Families sue after deadly COVID-19 outbreak at LaSalle Veterans Home
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[March 16, 2022]
By Kevin Bessler | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Dozens of lawsuits
have been filed after a deadly COVID-19 outbreak at the state-run
LaSalle Veterans Home.
The family members of 27 veterans who contracted COVID-19 are part of
lawsuits filed against the state of Illinois, the Department of Veterans
Affairs, LaSalle Veterans Home and several staff members at the
facility. Twenty-six of the 27 veterans listed in the lawsuit died.
Several family members spoke to the media in Chicago on Tuesday. Lindsey
Lamb, of Lockport, spoke about her grandfather, 89-year-old Richard
Cieski, a Korean War vet who died when the virus swept through the
facility in November 2020.
“He was a loving, gentle, caring family man who didn’t deserve to die
the way that he did,” Lamb said.
A total of 36 veterans died, representing about a quarter of the nursing
home’s total population at the time.
A state inspector general’s report last year found those deaths could
have been prevented. It detailed mismanagement from the top of the
Illinois Veterans’ Affairs Department to staff at the LaSalle Nursing
Home. The report called the response to the outbreak “inefficient,
reactive and chaotic.”
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“They had no plan; they had no training,” said attorney Steve Levy, who
represents the plaintiffs. “In many cases, they weren’t wearing masks.
They had no hand sanitizer. They didn’t even have morphine ordered by a
doctor to mitigate the painful death many of our clients suffered.”
The attorneys reportedly tried to settle the cases with the state, but
an appropriate level of compensation could not be agreed upon.
The outbreak and pending lawsuits could have political repercussions.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker made caring for veterans a key issue during his
campaign in 2018.
Republican State Sen. Sue Rezin of Morris has proposed legislation to
avoid a similar event in the future, including requiring an immediate
on-site review by state health officials when an outbreak occurs at a
veterans home. The Illinois Department of Public Health didn’t show up
at the LaSalle home until 10 days after the outbreak.
The lawsuits filed in LaSalle County allege negligence and wrongful
death and could cost state taxpayers millions of dollars.
Kevin Bessler reports on statewide issues in Illinois for
the Center Square. He has over 30 years of experience in radio news
reporting throughout the Midwest.
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