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POULSBO Dr. John West, an orthopedist and expert on knee pain, decided this year to become his own boss.
In an era when more physicians are employed by hospitals, it was no easy task. He spent hundreds of thousands to rent an office off Bond Road, build a staff and buy an X-ray machine and other equipment. He had to learn the intricacies of insurance, medical records systems, employment law, tax accounting and more.
But it came with the independence he said he didn t have working for a hospital. He now gets to make his own decisions on things that range from how much time he spends with patients to the art that goes on the office walls.
Mat North expecting mothers turn to traditional mid-wives as Covid-19 restrictions ground them – Kubatana net
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Aplicar los principios de proximidad y suficiencia y no importar más residuos peligrosos para enterrarlos • Ecologistas en Acción
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España necesita aplicar los principios de proximidad y suficiencia, y no importar más residuos peligrosos para enterrarlos - Tercera Información
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Disaster Recovery for Government Organizations -Planning, Practice, and People Jim Smith, CIO, State of Maine
Jim Smith, CIO, State of Maine
When the State of Maine computer operator drove to work on that cold, crisp morning in January of 1998, he probably did not realize that he would soon be living in the State’s data center, full time. In addition, he probably did not know he would bring his family with him. In Maine, in January, you need heat to survive and thousands of families did not have heat that January.
The Great Ice Storm of 1998 hit Maine and Eastern Canada hard. It extended over two weeks. Over half the state’s population was out of power for over two weeks, schools and government offices were closed, radio communication systems were out; every state, car, building, and road was covered in a four-inch layer of ice. It made travel impossible and it challenged basic survival.