Boston Herald

Report blasts ex-Soldiers’ Home head

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The leader of a veterans’ care center in Holyoke where 76 veterans died after testing positive for the coronaviru­s in the spring of 2020 lacked both the leadership skills and the temperamen­t to run such a facility when he was hired in 2016, according to a blistering state Inspector General’s report released Friday.

The 91-page report, which covers the period from May 2016 until February 2020 — just before the pandemic struck with full force — was also highly critical of the process that led to the hiring of Bennett Walsh as superinten­dent of the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home and of state oversight of the home.

The investigat­ion that led to the report started in 2019 in response to pre-pandemic complaints about Walsh.

“Superinten­dent Walsh did not have and did not develop the leadership capacity or temperamen­t for the role of superinten­dent,” an executive summary of the report said. “He created an unprofessi­onal and negative work environmen­t, retaliated against employees he deemed disloyal, demonstrat­ed a lack of engagement in the home’s operations and circumvent­ed his chain of command.”

Walsh was also frequently absent during regular business hours and staff did not always know where he was.

The report acknowledg­es that Walsh inherited some problems with the home when he was appointed by Gov. Charlie Baker in 2016, including ongoing staffing issues, tension with unions representi­ng employees and key leadership vacancies.

“Even with these management challenges, the office found that Superinten­dent Walsh was not engaged in the broad range of leadership duties required to manage the home,” the report said.

Walsh declined to answer questions from the Inspector General’s office and instead invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self incriminat­ion, the report said. A voicemail seeking a response was left with his attorneys.

An attorney for Walsh has in the past defended the way he ran the home, and blamed the state for failing to respond to requests for help.

The report also criticized the state Executive Office of Health and Human Services and the state Department of Veterans’ Services for not adequately addressing staff complaints about Walsh. An email seeking comment was left with a spokespers­on for the governor’s office.

The center for sick and aging veterans in the spring of 2020 had one of the worst coronaviru­s outbreaks at a longterm care facility in the nation. At least 76 veterans died, and dozens of others as well as staff members fell ill with the disease.

Walsh and the home’s former medical director were charged with criminal neglect by the state attorney general, but the charges were dismissed in November by a judge who cited a lack of evidence.

Walsh was suspended and then resigned in September 2020.

 ?? Ap fiLe ?? ‘UNPROFESSI­ONAL AND NEGATIVE’: Bennett Walsh speaks at a 2019 Sept. 11 ceremony while serving as superinten­dent of the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home. A report released Friday hammered Walsh as being ill-suited for the job at the COVIDwrack­ed facility.
Ap fiLe ‘UNPROFESSI­ONAL AND NEGATIVE’: Bennett Walsh speaks at a 2019 Sept. 11 ceremony while serving as superinten­dent of the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home. A report released Friday hammered Walsh as being ill-suited for the job at the COVIDwrack­ed facility.

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