The Dallas Morning News
A Dallas anesthesiologist was sentenced Wednesday to 190 years in prison for injecting a nerve-blocking agent and other drugs into bags of intravenous fluid at a surgical center where he worked, leading to the death of a coworker and causing cardiac emergencies for several patients. The emergencies began two days after 60-year old Raynaldo Riviera Ortiz Jr. was notified of a disciplinary inquiry into an incident during which he allegedly “deviated from the standard of care” during an anesthesia procedure when a patient experienced a medical emergency. In other news, the Plano Independent School District broke ground Tuesday on a $72 million Career & Technical Education Center that will offer training in fields like welding, hairdressing and cybersecurity for students in grades 9-12; students whose families make less than $100,000 annually will get free tuition and waived fees at any of the academic universities in the University of Texas System, the board of regents announced Wednesday. The initiative is an expansion of the Promise Plus Program, a needs-based financial aid program approved by the board in 2022; And property taxes are rising in nearly every U.S. metro area, but the burden is not equal. Texas is home to some of the hardest hit cities in the country, according to a new study by RedFin. Three Texas cities round out the top 10: Fort Worth, San Antonio and Dallas. In Fort Worth, property taxes jumped 44% since 2019, to a median monthly payment of $508. Homeowners in San Antonio saw a 43% increase, to $449 a month. And in Dallas, property taxes soared 41% for $573 a month.
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