Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Legal Fight Over Maine Hotels Used To House Homeless People
A Bangor motel wants a judge to decide whether it has to take in homeless guests paying for their rooms with city-issued vouchers. The Travelodge on Odlin Road filed a lawsuit earlier this month in Penobscot County Superior Court after it received a notice from a legal aid group saying it and other motels had violated the Maine Human Rights Act when they turned away homeless guests with housing vouchers. (2/28)
Two hotels in Maine will stop hosting hundreds of people experiencing homelessness because of complaints from neighboring businesses. The Days Inn and Comfort Inn near the Maine Mall in South Portland will not renew its contract with MaineHousing to provide emergency shelter when it expires May 31, the Portland Press Herald reports. Suresh Gali, head of New Gen Hospitality Management that operates the hotels, made the announcement at a meeting Friday, according to the newspaper. (2/26)
The record-breaking cold that settled over Billings this week is the kind of cold that can freeze bare skin in minutes. And for those experiencing homelessness, frostbite and hypothermia are a major concern. By Wednesday, temperatures dropped to minus 21 at the airport and minus 26 on the West End of Billings. The high for the day was minus 3. (Schabacker, 2/26)
When the city of Albuquerque鈥檚 years-in-the-making homeless shelter finally opens, it will cater exclusively to women 鈥 and it will maintain that focus for the undetermined future. The city has decided to launch the Gateway Center in Southeast Albuquerque with 50 beds for women. While officials have in the past described the Gateway as a 24/7 operation to aid anyone regardless of gender, religion or sobriety, they say starting exclusively with women makes the most sense from a resources perspective. (Dyer, 2/28)
Debbie Ettleman is one of the first patients at St. Vincent Healthcare to receive a full-support heart pump that just a month ago would have required her to fly to a major city. When patients鈥 hearts are weak, surgeons attach the device to replace function of the left side of the heart 鈥 allowing those muscles to completely rest, said Dr. Simon Maltais, a cardiac surgeon recently hired at SCL Health. (Ackerman, 2/26)
Polk County residents will soon be able to apply for another $35 million in pandemic-related rental assistance after some prodding of the U.S. Treasury Department by U.S. Rep. Cindy Axne. Axne, D-Iowa, announced Friday that the Treasury had approved the reallocation of the federal funds from the state of Iowa to Polk County after聽she wrote a letter earlier this month聽to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. (Rood, 2/25)
Tony and Neunutae Bell had been counting down the days until their wedding. After getting engaged three years ago and waiting for COVID-19 cases to wane, the couple realized this past Thanksgiving that a rare date would be coming up: Feb. 22, 2022. It鈥檚 a palindrome day, which is a number or word that can be read the same way forward and backward 鈥 and it was a Tuesday. Such a 鈥淭wosday鈥 won鈥檛 happen again for 400 years. But a few days before the planned courthouse nuptials, Tony found himself in the emergency department at Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital. The Baltimore couple was ready to call off the wedding. But once Erynn Bossom, a nurse manager on the neurology and stroke floor found out, she started to put a plan into motion. (Oxenden, 2/28)