Considering what Walker Little went through the past two years, the Jaguars' newest offensive linemen couldn't have not expected it. How's your health?
"I'm 100 percent and as strong as in shape as I've ever been," he said.
Little, an offensive tackle from Stanford University selected by the Jaguars Friday with the No. 45 overall selection of the 2021 NFL Draft – the 13th selection of the second round – missed all but one game of the 2019 season after sustaining a Week 1 knee injury.
He then opted out of the 2020 season because of COVID-19 and the surrounding circumstances around the Pac-12's shortened season. That means he has played one game since making the Pac 12 All-Conference first team as a sophomore.
"I'm really ready for the NFL, for this next step," he said. "The past year and a half has been a lot of training. It has been a lot of football studying. I'm trying to understand the game a lot better. I'm trying to get strong and just working on lot of technique work.
"I've had the pleasure of working with a lot of good coaches. I'm just working really hard to be in the best shape to get here and get drafted – and to compete and play."
Little was asked if he had apprehension after not playing in nearly two years.
"No," he said. "I'm ready for it. I have no concerns about stepping in and playing again."
Little said he was fully healthy and able to play before the 2020 season.
"I was healthy; I was ready to go," he said. "I was on campus and training with the team and ready to start our fall season, then the season got canceled. Me and [Stanford Head Coach David] Shaw had a conversation and said it would be best to take the next step and leave the uncertainty that was Stanford and as the Pac 12 season and just start preparing for the NFL."
Little (6-feet-7, 313 pounds), considered by many the nation's No. 1 recruit out of Houston (Texas) Episcopal High School as a senior, started 14 games for Stanford. He earned All-Pac 12 first-team honors as a sophomore in 2018 while starting 13 games.
"It was just tough not playing," Little said. "It's been a while and it's a game I love. It's a game I've been playing since I was a little kid. To not be able to play last year was tough. Having to watch my team play those few games they got in was tough, but I'm excited.
"I was able to work at it and put myself in a position to get drafted. Now, I'm getting drafted by a team like this. I'm so excited for it."
Little said the Jaguars spoke to him about the possibility of playing right or left tackle.
"I can play either side and come in and compete," he said. "That's what we've talked about and that's what I'm here to do. I've been working both sides, knowing that the versatility would help me get drafted and once I'm in the league any team wants a versatile player. I'm comfortable playing either side."
Little was the fourth player selected by the Jaguars in the '21 draft, the third on offense. They selected Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence No. 1 overall and Clemson running back Travis Etienne No. 25 overall on Thursday, selecting Georgia cornerback Tyson Campbell No. 33 overall early Friday.
JACKSONVILLE – The Jaguars have addressed offense again.
After selecting two offensive skill players on Thursday, they used a mid-second-round selection on Friday to address the offensive line.
Walker Little, a left tackle from Stanford University, on Friday joined the Jaguars as the 13th selection of Round 2 of the 2021 NFL Draft. He was the No. 45 selection overall.
Little (6-feet-7, 313 pounds), who was considered by many the nation's No. 1 recruit out of Houston (Texas) Episcopal High School, started 14 games at Stanford. He sustained a season-ending knee injury in Week 1 of the 2019 season and opted out of the 2020 season because of COVID-19.
He earned All-Pac 12 first-team honors as a sophomore in 2018 while starting 13 games.
The Jaguars on Thursday selected Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence No. 1 overall and Clemson running back Travis Etienne No. 25 overall, selecting Georgia cornerback Tyson Campbell No. 33 overall early Friday. They hold six more selections in the '21 draft: No. 65 overall (Round 3), No. 106 overall (Round 4), No. 130 overall (Round 4), No. 145 overall (Round 5), No. 170 overall (Round 5), No. 249 overall (Round 7).
We will meet at the Hobart Reservoir Trail at 12 p.m. on Friday, May 28, 2021 OR at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 29, 2021 to caravan into Little Valley together. Participants are welcome to join us on May 28 and camp in designated areas on the Forest that night to enjoy the natural beauty and to support multi-day participation. Camping details will be shared following your registration. The event is family friendly and fun for all ages!
Bioblitz overview
A Bioblitz is an intensive, citizen-led survey designed to record and identify all living things (i.e., plants and animals) occurring within a defined area, with the ultimate goal of capturing a complete species list for a given property. Local experts and scientists will be on-site to assist in species identification, and no previous experience or expertise in botanical or wildlife surveys is necessary! All are welcome and encouraged to learn and participate. The Whittell Forest & Wildlife Area is a Sierra Nevada gem with a diversity of ecosystem types and species!
About the Little Valley and Whittell
The Whittell Forest & Wildlife Area (Whittell) is a 2,650-acre forested property owned by the University of Nevada, Reno. Whittell is situated in the Little Valley, which encompasses a large meadow system and forested landscape managed by the US Forest Service and the University. Whittell is a designated University Core Research Facility maintained as a living field laboratory for research, instruction and community outreach in order to contribute to the understanding and protection of natural ecosystem integrity while engaging Nevada citizens in learning and problem-solving activities.
Documenting observations
We will use the iNaturalist application to document observations. The iNaturalist app uses crowdsourced data to create local species lists and track species abundances (declines or population increases) in a given area. Nearly 63 million observations and 330,000 species have already documented using this app! The application may be downloaded via your App Store and should be loaded prior to arrival onsite (no coverage in the Valley!). Demonstrations on how to record observations using the iNaturalist application will be provided onsite by local experts and bioblitz organizers.
You will need to join our project page. From your phone app, select the "more" link at the bottom right (a three dot icon), then select "projects," and then enter our project name into the search icon (magnifying glass icon):“Little Valley Bioblitz.” You can also find our project in the "nearby" screen.
At the bottom of the screen for each of your observations will be a "projects" folder. You will need to tag each observation to our bioblitz project folder in order for your observation to be linked to the bioblitz.
Don't forget to charge and bring your phone to the bioblitz!
Participation
No experience or expertise is needed to participate! A love of the natural world, desire to learn, or interest in supporting science are all you need.
What to bring
Masks & hand sanitizer
Water
Lunch and snacks
A fully charged phone or tablet with the iNaturalist app loaded!
Sun protection (sunscreen, hats, sunglasses, etc)
Others: binoculars, field guides, gloves
Camping gear for those staying Friday, May 28
Access and camping
The Little Valley is accessed via a 4wd road and takes approximately 1.5 hours (one-way) from the University’s main campus. We aim to limit the number of vehicles, so carpooling is encouraged for those vaccinated and willing to travel together. Note that passenger vehicles cannot access the property and, although we love dogs, please leave them at home.
COVID mitigation
All participants must follow COVID mitigation protocols, including wearing masks and maintaining distances greater than 6 feet from those not in your family unit.
Registration
Please register using the following form. Once registered, details will be shared regarding day-of meeting locations, weather and on-site camping options. The registration process includes a waiver (University employees are exempt). Registration is due by Thursday, May 27, 2021 at 5 p.m.
"Will it have an impact? Perhaps a minor impact on the margins in terms of reducing introductions. It's not going to dramatically affect our trajectory at this point," the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner said on "Closing Bell." "It's probably going to do more harm to India than any good that it attributes to us."
Gottlieb, who sits on the board of Covid vaccine maker Pfizer, said he thinks the White House's primary rationale for restricting travel from India is concern over the coronavirus variant known as B.1.617. It was first detected in the country and is believed to be highly contagious.
"But that variant is here anyway and the best way to reduce the risk of that variant is, frankly, to get more Americans vaccinated," said Gottlieb, who led the FDA in the Trump administration from 2017 to 2019. "That's going to be the best backstop against the spread of that variant, not restricting travel at this point."
White House press secretary Jen Psaki earlier Friday announced the travel restrictions, which go into effect Tuesday. India has been experiencing a major surge of Covid cases in recent weeks, straining its health-care system as daily death counts hit new records.
The travel order is expected to apply to non-U.S. citizens or permanent residents who have recently been in India, according to a person familiar with the matter. That means the restrictions will take a similar format to those that been implemented on much travel to the U.S. from China, Brazil and the European Union, effectively barring most visitors from India to the U.S.
"There are some studies that show when you implement travel restrictions — and most of the studies that have been done have looked at this in the context of an influenza pandemic — that you can delay introduction of a virus into a new region, that you slow the introduction and maybe reduce the peak of the epidemic that another country is going to experience," Gottlieb said.
If the U.S. would have put in place travel restrictions "that weren't so leaky" earlier in the pandemic, Gottlieb said, it's possible that it would've taken longer for the coronavirus to enter into the country and limit the severity of the outbreak.
"But at this point, we have enough virus here in the United States that we're not going to prevent introduction of the virus from India," he said.
The White House did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment on Gottlieb's remarks.
Coronavirus cases in the U.S. have continued to decline as more Americans are vaccinated against Covid. On Friday, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that more than 100 million Americans have been fully vaccinated.
The pace of new vaccinations each day has been slowing down, however, and states are working to find ways to appeal to Americans who are not particularly eager to get a Covid shot.
"I think we can continue to chip away at it," Gottlieb said, suggesting that a drop off in average shots per day "doesn't mean we're doing a bad job." He added, "I think it's inevitable that it's going to start to slow as you get into softer demand."
"Things like vaccination buses where they just drive up into communities and people can show up and get vaccinated on site with no wait. That's the way we're going to get more people vaccinated," Gottlieb added. "Also delivering vaccines through worksites, that's going to help as well."
Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC contributor and is a member of the boards of Pfizer, genetic testing start-up Tempus, health-care tech company Aetion Inc. and biotech company Illumina. He also serves as co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings' and Royal Caribbean's "Healthy Sail Panel."
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- After months of speculation on the New England Patriots possibly making a bold move up the 2021 NFL draft board for their quarterback of the future, coach Bill Belichick played it cool and let the draft come to him.
Then Alabama's Mac Jones dropped right into his lap.
It's one of the rare times when months of projection leading into a Belichick draft actually produced an accurate result. Jones was talked about as a Patriots possibility all the way back in January.
Back then, ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay noted how Jones was "super intelligent" with "pocket presence" and someone who "feels things, anticipates, and gets the ball out." Those who follow the Patriots know those are core tenets of what they value. They aren't looking as much for the quarterback who runs a 4.4-second 40-yard dash or makes off-platform throws as much as a good decision-maker who is accurate and loves football.
Then in February, former Patriots offensive coordinator Charlie Weis doubled down, saying he believed Jones was the best fit for the team.
"What are the two most important components of a star quarterback? They have the 'it' factor. And they're accurate. That's who he was," said Weis, who pushed back on the criticism Jones was a product of having NFL-caliber skill players around him.
"You talk about being around good players. Yeah, he was around good players. But playing on a team with a bunch of stars, who is the leader of the offense? He also had to make all those throws. I think the kid is an excellent quarterback. He has less holes than just about anybody," Weis said.
So, Jones to the Patriots has been on the radar for some time, which isn't usually the way it works with Belichick's drafts. Predicting his targets is often a fruitless pursuit.
The wrinkle this year, however, is that the San Francisco 49ers' bold trade up to No. 3 in late March came with a month of media speculation that it was for Jones. But when they drafted North Dakota's Trey Lance instead, the stars started to align again.
Jones himself even saw it coming.
"At the end of the day, you kind of want to get the right fit. I feel like, secretly, I really wanted to go to the Patriots all along," he said late Thursday night. "So I'm actually really happy it happened."
And now the question naturally becomes: How soon can the quarterback torch be passed in New England?
Cam Newton and Jarrett Stidham have been attending voluntary offseason workouts at Gillette Stadium the past two weeks, with most of the skill-position players also with them as some early chemistry is formed. Jones has ground to make up, and he struck a humble tone Thursday night, saying he plans to come in behind Newton and Stidham and learn from them.
But Belichick didn't select Jones at No. 15 for him to be a backup, which means it's only a matter of time.
"Cam’s our quarterback. Whatever time Jarrett or Mac are ready to challenge and compete, then we’ll see how that goes," Belichick said.
April 30, 2021 at 06:49PM
https://www.espn.com/blog/new-england-patriots/post/_/id/4822833/bill-belichick-patriots-get-their-qb-mac-jones-with-a-little-patience-in-nfl-draft
Bill Belichick, Patriots get their QB, Mac Jones, with a little patience in NFL draft - New England Patriots Blog- ESPN - ESPN
When Erik Leibovitz and Dara Silverman initially met online, he asked her to not go out with anyone else before they had the chance to meet in person.
Dara Silverman knew Erik Leibovitz for all of 15 minutes after connecting on J-Swipe in July 2015, when he asked a question that caught her off guard.
“Can you do me a favor?” said Mr. Leibovitz, 30, the vice president for global partnerships and business development at Monumental Sports & Entertainment in Washington.
Ms. Silverman, also 30 and a vice president for cybersecurity operations at J.P. Morgan Chase in Washington, braced herself.
“I thought, ‘What the heck is wrong with this guy, is he going to ask me to pick up his mail?’” she recalled. “I had no idea what he had on his mind.”
So Mr. Leibovitz, who graduated from Bates College with a degree in rhetoric, took an educated risk and asked the kind of question that could have made him yesterday’s news.
“I know you must get a lot of guys trying to take you out on dates,” he said. “Do me a favor and don’t go on any other dates until you let me take you out — give me a chance.”
Ms. Silverman said that she had fewer social options than Mr. Leibovitz could have ever possibly imagined.
“I had just finished graduate school at Florida State University, I received a master’s in public health from the University of Georgia, and moved to Washington,” Ms. Silverman said.
“My furniture truck had not even arrived yet,” she added. “I knew like one new person in my new neighborhood, the cashier at the CVS in my new neighborhood.”
So she rolled with his request.
“At the time, we were both 25,” Ms. Silverman said. “I just figured that in the worst case, he was looking for a hookup, but in the best case, he was looking to find someone he actually liked, and maybe hoping for a serious relationship.”
A week later, Mr. Leibovitz was hoping to make a dinner reservation at a French restaurant in Washington, Le Diplomate, which happened to be his favorite.
Unfortunately it was Bastille Day, and the restaurant had been booked. But Mr. Leibovitz would not be denied, and leaned once more on his expertise in rhetoric, and talked his way into a table for two. Ms. Silverman said they “sat there and talked for hours about life, love, work and family.”
Before the check came, Mr. Leibovitz knew he had found the woman, and soul mate, he had been looking for his entire life.
“There was absolutely no doubt that she was the one, no doubt,” he said. “She’s so smart and super-bubbly and had the greatest personality, it was easy to open up to her, and that’s why every time we spoke, it was usually for hours.”
They were married by Cantor Lisa Segal on April 24 at the Club at Admiral’s Cove in Jupiter, Fla.
They had originally intended to be married Nov. 7, 2020 in South Florida with 250 guests. But the coronavirus changed those plans.
“Looking back, I’m glad I did Erik that favor,” said the bride, laughing. “As it turned out, he was doing me a huge favor as well.”
This investigation is a joint project of KHN, a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues, and Spotlight PA, an independent, collaborative newsroom dedicated to producing investigative journalism for all of Pennsylvania.
When Ian Kalinowski was at work, his mom usually texted him. So when he saw her number show up as an incoming call around lunchtime one Tuesday, he figured it had to be important.
Now, more than seven years later, he remembers her screams, the shock and the questions she asked over and over again.
“Why are they saying this to me? Why are they lying to me?” Ian recalled his mom asking. “They’re telling me Adam’s dead. Why would they do this to me?”
Adam was Ian’s older brother. Growing up, it seemed they spent every second together. Football, hockey and tag filled long days outside their Pittsburgh home. When Ian moved away for college, he and Adam turned to online poker to stay in touch. Adam served as best man at Ian’s wedding, and Ian admired his brother’s artistic streak. Adam could turn any piece of paper into an origami swan. His mom’s home is still full of swans.
Adam’s struggle with opioid and alcohol addiction was painful for Ian to watch. The problems began, it seemed to Ian, after Adam dropped out of college and used drugs to deal with his depression. Adam sought treatment, and he relied on methadone for many years, but his problems continued. When he was 32, he typically drank dozens of beers each day. On Feb. 3, 2014, he entered a treatment center run by Addiction Specialists Inc., according to a lawsuit later filed by his family against the facility. The center, in a Fayette County strip mall, was about an hour’s drive south of Pittsburgh.
Less than 24 hours after Adam made it to the facility, he was dead, according to expert reports from doctors in the family’s wrongful death lawsuit. Ian couldn’t understand what went wrong, and neither could his mom, still in denial on the other end of the phone call.
What his family didn’t know was that Addiction Specialists, often known as ASI, had a history of violating state rules. In a later federal investigation into the facility’s billing and drug distribution practices, a grand jury concluded that a litany of problems occurred at the business many months before and after Adam’s arrival.
In the wrongful death suit, a lawyer for the Kalinowski family alleged Adam wasn’t evaluated by a physician when he arrived at ASI, didn’t receive the medication or treatment he needed, became increasingly uneasy and anxious throughout the night and killed himself. An Allegheny County judge in December 2019 said the business, two of its owners — Rosalind and Sean Sugarmann — and an ASI physician were negligent in caring for Adam. The judge ordered them to pay over $1.6 million in damages, although Ian doubts they ever will.
ASI eventually shut down, two years after Adam died.
In recent interviews with KHN-Spotlight PA, the Sugarmanns denied responsibility for Adam’s death and maintained that ASI was a good facility. Rosalind said it helped a lot of people in a rural area with a high drug-overdose rate.
Addiction treatment facilities in Pennsylvania, like ASI, are licensed and regulated by the state to ensure they follow certain rules and keep vulnerable people struggling with addiction safe. Oversight used to fall to the Department of Health. But in 2012, the state created the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs, a $125 million agency set up to give substance use the attention lawmakers felt it deserved.
At the time of Adam’s death in 2014, the department had taken few disciplinary actions against ASI. It had issued citations and required the company to submit plans to correct them. But the Sugarmanns told KHN-Spotlight PA that, at the time, they didn’t fear the state would shut them down.
Perhaps for good reason.
A KHN-Spotlight PA investigation found that the department has allowed providers to continue operating despite repeated violations of state regulations and harm to clients. More than 80 interviews and a review of thousands of pages of state government and court records revealed that the department lacks resources and regulatory power, uses an inherently flawed oversight system that does little to ensure high-quality or effective care, and rarely takes strong disciplinary action against facilities when so many Pennsylvanians need services.
The department has no standard criteria for when it should force facilities to serve fewer patients and, as of early April, had revoked just one treatment provider’s license in nearly a decade. It doesn’t, as a regular practice, compare facilities to see if any stand out for an unusual number of violations or the most client deaths. And since state inspections focus heavily on records, they can be tricked with fraudulent paperwork, former employees in the treatment field said.
Some advocates point out that overregulating or closing facilities could leave people suffering from addiction without options for care. But in the current system, state and judicial records show, some patients have received inadequate treatment or even died; certain facilities have fraudulently billed insurance companies; and owners rake in federal and state tax dollars, as well as private money from victims of the opioid crisis.
“Many of these rehab facilities are not properly run or supervised, and many are in it for the money,” said Peter Friday, an attorney who represented Adam’s family in their lawsuit. “These places have been unbridled.”
Who Polices the Providers?
Even though the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs provides the licenses that allow addiction treatment facilities to operate, Jennifer Smith, secretary of the department, said it has limited responsibility for them. Law enforcement agencies are often better positioned to take action against troubled providers, she said, and insurance companies that pay for services also offer oversight.
“It’s not our job to really police the providers,” Smith said in an interview. “Our function is to really try to enable them to meet the [state’s] requirements, and by doing so, enabling them to provide quality services.”
Yet, as the regulating body of these treatment facilities, the department collects some of the most critical information necessary to properly police them, including reports of client deaths and physical and sexual assaults.
Smith said most providers are trying to do good work. She said annual inspections ensure facilities meet safety standards, like having enough staff members and a building that’s up to code. But inspections are not meant to evaluate quality of care, she said.
The KHN-Spotlight PA investigation found the department makes little of what it knows about troubling facilities accessible to the public. Its website shows if a facility currently has a provisional license — a designation indicating the provider failed to meet several state requirements and will be inspected more frequently until it resolves those concerns — but not whether it ever received such a sanction in the past, for what issues, nor how they were resolved.
The department does not post the reports it collects about deaths and assaults, which represent some of the most concerning events at treatment facilities.
When KHN-Spotlight PA filed a public records request for those reports, the department shared only incidents that it decided did not warrant investigation. It said it could not provide the total number of such events at specific facilities since it doesn’t have aggregate data prior to September 2019, when it launched a new electronic reporting system. Even the available data from that new system provides an incomplete picture, as less than a quarter of treatment facilities had enrolled in the voluntary system as of March 2021.
Smith said people should pick facilities the same way they do primary care doctors, based on publicly available information, personal recommendations and discussions with insurers.
One of the main public resources the department offers is a website with reports from its facility inspections. Inspectors write these reports after a site visit, listing any violations of state regulations they found. But these reports provide a limited window into the daily reality for clients, as there’s no indication of which violations are more severe than others, and many regulations focus on building conditions and completion of records. One regulation, for example, mandates the temperature at which refrigerated food must be maintained.
In response to each violation inspectors find, the facility submits a plan to address it. If the facility fails to provide a plan or follow through on it, the department has two primary options: force the facility to reduce the number of clients it serves or issue a provisional license. If the department wants to permanently revoke a facility’s license, it must go through an administrative court process to get approval.
In nearly a decade before December 2020, the state issued provisional licenses to fewer than 80 facilities — less than 10% of providers— and forced only three to reduce their capacity, according to data from the department. In ASI’s case, regulators said multiple times that the company failed to document that it provided required counseling and other services. A department spokesperson said it didn’t force ASI to operate under provisional licenses before 2015 because the business submitted plans of correction the department found acceptable. Even if a facility has many violations, the department considers how cooperative it is in working to fix them, Smith said.
After a recent reorganization, the department formed a quality improvement unit with three employees, Smith said. The unit may work directly with treatment facilities but is meant to address broader prevention efforts and other addiction-related programs as well. The department is also working with a national company to provide an online platform where clients can leave reviews of facilities, starting in spring 2022.
But many employees and clients in the treatment field are skeptical of any long-term improvement. For years, they’ve seen troubled facilities make fixes, only to have the same deficiencies arise in later inspections.
The department’s own records show the cycle can persist for years.
Years of Citations, Little Action
At SOAR Corp methadone clinic in Philadelphia, inspectors from the state Department of Health first issued citations for unqualified employees in 2009, before the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs was created and took over inspections in 2012. Inspectors at the time also found one counselor who was responsible for 40 clients — above the state-mandated maximum of 35.
SOAR Corp responded by saying it had demoted an unqualified counselor, had hired another counselor to lower caseloads and would ensure future hires met the state’s requirements.
But state records show that within a year of those 2009 citations, the facility was cited three more times for similar issues: hiring an unqualified project director, overloading counselor caseloads and lacking enough medical personnel. Year after year, state inspectors found the same problems. Yet the state approved SOAR to open additional locations in Lansdowne, Levittown and Warminster in 2010, 2016 and 2018, respectively.
In interviews with KHN-Spotlight PA, a dozen former employees and nearly a dozen current and former clients across multiple SOAR sites complained about poor hiring practices and chronic understaffing as just two symptoms of their much larger concerns. They believed the company relentlessly pursued profits by getting as many clients in the door as possible, with little care for the quality of treatment.
The Philadelphia location has received three provisional licenses from the state, in 2012, 2019 and 2020, putting it among the 10 most frequent recipients of this sanction over nearly the past decade.
The former counselors felt that expectations to maximize “billable hours” led to their burnout. And they saw high turnover among staffers. The former and current clients said they sometimes went weeks without therapy or were switched from one overwhelmed counselor to another every few months.
Nicole Tihansky was a client at SOAR’s Levittown location for about a year until last fall. She said she waited more than a month before getting her first counseling session, and then was assigned about five counselors, one after the other.
“It makes you just want to get in and out of the session quickly, because you know you’ll get another counselor in a month,” she said.
Understaffing is a problem across the treatment industry, according to employees in the field. But former SOAR employees who have worked for multiple companies said SOAR stood out in their experiences for its high staff turnover and inadequate therapy.
“It’s not about therapy or addressing the needs of clients,” said Esther Kirshenbaum, a counselor who worked at the Philadelphia location from 2017 to 2019. “The attitude is to just get clients in here and make sure we get paid.”
In a statement, SOAR CEO Richard Mangano said the company “makes every effort to comply with local, State, and Federal regulations.”
KHN-Spotlight PA shared with SOAR a detailed list of more than a dozen allegations from their reporting, including violations of state regulations and putting profits over patient care. Mangano did not address them specifically.
“Soar Corp categorically denies any allegation or suggestion of wrongdoing. … Soar Corp has and will continue to work with DDAP to improve the important services it provides,” Mangano wrote, referring to the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs.
In its responses to state citations in recent years, SOAR explained that clients didn’t show up to scheduled counseling sessions, and that services like drug tests and physician evaluations had been provided but simply not documented properly.
The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs has never forced SOAR to decrease its capacity, nor have state officials initiated the administrative court process to permanently revoke its license.
Former clients and employees said state licensing inspections were announced ahead of time, causing a rush by SOAR employees in the days before a site visit to complete treatment plans, counseling notes and other required paperwork.
Nicholas Cucchiaro was a SOAR counselor from 2017 to 2018. He shared with KHN-Spotlight PA what he reported to the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs and the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General after he was fired. He told the agencies that a senior administrator at SOAR instructed him to make up counseling notes for clients who had gone weeks without an assigned therapist.
“These are notes from therapy sessions that never happened,” he said, adding he knew it was wrong but feared losing his job if he didn’t comply.
About a dozen other former employees and clients described to KHN-Spotlight PA their own experiences of similar practices, ranging from thrusting months’ worth of forms upon clients in the days before an inspection to backdating their paperwork.
The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs and the attorney general’s office both agreed to look into the allegations, Cucchiaro said, but he didn’t hear of any consequences for SOAR.
The attorney general’s office told KHN-Spotlight PA that it reviewed “a small number” of complaints regarding SOAR and referred the matter to the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs.
Smith, the department head, said that as a general matter it’s difficult to prevent facilities from falsifying paperwork, because state regulations require advance notice of licensing inspections. But if the department receives a complaint, it can conduct unannounced inspections, she said, and other facilities have been cited for fraudulent paperwork.
Unannounced site visits were made in response to the complaints at SOAR, according to a department spokesperson, and citations were issued for violations that did not include fraudulent paperwork. SOAR’s Philadelphia location received provisional licenses in 2019 and 2020, but as of mid-April all the company’s sites were operating on full licenses after remedying the cited issues.
A Growing Industry
One significant limitation on the department’s oversight is its inability to impose financial penalties on treatment facilities.
In contrast, the state’s environmental protection and health departments can fine polluters and nursing homes for violations.
A 2017 report from the state auditor general’s office urged lawmakers to allow the department to charge licensing fees and assess financial penalties, pointing to other states that do so. Smith told KHN-Spotlight PA that fining facilities would help weed out repeat violators.
A bill introduced in the Pennsylvania legislature to allow the department to generate licensing fees went nowhere two years ago. A similar measure was recently referred to the state Senate Health and Human Services Committee.
“I hope that it’s considered quickly as ensuring drug treatment facilities are given appropriate oversight is of utmost importance,” the bill’s sponsor, state Sen. Judy Schwank (D-Berks), said in a statement.
Meanwhile, with millions of dollars on the line, the treatment industry is growing in Pennsylvania. Over the past four years, the state has seen a net gain of about 40 facilities, the department said, bringing the total to more than 800 treatment providers. State budget documents suggest the industry’s client capacity has grown by about 5,000 over a similar period.
The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs employed 82 people, including two dozen who conduct facility inspections, as of April. That's about half the number of dog wardens employed by the state to inspect kennels.
Smith said there is “adequate staff to perform our current licensing responsibilities.”
In December 2018 — the same year the department said it received complaints from former SOAR employees and clients — it approved the company to open a location in Warminster. Inspection surveys at the facility since have found it violated state rules by providing a certain medication without state approval and failing to provide the required hours of therapy to some patients.
A former SOAR supervisor who is still working in the treatment industry and asked not to be named doubts the state will ever take stronger action against the company.
“The state knows the demand for treatment and the demand for medication-assisted treatment,” the former supervisor said. “If you took SOAR’s license in Northeast Philadelphia and didn’t give them a provisional, you could be displacing 500 clients.”
The Need for Treatment
The urgency of the opioid crisis puts regulators in a tough position: If they shut down a facility, where will all the patients get treatment?
James McKay, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s medical school who researches the efficacy of addiction treatments, said facilities that are committing insurance fraud or actively harming patients should be penalized. But the question becomes more complicated when judging how well a facility is serving its clients.
In Philadelphia, where there are many treatment programs, it might make sense to close one that has ineffective interventions, untrained counselors and many clients dropping out, McKay said.
“But if you’re out in the middle of the state and there’s only one treatment program in any reasonable distance, as long as they're not treating you badly, you’re at least going to get some support and meet others in recovery,” he said. “So much of this depends on what the other alternatives are.”
In western Pennsylvania, an inpatient detox and rehab facility called Clear Day Treatment of Westmoreland has received multiple provisional licenses since it opened in 2018. State inspectors have noted at least six incidents that involved drugs on the premises and have cited the facility at least twice for understaffing, writing that the lack of sufficient staff fails to ensure “efficient and safe operation.”
Despite these concerns, the facility is the only one in the county that provides detox services while allowing patients to stay on any of three medications for opioid use disorder. Many patients in the area need that service, said Colleen Hughes, executive director of the Westmoreland Drug and Alcohol Commission. (The commission is one of more than 40 agencies across the state that the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs contracts with to coordinate substance use services locally.)
The commission determined in 2017 that a lack of residential rehabs in the county was one factor delaying people’s treatment. Clear Day responded to a request for proposals to meet that need from companies that manage Medicaid-paid behavioral health for the state in that region. Clear Day has been awarded nearly $750,000 in state Medicaid funds left over from previous years to help with startup costs, according to Southwest Behavioral Health Management, one of the companies that put out the request.
Stephen Devlin, executive director of Clear Day, said in a statement that Southwest Behavioral Health Management closely monitored those funds, which helped the facility provide “much needed” addiction treatment services.
“State auditors have been diligent in ensuring that Clear Day addressed all deficiencies that have been identified during audits,” Devlin wrote, “and, further, that Clear Day provides strong and effective treatment to the individuals in our care.”
Hughes said her office has addressed the issues of understaffing and drugs on the premises with Clear Day through meetings and training sessions.
Smith, head of the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs, said: “None of us want to see providers closing. We want them to be successful. We want them to be able to deliver the services for their benefit and for ours.”
Waiting for Consequences
In Fayette County, ASI came under fire from state and federal authorities in 2015.
The FBI raided the facility that October. The following January, a federal grand jury indicted one of the owners, Rosalind Sugarmann, and an ASI doctor on multiple counts of illegally distributing a medication to treat opioid addiction.
Nearly three months later, a counselor employed by ASI overdosed while staying at the facility, an attorney for the state later said in an administrative court filing against ASI. Ultimately, a bankruptcy case forced the business to close.
In late 2016, Sugarmann pleaded guilty to illegal drug distribution and health care fraud. But that hasn’t kept her and her family out of the recovery business. Less than a year after she was released from prison, Sugarmann — who has talked publicly about her own substance use decades ago — announced she was opening a recovery home.
“I’m not going to stop working with addicts ever. That’s my calling in life,” Sugarmann said in an interview with KHN-Spotlight PA. “Somebody helped me, and I help somebody else.”
But two families said Sugarmann failed their loved ones.
There’s Adam Kalinowski, who died at ASI in 2014, and there’s 37-year-old James Pschirer, who died of an overdose in a recovery home Sugarmann’s family operates. These homes offer peer support and often have curfews and rules designed to help people stay away from drugs after they’ve been discharged from inpatient treatment.
In Kalinowski’s case, Sugarmann said ASI reported his death to everyone it was required to. There’s no indication from department records that the state cited ASI in connection with his suicide.
(The Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs wouldn’t comment on Kalinowski’s case specifically but said it worked with the FBI to investigate problems at ASI.)
Neither Sugarmann nor her husband, Sean, mounted a defense against the Kalinowski family’s lawsuit in court. In a recent interview with KHN-Spotlight PA, Sean Sugarmann placed the blame for Kalinowski’s death elsewhere, saying that the facility was staffed correctly and that, given his eventual suicide, Kalinowski never should have been sent to ASI.
Kalinowski’s family also sued UPMC Mercy, the Pittsburgh hospital where he was treated before going to ASI, and affiliated entities, but resolved the claims against them through a private settlement, according to a family attorney. UPMC denied responsibility for Kalinowski’s death. In a pretrial court filing, an expert witness for UPMC directed blame at ASI, saying Kalinowski was well enough to be safely discharged to a residential treatment facility. That he wasn’t evaluated by a doctor, nurse or professional counselor when he arrived at ASI was a concern, the expert wrote, and “perhaps this tragedy could have been avoided” if ASI had provided a higher level of care.
More recently, Rosalind Sugarmann has faced criticism for her involvement with recovery homes.
In February 2019, while still under federal supervision, Sugarmann announced on a blog that she was “back in commission!!” and would open a men’s recovery home called The Second Act outside Pittsburgh.
A 2017 law gave the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs new power to regulate recovery homes in addition to treatment facilities. The state missed a June 2020 deadline to implement the voluntary licensing process but plans to roll out the program this year.
James Pschirer turned to The Second Act for a place to stay in the fall of 2019. His mom, Andrea Zack, helped him with rent, writing out a $250 check to Sugarmann, according to a photocopy of the check the family provided.
Then, on Nov. 1, 2019, James died inside the home from a fentanyl and cocaine overdose, a photo of the death certificate provided by his family showed.
Andrea and James’ sister, Amanda Pschirer, went to The Second Act to collect his clothes and personal items. Andrea kept the coins in his pockets, knowing he had touched them.
It wasn’t until after James’ death that his family found out about Sugarmann’s criminal conviction, they said.
Amanda knows her brother chose to use drugs, but she thinks he could still be alive if he had stayed in another home with better oversight. And she’s angry that nothing stopped Sugarmann from being involved with one.
“I am worried that someone else will die under her care,” Amanda said.
In interviews, Rosalind and Sean Sugarmann downplayed their involvement with The Second Act. “My kids are involved in the recovery homes,” Rosalind told KHN-Spotlight PA. “I’m not an owner there.” The business is registered in their children’s names, and Rosalind said she’s lived in Los Angeles since early 2020.
Still, Sean Sugarmann acknowledged helping his adult children manage the business, and said in March he was living in the men’s home at that time. One of his daughters referred questions about The Second Act to Sean. Rosalind promotes the business on social media accounts, encouraging people to move in. She told KHN-Spotlight PA, “I’m not gonna deny that I’m a consultant.”
Sean said an overdose death “could have happened anywhere, and I think it happens everywhere.”
Last fall, Amanda Pschirer reached out to state officials with concerns about recovery homes. But she said she didn’t receive a response for four months. The department said a computer glitch with an online form, discovered in January, caused the delay in responding to her submission and about 260 others.
Ian Kalinowski, whose brother died at ASI seven years ago, has followed Rosalind’s posts online and saw that she’s still involved in the recovery business. He’s outraged.
He and his family are still grieving Adam’s loss. Ian wishes his young children had gotten to meet their uncle. He doubts the ASI defendants will ever provide the $1.6 million-plus that the judge said they owe.
Ian recognizes that ASI’s leaders faced some consequences for problems at the business.
“But there have still been no repercussions for what happened to my brother,” he said of the Sugarmanns.
He’s not optimistic there ever will be.
Methodology: How We Investigated Pennsylvania’s Addiction Treatment Industry and Found Weak Oversight of Providers
Federal grants, state initiatives and Medicaid pump millions of taxpayer dollars into the field annually. The state has seen a net gain of about 40 licensed treatment facilities over the past four years, bringing the total to more than 800.
But an investigation by Spotlight PA and KHN found the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs — which licenses these facilities — provides weak oversight and lacks the resources and regulatory power to police them, allowing providers to continue operating despite repeated violations and harm to clients. The department has no standard criteria to determine when it should force facilities to serve fewer patients and, in nearly a decade, has revoked just one provider’s license.
Spotlight PA, an independent, collaborative newsroom reporting on the Pennsylvania state government and statewide issues, began investigating the oversight of addiction treatment facilities shortly after its launch in late 2019. The newsroom later partnered with KHN, a national organization that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.
Our team began by scraping thousands of facility inspection reports from the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs’ website. We then analyzed them to find the most egregious citations: ones that mentioned a failure to report patient deaths and assault, that noted medication errors or that revealed unsafe staffing ratios.
We also requested from the department historical data about which facilities had received provisional licenses — designations indicating that facilities have failed to meet several state requirements and will be inspected more frequently until they resolve those concerns. The department didn’t have an automated system to gather this data but agreed to compile it manually. It provided the information with the following caveat: “Due to incorrect data entered into the licensing database, the attached report may not include all provisional licenses since 2012. It is as close to accurate as we can determine base[d] on the available data.”
Additionally, the team filed an open records request for reports of unusual incidents. These are certain serious events that the department requires facilities to report, including client deaths and incidents of physical and sexual abuse, among others. The department provided reports of only those incidents that it decided did not warrant investigation. It said it could not provide the total number of such events because it doesn’t have facility-specific aggregate data prior to September 2019, when it launched a new electronic reporting system. Even available data from that new system provides an incomplete picture, as less than a quarter of treatment facilities had enrolled in the voluntary system as of March 2021.
Reporters also reviewed the department’s administrative court history to see cases in which the state had initiated legal action against a facility.
To further inform our reporting, Spotlight PA launched a public callout for readers to send in tips and concerns about facilities.
Using a combination of these sources — facility inspection surveys, provisional license history, administrative court cases, limited reports of unusual incidents and tips from the public — we compiled a list of 34 facilities that appeared to have the most troubling track records.
From the short list of facilities, Spotlight PA and KHN reporters then reached out to current and former employees and clients at various locations. The interviews helped establish whether people’s firsthand experiences matched the concerns that arose in the data.
Our reporters also reviewed the licensing applications that these facilities had submitted to the state, as well as lawsuits filed by clients and employees against the facilities. We interviewed former employees of the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs to understand the oversight system and challenges within the agency.
The final story was based on interviews with more than 80 people and a review of thousands of pages of state government and court records.
Spotlight PA is powered by The Philadelphia Inquirer in partnership with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. The independent, nonpartisan newsroom is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results: spotlightpa.org/donate
CHICAGO (WLS) -- Target plans to hire 2,000 people for a distribution center in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood.
Multiple career or hiring events will be held in the Little Village community through May, according to Target officials. Local residents can apply for a variety of open positions at these events.
Target committed to offering market-competitive pay and benefits. At the Little Village distribution center, positions start at $18 an hour, Target said.
Additionally, Target will provide training and development for its team members, along with opportunities to build skills to succeed in their jobs and careers. Target said it also offers education benefits such as tuition and GED reimbursement in order to support team members' continuous learning. The investment in the team will allow Target to continue to recruit and retain strong team members, according to Target officials.
The redevelopment of the site has been controversial. It is the same location where a botched demolition of a smokestack left the neighborhood covered in dust and debris last year. The developer was hit with fines, but some residents argued the project should not receive millions in tax subsidies.
Candidates can visit the Target website to apply for a role.
CHICAGO (WLS) -- Target plans to hire 2,000 people for a distribution center in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood.
Multiple career or hiring events will be held in the Little Village community through May, according to Target officials. Local residents can apply for a variety of open positions at these events.
Target committed to offering market-competitive pay and benefits. At the Little Village distribution center, positions start at $18 an hour, Target said.
Additionally, Target will provide training and development for its team members, along with opportunities to build skills to succeed in their jobs and careers. Target said it also offers education benefits such as tuition and GED reimbursement in order to support team members' continuous learning. The investment in the team will allow Target to continue to recruit and retain strong team members, according to Target officials.
The redevelopment of the site has been controversial. It is the same location where a botched demolition of a smokestack left the neighborhood covered in dust and debris last year. The developer was hit with fines, but some residents argued the project should not receive millions in tax subsidies.
Candidates can visit the Target website to apply for a role.
Carrying even a little extra weight raises the risk of developing a severe form of COVID-19, especially in younger adults, according to a new study.
The findings published Thursday offer fresh insights into who is most at risk of complications, laying out the effects for certain age and ethnic groups and showing how weight gain matters.
The study comes as repeated lockdowns and pandemic stress lead to expanding waistlines in many developed countries and quashes the perception that only the obese face worse outcomes.
Those with a body mass index above 23, which is considered at the upper end of the healthy range, are already at higher risk, according to the U.K. researchers. They found that each one-point increase in BMI raises the chance of hospitalization by 5% and of intensive-care admission by 10%.
The impact was greatest in those under age 40, and the risks were amplified for Black people compared with other ethnic groups, the scientists found after studying the health records of almost 7 million people in England.
Being overweight had little effect on outcomes for people older than 80. The research was published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology journal.
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For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com
Gov. Brad Little Wednesday signed into law the controversial House Bill 377, dealing with school nondiscrimination and targeting critical race theory.
The new law bans school spending that in some way forces students to “adopt” or “adhere to” the belief that an individual is responsible for actions committed by members of their race or identity group in the past. It also bars schools from teaching that one identity group is superior, a teaching Republican lawmakers have attributed to critical race theory and liberal “indoctrination” they fear is occurring in Idaho public schools.
Little questioned the Legislature’s narrative of “widespread, systemic indoctrination in Idaho classrooms” that fueled the bill and said the legislative process has sent “the wrong message” to stakeholders.
“We must be focused on facts and data, not anecdotes and innuendo,” Little wrote in a letter transmitted to House Speaker Scott Bedke, R-Oakley.
The bill was introduced after House Republicans killed budgets funding Idaho colleges and universities and K-12 teacher salaries, over concerns that educators are teaching about social justice and critical race theory. Some legislators said they would not approve a teacher salary budget without “intent language” banning such teachings. Consequently, many moderate Republicans argued HB 377 could be the linchpin to moving education budgets forward, which have stalled the legislative session — now third longest in state history.
“The process that produced this legislation over the last few weeks sends the wrong message to Idaho teachers, parents, and students. It has been nothing short of a distraction from meeting our constitutional and moral obligations to public education in Idaho,” Little wrote.
The American Civil Liberties Union joined Idaho students in testifying against the bill, warning it would have a chilling effect on classroom discussions about race’s role in U.S. history. The bill also drew opposition from several lobbying groups: Idaho Business for Education; the Idaho Education Association; and the Idaho School Boards Association.
As the Statehouse debate over schools and social justice has intensified this month, the State Board of Education has remained neutral on the bill, though they’ve noted, like Little, that school districts and colleges already have processes in place to field curriculum complaints.
In Idaho, all curriculum decisions are made locally, Little pointed out in his letter. But some lawmakers have called the bill a “proactive” measure resisting proposed federal rules that they say would force schools to insert critical race theory into their teachings. However, the rules and orders they’ve cited so far have not made any mention of the intellectual movement, which approaches race’s social construction and role in American history and institutions.
Idaho Education News has so far been unable to verify the validity of lawmakers’ evidence of forced indoctrination in public schools.
“The claim that there is widespread, systemic indoctrination occurring in Idaho classrooms is a serious allegation. Most worryingly, it undermines popular support for public education in Idaho,” Little wrote.
Predecessor social justice bill likely dead
House Bill 364, the “Protecting Critical Thinking in Higher Education Act,” is likely dead for the session.
The bill, introduced before HB 377, was another in a string of bills targeting progressive-slanted education that came out of the failed education budget votes. Now that HB 377 is passed, the earlier proposal is unlikely to get a hearing in the Senate Education Committee, Sen. Carl Crabtree, R-Grangeville, told EdNews by email Wednesday. Crabtree is the committee’s vice chairman.
The bill would have required public colleges and universities to post an annual report on their websites outlining their compliance with new free speech codes. Students could have sued their colleges and university staff over alleged violations for a minimum of $5,000.
It passed the House 56-12 earlier this month on nearly a party-line vote.
About Blake Jones
Reporter Blake Jones covers the politics and policy of Idaho's K-12 public school system. He's a lifelong Idahoan, and holds degrees in Creative Writing and Political Economy from the College of Idaho. Follow Blake on Twitter @jonesblakej. He can be reached by email at [email protected]
Idaho didn’t move much this year in terms of per-pupil spending, and average teacher pay dropped slightly due to veteran turnover and a temporary salary freeze.
The House Tuesday struck down a bill to free up $40.3 million to help schools pay for staff and student COVID-19 tests. School districts, along with private and charter schools, could have opted into receiving the state-held federal money to pay for voluntary tests. But some House members said they didn’t want more coronavirus testing…
Budget-writers voted to put another $1 million into the K-12 salaries bill. Then, on a divided vote, they sliced $2.5 million from higher education.
It took the Senate three hours to push through the bill targeting concepts such as critical race theory. In other Statehouse news, a bill prohibiting mask mandates appears dead for the session.
Nampa students are running a snack-drive, Boise students are rallying around Simpson’s Salmon plan and more.
April 30, 2021 at 01:12AM
https://www.idahoednews.org/legislature/legislative-roundup-4-29-21-little-signs-nondiscrimination-bill-but-questions-anecdotes-and-innuendo-that-birthed-it/
Legislative roundup, 4.29.21: Little signs nondiscrimination bill, but questions 'anecdotes and innuendo' that birthed it - Idaho EdNews