Statement from Assemblyman Simcha Eichenstein Regarding New Developments at Maimonides Medical Center

Since I took office, the future of Maimonides has been at the forefront of our agenda. Not a week has gone by over the last several years that we have not been working on this issue behind the scenes. The fact is that Maimonides is in a fiscal crisis for a variety of reasons, so much so that the state has been actively bailing out the hospital to the tune of $350 million a year, just to meet payroll.

But today, our local communities are in jeopardy of losing our local hospital to a NYC Health + Hospitals takeover. I am deeply concerned and beyond outraged at this latest proposal presented by the leadership of Maimonides and NYC Health + Hospitals.

Dear neighbors, you need to know that this decision is being shoved down our throats. The state, along with an outgoing NYC administration with one foot out the door, decided to disregard our local communities and expedite a transition. Let me be clear: this is a short-sighted quick fix made without the slightest understanding of our local diverse neighborhoods.

This is especially disturbing to me because for years I have been working tirelessly together with hospital leadership and community leaders to work out a responsible and sustainable solution for our local hospital. I have devoted many hours to this very issue. Yet suddenly, without any meaningful engagement or transparency, Maimonides leadership and New York City decided to force this plan on us. No one in the community asked for it and hospital board members were pressured to approve it. In fact, those hospital board members who reside locally and understand the implications of this plan voted against it. This is not collaboration. This is coercion.

If this takeover moves forward, I worry that Maimonides will lose its independence and its ability to serve the people who depend on it most. That is why I am strongly opposed to this takeover.

Yes, changes are necessary, and a practical solution needs to be put into place. But reckless decisions by bureaucrats and stakeholders who will disappear the day after, with zero local input, will end in disaster. We need a clear plan that recognizes local interests and considers patient safety. Our families, our seniors, and our children rely on this hospital every day and those forcefully shoving this proposal down our throats do not.

We cannot stand by quietly while others make important decisions on our behalf.