(The Center Square) – Bruce Walker | The Center Square
Updated: January 21, 2022 - 12:19am
Michigan may never know the actual number of deaths resulting from Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s executive order to place COVID-19 patients in long-term care (LTC) facilities.
That conclusion was the only verifiable takeaway from Thursday’s Senate and House Joint Oversight Committee meeting, where state senators and representatives grilled Michigan Auditor General Doug Ringler, Deputy Auditor General and Director of Audit Operations Laura Hirst, and Michigan Department of Health and Human Services Director Elizabeth Hertel.
The committee meeting spotlighted sharp differences between the Democratic Whitmer administration and the nonpartisan Auditor General (AG). It also brought into stark view thepartisan divisions between Senate and House legislators; namely, Democrats who either disparaged the AG’s methodology or defended Whitmer’s EO 2020-50; and Republicans, who argued the governor erred when she issued the order, and depicted the administration’s underreporting of the number of LTC deaths as a cover-up for her failed policy.
Hertel, a Whitmer appointee, disputed the AG’s findings in its report issued to House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. Steve Johnson, R-Wayland, on Jan. 12. The report stated the total number of COVID-19 deaths at long-term care facilities was 8,061, 42% higher than the state’s self-reported 5,675 deaths.
Hertel argued the AG report tallied deaths from facilities that did not fall under the federal rubric of LTCs. However, as noted by Johnson, Whitmer’s order also included facilities beyond the federal classification.
“All of these long-term care facilities were subject to Executive Order 50,” Johnson said. “Therefore, they should all be counted, not just those that we're required to self-report.”
“Thousands of Michigan’s most vulnerable residents died, but all the state’s health director seems to be concerned with is providing political cover for Governor Whitmer,” Tori Sachs, executive director of the Michigan Freedom Fund, said in a statement. “We haven’t seen politicians argue semantics like this since President Clinton waffled over the definition of the word ‘is.’”
Sachs reiterated the MFF’s demand for a thorough investigation into the governor’s order that placed COVID-19 patients in nursing homes and LTFs, noting the executive order was opposed by the state’s nursing home association as well as several members of her own party.
“If the Auditor General corroborated the Whitmer administration's undercounting of nursing home deaths, they would be applauding the credibility of this report," Eric Ventimiglia, executive director for Michigan Rising Action, said in a statement. “The fact is that the Governor's policy had deadly consequences for Michigan seniors, then her administration covered it up and undercounted deaths by 42 percent.”
https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/joint-oversight-committee-grills-michigan-health-director-over-nursing