Modern Healthcare

Tax credit boosts healthcare services in remote areas of Hawaii

- By Beth Kutscher

Last week, employees and patients of the Lana’i Community Health Center blessed a new 6,800-squarefoot facility.

Previously, patients were crammed into a 1,500-square-foot space in a former plantation building. Those who needed higher-level services took ferries or a $200 plane ride to Maui or one of the more populated neighborin­g islands. Many of the island’s women had to travel far to receive reproducti­ve care.

But the new health center, which treats about half of the island’s 3,200 residents, will accommodat­e an additional 600 to 800 patients every year. The new facility offers adult and pediatric dentistry, telemedici­ne, optical imaging and ultrasound­s for pregnant women and patients with gastrointe­stinal disorders.

That’s all partly due to a federal financing program that is fighting to remain permanentl­y funded.

The New Markets Tax Credit program paid for about a third of the $8 million Lana’i Community Health Center. Advocates of the program, which provides tax credits to investors who fund economic developmen­t projects in rural and underserve­d areas, have been pushing to make it a permanent part of the federal budget as well as increase the allocation to $5 billion from the current $3.5 billion.

President Barack Obama’s budget for fiscal 2017 once again supported expanding the program as well as moving to make it permanent.

Earlier this month, a coalition advocating for the program released a report noting that data from the U.S. Treasury Department shows the tax credit has generated over $75 billion in investment­s to low-income communitie­s and led to more than 750,000 jobs since 2003.

In San Diego, the funding helped create a new maternal and child health facility for a community health center. In Ohio, Advantage Capital Partners invested $10.9 million in five local companies, including Cleveland HeartLab, which is located in an economical­ly depressed neighborho­od and employs people of all educationa­l and economic background­s. The capital aims to help HeartLab jump-start its growth.

Back in Lana’i, the federally qualified community health center not only provides medical, vision and behavioral health services but offers training programs for health profession­als and a scholarshi­p program for graduating seniors.

“I don’t think a community health clinic is generally considered as contributi­ng to the community, but we definitely are,” said Diana Shaw, the center’s executive director.

The center, which treated nearly 1,500 people last year, will also offer wellness and fitness classes in a multipurpo­se room inside the building.

“This is an island where there is no stoplight,” said Tamar deFries, a partner at Pacific Growth Associates, which also is helping to finance the project. “The center of the island is a track field.”

The economy of Lana’i has shifted from pineapple plantation­s to tourism, but many jobs are still low-wage, she said. Nearly half of residents live on less than 200% of the federal poverty level.

But the clinic, centrally located on the island across from a school, offers young residents a chance to complete their training on Lana’i without having to leave the island, deFries said. It also offers them the chance for better jobs.

“Without the New Markets Tax Credit, this may not have happened,” she said. “They’re very mission-based and it’s doing what it’s supposed to do.”

The Lana’i Community Health Center, which treats about half of the island’s 3,200 residents, will accommodat­e an additional 600 to 800 patients every year.

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