$1,525 facility fee highlights medical measure at Capitol to limit facility fees
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
AURORA, Colo. (KDVR) -- Colorado hospitals say they can't survive without facility fees but some patients say they may avoid medical care because they can't afford the rising cost of facility fees. A controversial measure, House Bill 23-1215, to limit facility fees will have its first hearing at the state Capitol on Friday. Aurora mom Natalie Zelinska will watch closely after receiving a $1,525 facility fee following her 4-year-old son's November 2022 appointment at Children's Hospital Colorado."We need to monitor his heart condition all the time. One to two times a year just to see where he is," Zelinska said, who previously took her son to Denver Health Medical Center for bi-annual electrocardiograms and ultrasounds. Family’s $2,500 hospital charge reduced after Problem Solvers get involved When her pediatric cardiologist moved to Florida, he suggested the Zelinksas seek care at Children's Hospital Colorado.Bills reviewed by the Problem Solvers showed the facility fee at Denver ...Denver mayoral candidates discuss public safety
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
DENVER (KDVR) -- With the Denver mayoral election just a few weeks away, a handful of candidates addressed the issue of public safety.The two-day forum was hosted by the Denver Justice Project and the Denver Task Force to Re-imagine Policing and Public Safety.Voter and Denver East High School graduate Sofia Joucovsky was in attendance. Board rules to allow officers in all Denver Public Schools high schools “I do support SROs (school resource officers) being in schools,” she said. “I do not think they should have the responsibility of disciplining students.”The forum was held in the Northfield area of Denver.The mayoral election is April 4 and if no candidate receives the majority of votes, the top two candidates move to a runoff on June 6.Pedestrian hit, killed in South Bay crash
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
CHULA VISTA, Calif. -- A person walking within the lanes of traffic on Interstate 5 died Thursday morning after being struck by a vehicle in the Chula Vista area, law enforcement said.The incident occurred around 3:04 a.m. on I-5 northbound, located north of Main Street, Jesse Matias with the California Highway Patrol told FOX 5.Authorities say the pedestrian was struck by other vehicles as well, but that number is unknown at this time. The pedestrian died due to their injuries, Matias confirmed. Man killed in two-car crash The man driving the vehicle, who was not injured, pulled over to the right shoulder and waited for first responders to arrive, per CHP.Driving under the influence is not suspected in the crash, according to authorities.The identity of the pedestrian is being withheld pending next of kin notification.Sex trafficking plea deal unending ‘nightmare’ for Texas mom
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Irma Reyes’ mind raced as her husband drove through the predawn darkness toward a courthouse hundreds of miles from home: Don’t they know my daughter matters?Reyes had been barely able to eat since she heard that Texas prosecutors planned to let the two men charged with sex trafficking her daughter walk free. She was going to court to try to stop them.Reyes’ daughter was 16 in 2017, when men she knew only as “Rocky” and “Blue” kept her and another girl at a San Antonio motel where men paid to have sex with them. Now, the cases against Rakim Sharkey and Elijah Teel — who police identified as the traffickers — have seen years of delay, a parade of prosecutors, an aborted trial and, ultimately, a stark retreat by the government.They are among thousands of cases under a cloud of dysfunction at the office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, whose legal troubles include a federal criminal investigation. Trafficking cases in particular have come under scrutiny and cast...Is bringing back firing squads for executions a good idea?
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
CHICAGO (AP) — The image of gunmen in a row firing in unison into the chest of a condemned prisoner may conjure up a bygone, less enlightened era. But the idea of using firing squads is making a comeback. Idaho lawmakers passed a bill this week seeking to add the state to the list of those authorizing firing squads, currently Mississippi, Utah, Oklahoma and South Carolina. Fresh interest comes as states scramble for alternatives to lethal injections after pharmaceuticals barred the use of their drugs. Some, including a few Supreme Court justices, view firing squads as less cruel than lethal injections despite the violence involved in riddling bodies with bullets. Others say it’s not cut-and-dry, or that there are other factors to consider. Here is a look at the status of firing squads in the United States: WHEN WAS THE LAST EXECUTION BY FIRING SQUAD? Ronnie Lee Gardner was executed at Utah State Prison on June 18, 2010, for killing an attorney during a courthouse escape attemp...Gwyneth Paltrow expected to testify in ski collision trial
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Gwyneth Paltrow and the man who broke four ribs after the two collided at a Utah ski resort seven years ago are both expected to testify on Friday in a trial over his claims that the movie star’s recklessness caused his concussion and lasting physical injuries.Paltrow and Terry Sanderson, the retired optometrist suing her, are expected to answer questions about the crash as their attorneys jostle to convince the 10-member jury who was responsible for the collision and who had the right of way as the skier farther downhill. Paltrow claims Sanderson was responsible for the crash.In a trial that Judge Kent Holmberg and attorneys for both parties have agreed will last eight days, with each side getting four to call witnesses, Friday marks the final day that Sanderson’s attorneys can compel Paltrow to testify. Next week, Paltrow’s team is expected to call medical experts, ski instrutors and her two children, Moses and Apple.The trial thus far has ...In The Month Of Ramadan, We Honour Linda Mohamed Benallal
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
BPR Ordered To Pay $485,000 In Municipal Bid Rigging Scandal
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
Protest In France Enters Its 10th Day With Crowds Growing Larger Daily
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
Trump remains 'well liked' by Texas Republicans, Texas Politics Project poll says
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:49:21 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Former President Donald Trump will hold his first campaign rally ahead of the 2024 election in Waco Saturday. According to new polling by the Texas Politics Project, Trump "remains well liked among Texas Republicans."Trump's job approval rating was always high amongst Texas Republicans, never dropping below 78% throughout his presidency, according to the Texas Politics Project.His favorability ratings amongst Texas Republicans, and likely GOP primary voters, have remained consistently strong — even in the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, when Trump supporters attempted to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. Eighty-one percent of Republican voters surveyed in February 2021 said Trump's actions that day do not disqualify him from holding future office.A February 2023 survey of GOP Texas voters showed 56% wanted the former president to run for office again. Amongst independent voters, 63% said Trump should not run again, ...Latest news
- Scavenger hunt, decorating contest returns to downtown Albany
- Woman’s anti-Mexican outburst caught on video at Disneyland
- Teenage suspects arrested in killing of liquor store clerk in West Covina
- LAX passenger arrives on international flight without passport, visa, ticket, report says
- Check out these useful and fun tech gifts ideas
- 1 dead, 2 injured in wrong-way crash in Baldwin Hills
- CAL FIRE arson arrests on pace for lowest since 2019
- Meet Interdisciplinary Archivist Guadalupe Rosales
- Jill On Money: Year-end money 2023
- Photos: SantaCon fills San Francisco’s Union Square for 28th annual event