Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 20, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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MENNONITE Church Manitoba has
removed a veteran pastor over allegations
of sexual misconduct with a female
prisoner in the Winnipeg Remand
Centre.
" We at Mennonite Church Manitoba
have withdrawn Tym Elias's credentials,"
MCM executive director Ken
Warkentin said Wednesday.
" I have difficulty commenting on
this - allegations have been made,"
said Warkentin. " The term we use is
ministerial sexual misconduct."
Elias was pastor at Home Street Mennonite
Church for nine years before joining
the remand centre as a chaplain.
Elias could not be reached Wednesday.
" Tym has appealed," said Warkentin,
who explained the appeal is already
being considered by members of the
church community. " I anticipate a ruling
by mid- March."
Warkentin was reluctant to divulge
much of Elias's background or of the
alleged circumstances.
Graduating from a seminary is preferred
for ordination but is not required,
he said. " The ordination process involves
a feeling of being called by God,"
followed by confirmation from a congregation
and by the MCM, he said.
Manitoba Justice officials confirmed
Elias is no longer an employee of the remand
centre, but would not elaborate.
" The individual's employment with
Manitoba Corrections ended last July.
As this is a personnel matter, we are
unable to provide further information.
We don't have information on whether
charges might be pending, as this would
be a matter for the police and the complainant,"
said a provincial official.
" When Corrections is aware of a situation
where police involvement may be
appropriate, they offer the opportunity
to call the police directly to file a complaint,"
she said.
nick. martin@ freepress. mb. ca
TOP NEWS
WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2014
winnipegfreepress. com A 3
A WINNIPEG doctor who was disciplined recently
for billing Manitoba Health for patients
seen by a nurse practitioner did not
act alone, says the owner of the clinic where he
worked.
Daren Jorgenson, owner of Four Rivers Medical
Clinic, said other physicians at his clinic were doing
the same thing as he challenged the province
to reform its billing system.
Earlier this month, the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of Manitoba publicly censured Dr.
Richard Letkeman, a former Four Rivers doctor.
Between November 2010 and April 2011, the college
said, Letkeman billed the province nearly
$ 40,000 for patient house calls taken by a nurse
practitioner working under his supervision at the
clinic.
In an interview, Jorgenson alleged Manitoba
Health was long aware of the clinic's practice and
admitted he had been " pushing the envelope" with
provincial bureaucrats in a bid to get them to accept
a less expensive fee- for- service regime for
nurse practitioners.
He said he bombarded department officials
with emails, challenging them to issue him a
" cease and desist" order so he could challenge
the existing billing system in the courts. " For two
years, they never did anything," Jorgenson said in
an interview this week.
Asked for its reaction, Manitoba Health reiterated
its position responsibility for fee- for- service
billings rests solely with the physician submitting
for payment. The department did not address the
allegation it knew other doctors at the clinic were
submitting bills for the nurse practitioner's house
calls.
" Manitoba Health has recovered the amount inappropriately
billed by the physician in this case
before sending the case to the Winnipeg Police
Service for investigation. It would be inappropriate
for us to comment any further," a department
spokeswoman wrote in an email.
Winnipeg police have not responded to a request
on whether it is actively investigating the matter.
Four Rivers operates clinics on Main Street and
Broadway as well as a house- call service that involves
as many as four physicians visiting patients
on a given day.
Jorgenson said most of the patients his physicians
visit could be treated by a nurse practitioner
at a lower cost to the health system. He applauds
the government for establishing Quick Care clinics
staffed by nurse practitioners and registered
nurses. But he believes it could be doing much
more to lower patient care costs.
" It's really important for the future. If we can't
control health- care costs through innovative
means, we're ( doomed)," he said.
Jorgenson also blasted the College of Physicians
and Surgeons for barging into what he said was a
simple billing matter between his clinic and Manitoba
Health.
He said during its investigation of Letkeman,
the college went through the records of patients
visited by the nurse practitioner with a finetoothed
comb - and even interviewed some about
their care - but found nothing amiss.
He described the college's censure of Letkeman
as an exercise of doctors protecting their own
turf.
Meanwhile, he said his clinic is having to turn
away scores of house- call patients a day due to
lack of staffing.
The college's registrar, Dr. Bill Pope, could not
be reached for comment Wednesday.
The nurse practitioner who went out on the
doctor- supervised house calls was equipped with
a Health Canada- certified camera system that
would allow a physician back in the office to log
in and listen to a patient's heart, check a patient's
throat and ears and participate with the patient
and nurse practitioner in a live three- way conversation,
Jorgenson said.
In its investigative report, the college said while
Letkeman tested the equipment in the clinic, it
was never used on a house call.
Jorgenson disputes this.
" Was it used all the time? No. Was it available to
be used? Yes. Was it used sometimes? A hundred
per cent," he said.
Four Rivers doctors - fearful for their licences
- no longer submit bills to government for nurse
practitioner visits, Jorgenson said.
The nurse practitioner employed by the clinic
continues to do house calls, he said, but now visits
wealthy Winnipeggers who pay for the service.
While the college publicly censured Letkeman,
he continues to practise in the city.
larry. kusch@ freepress. mb. ca
Pastor
removed
over sex
allegations
By Nick Martin
Doctor didn't act alone: clinic
. Other MDs billed for work by nurse practitioner . Effort to challenge the system
By Larry Kusch
JOE BRYKSA / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
A shining light
Morning sunshine illuminates the stained- glass windows in the dome of St. Andrews Ukrainian Catholic Church at 160 Euclid Ave. Wednesday.
A_ 05_ Feb- 20- 14_ FP_ 01. indd A3 2/ 19/ 14 9: 21: 09 PM
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