Wheelchair Lifts

  

     

Vertical Wheelchair Lift


 
 
Vertical Wheelchair Lift
Wheelchair Lift Elevator Houston
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Phonak Hearing Systems

If I Could Walk Tomorrow - A Reflection of all the Things We Take ...

How many times have you heard a television personality on a telethon or even your own doctor tell you the unexpected could happen to you? You hear it all the time as non-profit organizations try to raise money. Cancer can strike anyone at any time. Diabetes, stroke, heart disease, Parkinson’s, muscular dystrophy, the list goes on and on. It does not matter who you are, how much money you have, how old you are, or where you are from. Any of these ailments could strike you or a loved one and change your life in an instant.One day you could wake up and have some sort of life limitation. For all intents and purposes, you could wake up tomorrow, get in a car accident, and become a paraplegic or quadriplegic. The truth is we do not know what the future holds because we do not have a crystal ball that we can peer into on a regular basis.


Community Bulletin Board

CARnival, a benefit for Meals on Wheels, will be from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Arbor Acres. There will be bearded ladies, Siamese twins, jugglers and a band.

For more information, e-mail woestj@earthlink.net.

Piedmont planning group to hold byways workshop

The Piedmont Triad Rural Planning Organization will have a workshop on scenic byways from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday in the Davidson County commissioners' meeting room.

Jesse Day, a regional planner with the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments, will lead the workshop. For more information, call 249-7256.

University Women group will meet Thursday

The local chapter of the American Association of University Women will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Polo Park Recreation Center.

Dr.


Mobility Unlimited attempts to lift burden after Route 4's closure

When a bus route past his workplace closed earlier this month, Mark Towery took a week off the job just to plot how he would get around town.

Wheelchair bound, Towery is relying on friends, co-workers and taxis while a local nonprofit agency readies a van for him to drive. The 33-year-old is just one in a group of disabled riders formerly reliant on Rogue Valley Transportation District's Route 4 that Mobility Unlimited can assist, said executive director Glory Cooper.

"The services have been cut where they're most needed," Cooper said.

A $1.2 million shortfall in RVTD's budget coupled with low ridership prompted the Sept. 1 closure of Route 4 past Rogue Valley Medical Center. RVTD's Valley Lift also was discontinued in that area because federal funding for the service is directly linked to the proximity of bus routes.


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