The Oakland Press

Time to investigat­e COVID-19 nursing home policies here in Michigan, too

- State Sen. Jim Runestad, R-White Lake, represents Michigan’s 15th District.

Anyone following the national news knows that in New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administra­tion recently admitted to withholdin­g data about COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

After an investigat­ion by New York’s attorney general, it was discovered that the administra­tion had undercount­ed the number of deaths in nursing home facilities by more than 50%. Even the FBI and federal prosecutor­s have opened their own investigat­ion into Gov. Cuomo’s coronaviru­s task force and the governor’s handling of nursing homes.

Gov. Cuomo was one of a handful of governors nationwide who ignored early advice from medical experts and needlessly exposed nursing home residents to COVID-19.

What other governors made the same, tragic decision? Gretchen Whitmer, for one.

At a time when we knew Michigan seniors were the most vulnerable to this heinous virus, Gov. Whitmer’s orders put COVID-19-positive patients into the same homes as those most at risk. The administra­tion’s regional hub policy very well may have increased the death toll among our most vulnerable population.

As in New York, Gov. Whitmer’s administra­tion has been questioned repeatedly about discrepanc­ies in the reported numbers of deaths in long-term care facilities. And yet, there remains no clear reporting path to document nursing home patient cases and exposures by facility.

Michigande­rs know there are many, many similariti­es between the two governors’ handling of the virus: their unilateral overreach (both struck down by the courts), their allusion to vague metrics and data, their questionab­le vaccine distributi­on plans, and their outright defiance to losing their emergency powers. The alarming similariti­es with New York raise serious questions about what really happened in Michigan.

An investigat­ion into the nursing home situation shouldn’t be a partisan issue. It wasn’t partisan in New York, with a Democratic attorney general leading the way. Democrats in the State Assembly have also fought for justice, with some legislator­s even calling for the governor’s resignatio­n.

But here in Michigan, Attorney General Dana Nessel has refused to investigat­e the matter.

Last year, I called on the attorney general to investigat­e how the Whitmer administra­tion used taxpayer dollars to hire a political consultant to contact-trace Michigande­rs. To her credit, Ms. Nessel did launch an investigat­ion. Unfortunat­ely, members of the administra­tion refused to cooperate, and ultimately the investigat­ion went nowhere.

This time around, we’re not just talking about potential fraud. We’re talking about decisions that had life-and-death consequenc­es for our most vulnerable residents. I hope our state’s justice department will show the same zeal in investigat­ing our current governor as they have shown in investigat­ing our former.

Justice shouldn’t be partisan. And accountabi­lity should apply to both parties. Hopefully, Ms. Nessel will come to the same conclusion and do her part.

Why does this all matter? It matters as long as justice and accountabi­lity still matter in this world. It matters as long as the public cares about achieving true justice for the lives lost in this pandemic. In New York, it mattered to the families of the 6,500 individual­s who recently learned the truth about how their loved ones died. It should matter to every Michigande­r who has lost a loved one in a nursing home — a supposedly safe place — and has been grieving ever since.

I’ve made it my mission as a state senator to make a difference for families and the most vulnerable, and to fight for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in our government.

It would be nice to see our attorney general, the Michigan Department of Justice and members of both parties do the same thing for the families of the grieving.

It is long past time we do the right thing.

It is long past time that Michigan’s COVID-19 nursing home policies are investigat­ed once and for all.

 ??  ?? Jim Runestad
Jim Runestad

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