Bold developer stirs up nursing home biz
With a mix of money, moxie and missionary zeal,
The 36-year-old CEO of
"It's an industry in desperate need of innovation," Turner said.
So this year, even as his more-experienced competitors lobbied the Legislature to rein in Mainstreet's construction binge, Turner was cooking up a slew of new businesses that he said could grow Mainstreet's work force from 29 now to 7,500 within five years.
Those businesses include a nursing home operations arm, a medical transport company, pharmacy and therapy businesses, and even a line of long-term-care insurance products.
Now that the construction moratorium was shot down at the last minute - partly thanks to Mainstreet's aggressive investment plans and partly by the influence of Turner's father, the No. 2 Republican in the
He shows no aversion to risk. When he was a student at
Turner met his wife, Milissa, by introducing himself after she and her sisters performed a concert at a
And he has fueled his business growth with more than
But Turner thrives on growth. He and Milissa have six kids, age 8 and under, whom they home-school. The kids sometimes bound into Mainstreet's offices calling out, "Dada!"
Turner, a serious Christian who starts each day by reading the Bible and praying, also sees the growth his company has enjoyed - and any setbacks - as "God's will." Both Turner and his wife speak of his vision to transform long-term care in purpose-driven terms.
"I don't freak out anymore about how big we're getting," Milissa said of her husband's businesses. "When he has a new idea and I see that look in his eye, I know that it's inspired by God."
Turner's two-year stint at a
In 2012, Turner launched a real estate investment trust and took it public on the
Political target
Mainstreet is by no means the only long-term-care company with high-quality facilities and access to ample financial resources. But Turner's combination of cash and willingness to build in competitors' back yards makes him concerning to Indiana's nursing home operators.
Mainstreet was the target of the attempt by nursing home groups to pass a five-year ban on new construction of skilled-nursing facilities. Renovations of existing facilities or construction of assisted-living facilities would have been allowed to continue.
The rationale for the moratorium was that Mainstreet's facilities - as well as those built recently by other companies - target the most lucrative patients: those covered by the federal
But that threatened to upset the longstanding practice of most nursing homes, which use the profits they make on those patients to offset losses incurred in the lion's share of their patients - those paid for by the Indiana Medicaid program.
Those policy arguments were drowned out by Mainstreet's promise of new jobs and massive investments via a slew of building projects. In the middle of the legislative session, Mainstreet announced it would open 24 facilities in
"It was a game changer, absolutely," said Rep.
Still, at the end of the session, lawmakers had agreed on a two-year construction moratorium. But then Rep.
And that, according to multiple legislators who did not want to be quoted, turned the tide. Attempts to reach
"It's a total breakdown of the political system if one guy can wield that much influence that he can decide which laws are passed and which aren't," said Zeke
Turner, adding that he never asked his father to speak against the moratorium.
IPO unleashed growth
Dodging the moratorium in
But because of
Not only did
All of
"We view the total fees as reasonable relative to other management contracts which are frequently very favorable to the external manager," wrote
Turner's ability to find financing has been tied to his success from the beginning, said
The first project the two companies collaborated on was in
"He said, 'Just be patient. We're disappointed, but we're moving ahead," Bufford recalled. "We didn't know they'd have to knock on so many doors. But they did."
'Overbuilding'
It's been an unwritten rule for decades that nursing home operators would, for the most part, stay out of one another's territories. Turner has not only broken that rule - he's rubbed his competitors' faces in it.
Mainstreet opened two facilities this year - and both were within spitting distance of existing facilities operated by
In
Mainstreet's in-your-face building didn't please
"Of course we could wish they had chosen other locations, but this isn't the first time that we've experienced this situation," Boyle wrote in an email. He noted that, in 2007, Miller's signed a 15-year lease with Mainstreet to operate an older nursing home in
But then in 2009, Mainstreet built its own facility in
"Now both of our skilled-nursing facilities are sitting just blocks apart from one another with low occupancy," Boyle wrote.
Mainstreet's competitors are skeptical the company will be able to replicate its success in the development business in the operation of nursing homes. Up until now, Mainstreet always leases the facilities it builds to operators, such as Miller's or to
Figuring out how to make money while also providing high-quality service is no easy task, said
"They're definitely high-fliers and very confident," Benson said of Turner and his Mainstreet team. "I think when it comes to caring for seniors, it's more about servant leadership, and getting on your hands and knees."
On a mission
Turner, however, shrugs off those criticisms.
He thinks Mainstreet is creating an entirely new category of senior care that his competitors know little about. In a previous interview, Turner said the other nursing home providers are the "VHS" of longterm care.
Turner describes his own business as "health care hotels" (they feature coffee and sandwich shops, pubs and private rooms) or "transitional care" - facilities that focus on handling patients needed to rehabilitate after a hospital stay but with more serious needs than can be handled in home-based settings.
Nursing homes have been handling such patients for at least 25 years, since the federal
But Turner thinks there are large numbers of patients discharged from hospitals and needing rehabilitation, but who are avoiding traditional nursing homes.
Many of those patients aren't covered by
But to fully realize his "transitional care" vision, Turner said, he needs to extend innovation to all aspects of the process.
So he wants to get into the operations game himself. Mainstreet just hired a nursing home executive to launch its own operations company, which could employ up to 2,500 people in three or four years.
Turner is also in discussions to do his first acquisition - of a transport business that would ferry patients between their homes and Mainstreet's facilities in "something nicer" than 15-passenger vans.
After that, Turner said, he plans to start or acquire pharmacy and therapy businesses to complement his nursing home operations business. And he has even designed products he thinks he can use to found a long-term-care insurance business by 2017.
"Our mission, somewhat audacious, is to transform the way care is delivered in the senior living space," Turner said.
Title: CEO of
Age: 36
Family: Turner and his wife, Milissa, home-school their six kids, age 8 months to 8 years. His father,
Education: bachelor's from
Career:
2013 revenue:
2013 profit:
Mainstreet Property
Properties under development: 19 in nine states
Total investment: nearly
Sources:



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