Clouding the issue again

February 5, 2015

Our county hospital administrator took the position the other day that the hospital did not have time to bid on the contract to provide medical services to our county jail.

Getting control of the children’s hospital is more important according to him.

The children’s hospital mess is one that our county officials created.

Now we will have to continue sending more money out of town because the hospital does not have time to look at serving our prisoners.

I don’t understand why there is even a discussion about this.   Commissioner’s court has authority over the county hospital budget.  They have authority over the jail budget.

Why do we even need bidding here?  Commissioner’s court should simply tell the county hospital that they will do the work, that is unless they are concerned that the quality of care the detainees will receive will lead to lawsuits.

We deserve better

Brutus


Information about our jail healthcare provider

February 3, 2015

This from Helen Marshall:

While UMC dithers, here is the company that currently is getting our $8 million dollars…

Privatized Prison Healthcare Under Fire

By Adam Geller, Associated Press

24 January 15

  

onths after he landed in Florida’s Manatee County Jail, Jovon Frazier’s pleas for treatment of intense pain in his left shoulder were met mostly with Tylenol.

“I need to see a doctor!” he wrote on his eighth request form. “I done put a lot of sick calls in & ya’ll keep sending me back and ain’t tell me nothing.” Four months later, after Frazier’s 13th request resulted in hospitalisation and doctors diagnosed bone cancer, his arm was amputated, according to a lawsuit by his family.

But the cancer spread. Frazier died in 2011 at age 21, months after his release.

As an inmate, his medical care had been managed not by the county sheriff’s office that runs the jail, but by a private company under contract.

That company, Corizon Health Inc, is under growing pressure after losing five state prison contracts, downgrades by analysts and increasing scrutiny of its care of inmates held by some of its largest customers, including New York City. Corizon, responsible for 345,000 inmates in 27 states, is the country’s biggest for-profit correctional health provider, but is just one of many firms vying for billions of public dollars spent on prisoner care.

For-profit prison care raises questions about ceding public responsibilities to private companies. It turns, though, on a thornier issue: How do you ensure care of people that society mostly would prefer not to think about?

Inmates “are still human beings. I think some people forget that, I really do. They’re somebody’s child,” said Shirley Jenkins, Frazier’s grandmother.

States spend $8 billion a year on prison health care, a fifth of their corrections budgets, according to The Pew Charitable Trusts and the MacArthur Foundation. Local jails spend millions more.

Some critics fault the idea of privatising the job.

“The problem is a structure that creates incentives to cut corners and deny care to powerless people that have no other options,” said David Fathi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project.

Others say deficiencies with prison care go beyond whether it is privatised.

“I don’t have a great love for private health care … but I don’t think that they’re the source of the problem,” said Dr Marc Stern, former health services director for Washington state’s prisons. Stern, who once worked for a Corizon predecessor in New York state, issued a 2012 report criticising the company’s care of Idaho prison inmates while serving as a court-appointed expert.

“I think the problem is how much money and effort we are willing to put into correctional health care,” Stern said.

Some critics, though, say Corizon is notably problematic.

“We get letters from prisoners about medical care not being provided and the list is endless. And it’s increased tremendously since Corizon took over,” said Randall Berg, executive director of the Florida Justice Institute, who represents inmates petitioning for care.

Corizon said it strives to provide quality care.

“We are always troubled by any questions on the care provided to our patients and view this as an opportunity to reconfirm our commitment to operational ethics and professionalism,” company spokeswoman Susan Morgenstern said in a written statement. The company declined to answer questions.

Corizon’s struggles are widespread.

Its care of the 11,000 inmates at New York City’s Rikers Island is under “comprehensive review” by officials, who say they are concerned about problems including at least 16 deaths since 2009.

Arizona hired Corizon last year to replace Wexford Health Sources Inc after its care came under fire. But an advocacy group warned that “if anything, things have gotten worse” in state prisons. Arizona and the ACLU recently reached a settlement calling for more monitoring of inmate care.

Meanwhile Corizon has lost longstanding prison contracts in Minnesota, Maine, Maryland, Tennessee and Pennsylvania since 2012. Auditors in three states documented problems including slowness to address inmates’ urgent requests for off-site care and poor record-keeping.

Corizon was created in a 2011 merger. But the company, which generated $1.4 billion in revenue in 2013 and is owned by a Chicago private equity firm, has battled stiffening competition. In recent months, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s have downgraded Corizon’s holding company, citing financial underperformance, contract losses and competition that has squeezed profits.

The connection between Corizon’s contract losses and questions about the quality of care it provides is not clear.

But the challenges are evident in Florida, where a year after the state privatised prison care and awarded Corizon a $1.2 billion contract, news reports point to rising inmate deaths. If the company does not address substandard care, the state’s corrections commissioner wrote to Corizon’s CEO in September, Florida may begin withholding payment.

In Minnesota, an audit last year found that inadequate communication between prison staff and Corizon doctors during overnight hours “may have been a contributing factor to inmate deaths”.

But in announcing Minnesota’s change of contractors, the corrections commissioner said Corizon had provided “excellent” service.

In a written response to questions, the state DOC said its decision was not related to the audit. It would not comment on inmate deaths.

Corizon’s work in local jails also has come under scrutiny.

In October, Volusia County, Florida, officials questioned Corizon executives about lawsuits and its financial stability before voting unanimously to switch contractors.

The hearing was held in the shadow of a lawsuit filed locally by the family of Tracy Veira, an inmate who choked to death in 2009 in a cell where she was supposed to be under watch while detoxing from painkillers.

A nurse working for one of the companies that merged to form Corizon saw an ailing Veira in the jail’s clinic the afternoon before she died. She told a supervisor the inmate looked like she needed hospitalisation, but that Veira was instead sent back to her cell, according to an affidavit filed in the case.

When the commissioners questioned Corizon’s executives, there was no mention of Veira. But Commissioner Deb Denys said she was mindful of the case, scheduled for a July trial.

“I think everybody was,” Denys said. “Sometimes you don’t state the obvious.”


UMC too busy to provide medical services

January 31, 2015

If you are used to reading one post a day from this blog, please be aware that today we are posting two.

We thank Helen Marshall for caring about the community and invite others to send posts for publication.

Brutus

—————————————

This from Helen Marshall:

http://www.elpasotimes.com/News/ci_27410944

So Mr. Valenti says that UMC cannot consider bidding for the provision of medical services to county jail inmates,  at $8 million bucks, as UMC is too busy fighting with Children’s Hospital about its debt.

BRILLIANT!!!!  Increase his bonus!!!!


(IF I were an advocate for prisoners, I’d be very leery of allowing UMC to treat them, given the attitude of the ER doctors to authority – took a million dollar lawsuit to get them to understand that running anal and vaginal and other explorations on a woman’s body for hours, just because the CBP told them to, was not medical treatment…and speaking of that, it would reduce the UMC debt a bit if they didn’t have to pay out on such a lawsuit…)

I think maybe it’s time to stop reading the paper.


Job openings for CEO’s and owners

January 27, 2015

The publicly funded workforce commission that serves El Paso recently changed it’s name to Workforce Solutions Borderplex.

This is the agency that is now run by our former city manager.

I guess that I need to eat some crow publicly here.  Some of my friends have held that the whole ball park/city hall issue was tied to the Borderplex group.  I have preferred to think that the former city manager was acting as a monocrat and that while the Borderplex benefitted from the situation  they were not driving the issue.

I guess that I was wrong.

I’ve often thought that the former city manager played fast and loose with the rules.  I decided to look up the state enabling legislation that allowed the commission to be formed.  This part caught my attention:

Sec. 2308.256. BOARD MEMBERSHIP. (a) A board is composed as follows:

(1) representatives of the private sector, who:

(A) constitute a majority of the membership of the board; and

(B) are owners of business concerns, chief executives or chief operating officers of nongovernmental employers, or other private sector executives who have substantial management or policy responsibilities;

Maybe they are qualified, but

If the majority of the board members must be owners or chief executives or chief operating officers of nongovernmental employers, or failing in that at least be other private sector executives who have substantial management or policy responsibilities, then maybe our local board is made up of a bunch of heavy hitters that know how to run an organization.

The commission’s web page lists 23 board members.  Twelve would make a majority.

Looking them each up through google, of the ones that work in the private sector I found:

A public affairs officer at a local hospital

A restaurant owner

A web services manager for a local company

An investment manager

Two practicing  attorneys

A Certified Public Accountant

A property manager

A disbursements manager

A (sales?) director of a local medical supply company

and the former CEO of our electric utility

There were two people I could not identify.

By my reckoning the former CEO and the restaurant owner fit the state requirements.

Stacking the board this way is a common technique.  Hired management that is supposed to be guided by the board ends up running the show.

We deserve better

Brutus


Utility consumption

January 24, 2015

Our central appraisal district is the only local government entity that I have found that obeys this state law:

Sec. 2265.001. RECORDING AND REPORTING OF ELECTRICITY, WATER, AND NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION.

(a) In this section, “governmental entity” means:

(1) a board, commission, or department of the state or a political subdivision of the state, including a municipality, a county, or any kind of district; or

(2) an institution of higher education as defined by Section 61.003, Education Code.

(b) Notwithstanding any other law, a governmental entity responsible for payments for electric, water, or natural gas utility services shall record in an electronic repository the governmental entity’s metered amount of electricity, water, or natural gas consumed for which it is responsible to pay and the aggregate costs for those utility services. The governmental entity shall report the recorded information on a publicly accessible Internet website with an interface designed for ease of navigation if available, or at another publicly accessible location.

We deserve better

Brutus