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San Marcos Church spends Fifth Sunday out of the chapel and in the community

Mary Ellen Kent Bunyard Foundation awards $480,000 to area nonprofits

Positively Central Texas: Texas Ramp Project builds ramp for Waco man

Positively Central Texas: Texas Ramp Project builds ramp for Waco man A local organization is building ramps at homes for the elderly..for free! and last updated 2021-05-27 13:48:32-04 The Texas Ramp Project s goal is to give home bound seniors more freedom and mobility, by building them ramps. For free! A group of local volunteers went to Waco native Classie Ballou s home to help him out. The Waco South chapter of the Texas Ramp Project serves the McLennan and Falls County communities. Project leader, Steve Jackson, said, It s a goal to provide ramps across the state of Texas for seniors who are low income or even younger with disabilities.

Form 1024, Individual Status Summary

Medicaid No. Enter the individual’s Medicaid number. CARE or Unique ID No. If the individual is enrolled in HCS, enter the individual’s Client Assignment and Registration (CARE) Identification number; if CARE has transitioned out of use, enter the Unique ID number assigned to the individual by Texas Medicaid & Healthcare Partnership (TMHP). Enter N/A if no CARE or Unique ID number exists. Date of Birth Enter the individual’s date of birth using the mm/dd/yyyy format. Service Area Enter the managed care service area the individual resides in. If the individual is not enrolled in HCBS, enter N/A. Link to service areas: https://hhs.texas.gov/sites/default/files//documents/services/health/medicaid-chip/programs/managed-care-service-areas-map.pdf

North Texan one of 10 still living in iron lung

North Texan one of 10 still living in iron lung Follow Us Question of the Day In this Aug. 9, 2014 photo, Paul Alexander uses a plastic stick with a pencil tied to it to type on a keyboard using only his mouth while in his iron lung at his home in Dallas. Alexander is one . more > By SHELLY CONLON - Associated Press - Sunday, August 24, 2014 DALLAS (AP) - As a tow-headed 6-year-old, Paul Alexander took apart everything, including his mother’s blender, simply to understand how it worked. His father would be close behind, putting the pieces back together. Alexander didn’t know at that time there would be a day he wouldn’t be able to take things apart, wouldn’t be able to run around in the mud, or do other rambunctious activities the average 6-year-old could do. Paralytic polio would place him in an iron lung, a machine that forces air into his lungs with hel

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