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When Jack Richardson came to Greenville in 1966, he signed on with a small county
hospital without a formal budget. When he retired in 1989, he left a thriving
organization with nearly 600 patient beds, a multi-million-dollar budget and
a vital partnership with a thriving medical school.
As the
hospital built on its hometown roots to become a major medical center, Richardson
guided it as a manager in the late 1960s, then moved into its top position
administrator during its critical growth years.
There
were a lot of people who were skeptical, he says of the hospitals
continued push for progress, and especially of the idea to relocate and rebuild.
There was such a demand for space, and people were really concerned. Finally,
after a couple or three years, the concept of a new hospital was finally born.
Richardson,
a Nash County native, attended school in Richmond, Va., and was living there
when Pitt Memorial executive C.D. Ward invited him for an interview. He was
so glad to be back in his homeland that he kissed the ground, his wife, Lily,
remembers. Arriving here, they saw the old brick hospital rise before them.
It was a prominent structure, he says. It was the only thing
at that end of town.
From
the beginning, doctors and board members talked about the possibility of a medical
school in Greenville and he embraced their sense of vision. That dream took
years of building, brick by brick and dollar by dollar.
We
were so busy with day-to-day things that we didnt spend a lot of time
thinking about that, he remembers. We had nursing shortages, we
had money and space shortages. In that old hospital we had people in the halls.
From
that hospital, built with federal funds from the Hill-Burton Act, Richardson
helped create a professional, multi-specialty health-care community. He did
this by cultivating good relations with county, state and regional officials,
earning their good will through hard work, honesty and old-fashioned persistence.
He recalls
how during the hospitals funding struggles, administrators in Charlotte
and other cities accused him of rabble rousing in the east.
When
I would go to meetings in Charlotte, it was not unusual for me to come out at
a break and a television camera would be set up at the door, he remembers.
They would ask if I was from Greenville, where they are trying to build
a medical school. I would bring them up to date and tell them, from my perspective,
how things were going. I didnt leave off the fact that you go where the
need is. If the need had not been in eastern North Carolina, then the hospital
and the medical school would not be there.
In 1971
he became administrator, the highest hospital role at that time. One of his
first tasks was to develop a budget and integrate Medicare and Medicaid payments
into it. The hospitals revenues were already near $1 million and technology
was entering the field as never before.
Funding
was always a challenge, Richardson says. If you dont have
equipment in your hospital when doctors come, they cant practice medicine.
So you have to make commitments to technology.
His other
commitments grew, as well. On Saturday mornings he met with doctors to hear
their presentations and lectures, helping him understand the specifics of hospital
operations.
In 1977
he led the hospitals largest effort ever as it moved to a new location.
It was far more than a change of address.
The
new hospital cost about $20 million to build, and the architects warned me that
it was going to cost that much to operate it the first year, he says.
I thought he couldnt be serious, but sure enough, when I prepared
that next budget, I showed it to (county commissioner) Charles Gaskins and he
told me I was out of my mind. Our budget was about $20 million.
Funding
and the ongoing struggle to expand helped define Richardsons many roles
as negotiator, leader and trusted peer. By the mid-1970s, the medical school
was taking shape and Richardson relied on other leaders to help ensure its success.
Among them were William Laupus, M.D., first dean of the medical school, Edwin
Monroe, M.D., then associate dean of the medical school and a strong supporter,
and Leo Jenkins, university president and its staunchest champion.
We
had good meetings, we had open meetings, we had some discussions where we didnt
agree, but we tried to find a common ground, he says.
The major
accomplishments under his leadership have remained to this day. The new
hospital is a 23-year-old medical center. The School of Medicine is regularly
ranked among the nations highest for family medicine. The rehabilitation
center is one of the states best and the medical district only
a concept in his day extends deep into the former farms and scrublands
of Pitt County.
Some
people did not think there would be much future in a small community,
he says. I dont really worry about the future of the medical center,
because I feel like it is in good hands and I know it will grow on its own from
here on out, as long as it has good leadership. |
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