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4 February 2010 | 7 replies
It is WRONG.Unless you address TORT reform, Anti Trust practices, and outright FRAUD, you will never address Health Reform correctly.Here are a few anecdotal samples: Medicare paying $2,000.00 for a wheel chair.
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24 September 2010 | 22 replies
There are sometimes handicapped children or elderly parents that survive and need to be cared for.You are a very hard hearten person to be advocating that all their survivors be tossed into the gutter (the deceased probably even paid for his handicapped child's wheelchair, so the fed will take that too.)And apparently, you believe that all the family pets should be shunted off to the pound and put to sleep, and no arrangements made for their care when their owner dies.A good parent makes sure a child can make his own way.
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10 May 2010 | 5 replies
It's my understanding that "assisted living" is in different categories, depending on the degree of assistance and care required. for medically assistedpersons, I know some are the waiting room to heaven and not classified as nursing homes, and then there are those for limited assistance, like someone restricted to a wheel chair and who has say mental issues who can not really be on their own.A friend of mine owns several assisted living facilities and nursing homes.
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3 May 2016 | 7 replies
What if you required special access due to some accident and retro-fitted the entire house for wheelchair access?
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18 June 2019 | 11 replies
You can't charge extra fees for a person in a wheelchair, but that doesn't mean you can't charge them a cleaning fee if the wheelchair left scuff marks all over the floor and baseboards.
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8 July 2019 | 1 reply
Then she later said that she doesn't believe in shots/vaccinations...Fast forward to today and she got at least the rabies shot and will be sending that my way, but it prompted me to wonder a few things that I thought i'd ask the group.If she had refused to get the rabies vaccination, could i have forced the issue being that it's essentially what equates to a living wheelchair?
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10 July 2019 | 2 replies
I'm looking to convert two ground level units I have in a multi-family into fully wheelchair accessible units.
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2 August 2019 | 16 replies
Service animals are to be treated no different than say a wheelchair.4) You are correct, you do not have an option legally to deny service animals.
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3 July 2020 | 1 reply
You have to allow it if their request is reasonable.For example, installing a wheelchair ramp is a legitimate request but some homes aren't suitable (e.g. a Boston brownstone with steep stairs).
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23 July 2020 | 6 replies
The tenant obtained a wheelchair and months later I saw a wheelchair ramp built on my property entrance way.