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From Our Founder
September 15, 2009
By Bob Wichlinski
Doctors Lawyers and Politicians
Porter
County’s hospital was not
sold to the highest bidder. Actually it was, but the
highest bidder paid the 2nd highest bidder’s lower price.
The attorneys apparently failed to include a clause in the
buy-sell agreement protecting the seller in the event the lower bidder
was purchased by the higher bidder following closing on the deal;
which is exactly what happened. Those
representing the seller selected the 2nd highest bidder
citing the need to protect the interests of the hospital’s physicians.
Shortly after closing, the higher bidder purchased lower bidder,
in effect, creating their own discount. Nothing in
the contract forced them to pay the seller the difference in price which
totaled in the millions.
The Porter County Council
agreed to pay an Indianapolis law firm to shepherd the deal.
Council minutes state that the firm was experienced in the sale
of public assets. Days after closing it was
discovered that the county commissioners failed to comply with State law
by creating specific deposit accounts for the proceeds of the sale.
How did a law firm experienced in such transactions miss
this important detail? If they did, why then didn’t
the county sue the firm for malpractice or at least demand recompense?
Public hearings were promised
to address the issue of how to spend the proceeds of the sale.
Those meetings were abruptly halted by the county attorney citing
legal issues arising from the sale. They were never
reconvened.
The purchaser is protected
from “circumstances beyond their control” with respect to timely
construction of a new facility. Do “delays associated with
securing required zoning” constitute such a circumstance? Does this
circumstance potentially free them of responsibility for building a new
facility or invite renegotiation of the terms of the contract?
Given the climate the administration has fostered in terms of
land development in Porter County
should “timely zoning approval” have been specifically excluded from the
definition of “circumstances beyond the purchaser’s control” especially
given the nature of the location that was selected for construction of
the new facility?
The purchaser is now
requesting tax abatements for their new facility. Will the
state of the economy combined with failure to secure tax abatement
constitute “circumstances beyond their control?”
The sale of the hospital was
supposed to be about assuring quality health care in
Porter
County for generations to
come while freeing county government from the health care business.
But what it appears to have evolved into is assuring the
interests of everyone except the taxpayers.
It’s not clear precisely what
taxpayers received in consideration for the sale of the hospital; it may
never be. Is it any wonder why there is no plan for the
proceeds?
“Boondoggle” has become the
popular word to describe projects which do not favor the present
administration. I prefer the word shenanigans
to describe those which do.
As always, I can be reached via e-mail at
b@219.com
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