Republican senator urges bills preventing future health outbreaks get a
proper hearing
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[March 11, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The state failed to protect
36 veterans who died at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home during a COVID-19
outbreak that began in 2020, said a legislator who has introduced bills
she said would ensure the agency has quicker and better responses in the
future.
Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, reintroduced legislation to improve and hasten
the state’s response to the outbreak, but on Thursday called for more
help from lawmakers to advance the bills which remain in the Assignments
Committee.
“The residents of the Veterans’ Home served and protected our nation
when we needed it,” Rezin said during a news conference Thursday at the
Capitol. “But when they needed us to serve and protect them, our state
and our governor failed.”
The Illinois Department of Human Services Office of the Inspector
General’s report found multiple failures that contributed to the
outbreak and deaths.
The LaSalle home notified the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs
on Nov. 1, 2020, of two veterans and two employees at the facility
testing positive for COVID-19. Within a week, 60 veterans and 43 staff
members contracted the coronavirus.
The IDHS OIG investigation determined that a lack of comprehensive,
documented COVID-19 plans and policies which included the absence of any
standard operating procedures in the event of an outbreak played a
significant factor in the LaSalle facility’s inability to contain the
virus.
Two weeks after the onset of the outbreak, the Illinois Department of
Public Health and the United States Department of Veterans Affairs
visited the site to observe infection control practices.
Rezin also called it a “failure” of his administration that Gov. JB
Pritzker wasn’t fully briefed on the outbreak until nine days after it
began.
So Rezin is sponsoring Senate Bill 3170, which would require that a
veterans’ home administrator provide written notification to IDPH and
IDVA within 24 hours of learning of a second case of an infectious
disease.
Another bill, SB1471, would require facilities licensed and operated by
the state to conduct outbreak-related preparedness drills.
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Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, talks Thursday at the State
Capitol in Springfield about bills she has reintroduced in response
to a COVID-19 outbreak in 2020 at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Grace Kinnicutt)
The Human Services’ department’s report found that the LaSalle home had
not created a COVID-19 task force or committee for leadership and
supervisors to establish responsibilities for managing and monitoring
the virus. That, the report said, resulted in confusion among staff and
led to tasks being left undone.
“The unstructured approach caused complications and cross-contamination
of positive and negative veterans,” the report said.
The report recommended staff be retrained on personal protective
equipment requirements, replacing the nonalcohol-based hand sanitizers
with alcohol-based ones, and improving the temperature check process for
employees’ arrival at work.
The report also documented the leadership failures at the Illinois
Department of Veterans’ Affairs, former LaSalle Home Administrator
Angela Melbrech, former IDVA Director Linda Chapa LaVia and her chief of
staff, Tony Kolbeck.
It further states that the lack of preparedness caused confusion among
staff members and that several employees indicated one of the COVID-19
units was unprepared to deal with the influx of COVID-19 positive
residents. It’s stated that the “unstructured approach caused
complications and cross-contamination of positive and negative
veterans.”
A third bill, SB1445, would provide the inspector general subpoena
powers that ensure cooperation with state investigations after LaVia
refused to cooperate with the investigation.
Rezin’s bills have been stuck in the Senate’s Assignments Committee for
the past year waiting to be assigned to a substantive committee. Rezin
said she has written letters to get the bills called out of Assignments,
but has been “shocked and frustrated” that she has not gotten these
bills called from her Democratic colleagues.
“We must put these policies and procedures into state law ensuring
proper and effective responses undertaking no matter who is in charge,”
Rezin said. “It’s time we honor the obligation we have to our veterans
and their families by solidifying these into law.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation. |