Healthcare Navigators like these who aid the public to access health care coverage got the ax in McHenry County |
In
a perfectly executed stealth attack the
McHenry County Board suddenly and unexpectedly
rejected an Illinois state grant to pay for counselors to help insure people under the Affordable
Care Act on a 10-10 vote. The vote
to renew a $584,971 that requires no county
matching funds had expected to be routine.
The Board accepted a grant last year, the first year for enrollment in
so-called Obama care and almost 3000
county residents were assisted in enrolling with the aid of trained Navigators who assist those in need
understand and navigate the sometimes complex process. This year the Finance and Audit Committee had approved accepting the grant by a
unanimous 7-0 vote. It was expected to
sail through the County Board approval process with perhaps a moment over to
given over to political theatrics by hard core Tea Partyers.
The
grant was to run through next April, covering the annual open enrollment period for the state’s Health Care Exchanges. But
since part of the grant falls in this year’s county fiscal year, which oddly
ends on November 30, the Board had to vote during this fiscal year on accepting
the grant and 16 votes were necessary The vote, coming a little more than two weeks
before election day when half of the
Board’s 24 seats are at stake, was the perfect opportunity to pounce.
When
the motion to approve was called, arch-conservative
Ersel Schuster,
who lost her bid for Republican re-nomination and will be going off of the
Board, and the openly anti-immigrant
Illinois Minutemen leader and Tea Party darling Diane Evertsen, both representing the sprawling rural Board District 6, suddenly announced
their opposition. “This funding for the
Affordable Care—the ‘Non-Affordable Care Act’—is another half a million dollars
plus to try and make something work that is an admitted failure,” Evertsen
said. First term District 1 member Nick Chirikos of Algonquin, one of only two Democrats
on the board—the other, Paula Yensen
of District 5, was absent—scrambled to defend the program.
But
the fix was in. Word had to have been
quietly circulated that the vote would be a litmus test for Republican Board members after a take-over by the
county GOP by right wing insurgents
this spring. Political futures, it was
hinted, were on the line for those who did not fall in line with a jihad against hated Obamacare.
Board Chair Tina Hill, a relative social moderate might have been able a
year or so ago to whip up support for the grant. But she has been in the crosshairs for some time and is now on leave for medical
conditions and has sought treatment for what may be some sort of a breakdown and/or substance abuse problems. Acting Chair James Heisler of Crystal
Lake, a moderate conservative not known for grinding a social agenda ax, has only been at the helm for a few weeks. New Republican
County Chair Sandra Fay Salgado, a Board member from District 4 formerly was employed as an office manager for a mental health provider. She was notably absent for the vote.
The political and social atrocity went down here at the McHenry County Government Center. |
As
for the public, no hearings were ever held on rejecting the funding. And apparently none of the County’s major health care providers and agencies were
consulted in advance.
The
vote broke down this way”
Yes: Sue Draffkorn, R-Wonder Lake, Joe
Gottemoller, R-Crystal Lake, John Jung, R-Woodstock, Donna Kurtz, R-Crystal
Lake, Robert Martens Sr., R-Spring Grove, Mary McCann, R-Woodstock, Carolyn
Schofield, R-Crystal Lake, Michael Walkup, R-Crystal Lake, Michele Aavang,
R-Woodstock, and Nick Chirikos, D-Algonquin.
Note: McCann is chair of the Finance
and Audit Committee. Donna Kurtz is
vice-chair of that committee and chair of the Health & Human Services Committee and the Board’s most vocal social moderate
Republican. Walkup is a former Democrat not trusted by many Republicans.
No: Diane
Evertsen, R-Harvard, John Hammerand, R-Wonder Lake, Acting Chair James Heisler,
R-Crystal Lake, Ken Koehler, R-Crystal Lake, Mary McClellan, R-Holiday Hills,
Anna May Miller, R-Cary, Robert Nowak, R-Lake in the Hills, Ersel Schuster,
R-Woodstock, Mike Skala, R-Huntley, and Yvonne Barnes, R-Cary. Note: Hammerand
joins Schuster and Evertsen as the most openly Tea Party stalwarts on the Board
and waged open war on distressed Chair Hill.
McClellan is leaving the board and running unopposed for the open County Clerk position. Most of the rest had been expected to support
the measure. Five of them were members
of the Finance and Audit Committee who unexpectedly flipped their vote. The biggest surprise as a no vote came from Heisler.
Absent:
Nick Provenzano, R-McHenry, Sandra Fay Salgado, R-McHenry, Paula Yensen,
D-Lake in the Hills, and Chair Tina Hill, R-Woodstock. Note: Provenzano, a right wing warrior, would
have been a no vote. Yensen and Hill
would have been definite yeses. Salgado
seems simply determined to dodge the bullet.
I
am not sure what Schuster, Evertsen, and the Tea Party apparatus behind them
expected. Perhaps choruses of hosannas sung by angels on high. The folks are as capable of self-delusion as they are of misleading
the public. What they reaped was an
instant shit storm when the news hit
the front page of the Northwest Herald on Thursday
morning.
The
entire county network of health care providers and agencies rapidly recovered
from stunned disbelief and went public with outrage and indignation. The usually politically savvy and tread-on-eggs
leadership of Pioneer Center, a conglomerate private agency, with
thumbs in many behavioral, developmental disability, and mental health pies said it would
scramble to try and fund a Navigator for their clients. Without the ability to assist the largely
disable and disadvantage population, including homeless PADS clients, those individuals will either continue to
forego health care entirely, or turn to emergency
room treatments at an enormously elevated cost. “I don’t understand why and how you could
turn down 500 some thousand dollars to perform what really is an important role
in the community, Pioneer President Patrick
Maynard told the press, “I would really like to know what their thinking
was.”
Suzzane Hoban, Executive
Director of the Family Health
Partnership Clinic, the county’s main provider of basic health care
services to the un-and-under insured,
was blunter in Newsletter sent to
the Clinic’s supporters and community, “We immediately had to lay
off our trained Navigator and will no longer be able to assist people through
this complex process…Without assistance to get people private insurance or public
aid, we expect the number of patients we serve to increase, and many more
to use the emergency room as their primary care clinic, wasting precious local
health resources.” She also pointed out
that many of the 500 workers who just lost their jobs in Woodstock when Brown
Printing closed will soon be placing additional strain on the system.
The
suits of Centegra, who run the two hospitals,
urgent care facilities, and provide county’s only mental health beds, delivered their messages more discretely. But as the county’s largest employer and an economic powerhouse,
you can bet no voters had to pay attention.
But
outrage was not limited to the medical community whose ox was the most notably gored. The comments section of the Northwest Herald, usually a cesspool or right wing paranoia and rage was overwhelmed by real citizens expressing their shock and
outrage. The usual cast of ravers was reduced to denying that they
were either against health care or unfeeling.
They rallied around the dual mantras
of opposing hand holding to help
applicants navigate the system and
accusations that the poor were unworthy because they lack personal responsibility. One
guy inferred it was some sort of patronage
boondoggle. On a normal day these knuckle draggers would dominate the
conversation and bully alternative
voices with abuse and implied—and sometimes
explicit—threats. But now they found themselves
overwhelmed and on the defensive.
I
understand the home and office phones of no voters have been
flooded with irate callers. Most have
simply stopped answering. And with the
exception of Schuster who cheerfully doubled down on her opposition, most of
the others will not respond to press
questions either.
By
Friday afternoon some board members were scrambling to find a way the reverse the
decision. Acting chair Heisler told the Northwest Herald that he and several
other members, presumably including other no voters, would meet this coming
Monday to discuss holding a new vote either at the next regular Board meeting
on November 6, or perhaps at a special meeting.
I presume that no meeting would be called unless it was clear that the
vote would be overturned.
Meanwhile
grant support Kurtz also expressed confidence that the vote could be
changed. She also said that an Illinois Department of Public Health grant
coordinator agreed to temporarily hold off on re-distributing the grant to
other counties pending a re-vote.
It
is possible that a vote held after the November 4 general election would relieve pressure on some Board Members. It has also been suggested that having made a
grand and symbolic anti-Obamacare gesture, it would be possible for some to
change their votes without losing face—or
Tea Party support.
Two
things are clear however—concerned citizens in McHenry County need to continue to hold the miscreants’ feet to the fire in coming days and that in the
election no voters should be cast for opponents and incumbents Nowak, Dist. 1;
Heisler, Dist. 2; or Hammerend, Dist. or for Mary McClellan for County Clerk,
even if that means casting no vote in that race. A message should be sent.
On
the other hand, yes voters should be rewarded when they appear on the ballot.
Democratic incumbents Chirikos and Yensen as well as challengers Kathleen Bergan Schmidt, trying to
return to the County Board for Dist. 3, and new comer Arne
Waltmire in Dist. 4 who
faces the AWOL Saldago deserve support to keep up the fight against the reoccurrence
of this kind of outrageous nonsense.
This is a reminder of
my personal mantra these days now that I am retired as an active Democratic Party Committeeman—vote Democratic
on defense. Take to the Streets in offense to create significant change—like
a single payer national health care plan
that doesn’t even need the complicated rigmarole of Healthcare
Exchanges or the necessity of Navigators.
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