Deaths at LaSalle Veterans Home yields changes, probes

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By Sarah Mansur

A COVID-19 outbreak at the veterans home in LaSalle that has killed a quarter of the residents over the span of a few weeks has prompted the chairman of a state House committee to open an investigation into the deaths.

“I don’t know what it is or who’s responsible but something is wrong,” said representative André Thapedi, chairman of the House Judiciary-Civil Committee in a phone interview. “And that’s why I consider this to be a legal matter. What occurred, when you have 32 of our heroes dying in our care, that’s clearly a legal matter. So, I want to use all of my skills and all other resources that I have as a legislator to try to get to the bottom of what happened.”

Thapedi, D-Chicago, said the committee is “taking steps to conduct a fact-based investigation and hearings” before the new Illinois General Assembly is sworn in January 13, according to Thapedi’s December 1 letter addressed to governor JB Pritzker, attorney general Kwame Raoul, House speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, and House minority leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs.

December 2, Thapedi submitted a written request for a broad range of documents pertaining to the outbreak from Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs administrator Angela Mehlbrech, who was the administrator of the LaSalle facility. Monday, the State issued a news release noting Mehlbrech employment had been “terminated,” with assistant IDVA director Anthony Vaughn to serve as interim administrator of LaSalle Home.

Since the outbreak began on Nov. 1, the LaSalle home has reported that 32 residents have died of COVID-19 related illnesses, according to the latest update from the IDVA December 5. As of midnight October 31, there were 128 residents at the home, according to an IDVA spokesperson.

The U.S. VA report provides examples of a staff member violating personal protective equipment guidelines, including an instance where three staff members in the facility’s kitchen were seen with masks around their chins, eating, and all within less than six-feet from each other.

That report states that staff member who eventually tested positive had attended a Halloween party.

When IDVA director Linda Chapa LaVia was asked about staff attending a Halloween party during a Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing last month, she said that statement could not be substantiated and the information was based on “word of mouth.”

The report from IDPH states that transmission among some staff members “may have occurred due to reported laxity of masking and social distancing while off duty and during break periods while on duty.” As a result, “Increased monitoring has been initiated.”

Thapedi said once his committee receives the first batch of documents, the members will decide whether to make additional requests to the Department of Veteran Affairs, and to the Department of Public Health.

“Depending upon what documents and what information comes out of that first round, there may be some other entities or people or organizations that have relevant information that we can obtain, all with the goal of finding out what happened. So, it’s a process,” Thapedi said.

The investigation by the House committee is separate from an independent investigation by the acting inspector general from the Illinois Department of Human Services, which Chapa LaVia announced last week.

Thapedi said the civil judiciary committee’s investigation is not in coordination with representative Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, chairwoman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, who has called for an in-person committee meeting in Chicago set for December 15.

In Kifowit’s December 4 letter calling for the meeting, she wrote that she has no choice but to request an in-person subject matter hearing during a global pandemic, given the House’s failure to pass virtual hearings, as well as “the extreme concern and mourning of the death of 30 veterans in the LaSalle Veterans Home by myself and members of the committee.”

Monday, Kifowit wrote by text message to Capitol News Illinois that the Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s hearing next week will focus on the steps needed to protect residents at LaSalle. She said her committee’s inquiry will examine “the failings outlined in the (U.S. VA) report, look at best practices from other facilities and veterans homes, and work on a path through legislation to make sure situations like this never happen again.”

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

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