Moore: Legislature Working To Fix Chafee Administration Blunder

Russell J. Moore, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Moore: Legislature Working To Fix Chafee Administration Blunder

Besides Waterfire, Pawtucket Red Sox games, and going to Scarborough Beach--ragging on the Rhode Island General Assembly is undoubtedly one of the great Rhode Island pastimes. You can hear it in any café, coffee house, or barber shop on any given day.

And let’s face it—it’s understandable and more often than not deserved. The body usually doesn’t do itself any favors. They suspend their own rules, and exempt themselves from others. They pass a budget every year during some ungodly hour when every Rhode Islander who isn’t at a rave or working the graveyard shift is sleeping. And for some reason they can’t seem to pass a common sense ethics bill.

But like anything else, we do ourselves a disservice if we take a completely one-sided view of the legislature. To ignore the fact that there are good, hardworking legislators doing the right thing would be folly.

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For an example of the legislature doing the right thing, look no further than the recent government oversight hearings commissioned by Representative Joseph McNamara (D-Warwick). The House Health, Education, and Welfare Committee, which McNamaraa chairs, is investigating why the Department of Health forced a corporation that administers pain medication to severely ill individuals at their homes out of Rhode Island.

Pentec Health Inc., is a national company licensed to do business in 28 states. The company provides specialized, in-home nursing services to individuals who, in most cases, would need to otherwise visit a hospital to receive their treatments or medications. In particular, the company sends nurses to patient's houses to inject medication into pain pumps located in patients bodies. Those pumps are intended to mitigate excruciating pains.

For people who are struggling with end of life maladies, the service is invaluable. Absent the service, those individuals are forced to travel out of Rhode Island and into Boston hospitals for their treatments. According to people who testified at a recent statehouse hearing, the whole process can take several hours and is as painful as it is long.

The arrangement between Pentec and the patients it was helping was working nicely until the state of Rhode Island got involved. The state brought the company before the Department of Health and forced it to apply for a "certificate of need"--a precursor to a license. According to the company, the process was so arduous and contentious that Pentec just threw up its hands, gave up hope, and cut its losses.

The Department of Health would've forced Pentec to open up a Rhode Island office, despite the fact that there's no need or use for one. It would have also prevented prescription medication be given to nurses and instead forced the medication to be given directly to the patient--a move that contridacts commonsense regulations in most other states. Keep in mind, Pentec operates in 28 other states, including Massachusetts.

The company's Vice President said that the Department of Health made the company's leaders feel like they were some sort of criminals. Should it really be any wonder why Rhode Island is regarded as having a terrible business climate?

McNamara learned about the situation by reading an Op-Ed in the Providence Journal written by long-time reporter Tracey Brenton. Brenton's husband benefitted greatly from the services he received from Pentec nurses, according to her testimony. She said he couldn't have imagined how difficult it would've been without it.

But thats precisely the situation some Rhode Islanders find themselves in since the Department of Health got involved. By ostracizing Pentec, the Department of Health scored a two-fer. They not only hurt the economy by driving out a Rhode Island business, but it also reduced the standard of care. That's quite a day for the bureaucrats.

Fortunately for Rhode Islanders, McNamara did the right thing. It would have been easy for McNamara to look the other way or shrug his shoulders. But he didn't. He immediately convened hearings, held the administration's feet to the fire, and is currently working on developing a solution so that the state doesn't lose other good companies or services.

Its ironic that McNamara is probably best well-known at this point for his bill that would make calamari the state appetizer. (As an aside, I was amazed to hear how much people have against calamari, when all making it the state appetizer would do would be to help economic development and tourism.) McNamara should get accolades for his work on this particular issue.

It's tough legislative work like this, that may not generate catchy headlines, but will ultimately make the state a better place. Far too often, and I'm probably as guilty as anyone for this, Rhode Islanders have become so bogged down in negativity that good deeds go unnoticed. It's not the worst thing in the world, once in a while, to give credit where it's due.


A native Rhode Islander, Russell J. Moore is a graduate of Providence College and St. Raphael Academy. He worked as a news reporter for 7 years (2004-2010), 5 of which with The Warwick Beacon, focusing on government. He continues to keep a close eye on the inner workings of Rhode Islands state and local governments.

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