Showing posts with label Deadline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deadline. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Deadline dash: Glitches slow health care sign-ups







People line up to enroll for health insurance at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas on Monday, March 31, 2014. The deadline is just hours away to sign up for insurance in the first enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/San Antonio Express-News, Jerry Lara) RUMBO DE SAN ANTONIO OUT; NO SALES





People line up to enroll for health insurance at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas on Monday, March 31, 2014. The deadline is just hours away to sign up for insurance in the first enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/San Antonio Express-News, Jerry Lara) RUMBO DE SAN ANTONIO OUT; NO SALES





Charles Ellis, 53, of Salt Lake City, right, works with navigator Luis Rios while seeking help to buy health insurance at the Utah Health Policy Project Monday, March 31, 2014, in Salt Lake City. Ellis said he doesn’t feel he needs insurance but was signing up to avoid a penalty. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)





SEIU-UHW worker Kathy Santana, left , assists Ruben Tares, 27, during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)





Lisa Valera and her husband Manuel sign up for Obamacare at the Community Service Society, Monday, March 31, 2014 in New York. The troubled U.S. government web site for signing up for health insurance was unavailable for several hours Monday morning as the midnight deadline for buying coverage loomed. Heading into the deadline, more than 6 million Americans had signed up for health insurance, some of the policies heavily subsidized for lower income people. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)





A screen shows the countdown for the deadline to sign up for health insurance during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — In a flood of last-minute sign-ups, hundreds of thousands of Americans rushed to apply for health insurance Monday, but deadline day for President Barack Obama’s overhaul brought long, frustrating waits and a new spate of website ills.


“This is like trying to find a parking spot at Wal-Mart on Dec. 23,” said Jason Stevenson, working with a Utah nonprofit group helping people enroll.


At times, more than 125,000 people were simultaneously using HealthCare.gov, straining it beyond its capacity. For long stretches Monday, applicants were shuttled to a virtual waiting room where they could leave an email address and be contacted later.


Officials said the site had not crashed but was experiencing very heavy volume. The website, which was receiving 1.5 million visitors a day last week, had recorded about 1.6 million through 2 p.m. EDT.


Supporters of the health care law fanned out across the country in a final dash to sign up uninsured Americans. People not signed up for health insurance by the deadline, either through their jobs or on their own, were subject to being fined by the IRS, and that threat was helping drive the final dash.


The administration announced last week that people still in line by midnight would get extra time to enroll.


The website stumbled early in the day — out of service for nearly four hours as technicians patched a software bug. Another hiccup in early afternoon temporarily kept new applicants from signing up, and then things slowed further. Overwhelmed by computer problems when launched last fall, the system has been working much better in recent months, but independent testers say it still runs slowly.


At Chicago’s Norwegian American Hospital, people began lining up shortly after 7 a.m. to get help signing up for subsidized private health insurance.


Lucy Martinez, an unemployed single mother of two boys, said she’d previously tried to enroll at a clinic in another part of the city but there was always a problem. She’d wait and wait and they wouldn’t call her name, or they would ask her for paperwork that she was told earlier she didn’t need, she said. Her diabetic mother would start sweating so they’d have to leave.


She’s heard “that this would be better here,” said Martinez, adding that her mother successfully signed up Sunday at a different location.


At St. Francis Hospital in Wilmington, Del., enrollment counselor Hubert Worthen plunged into a long day. “I got my energy drink,” he said. “This is epic, man.”


At a Houston community center, there were immigrants from Ethiopia, Nepal, Eritrea, Somalia, Iraq, Iran and other conflict-torn areas, many of them trying anew after failing to complete applications previously. In addition to needing help with the actual enrollment, they needed to wait for interpreters. Many had taken a day off from work, hoping to meet the deadline.


The White House and other supporters of the law were hoping for an enrollment surge that would push sign-ups in the new health insurance markets to around 6.5 million people. That’s halfway between a revised goal of 6 million and the original target of 7 million. The first goal was scaled back after the federal website’s disastrous launch last fall, which kept it offline during most of October.


The insurance markets — or exchanges — offer subsidized private health insurance to people who don’t have access to coverage through their jobs. The federal government is taking the lead in 36 states, while 14 other states plus Washington, D.C., are running their own enrollment websites.


New York, running its own site, reported more than 812,000 had signed up by Sunday morning, nearly 100,000 of them last week.


However, it’s unclear what those numbers may mean.


The administration hasn’t said how many of the 6 million people nationally who had signed up before the weekend ultimately closed the deal by paying their first month’s premiums. Also unknown is how many were previously uninsured — the real test of Obama’s health care overhaul. In addition, the law expands coverage for low-income people through Medicaid, but only about half the states have agreed to implement that option.


Cheering on the deadline-day sign-up effort, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius planned to spend much of the day Monday working out of the department’s TV studio, conducting interviews by satellite with stations around the country.


Though March 31 was the last day officially to sign up, millions of people are potentially eligible for extensions granted by the administration.


Those include people who had begun enrolling by the deadline but didn’t finish, perhaps because of errors, missing information or website glitches. The government says it will accept paper applications until April 7 and take as much time as necessary to handle unfinished cases on HealthCare.gov. Rules may vary in states running their own insurance marketplaces.


The administration is also offering special extensions to make up for all sorts of problems that might have kept people from getting enrolled on time: Natural disasters. Domestic abuse. Website malfunctions. Errors by insurance companies. Mistakes by application counselors.


To seek a special enrollment period, contact the federal call center, at 1-855-889-4325, or the state marketplace and explain what happened. It’s on the honor system. If the extension is approved, that brings another 60 days to enroll.


Those who still don’t get health insurance run the risk that the Internal Revenue Service will fine them next year for remaining uninsured. It remains to be seen how aggressively the penalties called for in the law are enforced.


Also, the new markets don’t have a monopoly on health insurance. People not already covered by an employer or a government program can comply with the insurance mandate by buying a policy directly from an insurer. They’ll just have to pay the full premium themselves, although in a few states there may be an exception to that rule as well.


Supporters of the law held their breath early Monday when the website was taken down.


Administration spokesman Aaron Albright said the site undergoes “regular nightly maintenance” during off-peak hours and the period was extended because of a “technical problem.” He did not say what the problem was, but an official statement called it “a software bug” unrelated to application volume.


In Oakton, Va., enrollment counselor Rachel Klein said she noticed the website was running slowly.


“We all came into it understanding that today was going to be challenging,” said Klein. “We’re all relieved that there’s going to be a little extra time for people.”


House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said Monday that Republicans remain committed to repealing Obama’s law. But its supporters are wasting no time trying to shape the next open enrollment season, starting Nov. 15. The advocacy group Families USA will announce ten recommendations Tuesday to make the system more consumer-friendly.


They range from providing more in-person assistance with sign-ups, to eliminating premium penalties for smokers, to aligning enrollment with tax-filing season.


___


Associated Press writers Connie Cass in Washington, Don Babwin in Chicago, Randall Chase in Wilmington, Del., Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Michelle Price in Salt Lake City and Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, N.Y., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Deadline dash: Glitches slow health care sign-ups

Deadline dash: Health care sign-ups amid glitches







Charles Ellis, 53, of Salt Lake City, right, works with navigator Luis Rios while seeking help to buy health insurance at the Utah Health Policy Project Monday, March 31, 2014, in Salt Lake City. Ellis said he doesn’t feel he needs insurance but was signing up to avoid a penalty. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)





Charles Ellis, 53, of Salt Lake City, right, works with navigator Luis Rios while seeking help to buy health insurance at the Utah Health Policy Project Monday, March 31, 2014, in Salt Lake City. Ellis said he doesn’t feel he needs insurance but was signing up to avoid a penalty. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)





SEIU-UHW worker Kathy Santana, left , assists Ruben Tares, 27, during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)





Lisa Valera and her husband Manuel sign up for Obamacare at the Community Service Society, Monday, March 31, 2014 in New York. The troubled U.S. government web site for signing up for health insurance was unavailable for several hours Monday morning as the midnight deadline for buying coverage loomed. Heading into the deadline, more than 6 million Americans had signed up for health insurance, some of the policies heavily subsidized for lower income people. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)





A screen shows the countdown for the deadline to sign up for health insurance during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)





The HealthCare.gov website is shown on a laptop in Washington, Monday, March 31, 2014. Today is the deadline to sign up for private heath insurance in the online markets created by President Obama’s heath care law or face a federal fines. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — In a flood of last-minute sign-ups, hundreds of thousands of Americans rushed to apply for health insurance Monday, as deadline day for President Barack Obama’s overhaul brought long waits and a new spate of website ills.


“This is like trying to find a parking spot at Wal-Mart on Dec. 23,” said Jason Stevenson, working with a Utah nonprofit group helping people enroll.


Supporters of the health care law fanned out across the country in a final dash to sign up uninsured Americans. The HealthCare.gov website, which was receiving 1.5 million visitors a day last week, had recorded about 1.2 million through noon Monday.


At times, more than 125,000 people were simultaneously using the system, straining it beyond its previously estimated capacity. People not signed up for health insurance by the deadline, either through their jobs or on their own, were subject to being fined by the IRS, and that threat was helping drive the final dash.


The administration announced last week that people still in line by midnight would get extra time to enroll.


The website stumbled early in the day — out of service for nearly four hours as technicians patched a software bug. Another hiccup in early afternoon temporarily kept new applicants from signing up, and then things slowed further as the afternoon wore on. Overwhelmed by computer problems when launched last fall, the system has been working much better in recent months, but independent testers say it still runs slowly.


At Chicago’s Norwegian American Hospital, people began lining up shortly after 7 a.m. to get help signing up for subsidized private health insurance.


Lucy Martinez, an unemployed single mother of two boys, said she’d previously tried to enroll at a clinic in another part of the city but there was always a problem. She’d wait and wait and they wouldn’t call her name, or they would ask her for paperwork that she was told earlier she didn’t need, she said. Her diabetic mother would start sweating so they’d have to leave.


She’s heard “that this would be better here,” said Martinez, adding that her mother successfully signed up Sunday at a different location.


At St. Francis Hospital in Wilmington, Del., enrollment counselor Hubert Worthen plunged into a long day. “I got my energy drink,” he said. “This is epic, man.”


At a Houston community center, there were immigrants from Ethiopia, Nepal, Eritrea, Somalia, Iraq, Iran and other conflict-torn areas, many of them trying anew after failing to complete applications previously. In addition to needing help with the actual enrollment, they needed to wait for interpreters. Many had taken a day off from work, hoping to meet the deadline.


The White House and other supporters of the law were hoping for an enrollment surge that would push sign-ups in the new health insurance markets to around 6.5 million people. That’s halfway between a revised goal of 6 million and the original target of 7 million. The first goal was scaled back after the federal website’s disastrous launch last fall, which kept it offline during most of October.


The insurance markets — or exchanges — offer subsidized private health insurance to people who don’t have access to coverage through their jobs. The federal government is taking the lead in 36 states, while 14 other states plus Washington, D.C., are running their own enrollment websites.


New York, running its own site, reported more than 812,000 had signed up by Sunday morning, nearly 100,000 of them last week.


However, it’s unclear what those numbers may mean.


The administration hasn’t said how many of the 6 million people nationally who had signed up before the weekend ultimately closed the deal by paying their first month’s premiums. Also unknown is how many were previously uninsured — the real test of Obama’s health care overhaul. In addition, the law expands coverage for low-income people through Medicaid, but only about half the states have agreed to implement that option.


Cheering on the deadline-day sign-up effort, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius planned to spend much of the day Monday working out of the department’s TV studio, conducting interviews by satellite with stations around the country.


Though March 31 was the last day officially to sign up, millions of people are potentially eligible for extensions granted by the administration.


Those include people who had begun enrolling by the deadline but didn’t finish, perhaps because of errors, missing information or website glitches. The government says it will accept paper applications until April 7 and take as much time as necessary to handle unfinished cases on HealthCare.gov. Rules may vary in states running their own insurance marketplaces.


The administration is also offering special extensions to make up for all sorts of problems that might have kept people from getting enrolled on time: Natural disasters. Domestic abuse. Website malfunctions. Errors by insurance companies. Mistakes by application counselors.


To seek a special enrollment period, contact the federal call center, at 1-855-889-4325, or the state marketplace and explain what happened. It’s on the honor system. If the extension is approved, that brings another 60 days to enroll.


Those who still don’t get health insurance run the risk that the Internal Revenue Service will fine them next year for remaining uninsured. It remains to be seen how aggressively the penalties called for in the law are enforced.


Also, the new markets don’t have a monopoly on health insurance. People not already covered by an employer or a government program can comply with the insurance mandate by buying a policy directly from an insurer. They’ll just have to pay the full premium themselves, although in a few states there may be an exception to that rule as well.


Supporters of the law held their breath early Monday when the website was taken down.


Administration spokesman Aaron Albright said the site undergoes “regular nightly maintenance” during off-peak hours and the period was extended because of a “technical problem.” He did not say what the problem was, but an official statement called it “a software bug” unrelated to application volume.


In Oakton, Va., enrollment counselor Rachel Klein said she noticed the website was running slowly.


“We all came into it understanding that today was going to be challenging,” said Klein. “We’re all relieved that there’s going to be a little extra time for people.”


House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said Monday that Republicans remain committed to repealing Obama’s law. But its supporters are wasting no time trying to shape the next open enrollment season, starting Nov. 15. The advocacy group Families USA will announce ten recommendations Tuesday to make the system more consumer-friendly.


They range from providing more in-person assistance with sign-ups, to eliminating premium penalties for smokers, to aligning enrollment with tax-filing season.


___


Associated Press writers Connie Cass in Washington, Don Babwin in Chicago, Randall Chase in Wilmington, Del., Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Michelle Price in Salt Lake City and Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, N.Y., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Deadline dash: Health care sign-ups amid glitches

Thursday, March 13, 2014

SHOWDOWN: KERRY GIVES RUSSIA MONDAY DEADLINE

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SHOWDOWN: KERRY GIVES RUSSIA MONDAY DEADLINE

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Many Still Unaware of Looming Obamacare Enrollment Deadline


The clock is ticking as the Obama administration nears the March 31 deadline for people to sign up in private insurance plans through Obamacare, with officials hoping for a final rush to bolster the exchanges.

Initially, the administration had hoped to enroll 7 million people in plans, but those numbers remain about 3 million behind the target goal, mainly because of the botched rollout of the Healthcare.gov website, reports The Hill.


But a poll released this week threw cold water on that expectation by revealing the public’s ignorance about when they need to gain health coverage or pay a fine.


Three in four uninsured patients are not aware of the March 31 deadline, the Kaiser Family
Foundation found in its latest monthly Health Tracking Poll.


“Deadlines are something that Americans react to, whether it’s filing or taxes or other responsibilities in society,” Tad Devine, a Democratic strategist and adviser to John Kerry’s 2004 run for president, told The Hill. “Highlighting that date can be a really positive tool. Just making people aware of the deadline is likely to motivate them to join the system.”


House Republicans are voting next week to eliminate the individual mandate penalty for this year, a rule that says people who do not have insurance by the deadline will either be fined $ 95 or one percent of their income.


But Democrats say voters want to see Obamacare fixed and improved, not repealed, said a memo from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, and the Kaiser poll found 56 percent of the respondents believe Obamacare should remain the law.


Groups like Enroll America and health insurance companies are also spreading the word about the looming deadline,


In addition, the Obama administration on Friday said some people will be able to receive federal subsidies for health insurance bought in the private market and not through the Obamacare exchanges, reports The New York Times.


Technical problems with the federal exchange site had prevented some customers from using the online service to find insurance and subsidies, federal officials said.


Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, a Democrat, asked the federal government to allow the tax credits, and several other states that have their own exchanges, including Maryland, Hawaii, and Massachusetts, have also experienced difficulties.


“We recognize that some states have experienced difficulties in processing automated eligibility determinations and enrollments,” said Aaron K. Albright, a spokesman for the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “We released guidance providing options to marketplaces to ensure eligible consumers have access to financial assistance.”


The new policy will apply to people who were not able to buy insurance through the exchanges because of technical issues, and ended up signing up for private insurance through the marketplace to make sure they were covered before the deadline.


The subsidies will be paid retroactively, and Republican Pennsylvania Rep. Joe Pitts, who chairs the Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health said the Obama administration is “ignoring the law” with the new policy change.


But Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University, said the Obama administration is avoiding a legal liability by allowing the subsidies.


“People could have gone to court to obtain benefits denied without due process of law, because of a breakdown in government eligibility systems, and a judge would probably have ordered retroactive relief,” Rosenbaum said. “The federal government is voluntarily providing equitable relief that a court would have given.”


Meanwhile, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden and others spent last week pushing Obamacare, including Michelle Obama’s appearance on the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon last week, reports Politico.


In addition, Obama and others have been appearing on national radio talk shows and more to make their push as the deadline gets nearer.


“Folks only have about five weeks left,” Obama said on the Russ Parr Morning Show. “Don’t believe all the misinformation that’s out there because that is all politics and that is all directed toward me coming from the other side. Check for yourself whether this makes sense.”


The first lady has been using her appearances to push young people to apply for insurance.


“In addition to our old folks who don’t want to go to the doctor, young people think they’re invincible,” she said this past week. “The fact of the matter is the young lady who is still wearing the heels in the snow, who is going to slip and crack her behind on a patch of ice, is going to need insurance.”


Related Stories:


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Many Still Unaware of Looming Obamacare Enrollment Deadline

Thursday, January 9, 2014

US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal



US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal


US Keeps Setting Ultimatums, But Afghans Stand Firm


by Jason Ditz, January 09, 2014




After missing the Obama Administration’s “ultimatum” to sign the Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) by the end of December, officials told the Karzai government they wanted it done within “weeks, not months.”


Now, US Ambassador James Cunningham is admitting that the Karzai government is “unlikely” to meet that deadline either, saying he thinks Karzai will stick to his initial pledge not to sign until after the April vote.


The BSA would govern the US occupation of Afghanistan “through 2024 and beyond,” and Karzai has repeatedly said he won’t sign the deal before the election, which ends his term in office.


Karzai had been pushing for the US to make pledges to end night raids and drone strikes, citing the growing civilian casualties, while the US demands the deal be signed exactly as written.


Though the Obama Administration has made it clear they want the BSA signed as soon as possible, it is unclear why they keep going public with ultimatums that they don’t believe Karzai will accept, and coupling them with threats to withdraw that they have no intention of following through on.


Last 5 posts by Jason Ditz






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US Envoy: Karzai Unlikely to Meet New Deadline on Troop Deal

Monday, December 23, 2013

Surprise! ObamaCare Deadline Extended One Day


(Newser) – Because people love nothing more than shopping on Christmas Eve, the Obama administration today extended by 24 hours the deadline to sign up for a health care plan that would kick in on the first of the year, CNN Money reports. The move is such a last-minute surprise that when CNN called insurance giant Aetna, a spokeswoman said she had no knowledge of the extension. A spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services explained that they were “anticipating high demand and the fact that consumers may be enrolling from multiple time zones.”


The original deadline was actually a week ago, the AP points out, but it was pushed back amidst the site’s glitches. “It’s just nonstop now. Everybody knows about it. Everybody wants it,” a Florida enrollment counselor said. But if you miss the deadline don’t panic; the government is trying to talk insurers into covering even the true procrastinators who sign up in the middle of January as though they’d been signed up since New Year’s, and even if those companies refuse, you have until March 31 to sign up before facing a penalty.




Politics from Newser



Surprise! ObamaCare Deadline Extended One Day

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Obama Administration Relaxes Rules Of Health Care Law Ahead Of Deadline: Washington Post

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Obama Administration Relaxes Rules Of Health Care Law Ahead Of Deadline: Washington Post

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ukraine police give protesters deadline, PM brands them "Nazis"




KIEV Thu Dec 5, 2013 2:14pm EST





People sing the national anthem during a rally to support EU integration in Kiev December 5, 2013. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko


1 of 5. People sing the national anthem during a rally to support EU integration in Kiev December 5, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Vasily Fedosenko




KIEV (Reuters) – Ukrainian police on Thursday warned pro-Europe protesters they faced a “harsh” crackdown if they did not end their occupation of public offices in Kiev, while President Viktor Yanukovich’s prime minister denounced them as “Nazis and criminals”.


The authorities issued the tough warnings as foreign ministers held a European security conference in a city seething with unrest over the Ukrainian government’s U-turn away from Europe back towards Russia.


Germany’s visiting foreign minister used the occasion to warn Ukraine against violently cracking down on protesters. Russia’s responded by accusing EU officials of “hysteria”.


Kiev’s November 21 decision to abandon a trade and integration deal with the EU and pursue closer economic ties with Moscow brought hundreds of thousands of demonstrators into the streets over the weekend. Protesters have since blockaded the main government headquarters and occupied Kiev’s city hall.


Prime Minister Mykola Azarov defended his government’s handling of the crisis. He clashed sharply with Germany’s Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who has used his visit to Kiev for a conference of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to show solidarity with the demonstrators.


“Nazis, extremists and criminals cannot be, in any way, our partners in ‘Eurointegration’,” the government website quoted Azarov as telling Westerwelle.


Westerwelle expressed concern about police behavior at the protests, when dozens of people were severely beaten.


“Recent events, in particular the violence against peaceful demonstrators last Saturday in Kiev worry me greatly,” said Westerwelle. “The way Ukraine responds to the pro-European rallies is a yardstick for how seriously Ukraine takes the shared values of the OSCE.”


In a pointed gesture, Westerwelle visited the main protest center on Kiev’s Independence Square on Wednesday and met opposition leaders who have called for Yanukovich to resign. Several other EU ministers made the same trip on Thursday.


The crisis has exposed a gulf between Ukrainians, many from the west of the country, who hope to move rapidly into the European mainstream, and those mainly from the east who look to the former Soviet master Moscow as a guarantor of stability.


EU countries, especially those like Germany and Poland with experience of Cold War-era Russian domination, are keen to bind Ukraine and its 46 million people closely with the West and say their trade pact would have brought a surge of investment.


Moscow wants Kiev instead to join a customs union that it dominates with other ex-Soviet republics. Russia exerts powerful leverage because of Ukraine’s dependence on its natural gas.


A court ordered the protesters on Thursday to quit the Kiev mayor’s office, where they have set up an operational hub, and halt their four-day blockade of government buildings.


In perhaps the strongest signal yet that the authorities are contemplating action to reclaim the streets, the head of the Kiev police, Valery Mazan, said: “We do not want to use force. But if the law is broken, we will act decisively, harshly.


“We will not try to talk people round. We have the means and capability laid down by the law,” he added.


SOLIDARITY GESTURE


The stand-off between pro-EU protesters and the government is taking a toll on the fragile economy. The central bank has twice been forced to support the currency this week and the cost of insuring Ukraine’s debt against default has risen further.


Ukraine faces a $ 17 billion bill next year for debt repayments and deliveries of Russian gas.


About 3,000 pro-Europe demonstrators, mainly from western Ukrainian-speaking parts of the country, have been camped out in Independence Square since Sunday. They huddle round blazing braziers, swap anecdotes about events of the day and follow news developments on a huge TV screen.


Speaking to the OSCE session, Victoria Nuland, U.S. Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs, urged “all sides” to renounce violence, respect the right to peaceful assembly and the rule of law.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke scathingly about Europe’s reaction to Ukraine’s decision to seek closer trade ties with Moscow.


“This situation is linked with the hysteria that some Europeans have raised over Ukraine which, using its sovereign right, decided at the current moment not to sign any agreement which Ukrainian experts and authorities considered disadvantageous,” Russia’s Itar-Tass news agency quoted Lavrov as saying on the sidelines of the OSCE meeting.


Yanukovich, who is visiting Beijing, suggested some relief could be on the way for the distressed economy, signing documents for deals with China on agriculture, infrastructure improvement and energy. He estimated their value at about $ 8 billion of investment in the Ukrainian economy.


Ukraine faces huge problems in financing its current account deficit. Severely depleted central bank reserves are also putting Ukraine at risk of a balance-of-payments crunch.


One analyst, Timothy Ash of Standard Bank, doubted the long-term investment commitments from China would help an immediate cash shortage. “Ukraine needs short term cash/financing, and likely of the order of USD10-15bn at this stage in up-front cash to make a difference,” he said.


TYMOSHENKO CALL FOR SANCTIONS


The Kiev government says it has not ditched the trade deal with Europe but is taking a strategic “pause” while it negotiates a new “roadmap” with Russia to patch up its economy.


Protesters consider the move to have been an abrupt reversal to Ukraine’s march towards Europe. They hope to repeat the success of the “Orange Revolution” nine years ago, when mass demonstrations forced the overturning of a fraudulent presidential election victory for Yanukovich.


Azarov’s deputy, Serhiy Arbuzov, who is preparing to head Ukraine’s first high-level delegation to Brussels soon to repair some of the political damage, suggested the government might be ready to consider one of the opposition’s demands – early parliamentary elections. There has been no suggestion from Azarov that he is ready to go along with this idea.


Before negotiations were halted, the EU had pressed Ukraine to release Yulia Tymoshenko, who served as prime minister after the Orange Revolution but lost a presidential election in 2010 to Yanukovich and was later jailed for abuse of office. Brussels considers her a political prisoner.


On the eve of a fresh attempt to bring her to trial on new charges, Tymoshenko called for the West to apply “targeted sanctions” against Yanukovich and his family. This “is the only language he understands,” she said, according to her lawyer.


(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk and Natalia Zinets in Kiev, Megha Rajagopalan and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Peter Graff)





Reuters: Top News



Ukraine police give protesters deadline, PM brands them "Nazis"

Saturday, November 30, 2013

White House confident it’s met deadline to fix Healthcare.gov for most

White House confident it’s met deadline to fix Healthcare.gov for most
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/1bd00__national_security_agency__happyo.jpg


Anita Kumar
McClatchy Newspapers
November 30, 2013


happyoAfter two months of relentless criticism about the troubled rollout of the new federal health care law, Saturday marks the day when President Barack Obama pledged that the flawed website, HealthCare.gov, would be fixed.


White House officials say they expect that vow to be fulfilled, at least for the vast majority of Americans who need to access the website to sign up for health insurance. But anything less than success Saturday probably will be a crippling blow in a second term where Obama faces many tough political challenges, from budget battles to negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program.


The HealthCare.gov rollout disaster has sapped the president’s popularity, sending his approval rating in recent opinion polls to its lowest level ever. That gives the relaunch of the website an importance that goes beyond the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which already was considered the president’s signature domestic achievement.


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This article was posted: Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 1:41 pm


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Read more about White House confident it’s met deadline to fix Healthcare.gov for most and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

White House confident it’s met deadline to fix Healthcare.gov for most


Anita Kumar
McClatchy Newspapers
November 30, 2013


happyoAfter two months of relentless criticism about the troubled rollout of the new federal health care law, Saturday marks the day when President Barack Obama pledged that the flawed website, HealthCare.gov, would be fixed.


White House officials say they expect that vow to be fulfilled, at least for the vast majority of Americans who need to access the website to sign up for health insurance. But anything less than success Saturday probably will be a crippling blow in a second term where Obama faces many tough political challenges, from budget battles to negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program.


The HealthCare.gov rollout disaster has sapped the president’s popularity, sending his approval rating in recent opinion polls to its lowest level ever. That gives the relaunch of the website an importance that goes beyond the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which already was considered the president’s signature domestic achievement.


Read more


This article was posted: Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 1:41 pm


Tags: healthcare









Infowars



White House confident it’s met deadline to fix Healthcare.gov for most

How Is ObamaCare "Deadline Day" Going? Not Great


(Newser) – Today’s the day: The day the White House pledged to get Healthcare.gov working for the “vast majority” of users. So how’s it going? NBC News describes it as being “off to a rocky start.” The website was down for maintenance until 8am Eastern today, an 11-hour outage that lasted seven hours longer than a typical maintenance period. But it’s not clear whether that’s a bad thing, or just a sign that the administration is nervous. If all has gone according to plan, officials said the website’s capacity could be doubled, so it should be able to handle 50,000 visitors simultaneously.


But tech specialists tell Reuters it will be hard to independently assess whether the site has reached that goal, because any issues that still remain are likely buried deeper in the site. Tellingly, administration officials said today that 90% of users are now able to create an account, but did not say whether that same percentage would actually be able to finish enrolling. And officials are still warning that there will be times the site is overwhelmed, and are encouraging people to visit during off-peak hours (so, not in the middle of the day). And, as Politico notes, it’s possible the site will hold up just fine over the holiday weekend, only to crash again Monday. An official progress report is expected tomorrow.




Politics from Newser



How Is ObamaCare "Deadline Day" Going? Not Great

Health Site Is Improving But Likely to Miss Saturday Deadline


Louise Radnofsky and Spencer E. Ante
Wall Street Journal
November 30, 2013


ocaresiteDespite recent progress at HealthCare.gov, a raft of problems will remain beyond the Obama administration’s Saturday deadline to make the troubled federal insurance website work.


The news isn’t all bad: Users say the site looks better, pages load faster, and more people are getting through to sign up for health plans.


But technical problems still affect HealthCare.gov’s ability to verify users’ identities and transmit accurate enrollment data to insurers, officials say. The data center that supports the site faces continuing challenges, and tools for processing payments to insurers haven’t been built.


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This article was posted: Saturday, November 30, 2013 at 11:21 am


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Health Site Is Improving But Likely to Miss Saturday Deadline

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Inspectors in Syria expect to meet key chemical disarmament deadline

WASHINGTON — International inspectors expect to destroy Syria’s ability to produce new chemical weapons by Nov. 1, the first major deadline in the United Nations-ordered disarmament of Syria’s chemical arsenal, officials said Wednesday.



The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the watchdog group overseeing the disarmament, said equipment used to produce or mix toxic gases and nerve agents has been destroyed at almost all of the declared facilities in Syria.


OPCW spokesman Michael Luhan said Syrian authorities continued to provide “complete” cooperation to its team of 27 inspectors, and that the group was confident of achieving the first major milestone in the disarmament plan before the deadline.


Syria “will no longer have the capability to produce any more chemical weapons, and it will no longer have any working equipment to mix and to fill chemical weapons agent into munitions,” Luhan said at a news conference in The Hague.


The positive report reflected continuing progress in the U.S.-backed plan to destroy, dismantle or impound President Bashar Assad‘s chemical weapons stockpile by mid-2014.


Since arriving in Syria this month, OPCW inspectors, escorted by Syrian forces, have visited 18 of 23 chemical weapons sites disclosed by Assad’s government and have had “good access” to the facilities in government-controlled areas, Luhan said.


But inspectors have yet to visit any sites in areas held by rebels battling to overthrow Assad, Luhan said. Last week, OPCW chief Ahmet Uzumcu said that inspectors had to cancel a visit to at least one abandoned site in a rebel-held zone because they were unable to obtain security guarantees.


Disabling the production and mixing equipment so far has involved low-tech methods such as smashing machines, clogging them with concrete or running over them with heavy vehicles. Officials still don’t have a clear plan for tackling the more complicated task of destroying or seizing Assad’s existing stockpile of sarin, mustard gas, VX and other toxins, which U.S. officials estimate to amount to about 1,100 tons.


Norwegian officials said Tuesday that they were considering a request by the U.N. and the OPCW to take most of Syria’s chemical stockpile to Norway for destruction.


On Wednesday, NATO and Russian officials signaled for the first time that they would be willing to cooperate in eliminating the chemical weapons in Syria. Despite the mistrust between Russia and the alliance, officials said after a meeting of defense chiefs in Brussels that the two sides could work together in destroying the chemicals if asked by the United Nations.


U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in Brussels that disarming Syria was one of “many areas of common interest” for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Russia. Aside from the U.S., Russia is the only country with the ability to destroy the chemicals on a large scale.


“If we can continue to see progress made, and I believe everybody believes we can, in destroying chemical weapons in Syria, then it seems to me that this is going to open opportunities for a lot of nations to play roles in Syria in order to accomplish the objective,” Hagel said.


Moscow previously said that it would be willing to guard weapons sites and destroy Assad’s stockpiles, but not to take the weapons into Russia. U.S. law prohibits the import of chemical weapons, and Hagel said that there were “no plans to have any U.S. forces in any way in Syria.”


Russia, Assad’s most powerful backer, brokered the deal with the United States last month that calls for Syria to eliminate its chemical weapons. The agreement shelved a U.S. threat of airstrikes against Assad’s government as punishment for an Aug. 21 chemical attack in opposition-controlled areas that U.S. officials say left more than 1,000 people dead.


shashank.bengali@latimes.com




WHAT REALLY HAPPENEDPost id = does not exist.



Inspectors in Syria expect to meet key chemical disarmament deadline

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms



Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms