Metro

Howard Zucker, NY health commissioner who oversaw Cuomo nursing home scandal, resigns

Embattled state Health Commissioner Howard Zucker will step down from his position as soon as a replacement can be found, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced Thursday.

Zucker was a key figure in the administration of disgraced Gov. Andrew Cuomo, where critics charged he played a central role in its efforts to minimize and disguise the pandemic’s death toll across the state and in its nursing homes.

“He understands that, in this time, I’ve wanted to take the first 45 days to assemble a new team going forward,” Hochul said, announcing Zucker’s departure. “That process is ongoing, and he understands and he respects that.”

She added: “He also has an opportunity to move on to new ventures and I appreciate his service.”

Hochul said that a search for a replacement is underway.

The DOH later publicly released Zucker’s resignation letter, dated Thursday.

“There comes a time when the baton should be passed in this marathon journey that we call public service in New York State,” he wrote.

“Though we continue to address new quagmires related to the pandemic, from issues of booster shots, to legal challenges regarding vaccine mandates, I believe that in our particular state, the most difficult aspect of this may be behind us….The one important unresolved aspect is the need for pediatric vaccinations, which I see happening in the near future.”

“I therefore tender my resignation as a commissioner of health for the state of New York and will work to help provide for a smooth transition,” he said.

“I think it’s the first step; but, just like with Andrew Cuomo, a resignation does not equate to accountability and Howard Zucker and all of Cuomo’s enablers must be held accountable,” said Assemblyman Ron Kim (D-Queens), a progressive lawmaker who was among Cuomo’s most vociferous critics on the handling of nursing homes.

NYS Department of Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker has resigned.
NYS Department of Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker has resigned.Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock

The soon-to-depart Zucker issued the controversial March 2020 order that required nursing homes to accept coronavirus-positive residents returning from hospitals, provided they were not critically ill. Zucker also barred nursing homes from testing the returning residents for the virus.

State officials at the time argued they were forced to make the call because of a shortage of beds in emergency rooms and intensive care units across the state — and insufficient testing capacity.

However, critics charged that the moves helped to spread the disease in nursing homes and other adult care facilities, which are home to populations that are uniquely vulnerable to the deadly virus.

The order was quietly rescinded in May after it ignited a firestorm.

An analysis done by The Empire Center, a conservative-leaning think tank, revealed that the order might have increased the death toll in nursing homes by as much as 1,000 people — predominantly in facilities upstate.

It also revealed that the virus was in such wide circulation in New York City and its suburbs that no statistical correlation could be drawn.

Those findings were later backed by a report from the New York State Bar Association.

Zucker and Cuomo defended the nursing home orders saying the facilities were obligated to provide care and to obtain the necessary protective equipment to shield their staff and other residents from the virus.

However, the massive shortages of PPE made that impossible and it took state officials weeks to begin delivering the needed supplies, all as the death toll mounted.

They also came under fire for not allowing city nursing homes to send sick residents to two hospital ships that largely sat empty during the first wave of the pandemic.

Furious families of nursing home victims celebrated Zucker’s coming departure but blasted Hochul for not ousting him more quickly.

“Zucker orchestrated the nursing home cover-up and my advice to him would be to retain a lawyer,” said Danielle Messina, whose dad, Samuel, died of COVID in a Staten Island nursing home last year.

Tracey Alvino, whose dad, Daniel, died after contracting COVID in a Long Island nursing home, told The Post that “Howard Zucker should have been fired the minute Kathy Hochul became Governor.”

“He needs to be prosecuted for his role in the Cuomo Crime Syndicate,” he added.

The roiling questions about the nursing home orders handling of nursing homes cast a shadow over the boom in popularity that Cuomo enjoyed thanks, in large part, to his daily coronavirus press briefings, which became a national media sensation.

Off the newfound fame, Cuomo netted a $5 million deal that summer to write a memoir about his management of the pandemic: “American Crisis: Leadership Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic.”

As he sat down to write the book, his administration embarked on an effort to conceal the true toll of the coronavirus pandemic in the Empire State, particularly in its nursing homes.

Cuomo’s top aides — including his right-hand, Melissa DeRosa — ordered the state Health Department to exclude true estimates of the nursing home death toll from a widely criticized July report.

Additionally, Zucker’s Health Department provided incomplete tallies of coronavirus death counts from nursing homes for months, by refusing to release the tallies of residents who later died in nursing homes.

The Cuomo administration only released the complete figures after state Attorney General Letitia James released a report saying the Health Department’s count likely understated COVID-linked deaths at nursing home facilities by 50 percent.

Zucker’s incomplete counts obscured the connection between 1,900 COVID deaths and nursing homes in New York City alone.There are still a slew of probes underway into the state’s handling of the nursing homes and Cuomo’s book, including investigations by AG James, the state Assembly’s Judiciary Committee.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn are also examining the nursing home issue.

 – Additional reporting by Carl Campanile.