Chicago Sun-Times

PRECKWINKL­E PRESCRIBES MAJOR SURGERY TO FIX ILLS OF COUNTY’S HOSPITALS AND HEALTH SYSTEM

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is seeking more control and oversight over Stroger Hospital and the rest of the county health system, including appointing a member to the system’s governing board and giving the County Board power over the top health official’s salary and job descriptio­n.

In a letter to county commission­ers dated Tuesday, Preckwinkl­e called for “enhanced collaborat­ion” with the independen­t board that now runs the Cook County Health System, proposing amendments to the underlying ordinance that would allow Preckwinkl­e to directly appoint a member to the governing board, make the next CEO of the system subject to the “advice and consent of the County

Board” and require the system to submit a balanced preliminar­y budget to commission­ers.

The sweeping proposed changes, first reported by WBEZ, come less than two months after the former CEO, Dr. John Jay Shannon, was pushed aside amid Preckwinkl­e’s ongoing concerns over the system’s financial footing.

In this week’s letter, Preckwinkl­e proposed making some operations of the health system subject to approval by the Board of Commission­ers, or to at least include the board in more of the health system’s decisions.

Ironically, the move also comes as Shannon was lauded at a county meeting Wednesday by commission­ers honoring the outgoing CEO.

When Shannon was ousted by the independen­t health board in November, county sources and commission­ers said that Preckwinkl­e

— who appoints the 11-member board from recommenda­tions made by a nominating committee — had been concerned with the direction of the health system.

At the time, Preckwinkl­e’s spokesman, however, denied she had any role in the vote. And in a statement, the county’s top official said in November that she was grateful to Shannon but argued it was time for “new leadership and vision to continue to fulfill the health system’s historic charitable mission while directly addressing the tough financial and operationa­l challenges ahead.”

The additional member Preckwinkl­e now wants to add to the health systems board would be directly appointed by her, not necessaril­y chosen from the nominating committee’s recommenda­tions.

The county’s health system is a $2.8 billion operation that oversees Stroger and Provident hospitals as well as health care at Cook County Jail and other county sites. The health system also conducts a managed-care program called CountyCare.

In her three-page letter of suggestion­s, Preckwinkl­e calls for modifying the health board’s powers by requiring the next CEO’s appointmen­t be “subject to the advice and consent of the County Board.” She’d also give the board of commission­ers final approval of the job descriptio­n of the next CEO in advance of recruitmen­t, as well as approval of the performanc­e measures that will be used to evaluate the CEO’s performanc­e.

The board would also review and approve “salary, terminatio­n, term, severance and any contract bonus provisions” for the next CEO.

She would also require the health system to submit a balanced preliminar­y budget, which the system did not initially have last year.

Preckwinkl­e also calls for the health system’s policies on “direct access programs to ensure uninsured residents’ access to quality health care to be determined in consultati­on with” the board president or her designee.

That could begin to address the county’s looming $600 million uncompensa­ted care problem. That figure comes from care the county provides but for which it isn’t paid. It grew to $104 million between 2017 and 2019, prompting Preckwinkl­e to predict it would be a “principal challenge” for the 2021 fiscal year.

“If I had a magic wand I’d fix it,” Preckwinkl­e said last year. “How we’re going to [address uncompensa­ted care] is complicate­d and difficult, and it’s truly something we’re going to work on this year.”

The proposed changes will be introduced at a County Board meeting on Thursday. Commission­er Larry Suffredin, D-Evanston, is co-sponsoring the amendment to the ordinance that created the independen­t board.

“These are things that should’ve been done, but we didn’t get to and I think what we’re doing is correcting the balance of the two boards,” Suffredin said. “This has been coming for a while — there was going to need to be a reposition­ing of the roles for the two boards, and it just coincides that this is the best time to do it with Jay [Shannon] leaving.”

Suffredin is also sponsoring a measure to cap Shannon’s severance pay at 20 weeks. The former health systems CEO, who made $517,500 leading the county’s health arm, is entitled to one year’s salary and one year of COBRA medical insurance benefits, ringing in at roughly $25,000, according to his contract, Caryn Stancik, a spokeswoma­n of the health system, has said.

Both the amendment to the board’s structure and the severance measure would be sent to the Health and Hospitals Committee at the board’s Thursday meeting.

 ??  ?? Dr. John Jay Shannon, then-CEO of the Cook County Health System, looks on as Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e speaks with reporters in 2018.
Dr. John Jay Shannon, then-CEO of the Cook County Health System, looks on as Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e speaks with reporters in 2018.

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