Connect with us

Kare11

Hennepin Co. terminates agreement with North Memorial

Avatar

Published

on



After initially authorizing $48 million for the program, the county board ended the agreement early this month. North Memorial says it’s “disappointed.”

MINNEAPOLIS — Just months into a contract, the Hennepin County Board voted this January to terminate an agreement with North Memorial Health, which provided $48 million over two years for people struggling to pay their medical bills.

County commissioners passed the resolution 4-1 on Jan. 2, at the very end of a public meeting that lasted only 11 minutes. 

Kevin Anderson, a Hennepin County Commissioner representing District 7, said he supports helping North Memorial patients in vulnerable financial positions. However, he said he ultimately voted to end the contract because of concerns about the structure and authority of the deal.

“We can’t be a blank check for anybody who has these great needs,” Anderson said in an interview. “They’re operating in their best interest, obviously, but we also have to operate in the entire public’s best interest. If we’re using taxpayer dollars, it’s best that taxpayers and the governing entity over that has more say of it.” 

With its flagship hospital located on the border of North Minneapolis and Robbinsdale, North Memorial serves some of Hennepin County’s lowest-income residents and treats 20,000 Medicaid patients per year.

In May 2023, the county signed a deal with North Memorial to provide reimbursements largely for people on Medicaid, Medicare and other government assistance programs. Under the terms of the contract, which KARE 11 obtained under the Data Practices Act, the county committed $24 million to North Memorial in 2023 and another $24 million in 2024, setting a goal “to obtain better outcomes for residents, reduce hospital bed stays, and reduce disparities.” The contract gave North Memorial the power to “determine eligibility” of patients, but the language of the deal also provided the county wide latitude to terminate the deal early.

In a statement, North Memorial said it was “disappointed” by the board’s decision to end funding for the program in 2024. Last year, the health system said it lost more than $60 million in resources due to underfunding from Medicaid and Medicare programs, which have made up a growing percentage of patients in recent years. (North Memorial also operates a separate financial assistance program with “charity care.”)

“This contract was vital to helping fund and support the healthcare needs of residents – especially those covered by government programs,” a North Memorial spokesperson said. “The critical nature of this healthcare challenge only worsens with time, and we are determined to do all we can to take care of our community, but we will need help.”

Hennepin County Commissioner Jeffrey Lunde, whose district includes North Memorial, was the only member of the board who voted to keep the deal alive. He said at last week’s meeting that “the county needs to support people no matter where they are in the county.”

“I believe that when the money is removed from the agreement, that North Memorial will do what businesses do, they have to right-size their operations,” Lunde said. “It will be the people who can least afford it who will pay the price. I believe they tend to not have a voice, so I’m going to give them that voice today by opposing this motion.”

By terminating the agreement, Hennepin County now possesses $24 million in funding that it could use toward other health-care purposes. A spokesperson for the county said the board voted to end the agreement “in part to re-focus county resources on other strategies, including those within its existing hospital and clinic system, Hennepin Healthcare.”

Commissioner Anderson said the county already provides similar funding to county-owned Hennepin Healthcare for patients on government assistance. Although he said he has not seen any specific proposals to shift the North Memorial funding to Hennepin Healthcare, he said it might be an option. 

“We have a lot of need in health care right now. HCMC is no exception,” Anderson said. “We are experiencing a big additional need. We’re not getting the reimbursement rates we really would need to see in order to get a good health-care system functioning.”

Meanwhile, Anderson said he’d like to pursue a new agreement with North Memorial. The health system also said in its statement that “we are committed to continuing to work with the County through a new proposal submission to meet our shared goal of providing important health care services to the people of Hennepin County.”

“We were trying to help them out,” Anderson said. “I still want us to get to the point where we can get to a productive partnership.”

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Minnesota missionary killed in Africa; details remain scarce

Avatar

Published

on



The letter penned by Lakes Area Vineyard lead pastor Troy Easton said Beau Shroyer of Detroit Lakes was “killed in an act of violence while serving Jesus” in Angola.

DETROIT LAKES, Minn. — The leader of a church in northwestern Minnesota announced in a letter to his congregation that one of its members was killed during a Christian mission trip to Africa.

The letter penned by Lakes Area Vineyard lead pastor Troy Easton said Beau Shroyer of Detroit Lakes was “killed in an act of violence while serving Jesus” in Angola, and that many details about Shroyer’s death are still unknown.

“At this point, there are many details about what’s happened that are still unknown, however, we have been in contact with his wife Jackie, and are doing what we can to come alongside them in this shocking and awful time,” the pastor’s letter said.

According to Easton, Shroyer and his wife shared five children. 

Arrangements to celebrate Shroyer’s life are still uncertain, the letter read, but Easton said the church will share updates with the public when more information becomes available.

Easton’s letter indicates Shroyer was in Africa with SIM USA, an organization long involved in “cross-cultural missions.” 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

Man sentenced in fatal shooting outside after-hours party

Avatar

Published

on



Investigators say 27-year-old Mayan Deng Mayan shot a man following an argument at the unlicensed party at an Uptown business.

MINNEAPOLIS — A man will serve a sentence of more than 34 years in prison after pleading guilty in a fatal shooting at an after-hours party in Minneapolis. 

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office says 27-year-old Mayan Deng Mayan was sentenced to 414 months, or 34 1/2 years in prison for the murder, which took place outside an Uptown Minneapolis business that was holding an after-bar party the morning of Sept. 18, 2022. 

Police were dispatched to the Fade Barber Shop on the 1600 block of Harmon Place just before 5:30 a.m. and found 28-year-old Birahim Gildersleve of Rochester suffering from life-threatening gunshot wounds. 

Gildersleve was rushed to Hennepin County Medical Center but did not survive. 

Investigators learned the shooting followed a verbal argument outside the party and used surveillance video and a license plate reader to identify Mayan as the shooter. He was subsequently charged with second-degree murder. 

“Mr. Mayan took the life of Birahim Gildersleve and in doing so, devastated Mr. Gildersleve’s loved ones and damaged a community,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said. “There is no sentence that can repair the harm, but today’s sentence delivers accountability for Mr. Mayan and is in the interest of public safety.”

Mayan will be credited for 585 days already served. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Kare11

BCA agent testifies on concealment of Maddi Kingsbury’s body

Avatar

Published

on



BCA Special Agent Joe Swenson told jurors that Maddi Kingsbury’s remains were hidden by brush and logs 6 to 10 feet long and appeared to be there “on purpose.”

MANKATO, Minn. — BCA Special Agent Joe Swenson was the first witness called Monday morning, the 8th day of testimony in the 1st-degree murder trial of Adam Fravel for the death of Maddi Kingsbury, his ex-girlfriend and mother of his two children.

Swenson, based in Rochester, took the stand and testified about arriving at the scene where Maddi’s remains were found inside a culvert on June 7, 2023.  He recalled that the remains were so hidden that he couldn’t tell where the Fillmore Co. Deputy was pointing until they started moving logs and brush.

The BCA agent described some of the logs in the ditch as being 6-10 feet long and “the size of older wooden powerlines, 6-inches across.”

“It certainly appeared the logs were placed there on purpose,” Swenson said.

Then prosecutor Phil Prokopowicz questioned Agent Swenson about discoveries made during an April 27, 2023, search of the Rochester home Fravel and Kingsbury shared. Jurors were shown photos inside the garage as Agent Swenson testified about finding a roll a roll of black Gorilla duct tape, which seemed to match the tape wrapped around Maddi’s body.

Swenson told the courtroom he also found Wyze-brand surveillance cameras in the garage, which had been taken down from inside the townhome and were not operational on the day investigators believe Maddi was killed.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.