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		<title>Austin Texas Law Firm lawyer Auto  Accidents Personal Injury work place accidentss</title>
		<link>http://512lawfirm.com</link>
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		<description>Rhett Hoestenbach is an Autin Texas Personal Injury lawyer that specializes in automobile and workplace accidents, workers compensation drunk driving, DUI and insurance disputes.</description>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 10:28:02 +0000</pubDate>
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			<title>Deadliest Danger Isn't at the Rig but on the Road</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2012/05/15/deadliest-danger-isnt-at-the-rig-but-on-the-road</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2012/05/15/deadliest-danger-isnt-at-the-rig-but-on-the-road</comments>
			<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2012 10:28:02 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>By IAN URBINA - New York Times </dc:creator>
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			<title>Increased number of auto-pedestrian fatalities in Austin arouses concern</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2012/03/18/increased-number-of-auto-pedestrian-fatalities-in-austin-arouses-concern</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2012/03/18/increased-number-of-auto-pedestrian-fatalities-in-austin-arouses-concern</comments>
			<pubDate>Sun, 18 Mar 2012 11:01:23 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator> Brenda Bell - Austin American Statesman</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2012/03/18/increased-number-of-auto-pedestrian-fatalities-in-austin-arouses-concern</guid>
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			<title>Injured patients discover hospitals seeking a piece of their accident settlements</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/03/30/injured-patients-discover-hospitals-seeking-a-piece-of-their-accident-settlements</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/03/30/injured-patients-discover-hospitals-seeking-a-piece-of-their-accident-settlements</comments>
			<pubDate>Wed, 30 Mar 2011 10:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/03/30/injured-patients-discover-hospitals-seeking-a-piece-of-their-accident-settlements</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[By Mary Ann Roser<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>To this day, Jean Bogardus of Austin doesn't know what hit her.<BR/><BR/>She was walking in the parking lot of the Onion Creek Country Club on Feb. 7, 2007, when she was run over by a vehicle, leaving her right leg broken in three places.<BR/><BR/>"I think it was an SUV," Bogardus, 77, said [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[By Mary Ann Roser<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>To this day, Jean Bogardus of Austin doesn't know what hit her.<BR/><BR/>She was walking in the parking lot of the Onion Creek Country Club on Feb. 7, 2007, when she was run over by a vehicle, leaving her right leg broken in three places.<BR/><BR/>"I think it was an SUV," Bogardus, 77, said recently, "but it all happened so fast."<BR/><BR/>At University Medical Center Brackenridge, she had surgery and went home two days later in a wheelchair with rods and pins in her leg. The hospital said her care cost $31,115. Bogardus figured Medicare, her health insurer, would pay.<BR/><BR/>But instead of billing Medicare, the hospital filed a lien against Bogardus, staking a claim to part of any settlement she might seek from the driver's insurance company. That meant, if Bogardus was awarded a settlement, the hospital would get paid first.<BR/><BR/>Personal injury lawyers and some patient advocates say hospital liens — which have been permitted by Texas law since the 1930s — by themselves are not bad. It makes sense for hospitals to try to get paid, they said. But they see hospitals abusing liens by seeking drastically higher payments from accident victims than they would otherwise get.<BR/><BR/>The lien put Bogardus in the company of thousands of other accident victims in Central Texas who become embroiled in a tug-of-war over their settlements. UMC Brackenridge, Austin's only Level I trauma center, has filed more liens than any other hospital in Central Texas: 18,300 since 1999, according to Travis County property records. Four other hospitals, also operated by the Seton Family of Hospitals, have filed hundreds of liens each.<BR/><BR/>Many states have hospital lien laws to ensure payment of bills, especially when patients have no health coverage.<BR/><BR/>But Seton officials said they routinely file liens in cases where they anticipate an insurance settlement, regardless of the person's health coverage status. Spokeswoman Adrienne Lallo said the only time they don't automatically file liens is when the hospital bill is less than $5,000.<BR/><BR/>Seton officials say they are only trying to recoup the cost of caring for the injured person. A hospital risks getting nothing, in some cases, if it doesn't file a lien, said Greg Hartman, president and CEO of UMC Brackenridge. It's especially important for a safety net hospital like UMC Brackenridge, which because of its Level I trauma center sees a large number of accident victims — many of them uninsured. That's a worsening problem, Hartman said, in a state in which 25 percent of the population lacks health insurance.<BR/><BR/>Seton officials said they were unable to calculate how much they have collected from liens in the past two years. St. David's HealthCare stopped filing liens in early 2009, except in extraordinary circumstances, Chief Financial Officer David Wilson said. The liens "often created misunderstanding, and in some cases ill will with our patients" without bringing substantial financial benefit, he said.<BR/><BR/>When a patient like Bogardus has Medicare or Medicaid, the hospital is required to first seek payment from the person or party responsible for the accident, Seton officials said. Filing a lien is the most practical way to collect, Lallo said.<BR/><BR/>"If we fail to file a lien on, say, a motor vehicle accident settlement, we would preclude our ability to file for Medicare and Medicaid," Lallo wrote in an email.<BR/><BR/>Not so, federal officials said.<BR/><BR/>"In a liability situation where the liability insurance is in dispute, a hospital may bill Medicare conditionally," said Ellen Griffith, a spokeswoman for the Centers for Medicare &amp; Medicaid Services. "Medicare will recover its conditional payments from the ultimate settlement, if any. This enables the hospital to be paid more promptly than if it had to wait until the liability dispute is resolved."<BR/><BR/>Hartman said that because the law requires hospitals to "do whatever you can to see if there's another payer" besides Medicare or Medicaid, "we feel it's our responsibility to get dollars that are awarded by the court to pay for medical care before we spend government tax dollars on care."<BR/><BR/>But a lien can bring the hospital more money.<BR/><BR/>Hospitals generally seek the full charges, or "list price," from accident victims, rather than the discounted rates that the government and other insurers negotiate for patients with Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance. For example, Seton gives managed care companies such as HMOs discounts from 10 to 55 percent, Lallo said, and uninsured patients get discounts ranging from 21 to 35 percent, depending on whether the person pays upfront for care.<BR/><BR/>Virtually no one pays the list price, hospital officials and lawyers agreed.<BR/><BR/>In Bogardus' case, Medicare would have paid $10,866 — about 65 percent less than what the hospital actually charged her.<BR/><BR/>Under the state's lien law, hospitals may collect their "reasonable and regular rate," which personal injury lawyers say is often 60 percent less than the list price. That is why they object so strenuously when clients receive bills for the full charges, they said.<BR/><BR/>Glenda Owen, Seton's vice president of finance, said the list price is a starting point. "When we send that (bill) out the door, we're expecting to negotiate."<BR/><BR/>That's a smokescreen, said Mark Rukavina, executive director of the Access Project in Boston, a nonprofit interested in improving health and health care access.<BR/><BR/>"In a way the hospitals are shopping for the highest payer," Rukavina said. "It's excessive and unfair for them to be paid (full) charges."<BR/><BR/>Hal Bogardus, 80, Jean's husband and a retired semiconductor manager, scientist and engineer, said he had a word for it: "Egregious."<BR/><BR/>Resolution can take years<BR/><BR/>Hospitals often aren't the only lien filers after an accident. In settlement cases, it is common for the injured person's health and auto insurance carriers to file liens seeking repayment from the other party's insurance. Bogardus faced three other liens on the settlement, including one from her own auto insurance company, which was later waived, said her lawyer, Mike Davis.<BR/><BR/>Cases can take several years to resolve.<BR/><BR/>In February 2009, two years after the accident, Bogardus — whose right leg was ¾ of an inch shorter than her left after the accident, causing her to limp — sued the driver's insurance company for the maximum amount of his policy, $250,000.<BR/><BR/>Later that year, Davis also sued Seton and the company it uses to pursue its liens, Cardon Healthcare Network of The Woodlands, because the hospital "charges exceed the reasonable and regular rate for such services," the suit says.<BR/><BR/>Cardon offered to discount Bogardus' bill 15 percent, but Davis countered that the standard discount for her case at UMC Brackenridge would have been 60 percent off the list price.<BR/><BR/>Seton doesn't have a standard discount for Medicare and Medicaid but takes whatever those insurers pay, amounts that vary by diagnosis, Lallo said.<BR/><BR/>In the end, Bogardus paid Seton $21,255, including $14,255 from a medical plan that she had with Allstate, to settle the lien, about double what Seton would have gotten from Medicare. After paying her other expenses — including the other liens, medical expenses she incurred after her initial hospital stay and more than $87,000 in attorneys fees and expenses — Seton estimated she was left with about $60,000, an amount Davis would not confirm.<BR/><BR/>Bill would require notification<BR/><BR/>Often the injured person has no idea until months after their accident that a hospital has filed a lien against them. That's because Texas law doesn't require hospitals to tell them.<BR/><BR/>Because she had a lawyer, Bogardus found out about the hospital lien from him.<BR/><BR/>But Dianne Miller of Richardson said she didn't know for seven weeks that a lien had been filed after her accident. The car in which she was riding was struck head-on on her way to a Richardson City Council meeting on Nov. 19, 2007. Her leg was badly damaged in the accident, and the avid hiker, then 63, was told later she might be permanently disabled.<BR/><BR/>A few days after receiving that news, she received a letter from the hospital's lawyer informing her of the $556 lien. Miller, who was covered by Blue Cross Blue Shield, thought the lien meant the hospital was trying to take her house.<BR/><BR/>"I was already in shock," said Miller. "It was not clear a hospital lien was a non-property lien."<BR/><BR/>She was furious, but because it was a relatively small amount, she decided to pay the lien, she said.<BR/><BR/>She testified this month in favor of Senate Bill 328, filed by Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, which would require hospitals to send a notice to the injured person within five business days and explain the lien does not involve the person's house.<BR/><BR/>There is no penalty if a hospital fails to notify, Carona said, but he believes that "could place in question the collection" of the lien.<BR/><BR/>Lawyers object to liens' size<BR/><BR/>Judy Kostura, an Austin lawyer who is an expert on hospital liens, said, "It makes perfect sense to me that rather than write it off for charity, they (hospitals) might seek to recover some costs." But she objects to the size of the liens.<BR/><BR/>Lawyers don't like liens because they cut into what the lawyers get from a settlement, Hartman said. Lawyers dispute that claim, saying they typically get a third of the settlement and what is left is between the client and the hospital.<BR/><BR/>Austin lawyer Robert W. Lee said if he had not sued Seton and Cardon on behalf of Rosa Meza Aguirre, she would have been left with nothing.<BR/><BR/>Aguirre, who has six children and cleans houses for a living, was a passenger in her purple Neon on July 21, 2009, when it was struck by a tractor trailer changing lanes. The car spun out, crossing three lanes of traffic on southbound Interstate 35 and landing in the median near Wells Branch Parkway.<BR/><BR/>The impact forced her chest down onto the dashboard. Aguirre, 38, who did not have health insurance, underwent five CT scans at UMC Brackenridge, for which she was charged between $3,097 and $5,478 each. Her bill totaled $31,368.<BR/><BR/>She had no broken bones, but two years later, her chest still hurts, and she also has pain radiating from her neck, Aguirre said.<BR/><BR/>"I don't have a quarrel with the diagnostic treatment," Lee said. "I think the real problem is when they charge a ridiculous amount \u2026 for three hours in the ER."<BR/><BR/>Doctors will reduce their fees for uninsured patients, Lee added, "but the hospital has this lien statute, and they've got all the power. You have no ability to negotiate until you file suit and go to court."<BR/><BR/>The hospital filed a lien for the full bill on Aguirre's settlement of $57,500 from the trucking company. Lee had the charges analyzed by a California company that reviews medical bills; the company concluded that his client was overcharged $22,915. Lee claimed her bill should have been $8,453 and sued Seton, UMC Brackenridge and Cardon in May 2010.<BR/><BR/>Hartman said CT scans cost more at trauma centers because the centers are costly to operate, with specialists and sophisticated equipment. "It includes all of those overhead costs," he said.<BR/><BR/>The judge in the lawsuit said the hospital filed the lien too late, which gave Lee an advantage in negotiations. In the end, Aguirre paid $10,000 to satisfy Seton's lien. After paying other bills and attorney's fees and expenses of $19,166, her share was $21,880.<BR/><BR/>"In the end, my goal is not to screw the hospital out of getting paid for their service, it's paying them what's reasonable," Lee said. "It seems like their goal is to make as much money as they can."<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Judge Allows Witness to Testify via Skype</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/21/judge-allows-witness-to-testify-via-skype</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/21/judge-allows-witness-to-testify-via-skype</comments>
			<pubDate>Mon, 21 Feb 2011 21:09:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/21/judge-allows-witness-to-testify-via-skype</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Greg Land<BR/>Fulton County Daily Report<BR/><BR/>A Douglas County, Ga., judge ventured into new technological and legal territory during a recent criminal trial by allowing a witness to testify from Texas via Skype, the internet-based video-phone service, after the defense attorney said his client could not afford to bring the witness to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Greg Land<BR/>Fulton County Daily Report<BR/><BR/>A Douglas County, Ga., judge ventured into new technological and legal territory during a recent criminal trial by allowing a witness to testify from Texas via Skype, the internet-based video-phone service, after the defense attorney said his client could not afford to bring the witness to Georgia.<BR/><BR/>Douglas County Assistant District Attorney Nedal S. Shawkat opposed the use of Skype, arguing among other things that the confrontation clauses of the U.S. and Georgia constitutions require in-person testimony at trial.<BR/><BR/>Shawkat said he did not expect the motion to be granted "simply because it is a new area of the law, and because we weren't able to find any cases where it was used."<BR/><BR/>But Douglas County Superior Court Chief Judge David T. Emerson said that with the exception of a minor glitch or two when the signal went offline, the system worked quite well.<BR/><BR/>Despite the testimony of the defense witness, Juan Salazar was convicted of cocaine trafficking. Emerson sentenced Salazar, 35, to serve 30 years of a 33-year sentence.<BR/><BR/>Salazar was behind the wheel of a tractor-trailer loaded with butternut squash and headed from Texas to Montezuma, Ga., when he was pulled over for at traffic violation in Douglasville on Jan. 28, 2010. A subsequent search of the truck turned up 95 kilos of cocaine found in secret compartment in the truck's cab.<BR/><BR/>Salazar's lawyer, Arturo Corso of Gainesville's Corso, Kennedy &amp; Campbell, said that prior to trial, prosecutors had provided a lengthy list of possible witnesses the state might call to the stand. Among them was Richard Gutierrez, a broker from San Juan, Texas, whose business involves placing trucking companies with produce suppliers. Contacted by Corso, Gutierrez said he could testify that he had been in contact with the trucking company's owner and knew that the truck was supposed to be driven by another driver, and that Salazar had only been assigned the job at the last minute, when the other driver got sick.<BR/><BR/>Corso, who was privately retained, asked Emerson to issue a certificate of materiality to compel attendance for the man's testimony, which the judge declined.<BR/><BR/>On Jan. 28, Corso filed a "Motion for Leave to Present Live Testimony via Internet Video Phone (Skype)." It noted that, under ordinary circumstances, an out-of-state witness is paid 12 cents a mile each way and $25 a day to appear in court.<BR/><BR/>"Defendant Salazar, having been imprisoned prior to trial on these charges for one year is indigent and has no money to pay for said travel costs," he wrote.<BR/><BR/>While disappointed in the verdict -- which he plans to appeal -- Corso applauded Emerson's openness to the long-distance testimony.<BR/><BR/>"Judge Emerson didn't make a snap decision," he said. "He did his own research, and as near as we can tell there is no precedent, under state or federal rules of evidence, for using this in a criminal trial. The reason I think it was proper in this case is because the state was in possession of evidence outside of the state and beyond the court's reach."<BR/><BR/>Challenges in those types of cases "always [come] back to the confrontation clause," said Shawkat. "There's a lot of dicta as to why we have that clause. ... There have been a lot [of] cases where the argument has been that the state has the right to confrontation. If the defendant has the right to confront his accuser in person, then the state should have the same right to confront that witness, too."<BR/><BR/>The jury is also not privy to witness' body language and demeanor via monitor, he added.<BR/><BR/>Corso argued that the confrontation clauses are to protect the defendant, so there was no reason to deny the motion because "we were the ones asking for it."<BR/><BR/>The defense lawyer provided Gutierrez with a Skype camera, which the witness hooked up to his own computer in Texas, and the internet-based testimony lasted about an hour.<BR/><BR/>"We had a big, flat-screen TV, and the witness was almost life-size," Corso said.<BR/><BR/>"I think this story of justice-meets-technology is important," he said, "because otherwise Mr. Salazar would have been denied his due-process right to provide testimony in his defense."<BR/><br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>2 Running Austin Medics Help Save Marathoner</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/15/2-running-austin-medics-help-save-marathoner</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/15/2-running-austin-medics-help-save-marathoner</comments>
			<pubDate>Tue, 15 Feb 2011 11:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/15/2-running-austin-medics-help-save-marathoner</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[By Tony Plohetski<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>Marathon training partners Gerry Moreau and George Gibbons were on pace Sunday to finish their first big race together in 4 hours, 30 minutes , the goal they'd set after months of practice.<BR/><BR/>They lost 20 minutes working to save a man's life.<BR/><BR/>The two paramedics from [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[By Tony Plohetski<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>Marathon training partners Gerry Moreau and George Gibbons were on pace Sunday to finish their first big race together in 4 hours, 30 minutes , the goal they'd set after months of practice.<BR/><BR/>They lost 20 minutes working to save a man's life.<BR/><BR/>The two paramedics from Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services were nearing mile 15 of the 26.2-mile Rock 'n' Roll Mardi Gras Marathon in New Orleans when Gibbons saw that a small crowd had gathered around a collapsed runner.<BR/><BR/>Gibbons, 45, who has more than 15 years' experience as a medic, rushed over and dropped to his knees. He checked for a pulse. It was very faint.<BR/><BR/>He placed his hand on the runner's chest. He knew the man's heart was stopping.<BR/><BR/>"He was barely breathing, maybe two or three times a minute," Gibbons said.<BR/><BR/>By then, Moreau, 41, was kneeling beside him.<BR/><BR/>"What's happening?" he asked. The paramedics, who rarely team up in Austin, began working together to keep 54-year-old James McKinnon of Waterloo, Ind., alive.<BR/><BR/>For the next four minutes, the medics, tired from the race and with sweat dripping from their faces, took turns pumping McKinnon's chest. They learned his name and hometown from the bib runners are required to wear.<BR/><BR/>A nurse who was watching the race joined in, pressing a few breaths into the roadside patient.<BR/><BR/>Paramedics for New Orleans Emergency Medical Services and the agency's top doctor arrived a short time later and continued CPR. Gibbons and Moreau told them everything they'd done.<BR/><BR/>They watched as medics loaded McKinnon into the ambulance. Then they decided to resume running.<BR/><BR/>"There was nothing else we could do at that point," Gibbons said.<BR/><BR/>New Orleans EMS officials said by the time they got the man to the Interim Louisiana State University Public Hospital, he was breathing again.<BR/><BR/>"All the stars lined up for this guy," New Orleans EMS spokesman Jeb Tate said. "What happened was a passage right out of a textbook."<BR/><BR/>McKinnon remained in intensive care Monday. Family members could not be reached for comment.<BR/><BR/>Moreau and Gibbons spent the rest of the race ticking away the miles and wondering whether McKinnon had survived.<BR/><BR/>Moreau finished the marathon, his ninth, in 4 hours, 52 minutes — about 10 minutes ahead of Gibbons, who was running his first. When Moreau crossed the finish line, he got a medal draped around his neck with thousands of other runners. But he wanted to find out the fate of the man he and Gibbons had helped.<BR/><BR/>Then he saw some New Orleans paramedics a few feet away.<BR/><BR/>He told them that he was one of the runners who had tended to McKinnon.<BR/><BR/>"'We've been waiting for you guys this whole time,'" Moreau said one of them told him. "'He made it.'"<BR/><BR/>Moreau said he needed a moment to take it all in.<BR/><BR/>"It was amazing," he said. "That was best part of the whole weekend."<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Governor Rick Perry Calls for Legal Reforms</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/09/governor-rick-perry-calls-for-legal-reforms</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/09/governor-rick-perry-calls-for-legal-reforms</comments>
			<pubDate>Wed, 09 Feb 2011 12:58:26 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/09/governor-rick-perry-calls-for-legal-reforms</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Establish ‘loser pays' rules, in which people who sue and lose must pay court costs and legal expenses of the people they sued.<BR/><BR/>Enact ‘early dismissal' option for obviously frivolous lawsuits.<BR/><BR/>Establish expedited trials and limited discovery for lawsuits with claims between $10,000 and $100,000. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Establish ‘loser pays' rules, in which people who sue and lose must pay court costs and legal expenses of the people they sued.<BR/><BR/>Enact ‘early dismissal' option for obviously frivolous lawsuits.<BR/><BR/>Establish expedited trials and limited discovery for lawsuits with claims between $10,000 and $100,000.<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Snow day: Austin closes, wrecks mount as area blanketed in white </title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/05/snow-day-austin-closes-wrecks-mount-as-area-blanketed-in-white</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/05/snow-day-austin-closes-wrecks-mount-as-area-blanketed-in-white</comments>
			<pubDate>Sat, 05 Feb 2011 08:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/02/05/snow-day-austin-closes-wrecks-mount-as-area-blanketed-in-white</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[By Tony Plohetski<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>It didn't last long, but it caused plenty of trouble.<BR/><BR/>Austin shut down — and hunkered down — on the third day of an Arctic blast after a layer of freezing rain coated streets and highways. Up to 2 inches of snow followed Friday, blanketing the region.<BR/><BR/>The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[By Tony Plohetski<BR/>AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF<BR/><BR/>It didn't last long, but it caused plenty of trouble.<BR/><BR/>Austin shut down — and hunkered down — on the third day of an Arctic blast after a layer of freezing rain coated streets and highways. Up to 2 inches of snow followed Friday, blanketing the region.<BR/><BR/>The conditions brought the area to a crawl, leading schools to cancel and businesses to shutter and causing hundreds of wrecks as motorists ventured onto streets that in places resembled ice-skating rinks.<BR/><BR/>But by late afternoon Friday, most of the snow and ice had melted. Temperatures warmed to 40 degrees, and forecasters predict that they will rise to near 60 today — the most balmy since a strong cold front swept through the area Tuesday and plunged temperatures into the teens and 20s.<BR/><BR/>Although authorities deemed most of the more than 300 crashes in Austin minor, a North Texas teenager was killed late Thursday near Pflugerville in a collision that injured three other teens.<BR/><BR/>Hospital officials treated crash victims and people who had slipped and fallen. St. David's Medical Center reported that it had tended to two people for hypothermia.<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Call or Email Us Today For a Free Consultation</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/01/19/call-or-email-us-today-for-a-free-consultation</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/01/19/call-or-email-us-today-for-a-free-consultation</comments>
			<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jan 2011 15:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
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			<description><![CDATA[ [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[ [...]]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Attorney Rhett Hoestenbach is Board Certified in Personal Injury Trial Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization (‘TBLS”).</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/01/17/attorney-rhett-hoestenbach-is-board-certified-in-personal-injury-trial-law-by-the-texas-board-of-legal-specialization-%e2%80%98tbls%e2%80%9d</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/01/17/attorney-rhett-hoestenbach-is-board-certified-in-personal-injury-trial-law-by-the-texas-board-of-legal-specialization-%e2%80%98tbls%e2%80%9d</comments>
			<pubDate>Mon, 17 Jan 2011 18:08:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2011/01/17/attorney-rhett-hoestenbach-is-board-certified-in-personal-injury-trial-law-by-the-texas-board-of-legal-specialization-%e2%80%98tbls%e2%80%9d</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[There are more than 70,000 attorneys licensed to practice in Texas. Only 7,000 are Board Certified.<BR/><BR/>Board Certified lawyers earn the right to publicly represent themselves as a specialist in a select area of the law. In fact, they are the only attorneys allowed by the State Bar of Texas to do so. This designation sets them apart as being [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[There are more than 70,000 attorneys licensed to practice in Texas. Only 7,000 are Board Certified.<BR/><BR/>Board Certified lawyers earn the right to publicly represent themselves as a specialist in a select area of the law. In fact, they are the only attorneys allowed by the State Bar of Texas to do so. This designation sets them apart as being an attorney with the highest, public commitment to excellence in their area of law.<BR/><BR/>Board Certification is not a one-time event. It requires an ongoing involvement in the specialty area which is periodically substantiated with references from peers in that field. It also requires annual professional refreshment through TBLS approved, continuing legal education course work to stay abreast of current trends in law.<BR/><BR/>To learn more about <A HREF="/board-certified.htm" TARGET="_self">Boa</A><A HREF="/board-certified.htm" TARGET="_self">rd Certification click here</A> <br><br><br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>PUBLIC SAFETY: Austin construction workers face dangers, low pay</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/06/17/public-safety-austin-construction-workers-face-dangers-low-pay</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/06/17/public-safety-austin-construction-workers-face-dangers-low-pay</comments>
			<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 11:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/06/17/public-safety-austin-construction-workers-face-dangers-low-pay</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[By Juan Castillo AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF <BR/><BR/>Though it robustly feeds the city's growth and economy — generating an estimated $3.5 billion-plus annually in wages alone — Austin's commercial and residential construction industry frequently puts workers' safety, health and financial well-being at risk, according to a study released [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[By Juan Castillo AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF <BR/><BR/>Though it robustly feeds the city's growth and economy — generating an estimated $3.5 billion-plus annually in wages alone — Austin's commercial and residential construction industry frequently puts workers' safety, health and financial well-being at risk, according to a study released Tuesday by a worker advocacy group. <BR/>Combining results from surveys of more than 300 Austin construction workers and industry-related data from federal and state agencies, the 68-page study, "Building Austin, Building Injustice," depicts an industry rampant with poor and dangerous working conditions. Although many builders, developers and contractors are model employers, the study notes, others cut costs by not paying some workers for overtime, not paying some at all, misclassifying others as independent contractors, and failing to provide proper safety equipment such as harnesses and helmets, violations of federal and state regulations. <BR/>In doing so, they shift the toll to the public. Low-wage workers often depend on government support, hospitals and charities, the report said. <BR/>Industry representatives who had seen summaries of the study disputed the findings. <BR/>"I know of no one, certainly no one active in our association, who speaks out in favor of violating state and federal construction laws," said Harry Savio, executive vice president of the Home Builders Association of Greater Austin. <BR/>"We recognize the critical need for safety on our job sites," said Phil Thoden, president of the Austin chapter of Associated General Contractors of America. "We employ a full-time safety director to assist members with safety services and offer classes both in Spanish and English. Unfortunately, accidents occur, no matter how much precaution is taken." <BR/>'Pretty deplorable' <BR/>Release of the study by the Austin-based Workers Defense Project comes on the heels of last week's deaths of three men in a scaffolding collapse at a high-rise apartment construction project near the University of Texas. The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration is investigating. A spokeswoman said the agency does not comment during an investigation. <BR/>The study found that violations of workplace regulations are common in the industry, and federal, state and local governments are either ill-equipped to investigate or lax about enforcement. <BR/>"The report is just shocking in the way that it shows how the industry (in Austin) is really rife with these conditions that are pretty deplorable in terms of safety and health issues," said Richard Heyman, a UT professor and an adviser and researcher on the study. A specialist in urban development studies, Heyman said the report reveals systemic, structural failures. <BR/>"Employers rely on these kinds of conditions and on the fact that the public will pick up the bill for their lack of ability or lack of willingness to do the right thing," Heyman said. <BR/>The report illuminates questionable practices that have dogged the construction industry nationally. This is the first such study conducted in Austin. <BR/>A spokeswoman for the National Employment Law Project in New York said the findings were not surprising. <BR/>"It's really important data and research, but the construction industry (nationally) has often been the poster child of how workplace violations are just running rampant," said Catherine Ruckelshaus, a senior attorney and legal co-director at the project, which informally advised the Austin workers group but did not participate in the study. <BR/>Status plays a role <BR/>Ruckelshaus said one reason workplace violations persist is that enforcement is largely based on complaints. The industry nationwide is dominated by immigrant workers, and many are reluctant to complain out of fear they will lose their jobs or be investigated by immigration authorities, she said. <BR/>Ann Hatchitt, a spokeswoman for the Texas Workforce Commission, said the agency investigates all worker wage claims and does not ask questions about a person's immigration status. <BR/>Citing 2006 Census Bureau estimates, the study notes that 70 percent of Travis County construction workers that year were foreign-born, a 21 percent increase from 2000. <BR/>The Workers Defense Project helps low-wage laborers recover unpaid wages and advocates fair working conditions on their behalf. Director Cristina Tzintzún said the construction industry plays a vital role in the city's economy and the working conditions in the industry had never been studied. <BR/>The report said the construction industry employs more than 50,000 people in the Austin area, making it one of the top 10 industry employers. <BR/>Tzintzún said researchers visited about 100 commercial and residential building sites in Austin, chosen randomly, and surveyed more than 300 workers. They conducted longer interviews with about three dozen workers and employers. The survey was vetted by UT's Institutional Review Board, which typically signs off on research methodology. <BR/>Savio questioned if the study's sample size unfairly painted the industry with too broad a brush. <BR/>Heyman said the methodology was sound and that surveyors randomly visited job sites from a city database of all active building permits and then approached workers randomly, typically at entrances to job sites. Researchers from the University of Illinois-Chicago also joined in the study. <BR/>One in five construction workers told the questioners that they were not always paid, one in five reported suffering an injury that required medical attention at some point during their careers, and 45 percent earned poverty-level wages. <BR/>Other major findings: <BR/>Though overtime work in the construction industry is common, half of workers who did so reported receiving no overtime pay, a violation of wage and hour laws. <BR/>Nearly four in 10 workers were misclassified as independent contractors, denying them legal protections to overtime pay, workers' compensation coverage and benefits. <BR/>Sixty-four percent said they had received no basic health or safety training provided by OSHA. The training is voluntary. <BR/>A majority of workers lacked employer-based health insurance, pensions and sick or vacation days. Only 45 percent of workers said they had workers' compensation coverage. In Texas, employers can opt out of workers' comp. <BR/>Most workers earned $10 an hour. Using federal guidelines, the report calculated a poverty hourly wage as $10.56 an hour, based on a family of four. <BR/>Drawing on existing data, the report also says that Texas led the nation in construction-related deaths in 2007 with 142 fatalities, according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Labor. Tzintzún said similar data is not available by city. Per capita data is not tracked by state. <BR/>Texas had 23,900 construction-related injuries in 2007, an incident rate of 3.7 per 100 full-time workers, according to the Department of Labor. In all private industries, Texas had 242,000 injuries in 2007, an incident rate of 3.3 per 100 full-time workers. <BR/>According to the report, the state agency that investigates wage and hour violations, the Texas Workforce Commission, has not performed field investigations since 1993, handling complaints by telephone and mail. <BR/>Hatchitt said it would be cost-prohibitive for the agency's 23 staff investigators to travel across the state to investigate 15,000 to 20,000 wage claims a year. She said that in the past six years, the commission's Labor Law and Wage Claims Department helped more than 100,000 Texas workers recover more than $23 million in wages. <BR/>The report's authors call on policymakers and employers to do more to decrease the number of deaths in the industry, promote safe, humane working conditions and ensure enforcement against wage theft. When hiring subcontractors, general contractors should take into account working conditions, including wage theft, the report says. <BR/>Savio says most builders associations offer their workers training and says wage theft hurts everyone in the industry. <BR/>"If I'm a reputable builder and I have reputable subcontractors paying their guys and they're competing against fly-by-night con men, it disrupts the whole economic system," Savio said. <br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>FATAL CRASH REPORTED IN NORTH WILLIAMSON COUNTY</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/18/fatal-crash-reported-in-north-williamson-county</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/18/fatal-crash-reported-in-north-williamson-county</comments>
			<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2009 10:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/18/fatal-crash-reported-in-north-williamson-county</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[May 18, 2009<BR/><BR/><BR/>By David C. Doolittle – Austin American Statesman | Monday, May 18, 2009, 08:22 AM <BR/>The Texas Department of Public Safety is investigating a fatal crash that occurred about 5:30 this morning on Texas 195 near County Road 228 north of Florence, officials said.<BR/>Parts of the highway have been shut down as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[May 18, 2009<BR/><BR/><BR/>By David C. Doolittle – Austin American Statesman | Monday, May 18, 2009, 08:22 AM <BR/>The Texas Department of Public Safety is investigating a fatal crash that occurred about 5:30 this morning on Texas 195 near County Road 228 north of Florence, officials said.<BR/>Parts of the highway have been shut down as officials investigate.<BR/><BR/>No details have been released by the DPS or the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C. launches new website</title>
			<link>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/15/rhett-hoestenbach-pc-launches-new-website</link>
			<comments>http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/15/rhett-hoestenbach-pc-launches-new-website</comments>
			<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2009 16:24:00 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Rhett Hoestenbach P.C.</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://512lawfirm.com/blog/2009/05/15/rhett-hoestenbach-pc-launches-new-website</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[The Law Firm of Rhett Hoestenbach P.C. has just re-launched it's website.  As part of the launch, we are excited to have this blog as a place to share insights into injury law.<BR/><BR/>We strongly encourage you to <A HREF="faq.htm" TARGET="_self">read the FAQ section</A> to learn more about personal injury cases, and what you should know before [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[The Law Firm of Rhett Hoestenbach P.C. has just re-launched it's website.  As part of the launch, we are excited to have this blog as a place to share insights into injury law.<BR/><BR/>We strongly encourage you to <A HREF="faq.htm" TARGET="_self">read the FAQ section</A> to learn more about personal injury cases, and what you should know before selecting a law firm to represent you. <A HREF="contact-us.htm" TARGET="_self">Please contact us with any questions</A> you might have. We are always pleased to spend some time speaking with people about the law.<br><br>]]></content:encoded>
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