The proposed megamerger by Fairview Health Services and South Dakota-based Sanford Health is dead — again.
The announcement Thursday marks the second time in roughly a decade the two health systems have failed to complete a combination that prompted, in its latest incarnation, fierce opposition at the University of Minnesota.
And it leaves unresolved and difficult questions about the future of the U's partnership with Fairview, an affiliation that's been strained significantly over the past year.
"Without support for this transaction from certain stakeholders, we have determined it is in the best interest of Fairview Health Services to discontinue the merger process," Fairview CEO James Hereford said in a statement issued Thursday afternoon.
The U sold its teaching hospital to Fairview in 1997 and balked at the idea of an out-of-state entity owning the University of Minnesota Medical Center in Minneapolis. The merger would have created a health system with some 78,000 employees and more than 50 hospitals.
Sanford Health and Minneapolis-based Fairview first tried to merge in 2013, when the idea was met with significant political opposition. They announced the second attempt in November, specifying a timeline that was later delayed amid an ongoing investigation by Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison.
Bill Gassen, the president and CEO of Sanford Health, said in a statement: "Without support for this transaction from certain Minnesota stakeholders, we have determined it is in the best interest of Sanford Health to discontinue the merger process."
Ellison said in a statement that the health systems "made the decision they have determined is right for them."