Peb profile update

  1. Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell
  2. Change in permanent profile
  3. Change in permanent profile
  4. Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell
  5. Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell
  6. Change in permanent profile
  7. Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell
  8. Change in permanent profile
  9. Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell
  10. Change in permanent profile


Download: Peb profile update
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Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell

National Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver Greensboro/Winston-Salem Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami/Fort Lauderdale Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Nashville New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Sacramento San Antonio San Francisco Seattle Silicon Valley St. Louis Tampa Bay Washington, D.C. Wichita Miller noted that the “northwestern Union Square and Market Street west of 4th Street” have become weaker hotel locations today given Moscone Center’s Pebblebrook, which owns the city’s largest number of hotels with eight, has been an active seller over the last three years, flipping four downtown assets: former In April, RLJ Lodging Trust, meanwhile, owns the 401-room San Francisco Marriott Union Square (480 Sutter St., acquired in 2013) and the 166-room Courtyard San Francisco Union Square (761 Post St., acquired in 2017). It owns 10 other hotels elsewhere around the Bay Area. Pebblebrook (NYSE: PEB) and RLJ Lodging Trust (NYSE: RLJ) did not respond immediately to requests for comment, but I'll update this story if I hear back. A few hotels in that neighborhood stand out for their traditional reliance on convention business: the Hotel Zeppelin, the San Francisco Marriott Union Square, the JW Marriott San Francisco Union Square and the Grand Hyatt San Francisco, among others. Emmy H...

Change in permanent profile

My wife had gone through the MEB/PEB process and received her unfit memo. She has a very restrictive profile which they gave her to ensure that she does not further injure herself. (background) she was injured awhile ago during company pt. They were playing volleyball and she dove for the ball, another soldier jumped and when they came down, landed on her neck. To make a long story short, she was badly injured from that and other injuries sustained throughout her military career. Now she has had this p3 profile since 2010 and the army found her unfit and the docs signed off on her med board. she went through it and they found her unfit with the restrictions in place. Her current command has been trying to get her to violate her profile at every turn it seems. To the point of where she had to go to IG and filed a complaint which IG found to be valid and then things were improving at her unit. Now fast forward one week. She went into the clinic and seen a PA for a consult. The PA decided to remove all her restrictions indicating that he could not find anything wrong with her. Contacted her commander and said he would give her a new profile taking away all her limitations. Her other doctors have diagnosed her with all these problems yet now this PA can change a permanent profile without getting a higher signature when the profile was originally signed by a LTC who is the brigade surgeon. How is this possible? Have her respectfully request a second opinion. It is her right, ev...

Change in permanent profile

My wife had gone through the MEB/PEB process and received her unfit memo. She has a very restrictive profile which they gave her to ensure that she does not further injure herself. (background) she was injured awhile ago during company pt. They were playing volleyball and she dove for the ball, another soldier jumped and when they came down, landed on her neck. To make a long story short, she was badly injured from that and other injuries sustained throughout her military career. Now she has had this p3 profile since 2010 and the army found her unfit and the docs signed off on her med board. she went through it and they found her unfit with the restrictions in place. Her current command has been trying to get her to violate her profile at every turn it seems. To the point of where she had to go to IG and filed a complaint which IG found to be valid and then things were improving at her unit. Now fast forward one week. She went into the clinic and seen a PA for a consult. The PA decided to remove all her restrictions indicating that he could not find anything wrong with her. Contacted her commander and said he would give her a new profile taking away all her limitations. Her other doctors have diagnosed her with all these problems yet now this PA can change a permanent profile without getting a higher signature when the profile was originally signed by a LTC who is the brigade surgeon. How is this possible? Have her respectfully request a second opinion. It is her right, ev...

Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell

National Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver Greensboro/Winston-Salem Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami/Fort Lauderdale Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Nashville New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Sacramento San Antonio San Francisco Seattle Silicon Valley St. Louis Tampa Bay Washington, D.C. Wichita Miller noted that the “northwestern Union Square and Market Street west of 4th Street” have become weaker hotel locations today given Moscone Center’s Pebblebrook, which owns the city’s largest number of hotels with eight, has been an active seller over the last three years, flipping four downtown assets: former In April, RLJ Lodging Trust, meanwhile, owns the 401-room San Francisco Marriott Union Square (480 Sutter St., acquired in 2013) and the 166-room Courtyard San Francisco Union Square (761 Post St., acquired in 2017). It owns 10 other hotels elsewhere around the Bay Area. Pebblebrook (NYSE: PEB) and RLJ Lodging Trust (NYSE: RLJ) did not respond immediately to requests for comment, but I'll update this story if I hear back. A few hotels in that neighborhood stand out for their traditional reliance on convention business: the Hotel Zeppelin, the San Francisco Marriott Union Square, the JW Marriott San Francisco Union Square and the Grand Hyatt San Francisco, among others. Emmy H...

Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell

National Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver Greensboro/Winston-Salem Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami/Fort Lauderdale Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Nashville New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Sacramento San Antonio San Francisco Seattle Silicon Valley St. Louis Tampa Bay Washington, D.C. Wichita Miller noted that the “northwestern Union Square and Market Street west of 4th Street” have become weaker hotel locations today given Moscone Center’s Pebblebrook, which owns the city’s largest number of hotels with eight, has been an active seller over the last three years, flipping four downtown assets: former In April, RLJ Lodging Trust, meanwhile, owns the 401-room San Francisco Marriott Union Square (480 Sutter St., acquired in 2013) and the 166-room Courtyard San Francisco Union Square (761 Post St., acquired in 2017). It owns 10 other hotels elsewhere around the Bay Area. Pebblebrook (NYSE: PEB) and RLJ Lodging Trust (NYSE: RLJ) did not respond immediately to requests for comment, but I'll update this story if I hear back. A few hotels in that neighborhood stand out for their traditional reliance on convention business: the Hotel Zeppelin, the San Francisco Marriott Union Square, the JW Marriott San Francisco Union Square and the Grand Hyatt San Francisco, among others. Emmy H...

Change in permanent profile

My wife had gone through the MEB/PEB process and received her unfit memo. She has a very restrictive profile which they gave her to ensure that she does not further injure herself. (background) she was injured awhile ago during company pt. They were playing volleyball and she dove for the ball, another soldier jumped and when they came down, landed on her neck. To make a long story short, she was badly injured from that and other injuries sustained throughout her military career. Now she has had this p3 profile since 2010 and the army found her unfit and the docs signed off on her med board. she went through it and they found her unfit with the restrictions in place. Her current command has been trying to get her to violate her profile at every turn it seems. To the point of where she had to go to IG and filed a complaint which IG found to be valid and then things were improving at her unit. Now fast forward one week. She went into the clinic and seen a PA for a consult. The PA decided to remove all her restrictions indicating that he could not find anything wrong with her. Contacted her commander and said he would give her a new profile taking away all her limitations. Her other doctors have diagnosed her with all these problems yet now this PA can change a permanent profile without getting a higher signature when the profile was originally signed by a LTC who is the brigade surgeon. How is this possible? Have her respectfully request a second opinion. It is her right, ev...

Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell

National Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver Greensboro/Winston-Salem Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami/Fort Lauderdale Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Nashville New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Sacramento San Antonio San Francisco Seattle Silicon Valley St. Louis Tampa Bay Washington, D.C. Wichita Miller noted that the “northwestern Union Square and Market Street west of 4th Street” have become weaker hotel locations today given Moscone Center’s Pebblebrook, which owns the city’s largest number of hotels with eight, has been an active seller over the last three years, flipping four downtown assets: former In April, RLJ Lodging Trust, meanwhile, owns the 401-room San Francisco Marriott Union Square (480 Sutter St., acquired in 2013) and the 166-room Courtyard San Francisco Union Square (761 Post St., acquired in 2017). It owns 10 other hotels elsewhere around the Bay Area. Pebblebrook (NYSE: PEB) and RLJ Lodging Trust (NYSE: RLJ) did not respond immediately to requests for comment, but I'll update this story if I hear back. A few hotels in that neighborhood stand out for their traditional reliance on convention business: the Hotel Zeppelin, the San Francisco Marriott Union Square, the JW Marriott San Francisco Union Square and the Grand Hyatt San Francisco, among others. Emmy H...

Change in permanent profile

My wife had gone through the MEB/PEB process and received her unfit memo. She has a very restrictive profile which they gave her to ensure that she does not further injure herself. (background) she was injured awhile ago during company pt. They were playing volleyball and she dove for the ball, another soldier jumped and when they came down, landed on her neck. To make a long story short, she was badly injured from that and other injuries sustained throughout her military career. Now she has had this p3 profile since 2010 and the army found her unfit and the docs signed off on her med board. she went through it and they found her unfit with the restrictions in place. Her current command has been trying to get her to violate her profile at every turn it seems. To the point of where she had to go to IG and filed a complaint which IG found to be valid and then things were improving at her unit. Now fast forward one week. She went into the clinic and seen a PA for a consult. The PA decided to remove all her restrictions indicating that he could not find anything wrong with her. Contacted her commander and said he would give her a new profile taking away all her limitations. Her other doctors have diagnosed her with all these problems yet now this PA can change a permanent profile without getting a higher signature when the profile was originally signed by a LTC who is the brigade surgeon. How is this possible? Have her respectfully request a second opinion. It is her right, ev...

Hiltons move could mean more San Francisco hotel sell

National Albany Albuquerque Atlanta Austin Baltimore Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton Denver Greensboro/Winston-Salem Honolulu Houston Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami/Fort Lauderdale Milwaukee Minneapolis/St. Paul Nashville New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Sacramento San Antonio San Francisco Seattle Silicon Valley St. Louis Tampa Bay Washington, D.C. Wichita Miller noted that the “northwestern Union Square and Market Street west of 4th Street” have become weaker hotel locations today given Moscone Center’s Pebblebrook, which owns the city’s largest number of hotels with eight, has been an active seller over the last three years, flipping four downtown assets: former In April, RLJ Lodging Trust, meanwhile, owns the 401-room San Francisco Marriott Union Square (480 Sutter St., acquired in 2013) and the 166-room Courtyard San Francisco Union Square (761 Post St., acquired in 2017). It owns 10 other hotels elsewhere around the Bay Area. Pebblebrook (NYSE: PEB) and RLJ Lodging Trust (NYSE: RLJ) did not respond immediately to requests for comment, but I'll update this story if I hear back. A few hotels in that neighborhood stand out for their traditional reliance on convention business: the Hotel Zeppelin, the San Francisco Marriott Union Square, the JW Marriott San Francisco Union Square and the Grand Hyatt San Francisco, among others. Emmy H...

Change in permanent profile

My wife had gone through the MEB/PEB process and received her unfit memo. She has a very restrictive profile which they gave her to ensure that she does not further injure herself. (background) she was injured awhile ago during company pt. They were playing volleyball and she dove for the ball, another soldier jumped and when they came down, landed on her neck. To make a long story short, she was badly injured from that and other injuries sustained throughout her military career. Now she has had this p3 profile since 2010 and the army found her unfit and the docs signed off on her med board. she went through it and they found her unfit with the restrictions in place. Her current command has been trying to get her to violate her profile at every turn it seems. To the point of where she had to go to IG and filed a complaint which IG found to be valid and then things were improving at her unit. Now fast forward one week. She went into the clinic and seen a PA for a consult. The PA decided to remove all her restrictions indicating that he could not find anything wrong with her. Contacted her commander and said he would give her a new profile taking away all her limitations. Her other doctors have diagnosed her with all these problems yet now this PA can change a permanent profile without getting a higher signature when the profile was originally signed by a LTC who is the brigade surgeon. How is this possible? Have her respectfully request a second opinion. It is her right, ev...