WRAL Investigates Mental Health
WRAL Investigates Mental Health
A former Cherry Hospital employee who was fired for abusing a patient will not be getting his job back. The State Personnel Commission ruled Wednesday that it has no legal authority to re-instate O'Tonious Raynor.
The State Personnel Commission held a hearing Thursday to decide whether a fired Cherry Hospital worker should get his job back following an altercation with a patient last March.
Essie Freeman, 78, has a personal interest in North Carolina's zero-tolerance policy on abuse in psychiatric hospitals.
A Raleigh license plate office deemed out of compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act is also one of five locations in Wake County where disabled drivers can pick up their handicapped parking placards.
The same tax issues that scuttled a state position for the former director of the Mental Health Association in North Carolina have now forced the organization to shut its doors.
State officials are reconsidering the appointment of a mental health advocate to a key position at the Department of Health and Human Services, one day after WRAL News uncovered tax issues at his current job.
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