The Minnesota Department
of Health has fired one of its top administrators, triggering fresh
concerns about the agency’s handling of allegations of criminal abuse in
senior homes.
Nancy A.
Omondi was terminated last month as director of the department’s health
regulation division, which oversees state investigations of abuse in
senior care facilities. Omondi alleges she was fired in retaliation for
filing a complaint about “misconduct and bullying” in her division, as
well as high staff turnover, her attorney said Tuesday.
After her
termination, Omondi approached Sen. Karin Housley, chairwoman of the
state Senate Committee on Aging and Long-term Care, who on Tuesday
joined two other senators in calling for an investigation into
management practices at the division that handles elder complaints.
“[Omondi]
desperately tried to get the attention of her superiors ... but it fell
on deaf ears,” Housley, a Republican from St. Marys Point near Afton,
said at a news conference Tuesday.
“What this whistleblower uncovered was a toxic culture of bullying,
intimidation, harassment and complete disregard for outside input.”
The call for a fresh investigation comes a month after the Star Tribune published a five-part series
chronicling breakdowns in the state’s handling of elder abuse
investigations. The series found that hundreds of vulnerable residents
at senior care centers across Minnesota are beaten, sexually assaulted
or robbed each year. Yet the vast majority of these incidents are never
resolved, and perpetrators often go unpunished, in part because the
Health Department lacks the staff and expertise to investigate the
crimes.
A Health
Department spokesman said the agency is coordinating with the Minnesota
Management and Budget office to investigate Omondi’s complaint.
“The core values of our
department include integrity, respect and accountability,” spokesman
Michael Schommer said in an e-mail. “We take all complaints raised by or
against our employees at any level of the organization very seriously.”
Philip Villaume, an attorney for Omondi, called the timing of her termination “highly suspect.”
Omondi
filed a formal complaint on Nov. 13, alleging a “pattern of bullying and
harassment and dysfunction” within the health regulation division, he
said. She had planned to raise these same concerns with Minnesota’s
legislative auditor, who is also evaluating the Health Department’s
process for investigating maltreatment complaints. Omondi was fired a
day before she was scheduled to meet with a representative with the
Legislative Auditor’s office, Villaume said. The firing also occurred a
day before Omondi had a scheduled meeting with Health Commissioner Dr.
Ed Ehlinger, where she had also planned to raise her concerns about
misconduct, the attorney said.
“It’s
clear they were trying to silence her by terminating her,” said
Villaume, who said he is preparing a lawsuit against the Health
Department. “It’s a classic whistleblower case.”
Agency officials declined to discuss the terms of Omondi’s departure.
Omondi,
43, is a health research scientist who was born in Kenya and graduated
from the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota.
She worked at the Health Department from Sept. 19, 2016, to Nov. 29,
2017.
As the
population of seniors seeking care has increased, the Health Department
has been overwhelmed by a dramatic surge in maltreatment complaints.
Last year, the agency received 25,226 allegations of abuse and neglect
in senior care facilities, a sevenfold increase since 2010. The agency
has failed to keep pace with this increase, and last year investigated
only 3 percent of maltreatment complaints on site. Even when the state
does investigate, the cases can drag on for months, frustrating families
and making criminal prosecutions difficult or impossible, the Star
Tribune found.
Agency
officials early this year admitted they were falling behind, and
persuaded lawmakers to allocate $11.4 million in new funding to
investigate health facility complaints.
With the
new funding, the agency has embarked on a plan to double its
investigative staff over the next four years, including more
investigators with a criminal justice background. The agency is also
modernizing its computer systems so that it can share more information
about abuse investigations electronically; currently, the agency is
hampered by a paper-based system that slows investigations.
“We’ve been running fast to catch up, but it’s clear we’re not running fast enough,” Ehlinger said in a recent interview.
However,
both Housley and Sen. Michelle Benson, R-Ham Lake, chairwoman of the
Senate Health and Human Services Finance and Policy Committee, said
Tuesday they would oppose any new funding for the division that
investigates maltreatment until the concerns raised by Omondi are
addressed.
“There
should be no more money until we know what they are going to do about
this toxic culture,” Housley said. “No one should be fired for speaking
up.”
Full Article & Source:
Senior Minnesota health regulator is fired, triggering calls for greater scrutiny of senior abuse probes
1 comment:
Minnesota is having a hard time gaining traction on the elder abuse problems in that state. They let it go too long and now it's going to be hard to catch up. The state should start with a heartfelt apology!
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