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Minnesota addiction treatment centers closing, despite high demand

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Minnesota teens struggling with drugs or alcohol have few options for help after several treatment centers closed last year.

Clinics that prescribed opioid addiction medication shut down in Duluth and Inver Grove Heights in the fall, as did a decades-old residential treatment program in New Ulm.

And as 2023 came to an end, so did a nonprofit’s drug treatment program for mothers at a St. Louis Park housing complex.

Addiction treatment providers stopped services in at least 10 Minnesota locations in 2023, often citing a lack of staff and perilously thin margins. Others scaled back.

Program closures in 2023 surpassed any year that several providers said they can recall, and the closures are coming as deadly overdoses and demand for services remain high. On average, more than three people died every day in Minnesota from an overdose, according to Minnesota Department of Health data on confirmed deaths in 2023.

“It’s been a nightmare,” said Jack Benson, executive director at the metro-area On-Belay House Anthony Louis Center that serves teenagers. “We’re seeing a lot more deaths.”

The state is hearing about “unprecedented degrees of challenge” in addiction treatment, as well as other helping professions such as nursing and mental health care, said Department of Human Services Assistant Commissioner Eric Grumdahl. It’s hard to find and hang onto workers willing to do the challenging jobs, state administrative requirements are burdensome and companies are still limping from pandemic setbacks and inflation, he said.

Then there’s the state’s reimbursement rates. A recently released state study showed the rates the state pays providers do not line up with what they are spending to do the work. DHS officials recommended widespread increases, and both Democrats and Republicans stressed the need for rate changes at a January hearing.

But spending in the upcoming legislative session is expected to be minimal and a budget deficit might be on the horizon. That could mean organizations will have to wait for rate increases.

However, Grumdahl noted the state is still distributing some of the roughly $200 million legislators approved last year for behavioral health. He said portions of that money are going to help start up or expand substance use treatment, including family treatment centers, culturally specific programs and harm reduction measures to reduce fatal overdoses.

“This is not a simple solution. It’s a really complicated problem that is, in many ways, decades in the making,” he said. “So rates is a part of that, administrative simplification is a part of that, removing the barriers to licensure and entering the field is part of that.”

Overdoses feared amid service shortages

Benson has heard about several teens who died from overdoses in the past year as they waited for a treatment center bed to become available.

While some companies did open or expand facilities in 2023, providers said they believe more places have closed. Benson’s organization shut down five locations in recent years, but reopened one last year. Meanwhile, closures of other companies’ adolescent facilities in Mora, Burnsville and Roseville last year have funneled more people to their waitlist. He said working with teens comes with additional licensing and staffing requirements and low state reimbursement rates make it “very, very difficult.”

It’s not just adolescent centers shutting down: Providers offering various levels of service – from residential inpatient treatment to outpatient therapy services to clinics offering medication-assisted treatment – have closed their doors.

Organizations are also mothballing programs, having staff take on more cases or selling real estate to stay viable, said Brian Zirbes, executive director of the Minnesota Association of Resources for Recovery and Chemical Health. He said the association surveyed more than 120 of its members last summer and found a number of them were “on the ropes.”

“They have been scaling down, scaling back to stay alive,” Zirbes said.

It’s difficult to get an exact count of how many substance use treatment providers closed in Minnesota over the past year. DHS licensing data show that among hundreds of licensed providers, dozens closed last year and there was a substantial drop in treatment providers’ overall client capacity. But the numbers are flawed.

Some agencies DHS listed as closed told the Star Tribune they were still fully operating, while others listed as having active licenses have closed. The data only reflects closures reported to the agency, but providers are not obligated to report a closure, according to a DHS spokesman, who said they also mark a place as closed when a provider fails to pay a renewal fee at the end of the year.

The state licensing data doesn’t reflect a closure at one of Cindi Naumann’s businesses. She said she and her business partners at Freedom Center and New Freedom have spent years providing drug and alcohol treatment to rural communities in central Minnesota with the goal of “literally trying to save lives.”

Last year they closed two locations, an outpatient center in Cambridge that was serving more than 100 clients a year prior to the pandemic and a 15-bed facility that offered housing and treatment in Princeton. They have another facility left in Princeton, she said, but it has a waitlist.

“That was very, very sad for us,” Naumann said of the closures, noting that business was hampered by stagnant reimbursement rates, a lack of staff and lost income from the pandemic. “Once the pandemic hit and since then it’s just been impossible to keep things staffed and to move forward.”

Providers in rural communities said having fewer facilities means people have to look harder and drive farther, or must piece together sparse public transportation options to get the help they need.

It’s critical to seize the moment when someone is ready for treatment, and long distances and waitlists get in the way, said Marti Paulson, CEO of Project Turnabout in western Minnesota. Paulson, who is president of the Minnesota Alliance of Rural Addiction Treatment Programs, said in her 20 years in the business she’s never seen anything close to the closure levels of 2023. She worries about the consequences.

“If you are in active addiction,” she said. “A waiting list is asking for overdose.”



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Former Medtronic consultant gets 18 months federal prison for insider trading

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A former Medtronic consultant received an 18-month prison sentence this week for his role in a scheme linked to the $1.6 billion acquisition of an Israeli medical device company in 2018.

A federal jury in February convicted Doron “Ron” Tavlin, 69, of Minneapolis, of one count of conspiracy to engage in insider trading and 10 additional counts related to securities fraud. That same jury found David Jay Gantman, 58, of Mendota Heights, not guilty of all charges against him. A third defendant — Afshin “Alex” Farahan, 57, of Los Angeles — pleaded guilty in 2022 and has yet to be sentenced.

“His crime was cynical and brazen. It was also reckless,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Ebert wrote in a memo calling for a 3-year prison term. “Tavlin’s conduct had the potential to blow up a deal that a team of executives and financial advisers had been diligently negotiating for months.”

Tavlin is now scheduled to self-surrender Jan. 5 to begin his prison term, which will be followed by 320 hours of community service.

According to the evidence presented at trial, Tavlin learned about a secret, pending acquisition by Medtronic of Mazor Robotics, where he worked as vice president of business development, in 2018. Tavlin also previously worked as a consultant to the Ireland-based Medtronic, which also has a headquarters in Fridley.

Tavlin illegally tipped off Farahan, his friend, about news of the imminent acquisition and told him to keep the news secret. Farahan knew the deal would likely result in a boost to Mazor’s stock price and quickly bought more than $1 million of the company’s stock throughout August and September 2018. Medtronic announced plans to acquire Mazor, which specialized in robotics for spinal procedures, in September 2018 and the deal closed three months later.

Prosecutors said Farahan netted more than $245,000, and Gantman made $255,000 in profit by selling the securities quickly after the deal was publicized. Farahan paid Tavlin for the secret information about the pending deal — including a $25,000 kickback about a year later —according to prosecutors.

U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank, who sentenced Tavlin Monday, also ordered Tavlin to pay a special assessment fee of $1,100 – or $100 per each count. Frank did not impose a fine.



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Charges detail assault in Minneapolis that led to shooting rampage, killing one in Kandiyohi County

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Another friend of the ex-girlfriend arrived to help. He pulled up in a car as the group exited the apartment and Matariyeh immediately pointed a gun at him before pounding on the windshield with the gun. Everyone fled as Matariyeh ran back inside the apartment.

The two men met in a parking lot before attempting to return to the apartment. That’s when they looked up and saw Matariyeh on the balcony. Matariyeh immediately began firing multiple shots at them as they took cover behind parked cars.

It was around this time that Minneapolis police officers arrived and made contact with Matariyeh’s ex-girlfriend. She believed he was still inside the apartment, but officers later learned that he had fled. They reached him on the phone. He told officers he was going to kill innocent people if he couldn’t speak with his ex-girlfriend or see his daughter, who was at daycare at the time. He later told police negotiators that “he wanted to go out by ‘suicide by cop.’”

All the while, Matariyeh was speeding westbound.

Police officers pursued him near Cosmos in Meeker County after being alerted that Matariyeh might have stolen another vehicle at gunpoint in Carver County.

Around 2 p.m. he pulled into the rural driveway of Peter Mayerchak in Lake Lillian. Mayerchak, who was in his yard placing hay over his septic mound, went and greeted Matariyeh, who shot him in the chest.



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DFL’s last-minute push to keep their trifecta

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Mixing progressive dreams with dire warnings, a group of DFL leaders riled up a group of volunteers in St. Paul on Thursday morning, urging them to push on through the day’s freezing rain and fatigue in the remaining days before the election.

Several elected officials including Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar told the group of about 150 campaign staffers, volunteers and union members about how meaningful their work is to keeping DFL control of the Legislature, as the electeds start a statewide bus tour to turn out votes.

“We are here to keep our trifecta here in Minnesota,” U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar told volunteers on Thursday. “We’ve got five days, people!”

On the Republican side, House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said earlier this month that the House Republican Campaign Committee had raised a record $2.7 million ahead of the election and she said Republicans have also set records in volunteering and door-knocking as they work to break DFL control.

Minnesota Democrats hold a rally before starting a bus tour around the state to get voters excited, including Rep Ilhan Omar, Sen Amy Klobuchar, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, House Speaker Melissa Hortman, Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, Rep Betty McCollum and Sen Tina Smith on Thursday. (Glen Stubbe/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

“Republicans have the momentum and resources heading into the final stretch to win the majority and restore balance to Minnesota,” Demuth said in a statement. “Minnesotans are ready to move on from the expensive two years of Democrat one-party rule.”

House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said she thought voters preferred action to the gridlock of divided government. “They’re looking for people who can get things done,” she said.

These last-minute get-out-the-vote efforts come as Democrats around the country push to keep control of state legislative chambers and try to flip a few statehouses that Republicans hold by just a few seats.

The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, the arm of the national Democratic party that works on statehouse races across the country, has spent $500,000 on Minnesota races this year, including House races and the state Senate contest.



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