Press Release: SEIU Healthcare Illinois Testifies to Legislative Hospital Transformation Committee

From left: Holy Cross Patient Care Techs Phyllis Johnson; Meco Clark; and Shirley Jenkins; Venson Curington (organizer); Bonita Williams (St. Bernard); Sandra Summage (Metro South, standing); Anne Igoe, VP of HCII Health Systems; Dec. 5th, 2018.

From left: Holy Cross Patient Care Techs Phyllis Johnson; Meco Clark; and Shirley Jenkins; Venson Curington (organizer); Bonita Williams (St. Bernard); Sandra Summage (Metro South, standing); Anne Igoe, VP of HCII Health Systems; Dec. 5th, 2018.

Hospital Workers Release New Proposed Rules Saying Federal Medicaid Dollars Must Go to Safety Net Hospitals First Over Rich and Corporate Health Systems

 CONTACT: scott.vogel@seiuhcil.org

(December 6th, 2018, Chicago) – Hospital workers from SEIU Healthcare Illinois attended the Hospital Transformation Committee hearing on December 5th to present proposed rules that should guide the legislature in Phase Two of the Transformation Program. These new rules will determine the criteria for how to distribute federal Medicaid dollars to various hospitals who apply and how much money they would receive.

Anne Igoe, Vice-President of the Health Systems Division for SEIU Healthcare, testified to the committee and laid out the four fundamental values that legislators should adopt.

The four core values that the Hospital Transformation Program should be centered on are:

1-Program funding should be directed toward safety-net and critical access hospitals;

2-Transformation projects should incorporate robust stakeholder and community input;

3-Projects should address systemic health inequities;

4-Projects should expand services and invest in the hospital service workforce through higher wages and more affordable healthcare.

From left: A.J. Wilhelmi, President and CEO of Illinois Hospital Association (IHA)

From left: A.J. Wilhelmi, President and CEO of Illinois Hospital Association (IHA)

SEIU’s proposed rules and testimony were a direct challenge to the Illinois Hospital Association and its agenda. In essence, SEIU Healthcare stated that corporate health systems and wealthy non-profit hospitals should not be able to access federal Medicaid dollars for transformation projects when wealthy systems already have the resources to initiate their own projects.

In response, Anne Igoe issued the following statement:

“Today we revealed our Union’s core values that safety net hospitals should be given first priority when it comes to distributing federal Medicaid dollars for Illinois’ Transformation Program. Our message to these wealthy hospitals is, quite frankly, get in the back of the line.

“It is our safety net hospitals who need and deserve the most investment as they transition their health services and business models to be more financially stable.

“The Hospital Provider Assessment, and now the second phase called the Transformation Program, was intended to support safety net hospitals that serve low-income communities and high Medicaid populations. It was never meant to be a ‘grab bag’ for any wealthy hospital or corporate system to take advantage of federal dollars and then use them for whatever project they determined to be useful and without any accountability.

State Senator Emil Jones, III , whose 14th District represents Roseland Hospital and community, joins with SEIU hospital workers following a Hospital Transformation Hearing in Chicago on Dec. 5th, 2018

State Senator Emil Jones, III , whose 14th District represents Roseland Hospital and community, joins with SEIU hospital workers following a Hospital Transformation Hearing in Chicago on Dec. 5th, 2018

“Part of the SEIU’s recommendation is as a robust opportunity for stakeholder and community input in addition to a requirement that any project must focus on defined health disparities. This is in contrast to the IHA recommendation that priority funding go to hospitals who choose to cut inpatient services.

“The suggestion that poor communities don’t need a full service hospital is offensive. Our communities and safety net hospital workers need more investment – not more funding cuts or risk being forced to close because of the IHA’s greed.”

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