Larry Stansberry of New Orleans is a licensed Nursing Facility Administrator who has been the Chief Executive Officer at St. Margaret's at Mercy for the last fourteen years. He came to St. Margaret's in 2001 and turned it around. He had to lead it back to normalcy a second time in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, when its original site was destroyed. It took eight years, but St. Margaret's found a new home at the former Lindy Boggs Medical Center in 2013.
He is a well-educated professional who holds a graduate degree from Tulane University, and has completed coursework in the Loyola University Master’s program. "I am a reliable, dependable, knowledgeable self-starter," he says. "I have the skills necessary to plan, develop, finance and operationalize health care communities. I get results and positive outcomes."
Larry Stansberry of New Orleans is also a well-read man, who finds great pleasure in settling down with a good book. As he knows, his city is one of the most storied in all of America. It is a legendary place with a rich literary tradition. IT is the setting for such classics as A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams, The Moviegoer by Walker Percy, and A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole.
As he knows, more recent entries into the New Orleans literary canon include Gumbo Tales, a funny and personal set of stories about culinary discovery in The Big Easy by Sara Roahen, and City of Refuge, by Tom Piazza, a story of two families living in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. These books are probably not as well-known as the others mentioned, but each one offers a unique look at New Orleans and is worth reading.
He is a well-educated professional who holds a graduate degree from Tulane University, and has completed coursework in the Loyola University Master’s program. "I am a reliable, dependable, knowledgeable self-starter," he says. "I have the skills necessary to plan, develop, finance and operationalize health care communities. I get results and positive outcomes."
Larry Stansberry of New Orleans is also a well-read man, who finds great pleasure in settling down with a good book. As he knows, his city is one of the most storied in all of America. It is a legendary place with a rich literary tradition. IT is the setting for such classics as A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams, The Moviegoer by Walker Percy, and A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole.
As he knows, more recent entries into the New Orleans literary canon include Gumbo Tales, a funny and personal set of stories about culinary discovery in The Big Easy by Sara Roahen, and City of Refuge, by Tom Piazza, a story of two families living in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. These books are probably not as well-known as the others mentioned, but each one offers a unique look at New Orleans and is worth reading.