Jim was invited as a result of talk show host Jim Gearhart's receipt of a copy of the letter from Jim and Sarah published in the August 7 Westfield Leader (see bottom of this item).
The call-in number for 101.5 is (800) 283-1015.
Westfield Leader, August 7, 2008
Letter of Revs. Jim and Sarah Colvin
Taxpayers Pay for Questionable
Hospital Closings in New Jersey
Thanks for your coverage of Muhlenberg.
The only entities who benefit from the closing of a hospital are the large corporations that close them. Gov. Jon Corzine must be pleased that his friends at the top of the economic food chain benefit so handsomely. Catholic Health East of Pa. will receive $252 million in low cost bonds issued by the state as it takes over St. Michel’s in Newark, and the issuer may well be Corzine’s alma mater, Goldman Sachs. (Goldman Sachs is listed as a possible issuer in the NJ Hospitals and Facilities Authority bulletin). For the first six years, we taxpayers will shell out $8.8 million per year, then theoretically the company will take over payments, although we remain on the hook for the duration.
Solaris Health Systems, who declared Muhlenberg Regional Medical Center insolvent and convinced Corzine and his Health Commissioner, Heather Howard, to close this essential urban hospital, will benefit greatly from the closing. At first, Solaris applied for $70 million to close Muhlenberg. Now the number has magically increased to $160 million — an astonishing figure that could be used to maintain the hospital for another ten years! We taxpayers have a right to see just what the $160 million is intended to do.
Instead, Solaris is trying to cash in at the expense of state taxpayers and at the same time selling off as much of the property as possible. (It is valued at over $90 million.) Solaris must be drooling in wait of the day when they can shut down all operations in Plainfield and cash in to support bloated executive salaries. CEO John McGee makes $652,000 on the books and who knows how much from his other business dealings partnering with local politicians.
Corzine should be held accountable for these amoral shenanigans that end up endangering people by depriving them of healthcare. Not surprisingly, most of them are located in poor urban areas with large minority populations.
We pray for the day when Corzine holds no public office and Solaris is out of the healthcare business — and for the day when healthcare is seen as a human right rather than a source of profit for the few.
Revs. James and Sarah Colvin
United Church of Christ, Plainfield
2 comments:
Will knowlegable citizens be the voice for the undoing of abusive and corrupt politicans and the rebirth of an activist citizenry? I hope so for the future of NJ and Plainfield looks dim on this day in August, 2008. Less we forget, these problems are a result of apathy and identity politics, i.e., vote party line minus objectivity. Where were all these well minded people when it came to the creation of the PMUA, support of the historic preservation movement, failure of the school system, appointments such as the housing court judge, decay of the infrastructure, $6,000,000 sewer settlement and its subsequent use, etc? Evil and greed are the bed fellows of politicans and it ins't pretty.
Jim was terrific!
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