Tuesday, 24 March 2009

Clinic construction begins: first steps

Drill rig at site 

Drill rig arrrives at clinic building site; engineers bore holes and take soil samples for testing. Test results will determine the type of foundation to be laid for the new clinic.

Engineers prep to test soil

Sunday, 05 October 2008

Groundbreaking Held October 4, 2008!

(c)KenTouchtonPhoto08-045

Tangier Island Health Foundation board members break ground for new Tangier Island clinic. From left: Jimmie Carter; Dr. David Nichols; island resident and P.A. Inez Pruitt; E. Carlton ("Buddy") Wilton, Jr.; B.H.B. Hubbard; Captain Lonnie Moore, also a Tangier resident.  (Photo:  Ken Touchton)

Tangier Island may be just a tiny sliver of land in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay, but people throughout Virginia and beyond care deeply about the health needs of its people.

That simple fact was demonstrated again and again on October 4th when the Tangier Island Health Foundation held its groundbreaking to mark the impending construction of a modern health clinic to serve the island’s 600 residents.

“How we got here today was because of people responding,” said Foundation Chairman James N. Carter, Jr., who spearheaded the project after touring the current facility in November, 2005. “It’s amazing how many friends you all have.”

Public institutions, foundations and private individuals have shown their support through donations, grants, and pledges that will meet the $1.2 million estimated cost for construction and equipment.  The new facility will replace a 50-year-old structure that’s cramped, ill-equipped and in serious disrepair.

When construction is completed next year, islanders will have a vastly modernized clinic that will be able to handle far more of the islanders’ medical problems, enabling those who are sick to avoid costly trips to the mainland for care. The commute can even be dangerous when inclement weather creates rough seas, and can be particularly taxing on the elderly and those with serious illnesses.

Dr. David Nichols, named “Country Doctor of the Year” in a national competition in 2006, has provided medical care in the outdated facility for 29 years, commuting weekly by boat, plane or helicopter. In the early days it was sometimes so cold in the clinic that you could see your breath, he recounted. “But no one complained.”

When Carter first toured the clinic in 2005, it was an eye-opening experience for Dr. Nichols as well. Carter “made me realize I had become so focused on the patients here that I had become oblivious to the conditions,” Dr. Nichols said. He soon realized that a better future was within reach. “We knew we had a compelling story.”

Dr. Nichols made his comments on a brilliantly sunny Saturday on Tangier. He stood within the spray-painted footprint of the new clinic, with the Tangier water tower as a backdrop. What began as a small event with just a handful of key supporters (and the promise of a much larger celebration when the clinic opens next fall) grew into an island happening. Nearly 200 townspeople attended, with town leaders organizing and hosting a pot-luck lunch for all— complete with live music—after the ceremony.

“Isolated the way we are, this new clinic is very much needed,” said Tangier Mayor James Eskridge, a resident waterman with deep family ties to the island. “We have had a lot of people working on this for a long time—people who don’t even live here, but they care about the community.”

State and federal grants have been supplemented by generous donations from foundations, civic clubs, churches, and individuals. Checks presented at the groundbreaking ranged from $760 raised by a church bake sale, to $12,000 worth of new medical equipment from regional Rotary clubs, to a $50,000 donation from Julien and Terri Patterson, residents of the Washington, D.C. area who have a vacation home in nearby Irvington, Virginia.

Some of the key professionals who have donated their time and expertise to the project from its inception were also recognized, including:

  • B.H.B. Hubbard, III, an Irvington lawyer who’s handled all the legal work for the new clinic
  • McGuireWoods Consulting, a Richmond firm that was instrumental in securing a $300,000 state grant from the 2006 Virginia General Assembly
  • William D. Prillaman, an Irvington architect who designed the new facility
  • David Jones, a White Stone contractor who is coordinating the construction process
  • Nancy Dykeman, a Gloucester CPA who has handled all the clinic’s accounting work.

Health care on Tangier took another leap forward last year, when Tangier native Inez Pruitt became the island’s first full-time medical professional. Pruitt, who started helping with filing at the clinic after dropping out of high school to marry, eventually earned her GED and, with encouragement from her clinic colleagues, returned to school in 2001 and completed her studies to become a physician’s assistant.

“This is my island, my home, my paradise,” said Pruitt, who was introduced by Dr. Nichols as “the future of Tangier health care.” “I am grateful for [the clinic] we have,” she said. “But I can’t tell you how much more grateful I am that we are getting a new facility.”

As the ceremony wound down, Carter asked everyone “to come up and turn a little piece of dirt.”

This belongs to all of us,” he said.

Saturday, 04 October 2008

Major Gift Launches Next Campaign Phase

Julien P. check

From left:  Jimmie Carter, Dr. Nichols, Terri Patterson, Julien Patterson.  (Photo by Ken Touchton)

At the October 4th groundbreaking for the new Tangier Island Health Center, Julien and Terri Patterson presented a check for $50,000 to Tangier Island Health Foundation Chairman Jimmie Carter and Dr. David Nichols. The Pattersons are residents of Oakton and Irvington, Virginia and have been following fundraising progress for the new facility from its inception in early 2007. "With this gift,” Patterson said, “ Terri and I wanted to make a significant contribution that will kick off the next stage of fundraising for this important project, enabling the Foundation to maintain the building and its equipment for years to come.”

Monday, 02 June 2008

Church Members Pledge $25,000 for Clinic Construction

Tihfchurch_groupreduced_2In March the Session of the Campbell Memorial Presbyterian Church in Weems, Virginia, agreed to pledge $25,000 for construction of a modern health clinic for Tangier Island, payable upon the start of construction. In announcing this generous grant, church Elder Richard A. Scott said, “We admire the efforts you have made in serving the people of Tangier Island and pray for the successful completion of the new clinic.” 

On May 18th, Tangier Island Health Foundation Chairman Jimmie Carter and board member Dr. David Nichols were invited to present plans for the new clinic to the members of the church during their Mission Sunday service, and at lunch following the service. Addressing the congregation Jimmie Carter said, “On behalf of the Foundation’s Board of Directors, I want to thank you all for this amazing gift. This project is so important to the people of Tangier Island who are as grateful as we are for this gift and the community support that it expresses.”

In the photo, from left:  The Reverend Clay Macaulay, Pastor; Tangier residents Jerry Pruitt and Physician’s Assistant Inez Pruitt; Dr. David Nichols; church member Suzi Bowman; Foundation Chairman Jimmie Carter; and Project Director Tina Hagen.

Cabell Foundation Awards $200,000 Grant

The Board of Directors of the Cabell Foundation, based in Richmond, Virginia, has approved a $200,000 grant to the Tangier Island Health Foundation.  Half of this amount will help with equipment needs.  An additional grant of $100,000 will be made pending a one-to-one match for construction of the new health clinic.

“With this wonderful donation, the completion of our state matching grant, and the recent pledge from the Campbell Memorial Presbyterian Church in Weems, we are now almost three-quarters of the way toward our goal of $1.25 million for constructing and equipping the clinic,” said Foundation Chairman Jimmie Carter.   

The  Cabell Foundation was established in 1957 by Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Cabell, III of Richmond, Virginia.  Grants are normally made on a challenge or matching basis for capital projects in the areas of arts and culture, community development, higher education, historic preservation, and social services and welfare.

Site Preparation Begins . . .

Demolitionforclinicreduced_3

With the demolition in May of the old house occupying the site of their modern health facility, islanders celebrated its reality with photos like this one taken by clinic receptionist Cindy Parks.

Friday, 02 May 2008

Recent Grant Brings Tangier Clinic Closer to Construction Goal

With a generous grant of $250,000 recently awarded by a family foundation, the Tangier Island Health Foundation has been able to meet the balance of its $285,000 matching grant from the Commonwealth of Virginia.   

This gift constitutes a major boost toward our Campaign goal of $1.25 million to build and equip a modern clinic on the island.  On awarding the grant, a trustee of the foundation said, “We hope that this gift not only will help improve health care on Tangier, but also encourage others to contribute to a project that we consider important to the preservation of this unique island culture.”

“This incredible gift moves us to a position where we can see the new clinic just over the horizon,” Tangier Island Health Foundation Chairman Jimmie Carter said.  “We are fortunate that the trustees of this foundation understood the need for a new clinic on Tangier Island and saw our mission as fitting their own goals.  We, and the citizens of Tangier Island, are deeply appreciative of their generosity.”

Tuesday, 15 January 2008

Kellogg Foundation Awards $25,000 Grant to Help Build Health Clinic on Virginia’s Isolated Tangier Island

Tangierclinicpic_3 A $25,000 grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation has enabled the Tangier Island Health Foundation to complete fundraising for its first goal:  purchase of the land on which a modern health clinic will be built for the residents of this remote island community in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay.

“Tangier is Virginia’s only island community and a national treasure,” says James N. Carter, Jr. "It is so isolated that its 600 residents still speak an Elizabethan dialect dating back to the island’s colonization in the 1600s." But the remoteness of this waterman community causes serious problems when it comes to accessing quality medical care.” Carter established the foundation last year after discovering the appalling condition of the existing clinic during a visit with Dr. David Nichols, who has piloted his own aircraft to the island every Thursday for the past 28 years to provide residents their only consistent primary health care.

The Foundation aims to build and equip an attractive, state-of-the-art facility that adheres to the island’s architectural heritage, providing a range of primary care, emergency services, and wellness and prevention programs. It will replace the existing clinic—a crumbling fifty-year-old bungalow with outdated equipment. The new clinic will also function as a base to attract additional medical providers, thus broadening the scope of medical services offered on the island.

A non-profit, community-based organization, the Tangier Island Health Foundation is committed to improving access to primary and preventive health care for Tangier‘s population. The venture is a public-private partnership, with the goal of raising $1.25 million to provide the quality of health care that this underserved population both needs and deserves.

Last year the Virginia General Assembly validated the project’s importance with a $300,000 matching grant presented to the islanders during a visit by Governor Timothy M. Kaine. Governor Kaine has since included an additional grant proposal of $200,000 for the project in his 2008-10 budget. The balance of the clinic’s funding will come from private foundations such as Kellogg, and caring individuals.

The W.K. Kellogg Foundation was established in 1930 “to help people help themselves through the practical application of knowledge and resources to improve their quality of life and that of future generations." To achieve the greatest impact, the Foundation targets its grants toward specific areas. These include: health; food systems and rural development; youth and education; and philanthropy and volunteerism. Within these areas, attention is given to exploring learning opportunities in leadership; information and communication technology; capitalizing on diversity; and social and economic community development.

Friday, 01 June 2007

Dr. David B. Nichols on ABC World News

Countrydoctoroftheyearawardpresenta Dr. David B. Nichols has been flying to Virginia's Tangier Island once a week for 28 years to care for the 600+ isolated residents. After being nominated for his efforts by a local resident, Dr. Nichols was named Country Doctor of the Year for 2006. This is a national award sponsored by Staff Care, a physician staffing firm.  Dr. Nichols was selected as ABC News Person of the Week for the week of January 19, 2007.

Thursday, 15 February 2007

Home

Home

Who We Are

  • Tangier Island Health Foundation is a non-profit, community-based organization committed to serving Tangier Island by raising funds in order to replace the existing 50 year old clinic with a fully equipped state-of-the-art medical clinic.

Recipes from the Island


  • In it's 3rd printing - A collection of favorite recipes from local Tangier men and women and those out of towners who have become like family.

Proposed Clinic



  • Rendering of the proposed Tangier Island Health Clinic - Architectural design by William D. Prillaman, Irvington, Virginia.

Photo Albums

  • Click on any of the albums below to view pictures:

Clinic Groundbreaking

  • (c)KenTouchtonPhoto08-085
    All photos taken by Ken Touchton © 2008