In the News
FIRST ON FOX: Several House Republicans sent a letter to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) calling on the agency to release the 2021 child suicide data.
Rep. Bryan Steil, R-Wis., led the letter with 19 of his lower chamber GOP colleagues to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky asking the agency to publish the still-unreleased data.
"The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated a worsening crisis in our society: our children’s mental health," Steil said in a press release first obtained by Fox News Digital. "The data on suicide rates among children is an important tool needed to strengthen our mental health infrastructure."
"As we approach the coming school year, this critical data will help us make informed decisions to support our children and improve their mental health," he continued.
In the letter, the lawmakers ask Walensky to "work with" the members of Congress "to address this long-standing problem that was worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic."
"We understand the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has not released data for suicide rates among children for 2021," they wrote. "While we note the provisional data has been released, we ask why the CDC has not released the final data that is a critical indicator of our nation’s mental health."
The lawmakers wrote that childhood "is a critical period to prevent and treat mental health" and that half "of all mental illness occurs before a person turns 14 years old."
Steil and the Republicans also said that the "number of children admitted to children’s hospitals for thoughts of suicide or self-harm has doubled since 2016."
"Clearly, even before the pandemic, America was experiencing a mental health crisis among children and adolescents," they wrote, continuing to write the COVID-19 pandemic "further exacerbated this problem and strained the healthcare system, leaving children to struggle with unmet mental health needs."
"During the pandemic, school closures, social restrictions, and disrupted routines placed considerable stress on children and their families," they wrote. "These developments limited access to many resources children rely on to cope with stress and anxiety."
The lawmakers called the statistics "frightening and breathtaking" and cited the CDC’s previous data from "mid-March 2020 into October of that year" that, when compared to the 2019 data, showed "mental health-related emergency department visits among children ages 5-11 years increased by 24%."
They also noted the 31% increase for "adolescent children aged 12-17" during the same time period.
"The suicide statistics are even more appalling," Steil and his colleagues wrote. "According to a May 2020 CDC study, emergency department visits for suicide attempts among adolescents ages 12-17 was 39% higher than the same period during 2019."
"The problem is compounded by the fact that in the United States suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death among youth ages 15-24," they continued.
The Republicans concluded their letter saying the data "shows the scope of the crisis we are facing" and that the government "must take long overdue steps to strengthen our mental health infrastructure" if it is "to better meet the needs of our children."
"This must be a top priority," Steil and his colleagues concluded. "We stand ready to work with you to meet these challenges."
Joining Steil on the letter are Republicans from across the party’s spectrum, including Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa, Greg Murphy of North Carolina, and Kat Cammack of Florida.
The CDC did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the letter.
Connecticut Democrat Jim Himes is pessimistic about near-term relief from sky-high gas prices as the national average nears $5 a gallon. Rep. Himes, a supporter of President Biden, says the administration's options are limited.
"There's really almost nothing that the Biden administration could do today that would have an impact on near-term energy prices," said Himes, the chairman of the House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth.
His Republican counterpart on the committee is ranking member Rep. Bryan Steil, Republican of Wisconsin, and the two joined CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett on "The Takeout" podcast this week. Steil thinks the administration could do more to bring energy prices down.
"I think we need to change course on our energy policy and unleash American energy to lower those costs," Steil told Garrett. He argues that ramping up domestic oil and gas production and restarting the Keystone XL pipeline project could ease prices, even though it would be years before oil flowing through the pipeline would hit the market.
Those moves, Steil argued, could give investors confidence. "They've pulled back because they're concerned about obtaining full permits to get from exploration into full production."
Himes fears such policies would just lead to environmental catastrophe. "If we just decided to do what some of my Republicans want to do, which is burn all the coal, burn all the gas, burn all the petroleum. Good luck for the next generation that'll be dealing with the problems of climate change."
Their committee was created by Nancy Pelosi in 2020 to tackle wealth disparities in the U.S. economy. A Wall Street Journal poll released earlier this week found that 83% of Americans are unsatisfied with the current state of the economy.
The congressmen also touched on gun violence, after recent mass shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde, Texas.
Himes, whose district borders the site of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, wants to see Congress take action on gun control. He'd like to see expanded background checks for gun purchases, an idea that is supported by a majority of Americans and currently under consideration in Congress. "Not only should we study it, by the way, let's have an honest conversation about this."
But Steil is skeptical of federally funded studies of gun violence. "I think the broad concern is whether or not we're going to see a biased report from a federal agency rather than an unbiased report."
Highlights from this week's episode
- Himes on long-term solutions to illegal immigration: "At the end of the day, what is going to solve the illegal immigration problem in the long run is going to be to do away with the economic incentive for people to come here. Right. That means cracking down on people who were hiring the undocumented illegally. It means it means and I know that this is dull and hard to talk about, but it's true. It means working with countries like El Salvador and Honduras to turn them into places that people want to stay in. In the long run. That's what's going to fix our border issue."
- Steil on immigration: "The United States is always going to be a beacon of hope, pulling people in, having people wanting to come to the United States, that's positive. We have to be able to control who comes in a legal and orderly manner, and we have to hold businesses accountable that are hiring and employing illegal immigrants, as the chairman noted."
- Himes on the oil and gas industry: "The reality today is and this is not disputable, is that the energy companies who make their investment decisions, not based on what the guy in the Oval Office is doing, but based on their forecast of economic markets. They are sitting on unused leases. They are doing the same investment plans that they planned to do five years ago. They are making decisions based on the market, dropping away dividends."
- Steil on whether mass shootings are just something we have to live with: "We should not live with one mass shooting. The challenge is what are the policies we need to put in place to address it? I've offered three that I think we come together on to address this crisis. I think we could come together. I think there's areas of agreement and particulars relates to school resource officers. The relates to mental health and as relates to getting serious on gun crime writ large."
The office of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil is accepting nominations for health care workers to be considered for the First Congressional District’s Health Care Worker of the Year Award, according to a news release.
Steil’s office is looking to recognize an “unsung hero” who has gone above and beyond to care for Wisconsin families.
Our doctors, nurses, and health care providers have continued to provide our community with the utmost care and compassion,” Steil said in the release. “It’s important to thank and recognize our healthcare workers for the services they provide. I look forward to recognizing this year’s heroes.”
The award winner will be selected based on this criteria:
- Displaying exemplary service and performance on the job.
- Upholding the standard of providing unsurpassed care and treatment for patients.
- Going above and beyond the call of duty.
- Displaying self-sacrifice and selflessness in caring for others.
Nominees must live in the First District and be a licensed health care professional (they can work at a facility outside the district).
To nominate a health care worker for the award, go to steil.house.gov/health care-worker-award
The office of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil is accepting nominations for health care workers to be considered for the First Congressional District’s Health Care Worker of the Year Award, according to a news release.
Steil’s office is looking to recognize an “unsung hero” who has gone above and beyond to care for Wisconsin families.
Our doctors, nurses, and health care providers have continued to provide our community with the utmost care and compassion,” Steil said in the release. “It’s important to thank and recognize our healthcare workers for the services they provide. I look forward to recognizing this year’s heroes.”
The award winner will be selected based on this criteria:
- Displaying exemplary service and performance on the job.
- Upholding the standard of providing unsurpassed care and treatment for patients.
- Going above and beyond the call of duty.
- Displaying self-sacrifice and selflessness in caring for others.
Nominees must live in the First District and be a licensed health care professional (they can work at a facility outside the district).
To nominate a health care worker for the award, go to steil.house.gov/health care-worker-award
There’s bipartisan interest in tackling the surging prices of prescription drugs before the midterm elections, but lawmakers are divided on how much action the federal government should take in curbing those rising costs.
Gov. Tony Evers passed a bill last year that requires pharmacists to be more transparent around medication costs
The need for federal help is there, according to Yolanda Tolson-Eveans, pharmacist in charge at St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy.
“The surges in the cost of living in general, with gas prices and everything going on, she said. “People have to make difficult choices.”
She has been looking for ways to make those choices easier. The Madison-based pharmacist served on a task force created by Gov. Tony Evers three years ago to investigate solutions to addressing the issue of skyrocketing medication costs. That panel led to a law the governor signed last year, requiring more transparency in prescription drug pricing.
“I think that our group, in a small way, kind of proves that this is actually something that could be extended to a larger focus for the country at large,” Tolson-Eveans said.
Congressman Bryan Steil, R-Janesville agreed. He rolled out legislation requiring price tags on medication commercials.
“Sometimes seniors, in particular, have a difficult time identifying is there a generic or less expensive alternative that would work just as well,” he said. “And so working with my colleagues on across the aisle, we've come together to say 'let's have transparency, in particular, as it relates to prescription drugs and the advertisements we see every day on tv.’”
On the other side of Capitol Hill, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisconsin is eyeing a crackdown on price gouging during the pandemic on everything from drugs to gasoline. She’s pushing a bill that would require companies to disclose any changes to costs and allow state attorneys general to enforce standards against excessive pricing.
“This legislation will shine a light on price hikes and help prevent big corporations from exploiting a period of inflation to gouge consumers with higher costs,” she wrote in a statement.
Tolson-Eveans said those two measures would be a long overdue start.
“As a pharmacist, we are seeing the prices every day as we process claims for patients," she said. "And for folks that don't have insurance, we're seeing the cash price, so we see that direct impact. I think for providers and other folks that are kind of further away from the actual dispensing of the medication, sometimes you can lose sight of that.”
Lawmakers just have to agree on where to start. Rep. Steil said he’s not in favor of the recent bills Democrats have been floating around capping the cost of insulin and allowing medicare to negotiate drug prices.
“When the government controls price, the price actually rises and quality comes down,” Rep. Steil said. “I do think though, in the bill that I've put forward in a bipartisan way, one of the things we can work on is transparency.”
Federal lawmakers from both political parties have asked for an investigation and more oversight of the troubled state veterans home in Union Grove and a state senator is calling for a hearing on the facility.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, whose administration oversees the nursing home, said in an interview Thursday he welcomes additional oversight and will cooperate with any federal investigation.
"If you get fined, it is because you've done something wrong. And in this case, we have been unable to fulfill our duties to these great veterans, by having adequate staff and adequately trained staff," he said.
"We have to do a better job. Obviously, we're concerned. Our veterans served our country with great honor and dignity, and they deserve that."
The calls for more oversight and accountability come in the wake of a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation last week that revealed a pattern of violations at the Union Grove veterans home reaching back five years.
Union Grove ranked in the top five out of 117 federally certified state veterans facilities for having the most violations and fines, the Journal Sentinel found.
The Union Grove facility, one of three veterans homes in the state, was cited for 62 violations and received fines totaling $250,000 since 2017, records show. Federal regulators are still reviewing the latest five violations from March and considering a possible additional fine.
The violations include medication mistakes, failing to keep patients hydrated, not investigating patient abuse, infection control, poor food and filthy conditions. Residents and family members said care has steadily declined as leadership frequently changed and the home struggles with chronic understaffing.
Union Grove and other veterans homes like it are run by states, but they are funded with federal dollars.
U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., and U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, R-Wis., separately sent letters to Denis McDonough, secretary of Veterans Affairs. Steil also included Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, administrator of the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services.
In a statement Thursday, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said the findings of poor care and abuse at Union Grove "must be fully investigated."
In her letter, Baldwin asked the VA to review conditions at Union Grove and identify ways the facility could be better held accountable. She noted the state has been trying to improve recruitment and retention of staff since 2019.
"Despite these efforts, complaints regarding treatment of residents highlight the need for additional oversight and inspections by the VA," Baldwin wrote.
Steil, whose district includes the Union Grove facility, said he wrote the letter to make sure officials in Washington know about these problems and seek solutions.
"My work is to now get the eyes and ears and the attention of decision-makers in Washington so that we can hold folks accountable. But also and equally importantly, make sure that a situation like this never happens again, anywhere in the United States," Steil said.
State Sen. Van Wanggaard, R-Racine, is calling for hearings on issues highlighted in the Journal Sentinel investigation. He also plans to seek a state investigation or audit into the home.
"We have got to get this moving forward as quickly as we can because there is no excuse for this," Wanggaard said in an interview.
State Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Green Bay, chairman of the Committee on Veterans and Military Affairs and Constitution and Federalism, where a hearing would be held, called the Journal Sentinel investigation "beyond troubling."
"We are getting a full accounting of the facts and will use all levers of the state to make sure this nightmare is over for our vets and that the promise made to these heroes is restored," he said in a statement.
Wanggaard and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, whose districts include the home, toured the facility in early May and heard from residents about poor care and short-staffing.
They have pressed Mary Kolar, secretary of the state Department of Veterans Affairs, which operates the veterans homes, to allow more volunteers back in the facility as COVID has eased, which could help with the staff shortages.
Laurie Miller, who has volunteered at the home for more than five years, said there are good staff members at Union now; there just aren't enough of them.
"They are not the problem — the administration is," she said.
Evers backed Kolar, whom he appointed in 2019, saying she is doing "as good a job as possible." He said he hoped a new commandant, who is in charge of the facility, will be in place soon in Union Grove and the state will continue to push to increase hiring with bonuses and advertising.
"This is an urgent issue that everybody should care about," he said. "We need to solve it. It started several years ago, even before my time, but that doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if it started 100 years ago. We have to change it today. And that's where we're headed."
U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil is seeking federal action on reports of mistreatment of veterans at a state-run facility, following several efforts by constituents to call attention to the issue going back at least several months.
Steil, a Republican from Janesville, announced Wednesday he is asking federal authorities to review allegations of abuse and neglect of veterans living at the Wisconsin Veterans Home at Union Grove.
The congressman, whose district includes the Town of Dover facility, released a letter he wrote to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Urging “all appropriate action” from the federal authorities, Steil wrote: “This kind of treatment of our veterans is unacceptable. Our veterans deserve the highest quality of care, and this level of mistreatment cannot be tolerated.”
Read the congressman's letter here.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported last week that staff at the Racine County veterans home has been accused of physical abuse, medication errors, unsanitary conditions, poor quality food and other forms of maltreatment toward veterans.
The newspaper cited 62 operating violations found in the Union Grove home in the past five years, and said that ranks among the five worst offenders out of 117 federally certified veteran facilities in the nation.
The violations inside the state-run home date back to the administration of Republican Gov. Scott Walker and have continued since Democratic Gov. Tony Evers took office in 2019.
The veterans home named for Union Grove is located at 21425 Spring Street in the Town of Dover, just west of the Village of Union Grove.
It was not immediately clear what role the federal government could play in responding to conditions inside the facility.
Colleen Flaherty, a spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Department of Veterans Affairs, said officials at the state agency had no immediate comment on Steil’s request for a federal review.
“We would like some clarity,” she said.
The Milwaukee newspaper’s investigation was based largely on reports from residents inside the veterans home, as well as past residents and family members of veterans.
Steil, who was elected in 2018 in Wisconsin’s 1st Congressional District, told the newspaper he, too, had been receiving reports of problems at the home for years. The 1st Congressional District includes all of Racine and Kenosha counties, and stretches west to Steil’s home in Janesville.
Asked by The Journal Times to elaborate, Steil said in an email last week that many relatives and friends of veterans living in the facility had approached the congressman with concerns about “staffing levels and quality of care at the facility.”
He said he alerted the state veterans affairs office in instances when he had consent from the person making the complaint.
The congressman has separately expressed concerns about how the Wisconsin Veterans Home was handling COVID-19 pandemic safety protocols; at least 10 residents died after contracting COVID in the home. But he said he also had taken action to alert the state to complaints about the sort of issues raised later in the Milwaukee newspaper.
“In the last several years, numerous relatives and friends who have loved ones at the state-run Union Grove Veterans Home have reached out to me with concerns about staffing levels and quality of care at the facility,” he wrote. “In the cases that my office received consent from the veteran’s family, my office reached out to the Wisconsin Department of Veterans Affairs.”
Steil spokeswoman Grace White said the congressman would not provide copies of any such correspondence, citing privacy rights for those making complaints.
State veterans affairs officials, however, released copies of five letters received from Steil or his staff dating back to November 2020. The names of those registering complaints with the congressman were redacted.
In the first letter, Steil relayed concerns about staffing to manage COVID-19 risks. Along with other Republicans, Steil has made an issue of Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ response to COVID safety inside the veterans home, alleging that Evers did not accept federal assistance fast enough or keep National Guard troops on site long enough.
In subsequent letters to the state, Steil or his staff forwarded constituent complaints — some about COVID-19, and others about more general issues of care for veterans.
In January 2021, the congressman received a complaint from a woman who wrote that COVID was aggravating a staffing shortage, and that her father was getting cold food, was left in bed for extended periods, was left sitting in a wheelchair with no pants on. She also noted that visitation was being restricted because of COVID-19.
“I don’t want my Dad to die alone,” she wrote. “I want my Dad to survive this pandemic, and that means assuring that there is consistent professional staffing and level of care. Neither is a reality today.”
In December 2021, Steil staff member Ryan Vishaway wrote the state about a woman whose husband had died while living in the Dover veterans home.
“She would like to advocate for better staffing and investigation into medical care, and living conditions for residents,” Vishaway wrote.
Records show that the state in each instance responded to the congressman — or directly to the person making the complaint — and offered assurances that efforts were underway to improve conditions at the veterans home.
Steil wrote to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in September 2020 to express concerns about staffing levels inside the veterans home to combat COVID-19.
Asked why the congressman did not seek federal action on other quality-of-care issues until after the Milwaukee newspaper investigation, White noted that Steil reached out to state officials several times. She added: “I will also note — while the facility receives federal funding — it is state-run.”
Read the congressman's letter from 2020 here.
In his letter Wednesday to federal authorities, Steil again mentioned his past inquiries regarding COVID-19 protocols.
“The quality of care at this facility has long been a concern of mine and of the people of Wisconsin’s First Congressional District,” he wrote. “For additional background, back in 2020, I made multiple inquiries highlighting issues the Union Grove home was facing regarding cases and deaths of veterans infected with COVID-19.”
He concluded: “It is now abundantly clear that the veterans home in Union Grove has much larger issues than even I and the people who reached out to me were reporting in 2020.”
Alexandra Gorbarty, a junior at The Prairie School, was the winner of Wisconsin’s First Congressional District 2022 Artistic Discovery Contest for her art piece, "Midnight Sun at IU."
She was honored May 7 by Congressman Bryan Steil along with two Union Grove High School students — Nataly Schoening and Sadie Graham. Schoening earned second place for her digital artwork. Graham was awarded third place for her color pencil drawing.
The artwork will soon be displayed in the United States Capitol.
Each year, a nationwide high school arts competition is sponsored by the members of the U.S. House of Representatives. The Artistic Discovery Contest is an opportunity to recognize and encourage the artistic talent in the nation and our district.
Raising the interest rate might help fight inflation, but it could come at a hefty price.
The national debt rocketed past $30 trillion this year. Raising the interest rate raises the debt service payments, and those cannot be deferred. Meanwhile, the inflation rate is now at 8.4% for the year. On May 5th, the federal reserve raised the interest rate from 0.5% to 1%. Higher interest rates supposedly slow down inflation, but it also means an extra $100 billion interest payment on the debt. That’s just the beginning.
Congressman Bryan Steil might not be the only one predicting the Fed will raise interest rates again, but he is a lone voice pointing out how high those interest rates could very well go, and what that means for the federal government’s debt service payments.
Congressman Bryan Steil, WI-01, recently visited the Whitewater Fire Department to take a tour of the facility, meet with fire department staff, and participate in a ride-along.
“It was great to host Congressman Steil at the Whitewater Fire Department today,” said Assistant Chief-EMS Ashley Vickers. “It is important that our elected leaders know what our firefighters and first responders do to help save lives in our community.”
During his visit to the Whitewater Fire Department, Congressman Steil met with firefighters and EMTs who discussed their work in the community of Whitewater. Topics discussed were the general operation of the department, staffing shortages and the rising costs of equipment.
“Our firefighters and first responders are heroes,” said Steil. “I’m thankful for the work of the Whitewater Fire Department and grateful that they were able to give me a firsthand look at the lifesaving work they do every day.”