2004 to 2000 SCHOOL NURSE / NURSE COORDINATOR for DISTRICTLloyd Healthcare Services, AHRC Brookville, NY 2002 to 2004 DAY TREATMENT NURSESt. Mary's Community Care Professionals, Inc Bayside, NY 1998 to 2000 DIRECTOR OF PATIENT SERVICESPSA HealthCare Mineola, NY 1997 to 1998 BRANCH DIRECTORJ & D Ultracare Suffern, NY 1995 to 1997 DIRECTOR OF NURSINGMedical Marketing Development, Inc Mineola, NY 1993 to 1995 MANAGED CARE NURSE CONSULTANTABEL Health Management Services, Inc Great Neck, NY 1990 to 1992 NURSE MANAGER OF CASE MANAGEMENTBooth Memorial Medical Center Flushing, NY 1982 to 1990 STAFF NURSE SICUNew York University Medical Center New York, NY 1981 to 1982 STAFF NURSE ICU
Education:
Adelphi University Garden City, NY 1988 Masters in Business AdministrationHunter College-Bellevue School of Nursing New York, NY 1981 Bachelors Of Science
A woman that takes chances.. Big chances!!! I step over the line everyday to make my World a better place.. AS i find myself single at 50 again.. I am just beginning to feel like i am the woman i was meant to be.. :)
Rule in favor of a certain level of pension funding, and the court will have "bought itself a role in the annual appropriation process, " said Jean Reilly, a lawyer in the attorney general's office, "the sort of policy decisions that the court is not equipped to handle."
Date: May 06, 2015
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Christie Administration Faces Skeptical Court on Pension Fight
Assistant Attorney General Jean Reilly argued that state workers have no contractual or constitutional right to the payments under a pension law Christie signed in 2011. Rather, she said, the law violates the state constitution by binding future legislatures to make specific payments.
Date: May 06, 2015
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Judges Have Questions on Christie's Pension Contributions
Justice Barry Albin noted that public workers must still make bigger contributions under the pension overhaul if the state isn't meeting its entire obligation. "Is that some sort of bait and switch?" he asked Jean Reilly, a lawyer in the state Attorney General's Office.