WATERLOO, Ill. – Republican candidate for governor Paul Schimpf says the LaSalle Veterans’ Home tragedy is the result of failed leadership and a lack of accountability following the recent filing of lawsuits in LaSalle County that allege negligence and wrongful death, in what amounts to systemic failure. Schimpf says the loss of 36 Illinois veterans at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home is not only tragic, but it was avoidable.
“My heart goes out to all of the families who lost a loved one in this preventable tragedy,” Schimpf said. “We can’t turn back the clock, but we do owe it to the victims and their families to make sure a failure of this magnitude never happens again. I stand with the families of these veterans, and I will fight to ensure we have justice for the victims.”
Senator Schimpf says we’ve conveniently learned of failures at the facility and departmental level, but we still have no idea what Governor Pritzker knew—and when he knew it. “Why did his administration decide to ‘go it alone?’ Was the governor aware, or was he somehow disengaged? Why did it take twelve days for the Illinois Department of Public Health to dispatch a response team? Governor Pritzker must acknowledge that the buck stops with him, and he can’t shift the blame to his political appointees.”
The former state senator who was minority spokesman on the Veteran’s Affairs committee at the time of the outbreak demanded committee hearings when he says the facility’s area senator, Sue Rezin, was ignored by the administration. “I can’t help but wonder if this tragedy could have been avoided simply through legislative oversight of the administration. This is what happens when we assume that political appointees are up to the task.”
Now Schimpf is calling on the legislature to hold the administration accountable. “Of all people, Governor Pritzker should realize that oversight is necessary. Candidate Pritzker spent millions blasting the previous administration’s handling of the Quincy veterans’ home only to have his administration oversee the deadliest outbreak at a state facility in Illinois history. We need to institute legislative oversight practices immediately, so this kind of preventable tragedy never happens again.”
“Governor Pritzker’s billions boosted his campaign, but his money couldn’t buy him leadership. I was taught in the military that if you are in charge, you take responsibility. As a hands-on governor, my staff would’ve known to call me the minute the outbreak occurred. As governor, I won’t shift the blame to lieutenants when it’s politically expedient. I’ll stand up for Illinois veterans and working families and keep our communities safe.”