The Walk In Clinic’s Benefits And Drawbacks

For most people, our healthcare needs leave us with a conundrum of how exactly to proceed. On the one hand we feel crummy and do not want to wait a week or more to see our general care provider. On the other hand, our symptoms can hardly be described as urgent and we do not want to be a burden to the hospital emergency room or to spend the money on the visit to the ER. In addition to the unnecessary urgency and increased cost, it can be a seriously time consuming trip to spend three or more hours waiting to see someone for your sore throat simply because more immediate care is needed for other people. That leaves us stuck needing medical care but not knowing exactly what the best course of action is to receive it. Fortunately, there is a new option for those patients who need care quickly. It is called a walk in clinic and it is becoming more and more common in many different places all over the country. They are in the local drug store, as storefronts in shopping malls and even in some grocery stores. The need for care from something like a walk in clinic is lead by society’s demands for affordable and convenient healthcare. People need a care provider who is convenient and accessible or else they do not go at all. Basically a walk in clinic is a place that is used to treat minor and common problems. Usually they are not staffed by doctors, but by a certified nurse practitioner who can assess a patient’s well being and prescribe medication if necessary. They treat things like minor infections of the sinus, respiratory tract or bladder. They can diagnose things like strep throat or sprained wrists and they can even deal with chronic conditions like eczema or gout. For some, these places offer a quick and affordable source for booster shots and vaccinations. While these clinics offer great sources for simple medical treatments, they are not a substitute for regular visits to physicians. Additionally, anyone who goes to visit one of these convenient spots should also follow up and inform their doctor of any treatment they have had prior or any medication they may have prescribed. While a walk in clinic may be great for minor ailments, they are not always the best choice for all issues. They do not offer much in the way of follow up care or treatment of chronic conditions. When you go to visit, chances are you will be seen by a nurse practitioner or physician’s assistant and almost definitely not by a doctor. This means that sometimes lingering problems are missed and chronic ailments go undiagnosed. Also, because the staff is frequently rotated, it is not likely a person will be recognized or speak with someone who had previously treated them. This puts the satisfaction rating for most people very low and makes it particularly hard for some to feel comfortable divulging personal information to a total stranger every time they come in.

Protesters rally for a second time against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal

Buffalo, N.Y. Hotel Proposal Controversy
Recent Developments
  • “Old deeds threaten Buffalo, NY hotel development” — Wikinews, November 21, 2006
  • “Proposal for Buffalo, N.Y. hotel reportedly dead: parcels for sale “by owner”” — Wikinews, November 16, 2006
  • “Contract to buy properties on site of Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal extended” — Wikinews, October 2, 2006
  • “Court date “as needed” for lawsuit against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal” — Wikinews, August 14, 2006
  • “Preliminary hearing for lawsuit against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal rescheduled” — Wikinews, July 26, 2006
  • “Elmwood Village Hotel proposal in Buffalo, N.Y. withdrawn” — Wikinews, July 13, 2006
  • “Preliminary hearing against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal delayed” — Wikinews, June 2, 2006
Original Story
  • “Hotel development proposal could displace Buffalo, NY business owners” — Wikinews, February 17, 2006

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Buffalo, New York —For the second weekend in a row, demonstrators protested the Elmwood Village Hotel proposal on the proposed site.

The Elmwood Village Hotel is a proposed hotel by Savarino Construction Services Corporation and is designed by architect Karl Frizlen of the Frizlen Group. It is to be placed on the corner of Elmwood and Forest Avenues in Buffalo and will require the demolition of at least five properties (1109-1121 Elmwood).

The proposal also required that all five properties, including 605 Forest, be rezoned to a “C-2” zone, or a “special development plan.” The rezoning was passed by Buffalo’s Common Council on March 21, 2006.

Russell Smith, owner of the Six Nation’s Gift Shop at 1121 Elmwood, also participated in the protest.

“I am a Native American and we opened a Native American gift shop and we are just brand new [and just] opened. Having started out a business for the first time, and it the only Native American shop in the city, and I do not see the use of any hotel, especially at this district. The Elmwood Strip is pretty well established. Some of these people have been here a long while you know and they’re [Savarino Construction] disrupting their livelihood,” said Smith to Wikinews.

When Smith was asked if he was going to be in any of the shops in the new hotel he replied, “we don’t have the option of getting into the hotel or any of the shops that are going to be there. We haven’t [had] any idea that they [Savarino] were even planning to tear these buildings down to put a hotel here until we had moved in. I think thats a little unfair.”

Former City of Buffalo Mayor Anthony Masiello was asked to sign the petition to stop the hotel when he walked by, but he declined saying, “I respect what you are doing, but I am for the hotel.”

Despite the cold weather, at least 45 people showed up to walk the picket line.

For the moment, no further protests have been scheduled, pending the final decision on the hotel proposal by the city’s Planning Board which meets Tuesday, March 28, 2006. The meeting begins at 8:00am and will be held in room 902 on the 9th floor of City Hall in downtown Buffalo.

On Saturday morning several individuals attended a meeting with a lawyer to see what could be done, if anything, about the proposal and about Hans Mobius, former Buffalo mayoral candidate and owner of the properties to be demolished at 1109-1121 Elmwood.

One of the attendees, Nancy Pollina, co-owner of Don Apparel with Patty Morris, stated that “there is a case” but that she is likely unable to afford the large attorney’s fees. Pollina reports that she is looking into a “legal fund.”

Some of the affected are considering going to the New York State Supreme Court pro se to seek an injunction.

Some tenants of Mobius’s buildings have accused him of being a “slumlord” and claim that he “intentionally neglected” his properties with the intention of selling. Mobius, who has owned the properties for about 20 years, tried in 1995 to sell them to a developer who wanted to build a Walgreens Drugstore on the same site as the proposed hotel.

Mobius is expected to appear in housing Court on April 11, 2006. He has not returned any phone calls from Wikinews.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Protesters_rally_for_a_second_time_against_Buffalo,_N.Y._hotel_proposal&oldid=1981802”

AT&T to purchase T-Mobile for US$39 billion

Monday, March 21, 2011

AT&T has announced that it will purchase T-Mobile for US$39 billion. The move will make AT&T the largest cellular carrier in the United States. It was announced Sunday by both Deutsche Telekom, the owner of T-Mobile, and by AT&T. According to industry analysts, the deal was made to allow the two companies to compete with Verizon Wireless. Earlier in the week, T-Mobile employees hinted at a possible merger with Sprint, another cellular company. In the proposed deal, Deutsche Telekom will receive a board seat and a 8% stake in the merged company.

The merger is expected to complete after government regulatory departments approve it due to competition law. The sale would reduce the number of significant carriers in the US from four to three and is expected to close fully in about one year. In December 2010, T-Mobile reported a base of 34 million customers, AT&T had 95 million, and Verizon reported 94 million. A conference call on the deal is scheduled for EDT 8 AM Monday.

The move will to allow up to 95% of United States citizens access to a 4G LTE cellular network. Both AT&T and T-Mobile use the GSM standard (short for Global System for Mobile Communications) for their networks. Additionally, the popular iPhone smartphone from Apple Inc. will eventually arrive for T-Mobile subscribers; Verizon became the second carrier to sell the iPhone in the US February.

AT&T Chairman and CEO Randall Stephenson released a statement and said, “This transaction represents a major commitment to strengthen and expand critical infrastructure for our nation’s future. It will improve network quality, and it will bring advanced LTE capabilities to more than 294 million people. Mobile broadband networks drive economic opportunity everywhere, and they enable the expanding high-tech ecosystem that includes device makers, cloud and content providers, app developers, customers, and more. During the past few years, America’s high-tech industry has delivered innovation at unprecedented speed, and this combination will accelerate its continued growth.”

In response to the move, Gartner analyst Phillip Redman said, “Bigger is better in a commodity game. Four providers were too many. This may help Sprint as it becomes the standalone low-cost provider, and it makes more sense than a Sprint-T-Mobile deal.”

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=AT%26T_to_purchase_T-Mobile_for_US$39_billion&oldid=3292299”

US: Melamine from contaminated pet food enters human food chain

Sunday, April 29, 2007

At least 45 people are reported to have eaten pork which came from a hog farm in Ceres, California in the United States, where pigs from the farm were fed pet food which was recalled because it was contaminated with the chemical melamine.

So far none of the individuals have experienced signs of illnesses, but it is not known what effect the chemical, when ingested, has on humans because no major study has taken place on melamine.

On April 21, at least seven urine samples taken from pigs at hog farm, were tested and the results came back positive for the chemical melamine. At least three samples from the feed used to feed the pigs were tested and those results also came back positive for melamine.

Yesterday, the United States Food and Drug Administration or FDA, said in a statement that “we have no evidence of harm to humans associated with the processed pork product” and that “no recall of meat products processed from these animals is being issued.”

Despite the consumption of pork by humans, the FDA states that the risk to human health is minimal.

“The assessment that, if there were to be harm to human health, it would be very low, is based on a number of factors, including the dilution of the contaminating melamine and melamine-related compounds from the original rice protein concentrate as it moves through the food system. First it is a partial ingredient in the pet food; second, it is only part of the total feed given to the hogs; third, it is not known to accumulate in the hogs and the hogs excrete melamine in their urine; fourth, even if present in pork, pork is only a small part of the average American diet. Neither FDA nor USDA has uncovered any evidence of harm to the swine from the contaminated feed,” added the statement.

On March 19, the manufacturer of the food, Menu Foods, which is based in Mississauga, Ontario in Canada, recalled all of its dog and cat food which totaled over 60 million items. On April 28, Canadian officials announced that they will hold products, such as wheat and corn gluten, as well as soy and rice proteins that have been imported from China until they can be tested for melamine.

It is not known how extensive the outbreak is.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=US:_Melamine_from_contaminated_pet_food_enters_human_food_chain&oldid=1982787”

Used Cars Versus New Cars

The Indian Automobile Industry is going through a golden phase with entry of new cars hitting the market. They include Maruti Kezashi, Maruti Cervo, SUV Hyundai Santa Fe, SUV Skoda Yeti, Tata Aria and many more. All these cars would spring in the market with latest features and latest generation technologies.

According to industry professionals, the launch of such cars in India will eventually contribute in continuing the ongoing great demand momentum alive throughout the year. Most of the cars have already been added in the dealer lots and are readily available by pre-order bookings.

They might be redesigned or brand new cars, manufacturers are offering these cars at great incentives to get the buzz going. Firstly, you need to research so as to determine the best car that suits your needs. You need to also check for car price so that it fits into your budget. You can also check for their reviews including criticisms and problems on Internet reported about the car.

Secondly, as the market is competitive and crowded, you can go for attractive incentives like discounted prices and 0% financing options etc .Finally, you need to check the true market value of the car while buying them and can negotiate the price.

Buying new cars is great, especially when that car offer luxury, comfort and style. However, buying a car involves other procedures car warranty, car parts and services offered after purchase.

If car price is constraint, then you can opt for used cars where you can drive the car of your dreams with less offered price. However, you need to be careful while buying them. You need to check how old the car is, car history records which help you to uncover problems such as accidents, rolled back odometer etc.

You need to assess each part of the car with an experienced mechanic as even a small repair may cost expensive. Take the car for test-drive to assess the engine, brake and clutch condition, steering responsiveness.

However, you can also opt Certified used cars that are taken up by major companies like Hyundai warranty pre-owned program, Marutis True Value and Mahindra and Mahindras First Choice Wheels. They provide you a hassle free buying experience where each car undergoes a rigorous quality checks with necessary documentations in place.

On the contrary, it is always better to buy new car than a used car, unless and until you have constraint in price and badly need a car. As the used cars are old, the maintenance cost may be high and there would be constant replacement of old parts due to wear and tear.

Besides this, most of the manufacturers offer warranty programs where you need not spend anything extra for maintenance and labor costs. New cars have more fuel efficiency, safety and also value of your life. Thus, even if you are financially strapped, you need to realize that renowned manufacturers of the cars offer you unparallel opportunities for economic mobility.

Buying any car would be a big investment, but it can always be rewarding and exciting, especially if you sense the right car at a fair price.

Interview with LibriVox founder Hugh McGuire

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Old books never die. They don’t even fade away. Instead, their copyright expires and they are released into the public domain, where hordes of volunteers breathe new life into them. Groups like Project Gutenberg, Distributed Proofreaders and Wikisource digitize, preserve and categorize classic works of literature, old encyclopedias, and even periodicals.

Hugh McGuire, a writer from Montreal, decided that he did not only want to read these voices from the past — he wanted to hear them. “On a practical level,” he says, “I wanted to download a free audiobook.” Disappointed with the somewhat meager outcome of his search, he decided to create an open community website dedicated to creating spoken word versions of public domain texts. In August 2005, LibriVox was born. The call to action is simple enough:

“Would you like to record chapters of books in the public domain? It’s easy to volunteer. All you need is a computer, some free recording software, and your own voice.”

Less than a year later, the website features a hundred or so completed books, and 300 people have contributed chapters or poetry. “Probably another 400have done or are expected to do chapters for books not yet completed or cataloged,” McGuire explains. The finished audio files, like the texts they come from, are released into the public domain and offered in the MP3 and Ogg Vorbis file formats. Volunteers use the active forums and a wiki to collaborate. We asked Hugh McGuire about the state of the project, internationalization, and the place of LibriVox in the larger free content community.

Why did you decide to take the acoustic fate of public domain works into your own hands, and how did you go about it?

I think that a vibrant public domain is very important to a healthy world, and so I thought: here’s a way to help the cause. I launched LibriVox, emailed some friends and some podcasters who where doing literary stuff, and invited them to record a chapter of Joseph Conrad’s Secret Agent. Things have grown steadily since. By the way, AKMA was the first guy I know of to do something like this, with [Lawrence] Lessig’s Free Culture. That, I think, started my thinking about this, but it took a while for the idea to crystallize.

Do you personally record audiobooks, and did you already do so before LibriVox?

LibriVox was my first experience recording audiobooks. I still do the odd chapter, but i am a bit delinquent in finishing some of them these days!

Is there a particular LibriVox book which you think stands out because of the quality, the overall effort involved, its popularity, or for some other reason?

My personal favourite is Notes from the Underground (Dostoyevsky). Other random good ones:

  1. Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice
  2. Christie, Agatha. The Mysterious Affair at Styles
  3. London, Jack. White Fang
  4. Macaulay, Thomas Babington. History of England (Volume 1, Chapter 1)
  5. Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich. The Communist Manifesto (solo)
  6. Twain, Mark. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court (solo)

[Ed.: See the LibriVox catalog for a full index.]

Browsing the catalog, I find that the quality of the spoken audio varies greatly from text to text or even from chapter to chapter. If someone wanted to re-record a chapter because they didn’t like the speaker, would you then offer two versions?

Yes. We take the Wikipedia approach: if you think it should be better, please help it be so. You’ll note we offer a couple of versions of some books. Indeed our weekly poetry project celebrates this diversity of voice: each week a new short poem is chosen and as many readers as wish to record a version, so you get 20+ versions of the same poem, a very interesting audio experience.

Besides works whose copyright has expired, there is an increasing number of modern books available under Creative Commons and similar licenses. You mentioned Larry Lessig’s Free Culture, but it also includes some out of print titles by publishers who are open to the concept, such as O’Reilly. Do you want to limit the scope of LibriVox strictly to old public domain works, or do you have plans to include recent works under reasonably permissive licenses as well?

We are only doing public domain works, for a number of reasons, partly to keep simplicity in our copyright situation — public domain means its as simple as can be. CC makes things more complex. Also, there are other sites, notably podiobooks.com, which are better suited to CC works than LibriVox. we find it makes things clear and easy to say: published works, public domain, and leave it at that.

As far as I can tell, podiobooks.com features “free as in beer” content — material which you can download, but which isn’t under a free content license. Instead of “public domain”, wouldn’t “free content” work just as well, using something like the Free Content Definition to limit the scope?

This needs more discussion obviously: we chose public domain because the texts we use are public domain and we didn’t want to add newrestrictions, especially not non-commercial, since already our recordings are being used for a number of commercialish projects (I can’t recall any specific project names, but some pay-education sites use LV stuff). That’s good and well and fine with us. We don’t want to have to give anyone permission to use our recordings, we want anyone to use them for whatever they want.

Also, for the thing to work you need to have many dedicated volunteers willing to do the management (onerous) and many willing to do the reading. While Pride and Prejudice will attract many readers, I don’t know about O’Reilly’s latest tome on XML… though I might be wrong.

Are there plans to fully internationalize the website?

LV is a totally open project, so where the volunteers go, we go. We have books in German, Italian, French, Spanish, Hebrew, Finnish, Japanese, Old English… and possibly a few more. We also have a wiki, and our response to such questions is to encourage any non-anglos to make translations there, and we can incorporate into the site as needed. We have a language policy, which basically says that in general the forum language is English (so that admin know what’s going on) but that if a non-English book project is started, the language in that thread can be whatever volunteers wish to use.

I was thinking specifically about things like the user interface of the website and the forums. Are there plans to internationalize these? Many people speak no English at all, so an English website might not work for them.

In order for this to happen we need volunteers willing to do it. We have no budget (literally zero) and our structure is totally loose and open, so if a volunteer or group of volunteers offer to do this, we will find a way to help make it happen. There is the constraint that we’d be most comfortable with active volunteers doing it, who understand the project and its particularities.

Since everything is volunteer, the current admin would have to find the time to manage this, too, but I expect if there were a serious desire on the part of some volunteers, we’d have no problem adding the text. We have a wiki, where anyone is welcome to write the text in whatever language, and then we could easily post pages up to the site.

Has podcasting helped you in gaining more awareness?

Sure! Podcasting was the inspiration for LV … easy, cheap, do-it-yourself audio! Superb. Podcasting is an important part of our distribution, but torrents and regular downloads are probably bigger.

So, do you have an idea how many people listen to your podcast?

Last estimation was in the 5000 range.

Besides human readers, there’s also the fully automated approach of turning text into sound. Text-to-speech software is getting better every year, with an increasing focus on “natural” voices.

I don’t find text-to-speech very interesting. LV is about people reading to you, which is very different than having a computer – no matter the naturalness – read to you. Our recordings have mistakes, fumbles, coughs, and beautiful human voices being human, reading wonderful works of literature. It’s not just transmission of audio information, it’s something much more, and something no computer, robot etc. could ever replicate.

Do you not sometimes get worried that your work might eventually be made obsolete by technology?

See above, but we don’t really feel like we are in competition with other projects. Many of us are working for similar goals, and there’s room for many of us. Personally, I am very much interested in what the readers get out of the process, as much as the listeners. If there are computer-generated public domain audiobooks, so much the better. There are also many other audiolit projects, and we all seem to be doing parallel stuff. I think that’s great. The beauty of LV, podcasting etc. is that it’s all so cheap to do – you can have your choice. I will choose a real human reading over a computer reading any day, but others might not agree. That’s fine. LVers read out of love of literature, and nothing more.

Wikisource is the Wikimedia project which digitizes and archives free content texts. There’s also an existing Wikimedia effort to create spoken versions of Wikipedia articles. Are you guys aware of each other, and possibly already working together?

We’re aware of some of these projects, and have corresponded with some of these and others. There’s so much to do! It’s great that so many are doing this stuff, and that people can choose the things that interest them. this is the thing about LV (as with Wikipedia etc) … we can’t control our volunteers, nor do we want to. We just give a framework, and hope for the best.

What is the last audiobook you’ve listened to?

To be honest, I haven’t listened to a full book in a long while! Last chapter I listened to was from Whitman‘s Leaves of Grass.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Interview_with_LibriVox_founder_Hugh_McGuire&oldid=2584509”

Australian PM Gillard pressured to address human rights crackdown in China

Monday, April 25, 2011

The international organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) has called on Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard to publicly address China’s recent crackdown on dissidents, during her visit to the country from April 25th to 28th.

In an open letter HRW called on Prime Minister Gillard to address the increasing use of repressive force in China. According to HRW at least 39 lawyers and activists have been arrested and between 100 and 200 others have been victims of repressive measures such as house arrest, since February 16th.

Prime Minister Gillard is currently on a tour of Asia which included a stop in the disaster hit regions of Japan. She told Australian media before departing that she would “of course be raising human rights (with China).” “Our view of course is that we raise human rights. We have a human rights dialogue with China. That dialogue was in session as recently as December last year.”

HRW’s Asia advocacy director Sophie Richardson said that whilst Prime Minister Gillard has expressed concern in Canberra, “the test is whether she will do so publicly in Beijing”

The issue of human rights in China is of particular interest in Australia following the disappearance – and feared arrest – of Australian citizen and pro-democracy activist Yang Hengjun in China last month. The political blogger and writer disappeared in Guangzhou in March and although he has since resurfaced, he has not publicly stated exactly what happened during the two day period that he was missing.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Australian_PM_Gillard_pressured_to_address_human_rights_crackdown_in_China&oldid=3873474”

Rate Shock For California Health Insurance Plans

Submitted by: Dennis Jarvis

There’s a new term going around at the carrier level as they’re preparing for Jan 1st 2014 Health Exchange plans to come online. Rate Shock. Yes, it is as bad as it sounds. Needless to say, this refers to the health insurance rates we’ll pay in California for individual/family and small business coverage. Let’s look at what we can expect in terms of rates for 2013 leading up to the big switch over and what to expect from Rate Shock.

Precursor rate increase moves by Anthem

2013 is already sizing up to be bad if the Anthem recent notification of their 2/1/2013 rate increase for Individual and Family health plans (also know as IFP in the industry). The average increase for most Anthem Blue Cross of California members is around 20% with increases up to 25%. 25% is a huge hit (believe me…my family was right there). Was this just a one off? After all, Blue Shield of California came out with all new plans July 1st, 2012 which were much higher than the plans they replaced. By the way, Blue Shield announced a rate increase March 2013 soon after.

The Rule not the exception on rate increases in California

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CsLNlqnExR4[/youtube]

Unfortunately, the Anthem rate increase was not an isolated incident. The other major health insurance carriers have announced plans to increase rates as well for IFP in California including Aetna and Kaiser. We don’t expect them to raise again during 2013 since these plans are essentially temporary anyway for most Californians. Come Jan 1st, 2014, most IFP (and small business) members will have to change to one of the new California Health Exchange plans. Only grandfathered plans (those effective prior to 10/23/2010) can remain in force as long as they don’t make changes. If you are on a grandfathered California health plan, there are more considerations before making any changes to your plan. We’ve outlined that process here.

So what about this “Rate Shock” business?

The carriers are starting to get a feel of what will be required or “mandated” by the health reform bill both in and out of the Exchange. Based on experience and the new rules, they are expecting California health insurance rates to be 30-50% higher on the new plans available Jan 1st (for comparable coverage). The comparable coverage part is tough since the new plans will likely be richer than what’s available on the market then and most people in the Exchange will likely go to the Bronze or Silver plan while most people out of the Exchange will go with the Bronze. In the Exchange, the expected subsidy will be based on the Silver plan. Outside the Exchange (not qualifying for a subsidy), it will be a race to the bottom or the Bronze plan.

Why are the health insurance rates going up?

There are a few different reasons. There is California health insurance rate compression or the new rule that the oldest member cannot have rates more than 3 times the youngest member. Essentially, rates for people 45 and under will come up while older individuals (up to age 65) will go up but not as fast. The new plans are based on the Kaiser $30 Copay no deductible plan which is way out of whack with what people currently purchase on the market (generally a $3500+ deductible). That alone can drive up the costs significantly. Also, you can expect the various mandates (maternity, 100% preventative, etc) to add to the increase.

Silver lining based on income

If you make under 400% of the Federal poverty level, you can expect health insurance subsidies for most cases which will offset the large increase. If you don’t fall below 400% of poverty, expect to pay quite a bit more for health insurance or an increasing penalty for not purchasing it. In the meantime, run your instant quote to see what’s available through calhealth.net We expect to have the new Exchange and non-Exchange plans and rates online late summer of 2013. Of course, we’re happy to walk through your options with you.

About the Author: Dennis Jarvis is a licensed

California health insurance quote

agent with extensive knowledge of the Individual California health market. More on California rate shock:

California health insurance rate shock

Source:

isnare.com

Permanent Link:

isnare.com/?aid=1811373&ca=Finances

Small plane crashes on median of Interstate 75 in Michigan

Wednesday, March 8, 2006

A small, single-engine plane crashed in the median of Interstate 75 near Holly, Michigan Tuesday afternoon. The crash site is located about 100 feet from the East Holly Road overpass, near Exit 98, with approximate geographical coordinates of 42.784283° N 83.535847° W.

The Piper model PA-28-180 aircraft crashed in the median during mid-afternoon local time, and slowed traffic when police and rescue teams were en route to the scene. According to local television station WEYI-TV, two passengers were aboard the plane, and did not sustain any large injuries.

According to the FAA database, the plane was manufactured in 1968, and was issued a license in 1970. The most recent owner according to the database is a flying school in Coldwater, Ohio.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Small_plane_crashes_on_median_of_Interstate_75_in_Michigan&oldid=562126”