Connect with us

Iowa

Iowa Senate Republicans reject call for nursing home probe

Published

on

Iowa Senate Republicans reject call for nursing home probe


Iowa Senate President Amy Sinclair, R-Allerton, speaks Jan. 23 at the Statehouse in Des Moines. Sinclair on Thursday rejected a formal request by Democrats for a state oversight meeting to investigate nursing home care in Iowa in the wake of recent reported deaths, abuse and neglect in Iowa care facilities. (Charlie Neibergall/The Gazette)

Iowa Senate Republicans have rejected a formal request by Democrats for a state oversight meeting to investigate nursing home care in the state in the wake of recent reported deaths, abuse and neglect in Iowa care facilities.

Iowa Senate Democrats and advocates for Iowa seniors held a news conference Thursday at the Iowa Capitol calling on the GOP-controlled Senate Oversight Committee to launch a bipartisan investigation into Iowa’s nursing homes.

Sen. Claire Celsi, D-West Des Moines

Sen. Claire Celsi, D-West Des Moines

Sen. Claire Celsi, D-West Des Moines, the ranking member on the oversight committee, sent a letter to Sen. Amy Sinclair, R-Allerton, the committee chair and president of the Iowa Senate, requesting the investigation.

Celsi and advocates pointed to documented instances of resident deaths, abuse and neglect of residents at long-term care facilities in the state, including lack of access to food and water, and lack of access to adequate medical care, including medications, wound care and pain management and lack of access to ambulance services.

Advertisement

Sinclair, in a statement sent to The Gazette, said she will not schedule an oversight meeting on the topic “because it would distract department staff from performing their important work monitoring these facilities.”

She pointed to more than 2,800 citations issued in the past 12 months by the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals, the state agency responsible for inspecting the state’s nursing homes.

“That number of citations demonstrates how serious the state takes the issue of elder care,” Sinclair said in the statement.

The Iowa Senate president also pointed to legislative efforts to address workforce shortages in the industry.

“(S)ince 2017, the Senate has increased funding for nursing home care by nearly $75 million, increased incentives for high quality of care to over $111 million, and passed critical tort reforms to ensure nursing homes can continue to provide services in rural Iowa,“ Sinclair said.

Advertisement

‘Grave danger’

Celsi, in her letter, said “it is painfully clear that the State of Iowa is not taking its responsibility to care for vulnerable Iowans seriously.“

“Consequently, some residents of Iowa’s nursing facilities are in grave danger of neglect, abuse and death,” she wrote.

She said Iowans “want and deserve full accountability and transparency” from state officials, calling it “a matter of life and death for impacted Iowans.”

“We have a critical responsibility to ensure state departments are carrying through their legislatively assigned functions,” Celsi told reporters during the Thursday news conference. “The nursing home crisis is real, and the state has an obligation to investigate and provide workable solutions.”

Advertisement

Celsi on Thursday said legislative Democrats might have the option of holding meetings on their own in the event Sinclair did not agree to hold an official inquiry involving Republicans.

Citations, ratio

Last week, a Woodbury County care facility was cited by the state for retaliating against a woman who reported she was raped by one of her male caregivers, the Iowa Capital Dispatch reported. The woman allegedly was given 30 minutes to pack up her things before a taxi was summoned to drop her off at a homeless shelter.

A West Des Moines nursing home was cited for 62 violations, one of which is tied to a resident who contracted gangrene and had to have a leg amputated, the Capital Dispatch’s Clark Kauffman reported.

According to federal data, Iowa is responsible for 3 percent of the nation’s nursing facility citations, and 4.1 percent of the nation’s immediate jeopardy and life-threatening situations — despite accounting for just 1 percent of the nation’s 65-plus population.

Iowa ranks 49th among states in ratio of nursing home inspectors. A report by the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging suggests Iowa has one of the nation’s worst ratios of nursing home inspectors to care facilities, and that the state’s use of private contractors to inspect homes is extraordinarily costly to taxpayers.

Advertisement

“In some instances, the cost of two or three recertification surveys is equal to an annual surveyor employee salary,” the report states. “For example, in Iowa, the pay range for an RN surveyor employed by the State is $66,600 to $93,800,222 while CertiSurv charged the State $33,300 to survey a single nursing home with 96 to 174 beds, and $40,950 for a nursing home with 175 or more beds.”

Staffing shortages

Nursing home officials have said workforce challenges, including high turnover rates and worker shortages fueled by low wages, have impacted patient care. Industry officials say they also have felt financial strain from low Medicaid reimbursement that has not kept up with rising costs, making it harder to offer competitive wages.

More than two dozen nursing homes across the state have closed since June of last year. Iowa currently has more than 400 facilities across the state and more than 28,000 nursing home beds.

Funding increases

State lawmakers this year provided an additional $15 million to nursing homes through Medicaid reimbursement funding.

“Gov. Reynolds has increased Medicaid funding every rebase year as governor, leading to $163 million of new funding going to nursing facilities to increase quality of care for residents,” Kollin Crompton, deputy communications director for the governor’s office, said in a statement to The Gazette on Thursday.

Advertisement

Crompton also pointed to efforts by Gov. Reynolds to alleviate stress on nursing homes, including investing more than $24 million into programs like the Rural Health Care Loan Repayment and Recruitment Program, which recruits doctors and other health care professionals to rural communities, and creation of health care apprenticeship programs.

“Governor Reynolds believes solving the health care workforce shortage and addressing funding is the path to improving long-term care for Iowa’s seniors,” Crompton said.

The governor’s office also raised concerns over a recent proposal from the Biden administration to implement minimum staffing requirements in nursing homes. Reynolds joined 14 other U.S. governors who issued a statement opposing the federal mandate.

“The additional government regulation could unravel the workforce progress in Iowa and lead to facilities being closed,” Crompton said.

The governor’s office did not immediately respond Friday to a request seeking comment specifically on Democrats’ call for a state oversight meeting to investigate nursing home care.

Advertisement

Comments: (319) 398-8499; tom.barton@thegazette.com





Source link

Iowa

Updating Iowa State rankings in college football polls ahead of UCF matchup

Published

on

Updating Iowa State rankings in college football polls ahead of UCF matchup


play

The latest college football polls have been released, and Iowa State keeps moving up.

Iowa State improved to 6-0 after beating West Virginia 28-16 on Saturday in Morgantown.

Advertisement

The Cyclones are now set for a matchup at home vs. UCF on Saturday, Oct. 19.

Iowa State rankings update

Where did Iowa State land?

On Sunday, Iowa State checked in at No. 12 in USATODAY US LBM coaches poll. Previously, the Cyclones were No. 13.

Iowa State climbed up to No. 9 in the newest AP Top 25 college football poll. Last week, the Cyclones were No. 11.

US LBM Coaches Poll

Here is a look at the new US LBM college football coaches poll top 25.

Advertisement
  1. Texas
  2. Oregon
  3. Penn State
  4. Georgia
  5. Ohio State
  6. Miami (Fla.)
  7. Alabama
  8. LSU
  9. Clemson
  10. Tennessee
  11. Notre Dame
  12. Iowa State
  13. BYU
  14. Texas A&M
  15. Ole Miss
  16. Missouri
  17. Kansas State
  18. Indiana
  19. Boise State
  20. Pittsburgh
  21. Illinois
  22. Michigan
  23. SMU
  24. Army West Point
  25. Nebraska

Schools Dropped Out

No. 16 Oklahoma; No. 17 Utah

Others Receiving Votes

Oklahoma 81; Arizona State 49; Navy 37; Utah 31; Vanderbilt 26; Syracuse 13; UNLV 12; Iowa 12; Texas Tech 9; Liberty 9; Washington State 8; Memphis 4; Louisville 4; James Madison 3; Tulane 2

AP Poll

Here is a look at the new Associated Press college football poll top 25

  1. Texas
  2. Oregon
  3. Penn State
  4. Ohio State
  5. Georgia
  6. Miami (Fla.)
  7. Alabama
  8. LSU
  9. Iowa State
  10. Clemson
  11. Tennessee
  12. Notre Dame
  13. BYU
  14. Texas A&M
  15. Boise State
  16. Indiana
  17. Kansas State
  18. Ole Miss
  19. Missouri
  20. PIttsburgh
  21. SMU
  22. Illinois
  23. Army West Point
  24. Michigan
  25. Navy
OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES:

Vanderbilt 68, Nebraska 62, Arizona St. 39, Oklahoma 36, Washington St. 32, Iowa 29, Texas Tech 18, Syracuse 13, Arkansas 13, Utah 7, Louisville 6, Southern Cal 5, Liberty 2, UNLV 1.

Reach Eugene Rapay at erapay@gannett.com and follow him on X/Twitter @erapay5.





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Iowa

Becht, Hansen lead No. 11 Iowa State over West Virginia 28-16 for first 6-0 start since 1938

Published

on

Becht, Hansen lead No. 11 Iowa State over West Virginia 28-16 for first 6-0 start since 1938


Iowa State quarterback Rocco Becht believes the Cyclones have yet to hit their peak during their best start in 86 years.

Carson Hansen rushed for three scores, Becht threw a touchdown pass and No. 11 Iowa State beat West Virginia 28-16 on Saturday night.

The Cyclones (6-0, 3-0 Big 12) opened the season with six wins for the first time since 1938.

“I feel like we haven’t even played our best game yet as a whole — special teams, defense, and offense,” Becht said. The goal is “finding ways to get better each and every single week, and our mindset is just 0-0 and trying to win that next game.”

Advertisement

Iowa State forged a first-place tie in the league with BYU and idle Texas Tech.

The Cyclones broke open a close game by scoring two touchdowns after intercepting West Virginia’s Garrett Greene in the second half.

Becht found Eli Green on passes of 12 and 34 yards on consecutive plays to set up the Cyclones at the West Virginia 17. A third-down holding call on West Virginia cornerback Ayden Garnes gave Iowa State first-and-goal at the 3, and Hansen scored on the next play for a 21-10 lead early in the fourth quarter.

Jontez Williams made his third interception of the season on West Virginia’s next drive, and Iowa State took over at the Mountaineers’ 34. Hansen ran for 20 yards on the ensuing drive, capped by his 2-yard scoring run for a 28-10 lead with 4:42 left.

Hansen, a sophomore who also scored on an 11-yard run in the second quarter, finished with 96 rushing yards, one shy of the career high he set last week against Baylor. He ran for a total of 67 yards during an injury-filled freshman season.

Advertisement

“For him to consistently play the way he has the last couple of weeks, it’s awesome to watch,” Becht said.

West Virginia (3-3, 2-1) was held to 148 rushing yards against the league’s top defense after amassing 389 yards on the ground a week ago at Oklahoma State. The Mountaineers were hurt by several high snaps that threw off their timing and runs parallel to the line of scrimmage that lost yardage.

“In the second half, when it was winning time, we didn’t win,” said West Virginia coach Neal Brown. “We struggled to get into a rhythm.”

Becht completed 18 of 26 passes for 265 yards, including a 60-yard scoring toss to Jaylin Noel in blown coverage in the second quarter.

Becht’s father, Anthony, was honored on the field after the first quarter for his induction into the West Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. He played tight end for the Mountaineers from 1996-99 and 11 seasons in the NFL.

Advertisement

“You couldn’t ask for a greater night for his family,” Iowa State coach Matt Campbell said.

Rocco Becht said he wished he could have been there with his dad, “but I had bigger things going on trying to win this game.”

Jahiem White had an 8-yard scoring run and a 10-yard TD catch for West Virginia. Greene finished 18 of 32 for 206 yards.

Iowa State: The Cyclones answered the challenge on both sides of the ball in winning their seventh straight road game. Becht played smart and efficient, and the nation’s sixth-best scoring defense was stout again.

West Virginia: The Mountaineers many too many mistakes at key times and now have lost eight consecutive games to ranked opponents.

Advertisement

Iowa State might have a tough time moving up when the AP poll comes out on Sunday. The Cyclones were tied at No. 11 with Notre Dame, which beat Stanford 49-7.

Iowa State: Hosts UCF on Saturday night.

West Virginia: Hosts No. 18 Kansas State on Saturday night.

___ Get alerts on the latest AP Top 25 poll throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Iowa

Iowa football isn’t always pretty, but because of Kirk Ferentz, it has punched above its weight class

Published

on

Iowa football isn’t always pretty, but because of Kirk Ferentz, it has punched above its weight class


IOWA CITY, Iowa — In unseasonably warm air and beneath a blueish haze over Kinnick Stadium, Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz took a moment to himself with two minutes left and his team wrapping up a 40-16 win against Washington.

Ferentz stood apart from his team on the sideline with his headset on as his offense huddled during the media timeout. On the video board, his picture appeared. Public address announcer Mark Abbott relayed that Ferentz was about to win his 200th game as Iowa’s head coach, passing Amos Alonzo Stagg for second in Big Ten history. The crowd stood and applauded, and Ferentz acknowledged them with a wave.

GO DEEPER

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz earns 200th career win as Big Ten coach

Advertisement

Tight end Luke Lachey gave him a hug, as did running back Kaleb Johnson. Backup quarterback Marco Lainez III shook his hand. With 33 seconds left, Ferentz walked to the TigerHawk at midfield, shook hands with Washington counterpart Jedd Fisch and completed an interview with Fox Sports. More subdued than emotional, Ferentz jogged off the playing surface, up the tunnel and into Iowa’s locker room where his players welcomed him with a water bottle shower.

Sunshine and 70-degree days — literally or figuratively — rarely have followed Ferentz into October in his coaching career, so the picturesque autumn setting was abnormal for college football’s longest-tenured coach. However, how Ferentz and the Hawkeyes responded to a 35-7 loss to Ohio State last week went entirely by script.

There are two defining characteristics through the highs and lows of Ferentz’s 26 years at Iowa: One, his players trust him and believe in him. The other truth is, no football coach — thus, no program — responds better to adversity than Ferentz and his Hawkeyes.

Ferentz’s entire career has revolved around continual improvement. And Iowa has gone very far following Ferentz’s ethos.

“He’s the same person every day,” said left tackle Mason Richman, who is in his fifth season. “He brings the same exact energies. You know exactly what to expect from him, no matter what the scoreboard says.”

Advertisement

Iowa rarely recruits five-star players and mostly signs three-star prospects. Only once in his career did Iowa finish in the top 15 in national recruiting, and that was in 2005. The Hawkeyes are a low-offer program because they heavily research character in recruiting. They want high achievers with good grades who were team captains in multiple sports. To Ferentz and his staff, those players invest themselves and improve others.

“I feel like we recruit the type of the right type of guys,” Iowa linebacker Jay Higgins said. “We just don’t have selfish guys in the locker room. So when you have good guys who understand what a team should look like, and then you also have a good leader, it’s easy to stand together. I just think this team, this program, anytime there’s adversity, we only get closer.”

Those types of players are built to handle challenges, and Iowa continues to have the right coach to navigate them through it. The examples in Ferentz’s era abound.

• In 2016, the Hawkeyes gave up 599 yards in a 41-14 massacre at eventual Big Ten champion Penn State. As a three-touchdown home underdog to No. 2 Michigan the following week, Iowa bounced back with a stunning 14-13 upset.

• Sitting at the midpoint of the 2008 season, Iowa was 15-16 over 2 1/2 seasons. Ferentz never wavered, and neither did his team. The Hawkeyes won their final four games to end that season, and then their first nine in 2009. They finished with their highest final ranking (No. 7) since 1960.

Advertisement

• In 2014, Iowa continued a slope of mediocrity by losing all four rivalry trophy games and finishing 7-6. The next year, dubbed “New Kirk,” Ferentz switched practices from afternoon to morning and became much more open in the public. The players responded in 2015 with a spirit of togetherness, leading to a school-record 12 wins. From that year onward, Iowa ranks tied for 10th among power-conference teams in victories.

• Two years ago, Iowa’s offense was among the nation’s worst in every category. After a 7-3 season-opening win against South Dakota State in which the Hawkeyes scored on two safeties and a field goal, linebacker Jack Campbell shot down any question that dealt with division. Campbell’s attitude set the tone for that season and it carried over to 2023, in which Iowa’s offense posted the Big Ten’s worst statistical numbers in nearly 40 years. Yet there was no sniping, let alone dissension. The team eventually claimed the Big Ten West Division crown.

• In 2004, Iowa started 2-2, including a 44-7 loss at Arizona State. Despite losing four scholarship running backs to injury, the Hawkeyes held it together with defense mixed with an occasional highlight-reel play. The Hawkeyes won their final eight games, claimed a share of the Big Ten title and won the Capital One Bowl with a 56-yard touchdown pass on the game’s final play.

That 2004 team was honored Saturday before the second quarter to rousing applause. One of its stars, defensive tackle Jonathan Babineaux, was Iowa’s honorary captain on Saturday. It was a team molded by adversity, and it charted an unconventional path of success. It even took a safety midway through the fourth quarter against Penn State in a 6-4 win. Ferentz gave the eulogy at his father’s funeral in Pittsburgh the day before that game.

Most teams would have crumbled in any of those situations, but Iowa never did.

Advertisement

Why? Ferentz.

“It’s definitely his leadership,” Higgins said. “He truly only cares about the guys in the locker room. When you’ve got a guy like that thinking you’re able to respond, it’s nice. He’s not gonna freak out. Doesn’t matter what the headline is. He’s not gonna come to the meeting room and read off the headlines. He keeps his voice, and we all respond off him. If he’s calm and he knows that we need to respond after a bad game or a tough situation, we’re all going to follow that.”

None of those anecdotes mean Ferentz is perfect. Far from it. Critiques are plentiful about his son, Brian, running his offense for seven years, especially when the final three were so rough. Brian remained in place until university president Barbara Wilson and athletic director Beth Goetz stepped in and dismissed him following the 2023 season. Other complaints about Ferentz’s game-day decision making are fair.

And in 2020, dozens of former players accused the program of racial insensitivity and bias, which was confirmed through an independent investigation. Instead of resisting necessary changes or stepping down, Ferentz opted for a new course. He accepted responsibility and sought counsel from former players, relieved longtime strength coach Chris Doyle and extended a leadership council to include more voices. Many arbitrary rules such as not using X or wearing hoodies in the football complex were vacated. Although some feel the changes didn’t go far enough — while others believed they went too far — there’s no doubt the program has become more welcoming to all players. Its attrition rate is among the lowest in the Big Ten, and it has won the third most games in the Big Ten since that season.

With Ferentz’s guidance, Iowa has punched well above its weight class.

Advertisement

Its recruiting rankings are closer to those of Illinois and Purdue than Michigan and Penn State, yet the Hawkeyes’ results are closer to the latter. Iowa finds ways to win where its peers fall short. It’s not always pretty and perhaps it won’t ever win the ultimate prize. But that Iowa remains anywhere near the College Football Playoff rankings most years is a credit to Ferentz.

“I appreciate him how much this program means to him,” Richman said. “When you get an appreciation like that, you’re less stressed out. With him at the helm, this place has a really special place in my heart and the hearts of many across the entire state.”

(Top photo of Kirk Ferentz: Matthew Holst / Getty Images)



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending