Media Round Up from Put People First! PA’s Monday, September 8th’s Peaceful Sit-In and Rally at Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland, PA in Southeast PA.

Healthcare workers, local residents and community organizations rallied peacefully on September 8th at Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland, PA, calling on Delaware County Council to use its power of eminent domain to take Crozer-Chester back from Wall Street and reopen it as a public hospital, run by the workers and the community.

Fifty people, including former patients and workers, protested outside of the hospital, while eight people engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience, sitting along the side of the lobby while taking care to stay out of the way of foot traffic. 

Here’s a look at some of the earned media the action received:

Philadelphia Inquirer “Eight protesters arrested after sit-in at shuttered Crozer-Chester Medical Center”

by Sarah Gantz Updated Sept. 8, 2025, 6:15 p.m. ET

Eight people were arrested after staging a sit-in at Crozer-Chester Medical Center on Monday morning to protest the Delaware County health system’s closure earlier this year.

Put People First PA!, an organization that advocates for Medicaid and hospital access, organized a rally and sit-in at Crozer’s Upland campus to raise awareness about the local need for hospital services.

Crozer-Chester Medical Center was the busiest hospital in the area, with a level II trauma center and 24/7 mental health crisis center before it was closed this spring by its bankrupt for-profit owner, California-based Prospect Medical Holdings.

Upland Police said eight people were ordered out of a professional office building at Crozer that has remained opened for specific appointments. When they refused to leave, the eight people were arrested on charges of defiant trespassing.

The group said it wanted county and state lawmakers to use their eminent domain powers to take control of the hospital. They said they brought banners that read “Take back our hospitals!” and “People over profits!”

Other advocacy groups, including the National Union of the Homeless and the Crozer-Chester Nurses Association, joined the protesters.

The rally was part of a “national day of action for Medicaid” planned by the Nonviolent Medicaid Army, a national advocacy group, seeking to politically organize Americans who could benefit from the government-funded insurance for low-income people and those with disabilities. The organization held similar rallies in Western and Central Pennsylvania over the weekend.

The closure of Crozer Chester and a sister facility, Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, followed the failure of a state-led effort to find a new operator that would return the Crozer health system to nonprofit ownership.

A group of local healthcare executives are now buying the Taylor facility for $1 million, according to filings last week in Prospect’s bankruptcy court proceedings.


Delco Daily Times “8 protesters arrested at Crozer-Chester rally”

By Pete Bannan | Pbannan@Mainlinemedianews.com | The Delaware County Daily Times

UPDATED: September 9, 2025 at 5:17 PM EDT

A group of protesters was arrested at the closed Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland on Monday when they refused requests to leave.

Eight were arrested after repeated requests by police to leave the lobby were ignored, officials said.

The nonviolent protest was organized by Southeast Healthcare Rights Committee of Put People First! PA as part of their National Day of Action for Medicaid and against hospital closures.

The group demanded that Delaware County use eminent domain to take the facility from bankrupt Prospect Medical Holdings LLC and re-open Crozer as a public hospital run by workers and the community.

Shortly after 10 a.m. the group sat down in the lobby of the hospital complex and demanded the county take back the hospital from Wall Street, officials said.

“We are a group of people whose families have been hurt and harmed by this criminal health care system that puts profit over our lives. We’re sick and tired of getting sick while Wall Street gets rich, and we’re not going to take it anymore,” said one of the protesters in a social media post.

One of those arrested, Jamie Blair, 35, of Lansdowne noted Crozer is one of four closed in Delaware County by Prospect, and one of 26 hospitals overall that have recently closed across the state.

Blair said her niece and nephew were born at Crozer and her friends, family and neighbors depended on it for care.

“There is no dang reason why in the richest country in the history of the world that we cannot have health care for everyone,” Blair said.

Other protesters recalled the legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who attended Crozer Seminary from 1948 to 1951.

Upland officers gave repeated warnings and encouraged the protesters to move outside. One officer said they understand the protesters’ complaints, and nobody would like to see the facility opened more than the police.

“Especially, if something happens to one of us,” the officer said.

He warned they would have to arrest the group, whose members said they understood.

Upland Police Chief Michael K. Irey said the the were charged with defiant trespass and released on their own recognize after appearing before District Judge Georgia Stone.

“No resistance or issues … only one Delaware County resident among the arrested,” Irey said.

Singing, “I am not afraid, I will die for liberation because I know why I was made,” the group was taken one by one to police vehicles, officials said.

The arrest was streamed live on the group’s Facebook page.

In addition to those arrested, about 50 people, including former patients and workers, protested outside of the hospital.

Advocates also dropped a large banner hung from the parking garage, visible from I-95 reading, “Take back our hospitals! Seize Crozer for Delco.”

Peggy Malone, former president of the Crozer-Chester Nurses Association, thanked the protesters for their support.

“It is a source of hope where there seems to be none,” Malone said. “Four months ago, 2,700 employees lost their jobs here. Many still cannot find employment … We know of patients who are not receiving care. This is criminal. This is disgusting. And what is the biggest horror in all of this is that everything Prospect has done is legal, and that if this can happen here at Crozer, it can happen anywhere.”


Bucks County Beacon “Health Care Advocates in Delaware County Put Legislators on Notice: Stop Allowing Hospital and Health Care Closures to Continue”

by Melinda Rizzo

Advocates to reopen the former Crozer-Chester Medical Center, founded in 1958 as Delaware County Hospital, demonstrated outside the shuttered and mostly vacant health care facility Monday, demanding it be reopened as part of National Day of Action for Medicaid Comes to PA – in 12 states across the U.S., according to Put People First! PA.

A few doctors continue to practice and see patients at the Crozer-Chester property.

National Day of Action to Save Medicaid rallies were held Saturday, Sept. 6, too.

Crozer-Chester Medical Center was closed in May 2025 despite public outcry and outrage over the move by for-profit Los Angeles-based Prospect Medical Holdings, Inc. Prospect operates health care facilities in California, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. Prospect filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January, 6 ABC News.com reported.

“I recently had to get breast cancer screening and because of the closure I had to go to Yardley more than an hour away. In addition to being a stressful time, the inability to get local care was unacceptable,” said Heather Schumacher, a Put People First! Southeastern PA Health Care Rights Committee volunteer.

She said the demonstration outside at Crozer aimed to amplify the health care crisis in the region.

“Our emergency room in Springfield closed a few years ago. We’ve lived in Delaware County for 14 years, and it’s incredible to me to see [these] things fall like dominos,” she said. 

In addition to Springfield, Taylor Hospital, located in Ridley Park, Delaware County has been shuttered, too, as part of Prospect’s broad health care facility closures.

Crozer1a - Bucks County Beacon - Health Care Advocates in Delaware County Put Legislators on Notice: Stop Allowing Hospital and Health Care Closures to Continue
Photo courtesy of Put People First! PA.

“This is a nationwide crisis and a pattern that is happening everywhere. This is urgent. People get used to what happens and we don’t want to get used to this – it isn’t Okay,” Schumacher said.

The only remaining hospitals serving the region are Riddle Hospital in Media, operated by Main Line Health and Mercy Fitzgerald in Darby, operated by Trinity Health Mid-Atlantic.

Schumacher said Monday’s event was a “call to action” for local elected officials to actively do more.

While legislators and even representatives for Gov. Josh Shapiro’s office “have been listening,” the time to act is now as state-wide organizations must stop allowing private equity firms to pick up hospital properties and close them, leaving patients and local communities high and dry for care, she said.

“We need the state to use their power, take the hospital back and move it to county control. They (local representatives) are listening but the urgency is lacking, people are dying,” Schumacher said.

In addition to reclaiming local hospitals and reopening those that have been shut down, Schumacher is calling on state offices to “open a health care advocate office to work for the people and advocate on their behalf.”

Crozer2 - Bucks County Beacon - Health Care Advocates in Delaware County Put Legislators on Notice: Stop Allowing Hospital and Health Care Closures to Continue
Photo courtesy of Put People First! PA.

According to a Put People First! PA press release, the following demands have been made of elected legislators, the governor’s office and other officials:

  • For Delaware County to enact eminent domain to seize Crozer-Chester Medical Center from Wall Street.
  • For Gov. Shapiro and the attorney general to support counties to reopen closed hospitals as public hospitals.
  • For Gov. Shapiro and the attorney general to support a statewide Public Healthcare Advocate, housed in the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General, that would fight for the rights of everyday people in the healthcare system, not “Wall Street profiteers.”

Crozer has been our emergency room,” Schumacher explained “and with it closed, I don’t know where we would go.”

She said residents lament overcrowding at remaining hospital emergency departments, or EDs.

Crozer-Chester closed on May 2, 2025, leaving 2,700 people without jobs and hundreds of thousands of people without lifesaving emergency and trauma care – the fourth Crozer Hospital to close in the last few years, according to Peggy Malone, former president of the Crozer-Chester Nurses Association.

Hospital closures are an epidemic across the country with 26 hospitals closing in Pennsylvania alone in the past five years – with the passage of further Medicaid cuts, more hospitals will struggle to stay open, said Jamie Blair, of Lansdowne, Delaware County and member of Put People First! PA.

Data USA: Chester PA reported  the median household income in the City of Chester, located in Delaware County, is $39,808 with a poverty rate of about 30.8%.

According to the same data service, Data USA, Upland, where Crozer-Chester was located had a median household income in 2023 of $60,200, and a poverty rate of 14.3%.

“The Democratic and Republican parties have let Wall Street and private equity pillage our hospital systems,” Blair said, “while cuts to Medicaid under both Trump and Biden’s administrations are leaving hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania residents without healthcare. That is why we are taking action to re-open the Crozer system, preserve and expand Medicaid, and guarantee healthcare as a human right for every Pennsylvania resident.”

Recent protest events organized by The Nonviolent Medicaid Army (NVMA) took place in Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Vermont, the press release said.

According to the Put People First!, those removed from Medicaid will be forced to return to unaffordable, marketplace or employer based plans with high-deductibles and co-pays – or resort to living with no insurance coverage at all. These untenable conditions will further fuel the current medical debt crisis which totals nearly $200 billion in the U.S. today.

Crozer3 - Bucks County Beacon - Health Care Advocates in Delaware County Put Legislators on Notice: Stop Allowing Hospital and Health Care Closures to Continue
Photo courtesy of Put People First! PA.

Blair, along with seven others, was arrested by police Monday at the Crozer demonstration. The activities leading to the arrest were Livestreamed and may be viewed here.

After months of grassroots neighborhood canvassing and legislative contacts, Blair said the moment for “non violent civil disobedience” had come.

“Seeing that after 130 days Crozer remained shuttered with no laws on the books to prevent this from happening again in Pennsylvania” Put People First! took action.

“It is unjust that these hospitals are being closed and there is not a thing anyone is willing to do about it,” she said.

Blair and others are urging Delaware County to use eminent domain to “take Crozer back and make it a public hospital run by the workers and community.”

Malone said the health care situation in the region “is dire. There has to be somewhere for these patients, and this community, to go and get their health care needs met.”

She said the latest hospital bed count of 450 is grossly inadequate to serve Delaware County’s estimated population of about 600,000.

“To try to get appointments in other systems, some patients are waiting six months to a year for care,” Malone explained.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported on Sept. 5, private investors from KQT Aikens Partners (Keystone Quality Transport) an ambulance company in the area, had purchased Taylor Hospital for $1 million.

Malone noted people with chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, COPD and mental health medications won’t be able to get the prescriptions filled if they are not able to access physicians.

“If they are waiting … they are putting their lives at risk,” she said.

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