Gary Fleischer News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from Gary fleischer. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In Gary Fleischer Today - Breaking & Trending Today
Carolina Journal reports: A coal miners’ son. A powerful attorney. A defeated surgeon. Two college sweethearts. All of them became caught up in a powerful system known as Certificate of Need. Certificate of Need laws give the state control of medical resources. Twenty-five people, an advisory board appointed by the governor, oversee the supply of hospital beds, medical equipment, and a host of other resources. In theory, the system is supposed to guard patients’ access to health care. But the system offers a wealth of opportunities to crush unwanted competition and hamstring smaller doctors’ practices. Under CON laws, incumbent providers can take their competitors to court and force them to bleed money for months, years, or even decades. ....
speak on the record. “It’s human nature, so I shouldn’t be surprised, but I have clients who think it’s unconstitutional, it’s terrible, it’s an unfair restraint on trade,” said a CON attorney. “But once they get it, CON is great, it’s saving money, it’s good for the people. It’s incredible the metamorphosis they undergo.” THE FIGHTER Dr. Jay Singleton sometimes says he’s not the right man for the job. Singleton is the son of coal miners. He spent his childhood crisscrossing Appalachia in a trailer, always in search of another dying non-union mine. The good old days of mining were just a memory, and, more and more, the only thing left was strip mining, tearing the tops off mountains. ....
Then & Now: Brittan Square Fire Barn, Burncoat Street, Worcester Some called it the fire barn, a casual term that faded with the memory of horse-drawn fire equipment. The original fire house at 19 Burncoat St. in Worcester, built in 1893 to serve the Lincoln and Burncoat streets section of the city, was mostly called the Adams Square Fire House in the early days. And then, for reasons not clear, there was a name change: The area became Brittan Square, as it remains known. The Brittan Square Fire Station OK, barn, for our nostalgic readers remained in service through the mid-1960s. It was rundown, having not seen significant upgrades since its horse-drawn beginnings. ....