Local News
Career administrator to head FGH
Robert C. Marquardt brings nearly 21 years of hospital experience to his new position
FAIRMONT — Robert C. Marquardt, a career hospital administrator with nearly 21 years of experience at a Michigan hospital and a master’s degree from Yale University, has been selected the new president and chief executive officer of Fairmont General Hospital.
Marquardt, 56, currently CEO of Saint Catherine Medical Center Fountain Springs in Ashland, Pa., will begin his new job July 21, more than half a year after the resignation of his predecessor, Albert Pilkington III, who took a job as director of West Virginia University Hospitals-East in Martinsburg.
“We’re excited by the opportunity to come be there to be part of the community and help the hospital grow and prosper,” Marquardt said Thursday.
Mike Sengewalt, the hospital’s chief financial officer, said the hospital’s board of directors met Monday to decide between two candidates and settled on Marquardt, who accepted Wednesday. Sengewalt, interim CEO who also had thrown his hat in the ring for the permanent job, said he was pleased with the decision.
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North Marion girls celebrate state title
The North Marion girls’ basketball team certainly knows how to win. The Huskies know how to celebrate, too.
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YouTube video leads to parade invitation
History and technology have combined to get some Fairmont Senior High School students to the cradle of our nation’s history this summer.
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Local garage damaged in fire
A close-knit community watched firefighters battle a blaze around 5:15 p.m. Sunday that damaged a large garage behind a house on Tulip Lane, a short hop from Valley Chapel United Methodist Church.
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Lending a hand
Dave Patterson is a man who enjoys helping people.
He especially enjoys helping them when the snow falls like it did from mid-December until the first of March. During that time, he helped keep the streets around Crestview Avenue plowed. He even plowed some people’s driveways, porches and steps.
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Champions again
The North Marion Huskies girls’ basketball team is coming home as champions ... again.
The Huskies went wire-to-wire as No. 1 this season and won their second straight Class AAA state title with a 58-45 win over South Charleston Saturday at the Charleston Civic Center.
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Health officials ponder arrival of seasonal flu
As spring approaches and cases of H1N1 (swine) flu seem to be at bay, some health officials are wondering if the seasonal flu will begin to emerge or if the H1N1 pandemic somehow has kept seasonal flu from breaking out.
“There’s a lot of theories why this happens,” said Bob White, regional epidemiologist who works out of the Monongalia County Health Department.
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Rivesville water rates to increase
Rivesville water customers will soon be feeling the financial effects of Fairmont’s 49 percent rate increase.
And although customers will be paying higher bills as a result, there is a positive light in the fact that it will help the significant deficit that the town’s water fund is currently operating on.
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Tea Party members defend group’s mission
The liberal mainstream media want to define the Tea Party movement as a bunch of gun toting, racist, right-wing radicals.
“Their task seemed endless, almost overwhelming, especially with only $517 in their Tea Party bank account,” a recent article in The New York Times proclaims.
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Making a statement
Dozens of students gathered outside the county board of education offices in protest Friday morning.
Students began assembling shortly after 7 a.m. and their ranks continued to grow even after Superintendent of Schools Tom Deadrick asked them to leave.
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School curriculum key at FFA auction
Folks from all over the county came out to support youth Friday at the annual Ham, Bacon and Egg Show.
Each year, the county’s Future Farmers of America program sponsors the event, held at the Marion County Technical Center, which raises money for the youth who participate.
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