When the Rite Aid pharmacy on East Main Street in Owosso shut its doors, many locals felt a familiar worry. In late 2023, the drugstore chain’s bankruptcy spurred closures across Michigan, with over 180 locations statewide slated to shutter. For communities like Owosso, the loss of a hometown pharmacy was more than just inconvenience – it threatened access to everyday medicines and healthcare essentials. The situation in Owosso could have become another example of a growing “pharmacy desert,” where crucial medications and services suddenly aren’t readily available.

But in this small Mid-Michigan city, something remarkable happened. Instead of letting the empty Rite Aid building gather dust, Memorial Healthcare – Owosso’s independent hospital – stepped in to transform it. Today, that once-vacant pharmacy has been reborn as a one-stop urgent care, pharmacy, and lab services hub. In a time of industry upheaval, Memorial Healthcare’s bold move has turned a corporate closure into a community lifeline, ensuring Owosso urgent care and pharmacy needs are met right in the neighborhood.

Rite Aid, Facebook

Rite Aid’s Retreat Leaves a Void in Michigan

The story begins with Rite Aid’s retreat. The national pharmacy chain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in fall 2023 amid financial struggles and billions in liabilities from opioid lawsuits. What followed was a wave of store shutdowns that hit Michigan especially hard. By late summer 2024, Rite Aid announced it would close all of its Michigan stores – more than 180 locations statewide. This marked the end of an era: Rite Aid, once the state’s third-largest pharmacy chain, effectively disappeared from Michigan communities almost overnight.

The impact was widespread. Each closure meant one less place to pick up prescriptions or consult a pharmacist, and fewer options for quick over-the-counter needs. In some small towns, Rite Aid had been the only pharmacy or one of just a couple. Its exit raised alarms about community healthcare access: local leaders and health experts warned of emerging “pharmacy deserts” where residents would have to travel far for basic medications.

Owosso, a city of about 27,000 in Shiawassee County, felt these tremors when its own Rite Aid (store #4324 at 1002 E. Main Street) closed in September 2023. The familiar pharmacy lights went dark, and a prominent corner property at M-21 and Gould Street suddenly stood empty. It was a scene repeated across Michigan’s main streets. As big-name corporate pharmacies like Rite Aid (and even competitor Walgreens, which announced plans to close 1,200 stores nationally) scaled back, residents wondered who – if anyone – would fill the void.

  

Memorial Healthcare Steps Up to Fill the Gap

In Owosso, the answer came from an unexpected place: the local hospital. Memorial Healthcare, an independent health system based in Owosso, decided not to let the old Rite Aid stay vacant for long. Memorial is a unique player in Michigan’s healthcare landscape – a stand-alone community hospital that hasn’t been absorbed by a larger hospital chain. Instead, it has embraced an agile, innovative mindset to grow on its own terms. “We have grown in footprint and in greater vertical integration in supporting services,” Memorial’s leadership often notes, emphasizing new ways to generate revenue beyond core hospital operations while preserving its independence. In plain terms, Memorial isn’t afraid to think outside the box to serve its community.

So when Rite Aid left, Memorial Healthcare leaned in. By June 2024 – just months after the pharmacy closed – Memorial had arranged to take over the former Rite Aid building on East Main Street. The health system saw an opportunity to turn an abandoned drugstore into a healthcare asset. Plans moved swiftly to renovate the space and bring in Memorial’s own services. “We are excited to bring these enhanced services to the Owosso community and to make use of a vacant building in a meaningful way,” said Brian Long, President and CEO of Memorial Healthcare, when announcing the project. The approach was bold: rather than waiting for another retailer to occupy the site, the hospital itself would anchor it, bridging a service gap and investing in the neighborhood’s wellbeing.

This strategy speaks to Memorial’s vertical integration philosophy. While many small hospitals might partner with an outside pharmacy or simply lament the loss, Memorial chose to do it all in-house – creating a seamless extension of its healthcare network. “They don’t have those services at scale, and when you lose big facilities like Rite Aid, we need to have those services filled by independents like Memorial Healthcare,” explained Tom Kurtz, Memorial’s Chief Operating Officer. In other words, Memorial saw it as their responsibility as a community-based, independent provider to step up. By leasing and refurbishing the 10,000-square-foot Rite Aid building, Memorial could ensure Owosso’s urgent care and pharmacy needs were met locally by people who live and work in the community, rather than leaving residents high and dry.

Memorial Healthcare, Facebook

Building a One-Stop Health Hub in a Former Drugstore

What emerged at the corner of M-21 and Gould is a far cry from the old Rite Aid, yet it fulfills a similar purpose of neighborhood convenience – this time for healthcare. Memorial Healthcare transformed the space into a one-stop health hub, combining several services under one roof. The facility – which began opening in phases in late 2024 – now hosts:

  • Urgent Care Center: A full-service Owosso urgent care clinic for walk-in medical needs, open 7 days a week with extended hours (9 a.m. to 7 p.m., every day). This modern urgent care has expanded capacity, as Memorial merged two smaller local urgent care clinics (formerly on North State Road and Health Park Drive) into the new Main Street location. The result is a larger, state-of-the-art urgent care unit equipped to handle minor injuries, illnesses, and routine healthcare needs without an appointment. Patients can receive prompt care in their own community, including evenings and weekends – hours that previously had limited availability.

  • Community Pharmacy with Drive-Thru: Memorial’s new Michigan hospital pharmacy operates right on site, essentially reviving the prescription services that Rite Aid once provided – but now under Memorial’s ownership. Staffed by local pharmacists (including Jessica Batteen, a former Rite Aid pharmacist who “knew Rite Aid was struggling” and joined Memorial to “make a difference in this community”), the pharmacy offers the full range of prescription medications and over-the-counter products. Customers can walk in or use a convenient drive-thru to drop off and pick up prescriptions. The pharmacy is open daily (7 days a week, 10 hours per day) to ensure that, even on a Sunday evening, families can get their medications locally. “It’s going to be a great convenience to our patients ... to use that drive-thru facility,” COO Tom Kurtz noted, highlighting the benefit of a quick pickup for medicine after a doctor visit. Memorial even introduced a new mobile app for pharmacy customers, allowing prescription refills, reminders, and home delivery scheduling within a 25-mile radius of Owosso – high-tech perks one might not expect from a small-town hospital.

  • Laboratory and X-Ray Services: The facility also houses Memorial Healthcare Outpatient Services, including a lab draw station and X-ray imaging suite. This means patients visiting urgent care can get blood tests or X-rays done on the spot, without needing to travel to the main hospital campus. It’s truly an integrated care experience: an individual with a minor fracture can walk in, get an X-ray, see a provider, and pick up their medication all in one trip. These diagnostic services are also open to any community members with a lab order or imaging referral, making healthcare access even more convenient.

All of these services sit side by side in what used to be aisles of shampoo and greeting cards. The interior has been refitted as a medical clinic and pharmacy, but the focus on quick service and convenience remains. Plenty of parking, a well-known location, and that drive-thru window (a legacy from Rite Aid) make the spot an ideal health hub. “It’s really at a major cross-section of our community – great visibility, great parking, great public awareness, convenience,” CEO Brian Long said of the site’s advantages. In effect, Memorial Healthcare took a dead retail space and gave it new life as a healthcare center, ensuring that this prime corner continues to serve the community’s needs.

   

Community Reaction: From Empty Store to Lifeline

The transformation of the old Rite Aid into a healthcare facility has been met with enthusiasm and relief in Owosso. What could have been an empty building now buzzes with activity – and locals have noticed. When Memorial held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to officially unveil the new urgent care and community pharmacy, it turned into a community celebration. Neighbors, local officials, and even U.S. Congressman Tom Barrett showed up to tour the facility and applaud the hospital’s investment. It’s not every day that a small city sees a closed store reborn as something so beneficial.

For residents, the impact is already tangible. Parents have a nearby option when a child spikes a fever after hours. Seniors who once relied on Rite Aid for prescriptions can now use Memorial’s pharmacy and even get home delivery if needed. The integrated approach also means continuity of care – a patient can see the same health system for urgent treatment, lab work, and medication, with records in one place and providers who coordinate with each other. This is a level of service more common in big-city health complexes, now available on a friendly Main Street corner in Owosso.

Memorial Healthcare leadership reports that the venture is thriving. “It’s been, so far, a resounding success,” CEO Brian Long shared, reflecting on the first months of operation. By consolidating urgent care services at the new site, Memorial not only expanded its capacity to treat walk-in patients, but also freed up space at the main hospital and other clinics to add new services elsewhere. It’s a win-win: the community gains convenient care, and the hospital optimizes its resources to provide more specialized care where needed.

Patients are voting with their feet. The urgent care has seen strong usage, and the pharmacy’s drive-thru lane has become a welcome sight for those who missed having a quick prescription pickup on that side of town. One former Rite Aid customer noted that having a familiar location back in operation makes life easier – it’s still the place she goes for her meds, only now it’s run by a local team who know her healthcare history. For many, Memorial’s new facility doesn’t just replace what was lost; it improves on it. The hours are longer, the care more comprehensive, and the profits stay in the community rather than flowing to a distant corporate headquarters.

Rite Aid, Facebook

A New Model for Community Healthcare Access in Michigan

Owosso’s experience is echoing a broader theme: Michigan’s healthcare landscape is adapting in creative ways to ensure access, especially as large retail pharmacies retrench. Memorial Healthcare’s initiative is being watched as a potential model for other independent hospitals and health systems around the state. It exemplifies how local providers can innovate to fill gaps when big chains pull back. Rather than viewing Rite Aid’s collapse as just a challenge, Memorial saw an opportunity to expand services in a way that aligns with its mission and business strategy.

This concept of a hospital pharmacy-urgent care combo in a retail space is catching on. In Lansing, for example, the University of Michigan Health–Sparrow system is now converting a former Rite Aid across from Sparrow Hospital into a similar one-stop health center, complete with a pharmacy and urgent care under one roof. Sparrow’s leaders noted that their Rite Aid location had served tens of thousands of prescriptions annually, and replacing that capacity was crucial for the community. While Sparrow (now part of a larger health network) was approached to take over their site, Memorial in Owosso forged ahead on its own, demonstrating that even a standalone hospital can execute such a plan efficiently.

Memorial Healthcare’s independence proved to be an asset. In an era when many small hospitals are being acquired or struggling, Memorial chose a path of self-reliance and local focus. By creating a parent organization (Memorial Health System) in 2023, it gave itself flexibility to pursue real estate and service expansions beyond the hospital walls. The former Rite Aid project is a prime example of this strategy in action. It’s vertical integration at the community level: Memorial now handles everything from diagnosing an illness to dispensing the remedy, ensuring quality and continuity throughout. This not only helps patients but also bolsters the hospital’s financial stability, as revenue from pharmacy sales and urgent care visits flows back into the local health system. It’s a forward-thinking approach that other independent hospitals in Michigan may emulate to stay viable and better serve their populations.

Healthcare analysts and community advocates alike have praised the Owosso project. Transforming a defunct retail pharmacy into a healthcare facility addresses multiple issues at once – it eliminates a blighted vacant property, maintains healthcare access, and even creates jobs (Memorial hired former Rite Aid employees like pharmacists and techs, keeping their expertise in town). It’s the kind of grassroots solution that shows the power of local institutions. “People really wanted a pharmacy there again,” said one local business owner of a similar project elsewhere, underscoring the community demand for these services. Memorial listened and delivered, which in turn builds goodwill and trust.

As Michigan continues to face pharmacy closures and healthcare consolidation, the Memorial Healthcare story offers a template: community-based problems can be solved with community-based action. An independent hospital might become not just a place for surgeries and inpatients, but a hub for everyday health needs – from strep tests to prescription refills – especially when others bow out.

  

Turning Loss into Legacy – How Owosso’s Hospital Became a Lifeline

The old Rite Aid at 1002 E. Main St. could have become just another empty storefront, a symbol of corporate downsizing and lost convenience. Instead, it’s now a brick-and-mortar testament to community resilience and innovation. Memorial Healthcare took what was a local loss and turned it into a lasting legacy of care. In doing so, this Michigan hospital pharmacy and urgent care center has truly become a lifeline for Owosso and the surrounding areas.

Families in Owosso no longer have to worry where to go after hours when a child is sick, or where to get an emergency prescription filled on a Sunday. They know that at the familiar corner on M-21, a team of caring professionals is ready to help – seven days a week, no appointment needed, with a warm smile and the expertise of an integrated health system behind them. The glow of the pharmacy sign at night and the steady stream of patients during the day are daily reminders of how Memorial Healthcare put the community first.

This success story is more than just a feel-good local tale; it’s a call to action. It challenges other communities and healthcare leaders to ask: When a vital service leaves town, can we find a homegrown solution? Memorial Healthcare answered with a resounding yes. As we cheer Owosso’s achievement, readers across Michigan can take inspiration. Supporting community-based healthcare efforts – whether by using local services, volunteering, or advocating for innovative policies – can ensure that our neighborhoods remain healthy and vibrant, even when big corporations pull back.


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