Lucas County extends 2024 out-of-county autopsy pricing for 60 days amid competitive pressure
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The Board of Lucas County Commissioners voted to extend 2024 contract pricing for out-of-county autopsy work through the end of February while the coroner and county budget staff pursue talks with neighboring counties and review pricing strategy.
The Lucas County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously Jan. 7 to extend 2024 contract pricing for out-of-county autopsy and death-investigation services for 60 days, through the end of February, while county staff pursue follow-up meetings with neighboring jurisdictions and finalize a pricing plan.
The action followed a detailed presentation from Lucas County Coroner Dr. Blumquist, who told commissioners the office had planned a step increase in out-of-county contract rates but stopped implementation after neighboring jurisdictions cut their prices late last year. “We’re freezing this new contract until we can resolve issues,” Dr. Blumquist said, describing a sudden loss of several contracted cases and what he called an emergent pricing race that threatened roughly $300,000 in expected revenue.
The extension gives Dr. Blumquist, the county’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) staff and affected counties time to hold town-hall style meetings and negotiate a new approach. Dr. Blumquist said town-hall meetings were already scheduled for late January to discuss court-related needs and other operational factors with counties that might switch providers.
Why it matters: Dr. Blumquist told the board that roughly half of autopsies performed in the county are for Lucas County residents and half are for other counties. He said the county’s cost-per-out-of-county autopsy — accounting for shared facility and staffing costs — is about $2,700, while in-county cases run about $3,200. Those figures, he said, reflect fixed costs and economies of scale that make outright elimination of out-of-county work likely to increase costs borne by Lucas County taxpayers.
Dr. Blumquist described competing offers from other providers: he said some counties had signaled bids near $1,850 per autopsy and that the sudden downward move by larger counties had altered projected revenues. He warned commissioners that a 15% planned price increase could be offset by larger revenue losses if partner counties moved to lower-priced providers.
Commissioner Anita Lopez said she appreciated Dr. Blumquist’s “steadfast approach” and supported the 60-day extension to allow the office and OMB to finish outreach. Commissioner Pete Gerken and Board President Lisa Cibecchi likewise voted in favor; the clerk called a roll of unanimous yeas.
What the extension does and next steps: The extension maintains 2024 contract terms for existing out-of-county partners through Feb. 28, 2025. County staff will hold the scheduled meetings, analyze court and operational drivers identified in those conversations and return to the commissioners with a revised pricing or contracting recommendation within approximately one month.
The board recorded the vote as an approval of the 60-day extension; there were no abstentions or recorded no votes.
Ending: The coroner’s office and OMB will report back to the board with a recommended contract strategy following the end of the outreach period; commissioners signaled support for additional staff-level discussions and potential follow-up actions tied to those recommendations.
