Thriving New Hospital Passes Key Profitability Milestones Temporary Cash Flow Crunch at SWMC Caused By Reopening Costs, Not Operational Losses

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With flowers budding everywhere, balmy sunny days and the greenest, best- watered fields to be seen in years, it feels as though a vibrant early springtime has arrived in West Sonoma County.

Meanwhile, perched on the picturesque Laguna of Santa Rosa, our community’s new hospital is experiencing its own unexpectedly early fiscal spring. Based on the Sonoma Independent’s analysis of  financial data from the new Sonoma West Medical Center (SWMC) for the month of January and first week of February, it seems clear that the new hospital has succeeded in its goal of keeping wages and supply costs down while surpassing its revenue target.

Nevertheless, SWMC faces a short term cash flow crunch during the next four to five weeks. This has not been caused by operational losses (the revenue that the hospital conservatively expects to receive through insurance reimbursements and patient payments minus all operating costs). As shown in the two pie charts above, if you exclude pending insurance payments and un-compensated care provided prior to insurance re-certification, SWMC’s losses were under $200,000 for December and January.

What these graphs illustrate is that the need for bridge financing at SWMC did not arise from operational losses related to the functioning of the new hospital, but to the controversial decision by the former Palm Drive District Board to close the hospital and give up its Medicare number and licensing authorizations in late April, 2014. As the ‘Where $13 Million of Funding Went” pie shows,  more than 80% of the $13 million that has been laid out to reopen the hospital has been paid to operate a fully staffed hospital with no revenue for six months (May through October), plus three months (November through January) as an open hospital. During these first months of operations, the cost of more than $4.5 million in reimbursable care had to be fronted while waiting for Medicare and other insurance labyrinths to process their payments to a “new recipient.”

This $4.5 million of reimbursed cash will flow back to the hospital starting in March. Meanwhile, nearly $12 million in community philanthropy has run out, and bills still need to be paid.

 

As SWMC Chair Dan Smith explains, “Because of the way that the state treats you when you need to be re-licensed and re-inspected, we had to have the entire staff here long before we were able to open. It’s not like the state comes in and inspects the entire building and then you can go and hire the entire staff. You have to have the entire staff there before they begin to review you.”

That’s why the hospital requested $600,000 in bridge financing at the February 1 District Board meeting.  The Board voted to provide $500,000 at the meeting (thanks in part to a petition with 330 names by the new Friends of Sonoma West Medical Center, as reported here).  The funds came through a few days later, although the amount had been trimmed to $400,000.  To make it through this csh crunch period, private loans and grants are being arranged by SWMC to cover the next few payrolls.

Reining in the runaway expenses of the financially mismanaged Palm Drive Hospital was the first order of business in organizing the new Sonoma West Medical Center. A fiscally-focused new 14-member SWMC Board was created, headed by community business leader and lead philanthropist Dan Smith. Smith knew exactly where tight controls would be needed for SWMC to be profitable.

Salaries and benefits at the average California hospital are typically about 50% of gross monthly revenue.  According to District records, in January 2014, shortly before the Palm Drive Health Care District Board voted to close it, salaries and benefits had hit 72% of revenue. As a result, Palm Drive Hospital losses for the month of January, 2014, soared to a record $585,000. “These are the kinds of things you see in a fiscal environment where nobody’s minding the farm,” SWMC Board Smith said.

Smith and others have been carefully minding the farm that has become the  Sonoma West Medical Center.  In January, 2016, its first month of Medicare reimbursement eligibility, the hospital’s operational loss was around $200,000.  For Feberuary the hospital is exceeding its projected daily census, with more surgeries performed and scheduled than last month, and scores of women coming to SWMC for one of the only 3D mammography procedures in the County.

The month of February thus far suggests that revenue projections will be surpassed by well over 10%, creating a monthly profit at this District hospital for the first time in years once insurance reimbursements arrive.

Smith and his team are working to bring SWMC’s salaries and benefits close to the statewide average of 50% of hospital revenue and 13% of revenue for hospital supplies. SWMC’s supply expense of under 13% for January 2016 hit this important milestone, and compares favorably with Palm Drive’s wasteful supply expense of 20% of revenue in January, 2014. The new hospital is achieving these savings without sacrificing the level of personal, expert care that caused Consumer Reports, in early 2014, to rank Palm Drive Hospital as the number one of 360 California hospitals for safe outcomes, and the 5th safest in the entire United States.

Dr. Richard Powers, whose election on the “Doc and Cop” slate in November, 2014, created a new District Board majority willing to reopen the hospital. Dr. Powers told the Sonoma Independent, “I think we will live up to our intention of being a caring hospital that is standalone and financially viable.  And we wont lose our caring.  We will not become a computer first and patients second hospital—that’s not here.”

This week, Sonoma West Times & News, a widely-read West County newspaper, shocked citizens by publishing a front page article titled, “Fears of third hospital bankruptcy grow.”   The article was written by Rollie Atkinson, publisher of the Sonoma West Times. His article did not bother to analyze the January figures that SWMC provided the public with last week, showing that it had cut expenses by hundreds of thousands of dollars compared to Palm Drive’s numbers two years ago.  Nor did it quote or refer to a single person who expressed “fears” of a hospital bankruptcy, thereby violating a core journalistic principle–especially when presenting  such a potentially damaging headline.

The four part award winning investigative series that I wrote in 2014 about Palm Drive’s closing and reopening concluded with an article about the Sonoma West Times’ campaign of deception. Titled, “Sonoma West’s Relentless Vendetta to Stop Dan Smith from Re-Opening Palm Drive Hospital” and readable here, it chronicled a number of instances in which the newspaper distorted the hospital story to promote a damaging narrative with little or no basis in truth.

Last year, a half dozen members of our community formed a new non-profit, Informing to Empower, which launched the Sonoma Independent as a public interest website in April, 2015.  Informing to Empower’s mission is to provide transparency and insight into complex issues that impact the public interest, like the future of our community hospital.  Challenging narratives like “citizens are powerless” and “failure is our only option” with analysis and insight into solutions is what public interest media–and the Sonoma Independent–is all about.

UPDATE February 22:

An open letter to publisher Rollie Atkinson by hospital philanthropist Joan Marler and her husband Dan Smith appeared in this week’s edition of the Sonoma West Times & News this week. It noted,

“In your coverage of the rebirth of our district hospital, you have proven that your newspaper is a powerful force in our community. Your editorials, headlines, opinion pieces, and selection of letters have had a major effect on its process.  The commentaries you’ve published have made it difficult to raise money for the hospital and have discouraged people from contributing to its success at a critical time.

“Your recent headline, “Fears of Third Bankruptcy Grow,” came as a surprise to everyone who knows that the hospital is on a path to success with rapidly growing revenue. Since there was no mention of bankruptcy at the meeting you attended, and since you did not speak to a hospital administrator, and did not quote anyone as being fearful, this appears to be another personal opinion instead of news.

“If you had inquired, you would have found that Sonoma West Medical Center is already exceeding Palm Drive in patient census, ER visits and outpatient visits. For example SWMC had 433 inpatient days in January vsPalm Drive’s average of 344/month, a 26% increase.  SWMC had 573 ER visits in January compared to Palm Drive’s average of 496, a 15% increase. This week kicks off the 3D mammography program, more elective surgery and other programs, all of which will add to the hospital’s success.

“Last Easter, you wrote about the resurrection of Christ and the miracle that this story represents for you. Perhaps, this Easter you can write about the resurrection of our hospital, a miracle that has happened right here in Sebastopol against overwhelming odds, not the least of which has been your paper.”

A letter from Friends of the Sonoma West Medical Center co-coordinators Gail Raborn and  Paul-Andre Shabracq also appeared on the letters page. It said:

“We were dismayed to see the February 11 edition of the Sonoma West Times with a most misleading headline peeking out of the newspaper box. This headline was a complete abrogation of journalistic principles substituting a malicious intent to discredit our hospital for accurate reporting of the facts. 
The headline Fears of Third Hospital Bankruptcy grow had little relation to the article underneath or to the facts.
There was no discussion of a possible third bankruptcy at the February 1 Palm Drive Health Care Board meeting. The article inaccurately reported the hospital had 100 employees when in fact it employed 143 people in January. No reporter contacted SWMC administrators for input into this story. The purpose of the February 1 District Board meeting was simply to consider temporary and short-term bridge financing from the District Board until the $4.5 million dollars owed the hospital arrive in March. Why did the Sonoma West Times and News article not mention that our hospital was experiencing a level of activity that will make it profitable by May? 
We cannot understand why a local newspaper tries to to undermine our hospital with a life-saving ER and which is one of the largest employers in the community.”

 

 

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Jonathan Greenberg

Jonathan Greenberg is the editor and publisher of the award winning Sonoma Independent, which he founded in 2015 to serve the public interest with insight, solutions and advocacy.

In January, 2024, Jonathan launched the StopTrumpDictatorship.com Project to create and market compelling YouTube ads, as well as the Progressive Source PAC to fund them. The effort’s first project was the Dems Vote Haley in SC video, which was viewed 400,000 times in blue counties, contributing to Haley outperforming polls by 10 points.

Jonathan has been an investigative legal and financial journalist with 40 years of experience contributing to national publications. During the past six years, Jonathan wrote four of the most widely-read exposes in the Washington Post about Donald Trump. Jonathan has known Trump longer than any journalist writing today. He was head of research for the first Forbes 400 when Trump conned him into putting him on the list. The notorious phone calls Trump taped pretending to be John Barron was the subject of monologues on Colbert, the Daily Show and Seth Meyers. Jonathan has appeared live on more than a dozen major news shows, including on CNN with Erin Burnett, Don Lemon and Chris Cuomo, on MSNBC with Ari Berber and Ali Velshi, and NPR's On the Media.

Jonathan was a Web 1.0 pioneer. In 1996 he started Gist Communications, a disruptive new media company that competed successfully with News Corp’s TV Guide Online. In 1997, Gist was one of just 14 websites in the world to be named a winner of the First Annual Webby Awards in San Francisco. Following Gist and the 9-11 attacks on the World Trade Center, Jonathan served, in 2002 and 2003, as Policy Director for the New York City Council’s Select Committee on Lower Manhattan Redevelopment, where he directed media and public policy campaigns and was the city council’s lead analyst for federal relief programs.

In 2007, Jonathan founded Progressive Source Communications, a public interest digital advocacy company that has created scores of impactful videos and campaigns to build awareness of solutions that serve the common good. Progressive Source owns the Sonoma Independent.

Jonathan is a graduate of Yale Law School's Masters Degree in Law fellowship program. A fuller bio and links to Jonathan's work can be found at JonathanGreenberg.com.

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