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Hochul apologizes to families of nursing home residents who died of COVID-19

Governor Hochul's office

 

Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday that she has apologized to family members of nursing home residents who died at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York.

The governor, in a weekly briefing on the state’s management of the coronavirus, also drew attention to another infectious disease -- the flu -- which she says may also pose a serious health threat this year.    

Hochul, who was the first state elected official to publicly get the COVID-19 vaccine, received her annual flu shot on Wednesday before the cameras.   

“I made sure I wore the mask so you wouldn’t see whether I winced or not,” Hochul joked.    

The state is running a public service announcement urging New Yorkers to get the flu vaccine. 

Last year’s flu season was very light, as the pandemic placed restrictions on social interactions, but the governor said that might not be the case this year, and more people could get sick.   

Hochul also revealed details of a private meeting she held Tuesday with Assembly Aging Committee Chair Ron Kim and family members of people who died of COVID-19 in nursing homes.  

The family members, along with Kim, blame some of the deaths on former Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s pandemic policies, including a March 25, 2020, directive that required nursing homes to take residents who were infected with the virus back from hospitals. The directive, and the subsequent undercounting of nursing home deaths, are the targets of a federal investigation into the actions of Cuomo and his former top aides.  

Hochul, who replaced Cuomo in August after he resigned, said she did something her predecessor did not do -- told the family members that she is sorry for what happened.   

“I apologized for the pain that those poor families had to endure,” Hochul said. “It was a very emotional meeting.”    

Kim, in a statement after the meeting, called it a “step in the right direction” but said there’s a long road to travel before the state reaches full accountability for what happened.   

The families, who have formed an advocacy group called Voices for Seniors, expressed some skepticism, saying that after a year of Cuomo’s “gaslighting,” they hope that the meeting was not an attempt to silence them and continue to control the narrative around nursing home deaths.    

Kim and the family members are seeking a compensation fund and a memorial. Hochul said her staff is working on both of those requests.   

“This is not a one-off,” Hochul said. “This is not just a photo opp.”     

Hochul also addressed Tuesday’s court ruling on a portion of the state’s vaccine mandate. A federal court judge ruled that health care employees will be allowed to decline the vaccine because of their religious belief. Hochul called the ruling “disappointing” and said the state will appeal.   

“I will be standing behind this mandate,” she said.  

The governor said the vaccine mandate has worked, and has led to over 95% of hospital workers, nursing home staff, home health care aides and adult care facility workers getting at least one dose of the vaccine. 

Hochul has not released a tally of health care workers who quit their jobs rather than get the vaccine, saying the state does not keep records of those numbers. 

 

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.