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Al's Morning Meeting

Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing > Al's Morning Meeting
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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


*1. "Wired" explains how to figure out who is behind a Twitter page.

2. Check out FarmVille, Facebook's fastest growing application.

3. Before any health care reform vote, watch Steve Kroft's "60 Minutes Story" on the $60 billion in Medicare fraud that poisons the system each year.

4. Slate reported that some companies under criminal investigation still received stimulus money.

*5. USA Today reporters Brad Heath and Blake Morrison, WNYC's Radio Rookies and others won Casey Medals for their coverage of children. Watch this video of Heath and Morrison talking about their 8-month investigation of toxic air outside America's schools.

6. The Washington Post reveals how Washington, D.C., which has the nation's highest rate of AIDS cases, wasted millions of dollars on AIDS care.

7. The Association of Independents in Radio has provided a one-stop shopping page for people trying to sell freelance radio stories.

8. Sidewalks are in such bad shape in some cash-strapped towns that people who use wheelchairs are having to ride along the street instead.

*9. There's a new wearable HD camera for sports and action video that costs less than $350. Watch this sample video.

*10. The Tennessean's "Life on Hold" project looks at the lives of 20-year-olds trying to "figure it all out." The project features some really nice multimedia.

11. What words do you use that your readers don't understand? The New York Times tracks the words that its readers look up.

12. Read Beth Macy's first-person account about her Roanoke Times' project, "Age of Uncertainty." The series is about her community's aging senior citizens and the people who care for them.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but relies on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Some Financially-Strapped Shriners Hospitals May Close
Posted by Al Tompkins at 3:15 PM on Jun. 15, 2009
Six Shriners hospitals around the country could have a better idea of their fate after July 5, when Shriners will meet at their national convention to vote on major restructuring.

The hospitals, which provide free care to children who have suffered burns or who need orthopedic, spinal cord or cleft lip and palate care, charge nothing and don't even have billing departments. But the Shriners who have funded them are a dying breed and are now dealing with the difficulty of raising public contributions and an endowment that has dropped from $8.5 billion to $5.2 billion throughout the past year.

The hospitals that may close are located in Springfield, Mass., Shreveport, La.; Erie, Pa.; Greenville, S.C.; Spokane, Wash.; and Galveston, Texas.

See a list of Shriners hospitals and the special care each offers.

Poynter's St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times reported that all 22 Shriners hospitals could be broke in five to seven years if their financial situation doesn't improve:

"Shriners membership never quite topped a million. Those parades down Main Street somehow took a wrong turn toward a quaint past. Just 350,000 guys wear fezzes today, 100,000 of them over 70.

"Medicine also headed in another direction. Costs of technology soared. The rods and hardware used to straighten the spine of a single child with scoliosis can cost $50,000. Doctors who once referred children to Shriners hospitals fell under the domain of managed-care networks. A trend toward outpatient care left hospital beds empty. The whole concept of free care got fuzzy. Did 'free' mean not as good?"

CNN said there are some proposals to cut spending systemwide rather than close hospitals:

"'If we do nothing, every hospital would have to cut 25 to 30 percent from their budgets, which in effect would shut about six of them anyway, because they couldn't give the services they've been giving,' [Ralph Semb, president and CEO of Shriners Hospitals] said.

"Still, the hospitals can't close without consent of the fraternity's membership. Two-thirds of the roughly 1,400 representatives at the group's July 6-8 Imperial Council Session in San Antonio, Texas, would have to vote for it. 

"History shows that might be difficult. Members, some of whom transport children to hospitals themselves, killed a 2003 proposal to close the hospital in Minneapolis, Minnesota, after a similar market downturn.

"'I don't think it will happen. I don't think it should happen,' said Carl V. Nielsen, a 40-year Shriner and a board member for the Minneapolis hospital, which is not on the current possible-closure list. 'That would leave large areas of the country without a Shriners hospital, and the cost of transportation of the patients back and forth [to the remaining hospitals] would be too great.'"

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