SYRACUSE, N.Y. — St. Joseph’s Health plans to create a new, $31 million center for cardiovascular care under a $20 million capital campaign to mark the organization’s 150th anniversary in 2019.
“We are pleased to announce that we’ve already raised $12 million toward that goal,” David Panasci, chair of the St. Joseph’s Health Foundation board of directors and chair of the 150th Anniversary Campaign, said in his remarks at Friday morning’s announcement.
The effort represents the organization’s “most determined philanthropic endeavor yet,” St. Joseph’s Health said in a news release issued Friday.
St. Joseph’s plans to renovate existing space in the hospital for the new center. It’ll have six special-procedure rooms, a new hybrid operating room, and “nearly double” the space currently used for these services. The organization expects it’ll be “fully completed” by the fall of 2018.
St. Joseph’s will name the center for cardiovascular care for Dr. A. John Merola, who has been “closely aligned” with St. Joseph’s Health for more than 50 years. He helped create the family-medicine residency program in the 1970s, St. Joseph’s added.
Merola, who donated a $3 million contribution toward the project, is serving as the honorary chairman for the 150th anniversary campaign.
It was a “sizable and momentum-building gift,” said Panasci.
Additional projects
Besides the cardiovascular-care center, St. Joseph’s Health also plans to redesign its current breast care and surgery suite to provide more services in a single location, the organization said in a news release issued Friday.
In the fall of 2017, St. Joseph’s Health will co-locate its breast-imaging services within the current breast care and surgery suite at Northeast Medical Center in Fayetteville.
St. Joseph’s will collaborate with St. Joseph’s Imaging for imaging services within the suite.
In addition, the organization also plans upgrades to the St. Joseph’s College of Nursing, including a new lecture hall, as the organization believes the building is “outdated, inefficient and inadequate for the size of the student body and today’s technological requirements.”
“Beyond that, our future plans include an updated women’s and children’s unit; renovations to our orthopedic and spine center; and expanding the primary-care center in our community,” Leslie Luke, president and CEO of St. Josephs’ Health, said in remarks at Friday morning’s announcement.
The capital campaign won’t cover the cost of all the projects involved, Luke said in speaking with reporters after the event.
“The rest of the money will come from our own equity. We won’t be borrowing money for that,” said Luke.
The capital campaign will continue into 2018, he added.
St. Joseph’s Hospital was founded by Sr. Marianne Cope and four other Sisters of St. Francis in 1869 at the summit of Prospect Hill, where it is still located today.
St. Joseph’s Health in July 2015 formally joined Livonia, Michigan–based Trinity Health, which describes itself as “one of the largest multi-institutional, Catholic health-care delivery systems in the nation.”
St. Joseph’s Health had transferred the nonprofit sponsorship from the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities to Trinity Health’s Catholic Health Ministries.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com