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Archive for the ‘Governor’s Office’ Category

State Sen. Jack Donahue’s expressions of shock and surprise notwithstanding, the handwriting was on the wall more than a year ago as to the fate of the 60-year-old Southeast Louisiana State Hospital in Mandeville—thanks in part to a bill he authored four years ago.

It was in May of 2011 that then-parish president Kevin Davis revealed that he was working with the state to have St. Tammany Parish purchase 1,442 acres adjacent to the hospital in an effort to prevent the low-lying land from being developed in the future.

That sale was consummated last month at a price of $6.45 million. The land was appraised for $14.7 million in February 2011, according to records of the Office of State Lands. Davis, however, said in 2011 he felt the correct value of the land was nearer $10 million. He added that the Division of Administration had verbally agreed to the $10 million figure.

There was no explanation as to why the ultimate selling price was more than 35 percent lower than the reported agreed upon price and less than half the original appraised value.

Six months after the negotiations for the land were announced, Davis, who was term-limited and not eligible to seek re-election as parish president, was appointed by Jindal as director of the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (GOHSEP) at a salary of $165,000 per year.

He contributed $3,000 to Jindal election campaigns in 2003 and 2008 and Donahue gave $1,500 to the governor’s campaign in 2007 and 2011.

Jindal in turn, contributed $2,500 to Donahue’s campaign last year.

Both Donahue (R-Covington) and Rep. Scott Simon (R-Abita Springs) claimed that the announcement of the closure caught them off guard. Simon is chairman of the House Committee on Health and Welfare, making the decision not to inform him even more curious.

It was revealed during last year’s negotiations between the state and St. Tammany that the parish had been given first refusal on purchase of the 1,442 acres in a 2008 bill authored by Donahue.

Donahue’s bill also stipulated that proceeds from the sale of the land adjacent to the hospital must go toward the restoration, renovation, construction or maintenance of the hospital.

Davis said he had initially persuaded the state to construct a new hospital on parish-owned land north of I012 but those negotiations cratered when Bruce Greenstein was appointed secretary of the Department of Health and Hospitals (DHH).

He also said at that time that the state had decided not to close the hospital.

DHH issued an announcement late Friday, however, that the 348-bed hospital would be phased out of operation beginning in October despite those assurances of more than a year ago that it would remain open.

Patients at the facility will be transferred to East Louisiana State Hospital in Jackson with some possibly going to Central State Hospital in Pineville, placing a strain in terms of finances and logistics on families of patients who help care for the patients.

The move will also eliminate 300 positions at the hospital, one of the largest employers in St. Tammany Parish.

In addition to keeping the land free from development, Davis said he hoped to turn the property into a mitigation bank which would help pay the cost of acquiring the land.

St. Tammany is required to contribute matching funds for various state and federal road projects, Davis said. Some of the land used for those projects consists of wetlands and he said he wanted the parish’s financial contributions to go into the mitigation bank in exchange for credits that would allow wetlands construction.

The parish, he said, did not have available funds to purchase the land outright, so he had initiated negotiations with officials from the Trust for Public Land in and effort to get the trust to purchase the land on the parish’s behalf with the parish paying back the trust in a minimum of five years.

Now that the 1,442 acres adjacent to the hospital has been sold for less than half its appraised value and now that the official announcement of the hospital’s closure has been made, the question that remains is what now becomes of the remaining 500 acres and the hospital buildings?

Southeast Louisiana State Hospital, a psychiatric treatment facility, was established 60 years ago, in 1952, on 2,235 acres of land (later reduced to 1,900 acres). In 1959, it received international, if unwanted, attention as a brief stopping-off point for Gov. Earl K. Long in his odyssey across the southwestern U.S. during his celebrated mental breakdown.

Earl, still very much the state’s governor, fired state Hospital Board head Jesse H. Bankston and replaced him with Charles Rosenblum. Rosenblum subsequently persuaded the board to fire hospital head Dr. Charles Belcher and replace him with Dr. Jess McClendon. McClendon, a personal friend of Long, promptly ordered his release.

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“The selection of a third-party is an important step toward providing quality care and service…”

–Commissioner of Administration Paul Rainwater, defending the awarding of a contract to Blue Cross/Blue Shield to administer the state health care insurance plans. Announcement of the award was held off until near the close of business on Friday.

“It really is a shame that we will have to face the real cost of Bobby’s ambition for a very long time.”

–Former State Sen. Butch Gautreaux, responding to the awarding of the BCBS contract that will abolish 177 OGB positions.

“This is an opportunity to reform and modernize.”

–DHH Secretary Bruce Greenstein, explaining how the federal cut of $859 million to the state’s Medicaid program is “doable.”

“I was surprised to see this on the table. I was told 15 minutes before the announcement was made.”

–State Sen. Jack Donahue (R-Mandeville), reacting to the administration’s announcement late Friday that Southeast Louisiana Hospital in Mandeville would begin closing down operations effective Oct. 1, resulting in the loss of 300 positions.

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True to form, Gov. Piyush Jindal waited until a Friday, considered one of the slower news days of the week, to make the long-anticipated announcement that Blue Cross/Blue Shield (BCBS) had been selected to administer the Preferred Provider Organization (PPO) for the Office of Group Benefits, a move that will eliminate 177 positions in the office.

Jindal was considerate enough to release the announcement through his favorite publication, the Baton Rouge Business Report, which ran the story on its web page. The OGB web page also carried the announcement.

The administration likewise waited until Friday to make the announcement that the 348-bed Southeast Louisiana Hospital in Mandeville will begin closing down operations, effective, Oct. 1, costing another 300 employees their jobs.

St. Tammany Parish has the highest suicide rate in the state and the move leaves up to a quarter-million people with no facility for treatment of depression or suicide prevention.

The move with Southeast Louisiana Hospital came as a major surprise considering some of Jindal’s strongest support has historically come from legislators in St. Tammany.

Both events might be considered as part of what Capitol Bureau reporter Marsha Shuler described in Friday’s Baton Rouge Advocate as Jindal’s health care “train wreck.”

The administration on Friday sent separate letters to BCBS, Humana and United Healthcare. The letters to Humana and United Healthcare informed them that their proposals were not accepted while the one to BCBS announced it had won the contract to be OGB’s third party administrator (TPA) for both the state’s HBO and PPO, which the administration said will save the state $20 million per year.

BCBS has already been serving as the TPA for the HMO and effective Jan. 1, will be assuming administration of both.

The privatization of OGB’s PPO has been controversial since first being proposed by Jindal more than a year ago. The root of that controversy lies in the fact that the OGB employees paid claims with a turnaround time of less than three days, much to the satisfaction of the 62,000 state employees, retirees and their dependents.

Moreover, the PPO had gone from a $60 million deficit to a $500 million surplus in the five years during which it was run by former director Tommy Teague. Teague was fired on April 15, 2011, when he didn’t sign on to the privatization plan quickly enough to please Jindal.

His successor, Scott Kipper, lasted only six weeks after testifying before a legislative committee that were it left up to him to decide, he would not lay off any of the OGB employees. That remark, made in response to a direct question from a committee member, appeared to irritate his boss, Commissioner of Administration Paul Rainwater who, only moments before, had indicated a need to downsize the agency by 149 positions.

The quick turnaround of claim payments combined with the agency’s $500 million surplus seems to be in stark contrast to Rainwater’s statement on Friday: “The selection of a third-party administrator is an important step toward providing quality care and service to plan members in the most cost-effective way.”

Former State Sen. D.A. “Butch” Gautreaux (D-Morgan City), who served as chairman of the Senate Retirement Committee and as a member of the OGB board of directors before being term-limited last year, fought the governor’s privatization efforts every step of the way.

Contacted Friday, Gautreaux was typically critical of the move. “Sometimes it just isn’t satisfying to be right,” he said.

“It was told to me confidentially well over a year ago and re-stated by in a Senate Retirement Committee hearing that the PPO was going to Blue Cross/Blue Shield.

“I hope Bobby Jindal leaves soon but I feel sorry for his successor. The cost of employee and retiree health insurance will be rising once we get over the one-year hump.” He was referring to a one-year moratorium on premium increases promised by the administration. Gautreaux said the information about premium increases was shared with him by the same source.

Because the state paid no taxes on premium income and because there is no requirement for a profit as long as the PPO was administered by the state, skeptics fear the need for profit and the requirement to pay taxes on profits will necessitate a rate hike by a TPA.

“It really is a shame that we, the taxpayers of Louisiana, will have to face the real cost of Bobby’s ambition for a very long time,” he said.

St. Tammany has had 124 suicides since 2009 and many more reported attempted suicides during that same period.

“The department (Department of Health and Hospitals) is very aware and concerned about the suicide rate,” said DHH press secretary and director of the Bureau of Media and Communications. “Our commitment and ability to respond to patients who will need beds and treatment remains the same,” he said.

State Sen. Jack Donahue (R-Mandeville) said the announcement caught him off guard. “It was not discussed during this legislative session to my knowledge. I was told 15 minutes before the announcement was made.

Rep. Scott Simon (R-Abita Springs), chairman of the House Committee on Health and Welfare, was equally unaware and expressed his “shock” that Jindal would take such action.

To abruptly close down one of the largest employers in St. Tammany in a parish where Jindal has enjoyed some of this strongest support is bad enough. But to do so without even extending the courtesy of giving his legislative allies a heads-up to prepare them only compounds his insensitivity and boorish contempt for the citizens of St. Tammany in particular and citizens of the state in general.

While Jindal and GOP presumed presidential nominee have been accusing Pres. Barrack Obama of being “out of touch,” Shuler was quick to point out the governor’s own inconsistencies and what might appear to some as his deliberate moves to dismantle the state charity hospital system.

The Advocate reporter said Jindal, who is rarely in the state anymore, choosing instead to stump for Romney while auditioning for the vice presidential nomination, seems almost aloof to the financial straits Louisiana’s Medicaid health care program suddenly finds itself in.

A new federal law gutted more than $859 million from the state’s Medicaid funding but Jindal, Rainwater and DHH Secretary Bruce Greenstein say the state can overcome the cut by sacrificing services offered by the LSU hospital system’s care for the uninsured and physician training programs. Further cuts would come through reducing payments for uninsured care by rural hospitals.

As recently as late May, Greenstein and Jindal were united in predicting a doomsday scenario if a proposed $51 million cut was imposed on the LSU Med School. They predicted that some of LSU’s 10 public hospitals, which provide healthcare to the state’s indigent and which also train physicians, might have to shut down.

Now, however, since Jindal has rebuked Obama’s health care plan, the $859.2 million cut to the state’s Medicaid program is “doable,” they say, again in unison. Greenstein even called the cuts “an opportunity to reform and modernize.”

Greenstein and Rainwater, who foresaw widespread closures with a $51 million proposed cut, now say LSU can cut $300 million and still maintain health care for the poor and uninsured.

Now who’s out of touch?

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Gov. Piyush Jindal has yet another dissident in his crosshairs.

This time it’s Louisiana Land Trust (LLT) board member Don Vallee of New Orleans who he wants to Teague.

This time, however, there could be a slight problem known as the State Constitution.

LLT, originally the Road Home Corp., is a publicly-chartered non-profit organization formed to manage properties purchased by the State of Louisiana under the current Road Home Program as part of the ongoing recovery effort from damage caused by hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005.

Once it takes title to properties purchased by the Road Home Homeowner Assistance Program, LLT has broad powers to receive and dispose of the properties, to accept funds “from any sources,” to borrow against the properties and to obtain payment for obligations under the guidelines set forth by the Louisiana Recovery Authority and to provide for financing as administered by the Office of Community Development (OCD).

Funding for LLT is provided through community development block grants (CDBG) funds administered by OCD.

LLT is governed by a seven-member board of directors with one member appointed from a list of three persons nominated by the president of the Senate and one appointed from a list of three nominated by the speaker of the House.

Donald Vallee, former president and general manager of Boland Marine and Manufacturing Co. of New Orleans, was nominated by then-House Speaker Jim Tucker and subsequently appointed by Jindal in May of 2008.

Vallee has occasionally clashed with other board members, even accusing one member of a conflict of interest. Vallee said in 2009 that he felt rents in New Orleans were artificially inflated by voucher rates.

In successfully lobbying the state Bond Commission for a temporary moratorium on new bonds for subsidized, affordable-housing construction in New Orleans, he said in September of 2009 that the city’s rental market “overbuilt.”

The Bond Commission hearing was prompted by a Bureau of Governmental Research report that supported Vallee’s position.

The report said that since Katrina, a larger share of New Orleans families received federal housing subsidies. It further suggested that the city may be in danger of having too much affordable housing, predicting that by 2012, if all proposed projects were completed, one in four households in New Orleans would be subsidized.

The rate was one in 10 prior to Katrina.

“What we don’t need is more construction,” Vallee reiterated. “We need reasonable rents.”

He said the moratorium on new subsidized housing was necessary because no one had properly studied the big picture. He called for the moratorium to remain in place until a comprehensive market study could be completed by an independent party—“someone without any skin in the game.”

Tucker also supported the moratorium, saying policymakers had been “flying by the seat of our pants” when making determinations of what housing subsidies were necessary in New Orleans. The result, he said, was an “excess supply.”

Added to the problem was the credit-market crash of 2008 stalled some developments and potential builders were unable to find investors to buy state-allocated tax credits.

Apparently Vallee’s independent streak doesn’t sit well with Jindal, who has expressed his wishes to replace him.

Apparently, whenever one stands between Jindal and tax credits, it gets Piyush’s hackles up.

But Vallee said he will fight his attempted ouster because he believes that Jindal lacks the legal authority to replace him.

“We’re not a state agency,” he said. “We are a private, non-profit corporation. I was not selected by the governor. He did appoint me but it was on the nomination of the Speaker of the House.”

Part of Vallee’s problem could be that unlike many of Jindal’s appointees, he has never contributed to any of the governor’s political campaigns.

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Remember last year’s incredible fiasco precipitated by Gov. Piyush Jindal when he spurned that $80.6 million Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) grant to provide high speed broadband internet to rural areas of Louisiana?

Well, it’s back—perhaps to bite him in the gluteus maximus.

State Superintendent of Education John White has released a report that shows Louisiana public school students and teachers are lacking the technology to enter the digital age.

The Louisiana Technology Footprint report discusses technology guidelines that provide a snapshot of the current state of digital readiness of school districts and campuses in the state.

Louisiana Believes, the highly-touted plan by the department includes, among other goals, one for all schools to be digital-ready by 2014-2015.

The report provides districts with an initial footprint picture of network, bandwidth and device requirements need to fully implement online assessments by the 2014-2015 school year and full digital readiness thereafter.

“Data and technology specifications…indicate school campuses in Louisiana have 197,898 devices available for online testing but only 67,038 (33.9 percent) met new device standards,” the report says.

Only five districts—Ascension, City of Bogalusa, Red River, St. James and FirstLine Schools of New Orleans—meet the minimum device readiness requirements and only two—Ascension and St. James—meet both device and network readiness guidelines for online testing, it said.

It was last Oct. 26 that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Division (NOAA) issued its final termination letter for the grant after repeated efforts to get the state to comply with its request for additional information.

The project, which LouisianaVoice learned was opposed by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), would have created 900 miles of cable over 21 rural parishes in Louisiana and would have supported several Louisiana universities with expanded optical fiber networking capacity.

That could have complimented the Board of Regents’ $20 million Louisiana Optical Network Initiative (LONI) project, designed to extend high-speed networking capabilities in the state.

But Jindal, whose wife’s charitable foundation received considerable funding from AT&T, apparently preferred that the project be carried out by private companies—such as…oh, say AT&T, for example.

The governor refused to re-apply for the grant because what he termed a “heavy-handed approach from the federal government that would have undermined and taken over private business.”

U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu call Jindal’s stated reason “hogwash.” She said the grant would not have interfered with private enterprise and in fact, would have granted money for private companies to lay the cable. “We weren’t trying to create a government broadband system,” she said.

Almost a year before the final rejection of the grant, ALEC, at its annual meeting in San Diego in August of 2010, passed a resolution opposing initiatives targeted at providing universally accessible broadband service because of “the unnecessary, burdensome and economically harmful regulation of broadband internet service companies, including the providers of the infrastructure that supports and enables internet services…”

Looks like someone forgot to tell White about Jindal’s opposition to expanded availability to that evil internet.

In fact, White, in his report, encourages school districts to join a statewide consortium that will aid in consolidated purchasing and contracts as well as providing technology services and support.

Wonder who’ll get the contract to form that consortium?

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