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Construction Completed


BY JENNIE LLOYD

Community Health Connection construction completed in Kendall-Whittier neighborhood

After some federal stimulus grant glitches, a $4.6 million construction project to build a new, state-of-the-art medical facility for Community Health Connection is finally completed.

Now, the brand-new, red-brick, bilingual, federally qualified health facility stands at the corner of E. Third St. and Lewis Ave.

The center, also called La Coniexión Médica, has been located in a crowded east Tulsa strip mall, and will continue to serve residents in that area. The new facility will be operational once they finish up some last-minute insurance-related paperwork is wrapped up, according to Lori Adams, Community Health Connection's operations and compliance manager.

On Nov. 18, an open house was held for the public to learn more about the new services that will be offered soon in the 16,000-square-foot health center in Kendall-Whittier neighborhood.

Last year, Community Health Connection faced a $3.4 million shortfall after being denied the stimulus money. The denial came as a slap in the face after the service became a federally qualified health center in 2005 with the stipulation that it serve the Kendall-Whittier area.

But finding a suitable spot in Kendall-Whittier, a historic Tulsa district undergoing revitalization along with the rest of Midtown, proved difficult.

The federal government allowed Community Health Connection to open in East Tulsa at 9912 E. 21st St. while the medical group found or built a suitable facility in the Kendall-Whittier area.

When Community Health Connection's board found out they may face a $3.4 million shortfall last February, the sidewalks, curbs and foundation were already in place at the new site.

Failing to fund new medical facilities to serve Green Country's less fortunate people could strain our health-care infrastructure by holding off on pricey preventive care and clogging emergency rooms.

But the grant money, designed to boost federally qualified health centers with money appropriated through the Affordable Care Act, eventually came through in October 2010.

By April of this year, the final beam was positioned atop the structure. On Nov. 18, a public open house was held to celebrate the completion of the new Community Health Connection in Kendall-Whittier.

Little kids rode ponies, jumped around in a bounce house and had their faces painted in the facility's parking lot while others toured the building and talked to nurses and staff about medical services that will be offered by January.

Twelve new examination rooms with cheerful colors and a full-service dental office will soon be filled with thousands of Tulsa-area patients that count on these low- or no- cost medical services. The clinic has separate areas for mental health care, a social worker and laboratory space for medical testing.

The Kendall-Whittier area was identified as a place with a large percentage of minority and low-income residents. Since the health center has so many current patients at its East Tulsa facility, it will continue to serve the more than 5,500 patients Community Health Connection providers treated in 2010.

Clinic staffers are not allowed to ask about the immigration status of patients. The center accepts some private pay plans plus Medicare and Medicaid. As a federally qualified health center, Community Health Connection offers a sliding scale based on income and insurance.

The center will be propped up by a number of mostly federal-related grants and even malpractice insurance. Community Health Connection is one of only 18 federally boosted health centers in the state, while 300 such centers operate in Texas.

Send all comments and feedback regarding City to jlloyd@urbantulsa.com



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COMMENTS
2 comments posted for this article
Benny
 11/27/2011 - 10:11am
   Why are the "clinic staff not allowed to ask the immigration status of patients"? If Federal tax dollars is being used then WHY NOT? I want to know that my tax dollars are NOT providing medical services to those that are not here legally and have not earned it. If they need medical treatment let them GO BACK TO MEXICO. I am sick and tired of our country turning a blind eye to its citizens and catering to the illegals.
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William, tulsa
 11/23/2011 - 7:06am
   IF, this is the building I think it is, it pains me to say it, but its a blight to the Whittier Square area. Its aims to help low income people are good, and I am glad to see the services being provided,,,,but.... Tulsa is trying, and should be trying to create more pedestrian friendly/transit friendly areas, especially for poor people who are often the largest users of transit in our city. Creating a pedestrian/transit friendly area means you build the building up to the sidewalk, and if you have parking, put it behind the building. This building does not do that. It adds another break in the pedestrian streetscape and hurts the efforts to make the Whittier Square area more pedestrian and transit friendly for everyone, including the poorest who need and use transit the most. Every new building that goes in needs to help our budding, pedestrian friendly areas, not do just the opposite and hurt them like this building does. On another note, if our new comprehensive plan was in place, this building would have not been allowed to be built with the parking in front of it like it has. Many people in the community worked to create that comprehensive plan. Many people in the community wanted to see the Whittier Square are become more pedestrian and transit friendly. Why the people who "placed" this building didn't care and basically flipped their middle finger at the efforts and desire to create a better, more pedestrian and transit friendly area, did this I do not know. But its a shame. And this is not the only example of this type of "placing" going on in areas that really NEED good, effective, easily useable transit for the people who most need and use it. And then the sad thing is that so many then complain about how much transit costs and wonder why more people don't use it. If you can't get to the transit easily and comfortably, and when you can't get off the transit and have an enjoyable, comfortable walk to lots of different places and services... people arent going to use it as much and it will cost you a lot more to operate your transit (thats money taken away from other city services btw). Design matters. Street design and placement of buildings matters. The people of Tulsa, of north Tulsa, have said as much. Why, again, the people who placed this building ignored that, have chosen to not make things better and more cost effective in this matter, baffles me. What a shame that something so obvious and easly done was so blatantly ignored.
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