Beyond providing accessible, high-quality health care, Indiana's Community Health Centers (CHCs) also have a significant economic presence at both the state and county level. There are roughly eighty-five CHC facilities that operate primarily in 40 counties across the state. CHCs provide primary health care services by state-licensed professionals to community members. This article highlights findings from a recent study commissioned by the Indiana State Department of Health and the Indiana Primary Health Care Association and conducted by the Indiana Business Research Center (IBRC).1 The study utilized a web-based survey of CHC administrators. Seventy out of the state's eighty-one sites in operation during this period responded for a response rate of 86 percent.