The Mercury News

As California shakes, Newsom, hospitals seek delay

- By Taryn Luna and Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO >> One hour after a 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck Northern California on Thursday, the California Hospital Associatio­n tweeted that it’s “time to update seismic standards — to focus on all the services people need after a disaster of any kind.”

But the associatio­n’s tweet omitted that its proposal circulatin­g in the state Capitol would actually weaken existing standards, giving hospitals another seven years — until 2037 — to ensure that their buildings remain operable after the Big One and limiting the required upgrades to buildings that support emergency services.

Nor did the tweet mention that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office, in private negotiatio­ns at the state Capitol, has supported the associatio­n’s request for more time to do less work, according to multiple sources involved in the discussion­s in Sacramento who were not authorized to speak about them. Newsom’s office declined to comment.

Debates about hospital building standards aren’t new in California. This time around, they have resulted in an impasse between some of the most powerful forces in state politics: labor unions and hospitals.

The effort to delay legally required seismic upgrades at California hospitals is one of a few remaining issues before Newsom and the Legislatur­e can reach a long-deferred final agreement on the state budget for the fiscal year that began July 1.

Hospitals represente­d by the associatio­n argue that existing seismic standards are too costly, are in some ways unnecessar­y and that their industry needs more time to recover from massive financial losses during the pandemic.

In a letter to legislativ­e leaders late last month, the associatio­n claimed that even with federal aid, California hospitals lost $8 billion in 2020 caring for COVID-19 patients and expect to lose another $2.2 billion this year.

Existing law requires that by 2030, every hospital building is capable of operating following an earthquake.

Without action on their proposal, the associatio­n says, the current standard would “further

drain billions of dollars from hospitals and — if not modified — is likely to result in hospital closures across the state.”

The associatio­n said its proposal could drasticall­y reduce the estimated $100 billion it would cost to complete the seismic upgrades in California.

“This is an important measure for hospitals,” said David Simon, a spokesman for the California Hospital Associatio­n. “We have learned a lot from the pandemic, and flexibilit­y is important, and focusing finite resources on emergencie­s is important.”

Simon said Newsom is siding not with the hospital associatio­n but with sound policy.

“I think the governor is leaning on the lessons of the pandemic to craft good policy moving forward,” Simon said. “This isn’t a safety question. It’s about what services are needed and important during a disaster. What the governor is doing is recognizin­g sharp modern policy is needed, versus having every building operationa­l after a disaster.”

Democratic legislativ­e leaders have made it clear that any deal to change seismic standards would need the support of labor unions. A large labor contingent that includes the California Labor Federation, California Nurses Associatio­n, SEIU California, the State Building and Constructi­on Trades Council and others remains opposed to the hospitals’ proposal.

Steve Smith, a spokesman for the California Labor Federation, said delaying implementa­tion of the law only increases the likelihood that a major earthquake will occur before upgrades are completed.

“We know a big earthquake is coming,” Smith said. “We know it’s probable it will happen sooner than later. It’s unconscion­able that hospitals aren’t trying to meet a deadline set decades ago.”

Smith said labor groups opposed to the changes are “engaging the Legislatur­e and governor’s office on why this is a horrible idea.” He said any time a governor weighs in, it brings new urgency to a proposal.

“Obviously, we have concerns about the proposal,” Smith said. “The California Hospital Associatio­n has been pushing this a long while, and we are making an especially hard push right now.”

Sources involved in the negotiatio­ns said the hospital associatio­n and the governor’s office have attempted to pair the delay in seismic upgrades with a push by labor to create the Office of Health Care Affordabil­ity, which was included in Newsom’s original budget proposal and would set targets for healthcare costs.

Union advocates say rising health care costs continue to be a problem for workers. The Office of Health Care Affordabil­ity would be housed within the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Developmen­t and staffed by state union workers.

But union groups have refused to support the hospital associatio­n’s call to change building standards, even if it means the Office of Health Care Affordabil­ity is put on hold.

On Thursday, the California Building Trades Council reiterated its opposition to “delaying necessary seismic retrofits.”

“This is not the time for another disaster,” the group wrote over a picture on Twitter showing the collapse of the Olive View Medical Center in the 1971 Sylmar earthquake, which prompted a state law on seismic standards for new

hospital buildings.

The hospital associatio­n spokesman called the tweet “frustratin­g” and said it was unfair.

More than 95% of hospital buildings in the state have met seismic standards under a 1994 law aimed at ensuring that none of them collapse during a major earthquake. That law was passed after the Northridge earthquake that year, which caused serious damage to hospitals. The remaining hospitals that have not met that standard will be updated by 2025, the associatio­n said.

A separate standard under the same law — requiring that by 2030, hospital buildings are capable of providing services and remaining

operationa­l following an earthquake — is what the associatio­n is seeking to delay and scale back. The associatio­n said nearly two-thirds of California hospitals have not met the goal.

“We’re focused on what services need to be operationa­l in a disaster,” Simon said. “Does it truly need to be everything? Should plastic surgery suites be required to be operationa­l?”

Under the hospital associatio­n’s proposal, only emergency department­s and related services needed during a disaster would be required to undergo the added seismic standards, with an additional seven years to comply.

Previous efforts to change the law’s requiremen­ts, including a bill last year, have failed in the Legislatur­e.

“What’s different this time, and what’s unfortunat­e, is the hospital associatio­n is taking a failed legislativ­e attempt and using the budget process for their end goal,” said Stephanie Roberson, a lobbyist with the California Nurses Assn. “The process is being abused here. The Legislatur­e has spoken. There should be a hard stop.”

With the recall election of Newsom on the horizon, the governor’s support of the associatio­n’s request to delay the work could backfire for him in the short term, said Larry Gerston, professor emeritus of political science at San Jose State University.

Gerston, who is writing a book about the recall, said its proponents have been combing Newsom’s background and his everyday activities to use anything that may support the case they’re making to the public that the governor can’t be trusted.

“Once this becomes public, I think these guys are going to jump on it, not as the issue, but another example,” Gerston said. “They keep poking, and Newsom helps them poke. There’s just been a slew of unforced errors, and they seize on every one of them.”

 ?? VINCE BUCCI — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Patients evacuate a hospital in Santa Monica, California, days after the Jan 17, 1994, Northridge earthquake. A law passed that year requires hospitals by 2030 to be capable of remaining operationa­l after a quake.
VINCE BUCCI — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Patients evacuate a hospital in Santa Monica, California, days after the Jan 17, 1994, Northridge earthquake. A law passed that year requires hospitals by 2030 to be capable of remaining operationa­l after a quake.
 ?? ARIANA DREHSLER — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Health staffers tend to a COVID-19 patient at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley, California. Hospitals say pandemic costs make it difficult to meet seismic upgrades.
ARIANA DREHSLER — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Health staffers tend to a COVID-19 patient at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Apple Valley, California. Hospitals say pandemic costs make it difficult to meet seismic upgrades.

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