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Massachusetts to Pay $56 Million After Deadly Covid Outbreak at Veterans’ Home

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Massachusetts said on Thursday that it had agreed to pay $56 million to resolve claims that the leaders of a state-run nursing home for military veterans showed deliberate indifference during a coronavirus outbreak that was linked to the deaths of 84 residents early in the pandemic.

An independent investigation had painted a picture of chaos at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home when the virus began sweeping through it in March 2020, and had sharply criticized the leaders for combining veterans from two locked dementia units into one unit, crowding those who were infected or showing symptoms with those who did not have symptoms.

A social worker said it “felt like it was moving the concentration camp, we were moving these unknowing veterans off to die.” A nurse described it as “total pandemonium.”

Gov. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, accepting the findings of the investigation in June 2020, called them “nothing short of gut-wrenching.”

In the settlement, which followed months of intensive negotiations with the governor’s office, neither state officials nor those who ran the home acknowledged any wrongdoing or apologized for the treatment of the veterans there, lawyers for the veterans’ families said.

Nevertheless, Linda McKee, who lost her father, James Miller, a 96-year-old World War II veteran, said she was glad to see the state “finally accept some responsibility for what happened.”

“The memories of how my father was treated at the Soldiers’ Home will never be erased from my mind,” Ms. McKee said in a statement released by her lawyers, Michael Aleo and Tom Lesser. “It would have been more humane if he had died on Omaha Beach in Normandy than how he died at the Soldiers’ Home.”

Under the agreement, the families of 84 veterans who contracted Covid-19 and died before June 23, 2020, will be paid at least $400,000, with an average award of $510,000, Mr. Aleo and Mr. Lesser said.

Another group of 84 veterans who were infected but survived past June 23, 2020, will be paid no less than $10,000, with an average award of $20,000, the lawyers said, adding that the payments to both groups would not be reduced by legal fees.

A former U.S. attorney for Massachusetts, Donald K. Stern, will administer the claims fund and make awards based on a review of each claimant’s circumstances.

The settlement came about five months after New Jersey agreed to pay $53 million to the families of 119 veterans who lived in two state-run homes ravaged by the coronavirus. The families had been preparing to file lawsuits that accused the state of gross negligence.

The average payout in that case was expected to be about $445,000, as part of an out-of-court settlement that was believed to be the first of its kind nationwide.

The settlement in Massachusetts must still be approved by a federal judge and funded by the State Legislature.

Mr. Baker said he would file legislation seeking $56 million for the claims fund in the coming weeks. Once the settlement is complete, Mr. Aleo and Mr. Lesser said, the families, who had filed a class-action lawsuit against four leaders of the home and the state’s secretary of veterans’ services in July 2020, will drop their case.

Mr. Lesser called the resolution “fair and just” and said that it would prevent protracted litigation.

“The Covid-19 outbreak at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home was a terrible tragedy,” Mr. Baker said in a statement on Thursday. “While we know nothing can bring back those who were lost, we hope that this settlement brings a sense of closure to the loved ones of the veterans.”

The independent investigation, led by a former federal prosecutor, Mark W. Pearlstein, was especially critical of the decision to crowd veterans into one ward — a move one employee described as “the most insane thing I ever saw in my entire life.”

A social worker recalled listening to the chief nursing officer say “something to the effect that this room will be dead by Sunday, so we will have more room here.” Another social worker described seeing a supervisor point to a room and say, “All this room will be dead by tomorrow.”

The report detailed other errors, including the rotation of staff members between wards, which accelerated the spread of the virus.

It said that decisions made by facility’s superintendent, Bennett Walsh, were “utterly baffling from an infection-control perspective” and inconsistent with the home’s mission to treat veterans with “honor and dignity.”

Mr. Walsh’s supervisor, Francisco Urena, resigned as the state’s secretary of veterans’ services in anticipation of the report, telling WCVB, a local television station: “I’m very sorry. I tried my best.”

In November, a judge dismissed criminal neglect charges against Mr. Walsh, a retired Marine Corps lieutenant colonel with no previous nursing home experience, and the home’s former medical director, Dr. David Clinton. The state attorney general’s office has appealed the decision.