SAN MARCOS: Candidates for short-term hospital board seat are familiar faces

Jerry Kaufman, Lee Thibadeau served on Escondido and SM councils, respectively

By ANDREA MOSS - Staff Writer | Friday, August 22, 2008 7:26 PM PDT

Lee Thibadeau (Photo by Don Boomer - Staff Photographer)
erry Kaufman (Photo by Don Boomer - Staff Photographer)

ESCONDIDO ---- Two men with high community profiles and strong personalities are breathing life into what historically has been one of the area's sleepier races.

The two men, Jerry Kaufman and Lee Thibadeau, are vying for a two-year seat on Palomar Pomerado Health's board of trustees.

Kaufman and Thibadeau are well-known around North County because both have played prominent roles in local government. They're the only candidates in the race for the two-year seat being vacated by current board member Linda Bailey; a race for three open seats with four-year terms has attracted six candidates.

Thibadeau said in a recent interview that he and Kaufman know each other.

"I'm glad he's running," Thibadeau said. "He and I won't fight 'cause I think he's a good guy."

A 67-year-old physical therapist who lives in Escondido, Kaufman was appointed in December 1998 to finish Lori Holt Pfeiler's council term after she was elected mayor. He lost his bid for a four-year term in 2000.

Kaufman has a long history of community involvement, including serving on several nonprofit organizations' boards of directors and organizing golf tournament fundraisers for the Escondido Chamber of Commerce.

The 63-year-old Thibadeau, the director of a Los Angeles-area petroleum manufacturer, was elected to a regular San Marcos City Council term in 1980 and served until 1986. He served as the city's mayor from 1986 to 1994.

He was elected to the council again in 2000 and served until 2004 before losing his seat to Jim Desmond.

A public health care district, Palomar Pomerado owns and operates Palomar Medical Center in Escondido and Pomerado Hospital in Poway. The board oversees and sets policies for the district, which broke ground on a third hospital on the west side of Escondido late last year.

The project is part of a $1 billion expansion of the district's facilities. Voters agreed to help pay for the expansion in 2004 when they approved a $496 million bond measure.

District critics have expressed concern about construction delays and cost overruns on the new hospital since then. They also have questioned the district's commitment to renovating and expanding Palomar Medical Center, as hospital officials have promised.

Kaufman helped campaign for the bond measure, and he serves on a president's council that advises Palomar Pomerado President and Chief Executive Officer Michael Covert on matters related to the district. Kaufman's involvement with the district didn't help him, though, when he applied for the short-term seat earlier this year, when the board appointed Bailey to fill a vacancy created when then-board member Gary Powers moved out of state.

On Wednesday, Kaufman said no one asked him to run for the hospital board and that he believes Covert and the district are generally doing a good job

He said he's running because he wants to make sure the district fulfills its pledge to rebuild Palomar Medical Center and other promises made to the city.

"As (the district) moves along in that direction, there's going to be a lot of negotiation between the public and private entities to help build out some of the facilities in (Escondido's) downtown area," Kaufman said. "I've been doing this for 40 years ---- I'm a physical therapist and a businessman. I've had my own practices that I developed and sold. So I have a pretty good idea of how to build businesses and keep projects going until they're successful."

He said he also thinks his experience as a councilman and as a member of a state physical therapists board could be used to help the hospital district modernize and do a better job of coordinating its efforts with other health care providers, such as community clinics.

Thibadeau said various friends and acquaintances urged him to make another bid for a San Marcos council seat or run for various other elected positions. News reports about the hospital district's financial challenges ---- including allegations by critics that the hospital district's expansion project is $300 million over budget ---- prompted him to enter the hospital race, he said.

"They're not meeting some of their goals to voters," Thibadeau said. "So I thought it'd be kind of fun to help get them back in the right direction."

His business experience can help him do that, he said.

"They're all medical professionals," Thibadeau said, referring to current board members. "And that's great, especially for the hospital district. On the other hand, they don't have the business acumen that they really need to deal with what they have in the immediate future."

No surprise

Local community leaders said they were not surprised to hear that Kaufman and Thibadeau had decided to run for the hospital board.

"These guys are public servants," said Harvey Mitchell, executive director of the Escondido Chamber of Commerce. "That's their whole background."

Escondido City Councilman Dick Daniels said Kaufman and Thibadeau may have simply seen an opportunity in running for a two-year seat.

"It's hard to run against an incumbent when the four-year seats are open," he said.

Frequent hospital district critic Wally Gutierrez said he has been encouraging "everybody" to run for the hospital board because he thinks its needs a major change, but he said he did not recruit anybody in particular. While he knows Kaufman casually, Gutierrez said he might be more inclined to support Thibadeau because of his concern about the district's finances.

Hospital board Chairman Bruce Krider said he wasn't surprised to see Kaufman enter the race, given his history in health care and with the district. Although Thibadeau's motives for running are more of a mystery, he apparently was successful as a councilman, Krider said.

"So, fine," he said. "The process is generating some interesting candidates."

Contact staff writer Andrea Moss at (760) 739-6654 or amoss@nctimes.com.

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Pre-Registration Comments[-]Go to Top

Kick Some Butt THIBADEAU wrote on Aug 22, 2008 7:58 PM:I'll give you two years to fix the hospital board, then we need you to come back and Kick Some MORE Butt in San Marcos. Desmond must go in 2010! Come on home, we need a REAL MAYOR again!!

Reluctant taxpayer wrote on Aug 23, 2008 3:17 AM:PPH won't allow any independant thinkers on their board. But it does give me a lot more respect for Linda Bailey. Changing the imprint of the PPH rubber stamp probably will not happen. This corrupt system is way too entrenched. No Mas.

Escondido Healthcare Blues wrote on Aug 23, 2008 7:12 AM:Jerry Kaufman is a long time supporter of the status quo at PPH. For more of the same sad results, vote for him.

Palomar Hospital gains wrote on Aug 23, 2008 7:55 AM:While not everyone always agreed with Thibadeau, no one can say that during his terms on the council and as mayor, the City of San Marcos didn't flourish. What we see today is a beautiful, well-planned city, with mney in the bank. We need to keep it there and retain our city, before a few wily developers and friends make big changes and we all wish to turn the clock back. After the Palomar District, please come back and help to control our city for its residents and its future.

Lisa wrote on Aug 23, 2008 8:14 AM:To NC Times. What is your blog policy- a free for all? Kick some ****? My pappy calls that filth talk. As for Thibadeau, he is vindictive and so are his cronies.

YES Prop O wrote on Aug 23, 2008 3:22 PM:That's right, Thibadeau helped create our beautiful city. And the developers and their pocketed current council-members are doing everything they can to destroy it with their high density, big city dreams. How DENSE can San Marcos get? Citizens are fighting for their quality of life. San Marcos Voters need to vote YES on Prop O.

Kaufman Who wrote on Aug 23, 2008 4:35 PM:Kaufman applied to get appointed to the PPH twice, but was a no show for the PPH Board interviews. I would not vote for him.

Hey Lisa wrote on Aug 23, 2008 4:48 PM:Would your "pappy" approve of your hateful comments? My father wouldn't. He wouldn't allow me to call him "pappy" either. Get over "Kick Butt", would "Spank em" be more to your liking?

Kaufmans Wrong Choice wrote on Aug 23, 2008 4:52 PM:In April 2005, Kaufman wrote a commentary that included, 'In addition to the jobs provided at the ERTC site, the hospital will renovate the existing hospital campus with an infusion of $72 million and move their administrative staff into these buildings. . . . they will put more than $500 million into a new facility and refurbish the downtown facility with an additional $72 million . . . '.
www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/04/29/opinion/commentary/22_32_444_28_05.txt

In May 2007, PPH diverted that $72 million to the new hospital in the ERTC. Much of that money went to fix grading problems in the ERTC that were known to PPH in May 2005, but that were kept hidden from the public and the City Council when the zoning change was approved.

Kaufman was wrong in 2005. He is still wrong today!

The Other Race wrote on Aug 23, 2008 5:03 PM:Don't forget the other race. There are three challengers for those three seats:
Evelyn Madison, a publishing business manager from Escondido;
Donald Brust, a retired veterinarian from Valley Center; and
John Amodeo, a retired public administrator from San Diego.

The incumbents at PPH have failed. In 2004, PPH claimed it would finish the new hospital in 2009, and then refurbish the old hospital beginning in 2010.

No the funds ($72M) to refurbish the old hospital are gone. The new hospital is hopelessly behind schedule and so far overbudget such that 33% of the new hospital facility will not be built in the forseeable future due to lack of funds.

Vote out the tire incumbents. A new 'vision' is needed at PPH!

Vote wrote on Aug 23, 2008 5:46 PM:I live in Escondido and Thibadeau will get my vote

Jerome F wrote on Aug 23, 2008 11:05 PM:People don't know how much they don't know. Any person who thinks they can just waltz in with general business background and thinks that's all they need to know to run hospitals is truly naive.

To Jerome F wrote on Aug 27, 2008 4:30 AM:It is truly naive to think that a background in healthcare absent a bckground in business is the best choice for the PPH board. Tous chez.

To Lisa wrote on Sep 6, 2008 9:02 PM:Where have you been? Thibadeau made San Marcos and put it on the map! PPH board will be lucky to get him! You sound like the vindictive one!

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