The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
    • Contact
  • Investigations
    • Data
  • Donate
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Oxford Senator Rick Bennett Sheds GOP to Run for Maine Governor as an Independent
  • Three More Mills Vetoes – Tribal Eminent Domain, LGBTQIA+ Recovery Housing, Ferry Power Grab
  • China Tries Getting Rich In America’s Backyard
  • Rockland Police Search for Man in Connection to Reported Assault
  • Residential and Condo Associations in Maine Can No Longer Ban Members from Installing EV Chargers
  • Angus King Co-Sponsors Republican-Led Bill Mandating Steps to Combat Chinese Espionage
  • Here Are the Tax and Fee Increases Mainers Can Expect from the Budget Janet Mills Signed into Law on Monday
  • Maine Wildlife Chief on Covering Up Dark Web Drug Scandal Involving Ex-Husband: “can’t talk about personnel…”
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Tuesday, June 24
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
    • Contact
  • Investigations
    • Data
  • Donate
The Maine Wire
Home » News » News » Gardiner’s Proposed School-Based Clinic Operator Earned $11.7 Million Prescribing Drugs in 2023
News

Gardiner’s Proposed School-Based Clinic Operator Earned $11.7 Million Prescribing Drugs in 2023

A review of the nonprofit's public tax filings by the Maine Wire shows that as much as 40 percent of the nonprofit's yearly revenue comes from handing out prescription drugs, raising questions about whether HealthReach's primary motivation is student health or boosting prescription numbers.
Steve RobinsonBy Steve RobinsonDecember 10, 2024Updated:December 10, 202415 Comments5 Mins Read7K Views
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

A new trend sweeping Maine schools has parents concerned about the lack of transparency surrounding medical treatments — including sex-change related treatments and mind-altering prescription drugs — their children might be receiving without their knowledge or consent.

The latest battleground is the Gardiner area school system, where school officials are looking to create a so-called “school-based clinic” — that is, a fully functional medical office colocated with a public school.

Maine School Administrative District 11, which includes Gardiner, West Gardiner, Pittston, and Randolph, is currently reviewing a contract that would create medical office within the schools capable of prescribing drugs to teens.

Like the other more than 30 school-based clinics operating in Maine schools, Gardiner’s proposed clinic would be inside the school, might lease space from the school, and might even be branded as if it’s officially part of the school.

But technically and legally, the school-based clinics are always separate entities, and that’s an important detail in how they operate and why some parents are concerned about the lack of transparency and accountability.

In theory, the school-based clinics are taxpayer-funded nonprofits that allow Maine’s youth to receive medical care they might not otherwise be able to access.

In practice, the clinics create a conduit for minors to receive medical treatments and prescription drugs without their parents’ knowledge or consent, including controversial treatments like antidepressants or off-label prescriptions for cross-sex hormones and puberty blockers.

Should a parent complain to the school’s superintendent, principal, or school board, those administrative officials have plausible deniability for anything occurring within the clinic.

After all, it’s a totally separate entity and HIPAA protections apply.

Similarly, the clinic’s leadership can rely on patient confidentiality rules to avoid answering any questions.

In addition to the Bulldog Health Center at Lawrence High School, there are school-based clinics operating in RSU 17 (Oxford Hills), AOS 93 (Lincoln County), RSU 40 (Union), CSD 3 (Boothbay), RSU 1 (Morse), RSU 12 (Wiscasset), RSU 34 (Old Town), the Portland Public Schools, Westbrook, RSU 67 (Mattanawcook), RSU 22 (Hampden/Winterport), Lee Academy, and Brewer.

Many of the clinics in Maine are operated by tax-advantaged nonprofits, ranging from large nonprofit hospitals to smaller, more specialized providers.

Although the school-based clinic controversy in Gardiner has attracted some local and national media attention, less attention has been paid to the nonprofit looking to operate the clinic — HealthReach Community Health Centers.

Healthreach was the subject of a previous Maine Wire report after its Bulldog Health Center — the school-based clinic it operates out of Lawrence High School — sent a minor child home with a bag of unlabeled pills.

[RELATED: Maine Dad Says High School Clinic Sent 17-Year-Old Daughter Home with Secret Baggy of Zoloft, Sicced Child Protective Services on Him For Complaining…]

The pills, later discovered by the child’s father, Eric Sack, turned out to be Zoloft, a prescription anti-depressant.

Sack, in an attempt to figure out why a school-based clinic would send his minor child home with a baggy full of unlabeled pills, quickly encountered the lack of transparency and accountability that’s built in to the school-based clinic model.

Sack said that he contacted Lawrence High School Principal Dan Bowers, but Bowers declined to comment because the “Bulldog Health Center” is, on paper, a separate entity from the school.

Bowers subsequently refused to respond to the Maine Wire’s inquiries.

When Sacks contacted representatives from the Bulldog Health Center, he said that a representative told him they were legally allowed to give his daughter prescription drugs without informing him, but they wouldn’t address the lack of a label or safety container.

Like Bowers, the Bulldog Health Center and HealthReach declined to respond to the Maine Wire’s inquiries.

Pharmacists and healthcare providers are required to label dispensed medications with specific information as outlined in Title 32, §13794 of the Maine Revised Statutes.

It’s unclear why the Bulldog Health Center failed to follow Maine’s rules for the provision of prescription drugs and instead gave the teen girl a bag of unlabeled pills.

Failure to comply with these labeling requirements can result in disciplinary actions by the Maine Board of Pharmacy, which may include fines, suspension, or revocation of professional licenses.

If the Bulldog Health Center — or HealthReach — were to lose their license to issue teens prescription drugs, that might constitute a massive financial blow.

Tax documents filed by HealthReach suggest that nearly 40 percent of the organization’s total program revenue in 2023—$11.7 million—came from its prescription drug program, with an additional $6.9 million coming in the form of government grants.

The organization only began reporting its prescription-based revenue as a separate line item in 2021.

In that year, HealthReach earned $7.8 million from its “Pharmacy Program,” or approximately 33 percent of its total program revenue.

In the two-year period from 2021 to 2023, HealthReach increased its total revenue from prescribing drugs by $3.9 million.

Although HealthReach operates several clinics throughout Maine, the period from 2021 to 2023 just so happens to coincide with the first two years of operation for its school-based clinic in Lawrence, which was opened in 2021.

At the same time HealthReach has grown its prescription drug-based revenue, salaries for its top-paid employees have grown well beyond the median salary for a nonprofit employee in Maine.

More recently, the Bulldog Health Center has been featured in Daily Signal reporting that showed photos from inside the clinic — which is physically located within the school.

The photos show a clinic adorned with the quasi-religious symbols of gender ideology, including the “pride progress flag.”

Lawrence High School’s health center in Fairfield, Maine. (Diandra Staples/HealthReach Community Health Centers, via DailySignal.com)

Those photos have only stoked parental concern that the clinics will place gender ideology — and prescription drug revenue — over the well-being of students.

Previous ArticlePingree, King, and Mills Push Eleventh-Hour Protections for Immigrants as Trump Heads for White House
Next Article Portland Seeking Grant Applications for Homeless ‘Day Space,’ Methadone Treatment Program Funded by Opioid Settlement
Steve Robinson
  • Twitter

Steve Robinson is the Editor-in-Chief of The Maine Wire. ‪He can be reached by email at Robinson@TheMaineWire.com.

Subscribe to Substack

Related Posts

Oxford Senator Rick Bennett Sheds GOP to Run for Maine Governor as an Independent

June 24, 2025

Three More Mills Vetoes – Tribal Eminent Domain, LGBTQIA+ Recovery Housing, Ferry Power Grab

June 24, 2025

China Tries Getting Rich In America’s Backyard

June 24, 2025

<span class="dsq-postid" data-dsqidentifier="33135 https://www.themainewire.com/?p=33135">15 Comments

  1. Just the facts on December 10, 2024 9:59 AM

    A good governor would put a stop to this immediately and call for a full investigation. Alas mills , the hunter biden of maine will quietly pull the covers over her head and patiently wait for her next kickback hoping no one will notice.

  2. Jake on December 10, 2024 10:16 AM

    God! How did we make it having to travel 20 to 50 miles to the nearest health care? People seemed to be much MUCH more healthy then also! We should NOT have clinics in the schools. Ya, OK a nurse is ok, but we have a health facility in every town now so we do not need them at school as well! Teachers can have basic training – OH,, that may not be in their contract??? Get the LGBTQPEDOs out of the schools as well. You might know how I feel now.

  3. Jeff on December 10, 2024 10:33 AM

    Whatever happen to the days of a parent sending a child to school with 2 aspirin and getting in big trouble? This is sick. Evil of all sorts needs to be eradicated from our schools.
    Thank you Maine Wire for digging into what the MSM ignores.

  4. JHC 1972 on December 10, 2024 10:41 AM

    You spelled HIPAA wrong, maybe a lot more then that needs fact checking too!

  5. Rooster on December 10, 2024 10:43 AM

    Are they performing abortions, yet?

  6. axylos on December 10, 2024 2:16 PM

    I am not sure if I am wasting my breath, but people of MSAD11 voted these people into office. What did they expect?! They voted in DemocRAT-Communists and this is what they do. When will the people of Maine wake up? Reality is I do not hold out any hope they will because it takes effort and they just don’t bother.

  7. Jep Jepperson on December 10, 2024 2:31 PM

    That’s crazy!

  8. ME Infidel on December 10, 2024 3:26 PM

    Can’t go anywhere in a public school without seeing the omnipresent “flag” either.

  9. sandy on December 10, 2024 5:57 PM

    How are your reading scores? number one job. Health care is the parents’ job!

  10. Benny Weaver on December 11, 2024 8:49 AM

    Gardiner is now a suburb of Greater North Portland .
    Let the crazy people rule !
    Maybe the Sykes woman will be a good mayor .

  11. Rev Kev on December 11, 2024 10:41 AM

    School-based health clinics have always been a terrible idea and should be abolished. The poor souls that are stuck in our propaganda mills should not also be subjected to the whims of the school-based counselors who are typically young liberal women who have not yet grown up themselves and still have parent issues. Formal healthcare and education need to be separate, aside from the common sense parentis locus of caring teachers and principals with whom parents can form trusting relationships. The professionalization is killing everything in our society.

  12. Craig on December 11, 2024 6:22 PM

    Nothing but drug pushers!!

  13. patriot on December 12, 2024 10:40 AM

    Simply, Legal Drug dealers…. like all pharmaceutical companies….they’re everywhere, GP’s , PA’s etc. people need to wake up and get back to nature and natural treatments… LEAVE OUR KIDS ALONE….

  14. Ellen on December 12, 2024 2:30 PM

    Exploitation! Your children are potential customers of the group think that says “it’s all for the children” when in fact, it is all for the money. If it was not, they would not do it. It is an incestuous relationship. The school get rent and the ability to redirect parents and Healthreach or other agency gets to bill for services. Isn’t it the parents who should be managing these things? Within the walls of the school kids get therapy, medical attention, sexual identity support, socialization, and conveyance of political group think. The only thing schools barely do is educate kids for the future workforce. This is the fault of naive parents who assume that the schools have the best interests of your child as well as respect and honor of you as a parent endowed with rights and responsible for your children.

  15. Boxcar on January 19, 2025 12:05 PM

    One question…WHY.??

Leave A Reply

Subscribe to Substack
Recent News

Oxford Senator Rick Bennett Sheds GOP to Run for Maine Governor as an Independent

June 24, 2025

Three More Mills Vetoes – Tribal Eminent Domain, LGBTQIA+ Recovery Housing, Ferry Power Grab

June 24, 2025

China Tries Getting Rich In America’s Backyard

June 24, 2025

Rockland Police Search for Man in Connection to Reported Assault

June 24, 2025

Residential and Condo Associations in Maine Can No Longer Ban Members from Installing EV Chargers

June 24, 2025
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.