Don’t mess with the
leadership of the N.C. General Assembly. That seems to be the central message
in a dispute between the legislature and Vidant Health, the corporation that operates
the Greenville hospital depended upon by thousands of eastern North Carolina
residents and by the East Carolina University Medical School.
The Pitt County Board of
Commissioners poked its finger in the eye of the N.C. Senate, which responded
not with a finger but with a fist. The Pitt County board claimed the authority
to appoint all 20 members of the Vidant board instead of the eleven members (a
majority, if you’re counting) they had been appointing. The state Senate had
been selecting the other nine, and senators didn’t like anyone messing with
their authority to control (or at least influence) things.
When the Senate’s proposed
state budget was released, a $35 million Medicaid reimbursement to the
Greenville Vidant hospital was omitted. Even in the stratospheric world of
health care costs, that’s a big loss for a hospital. Vidant claims that revenue
as its just deserts for being a teaching hospital for the ECU Medical School.
Senate leaders say if they can’t appoint board members, the state will have no
control over the management of the hospital and should not put additional state
money into Vidant.
Legislative leaders have
indicated they are so serious about this that they are willing to force the ECU
Med School to cut ties with Vidant and build an all-new med school teaching
hospital in Greenville at an estimated cost of $500 million.
As Raleigh columnist Colin
Campbell has pointed out, few Republicans (who hold a majority in the Senate)
opposed this power play, even those whose districts are served by
Vidant-affiliated hospitals. One exception is Rick Horner, who represents
Wilson and Nash counties. Vidant, feeling robust, had made aggressive moves in
the Wilson market with new physician offices, health care services and strong
public relations moves.
A Greenville TV station has
reported that UNC has a secret plan to take over Vidant. UNC Health flatly
denies the report. When I heard about this alleged conspiracy, I said, “Sounds
like the ghost of Leo Jenkins.”
Jenkins, the legendary
chancellor of ECU, grew that university to prominence partly by claiming that
the entire state, and especially UNC-Chapel Hill and university president Bill
Friday, was prejudiced against ECU. His perception was that no one west of I-95
gave a hoot about anything east of I-95, except the beaches (and then only for
visits). He lamented the poverty rates in eastern N.C. counties, the
out-migration of people from small towns down east, the poor-quality public
schools, the lack of jobs, etc. surrounding ECU.
Jenkins’ salesmanship and
determination greatly expanded ECU, but his “us against them” perception lives
on long after ECU has expanded its undergraduate and graduate student
populations and national recognition. The suspicion that a conspiracy led by
UNC-Chapel Hill is out to destroy ECU lives on. Although an ECU alumnus is
chair of the UNC Board of Governors, the heirs of Jenkins’ thinking persist in
believing that the UNC board is aligned against ECU.
Besides the UNC board chair
being accused of siding with the enemy (or something akin to that) and senators
voting against their constituents’ health care interests, this whole episode
seems bizarre. Refusing to give Vidant $35 million in Medicaid reimbursement
while considering spending $500 million to build a new teaching hospital turns
fiscal responsibiity on its head.
I’ve seen no reporting on
whether the Pitt County board had the authority to change the composition of
the Vidant board. If not, the whole issue, which is in the courts, might be
moot. Pitt has submitted a “compromise” that looks a lot like a list of
demands, but a sensible compromise should be doable. Let Pitt commissioners
have their eleven appointees, or even twelve, and let the hurt-feelings Senate
appoint the remaining nine seats or eight. You could even enlarge the board to
21 members and let Pitt County appoint twelve members.
Pitt commissioners aren’t
going to win a poker standoff against a player who has all the chips.
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