Construction is underway at Sunnyview Lane on a chilly Friday morning in October. There’s an unfinished atrium staircase, exposed wires and plumbing, and workers slathering white paint on a hallway wall.
Construction is underway at Sunnyview Lane on a chilly Friday morning in October. There’s an unfinished atrium staircase, exposed wires and plumbing, and workers slathering white paint on a hallway wall.
Steve Bicknell has, as he calls it, a certain type of patience. When he’s teaching senior citizens computer skills, a role in which he’s worked at the Kalispell Senior Center for about seven years, he doesn’t care how many times he has to explain how email works, or walk someone …
Steve Bicknell has, as he calls it, a certain type of patience. When he’s teaching senior citizens computer skills, a role in which he’s worked at the Kalispell Senior Center for about seven years, he doesn’t care how many times he has to explain how email works, or walk someone …
The new, 28,216-square-foot Digestive Health Institute at 320 Sunnyview Lane, which opened Oct. 1, has all the trappings of a brand-new space. Every room smells of freshly delivered furniture. There’s landscaping work to be done outside, and the last touches on some second-floor tile need to be made.
The new, 28,216-square-foot Digestive Health Institute at 320 Sunnyview Lane, which opened Oct. 1, has all the trappings of a brand-new space. Every room smells of freshly delivered furniture. There’s landscaping work to be done outside, and the last touches on some second-floor tile need to be made.
An initiative on the ballot this November, which would raise taxes on tobacco products to fund Montana’s Medicaid expansion, has galvanized health providers and engendered the most well-funded opposition to an initiative in the state’s history, largely, but not entirely, funded by tobacco companies.