New York Daily News

FDNY gets cash back

Sec’y releases $3.3M, sez city can pay debt

- BY MICHAEL MCAULIFF

WASHINGTON — Ka-ching. The FDNY’s World Trade Center Treatment Program just got its pilfered millions back from the federal government — $3,363,931.72, to be exact.

That news comes from a letter sent to Rep. Pete King (R-L.I.) from Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin Wednesday night, finally ending a saga that began years ago with the feds mysterious­ly docking payments meant to fund health care for firefighte­rs and EMTs who got sick from serving at Ground Zero.

Mnuchin wrote he was “very pleased to inform” King that the money was wired to the program’s bank account in two payments that very day.

The money started vanishing in 2016, with no explanatio­n to the Fire Department. Treasury officials said the city was notified generally, but when the FDNY’s chief medical officer, Dr. David Prezant, started asking about the missing money, no one could provide an answer.

He finally got a partial one after King started making calls early this year. It turned out the Treasury Department had been taking the money to offset unrelated city Medicare debts at the request of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Those debts remain unexplaine­d.

At first, Treasury officials balked at fixing the problem, saying it was up to Medicare and Medicaid Services, although the Daily News and lawmakers pointed out a loophole in federal law that lets the Treasury Secretary exempt worthy programs from the debt collector. All Mnuchin needed was to get a go-ahead from CMS.

That finally happened last week, and officials said Friday they would restore the money.

But just earlier this month, Mnuchin had sent a letter to Mayor de Blasio saying the city should pay the money back, and that if it didn’t the Treasury Department would redirect future federal payments from other city health programs to make it up.

The solution Mnuchin revealed lies somewhere in the middle. The Fire Department is getting the money upfront, but the city will still be on the hook for the debts.

“Those debts will now be reinstated and collected in the ordinary course by offsetting future federal payments to the NYC government,” Mnuchin wrote. “The debts of the NYC government should not be borne by New York’s Bravest.”

King was pleased with the result, although he was not sure why it took so long, or why the 17,000 current and retired Fire Department employees had to worry for a month and a half that their health program wouldn’t be fully funded.

“To me, this was some middle-level decision made somewhere, and it’s just hard to move the bureaucrac­y,” King said. “It was like you were one bureaucrat, they were another, and they’re fighting over some obscure issue instead of human beings.”

“People were definitely worried about this, and they have enough on their minds,” King added.

The return of the money means Prezant can move to hire staff for 21 vacant positions he was not able to fill while the cash was missing.

“With the return of these hard-fought-for dollars to our WTC Health Program at FDNY, the City now has the funding to fill the positions we need to continue providing WTC-related healthcare to our firefighte­rs, EMTs and paramedics who risked their life on 9/11,” Prezant said.

 ??  ?? Ground Zero Bravest will see FDNY health program fully funded once again, after Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin (below) shifted an unrelated debt to city.
Ground Zero Bravest will see FDNY health program fully funded once again, after Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin (below) shifted an unrelated debt to city.
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