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AZTEC A bill that would allow essential workers who contract COVID-19 to qualify for workers’ compensation benefits has advanced to the House floor after passing the House State Government, Elections and Indian Affairs Committee on a 5-3 vote on Feb. 26.
House Bill 268, or Coronavirus and Workers Comp, was sponsored by Rep. Dayan Hochman-Vigil, D-Albuquerque, Rep. Christine Chandler, D-Los Alamos, Rep. Meredith Dixon, D-Albuquerque, Rep. Daymon Ely, D-Corrales, and Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, D-Albuquerque.
“House Bill 268 came about because we heard firsthand from constituents who unquestionably caught COVID-19 at work, but were denied Workers’ Compensation,” said Rep. Hochman-Vigil in a press release. “Essential employees put their health and safety on the line every day to provide the services that New Mexicans need. Should they become infected at work, they deserve the same protections they would receive from any other workplace injury.”
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Elizabeth Whitefield, a longtime family law judge and attorney, advocated for a law that would allow terminally ill patients to seek help from a doctor to end their life. (Jim Thompson/Albuquerque Journal)
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. One by one, they told stories of the painful ways in which loved ones died, the butchery of it all, the screaming, the indignity, the helplessness of final days, the relief that only came through ugly death.
Saturday, as the chill of a polar vortex descended outside, the state House Judiciary Committee took testimony via Zoom on a bill that if passed could allow terminally ill patients to die in a way less cold, less cruel.
Jack Francis Veulemans, of Sedalia, formerly of Tipton, passed into the care of our Lord on Monday, January 25, 2021. He was 93.
Born January 3, 1928, at the family home in Gravois Mills, he was the second of five children of John Dominick and Edith May (Higbee) Veulemans.
The family moved to Tipton and at age eight, before and after school, Jack began working with his grandfather, father and uncle at the family grain elevator. When the family sold the elevator business to MFA in the mid-sixties, Jack started Veulemans Elevator in Otterville. He grew the business throughout the decades and was respected in the industry. For the next many years, Jack provided employment for many local men whom he lovingly referred to as “the boys.” Jack prayerfully and humbly led by example in all aspects of his life. He sold the elevator in the early nineties, but continued to frequent there, sometimes working, until about 2010.
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