Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hospital opens in Sevier County

Residents eager to tour facility

- LORI DUNN

DeQUEEN — Rain couldn’t keep county residents from touring the new Sevier County Medical Center on Friday.

The hospital, at 960 U.S. 71 N., held its grand opening Friday, and a large crowd turned out to see the facility that the county has been working toward for over three years.

The $24 million hospital should start accepting patients in about a week.

“This is your hospital,” hospital board Chairman Steve Cole said to the crowd. “Go look at it. This is what the tax is for. This is what we wanted to do.”

Cole said constructi­on is finished, but now comes the hard part.

“We have to keep it a viable, functionin­g hospital,” he said.

Sevier County voters approved a 1% sale tax in a 2019 special election to build the hospital. The county’s previous hospital, which was owned by an out-of-state company, closed earlier in 2019 after a series of financial setbacks.

That closure has been hard on county residents, who have had to go to Nashville or Ashdown for treatment, Cole said.

Residents were eager to tour the new hospital and see the different department­s, such as radiology and emergency.

“It couldn’t have been any better as the entire community came out to support their local hospital. We have purposely hired the staff we have to match the energy of the hospital, meaning patient care will be job one,” Cole said.

Cole also thanked the city of DeQueen and Mayor Jeff Brown for their cooperatio­n. Since the hospital was built outside the city limits, cooperatio­n from the city was needed for infrastruc­ture issues such as sewers.

The new hospital has 15 beds and 10 rooms in the emergency department, according to county officials.

Hospital staff have been moving in over the past few weeks and training employees. The hospital is expected to employ over 100 people, which is good for economic developmen­t, Cole said.

“That is huge for our area,” Cole said.

The new hospital was scheduled to open Sept. 20, but constructi­on delays pushed the date back.

Vandalism earlier this year slowed constructi­on for a bit, but replacemen­t materials were obtained fairly quickly, and officials announced it would not affect the opening date.

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