The Virgin Islands Government Hospital and Health Facilities Corporation submitted a comprehensive restructuring and cost-cutting plan on May 30, one day after receiving $13 million in emergency funds tied to a legislative mandate requiring the proposal within 30 days.
According to senators, the requirement was aimed at addressing chronic cash flow problems and mounting vendor unrest at the territory’s two public hospitals.
In a call with the Source on Sunday, Jerry Smith, chair of the GHHFC board, confirmed that the $13.5 million in emergency funds, appropriated through Act 8985 from Epstein civil settlement proceeds, was deposited on May 29 and used immediately to begin paying vendors. “Eighty percent of the money went out right away,” Smith said. “We were ready. We didn’t want to wait.”
The 40-page austerity plan, submitted to Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. and Senate President Milton Potter, outlines a dual approach: immediate expenditure reductions paired with long-term modernization. According to Smith, this is just the beginning. “People were crying fire, but a lot of these actions were already in motion,” he said. “This plan formalizes them.”
The plan’s release marks a significant turning point for the Schneider Regional Medical Center and the Gov. Juan F. Luis Hospital, both of which have faced mounting debt, vendor holdbacks, workforce shortages, and post-disaster infrastructure setbacks. Among the most pressing challenges is the rising cost of staffing and operations. “We haven’t renegotiated physician salaries since 2002,” Smith noted, citing the need to rethink employment models and attract more full-time doctors under improved salary structures.
Cost-Cutting by the Numbers
At JFL, the austerity plan identifies $6.6 million in savings through workforce realignment, eliminating unfilled roles, and consolidating administrative positions. Supply cost reductions are expected to generate an additional $5.2 million, much of it through bulk purchasing and tighter inventory controls. The hospital has also centralized billing and expanded outpatient services, including two new lab draw stations expected to bring in up to $80,000 a year.
SRMC reported $1.66 million in cuts through staff reductions, contract renegotiations, and the suspension of nonessential services such as transportation and unused software subscriptions. A revenue boost of over $5 million is projected through the expansion of gastroenterology services, improved emergency room billing practices, and a newly implemented revenue cycle management system.
Both hospitals are also pursuing technology upgrades, particularly in cybersecurity and billing infrastructure. A systemwide data breach at JFL in April 2025, along with previous cyberattacks at SRMC, has accelerated plans for a cloud-based electronic medical record system, which GHHFC is now prioritizing in collaboration with the Office of Health Information Technology.
But the most sweeping reforms are still to come. In July, members of the hospital boards and key executives will embark on a fact-finding mission to Florida to study successful public health systems. “We’re looking at systems that work – models that match the needs of our territory,” Smith said. The goal, he explained, is not to recreate what already exists elsewhere but to identify best practices for a more unified, efficient model that delivers critical care, outpatient services, and wraparound support.
“What we’re envisioning isn’t just two hospitals,” Smith added. “We’re talking about one integrated system with strategic tentacles that raise the level of care throughout the territory.”
That includes expanding access to specialty services like neurology and psychiatry via telemedicine — an initiative expected to generate $1.5 million over three years, while reducing reliance on costly off-island transfers. Plans are also in motion to create ambulatory Clinical Centers of Excellence focused on cardiac and diabetic care.
A territory-wide strategic planning retreat is scheduled for August to finalize the five-year road map.
Next Steps and Accountability
While the emergency funds provided short-term relief, Smith emphasized that true stability will require continued government support and community buy-in. “We don’t need support just to get through this moment,” he said. “We have a mandate to improve health care in the Virgin Islands — and we will.”
The submission of the austerity plan brings GHHFC into compliance with Act 8985, which also requires quarterly progress reports to the Legislature. Budget hearings are expected to address the hospital system’s outlook in the coming weeks.
“We’re completing the process of making offers to new physicians, we’re redefining what kind of hires we need, and we’re being honest about where the gaps are,” Smith said. “This is about being strategic and informed – not just cutting costs, but building something better.”
St. Croix Source
Local news