New Bern eye surgeon appeals ruling in challenge against CON law
A New Bern eye surgeon will ask the North Carolina Court of Appeals to review last month’s ruling upholding the constitutionality of North Carolina’s certificate-of-need law.
A bipartisan three-judge trial court panel has upheld the constitutionality of North Carolina’s certificate-of-need law in health care, rejecting a New Bern eye surgeon’s legal challenge.
Lawyers for a New Bern eye surgeon and state health regulators spent 2 ½ hours Tuesday arguing in court over the future of the state’s certificate-of-need restrictions.
The state treasurer and state employees association support a New Bern eye surgeon’s challenge of the state’s certificate-of-need health care restrictions.
A new John Locke Foundation brief defends a New Bern eye surgeon’s ongoing challenge against North Carolina’s certificate-of-need health care restrictions.
A New Bern eye surgeon and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services offered contrasting arguments about the state’s certificate-of-need law in court filings Wednesday. A challenge to the CON law heads before a three-judge trial court panel on Nov. 18.
In-person early voting gets underway this Thursday, Oct. 16, for voters in 380 NC municipalities ahead of the November municipal elections.
A New Bern eye surgeon’s challenge to North Carolina’s certificate-of-need health care restrictions will head to a bipartisan three-judge trial court panel on Nov. 18. Dr. Jay Singleton is asking the panel to declare the CON law unconstitutional.
A bipartisan three-judge Superior Court panel will hear a New Bern eye surgeon’s ongoing challenge of North Carolina’s certificate-of-need law. Dr. Jay Singleton’s latest court filing has asked judges to declare the CON law unconstitutional.
The US Department of Education is releasing $6.8 billion in education funding that it had originally frozen on June 30, including over $165 million for North Carolina.
Upon completion, participants are recognized as chef ambassadors and are expected to share their newly acquired knowledge and skills with fellow school nutrition professionals in local schools or districts.
According to a new industry analysis, repealing Certificate of Need could position NC for a significant expansion in rehabilitative care infrastructure. The state could see up to $1.2 billion in capital investment over the next decade.