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Nursing Home Where 12 Died After Hurricane Irma Loses Its License

Charles Trainor Jr.
/
Miami Herald
Authorities have attributed as many as 12 deaths to sweltering conditions at The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills in the aftermath of hurricane Irma.

Moving forward with an administrative law judge’s recommendation, the state Agency for Health Care Administration has issued a final order to revoke the license of a Broward County nursing home where residents died after Hurricane Irma in 2017.

The agency issued the 17-page order on Friday, Jan. 4  against The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills. Gov. Rick Scott’s administration in 2017 moved to revoke the license, but the nursing home challenged the decision in the state Division of Administrative Hearings.

Read more: 'Hellish Nightmare:' Hollywood Hills Nursing Home Tragedy Continues In Court

Judge Mary Li Creasy on Nov. 30 issued a recommended order that supported the revocation. But under administrative law, the issue had to go back to Scott’s Agency for Health Care Administration for a final order.

The dispute stemmed from the September 2017 hurricane, which knocked out the nursing home’s air-conditioning system for three days. Authorities have attributed as many as 12 deaths to sweltering conditions at the facility, though Creasy wrote that “clear and convincing evidence” was presented during the case that nine of the 12 residents “suffered greatly from the exposure to unsafe heat in the facility.”

Read WLRN's full coverage of the deaths at Hollywood Hills Nursing Home

The deaths and evacuation of the Broward nursing home drew national attention in the days after Hurricane Irma, which made landfall Sept. 10, 2017 in Monroe and Collier counties and caused damage through much of the state.

The nursing home lost power to its air-conditioning system, Creasy wrote, because a fuse to a transformer on a power pole was dislodged.

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