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Class action lawsuit names Providence St Mary and former neurosurgeons Dr Daniel Elskens and Dr Jason Dreyer [Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, Wash ]

Four area residents are named as plaintiffs, but hundreds of people were harmed by the Walla Walla hospital and the two doctors, said Spokane- based attorney William Gilbert after filing the lawsuit in Superior Court of King County. It was after the announcement on April 12 by the Eastern Washington Department of Justice that his office was able to know of the.

More Details Emerge On Providence St Mary Medical Center s Requirement To Pay Largest Ever Health Care Settlement In Eastern WA [Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, Wash ] – InsuranceNewsNet

B, "the U.S. Attorney's Office of the Eastern District of Washington said at a press conference on Tuesday, April 12, that two former Walla Walla neurosurgeons hurt patients and committed insurance fraud while practicing at Providence St. Mary Medical Center. Standing outside her Spokane office, U.S. Attorney Vanessa Waldref told listeners that not only did the.

Delightful distractions in dire days: News oddities during 2020 in the Walla Walla Valley (Part 5)

Delightful distractions in dire days: News oddities during 2020 in the Walla Walla Valley (Part 5)
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Building each other up: The U-B explores good news of 2020 in the Walla Walla Valley (Part 4)

Editor’s note: In this weeklong series, the Union-Bulletin will focus on the upside of 2020. Despite a pandemic, historic floods and more, not all news in 2020 was bad news; sometimes our staff reported on heartwarming stories of communities coming together, people working for good in the Valley and businesses defying odds. Construction was on the rise in 2020. People around the Valley also took time to be constructive with their time, building new garden beds, finally doing that long-dreamed home addition and sometimes pitching in to help around the community. In today’s edition of “On the Upside: 2020,” we look at some of the ways people in the Valley literally and figuratively built each other up.

Through flood and fear: The Union-Bulletin explores good news of 2020 in the Walla Walla Valley (Part 1)

The year 2020 is about to come to a close. And while the turning of a new page in the calendar doesn’t bring an end to historic events of 2020 — the COVID-19 pandemic rages on, protestors continue to call for racial equity, the presidential election is still being challenged and many properties in the greater Walla Walla Valley are still awaiting repairs from last winter’s flooding — a new year brings renewed hope. We’ve all born witness to, whether in person or from afar, the downside of 2020 — from the pain of a loved one dying from the virus, to the economic turbulence of monthslong shutdowns and job losses, to the sadness of losing a family property to the floods, to the discomfort of families divided along political lines.

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