Senators Sanders, Markey plan vote on launching Steward Health bankruptcy investigation
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders has joined a growing chorus of lawmakers pushing for an investigation into what caused Steward Health Care to go bankrupt.
Sanders, an independent from Vermont, issued a joint statement on Thursday with Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts about an upcoming vote to investigate and subpoena Steward Health Care officials.
Markey chairs the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Subcommittee on Primary Health and Retirement Security, and Sanders is a HELP Committee Chairman.
Next week, the HELP Committee will vote to subpoena Steward CEO Dr. Ralph de la Torre and to investigate financial decisions leading up to Steward’s bankruptcy.
Below is the joint statement:
"In America today, we have a dysfunctional and cruel health care system that is designed not to make patients well, but to make executives extraordinarily wealthy.
There could not be a clearer example of that than private equity vultures on Wall Street making a fortune by taking over hospitals, stripping their assets, and lining their own pockets.
Perhaps more than anyone else in America, Dr. Ralph de la Torre, the CEO of Steward Health Care, is the poster child for the type of outrageous corporate greed that is permeating our for-profit healthcare system.
Working with private equity forces, Dr. de la Torre became obscenely wealthy by loading up hospitals from Massachusetts to Arizona with billions in debt and sold the land underneath these hospitals to real estate executives who charge unsustainably high rent.
As a result, Steward Health Care, and the more than 30 hospitals it owns in eight states, were forced to declare bankruptcy with some $9 billion in debt.
Several of Steward’s hospitals have been forced to close their doors. Others couldn’t pay their health providers or purchase life-saving hospital supplies. Now, communities across the country are grappling with the possibility of losing their local hospitals as a result of Steward’s gross financial mismanagement. Meanwhile, Dr. de la Torre received an estimated $16 million a year in compensation, and Cerberus, the private equity firm he partnered with, made an $800 million profit.
Adding insult to injury, while patients and providers at Steward-owned hospitals suffered and his company careened towards bankruptcy, Dr. de La Torre received an estimated $100 million from his private equity enablers that he used to buy a $40 million yacht and a $15 million luxury fishing boat.
That is corporate greed at its most disgusting.
Time and time again we have invited Dr. de la Torre to come before Congress to testify about the financial mismanagement at Steward that led to one of the largest healthcare bankruptcies in our nation’s history. And time and time again, he has arrogantly refused.
Enough is enough. It is time for Dr. de la Torre to get off of his yacht and explain to Congress how much he has gained financially while bankrupting the hospitals he manages."
Steward has been soliciting bids to sell the 131 hospitals it operates across the U.S., including Trumbull Regional Health Center in Warren, Hillside Rehabilitation Hospital in Howland, and Sharon Regional Medical Center in Mercer County, Pennsylvania.