Hoag gets OK to add to expansion
June Casagrande
A request by Hoag Hospital to add almost 50,000 square feet to the
next phase of the hospital’s expansion has won the approval of city
leaders, but not without some serious reservations.
Hospital representatives asked the City Council to increase the
area on which they could build the planned East Tower because state
and federal regulations passed in the 10 years since Hoag’s expansion
was approved require the hospital to make more space for utilities,
as well as electrical and mechanical equipment. The tower was
originally planned to be 397,711 square feet.
Peter Foulke, the hospital’s executive vice president of corporate
services, emphasized that all the hospital wanted was to have the
same amount of space for health-care services as was originally
approved in 1992.
“The health-care needs in this community are expanding,” Foulke
said. “Hoag Hospital is here only to serve the community. We’re not
for profit.”
But Councilman Gary Adams worried that the action, as written,
could give the hospital carte blanche to exceed floor-area limits for
future buildings.
“My concern has to do with the integrity of the process,” Adams
said. “This has the potential of undoing all the decision-making
process that took place a long time ago. I don’t think that it’s fair
to people who were originally involved in this process.”
Adams on Tuesday suggested allowing the hospital to expand as
requested, but on the conditions that the loosened regulations not
apply to future buildings and that the hospital agree not to use any
of the added floor space for traffic-generating uses, such as patient
care.
But fellow council members didn’t back him up. Councilman Gary
Proctor made an alternative motion. The hospital should agree to
Adams’ second condition, Proctor said, but hospital administrators
should not have to go through the same process for future buildings,
he said. Council members agreed, approving the action 6 to 1, with
Adams’ the only “no” vote.
But controversy over Hoag expansion will probably continue. Some
neighbors have said that sprawl on the Hoag campus must be reined in
to prevent problems such as excessive traffic and noise generated by
emergency rooms.
“We’re doing the Hoag dance,” resident John Chamberlain said.
“This should be exposed as a brand-new approach.”
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