We have a good time the outstanding lifetime of Charles Wesley Rook Jr., who died on January 19, 2022, of coronary heart failure at his Tucson winter dwelling, together with his loving household by his facet.
Born August 30, 1938, in Denver, Colo., Charley was raised In Nebraska and selected to return east to affix the Massachusetts Institute of Expertise’s class of 1960. Throughout eight phrases on the dean’s record, he served on the East Campus Home Committee and Senior Home Committee and chaired the Judicial Dormitory Council. He acquired the distinguished Beaver Key; was awarded membership within the Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Xi honor societies; participated in “T” Membership, the Tech, WTBS radio, crew, observe, swimming and NROTC; and courted Jean Barclay, his future spouse. Lively within the Outing Membership, mountain climbing, spelunking, mountaineering and snowboarding, he additionally performed rugby and drank beer with the MIT, Boston and Washington, D.C., golf equipment.
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Charles Wesley Rook Jr.
Upon graduating MIT with BS, MS and physician of science levels in electrical engineering, Charley was commissioned into the U.S. Navy. Assigned to the Bureau of Ships and the Naval Digital Programs Command in Washington, D.C., he did analysis and managed tasks earlier than serving for 9 years within the U.S. Naval Reserves. After Navy responsibility, he joined the workers at MIT’s Lincoln Lab in 1966, contributing to superior analysis tasks for 35 years.
He was trustworthy, even-tempered, honest, variety and reserved, with a dry humor — a Renaissance man. Charley liked opera, London theater, biking, enjoying rugby, studying languages and quoting Shakespeare. Hooked on the day by day New York Instances crossword puzzle, he scored 2,781/97.4% of puzzles solved, together with his longest streak of 655 interrupted by travels to seven continents.
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One other deep curiosity was classical music. He loved singing bass with the Harmony Refrain in Massachusetts and several other group choruses. An incredible delight was singing at Carnegie Corridor’s Centennial Celebration. He framed his backstage go. Each week, he listened to NPR’s “Joyful Noise” choral music and “Says You,” and watched “Wheel of Fortune” and “Jeopardy.”
Operating was a part of his day by day routine. He completed the Boston Marathon and ran many weekend races. Lengthy-distance biking turned his ardour, which led to biking holidays in Europe, Canada and the U.S. In his later years, he rose to the challenges of New England century rides.
After residing in Chelmsford, Mass., for 34 years and restoring a 200-year-old home, he and his spouse retired to Burlington, Vt. Their dwelling overlooking Lake Champlain turned “base camp” for twenty years of journey. Upon studying that non-native Vermonters had been referred to as “flatlanders,” Charley stated he’d need to dig down 4,800 ft from the place he was born within the mile-high mountains of Colorado to be able to get to Vermont! He liked Vermont.
He’s survived by his spouse of 60 years, Jean (Barclay) Rook; his daughters, Rebecca Rook (Douglas Smith) of California and Jennifer Atkins (David Atkins) of Massachusetts; his grandchildren, Shay, Jason and Marshall Atkins; and his sisters, Barbara Clausen and Martha Rook of Oregon.
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – On Monday, former and current Vermont legislators are going to call on Gov. Scott to declare a state of emergency regarding the state’s homeless population.
Three former and two current Vermont legislators say the homelessness crisis is overwhelming many communities, and causing unnecessary suffering, and even death.
Under the State of Emergency, the legislators ask the state to keep open and available resources for the homeless, and fund services for mental health and drug abuse.
Then, they ask the General Assembly to create legislation to develop long-term solutions.
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The event will be held 10:30 Monday morning at the Delta Hotel by Marriott on Williston Rd in South Burlington.
TOWNSHEND — Police arrested a new suspect believed to be driving the car that struck a local man, who later died from his injuries.
In a news release issued just after midnight Sunday, the Vermont State Police announced further investigation found Daniel Carr, 34, of Townshend, was operating the 2009 GMC Sierra that struck Shane Whittaker, 24, of Jamaica, on Route 30 in Townshend at about 6:30 p.m. Dec. 9.
Carr was arrested for gross negligent operation with death resulting, leaving the scene of an accident with death resulting, two counts of reckless endangerment, providing false information to police, driving with a criminally suspended license, failure to comply with ignition interlock device restricted driver’s license, and violation of conditions of release. He was transported to the Westminster State Police Barracks for processing and later taken to Southern State Correctional Facility, where he is being held on $25,000 cash bail. He is expected to be arraigned in court Monday afternoon.
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Initially, Jamee Shields, 26, of West Townshend, was suspected of driving the vehicle that struck Whittaker and rolled over. She had been cited for gross negligent operation and reckless endangerment after police determined her child had been in the vehicle at the time of the incident. A court date was scheduled for January.
Now, Shields is cited for providing false information to police. She is scheduled to be arraigned Monday afternoon.
Earlier this month, Carr was arrested by Windham County Sheriff’s Office for a second driving under the influence offense, eluding law enforcement and violation of conditions of release. He and Shields are in a relationship.
Previously, police said Shields showed signs of impairment and was subsequently arrested for suspicion of driving under the influence of drugs. She was arrested and transported to the Westminster State Police Barracks for processing.
TOWNSHEND — A pedestrian who was critically injured in a crash involving a single vehicle on…
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Whittaker had been transported to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, where he stayed in critical condition until he died last week.
A GoFundMe set up to support his family after the tragedy says that Whittaker was driving on Route 30 with two of his best friends when slippery road conditions caused them to drive off the road.
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“Unable to get the car back on the road, they were patiently waiting outside the car when a driver under the influence hit Shane with her truck and dragged him several feet while he was pinned underneath,” the page says. “The truck flipped and landed on top of him, causing several life-threatening injuries. Friends with him at the time witnessed this tragedy and will never be the same. Shane remained unresponsive and in a coma on life support, surrounded by loved ones … when he passed away.”
The GoFundMe describes Whittaker as a gentle, deep soul who brought peace to everyone he met.
“He had many friends with whom he had very tight bonds. He enjoyed dancing and creating music with his friends. He was on his way to a bright future as a translator for the deaf. As a CODA (child of deaf adults), he was fluent in sign language,” the page says. “As his father explained, CODAs are a part of a very tight, but underrecognized community that mixes their deaf culture and identity with the rest of the hearing world. Surrounded by members of this loving group, he learned to communicate with them at a very young age.”
Whittaker’s death, the page says, “has left an unimaginable void in the lives of his family, friends, and community. His parents, who poured their love into raising such a kind and talented young man, are now faced with the overwhelming burden of arranging a funeral.”
Last month, the University of Vermont Health Network announced a slate of wide-ranging cuts to its Vermont facilities.
Those cuts — which drew a swift and furious outcry — included closing an inpatient psychiatric unit at Central Vermont Medical Center, ending kidney transplants at the University of Vermont Medical Center, and shuttering a primary care clinic in Waitsfield.
Across Lake Champlain, however, the situation looks very different. Over the past few years, UVM Health Network’s facilities in northern New York have added capacity and increased the volume of certain procedures.
Over the past two years, Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital, in Plattsburgh, has worked to increase the number of surgeries it performs, according to Annie Mackin, a network spokesperson. During that time, Elizabethtown Community Hospital’s Ticonderoga campus has expanded clinics in women’s health and dermatology. Late in 2023, a primary care clinic operated by another health care organization opened at Alice Hyde Medical Center, in Malone. And earlier this year, Alice Hyde hired a general surgeon, the network announced in October.
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The network hopes to add even more capacity in the state in the coming years, leaders say.
“In New York, we’re doing our very best to expand services, to grow opportunities, to be able to have more opportunities to see patients over there,” Steven Leffler, president and chief operating officer of UVM Medical Center, said in an interview last month.
“We’re hoping they’ll have more inpatient access to cover patients who can’t stay here,” Leffler said, referring to the Burlington hospital. “We’re hoping we can move more surgical cases there as a way to make sure that access is maintained for people who may have, unfortunately, more (of a) challenge getting access here.”
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byPeter D’Auria
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‘Patient-centered and patient-focused’
Leaders of the six-hospital network said the additions in New York are simply part of ongoing efforts to help patients access more care more easily — similar to what the network seeks to do in Vermont.
The University of Vermont Medical Center, Central Vermont Medical Center and Porter Medical Center, in Middlebury, are all part of the UVM Health Network.
The recent cuts on this side of the lake, administrators say, were due solely to the actions of the Green Mountain Care Board, a state regulator that capped network hospital budgets and ordered UVM Medical Center to reduce its charges to private health insurers earlier this year.
Additions at New York hospitals, which are not under the board’s jurisdiction, have nothing to do with the board’s orders and often predate them, network leaders said.
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That work “is totally independent and unrelated to regulatory action here,” Sunny Eappen, the president and CEO of UVM Health Network, said in an interview.
Expanding services in New York, however, does benefit Vermont’s hospitals. In the 2023 fiscal year, New York residents contributed roughly 14% of the University of Vermont Medical Center’s patient revenue, to the tune of $245 million, according to financial documents submitted to the Green Mountain Care Board.
In Vermont, the care board places limits on how much hospitals can bring in from patient care — limits that UVM Health Network officials have said are onerous and harmful. By adding capacity in New York, the network can keep some of those patients in their communities and out of Vermont hospitals.
Owen Foster, the chair of the Green Mountain Care Board, declined to comment, saying he did not know the details of the network’s New York hospital services.
In 2025, Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital plans to add operating room capacity for general surgery, urology, ear nose and throat procedures and orthopedics, according to Mackin, the network spokesperson. The network has invested in some “anesthesiology resources” for that expansion and is recruiting urology and orthopedics clinicians, she said.
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The network has also informed about 370 New York patients that they have the option of getting imaging procedures — such as x-rays — in-state, rather than in Vermont, Mackin said. UVM Health Network is also “evaluating opportunities” to add gastroenterology, cardiology and infusion procedures in New York, she said.
“It’s patient-focused and patient-centered, right?” Lisa Mark, the chief medical officer of Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital and Alice Hyde Medical Center, said in an interview. “So they don’t have to travel across the lake if they don’t need to.”
Vermont and New York
Over the past few months, UVM Health Network has drawn scrutiny for the movement of money between its Vermont and New York hospitals.
That attention was sparked by the revelation, during the Green Mountain Care Board’s annual hospital budget review process, that Burlington’s UVM Medical Center was owed $60 million by Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital in Plattsburgh.
That has led to fears that Vermonters are subsidizing New York medical facilities. In comments submitted to the Green Mountain Care Board in August, Vermont’s chief health care advocate Mike Fisher and his staff members charged that the network “has consistently weakened its financial position by choosing to transfer monies to the New York hospitals.”
Network leaders have repeatedly denied that those transfers — which have paid for pharmaceuticals, physicians’ salaries and other expenses — had any impact on Vermonters. Those transfers affect a hospital’s cash on hand, leaders said, but do not affect margins or Vermonters’ commercial insurance rates.
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“We’ve been very, very clear on that,” Rick Vincent, the network’s executive vice president and chief financial officer, said in an interview. “The Vermont commercial rates are not impacted by those New York hospitals.”
Last month, the care board asked the network for more information about the New York hospitals’ finances, including their operating margins and cash on hand.
UVM Health Network initially declined to provide that information. But Eappen said in an interview he does intend to share the hospitals’ financial information with the board.
According to publicly available nonprofit tax forms, some of the network’s New York hospitals have struggled in the past years. Champlain Valley Physicians Hospital lost nearly $30 million in its 2022 fiscal year and nearly $40 million in the 2023 fiscal year, according to tax records, and Alice Hyde Medical Center lost about $20 million in those two years, as well. Elizabethtown Community Hospital, meanwhile, has reported positive margins for the past decade.
Eappen said that Champlain Valley and Alice Hyde have grown more stable in the past year, although financial data is not yet publicly available.
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There are “not yet” plans to shift more services to New York as a result of the Green Mountain Care Board’s orders, Eappen said. But keeping care close to home for residents of northern New York is a win-win, he said.
“If New Yorkers stay in New York, it doesn’t contribute to that Vermont revenue piece,” Eappen said, referring to patient revenue, which is capped by the Green Mountain Care Board. “And so if we do it well and keep New Yorkers in New York, it’s a positive on both ends.”