At the Jan. 7 Beaver County review/work session, a commissioner announced the county's new public bid threshold for 2026 is $24,500, meaning work valued below that amount generally will not require public bidding. The change was characterized by the speaker as recently announced and forwarded to county staff and departments for implementation.
The commissioner also addressed public inquiries about Brighton Rehab. The speaker said the Department of Justice previously sued Brighton Rehab and referenced a $15,000,000 fine related to fraud findings. The facility reportedly declared bankruptcy; the last reported census cited in the meeting was somewhat under 400 residents. The commissioner said the state has prohibited the facility from admitting new residents and described it as not currently licensed. The speaker added the county has no direct oversight of Brighton Rehab but said county officials have been cooperating with state authorities. The commissioner reported the facility was apparently sold to an entity described in the meeting as 'BSB Friendship LLC' for approximately $37.5 million.
The commissioner cautioned that the county's role is limited and that state agencies are leading oversight and enforcement activity. No formal county action, vote, or directive related to Brighton Rehab was recorded during the session. The announcements were delivered as informational updates in the commissioners' report portion of the work session.
The commissioner also recognized the retirement of William Day from St. Barnabas Health System after many years of service and noted Douglas Day is taking over as CEO; the speaker said Homemaker Home Health has become part of the St. Barnabas network.
(Reporting based on commissioner remarks at the Beaver County Commissioners' Jan. 7, 2026 work session.)