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Bloomington OKs plan to develop Carle Health medical campus on east side

A sign at the intersection of Trinity Lane and Galena Road identifies the Carle Health facility in the Empire Business Park on Bloomington's east side, with cars filling a parking lot in the background.
Joe Deacon
/
WGLT
A three-party, public-private partnership will pave the way for Carle Health to pursue a mixed-use medical campus in the Empire Business Park on Bloomington's east side.

A three-party, public-private partnership to develop a large mixed-use medical campus on Bloomington’s east side will allow Carle Health to expand services in the Twin Cities.

The Bloomington City Council on Monday approved the agreement with Carle and Deneen Brothers Farms that paves the way for the regional medical campus on 35 acres within the Empire Business Park, behind Carle's current facility on the southeast corner of Trinity Lane and Cornelius Drive.

“This is really a wonderful, strong bookend for the Empire Street commercial corridor, to really be able to finish out what was envisioned even 20 years ago,” said Kelly Pfeifer, the city’s director of development services.

Under the agreement, Carle and Deneen will privately fund about $6 million in infrastructure improvements, including new roads, sidewalks, trails and other utilities to support development.

In return, the city will waive up to $600,000 in development fees and reimburse some costs associated with extending Constitution Trail.

The council voted 7-0 to approve the nine-year agreement, with Mollie Ward recusing herself and Jenna Kearns absent from the 85-minute meeting.

“This agreement is the next step in Carle choosing to grow its footprint in Central Illinois, right here in Bloomington, and we’re happy to have them,” said senior deputy city manager Billy Tyus. “We also think it’s the next step in Bloomington continuing to become a health care destination. I mean, we’re growing in that area considerably, and there’s more to come.”

The agreement will allow for completion of a long-planned connection of the eastern and western segments of Cornelius Drive within three years. The total expense to the city is projected at $165,000, primarily to pay for a small portion of the Cornelius Drive extension.

Bloomington will be responsible for maintaining a basin on the property, but Pfeifer said Deneen Farms agreed to pay a one-time $100,000 fee toward future maintenance.

Options for the health care campus include wellness services, professional offices and possible commercial development along Empire Street [Illinois 9]. Future phases of the project may add residential development.

“This project allows Carle Health to thoughtfully plan for future facilities and services that best meet the evolving needs of the community,” Dr. Robert Cavagnol, Carle BroMenn Medical Center and Carle Eureka Hospital president, said in a statement Tuesday. “We are excited to partner with the City of Bloomington and the Deneen family to offer the community more moments of connection and strengthen the medical services already in place to create a fully community-integrated wellness experience for the enrichment of the broader community.”

The concept for the campus allows for flexibility while holding consistent with the preliminary plan the council approved in January.

Budget formally presented

Meanwhile, city staff formally presented Bloomington’s annual budget proposal of $370.5 million, with a general fund balance of $148.3 million.

“The proposal has not changed from the preview,” said City Manager Jeff Jurgens.

Planned capital improvements total $111.7 million, highlighted by $81.9 million dedicated to upgrading the city’s water system. Those improvements include lead service line replacements and other critical system-wide repairs.

“That’s an increase in our water capital investment by 281%, and again, I just would remind the council and the community we knew that we needed to do this work. That’s why we did put in place the new rate structure,” said Jurgens.

During her opportunity to speak at the end of the meeting, Ward urged the staff to allocate $120,000 in funding for violent crime prevention, pointing to a recent shooting incident in her neighborhood.

“A few weeks ago, we decided that we were going to spend $120,000 out of current funds to buy new guns [for the police department]. One of the arguments made for that purchase was that those guns were getting pretty close to needing to be replaced,” said Ward.

“Which means, we’re not going to have to spend that $120,000 this year or the following year. Is it going toward prevention, or is it simply going to react? Let’s at least come up with that little bit.”

The council will hold a special meeting next Monday in place of a committee of the whole, when department heads are expected to detail all of the capital projects included in the budget proposal. A public hearing on the spending plan is set for March 23, with a vote expected at the April 13 meeting.

Other business

Items approved unanimously as part of the consent agenda include:

  • Spending $135,000 on four new snowplows and another $60,000 on three wheel loader buckets for the public works department;
  • Waiving bidding requirements and authorizing staff to negotiate terms of the 2027 street resurfacing program with Rowe Construction;
  • Extending the Mutual Aggregation Program energy supply brokerage services agreement with the Stone River Group by three years;
  • Granting a special use permit for a wireless communications tower in the 1100 block of Interstate Drive; and
  • Approving three liquor license applications.

A mayoral proclamation in recognition of Eid al-Fitr marking the end of Ramadan on March 20 was postponed, with no explanation provided.

The council recognized the appointments of Brian Kelly to the Building Board of Appeals and Bruce Tompkins to the McLean County Regional Planning Commission.

Corrected: March 10, 2026 at 10:51 AM CDT
Kelly Pfeifer clarified to WGLT that Deneen Farms, not Carle, will pay a one-time fee of $100,000 toward future maintenance of a basin on the property. The length of the agreement is nine years.
Joe Deacon is a reporter at WCBU and WGLT.