Related Company:
Board of Directors Announces Appointment After Extensive National Search
Vermont Business Magazine Adrianne Johnson Ross, MHA, was today named Home Health & Hospice’s next president and chief operating officer. She is preceded by Judy Peterson, who is retiring in January 2021 after eight years leading the organization.
Johnson Ross’s appointment is effective immediately. She begins today and will transition into in her new role over the next few weeks.
Johnson Ross has for the past year served as interim chief executive officer/executive director for Pheno Health Technologies, Inc., in Minneapolis, Minn., where she was responsible for a $370 million multi-clinic operations budget and led a team of 250 staff. Prior to her most recent role, Johnson Ross served as director of patient access for Hennepin Healthcare in Minneapolis, and as interim director of Healthcare Operations for B. E. Smith, Inc.
Vermont s top stories: Virus, legal weed, Scott s reelection
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Loving her to the moon and back: Plattsburgh toddler getting kidney transplant
tribuneledgernews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tribuneledgernews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By JOE LoTEMPLIO Editor in Chief Dec 25, 2020
Dec 25, 2020
PLATTSBURGH â Clinton County legislators will consider a local COVID-19 relief plan that has caused sparks.
Legislator Simon Conroy (D-Area 4, Town of Plattsburgh) put forth a plan to establish a relief fund using money from the federal Tobacco Settlement.
His plan calls for $45,000 of unused 2020 money from the fund, and another $65,000 allocated for 2021, to be used for local relief. Additional funds would be sought from towns, the state and corporations, Conroy said.
The $45,000 would be available immediately for emergency situations to those harmed by the coronavirus. The full legislature would decide who gets what, Conroy said.