Minority Legislative Leaders Announce Additional Forums on Nursing Homes, Assisted Living & Long-Term Care Facilities & Covid-19
Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay and Senate Minority Leader Rob Ortt today announced Minority-led forums to gain additional insight and information on the impacts of COVID-19 in New Yorks nursing homes and residential care facilities.
All members of the Assembly and Senate Standing Committees on Health, Aging and Investigations will be invited to participate in an upcoming event to be held on Monday, August 17, at 10 a.m. The proceeding will be conducted virtually, with additional regional sessions to follow later in the year.
If weve learned anything from the first two nursing home hearings, its that the discussion is far from over. We have heard from a number of individuals and organizations who wanted to come forward and share their experiences, but simply were not given the opportunity to do so, Leader Barclay said. Holding legislative hearings was important, but there is no reason to limit the conversations to only two events on an issue that impacted so many thousands of lives. After the health commissioners evasive testimony, after legislators were denied a chance to ask questions, after witnesses were pulled off of invitation lists, our Conference promised that we were not done listening. Mondays forum, and those that will follow, demonstrate our commitment to those individuals still waiting be heard.
Thousands of New Yorkers died in nursing homes and adult care facilities, and the state has yet to provide proper context to the full extent of the issue, Leader Ortt said. For more than three months, Senate Legislators called for hearings and an independent investigation to uncover the truth about what happened in our states nursing homes. Despite two prior hearings, there is clearly more work to be done. This is too critical of an issue to simply walk away and close the door. Even without full transparency and cooperation from the Cuomo Administration, grieving families deserve to be heard.
Janice Dean, whose mother-in-law and father-in-law both died from COVID-19 while living in elderly care facilities, will provide testimony during Mondays hearing. Ms. Dean, a Fox News meteorologist who has been vocal about the states handling of COVID-19 in nursing homes, was originally informed she would appear at the August 10 hearing. However, Majority members later reversed that decision in the days leading up to the hearing and refused to allow Ms. Dean to provide testimony.
In a joint legislative hearing held on August 3, Department of Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker left after taking questions for less than two hours, and refused to provide the full death toll of nursing home residents who were infected by COVID-19. He did not testify at the second hearing, held on August 10.