William Sears, 51, sometimes has back pain so intense he cannot sleep or bend to tie his shoes.
It's been that way since 2008, following a work injury and back surgery.
Making matters worse was a heat stroke this summer that shut down Sears' kidneys and prompted doctors to warn him to move out of Phoenix, where he owned his own business installing flooring.
Sears and his wife took the doctors' advice to leave the heat for his health, and they have been living on the outskirts of Flagstaff and seeking work for the last three months.
"I wake up six or seven times every night in pain," Sears said.
And so, Sears was among the patients Tuesday at the opening day for Flagstaff's free clinic for poor and uninsured people, the Poore Medical Clinic.
Patients started arriving at 6:45 a.m., said Bill Packard, one of the clinic's founding members and volunteers.
Physician and co-founder Henry Poore was examining a patient who had a prosthetic limb that had worn out. The patient needed a doctor to say as much in order to receive a new one.
"He said, 'How much money do I need to bring with me?' And I said, 'None,'" Poore recalled.
'REALLY SICK PEOPLE'
The clinic is free for Coconino County residents who don't have insurance and are living at less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level (that equates to less than $44,700 a year for a family of four or less than $21,780 for an individual).
"We're getting calls from really sick people who need to be seen," Poore said.
On Tuesday, Kathleen Petty and her two kids fit that description.
Petty has had symptoms resembling bronchitis for about 10 days, and now her 3-year-old son and 12-year-old daughter do too.
They came from their home near Ash Fork to be seen, after losing state-provided health care because they make just a little too much to be eligible under new budget cuts enacted this year.
"We just got kicked off AHCCCS (Arizona's version of Medicaid) because we're right in that range -- too poor to be rich, too rich to be poor," she said.
PMI Group said on Saturday that the main subsidiary of the company has been seized by Arizona insurance regulators, and will begin paying only 50 percent of claims. Under a court order obtained by Arizona regulators, "the Arizona Department of
Three members of Petty's four-member family have pre-existing health problems, meaning her quotes to buy health insurance have been about $900 per month, or far more than the family can afford. Petty is a stay-at-home mom looking to start a daycare.

This is the longest stretch the Chargers have gone without home games since 2003 when they played three road games, had a neutral site game in Arizona because of wild fires in San Diego and then went to Chicago. The Chargers' next game at home, Nov.
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When I speak at Michigan events, I often end with a quote from arguably the first important Michigan Man, Fielding Yost. Near the end of his life, they held a big banquet for him called, “A Toast to Yost from Coast to Coast,” which was broadcast
It’s Friday night, and things are hopping at The River. Abluegrass rope plays as diners pierce down the portion line for aplate of duck and vegetables, then lay at long tables toppedwith cloths and uninformed flowers, and puncture in.
The song and chapel cooking sky might not sound similar to whatyou regard of when you regard of a food pantry, but founders Andy andJenny Czerkas meant to erect a community, and more people from morewalks of life are swallowing their honour and getting acquaintedwith being on the reception finish of gift at The River Food Pantryon Madison’s north side.
As the manage to buy grinds away, even people in households with twoincomes who used to regard of themselves as “middle class” areturning to food pantries to help make ends meet.
Carol Tishman used to regard of herself as center class, butisn’t certain what that means now. The 63-year-old home illness careaide functions for two local agencies, but found she can’t make endsmeet since a housemate who common expenditure changed on.
“It was hard to advance to the food pantry,” she says, “but we feelit’s my shortcoming to do what we can to survive.” Tishman’sthoughts of early retirement have faded with her change in circumstances,as has a bit of identity, too. “I are unaware where we fit in right away “struggling ” that’s how we categorize myself,” she says.
Volunteer prepare Jim Carrier says working at The River hastransformed his ideas about who needs a food pantry. “My time herehas coincided with the Great Recession and we’ve been similar to aleading mercantile indicator. What you see in the lines here is whateventually becomes headlines,” says Carrier, moreover a associate of thenonprofit pantry’s house of directors.
But what has not been creation headlines is the fact that asdemand mounts at food pantries via Dane County, it’s gettingmore tough for organizers to secure food by what have beentheir leading suppliers.