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Nursing home worker s death triggers record COVID fine April 25, 2021 8:36pm Text size Copy shortlink: A St. Louis Park nursing home has paid the state s largest fine for a COVID-related workplace safety violation following the death of a beloved caregiver last May. Sholom Community Alliance paid $27,100 in fines after David Kolleh, a manager in the facility s memory care unit, died from the coronavirus as it spread in the home, newly released inspection files from the state Labor Department show. The nursing home s penalty included a $25,000 citation for failing to deploy an adequate respiratory program for workers, a sum nearly four times the maximum $7,000 penalty per serious violation. Minnesota Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MNOSHA) inspectors determined the facility s failure caused or contributed to Kolleh s death. ....
Sholom Community Alliance paid $27,100 in fines after its employee David Kolleh died last May, according to Minnesota Labor Department inspection files. ....
After many dark months of illness, isolation and death, hope arrived Monday morning at Ebenezer Ridges Care Center in Burnsville, Minn., in a blue igloo cooler. Nurse Steve Rosenow was the first to sit down in the center’s chapel to get a dose of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, as a line of his coworkers watched from the lobby. A nurse poked a needle into a vial of the vaccine just out of the cooler, and stuck it into Rosenow’s upper arm, as those around him cheered. As Rosenow waited to make sure he didn’t have an allergic reaction to the first of two shots that should protect him against COVID-19, he reflected on the weight of the last nine months. ....
The gift of gratitude for those on COVID duty The dedication of all who battle the virus in Minnesota has saved and enriched countless lives. By EDITORIAL BOARD, Star Tribune December 23, 2020 5:18pm Text size Copy shortlink: Ed Yong was a civil engineer in his native Cameroon. But when he came to the United States almost 30 years ago, he switched careers and went into health care. After four months in the hospital with life-threatening COVID-19, a virus he likely picked up on the job, Yong, 60, has no regrets about his second career at Hennepin Healthcare in Minneapolis. He is proud to have risen to the challenge when the hospital floor he worked on was converted to COVID care earlier this year. Even though he became seriously ill, Yong hopes to repay the coworkers who lovingly cared for him by returning to work at some point after his expected Dec. 30 discharge. ....