Or, what do you do with an apparently abandoned hospital that you can’t unload?
Today’s Statesman has an article about the hospital situation in Lakeway. (For those unfamiliar with Austin geography, Lakeway is a rapidly growing part of the greater Austin area, located west of Austin proper, out near Lake Travis.) I happen to be interested in this story for reasons I’m not sure I can talk about, but there’s some things in it that are worth blogging about.
Basically, there were plans for two hospitals. One is the Lakeway Regional Medical Center, which is going to be a pretty large complex (complete with labor and delivery facilities). The other was Lake Travis Transitional Medical Center, a smaller (46 beds) facility that started out as a “transitional facility”: “the hospital would be aimed at patients who were recovering from a traumatic injury or had some other serious medical problem and needed to be hospitalized 25 or more days.” At some point, though, plans changed and Lake Travis Transitional became a direct competitor of Lakeway Regional.
Another twist:
Lake Travis Transitional asked HUD for information about the loan, but HUD wasn’t forthcoming. LTT sued HUD:
Nobody with Lake Travis seems to want to talk to the Statesman these days.
My personal opinion is that this is slightly misleading. The distances the Statesman gives are accurate, but to get to Seton Southwest you have to travel Texas 71; traffic frequently backs up, especially in Oak Hill, and there have been a lot of serious (fatal) accidents on that stretch of road. The Hospital at Westlake is, I think, a little better to get to. Bee Cave Road isn’t as bad as 71. But The Hospital at Westlake strikes me as being more of a boutique hospital than a general practice one. It seems like the kind of place that people go to for plastic surgery, not where you’d go when your left ventricle seizes up.