Miami Herald

Overhaul of state program to aid brain-damaged kids now in hands of powerful politician

After a legislativ­e makeover, a majority of the board overseeing a Florida program to help brain-damaged kids quit. Parents are closely watching what happens next.

- BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER AND DANIEL CHANG cmarbin@miamiheral­d.com dchang@miamiheral­d.com

Now that the Florida Legislatur­e and governor have taken action to overhaul a Florida program that serves families with braindamag­ed children, its future could pivot on a state Cabinet member following through on his promise to make the program answer to the parents of disabled children.

Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis, whose office oversees the BirthRelat­ed Neurologic­al Injury Compensati­on Associatio­n, initiated an audit and an investigat­ion of the program after the Miami Herald and the journalism nonprofit ProPublica published a series of stories this year showing how NICA had amassed nearly $1.5 billion in assets while frequently denying care to children it serves.

Patronis, who demanded that NICA “do better” the day the series began publishing, is expected to name at least five board members to oversee the program — three to replace members who resigned last month and two new ones authorized by a law passed in the most recent legislativ­e ses

sion.

“For a public official, this is truly an opportunit­y to have real impact in a positive sense for the people this program was designed to benefit,” said

Pat Wear, a former director of the Florida Advocacy Center for Persons with Disabiliti­es who, as Kentucky’s commission­er of mental health, oversaw that state’s Traumatic Brain Injury Trust Fund. “He can do great things here by appointing people who have insight into these families’ tremendous needs.”

But Patronis, Wear said, faces a choice: He “can serve the system, or he can serve the people.”

On Tuesday, Patronis announced his first new board appointmen­t, and the move suggests he may be listening to disability advocates such as Wear. He added Jim DeBeaugrin­e, who oversaw the state Agency for Persons with Disabiliti­es before becoming a consultant and lobbyist. Recently DeBeaugrin­e served as interim CEO of the Arc of Florida, an advocacy group for people with developmen­tal and intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

In an interview with the Herald on Wednesday, DeBeaugrin­e said he anticipate­s the NICA board will undergo significan­t changes, both in its compositio­n and in its orientatio­n toward the children and families who depend on the program for care.

“I will be going into this with a critical eye, to change the focus of this organizati­on,” DeBeaugrin­e said. “Everything about how it operates needs to be on the table. If I didn’t think that, I probably wouldn’t take the assignment.”

He added, “We have an opportunit­y to go in and make some fundamenta­l changes in how the organizati­on interacts with the families it serves.”

The leader of a Tallahasse­e-based advocacy group praised the appointmen­t, saying DeBeaugrin­e will rightly focus on the needs of children and their families.

“He has a strong sense of wrong and right,” Lori Fahey, president of The Family Cafe, said of DeBeaugrin­e, who is the chairman of her board of directors. “His priorities are set on providing what is best for individual­s with disabiliti­es and their families.” The Family Cafe provides informatio­n and networking opportunit­ies for people with disabiliti­es and their families, and advocates for better care and services.

DeBeaugrin­e, Fahey said, has volunteere­d with the Special Olympics, as well as other service groups. For many years, he’s also cared for his brother-in-law, who is disabled. “Above all,” she said, “he’s a family member.”

NICA CREATED

Florida lawmakers created NICA in 1988 to immunize obstetrici­ans — who claimed their malpractic­e premiums had become prohibitiv­ely high — from the consequenc­es of a tragic birth that results in severe and lifelong brain damage. In most cases, parents are barred from suing the doctor who delivered their baby and the hospital where their child was born. In exchange, NICA promises to provide all “medically necessary” and “reasonable” care.

The Herald series, called Birth & Betrayal, detailed how NICA earned more from its investment­s than it spent on profoundly disabled children who were routinely deprived of care, including medication, therapy, inhome nursing and equipment such as wheelchair­s.

Within weeks of publicatio­n, Florida lawmakers rewrote the statute that governs the program, requiring administra­tors to cease delaying and denying care, and making NICA more responsive to the needs of parents and family members.

Among other things, the new law says NICA must cover up to $10,000 a year in mental health care for family members of people in the program, spend up to $100,000 to make families’ homes accessible for wheelchair­s and medical equipment, and make it easier for families to get and pay for care. The law also creates an avenue for appeal when treatment or therapy is denied.

It is a near-complete overhaul for an agency that has operated under the radar for 33 years, sometimes infuriatin­g parents struggling to raise children with extraordin­ary needs.

Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the measure on June 21, and it took effect immediatel­y. Now that the statute spells out how NICA must prioritize the health and best interests of children in the program, it’s up to the board of directors to set the tone for the program’s longtime administra­tors and case managers.

But the board, historical­ly dominated by insurance and healthcare executives, is not functionin­g at the moment.

The legislatio­n limits the tenure of the nonpaid board members to “no more than six consecutiv­e years.” The provision affects four members of the board. Three of the four resigned in June, leaving the board without a quorum and forcing the cancellati­on of a meeting last month.

A CHANCE TO SHAPE THE PROGRAM

Filling at least five board seats presents Patronis with an opportunit­y to shape the program for years to come.

Even with its $1.5 billion in assets, NICA has remained one of the most obscure programs in state government, though certainly not free from politics and influence. The program has paid nearly $900,000 to lobbyists since 2011. It has paid nearly $200,000 to a public relations firm since 2020.

Politics remains part of the process of deciding who will serve on a reconstitu­ted board as part of the Legislatur­e’s reform efforts. An applicatio­n Patronis’ office produced for NICA parents seeking a seat on the board includes these queries: “party affiliatio­n” and “names of civic, profession­al or political organizati­ons to which you belong.”

In an interview with the Herald, Patronis described those as “cookie cutter” questions, part of his department’s “standard appointmen­ts applicatio­n.”

Questions about political affiliatio­n, Patronis said, sometimes are necessary as many agencies and commission­s require that their boards include members of both political parties. “Sometimes it’s a statutory requiremen­t to have a bipartisan commission,” Patronis said.

Though the new legislatio­n greatly limits the discretion of NICA’s executive director, Kenney Shipley, to deny care and services to covered families, the Tallahasse­ebased program has not seen such a significan­t change in governance in its history. In the course of

filling the two newly created board slots — one to be held by a NICA parent and another by an advocate for children with disabiliti­es, which DeBeaugrin­e now fills — plus the three vacancies, Patronis can effectivel­y transform the program’s oversight.

For some parents, a change in NICA’s management and culture is key to any meaningful reform, and that begins with the tone at the top.

“A change in leadership and governance is the only option,” said Michelle Perez, the Orlando-area mother of a 1-year-old boy in the NICA program.

“I hope that [Patronis] appoints board members who are qualified and impartial to both sides,” she added. Families served by the program “need a director to advocate for them too.”

NICA did not respond to a request for comment.

PATRONIS’ CHALLENGIN­G TASK

As he seeks reelection to a second term, Patronis faces perhaps the most daunting task of his political career.

The son of a prominent Panama City family, Patronis managed his family’s seafood restaurant when term limits left then-House Speaker Allan Bense’s seat vacant in 2006. Patronis ran for the seat and won it, and he was reelected three times before he was term limited. His early endorsemen­t of a little-known hospital executive, his longtime friend Rick Scott, for governor was rewarded in 2015 with an appointmen­t to the Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities.

Scott propelled his career again in June 2017 by appointing Patronis — who has called Scott his mentor — to complete the term of Jeff Atwater, who resigned as CFO to take a similar job for Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. Patronis beat his Democratic opponent, Broward businessma­n Jeremy Ring, in the 2018 election.

As the state’s top financial

watchdog, Patronis’ office oversees NICA, but he had not previously made it a priority. In January 2019, shortly after Patronis’ election, the mother of a young woman with severe physical disabiliti­es whose medical care is reimbursed by NICA asked Patronis in an email to “take notice, and, hopefully, take action” to reform the program.

Patricia Parrish of Titusville, whose daughter Delaina is now 23, told Patronis that NICA administra­tors showed favoritism toward some families, failed to apprise parents of benefits to which they were entitled, had failed for years to update written guidelines — when there were any — and lacked transparen­cy.

“Our only option for ANY grievance, no matter how big or small, is [to appeal to an administra­tive judge], which is a burdensome and excessive demand on a parent whose job is the caregiving for one who is severely disabled,” Parrish wrote.

She added, “I don’t believe the original intent of NICA was to alienate and burden families who best know the needs of their children.”

Parrish, whose husband, Jesse J. Parrish III, has applied to be on the board, told the Herald that Patronis never responded.

The day the series was published, Patronis vowed in a prepared statement to “do some good on behalf of these families.” He initiated an audit of NICA’s finances, spending and investment­s, and announced a separate investigat­ion by his office’s consumer advocate, Tasha Carter.

“NICA has got to do better,” Patronis wrote in the statement. “I cannot imagine or understand how difficult it is for families of children with neurologic­al injuries, but we’ve got to figure out a way to make things easier for them.”

He added, “This program needs to treat these children with kindness instead of treating them as

though they’re a liability for shareholde­rs.”

On June 3 and 4, three of five NICA board members submitted resignatio­n letters: Robert E. White Jr., who is the chief operating officer of The Doctors Company malpractic­e insurer; Dr. Steven Dukes, an obstetrici­an who is covered by NICA; and Bryan Anderson, vice president for government relations at hospital giant HCA Healthcare.

All had served more than six years consecutiv­ely. None of the three responded to an email from the Herald.

LYDECKER’S TENURE

That left Dr. Samuel Wolf, an obstetrici­an who is covered by NICA and has served on the board since 2020, and Charles Lydecker, Foundation Risk Partners’ CEO, who has been on the board since September 2008. Lydecker has not only served more than six consecutiv­e years, but his tenure would appear to be in jeopardy for another reason: The new law explicitly bars any representa­tive of “a casualty insurer” from serving on the board’s “citizen” seat, which Lydecker now holds.

Lydecker did not respond to phone calls and an email.

A longtime insurance executive, Lydecker has been active in Florida civic organizati­ons since he moved to the Daytona Beach area in the 1990s. He was appointed to NICA’s board of directors in September 2008.

Lydecker, 57, is CEO of an insurance brokerage that he founded in 2017 after a bitter falling out with his former employer, Brown & Brown, a Daytona Beach-based national insurance agency.

He is an example of how money and politics and public service become intertwine­d. A frequent donor to political candidates and causes, he has given more than

$100,000 to Republican­s and Democrats since 1997.

On April 30, one day after lawmakers passed the NICA reform bill, Lydecker contribute­d $1,000 to Patronis’ reelection campaign; four executives of his Foundation Risk Partners insurance agency added an additional $4,000 that day.

Previously, on April 5, Lydecker gave $25,000 to a political action committee, Treasure Florida, that is affiliated with Patronis. During the 2018 election cycle, Foundation Risk Partners gave $30,000 to Patronis.

Since February 2018, Lydecker has given $38,000 to campaigns to elect DeSantis, who appointed Lydecker to the State University System’s Board of Governors in

June 2019.

Lydecker lives in Ormond Beach in Central Florida and served on the fundraisin­g team for DeSantis’ campaign for governor in 2018.

He also is vice chairman of the Halifax Health System Foundation, a fundraisin­g arm of Halifax Health, the taxpayerfu­nded hospital network in Daytona Beach. Halifax Health has been the subject of more than a dozen petitions for NICA coverage, suggesting the hospital has an interest in ensuring patients are compensate­d by the program.

Patronis’ spokesman, Frank Collins, declined Friday to discuss whether Lydecker wishes to remain on the board, or whether Patronis will seek his removal. When asked whether the campaign contributi­ons from Lydecker and his firm might influence those decisions, Collins said: “Absolutely not.”

“The appointmen­ts process is ongoing,” Collins said.

As NICA’s chairman and longest-serving board member, Lydecker is one of the last leaders standing.

Some parents would like to change that.

Michelle Perez, the Orlando-area NICA mother pushing for a clean slate at the top, has been lobbying Patronis to suspend Lydecker and other board members while the CFO’s investigat­ion into the program proceeds.

In emails to both Patronis and two local lawmakers shortly after the Herald series began, she wrote, “I am very concerned that Ms. Kenney Shipley and the board members are still there, and not on administra­tive leave while the investigat­ion is taking place.”

In a recent interview with the Herald, Perez questioned how Patronis can reform NICA while accepting campaign cash from a board chairman who served for nearly 13 years. “How are you going to fix NICA like that?” she asked. “How can you fix NICA while you’re taking their money?”

BABY JACE PEREZ

Jace Perez was born on July 26, 2019.

Michelle Perez said a hematoma at birth compressed her son’s spinal cord, resulting in permanent neurologic­al damage. Jace cannot walk or talk, and he is cognitivel­y impaired, though she does not believe severely. Perez said doctors exacerbate­d her son’s condition by dischargin­g the newborn too quickly and by not explaining the risks he faced.

When she accepted NICA’s offer to include Jace in the program, Perez said she was forced to forfeit any chance of knowing exactly what went wrong — and any opportunit­y to hold someone to account.

“They told us that whatever was medically necessary he would get,” Perez said. “But we’ve been trying to get a wheelchair for about a year.”

Because Jace is so young, Perez said, both Medicaid and the boy’s private insurer rejected her request for a wheelchair, though both Jace’s pediatrici­an and physical therapist said he needed one. Jace is so floppy physically that he slumps in his stroller, and his doctor fears this will lead to scoliosis, a serious risk for youngsters in his condition.

“They were pointing fingers at each other,” she said. “We were getting the runaround.”

After reading stories in the Herald, Perez said, she contacted the consumer advocate in Patronis’ office, who called NICA on her behalf. She said NICA then agreed to pay for the wheelchair, which should be ready in about a month.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE AP ?? Jimmy Patronis, who as chief financial officer oversees the Neurologic­al Injury Compensati­on Associatio­n (NICA), announced an audit of the program after a series of investigat­ive articles by the Miami Herald and the journalism nonprofit ProPublica.
WILFREDO LEE AP Jimmy Patronis, who as chief financial officer oversees the Neurologic­al Injury Compensati­on Associatio­n (NICA), announced an audit of the program after a series of investigat­ive articles by the Miami Herald and the journalism nonprofit ProPublica.
 ?? Courtesy of the Perez family ?? Jace Perez, whose mother is fighting for changes at the top of Florida’s NICA program.
Courtesy of the Perez family Jace Perez, whose mother is fighting for changes at the top of Florida’s NICA program.
 ??  ?? DeBeaugrin­e
DeBeaugrin­e
 ??  ?? Lydecker
Lydecker

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