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The Download: Politics, Ideas, and Civic Life in Massachusetts
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CommonWealth Beacon Download. Politics, Ideas, & Civic Life in Massachusetts.

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BEHIND THE SCENES DRAMA: Milton, locked in a high-stakes legal battle with Attorney General Andrea Campbell over compliance with the MBTA Communities Act, lost its special counsel when the MBTA complained the Foley Hoag attorney had an ethical conflict because the firm also represents the T. Foley Hoag said there was no conflict but the attorney stepped down anyway. Bruce Mohl has the story.


OPINION: Garrett Dash Nelson of the Boston Public Library’s Leventhal Map Center says the debate over an Everett soccer stadium shows the limitations of policy debates that center around municipal boundary lines on a map.


PRESSLEY TO STEERING AND POLICY: Jennifer Smith reports that the House Democratic caucus appoints US Rep. Ayanna Pressley to a key panel, signaling party confidence in the third-term Boston congresswoman. 

On Steward crisis, Massachusetts Nurses Association head says ‘we invited it in’


March 18, 2024

By JENNIFER SMITH 

Steward Health Care’s financial spiral is giving Julie Pinkham, executive director of the Massachusetts Nurses Association, a bad case of déjà vu. 


“This is Groundhog Day,” she said on an episode of The Codcast hosted by John McDonough, a professor at the T. H. Chan School of Public Health at Harvard University, and Paul Hattis, senior fellow at the Lown Institute. 


As pressure ramps up to find a way to shore up the nine Massachusetts hospitals owned by Steward, which employ about 3,000 nurses represented by the nurses association, Pinkham worries that the state may be in the same position that let Steward get a foothold at the core of the state’s health care system more than a decade ago.


“I have said this before, and I will say this repetitively: 15 years ago, we had this problem,” she said, referring to major hospital systems in turmoil. “None of the nonprofits came forward, and there was no plan in place, health policy-wise, to rectify it. Subsequent to that, we have seen other hospital closures – not the least of which, North Adams Regional Hospital, closed with 72 hours notice.” 


This left the door open to private equity offering solutions, she said. While Steward CEO Ralph de la Torre’s team has dodged efforts by the state to access financial information that could have presaged the current collapse, the crisis is the end result of decades of choices, Pinkham said.


“Look, we invited this in when we deregulated in the 90s and we subsequently didn't create any sort of guardrails,” she said. “We invited it in. So if we don't like what we see, we should probably look in the mirror and take some responsibility for what we have.”

The Codcast

This week on The Codcast, longtime Massachusetts Nurses Association executive director Julie Pinkham talks to John McDonough and Paul Hattis about the MNA's relationship to Steward Health Care over the years, the consequences of healthcare deregulation, and how the state can facilitate a positive outcome in the present situation.

LISTEN NOW

Steward Health Care boasted that it was the largest physician-owned and operated health care system in the US in 2020, 10 years after Cerberus Capital Management purchased the original six hospitals of the Caritas Christi system in Massachusetts, which would go on to become Steward.


Early negotiations with Steward-acquired hospitals in Massachusetts were bumpy, Pinkham said. The nurses were working on an agreement for a Taft-Hartley pension plan at the Catholic nonprofit health care system Caritas Christi when Cerberus entered the picture. The system needed cash, and private equity was offering it. In the short term, the system seemed to stabilize, and a large chunk of the hundreds of millions of investment dollars was steered toward protecting the Caritas workers’ pensions.


But trouble was in the air when de la Torre’s appetite for expansion grew, Pinkham said.


In need of additional money to expand, Steward in 2016 entered into an agreement with Medical Properties Trust, an Alabama-based real estate investment group that focused on purchase and lease-back arrangements with hospitals. MPT bought the company’s hospital buildings and leased them back to Steward.


“What made us nervous is for-profits generally, in our experience, aren't necessarily long-term players,” Pinkham said. “You can wake up and there's a transfer of ownership. But with MPT in the mix of the real estate investment group, the property was no longer owned. There were no assets anymore. The only real assets that Steward had were the people working there. Frankly, the people delivering the care were the assets.”


Pinkham said the nurses group was in conversations with the attorney general’s office and others at the time to express concerns. Supply issues became more common over the past year or so, she said, leading to issues like canceled surgeries because operating rooms lacked equipment. 

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A conversation on MBTA Communities. March 27 in Quincy. Join us.

The situation now is being closely watched, Pinkham noted, with ramped up state oversight of the impacted hospitals and pressure from Gov. Maura Healey’s administration for Steward to transfer its Massachusetts hospitals to new operators. But deregulation has left the industry in a delicate position, she said, without mechanisms for the governor or attorney general to bring interested parties to the table to answer hard questions.


“We're back again where we started, where we sort of justify why we want to get this infusion of cash in a manner that isn't necessarily a manner that we like,” Pinkham said, referencing Cerberus first entering the Massachusetts scene to acquire the floundering Caritas system. 


“I feel like sometimes we are playing checkers and others are playing chess,” she said. “We're focused on the hospital industry and the crisis in front of us. And meanwhile, in order to resolve some of those cash issues, are we going to see an expansion of the physician network as for-profit, as well as a number of other health care sectors moving towards private equity and for-profit? So, are we watching our flanks, or are we just gonna substitute one problem for another quickly enough?”

More from CommonWealth Beacon

OPINION: Patrice Murphy of the Manchester Essex Conservation Trust says the state is pitted against itself (housing vs. environment) at Shingle Place Hill in Manchester by the Sea. 


POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: Gov. Healey’s evolution on marijuana, Middlesex DA Marian Ryan’s snail-pace murder investigation, and the Wu train.


OPINION: Charlie Chieppo and Jamie Gass of the Pioneer Institute say doing away with the MCAS graduation requirement would be a step back in the push for educational equity and excellence

In Other News

BEACON HILL

  • Gov. Maura Healey’s campaign released an ad touting the tax cut package she signed last year as many residents prepare to file their 2023 returns. (Boston Herald)

  • The governor’s office, which previously said it would not announce out-of-state trips Healey was taking in advance, now isn’t saying where she went after the fact, either, refusing to disclose where the governor was for four days last month when she left Massachusetts. (Boston Globe)

  • The Healey administration on Friday launched a program that helps convert office space into new housing. (GBH News)

MUNICIPAL MATTERS  

  • Three pot shops are suing Great Barrington, a town in the Berkshires, for $6 million, and accusing its officials of improperly reaping fees. (MassLive)

  • Melrose’s fire chief, set to retire in April, is on leave as a result of an investigation that city officials aren’t offering any more information on. (NBC10)

ELECTIONS

BUSINESS/ECONOMY

  • Massachusetts’ congressional delegation is touting the new Internal Revenue Service Direct File as a way to save taxpayers time and money. (Cape Cod Times)

EDUCATION

  • School officials are looking to lock up cell phones as they battle for students’ attention in classrooms. Massachusetts is offering $800,000 in grants to districts. (Wall Street Journal)

TRANSPORTATION

  • The MBTA’s Fairmount commuter rail line, which runs through Boston’s Dorchester and Mattapan neighborhoods, could see more frequent service, and electric battery-powered trains, under a proposal laid out in bid documents posted by the T. (StreetsBlogMass)

  • Plans for the Saugus senior prom hit an unexpected glitch as the cost of bus transportation to and from the prom doubled because of the need to purchase molestation insurance. (Daily Item)

ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT

  • Massachusetts lobstermen can keep setting traps for lobsters and crabs in an area outside Boston Harbor, a federal judge ruled. Federal officials had sought to block the lobstermen, saying they endangered right whales. (Universal Hub)

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

  • A retired Boston Police captain who now lives in Hanover was convicted by a federal jury of masterminding an overtime theft scheme at the evidence warehouse. (Patriot Ledger)

  • The number of Worcester homicides was down in 2023 but nonfatal shootings rose, new crime statistics show. The city council will review the stats on Tuesday, two weeks after a double homicide shocked the city. (Worcester Telegram)

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