12.16
This week Hutcheson leaders are expected to adopt a new plan to cut costs at the struggling hospital. Specifics of the new plan aren’t known since HMC’s FIVE boards meet behind closed doors.
Hutcheson critics rightly point to multiple boards for ongoing problems. Defenders of the boards and hospital leaders blame current financial struggles on a plan from 1995.
Details of this article go far to explain the dysfunction at HMC: Five different overlapping redundant boards, with members appointed by either the county governments or members of the other boards. The boards meet in secret, which is unethical if not outright illegal, and they don’t even follow their own rules about who can serve on the various committees.
Hutcheson’s three county owners are ultimately responsible for this mess because they structured the hospital to run this way and selected the people in charge, but there are enough layers of boards and committees that each county government can point to them and defer blame.
Senator Mullis and Rep. Deffenbaugh (and whoever wins House District 2 vote) need to legislate two or three of those boards out of existence.. Streamline it, make the governance more transparent and simple. Take away their ability to hide their actions or blame them on others, and then it becomes clear who the problems are.
Now confirmed: Walker Transit fees will double in January, from $4 per round trip to $8. New Transit Director Larry Brooks says the county had to raise rates to cover fuel costs, because ridership is up since Lookout Mountain Community Services stopped running busses.
Brooks says anyone with a medical problem can use Angel Medical, which charges $40 for the same trip, and then bill it to Medicare.
- “‘The reason Lookout Mountain Community Services pulled out is because they were losing money, and that’s the same reason Walker County was looking at it,’ Brooks said, referencing Sole Commissioner Bebe Heiskell’s decision earlier this year to continue the service after she considered dropping it. ‘It’s not just Walker County. Other agencies [are struggling].'”
Back in July when LU said Bebe was killing the bus service, she claimed to have no intention or thought of shutting it down. Now she was “considering” dropping it.. (At the time she also said raising rates wasn’t an option.) The woman had every intention of killing this all along, and still would shut the busses down if she could get away with it. This fare increase is a step closer to that, cutting back usage in order to justify closing it down later on. She might as well just spit in the face of older and handicapped people who use Transit.
Hope everyone who goes out to the Mountain Cove Farms New Years party to enjoy “heavy horderves” and champagne thinks about old people sitting at home trying to decide if they want to pay their electric bill or ride the bus to Bi-Lo.
The reason Walker County has to raise transit rates was opened to the public last weekend:
A dozen, or possibly two dozen, people showed up for SPLOSTmas Christmas At the Cove on Saturday and Sunday. The craft/gift festival hosted at county-owned Mountain Cove Farms was promoted as an opportunity for the county, and vendors, to make money. So far no financial numbers have been released; if the Civil War Reenactment held there in September is any indicator, they never will be.
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