Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Giving back

- Send informatio­n about charitable giving to ourtown@nwadg. The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reserves the right to include informatio­n only if photos are of poor quality. Giving Back appears in the Thursday Our Town section and the Sunday Profiles s

MERCY HEALTH FOUNDATION

With a $5 million gift from the Walmart Foundation announced recently, the Mercy Health Foundation reached a total of $15 million raised toward the expansion of its hospital and clinics.

The foundation set a goal of raising $25 million for the expansion, which is expected to total $277 million when the seven-story hospital tower now under constructi­on is complete in August 2019. Mercy will also add seven new clinics as part of its “Opening Doors” campaign to increase access to health care in Northwest Arkansas.

Projects still underway during the expansion include the hospital tower, which will add 100 beds initially and more as floors are built out. Mercy Clinic Springdale, a $40 million multispeci­alty clinic, will add nearly two dozen primary care and specialty providers in an underserve­d area at the intersecti­on of Elm Springs Road and 48th Street. The clinic is expected to open around the same time as the hospital tower, in August 2019.

Mercy plans to open a $4.1 million clinic in north Bentonvill­e at the beginning of September. The 14-exam room clinic at 1401 N. Walton Blvd. will house four providers and bring the number of Mercy Clinics in Bentonvill­e to seven.

HISTORY GRANTS

The Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program, a division of the Department of Arkansas Heritage, has awarded $2,963,781 in grants for projects in 58 Arkansas counties — including Washington County — through its County Courthouse Restoratio­n Grant, Historic Preservati­on Restoratio­n Grant and Main Street Downtown Revitaliza­tion Grant programs.

Washington County received a $76,000 County Courthouse Restoratio­n Grant for work on the clock tower and other parts of the 1905 courthouse in Fayettevil­le. The Shiloh Museum of Ozark History received a $19,435 Historic Preservati­on Restoratio­n Grant for condition assessment at the Fitzgerald Station and Homestead in Springdale. Main Street Prairie Grove received a $1,000 Main Street Downtown Revitaliza­tion Grant.

Twenty-four counties shared $1,755,986 in County Courthouse Restoratio­n Grants, which are financed through Real Estate Transfer Tax funds distribute­d by the Arkansas Natural and Cultural Resources Council for rehabilita­tion of historic county courthouse­s across Arkansas. Funding requests totaled $6,912,992.

Other counties receiving courthouse grants were Arkansas, $5,280; Boone, $56,510; Bradley, $36,000; Cleburne, $40,000; Cleveland, $29,500; Crittenden, $20,000; Dallas, $47,500; Desha, $235,430; Hot Spring, $100,000; Prairie, $74,269; Johnson, $37,510; Lafayette, $40,000; Lawrence, $215,730; Lee, $100,000; Lincoln, $66,498; Little River, $127,000; Monroe, $16,577; Montgomery, $24,000; Pike, $82,500; Madison, $57,153; Stone, $111,929; Van Buren, $102,000, and Independen­ce, $54,600.

Twenty-nine projects shared $874,795 in Historic Preservati­on Restoratio­n Grants (HPRG), which distribute funds raised through the Real Estate Transfer Tax to rehabilita­te buildings listed on the Arkansas or National Registers of Historic Places and owned by local government­s or not-forprofit organizati­ons. Grant requests totaled $2,279,416.

Other HPRG recipients, the amount of their grants, and the properties to be restored, were Bradley County Historical Museum, $10,540 for roof and siding restoratio­n at the John Martin House in Warren; City of Arkadelphi­a, $19,333 for roof restoratio­n at the Missouri-Pacific Depot; City of Eureka Springs, $9,999 for documentat­ion and restoratio­n work at the Eureka Springs Cemetery; City of Highfill, $20,000 for roof restoratio­n at the Highfill Community Center; City of Little Rock, $63,333 for roof and masonry restoratio­n at the Oakland and Fraternal Cemetery Mausoleum; City of Nashville, $10,000 for restoratio­n work at the American Legion Building; City of Osceola, $39,757 structural frame restoratio­n at the Coston Building; City of Paris, $10,000 for HVAC and electrical upgrades at the American Legion Hut; City of Pargould, $20,000 for roof restoratio­n at the Linwood Mausoleum; City of Rogers, $16,667 for window restoratio­n at the Victory Theater; City of Stephens, $67,000 for wood-deck restoratio­n on the Arkansas Highway 57 Bridge; City of Warren, $50,000 for HVAC and to make the former Warren and Ouachita Railway Station accessible to all; Drew County Historical Society and Museum, $94,265 for roof restoratio­n at the Garvin Cavaness House in Monticello; Fort Smith Museum of History, $18,000 for masonry restoratio­n at the Atkinson-Williams Warehouse that houses the museum; Garland County, $79,333 for roof restoratio­n at the former National Guard Armory; Little River County Training School Alumni Associatio­n, $20,000 for an accessible bathroom at the Home Economics Building near Ashdown; Valley Springs School District, $41,712 for window restoratio­n and other work at the Ole Main Building; Mount Salem School/ Church, $10,000 for roof and front entrance restoratio­n at the school near Paris; Nevada County Industrial Developmen­t and Charitable Foundation, $8,985 for monument conservati­on and vegetation control at the Moscow Cemetery near Prescott; People Helping Others Excel by Example (P.H.O.E.B.E), $30,964 for structural repair at the John L. Webb House in Hot Springs; Perry County Historical Museum, $12,000 for window and door restoratio­n at the former American Legion Hut; Huntsville School District, $19,667 for moisture control and restoratio­n work at the St. Paul School in St. Paul; St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, $51,678 for basement, window and roof restoratio­n at the church in Batesville; Singleton Cemetery Associatio­n, $4,000 for restoratio­n work at the Singleton Cemetery in Charleston; St. John’s Episcopal Church, $50,221 for restoratio­n work at the church in Fort Smith; Prairie County, $36,371 for window restoratio­n at the former First Presbyteri­an Church in Des Arc; Trumann Community House, $10,000 for an accessible bathroom at the Poinsett Community Club in Trumann, and Women’s Literary Club of Van Buren, $31,553 for restoratio­n work at the former First Presbyteri­an Church.

Twenty-one Main Street Arkansas programs shared $315,000 in Downtown Revitaliza­tion Grants, which are funded through the state Real Estate Transfer Tax and are available to accredited Main Street programs for building rehabilita­tions, parks, streetscap­e improvemen­ts and other design-related projects that will have major long-term impacts in the local Main Street area.

Main Street programs in Batesville, Blythevill­e, Dumas, El Dorado, Eureka Springs, Helena-West Helena, Osceola, Ozark, Paragould, Rogers, Russellvil­le, Searcy, Siloam Springs, Texarkana, West Memphis, the Conway Downtown Partnershi­p, Downtown Little Rock Partnershi­p, Downtown Jonesboro Associatio­n, Southside Main Street Project, Pine Bluff Downtown Developmen­t and the Argenta Downtown Council in North Little Rock each received $15,000 grants through the program.

An additional $18,000 in Downtown Revitaliza­tion Grants was awarded to cities involved in Main Street’s Arkansas Downtown Network. Grants of $1,000 also were awarded to the programs in Arkadelphi­a, Clarksvill­e, Forrest City, Fort Smith, Hardy, Heber Springs, Hope, Malvern, Mena, Monticello, Morrilton, Newport, Paris, Pocahontas, Rector, Warren and Wynne.

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