Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Lawmakers seek public hearing on veterans’ home outbreak

GOP requests inquiry into cases at state facility

- By Sarah Mansur

SPRINGFIEL­D — Republican­s on the Illinois House Veterans’ Affairs Committee called for a hearing this week to investigat­e a COVID-19 outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home where at least nine residents have died after testing positive for the virus.

In a letter to the House’s committee chairwoman Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, DOs wego, the Republican House committee members asked to hold hearings to “quickly investigat­e how and why this most recent outbreak occurred and what steps are being taken by the Pritzker administra­tion to stop the spread of COVID-19 at all state-run veterans’ homes and health care facilities.”

More than 150 positive COVID-19 cases have been reported at the La Salle Veterans’ Home, including 82 residents as of Thursday, said Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike. The LaSalle facility can provide care for up to 184 veterans, according to the state’s website, and the facility currently has 121 residents and 230 active employees.

“The increase we have seen at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home is frightenin­g and leaves us with many unanswered questions about the failures in protocol that has caused such a widespread outbreak,” the letter reads.

Kifowit said she spoke to an Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs official on Wednesday about the recent outbreak and steps being taken to address it.

“I really think that it’s simply unacceptab­le,” Kifowit said in a phone interview. “I did have an extensive conversati­on with IDVA about the contact tracing and evaluating what happened, increasing cleaning and about avenues to improve air quality. So, it was a good conversati­on.”

Kitfowit said she is in talk swith Sen. Tom Cullerton, D-Villa Park, who chairs the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, about holding a virtual subject matter hearing on the outbreak in LaSalle. While the Senate has procedures in place for holding hearings virtually, the House does not.

The Illinois Veterans’ Home at Quincy has reported more than 80 cases and one death since the beginning of the pandemic, and the Manteno Veterans’ Home has reported more than 100 cases and more than 15 deaths since the pandemic began, Ezike said at the governor’s dailynews conference Thursday. According to IDVA, no residents are currently known to be COVID-19- positive at the Quincy home, 14 employees are currently positive. Manteno has one resi--

dent and 12 employees who are currently positive for COVID-19.

The Prince Home, which is separate from Manteno but on the same campus, has reported seven positive COVID-19 cases, while the Anna Veterans’ Home has reported 13 positive COVID-19 cases, which includes six residents, Ezike said. There are no active cases at the Prince Home, according to IDVA, while one employee at the Anna home is currently positive.

Ezike said decreasing the spread of the virus in local communitie­s surroundin­g veterans’ homes will ultimately help lower the rate of infection inside veterans’ homes.

“Please understand that it’s impossible to have a COVID- free veteran’s home, (or) COVID-free school in the midst of a COVID storm. And that’s what we have in our community right now,” Ezike said. “We can help protect our veterans by reducing the amount of virus that’s circulatin­g in the communitie­s. Health care staff, who work at the homes, they’re in the community with you. They’re buying groceries, they’re running other essential errands, and if disease transmissi­on is just rampant, then those individual­s thatwork in the homescan get the virusand unfortunat­ely spread it to our heroes.”

She said an IDPH team is on site at the LaSalle home to “provide technical assistance and consultati­on.”

In a Nov. 11 letter to residents and staff of the LaSalle home, IDVA Administra­tor Angela Mehlbrech wrote that the facility has been following

recommenda­tions from state and local health officials.

“This includes continuing our health screenings of staff and residents, maintainin­g social distancing practices, wearing face coverings, using gloves and gowns when indicated, and intensifie­d cleaning and disinfecti­on protocols,” Mehlbrech wrote.

According to IDVA, the residents who tested positive are being isolated in the LaSalle facility, which has suspended all visitation­s since the outbreak began.

During a Zoom news conference on Thursday, Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, said the outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home is another reason why the House and Senate should hold additional hearings into the state’s response to COVID-19.

“We can have a back and forth dialogue about what happened from this outbreak, what protocols were in place, and what protocols, if any, were broken, what’s being done, and what can we learn from it, sowe can protect everyone in our veterans’ homes and nursing homes,” Rezin said during a news conference with Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, requesting that legislativ­e leaders convene hearings on the state’s COVID-19 response with members of the General Assembly.

“I know everybody’s working right now around the clock to do a deep dive on what happened … But clearly there was a breach at the veterans’ home. And we need to know why. And itwould be much easier for us to be able to do a deep dive with a public hearing,” she said.

 ?? ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Democratic Illinois Rep. Stephanie A. Kifowit asks questions in 2018 of Erica Jeffries, director of the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs during a committee hearing.
ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Democratic Illinois Rep. Stephanie A. Kifowit asks questions in 2018 of Erica Jeffries, director of the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs during a committee hearing.

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