HERMANTOWN, MINN.
State regulators knew about the dangers at Superior View Assisted Living, a small senior care home set amid dense birch trees in northern Minnesota.
An elderly male resident died there in 2015 after being left for days without food, water and vital medications, state records show. Another resident died a few weeks earlier after staff failed to call a doctor when his blood sugar level soared to dangerous levels.
Other residents were left stranded in their rooms, unable to summon the staff for help, because their rooms lacked working emergency call lights.
As the violations piled up, the Minnesota Department of Health could have revoked Superior View's license, or even called in criminal prosecutors. Instead, it allowed the center to stay open, endangering dozens of residents, according to state records and interviews with former employees.
"It was a daily horror show," said Jessica Petersen of Duluth, a former caregiver there.
The state finally shut down Superior View in August 2016, but only after a devastating fire swept through the home and called public attention to its problems.
Superior View's history highlights a deeper breakdown in the way Minnesota regulates the rapidly growing assisted-living industry.