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October 2024 Edition - Access Press

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Volume 35, Number 10

October 2024

WWW.ACCESSPRESS.ORG

Medical device, innovation at debate’s center

DEBATE To page 4

DSPs are honored Page 9 Housing issues eyed Page 4

FILE PHOTO

Many people enjoyed the 2023 awards event.

Join Access Press on November 1 as we honor those who serve

The annual Access Press Awards event is coming up on Friday, November 1. Anyone wanting to purchase tickets needs to do soon as space is limited. Don’t miss the opportunity to reconnect with friends and to honor the winners and nominees for the 2024 Charlie Smith Founders Award and Tim Benjamin Sustainers Award. Check our website at www. accesspress.org to read biographies of the many worthy nominees. This year’s event is designed for the mixand-mingle interaction that people enjoy most at the awards. Instead of a dinner, it will be an early evening reception with delicious bites

and beverages. The award ceremony will be emceed by Mark Daly, former Access Press board member and longtime investigative reporter at KARE-11. The event is in the first floor Great Hall of the new Main Building, 700 7th St E, St. Paul, at Metropolitan State University. Ample parking is available across the street in the ramp and lot at 402 Maria Ave. The fun starts with 4:30 p.m. registration. The awards program starts at 6 p.m. Tickets are $100 per person, or $800 per table of eight. Purchase tickets online at accesspress.org

Use Access Press Directory for needed supports, services Page 6-7 FedEx is focus Page 8 Rise leader remembered Page 3 Election reminders! Page 3

EVENT To page 5

St. Paul council eyeing a ban on new drive-through services New fast-food restaurant and coffee shop drive-through services would be banned in St. Paul if a Planning Commission recommendation wins City Council approval later this year. The commission voted 6-5 September 13 to recommend the zoning changes. The changes could have major effects on the lives of people with disabilities, who sometimes rely on drive-through restaurants for their food. Minneapolis banned new fast food and coffee drive-through services five years ago. A change would make the Twin Cities the first major U.S. metropolitan area to have such a ban. Existing drive-through services of all types could remain open in place if the recommendations are adopted. If a fast-food restaurant or coffee shop closes, its drivethrough could still be used if a similar business opens in that location within a year. New bank and pharmacy drive-throughs would be permitted, but at fewer locations than are allowed under current zoning regulations. Bill Dermody, city planning manager, said

ISTOCK

by Jane McClure Oakdale resident Jeffrey Toby has used wheelchairs since sustaining a spinal cord injury 37 years ago. His active lifestyle includes selfemployment, reading and getting out as much as possible. He also supports spinal cord injury research through the Fergus Falls-based Spinal Cord Society, hoping to help others in his situation. Like many who use wheelchairs, Toby is susceptible to pressure sores. Pressure sores can all too easily expand into large wounds and become infected. In his case pressure sores recently worsened and led to infections that required hospitalization. A large pressure sore affected one of his femurs. Toby said that treating pressure sores and infection was especially challenging during the COVID-19 pandemic. “Initially I’m not sure I knew how sick I was.” He credits his wound care nurse, Jan Chevrette, for her expertise in getting him the care needed. He also gives credit to Tamarack. Pressure injuries kill 60,000 people and affect up to 1/3 of wheelchair users each year, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Toby recently began using Tamarack Habilitation Technology’s FlexForm wheelchair cushion. “This cushion has been a life saver and a life changer.” A wound that was 10 inches long shrunk to the size of a sunflower seed. So when Tamarack discontinued the cushion in late 2023, Toby was dismayed. “It’s just not right,” he said. “It’s so unjust. This is a product that can save lives.” While Tamarack is committed to serving existing FlexForm customers, prospective new customers will lose out. Cole Carlson, owner and CEO of Tamarack, empathizes with the situation. Without a billing code from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), greater manufacture and sales of the cushion aren’t financially viable. His company has waged a lengthy fight to get the product recognized by CMS. A CMS spokesperson responded to the issue, stating that under the Medicaid program, items like wheelchairs and their accessories are considered durable medical equipment (DME). Federal statute does not define DME for the purposes of Medicaid; however, medical supplies, equipment, and appliances are a mandatory home health care benefit when medically necessary. Under the Medicaid program, states have broad flexibility within federal parameters to define specific coverage policies for different types of DME. Carlson has long maintained that innovation and product improvement

NEWS DIGEST

that drive-throughs associated with food and beverage uses have more negative impacts on pedestrian-oriented development than those associated with banks or pharmacies. St. Paul has more than 70 businesses with drive-throughs, with about half of those being fast-food restaurants and coffee shops. The recommendation from the commission’s Comprehensive and Neighborhood Planning Committee is based on city staff studies and comments received at

a June public hearing. At the public hearing, organizations and community members weighed in on two ideas – allowing fewer new drive-throughs or a total ban on new ones. Supporters of a ban contend that changes are needed to promote walkability, improve pedestrian safety and decrease pollution from motor vehicles idling in line. Foes of the measure, including restaurant owners, DRIVE-THROUGH To page 4

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