What the Community Deserves to Know
By Dr. Chris Van hemelrijck
In mid-November 2025, South County Health (SCH) CEO Aaron Robinson and Board Chair Joseph Matthews announced they had signed a letter of intent with one of the “top 10” health systems in the country. A 120-day due diligence period followed. That period is now closing — and the community still knows remarkably little about what has actually been agreed to.
SCH leadership has described the arrangement as “transformational” and “non-traditional” — a clinical and digital partnership that would bring an Epic electronic medical records (EMR) system, artificial intelligence tools, and world-class clinical expertise to South County.
We are told that existing and future funds raised locally will remain with SCH and that local governance will not change. These are reassuring words. But words are not a governance structure, and reassurances are not contractual protections.
The unnamed partner is just one of several unknowns. Robinson has referenced “multiple partners” — strategic, AI, digital, and clinical — but has not identified the AI company involved, the clinical partner providing second opinions, or how any of these relationships would be structured.
Each of these entities may have its own financial interests and contractual claims. The public deserves to know who they are.
Understanding why SCH is pursuing this deal requires looking at the finances honestly. Three consecutive years of net losses — $4.6 million in 2022, $6.5 million in 2023, and $534,000 in 2024 — against total revenue of roughly $239 million tells a difficult story. Current net assets stand at approximately $72 million.








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