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Crash survivor says changes to Michigan's car insurance law "destroyed my life"

Brian Woodward became quadriplegic after a car crash in 1983. Until recently, he lived and worked at home, and was active in his community. But changes to the state's no fault law forced him to move into a nursing home. "It's destroyed my life," he says.
Paulette Parker
/
Michigan Radio
Brian Woodward became quadriplegic after a car crash in 1983. Until recently, he lived and worked at home, and was active in his community. But changes to the state's no fault law forced him to move into a nursing home. "It's destroyed my life," he says.

Michigan’s system of care for severely injured car crash survivors is collapsing. Agencies that care for survivors with traumatic brain injuries and spinal cord injuries are being driven out of business by changes to Michigan’s no fault insurance law.

Tracy Samilton met one of the many people who are now suffering tragic consequences.

Brian Woodward is the kind of success story Michigan’s former no fault law was quite literally designed for. After a car crash left him a quadriplegic at age 24, he didn’t have to sue to get his care paid for or spend the rest of his life in a nursing home.

Instead, with the help of one on one caregivers, he went to college.

“And I got a bachelor’s in business and computer science and I graduated magna cum laude from Northwood”

The new law set a target for car crash survivors of “maximum recovery.” In Woodward’s case, that meant a full life. He got a job with a contractor for a Big three automaker, paid taxes, bought a house.

He coached little league and mentored kids as well as other quadriplegic crash survivors. At church, “I sang in the choir and I participated in the community and then I hunted and fished.”

But as he puts it, “On July 2nd, the world came crashing down.”

That’s when his agency said they couldn't afford to take care of him anymore. The new no fault law cut their reimbursements by nearly half.

“The life as I knew it was completely gone in a moment.”

Woodward says one of his caregivers had been with him for 20 years, another for 26.

“Those are like your best friends, you develop your own little family, with the people that take care of you and it was very heart breaking and heart wrenching to lose them like that”

Without caregivers, he also lost his job of 30 years. Since the summer, he’s lived in a string of understaffed nursing homes. Quadriplegic people need vigilant care to stave off infections, pressure sores, blood pressure spikes, and overheating.

“And I ended up going to the hospital at least six or seven times throughout this ordeal, several of them were life threatening, I had sepsis twice.”

Woodward says the facility he’s in now, Special Tree Neurocare Center, is better than the others. But even so, if something goes wrong when he’s in his room alone, he’s paralyzed. He can’t just push a call button.

He’s praying that the politicians in Lansing do something before it’s too late. People have already died after losing care. He’s afraid he could be next.

“I never thought it would get this far.”

That’s Special Tree CEO Joe Richert. He met with me the same day he had to lay off 30 staff. He says his company has spent 7 million dollars of its reserves. There’s not much left.

Richert calls the new no fault insurance law crazy, because it permits one highly profitable industry, car insurance, to drive another one that's far less profitable out of existence.

Companies like his are closing all around him. And vulnerable patients are losing care, even dying.

“It’s despicable. It's isn't organized, but it's essentially all coming together in a plan to destroy us. It’s evil. At least an evil outcome, even if their intentions aren’t evil.”

Richert says the Governor and a few key Republican leaders could put a stop to the debacle. There’s nearly 27 billion dollars in the state fund that was set up to care for catastrophically injured car crash survivors.

But instead, the fund's surplus is being used for a campaign stunt, he says. Every registered car owner will get a check this spring -

“So the Governor can stay on her victory lap and give back $400 per vehicle before the election.”

If nothing is done, and Special Tree has to close, Richert has no idea where his patients will go.

“You just can’t have folks who can’t move who are quadriplegics and just leave ‘em in an empty building. Something’s gonna have to give.”

Survivors, their loved ones, and care providers have pinned their hopes on a new bill with fairly strong bipartisan support that was introduced by Republican State Representative Phil Green. The bill would significantly boost-boosts payments for care and could help agencies like Special Tree stay in business if it's passed.

Tracy Samilton covers energy and transportation, including the auto industry and the business response to climate change for Michigan Radio. She began her career at Michigan Radio as an intern, where she was promptly “bitten by the radio bug,” and never recovered.