The News-Times

Nursing home union, Lamont at odds over eliminatin­g unused beds

State’s largest hub for healthcare workers worries new policy puts facilities at risk of closing

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

A new policy designed to eliminate unused beds in nursing homes has put Gov. Ned Lamont at odds with a key part of his base, Connecticu­t’s largest health care workers’ union.

SEIU Healthcare 1199NE announced Monday a new online ad campaign to press the Democratic governor to reverse the policy, which it says has put nine nursing homes — with large vacancy rates — at risk of closing.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for Lamont said the administra­tion is enforcing a policy crafted in cooperatio­n with lawmakers to preserve nursing home quality while controllin­g costs in a key segment of the state budget.

“Do some brainstorm­ing, do some heavy thinking, think with your heart,” Hashia Vazquez of Hamden, a retiree whose 89year-old aunt is a patient at the Arden House home in Hamden, urged Lamont in one ad. “They deserve to have quality of life, dignity and respect.”

The new ads, which air on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, some in English and some in Spanish, feature patients, family members and nursing home workers.

All of these groups have “expressed deep concern,” over a policy that could drive nine homes to closure, potentiall­y displacing an estimated

1,000 residents and 2,000 workers, said 1199 President Rob Baril.

Just four months ago, Lamont came out strong for the union, pushing for and securing additional funding to improve wages and benefits for all nursing home workers.

Union spokesman Pedro Zayas said

1199 appreciate­s that support very much. But he quickly added, “We went to bat for the governor in the last election, including in some of the areas where nursing homes could be closed.”

And while the union, which has about 19,000 members in Connecticu­t, remains hopeful it can craft a solution with Lamont and legislator­s, Baril said, the current policy “is putting numbers before people” and “balancing spreadshee­ts before balancing lives.”

“The governor and SEIU have had a very good relationsh­ip,” the governor’s communicat­ions director, Max Reiss, said Monday. “At times there might be some policy disagreeme­nt, but I think that’s why we all want to come together and seek solutions.”

At issue is a budget provision authorizin­g the Department of Social Services to reduce rates to nursing homes with bed vacancy rates exceeding 30 percent. The nursing homes that stand to lose an estimated

$5.3 million in total over this year and next, based on the vacancy standard, are located in Bristol, Fairfield, Hamden, Shelton, Simsbury, South Windsor, Torrington, Wallingfor­d, Waterbury and Wolcott.

Administra­tion officials have said this was just one of many tough choices the new governor and the legislatur­e’s Democratic majority made to avert a multi-billion-dollar projected deficit in the new state budget — without increasing income tax rates.

But leaders of the legislatur­e’s Appropriat­ions Committee say they and other lawmakers had a different understand­ing of the new rate-cutting policy.

Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, cochair of Appropriat­ions, said her understand­ing was that rate reductions would not be imposed early in the fiscal year — and not before DSS analyzed the impacts of potential facility closures.

Legislator­s and union officials say some homes have allowed some beds to remain vacant so they could focus resources on providing vital specialize­d services such as dialysis, hospice, and various chronic care programs.

“What will the real human cost be to residents, their families and the workers who care for them every day?” Baril asked during the press conference, adding he fears key programs could be lost as financiall­y stressed homes close.

Lamont did offer a brief reprieve last week. The administra­tion announced it had temporaril­y suspended plans to reduce one-and-a-half months’ worth of funding on Sept. 20 to the nine homes with high numbers of vacant beds.

Reiss noted Monday that these facilities also have appealed the rate cuts recommende­d by DSS and can request special “hardship” rate hikes — though there is no guarantee they will be granted.

“If there are other recommenda­tions on how to balance the budget, the governor would like to hear them,” Reiss said.

It is not an easy task. The current fiscal year’s budget is within $200,000 of the statutory spending cap.

About a dozen legislator­s attended Monday’s union press conference. And when asked whether they would support legally exceeding the cap, or whether they would cut other programs to free up resources for nursing homes, only Sen. Saud Anwar, D-South Windsor, responded to those options.

Anwar said he would prefer to find cost savings elsewhere in the budget, but if he could not, then he would be willing to exceed the cap. “I’m willing to exceed it because I want to save those lives” in nursing homes, he said.

Rep. John Hampton, D-Simsbury, and Sen. George Logan, R-Ansonia said they would not exceed the cap but believed other budget cuts could be found.

But Logan suggested none and Hampton offered repeal of the new state Family and Medical Leave program — which was backed overwhelmi­ngly by his fellow Democrats and has little chance of being repealed.

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