The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Advocates renew push for health equity reform in state

- By Jenna Carlesso

A month into the legislativ­e session, advocates are turning a spotlight back on an issue that failed to gain traction at the state level last year, even as the coronaviru­s pandemic exposed stark disparitie­s in health care: declaring racism a public health crisis in Connecticu­t and passing reform to address long-standing inequities.

In June, following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police and amid a health crisis that has disproport­ionately harmed communitie­s of color, cities and states across the country took the symbolic step of declaring racism a public health crisis. In Connecticu­t, 20 municipali­ties, including Hartford, Bridgeport, New Haven, Simsbury and West Hartford, have adopted the declaratio­n, along with the Mashantuck­et Pequot Tribal Nation. Ninety-nine cities and 72 counties nationwide have done the same, as have four states: Michigan, Nevada, Minnesota and Wisconsin, according to Health Equity Solutions, which has been tracking the declaratio­ns.

The pronouncem­ents are designed to spur a deeper analysis of systemic issues and ultimately drive policy change. But while local leaders have begun to wade into those problems, the state has yet to take similar action. Calls by advocates last summer to declare racism a public health crisis were brushed aside by Gov. Ned Lamont. A spokesman for the governor has said Lamont’s ability to take action by executive order is restricted and that any mandate he imposes would be limited in duration.

With the legislatur­e back in session, proponents of the effort are turning to lawmakers. Reps. Matthew Ritter and Brandon McGee, both Democrats from Hartford, are working on a bill that would address health equity. Their plan includes forming a commission, composed of advocates, representa­tives of various state department­s and others, to exchange ideas, discuss challenges, offer input on policy and provide recommenda­tions to state agencies and legislator­s on health equity.

“Until we fully understand the racial and ethnic impact of the policy and budget decisions we make, we’re operating in the dark,” McGee said. “Health inequities and the social determinan­ts that drive them must be addressed purposeful­ly and urgently, and with full knowledge of the consequenc­es of our actions as policymake­rs.”

“We went through an entire year of seeing what many Black and brown people have been telling for years – inequities,” he added. “Now’s the time for us to go beyond the marches and the protests … now is the time I believe that there’s an appetite [for reform]. And this conversati­on is being supported not just by people of color but their allies as well.”

The measure being drafted by McGee and Ritter, the House Speaker, would also facilitate training for people in certain state agencies, possibly the Office of Legislativ­e Research or the Office of Fiscal Analysis, to produce racial and ethnic impact assessment­s – analyses that examine the impact of a bill or policy on specific racial or ethnic groups. Connecticu­t has a law in place allowing legislator­s to request such an assessment, though proponents say training is needed for those reports to be produced.

The bill may include education for existing staff or funding for additional workers to handle the assessment­s, Ritter said.

“The thought right now is that there is sometimes not enough attention paid to the policy decisions from the standpoint of people of color,” Ritter said. “That’s what this bill ultimately will try to address, is that there’s another lens to look at policy.”

The health equity commission may also review what data is gathered by medical providers on race and ethnicity and make suggestion­s for standardiz­ation and improvemen­t, Ritter said.

Sen. Saud Anwar, D-South Windsor, a physician, has introduced his own bill on the issue. The measure would declare racism a public health crisis and establish a commission to study institutio­nal racism in Connecticu­t’s laws and regulation­s; racial disparitie­s in the criminal justice system and their impacts on health; disparitie­s in access to fresh food, public safety and other social determinan­ts of health; disparitie­s in access to health care and health outcomes; and the impact of zoning restrictio­ns on the creation of housing disparitie­s.

The commission would also provide recommenda­tions to lawmakers and other state officials.

Anwar recently criticized Lamont’s

budget proposal as not doing enough to address equity.

“We need to recognize healthequi­ty challenges before the pandemic were among the highest in the country, and the pandemic has only further shown this disparity is impacting residents of our state, and it may become a scar on them forever,” he said. “Asset-limited, income-restrained employed are increasing rapidly in the pandemic, and who will speak for them?”

A spokesman for Lamont pointed to recent remarks made by Melissa McCaw, secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, on equity provisions in the proposed budget.

McCaw told the legislatur­e’s Appropriat­ions Committee last week that the administra­tion is investing more than $230 million in federal pandemic relief in affordable housing and rent relief. Additional investment­s were made in social service agencies to reflect higher caseloads, if not to raise rates.

Max Reiss, Lamont’s spokesman, said the administra­tion also is addressing equity in its rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine, including sending out mobile units to deliver the shot in underserve­d areas.

“We take the issue of equity incredibly seriously, as evidenced by our efforts directly in communitie­s to try to do vaccine outreach,” he said. “We know that there’s probably no such thing as enough when it comes to trying to cross that health care disparity divide, but the administra­tion is committed to trying to correct that as much as possible.”

Advocates say they support legislator­s’ efforts to declare racism a public health crisis and take steps to confront disparitie­s, but they expressed disappoint­ment in Lamont for not doing more.

The Rev. Ashley “AJ” Johnson, pastor of the Urban Hope Refuge Church in Hartford and an organizer with the Greater Hartford Interfaith Action Alliance, said the governor should not wait on the legislatur­e to take action. GHIAA, a coalition of 38 congregati­ons across Connecticu­t with thousands of members, called on Lamont in November to declare racism a public health crisis, and members have renewed those calls since the legislativ­e session began.

“A lot of people will say a declaratio­n isn’t enough, but this is something he can do,” Johnson said of Lamont. “So do it, and then follow up” with more action, he said.

He has also called on the state to form a commission that examines the intersecti­on of racial impact and health disparitie­s.

Melinda Johnson, an activist who organized a funeral procession in Hartford last summer in honor of Floyd, called Lamont’s inaction on the issue “dishearten­ing.”

“You want to believe in your leaders, and you want to believe that your leaders care about your wellbeing,” she said. “And while we see that the governor has made a lot of progress in our state showing that he cares about our wellbeing in the space of COVID-19, it does not ring the same way when it comes to racism. It does not feel like, when we talk about prioritizi­ng communitie­s of color, that that is a priority for him.”

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