(1032) stories found containing 'Petersburg Medical Center'


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  • Tempers flare during constituency visit

    Dan Rudy|Apr 13, 2017

    Petersburg was paid a visit by longstanding United States Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska) on Monday, part of a wider tour of Southeast that includes Ketchikan and Juneau. Extra chairs had to be brought into the Borough Assembly chambers to accommodate the audience, and people stood at the room's back and sides. Seated front and center, Young explained the session would be an informal way for people to give input and ask questions. "I'm here primarily to hear what's on your mind and what you'd like to...

  • Living wills to be explained April 19

    Apr 13, 2017

    The Petersburg Medical Center will provide the public a time to create a living will using the Five Wishes document. The booklet allows anyone 18 years or older a way to control how they are treated if they get seriously ill and cannot speak for themselves. The meeting will be from 7-8 p.m. at the Dorothy Ingle Conference Room on Wednesday, April 19. The Five Wishes document will be explained and questions about it will be answered. Five Wishes is a living will that talks about people’s personal, emotional and spiritual needs as well as t...

  • PMC hosts medical student

    Apr 13, 2017

    Mariya Kochubey from University of Washington School of Medicine will be completing her third year Family Medicine Clerkship at Petersburg Medical Center. She will be at PMC through May 5. Petersburg Medical Center is an official University of Washington Medical Student Clerkship site for rural Family Medicine. The experience that medical students get here may encourage them to pursue rural family medicine; perhaps even returning to our community someday to practice, according to Dr. Jennifer...

  • Police respond to disturbance at school

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Apr 13, 2017

    Police made contact with a man shouting vulgarities and making offensive hand gestures in front of the Rae C. Stedman Elementary School on Monday morning. He was also reported to be wearing a gas mask or respirator. In an email sent to parents and others, Principal Teri Toland said, “Today there was an individual in front of the building shouting offensive messages and using inappropriate hand gestures. We have spoken with police and (are) pursuing every legal avenue to insure students are safe. The police do not feel that the individual is a...

  • Assembly approves lower power rate for school

    Kyle Clayton|Apr 6, 2017

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly discussed a request made by the Petersburg School District and Petersburg Medical Center to pay a lower power rate but ultimately voted to only provide it to school buildings, instead of all municipal buildings including the hospital. The request comes after meetings between the Petersburg School District, Petersburg Medical Center and borough administrators on how to maintain services without increasing fees or taxes. “The school, the hospital and the borough have been getting together in these meetings to try t...

  • SEARHC-AICS merger completed

    Apr 6, 2017

    Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium (SEARHC) has completed its acquisition of Alaska Island Community Services (AICS), with the transition formally taking effect on April 1. Started in 1975, SEARHC is a non-profit tribal health consortium representing 18 Native communities in the region. Among its other programs, it operates Mt. Edgecumbe Hospital and the Ethel Lund Medical Center in Juneau. One of the largest private employers in the region before the merger, the deal with AICS extends its reach to 24 communities. Established in...

  • Drips and Leaks

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Mar 30, 2017

    The Petersburg Medical Center Board approved a budget of up to $250,000 plus design costs of $42,000 to renovate the basement kitchen at the hospital at a special meeting last night. The kitchen is located in the basement of the Long Term Care facility adjacent to the hospital. That building is located in the oldest section of the facility that was built in 1969. CFO Doran Hammett told the board that design and renovation expenses should be taken from the hospital's long-term investment...

  • Hospital recognizes employees for their service

    Mar 30, 2017

    Petersburg Medical Center hosted a luncheon to recognize employees for their service to the hospital on March 7. Miriam Swanson has served 25 years; Jennifer Bryner and Jenna Olsen for 20 years and Elizabeth Hart for 15 years. Recognized for 10 years service were Mamie Nilsen and Elise Kubo. Five-year employees were Angela Bertagnoli, Liz Thomas, Liz Woodyard, Helen Boggs, Shara McMullen, Mark Tuccillo, Skip Hallingstad and Elen Aase....

  • March to be strongest revenue month for Medical Center

    Mar 30, 2017

    Chief Financial Officer Doran Hammett predicts March will be one of the strongest revenue months for Petersburg Medical Center. The prediction is based on all Long Term Care beds being filled and patient census numbers in February. Hammett added that March revenue could exceed March income for the past two years. “Cash is strong,” according to Hammett and PMC is showing a $500,000 positive cash flow as of Feb. 28 with 93.3 days of cash on hand. Cash on hand reflects the length of time the hospital can pay for operating expenses using only its...

  • Borough to update zoning code, assembly hears capital project list options for Power & Light

    Kyle Clayton|Mar 9, 2017

    At this week’s Assembly meeting, Community Development director Liz Cabrera presented to the Petersburg Borough Assembly an outline for how to update the borough’s zoning code that hasn’t been brought up to speed since 1986. Cabrera said many parts of the code are contradictory due to small updates in some sections but not in others, that the processes used are cumbersome and slow and that the zoning is restrictive. “A lot of the definitions in the code are nonexistent, blurry, unclear, really difficult to interpret and apply consistently, real...

  • PMC growth: Renovate or rebuild facility

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Mar 9, 2017

    The final chapter of Petersburg Medical Center's strategic plan is likely the most daunting. The first goal of the plan states: "Fix or replace the facility to create a safe environment for patients, staff and community." Decisions need to be made to remodel the current facility at an estimated cost of $16 million or to replace the facility for an estimated $33 million. Both options require outside funding sources. In May 2016 Joann Lott of Jensen Yorba Lott Architects told the PMC board:...

  • Petersburg Medical Center strategic plan monitors financial strength

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Mar 2, 2017

    Oversight and communication by the Chief Financial Officer are a key component of PMC's strategic plan to achieve a break-even operation. The CFO is charged to balance quarterly spending with revenue and reimbursement in each department and control unnecessary waste at PMC. Doran Hammet, CFO, regularly communicates PMC's financial position to employees, physicians, management and the board. He does this at monthly meetings of the hospital board. He assures that pricing is competitive and he...

  • PMC to promote quality services and clinical excellence

    Feb 23, 2017

    Petersburg Medical Center’s strategic plan includes monitoring and improving health care services at the facility. This entails using state, federal and internal quality indicators to improve clinical excellence at PMC. Staff educational meetings and reports to the hospital board are a function of monitoring progress of the plan. Staff will monitor for new and changing regulations and implement those changes with education of employees and reports to the board. Policies will be updated to reflect changes in regulations, according to the strateg...

  • Police reports

    Feb 23, 2017

    Feb. 15 — An abandoned vehicle was reported in the Petersburg Medical Center parking lot. Three disturbance calls were reported at three locations along Nordic Drive. Paul Jacobsen-Wilson, 32, was cited for expired registration and Liability Insurance Required. An intoxicated person was reported along Haugen Drive. A hit and run was reported at Mountain View Manor. A disabled vehicle was reported at 3-mile Cabin Creek Rd. Suspicious activity was reported along Nordic Drive. Feb. 16 — Stewart R. Conn, 18, was cited for Failure to Exercise Due...

  • Ice cream social

    Feb 16, 2017

  • School, hospital request lower power rates

    Kyle Clayton|Feb 9, 2017

    The Petersburg Borough Assembly discussed a request made by the Petersburg School District and Petersburg Medical Center to pay a lower power rate last month. The request comes after meetings between PSD, PMC and borough administrators on how to maintain services without increasing fees or taxes. "The school, the hospital and the borough have been getting together in these meetings to try to figure out ways that we can continue to function in the way the community wants without having to cut...

  • Medical Center faces housing crunch

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Feb 2, 2017

    The Petersburg Medical Center has to remedy a housing crunch this year, as they will be evicted from three of the six apartments they rent from Petersburg Mental Health's seven unit apartment building on Fram Street. Evictions would happen now through June. The PMC provides housing for locums and short-term employees and pays up to $1,100 per month for each of the 6 units they currently occupy. CEO Liz Woodyard told the hospital board last Thursday that the hospital likes to have housing within...

  • New power rate could help hospital, schools

    Feb 2, 2017

    Petersburg Power and Light could be asked to subsidize electric rates to Borough general fund users, the hospital, cold storage and schools. In a joint meeting with the schools and hospital, Borough Manager Steve Giesbrecht asked the finance department to run numbers showing the potential savings if a Municipal Rate were set at $9/mo. plus 6.9-cents per kwh. Savings to each entity would be $233,179 each year and the borough electric utility would subsidize the savings through their revenue stream. Manager Giesbrecht wrote: “Important to r...

  • Whooping cough confirmed in community

    Jess Field|Jan 19, 2017

    The Petersburg has one confirmed case of Pertussis or whooping cough, according to a notice sent out by Superintendent Erica Kludt-Painter on Tuesday afternoon. “We have been working with the Medical Center and Public Health Nurse to determine the best course of action for sharing accurate and helpful information with staff, parents, and community members,” Kludt-Painter wrote. “This is not a public health emergency, but we need to be cautious and aware.” The email described the case as being found in a small child, but did not specify if it w...

  • Petersburg news highlights for 2016

    Jess Field|Jan 5, 2017

    January Public Works rolled out the borough's highly anticipated blue cart recycling program. The borough received $820,117.61 from the annual raw fish tax. Dave Zimmerman was hired as the new Tongass National Forest Petersburg District Ranger. The assembly continued discussing the reallocation of the Kake access road funding. Representative Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins took part in a budget crisis presentation at Sons of Norway Hall. The visit was the first of many by representatives throughout the...

  • Noon party

    Jan 5, 2017

  • Oktoberfest celebrates 40 years of community

    Mary Koppes|Oct 27, 2016

    The community gym was bustling for the better part of Saturday as over 50 food, art and craft vendors set up booths and sold their wares at the 40th annual Oktoberfest Art Share. The event is coordinated by the Muskeg Maleriers and this year Jean Curry, Sally Dwyer and Polly Koeneman were the lead organizers. "It went well," Curry said. "It was busy almost the entire time." Shoppers had access to everything from pottery and jewelry to beeswax candles and handcrafted textiles. As tradition goes,...

  • Despite stikine slowdown, moose total highest on record

    Dan Rudy|Oct 20, 2016

    Area hunters brought in a bumper harvest this fall, with 112 moose reported at the end of the month-long 2016 season on Saturday. The total ended up being the largest on record, besting the 109 harvested in 2009. That year, antler restrictions were loosened to allow the harvest of bulls with two brow tines on both antlers, allowing for better yields. Alaska Department of Fish and Game area biologist Rich Lowell noted returns on the Stikine River were well below the long-term yearly average of 26...

  • Forfeited moose meat to be given away

    Ron Loesch Publisher|Oct 13, 2016

    After nearly a year of planning, the volunteer committee headed by David Byrne has established a plan to distribute moose burger meat (from illegally shot moose) to non-profit agencies and food service providers in Petersburg. Under the proposed distribution protocol, Trooper Cody Litster will take the moose to Trading Union or Hammer and Wikan for butchering. The meat will be ground into burger, packaged and delivered to the Community Cold Storage for freezing, pending approval by the Borough. Distribution of the meat to various organizations...

  • Voters approve marijuana cultivation and sales

    Jess Field|Oct 6, 2016

    Petersburg voters spoke loudly in favor of supporting marijuana in the Petersburg Borough. Moving forward, the product will be taxed and potentially bring much needed funds to the borough during tough fiscal times in the Last Frontier State. The unofficial results showed a landslide victory with 701 no votes to 414, on the only ballot initiative for this year's municipal election. The polls were busy Tuesday, with 1120 people taking the time to cast their ballot at the Community Center, in...

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