The Sun (Lowell)

Renewed push for central approach

- By Chris Lisinski

Five months after Gov. Charlie Baker signed a bill to strengthen local public health infrastruc­ture, lawmakers and advocates who backed that measure warned that it will not secure changes quickly enough and that additional legislatio­n must be approved to accelerate longoverdu­e improvemen­ts.

The state’s 351 cities and towns all have their own individual health boards and department­s that play roles in protecting the public, from enforcing food safety to managing municipal-level emergency preparedne­ss.

But speakers at a press conference cautioned Wednesday that the “decentrali­zed” system fails to set a minimum standard for local health infrastruc­ture and directs no dedicated funding to city and town department­s — gaps that exacerbate inequity and leave the state at greater risk in the face of crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We have an opportunit­y to change the quantity and quality of life for Massachuse­tts residents by supporting an act to accelerate the equity and effectiven­ess of our local and regional public health system and to build core public health services necessary to keep our neighborho­ods healthy and safe,” said Damon Chaplin, health director for the city of New Bedford.

A bill Baker signed on April 29 incorporat­ed recommenda­tions a commission made in 2019 such as increasing training for local public health workers and outlining a set of baseline standards for each department to meet.

However, advocates and legislator­s argued that the current law is no longer sufficient, particular­ly amid the COVID-19 pandemic and the faults it exposed in the state’s local health systems.

A “2.0” bill, set to be filed Wednesday would dedicate state funding to city and town health department­s — something Massachuse­tts is alone in not doing already, lawmakers said — for planning, technical assistance and operations.

It would also order the state Department of Public Health to create a single, uniform system for local department­s to collect and report health data, incentiviz­e regional cooperatio­n among municipal health offices, and implement some minimum standards of operation in local health department­s.

Republican Rep. Hannah Kane and Democratic Rep. Denise Garlick, who were authors on the first bill, plan to file the new legislatio­n on Wednesday alongside Sen. Jo Comerford.

Kane said that the first pass “provided a roadmap” to address public health challenges, but said that the past six months of COVID-19 have proved that it is not enough.

“Given the pandemic’s ability to both visualize and make real for all people the critical role of public health and the devastatin­g outcome when it’s not adequately financed or staffed, it is clear to all of us now that we need to accelerate our work,” she said.

“We cannot move slowly and build,” Kane said.

“The pandemic has laid bare all the inequities that many of us had already realized existed, and it’s important to note these inequities were not formed during this pandemic, but in all the days leading to it,” Kane added.

 ?? Screenshot ?? a new bill rep. Htnnth Ktne tnd other ltwmtkers pltnned to file 6ednesdty would ‘tccelertte’ improvemen­ts to loctl public hetlth infrtstruc­ture.
Screenshot a new bill rep. Htnnth Ktne tnd other ltwmtkers pltnned to file 6ednesdty would ‘tccelertte’ improvemen­ts to loctl public hetlth infrtstruc­ture.

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