Some residents in the Denver neighborhood of Park Hill are suing a nonprofit, a church and its pastor, and the city of Denver in an effort to prevent a legal homeless encampment from opening.
When surgery is covered but anesthesia isn t: Coloradans caught off-guard by out-of-network bills
Major change affected one of the stateâs largest insurance companies
KMGH-TV
and last updated 2021-05-08 00:24:50-04
LITTLETON, Colo. â Shortly before her surgery at Littleton Hospital in February, Sue Henry got a call from her anesthesiologist to tell her he was out-of-network.
âI thought it was completely outrageous. I didnât know until a week before my surgery,â Henry said. âI have an in-network hospital and in-network surgeon, and the guy in between thatâs going to make me comfortable is out-of-network.â
She tried to find a less expensive option that was in her insurance network but said she could not find another anesthesiologist within 50 miles.
A group of Park Hill residents are suing the nonprofit Colorado Village Collaborative, Park Hill United Methodist Church and the City of Denver to stop a safe-camping site for people experiencing homelessness proposed for South Park Hill. The proposed [site] has not met the requirements set out by the city, pose[s] a real danger to minors and school-aged children, does not address the impact it will have on the neighborhood and displaces people from an area with available resources to an area not equipped to handle the purpose of the [safe-camping site], reads a motion for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction filed in Denver District Court on May 6 by local attorneys Heather Anderson Thomas and Douglas W. Baier on behalf of five plaintiffs. Nathan Adams, the church s lead pastor, is the one person named as a defendant; he declined to comment on the suit. The lawyers for the plaintiffs have not responded to interview requests.
In an unusually brief oral argument before the Colorado Supreme Court, both the attorney general’s office and the defense agreed: trial courts still have the authority to return unlawfully-seized property
The Docket: Real estate lawsuit roundup for 5.6.21
Turnpike Industrial, LP v. J Squared General Contracting, LLC, and Jack Thurman
Plaintiff says defendants, per a lease dated March 14, 2019 expiring April 30, 2022, have failed to pay full monthly rental and fees for July 2020 through April 2021, and are indebted to plaintiff for $60,096.06.
Attorneys: Steven W. Kelly, Michael L. Schlepp and Taryn H. Van Deusen of S&D Law
Filed: 4/29/2021
Arapahoe District Court
Mastino Management Inc. and Kimberly Bacon v. Fox Run at Centennial Homeowners Association; Jennifer Bernard; and Julie Block
Defamation and libel. Defendants failed to pay plaintiffs for property management services and defamed them in front of the board launching in “a verbal barrage of personal attacks beyond the bounds of decency a normal person should endure including the humiliating and bitter accusation that Ms. Bacon is ‘the worst mother ever. ”