comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Glenda bishop - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Quincy hospital bonds to be paid off sooner than projected

QUINCY The collection rate for the bonds sold to build the new Quincy Valley Medical Center may be lower than originally anticipated. The sale of the second set of bonds, which will generate about $9 million in revenue, is set for late June.

Quincy-valley-medical-center
Washington
United-states
Seattle
Cheryl-schweizer
Joe-kunkel
Anthony-gonzalez
Van-lieshout
Jim-nelson
Kayla-van-lieshout
Glenda-bishop
Washington-department-of-health

New QVMC framing starting soon

QUINCY Construction of the new Quincy Valley Medical Center should reach an important milestone early next week. “Steel starts going up a week from today,” said Joe Kunkel, the project manager, during the QVMC commission meeting Jan. 22.

Joe-kunkel
Glenda-bishop
Abram-jenks
Jessie-steiger
Quincy-valley-medical-center
Klosh-group
Executive-officer-glenda-bishop

Quincy hospital to lease new CT equipment

QUINCY — The new Quincy Valley Medical Center will have some new equipment, including a new CT scanner. Hospital commissioners approved a lease proposal during their regular meeting Monday.

Tom-richardson
Glenda-bishop
Anthony-gonzalez
Quincy-valley-medical-center
General-electric
Goldseal-revolution
Executive-officer-glenda-bishop
The-economy
Rade
Medicine
Jaw

Quincy hospital to lease new CT equipment

QUINCY The new Quincy Valley Medical Center will have some new equipment, including a new CT scanner. Hospital commissioners approved a lease proposal during their regular meeting Monday.

Anthony-gonzalez
Tom-richardson
Glenda-bishop
Quincy-valley-medical-center
General-electric
Goldseal-revolution
Executive-officer-glenda-bishop

Quincy Valley Medical Center board approves third phase of construction contract

QUINCY Quincy residents are beginning to hear and feel, if not yet see, construction on the site of the new Quincy Valley Medical Center. The site has been cleared of three buildings, some trees and grass, and Tony Sanchez of Graham Construction said Monday that the next task is installing the pilings to support the new building, called geopiers. “We drill eight to 10 feet (in) depth, fill them with rock and crush them down,” Sanchez said.

Chris-colley
Abram-jenks
Joe-kunkle
Randy-zolman
Tony-sanchez
Glenda-bishop
Quincy-valley-medical-center
Klosh-group
Quincy-valley-medical
Graham-construction
Executive-officer-glenda

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.