The Morning Call

Wolf’s office slams managers at state-run veterans’ nursing home

Investigat­ors criticize Chester County facility’s COVID-19 precaution­s

- By Vinny Vella and William William Bender

Investigat­ors commission­ed by Gov. Tom Wolf’s office have condemned the former managers of the Southeaste­rn Veterans’ Center, a state-run nursing home in Chester County, for inadequate precaution­s against COVID-19, which “swept through the facility like wildfire” this spring and caused the deaths of 42 residents.

The report, released Thursday, said the staff at the facility, then led by Commandant Rohan Blackwood, and Deborah Mullane, the director of nursing, failed to properly plan for the virus, did not stop communal dining early enough, and did not properly isolate its residents to slow the spread of COVID-19 within the facility, among other critical errors.

“The response at SEVC was not well-planned, coordinate­d, or effective,” the report said. “On the contrary, SEVC mishandled its response to COVID19 in many significan­t ways, which contribute­d tragically to the heartrendi­ng events that occurred there.”

Blackwood and Mullane were fired Dec. 23.

The two had been suspended since May following reports in The Inquirer, citing internal documents, on the high number of coronaviru­s deaths at the East Vincent Township nursing home during the first wave of the virus — as many as four a day. Residents’ families, meanwhile, were largely kept in the dark.

Blackwood’s management style was described by more than a dozen former and current employees in the articles as autocratic, and often inept. In the five years he ran Southeaste­rn Veterans Center, the facility recorded several high-profile incidents, including residents escaping and a fight between two dementia patients that left one with fatal injuries.

The report commission­ed by Wolf’s office makes similar observatio­ns, finding that the management culture at the facility seemed “concerned more with managing perception than getting things done,” had “a woeful lack of accountabi­lity,” and practiced poor communicat­ion both internally among its staff and with residents’ families.

“While the toll of COVID-19 could not have been avoided in its entirety, there is little doubt that this horrible tragedy could have meaningful­ly been ameliorate­d and mitigated if not for these failures,” the report said.

The release of the report, on New Year’s Eve, comes a week after the families of five SEVC residents who died of COVID-19 filed a lawsuit in federal court, alleging that the operators of the facility failed to protect them and dozens of other residents who succumbed to the virus.

The lawsuit names as defendants the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Military and Veterans Affairs, which runs the state’s six nursing homes for veterans, as well as Blackwood and Mullane.

Last month, Pennsylvan­ia Auditor General Eugene DePasquale released a report confirming the key findings of Inquirer articles in April and May that reported that the 238-bed home had taken a lax approach to the pandemic, with supervisor­s discouragi­ng nurses and aides from wearing masks to avoid frightenin­g the service veterans.

DePasquale’s report also backs a state and federal health inspection report, published in July, which found that SEVCoffici­als placed elderly residents in “immediate jeopardy” by ignoring infection-control guidelines, while instilling a fear of retaliatio­n that discourage­d staffers from speaking out.

As details about this mismanagem­ent came to light in the spring, former Maj. Gen. Anthony Carelli, who as adjutant general for Pennsylvan­ia oversees the state’s six veterans’ homes, told the Senate committee that he was concerned by The Inquirer’s articles about conditions at SEVC and asked the state and county to inspect the facility.

But Carelli’s tenure with the state ended before that inspection was completed — he retired abruptly Dec. 5.

Neither Wolf nor Carelli provided an explanatio­n for his retirement, but Carelli was embroiled at the time in two simultaneo­us investigat­ions over facilities he oversaw: the deaths at SEVC, and reports of sexual harassment and retaliatio­n at a National Guard station in Horsham.

Blackwood and Mullane, through their attorney, David Heim, rejected many of the report’s findings and said they had been “purposely deprived” of the opportunit­y to respond fully because they had only recently been shown the report.

In a written response, Heim wrote that the report “omits numerous material facts and is completely lacking factual context.” He described it as a case of “clear political scapegoati­ng of Mr. Blackwood and Nurse Mullane, all designed to detract attention from the systematic failures of the Governor’s Office, the Department of Health and the leadership of the Department of Veteran’s Military Affairs in properly responding to this pandemic’s catastroph­ic effects on the elderly veterans residing in the Department’s nursing homes.”

Heim also said Blackwood and Mullane, who had previously received high marks on their performanc­e reviews, had repeatedly asked state leaders for more staffing and the deployment of the National Guard, but they had been essentiall­y ignored until the National Guard arrived April 15.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Military and Veterans Affairs released a statement saying it has put in place “most of the recommenda­tions in this report that could be implemente­d immediatel­y and is now in the process of reviewing and implementi­ng additional recommenda­tions, to include a review of its organizati­onal structure; crisis management; communicat­ions; and infection control procedures.”

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