Ominous news about job losses and financial woes at Minnesota hospitals over the last week coincide with Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s line-item veto of $381 million in General Assistance Medical Care (GAMC) grants and his vow to make even more cuts by unallotment. But as bad as the doomsday scenarios are, they shouldn’t include St. Paul’s Regions Hospital closing — a prospect that the DFL warned of over the weekend.
Here are some headlines from the last week that, to some at least, read like plot lines for a series-ending episode of TV’s “House” doctor drama, if not a medical prequel to the post-apocalyptic “Mad Max” movies.
» Hennepin County Medical Center (HCMC) in Minneapolis will lay off 100 staffers.
» Park Nicollet Health Services lays off 240 and closes a clinic in Hopkins. The owner of Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park has already laid off more than twice that number over the last six months.
» Willmar’s Rice Memorial Hospital continues to shed staff. Layoffs have left the city-owned hospital with its smallest workforce in a decade.
» In rural areas of the state, doctors are scarce. Health care organizations must dangle bonuses to attract debt-laden med school grads to the hinterlands.
» St. Peter bucked the trend by expanding a local clinic of Mayo Health System, but Mayo’s flagship facility in Rochester will lose $30 million from Pawlenty’s GAMC veto alone.
» Losing patients, North Memorial Health Care is cutting 100 jobs. A 6-percent decline in stays at the Robbinsdale hospital hides one area in which business is up by 22 percent: charity care.
» Two metro hospitals that care for the poor — Regions in St. Paul and HCMC in Minneapolis — will make deep cuts. HCMC Medical Director Michael Belzer says revisiting state cuts during the 2010 Legislative session will be too late, as hospitals will have set budgets and take actions necessary to meet them by then.
But Regions is not in danger of closing its doors, contrary to a DFL Party announcement (see below) from the closing days of the legislative session.
“That’s not going to happen,” Regions spokesman Vince Rivard told the Minnesota Independent on Monday, adding that a hospital expansion financed with St. Paul municipal bonds is still set to open this summer.
Still a variety of program cuts at Regions and even imposition of new, restrictive geographical boundaries are possible, Rivard said. The hospital sees patients from as far away as Montana but is only obligated to provide Ramsey County residents with non-emergency services.
And Rivard agreed with HCMC’s Belzer that fixes the Legislature next year makes to the governor’s vetos would come too late to forestall drastic cutbacks.
Here’s the press release from the DFL House DFL Caucus that asserted that Regions Hospital could close. It was sent out Saturday, midway between Pawlenty’s Thursday night line-item veto of GAMC and the end of the Legislative session Monday night.
NEWS STATEMENT
Minnesota House of RepresentativesMay 16, 2009
PAWLENTY VETO MAY RESULT IN FULL OR PARTIAL CLOSURE OF REGIONS HOSPITAL
Local lawmakers speak out against Governor Pawlenty’s deep cuts to
Regions HospitalAfter announcing Thursday he plans to make billions of dollars in
budget cuts alone without public or legislative input, Governor Tim
Pawlenty eliminated General Assistance Medical Care (GAMC) in Minnesota.
With one line item veto late Thursday night, the governor cut $381
million that was dedicated exclusively to treat the poorest people in
the state – including veterans, senior citizens, and the mentally ill.Those cuts may result in the full or partial closure of Regions
Hospital in St. Paul. By eliminating GAMC, the hospital will face a $46
million budget cut – 10% of its gross revenue. Regions Hospital employs
roughly 5,000 people and serves nearly 23,000 patients every year.The following is a statement from local state lawmakers deeply
concerned about these devastating cuts to Regions Hospital and the
potential impact on residents of St. Paul and the surrounding suburbs:“Governor Pawlenty’s veto pen single-handedly put Regions Hospital in
St. Paul at serious risk of significantly cutting back critical services
or potentially closing its doors. This is a devastating blow to tens of
thousands of citizens in St. Paul and the surrounding communities who
rely on Regions Hospital for quality, expert medical care. It has
threatened thousands of jobs, and the health and safety of our
communities.This deep and devastating cut could have been avoided. Lawmakers
offered a responsible alternative that would have cut Regions Hospital
only $5.7 million – a budget reduction the hospital could have sustained
without significantly drawing back critical medical services to our
community.By eliminating GAMC, Governor Pawlenty has cut 30,000 of Minnesota’s
poorest, sickest citizens off health care. Many are veterans, senior
citizens, people with mentally illness, or those who are homeless. 70%
have expensive mental health or chemical dependency challenges, and 40%
have chronic disease that leads to frequent hospitalization. Without
care, these Minnesotans will be at risk of devastating health
implications.Finally, these cuts have made the state’s budget shortfall even
worse. Eliminating GAMC in Minnesota costs the state $100 million in
federal matching funds. It also requires that inmates in county jails
and sex offenders who are constitutionally required access to medical
care must now be paid for in general fund dollars.We are deeply disappointed in Governor Pawlenty’s decision to balance
the budget with jobs and deep cuts to hospitals. In the final days of
session, we’ll keep fighting to protect jobs and keep Minnesota’s
hospitals whole.”
Officials whose names appeared at the top of the release are State Reps. Joe Atkins, John Lesch, Karla Bigham, Leon Lillie, Paul Gardner, Tim Mahoney, Mindy Greiling, Carlos Mariani, Rick Hansen, Erin Murphy, Alice Hausman, Michael Paymar, Sheldon Johnson, Bev Scalze, Kate Knuth and Cy Thao.














12 Comments »
Comment posted May 19, 2009 @ 5:39 pm
Maybe the hospitals should send sick people to the Governor’s office for care.
Comment posted May 19, 2009 @ 6:34 pm
Maybe Timmy should unallot his salary and health insurance to see how well he could do without it…
Comment posted May 19, 2009 @ 7:47 pm
Screw sick people …. so long as we don’t raise taxes among those of us who can kick in more without missing a meal, a mortgage payment, or even planned vacation. Don’t want the rich, the comfortably middle class to be troubled by those pesky poor- needy needy needy!
Can’t they just eat cake? What!? They want to be healed? Where’s their self-reliance?!?!
Comment posted May 19, 2009 @ 11:25 pm
Don’t worry about a thing. When Obamas socialed medical system kicks in, no one will have any worries whatsoever. Unless of course if you’re over 65 and need a hip replacement, suffer from congenital heart failure, are on 5 plus meds, have any other illnesses that “you can deal with.”
These articles and issues are comical. How about the billions, yes billions that illegal immigration costs hospitals and taxpayers every year? How about the misappropriation of MNCARE funds (currently at a $32m surplus)?
The article also talks of GAMC funding being cut, when in reality the budget is riddled with benefits, grants and subsistence to medical facilities.
Comment posted May 20, 2009 @ 10:52 am
Mill,
Get a clue. Only the very wealthy should be able to live life and be healthy. If you don’t have money, or even if you are middle class, you don’t deserve top quality health care. It’s the emergency room for you and you better like it!
Take care.
Comment posted May 20, 2009 @ 11:32 am
Polly Anna notices that maybe this will be just the thing to destroy Pawlenty’s political career, eliminating any worry of him becoming President of the USA which would be a nightmare of the whole country and not just Minnesota. After all, do we want a President who doesn’t care about the poor? He won’t get the Catholic vote anyway
Comment posted May 20, 2009 @ 7:13 pm
So now what are we supposed to do. Not only do we add to the unemployment rate by laying off thousands more, thus increasing the likelyhood of finding a job to near zero. But…we take medical care away from those who cannot work because they have serious issues. Issues such as Multiple Personality Disorder…Schizophrenia…Socialpaths. These people that have serious issues that could be very bad for them as well as our community if they do not have access to psychiatric treatment and quality care. Do they really want to see these SOME of those experiencing mental illness or chemcial dependancy to live without their medication?? Are they really even thinking this through?? Do they understand the implications of some mental illnesses being left untreated?
Comment posted May 20, 2009 @ 8:33 pm
DFL TO GET CLUE???
AP LOS ANGELES – California’s voters on Tuesday rejected a complex slate of ballot propositions designed to keep the state from sliding further toward fiscal calamity.
The only measure they approved in a statewide special election was Proposition 1F, which will prohibit raises to lawmakers and other state elected officials during deficit years.
Voters rejected at least four of the five other measures, including Proposition 1A, the centerpiece of efforts by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and other state leaders to fix California’s ongoing fiscal problems. It would have created a state spending cap while prolonging temporary tax increases and also strengthened the state’s rainy day fund.
“Tonight we have heard from the voters and I respect the will of the people who are frustrated with the dysfunction in our budget system,” Schwarzenegger said in a statement late Tuesday.
“Now we must move forward from this point to begin to address our fiscal crisis with constructive solutions.”
The failure of the measures means California’s budget deficit will grow by nearly $6 billion above the current $15.4 billion deficit, forcing Schwarzenegger to make further cuts to state programs already facing major rollbacks.
“Obviously, it’s disappointing,” said Democratic Assemblywoman Noreen Evans, chairwoman of the Assembly Budget Committee. “But I think the voters are sending a message that they believe the budget is the job of the governor and Legislature. We probably need to go back and do our job.”
Comment posted May 20, 2009 @ 10:43 pm
East sider, you need to get a clue. ER visits cost hospitals way more than a regular visit, thus the higher co-pay for those utilizing the service. Also, please explain why Canadian members of Parliament are going to American hospitals rather than Canadian ones. Also explain to me why hospitals that border Quebec have bi-lingual language in their hospitals. No, not English and Espanol. English and French.
I love the tact about the poor too. Ummm, when is too much enough? When do people start becoming responsible for themselves? A lot of the poor I know have plenty of money for booze and smokes, but none for health care? And since their boozing and smoking, they’re not to worried about their health are they? How about diet too for than matter?
Comment posted May 21, 2009 @ 3:55 pm
Rick:
“How about the billions, yes billions that illegal immigration costs hospitals and taxpayers every year?”
It is outweighed by the billions they pay into the system.
Comment posted June 3, 2009 @ 2:56 pm
I agree with you Rick. I am all for Hand-ups, your trying, something happens, you need a little temporary help to get by I’m cool with that. It’s this long term handout thing i am sick of. 18 y.o. getting pregnant intentionally because the state will take care of them. People with supposed mental problems. I have personally known 2 people who were to “depressed to work”, 2 people who sold drugs for a job, and 1 person who had ADD and couldn’t work all on Minnesota care. It’s ridiculous. Hello people 381million, there are only 5 million people in the state and of those maybe 2 million pay taxes. So almost $200 a person paying taxes. This welfare for people not trying crap has got to go.
$698 Billion dollars a year is spent in the U.S. on welfare according to the heritage foundation.
With 155 million taxpayers, that’s about $4500 a person
I also agree with the illegal immigrants costing money. Heck it’s 70 some billion for the kids in the schools. The schools can’t prevent it because by law they can’t ask if a kid is a legal citizen. Now that’s crap too.
Comment posted August 8, 2009 @ 11:30 pm
All people who will be cut off from medical care and medications………………Contact your pharmacist and have him get you in touch with the “PATIENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM” that the drug manufacturers offer to people who cannot afford their medications. You will qualify for free medicines and will get the medicines mailed out to you. I am in the same boat and I got mine in the mail. Believe me, they have a lot of free drugs to be given out and they can afford it.
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