The chief executive of Baptist Community Services on Monday denied any notion of his involvement in the ousting of John Hicks, chief executive of Baptist St. Anthony’s Health System who suddenly left the hospital system last week with no reason given.“If you asked me why he left, I could not tell you,” said Tim Holloway, who was CEO of High Plains Baptist Hospital from 1977 to 1996. “There was a wall built, and I asked for it.”
The board of Baptist Community Services, which owns half of BSA, appoints half of the 12-member BSA board of trustees. Catholic partner Christus Health, which owns the other half of the hospital system, also appoints six board members.
It was a meeting between Hicks and the executive committee of the BSA board, made of three BCS and three Christus appointees, that resulted in Hicks’ leaving. Neither Hicks, the hospital nor its board stated a reason for the separation.
Hicks was named BSA CEO after the 1996 merger of High Plains Baptist and St. Anthony’s hospitals.
Holloway said Monday he removed himself from discussions involving an important BSA matter when it came up a couple of weeks ago.
“It was suggested that I not be involved in any conversations involving BSA, and I agreed with that,” Holloway said. “When somebody said that, I said ‘Fine. That suits me.'"
Holloway said he couldn’t recall who pitched the suggestion or
when exactly it came.“I have no, nada, zero input into the operations of that organization,” Holloway said of BSA.
The issue Holloway referred to, which eventually led to Hicks’ leaving, involved closed-door meetings and phone calls from BCS Senior Vice President Steve Dalrymple. Dalrymple sits on the six-member executive committee that met with Hicks.
Holloway also said the failed sale of its half of BSA to its Catholic partner last year now means nothing to the BCS board who appoints the BSA board that hires and fires the hospital chief.
BCS pitched the idea of selling its 50 percent stake in the hospital system to Christus. BCS withdrew the offer late last year after widespread backlash against the sale.
“It is a dead issue, capital D-E-A-D,” he said of the possible sale.
Holloway said Hicks, who was outspokenly against the sale of the hospital, was just doing what he thought was best for BSA.
“I wasn’t his best friend. He wasn’t my best friend, but if I saw him today, I would shake his hand,” Holloway said. “People are trying to make something out of this.”
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