“Thanks to Gen. Gourley’s efforts, we broke ground on the new clinic last week on Veterans Day,” said Farr. “He did not live long enough to see construction begin but his service, both as a leader in the Army and as pillar of our veteran’s community, is the foundation on which this clinic will be built. Naming the clinic after him is the proper way to honor his legacy.”
Ground was broken on Veterans Day and the clinic is expected to open in the fall of 2016. The three-story building, 104,000-square-foot facility will provide primary care and specialty care including medical/surgical subspecialty clinics, mental health care, audiology, physical and occupation therapy, ancillary and diagnostic service. The clinic will replace the VA’s existing clinic, which is too small to serve the current population, and cannot be expanded.
Gen. Gourley’s military service began in the late 1960s when he served in Germany, where he shared MREs (Meal, Ready-to-Eat) with Elvis Presley. He later served in Korea and Vietnam. After returning from his tour in Vietnam, he was assigned to the Pentagon and rose to work with then General Colin Powell on the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
In his retirement, Gen. Gourley worked to enhance life for active duty soldiers and veterans living in Central California by working to improve TRICARE service on the Monterey peninsula; establish a veterans cemetery on the old Fort Ord; make health care more affordable and accessible to military retirees; and placing the groundwork for the joint DOD-VA health care clinic.
The bill now heads to the Senate for a vote.