Showing posts with label Concerns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concerns. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Concerns about cancer centers under health law







This photo taken Feb. 20, 2014 showsWashington state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler speaking to seniors at an annual lobby day for the group in Olympia, Wash. Cancer patients relieved that they can get insurance coverage because of the new health care law may be disappointed to learn that some of the nation’s best cancer hospitals are off limits. Only four of 19 nationally recognized comprehensive cancer centers that responded to an Associated Press survey said patients have access through all the insurance companies in their state’s exchange, or primary market. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)





This photo taken Feb. 20, 2014 showsWashington state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler speaking to seniors at an annual lobby day for the group in Olympia, Wash. Cancer patients relieved that they can get insurance coverage because of the new health care law may be disappointed to learn that some of the nation’s best cancer hospitals are off limits. Only four of 19 nationally recognized comprehensive cancer centers that responded to an Associated Press survey said patients have access through all the insurance companies in their state’s exchange, or primary market. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Some of America’s best cancer hospitals are off-limits to many of the people now signing up for coverage under the nation’s new health care program.


Doctors and administrators say they’re concerned. So are some state insurance regulators.


An Associated Press survey found examples coast to coast. Seattle Cancer Care Alliance is excluded by five out of eight insurers in Washington’s insurance exchange. MD Anderson Cancer Center says it’s in less than half of the plans in the Houston area. Memorial Sloan-Kettering is included by two of nine insurers in New York City and has out-of-network agreements with two more.


In all, only four of 19 nationally recognized comprehensive cancer centers that responded to AP’s survey said patients have access through all the insurance companies in their states’ exchanges.


Not too long ago insurance companies would have been vying to offer access to renowned cancer centers, said Dan Mendelson, CEO of the market research firm Avalere Health. Now the focus is on costs.


“This is a marked deterioration of access to the premier cancer centers for people who are signing up for these plans,” Mendelson said.


Those patients may not be able get the most advanced treatment, including clinical trials of new medications.


And there’s another problem: it’s not easy for consumers shopping online in the new insurance markets to tell if top-level institutions are included in a plan. That takes additional digging by the people applying.


“The challenges of this are going to become evident … as cancer cases start to arrive,” said Norman Hubbard, executive vice president of Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.


Before President Barack Obama’s health care law, a cancer diagnosis could make you uninsurable. Now, insurers can’t turn away people with health problems or charge them more. Lifetime dollar limits on policies, once a financial trap-door for cancer patients, are also banned.


The new obstacles are more subtle.


To keep premiums low, insurers have designed narrow networks of hospitals and doctors. The government-subsidized private plans on the exchanges typically offer less choice than Medicare or employer plans.


By not including a top cancer center an insurer can cut costs. It may also shield itself from risk, delivering an implicit message to cancer survivors or people with a strong family history of the disease that they should look elsewhere.


For now, the issue seems to be limited to the new insurance exchanges. But it could become a concern for Americans with job-based coverage, too, if employers turn to narrow networks.


The AP surveyed 23 institutions around the country that are part of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. Two additional institutions that joined this week were not included in the survey.


Cancer network members are leading hospitals that combine the latest clinical research and knowledge with a multidisciplinary approach to patient care. They say that patients in their care have better-than-average survival rates. The unique role of cancer centers is recognized under Medicare. Several are exempt from its hospital payment system, instituted to control costs.


AP asked the centers how many insurance companies in their state’s exchange included them as a network provider.


Of the 19 that responded, four reported access through all insurers: the Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, Duke Cancer Institute in Durham, N.C., and Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center in Nashville. One caveat: Some insurers did not include these cancer centers on certain low-cost plans.


Two centers had special circumstances. The best known is St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis. Treatment there is free as long as children have a referral.


For the remaining 13, the gaps were evident.


In Buffalo, N.Y., Roswell Park Cancer Institute is included by five of seven insurers in its region. But statewide, the picture is much different: Roswell Park is not included by 11 of 16 insurers. Dr. Willie Underwood, associate professor of surgical oncology at the teaching hospital, says that’s a problem.


“Overall, when you look at the Affordable Care Act, it improves access to cancer care,” said Underwood. “When it comes down to the exchanges, there are some concerns that we have. That is not being critical, that is being intelligent. There are some things we should talk about … before they start becoming a problem.”


Melanie Lapidus, vice president for managed care at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, home to Siteman Cancer Center, said she doesn’t think patients realize the exchanges offer a more restrictive kind of private insurance.


Lapidus cited Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, which includes Siteman in many of its plans outside the Missouri exchange, but none within the exchange.


“We have had many people say to us, ‘I picked Anthem because you guys are always in their products, and I assumed you would be in their exchange products’,” Lapidus said. “It’s still hard to tell who is in network and who is not.”


In a statement, Anthem said its network was based on research involving thousands of consumers and businesses. “What we learned was that people are willing to make trade-offs in order to have access to affordable health care,” the company said. “Our provider networks reflect this.”


Huntsman Cancer Institute in Salt Lake City is included by five of six Utah insurers, but Mark Zenger, who manages the center’s negotiations with insurance companies, said he’s concerned about getting left out by Humana, a major carrier.


“We are worried about the potential to have these Humana exchange members seek treatment and have no other option,” said Zenger.


Humana spokesman Tom Noland said patients can have access to Huntsman for complex procedures, on a case-by-case basis.


Some state insurance regulators see a problem.


“I want insurers to be able to innovate and come up with new product designs,” said Mike Kreidler, insurance commissioner for Washington state. “At the same time, there is a requirement for regulators like myself to be vigilant to make sure there aren’t unreasonable compromises.”


The Obama administration says it has notified insurers that their networks will get closer scrutiny for next year in the 36 states served by the federal exchange. Cancer care will be a priority, it says.


___


AP writers Sheila Burke in Nashville, Tenn., Kim Chandler in Montgomery, Ala., Emery Dalesio in Raleigh, N.C., Jeff Karoub in Detroit, Brady McCombs in Salt Lake City, Christine Scalora in Lincoln, Neb., and Christopher Weber in Los Angeles contributed.


Associated Press




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Concerns about cancer centers under health law

Friday, February 28, 2014

"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns








FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Oct. 30, 2013 file photo, former President Bill Clinton speaks in Charlottesville, Va. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)





FILE – In this Jan. 27, 2014 file photo, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks in New Orleans. The National Archives plans to release about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Some of the topics include the president’s health care task force and the 9/11 Commission Report. The papers could shed light on Clinton’s presidency and provide insight into a future presidential candidate: former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Bill Clinton’s aides were concerned early in his presidency about his health care overhaul effort, led by his wife, that never passed and a need to soften the image of Hillary Rodham Clinton, according to documents released Friday. Mrs. Clinton now is a potential 2016 presidential contender.


The National Archives released about 4,000 pages of previously confidential documents involving the former president’s administration, providing a glimpse into the struggles of his health care task force, led by the first lady, and other priorities such as the U.S. economy and the North American Free Trade Agreement.


Hillary Clinton’s potential White House campaign has increased interest in Clinton Presidential Library documents from her husband’s administration during the 1990s and her own decades in public service. A former secretary of state and New York senator, Mrs. Clinton is the leading Democratic contender to succeed President Barack Obama, though she has not said whether she will run.


Friday’s documents included memos related to the former president’s ill-fated health care reform proposal in 1993 and 1994, a plan that failed to win support in Congress and turned into a rallying cry for Republicans in the 1994 midterm elections. As first lady, Hillary Clinton chaired her husband’s health care task force, largely meeting in secret to develop a plan to provide universal health insurance coverage.


White House aides expressed initial optimism about her ability to help craft and enact a major overhaul of U.S. health care.


“The first lady’s months of meetings with the Congress has produced a significant amount of trust and confidence by the members in her ability to help produce a viable health reform legislative product with the president,” said an undated and unsigned document, which was cataloged with others from April 1993. The document urged quick action, warning that enthusiasm for health reform “will fade over time.”


But the documents also showed the growing concerns among Clinton’s fellow Democrats in Congress. Lawmakers, it said, “going to their home districts for the August break are petrified about having difficult health care reform issues/questions thrown at them.”


Administration officials also wanted to distance Hillary Clinton from a staff meeting on the touchy subject of making health care cost projections appear reasonable. Top aides wrote an April 1993 memo saying pessimistic cost-savings projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office were “petrifying an already scared Congress.”


“CBO has the very real potential to sink an already leaking health reform ship,” said the memo, signed by Clinton aides Chris Jennings and Steve Ricchetti, the latter now a top aide to Vice President Joe Biden. A White House and congressional meeting meant to “align budget assumptions with CBO” would be “all staff,” the memo said, so “we do not believe it appropriate that Mrs. Clinton attend.”


By September 1993, Mrs. Clinton acknowledged the obstacles in a Capitol Hill meeting with House and Senate Democratic leaders and committee chairs. “I think that, unfortunately, in the glare of the public political process, we may not have as much time as we need for that kind of thoughtful reflection and research,” the first lady said, citing “this period of challenge.”


The meetings also showed that Mrs. Clinton was doubtful that a health care law with a universal mandate — requiring people to carry health insurance — would be approved. “That is politically and substantively a much harder sell than the one we’ve got — a much harder sell,” she told congressional Democrats in September 1993.


In 2007, when she ran for president, Clinton made the “individual mandate” a centerpiece of her “American Health Choices Plan,” requiring health coverage while offering federal subsidies to help reduce the cost to purchasers.


The health care overhaul signed into law by Obama in early 2010 carried a mandate that all Americans must obtain health insurance or pay a fine.


The documents also include detailed media strategy memos written as aides tried to soften Mrs. Clinton’s image.


Her press secretary, Lisa Caputo, encouraged the Clintons to capitalize on their 20th wedding anniversary as “a wonderful opportunity for Hillary” and also suggested she spend more time doing White House events celebrating first ladies of the past.


Placing Clinton in a historical context “may help to round out her image and make what she is doing seem less extreme or different in the eyes of the media,” Caputo wrote in a lengthy August 1995 memo about courting better press coverage as the president looked toward re-election.


Caputo also proposed the “wild idea” of having Clinton do a guest appearance on a popular sitcom of the day, “Home Improvement.”


Other documents offered a glimpse into the juggling of priorities early in Clinton’s first term and administration concerns after Republicans took control of the House and Senate in the 1994 elections.


A July 1993 memo shared among Clinton’s advisers sought guidance on how the administration should focus its attention on three major priorities: health care reform, the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement and an initiative aimed at “reinventing government.”


“The president has repeatedly promised that health care will come after the economic package passes,” the memo from Clinton advisers Rahm Emanuel, Bob Boorstin, Mark Gearan and others said. “Surveys indicate that health care remains the second or third priority (behind job creation) for the vast majority of voters, but also that people fear reform is just another promise to be broken.”


“Our core supporters are rapidly losing patience and could block passage by throwing their support to alternative plans,” the memo warned.


Following the midterm losses, Clinton policy adviser William Galston wrote in January 1995, before the president’s State of the Union address, that the public had “not given up on the Clinton presidency.” But he warned the annual speech before Congress “may well be our last chance for a very long time to command the attention of the people as a whole. We cannot hold anything back.”


The new documents offer only glimmers of Clinton’s internal national security deliberations. The most detailed material, contained in files from then-national security speechwriter Paul Orzulak, show top Clinton officials wrestling with how to deal with China’s emergence as a world financial power.


Notes from an undated meeting with National Security Adviser Samuel “Sandy” Berger show Berger pushing for China’s membership in the World Trade Organization despite concerns about human rights abuses.


A series of emails pertaining to the 9/11 Commission’s research into Clinton-era handling of al-Qaida attacks were all apparently withheld by Archives officials, citing national security and confidential restrictions. The only memo released was a single July 1998 email about whether to send a high-ranking diplomat to Minnesota with a presidential message to greet ailing Jordanian King Hussein. “Sounds like too much crepe hanging,” said a dismissive official.


___


Associated Press writers Stephen Braun, Henry C. Jackson, Connie Cass in Washington and Jill Zeman Bleed in Little Rock, Ark., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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"90s documents show Clinton health care concerns

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

White House says raised concerns with Iraq about report of arms deal with Iran



WASHINGTON Tue Feb 25, 2014 1:41pm EST




White House says raised concerns with Iraq about report of arms deal with Iran

Sunday, January 19, 2014

US lawmakers raise safety concerns about Olympics







In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2014 photo made available by Presidential Press Service on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin, listens during an interview to Russian and foreign media at the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, which will host Winter Olympic Games on Feb. 7, 2014. President Vladimir Putin once again has offered assurances to gays planning to attend the Sochi Olympics, but his arguments defending Russia’s ban on homosexual “propaganda” to minors show the vast gulf between how he understands the issues and how homosexuality is generally viewed in the West. In an interview with Russian and foreign television stations broadcast Sunday, Putin equated gays with pedophiles and spoke of the need for Russia to “cleanse” itself of homosexuality as part of efforts to increase the birth rate. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2014 photo made available by Presidential Press Service on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin, listens during an interview to Russian and foreign media at the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, which will host Winter Olympic Games on Feb. 7, 2014. President Vladimir Putin once again has offered assurances to gays planning to attend the Sochi Olympics, but his arguments defending Russia’s ban on homosexual “propaganda” to minors show the vast gulf between how he understands the issues and how homosexuality is generally viewed in the West. In an interview with Russian and foreign television stations broadcast Sunday, Putin equated gays with pedophiles and spoke of the need for Russia to “cleanse” itself of homosexuality as part of efforts to increase the birth rate. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)













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(AP) — Members of Congress expressed serious concerns Sunday about the safety of Americans at next month’s Olympics in Russia and said Moscow needs to cooperate more on security.


Suicide bombings last month in the southern Russian city of Volgograd, about 400 miles from where the Sochi Games will be held, have contributed to the safety anxiety. Russian President Vladimir Putin has promised that his country will do all it can to ensure a safe Olympics without imposing security measures that are too intrusive.


The State Department has advised Americans who plan to attend the Olympics, which run Feb. 7-23, that they should keep vigilant about security because of potential terrorist threats, crime and uncertain medical care.


“We don’t seem to be getting all of the information we need to protect our athletes in the games,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. “I think this needs to change, and it should change soon.”


But FBI Director James Comey said earlier in January that the Russian government “understands the threat and is devoting the resources to address it.”


Rogers, R-Mich., contended that the Russians “aren’t giving us the full story about what are the threat streams, who do we need to worry about, are those groups, the terrorist groups who have had some success, are they still plotting? There’s a missing gap, and you never want that when you go into something I think as important as the Olympic Games and the security of the athletes, and the participants and those who come to watch.”


Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said from Moscow that he planned to be in Sochi on Monday to assess the security situation.


“All the briefings that I’ve received, from the intelligence community to the FBI and others, indicate that there are serious concerns, and that we need to do a lot to step up security. I do believe Putin is doing a lot of that,” said McCaul, R-Texas.


While he said diplomatic security has declared Russian cooperation on safety measures is good, he said “it could be a lot better, and that’s one thing I want to press while I’m over here.”


Comey, the FBI head, told reporters this month in Washington that “we have been in regular communication — including me personally — with their security organizations to make sure we’re coordinating well. I think that we are. We’ve improved our information sharing on counterterrorism and it’s important.”


No one has claimed responsibility for the December bombings in Volgograd. But the blasts followed Chechen warlord Doku Umarov’s call to launch attacks on the Olympics.


“I would not go, and I don’t think I would send my family,” said Sen. Angus King, I-Maine.


An insurgency seeking to create an independent Islamic state in the Caucasus has swept the region after two separatist wars in Chechnya. Chechnya’s Moscow-backed strongman, Ramzan Kadyrov, claimed Thursday that Umarov was dead, but he offered no proof to the claim he had repeatedly made in the past.


The province of Dagestan, located between Chechnya and the Caspian Sea, about 300 miles east of Sochi, has become the center of the rebellion, with daily shootings and bombings of police and other officials.


Rogers appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” and CBS’ “Face the Nation.” King was on CNN and McCaul spoke on ABC’s “This Week.”


Associated Press




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US lawmakers raise safety concerns about Olympics

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Financial stability concerns should not deter Fed on policy: Bernanke

Financial stability concerns should not deter Fed on policy: Bernanke
http://s1.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20140116&t=2&i=830061613&w=580&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBREA0F1B6Z00





WASHINGTON Thu Jan 16, 2014 12:32pm EST



U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pauses as he responds to reporters during his final planned news conference before his retirement, at the Federal Reserve Bank headquarters in Washington, December 18, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pauses as he responds to reporters during his final planned news conference before his retirement, at the Federal Reserve Bank headquarters in Washington, December 18, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve should give the economy the stimulus it needs despite “credible” worries that its massive bond-buying program could destabilize the financial system, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Thursday.


In his last planned public remarks as head of the central bank, Bernanke said concern about the potential harm to financial stability is the only risk from unconventional monetary policies “that I find personally credible.”


But, he added “at this point we don’t think that, and I think I can speak for my colleagues on this, we don’t think that financial stability concerns should at this point detract from the need for monetary policy accommodation, which we are continuing to provide,” Bernanke said.


During his tenure, Bernanke pushed the Fed far into unconventional territory, not only slashing short-term interest rates to zero and keeping them there since December 2008, but providing long-term “forward guidance” assuring investors the Fed would keep interest rates low for a long time to come.


In a second unprecedented move, he quadrupled the Fed’s balance sheet to $ 4 trillion through three rounds of bond-buying aimed at lowering long-term rates and spurring hiring.


“I do think by the way that they both have been helpful,” Bernanke said at a Brookings Institution event. And neither, he said, have delivered the potential costs that many warned they would, including unbridled inflation.


Inflation, by the Fed’s preferred gauge, has risen just 1.1 percent in the past 12 months, well below the Fed’s 2-percent target.


Janet Yellen, currently Fed vice chair, will take the reins as Fed chair on February 1, just after the Fed’s first policy-setting meeting of the year.


Last month, the Fed took a first step toward dialing down its massive stimulus with a decision to reduce monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to $ 75 billion from $ 85 billion a month.


The Fed will probably phase the program out entirely late in the year, Bernanke said at the time.


He also told investors that the Fed was nowhere near to tightening policy, saying the U.S. central bank would keep rates near zero until “well past the time” that unemployment falls to 6.5 percent, especially if inflation continues to linger below the Fed’s 2-percent target.


Unemployment fell to 6.7 percent in December.


(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer and Jason Lange; Writing by Ann Saphir; Editing by James Dalgleish and Paul Simao)






Reuters: Economic News




Read more about Financial stability concerns should not deter Fed on policy: Bernanke and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Kerry seeks to soothe Israeli security concerns







U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, retrieves his notes from the podium after giving a joint statement with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry is visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah to have the Israeli-Palestinian peace talk and to consult Israeli officials about Iran. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, retrieves his notes from the podium after giving a joint statement with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry is visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah to have the Israeli-Palestinian peace talk and to consult Israeli officials about Iran. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry delivers remarks during a joint statement with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry is visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah to have the Israeli-Palestinian peace talk and to consult Israeli officials about Iran. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shakes hands during their joint statement at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry is visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah to have the Israeli-Palestinian peace talk and to consult Israeli officials about Iran. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walk in to give their joint statement at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry is visiting Jerusalem and Ramallah to have the Israeli-Palestinian peace talk and to consult Israeli officials about Iran. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)





U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, meets Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. Kerry said, when he met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier, that Israel’s security is a necessary part of its ongoing peace negotiations with Palestinians, a process he described as making some progress. (AP Photo/Mohamad Torokman, Pool)













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(AP) — Looking to soothe irritated relations with Israel, America’s top diplomat on Thursday pledged to support the Jewish state’s security throughout separate negotiations with Iran and the Palestinians — including Israel’s demand that it “defend itself, by itself.”


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s comments served as a sort of peace offering to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has made no secret of his displeasure with a tentative offer by world powers to ease some sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbing Tehran’s nuclear program.


In remarks to reporters after meeting with Netanyahu in Jerusalem, Kerry repeatedly affirmed Israel’s security as a top U.S. priority. He said he and retired Marine Gen. John Allen offered suggestions on how Israel can bolster its security as the result of its ongoing peace negotiations with Palestinians.


Kerry did not offer any specifics, and Netanyahu separately told reporters that the process was not helped by discussing its details with the media.


However, Kerry pointedly said the U.S. recognizes Israel as a “country that can defend itself by itself.” Netanyahu has long insisted that any final peace deal must allow Israel to maintain a security presence in the West Bank — a prospect that has angered Palestinians.


“We have always known that this is a difficult, complicated road, and we understand that,” Kerry said at the end of his three-hour morning meeting with Netanyahu. “I believe we are making some progress, and the parties remain committed to this task.”


Netanyahu, offering his own rundown of the meeting with Kerry, said Israel is ready for peace but “must be able to defend itself, by itself, with its own forces against any foreseeable threat.”


Kerry then headed to the nearby West Bank city of Ramallah to meet with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whom he praised for sticking with the so-far fruitless negotiations “despite difficulties that he and Palestinians have perceived in the process.” The talks, which face a March deadline for a resolution, have entered their fifth month without any major breakthroughs.


“The interests are very similar, but there are questions of sovereignty; questions of respect and dignity, which are obviously significant to the Palestinians and Israelis; very serious questions security and also of longer term issues of how we end this conflict once and for all,” said Kerry, who struck a more conciliatory tone after meeting with Abbas for just over three hours.


“We, I think, made some progress,” said Kerry, who raised the possibility of returning in about a week to resume the discussions.


Abbas was not immediately available after the talks and did not join Kerry in his brief comments to reporters.


Israel currently has military control of the West Bank and does not want to give it up. But a possible part of the U.S. plan could call for stationing international forces along the West Bank border with Jordan, although officials on all sides have refused to discuss the details.


It’s also possible that Israel would be in control of the international forces, in an uneasy compromise to try to appease both sides.


“If this process is going to continue, we’re going to have to have a continual negotiation,” Netanyahu said. He cited a need “to have these real discussions inside in a sustained effort to bridge historic gaps and provide security.”


The meeting in Jerusalem — which will continue Thursday night during a private dinner — sought in part to placate Netanyahu after world powers reached a tentative agreement with Iran last month over curbing Tehran’s nuclear program in a separate deal that infuriated Israel. Netanyahu warned anew Thursday against easing harsh sanctions against Iran.


“Steps must be taken to prevent further erosions of sanctions,” Netanyahu said.


Kerry said the U.S. will remain “vigilant” in enforcing sanctions against Iran, including the harshest measures that have crippled the Islamic republic’s oil and banking industries. However, the Obama administration is pushing back against new sanctions against Iran, as offered by some lawmakers in Congress. Such a move could be seen as a heavy-handed, bad-faith tactic at a delicate time in the negotiations.


Even so, “Israel’s security in this negotiation is at the top of our agenda,” Kerry said, referring to the talks with Tehran. “And the United States will do everything in our power to make certain that Iran’s nuclear program — a program of weaponization possibilities — is terminated.”


___


Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP


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Kerry seeks to soothe Israeli security concerns

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Shareholders raise surveillance concerns at AT&T, Verizon

Shareholders raise surveillance concerns at AT&T, Verizon
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/d81ee__?m=02&d=20131120&t=2&i=813568086&w=460&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBRE9AJ1BZP00.jpg





BOSTON/NEW YORK Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:25pm EST



A man stands in the middle of Grand Central Terminal as he speaks on a cell phone, as passengers face limited train service on the New Haven Line between Stamford Station and Grand Central Terminal due to a Con Edison power problem in New York, September 25, 2013. REUTERS/Zoran Milich

A man stands in the middle of Grand Central Terminal as he speaks on a cell phone, as passengers face limited train service on the New Haven Line between Stamford Station and Grand Central Terminal due to a Con Edison power problem in New York, September 25, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Zoran Milich




BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Shareholders of telecom giants AT&T Inc and Verizon Communications Inc are seeking more details related to their sharing of customer information with governments, showing investors starting to push back over the role of communications companies in spying operations.


Activists including Trillium Asset Management of Boston and the $ 161 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund have filed proposals for the spring shareholder meetings of AT&T and Verizon, representatives said.


Both resolutions call on the companies to report semi-annually on “metrics and discussion regarding requests for customer information by U.S. and foreign governments.”


As carriers of massive amounts of voice and data traffic, the telecommunications companies have been at the center of controversies over the use of their data by U.S. intelligence agencies. Just on Monday the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to a ruling that gave the government access to Verizon records of millions of telephone calls.


A worry is the close ties could hurt the companies’ business, said Trillium Senior Vice President Jonas Kron.


“From an investor perspective, this is one of those issues where there’s an overlap of interests” among privacy advocates and business groups, Kron said. He cited surveys that spying fears could cut tens of billions of dollars from the sales of cloud computing services.


AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel said that “As standard practice we look carefully at all shareholder proposals but at this point in the process we do not expect to comment on them.”


Verizon spokesman Bob Varettoni declined to comment on the shareholder proposal it received except to say the company is evaluating it.


Customers in growth markets like China have historically mistrusted U.S. technology corporations. Those fears have been stoked by disclosures from former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.


For instance, Cisco Systems Inc last week blamed what some analysts call “the Snowden effect” in part for dismal quarterly revenue. Others have questioned the financial impact of the revelations, however.


In response many technology companies have pushed for — or at least aimed to be seen pushing for — transparency in their dealings with U.S. intelligence agencies.


Companies including Google Inc, Microsoft Corp, Twitter Inc, Facebook Inc, Apple Inc and Yahoo! Inc have published “transparency reports” showing government data requests. Some have in addition gone to court seeking to disclose more details.


But the two big telecommunications companies have not responded as aggressively to the data requests, the shareholder activists note in their resolutions.


Specifically, the resolutions cite press reports of the intelligence agencies’ involvement with the companies, and the resulting criticism from figures like Brazil’s president Dilma Rousseff, who called U.S. monitoring activities “a breach of international law.”


The resolutions call on AT&T and Verizon to publish semi-annual reports, subject to current laws, “providing metrics and discussion regarding requests for customer information by U.S. and foreign governments, at reasonable cost and omitting proprietary information.”


Trillium has $ 1.3 billion under management and calls itself the oldest independent investment adviser focused on sustainable and responsible investing. Trillium and other activists have used shareholder proposals in the past to air out arcane issues such as several “network neutrality” measures it brought at AT&T and Verizon since 2012. One at Verizon in the spring won support from 24 percent of shareholders.


Even when such measures don’t pass, activists see them as a way to call attention to issues.


“Often the utility of such resolutions is to generate conversation with and among management, particularly if the company has refused to engage in other ways,” said Christine Bader, a lecturer on human rights and business at Columbia University. She is also affiliated with the Global Network Initiative, a privacy-advocacy group that counts some of the technology companies as participants.


Filers of the AT&T proposal include the New York State fund, Trillium, the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, and Arjuna Capital, according to a statement from Open MIC, a non-profit organization in New York that works with investors on media issues and helped organize the resolutions.


Filers of the Verizon proposal include Trillium, the ACLU chapter, the Park Foundation, and Clean Yield Asset Management, the activists said.


(Reporting By Ross Kerber; editing by Andrew Hay)






Reuters: Business News




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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

GLOBAL MARKETS-World stock markets pause amid growth concerns

GLOBAL MARKETS-World stock markets pause amid growth concerns
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Tue Nov 19, 2013 1:22pm EST



* Worries over timing of Fed taper resurface


* Dollar steady amid conflicting views on Fed stimulus


* Oil prices ease, copper edges higher


By Ryan Vlastelica


NEW YORK, Nov 19 (Reuters) – World stock markets mostly dipped on Tuesday as investors sought new catalysts to extend a rally amid signs of tepid economic growth, though Wall Street held mostly steady on expectations for continued stimulus from the Federal Reserve.


While accommodative policies from central banks around the world have boosted markets this year, market participants have grown concerned that the rally may have been overdone. In a sign that weakness may be ahead, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development cut its 2014 forecast for global economic growth to 3.6 percent from the 4.0 percent it saw in May.


The outlook change followed negative comments from activist investor Carl Icahn, who on Monday told Reuters there was a chance the stock market could face a “big drop,” citing weak earnings growth.


Separately, short-seller Jim Chanos told Reuters that he was bearish on oil and coal companies, a sector tied to the pace of economic growth.


Despite that, the Fed’s bond-buying program, which is providing $ 85 billion of liquidity a month, is seen providing a floor to equity prices, though investors are keen for clues of when the Fed will begin to scale back the program.


“I’d say there’s a very low probability the Fed does anything between now and the end of the year,” said Dan Veru, who oversees $ 4.5 billion as chief investment officer of Palisade Capital Management in Fort Lee, New Jersey, adding that markets would “drift up” through then.


MSCI’s world equity index, which tracks shares in 45 countries, fell 0.3 percent, after hitting a six-year peak on Monday.


The Dow Jones industrial average was down 1.63 points, or 0.01 percent, at 15,974.39. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was down 2.44 points, or 0.14 percent, at 1,789.09. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 10.57 points, or 0.27 percent, at 3,938.50.


The Dow was helped by a rally in Home Depot, which advanced 1.3 percent after its quarterly results.


The earnings season has been mixed in Europe, contributing to the region’s 0.7 percent drop on Tuesday. Shares in the region recently hit a five-year high.


“Pan-European multiples are close to multi-year highs. That means markets are no longer cheap and we need to see some earnings improvement to warrant higher equity prices,” said Gerhard Schwarz, head of equity strategy at Baader Bank.


Earlier, optimism sparked by China’s bold economic reform plans continued to bolster Asian markets, lifting MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan by 0.2 percent, extending Monday’s 1.4 percent rally.


DOLLAR FLAT


The dollar held steady on Tuesday, caught between talk the U.S. central bank could keep its easy policy stance until March and some optimistic comments on the economy by two top Fed officials that could signal an earlier move.


William Dudley, president of the New York Fed and one of the staunchest supporters of the Fed’s easy-money policies, cited labor market improvements and stronger-than-expected growth in the third quarter as positive signs for the U.S. economic recovery. Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser, an inflation hawk and critic of Fed stimulus spending, also pointed to improving economic conditions.


The U.S. dollar index fell 0.2 percent, though the greenback rose 0.2 percent against both the yen and the euro.


Euro zone government bonds moved within narrow ranges, with 10-year German yields slightly firmer at 1.7 percent, while lower-rated Spanish and Italian yields were little changed.


The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was down 6/32 in price, the yield rising to 2.6979 percent.


In commodity markets, copper fell 0.1 percent while gold was flat. U.S. crude oil futures rose 0.1 percent while Brent crude lost 1.04 percent.






Reuters: Bonds News




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Thursday, November 14, 2013

Kerry says he understands Israel"s "deep concerns" over Iran


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaks at a reception at the Japanese Ambassador’s Residence in Washington November 12, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas




Reuters: Politics



Kerry says he understands Israel"s "deep concerns" over Iran

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Health site security concerns raised in memo








Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius gestures while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, before the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the difficulties plaguing the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. The Obama Administration claims the botched rollout was the result of contractors failing to live up to expectations – not bad management at HHS. As the public face of President Barack Obama’s signature health care program, Sec. Sebelius has become the target for attacks over its botched rollout with Republicans, and even some Democrats, calling for her to resign. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius gestures while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, before the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the difficulties plaguing the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. The Obama Administration claims the botched rollout was the result of contractors failing to live up to expectations – not bad management at HHS. As the public face of President Barack Obama’s signature health care program, Sec. Sebelius has become the target for attacks over its botched rollout with Republicans, and even some Democrats, calling for her to resign. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is surrounded by photographers on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, prior to testifying before the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the difficulties plaguing the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. Sebelius, President Barack Obama’s top health official faced tough questioning by a congressional committee Wednesday that will demand she explain how the administration stumbled so badly in its crippled online launch of the president’s health care overhaul. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is sworn in on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., prior to testifying before the committee’s hearing on the difficulties plaguing the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. Sebelius, President Barack Obama’s top health official faced tough questioning by a congressional committee Wednesday that will demand she explain how the administration stumbled so badly in its crippled online launch of the president’s health care overhaul. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)





Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is sworn in on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, prior to testifying before the House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the difficulties plaguing the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. President Barack Obama’s top health official faced tough questioning by a congressional committee Wednesday that will demand she explain how the administration stumbled so badly in its crippled online launch of the president’s health care overhaul. (AP Photo/ J. Scott Applewhite)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Defending President Barack Obama’s much-maligned health care law in Congress, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was confronted Wednesday with a government memo that raised security concerns about the website consumers are using to enroll.


The document, obtained by The Associated Press, shows that administration officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services were concerned that a lack of testing posed a potentially “high” security risk for the HealthCare.gov website serving 36 states.


Security issues are a new concern for the troubled HealthCare.gov website. If they cannot be resolved, they could prove to be more serious than the long list of technical problems the administration is trying to address.


“You accepted a risk on behalf of every user that put their personal financial information at risk,” Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., told Sebelius during questioning before the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee.


Sebelius countered that the system is secure, although the site has a temporary security certificate, known in government parlance as an “authority to operate.” Sebelius said a permanent certificate will only be issued once all security issues are addressed.


Earlier, the secretary said she’s responsible for the “debacle” of cascading problems that overwhelmed the government website intended to make shopping for health insurance clear and simple.


“Hold me accountable for the debacle,” Sebelius said during a contentious hearing before the powerful House Energy and Commerce Committee. “I’m responsible.”


Sebelius is promising to have the problems fixed by Nov. 30, even as Republicans opposed to Obama’s health care law are calling in chorus for her resignation. She told the committee that the technical issues that led to frozen screens and error messages are being cleared up on a daily basis.


Addressing consumers, Sebelius added, “So let me say directly to these Americans, you deserve better. I apologize.”


But even as she started her testimony, some consumers trying to log into the federal website that serves 36 states were getting this message: “The system is down at the moment. We are experiencing technical difficulties and hope to have them resolved soon. Please try again later.”


The Sept. 27 memo to Medicare chief Marylin Tavenner said a website contractor wasn’t able to test all the security controls in one complete version of the system.


“From a security perspective, the aspects of the system that were not tested due to the ongoing development, exposed a level of uncertainty that can be deemed as a high risk for the (website),” the memo said.


It recommended setting up a security team to address risks, conduct daily tests, and a full security test within two to three months of going live.


HealthCare.gov was intended to be the online gateway to coverage for millions of uninsured Americans, as well those who purchase their policies individually. Many people in the latter group will have to get new insurance next year, because their policies do not meet the standards of the new law.


Sebelius’ forthright statement about her ultimate accountability came as she was being peppered with questions by Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., about who was responsible. It was Blackburn who introduced the term “debacle.”


Rep. Henry Waxman of California, the ranking Democrat on the committee, scoffed at Republican “oversight” of a law they have repeatedly tried to repeal.


“I would urge my colleagues to stop hyperventilating,” said Waxman. “The problems with HealthCare.gov are unfortunate and we should investigate them, but they will be fixed. And then every American will have — finally have access to affordable health insurance.”


Sebelius entered a hearing room so packed with lawmakers, photographers and others that she had trouble finding a path to her seat after shaking hands with the committee members.


Many in the crowd chuckled at her quandary, which was far easier to negotiate than the questions that awaited her about the messy launch of Obama’s health care web site. The crowd parted, and she found her way to her seat at the witness table, facing a wall of expectant lawmakers.


The standing-room-only hearing room was silent when she swore an oath to tell the truth and began her statement. “I apologize,” she told the rapt committee.


Sebelius faced questions about problems with the website as well as a wave of cancellation notices hitting individuals and small businesses who buy their own insurance.


Lawmakers also want to know how many people have enrolled in plans through the health exchanges, a number the Obama administration has so far refused to divulge, instead promising to release it in mid-November.


Some committee members expressed doubts about whether consumers’ personal information is safe on such a balky website.


On Tuesday, Medicare chief Marilyn Tavenner was questioned for nearly three hours by members of the House Ways and Means Committee who wanted to know why so many of their constituents were getting cancellation notices from their insurance companies.


The cancellations problem goes to one of Obama’s earliest promises about the health law: You can keep your plan if you like it. The promise dates back to June 2009, when Congress was starting to grapple with overhauling the health care system to cover uninsured Americans.


As early as last spring, state insurance commissioners started giving insurers the option of canceling existing individual plans for 2014, because the coverage required under Obama’s law is significantly more robust. Some states directed insurers to issue cancellations. Large employer plans that cover most workers and their families are unlikely to be affected.


The law includes a complicated “grandfathering” system to try to make good on Obama’s pledge. It shields plans from the law’s requirements provided the plans themselves change very little. Insurers say it has proven impractical. The cancellation notices are now reaching policyholders.


Tavenner blamed insurance companies for cancelling the policies and said most people who lose coverage will be able to find better replacement plans in the health insurance exchanges, in some cases for less money. Change is a constant in the individual insurance market, she added, saying that about half of plans “churn” over in any given year.


Associated Press




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Health site security concerns raised in memo