Archive for INDO-US Members In The Media

Chambers to focus on new opportunities for local Asian Americans

Enhancing the economic potential of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders will be the focus of an upcoming panel discussion.

The Asian American Chambers of Commerce of Tampa Bay will host the presentation on the report to the President from the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

The panelists include Joseph Melookaran, former commissioner of the President’s Advisory Commission on AAPIs and author of the report; Rudy Pamintuan, former chairman of the President’s Advisory Commission on AAPIs and chairman of the United States Asian Center; and Jimmy Lee, former executive director of the President’s Advisory Commission on AAPIs and managing director of the U.S. Asian Business Council.

The AACC is comprised of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Tampa Bay, Tampa’s Indo-US Chamber of Commerce, the Philippine American Chamber of Commerce, and other business professionals.

The event is scheduled for 6:40 p.m. on Nov. 14 at the Hilton Tampa Airport Westshore Hotel at 2225 N. Lois Ave. in Tampa.

More information is available online.

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Attorney General To Attend Diwali Nights on Oct. 27 In Tampa

By AAKASH M. PATEL

The long-anticipated wait for the Diwali Nights fundraiser is nearing an end. The event, which kicks off the Kamla Project, is set for the evening of Oct. 27. The Kamla Project is a collaboration initiated between Voices for Children, and Rahul Mehra, a board-certified child, adolescent and adult psychiatrist who has been practicing in Tampa for the last 15 years. Voices for Children is a local organization that appoints a community volunteer to become the “voice” for a child in foster care. The Kamla Project is named in honor and remembrance of Mehra’s late mother, Kamla Kapur Mehra. “Her dedication, passion and love for children has been a lifelong inspiration for me,” said Mehra.The mission of the project is threefold. First, provide free one-time psychiatric evaluation services to foster children and foster parents. The specific goal of such evaluations is to significantly shorten the time for finalization of adoptions for the children. Second, the Kamla Project will provide training and resource to the Guardian ad Litem Program in Hillsborough County. Lastly, it looks to promote public awareness in partnership with Voices for Children for the special needs of children in foster care. The Diwali Nights fundraiser is set at 7 p.m. and is open to anyone. The honorary chairman is Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum. For information, visit http://www.kamlaproject.orgAakash M. Patel is secretary of the Indo-US Chamber of Commerce Executive Committee and has been a Khaas Baat contributor since 2005. He can be reached at Aakash.M.Patel@gmail.com

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Community Bank Filled With Indian Investors Opens In Downtown Tampa

By AAKASH M. PATEL

 
 
NorthStar’s Personal Banker Vinita Mehra poses with Directors Paresh Patel, left, and Dr. Kiran C. Patel at the bank’s grand opening recently. Photo by Aakash Patel

Exactly one year after filing with the Florida Office of Financial Regulation to become an official bank, NorthStar Bank opened its doors to the Tampa Bay community. More than 400 people attended the grand opening celebration held recently at the company’s first office and headquarters inside the cylindrical Rivergate Tower in downtown. While NorthStar is among a dozen startup banks to open in the area since 2005, it is unique because of its ties to the Indian community. Philanthropist Dr. Kiran Patel is the company’s largest individual shareholder and Paresh Patel (no relation) is one of the main organizers of NorthStar. Both are among the 10 founding Board of Directors.”We wanted a community bank owned by local investors for Tampa Bay businesses,” said Paresh Patel in an interview with Khaas Baat. “Marty Traber (also a Board member) and I first discussed the idea in 2004 at an Indo-US Chamber of Commerce meeting (www.indo-us.org) Tampa Bay has a vibrant business community especially amongst Indians, yet we are just a number to the big banks. Why not instead bank somewhere where you are valued as a customer? After much discussion with other community leaders, we felt that time for our opening was now.”In keeping with the community owned spirit the bank has over 100 individual shareholders from in an around Tampa Bay with over 25 percent being Indians. Investors in the bank include a variety of professions such as pharmacists, engineers, doctors and businessmen. According to Patel, NorthStar’s goal is to provide financial services for small to mid-sized businesses and their owners, executives and employees, as well as consumers in general. Aakash M. Patel is secretary of the Indo-US Chamber of Commerce Executive Committee and has been a Khaas Baat contributor since 2005. He can be reached at Aakash.M.Patel@gmail.com

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New Pair To Lead EMERGE Tampa For Next Year

The St. Petersburg Times

Emerge Tampa, the Chamber of Commerce’s young professionals branch launched in 2004 to spruce up Tampa’s sometimes unhip image, unveiled its third generation of leaders on Wednesday: Candace Cusseaux, an associate at Cushman & Wakefield, and Pradeep Vanguri, an instructor at the University of South Florida, will take the reins in January as Emerge co-chairs for 2008. Cusseaux, 26, a 2003 graduate of Florida State, works in commercial real estate and is involved with civic organizations such as Big Brothers Big Sisters and the Tampa Organization of Black Affairs. Vanguri, 30, a member of the INDO-US Chamber of Commerce, is an assistant professor and program director in USF’s athletic training education program. He graduated in 1998 from East Carolina University, then earned a master’s at N.C. State and a doctorate in instructional technology from the University of Alabama. They will replace Mark Colvenbach, 34, and Nicole Levin, 27, who complete a two-year stint as co-chairs.

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Talk of the bay: New pair to lead Emerge Tampa for next year

By Times Staff
Published September 27, 2007


Emerge Tampa, the Chamber of Commerce’s young professionals branch launched in 2004 to spruce up Tampa’s sometimes unhip image, unveiled its third generation of leaders on Wednesday: Candace Cusseaux, an associate at Cushman & Wakefield, and Pradeep Vanguri, an instructor at the University of South Florida, will take the reins in January as Emerge co-chairs for 2008. Cusseaux, 26, a 2003 graduate of Florida State, works in commercial real estate and is involved with civic organizations such as Big Brothers Big Sisters and the Tampa Organization of Black Affairs. Vanguri, 30, a member of the INDO-US Chamber of Commerce, is an assistant professor and program director in USF’s athletic training education program. He graduated in 1998 from East Carolina University, then earned a master’s at N.C. State and a doctorate in instructional technology from the University of Alabama. They will replace Mark Colvenbach, 34, and Nicole Levin, 27, who complete a two-year stint as co-chairs.

Cypress Gardens sale in works

LandSouth Holdings LLC, a Mulberry real estate investment firm, is on the threshold of buying Cypress Gardens for $16.8-million. The firm, which reportedly is signing Cypress Gardens owner Kent Buescher to run the place, is the lone bidder in an auction for the Winter Haven park to raise cash to settle with creditors and help lift Buescher’s Adventure Parks Group LLC out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy. A judge in Georgia is being asked to rule today on whether to hand the keys to Florida’s oldest theme park over to LandSouth and sell Buescher’s other park, Wild Adventures in Valdosta, Ga., for $34.5-million to Hershend Family Entertainment. Hershend owns several amusement parks including Silver Dollar City in Branson, Mo., and Dollywood in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. A committee of unsecured creditors is fighting the sale. The creditors argue the proceeds are $76-million short of paying off the debts. An expert valued the parks at $101-million and Buescher’s links to the winning bidder had not been disclosed.

[Last modified September 26, 2007, 23:30:26]

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Congressman Bobby Jindal Comes To Florida

By AAKASH M. PATEL

Louisiana gubernatorial candidate U.S. Rep. Bobby Jindal made a brief stop in St. Petersburg on Sept. 20, just one month before his election. Jindal, the only Indian-American in Congress, attended a fundraiser at the home of Dr. Akshay and Seema Desai in St. Petersburg. Also in attendance to give his endorsement was Florida Gov. Charlie Crist. Congressman Jindal is considered to be the front runner in the Louisiana governor’s race. Now 36 and making his second bid for the governorship, Jindal is hoping voters see him more as a hard-working team player. To date, Jindal’s overall campaign contributions total more than $10 million with $105,000 being raised at Desai’s fundraiser.“I know how he feels just one month before an election,” Gov. Crist told the audience in his introduction speech. “It’s tough, but Bobby, you will be the next Governor of Louisiana.”During Jindal’s remarks, he thanked all 75 attendees and spoke about his election. If he gets 50 percent of the vote on Oct. 20, he wins the election, but anything less and a runoff will take place Nov. 17. “Florida is Louisiana’s sister state, and we’ve dealt with a lot of the same issues.” “I’ve got a 100 point plan that will benefit the citizens of Louisiana,” said Jindal.

Those such as Desai who have watched Jindal’s career believe that his years in Congress could serve him well if he gets elected governor. “Bobby is a young, dynamic, intelligent person,” said Desai in an exclusive interview with Khaas Baat. “He is a problem-solver, believes in good governance, and his skill sets will benefit the citizens of Louisiana.” Desai serves as a member of the Florida Board of Education.

Aakash M. Patel is secretary of the Indo-US Chamber of Commerce Executive Committee and has been a Khaas Baat contributor since 2005. He can be reached at Aakash.M.Patel@gmail.com
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Medicine’s New Pulse

By CAROL GENTRY The Tampa Tribune
Published: Jul 30, 2007

TAMPA - A decade ago, Cynthia Smith had five children and a high school diploma but no skills, scraping by on welfare and food stamps in Okeechobee.

Today, she’s a systems analyst for Tampa General Hospital, having worked her way up from a clerical job there in 1998. She was promoted a year ago from database specialist, she said, winning a pay boost to $43,000 from $29,000.

“I’ve been blessed,” she says modestly. But, she adds, “I was willing to learn anything and everything to get to where I am.”

Taking night classes, she earned an associate’s degree in computer science and plugged on. Now she lacks 10 classes for a bachelor’s and owns a home in Palm River near Brandon.

“I fell in love with computers,” says Smith, who had never heard of a computer mouse when she applied for aid to go to school. “It’s so much fun!”

The Bureau of Labor and private-sector employers say this country needs more Cynthia Smiths. Health information management, sometimes still called health information technology, is one of the fastest-growing fields around.

Efforts to computerize medicine have been going on for decades, but the field has lagged behind other industries. President Bush has declared the development of an electronic health network by 2010 a national priority.

Health information management careerists say they are a breed distinct from the software engineers and technicians who write computer code and keep networks running. Claire Dixon-Lee, vice president for education at the American Health Information Management Association, says her members serve as a bridge between information technology workers and health care professionals.

Her favorite analogy involves a water pipe.

“IT folks maintain the pipes, but we have to make sure the water is pure going through them,” she says.

The Bureau of Labor forecast in 2001 that the health information work force would grow by 49 percent by 2010. Two- and four-year health information management college programs are turning out about 3,000 graduates a year, only half as many as needed, Dixon-Lee says.

Meanwhile, some medical, nursing and public health schools are starting “informatics” programs as specialties or offshoots of the professional disciplines.

Because of the shortage, some companies that develop electronic health records are recruiting doctors, nurses and administrative staff from hospitals, health plans and medical offices - people who know the quirks of the U.S. health care system, patient flow, jargon and billing codes.

Not just any techie can build electronic medical records and networks that work in health care, employers say, because health care is even more complex than computer technology.

“Understanding the industry is key,” says Jason Patchen, chief executive officer of Visionary Medical Systems. “They’ve seen a million charts, and they know the work flow.”

Patchen says he would much rather teach information technology to a health care worker than explain the health system to a coder or network manager. He’s a living example; he gravitated to health IT from running health plans and medical groups, as did Visionary’s chairman, cardiologist Kiran Patel, who founded and sold WellCare Health Plans of Tampa in 2002. Patel’s son Shilen is president of Visionary.

Visionary, chief subsidiary of American Healthcare Holdings of Tampa, employs 68 at its Tampa base and more than 200 in Maryland, Miami and India, Patchen said. The cubicle farm at the Visionary offices off West Shore Boulevard mixes nurses and other health professionals with technical experts who have no background in the health field, and they help one another.

A health worker with no technical background would be hired at $50,000 to $60,000, he said. A nurse who walks in with some programming or technology background can start at $70,000 or more, he said, and a seasoned clinician with a technology background can make more than $100,000.

“We never stop hiring or looking for the best people,” Patchen says. “They are our most important asset.”

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Mary Anne Brunelli was the ideal hire for Visionary: She was a software engineer in the 1980s and became a nurse in the mid-1990s because she missed contact with people. “I’m not a sit-in-front-of-the-computer type,” she said.

Now she travels to see clients or prospects in medical offices, customizing software to fit the needs of the doctors, nurses, billers and front-desk clerks. Unless all of them find the electronic record system easy to use, they won’t use it.

“This really is my love,” Brunelli says. “I want medicine to make use of the computer.”

Most nurses, doctors and health administrators don’t have Brunelli’s software training, so Visionary puts them through six to eight weeks of in-house IT training. They need to understand code even if they’re not writing it themselves, Patchen says.

Doctors and nurses provide content for the health records, arranging time-saving lists of likely symptoms, diagnoses, tests and prescriptions so their client clinicians can substitute quick clicks for handwritten charts. That provides a solid audit trail to back up the billing.

They also tell the computer what kinds of prompts to give the clinical staff. Did Mr. Smith stop at the lab for blood tests, as instructed? Are the results in? Did Mrs. Jones fill her prescription this time, or has she stopped taking her medicine again?

Hospitals’ information needs are even more complex because patients are often unable to communicate and in many cases are desperately ill. They need a rapid series of tests and treatments conducted by different departments, and monitoring by a broad variety of health professionals who work on different shifts and seldom communicate except through electronic records.

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Tampa General Hospital spends about $20 million in operating funds and at least $5 million in capital expenses annually on information systems, says Ginger Oliver, its vice president for information systems.

Although that represents only 2.5 percent of TGH’s billion-dollar budget, she said, it’s a vital fraction that affects every department. “If I break down,” Oliver said, “they break down.”

A pediatric nurse who switched to information systems in 1982 when the hospital got its first computers, Oliver acquired an MBA and worked her way up to senior management. Nurses are an increasing presence among chief information officers in health care, she said, and she employs five former nurses who have shifted to programming.

It’s not hard to see why. Unlike nursing, IT requires no heavy lifting, no blood or other body fluids, and higher pay. Oliver was losing her IT staff to other industries until she persuaded the hospital’s human resources staff that the pay scale had to conform to the IT industry, not to that of a hospital.

Given the nursing shortage, some worry whether health care can afford to lose more nurses to information management. But the question is moot unless the industry is willing to increase nursing salaries by 50 percent.

Reporter Carol Gentry can be reached at (813) 259-7624 or cgentry@tampatrib.com.

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TV host has faith in power of media

By ERNEST HOOPER
Published May 22, 2007


Jill Isaac stands before the cameras in the WEDU studios putting the final touches on the latest episode of Small Business Academy, but not without displaying her penchant for perfection.She begins the take but stumbles ever so slightly. I’m not even sure why she stops, but she starts over. She does it again before achieving the perfect closing on the third take.The stops and starts make me wonder if the frustration of being both producer and on-air talent for the show ever becomes too taxing, but nothing seems to dent Isaac’s love of television.

“For me, it’s about the influence and impact it has on the masses, ” Isaac said. “Society needs steering, and it’s not going to necessarily happen through books anymore.”

For the past eight months, Isaac has tried to steer people into the world of small business. The show profiles local entrepreneurs in an effort to inspire others.

The next installment, which airs Thursday at 9 p.m., explores how family-run Sol Davis Printing dealt with the death of Wilbert Davis, one of the first soldiers from Tampa to die in Iraq.

Upcoming shows will feature Jeffrey Hess of Hess Fine Arts and Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales.

With WEDU sitting in a local enterprise zone, the station has a goal of promoting business development. Both Isaac’s show and a second program, Suncoast Business Forum, aim to educate about business opportunities.

Her show debuted in September. Reaction from friends and even strangers has Isaac convinced of the program’s impact.

One person asked her about starting a tea room after seeing a profile of Kim Pham, co-owner of Tampa’s Kaleisia Tea Lounge.

“I’m helping people. I know I am, ” Isaac said. “I’m encouraging them to get off the miserable situation they’re in with that minimum-paid job and inspiring them to start small businesses.”

Diversity also plays an important role.

“Tampa Bay is completely diverse, but it’s not being represented through the airwaves, ” Isaac said. “If you look at the representation of the community, it’s not reflected in TV.”

Isaac said she empathizes with entrepreneurs because of her own background. She worked as a producer for a number of small television news networks in Asia after graduating from the University of Toronto.

Her resume includes productions in such cities as Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Hong Kong; New Delhi; Bangalore, India; Singapore; Bangkok; Dubai, United Arab Emirates; and Karachi, Pakistan.

She returned to North America to earn two master’s degrees from Seton Hall’s Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Affairs. Now she calls St. Petersburg home and says the area around the Vinoy Resort looks just like Singapore.

In addition to the show, Isaac also teaches a class on intercultural communications at the University of Tampa.

Television, however, remains her first love.

“This medium is one of the greatest influences out there, and I think that gets me excited, ” Isaac said.

It makes me want to take a chance. Almost.

That’s all I’m saying.

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2006 Business Woman of the Year

Jaseline Johnson

University of Tampa, adjunct professor

Johnson is currently teaching cross-cultural communications at UT, a course that taps into her experience as a television producer in Asia. Fluent in Malayalam and French, she became a media consultant after a successful run as a producer.

But during the Asian economic crash in the late 1990s, Johnson lost her job as a producer because she was an expatriate with no seniority at the company. The layoff proved to be a life-changing event.

Johnson had produced game shows that won an Asian Television Award in 1998. At the awards night, she parlayed that recognition into becoming senior producer for Dateline Malaysia, which was heavily covered by international media and gave her the exposure and experience that prepared her for her next step.

That success enabled her to become a media consultant for various networks in Asia over the next four years until she was appointed as an associated producer for Canadian Broadcasting Corp. in Canada.

Her expertise in corporate media and her fluency of Asian language brought her numerous clients from countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and the American United Emirates.

Working with international corporations has given Johnson an opportunity to mingle with some of the world’s richest and most powerful businessmen. One common thread among them was: “You must never get too used to a comfort zone. To be successful, you need to work outside of your safety net,” she said.

Success seems to be connected with action and successful people make mistakes, but they don’t quit, she added.

Johnson was recently accepted to the board of directors for the United Nations Association for the United States of America, Tampa Bay Chapter. She is also establishing a soup kitchen in St. Petersburg to feed the homeless and poor.

lhalstead@bizjournals.com | 813.342.2467

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New governor seeks health care advice in area entrepreneur

Fund-raising prowess said not to factor in appointment

Tampa Bay Business Journal - November 24, 2006
by Margie Manning
Senior staff writer

St. Petersburg — Governor-elect Charlie Crist is looking locally for answers to improve health care delivery in Florida.

He’s tapping entrepreneur Dr. A.K. Desai to head a group that will look for better ways to run the Department of Health and the Agency for Health Care Administration.

The two agencies manage $16 billion in health care spending in Florida, which is about 21 percent of the state’s total $75 billion budget and second only to education in total state spending. The Health Care Citizens Review Group Desai will chair will identify opportunities for efficiencies in running the agencies, he said.

“As we spend billions of dollars, I’m sure there are opportunities to spend those wisely,” Desai said.

Between now and the inauguration, Desai said his group would conduct meetings in Tallahassee with department heads and key people among the administrative staff, reviewing legislative and budget priorities. He also said the group would talk to citizens who are receiving services from the departments.

Desai is one of nine Citizens Review Group leaders appointed by Crist.

St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Baker will head the “growth and environment” group, looking at the Department of Environmental Protection, Fish & Wildlife Commission, Department of Transportation and Department of Community Affairs.

Group leaders and members are volunteering their time, according to a release from Crist.

Separate personnel from policyMore than 300 state agency heads and top staff who serve under Gov. Jeb Bush have turned in their resignations, which is typical in preparation for a change in administrations. Crist’s transition team will deal with personnel issues, freeing the Citizens Review Group to concentrate solely on policy, Desai said.

“This eliminates the fear that people will lose their jobs because of what they will tell you,” said Susan MacManus, University of South Florida professor of public administration and political science.

Citizens Review Groups initially were established by Gov. Jeb Bush prior to his first term in office, said MacManus, who served on the group that looked at the Department of Health and AHCA eight years ago. Bush was one of the first governors in the nation to establish such groups, although many other governors have since followed his lead, she said.

Problem solverAlthough Desai and Baker are Republicans, as is Crist, group leaders are tapped for their expertise, not their political support, MacManus said.

Desai was a top fund-raiser for Crist, but Desai said that was separate from his appointment to the Citizens Review Group: “I was asked to head the group for my understanding of complex health care issues.”

Desai is chairman and CEO of Universal Health Care, a St. Petersburg-based managed care company that primarily focuses on Medicare and Medicaid coverage. He also has a private practice in St. Petersburg. He was appointed by Gov. Bush to the Board of Governors for the state university system and serves on the White House Commission on Asian American Pacific Islanders Health Committee that advises President Bush on issues affecting Asian Americans.

“I’m a policy wonk, and I like to be part of solving a problem,” Desai said.

Desai said he’s known Crist since the St. Petersburg resident ran for the state senate in the 1990s. Because Crist’s father and sister also are physicians, Desai said Crist is understanding and sympathetic to health care issues.

Also named to the Health Care Citizens Review Group was Dr. Alan Mendelsohn, a Broward County physician, who will be one of the team leaders looking at the Department of Health. A leader for the team looking at AHCA has yet to be appointed, Desai said.

mmmanning@bizjournals.com | 813.342.2473

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