Sen. John Velis hopes probe of Holyoke Soldiers’ Home COVID-19 disaster will help future generations of veterans

July 21, 2020 – MassLive – Stephanie Barry

State Sen. John Velis’ first listening session with family members of veterans who died of COVID-19 contracted at the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke lasted for more than three hours on Friday.

There wasn’t a dry eye in the house, according to the newly elected senator from Westfield — one of six Western Massachusetts legislators appointed to a legislative oversight committee investigating an apparent management failure at the long-term care facility when coronavirus overtook patients and staff in late March.

By June, 76 veterans had died and 84 survivors had tested positive for the virus, as did more than 80 staff members.

Gov. Charlie Baker commissioned an independent analysis on the matter by Boston attorney Mark Pearlstein. The former federal prosecutor conducted 100 interviews, delved into 114,000 pages of records and concluded ousted Soldiers’ Home Superintendent Bennett Walsh failed miserably along with his top clinical staff.

Walsh, fired the day the report was released in late June, argues state officials’ early criticisms were “outrageous.” His attorney has said publicly Walsh has been unfairly scapegoated.

Bennett has scheduled a news conference Thursday. He held another conference May 26, releasing a stack of emails between Walsh and state officials that appeared to debunk early accusations Walsh was trying to hide the outbreak. At that time, the death toll at the Soldiers’ Home continued to climb.

Pearlstein used words like “catastrophic” and “baffling” when assessing decisions top staff made during the early days of the crisis, also portraying state officials as checked out on the Soldiers’ Home until the crisis peaked.

Velis said families of veterans reported watching helplessly, and in horror, until they were prevented from visiting their loved ones altogether.

“The family members, more so than anybody, were there when all this was happening,” said Velis, a former state representative and combat veteran. “You don’t need a medical degree to make observations, and you better believe I’m going to bring those observations back to Boston.”

Velis was named to the Special Joint Oversight Committee on the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home along with Sen. James T. Welch of West Springfield and state Reps. Joseph Wagner of Chicopee, Michael Finn of West Springfield, Aaron Vega of Holyoke and Mindy Domb of Amherst. All are Democrats.

The western delegates will join 11 of their colleagues from eastern Massachusetts including Rep. Linda Dean-Campbell, D-Methuen, and Sen. Walter Timilty, D-Milton, who also head the legislature’s Joint Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs.

Continue Reading

Legislative committee begins investigation into Holyoke Soldiers’ Home

July 21, 2020 – Western Mass News – Ryan Trowbridge & Audrey Russo

HOLYOKE, MA (WGGB/WSHM) — A group of lawmakers is now investigating the deadly COVID-19 outbreak at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home.

This comes as 101 veterans have died, with 76 of them testing positive.

Countless others contracted the illness and recovered and this group of legislators is tasked with looking into how the virus spread so quickly.

There are already multiple investigations into the Soldiers’ Home underway and the independent investigation ordered by the governor was completed weeks ago.

We spoke with the lawmakers on the Legislative Oversight Committee about how their probe into the home will be different from the others.

“There was not a dry eye there,” said State Sen. John Velis.

Velis has already begun listening sessions with the families of the vets who died in the COVID-19 outbreak at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home. He is part of a 17-member legislative committee tasked with investigating the deadly outbreak, considered one of the worst at a long-term care facility in the country.

“There was a D-Day survivor. To survive that and then come back to this and go through what they did…” Velis noted.

Velis is hoping the families’ input will help probe further back before the outbreak in March.

“All the time that they spent up there visiting, their observations, what they saw, what they feel could make it better,” Velis said.

Continue Reading

Velis says “much more work to do” as legislative sessions extend – The Westfield News

August 3, 2020 – The Westfield News – Hope E. Tremblay

BOSTON – State Sen. John C. Velis touted the extension of the legislative session this week, saying it allows elected officials to continue working for residents.

Last Thursday, the Massachusetts State Senate and the House of Representatives came to an agreement to continue formal legislative sessions through the end of the year. With the heightened needs brought forth by the COVID-19 pandemic, this extension will allow for the legislature to continue working on major legislation to bring relief to the Commonwealth.

“Over these last few months the needs of Massachusetts residents have greatly changed due to COVID-19. It is our duty as elected officials to ensure we are responding to these changes, and I believe it is crucial that we extend the session to continue our work,” said Velis. “During this unprecedented public health crisis, which has impacted every single person in Massachusetts, the typical summer break of the legislature is completely unimportant. We have accomplished a lot this session, but there is more work to do, and I’m glad we will be continuing that work to meet the needs of our constituents.”

Continue Reading

Translate »