Healthcare heroes: Voices of the caregivers who got us through COVID-19
Posted May 09, 2021
‘COVID is a slow-moving disaster that slowly wears you down’ It has been frustrating seeing human beings, people who have died from COVID who could have been saved by masking, distancing, and later vaccinating, said Dr. William Paolo, acting chair of emergency medicine at Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse, NY.
Dr. William Paolo, associate professor of emergency medicine; associate professor of public health and preventive medicine and interim chairman of emergency medicine, Upstate University Hospital, Syracuse, NY
As a teen I was a bit of a hypochondriac and developed a fascination with microbes. I went to medical school to learn about them. I fell in love with emergency medicine. I’ve been with Upstate since 2009.
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A divided Crossett City Council adopted a budget for the coming fiscal year Monday night, Dec. 21. The point of contention was nearly a quarter million dollars.
Four council members, C.T. Foster, James Knight, Kerstin Mondragon and Sheila Phillips, voted in favor of the budget.Â
Councilmen Dale Martinie and Cary Carter voted in the minority when casting votes against the proposal.
Carter said that he thought the budget should be cut by approximately $200,000. Mayor Crystal Marshall said the budget had already been cut by 8 percent â approximately $468,226 â when compared to the 2020 budget.
âI donât want to make cuts or lay people off unless it is absolutely necessary,â Marshall said. âIf I start laying people off, then Iâm afraid others will panic and lay people off and we are going to start seeing a ripple effect on our town.â