Episode 19 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast features an interview of attorney Alvin Wolff, Jr., who’s written a book called The Total Guide for Motorcycle & Bicycle Accident Victims in Missouri and the Seven Mistakes that Can Sink Your Claim.
His law firm, Alvin Wolff Jr. & Associates from St. Louis, Missouri, specializes in personal injury, medical malpractice, wrongful death and work related injuries, but Wolff, who is an avid cyclist and former motorcyclist, has a special interest in cases involving bicycles.
When someone is injured in an accident, she or he usually doesn’t have any previous experience on which to draw, to understand how to talk to insurance adjusters, whether to sign insurance company forms, or when to hire a lawyer.
Every cyclist should have some familiarity with bicycle laws, and some sense of what they should do in case an accident does happen, and this is what’s covered in Wolff’s book, and what we discuss in this fascinating podcast interview. You can learn more at his web site at Alvin Wolff Jr. & Associates and be sure to check out his blog for frequent news and tips.
You can request a free copy of The Total Guide for Motorcycle & Bicycle Accident Victims in Missouri and the Seven Mistakes that Can Sink Your Claim on his website or your can order the book on Amazon.com.
If you’re involved in an accident on your bicycle, and you’ve been injured, you need to be aware of your rights and responsibilities. If you’re in doubt, get legal council, and if you’re not sure who to contact, Wolff can provide referrals to attorneys in your area with knowledge of bicycle law.
This post is copied and adopted from Randy Rasa's Show Notes for Episode 19 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast.
The EPNetwork™ was founded in January 2009 by Edward Eroe to provide news and information with podcasts that focus on topical areas that do not necessarily receive regular news coverage nor in depth exposure.

Thursday, April 29, 2010
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 16 - EPNetwork
Episode 16 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview Dr. Kevin Hutton, Chairman of the MedEvac Foundation International.
Kevin Hutton is a practicing, Board Certified, Emergency Physician and the Founder, CEO, and Chairman of Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. He began his career in 1980 as an ambulance driver then progressed into becoming an academic emergency physician, flight physician, air medical researcher, operational medical director, and the San Diego County EMS system quality assurance committee chairman.
Dr. Hutton is recognized for his expertise in teaching, clinical research, privacy and compliance management, medical transport reimbursement, and the application of integrated information systems to transport medicine. He is a founding and past board member of the Air Medical Physician Association, Past Secretary and Board Member of Association of Air Medical Services, and the current Chairman of the MedEvac Foundation International.
In 2006, Kevin was recognized as a finalist for the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year award for his creation and growth of Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. He founded and grew Golden Hour, a company with 160 employees that provides air medical and ground transport services including integrated computer aided dispatch, transfer center integration, clinical charting, quality assurance, billing, collections, and data analytics. This is all done via Internet based on Software-as-a Service or SaaS, throughout the United States. Dr. Hutton has been awarded several US patents on these technologic innovations.
Kevin was also the recipient of the Marriott-Carlson Award in 2008. This is the air medical industries highest award for individual contribution to the air medical community. He has been an invited speaker both nationally and internationally on medical transport reimbursement, medical transport research, and has been an advisor to the Japanese in the financing of their HEM-Net air medical network.
Dr. Hutton is also the Medical Director of the Cat Cay Medical Clinic in the Bahamas and is a volunteer physician with the Aeromedicos bush pilots that operates a medical clinic in Baja California.
Kevin has two sons, age 20 and 17, and lives in Del Mar, California. He enjoys sailing, snowboarding, and carpentry.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 15 - EPNetwork
Episode 15 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview Hayden Newton, the Chairman of the Association of Air Ambulances in the United Kingdom. I also provide an update on the Iceland Volcano and News and Information from the air medical community and industry.
Hayden Newton is currently the Chief Executive of the East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust where he was appointed in February 2008. He was the former operational manager at Peterborough ambulance station before taking up a directorship with the Scottish Ambulance Service in 1988.
Hayden returned to England as Director of Performance for the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Ambulance Service in 2000 and was then appointed Chief Executive of Kent Ambulance Service in 2003. After Kent, Hayden moved to a national post at the Department of Health leading the Call Connect initiative.
Hayden has a post graduate diploma from the University of Glasgow in Management studies and is a paramedic. He lives with his wife and son in Cambridge.
Hayden Newton is currently the Chief Executive of the East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust where he was appointed in February 2008. He was the former operational manager at Peterborough ambulance station before taking up a directorship with the Scottish Ambulance Service in 1988.
Hayden returned to England as Director of Performance for the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Ambulance Service in 2000 and was then appointed Chief Executive of Kent Ambulance Service in 2003. After Kent, Hayden moved to a national post at the Department of Health leading the Call Connect initiative.
Hayden has a post graduate diploma from the University of Glasgow in Management studies and is a paramedic. He lives with his wife and son in Cambridge.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 14 - EPNetwork
Episode 14 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview Rollie Parrish, founder and webmaster of FlightWeb.com. I also provide News and Information from the air medical community and industry.
Rollie Parrish worked as a flight nurse for 13 years with HelpFlight in Billings, Montana and Northwest MedStar in Spokane, Washington. He now works in Quality Improvement and Clinical Informatics with a primary focus on cardiac services at the Providence Sacred Heart Hospital in Spokane.
Rollie started FlightWeb in 1995 to help individuals in the air medical community communicate using new innovative technologies. In addition to FlightWeb he assists with a number of other websites including the Air Medical Physician Association, the Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Systems, the Concern Network, and the Association of Professional Flight Chaplains.
Rollie is a graduate of the Walla Walla Community College Nursing School and is currently pursuing studies at the Washington State University. He lives in Spokane, Washington with his wife and three teenage boys. Rollie is from Trout Lake, Washington, which is small town north of Portland, Oregon, and has now lived in Spokane for 15 years.
Rollie Parrish worked as a flight nurse for 13 years with HelpFlight in Billings, Montana and Northwest MedStar in Spokane, Washington. He now works in Quality Improvement and Clinical Informatics with a primary focus on cardiac services at the Providence Sacred Heart Hospital in Spokane.
Rollie started FlightWeb in 1995 to help individuals in the air medical community communicate using new innovative technologies. In addition to FlightWeb he assists with a number of other websites including the Air Medical Physician Association, the Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Systems, the Concern Network, and the Association of Professional Flight Chaplains.
Rollie is a graduate of the Walla Walla Community College Nursing School and is currently pursuing studies at the Washington State University. He lives in Spokane, Washington with his wife and three teenage boys. Rollie is from Trout Lake, Washington, which is small town north of Portland, Oregon, and has now lived in Spokane for 15 years.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Kansas Cyclist Podcast Episode 18 - KansasCyclist.com and EPNetwork
Episode 18 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast features an interview with Eric Benjamin of Adventure Monkey, a bicycling blog covering the Flint Hills of Kansas.
Eric Benjamin started the Adventure Monkey blog last summer as a way to document and share his rides in the Flint Hills of Kansas. “I am a professional photographer that fell in love with cycling,” Eric says. “At Adventure Monkey, I share my cycling adventures and photography in hopes that I may inspire you to remember your dreams and live the life you have always wanted to live, no excuses or regrets. It’s time to live.”
The Adventure Monkey web site is also where Eric sells his amazing photographs. Be sure to check out the Adventure Monkey Image Portfolio for some examples of his work, which you can also purchase on paper or canvas.
In just a few short months the blog grew in popularity and readership, and soon expanded. In March, Adventure Monkey Magazine was born. This is a full-color, professionally-produced publication, and issue #1 focuses on Kansas Cycling, with a special focus on the challenges and rewards of bicycling in winter.
The magazine features articles from an amazing variety of contributors, including Anne Marie Garrett (ride like a girl), Shawn Honea (IM Design Group), Robert Garcia (River City Cyclist), LeLan Dains (The Life of LeLan), Rebecca Martin (Get Spoked), Matt and Stephanie Brown (High Gear Cyclery), Garret Seacat (Seagato), Mike Wise (The Vertically Challenged Mountain Biker), Adam Didde (Adamthedad), Rob White (Maverick Enterprises), Bobby Wintle (something to write home about) and Randy Rasa (DirtBum).
You can read issue one of the magazine online (PDF) or purchase a hard-copy from MagCloud. Eric hopes to offer subscriptions in the future
In addition to the web site and magazine, you can also follow Adventure Monkey on Facebook and Twitter.
For this episode’s “On The Scene” segment, I interview my partner with the podcast, Randy Rasa, about a recent week-long trip he took to Arkansas. You might have seen some of the posts that came from that trip (Cyclo-Tourist Outlasts Winter and Eureka Springs: Naturally Bicycle Friendly), but Randy put together a full write-up on his personal blog, DirtBum, with lots of photos and descriptions of the places he explored. Yeah, you might say his Adventure Monkey led him to Arkansas …
It was a fun trip for him, but there was a lot of climbing in the Ozark Mountains, way more uphill than the flatlands he is accustomed to! Read more at DirtBum’s Arkansas Adventure.
Incidentally, you can also follow the DirtBum blog on Facebook and Twitter, as well as subscribe via RSS or email.
This post is copied and adopted from Randy's Show Notes for Episode 18 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast.
Eric Benjamin started the Adventure Monkey blog last summer as a way to document and share his rides in the Flint Hills of Kansas. “I am a professional photographer that fell in love with cycling,” Eric says. “At Adventure Monkey, I share my cycling adventures and photography in hopes that I may inspire you to remember your dreams and live the life you have always wanted to live, no excuses or regrets. It’s time to live.”
The Adventure Monkey web site is also where Eric sells his amazing photographs. Be sure to check out the Adventure Monkey Image Portfolio for some examples of his work, which you can also purchase on paper or canvas.
In just a few short months the blog grew in popularity and readership, and soon expanded. In March, Adventure Monkey Magazine was born. This is a full-color, professionally-produced publication, and issue #1 focuses on Kansas Cycling, with a special focus on the challenges and rewards of bicycling in winter.
The magazine features articles from an amazing variety of contributors, including Anne Marie Garrett (ride like a girl), Shawn Honea (IM Design Group), Robert Garcia (River City Cyclist), LeLan Dains (The Life of LeLan), Rebecca Martin (Get Spoked), Matt and Stephanie Brown (High Gear Cyclery), Garret Seacat (Seagato), Mike Wise (The Vertically Challenged Mountain Biker), Adam Didde (Adamthedad), Rob White (Maverick Enterprises), Bobby Wintle (something to write home about) and Randy Rasa (DirtBum).
You can read issue one of the magazine online (PDF) or purchase a hard-copy from MagCloud. Eric hopes to offer subscriptions in the future
In addition to the web site and magazine, you can also follow Adventure Monkey on Facebook and Twitter.
For this episode’s “On The Scene” segment, I interview my partner with the podcast, Randy Rasa, about a recent week-long trip he took to Arkansas. You might have seen some of the posts that came from that trip (Cyclo-Tourist Outlasts Winter and Eureka Springs: Naturally Bicycle Friendly), but Randy put together a full write-up on his personal blog, DirtBum, with lots of photos and descriptions of the places he explored. Yeah, you might say his Adventure Monkey led him to Arkansas …
It was a fun trip for him, but there was a lot of climbing in the Ozark Mountains, way more uphill than the flatlands he is accustomed to! Read more at DirtBum’s Arkansas Adventure.
Incidentally, you can also follow the DirtBum blog on Facebook and Twitter, as well as subscribe via RSS or email.
This post is copied and adopted from Randy's Show Notes for Episode 18 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast.
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 13 - EPNetwork
Episode 13 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview Steven Sweeney, Board Chair of the Air Medical Memorial. I also provide an update to the Hospital Wing crash and other News & Information.
Steven Sweeney, Board Chair of the Air Medical Memorial, works as a Marketing, Creative and Art Director in the Denver metropolitan area. He has worked in the architectural and engineering, aviation and healthcare industries, including acting as Investor Relations Manger at Air Methods Corporation, in the early 1990s.
Steven grew up around the Flight For Life Colorado program in Denver and made many friends with members of the team. His interest in the air medical industry began with a tour of the Flight For Life program back in 1973 at the age of five. Both Steven and his brother Kevin lost a friend, Sandy Sigman, when their Flight For Life helicopter went down on Huron Peak in Colorado in July 1994. Steven’s brother also lost friends and colleagues when AirLife Denver crashed in Littleton Colorado in December 1997. Kevin worked at AirLife for 9 years as a dispatcher.
Those two crashes inspired the brothers to start developing the concept of a national memorial honoring the air medical industry. After 8 separate crashes and the loss of 24 air medical crew members in 2008, Steven started the Air Medical Memorial group on Facebook in January of 2009 to create awareness within the industry and gain support from the friends, family members, and coworkers of those lost in the line of duty.
Steven lives in Littleton, Colorado with his wife and two children.
Steven Sweeney, Board Chair of the Air Medical Memorial, works as a Marketing, Creative and Art Director in the Denver metropolitan area. He has worked in the architectural and engineering, aviation and healthcare industries, including acting as Investor Relations Manger at Air Methods Corporation, in the early 1990s.
Steven grew up around the Flight For Life Colorado program in Denver and made many friends with members of the team. His interest in the air medical industry began with a tour of the Flight For Life program back in 1973 at the age of five. Both Steven and his brother Kevin lost a friend, Sandy Sigman, when their Flight For Life helicopter went down on Huron Peak in Colorado in July 1994. Steven’s brother also lost friends and colleagues when AirLife Denver crashed in Littleton Colorado in December 1997. Kevin worked at AirLife for 9 years as a dispatcher.
Those two crashes inspired the brothers to start developing the concept of a national memorial honoring the air medical industry. After 8 separate crashes and the loss of 24 air medical crew members in 2008, Steven started the Air Medical Memorial group on Facebook in January of 2009 to create awareness within the industry and gain support from the friends, family members, and coworkers of those lost in the line of duty.
Steven lives in Littleton, Colorado with his wife and two children.

Saturday, March 27, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 12 - EPNetwork
Episode 12 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview David Kearns, the Coordinator of the CONCERN Network. I also check in with Tim Pickering, Vice President of the Association of Air Medical Services, regarding the AAMS Spring Conference in the First Response section. News & Information and the initial reports from the Hospital Wing crash in Tennessee.
David Kearns is the Clinical Coordinator at Flight for Life Colorado which is based at St. Anthony’s Hospital in Denver, Colorado. He has been a flight nurse since 1981 and has served in several positions at Flight for Life Colorado since 1988.
David has been the Coordinator of the CONCERN Network since the retirement of the late Roseanne Krantz in 2004. He helped move the CONCERN Network, in conjunction with Rollie Parrish from Flightweb, to the current e-mail system notification system from the older fax-based one in 2000.
David is the current Region II board member of the Association of Air Medical Services and a past board member of the Air & Surface Transport Nurses Association from 1998 to 2002. He served as president from 2001-2002. David has delivered presentations on physiologic monitoring, post-of-care technology, prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia, and the history of the CONCERN Network at past Air Medical Transport Conferences and Clinical Midyear Meetings.
He graduated from Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska in 1981 with a bachelors in science in nursing and from University of Colorado in 1994 in Denver, Colorado with a masters in nursing. David lives in Lakewood, Colorado and has interests in things historical, things that fly, fitness, and computer technology.
David will become a regular contributor to the Air Medical Today Podcast where he will provide updates on the CONCERN Network.
Tim Pickering is currently the Vice President and Region III Board Member of the Association of Air Medical Services and the Director of Public Affairs for Air Evac EMS, Inc. in West Plains, Missouri.
Tim is going to be a regular contributor to the Air Medical Today Podcast with a feature called the Commindustry Update where he will provide an overview of trends in the air medical and critical transport community and industry.
I want to extend Air Medical Today's deepest sympathy, thoughts and prayers to the crew, family, and friends of the Hospital Wing program after their tragic crash on March 25, 2010.
David Kearns is the Clinical Coordinator at Flight for Life Colorado which is based at St. Anthony’s Hospital in Denver, Colorado. He has been a flight nurse since 1981 and has served in several positions at Flight for Life Colorado since 1988.
David has been the Coordinator of the CONCERN Network since the retirement of the late Roseanne Krantz in 2004. He helped move the CONCERN Network, in conjunction with Rollie Parrish from Flightweb, to the current e-mail system notification system from the older fax-based one in 2000.
David is the current Region II board member of the Association of Air Medical Services and a past board member of the Air & Surface Transport Nurses Association from 1998 to 2002. He served as president from 2001-2002. David has delivered presentations on physiologic monitoring, post-of-care technology, prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia, and the history of the CONCERN Network at past Air Medical Transport Conferences and Clinical Midyear Meetings.
He graduated from Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska in 1981 with a bachelors in science in nursing and from University of Colorado in 1994 in Denver, Colorado with a masters in nursing. David lives in Lakewood, Colorado and has interests in things historical, things that fly, fitness, and computer technology.
David will become a regular contributor to the Air Medical Today Podcast where he will provide updates on the CONCERN Network.
Tim Pickering is currently the Vice President and Region III Board Member of the Association of Air Medical Services and the Director of Public Affairs for Air Evac EMS, Inc. in West Plains, Missouri.
Tim is going to be a regular contributor to the Air Medical Today Podcast with a feature called the Commindustry Update where he will provide an overview of trends in the air medical and critical transport community and industry.
I want to extend Air Medical Today's deepest sympathy, thoughts and prayers to the crew, family, and friends of the Hospital Wing program after their tragic crash on March 25, 2010.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Air Medical Today Episode 11 - EPNetwork
Episode 11 of the Air Medical Today Podcast has been published. In this episode I interview Denise Landis, Chairperson, and Kris Nelson, Co-Director of the Graduate School, with the Medical Transport Leadership Institute in Wheeling, West Virginia. I also check in with Kathy Nichols, former flight nurse with West Michigan Air Care who recently returned from a medical mission to Haiti in the First Response section. As always news & information, listener feedback, and soon a special feature covering various aspects of the air medical and critical care transport community in each episode.
Denise Landis, is the Manager, of the Survival Flight Critical Care Transport program at the University of Michigan Health System as well as serving as Chair of the Medical Transport Leadership Institute. She has been with Survival Flight for 25 years holding the positions of Flight Nurse Specialist, Chief Flight Nurse, and now Manager, Critical Care Transport. Denise has been the Chairperson of MTLI since it’s inception.
Denise has been actively involved in local, state and national boards and committees including being one of the founding members of the Michigan State Chapter of AAMS. She continues involvement with the Michigan Chapter and also with the state chapter of the American Ambulance Association. Denise also served on the AAMS Board of Directors and is a past president.
She is a graduate of Madonna College in nursing and completed her Masters of Science in Health Administration from Central Michigan University and resides in Hamburg, Michigan, near Ann Arbor, with her husband Scott.
Kris Nelson is a Flight Nurse Specialist with Survival Flight and also the Co-Director of the MTLI Graduate School. He has been with Survival Flight since 1987 and joined MTLI after completing the school himself in 2000.
Kris received his diploma as a registered nurse from Mercy School of Nursing in Detroit in 1976. He worked at various positions in Michigan Washington, and Florida before being hired by the University of Michigan in 1985 where he first worked as a staff nurse in the Emergency Department. His interest grew for the field of flight nursing and in March of 1987 he met all the qualifications and was hired by Survival Flight.
In 2006, Kris was honored to be a guest speaker at the Japanese Air Medical Conference in Tokyo, Japan. While in Japan, Kris visited a number of cities and spoke with many groups of physicians, nurses and medical transport personnel about his experiences with flight nursing in the United States.
Kris has been married to his wife Michele for 30 years and they have raised two sons, Matthew and Emmett. Michele and Kris currently live in a log home on five wooded acres approximately 30 miles from Ann Arbor. He enjoys working on his property, running, snowboarding, and most importantly spending time with his family. He has a unique Twitter client that he uses at AMTC.
Kathy Nichols is a retired flight nurse from West Michigan Air Care in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She joined West Michigan Air Care when the program was formed through the merger of the Borgess and Bronson Hospital helicopter programs in 1993. She had been a flight nurse for 23 years and served as an emergency department nurse for 20 years prior to her flight nurse career. She continues serving as an instructor for PALS and ACLS. Kathy is in the blue scrubs 3rd from the left in the picture.
Kathy’s current goal is traveling independently with various groups for medical care missions in developing countries. Her recent travels have included Tanzania in November 2009 and Haiti in late February and early March 2010.
She is a graduate of the Borgess School of Nursing and Western Michigan University with degrees in nursing. Kathy is a past president of the National Flight Nurses Association - Michigan Chapter. I had the honor and privilege of working with Kathy when I was the President & CEO of West Michigan Air Care from 1993-1998.
Denise Landis, is the Manager, of the Survival Flight Critical Care Transport program at the University of Michigan Health System as well as serving as Chair of the Medical Transport Leadership Institute. She has been with Survival Flight for 25 years holding the positions of Flight Nurse Specialist, Chief Flight Nurse, and now Manager, Critical Care Transport. Denise has been the Chairperson of MTLI since it’s inception.

She is a graduate of Madonna College in nursing and completed her Masters of Science in Health Administration from Central Michigan University and resides in Hamburg, Michigan, near Ann Arbor, with her husband Scott.
Kris Nelson is a Flight Nurse Specialist with Survival Flight and also the Co-Director of the MTLI Graduate School. He has been with Survival Flight since 1987 and joined MTLI after completing the school himself in 2000.
Kris received his diploma as a registered nurse from Mercy School of Nursing in Detroit in 1976. He worked at various positions in Michigan Washington, and Florida before being hired by the University of Michigan in 1985 where he first worked as a staff nurse in the Emergency Department. His interest grew for the field of flight nursing and in March of 1987 he met all the qualifications and was hired by Survival Flight.
In 2006, Kris was honored to be a guest speaker at the Japanese Air Medical Conference in Tokyo, Japan. While in Japan, Kris visited a number of cities and spoke with many groups of physicians, nurses and medical transport personnel about his experiences with flight nursing in the United States.
Kris has been married to his wife Michele for 30 years and they have raised two sons, Matthew and Emmett. Michele and Kris currently live in a log home on five wooded acres approximately 30 miles from Ann Arbor. He enjoys working on his property, running, snowboarding, and most importantly spending time with his family. He has a unique Twitter client that he uses at AMTC.
Kathy Nichols is a retired flight nurse from West Michigan Air Care in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She joined West Michigan Air Care when the program was formed through the merger of the Borgess and Bronson Hospital helicopter programs in 1993. She had been a flight nurse for 23 years and served as an emergency department nurse for 20 years prior to her flight nurse career. She continues serving as an instructor for PALS and ACLS. Kathy is in the blue scrubs 3rd from the left in the picture.
Kathy’s current goal is traveling independently with various groups for medical care missions in developing countries. Her recent travels have included Tanzania in November 2009 and Haiti in late February and early March 2010.
She is a graduate of the Borgess School of Nursing and Western Michigan University with degrees in nursing. Kathy is a past president of the National Flight Nurses Association - Michigan Chapter. I had the honor and privilege of working with Kathy when I was the President & CEO of West Michigan Air Care from 1993-1998.
Monday, March 8, 2010
Kansas Cyclist Podcast - Episode 17
Episode 17 of the Kansas Cyclist Podcast features a look at the Topeka Community Cycle Project, a community bicycle workshop that will offer cyclists a place to work on their bikes, learn about bicycle repair and maintainable, and even earn a bike of their own.
Randy Rasa and I talk with founder Robert Fitzgerald, a law student at Topeka’s Washburn University, who launched the project this winter. Robert modeled the idea after similar bike co-ops from around the country, which offer cyclists a place to work on their bikes, learn about bicycle repair and maintenance, and even earn a bike of their own through the innovative “earn-a-bike” program, in which a person invests 10 hours volunteering at the shop and earns shop credit. That credit can be turned in for a bicycle of their choosing from the inventory. Then that person works with a shop mechanic to overhaul the bicycle to make it fully functioning — in the process learning how to repair and maintain their bicycle. After the bike passes a safety checklist they can take it with them. At this point the person has invested in the shop and in themselves and has a functioning bicycle for transportation. If they run into any mechanical issues with the bicycle in the future, they have the skills to repair it and they have a space at the shop and access to the tools necessary to complete the repairs.
When the Topeka Community Cycle Project officially opens this spring, it will be the only such community bike shop in the state of Kansas. They’re currently accepting donations of bicycles, components, tires, tools, accessories — basically anything bicycle-related, they can find a use for. You can contact them via email at topeka@cycleproject.org, via their web site, cycleproject.org, or follow them on Facebook and Twitter.
For this episode’s “On The Scene” segment, we’re doing something a different. This time out, the scene is a hospital bed, where we talk with Chris Love, who suffered a broken leg and broken arm in a bicycle accident in late February. We bring you this story not because there’s anything really unusual in Chris’s story (other than, perhaps, his incredibly positive attitude and determination to get back on the bike), but because this type of accident — in Chris’s case, a wheel slipping on a wet board on an innocuous-looking bridge on an easy paved trail, with no cars or other cyclists involved — happens more often than we care to admit. Even for someone like Chris — a fit and experienced mountain biker, with a well-maintained bicycle, riding on familiar trails — things can happen quickly, with devastating consequences. Makes you think.
Chris is facing a long period of rehab, but he’s looking forward to riding again. You’ll want to listen to his story, and perhaps hit him up with a few words of encouragement at chris1281982@gmail.com or on Facebook.
Randy Rasa and I talk with founder Robert Fitzgerald, a law student at Topeka’s Washburn University, who launched the project this winter. Robert modeled the idea after similar bike co-ops from around the country, which offer cyclists a place to work on their bikes, learn about bicycle repair and maintenance, and even earn a bike of their own through the innovative “earn-a-bike” program, in which a person invests 10 hours volunteering at the shop and earns shop credit. That credit can be turned in for a bicycle of their choosing from the inventory. Then that person works with a shop mechanic to overhaul the bicycle to make it fully functioning — in the process learning how to repair and maintain their bicycle. After the bike passes a safety checklist they can take it with them. At this point the person has invested in the shop and in themselves and has a functioning bicycle for transportation. If they run into any mechanical issues with the bicycle in the future, they have the skills to repair it and they have a space at the shop and access to the tools necessary to complete the repairs.
When the Topeka Community Cycle Project officially opens this spring, it will be the only such community bike shop in the state of Kansas. They’re currently accepting donations of bicycles, components, tires, tools, accessories — basically anything bicycle-related, they can find a use for. You can contact them via email at topeka@cycleproject.org, via their web site, cycleproject.org, or follow them on Facebook and Twitter.
For this episode’s “On The Scene” segment, we’re doing something a different. This time out, the scene is a hospital bed, where we talk with Chris Love, who suffered a broken leg and broken arm in a bicycle accident in late February. We bring you this story not because there’s anything really unusual in Chris’s story (other than, perhaps, his incredibly positive attitude and determination to get back on the bike), but because this type of accident — in Chris’s case, a wheel slipping on a wet board on an innocuous-looking bridge on an easy paved trail, with no cars or other cyclists involved — happens more often than we care to admit. Even for someone like Chris — a fit and experienced mountain biker, with a well-maintained bicycle, riding on familiar trails — things can happen quickly, with devastating consequences. Makes you think.
Chris is facing a long period of rehab, but he’s looking forward to riding again. You’ll want to listen to his story, and perhaps hit him up with a few words of encouragement at chris1281982@gmail.com or on Facebook.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Air Medical Today - Episode 10

Dr. Hankins has been serving as the Medical Director of the Mayo Clinic Medical Transport since 1991 and as the President of AAMS since October 2009. He also has been serving as an Emergency Physician Consultant with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Mayo Clinic since 1991. Dan is boarded in both Internal Medicine and Emergency Medicine and did his training at the University of Minnesota. He attended medical school at the University of Pittsburgh and did his undergraduate work at George Washington University in Washington, DC in Anthropology.

Dan is a native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and lives in Oronoco, Minnesota with his wife, Joan who is a flight nurse. They have 6 children and step-children and 6 grandchildren. Joan and he also have their own rural cat rescue shelter with 13 cats on their 6 acre property.
Dawn Mancuso is the Executive Director and CEO of the Association of Air Medical Services, where she has been responsible for overseeing the association’s move to the Washington, DC area and transitioning the association’s structure and services to meet the industry’s changing needs. She also serves as executive director and chief executive officer for the MedEvac Foundation International.

Dawn is a past winner of GWSAE’s Monument Award, ASAE’s Diamond Award of Excellence, and the Associations Advance America Summit Award. She is a frequent presenter at association management conferences, and has been published in magazines such as Association, Executive Update, and other non-profit management publications. She is the author of one of the chapters of Professional Practices in Association Management, a textbook for those in the association management profession. In March of 2001, she was named a Fellow of the American Society of Association Executives.
Dawn has worked in the association management field since 1982. She has held positions with other associations such as the National Association of RV Parks and Campgrounds, the Educational Dealers and Suppliers Association International, the National School Supply and Equipment Association, and the International Chiropractic Association.
In her spare time, she has volunteered as an usher for the Washington Shakespeare Theatre, and has served on the board of several community non-profits, including PAL, an organization that promotes the human-animal bond through sponsoring pet therapy visits to nursing homes, veterans homes and hospitals, the Association Foundation Group (AFG), and MetroPets, an organization created to promote the adoption of homeless animals and the well-being of companion animals in the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan area.
In the First Response section of the podcast I check in with David Kearns who is the Clinical Coordinator for Flight For Life Colorado, the Region II Director for the Association of Air Medical Services, and the Coordinator of the CONCERN Network. I discuss with David the recent announcement regarding the discontinuation of the Alaris MedSystem III Multi-Channel Infusion Pump by CareFusion and some grass-roots work that he is doing in response.
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