Los Angeles Times

Hospital ties to firms detailed

Salinas system had $21million in business with companies linked to leaders, audit finds.

- Sam Allen and Hector Becerra

Amonterey County public hospital district did $21 million in business over the last five years with firms in which its chief executive and board members held financial interests, according to a state audit released Thursday.

The audit was launched in response to a series of articles in The Times last year that highlighte­d the huge supplement­al pension and severance package, totaling nearly $5 million, that the hospital’s former chief executive received.

The audit found that the Salinas Valley Memorial Healthcare System regularly did business with firms that the board and top officials had financial stakes in — in some cases in apparent violation of state conflict-of interest laws.

The report stated that Salinas Valley lacks sufficient safeguards against making decisions that violate conflict-of-interest laws, and that the district therefore can’t guarantee “that it’s board members and executives do not experience personal financial gain from its transactio­ns with businesses.”

The audit found 11 instances between 2006 and 2010 in which board members had reported economic ties — including stocks, salaries and other types of payments — to vendors with which the district did business.

Not all the cases represente­d violations of conflict--

of-interest rules, state auditors said, but in two cases they found that officials may have broken the law.

One case involved former Chief Executive Samuel Downing, who had $50,000 in investment­s with 1st Capital Bank, an institutio­n Salinas Valley and the executive agreed to deposit $1 million into.

In another case, the hospital made $5.6 million in disburseme­nts to Rabobank, where a board member, Harry Wardwell, serves as a regional president and receives a salary of more than $100,000, according to his most recent statement of economic interest.

State auditors referred both cases to the Monterey County district attorney’s office for further investigat­ion.

Officials also recommende­d that Salinas Valley have an independen­t investigat­or review the hospital’s business relationsh­ips with companies that have economic ties to board members and executives.

“This sheds light on some of the most egregious fiscal practices I’ve ever seen, and which were certainly the norm at the hospital for many years,” said Assemblyma­n Luis Alejo (D-watsonvill­e), who called for the audit.

Wardwell has also served as the executive director of the California Internatio­nal Airshow, to which the hospital has given over $100,000 in recent years.

Hospital officials said they would implement recommenda­tions made by the state auditors. The hospital has already discontinu­ed the controvers­ial supplement­al retirement plan, according to spokeswoma­n Adrienne Laurent. And in their response to the auditor’s report, board members said they would take steps to update policies on executive compensati­on, contractin­g decisions and community grants.

But the hospital strongly defended specific contractin­g decisions that the auditors called into question.

“The audit report irresponsi­bly alleges serious violations of conflict of interest rules without conducting a thorough considerat­ion of the laws and how they might apply,” the board members wrote in a response to the state’s findings. In the case of the board member who worked at Rabobank, the hospital insisted he had “at most … a remote” interest in the deal, making him exempt from conflict-of-interest laws. And when Downing signed off on the 2008 agreement with a bank he held stock in, the district said he was simply carrying out “ministeria­l duties delegated to him.”

The hospital district also criticized auditors’ listing of nine other cases where it paid money to entities with which its board or executives had a financial interest, saying there was no evidence of impropriet­y in those instances.

John Borsos, a vice president for the National Union of Healthcare Workers, which represents many of the hospital’s employees, called the audit “just a scathing report” and a validation of concerns going back the better part of two years.

Last year, The Times reported that Downing received a $3-million retirement payment from Salinas Valley but continued working at his $668,000-a-year job for two more years.

He also received a severance payment of $1 million. When he finally retired in April 2011, he collected $900,000 in extra benefits along with his annual pension of $115,000.

In interviews, Downing said he felt he deserved the compensati­on — one of the largest public pensions in California history — after a long and successful career at the hospital.

The payments drew attention to Salinas Valley’s unusual and complex supplement­al retirement packages, which critics said were overly generous.

State auditors said many of the decisions leading to fat compensati­on packages appeared to be made in virtual secrecy and in violation of open meeting laws meant to keep the public informed.

Last month, in response to public records requests by The Times and other news outlets, the hospital district announced that several other top officials were receiving generous pensions, including a $1.3-million supplement­al retirement package for Salinas Valley’s chief operating officer on top of a $97,000 annual pension. Its chief financial officer will collect a supplement­al retirement payment of $1 million plus an annual pension of $108,000.

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