August 1997 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina • 5 Greensboro health care nonprofits may mei^ Wesley Long Community Hospital and Moses Cone Health Systems seek federal approval for merger and develop an outline to create a foundation. By Leslie Broberg Greensboro In years to come, the summer of 1997 may be remembered as the sea son of nonprofit hospital mergers in the Piedmont. Just as the new Novant Health System in Winston-Salem and Charlotte was formally emerging as a regional health care giant, Greensboro’s Wesley Long Community Hospital and Moses Cone Health System were entering the final phase of their proposed merger plans. In early July, the two hospitals filed their officiM mei^r notice with the Federal Trade Commission, which will decide whether the merger would create an unwanted health care monopoly in Greensboro. Hospital officials are hoping for an approval within 30 days. Combining the two interests would involve folding the 309-bed Wesley Long HEALTH Community Hospital CARE into the 547-bed Moses Cone Memorial Hospital, which includes the 115-bed Women’s Hospital of Greensboro and other specialty ser vices and physician practices. In addition to saving the com bined hospitals $53 million over five years, the merger would establish a more competitive force in the local health care market that now includes Novant Health, with its bold plans to serve more than 2.2 million people in North Carolina and parts of Vir^a and South Carolina. As hospital officials await the FTC ruling, they are laying the groundwork for the $50 millkp Wesley Long Community Health Foundation, to be funded by the hos pital’s former sale of shares in PHP Inc., the health maintenance organi zation The foundation will award $2.5 million in grants each year for pro jects that help improve the health of the community. The hospitals have already named officers to this new founda tion, which will begin operating if the merger is approved. William R. Rogers, the former president of Guilford College, was named chair man, and Warren G. Corgan, a former vice president at AT&T, was named vice chairman. Hospitals Continued from page 3 cialties. Facing managed care and height ened competition, many hospitals around the country have been seek ing partners to help strengthen their stance in the health care arena. Carolina Medicorp and Presbyterian were no exception. The for-profit Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corp., for example, was once rumored to be a possible partner for Presbyterian. But Carolina Medicorp and Presbyterian decided to join forces, maintaining their nonprofit status and keeping their form of health care out of the hands of Wall Street investors and distant managers. “We will retain medical manage ment in the providers’ hands,” says Gregory J. Beier, who was named president of Novant’s Triad region. “We’ll look to the MDs — not the MBAs — to develop the best ways to practice medicine.” Novant will be led by Wiles, who was previously the president and chief executive officer of Carolina Medicorp. Paul E Betzold, who was president and chief executive officer at Presbyterian Healthcare System, is now president of Novant’s Southern Piedmont Region. “As we began the due diligence process, we found no impediments to proceeding,” Betzold says. “It con firmed what we had been saying aU along—this is a merger of two equals with similar missions and visions of the future.” hi seeking its new status, Novant needed routine state and federal approvals from the North Carolina Medical Care Commission, the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Trade Commission. Novant also had to convince Forsyth County to change the bylaws of Carolina Medicorp and Forsyth Memorial Hospital. Since 1984, when Carolina Medicorp was created to run Forsyth Memorial, county commis sioners have appointed 12 of Carolina’s 19 trustees. But a change was needed if the new entity was to reach beyond the scope of the county. Now, under the changed bylaws, Forsyth County Commissioners will appoint one person to Novant’s Board of Trustees. They will also approve the nominations of 12 of the 19 Paul M. Wiles trustees on the board that will over see Forsyth Memorial after the merg er. The interesting fallout from this exchange was a $10 million gift to the county that will likely be used to pay for health care needs in the county. The pay ment was “never a key factor in the merger,” says Peter Brunstetter, chairman of the Forsyth County Commission and the new Forsyth area trustee on Novant’s board. “It is a return to the government for an asset that has grown over time,” he explains. Brunstetter says the money will be put in a bank to collect interest for one year until County Manager Graham Pervler develops suggestions for its use. But, Pervier adds, “we will take our time in recommending strate gies.” NONPROFIT BRIEFS LEADERSHIP Web site for women Juliette Tracey Gcddman is the new director of development and outreach at Women’s Connection Online, a web site for professional women and women business owners, located at http:/Avww.womenconnect. com>. Goldman will work to increase the visibility of women business owners, women’s non profit organizations and volun teer efforts on the Internet. She also will work to improve Internet access for these women. Goldman was director of development and outreach for the Washington Area Community Investment Fund and has served as deputy director of the National Women’s Business Council. research Why do nonprofits die? New research sponsored by the Nonprofit Sector Research Fund attempts to answer the question: Why do nonprofits die? Researchers used a sample of organizations tracked over 15 years and interviewed represen tatives from “dead” organiza tions. The study found smaller and younger organizations were more likely to die than older and larger ones. Small size was sin gled out by 37 percent of respon dents as the main reason for closing. Twenty percent pointed to organizational instability, such as personal loss and turnover, as the most critical factor. A signifi cant number indicated their organizations were harmed by the influence of strong board members. housing Fannie Mae would aid Habitat The Fannie Mae Foundation has announced a $1 million chal lenge grant to Habitat for Humanity International. The announcement was made at the First Annual James W. Rouse Forum on the American City in Washington. The Fannie Mae Foundation’s $1 million challenge grant over two years will support Habitat for Humanity International in developing a dedicated operating reserve fund of $10 million, based on an annual operating budget projected to grow to $100 million by 2002. The Fannie Mae Foundation will match $1 for every $3 Habitat raises in response to its challenge grant. CaE (800) HABITAT. FUNDRAISING Used-car charity under fire The nonprofit that built a multi-million-dollar charity from used car donations was slapped with a preliminary injunction recently amid charges of fraud and false advertising, according to reports by the San Francisco Examiner and the Associated Press. The order, passed down by Superior Court Judge William Cahill, means the Jewish Educational Center must close until a hi^er court overturns the ruling. Cahill had appointed a receiver to oversee the non profit’s assets, which the charity reported as $1.8 million. The charity runs one of the largest for-profit used-car deal ers in the U.S., with sales of $8.5 million last year. But it spent only $1.45 million on charity causes. 1997 North Carolina Funders Summit Making Chanqe Happen A conversation among funders and state government decision-makers ■ Sponsored hy the Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina ■ Co-sponsored by the Office of the Governor Thursday, October 30, 1997 Raleigh Marriott Crabtree Valley Raleigh, North Carolina Featured Speakers George Autry, President, MDC Inc. Tom Bacon, Director, North Carolina Area Health Education Centers Pheon Beal, Associate Director, Employment Programs, State Division of Social Services Philip Blumenthal, Director and Trustee, Blumenthal Foundation Robin Britt, Policy Adviser to the Governor for Children, Families and Nonprofits David l^bxi. State Secretary of Human Resources Jeanne Butler, Executive Director, Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts Rick Carlisle, Adviser to the Governor for Economic Policy Todd Cohen, Editor and Publisher, Phi/anthroP)i Journal of North Carolina Ray Cope, Executive Director, Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust Janis S. Dempster, Director of Corporate Communications, Sprint John Doman, President, Public School Forum of North Carolina Katie Dorsett, State Secretary of Administration William Friday, Executive Director, William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust Jim Henderson, Head of Upper School, Carolina Friends School Bill Holman, Director of Government Affairs, North Carolina Chapter, Nature Conservancy Tom Houlihan, Governor’s Education Adviser The Honorable James B. Hunt Jr., Governor of North Carolina Mack Jarvis, State Secretary of Corrections Joseph Kilpatrick, Assistant Director, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Tom Lambeth, Executive Director, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation Cathy Lawrence, Executive Director, Warren Family Institute Peter Leousis, Assistant State Secretary for Children, Youth and Families Rob Maddrey, President, Arts North Carolina Betty McCain, State Secretary of Cultural Resources Wayne McDevitt, State Secretary of Environment, Health and Natural Resources Kate McGuire, Program Director, N.C. Center for Nonprofits Sandra Mikush, Assistant Director, Mary Reynolds Babcock Foudnation Richard Moore, State Secretary of Crime Control and Public Safety Hilda Ragland'Pinnix, Manager, Community Relations, Carolina Power &. Light Co. James B. Hunt Jr, William Friday Jane Preyer, Director, North Carolina Environmental Defense Fund Deborah Ross, Executive Director and Legal Director, American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina Lao Rubert, Executive Director, Carolina Justice Policy Center Jonathan Sher, President, North Carolina Child Advocacy Institute Pam Silberman, Research Fellow, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, UNC-CH Leslie Takahashi, Executive Director, Wildacres Leadership Initiative Mike Ward, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Don Wells, Director, Certificate Program in Nonprofit Management, Duke University The 3rd annual statewide gathering for North Carolina’s grantmakers Conference open to funders and state officials only. ii Journal subscribers save $25 on confer- ence registration. * To request a brochure, please call (919) 899-3740 ■ Deadline to register is October 16, 1997