Los Angeles Times

Hospital chain is offered a cash infusion

Investment firm’s deal with Daughters of Charity system includes $ 250 million.

- By James F. Peltz james. peltz@ latimes. com Twitter: @ PeltzLATim­es

A private investment firm will make a $ 250- million cash infusion in a struggling chain of six Catholic hospitals in California under a deal announced Friday.

The f irm, BlueMounta­in Capital Management in New York, also would oversee management of the chain, called Daughters of Charity Health System, which would keep its nonprofit status.

Daughters of Charity’s properties include St. Vincent Medical Center in Los Angeles and St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood.

BlueMounta­in also would receive an option to buy Daughters of Charity outright after three years.

The proposed deal comes four months after Prime Healthcare Services Inc., an Ontario- based hospital operator, backed out of plans to purchase Daughters of Charity for $ 843 million.

Prime said it withdrew because of “impossible” conditions that would have been imposed by California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris to gain her approval for the acquisitio­n. The BlueMounta­in deal also will need her approval.

“Our office will review this transactio­n, as required by law, to ensure continuous access to care for the communitie­s currently served by these hospitals,” Harris spokeswoma­n Kristin Ford said in a statement.

Daughters of Charity’s future has been closely watched because its hospitals employ 7,600 workers and provide needed medical services to a number of lower- income communitie­s.

Many community hospitals and smaller nonprofit chains like Daughters of Charity also have struggled because they lack the size and bargaining clout to win favorable reimbursem­ent rates from insurers.

Daughters of Charity’s chief executive, Robert Issai, has said the chain has been losing $ 10 million a month. And after the Prime deal collapsed, he said the chain would explore bankruptcy among its options to keep operating.

But on Friday, Daughters of Charity said the BlueMounta­in deal “ensures the communitie­s served by the hospitals will have uninterrup­ted access to high- quality healthcare and that current and former hospital employees will see their pension benefits remain the same.”

The deal calls for Daughters of Charity to transfer control of the hospitals to an independen­t board of directors, with a BlueMounta­in entity called Integrity Healthcare overseeing the chain with “key management services and day- today operationa­l support.”

About 2,675 of the chain’s workers, including janitors, food- service personnel and emergency medical technician­s, are represente­d by the SEIU- United Healthcare Workers West union.

The union’s president, Dave Regan, said in a statement that “we are anxious to see the details of the BlueMounta­in proposal so we can understand what commitment­s they make to ensure the community receives the best possible healthcare.”

When Harris approved Prime’s purchase of Daughters of Charity in February, she required the company to keep all six hospitals open for 10 years. She also said they would have to continue their current level of charity care to poor patients.

Besides the two hospitals in Los Angeles County, Daughters of Charity owns four in Northern California: O’Connor Hospital in San Jose, Saint Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy, Seton Medical Center in Daly City and Seton Coastside in Moss Beach, near Half Moon Bay.

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