Patrick Pushing for Reopening of North Adams Hospital

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Gov. Deval Patrick, with Mayor Richard Alcombright, Public Health Secretary John Polanowicz, state Sen. Benjamin Downing and state Rep. Gailanne Cariddi at MCLA on Tuesday morning.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Gov. Deval Patrick is fast-tracking Berkshire Medical Center's application to reopen the emergency room at North Adams Regional Hospital.

Patrick spent Tuesday morning working at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts with Department of Public Health Secretary John Polanowicz, Mayor Richard Alcombright, state Sen. Benjamin Downing, state Rep. Gailanne Cariddi and Berkshire Health System officials to file an application for reopening as an emergency satellite facility.

The application was signed Tuesday and the governor ushered it through the state approval process. BMC is under court order to reopen the emergency department as soon as possible.

"We've been talking through what the short-term and the long-term solutions may be. I have asked, as you may know, Berkshire Medical Center to apply for something called an SEF — a satellite emergency facilities — so we can reopen the emergency department at the hospital," Patrick said from the steps of the MCLA president's office. "They have done that and that application is being signed. We are going to see what we can do to process that as quickly as possible at the state and the federal level."

Patrick says he hopes the emergency room can at least be open in the coming days but that will depend on when the federal government gives its approval. He said his administration has been working with the federal delegation to push the approvals through on that level, too.

"What we are trying to do right now is to get at least the emergency department reopened, to continue the hospice and VNA services and to buy some time so there can be a thoughtful analysis of what should come," Patrick said.

He said Berkshire Health Systems, BMC's parent company, has already hired 75 or so former North Adams Regional Hospital employees. Patrick said he also working with the major players to transfer the licenses for VNA & Hospicecare of Northern Berkshire to return those services but those licenses are mostly handled on the federal level.

A long-term solution is not expected to bring all services back to the hospital. Which services will be sorted out with BMC as the process unfolds. Patrick suggested the emergency department, hospice, OB/GYN and ancillary imaging as possible services returning.



"There will be a medical facility in North Adams — although in a diminished form," Patrick said.

While the state is doing its part for the approvals and helping BHS reach a deal for the hospital, Patrick said the state has no plans to temporarily take over the hospital in any type of receivership. Republican gubernatorial candidate Charlie Baker had called for the state to do so last week.

"North Adams Regional Hospital is a private entity and in Massachusetts, the state doesn't run private entities, even hospitals. I was expressing frustration that before the announcement — I think it was a week ago today — that they would close at the end of the week. This team had been working closely with them on an orderly wind down and transition," he said. "It makes what we are trying to do now a little harder and more complicated because we have to go through these processes."

Patrick said he is frustrated with the sudden closure because the state believed a deal was in place for another entity to take over the hospital. Berkshire Health Systems was reportedly in conversations with Northern Berkshire Healthcare just prior to the closing but a deal fell through only days before the NBH board of trustees voted to close.

Patrick said there was nothing more the state could have done to halt the closing ahead of time.

"It's impossible to think what more could have been done. It would have been great, frankly, to have a more constructive partner in North Adams Regional Hospital," the governor said.

Meanwhile, there are hospitals in the state struggling financially, though not as much as NARH was. Patrick said whatever role the state plays in this hospital will end up setting a precedent for any future situations.

Attorney General Martha Coakley was in the city on Tuesday afternoon to meet with officials. Coakley's office filed a temporary restraining order last week to keep the emergency room open at NARH; an injunction hearing is set for Thursday.

 

 


Tags: governor,   NARH,   NBH,   state officials,   

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Pittsfield School Committee Requests Redacted PHS Report

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee and City Council have requested a redacted report of the Pittsfield High School investigation that concluded last spring. 

On Wednesday, the committee approved member Ciara Batory's request to release the PHS investigative report with proper redactions by Feb. 18.  The previous day, City Council members made the same request, but left the deadline up to the School Committee. 

Five past and present PHS staff members were investigated for alleged misconduct, and allegations were found to be "unsupported," according to executive summaries released by the former committee. 

"The fact that the City Council has urged transparency here speaks volumes. When another elected body looks at a situation and says the public deserves answers, we should listen because trust isn't built by asking people to take our word for it," Batory said. 

"Trust is built by showing our work. Honesty will always shine, and secrecy will always create doubt." 

It was noted that the report will be heavily redacted and might provide less information than the summaries. The School Committee will review the document before it reaches the public. 

"In preparation for the meeting, I have been told by legal counsel that what will be released as a redacted version will have less information than what was in the summary report," Mayor Peter Marchetti, chair of the committee, said. 

"That's what I can share." 

Batory asserted that the district cannot move forward by asking families to trust major changes in the district, such as the middle school restructuring, "while holding information they paid for, information that directly impacts their confidence in the system that serves their children." 

"Let me be clear. I'm not asking us to be reckless," she said. "I’m asking for a redacted release, a legal release so we protect students' privacy while giving the community the truth they deserve." 

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