Pastor Jon Bruss of St. John's Lutheran Church gives the prayer along with Anna Munns, at the candle light vigil held at St. Francis Hospital in Topeka, Kan., on Monday, April 17, 2017, in hopes of keeping the doors to St. Francis Hospital open. The owner of St.Francis, a nonprofit Catholic hospital in Topeka, said Tuesday that it will stop operating the facility this summer, whether or not it finds a buyer, and that Kansas' refusal to expand state health coverage for the needy contributed to the hospital's financial troubles. (Keith Horinek/The Topeka Capital-Journal via AP)

Pastor Jon Bruss of St. John's Lutheran Church gives the prayer along with Anna Munns, at the candle light vigil held at St. Francis Hospital in Topeka, Kan., on Monday, April 17, 2017, in hopes of keeping the doors to St. Francis Hospital open. The owner of St.Francis, a nonprofit Catholic hospital in Topeka, said Tuesday that it will stop operating the facility this summer, whether or not it finds a buyer, and that Kansas' refusal to expand state health coverage for the needy contributed to the hospital's financial troubles. (Keith Horinek/The Topeka Capital-Journal via AP)

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The owner of a nonprofit Catholic hospital in Topeka said Tuesday that it will stop operating the facility this summer, whether or not it finds a buyer, and that Kansas’ refusal to expand state health coverage for the needy contributed to the hospital’s financial troubles.

The 378-bed St. Francis hospital’s problems have advocates promising to push again to expand the state’s Medicaid program under former President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. But it’s not clear that they can pick up enough votes in the Republican-controlled Legislature to overcome opposition from GOP Gov. Sam Brownback, who vetoed an expansion bill last month.

Brownback and a local hospital board member said expanding Medicaid, which provides coverage for the poor, disabled and elderly, would not save St. Francis from closing. But its owner, Denver-based SCL Health, said in a statement Tuesday that the failure to do so “added pressure” as uncompensated and charity care more than doubled over the past five years.

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“There’s no question that St. Francis would be a stronger hospital had Medicaid expansion happened,” said David Jordan, executive director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas.

Local officials said St. Francis and its affiliated clinics provide about a third of the health care in the Topeka area, and closing the hospital could endanger up to 1,600 jobs.

SCL has been looking for a buyer for St. Francis since May 2016 but has yet to find one. It said Tuesday that it is willing to donate the hospital to another organization to keep it open.

“I remain confident we will pull together as a community and work through this transition,” said Topeka Mayor Larry Wolgast.

Topeka also is home to the nonprofit Stormont Vail Health system, which operates a 586-bed hospital within blocks of St. Francis. Stormont President and CEO Randy Peterson said it began talks Monday with SCL Health and is interested in taking over St. Francis’ operations, though “we would need the facilities and the staff of St. Francis.”

“We would hope that we could work something out,” Peterson said during a news conference.

The company said it hopes to have more definitive information about the hospital’s future by the first week of May, though President and CEO Mike Slubowski said St. Francis “is not sustainable.”

“With or without another operator, however, SCL Health will cease operating the hospital this summer,” the company’s statement said.

Mercy Hospital in Independence closed in 2015, with local officials citing the state’s failure to expand Medicaid as a key factor. Hospitals in Fort Scott and Wellington also are facing problems, and Jordan’s alliance says 31 are vulnerable.

The bill vetoed by Brownback would have extended Medicaid coverage to up to 180,000 poor adults, most of whom don’t have insurance. Supporters were a few votes short in each chamber of the two-thirds majorities necessary to override a veto and working to attract them.

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The 2010 federal law championed by Obama promised to pick up most of the tab, but Brownback said the remaining costs would have busted the cash-strapped state’s budget while moving Medicaid away from protecting the truly vulnerable.

Dr. Jim Owen, a local St. Francis board member and the chairman of the hospital’s radiology department, said SCL Health’s management of the hospital is largely responsible for its problems, arguing that it has not invested in the facility or done and adequate job of recruiting staff.

“Had we had Medicaid expansion, we’d still be where we are now,” he said.

Federal income tax forms available online said that from 2012 through 2015, St. Francis Health lost nearly $26 million, though SCL’s statement said the losses for the past five years, including 2016, amounted to $117 million.

The company’s statement came only hours after Brownback issued one saying he had a commitment from Slubowski to delay any announcement about closing the hospital.

Later, Brownback spokeswoman Melika Willoughby said in an email: “An all-out effort is underway to keep St. Francis open.”

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Associated Press writer Allison Kite contributed to this report.

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Follow John Hanna on Twitter at https://twitter.com/apjdhanna .