Months after the city enrolled residents in an optional telehealth program, Garland voters will decide this spring if they are willing to pay a fee for telehealth services.
The Garland City Council in August approved an agreement with Dallas-based MD Health Pathways to enroll residents in its Tap Telehealth program for a monthly fee added to their utility bills. Now, residents say the decision should have been theirs from the beginning.
鈥淚f it's going to be put, especially on a utility bill that most people aren't going to pay attention to, we should know about it. We should vote,鈥 Garland resident John Laton Bowles said at a recent council meeting. 鈥淲e should look at all the other options out there to do something like this."
A will be on the May 2 special election ballot. If it鈥檚 approved, Garland residents would be charged a separate fee of $6 a month for the first two years, increasing up to $9 a month in year five. Residents would be able to opt out.
The city can鈥檛 add a fee without changing an ordinance, a spokesperson said.
Whether voters approve or reject the proposition, the results will be non-binding, the spokesperson said 鈥 meaning the vote itself does not cause an action by the council but lets them know the 鈥渨ill of the people.鈥
Mayor Dylan Hedrick, who voted against the agreement in August, said the election is 鈥渁 step I thought we should have done possibly from the beginning鈥 to make more people aware of the service and the fee. He called the decision to partner with MD Health Pathways 鈥渞ushed.鈥
鈥淚 was more against the opt-in, opt-out nature of it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was concerned about our elderly and our non-native English speakers or other people who may not be able to opt-out of it or are even aware of the program.鈥
Supporters of the telehealth program say it鈥檚 needed to close a health care access gap in Garland. The city has been without a hospital since early 2018, when Baylor Scott and White closed due to financial losses.
Dr. Dirk Perritt, CEO of MD Health Pathways, said it鈥檚 one of the reasons he started his company.
鈥淚 spent almost a decade in the hospital that is no longer here, that the city lost recently, and I've watched families come into the ER two in the morning for problems I could solve with a simple conversation," he told council members at last week鈥檚 work session.
鈥淭hose families often left with a $1,500 ER bill.鈥
He said as part of the pilot program, 10,000 Garland families have had free access via phone to a doctor or provider with no copay or deductible. According to Perritt, a little over a month ago a mailer was sent to 82,000 households, and 5,400 opted out of the program.
"The numbers tell a different story than the noise that you hear in the chambers," he said.
Perritt said he couldn鈥檛 鈥personally divert healthcare funds to run a political campaign."
"The families we serve, they don't have time to attend council meetings,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey don't have time to often vote. Many have never voted. They're working two jobs, caring for kids, caring for aging parents.鈥
It鈥檚 unclear what would happen to the city鈥檚 agreement with MD Health Pathways if the ballot measure passes. The city currently has an option to end the contract up to 30 days before an implementation date, and that date hasn鈥檛 been set yet, Hedrick told 四虎影院.
四虎影院 reached out to MD Health Pathways and has not received a response.
Priscilla Rice is 四虎影院鈥檚 communities reporter. Got a tip? Email her at price@kera.org.
四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider . Thank you.