Showing posts with label bills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bills. Show all posts

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Mitt Romney on Hillary Clinton: She’ll be judged on her own record, not Bill’s



Ann and Mitt Romney


When it comes to the 2016 presidential race, Hillary Clinton shouldn’t be judged for the actions and indiscretions of her husband while he was president, former Gov. Mitt Romney (R-Mass.) said on Meet the Press Sunday.


While conducted the interview with Romney, host David Gregory pointed out that Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) has outspokenly condemned Bill Clinton for his relationship with then-White House intern Monica Lewinsky. Paul has also suggested that Democratic candidates who have accepted money from the former President should give it back. Gregory asked Romney if the former Secretary of State should be judged on the record of her husband.


“I don’t think Bill Clinton is as relevant as Hillary Clinton, if Hillary Clinton decides to run for president,” Romney answered. “And in her case, I think people will look at her record as Secretary of State.”


Romney told Gregory that people will look at relationship between the United States and other nations during Clinton’s tenure as Secretary, judging whether or not U.S. interests were elevated or not. The former GOP presidential nominee didn’t specifically mention the attack in Benghazi, but it will likely be the biggest point of contention when it comes to Clinton’s record.


Romney didn’t, however, dismiss the national humiliation caused by Clinton during his presidency. While Romney acknowledged the period of economic prosperity during the Clinton administration, he also pointed out that Bill “embarrassed the nation.”


“He breached his responsibility, I think, as an adult and as a leader in his relationship,” Romney said.


As unfortunate as that incident was to the Clinton family and the rest of the country, Romney said he doesn’t feel like the former First Lady is the one who needs to answer for it, disagreeing with Paul’s attacks.


The former Governor also reiterated his promise to stay out of the 2016 presidential race, which would be his third time running for the Oval Office.


“Is there something, Governor, that might make you change your mind?” Gregory asked. “Reagan, after all, he ran three times, didn’t he?”


“You know, I’m not Ronald Reagan,” Romney joked. “I think that’s been pointed out to me before. I’m not running for President.”




Red Alert Politics



Mitt Romney on Hillary Clinton: She’ll be judged on her own record, not Bill’s

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

After Obamacare, families still struggle with medical bills











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(NaturalNews) One of Obamacare’s “selling points” – and yes, there were many – was that the cost of healthcare would come down. That is, the cost of actual care that Americans would have to pay out-of-pocket, as well as the prices that people pay for healthcare delivery.

As you are aware, especially if you’re a regular Natural News reader, there isn’t much about Obamacare that has reduced prices – prices for insurance premiums, level of deductibles and most certainly the cost of healthcare delivery. Still, the president, during his State of the Union Address, and his administration have said that Obamacare has caused healthcare costs to rise less than they otherwise would have. That claim is dubious, at best, but it still, at least, admits the obvious: Costs are continuing to rise, and Obamacare, once claimed by its supporters as the only way to get costs and prices under control, is failing miserably at this as well.


This was substantiated by a recent report from federal researchers, who found, as reported by NBC News, that more than one-quarter of U.S. families are still burdened by having to pay for medical care. Indeed, they found, one in six struggle to pay their healthcare bills (a phenomenon that will only increase as deductibles in Obamacare-approved healthcare plans go up):


The 2010 Affordable Care Act is designed to reduce the burden by getting health insurance to more Americans. But the report from the National Center for Health Statistics shows that even families with health insurance can struggle to pay bills.


The figures don’t lie – healthcare costs still burdening families


“In 2012, 26.8 percent of families in the United States experienced any financial burden of medical care,” the NCHS team said in its report. “Almost 1 in 6 families (16.5 percent) had problems paying medical bills in the past 12 months.”


Almost 9 percent of Americans said they had medical bills they could not even pay.


The government team examined results from a very large national survey of more than 43,000 families involving 108,000 people. They found, for one, that having children typically leads to more medical bills.


“One in three families with children (36 percent) experienced any financial burden of medical care,” the NCHS team reported. That is in comparison with 25 percent of families with two adults and no children.


The research team discovered that families who have a mix of insured and non-insured members have the hardest time paying medical bills, as noted by NBC News:


The survey found trouble paying bills among 46 percent of families in which some members had insurance – for instance, a child covered by the Children’s Health Insurance Program but whose parents had no insurance. And 40 percent of families with no health insurance at all reported financial burden.


And, even in families where all members were covered under private insurance, medical bills still caused some hardships; 21 percent said they had some financial burden from medical care.


Don’t believe the hype from the law’s supporters


One of the administration’s biggest selling points for Obamacare was that too many American families face bankruptcy each year because of medical bills that they cannot pay. Other reports back this up; they say nearly half of all personal bankruptcies stem from costly illnesses.


But again, the Affordable Care Act – not-so-aptly named, because for tens of millions of Americans, it isn’t so affordable – is not living up to its promises of cutting costs and abating medical care-induced financial hardship.


As noted by Charles Blahous, who is a senior research fellow for the Mercatus Center, a research fellow for the Hoover Institution and a public trustee for Social Security and Medicare, Obamacare is not reducing costs:


Public confidence in the ACA took a beating when it was revealed that millions would lose health coverage that they had been told they could keep. Now the public is being told that the ACA is responsible for government actuaries’ improved health spending projections, when an examination of those projections clearly shows that not to be so.


Supporters of the ACA, the president and his policy team will continue to tout the law as helping to reduce healthcare costs. Don’t be surprised if they even trot out a few “success stories” to bolster their claim.


But analysts and experts who are looking at the issue through a non-partisan lens, as they should, know better.


And so do the scores of millions of Americans who are still struggling with healthcare costs.


Sources:


http://www.cnbc.com


http://www.nationalreview.com


http://www.naturalnews.com


http://www.economics21.org





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After Obamacare, families still struggle with medical bills

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Do-nothing Congress: Lawmakers pass more blame than bills




  • Congress is on track to have its least productive year in recent history

  • Boehner blames the Democratic Senate, White House, cites 148 House-passed bills

  • Many targeted Obamacare, dealt with shutdown with no chance of passage

  • Democrats blame House conservatives for impeding legislative progress



Tune in to “Crossfire” on CNN Thursday at 6:30pm ET. Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) and Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) join hosts S.E. Cupp and Stephanie Cutter to debate who is to blame for the do-nothing Congress.


Washington (CNN) — Congress is on pace to have its least productive year in modern history, earning a “do-nothing” label and adding another unwanted statistic to a body already facing chronically low approval ratings.


Cue the blame game.


“To date, the House has passed nearly 150 bills this Congress that the United States Senate has failed to act on,” Republican Speaker John Boehner argued Wednesday. “The Senate (and) the President continue to stand in the way of the people’s priorities.”


Democrats are tossing responsibility right back in the GOP’s lap, arguing that hardline House conservatives are blocking legislative progress.



• Number of laws passed so far by the 113th Congress — 56: Sound substantial? Check out the breakdown.

• Bills limited to one piece of land or region — 10: These include the Denali Park Improvement Act, the Freedom to Fish Act and the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site Boundary Modification Act.


• Reauthorization of laws –5: The U.S. Parole Commission, a congressional award program and a handful of other regular pieces of business were reauthorized — not exactly heavy lifting.


• Keeping government running — 5: Congress repeatedly had to vote to fund government and keep the bureaucracy from hitting its self-imposed debt ceiling.


• Naming things — 4: Congress voted to name a bridge, a VA building, an air traffic control tower and a section of the IRS Code.


• What else did they do? Most of the others were focused and had limited impact. One dealt with how to handle organ transplants from HIV+ donors. Another delayed new pipeline safety standards.


• There were a few heavy lifts: The House and Senate agreed on reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act, prepared for a possible pandemic flu and handled the nation’s helium reserve, pivotal in the medical world.)


• Stuck in idle: Immigration; jobs and the economy; energy reform/Keystone pipeline/climate change; future Medicare insolvency; future Social Security insolvency.




Meanwhile, America’s national legislature is growing increasingly dysfunctional.


No deal, but sides said to be closer on budget deal


So far, 56 bills have been signed into law in the first session of the 113th Congress. Assuming legislators don’t pick up the pace next year — and the smart money says they won’t as the midterms draw near — this will become the least productive Congress in at least the last 40 years, according to a CNN analysis of congressional records.


Is the fact that fewer bills have become law necessarily a bad thing? That depends on your point of view. But representatives and senators on both sides of the aisle readily acknowledge that some major issues have not been addressed.


GOP obstruction of Obamacare is closing hospitals


Congress hasn’t passed a budget, among other things. None of the 12 annual spending bills has made it to the President’s desk. We don’t have a new farm bill. Immigration reform is stalled. Tax and entitlement reform are dead in the water.


Adding insult to injury, in October the federal government had its first partial shutdown in nearly two decades.


The most important issue in Washington political circles, naturally, is who’s responsible.


Democrats point out that roughly one-third of the 148 bills passed by the GOP-controlled House so far this year were attempts to repeal, delay or defund Obamacare that had zero chance of passing the Senate or surviving a certain presidential veto.


Washington could still screw up your holidays


More than a dozen of those measures were also partisan, piecemeal spending bills passed during the government shutdown that had no chance of being signed into law.


Some of them had nothing to do with major issues at all, such as the bills renaming courthouses in Sherman, Texas, and Fergus Falls, Minnesota.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has called the House GOP a bunch of “modern-day anarchists.” But Republicans argue that Democrats are standing in the way of priorities such as entitlement reform. Democrats are standing in the way of a major overhaul of the tax code, they insist.


While both the House and the Senate passed farm bills, Democrats are blocking much-needed changes to the country’s agriculture laws, Republicans say.


As is usually the case in Washington, your opinion of which party is to blame is probably determined by which party you belong to. Meanwhile, Democrats and Republicans are growing more ideologically distant by the day.


And that is a recipe for gridlock.


Opinion: Here’s something Congress could actually do




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Do-nothing Congress: Lawmakers pass more blame than bills

Monday, November 18, 2013

TREASURIES-U.S. bonds rise; light buyside bid for 3-month bills

TREASURIES-U.S. bonds rise; light buyside bid for 3-month bills
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/d4041__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Mon Nov 18, 2013 1:16pm EST



* Record highs on Wall Street restrain gains for safe-haven debt


* Lightest buyside demand for 3-month bill auction since July


* Three-month bills to mature after Feb. 7 debt ceiling mark


* Retail sales, consumer price, home sales data due on Wednesday


By Ellen Freilich


NEW YORK, Nov 18 (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury debt prices rose on Monday, supported by the prospect of “easy” monetary policy, but gains were limited by investors’ preference for riskier assets.


U.S. stocks advanced as the Dow and the S&P 500 climbed to record highs, reacting to prospects for continued economic stimulus from the Federal Reserve.


Continued reaction to comments from the likely next Fed Chairperson Janet Yellen drove the Treasury market’s gains, said Kevin Giddis, head of fixed income capital markets head at Raymond James.


Better buying in the middle of the maturity curve from international real money accounts and curve flattening trades from various accounts were two features of the trading, said Thomas di Galoma, co-head of fixed income rates at ED&F Man Capital in New York.


THREE-MONTH TREASURY BILL AUCTION


The Treasury’s weekly sales of three- and six-month bills resulted in the lightest buyside demand since July for three-month bills, said Stone & McCarthy Research Associates analyst Cathy Guo.


The six-month bills drew a better bid than the three-month bills.


“The maturity date of the three-month bills in late February may have something to do with it, but investors will be cautious with front-end investments around the time that the debt ceiling is reinstated,” said Thomas Simons, vice president and money market economist at Jefferies in New York.


As of now, the Treasury is allowed to issue as much debt as needed through Feb. 7. At that point, Congress must raise the debt limit to let the Treasury increase the total amount of official borrowing.


The benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 7/32, leaving its yield at 2.69 percent.


Absent fresh economic data, there was little besides the backdrop of monetary accommodation and the lure of riskier assets to guide the U.S. Treasury market on Monday.


Wednesday is the first day of the week offering a basket of fresh economic data. Figures on October retail sales, consumer prices, and home sales are due that day.


“Wednesday is when the fireworks could begin: Retail sales, the consumer price index, existing home sales and minutes from the October 29-30 Fed policy meeting could make trading U.S. government securities quite interesting,” Giddis said.


The 30-year bond rose 15/32 in price at 99-19/32 for a yield of 3.77 percent.






Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about TREASURIES-U.S. bonds rise; light buyside bid for 3-month bills and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Energy bills have risen at EIGHT times the rate of average earnings

Energy bills have risen at EIGHT times the rate of average earnings
http://thedailynewsreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/1fc8b__article-0-19FABC11000005DC-474_634x309.jpg


By Adam Uren


|


Energy bills have risen at a rate eight times higher than average earnings over the past three years, according to Citizens Advice.


The charity has found that the ‘Big Six’ suppliers have increased their gas and electricity prices by on average 36 per cent since October 2010, during which time earnings have risen by a measly 4.4 per cent.


Prices have also easily outstripped the rate of inflation as well, almost four times the 10.2 per cent increase in the last three years.


Rise: Energy bills have risen by 36 per cent in the last three years.

Rise: Energy bills have risen by 36 per cent in the last three years.



Energy firms have shown no sign of putting a stopper on rises either, with recent announcements seeing rises of up to 10.4 per cent set to come in this winter, and Citizens Advice fears that people are racking up serious debts to pay for their winter energy bills.


Chief executive Gillian Guy said: ‘Enormous escalations in energy prices are creating a desperate situation in many households.


‘People find they do not have enough money coming in to pay for everyday essentials as increases in daily costs are outstripping low rises in earnings.


‘As we head into winter, and the latest price rises begin to kick in, more and more people are likely to reach crisis point as they struggle to heat their homes and feed their families.


‘People should not have to get into debt in order to have a warm home.  Energy companies and the Government need to look at how they can reduce the pressure energy bills are putting on people’s finances.’


Energy providers have been attempting to pin the blame for rising costs on green taxes levied by the Government, but energy secretary Ed Davey told the Mail on Sunday today he feels these firms may be ‘too profitable’.


The Big Six of British Gas, E.On, SSE, npower, EDF Energy and Scottish Power were hauled before a committee of MPs last month to explain their margins, and people are increasingly being encouraged to switch their energy plans to smaller and cheaper suppliers.


Citizens Advice said that 28 per cent of people who seek help with an energy problem also have a debt issue, with half of these in debt to their energy suppliers, while others have card or personal loan debts.


Ms Guy thinks green levies on energy companies should instead be raised via taxation to make it fairer on those struggling to stay afloat.


She said: ‘It’s absolutely essential that families on low incomes and pensioners get the necessary help to stay warm so I urge the Government not to cut the support that is currently available.


‘Levies are adding an unfair financial burden to poorer households.  Paying for these costs through taxation would be a much fairer approach and would avoid low income households funding.’







Money | Mail Online




Read more about Energy bills have risen at EIGHT times the rate of average earnings and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Kleargear.com Bills Woman $3500 For Writing a Negative Review

Kleargear.com Bills Woman $3500 For Writing a Negative Review
http://thedailynewsreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/ffe75__images.jpg

imagesAfter ordering several items from kleargear.com that never showed up, the Palmers did what most of us would do: They tried to contact the company for more information. When that failed to produce any results, they took to the internet and write a review of their experience at ripoffreport.com. What happened next may inspire us all to read the fine print buried in terms of sale agreements a little more closely.


Via KUTV:


That was the end of it, Jen thought, until three years later when Jen’s husband got an email from Kleargear.com demanding the post be removed or they would be fined. Kleargear.com says Jen violated a non-disparagement clause. It turns out that, hidden within the terms of sale on Kleargear.com there is a clause that reads:


“In an effort to ensure fair and honest public feedback, and to prevent the publishing of libelous content in any form, your acceptance of this sales contract prohibits you from taking any action that negatively impacts kleargear.com, its reputation, products, services, management or employees.”


The clause goes on to say if a consumer violates the contract they will have 72 hours to remove your post or face a $ 3500 fine. If that fine is not paid, the delinquency will be reported to the nation’s credit bureaus.



Read more.


The post Kleargear.com Bills Woman $ 3500 For Writing a Negative Review appeared first on disinformation.




disinformation




Read more about Kleargear.com Bills Woman $3500 For Writing a Negative Review and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Marco Rubio Immigration Bill"s Key Opponent: Marco Rubio


“Back in April, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., stood before cameras with the bipartisan “Gang of Eight” and joked he wasn’t quite sure he was ready to sign onto t…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Marco Rubio Immigration Bill"s Key Opponent: Marco Rubio

Friday, August 30, 2013

Gun controllers fire volley of bills through CA Legislature


By Katy Grimes | Cal Watchdog


A new Harvard University study found that gun bans don’t lower the murder rate. That hasn’t prevented the California Legislature from firing a fusillade of new gun-control laws.


AB 711, by Assemblyman Anthony Rendon, D-Lakewood, would make California the first state in the nation to prohibit the use of all lead ammunition for hunting. According to Sam Paredes with Gun Owners of California, extensive research has shown that traditional lead ammunition does not pose a health hazard for hunters. And a recent study found that, despite 99 percent hunter compliance, a ban on using lead ammunition in certain areas of the state under AB 821 of 2008 failed to reduce lead poisoning in condors.


AB 180, by Assemblyman Rob Bonta, D-Oakland, would repeal state firearms preemption in Oakland by allowing the city to enact ordinances more restrictive than state laws on the registering and licensing of firearms. AB 180 would allow the city of Oakland to create anti-gun policies much more strict than the rest of the state. Criminals still could get guns in other California cities, or in Nevada.


AB 231, by Assemblyman Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, would expand the law pertaining to the storage of firearms. This bill would make it a crime if a child gets access to an unlocked firearm. According to Gun Owners of California, AB 231 is a misguided proposal that imposes unprecedented liability on legal gun owners.


Read the complete story at CalWatchdog.com



Please, feel free to “steal our stuff”! Just remember to credit Watchdog.org. Find out more



Watchdog.org



Gun controllers fire volley of bills through CA Legislature

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Does New York City Mayor Bloomberg want to ban e-cigarettes too?


FoxNews.com
August 11, 2013


New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg doesn’t just want to limit the use of cigarettes – but electronic cigarettes as well.


In a newly leaked draft of three tobacco-related bills soon to be voted on by the NYC City Council, the new definition of “tobacco products” under city law would be changed to include e-cigarettes and related components, parts and accessories.  If the ordinances pass, the display of e-cigarettes and smokeless tobacco would be banned in retail stores.


Also, while tobacco and menthol flavored e-cigarettes would still be available in retail stores, all other flavored e-cigarettes could only be sold in age-restricted “tobacco bars.” But there’s a catch. New York City prohibits the operation of “tobacco bars” that weren’t opened before December 31, 2001.


Full article here


This article was posted: Sunday, August 11, 2013 at 4:20 am


Tags: police state










Infowars



Does New York City Mayor Bloomberg want to ban e-cigarettes too?

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

New York City mayor vetoes bills to limit stop-and-frisk policy


New York Police Department officers stand in the Times Square in New York, April 25, 2013. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

New York Police Department officers stand in the Times Square in New York, April 25, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid






NEW YORK | Tue Jul 23, 2013 7:03pm EDT



NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York City Michael Bloomberg on Tuesday vetoed two measures meant to curb the city’s controversial stop-and-frisk policing policy, setting up a likely showdown with the City Council.


Bloomberg called the bills dangerous and irresponsible and said they would make the city less safe.


One measure would create an independent inspector general to monitor the New York City Police Department. The other would expand the definition of racial profiling and allow people who believe they have been profiled to sue police in state court.


Bloomberg has defended the policy of stopping, questioning and frisking suspected wrongdoers to fight crime.


Opponents of stop-and-frisk, among them minority groups, civil libertarians and some of the Democratic mayoral candidates, have said police officers disproportionately target young black and Hispanic men.


Each of the measures, together called the Community Safety Act, passed the 51-member City Council with the two-thirds majority necessary to override a veto.


City Council members who back the measures vowed to override Bloomberg’s vetoes.


“The Community Safety Act will help us make New York a place where everyone can walk the streets without fear of violence or discriminatory policing,” said Democratic council members Jumaane Williams and Brad Lander. “We look forward to overturning Mayor Bloomberg’s veto and making this legislation law.”


Bloomberg argued that the first measure would create not an inspector general but an official who would rival the police commissioner on law enforcement policy and strategy.


“The consequences would be chaotic, dangerous, and even deadly for our police officers and for our city,” he wrote. The second, he said, would unleash an avalanche of lawsuits against the police department.


Communities United for Police Reform, an organization that advocates an end to the stop-and-frisk policy, said it was disappointed by the vetoes, which it called “misguided.”


“New York City must outlaw racial profiling and all discriminatory profiling,” it said in a statement.


One of the Democratic mayoral candidates, Bill de Blasio, said Bloomberg was turning a blind eye to racial profiling.


“I believe we need a real change, and encourage City Council members to stand by their votes and override the Mayor’s veto,” he said in a statement. “Our young men cannot afford for us to waver in the face of intimidation from City Hall.”


(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst, Toni Reinhold)






Reuters: Politics



New York City mayor vetoes bills to limit stop-and-frisk policy

New York City mayor vetoes bills to limit stop-and-frisk policy


New York Police Department officers stand in the Times Square in New York, April 25, 2013. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

New York Police Department officers stand in the Times Square in New York, April 25, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid






NEW YORK | Tue Jul 23, 2013 7:03pm EDT



NEW YORK (Reuters) – New York City Michael Bloomberg on Tuesday vetoed two measures meant to curb the city’s controversial stop-and-frisk policing policy, setting up a likely showdown with the City Council.


Bloomberg called the bills dangerous and irresponsible and said they would make the city less safe.


One measure would create an independent inspector general to monitor the New York City Police Department. The other would expand the definition of racial profiling and allow people who believe they have been profiled to sue police in state court.


Bloomberg has defended the policy of stopping, questioning and frisking suspected wrongdoers to fight crime.


Opponents of stop-and-frisk, among them minority groups, civil libertarians and some of the Democratic mayoral candidates, have said police officers disproportionately target young black and Hispanic men.


Each of the measures, together called the Community Safety Act, passed the 51-member City Council with the two-thirds majority necessary to override a veto.


City Council members who back the measures vowed to override Bloomberg’s vetoes.


“The Community Safety Act will help us make New York a place where everyone can walk the streets without fear of violence or discriminatory policing,” said Democratic council members Jumaane Williams and Brad Lander. “We look forward to overturning Mayor Bloomberg’s veto and making this legislation law.”


Bloomberg argued that the first measure would create not an inspector general but an official who would rival the police commissioner on law enforcement policy and strategy.


“The consequences would be chaotic, dangerous, and even deadly for our police officers and for our city,” he wrote. The second, he said, would unleash an avalanche of lawsuits against the police department.


Communities United for Police Reform, an organization that advocates an end to the stop-and-frisk policy, said it was disappointed by the vetoes, which it called “misguided.”


“New York City must outlaw racial profiling and all discriminatory profiling,” it said in a statement.


One of the Democratic mayoral candidates, Bill de Blasio, said Bloomberg was turning a blind eye to racial profiling.


“I believe we need a real change, and encourage City Council members to stand by their votes and override the Mayor’s veto,” he said in a statement. “Our young men cannot afford for us to waver in the face of intimidation from City Hall.”


(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst, Toni Reinhold)






Reuters: Politics



New York City mayor vetoes bills to limit stop-and-frisk policy

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Cashing in on Kids: 139 ALEC Bills in 2013 Promote a Private, For-Profit Education Model


Despite widespread public opposition to the education privatization agenda, at least 139 bills or state budget provisions reflecting American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) education bills have been introduced in 43 states and the District of Columbia in just the first six months of 2013, according to an analysis by the Center for Media and Democracy, publishers of ALECexposed.org. Thirty-one have become law.


ALEC Vouchers Transfer Taxpayer Money to Private and Religious Schools


News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch has called public education a “a $ 500 billion sector in the U.S. alone that is waiting desperately to be transformed.”


But this “transformation” of public education — from an institution that serves the public into one that serves private for-profit interests — has been in progress for decades, thanks in large part to ALEC.


ALEC boasts on the “history” section of its website that it first started promoting “such ‘radical’ ideas as a [educational] voucher system” in 1983 — the same year as the Reagan administration’s “Nation At Risk” report — taking up ideas first articulated decades earlier by ALEC supporter Milton Friedman.


In 1990, Milwaukee was the first city in the nation to implement a school voucher program, under then-governor (and ALEC alum) Tommy Thompson. ALEC quickly embraced the legislation, and that same year offered model bills based on the Wisconsin plan. For-profit schools in Wisconsin now receive up to $ 6,442 per voucher student, and by the end of the next school year taxpayers in the state will have transferred an estimated $ 1.8 billion to for-profit, religious, and online schools. The “pricetag” for students in other states is even higher.


In the years since, programs to divert taxpayer money from public to private schools have spread across the country. In the 2012-2013 school year, it is estimated that nearly 246,000 students will participate in various iterations of so-called “choice” programs in 16 states and the District of Columbia — draining the public school system of critically-needed funds, and in some cases covering private school tuition for students whose parents are able and willing to pay. 


But promised improvements in educational outcomes have not followed. “If vouchers are designed to create better educational outcomes, research has not borne out that result,” says Julie Mead, chair of Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis at the University of Wisconsin. “If vouchers are such a great idea,” after twenty years in effect, “they would have borne fruit by now.” 


The ALEC education agenda also fits into the organization’s broader attack on unions: by lowering teacher certification standards and funnelling public money to non-unionized private schools, ALEC undermines teachers unions, which guarantee fair wages and working conditions and are a major political force that have traditionally backed the Democratic Party.


ALEC Education Bills Undermine Free, Universal Public Education


ALEC-influenced bills introduced in 2013 include legislation to:


  • Create or expand taxpayer-funded voucher programs, using bills such as the “Parental Choice Scholarship Act” (introduced in three states). Under many state constitutions, the use of public dollars to fund religious institutions has been rejected on separation-of-powers grounds, but the ALEC Great Schools Tax Credit Act, introduced in ten states in 2013, bypasses state constitutional provisions and offers a form of private school tuition tax credits that funnel taxpayer dollars to private schools with even less public accountability than with regular vouchers.

  • Carve-out vouchers for students with special needs, regardless of family income, through the “Special Needs Scholarship Program Act” (introduced in twelve states), which sends vulnerable children to for-profit schools not bound by federal and state legal requirements to meet a student’s special needs, as public schools must. A proposal in Wisconsin would have allocated up to $ 14,658 to a for-profit school for each special needs student.

  • Send taxpayer dollars to unaccountable online school providers through the “Virtual Schools Act,” introduced in three states, where a single teacher remotely teaches a “class” of hundreds of isolated students working from home. The low overhead for virtual schools certainly raises company profits, but it is a model few educators think is a appropriate for young children.

  • Offer teaching credentials to individuals with subject-matter experience but no education background with the Alternative Certification Act, introduced in seven states. The bill is part of ALEC’s ongoing effort to undermine unionized workers and promote a race to the bottom in wages and benefits for American workers.

  • Require that educators “teach the controversy” when it comes to topics like climate change — where the only disagreement is political, not scientific — through the Environmental Literacy Improvement Act, introduced in five states.

  • Create opportunities to privatize public schools or fire teachers and principals via referendum with the controversial Parent Trigger Act (glorified in the flop film ”Won’t Back Down”), introduced in twelve states. First passed in California, a modified Parent Trigger bill was brought to ALEC in 2010 by the Illinois-based Heartland Institute, which is perhaps best known for controversial billboards comparing people who believe in climate change to mass murderers like the Unabomber Ted Kaczynski.

  • Create an appointed, state-level charter school authorizing board through the Next Generation Charter Schools Act, introduced in seven states, which effectively shields charters from democratic accountability. The legislation “would wrest control from school boards, and likewise from the community that elects those school boards,” Mead says, since it takes away their power to authorize charters in the community.

ALEC Corporations Reap the Rewards


Some of the for-profit corporations profiting from the ALEC Education privatization agenda include:


“Amplify,” the newly-created education division of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, parent company of Fox News. News Corp is on the ALEC Education Task Force. In 2010, News Corp hired former New York City chancellor Joel Klein to run its education division, which includes the for-profit education company formerly known as Wireless Generation. The firm has big plans for a specialized “Amplify Tablet” that would provide lesson plans, textbooks and testing to cash-in on new “Common Core” required state standards.


K12 Inc., the nation’s largest provider of online charter schools, where low-paid teachers manage as many as 250 students at a time and communicate with their pupils only through email and phone. The corporation, whose CEO Ron Packard received $ 5 million in total compensation in 2011, is on the ALEC Education Task Force and its lobbyist Lisa Gillis has Chaired ALEC’s Special Needs Subcommittee. According to a report in the New York Times, students in K12, Inc. schools often perform very poorly, and some K12 teachers claim that they have been encouraged to pass failing students so that the company can receive more reimbursement from states. K12 receives an average of between $ 5,500 and $ 6,000 for every student on its rosters — the same amount that would be spent for students attending a brick-and-mortar school, despite K12 not having to pay for cafeteria, gyms, busing, or heat and air conditioning — and much of K12′s profits are spent on advertising targeted at increasing enrollment, rather than on investments in education. At K12′s Agora Cyber Charter School, which produces more than 10% of the company’s revenue, nearly 60% of students are behind grade level in math, nearly 50% are behind in reading, and a third do not graduate on time.


Corinthian Colleges is a for-profit college chain that operates campuses under names like Everest, Heald, and WyoTech, in addition to offering degrees online. It has become notorious for aggressive recruiting practices and leaving students unprepared for the job market and saddled with massive student loan debts. In Milwaukee, for example, where a Corinthian Everest campus was financed with $ 11 million in city bonds, just 25% of students found jobs and over half dropped out; the campus closed two years after it opened. Nationally, over 40 percent of Corinthian’s students default on their loans, and only 60% of students complete their coursework. In June, Corinthian disclosed that it is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and has been subpoenaed by California’s Attorney General for its recruiting practices and financial responsibility.


Ideological Interests Lift the ALEC Agenda


An array of right-wing nonprofits also promote the school privatization agenda in ALEC.


The 501(c)(4) American Federation for Children and its 501(c)(3) wing the Alliance for Children, for example, have brought an array of privatization bills to ALEC and promoted the legislation across the country. The groups were organized and are funded by the billionaire DeVos family (heirs to the Amway fortune); Richard DeVos has received the ALEC “Adam Smith Free Enterprise Award.” AFC’s top lobbyist is disgraced former Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Scott Jensen, who was convicted of three felonies for misuse of his office for political purposes and banned from the state Capitol for five years (though the charges were later reversed and dropped as part of a plea agreement). Jensen represents the organization on the ALEC Education Task Force and has brought AFC bills to ALEC for adoption as “model” legislation. AFC spent at least $ 7 million electing privatization-friendly state legislators across the country in 2012, but reported far less to state election authorities.


In addition to the DeVos family foundations, the Milwaukee-based Bradley Foundation is one of the top school privatization funders in the country, spending over $ 31 million over the past eleven years promoting “school choice” nationwide, according to One Wisconsin Now; for decades, Bradley has also been a major ALEC funder. The foundation has over $ 600 million in assets and is headed by Michael Grebe, Scott Walker’s campaign co-chair.


Before Milwaukee became the first city in the nation to implement a school voucher program, Bradley bankrolled the groups that laid the groundwork. When the plan was challenged in Wisconsin courts, Bradley funded its legal defense, which included hiring Kenneth Starr — later known for pursuing Bill Clinton over Whitewater and Monica Lewinsky — to represent the state.


Average Americans Pay the Price


Originally promoted as a program for Milwaukee’s low-income students of color to have access to private education, the initial voucher program gained support from some African-American leaders and was pushed by State Representative Polly Williams, a Milwaukee Democrat. But last session, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker broadened vouchers to families with higher incomes, and in the 2013-2015 budget further expanded the program. “They have hijacked the program,” Williams says. “As soon as the doors open for the low income children, they’re trampled by the high income,” she said. “Now the upper crust have taken over.”


The laws have been sold to poor and minority communities as a way to close achievement gaps, but there is little evidence of success: in Wisconsin, data shows that students receiving vouchers perform no better, and in some cases worse than those attending public schools. Cash-for-kids programs have shown similar results in school districts across the country.


Reports have also emerged in Milwaukee and elsewhere of for-profit schools registering students, keeping them in class until just after the date where enrollment is counted for funding purposes, and then sending them back to public schools. In many cases those students have special needs the voucher schools claimed they could not satisfy.


Six-year-old Trinity Fitzer, who has anxiety and gastrointentinal problems, was attending Milwaukee’s Northwestern Catholic School in the 2011-2012 term on a voucher. After a few months, Northwestern Catholic informed Trinity’s mother that she was being “withdrawn” from the school for “continuing behavioral issues.” The school claimed that “withdrawal is the decision of the parent,” but Trinity’s mother said it was not her decision and “she didn’t have an option.”


Jane Audette, a social worker at Hawthorne Elementary, a public school in Milwaukee, said the school receives several “cast-off” students every year from private schools like Northwestern Catholic. “What has happened over and over with Milwaukee’s Northwest Catholic is they will tell a parent, ‘Your child needs more than we can give your child, so we suggest you go down the street to Hawthorne.’”


And vouchers, testing, and school privatization have in many cases been offered as a substitute for grappling with the persistent structural issues that perpetuate achievement gaps.


“What has been forced on our communities is not reform at all: they are mediocre interventions,” said Jitu Brown, an education organizer for the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization who spoke at Netroots Nation in June. “The only reason that mediocrity is accepted is because of the race of the children being served.“


Privatizing Schools and Other Government Services


Brown puts the education reforms in the context of broader community disinvestment and austerity measures: cutting social programs and closing schools, police stations, hospitals, and other institutions that serve as commmunity anchors, while cherry picking and selling off the better institutions to private players.


And ALEC has played a key role in promoting this agenda. ALEC has sought to shrink the size of goverment by starving states of revenue, voucherizing critical programs like Medicare and Medicaid, and privatizing all aspects of government, from education to foster care to pensions to prisons.


When the ALEC’s cash-for-kids model is put before the voters, it is resoundingly rejected. In 27 statewide referenda on the topic, voters rejected vouchers on average 2-1. But as long as ALEC “models” continue to garner bipartisan support facilitated by corporate campaign contributions or are slipped into state budgets in the dead of night — ALEC will have continued success with the “transformation” of the American educational system into a profit-driven enterprise.


The ALEC Education agenda not only “converts a public good into something private,” says Mead, but private schools “don’t have the same responsibility [as public schools] to serve everybody, which diminishes public access, oversight and accountability.”


“There is that saying, ‘democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.’ The public school system is the same way,” Mead says. “It has problems, and can be better, but has served us pretty well for 150 years.”


View the full list of 2013 ALEC education bills here.


ALEC Education Bills, 2013



















































































































































































































































































































































































StateALEC BillState Bill
ALFounding Principles ActSB 443
ALThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActHB 84
AKFounding Principles ActHB 31
AZDistrict and School Freedom ActHB 2496
AZEnvironmental Literacy Improvement ActSB 1213
AZParent Trigger ActSB 1409
AZFounding Principles ActSB 1212
AZResolution Supporting Private Scholarship Tax CreditsHB 2617
AZThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 2617
AZThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActHB 2494
AZThe Virtual Public Schools ActHB 2493
ARFounding Principles ActSB 1017
ARResolution Supporting Private Scholarship Tax CreditsSB 740
ARThe Foster Child Scholarship Program ActHB 1788
ARThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActSB 740
ARThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActSB 66
ARThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActHB 1040
ARThe Open Enrollment ActHB 1507
ARThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 1897, HB 2260
CAThe Open Enrollment ActAB 1279
COEnvironmental Literacy Improvement ActHB 13-1089
CTThe Lifelong Learning Accounts ActSB 769
DEThe Charter Schools ActHB 165
DCThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActB 20-0310
FLAlternative Certification ActSB 1664, SB 1238
FLEducation Savings AccountHB 1251
FLThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActSB 1390
FLThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActSB 172
FLParent Trigger ActHB 867, SB 862
IDThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 227, HB 286
ILAlternative Certification ActHB 513, HB 1868
INParental Choice Scholarship Program ActHB 1003, HB 1001
INParental Rights AmendmentSB 332
INThe Smart Start Scholarship ProgramHB 1003
INThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 1003
IAParent Trigger ActSF 2
IAThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 225
KSEnvironmental Literacy Improvement ActHB 2306
KSParental Rights AmendmentHR 6010
KSPublic Employee Freedom ActHB 2123
KSThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 2400
KSThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActSB 196
KSThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 2263
KYEnvironmental Literacy Improvement ActHB 269
KYThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 66
KYThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActHB 76
KYThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 155
LAParental Choice Scholarship Program ActHB 597
MEAlternative Certification ActSP 461
METhe Next Generation Charter Schools ActHP 967
METhe Virtual Public Schools ActHP 331, SP 391
MDParent Trigger ActHB 875
MAAlternative Certification ActH 418
MAFounding Principles ActH 513
MAParent Trigger ActH 429
MIFounding Principles ActSB 121
MIThe Virtual Public Schools ActHB 4228, SB 182
MNThe Charter Schools ActSF 978
MSParental Rights AmendmentHC 90, HC 96, HB 496
MSThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActSB 2132, HB 1095
MSThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActSB 2716, HB 118, HB 787
MSThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActSB 2189
MSThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 1004
MOParent Trigger ActSB 311
MOTeacher Choice Compensation ActSB 408
MOThe Next Generation Charter Schools ActHB 315
MTResolution Calling for Greater Productivity in American Higher EducationSJ 13
MTEducation Savings Account ActHB 357
MTThe Charter Schools ActSB 374, HB 315
MTThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 213
MTThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 390
NEParental Rights AmendmentLR 42
NVFounding Principles ActSB 163
NVGreat Teachers and Leaders ActSB 407
NVParent Trigger ActAB 254
NVParental Rights AmendmentSB 314
NVThe Charter Schools ActAB 205
NJThe Charter Schools ActA 4177
NJThe Family Education Savings Account ActA 3959
NMLocal Government Transparency ActSB 63
NYCommon Sense in Medication Students ActA 2972
NYFounding Principles ActS 2134
NYParent Trigger ActA 3826
NYQuality Education and Teacher and Principal Protection ActA 3110
NYThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActS 788
NCParental Choice Scholarship Program ActHB 944
NCParental Rights AmendmentH 711
NCThe 140 Credit Hour ActHB 255
NCThe Innovation Schools and School Districts ActH 960
OHFounding Principles ActSB 96
OKAlternative Certification ActSB 877
OKEnvironmental Literacy Improvement ActHB 1674
OKFounding Principles ActSB 154
OKParent Trigger ActHB 1385
OKParental Rights AmendmentHB 1384
ORParent Trigger ActHB 2881
PAThe Great Schools Tax Credit Program Act (Scholarship Tax Credits)SB 51
RIThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActH6131
SCParent Trigger ActS 556
SCParental Rights AmendmentS 628
SCThe Charter Schools ActS 3853
SCThe Open Enrollment ActS 313
SDFounding Principles ActSCR 2
TNFounding Principles ActHB 1129
TNLocal Government Transparency ActSB 2832
TNParent Trigger ActHB 77
TNThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActHB 387, SB 486
TXParental Rights AmendmentHCR 38
TXStatewide Online Education ActSB 1298
TXTaxpayers Savings Grants ActSB 29
TXThe Education Enterprise Zone ActHB 300
TXThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActSB 17
VAParental Rights AmendmentHB 1642, SB 908
VAResolution Supporting Private Scholarship Tax CreditsSB 1227, HB 1996
VAThe Great Schools Tax Credit (Scholarship Tax Credit) ActHB 1996, SB 1227
WAA-Plus Literacy ActSB 5328
WVThe Charter Schools ActHB 2808
WVAlternative Certification ActSB 359
WVResolution Adopting the 10 Elements of High-Quality Digital LearningSB 37
WVFounding Principles ActHB 2594
WIThe Family Education Savings Account ActSB 111
WIThe Special Needs Scholarship Program ActAB 40


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Cashing in on Kids: 139 ALEC Bills in 2013 Promote a Private, For-Profit Education Model