Sunday, June 16, 2024

Warren’s New Bill Makes Private Equity’s Death Grip on Hospitals a Crime


 

JUNE 14, 2024
Facebook

Private equity’s entrance into health care since 2000 has been dramatic. Both the number of private equity (PE) deals and annual PE investments in health care increased tenfold between 2001 and 2020, and peaked in 2021.

Until now, lax corporate transparency and accountability regulations meant that there was nothing anyone could do when corporate owners of health care companies enriched themselves and their investors while driving the companies they owned to financial disaster. They got away with their ill-gotten gains while the hospitals’ stakeholders and communities paid the price. But that is about to change.

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) announced the Corporate Crimes Against Health Care Bill. This new legislation will empower state Attorneys General and the US Attorney General to claw back funds and impose civil and, in the case where a patient dies, criminal penalties on a PE firm and related financial actors whose financial engineering activities drove the health care organization to financial ruin.

Senator Warren’s Corporate Crimes Against Health Care bill will curb the use of financial engineering strategies that endanger the integrity of the US health system. It will curb abuses that I and other researchersinvestigating the financialization of America’s health system have identified. It will protect the right of patients to the best care possible, of professionals and frontline workers to adequate staffing and time with patients, and of communities to accessible health care.

In the case where looting the hospital results in a patient’s death, the Corporate Crimes Against Health Care bill mandates that executives of the PE firm and the failing health care company will be subject to a new criminal penalty of up to six years in prison.

Regulators — state attorneys general and the US attorney general — will be able to claw back all compensation paid to PE firms and health company executives who unjustly enriched themselves as the health care organization spiraled toward serious, avoidable financial difficulties. A corporate owner who shows that it could not have prevented the financial troubles will not be penalized.

Importantly, and proactively, the legislation would prohibit federal health programs from making payments to hospitals and other health organizations that sell assets to a real estate investment trust (REIT).

It provides transparency by requiring health care entities receiving federal funding to report changes in ownership and control as well as financial data including debt. Health care professionals caught between the demands of their corporate owners and the needs of their patients experience this conflict in deeply personal and disabling ways that have been termed “moral injury.”

The new legislation will mandate a Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General report to Congress on the harms of corporatization in health care.

Today, private equity has ownership stakes in nearly every segment of health care from doctors’ practices and hospice agencies to hospitals, health IT, and medical debt collection. The supercharged drive for profits by PE owners clashes with the public’s right to an equitable and inclusive health system that puts patients’ needs first. PE firms prey on the most vulnerable members of society: children with behavioral problems, the frail and poor elderly, the dying being cared for by hospice agencies, and acutely ill patients in hospitals.

Private equity has a well-worn playbook that it uses to legally loot health care companies. These strategies erode the financial stability of organizations across the health care spectrum. But the effects of PE’s relentless pursuit of maximal profit in the four to seven-year window before it resells the company may be most pernicious in hospitals. The scale of hospitals and affiliated health systems in terms of the number of patients cared for, professional and frontline workers employed, and the communities they serve, dwarfs other health segments. A hospital closure can devastate the community it serves.

Private Equity uses standard operating procedures, like these, to extract wealth from the companies it owns:

+ Recruit investors who commit capital to a private equity fund. For instance, investors like pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, and high net worth individuals provide the funds, but they don’t make any decisions.

+ Buy health care companies and providers for the PE fund’s portfolio of assets, transforming an organization whose mission is to serve the public good into a financial asset to be bought and sold.

+ Use the capital the investors have contributed to the PE fund to make the “down payment” on the acquisition of the health organization. The PE firm contributes 2 cents to the PE fund for every dollar the investors put in, so it has very little of its own money at risk.

+ Use lots of debt (leverage) to acquire the health organization and then obligate the acquired enterprise to repay the borrowed funds. Even though the debt was used by the PE fund to buy the company, which it now owns, it is the company, and not the fund, that is on the hook to repay the debt. This is a so-called leveraged buyout.

+ The higher the use of debt, the greater the profit for the PE firm and its investors when the company is sold a few years later. But debt is a two-edged sword. It weakens the health organization, greatly increasing the risk it will face financial distress and bankruptcy.

+ Require the health company to take on more debt and use the proceeds to pay dividends to the organization’s owners, i.e., the PE firm and its investors.

+ Strip the health organization of its assets by selling off its real estate to a real estate investment trust (REIT) in a sale-leaseback agreement. The proceeds of the sale are used to line the pockets of the PE firms and their investors. The health care organization is left with the lease and must now pay rent on property it formerly owned.

+ Require the health organization, which the PE fund now owns, to agree to pay you for vaguely specified “monitoring” services, colloquially referred to as “money for nothing.”

+ Engage in cost cutting and tax manipulation to increase cash flow, known as “putting lipstick on the pig.”

+ Sell the dolled-up, debt-ridden company at a profit in four to seven years after acquiring it. Give the PE firm 20 percent of the profit even though it only put up 2 percent of the equity.

+ Walk away scot-free if the health company sinks under the weight of its fees, debts, and rent payments. Keep all the money you skimmed off the top to line the pockets of your executives. Leave the patients, workers, creditors, and community to pay the price.

In hospitals and nursing homes, the financial strategies employed by private equity siphon off taxpayer dollars that fund Medicare and Medicaid and are meant to pay for health care for patients. The public’s money is used to unjustly enrich PE firms and their investors. Mortality is higher in PE-owned nursing homes. Hospital patients are left with poor care and a higher incidence of “adverse events” in hospitals — ulcerated bed sores, falls, nasty hospital-acquired illnesses — that complicate their recovery.

We have seen this most recently in the dramatic implosion of the Steward Health System, now bankrupt and stranding patients, workers, vendors, and creditors. Many communities are left without a way to meet the health needs of their residents when private equity deals close a safety net hospital or the only hospital in an area.

PE firm Cerberus Capital bought out a small troubled Catholic hospital system in the Boston area, Caritas Christi Health Care, in 2010. After a few years, Cerberus sold off most of its hospitals’ property to MPT, a real estate investment trust. This left the hospitals saddled with long-term inflated leases.

Cerberus used the sale proceeds to pay itself hundreds of millions in dividends and then used the Steward system as a platform for a massive debt-driven acquisition strategy to buy out 27 hospitals in nine states in three years between 2016 and 2019, then roll them up into a dominant health care company in its local markets.

Steward’s debt load exploded, and by 2019, its financials were deeply in the red. Its Massachusetts hospitals were the worst financial performers of any system in the state and had higher than average rates of patient falls, hospital-acquired infections, and patient readmissions. Unable to find a buyer for its financially weakened hospitals, Cerberus exited Steward in 2020 by lending a group of the hospital system’s physicians the money to buy the troubled chain, leaving them to cope with above-market rent payments and massive debt. Cerberus pocketed $782 million for itself and its investors from its ownership of Steward.

Steward declared bankruptcy this year and will shutter most of its hospitals. Its nine Massachusetts hospitals, four of them safety net hospitals, served 200,000 patients a year. Closing them will leave patients without access to emergency and other vital medical services, and with long travel times for surgeries, cancer care, and care for chronic conditions.

The most tragic story to emerge from Steward’s financial fiasco is the death of a new mother just a day after giving birth at a Steward hospital. The woman had a deep bleed that could have been treated with an embolism coil. But the hospital did not have one. Weeks earlier the devices had been repossessed by their manufacturer because the hospital failed to pay for them.

Steward is not an isolated case. In 2010, PE firm Leonard Green acquired five community health systems, renamed them Prospect Medical Holdings, and expanded the system through debt-financed mergers and acquisitions to 20 hospitals and 165 clinics by 2019. The hospital system’s debt level multiplied and its quality ratings fell to among the lowest in the country. It sold off much of its hospitals’ real estate to MPT so that its hospitals now pay inflated rents.

In the Fall of 2019, Leonard Green shut down its hospital in San Antonio, Texas as well as the hospital’s home health division, its specialty health and behavioral center, and other facilities, laying off nearly a thousand workers. By that time, it had extracted at least $658 million in fees and dividend recapitalizations. Taxpayers pay: 55 percent of Prospect’s annual net revenue through Medicare and Medicaid.

In the Fall of 2023, Leonard Green closed Delaware Memorial Hospital, a debt-ridden safety net hospital in a middle-class suburb of Philadelphia, and was given a nine-month grace period to find a buyer for Crozer Health, a failing four-hospital chain in Pennsylvania’s Chester County.

Apollo Global Management is currently the largest private equity owner of hospitals. It owns LifePoint Health and Scion Health, which, between them, have a total of 244 hospitals. This is more than half of the 457 acute care, behavioral, and specialty hospitals the Private Equity Stakeholder Project has identified as private equity owned.

LifePoint is the largest chain of mostly rural hospitals in the US. It owns 62 acute care hospitals serving communities in 16 states. In early 2020, Lifepoint sold the real estate of 10 of its hospitals in six states to Medical Properties Trust in a sale-leaseback deal that enriches Apollo and leaves the hospitals with long-term leases and escalating rent payments.

On March 17, Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) sent a letter to LifePoint inquiring about this and other “opaque and questionable acquisitions, mergers, and other related party transactions…” Concerned about the financial condition of the LifePoint hospitals and dissatisfied with the responses he got from its PE owner, he is investigating further. Along with other health care companies owned by PE firms, LifePoint is the subject of two US Senate inquiries — one of them co-led by Senator Grassley.

In the last fifteen years, the private equity industry’s growth has rested on a foundation of sand, supported by secrecy, misinformation, hype, and poor institutional governance. The private equity industry, controlling trillions of dollars in assets, sorely needs adult supervision, independent verification, and public information dissemination.

Not only does the Corporate Crimes Against Health Care bill curb the use of financial engineering strategies that endanger the integrity of the US health system; it offers justice for those harmed.

This first appeared on CEPR.


How the Crypto Industry Dodges Regulation


 
JUNE 14, 2024
Facebook

Photo by Art Rachen

A recent bill passed by the House of Representatives claims to regulate the cryptocurrency industry and protect consumers. But the bill is a Trojan horse designed by an industry flush with cash — the real kind.

The Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act is the cryptocurrency industry’s big attempt to win favors from Washington. Put simply, it would exempt crypto assets and platforms from the definition of “securities,” meaning that the Securities and Exchange Commission’s power to regulate crypto would shrink dramatically.

The SEC has been the cornerstone of protecting small investors since the 1930s, when it was created in response to the pre-Depression stock market crash. Instead, crypto wants to be regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, an obscure agency with much less capacity to enforce the law.

The potential impact should not be taken lightly. The FBI reported in 2023 that over $4 billion was lost due to investment scams. Another recent report showed that more than 90 percent of stablecoin transactions are fake. And the myth that crypto is a means to financial inclusiveness is just that.

If any industry ever needed more oversight, not less, it’s the crypto business. But that’s not what the bill would do.

The crypto industry has consistently misled lawmakers during the process by using obscure crypto industry jargon and exaggerated promises of “innovation” to dress up policies that are simply new ways to avoid effective oversight and legitimize risky industry practices.

“This bill, if enacted, would close the purported crypto regulatory gap with a wrecking ball instead of a modest patch, damaging financial regulatory safeguards for all Americans, not just crypto consumers,” said Mark Hays, senior policy analyst at Americans for Reform. Hays also fears the bill would also create a roadmap for other industries, namely Wall Street, to evade regulatory oversight.

The outside money involved in getting this legislation passed underscores the ability of a well-heeled industry to corrupt the process. Crypto has spent a shockingly large amount of money lobbying and pushing candidates to embrace their policy goals in exchange for support. Crypto Super PACs have spent over $100 million this cycle.

Lawmakers will no longer have consumers’ best interests at heart if they become captive to the crypto industry. But in the recent crypto vote, 71 Democrats, who are generally more crypto skeptical than their Republican counterparts, joined Republicans in helping this bill pass the House. That shows the power the lobby has over lawmakers despite the opposition from consumer and labor groups, state regulators, several federal agencies, and the Biden administration.

Voters will have to call on Congress to resist the urge to fall for the industry’s false claims, flashy public relations, and political pressure. Lawmakers should hold the industry to the same standards as everyone else. Why should crypto investors receive less protection than others? The industry’s record shows that’s not a risk worth taking.

Brian Carss is a communications intern at Americans for Financial Reform and a recent graduate of North Carolina State University.

WAR IS RAPE

A WWII Canadian Soldier Honored for Killing Allied Troops


 

JUNE 14, 2024

Facebook

The Normandy celebrations of the 80th anniversary of D Day commemorated the victory of the Allies against the Axis powers. But a very different recent celebration in Italy paid tribute to a WWII Allied soldier who shot and killed fellow Allied soldiers. The heroics of the young Italian Canadian officer Captain Tony Scotti shooting French colonial troops during the Battle of Cassino in order to protect women and children was recently recognized by the Italian government. Years after the late May/early June 1944 events, government officials as well as local villagers paid tribute to the courage of Scotti in one of the most courageous and unusual acts to have taken place during the fog of war and a reminder of fragile alliances.

The story begins at the end of May 1944, when the sixteen-year-old Antonio Grazio Ferraro was caught between retreating German soldiers and arriving French colonial troops. “With the retreat of the Germans and the advance of the Allied troops, we considered ourselves relatively safe because the area was under the control of Canadian soldiers,” the mature Professor Ferraro wrote years later in an interview in “CASSINO from the destruction of war to the rebirth of peace.”

That safety was an illusion. Rumors were spreading among the villagers about the violence of the advancing Allied troops, the Moroccan “goumiers,” mostly recruited from Berber tribes in the Moroccan Atlas Mountains. More than rumors, the advancing French troops even warned the locals that the North African troops were capable of violence.

Ferraro was rounded up by the colonial troops along with members of his family. They were forced to witness sexual as well as extreme physical violence. The 1960 film Two Women, starring Sophie Loren, describes the violence and rapes that took place in the region at the time. Arriving French soldiers made no effort to stop the beatings and rapes or punish the perpetrators.

Outraged by what had happened and what was happening, Ferraro and his family went to the nearby headquarters of the Canadian Military Police in Pofi. They met with the commander, Captain Tony Scotti, a former police officer in Westmount, Quebec, who spoke perfect Italian because of his family’s background.

The next day Scotti and several soldiers went to the cottage where the violence had taken place. Soon after, the locals started screaming as the dreaded Moroccans started approaching from across the Sacco River, the border between the Canadian Army and the French Expeditionary Forces. As Ferraro recounted: “Captain Scotti warned them not to cross the river, firing a few shots into the air with his pistol. After an initial moment of hesitation and surprise, the gaumiers tried to cross the river as if in a fit of madness, at which point the Canadian soldiers opened fire, fatally shooting several of them. The survivors and their wounded turned back and disappeared into the trees.”

page6image65417472

Captain Tony Scotti in 1944.

How many were killed we will never know. But Ferraro later said the river ran red after the Canadians machinegunned their Allies. An official report estimated that around three hundred rapes were believed have taken place in the Castro dei Volsci area alone.

Adding to the heroic act of Scotti and the Canadians is a bit of serendipity. Several years after, in 1975, during ceremonies marking the Battle of Cassino, a delegation of Canadian politicians and soldiers attended a conference organized by the local municipality and the Mayor of Cassino, Antonio Grazio Ferraro.

Ferraro recollected what happened this way: “As I welcomed the convention participants with the ritual greetings of welcome, one of them stood up and welcomed himself as Colonel Tony Scotti of the Canadian Military Police.

No, it wasn’t possible. Was it really Captain Scotti I met in Pofi in May 1944? When I asked him if he was in command of the Military Police in Pofi and if he remembered the events that happened 31 years ago, after a moment of silence, he walked towards me, and we gave each other an emotional hug.”

“At the end of the conference, which obviously underwent a surprise change of program, I gave Colonel Scotti the Gold Medal of the City of Cassino, and he reciprocated, giving me the golden badge of his Corps.”

80 years after the events surrounding the Battle of Cassino, the Government of Italy formally recognized the descendants of Tony Scotti in two events, April 25 in Pofi and May 14 in Castro dei Volsci. At the first event, the mayor of Pofi presented Scotti’s and Ferraro’s daughters the key to the city and honorary citizenship. April 25 is “Liberation Day” in Italy and this year, like D Day, marks the 80th anniversary. The key was designed and produced especially for this occasion. A monument was put up near where it all happened.

page2image64649552

Scotti’s daughter Carol Kohler Scotti with family, key to the city of Pofi and honorary citizenship.

The second ceremony took place at the train station in Castro dei Volsci on May 14, 2024. Scotti’s two daughters and family were there with twenty-four veteran Canadian soldiers and local survivors of the war.

page7image64543296

Carol Kohler Scotti with veteran Canadian soldiers before the monument.

As one of the monuments honoring these two men put it so well: “In these places, during the early days of June 1944, two young men proved their courage and altruism. Through their actions they saved the citizens from dreadful brutalities and abuses.”

Scotti stayed in the provost corps after the war and become the Commandant of the Canadian Provost Corps School (1960-62) and the Canadian Army Provost Marshal (1962-64). He retired from the military in 1968 and died in 1995 at 80.

Based on what was happening in 1944, Scotti and Ferraro understood that so-called “allies” could not be trusted. In his remarks at the American cemetery at Coleville-sur-Mer on June 6, President Biden said; “We proved something else here as well: the unbreakable unity of the Allies. Here with us are men who served alongside the Americans that day, wearing different flags on their arms but fighting with the same courage, for the same purpose. What the Allies did together 80 years ago far surpassed anything we could have done on our own. It was a powerful illustration of how alliances — real alliances — make us stronger — a lesson that I pray we Americans never forget.”

Biden was probably not aware of what Scotti and Ferraro did. For beyond Biden’s extolling the “unbreakable unity of the Allies,” Scotti’s and Ferraro’s heroics highlight that seeming allies and alliances are not always “real” and cannot always be trusted. Their courage in protecting innocent civilians even against allied troops is more than worthy of commemoration against the background of the “Us” against “Them” celebrations on D Day.

Daniel Warner is the author of An Ethic of Responsibility in International Relations. (Lynne Rienner). He lives in Geneva.