Life Link III plans to open a new air medical base in Rhinelander, Wisconsin.
This new base, which marks the company’s tenth air medical base throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin, is scheduled to begin 24/7 operations starting in spring 2021. This base will be located at the Rhinelander-Oneida County Airport, which allows the company to support the growing needs of this area and Life Link III’s consortium member-owners.
As one of the largest hospital-based nonprofit consortium programs in the United States with ten member-owners, Life Link III has a 35-year history of demonstrating its dedication to improving patient care and transport safety. Life Link III’s medically-configured helicopters and airplane serve as flying intensive care units (ICUs) and feature advanced clinical capabilities on-board each aircraft including point-of-care laboratory testing, point-of-care ultrasound, and LUCAS mechanical CPR. Whole blood is also carried on-board every flight.
Press release content from Business Wire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
Life Link III Announces Plans for New Air Medical Base in Rhinelander, Wisconsin
December 21, 2020 GMT
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (BUSINESS WIRE) Dec 21, 2020
Life Link III announced today that they plan to open a new air medical base in Rhinelander, Wisconsin. This new base, which marks the company’s tenth air medical base throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin, is scheduled to begin 24/7 operations starting in spring 2021. This base will be located at the Rhinelander-Oneida County Airport, which allows the company to support the growing needs of this area and Life Link III’s consortium member-owners.
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Fox21Online
December 19, 2020
DULUTH, Minn.– The Lake Superior Zoo opened back up Saturday, being among the outdoor venues allowed to open in Minnesota under the governor’s updated COVID-19 guidelines.
Guests walked the grounds of the zoo again after it was closed since last month. One group visiting from hours away says they were checking out Bentleyville last night and when they heard the zoo was open again they had to bring the grandkids to check out all of the animals at the zoo.
“It’s fun for the kids and to be able to go outside and do something in these times means a lot to get some fresh air. And they love animals,” Vicki Schmidt of Park Falls, Wisconsin, who was visiting for the weekend with her grandkids Layla and Blake.
America’s biggest companies flourished during the pandemic but put 100,000 out of work and rewarded investors, analysis shows Author: Douglas MacMillan, Jonathan O’Connell, Peter Whoriskey, Chris Alcantara, The Washington Post Updated: December 16, 2020 Published December 16, 2020
Salesforce chairman Marc Benioff, a self-styled leader of the corporate philanthropy movement, said in a series of tweets in late March that Salesforce pledged “not to conduct any significant lay offs over the next 90 days.” But in August the company laid off about 1,000 people. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)
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Print article As the coronavirus pandemic devastated small businesses and plunged millions of Americans into poverty this summer and fall, executives at some of the country’s largest corporations sounded surprisingly upbeat.