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            |  To the editor: We can learn 
			from our mistakes. According to the March 2021 AAUP Bulletin, a 
			decision by the Trump Administration's Centers for Medicare and 
			Medicaid Services (CMS) resulted in thousands of unnecessary deaths 
			in the United States. Responding to President Trump's call for 
			deregulation, two years ago the CMS decided to use onetime fines 
			rather than the fines that formerly accrued for each day of past 
			violations in nursing home facilities. That action removed a key 
			incentive for nursing homes to correct problems with their 
			sanitation programs. As a result, nursing homes were less safe when 
			the COVID-19 pandemic hit them in 2020. 
			
			 Before the 2017 rule change, nursing homes were fined up to $22,320 
			for every day that they didn't comply with federal rules. The 2017 
			change allowed nursing homes to overlook threats to their residents.
			 
            [to top of second column in this letter] | 
            
			 
              
            After July 2017, nursing homes had little impetus to 
			identify and quickly correct faults in their sanitation protocols. 
			As a result, more than 153,000 residents and staff of American 
			long-term care facilities unnecessarily fell victim to the 
			coronavirus.
 To the best of my knowledge, no one from the Trump Administration 
			has every expressed regret for dropping the ball that killed 153,000 
			so many of our fellow Americans. Just as the recent "big freeze" in 
			Texas revealed the dangers of ditching regulations simply to save a 
			buck, the failure of the Trump administration to regulate nursing 
			homes properly demonstrates that reasonable regulations are 
			essential. Fortunately we now have new leadership in Washington.
 
 Gary Davis
 [Posted 
            
			March 20, 
			2021]
             
            
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