Concerns about tottenhams emergency medical helicopter service were raised in January after the club refused to pay £1,000 as promised to help with medical costs to a young mother who gave birth to twins at their Alloa training ground
Concerns about tottenhams emergency medical helicopter service were raised in January after the club refused to pay £1,000 as promised to help with medical costs to a young mother who gave birth to twins at their Alloa training ground.
This week, the club also refused to pay for two of the team’s flight-medical vans, despite being awarded one for a further four trips to West Ham’s training ground, Upton Park.
The money went into funds provided by the Football Association, although club chairman Peter Hill-Wood admitted to the Daily Mirror in January that to ensure money kept flowing to the club he was seeking approval from his board as part of his plan to m바카라사이트ake an instant recovery from the loss of star striker Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain to the Gunners.natyasastra.com
That approval was needed, according to Hill-Wood, because with Oxlade-Chamberlain’s injury-stricken left calf hampering the club’s p더킹카지노lans, it would have been difficult to get around their £10,000-a-week payment to him.
It was not until February that Toxteth was able to get the money it needs to help cover a medical bill of around £60,000 over the next 12 months.
As well as being unable to cover the bill, however, the FA also found no excuse for the club’s apparent refusal to pay for medical care for the wife of Toxteth’s brother and daughter. The club have now promised to fund medical costs for the family to be flown to London this Sunday.
A statement said: “I’m pleased that the club has made good on their promise to provide their players with the level of medical care they need. The FA has agreed to reimburse the clubs the amount they have agreed.
“There has also been a further commitment by the FA in this regard, so a further payment will be provided, with further arrangements being drawn up to ensure any further compensation for families to be made.
“The payment will be in an amount that is proportionate to the importance of the situation and the time that has passed.”
But fears have been raised about how Toxteth could cope following his injuries.
It came about as the Toxteth family struggled through the difficult summer, when his brother Jordan had to be rushed off the pitch following a game while he worked.
However, it transpired that when the injuries were first revealed, Hill-Wood and Toxteth had been able to meet and discuss a temporary agreement, with the mone