Chattanooga Times Free Press

Internet aids Tullahoma land company

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

A Nashville area health care company is expanding to Tullahoma, Tennessee, where it will invest nearly $1 million and create 200 new jobs over five years.

Tullahoma’s robust fiber optic network and communicat­ions infrastruc­ture was a key reason EnableComp LLC, which will process medical insurance claims, picked the city, said

Thom Robinson, executive director of the Tullahoma Area Economic Developmen­t Corp.

“We’ve got some of the best there is with the fiber optic capabiliti­es we have,” he said, also citing Chattanoog­a’s highspeed internet. “We can offer gig service and more to any place in our city.”

EnableComp is a full-service processor of complex medical claims, serving more than 800 health care providers across 39 states, according to the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t. Founded in 2000, EnableComp currently has about 240 employees at its headquarte­rs in Franklin.

The company processes 180,000 claims annually and uses clinical expertise, datadriven analytics, managed-care and proprietar­y technology to achieve results for its clients, according to the state.

“We’ve got some of the best there is with the fiberoptic capabiliti­es we have.”

— THOM ROBINSON

EnableComp President and CEO David Jones said Tullahoma is perfectly situated to be another “center of operationa­l excellence” for the business.

“We want to be the employer of choice in Coffee County,” he said.

Coffee County Mayor Gary Cordell, too, cited the fiber optic service, adding that there are discussion­s about a potential new call center from another company.

“They’ve got outstandin­g service,” he said about Tullahoma’s fiber optics, adding that EnableComp will be one of the city’s larger employers.

Robinson said the building at 1400 Cedar Lane that EnableComp will occupy is about 10,000 square feet in size and centrally located.

“It’s close to everything,” he said, adding there is more adjacent space opening up should EnableComp want to expand its footprint in the future.

Robinson termed the structure “nice and fairly new.” While some money will go into remodeling the space, most is going into equipment, he said.

The economic developmen­t official said the city didn’t offer incentives, but he believes the state may have provided some for workforce training.

State Economic and Community Developmen­t Commission­er Bob Rolfe said Middle Tennessee is a hub of health care innovation, with more than 250,000 Tennessean­s working in the industry across the greater Nashville region.

“I’m pleased to see one of our home-grown businesses, EnableComp, move forward with this considerab­le expansion in Coffee County,” he said.

Anticipati­ng the grand opening of the new facility in September, the company will host a career fair on Aug. 21 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at Northgate Mall in Tullahoma.

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