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Category Archives: Ascension
Rural healthcare forum Wednesday in Luling – Hays Free Press
Posted: September 20, 2019 at 3:43 am
by Andy Davis, CEO of Ascension Texas
The healthcare industry is experiencing a dramatic transformation. Reimbursement models are changing rapidly, and digital transformation is bringing new and dynamic competitors into the healthcare space. These changes impact the industry as a whole, but more specifically, rural healthcare providers are most impacted by the changes to traditional care delivery.More than 100 rural hospitals have closed across the country since 2010, and 17 of those hospital shutdowns were right here in Texas more than any other state in the country. Looking ahead, 21% of rural hospitals across the nation are at high risk of closing, according to Navigants analysis of CMS data.As healthcare leaders, we are cognizant and responsive to the fact that about 10% of physicians practice in rural America while nearly 20% of the U.S. population seeks care in rural communities.To combat the gaps in care which continue to grow for rural populations, Ascension Texas has launched telehealth and virtual care services to help maintain access to care. Ascension Texas Online Care is an online urgent care service that allows a patient to video chat with a virtual provider at any time 24 hours a day, seven days a week for a flat fee of only $49, no insurance necessary using a smartphone, tablet or laptop. Additionally, in 2017 Ascension Seton opened AscensionConnect in Austin, where the latest monitoring and connected health technologies are evaluated, piloted and utilized by multidisciplinary teams to provide services and deliver care within hospitals, clinics, and in the home around the clock.Looking forward to continuing support for rural communities, Ascension Texas will open the Elgin rural health clinic later this year, which is a multi-phase medical center complex that will offer primary and after-hours care in Elgin. The 5,000 square foot medical facility is a partnership between Seton and Elgin to provide much-needed medical services and facilities to the community in a manner that is financially viable and sustainable. The new center will be licensed as a Rural Health Clinic and include lab and x-ray. Additionally, Ascension Seton is building a micro-hospital in Bastrop that is scheduled to open in November, which was thoughtfully designed to evolve along with our communitys changing needs. The medical center will include an emergency department, inpatient rooms, procedures rooms, and imaging services. Medical office space on the second floor will offer families the convenience of primary and specialty care under one roof.Despite these approaches and innovations, many rural communities are struggling to access healthcare services; we want to continue to be a part of the solution. As we provide innovative access options and comprehensive community health locations, we can also lead the way with greater support of health profession programs to place graduates in rural areas; we are committed to connecting individuals in our local communities to high demand healthcare careers within our organization.Additionally, partnerships with transportation companies, clinics and other health organizations will be essential to make access to care safe and convenient for patients. Ascension Texas has made significant investments in helping a unique public safety air rescue program, STAR Flight, that performs everything from the transport of critically ill patients to firefighting, rescue to law enforcement and serves Travis County and 19 other counties within the Central Texas area. The STAR Flight program responds to people experiencing medical problems such as heart attacks or strokes or suffering from traumatic injuries sustained in motor vehicle accidents or recreational activities, and regularly transports from rural hospitals patients who require a higher level or specialized care.To continue the conversation about access healthcare in rural communities, Ascension Seton is hosting a rural healthcare forum on Wednesday, Sept. 25, from 7:30-9:30 a.m. at the Civic Center in Luling, to discuss the future of rural & community hospitals across the state. Ascension Seton leadership will be joined by John Henderson, CEO of Texas Organization of Rural & Community Hospitals, to address topics regarding rural hospitals throughout Texas, including how they are changing, what is impacting these hospitals, and what to expect in the future. Ascension Seton leadership will also discuss legislative policies that support rural communities and the Ascension Texas strategy around rural access to care.
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Ascension Council on Aging for Sept. 19, 2019 | Ascension – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
Thursday
Menu: Ham and lima beans with rice, strawberry-kiwi juice, steamed spinach, cornbread, chocolate marshmallow snack cake.
Pilates: 8 a.m. and 9 a.m., Gonzales
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Bingo: 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m., Gonzales
Zumba: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville
Bingo: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville
Birthday Party: 10 a.m., Donaldsonville (sponsored by Humana)
Zumba: 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
Cajun Needlers: 12:30 p.m., Gonzales
Menu: Fall Special Chef salad with chicken and cheese over salad greens and ranch dressing, fruit, saltine crackers, apple crunch bar
Line Dancing: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville branch
Political Forum: 9:30 a.m., Gonzales
Bingo: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville
Walgreens Flu & Shot Clinic: 10 a.m. to noon, Donaldsonville
Canasta: 12:30 a.m., Gonzales
Menu: Beef tips with gravy over rice, Normandy blend vegetables, spinach romaine salad with Italian, white dinner roll, fruit and grain bar
Bingo: 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
Beading: 9 a.m., Gonzales
Southern Ag-Nutrition Ed: 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
PIYO: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville
Bingo: 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville (sponsored by Accord Rehab)
Gospel Music Etta Brown: 10 a.m., Gonzales
Fast Exercise: 10:45 a.m., Gonzales
Dominoes: 12:30 p.m., Gonzales
Tai Chi: 1 p.m., Gonzales
Menu: Sliced ham sandwich with American cheese on whole-wheat bread with lettuce/tomato/mayonnaise/mustard, carrot raisin salad, applesauce
Yoga: 8 a.m. and 9 a.m., Gonzales
Bingo: 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m., Gonzales
Zumba Gold: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville
Bingo: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville
Zumba: 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
Bridge: 11:30 a.m., Gonzales
Menu:Red beans and sausage over brown rice, mustard greens, salad with fat free ranch, cornbread, fruit
Bingo: 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., Gonzales, Sponsor Accord Rehab
PIYO: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville
Crafts: 9 a.m., Gonzales
Bingo: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville
Seated Tai Chi: 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
Line Dancing: 1 p.m., Gonzales
Menu: Hamburger with lettuce/tomato/pickle/mayo/mustard/ketchup, chuckwagon corn, pineapple cobbler
Pilates: 8 a.m. and 9 a.m., Gonzales
Bingo: 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m., Gonzales
Zumba: 9 a.m., Donaldsonville
Bingo: 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Donaldsonville
Birthday Party: 10 a.m., Gonzales HC
Zumba: 10:30 a.m., Gonzales
Cajun Needlers: 12:30 p.m., Gonzales
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Ascension Parish 4-H sends four delegates to national convention in Washington, D.C. – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
Among the 31 Louisiana 4-H members who participated in the Citizenship Washington Focus in Washington, D.C., this summer were four from Ascension Parish:Abby Lobell, Karlie Lobell, Stacey Kloosterman and Alex Sullivan.
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Citizenship Washington Focus is the premier 4-H leadership and citizenship program for high school students. The Louisiana participants toured several historical museums and monuments, including the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, the 9/11 Memorial, the National Cathedral and the Newseum. They met Louisiana congressmen, took part in a bill-writing workshop and created a community-action plan raising awareness of special needs.
For information on the Ascension Parish 4-H program, contact the Ascension Parish Extension office at (225) 621-5799.
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Top brass turnover comes at a bad time for Amita Health – ModernHealthcare.com
Posted: at 3:43 am
A wave of executive departures, capped by the exit of CEO Mark Frey, has swept through Amita Health as the hospital chain grapples with a changing health care sector and works to integrate a major acquisition.
Seven of Amita's 19 hospitals lost their CEOs last month. Aug. 30 brought the resignation of Frey, who had led the Lisle-based organization since it was formed four years ago as a joint venture of national chains Ascension and AdventHealth. Amita didn't announce Frey's departure publicly, and it won't say why he and the other executives left.
C-suite turnover comes at a time when Amita is trying to adapt to turmoil in health care, where cost pressures are threatening traditional business models and driving consolidation. Executive turnover also complicates management challenges facing Amita, which doubled in size after absorbing Presence Health, a local Catholic chain with 10 hospitals that Ascension acquired last year.
Upheaval in executive ranks causes disruption, "which is never efficient and never good," says Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business. Gordon says Amita needs to guard against a loss of momentum as it looks for executives to fill the empty positions, particularly the CEO post. The new boss should have "clear marching orders to move quickly," he says. "You don't want the transition to drag on. You want to show those cost savings; you want to show the synergies."
In addition to folding Presence into Amita, Frey was in the process of retooling a hospital-centric business model amid growing pressure to reduce health care costs. Amita is beefing up outpatient and virtual care, as declining reimbursement rates pinch hospital revenues and new payment models push more care into less-expensive settings.
His plan involved streamlining Amita's outpatient footprint, which grew by 170 locations with the addition of Presence. Frey last year outlined plans to consolidate smaller sites with one or two doctors into large retail centers with specialists and ancillary services like imaging. Amita currently has more than 230 outpatient sites.
The hospital chain also has aggressively cut service lines at some facilities to save money on surgical equipment, space and staff. While the cost-cutting strategy also is intended to improve care by increasing patient volume at select facilities, it means patients could be forced to travel farther for treatment.
That's the case in Elgin and Elk Grove Village, where Amita plans to close mental health units at its hospitals upon approval from the state. The move prompted outrage from community members and elected officials.
Amita's plan to stop offering labor and delivery services at Amita Health St. Francis Hospital in Evanston also faces opposition from community members who say it would hinder access to care. A public hearing is scheduled for Oct. 1.
Meanwhile, Amita in June received approval from the state to end comprehensive physical rehabilitation at Amita Health St. Joseph Hospital in Chicago and open-heart surgery programs at St. Francis and Amita Health Sts. Mary & Elizabeth Medical Center in Chicago.
Cutting or consolidating clinical programs is "arguably necessary" for Amita "to take on bigger players in the market," says Anthony LoSasso, a professor at DePaul University who specializes in health care economics. But some hospital CEOs might not want to give up certain service lines, he adds, which creates a "real territorial fight."
There's stiff competition in Amita's service area, with large chains like Northwestern Medicine and Advocate Aurora Health competing for the same patients and doctors.
Even though many of its patients have private insurance or Medicarewhich pay hospitals more than MedicaidAmita is among the hospital chains that say Illinois' Medicaid managed care program for low-income patients significantly increased administrative costs. In March, it said about 35 full-time-equivalent employees were working on issues related to the program.
Amita was designed to grow with its owners, sources say, pointing to the success of 23-year-old Centura Health in Centennial, Colo., the joint venture between AdventHealth and Catholic Health Initiatives, which is now part of CommonSpirit Health.
Rare as they are, such arrangements appeal to Catholic chains like Ascension that want to grow while preserving their religious affiliations.
The changes at Amita mirror those at 151-hospital Ascension, which now owns nearly 80 percent of the facilities operating within the joint venture. Ascension's Alexian Brothers Health System, where Frey spent three decades, brought five hospitals to the deal in 2015. Altamonte Springs, Fla.-based AdventHealth, formerly known as Adventist Health System, owns four Amita hospitals.
Ascension's new strategy emphasizes outpatient and virtual care, as well as ancillary businesses like revenue-cycle management. Several top executives left the St. Louis-based organization this year, followed by the July retirement of its chief, Anthony Tersigni. Former Chief Operating Officer Joseph Impicciche now serves as CEO.
Meanwhile, five Amita CEOs who oversaw a total of eight hospitals have quietly stepped down since February. The departures follow the January appointments of three regional operating teams, as well as a post-acute care team, to support the growing chain's new scale and geography.
Amita and Ascension declined interview requests, and a representative of 48-hospital AdventHealth did not respond to requests for comment.
Hospital CEOs who have been in the job for a while are used to being "generals on the proverbial battlefield," LoSasso says. "But, now, if you say the true general is the CEO of the whole entity and you're just the colonel, that sort of shift might not be well received and you could see some pushback. . . .(Amita has) to find qualified, committed people who are also willing to work with the broader leadership (team) to carry out the overall mission."
As Amita searches for a new leader, it will be led by interim co-CEOs Karen Springer, executive vice president of performance optimization and nursing operations at Ascension, and Eddie Soler, executive vice president of finance at AdventHealth.
Top brass turnover comes at a bad time for Amita Health was originally published in Crain's Chicago Business
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Ascension Parish, landowner defend ditch work in Galvez – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
GALVEZ Ascension Parish workers and homeowner Kevin Delaune were hard at work recently on the Bert Delaune ditch north of Gonzales.
They were in the process of installing 5- by 6-foot box culverts and wooden bulkheads in the parish ditch that cuts diagonally across Kevin Delaune's property north of La. 44 and Bertville Road.
Visible to drivers on busy La. 44, along with the election sign for Parish Councilman Dempsey Lambert in Delaune's front yard, the work has drawn fire on social and local media sites as a sign of improper election-time parish work on private property.
Delaune, 51,who has lived on the property for 30 years with his wife and has seen the online commentary, said that while he has known Lambert for years and is supporting his reelection, his support has nothing to do with the job.
Delaune said he has been trying for nearly four years to have the parish help him replace an old wooden bridge over the lateral. The parish supplied The Advocate with his work order from November 2015.
"People want to take pictures of Dempsey's (sign). That man ain't got a ... damn thing to do with what's going on over here," said Delaune, who said he is originally from Napoleonville and isn't related to the Delaune family that owns hardware and grocery stores in Ascension.
Lambert, who represents the Galvez area where Delaune lives, is facing an election challenge this year from Cheryl Malbrough. Lambert is a Republican; Malbrough is an independent.
Lambert called any allegations of impropriety with the work a "complete lie."
"We followed all the policies and procedures with this job," he said in a recent interview.
Parish officials say the work is part of a standard deal it offers landowners to replace damaged culverts used to cross parish ditches and access private property: The parish provides the engineering specifications and does the labor; the landowner supplies a culvert built to parish requirements.
"The parish will do this for any resident who meets the criteria," saidMartin McConnell, parish government spokesman.
Though in practice for many years, the East Ascension drainage board formalized the policy on April 20, 2017, and publicized it online.
According to parish engineering estimates, the ditch running through Delaune's property drains nearly 107 acres upstream, including homes across La. 44 from Delaune in the Old Hickory Avenue area. The parish sized the planned culverts to handle a 25-year rainfall event, a newer and more robust parish drainage standard than the one from a few years ago, parish documents show.
According to Delaune and a parish spokesman, Delaune did not have the money in March 2016 when parish engineers first designed the culverts after his initial request. Delaune, who is a heavy crane operator on the Mississippi River, said a concrete yard wanted $8,900 for culverts custom-built to the parish specifications, which Delaune said he could not afford.
Martin McConnell, parish government spokesman, said Delaune's work order was left open but he recently obtained the money to buy the materials and called the parish in August to do the job.
Delaune said he went back recently to the same yard and asked to buy a precast culvert that was bigger than what the parish required at a cost of about $5,000, providing more drainage capacity at less cost for surrounding homes.
The now removed bridge was originally installed on Delaune's property years before he owned the land to give the parish access to cut grass along the ditch. The parish has 15-foot-wide servitudes along each side of the ditch, McConnell said.
About 15 years ago, Delaune said he told the parish he would cut the ditch so workers would stop using the heavy equipment that he said was rutting his yard. Since then, the parish installed another bridge downstream, making the bridge in Delaune's yard unnecessary for parish ditch maintenance.
The old bridge became Delaune's responsibility, he said, because it only served as an access to the back part of his property, which has a home and storage sheds on it but is separated from La. 44 by the parish ditch. The property is landlocked from access to other roads besides the highway, parish assessment records show.
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Ascension Parish, landowner defend ditch work in Galvez - The Advocate
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Bridge replacements on Airline Highway to begin Monday in East Baton Rouge, Ascension – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
Construction is expected to start Monday on a nearly $10 million project to replace three aged bridges that cross bayous under Airline Highway in Ascension and East Baton Rouge parishes.
The more-than-yearlong project will replace both bridges over Bayou Manchac at the Ascension-East Baton Rouge parish line and also, 1 miles to the southeast, the southbound bridge over Bayou Francois in Gonzales, a state highway department spokeswoman said.
State highway officials said they don't anticipate any closures on Monday but drivers should expect to seecrane operations on the southwest end of the Manchac bridges to install test piles.
The Manchac bridges are near the State Fairgrounds, which is BREC's Airline Highway Park, in Baton Rouge.
All three bridges on Airline, which is also known as U.S. 61, were built in the early 1950s.
"Being 60 (-plus) years old, they have reached their expected design life for bridge structures constructed at that time," Brandie Richardson, the state Department of Transportation and Development spokeswoman, wrote in an email Friday.
Richardson added that the bridges are not in failing condition at the present time, despite their age, but DOTD is moving to replace them before they get to that point.
She said DOTD identifiesas priorities for replacement or repairthose bridges with traffic weight postings that are also part of the National Highway System.
"U.S. 61 is part of the NHS and is a heavily-used truck route," Richardson said.
James Construction Group was awarded the $9.96 million job, Richardson said.The work isn't expected to be finished until late 2020 and drivers should watch for future updates.
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Borderlands 3: Ascension Bluffs Crew Challenges Guide | Claptraps, Typhon Logs & Hunts Locations – Gameranx
Posted: at 3:43 am
The second major area of Borderlands 3 is the Ascension Bluffs, where your Vault Hunters will finally confront the cruel twins. The massive Broadcast Center is the focal point of this map, but youll want to explore every nook-and-cranny to uncover the many, many collectibles hidden throughout.
This is also a map with various other mini-quests you can complete. Youll have Crimson Radios and Hijack Targets to find. Both of these are well-worth doing, and usually involve a simple little puzzle. But, theyre also incredibly easy to find and getting close to their locations will instantly mark them on your map. With that in mind, we wont be covering those locations here. This is all about the trickier-to-locate Claptraps and Typhon Logs.
More Borderlands 3 guides:
For this guide, well cover where to find Dead Claptraps, Typhon Logs, Typhon Dead Drops, and Legendary Hunt locations.
There are three Typhon Logs in each area, and there can be one or more Dead Claptraps or Legendary Hunts to find. Below, youll find a map with locations marked for every collectible type, and text instructions with more details to help you track them all down.
Typhon Logs are one of the most valuable collectibles. Finding all three will unlock the location of the Typhon Dead Drop. This cache is full of good loot, so its worth going to each location.
Legendary Hunt: Just to the right of the Fast Travel Station. Go up to the hills to find the flying Skrakks nest. Just across the valley from the Crimson Radio.
Typhon Log #1: From the entrance area, follow the road up until you spot a white silo on the edge to the right of the road. The log is nearby.
Typhon Log #2: On a small platform to the right of the road leading up to the main Holy Broadcast Center.
Typhon Log #3: On a small ledge with a tree, just to the right of the two bridges in the large bandit camp, west of the Path of Sacrifice.
Dead Claptrap: On the bridge leading to the Holy Broadcast Center, look on the right for a container with three hanging lamps. The claptrap is on one of the poles.
Typhon Dead Drop: Located just behind the Catch-A-Ride station, near the entrance to the Path of Sacrifice / Holy Broadcast Center.
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Check out the Baton Rouge prep report for Thursday, Sept. 19 – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
Football schedule
Editor's note: Games start at 7 p.m. unless otherwise listed; schedule updated to include Saturdays LSD game.
Thursday
Local/area
Kentwood 27, East Feliciana 6
Mentorship 60,North Central (5-1A) 0
Central Private (6-1A) vs. Catholic-Pointe Coupee (5-1A), n
Statewide
Benton 57, Huntington 30
Calvary Baptist Academy 37, C.E. Byrd 25
G.W. Carver 36, John Ehret 30
Haynes Academy 35, Ben Franklin 0
Iowa 14, Welsh 11
Opelousas Catholic 42, Port Barre 0
Pope John Paul II 10, Thomas Jefferson 8
Ruston 49, Airline 28
St. Louis 38, Kinder 37, 2OT
Friday
5A/4A
Belaire (7-4A) at Central (4-5A)
St. Amant (5-5A) at Denham Springs (4-5A)
Live Oak (4-5A) at West Feliciana (7-3A)
Captain Shreve (1-5A) at Scotlandville (4-5A)
Walker (4-5A) at Fontainebleau (6-5A)
Madison Prep (7-3A) at Istrouma (7-4A)
Brandon (Miss.) at Zachary (4-5A)
Catholic (5-5A) at University (7-3A)
Covington (6-5A) at Dutchtown (5-5A)
Northwest (5-3A) at East Ascension (5-5A)
McKinley (5-5A) vs. Southern Lab (6-1A) at Mumford Stadium
Woodlawn (5-5A) at Riverside (9-1A)
Broadmoor (7-4A) vs. Donaldsonville (9-3A) at Boutte Stadium-Donaldsonville
Plaquemine (7-4A) at St. Thomas More (5-4A)
Brusly (7-3A) vs. St. Michael (7-4A) at Olympia
Tara (7-4A) at Northeast (7-2A)
Baton Rouge area
Wossman (2-3A) at Baker (7-3A)
Thrive Academy (6-1A) at Glen Oaks (7-3A)
Dunham (7-2A) at Parkview Baptist (7-3A)
Albany (8-3A) at Springfield (9-2A)
Loranger (8-3A) at St. Thomas Aquinas (8-2A)
Jewel Sumner (8-3A) at St. Helena (8-2A)
Amite (8-2A) vs. Capitol (7-2A) at Memorial Stadium
Episcopal (7-2A) at Country Day (9-1A)
Port Allen (7-2A) at Livonia (6-4A)
Ascension Catholic (7-1A) at Slaughter Community Charter (6-1A)
Houma Christian (6-2A) at Ascension Christian (7-1A)
Varnado (8-2A) at East Iberville (7-1A)
Hamilton Christian (4-1A) at St. John-Plaquemine (7-1A)
West St. Mary (7-2A) at White Castle (7-1A)
Saturday
Local/area
Oklahoma School for the Deaf at Louisiana School for the Deaf, 6 p.m.
Ascension Catholic 3, Zachary 0
Zachary 12 19 18
Ascension Catholic 25 25 25
Istrouma 3, Baker 0
Istrouma 25 27 25
Baker 19 25 19
Team leaders: ISTROUMA: Fredricka Bradley (7 kills, 5 aces, 3 blocks), Leahmonet Morgan (5 kills) Genesis Lee (4 kills, 7 assists); BAKER: Naylah Rivers (5 kills, 5 aces), Skyla Preston (4 kills, 2 blocks). Team records: Istrouma 7-4; Baker 4-6
Central 3, St. Michael 1
Central 19 25 25 25
St. Michael 25 21 18 16
Team leaders: CENTRAL: Caroline Nunnery (14 kills, 4 blocks), Kaitlin Dilworth (9 kills, 2 aces, 6 ace, 11 digs); ST. MICHAEL: Lexi Gonzales (17 kills, 2 aces, 12 digs), Karleigh Bourgoyne (36 assists, 10 digs), Nicole Benigno (2 assists, 24 digs). Team records: Central 6-4; St. Michael 7-9
Central 3, Catholic-PC 0
Catholic-Pointe Coupee 22 15 15
Central 25 25 25
Team leaders: CENTRAL: C. Nunnery (13 kills, 5 blocks), J. Alvin (7 kills, 3 digs), M. Fralick (14 assists, 8 digs, 4 kills); CATHOLIC-PC: A. Vosburg (21 assists, 7 digs, B. Bizette (7 kills, 5 digs), J. Guidry (4 kills, 2 blocks). Team records: Central 5-4
Istrouma 3, Belaire 0
Belaire 14 11 18
Istrouma 25 25 25
Team leaders: ISTROUMA: Fredricka Bradley (13 kills, 5 aces), Brianna Battley (5 kills, 2 blocks), Alayshia Whitlock (8 aces). Team records: Belaire 1-5; Istrouma 8-4
Lee High 3, Live Oak 0
Live Oak 12 15 23
Lee High 25 25 25
Team leaders: LIVE OAK: Katelyn Teel (5 kills, 2 blocks), Kate Campbell (3 kills, 19 digs), Alyssa Holden (9 assists, 7 digs); LEE: Diamond Holliday (15 kills, 3 blocks, 5 digs), Trinity Bell (10 kills, 4 blocks), Trenity Lundy (19 digs, 3 aces), Johnice Hubbart (34 assists). Team records: Live Oak 5-11; Lee High 13-2
McKinley 3, West Feliciana 0
West Feliciana 8 19 20
McKinley 25 25 25
Team leaders: WEST FELICIANA: Daelyn Weaver (6 kills, 4 digs), Destiny Mitchell (6 kills, 2 blocks), Mallory Cutrer (5 digs), Hailey Walker (10 assists); McKINLEY: Tyrianna Arrell (20 assists, 2 kills, 2 blocks), Codi Watson (7 kills, 3 blocks), Kaelyn Hill (5 kills, 3 blocks), KeIra Collier (4 kills, 2 aces). Team records: McKinley 9-4
Parkview Baptist 3, Walker 0
Walker 10 10 11
Parkview Baptist 25 25 25
Team leaders:
Team records: Walker 8-8; Parkview Baptist 9-3
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Check out the Baton Rouge prep report for Thursday, Sept. 19 - The Advocate
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Wanted: Volunteers to serve on new board overseeing animal services in Ascension Parish – The Advocate
Posted: at 3:43 am
Ascension Parish will soon be looking for seven volunteers to take on a new role in animal services for the community.
They won't be fostering, rescuing or caring for animals although they could do that, too but serving on a new board to oversee parish animal services, in light of a property tax being collected for the first time this year for shelter operations and animal control operations, as well as building a $2.5 million facility to house both.
People who would like to serve on the board will go through an application process and interview with the parish council's personnel committee, which will make its recommendations to the parish council.
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Earlier this month, the personnel committee introduced amendments to current parish law to create the Ascension Parish Animal Services Board.
"With a new revenue stream, the board will be promoting pet care and neutering" as well as protecting animals from mistreatment, protecting people from uncontrolled animals and "being good stewards" of the new animal tax revenues in the parish, John Cagnolatti, committee chairman said.
Ascension Parish voters in December 2018 approved a 10-year, 1-mill property tax expected to generate about $1.3 million annually for animal services. Creating a volunteer board to oversee the use of the revenues is the next step.
The personnel committee's proposed amendments to parish law will be voted on by the full council on Thursday.
When temperatures plummeted this winter, workers at CARA's House, the animal shelter for Ascension Parish, set up diesel-fueled heaters in the
The board, as proposed, will be made up of:
The vision of the board has also been spelled out: that someday in Ascension Parish "all citizens, their property and their neighborhoods will be safe from the dangers and nuisances of irresponsible pet ownership, that someday animals will not suffer because of human abuse, neglect or ignorance, and that every pet born will have a good home and proper care all its natural life."
Reagan Daniel, president of the board for CARA's House, the animal shelter in the parish, said they "are very much looking forward to sitting down with the board and helping in the planning process."
Daniel said CARA's House staff and volunteers have been considering priorities for the new facility.
"One of our biggest needs is a climate-controlled facility," she said.
Currently at the shelter in Sorrento, dogs are housed in a building that must be heated in the winter by diesel heaters and heat lamps and cooled in the summer by a huge, industrial-sized ceiling fan as well as individual box fans at each kennel and big "circle drum" fans that can be moved around.
The cats are housed in temporary buildings that are air-conditioned in the summer and have heating in the winter.
The shelter is currently housing 200 cats and 125 dogs, Daniel said. Summertime is the shelter's busiest time of the year.
One of the factors, Daniel said, is the jump in "owner surrenders" of pets to the shelter, often because the owners are moving away or, sometimes, leaving on a vacation.
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Ascension Wisconsin to provide free medical exams, dental care Saturday at North Division High School – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Posted: at 3:43 am
Ascension Wisconsin's "Medical Mission at Home" event in Racine drew about 300 people in May. A similar event will be held in Milwaukee on Saturday.(Photo: Ascension Wisconsin)
Ascension Wisconsin, with the help of roughly 500 volunteers, will provide free medical exams, dental care and other services Saturday at its first medical mission in Milwaukee.
The event will be held from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at North Division High School, 1011 W. Center St.
It will include free medical exams by primary care physicians, specialists in obstetrics/gynecology, dermatology and podiatry, nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
Dentists from the St. Elizabeth AnnSeton Dental Clinic, which is sponsored by Ascension Wisconsin, and from throughout southeastern Wisconsin also will be staffing the event.
Other services will include basic vision tests, blood tests and mammograms.
A similar event in Racine in May drew 300 people.
Some people dont seek out medical care, said Tim Waldoch, chief mission integration officer for Ascension Wisconsin.
We are doing this to bring medical care out to them, he said.
Volunteers will help people determine what services they need and will guide them through the event.
In addition, care coordinators will arrange follow-up care as well as help connect people with a primary care physician.
We are trying to set the stage for better care on many fronts, Waldoch said.
Financial counselors from Ascension Wisconsin and Covering Wisconsin also will be at the event to help people enroll in BadgerCare Plus, the states largest Medicaid program.
Adults with household incomes below the poverty threshold $12,490 for one person are eligible for coverage through BadgerCare Plus.
The cutoff for eligibility is much higher for children and pregnant women.
People with low incomes also are eligible for federal subsidies that offset all or almost all of the cost, including out-of-pocket expenses, of buying private health plans under the Affordable Care Act.
Those plans, though, are available for more people only during the annual open-enrollment period.
Waldochpraised Milwaukee Public Schools and North Division High School for their help.
We are taking over the place that day, he said.
Other organizations also are participating. And the event is drawing physicians and other volunteers who work for Ascension Wisconsin from as far as Rhinelander.
"This is something that people feel very proud of and want to be part of, said Kevin Kluesner, chief administrative officer of Ascension St. Joseph hospital.
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