Tuesday, 07 February 2012

  • teeth whitening beverly hills

    William Kelly is really a St. Charles dentist, but nobody ever said getting him to volunteer is similar to pulling teeth.

    Kelly’s long history of community involvement in St. Charles and also the long tenure of his dentist within the city earned him the 2011 Charlemagne Award Friday night. The buzz is

    Kelly was born in St. Louis, raised in southern Illinois and came to St. Charles to ascertain a verbal practice in 1976. Kelly arrived at town after graduating in the University of Illinois and earning a verbal degree and an orthodontic certificate from Loyola University. During school, he met his wife, Joelle.

    Kelly’s first dentist operated from 116½ W. Main St., but success eventually spawned the building of an oral office of their own at 11 S. Sixth St. Turned operates his practice with the help of his son, Dan.

    During his 36 years in St. Charles, he’s devoted many hours to the Fox Valley Special Recreation Association, Special Olympics, The first day Network, St. Charles Kiwanis Club, United Way, St. Charles Chamber of Commerce, St. Charles Community Chest and St. Patrick Church.

    teeth whitening beverly hills

    His dedication to making St. Charles and the surrounding area a better destination to live is exemplified by his resolve for providing opportunities for special needs children and adults, including his own son David, in line with the award description. Kelly twice has been the recipient of the Fox Valley Special Recreation Association “Family from the Year” Award.

    “Our recipient has literally touched the lives of thousands in St. Charles,” read the explanation of why Kelly was chosen for your Charlemagne Award. “He continues to make a positive difference in the lives of his patients on a daily basis. Younger crowd will continue to volunteer and serve town he feels he owes a lot to.”

    teeth whitening beverly hills

    A Chandler dentist is fighting the city’s effort to gather sales taxes on Invisalign braces, arguing that they're prosthetic medical devices not at the mercy of tax and that he is being unfairly targeted.

    Dr. Stephen Hunsaker e-mailed City Councilman Jeff Weninger to complain, but a municipal auditor is defending your analysis, saying it left certainly one of his office’s routine efforts to locate and collect unreported taxes. Hunsaker, who opened Aspen Orthodontics at 3980 E. Riggs Road in 2003, said he has retained legal counsel and declined to talk about the dispute.

    Invisaligns are custom-made, clear, removable covers that realign teeth and cost about $5,000, in line with the manufacturer’s website. Municipal florida sales tax on that amount would be $75; combined state, county and city sales taxes would be $440.

    Chandler tax auditor Lee Grafstrom said braces don’t fulfill the definition of tax-exempt medical “prosthetic” devices simply because they “do not support an element of the human body or enhance one of the senses. Quite simply, the patient’s teeth are not being locked in the mouth by the trays or braces and also the teeth function without or with any kind of dental braces.”

    Complicating the thing is that traditional metal braces, although also not considered “prosthetic,” are usually exempt from sales taxes because they're sold as less than Fifteen percent from the dentist’s total charge. The cost of Invisaligns are a higher area of the dentist’s charge, Grafstrom said.

  • Hi everyone! I'm just getting started on Xanga... Drop me a comment if you've got some ideas on what to do first - or just to say, "Hi!"

adamboynton078

  • Visit adamboynton078's Xanga Site
    • Member Since: 2/7/2012

Recommended

[no recommendations]

Groups

[no groups]