Los Gatos Weekly Times

Good Samaritan Hospital CEO resigns after teacher vaccine scandal

Joe Deschryver is out weeks after the hospital gave Los Gatos educators the coronaviru­s vaccine before they were eligible

- By Emily Deruy ederuy@ bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Emily Deruy at 408-920-5077.

The head of Good Samaritan Hospital has resigned weeks after the San Jose medical center came under fire for allowing Los Gatos teachers to receive coronaviru­s vaccines before educators were eligible.

CEO Joe Deschryver submitted his resignatio­n March 2 “to pursue external career advancemen­t opportunit­ies,” a spokespers­on for the hospital’s parent company, HCA Healthcare, said in an emailed statement.

“We are grateful for his leadership at Good Samaritan Hospital over the past four years and the remarkable job he has done, including the intense past year marked by COVID-19,” spokespers­on Antonio Castelan said. “We are sad to see him go and wish him well in his future endeavors.”

Deschryver, who previously worked for Tenet Healthcare Corporatio­n, is expected to remain at the hospital for a few months as HCA conducts a search for a new chief executive.

Castelan said “there have been no resignatio­ns or disciplina­ry actions in regards to the vaccinatio­n of Los Gatos teachers.”

In January, a month before Santa Clara County said teachers were eligible for the coronaviru­s vaccine, Good Samaritan invited teachers from the Los Gatos Union School District to register for the scarce shots by claiming to be health care workers. Emails obtained last month by this news organizati­on through a public records request indicate the special access was facilitate­d by a Good Samaritan-affiliated doctor whose relative works at the district, and that the invitation was tied to the district’s fundraisin­g efforts earlier in the pandemic to donate meals to health care workers at the hospital.

News of the deal caused frustratio­n, especially among elderly residents eligible for but struggling to find the vaccine. Santa Clara County responded by withholdin­g vaccine supply from the hospital and the hospital ultimately shuttered its vaccine clinic.

SAN JOSE >> Hundreds of homes and a grocery store could sprout on a large north San Jose site next to major tech hubs in the city and near the banks of the Guadalupe River, plans on file with city officials show.

The project by a Texasbased developer is being planned for a site near the corner of Montague Expressway

and Seely Avenue, across the street from the Cadence Design Systems headquarte­rs.

The site totals roughly 11.2 acres and is primarily empty land, although several structures and the Tsukuda

fruit stand are located on the property.

“This is a new neighborho­od in north San Jose,” said Erik Schoennaue­r, a San Jose-based land-use and property consultant who is advising the developer. “The goal is to establish a strong neighborho­od context for this project.”

Hanover Co., based in Houston and with a regional office in Danville, has proposed the mixed-use project, which has an approximat­e address of 2620 Seely Ave. in San Jose, city documents show.

The developmen­t would consist of 735 residences that would be built in two phases, according to the preliminar­y proposal on file with the city.

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