by James C. Sherlock
This is yet another story of state-sanctioned corruption by elected politicians serving the interests of the nursing home industry. New players, same play.
That industry, led this time by out-of-state chains, has once again found it cheaper to buy the votes and influence of senior members of the General Assembly with laundered Medicare and Medicaid funds than to spend that money to care for residents.
The Saga of General Assembly House Bill 605
An article by this author, published two months ago, drew attention to House of Delegates Bill 605 (HB605). The patrons were Delegates Rodney Willett, D-Henrico, and Vivian Watts, D-Fairfax. As introduced, HB605 set a minimum staffing standard.
It therefore had no chance of passage and may never have been expected to do so.
Rep. Willett introduced his bill on January 13, 2026. On that same day, he and Del. Luke Torian (Appropriations Committee Chair) received $10,000 each from Organizing for Virginia Seniors. Gov. Spanbergerโs name, at $100,000, tops that list.ย Organizing for Virginia Seniorsย is funded by out-of-state nursing home chains.
Willett now says he will โdefer to the greater expertsโ on determining standards.
As sent to the Governor, HB 605 directs the Joint Commission on Health Care to conduct a study. The only directed reference is to that Commissionโs own 2021 study, not the wealth of national work on that subject. The nursing home lobby is confident that it controls the outcomes from that Commission.ย It always has. Money well spent.
That sequence of events is, unfortunately, legal in Virginia.
Weโll examine the industry positions on both regulations and sanctions, and some history. Then we will look at the General Assembly’s โgreater experts,โ who sit on and staff that Commission, including Willett, who chairs it.
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