The Navigator Homes development would cost $600 per night for private pay clients.
Provided, MVC Presentation

MVC Closes Hearing on Hospital's Nursing Home Development

A proposed nursing home and workforce housing development in Edgartown is nearing the final phase of its review before the Martha's Vineyard Commission.

A proposed nursing home and workforce housing development in Edgartown is nearing the final phase of its review before the Martha’s Vineyard Commission, after the commission closed its public hearing Thursday night.

Located on about 28 acres of land at 490 Edgartown-Vineyard Haven Road, the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital-Navigator Homes project would replace the hospital’s Windemere facility with a 66-bed skilled nursing home composed of five separate residences, along with 76 bedrooms for hospital and Navigator employees in 48 units of townhouse and duplex housing.

“We’re chomping at the bit to get this built,” said hospital trustee Ed Olivier during Thursday’s hearing, which was continued from a series of public sessions earlier this fall.

Hospital hiring is nearly at a standstill due to the Island housing crisis, Mr. Olivier said.

“Recruiting is just getting tougher and tougher,” he said.

Some neighbors of the undeveloped property have decried the project, saying it will bring traffic and unsightly views to their semi-rural area, while proponents maintain it’s urgently needed to help meet the Island’s chronic shortages of both nursing home beds and workforce housing.

“There is not another location for this,” said project attorney Geoghan Coogan, who noted that the hospital and Navigator Homes have agreed to plant additional trees and shrubs to help soften the visual impact of the main entrance, among other landscaping.

“We think with the surrounding buffers that we have and we’ve created, we can really minimize the neighborhood impact,” Mr. Coogan told the commission.

To offset nitrogen build-up from the development’s wastewater, project applicants are proposing to use an advanced denitrifying system and build 14 more at homes elsewhere in the watershed.

Commissioner Ben Robinson asked project engineer Ed Pesce whether an additional level of treatment could be added to account for the number of medications Mr. Robinson said it was likely that an elderly population of nursing home residents would be passing on to the wastewater stream.

The advanced septic system will be sufficient, Mr. Pesce said, adding that pharmaceutical use is going on in the neighborhood already.

“People on Teaberry [Lane] are taking drugs,” he said.

Other concessions made during the public hearing process have included a change from vinyl siding to cedar shingles for duplexes visible from the road and cementitious siding for townhomes on the far end of the property.

The Navigator buildings, also known as Green House Residences after the nonprofit Green House Project for alternative nursing home living, can’t be shingled because of strict federal safety rules, company president David McDonough told the commission in September.

“They are hypersensitive to anything that has any fire-causing capabilities,” he said.

Staying at Navigator Homes will cost $600 a day for privately-insured patients, Mr. McDonough told the commission last Thursday.

Long-term stays insured by Medicaid will cost $328 a day and short-term Medicare stays $689, both rates set by the state of Massachusetts, he said.

While high at $219,000 a year for private payers, the rate is not out of line in the current market, Mr. McDonough said, echoed by Mr. Coogan.

“The cost of care in a nursing home is pretty much the same anywhere,” Mr. Coogan said.

“It’s a very expensive place to live no matter what [insurance] track you’re on.”

Navigator Homes is committed to having no more than 50 per cent private-pay patients, Mr. McDonough told the commission.

“That’s how you make the project economics work,” he said.

Mr. McDonough also said that the average remaining lifespan of a patient in the Green House-style facility planned for Edgartown — with a limited number of residents in each of multiple buildings, and staff living nearby — is 5.5 years, compared to 1.5 years for someone in a traditional nursing home.

Vineyard residents can’t legally be given preference in admissions to the facility, Mr. Coogan said.

If approved, Mr. McDonough said, the project is expected to take 18 months to two years to complete.

Navigator Homes recently announced $44.5 million in loans for the project from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

While the MVC’s public hearing is closed, the written record remains open until 5 p.m. Nov. 3, to be followed by commission deliberations at a later date.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 10/23/2022 - 07:08

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here we go again edg

Since this is a 'for-profit' based upon the $600 per day for private patients, I'd expect this enterprise to pay real estate property taxes like the rest of us. Seriously who can afford $600 per day?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 10/23/2022 - 07:28

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Ben I Edgartown

No wastewater hookup, no building. Morgan Woods had to hook to sewer. It’s ridiculous to fathom a project this size being put on septic. The hospital had a “verbal” agreement for waste water years ago and lost it. Now they’re trying to jam this project in. Unprecedented use of Nitroe systems at this scale on our island. Not to mention the additional water load demand on our resources. I am a strong supporter for elderly care but - WHY - does this project gave to be SO LARGE? In a residential area… consider the 100+ asphalt parking spaces. Can’t we accomplish the same outcome without clear cutting pristine forest? Without building double decker tract workforce housing? Please consider the ramifications of this plan and send it back to the drawing board. Lastly… where is the call to renovate Windermere as a stop gap? How did they let it degrade so rapidly…follow the facts here. It does not add up.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 10/23/2022 - 11:29

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gina Menemsha/NYC

It would be helpful if the Gazette can research if the rates given buy the Navigator representatives as State dictated for every MASS nursing /long term care facility.. Sounds a tad high to me.. Also if that rate includes all incidentals for the residents.
Also how/who will manage the staff housing program ?? I have read that Navigator has received private equity investments from Silver Lake Partners. which isn't a non profit entity.. perhaps the Gazette can investigate that financing connection..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/25/2022 - 10:12

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Lorraine Edgartown

Be very careful here; wheels within wheels. This should not be built with a septic system for wastewater. It needs its own treatment plant and we are talking hazardous waste and constant use of huge amounts of water and the trash from such a facility will be enormous. Plus, this is all mandated systems....this should not be built at all here in the present form.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 10/26/2022 - 19:41

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Amy Edgartown

The waste water plan alone should halt this project....

$219,000 a year for private payers? What island elder can afford that? Not many. Long term Vineyard residents will still be forced to leave the island that they were born on. This does not help the average aging Vineyard resident

Why can't Windemere be better utilized again? Maybe if admissions hadn't been halted it would not be in such a poor financial state now.
The merger with Mass General continues to create a broader gap in vision and care for islanders.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/27/2022 - 12:42

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Ken Edg.

The advanced septic system will be sufficient. Didnt they say this about the bowling alley in OB?

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