Posts Tagged ‘health care’

Ogdensburg wants news about the psych center; the state’s not talking

New York State Office of Mental Health Acting Commissioner Kristin Woodlock and her team listening to speakers from the North Country at today's meeting at the St. Lawrence Psychiatric Center in Ogdensburg. Photo: Julie Grant

New York State Office of Mental Health Acting Commissioner Kristin Woodlock and her team listening to speakers from the North Country at today’s meeting at the St. Lawrence Psychiatric Center in Ogdensburg. Photo: Julie Grant

There’s a lot of speculation out there about the future of the St. Lawrence Psychiatric Center in Ogdensburg. The NY Office of Mental Health is considering closing a number of state hospitals, saying that at 24, New York has more than 3 times that of any other state.

Acting Mental Health Commissioner Kristin Woodlock visited Ogdensburg last week, as part of her “listening tour” of hospitals, and she got an earful from the community – including concerns about the possible loss of care for patients, and of more than 500 jobs.

Woodlock said a decision could come as early as Monday. But Monday came and went without word from the state, and people want to know what’s going happen.

The Watertown Daily Times speculates that “no news could be good news” for the Ogdensburg facility. Robert McNeil, chairman of the St. Lawrence River Valley Redevelopment Agency said, “I’m optimistic.” He said the Commissioner’s visit was a success, “There was a lot of good testimony there.”

I spoke with Ben Rosen, spokesman for the NY Mental Health Office, this afternoon.  He wouldn’t give any information about what or when we might hear from the state, despite the community’s anxiety.  It sounds like no news isn’t necessarily good or bad.  It’s just no news. We’ll keep you posted as soon as we hear anything…

Friday news roundup: casinos, rural health care, farmers markets

Photo: Government Press Office, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Photo: Government Press Office, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Happy Friday! As we’re fond of saying here at NCPR, it’s the best day of the workweek. Today for your delectation from the newsroom we have some great stories. Julie Grant has reported extensively on the troubles EJ Noble hospital’s had over the last year or so, and this week she’s had two stories updating the situation now that the hospital has reopened and reorganized. In the first she reported on the hospital’s efforts to get patients to return; and today she’s reporting on how people in the tiny Adirondack village of Harrisville are dealing with the hospital’s closure of one of the its rural clinics there.

David Sommerstein has a very springlike Heard Up North today on a “Gentleman’s Runabout” in the Thousand Islands; and Brian Mann and Todd Moe worked together on a really fascinating treatment of an oratorio celebrating an als0-really-fascinating chapter in Adirondack history: the Timbuctoo colony of freed slaves near Lake Placid.

So what else is going on? Well, North Country Now is reporting that North Country Assemblywoman Addie Russell has voted to establish task force to combat human trafficking (here’s David Sommerstein’s recent piece on human trafficking in New York state.)

Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced yesterday that he wants to build three new casinos upstate, but that announcement comes with a caveat for Native casinos, including the just-expanded Akwesasne Mohawk Casino in Hogansburg (more from Your News Now on the expansion.) WWNY-TV reports the governor’s saying if the state’s Native casinos don’t reach agreements with the state in coming months, they could be facing competition from non-Native casinos. Apparently if the tribes’ agreements with the state are “in good standing”, new casino rules won’t look to put new casinos near them; but if that’s not the case they may try to site new casinos near Native casinos. The issues at hand are things like revenue sharing with the state.

And if you’re a farmers market vendor, GardenShare and Cornell Cooperative Extension have some information for you. They’ll be hosting a free training webinar next Wednesday at the Potsdam Public Library computer center for vendors in St. Lawrence County who want to be able to accept WIC checks this season at the market. Executive Director Aviva Gold said in a statement quoted in North Country Now that given the number of women who receive WIC services in the county, “this is a substantial income opportunity for our local farmers.” You can reserve a spot by emailing office@gardenshare.org.

 

 

Tuesday news roundup: Hospitals, schools, and bars

Photo: Jon S, Creative Commons, some rights reserved

Correction: This post originally said that the Vermont legislature had passed the migrant workers’ driver’s license legislation. In fact, that legislation hasn’t passed and is still in the legislature. 

Hello! Today from our newsroom we have a delightful selection of stories, including but not limited to the following:

In Gouverneur, EJ Noble hospital is open again after a raft of problems caused it to close at the New York State Department of Health’s orders…but patients haven’t returned yet, and that’s a worry.

More details on Brooklyn Senator John Sampson’s arrest on various corruption charges (embezzlement, a coverup), and the reaction to them (the word “staggering” makes an appearance).

And The Vermont legislature’s wrapping up its session, and looking at end of life laws, legal marijuana, and a migrant driver’s license.  It’s also passed a bill that would allow migrant workers to have driver’s licenses, and Gov. Peter Shumlin says he’ll sign that. Gov. Peter Shumlin has said he will sign that bill.

Elsewhere in our region, more school cuts, this time at Northeastern Clinton Central School District (NCCS, in Champlain), where a proposed budget cuts positions (including an English and math teacher, two teaching assistants, and other positions) and electives (and Model UN) as enrollment increases (That story from the Press-Republican.) The new spending plan, up for a vote May 21, includes nearly $90,000 in reductions. Also notable in this story is a comment from NCCS Interim Superintendent Gerald Blair on a recent influx of 68 new students: “They came from a variety of places, and they were not local.”

If you’re a fishing kind of person, St. Lawrence County FishCap will be helping the DEC restock trophy trout in local rivers this afternoon. Details, from FishCap’s Facebook page: “Please plan to meet at the Nicholville Bridge at 2:00pm today. Wear boots or water shoes. We will be transporting fish from the truck to the river. We need all the volunteers we can get. Need more information call Bob 315-600-7533.”

Potsdam fraternities are worried about the future, the Watertown Daily Times reports. It seems there’s a bit of a problem with hazing and alcohol abuse, and an 11-member task force has been researching the issue for the last three months in an effort to fix the problem. There’s some concern that when the task force held a public meeting yesterday, almost everyone who showed up was a student and a member of a fraternity or sorority.

And in Essex County, the Plattsburgh Press-Republican reports, people are going to have to get their drinking in a little earlier if a new rule shortening bar hours gets approval from the New York State Liquor Authority. But don’t worry too much — the earlier time is 3 am (it’s been 4 am for some time now.) The County Board of Supervisors voted 15-1 in favor of the measure.

 

 

Afternoon Read: Sick St. Lawrence County

The admitting desk at E.J. Noble hospital in the St. Lawrence County town of Gouverneur. The hospital was briefly closed last year after the New York State Department of Health found it deficiencies in its lab. St. Lawrence County has a 1,897:1 primary care doctor:patient ratio. Photo: Julie Grant

Just as most of us in the office are getting over our spring colds, stomach bugs, etc., some unsettling news has come from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. It turns out St. Lawrence County is one of the least healthy in the state. In fact, it’s ranked 57th out of 62 New York counties, and as county Public Health Director Dr. Susan Hathaway told Your News Now today, that’s “not a distinction we want to have.”

You can check out the specifics of RWJF’s findings in the link above (and if you’re into this stuff, they’re fascinating!), but what it basically comes down to, YNN reports, is that St. Lawrence County adults use a lot of tobacco, and have both higher rates of obesity and lower rates of physical activity than most of New York’s other counties. It’s also one of the state’s counties with highest unemployment and poverty rates — these often correlate closely with tobacco use, obesity and a lack of physical activity. Dr. Hathaway also indicates in the article that access to health care is a problem (the ratio of primary care doctors to patients is 1897:1; that’s compared with a state average of 1222:1.) She says a lack of jobs in the area for the spouses of health care providers makes it harder to attract new providers to the area.

On the upside, St. Lawrence County did do somewhat better in the clean air and water rankings, where it’s at about the fiftieth percentile.

FYI, most other northern New York counties did somewhat better in the rankings: Warren County ranked 12th; Essex, 16th; Lewis, 17th; Clinton, 26th; Jefferson, 30th; Franklin, 36th; and Herkimer, 39th.

Hamilton County, on the other hand, did slightly worse, ranking 58th. The county did rank 17th in health behaviors (that’s as opposed to 59th in St. Lawrence County), although it has an extremely high rate of “premature death.” As you may recall from our recent reporting, new census numbers also show Hamilton County’s population has dropped to below 4,800 people, 25 percent of whom are over 65. So that may have something to do with those health numbers.

We’ll have more on these numbers in the days to come. In the meantime, try to stay healthy?

 

 

Adirondack Health in Saranac Lake announces layoffs

Adirondack Health CEO Chandler Ralph called the reductions in staff and work hours “discouraging” (PHOTO: AMC)

One of the North Country’s largest employers says it will cut 18 full time employees and cut the hours of another 15 full- and part-time staff.

The move at Adirondack Health follows on the heels of lay-off and cutbacks at other medical facilities around the North Country.

It represents a painful loss of high-wage, high-benefit jobs.

In a statement, CEO Chandler Ralph blamed the cutbacks on Medicaid losses and on declining in-patient numbers at Adirondack Health Facilities.

Ralph says the organization faced a $1.2 million dollar “reduction of revenue” in 2013.

“While these revenue reductions are certainly discouraging, this is not the first time we have faced a challenge of this magnitude,” said Chandler Ralph, President & CEO of Adirondack Health. “Our experience has taught us we have the resources and talent to develop new and innovative solutions to continue providing high quality healthcare to the residents and visitors of our region.”

The move comes as nurses at Adirondack Health distributed a letter urging the organization to delay a vote on proposed downsizing or elimination of emergency room services at a satellite hospital in Lake Placid.

The Board of Directors of Adirondack Medical Center must delay a planned vote this evening to close or convert the hospital’s emergency department to a 12-hour urgent care center without the opportunity for public comment.

AMC did not offer the community an opportunity to provide input on this crucial matter, which will limit access to vital emergency medical services.

Glens Falls Hospital discusses “partnership” with Albany Medical

Glens Falls Hospital, one of the North Country’s most important care facilities, has announced that they will begin exploring partnership possibilities with Albany Medical Center.

“It is clear that in order to most effectively meet patient needs in the future amidst the many challenges facing health care, collaborative partnerships with other leading health care providers will be key,” said David Kruczlnicki, president and CEO of Glens Falls Hospital, in a prepared statement.

In a follow-up interview with NCPR, hospital spokeswoman Darlene Raynsford said it’s too early to say whether the effort could result in a full merger between the two facilities, but she declined to rule it out.

“It’s very hard to tell that right now,” Raynsford said.  “We’re just at the beginning stages.  We’re discovering and finding out what is the best for our patients and communities.”

The move comes after several regional hospitals and nursing home facilities announced job cutbacks and other austerity measures, reflecting tighter government reimbursements from Albany and Washington.

Raynsford said financial concerns were one of the issues driving the new partnership.  “Fiscal issues, reimbursements, Obamacare, there’s a lot of factors that play both nationally and locally,” she said.

If the partnership creates new efficiencies at Glens Falls Hospital, the changes could also affect jobs and hiring in the North Country.  The facility currently has an annual budget estimated at roughly $300 million.

The full press release is below:

Today, Albany Medical Center and Glens Falls Hospital announce they have initiated a process to identify opportunities for collaboration that will benefit patients served by each health care organization, and the region as a whole.
 
“It is clear that in order to most effectively meet patient needs in the future amidst the many challenges facing health care, collaborative partnerships with other leading health care providers will be key,” said David G. Kruczlnicki, president and chief executive officer of Glens Falls Hospital, a $300 million/annual revenue health care organization with 28 primary care and specialty-services locations serving six counties throughout the southeastern Adirondacks. “Albany Medical Center and Glens Falls Hospital have a long and successful history of working together in services such as neonatal care, emergency medicine, and interventional cardiology. Today’s announcement is a logical extension of that tradition, and will bring leadership and physicians together to look at new ways to further build on our existing relationship,” said Kruczlnicki.
 
“As the region’s only academic health sciences center, it is our mission to pursue partnerships that will provide educational opportunities and enhance access to care of the highest quality,” said James J. Barba, president and chief executive officer of Albany Medical Center, which includes a 651-bed hospital, a large multi-specialty physician group practice, medical college, and biomedical research enterprise. “We pursue partnerships which allow the needs of three million residents in our 25-county service area to be met completely. We believe discussions with Glens Falls Hospital promise to result in innovation and improvements in patient care.”
 
Leaders of the two organizations began discussions about opportunities for collaboration a few months ago, and secured approval from their respective boards to begin a more formal process. A leadership committee, including administrators and physicians from each entity, is being formed to identify and prioritize new opportunities for collaboration.
 
            Glens Falls Hospital is a comprehensive integrated system of primary care, specialty care and hospital services, serving a six-county region of the southern Adirondacks. With 3,000 employees and 28 regional locations, it is the largest health care provider between Albany and Montreal, offering a wide range of physician services, hospital care, and community health improvement programs. For more information:  www.glensfallshospital.org or facebook.com/GlensFallsHospital.
 
            Albany Medical Center, northeastern New York’s only academic health sciences center, is one of the largest private employers in the Capital Region. It incorporates the 651-bed Albany Medical Center Hospital, which offers the widest range of medical and surgical services in the region, and the Albany Medical College, which trains the next generation of doctors, scientists, and other health care professionals. It also includes a biomedical research enterprise, and the region’s largest physicians practice with 350 doctors. Albany Medical Center works with dozens of community partners to improve the region’s health and quality of life. For more information: www.amc.edu or www.facebook.com/albanymedicalcenter.

North Country healthcare leaders say fiscal cliff would hurt ho

Hospital administrators from the eastern half of the North Country gathered today in Plattsburgh to raise the alarm about possible cuts stemming from the fiscal cliff deficit reduction negotiations in Washington.

“What they’re saying is that if we go over the fiscal cliff, there are cuts that impact health care,” says Champlain Valley correspondent Sarah Harris. “Those cuts will impact North Country hospitals in really big ways.”

According to Harris — who will report on the press conference tomorrow morning — regional hospitals could lose 4-5% of their total budgets if Federal funding is curtailed.

This news comes in the wake of a recent spate of lay-offs and downsizings at hospitals from Glens Falls to Saranac Lake.  Tune in tomorrow during Morning Edition and the 8 O’clock Hour for more details.

The full press release is below:

DECEMBER 20, 2012 – North Country health-care providers are uniting to urge elected officials to protect vital services and much-needed jobs being jeopardized by fiscal cliff and deficit reduction negotiations in Washington, D.C.
 
Today, the leaders of three North Country health systems – Adirondack Health, CVPH Medical Center and Elizabethtown Community Hospital – are asking the public to join them in urging elected officials to resolve our fiscal challenges without sacrificing health-care services and jobs in our region.  Hospitals and nursing homes have already endured drastic cuts. Further reductions will undermine our ability to provide the community with access to care at the right time, in the right setting.
 
Hospitals and nursing homes in the North Country have already accepted $320 million in funding cuts over the next ten years as part of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and other adopted Medicare and Medicaid cuts.  The realities of health care reform have also resulted in the need for several hospitals in the region to implement long-term restructuring plans, including reductions to their workforce, in order to continue providing a high level of patient centered care to their communities.
 
Health care providers in our region would be hit with an additional $432 million in cuts over 10 years if we go over the fiscal cliff.  In 2013 alone, other Medicare payment policies that have expired or are set to expire represent an additional $11 million in losses for hospitals in our region.
 
Arbitrary funding cuts to health care threaten the ability of our North Country hospitals to continue providing vital services to our communities on a daily basis or in a time of crisis.
 
“Each of our organizations has had to deal with these fiscal realities without compromising our commitment to quality care and community need,” said Chandler Ralph, President & CEO of Adirondack Health.  “Unfortunately, we are feeling increasing pressure to evaluate those services that fill a community need but in the long run are unsustainable.”
 
Hospital administrators are incredibly worried about the future, according to Rod Boula, administrator and CEO at Elizabethtown Community Hospital. “Small, community hospitals simply cannot shoulder additional cuts,” he said. “Elizabethtown Community Hospital is facing cuts of more than four hundred thousand dollars. That’s two percent of its gross revenues per year; and four million dollars over ten years.  This will have a tremendous negative impact on the availability of primary care services to our rural communities.”
 
“As a nation we cannot afford to sustain the rate of growth in what is being spent on health care.    We as providers need to be willing to challenge ourselves to determine how we can deliver greater value and better outcomes while expending fewer resources to produce the desired results,” said Stephens Mundy, President and Chief Executive Officer of CVPH Medical Center. 
 
“However, if the extreme cuts to reimbursement being discussed in Washington do occur, the process is going to be incredibly painful and all the more challenging.  Although we are not-for-profits we are businesses as well with bills to pay and payrolls to meet.  When we receive significantly less money than it costs to provide services, something has to give,” he added.
 
Hospital leaders understand the fiscal challenges our nation faces.  However, arbitrary cuts to Medicare and Medicaid funding will force health-care providers to evaluate their ability to deliver important services.  Most vulnerable are those services where reimbursement levels do not reflect the true cost of providing care, such as dialysis, chemotherapy or obstetrics.
 
Even as hospitals in this region have grappled with fiscal challenges and the realties of health-care reform, they are working to make care more affordable through innovative programs that focus on preventive care, improving quality and enhanced patient safety.
 
Workable solutions include:
* Coordinated care approaches for patients with chronic illness
* Medical malpractice reform
* Restructuring Medicare and Medicare
* Encouraging healthy lifestyles
* Thoughtful discussions on end-of-life care
 
Adirondack Health, CVPH Medical Center and Elizabethtown Community Hospital provide critical safety net services to a six-county region of northern New York totaling 7,875 square miles that are home to 306,466 residents.  This number does not include the thousands of tourists who visit the region annually.  These three health systems are major employers and serve as economic anchors in their communities.
 
ABOUT ADIRONDACK HEALTH
Adirondack Health is the new name for the family of facilities and individuals who have provided sophisticated care to the Tri-Lakes region for the past 100 years.  They include: Adirondack Medical Center, Adirondack Medical Center/Lake Placid, Mountain Health Center (Keene), Lake Placid Health Center, Tupper Lake Health Center, Mercy Living Center (Tupper Lake), Uihlein Living Center (Lake Placid) and Adirondack Dental Service (Lake Placid).  The highly trained and compassionate individuals who work at these facilities provide a full range of medical, surgical and long-term care services.
 
Adirondack Health is not only the leading provider of health care for the residents and visitors of the Tri-Lakes region, it is also the largest private employer in the Adirondack Park.  In addition to the physical and social health of the community, Adirondack Health plays a significant role in the economic health of the community.  With over 900 full-time employees, Adirondack Health has a $120 million annual impact on the local economy.  This impact comes from the generation of payroll, income and property tax revenue, purchase of goods and services and associated commerce generated by our employees living throughout the area. As a result of these factors, and more, Adirondack Health is a key community institution, and an advocate for improving the health and economic well being of the patients, residents, businesses and visitors it serves. 
 
We are leading care for a healthy community.
 
ABOUT CVPH MEDICAL CENTER
CVPH Medical Center is the largest medical facility and employer in New York’s North Country.  The CVPH family includes approximately 2,300 employees, 200 members of its medical staff and 225 volunteers.  CVPH provides a full gamut of medical services including open-heart surgery and angioplasty, 24-hour physician coverage in its emergency department, and a complete range of diagnostic services.  In January, CVPH is slated to affiliate with Fletcher Allen Partners, an integrated health care system with members based in Vermont and Northern New York. 
 
ABOUT ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
Elizabethtown Community Hospital is a 25-bed critical access hospital (CAH) providing healthcare to the residents of, and visitors to, communities throughout Essex County. The hospital offers advanced technology, access to specialists, a variety of health-care services, and highly skilled medical staff. Hospital services include: inpatient care, a 24-hour emergency department, specialty clinics, a complete physical and occupational therapy department, on-site laboratory, an all-digital radiology department, chemotherapy treatment, and a cardiac rehabilitation program.
 
Elizabethtown Community Hospital is the only critical access hospital in Essex County accredited by the Joint Commission. It first received its critical access hospital status in 1997. This designation is given to small, rural hospitals that are located over 35 miles from another hospital. Critical access hospitals must have agreements with other facilities that are willing to accept patients needing additional care. Those hospitals must trust the abilities and capabilities of the CAH, in terms of managing initial assessment and care of the patient. There are 1,325 CAHs across the United States; 13 of those are in New York State.
 
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Sunday Opinion: Thumbs up to healthcare reform, thumbs down to wind farms

Morning folks.  Gorgeous weekend down in the Champlain Valley.  Hope you’ve had some spring wherever you are.

Here’s a survey of weekend opinions across the North Country.  A lot of interesting stuff out there.

The Plattsburgh Press-Republican gives a tentative thumbs-up to President Barack Obama’s healthcare reform plan passed past year.

The AARP survey shows how important health-care reform is to a strong national economy. Obama’s controversial health law may not be the final answer, but it is a step in the right direction.

The American people could not carry on securely without some kind of change to the health-insurance system. It was destroying too many American dreams.

The Glens Falls Post Star continues its criticism of the Adirondack Park Agency and urges Governor Andrew Cuomo to choose wisely the five new commissioners he’ll name over the next few months.

In a nutshell, the APA has a well-earned reputation for being overreaching, inflexible, unresponsive to citizens, and in some cases abusive.

We’ve done articles on some of the more egregious cases. Environmentalists have been allowed to dominate the APA board, contributing to the park’s hostile economic environment for residents trying to make a living.

What’s needed isn’t really a balance of pro-environment and pro-development members, but a willingness by all members of the APA board to see how conservation and economic growth have to go hand in hand in order for people to be able to live and thrive in the park.

The Watertown Daily Times, which serves Fort Drum, urges a continued engagement in the Middle East as the “Arab Spring” continues.

These events — occurring on one day in a few countries — reflect the larger struggle for political and social reform playing out throughout the region. As the so-called Arab Spring continues, the United States must monitor the developments and do what it can to help the cause of freedom.

The Adirondack Daily Enterprise wrestles this week with a hyper-local issue, but one that will resonate for many communities:  government support for the local chamber of commerce, and the problem of “double taxation” in areas that have multiple layers of government.

The village board members are not only wondering whether taxpayers are getting their money’s worth; they’re also deciding whether this should be one of many things that has to go in these tight times – especially since two of the three towns that divide the village already pay the chamber, meaning most villagers are paying twice.

The Burlington Free Press has a fierce essay by Deborah Caldbeck, who opposes large scale wind far development.

Caldbeck describes looking across Lake Champlain toward New York and seeing…

…a number of eerie, intermittently blinking, red lights from the wind towers from the Ellensburg wind “farm” in Clinton County, N.Y. A communion with the wonders of nature violently broken by another reminder of man’s inhumanity to nature…

Finally, last week there were some complaints about my picks for the Sunday Opinion discussion.

So this week, I want to urge you not only to leave comments, but also to leave suggestions (with links, if possible) about other opinion writing out there that you found interesting.

This will share those ideas and sources with readers, and give me some fresh ideas of places to look for smart, thought-provoking essays about the North Country.

Morning Read: Adirondack project could be new model for healthcare

We’ve reported before on the Adirondack Regional Medical Home Pilot project, which aims to refocus the way healthcare is delivered.

The new approach is more outcomes-based and less concentrated on costly procedures.

Doctors and hospitals are rewarded financially for actually improving people’s health, not for using expensive machines or drugs.   They also work to reduce costly emergency room admissions.

Now the Albany Times-Union has an update on the story, looking in-depth at how the Medical Home approach affected Amy and Brendan Gotham, a couple in Lake Placid, who have a young baby.

Amy Gotham had just crawled into bed when the baby monitor shook with an alarming noise.

Gotham, 29, ran into the next bedroom to find then-5-month-old Liam bawling and coughing, yet unable to make a sound. His case of croup — a swelling around his vocal cords — had dramatically worsened overnight.

Gotham called her husband, Brenden, who was still at work. “I’m taking him to the ER,” she said.

But using an on-call system and improved electronic medical records, their doctor was able to help over the phone, calling in a prescription to the pharmacy and making the trip to the emergency room unnecessary.

While [Adirondack Medical Center CEO Chandler] Ralph said it is too early to assess per-patient cost savings, ER visits dropped from 16,249 in 2009 to 15,417 in 2010.

According to the Times-Union, New York state is now preparing to expand the Adirondack pilot project to involve roughly a million families across the state.  Read the full article here.

Morning Read: Clinton County considers privatization of home health care

Counties around the North Country have been considering the privatization of their nursing homes.

Now the Plattsburgh Press Republican is reporting that Clinton County may follow the trend by privatizing its in-home nursing and health care services.

Over the last five years, the program shifted from being a net money-maker for the county to nearly a $2 million expense.

The increase is mostly due to a drastic drop in Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements and stricter federal guidelines.

“There obviously is a lot of emotion involving this, but for the county not to look at alternatives that could continue to provide the service and still save nearly $2 million would be irresponsible,” said County Administrator Michael Zurlo.

Dozens of people turned out this week to protest the change, arguing that it would mean lower quality service.  Read the full article here.