Former LaSalle home administrators misled Pritzker administration,
officials claim
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[May 15, 2021]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — Top officials from Gov. JB
Pritzker’s administration claimed Thursday that they were misled by
leadership at the state Department of Veterans’ Affairs regarding a
deadly COVID-19 outbreak at the state-run LaSalle Veterans’ Home.
Deputy Gov. Sol Flores and Illinois Department of Public Health Director
Ngozi Ezike said, as a result of this misinformation, they were unaware
of the breakdown in basic infection control protocols at LaSalle that
led to a November COVID-19 outbreak that killed 36 veterans.
During the nearly four-hour House Veterans’ Affairs Committee hearing
Thursday, Flores blamed senior officials at IDVA and the home for the
staff’s failure to follow state and federal health guidelines.
“IDVA was supposed to be following all protocols laid out in the IDPH
and (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) guidelines
specific to long-term care facilities,” Flores, who oversees human
services agencies for the governor’s office, told the committee. “We
were told that that was happening by the home administrator (Angela
Mehlbrech), and the staff that was on the ground.”
Mehlbrech was fired in December, and former IDVA Director Linda Chapa
LaVia, as well as her chief of staff, Tony Kolbeck, have since resigned.
When asked what has changed at the home to ensure the administration is
not receiving misinformation, Flores cited new leadership at the home.
She said the administration is also asking for more detailed reports
from staff at the home.
“Now that visitation is allowed, I intend to go with (IDVA Acting)
Director (Terry) Prince and visit more of the homes,” Flores said,
noting she has not yet visited the LaSalle home in person.
Ezike said medical and infection control professionals at IDPH were in
frequent contact with the Kolbeck and others at the home throughout the
outbreak to educate and recommend strategies.
“Through these calls and through the information we were hearing at the
time, we believed that the home was following all the recommended
protocols and the appropriate steps were being taken to address the
cases,” Ezike said.
The hearing comes two weeks after the release of an investigative report
into the response by officials from the home and IDVA.
The investigation revealed a response to the outbreak at the LaSalle
home that was “inefficient, reactive, and, at times, chaotic,” according
to the 50-page report from the Illinois Department of Human Services’
Office of the Inspector General.
The report found the home and agency lacked any outbreak plans and had
insufficient COVID-19 policies. In addition, the report found the home
and agency failed to communicate, train, and educate staff members
concerning COVID-19 policies, and it found repeated non-compliance with
personal protective equipment protocols among staff.
It described former IDVA Director Linda Chapa LaVia as having
“abdicated” her authority to Kolbeck. It also found that no one at IDVA
visited the LaSalle facility, either in person or virtually, from March
2020 until December 2020.
The scope of the investigation was limited to examining policies and
protocols in the home, as well as assessing IDVA’s response to the
outbreak and compliance with state and federal regulations.
The investigators only requested documents from IDVA, but not from the
governor’s office or IDPH, according to Peter Neumer, acting inspector
general at the Illinois Department of Human Services.
Neumer testified before the same committee earlier this week, noting his
team did not interview anyone with the governor’s office, although it
did interview three IDPH officials who have medical experience or
backgrounds in infectious disease.
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Deputy Gov. Sol Flores, who oversees human services
agencies for the Pritzker administration, testifies Thursday before
the House Veterans' Affairs Committee regarding the deadly outbreak
at the LaSalle Veterans' Home. (photo credit: Blueroomstream.com)
The inspector general’s report found that IDVA failed
to implement recommendations made in 2019 after an outbreak of
Legionnaires’ disease at the state-run veterans home at Quincy that
killed 13 veterans. Those recommendations called on IDVA to create
uniform infection control policies across all four state-run homes.
Acting IDVA Director Prince, who also testified at
Thursday’s committee hearing, said uniform policies were implemented
at all four state-run veterans homes in late April.
The senior home administrator position at LaSalle, which has
remained vacant since 2019, would have been responsible for carrying
out these recommendations, according to the report. Since the
position had not been filled, the recommendations were not
implemented by the time the pandemic hit.
Prince said this position is still vacant but his department is
currently interviewing candidates.
Pritzker, at an unrelated news conference on Wednesday, also
assigned blame to IDVA leadership when asked about the failure to
carry out recommendations.
“I’m upset and extraordinarily disappointed that leadership at the
Department of Veterans’ Affairs did not make the corrections
suggested in that report that should have been made,” he said.
Request for AG criminal investigation, civil lawsuits
House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, of Western Springs, sent a formal
request on Tuesday to Attorney General Kwame Raoul asking him to
open a criminal investigation into the COVID-19-related deaths at
the LaSalle home.
“Caring for our aged veterans in our state facilities should always
rise to the highest level of care,” Durkin’s wrote in the letter.
“That standard of care for our heroic veterans at the LaSalle
Veterans’ Home was not met as evidenced by the report.”
Such an investigation would not be unprecedented.
In 2018, then-Attorney General Lisa Madigan, a Democrat, launched a
criminal investigation into how the administration of then-Gov.
Bruce Rauner, a Republican, responded to the deadly outbreak of
Legionnaires’ disease at Quincy between 2015 and 2018.
That investigation concluded in 2020, under current Attorney General
Kwame Raoul, also a Democrat, who found there was not a basis to
bring charges.
A spokesperson for Raoul’s office said Durkin’s request is being
reviewed.
The state is also facing more than a dozen lawsuits filed on behalf
of veterans who contracted COVID-19 at LaSalle. The lawsuits accuse
the facility of providing negligent health care that violated state
law.
Lawyers with the Chicago-based Levin & Perconti firm have argued in
the lawsuits that the LaSalle facility did not provide health care
services consistent with guidance issued by the state and federal
health authorities, did not adequately supply or properly use
personal protective equipment, and did not take the necessary steps
to provide medical care to patients with COVID-19 or prevent further
transmission of the virus.
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