Tuesday, March 18, 2014

More On Turner Helping Turner: GOP Lawmaker Lobbied For Defeat Of Nursing Home Moratorium Bill


State Rep. Eric Turner's immediate family members have a major financial stake in the success of Mainstreet Property Group, a real estate development firm that has raised a large amount of capital in Canada to fuel the construction of a slew of new nursing homes in Indiana. An industry group representing nursing homes across the state of Indiana, the Indiana Health Care Association, lobbied state lawmakers this year to place temporary moratorium on the construction of new nursing homes. Although Rep. Turner, a member of the House Republican leadership team, had publicly recused himself from participating in votes on SB 173 in committee and on the floor, the Associated Press' Tom LoBianco is now reporting that Turner lobbied colleagues aggressively behind the scenes to defeat the legislation late in the session after it comfortably passed both the House and Senate before dying in conference committee. Those Republican lawmakers credit Turner's lobbying efforts with defeating the bill:
A powerful House Republican secretly lobbied colleagues in the final hours of the 2014 session last week to kill a measure that would have been disastrous for his family's nursing home business.
Rep. Eric Turner lobbied to kill legislation that would have temporarily halted construction of new nursing homes and elderly care facilities, multiple Republicans with direct knowledge of the discussions told The Associated Press. Turner's son has emerged as a statewide leader in building such facilities, capitalizing on a surge of retiring Baby Boomers.
The Republicans spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the private caucus meetings during which Turner argued his case . . .
Turner's private lobbying marked an about-face from his public actions during the session, during which he regularly excused himself from votes on the measure and stayed quiet through public hearings.
Last year, The Associated Press reported that Turner had pushed a measure to benefit a client of his daughter, who is a Statehouse lobbyist. In light of that, House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said last year he'd review how the House handles conflicts of interests . . .
House ethics rules bar lawmakers from voting directly to benefit themselves, but Turner's efforts last year and this year did not appear to be a violation because they would have benefited his children instead.
Mainstreet Property Group LLC, a development company run by Zeke Turner and founded in part by his son Eric Turner, is in the process of developing five projects that the company believes will result in $162 million in economic impact throughout the state. A message left Monday with a Mainstreet Property spokeswoman seeking comment was not immediately returned.
The stakes are high in the nursing home game. Existing operators, some with older facilities, came to state lawmakers this year seeking to extend a construction moratorium enacted in 2009. They argued that flooding the market with new facilities would draw wealthier patients away and cause Medicaid recipients to be stuck in worsening conditions at the older homes.
Eric Turner's children, Zeke Turner and Jessaca Turner Stults, who's a lobbyist for Mainstreet, were on the other side of the debate with developers and trade unions, arguing that building new nursing homes meant creating thousands of jobs and tens of millions of dollars in economic development . . .
Zeke Turner and others launched a last-minute campaign at the end of the session, bringing in top-tier Republican and Democratic lobbyists to sway lawmakers. But it was his father's decision to swoop in last Wednesday as the session raced to a close that became deciding factor in defeating the nursing home measure, said another Republican with direct knowledge of Turner's efforts.
There are really no good guys in this debate, only losers--the taxpayers. The Indiana Health Care Association is now dominated by the nearly 60 nursing homes owned in name only by the Marion County Health & Hospital Corporation and operated by American Senior Communities in an effort to bilk extra dollars out of Medicaid. The corrupt Health & Hospital Corporation is using the extra dollars being bilked out of Medicaid to pay for its more than $700 million Eskenazi Hospital. By creating the illusion that a nursing home is owned by a county-owned hospital, Medicaid reimbursement rates 50% higher than that paid out to other nursing homes can be tapped for providing the exact same services. More than 60% of the nursing homes in Indiana are now affiliated with county hospitals in order to take advantage of this Medicaid bilking scheme. The battle that took place at the legislature this year only proves the old adage that there is no honor among thieves.

10 comments:

  1. The government needs one big audit by independent auditors on behalf of the public. 20 Years ago when we searched for a nursing facility we learned to avoid any associated with Medicaid because the facilities were the subpar. That continues today. That exploitation of Medicaid taxpayer money has been going on and will continue because the government does not oversee how it spends our money nor can they thoroughly investigate fraud much less stop it. Now they want to be in charge of health care. Wake up people.

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  2. If you don't participate in Medicaid, you pretty much eliminate the vast majority of potential residents at your facility. The vast majority of residents in nursing homes qualify for Medicaid benefits, if not upon their entry into the nursing home, soon thereafter after spend down of their assets due to the rising costs.

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  3. Anonymous8:58 AM EST

    Dig deeper.
    Wasn't Turner and Kenley the Sen's. that promoted the Ref's in Boone County, Zionsville for schools...not their district. Connections to call centers...

    “It doesn’t matter to me what your politics are or what position you hold in your community,” U.S. Attorney Joe Hogsett told the Indianapolis Star. “If you violate the public trust, our Public Integrity Working Group will find you, will investigate you, and the U.S. attorney’s office will then prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.”

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  4. The feds have known for some time that Turner cut a deal with the Daniels administration and ACS on that call center in Marion before the legislation even passed. Sure, it made it quick several million dollars on insider trading on the deal for him and his family, but this is Indiana. This is all legal if you're a part of the corrupt political establishment that only uses government for their own self-dealing purposes. When Joe Hogsett was Secretary of State and asked what he planned to do about the securities fraud committed by the promoters of Ski World, his response to their attorney was: "Not a God damn thing." Enough said.

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  5. I do not know if I should laugh or cry. Here we have our Government in a total lather about corrupt Russian Oligarchs and Putin. We hear all this talk about sanctions, and blah, blah.

    Yet, as you and others document day after day, the corruption, double dealing, and theft from the Tax Payers is simply SOP in Indiana. We have a justice that is dedicated to grinding those at the bottom, while those at the top skate.

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  6. Indiana "Republicans" will have to answer for their policies of Mass Tax-it; to an increasingly aware, voting public.

    The "Republican" majority can't hide bad economic policy behind the relative misery index of state comparisons; when baselined year to year, for growth or reduction of morbidly proportioned state government, in real, net terms.

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  7. Anonymous11:03 PM EST

    Those at the local (of corruption) skate with the top...(of corruption)...Must wait years now for answers due to presidential elections and more...??? Patterns.

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  8. Anonymous11:05 PM EST

    Feds waiting for elections?

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  9. Anonymous7:57 AM EST

    I know an owner in the nursing home
    industry, mostly outside of Indiana.

    His business typically waits 3 to
    6 months (or more), before payment
    is received from the state for the services rendered to the patients.

    It is a very regulated industry.

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  10. Anon. 7:57, You must be talking about Illinois. My brother-in-law sits on the board of a small town nonprofit nursing home in Illinois. They're barely able to keep their doors open because of the delayed Medicaid payments from the state of Illinois.

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