TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Saying he didn’t want to make
changes necessary to get it passed, Florida Constitution Revision
Commission member Brecht Heuchan on Tuesday withdrew a proposal that
would have guaranteed certain rights to nursing-home residents and
allowed them to sue facilities if those rights were violated.
Heuchan said he met with commission members
over the past several weeks to discuss their concerns and discovered
that the portions of the proposed constitutional amendment (Proposal 88)
that were most important for him were the same provisions that were
most worrisome to other commissioners.
“To get this proposal in a place where it could
enjoy the support that’s needed would leave it in a place that I
wouldn’t want it, to be honest,” Heuchan said in announcing his decision
to withdraw the proposal from further consideration.
Though his remarks were relatively brief,
Heuchan fought rising emotion in his voice, noting that it was painful
for him to concede that the proposal wouldn’t pass. The proposal faced
opposition from the nursing-home industry.
“It’s very difficult, but it is life and it is this process and it’s the way things are,” Heuchan said.
Heuchan’s proposed constitutional amendment
would have guaranteed residents whose rights were violated the ability
to sue -- without limitations -- for losses, injuries and damages caused
to them and their families. The owners, operators, employees and others
who care for residents at long-term care facilities could have been
liable under the proposal.
The proposal also would have required
facilities to have the financial resources or liability insurance to
provide compensation for damages, something they are not required to
have today.
Heuchan’s proposal was supported by AARP
Florida which backed enshrining the rights in the state Constitution.
AARP spokesman Dave Bruns said the senior-advocacy group was
disappointed that the proposal was withdrawn.
The Constitution Revision Commission meets
every 20 years and has the power to place proposed constitutional
amendments directly on the November ballot. It is meeting this week in
Tallahassee to try to narrow a list of ballot proposals. Ultimately, 60
percent of voters would have to approve any constitutional amendments.
Heuchan is a legislative lobbyist for the
Florida Justice Association, which represents plaintiffs’ attorneys, and
the Tampa law firm of Wilkes & McHugh, which has long been a major
player in suing nursing homes.
Heuchan’s connections led Conwell Hooper,
executive director of the American Senior Alliance, to file an ethics
complaint against him. Hooper’s group is a member of the Florida Health
Care Association, the state’s largest nursing home association, which
adamantly opposed the proposal.
But the Florida Commission on Ethics cleared
Heuchan, saying nothing in the complaint filed against Heuchan showed
he was paid to push the amendment or broke laws.
The Florida Health Care Association issued a statement Tuesday thanking Heuchan for withdrawing his proposal.
“We believe the Legislature is the proper
place for these types of discussions and look forward to working
together with Florida lawmakers, regulators and other stakeholders on
policies that prioritize resident care,” association Executive Director
Emmett Reed said in a prepared statement.
LeadingAge Florida, another nursing home group, said it was pleased the proposal was withdrawn.
“As we’ve said from the beginning, the
proposal would have done nothing to improve the lives of nursing home
and ALF (assisted living facility) residents. Instead, it would only
have served to benefit trial attorneys and divert already scarce
resources that should be spent on the care of frail seniors,” LeadingAge
Florida President Steve Bahmer said in a statement.
While he is withdrawing the proposal,
Heuchan said he plans to continue to “fight for the rights of the
elderly in our state and would welcome all the help I could get.”
Full Article & Source:
Nursing home residents' rights measure scrapped
This is a giant step backwards.
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