We're on a listening tour across North Carolina, talking to local leaders who are collaborating on solutions to our toughest common challenges. Our goal is to understand the complex diversity of our state, to celebrate the grassroots heroes working to improve the health and well-being of all North Carolinians and to learn from their worthy efforts.
Pender County Demographics
Population
62,815
Population Density Distribution
Rural
Median Income
$60,044
Our visit to Pender County began at the Historic Burgaw Train Depot. The Burgaw Train Depot is the oldest railroad depot in North Carolina.1 It was restored to resemble the historic makeup of the building, and it now serves as an event center for the town of Burgaw.
Pender County is a fast-growing county just north of Wilmington. The county consists of several vacation communities along the coastline including Topsail Beach and Surf City, as well as significant farmland inland. The county has over 300 farms producing crops such as soybeans and animals such as “broiler chicken” and hogs.2
We were greeted by Pender County native and former North Carolina Farm Bureau CEO Larry Wooten.
“Burgaw is a great community, it is a true community with a small-town spirit, and it is fantastic for you all to be here,” noted Wooten. Wooten once owned a large farm in the community, and he said with a smile that he was married just down the street from the rail depot.
Blue Cross NC President and CEO Dr. Tunde Sotunde said Blue Cross NC remains on the road for the Extra Miles Tour in order to “get out of our buildings in the Research Triangle and out into communities to understand what is going on in your communities.”
Our time in Pender County was guided by the Cape Fear Collective and Community Care of the Lower Cape Fear. Cape Fear Collective is a social impact organization focused on sparking system change in southeastern North Carolina through collaborations focused on the intersection of leveraging local assets, data and social impact investing around issues such as housing and health care. Community Care of the Lower Cape Fear works with Prepaid Health Plans, ACOs, practices and providers to improve patient outcomes, experience and satisfaction. The organization is also one of the three Network Leads chosen for the Healthy Opportunities Pilot.
The conversation focused on the Healthy Opportunities Pilot for the region. The Healthy Opportunities Pilot is a large-scale pilot program to test and evaluate what North Carolina’s Department of Health and Human Services describes as, “evidence-based, non-medical interventions related to housing, food, transportation and interpersonal safety and toxic stress to high-needs Medicaid enrollees.”3
Our conversation included an overview of the Healthy Opportunities Pilot in the region. We were also able to engage in conversation with several organizations that are helping to execute the pilot including Pender County Christian Services and Destiny Total Healthcare. A key takeaway from the conversation is the need to learn from the complexity of putting together the coalition of nonprofits, government agencies and for-profit businesses that are needed to meet the needs of the targeted population.
Sarah Ridout, the Healthy Opportunities Pilot Director for Community Care of the Lower Cape Fear, walked us through the sobering statistics the pilot seeks to address including the roughly 1,200,000 North Carolinians who struggle to find affordable housing and the 8th highest rate of food insecurity in the country.
Sandy Harris, the Executive Director of Pender County Christian Services, noted the Healthy Opportunities Pilot has been important for the residents she serves because, “Elderly people won’t inherently ask for help, so we need a united approach.”
The community in action
Blue Cross NC Extra Miles Tour
Disclosures:
County Statistics data sourced from US Census Bureau
Population Density Designation data sourced from from NC Rural Center.
All other trade names are the property of their respective owners.
U39702, 12/23
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