Brian Essi wrote:Phil,
I understand your concern, but consider the fact that the Family Health Center is the only "development" on the table. Even Bullock admits it will have only 150 employees and the majority of the "doctors" will be inexperienced residents in training. The rest of the doctors are already in Lakewood and will be relocated to the FHC leaving their existing buildings empty. So to over simplify a complex matter, why would we take $26 million of our cash now to demolish buildings and give away equipment to CCF for FREE that are together worth an estimated $70 million. Stated differently, why would we as taxpayers subsidize CCF and the yet to de identified developer(s) of the land to the tune of $96 million when that means releasing CCF from a $400 million claim? Discount the claim to 5% and the "deal" still makes no economic sense.
Back on April 13th I wrote my first epistle to Council (Jim O'Bryan posted here back in April) that included the following:
"You on behalf on our City currently have at least five aces in your hands:
1. If my analysis is valid the Lease and DA are assets;
2. CCF needs and wants to retain its share of Lakewood’s valuable market;
3. CCF desperately wants the prime real estate location owned by the City upon which the hospital rests—tearing down the hospital insures their monopoly in the Lakewood Service Area for years to come—25,000 hospital admissions;
4. The possibility of a hospital continuing at that location after 2026—keeping this option open is very important for our City and any future negotiations.
5. The ability to seek competitive bidding for well thought out options with many others besides just CCF."
Since then, my analysis have been verified by others--if CCF stays, they are on the hook and they pay.
So you are right that there is nothing in the amendment that guarantees another partner, but the FHC does more harm than good and hurts rather than helps Lakewood's healthcare. It guarantees we will never have a hospital. We really have nothing to lose and great potential for gain (i.e. the possibility of retaining a hospital) by telling CCF and LHA to pound salt.
Rewarding failure, manipulation and potentially criminal behavior can never help Lakewood.
Great response, thanks! I appreciate your passion for this. This is so complicated.
I think you did a good job of boiling down possible outcomes and I am glad you acknowledge the uncertainty that I have. I have read some and understood less about this issue. I worry that if I am representative of the average voter in Lakewood when such a vote comes up that we will be making gut-level decisions vs. informed ones. This is why we have representative governance. We elect people we hope will make the right decisions for the city on our behalf. When their job comes up we review and if they did a good job of it as far as we can see we vote for them. If they do not, we send them packing. We work in generalities. Is the city better off, safer, run more efficiently, etc. We talk with some level of specificity on how they attained that, too. But when it comes to understanding the level of relationships between a City, the LHA and CCF and all its complexities and responsibilities just seems like a lot to ask of the electorate (per the Amendment).
Does the amendment indicate what information (if any) is to be shared with the voters when making decisions? Who decides what is shared? The City Council? The current resident of the property? The LHA? A 3rd party? The Lakewood Observer? Or is it simply a ballot that says, "City Council has voted to close the hospital located on the corner of Belle and Detroit. Do you approve of closing this facility: Yes or No. " (prompting the usual, "wait, Yes keeps it open or Yes closes it? I am so confused!" discussions, of course).
Thanks for this discussion! It is really helpful in figuring this mess out.
Phil