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St. Lucie County may let dogs roam wild at Wildcat on Hutchinson Island

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

ST. LUCIE COUNTY — Dog owners could find a new place to take their pets if County Commissioners allow dogs to roam Wildcat Cove.

The measure would let dog owners allow their pets to roam without leashes in the area so long as the owner is in control of the dog.

Wildcat Cove is located at 3399 North A1A in North Hutchinson Island just west of Pepper Park. The area has a riverside view.

Commissioners are expected to set a date for a public hearing at Tuesday’s meeting. The meeting is at 6 p.m. at 2300 Virginia Ave. in Fort Pierce, and the public hearing is expected to be in early October. If passed then, the space could be used as of Nov. 1.
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Raid on Sebastian home turns up 3,000 illegal pills, stolen auto parts, police say

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

SEBASTIAN — Police investigators said they uncovered a criminal enterprise involving ill-gotten prescription drugs, out-of-state pill smuggling and stolen auto parts when they searched a home last weekend.

Investigators spent 30 hours searching an undisclosed home late Friday and most of Saturday, said Sebastian Officer Steve Marcinik, police spokesman. Eight investigators recovered more than 3,000 pills with a street value of $60,000, as well as $6,500 worth of stolen property and $4,500 cash, investigators said.

“This shows a direct link between theft and the illegal prescription drug business,” Marcinik said.
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‘Eco photo tours’ offered in October, Martin parks officials say

Friday, September 11th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

MARTIN COUNTY — The Martin County Parks and Recreation Department is launching a new environmentally focused outdoor recreation program for all ages.

Veteran photographer, Kevin Boldenow is leading the newest eco-style adventure throughout Martin County’s most beautiful landscapes. The “eco photo tours” will be a serious of photography instruction at different locations throughout Martin County for both novice and experienced photographers, county officials said in a news release. (more…)

Man, wife argued during anniversary cruise before he jumped, was saved off St. Lucie

Friday, September 4th, 2009 by Post Staff

PORT CANAVERAL — Martha Jackson was watching a wedding video with her nephew when she heard the splash.

Soon after, the Nashville, Tenn., woman heard a man yelling.

“You could hear him hollering for help,” said Jackson, who was on the last night of a four-night cruise to the Bahamas.

Authorities have not released the name of the 34-year-old Philadelphia man who jumped from his sixth-deck suite aboard the Carnival Sensation late Wednesday. The man, who was on the cruise celebrating his wedding anniversary, was rescued 1 1/2 hours later by the Disney cruise ship Wonder off the coast of southern St. Lucie County. (more…)

Police-hating MySpace comments help earn Stuart robber cell space for 12 years

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

Note to teens facing a potential prison term: don’t use your MySpace page to post photos of police officers and wish “AIDS and genocide to all law enforcement.”

That’s what Stuart resident Jesse Alan Walker, 19, did while awaiting a June trial in which a jury convicted him of robbery with a firearm related to a 2008 home invasion armed robbery. At trial, he was accused of planning the robbery with two then-20-year-old co-defendants, who once played football for Jensen Beach High School.

“I hate the (expletive) police,” Walker posted on MySpace last December, along with photos of Stuart Police officers and derogatory comments.
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Search has yet to turn up two men who never returned from weekend fishing trip

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009 by Post Staff

Two men who never returned from a weekend fishing trip out of Fort Pierce continued to go missing on Tuesday morning.

Vincent Faulkner and his brother-in-law Eric Ross left the Black Pearl boat ramp in downtown Fort Pierce about noon Sunday, Coast Guard officials there report. The search for them and the 14-foot boat they were on began after family contacted officials about 9:30 p.m. Sunday.

The search continues today, when the Coast Guard deployed a helicopter crew, a jet crew, a long-range aircraft crew and three boats to scour the seas.

As of last night the search area included 1,200 square miles. It is too early to tell how wide the area will be today, a spokesman said this morning.

Harbor Branch/FAU scientist gets grant to look for cancer cure in the ocean

Monday, July 13th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

Esther A. Guzman, a scientist at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute in Fort Pierce, has received a $375,000 grant for a three-year project to find marine organisms that might help prevent pancreatic cancer.

The 36-year-old Guzman grew up in Mexico City and earned a doctorate in immunology from the University of Texas’ M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston in 2004. She joined the drug discovery program at Harbor Branch, a division of Florida Atlantic University, the following year. (more…)

Armed boy, 14, surrenders to Fort Pierce police after standoff

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

FORT PIERCE — A 14-year-old boy who police say fled from officers, brandished a gun and barricaded himself inside a home Monday afternoon surrendered after a few hours, officials said.

Patrick Casimir of 1105 North 29th Street was arrested just before 5 p.m. after he walked out of the house in the 3000 block of Avenue L with his hands raised, according to Sgt. Dennis McWilliams. No one was injured, and no shots were fired.

Casimir was charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, armed burglary and two counts of resisting arrest without violence, officials said.
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Medicare rules making it difficult for Treasure Coast patients to get oxygen

Monday, July 6th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

New Medicare payment rules are starting to strangle local small oxygen suppliers by forcing them to turn away business.

In the process, patients who live here part-time, travel, move or want to switch suppliers locally are left struggling to find new options for oxygen.

“This is going to dramatically affect patients’ lifestyles, how they move and their freedom,” said Mark Hassett, general manager of Stuart-based OxyPros Inc., which also has a Port St. Lucie office “Patients need to speak up.”

In the new rules for 2009, Medicare pays suppliers about $164 monthly for three years for patients renting respiratory equipment. In the following two years, suppliers continue providing oxygen and services, but only receive negligible reimbursement. After the fifth year, the payment cycle begins again and patients are entitled to new equipment.

Now, it’s become a losing proposition, suppliers said, to take a patient who has been on oxygen even for a year or two, because two years of providing essentially free oxygen and services follow.

And close to three full years is necessary to cover the costs of the impending two-year period with little reimbursement, said Kathie Rovella of Oxygen Plus in Vero Beach.

So suppliers are often forced to reject patients who are a few years into their oxygen use. Oxygen Plus has turned away 12-15 patients this year because of the new billing cycle, including two in the last week, Rovella said.

Because much of Florida’s population doesn’t live in the state year-round that can make it difficult because patients have to find a supplier in two locations. And patients a few years into the cycle who move are often left confused and without coverage.

Travel cane be even more difficult.

Patients either have to lug their equipment around with them, or search diligently for willing suppliers wherever they are going, Rovella said.

The rule is part of a large-scale effort to cut Medicare costs and eliminate fraud in the oxygen industry, which long lacked sufficient regulation, said Zane Morgan, a manufacturers representative for several Florida oxygen suppliers.

Dorothy McGrath is approaching four years using oxygen. She decided that carrying her 30-pound concentrator to Kentucky to see her daughter last month was unreasonable.

So McGrath, of Hobe Sound, rented from a local supplier, and was handed a $150 bill, which OxyPros luckily paid for her.

Because McGrath was in the middle of her third year, the Kentucky supplier wouldn’t accept her Medicare.

“You’re really bound to your house, and that’s not fair,” said McGrath, 63.

Patients like McGrath, who travel, move across the state, live seasonally up North, or look to move closer to family simply are getting turned away, Hassett said.

Meanwhile, the loss in customers and reimbursement could be debilitating for small suppliers in the long run.

Medicare reimbursement hardly accounts for labor costs, like providing 24/7 on-call services, and equipment set-up, maintenance and refills, which in reality are the prime expenses for suppliers, Hassett said.

OxyPros and Oxygen Plus have both added smaller health-care items to their inventories to help make up for profit losses. And OxyPros is in a hiring freeze, while Oxygen Plus staff members have taken pay cuts.

But neither company is confident small suppliers will be able to continue the same services without a large-scale change.

“Oxygen Plus is a mom-and-pop store,” Rovella said. “And trust me, we won’t be able to sustain this much longer.”

In the end, however, it’s the patients like those who come in for portable oxygen so they can move and be active who suffer — and who become confined to one area in an effort to be mobile.

“They’re not thinking about the person’s life,” McGrath said. “It’s important when you’re disabled to be near your friends and family.

“Everybody has to breathe.”

OXYGEN BREAKDOWN

In years one to three, suppliers receive an average of $200 per month – 80 percent from Medicare, and a 20 percent copay from the patient or secondary insurer – for renting, installing and maintaining rented oxygen equipment

In years four and five, Medicare offers minimal reimbursement to oxygen suppliers, who are required to continue offering the same equipment and services

After five years, the payment cycle restarts, and patients are entitled to new equipment

By Jonathan Mattise, TCPalm.com

Loan modifications a struggle for Treasure Coast homeowners

Thursday, June 18th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

Since March, Leroy Stennett has spent more than 10 hours talking to seven people in five departments at Bank of America about getting his mortgage modified.

In 2006, Stennett and his wife purchased a house in Port St. Lucie for $285,000, putting $95,000 down and adding another $5,000 in closing costs from the sale of their previous home.

“My house is worth $120,000 now, so, I’ve basically paid it off, but they don’t want to cut me a break,” Stennett said about his lender, Bank of America. “Every time I call, I talk to a different person, so I can’t get any real answers.”

Like thousands on the Treasure Coast, Stennett hoped President Barack Obama’s Making Home Affordable plan would help adjust his house payments after applying for a mortgage modification. But frustrated homeowners, who remain current on mortgage payments despite economic setbacks, say they are confused about the modification process and aren’t getting support or cooperation from their lenders. (more…)

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