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Native
American Press/Ojibwe
News
Weeklong picket at IHB
Community meeting planned for 6:00 pm on Monday,
April 8th at Minneapolis Indian Center
By Clara NiiSka - April 5, 2002
On Friday, March 29th, physicians Dr. Carol Krush and Dr. Lori Banaszak
were fired from their jobs at the Indian Health Board community clinic
in south Minneapolis. Both had worked at the clinic for years, Dr.
Krush since the clinic opened twenty-eight years ago.
Press/ON spoke with Dr. Krush as she picketed the clinic
on Wednesday, April 3rd.
Dr. Krush said that her signing the letter, “Physicians
respond to IHB board of directors’ open letter,” published in Press/ON
on March 22, 2002 was “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” leading
to her being fired for “insubordination.” When the letter came out in
the paper, there was a “disciplinary meeting,” Dr. Krush said, then she
“kept getting voice mails about the disciplinary meeting,” which she
understood as the administration’s ‘building a record’ to justify her
being fired. Late Friday afternoon, “at the end of the day,” she heard
“the person at the front desk telling Penny Scheffler that I was still
seeing patients.” When Dr. Krush had seen her last patient, at about
5:30, interim director Penny Scheffler and a lawyer took Dr. Krush and
Dr. Banaszak to clinic administrator Dr. Terril Hart’s office,
“separately. Laurie was first.” Both physicians were given their
termination papers, severance checks, and told to turn in their keys.
Dr. Krush said that she has not cashed her termination check, and does
not intend to until she has done everything she can to resolve the
problems at IHB and—perhaps—return to the clinic and the generations of
patients who she has served as their family doctor.
“I knew when I signed [the “Physicians respond …”
letter] that it would not go down well,” Dr. Krush said, but “they were
lying in the letter from the board. I could not let it go. They said we
were doing FAS (fetal alcohol syndrome) evaluations. That’s my
department – we have not been doing FAS evaluations since [Dr.] Lydia
[Caros] left.”
The March 22nd physicians response letter was reportedly
jointly written at a meeting of a number of physicians and medical
staff. “I knew when I [said], ‘put my name on it’ that I would get in
trouble,” Dr. Krush said. “But, I do not regret it. It had to be done.
If my getting fired is what it takes to get this mess cleaned up – I’m
not a martyr, but a some point you have to stand up.”
According to Dr. Krush, the Indian Health Board clinic
was founded “by a group of community members who hit the streets” and
sought community members’ opinions about their unfilled medical needs.
“Several doctors from Hennepin County Medical Center would go to coffee
with the community members”; the concerned physicians included Dr.
Krush, then a resident at HCMC. The IHB “started with a community
board,” she said, and elections every year. “I do not know when it
shifted to a non-elected board.”
Dr. Krush, along with other physicians and medical
staff, hopes that the community meeting planned for 6:00 pm on Monday,
April 8th, at the Minneapolis American Indian Center at 1530 E.
Franklin Avenue, will lead to healing the problems at IHB.
“The point of the community meeting is to talk about
what is going on,” Dr. Lydia Caros told Press/ON. Dr. Caros urges the
present board of directors “to resign,” and hopes that the IHB will go
back to having a community-elected board. She points to “successful”
community-run boards of directors, and says, “it would not take too
much time to look at” how these boards of directors are structured and
operated. “A bunch of intelligent people ought to be able to” resolve
the problems at IHB, the physician says.
Penny Scheffler’s
response
Interim director Penny Scheffler confirmed that Dr. Krush and Dr.
Banaszak were fired for insubordination. “Yes,” she said, “they
advocated against the board and management. We tried to talk to them.”
The physicians “refused to cease the advocacy against
the organization,” Scheffler said, and “it is regrettable that this is
an unfortunate turn of events.”
Press/ON asked Scheffler about Dr. Krush’s contention
that the IHB is no longer doing FAS assessments. “We are able to do
fetal alcohol assessments,” Sheffler said, “my information is that we
can do this, and so we would like to continue to do this.”
Scheffler responded to Press/ON’s questions about the
board of directors – which a number of IHB staff and doctors have
characterized as “self-perpetuating” through internal appointment – by
pointing out that “the board is following their bylaws.” She responded
to this writer’s request for a copy of the bylaws by saying that she
would check to see whether or not they are public information.
In light of the upcoming community meeting on Monday,
April 8th, Press/ON asked Scheffler if she had any comments about
improving the situation at an obviously troubled organization. “I think
that we will try to take steps to stabilize the organization, and the
main thing that we have do deal with [right now] is getting that
permanent executive director on board so that he or she can use their
leadership to take the organization forward,” she said. “We are trying
to take steps – slow steps, but steps.”
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