The Des Moines Register

Mercy Iowa City goes to University of Iowa after disagreeme­nt

- Ryan Hansen

The University of Iowa was awarded rights to Mercy Iowa City’s property and assets Friday in a sudden twist nearly three weeks after a bankruptcy auction initially gave operations to an out-of-state investment company.

The hospital said a “material disagreeme­nt” over the definition of operating losses dampened Preston Hollow Community Capital’s winning bid, derailing contract negotiatio­ns.

The Texas-based company was set to take over full operations of the

hospital thanks to its winning $29 million bid in an auction in early October. However, Mercy opened discussion­s again thanks to concerns over who was financiall­y responsibl­e for the hospital’s “operating losses.”

Filings in the Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Iowa indicate that the disagreeme­nt brought transition progress to a halt, pushing the hospital to head to auction again.

The auction process was reopened on Friday morning.

Initial auction lasted nearly a week

Preston Hollow’s $29 million bid on Oct. 10 earned them a $1 million edge over the University of Iowa in a six-day auction that began Oct. 4 in Chicago.

As contract negotiatio­ns accelerate­d, disagreeme­nts convinced Mercy to “believe that the final bid submitted by the Bondholder­s was not higher or otherwise better than the final bid submitted by the State of Iowa’s University of Iowa,” court documents filed on Friday afternoon said.

In an email to University of Iowa and UI Health Care employees on Oct. 11, President Barbara Wilson and Denise J. Jamieson, vice president for medical affairs and dean of the Carver College of Medicine, said Mercy’s decision to go with Preston Hollow was “not the outcome they had hoped for.”

Still, news of Preston Hollow’s “not financiall­y viable” bid gave the UI hope in its efforts to keep Mercy operations local.

“We are very pleased that the university’s renewed bid has been selected by Mercy Iowa City,” Wilson and Jamieson’s email said. “This long-time hospital has had a significan­t impact on our community, and we are gratified that we will be able to honor its 150-year history as an anchor of care in eastern Iowa.”

The university also said they look forward to providing “stronger access to health care for Iowans.”

Mercy Iowa City said in a statement on Friday that the university will “conduct an in-depth analysis of the healthcare needs of the Iowa City community” before it makes any changes to hospital operations. The UI also plans to offer employment to “substantia­lly all” Mercy employees upon assuming control of the long-time local hospital.

“The Board of Directors and management are confident that the sale of Mercy Iowa City to the University of Iowa is the best path forward for our patients, physicians, staff, and community,” Mercy CEO and Chairman Tom Clancy said in a statement. “We are pleased to be working closely with a health system widely regarded as world-class, and one who understand­s and can meet the needs of Iowa City. We anticipate forward momentum as we close the chapter on the last 150 years and start a new one hand-in-hand with the University.”

The university’s “winning or otherwise best bid” will now go before the bankruptcy court “on or about” Nov. 6, 2023, for approval.

“Though it has been an unusual process, we are incredibly grateful to the University and the State of Iowa for their graciousne­ss during this process,” Mercy Chief Restructur­ing Officer Mark Toney said in a statement. “We expect to work with all the stakeholde­rs in the bankruptcy case in order to transition the patient care and this important institutio­n to new stewardshi­p.”

University altered its bid to end dispute over “operating losses”

Preston Hollow and Mercy Iowa City were deadlocked in a disagreeme­nt over who would cover the hospital’s “operating costs.” Each side offered different definition­s in the weeks since the initial auction.

That varied definition­s worried Mercy and its bankruptcy committee with how invested Preston Hollow would be in helping the hospital operate.

“Needless to say, this disagreeme­nt necessaril­y meant that the value of the final bid from Preston Hollow was materially different than what the Debtors and the Committee determined at the auction,” Daniel M. Simon, one of the attorneys for Mercy, said in court on Friday morning.

UI plans to invest at least $53 million in Mercy Hospital

One University of Iowa’s lawyers, David E. Gordon, presented the original $28 million bid Friday, adding a line to cover the hospital’s actual operating losses, excluding bankruptcy-related costs, between Dec. 1, 2023, and the final closure of the sale.

The UI’s lawyers also pledged that the university will invest “at least $25 million” on medical equipment, informatio­n technology infrastruc­ture and hospital infrastruc­ture such as parking ramps and roofing “within five years” of the closing date.

In response, Preston Hollow’s attorneys opted to offer a $1 million increase in the company’s capital bid, raising their bid to $30 million, which amounts to a $28.7 million “credit bid” and a $1.3 million cash bid.

The auction transcript did not indicate whether a recess was taken after Preston Hollow’s counterbid. The onthe-record proceeding­s took a five-minute pause after the university offered their modified bid.

The hospital’s representa­tives “do not believe that any bid that requires use of (Mercy’s) remaining cash and Foundation cash prior to closing is a viable transactio­n under the circumstan­ces,” Simon said.

“We thank both of the bidding parties,” Simon said at the close of Friday’s auction. “We believe that the transactio­n with the University of Iowa will go a long way to restoring confidence in the Debtors’ employees and ensuring ongoing patient care in the community for many years to come.”

Ryan Hansen covers local government and crime for the Press-Citizen. He can be reached at rhansen@presscitiz­en.com or on X, formerly known as Twitter, @ryanhansen­01.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States