Saturday, April 4, 2020

Why this? Why now? Transparency requires an explanation

Cook County’s chief architect of COVID-19 response ousted, puzzling some, alarming others
Cook County Commissioner Larry Suffredin said he hadn’t been given a “coherent” explanation for why Dr. Terry Mason was let go. Suffredin said all of his experiences with the former head of the public health department in the past 10 days had been positive.

By Rachel Hinton Apr 3, 2020, 1:29pm CDT


Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle introduces Dr. Terry Mason after a meeting of faith and community leaders in 2011. | Rich Hein/Sun-Times file

The veteran public health official at the forefront of Cook County’s response to the coronavirus crisis was handed a pink slip Friday, prompting surprise and concern from some county commissioners who said they thought he was doing a good job.

No official reason was given for Dr. Terry Mason’s departure, but Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said he was terminated.

Adding to the day’s drama, Cook County Health announced Friday that it would close the emergency department at Provident Hospital for about a month starting Monday to figure out a better way to handle the “large volume of patients” and “challenges of a pandemic” at the South Side hospital.

Mason joined Cook County Health as the system’s chief medical officer before transitioning into the role of chief operating officer of the Cook County Department of Public Health, which is part of the health system, in 2013.

Before going to work for the county in 2009, the former Mercy Hospital and Medical Center urologist spent nearly four years as Chicago’s public health commissioner. For decades, he was host of WVON-AM’s radio talk show “Doctor in the House.”

Debra Carey, the interim CEO of Cook County Health, said in a statement that Friday was Mason’s last day.

Doctors Kiran Joshi and Rachel Rubin, who have both been senior medical officers at the county department since 2014 and members of the medical staff at Stroger Hospital, have agreed to step in and co-lead the department effective immediately, Carey’s statement continued.Dr. Terry Mason, right, talks with exercise physiologist Roy Walker, left, Sheri Hampton Brazley, from the Chicago Board of Health, and Joel Africk, CEO of the American Lung Association of metropolitan Chicago, on his radio program in 2006, in Chicago. M. Spencer Green/AP file
“On behalf of the Cook County Health Board of Director and the staff, I want to personally thank Terry for his years of service to the residents of Cook County,” Carey said in the statement. “He has been a valued member of the executive team and has contributed to our success in recent years.”

Mason was one of the main faces of the county’s response to coronavirus, though Joshi and Rubin have been “deeply involved in public health’s response to the coronavirus since the beginning and have my full support and deep gratitude,” Carey said in a statement.

Mason is the third high ranking health official to be cut from county government in recent months. In November, the Board of Cook County Health voted to oust Dr. John Jay Shannon, the CEO of the county’s health arm.

In February, the health system’s chief financial officer, Ekerete Akpan, was dismissed.Dr. Terry Mason, chief operating officer for the Cook County Department of Public Health, right, along with Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, left, and other elected and health officials speaks to reporters the situation of Illinois amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Monday, March 16, 2020. Tyler LaRiviere/Chicago Sun-Times file

Cook County Commissioner Larry Suffredin, D-Evanston, said he hadn’t been given a “coherent” explanation for why Mason was let go, saying all of his experiences with the former head of the public health department in the past 10 days had been positive.

“I always felt Terry Mason did a good job, and I always enjoyed working with him, but obviously Debra Carey and [chair of the health system’s board of directors] Hill Hammock felt it was time for a change,” Suffredin said.

Commissioner Sean Morrison, R-Palos Park, found the move “very alarming” considering the spread of coronavirus throughout the county.

“This coronavirus is very real, we haven’t even hit the apex yet, that’s a few weeks away,” Morrison said. “I think he did a good job.”

9 comments:

  1. Anonymous4/04/2020

    Hey! Where is the "social distancing"in this group?Are they immune?Also,it doesn't look like much "diversity"in this group either,more "immunity"????

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  2. Anonymous4/04/2020

    They wanted him to lie about public health stuff and he refused to play ball. Stay in your holes its going to get hot soon.......

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  3. Anonymous4/04/2020

    Preckwinkle is up to something.

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    1. Anonymous4/05/2020

      I agree she is reported to have drawn on the $100 million line of credit. The pension fund is poised to have the county board implement an increased tax levy. And me here's that county may be getting hit with mass lawsuits. Watch out if county doesn't claim some type of financial distress.

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  4. Anonymous4/04/2020

    Off topic; I get incensed with Pritzker’s constant finger pointing at the federal government about the response to the virus. Pritzker, along with Lightfeet and all the other agencies of local government that support the idea of sanctuary cities refuse to comply with federal government guidelines and yet now, when the shit hits the fan, they want the federal government to come in and tell them how to govern their cities. You folks ran for election, telling voters you were the ones we could have confidence in to protect and guide the citizens of Chicago. Now you’re basically acknowledging you cant. To me its like welching on a bet.
    So why should you ask us to have confidence in you now. WE DONT

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    1. Anonymous4/04/2020

      Donald, their daddy, didn't cover up for their obvious incompetency in a timely manner. This is a statewide and local problem, with assistance from the fed. Grow up, fatass, and the clueless mayor.

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  5. Anonymous4/04/2020

    Dr. Mason was an urologist. How did he jump from urology to Chicago and later, Cook County Health? Did he obtain more education?

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    1. Anonymous4/05/2020

      Doctors are smart. Smarter than the average bear btw. They are easily able to transition into other roles.

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    2. Anonymous4/06/2020

      It's unfortunate that due to affirmative action I can never have a black Dr. treat me or my family don't know if he/she were pushed through medical school because of race.

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