Showing posts with label challenges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label challenges. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Apparently Now a Tax Expert, ESPN"s Kenny Mayne Helps Mustache-Clad Hipsters with IRS Challenges

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Apparently Now a Tax Expert, ESPN"s Kenny Mayne Helps Mustache-Clad Hipsters with IRS Challenges

Monday, February 3, 2014

New Microsoft CEO faces challenges in mobile, investor relations

SEATTLE (Reuters) – As Microsoft Corp prepares to unveil insider Satya Nadella as its new chief executive, investors and analysts are weighing how effective the 22-year veteran will be in re-igniting the company’s mobile ambitions and satisfying Wall Street’s hunger for cash.


Reuters: Top News



New Microsoft CEO faces challenges in mobile, investor relations

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Suspecting Child Abuse: Challenges and Guidance


This presentation will (i) describe the problem of child abuse, particularly as it relates to reporting suspected abuse; (ii) share research findings from th…



Suspecting Child Abuse: Challenges and Guidance

Sunday, December 22, 2013

NSA whistleblower challenges congressional testimony

NSA whistleblower challenges congressional testimony
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/ff7c0H6ESBA/mqdefault.jpg


NSA whistleblower challenges congressional testimony

Today, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence called a last minute hearing to get NSA Director Keith Alexander on record about exactly what inf…
Video Rating: 4 / 5




Read more about NSA whistleblower challenges congressional testimony and other interesting subjects concerning Whistleblowers at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Blogger challenges restaurants to feed her family of 5 on Christmas Eve




A Philadelphia blogger named Sarah Lockard has an interesting proposition for area restaurants on Christmas Eve: Feed her family of five for free, and she’ll promote the restaurant on Facebook and Instagram.



Lockard helms AroundMainLine.com, a Philly blog devoted to food, entertainment, and lifestyle news. On the current front page, there are several stories about upscale boutiques and giveaways to fairly posh restaurants. On Monday, she sent the following email out to some local restaurants, with her pitch:






Good Evening!!!



Every Christmas Eve my family enjoys an amazing night dining out and this year I am offering you the exciting opportunity to be our restaurant that hosts us!



The host restaurant will receive approximately $ 1,000 in PR with AML:



1) 2 Facebook posts on AML’s Facebook page promoting the respective restaurant as the restaurant of choice for AML’s family for Christmas Eve



2) 5 instagram photos during the dining experience



3) 2 AML enewsletter ads in Jan and Feb 2014 (reaches over 3,000 unique individuals)



4) listed in our Christmas Eve dining guide published Dec 10th, 2013 on AML.



We are asking for the following in turn:



Dinner for 5 drinks and food compensated, we will tip according to the value to the server.



This is a VERY innovative and effective way to promote your restaurant on this very competitive evening and reach tens of thousands of local foodies through AML’s channels.



Please note this is first come, first serve.



I am excited to hear from you!



Be THE top restaurant we recommend this Christmas Eve to our HUGE audience!!!!



Your friend,



Sarah




Yes, she said she’d tip according to the value of the server. Who has to work on Christmas Eve. Feeding her family for free.



Lockard likely saw this as a way to get press for her blog, and a couple commenters on the Philly Mag piece applauded her for her “innovative” approach. But the majority didn’t really take kindly to her self-centered quest:






“The soup kitchen would be a good place for her to start and help. Maybe she will learn something there. It’s free and I am sure they could use some publicity.”



“It’s simple Sarah, draw some lines between your business and your personal life.”



“Frankly your potential clients/advertisers should NOT need to wine & dine you and your family members to become partners, on CHRISTMAS EVE no less. Visitors checking out your “e-magazine’s” Instagram photos should NOT see sweaty half-naked selfies of you at the gym.”




These sorts of “business” exchanges happen often, in every area of media. However, Lockard’s blog caters to a very specific demographic, and apparently her clueless self-promotion isn’t new. Sure, a struggling business might bite at her offer, but not every family gets to experience an “amazing night dining out” every Christmas Eve. Perhaps Santa will bring Lockard some empathy?



An email asking who’s taken her up on her offer was not immediately returned, and her voicemail was full.



Photo via Phanatic/Flickr




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Daily Dot

Blogger challenges restaurants to feed her family of 5 on Christmas Eve

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Conservative Firebrand Challenges Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn





Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Texas, second from right, participates in a mock swearing-in ceremony with House Speaker John Boehner on Jan. 3. Stockman made the surprise move Monday to challenge Sen. John Cornyn in the 2014 Texas GOP primary.



Evan Vucci/AP

Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Texas, second from right, participates in a mock swearing-in ceremony with House Speaker John Boehner on Jan. 3. Stockman made the surprise move Monday to challenge Sen. John Cornyn in the 2014 Texas GOP primary.



Rep. Steve Stockman, R-Texas, second from right, participates in a mock swearing-in ceremony with House Speaker John Boehner on Jan. 3. Stockman made the surprise move Monday to challenge Sen. John Cornyn in the 2014 Texas GOP primary.


Evan Vucci/AP



Another day, another GOP primary fight.


This time, it’s John Cornyn of Texas, the number two Republican in the Senate, who’s receiving a challenge from the right in 2014. Rep. Steve Stockman, a conservative firebrand, made the surprise move to enter the March 4 race Monday evening just before the state’s filing deadline.


The Lone Star State is now poised to become the latest battleground — and the first Senate test — in the ongoing civil war between the Republican Party’s establishment and Tea Party wings.


Six other GOP senators, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, are facing reasonably competitive primary challengers next year. But the race in Texas is the only one where a GOP congressman is taking on an incumbent senator.


Stockman is no insider. After serving in the House for a single, controversy-filled term in the mid-1990′s, he was returned to Congress in 2012 to represent the newly-created, East Texas-based 36th District. In his second tour, Stockman has picked up where he left off.


He has called for President Obama’s impeachment, compared him to former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and established a brash Twitter presence. More recently, he came under fire for not properly disclosing his financial information.


Stockman’s bid against Cornyn, who’s seeking a third term, appears to be a fairly steep uphill climb. For starters, his fundraising hasn’t been up to par for a statewide hopeful: At the end of September, his campaign had just $ 32,000 on hand and was $ 163,000 in debt. Cornyn, on the other hand, had nearly $ 7 million in his campaign coffers and no debt.


Stockman’s hopes will depend on his grassroots support, and he’ll likely need some assistance from influential conservative outside groups — the kind that have already backed primary challengers to veteran GOP senators elsewhere this year.


One of those organizations, the Club for Growth, released a statement Tuesday saying it would not get involved in the Texas primary battle. The Tea Party-aligned Senate Conservatives Fund, which has expressed dissatisfaction with Cornyn in the past, and Madison Project have yet to announce their plans.


Another factor working against Stockman: time. Texas scheduled its primary for the first week of March, making it the first Senate contest of 2014. That means he has less than three months to organize a campaign infrastructure, raise a hefty amount of cash and make his name known statewide.


But Stockman’s campaign may have the Tea Party faithful thinking back to Sen. Ted Cruz’s rise in 2012, when he earned conservative grassroots support and defeated the favored establishment candidate in the GOP primary. For his part, Cruz has declined to back Cornyn’s re-election effort.




News



Conservative Firebrand Challenges Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn

Friday, December 6, 2013

Kansas community ordinance challenges Fourth Amendment

Kansas community ordinance challenges Fourth Amendment
http://watchdog.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2013/12/code-inspector-300x200.jpg


UP TO CODE: A new ordinance in Lawrence would expand an existing program to allow city building inspectors to search, photograph and video record issues inside rental housing.

UP TO CODE: A new ordinance in Lawrence would expand an existing program to allow city building inspectors to search, photograph and video record issues inside rental housing.



By Travis Perry │ Kansas Watchdog


OSAWATOMIE, Kan. — After ruling earlier this year that city residents aren’t capable of safely managing furniture on their own front porch, one Kansas community is considering taking its control of residents lives to the next level: mandated governmental inspections.


That could soon be the reality for the thousands of people living in the more than 20,000 rental units across Lawrence if city commissioners approve an expansion of its rental licensure ordinance.


The city already has a process through which tenants or landlords can request inspections if they suspect some kind of problem, but the new proposal would make such action compulsory.


As it stands, the ordinance would require landlords to register their properties to the tune of about $ 25 annually per location. Additionally, once every three years 10 percent of a landlord’s properties would be subject to mandatory searches by city building inspectors looking for major and minor health and safety violations — regardless of whether a tenant occupies the property. If no major violations are found, the given property will be bumped to a six-year inspection cycle as incentive.


Read the full ordinance here.


The program itself has existed in some form for more than a decade, but so far it has been relegated to a relatively small portion of the city. But up for grabs now is a proposal that would expand the measure across the municipality, and into the living rooms of countless residents. While officials argue the ordinance is to combat slum lords and improve “life safety,” opponents are saying the measure could pose a significant threat to Fourth Amendment rights.


Inspectors would be tasked with documenting through photographs and video any violations they find. Of course, there’s no telling what else could be caught in the scope of an inspector’s lens, and whether that information could make it into the hands of local law enforcement.


While the measure was set to come up for a vote Tuesday, an outpouring of opposition pushed city officials to table the measure for a few more weeks. A significant number of those voicing concern referenced a similar 2009 ordinance enacted — and later repealed — in Kansas’ other big college town, Manhattan.


Only months before the program’s demise in 2011, a Manhattan city inspection resulted in several college students being hauled before a municipal judge to face a litany of code violations. The young adults were sentenced to 15 days in jail, but they ultimately received nine months’ probation, contingent upon further compliance.


Aside from the privacy intrusion, the measure would also constitute a significant expansion of local government staff and spending. City officials estimate they would need to hire five full-time inspectors, as well as an administrative staffer, to handle the influx of bureaucracy associated with the ordinance. The projected cost associated with this is about $ 400,000.


But never mind the fact that the program isn’t financially sound.


A 2012 city audit concluded the current, limited program and fee schedule is woefully inadequate. Over a two-year period, auditors concluded that registration revenue — totaling about $ 40,000 — covered less than half of the salary and benefit costs associated with the program, instead sloughing the majority of the cost onto general revenues.


So, naturally, auditors suggest the city simply expand. Oh, and they also say commissioners should hike up the fee to $ 40 annually, though it’s not reflected in the proposal’s current form.


The American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas and Western Missouri announced recently it plans to launch an investigation into privacy threats posed by the ordinance, legal director Doug Bonney noted in a letter to city officials in late November. Bonney told Kansas Watchdog he had heard city code officials would — or could — pressure landlords into compelling their tenants to sign consent forms permitting inspections.


The matter raises questions about whether consent is truly voluntary, Bonney said.


A federal appeals court in 2007 upheld an earlier challenge to the city’s limited rental licensing program.


Related: Kansas community cracks down on couches


Contact Travis Perry at travis@kansaswatchdog.org, or follow him on Twitter at @muckraker62. Like Watchdog.org? Click HERE to get breaking news alerts in YOUR state!



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



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Read more about Kansas community ordinance challenges Fourth Amendment and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, December 1, 2013

After survival, preemies face life challenges


Children’s health




3 hours ago


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


On the left, Alexis Clarke sleeps. The photo was taken in the first days of her life, when she was barely as big as her mother’s hand. On the right, Alexis sleeps in her mom’s lap in a recent photo.



As the smallest baby ever delivered at the University of California, San Diego Medical Center, Alexis Clarke has amazed even her doctors. Born six months ago weighing barely 11 ounces — less than a can of soda — little Alexis now tops the scales at more than 7 pounds and is almost ready to go home with her parents.


Her mother, Laurie Clarke, is full of gratitude for her daughter’s progress. “In all honesty, even 10 years ago we may not have had the same outcome,” said Clarke, 34, a first-time mother from Carlsbad, Calif. “We are so lucky.” 


Alexis was born after she’d been in the womb just over 25 weeks; a typical pregnancy lasts 40 weeks. Babies born before 37 weeks are considered premature, but with medical and technological advances, it’s no longer unusual for very preterm babies to survive. The key, in general, is a steroid for mothers and a drug for their babies.


Alexis’ journey has been marked by ups and downs. Just as her parents thought she was ready to be discharged in time for Thanksgiving, one of her doctors told them she needed emergency eye surgery. Then a small cough raised concerns that she’d contracted whooping cough, prompting her to be put into isolation (tests came back clear). But an MRI of her brain delivered the good news that her development seems to be proceeding normally. 


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


This is the first photo Alexis’ parents took of their tiny baby girl.



Baby Alexis is hardly the tiniest preemie born, but her journey from neonatal intensive care to home is typical of other extremely premature babies. In 2011, less than 1 percent of live births in the U.S. were considered “extremely preterm,” delivered before 28 weeks. That represents more than 28,000 babies. Meanwhile, the total number of premature births in the U.S declined last year to 450,000, or 11.5 percent, the lowest preterm birth rate in 15 years.


“In the past six years we’ve had babies survive that we didn’t think could survive,” Dr. Krishelle Marc-Aurele, one of Alexis’ doctors, told NBC San Diego.


Some hospitals are divided on treating babies born in the “gray zone,” between 23 and 25 weeks. In the U.S, up to 90 percent of neonatal units resuscitate babies born as soon as 23 weeks. Younger than that and most doctors believe a baby is not viable. “The lower level of viability is inching down,” said Dr. John Muraskas, who resuscitated the smallest surviving baby on record, Rumaisa Rahman, born in 2004 weighing 9.2 ounces.


Muraskas, a professor of pediatrics and neonatal/perinatal medicine at Loyola University Medical Center, said the key treatments began in the 1990s and have made all the difference.


Now doctors routinely give moms on the brink of delivering too soon two doses of steroids to help the baby or babies’ lungs mature quicker and strengthen the blood vessels in the brain. That reduces the risk of a premature infant developing a brain bleed.


Once born, preemies receive surfactant, a drug administered through a breathing tube into their lungs that makes them stronger and less stiff, and able to breathe independently sooner.


There have been some other strides made as well. For one thing, March of Dimes chief medical officer Dr. Ed McCabe says neonatal intensive care units are no longer loud and brightly lit. “Now we know it’s better to make it darker and quieter to mimic the environment in the womb,” said McCabe.


When it comes to survival, babies who don’t even weigh in at a pound sound alarming. But gestational age is actually more important than weight. The longer a baby stays in the womb, the better she does.


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


Baby Alexis is growing stronger by the day – here she is on Nov. 15.



Gender matters too. For reasons still unknown to researchers, girls born early are hardier than boys. About 80 percent of girls born at 25 weeks survive to celebrate their first birthday compared to 75 percent of boys, said Muraskas. The risk of serious disabilities such as blindness, deafness or severe cerebral palsy is 10 percent for girls and 15 percent for boys born at 25 weeks.


More common are mild or moderate outcomes that include behavioral problems, learning disabilities and some degree of cerebral palsy. Recent research has also suggested an association between prematurity and autism.


Muraskas worries that long-term effects of being born extremely premature aren’t always considered. “We try to err on the side of life,” he said. “The problem with our field is that we don’t have a crystal ball.”


Neither did Beverly Roach, whose twin daughters were born in 1986 at 25 weeks, the same as Alexis Clarke. Roach, of Plainview, N.Y., recalls being offered surfactant for her twins as part of a research study, but she decided against it because the government had yet to approve the drug. Steroids weren’t an option because one of the twins’ amniotic sacs had ruptured. 


Now 27, the twins still bear the marks of being born too soon. Ellen, who weighed 1 pound, 8 ounces, has a shunt in her head to drain the fluid in her brain caused by hydrocephaly. She can’t read and can’t hold a job, but she can walk and talk. 


Robyn, who weighed 1 pound, 11 ounces, wears hearing aids and graduated from high school. Cerebral palsy leaves her unaBLe to drive, but she dates and works an office job two days a week at an early-intervention school. Roach calls her daughters “the light of my life.”


Within the past few years, both sisters moved to group homes, where they’ve made friends.


Sometimes, Roach will call to ask if she can come visit only to be told no. “They’ll say, Mom, we’re going out,” said Roach. “They’re going out on a Saturday night and I’m at home.”






After survival, preemies face life challenges

Saturday, October 19, 2013

The Use of Satire in the News The Daily Show Challenges Fox News

The Use of Satire in the News The Daily Show Challenges Fox News
http://img.youtube.com/vi/ETD1f3SU2GY/0.jpg



A video I made about how the Daily Show with Jon Stewart uses satire to thwart the ill will of the news media, particularly Fox News.




Read more about The Use of Satire in the News The Daily Show Challenges Fox News and other interesting subjects concerning Top News Videos at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Clinton mulls idea of White House run, aware of "challenges"


Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks at the Liberty Medal ceremony after receiving the award, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Septmeber 10, 2013. REUTERS/Tom Mihalek

Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks at the Liberty Medal ceremony after receiving the award, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Septmeber 10, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Tom Mihalek






WASHINGTON | Sun Sep 22, 2013 12:10pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Hillary Clinton acknowledges that she is wrestling with whether to run for the U.S. presidency in 2016, well aware of the “political and governmental challenges” she would face if she wins.


The former U.S. secretary of state and first lady said in an interview with New York magazine that has not decided if she will run and is trying to be “both pragmatic and realistic.”


“I’m not in any hurry,” Clinton told the magazine in an article posted on its website on Sunday. “I think it’s a serious decision, not to be made lightly, but it’s also not one that has to be made soon.”


Clinton, who also served as a U.S. senator from New York, ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008 but lost to Barack Obama.


“I think I have a pretty good idea of the political and governmental challenges that are facing our leaders,” she said. “And I’ll do whatever I can from whatever position I find myself in to advocate for the values and the policies I think are right for the country.”


As she considers her 2016 prospects, Clinton said, “I will just continue to weigh what the factors are that would influence me making a decision one way or the other.”


Some of Clinton’s confidants who spoke with the magazine are far less circumspect than she is about a presidential run.


“She’s running but she doesn’t know it yet,” one person told New York, which described Clinton as America’s most popular Democrat. “It’s just like a force of history. It’s inexorable, it’s gravitational. I think she actually believes she has more say in it than she actually does.”


One longtime Clinton friend said: “She’s doing a very Clintonian thing. In her mind, she’s running for it and she’s also convinced herself she hasn’t made up her mind. She’s going to run for president. It’s a foregone conclusion.”


DOMESTIC LIFE


Since leaving the State Department in February, Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, have been spending far more time at home together.


“We have a great time,” she said. “We laugh at our dogs. We watch stupid movies. We take long walks. We go for a swim.


Asked if her husband is nudging her toward a run, she said:


“I don’t think even he is, you know, focused on that right now,” she says. “Right now, we’re trying to just have the best time we can have doin’ what we’re doin’. ”


Bill Clinton said his wife’s popularity stems from her successes with different people in government.


“She made a lot of friends in the Senate among Republicans as well as Democrats. People in New York liked her across the political spectrum,” he in a CNN interview aired on Sunday.


“But these polls don’t mean much now,” he said. “We’re a long way ahead. I think she would be the first to tell you that there is no such thing as a done deal, ever, by anybody. But I don’t know what she’s going to do.”


Hillary Clinton had been the leading the race to be the Democratic candidate in 2008 before being overtaken by Obama. Serving in his cabinet deepened her understanding of the problems a president faces, she said.


“I’ve had a unique, close, and personal front-row seat,” she said in the New York interview. “And I think these last four years have certainly deepened and broadened my understanding of the challenges and the opportunities that we face in the world today.”


She said she is enjoying the first time in decades that neither she nor her husband is either running for or serving in office.


“It feels great because I have been on this high wire for 20 years, and I was really yearning to just have more control over my time and my life, spend a lot of that time with my family and my friends, do things that I find relaxing and enjoyable, and return to the work that I had done for most of my life,” she said.


(Writing by Philip Barbara; Editing by Bill Trott)






Reuters: Politics



Clinton mulls idea of White House run, aware of "challenges"

Clinton mulls idea of White House run, aware of "challenges"


Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks at the Liberty Medal ceremony after receiving the award, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Septmeber 10, 2013. REUTERS/Tom Mihalek

Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks at the Liberty Medal ceremony after receiving the award, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Septmeber 10, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Tom Mihalek






WASHINGTON | Sun Sep 22, 2013 12:10pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Hillary Clinton acknowledges that she is wrestling with whether to run for the U.S. presidency in 2016, well aware of the “political and governmental challenges” she would face if she wins.


The former U.S. secretary of state and first lady said in an interview with New York magazine that has not decided if she will run and is trying to be “both pragmatic and realistic.”


“I’m not in any hurry,” Clinton told the magazine in an article posted on its website on Sunday. “I think it’s a serious decision, not to be made lightly, but it’s also not one that has to be made soon.”


Clinton, who also served as a U.S. senator from New York, ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008 but lost to Barack Obama.


“I think I have a pretty good idea of the political and governmental challenges that are facing our leaders,” she said. “And I’ll do whatever I can from whatever position I find myself in to advocate for the values and the policies I think are right for the country.”


As she considers her 2016 prospects, Clinton said, “I will just continue to weigh what the factors are that would influence me making a decision one way or the other.”


Some of Clinton’s confidants who spoke with the magazine are far less circumspect than she is about a presidential run.


“She’s running but she doesn’t know it yet,” one person told New York, which described Clinton as America’s most popular Democrat. “It’s just like a force of history. It’s inexorable, it’s gravitational. I think she actually believes she has more say in it than she actually does.”


One longtime Clinton friend said: “She’s doing a very Clintonian thing. In her mind, she’s running for it and she’s also convinced herself she hasn’t made up her mind. She’s going to run for president. It’s a foregone conclusion.”


DOMESTIC LIFE


Since leaving the State Department in February, Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, have been spending far more time at home together.


“We have a great time,” she said. “We laugh at our dogs. We watch stupid movies. We take long walks. We go for a swim.


Asked if her husband is nudging her toward a run, she said:


“I don’t think even he is, you know, focused on that right now,” she says. “Right now, we’re trying to just have the best time we can have doin’ what we’re doin’. ”


Bill Clinton said his wife’s popularity stems from her successes with different people in government.


“She made a lot of friends in the Senate among Republicans as well as Democrats. People in New York liked her across the political spectrum,” he in a CNN interview aired on Sunday.


“But these polls don’t mean much now,” he said. “We’re a long way ahead. I think she would be the first to tell you that there is no such thing as a done deal, ever, by anybody. But I don’t know what she’s going to do.”


Hillary Clinton had been the leading the race to be the Democratic candidate in 2008 before being overtaken by Obama. Serving in his cabinet deepened her understanding of the problems a president faces, she said.


“I’ve had a unique, close, and personal front-row seat,” she said in the New York interview. “And I think these last four years have certainly deepened and broadened my understanding of the challenges and the opportunities that we face in the world today.”


She said she is enjoying the first time in decades that neither she nor her husband is either running for or serving in office.


“It feels great because I have been on this high wire for 20 years, and I was really yearning to just have more control over my time and my life, spend a lot of that time with my family and my friends, do things that I find relaxing and enjoyable, and return to the work that I had done for most of my life,” she said.


(Writing by Philip Barbara; Editing by Bill Trott)






Reuters: Politics



Clinton mulls idea of White House run, aware of "challenges"

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Judge freezes challenges to Detroit bankruptcy







Protesters march outside the Theodore Levin United States Courthouse, in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. A federal judge agreed with Detroit on Wednesday and stopped any lawsuits challenging the city’s bankruptcy, declaring his courtroom the exclusive venue for legal action in the largest filing by a local government in U.S. history. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Protesters march outside the Theodore Levin United States Courthouse, in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. A federal judge agreed with Detroit on Wednesday and stopped any lawsuits challenging the city’s bankruptcy, declaring his courtroom the exclusive venue for legal action in the largest filing by a local government in U.S. history. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Firefighters protest outside the Theodore Levin United States Courthouse, in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. A lawyer for Detroit argued Wednesday that the city would be “irreparably harmed” if lawsuits challenging a multibillion-dollar bankruptcy are allowed to go forward, the first dispute in the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Retirees anxious about their pensions have won favorable rulings from an Ingham County judge that could slow down or even derail the bankruptcy filed just last week.(AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Protesters carry a sign outside the Levin Federal Courthouse in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Detroit’s bankruptcy is hitting a courtroom for the first time as a judge considers what to do with challenges from retirees who claim their pensions are protected by the Michigan Constitution.(AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Firefighters protest outside the Theodore Levin United States Courthouse, in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Detroit’s bankruptcy is hitting a courtroom for the first time as a judge considers what to do with challenges from retirees who claim their pensions are protected by the Michigan Constitution. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)





Protesters carry a sign outside the Levin Federal Courthouse in Detroit, Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Detroit’s bankruptcy is hitting a courtroom for the first time as a judge considers what to do with challenges from retirees who claim their pensions are protected by the Michigan Constitution.(AP Photo/Paul Sancya)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday swept aside lawsuits challenging Detroit’s bankruptcy, settling the first major dispute in the scramble to get a leg up just days after the largest filing by a local government in U.S. history.


After two hours of arguments, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes made clear he’s in charge. He granted Detroit’s request to put a permanent freeze on three lawsuits filed in Ingham County, including another judge’s extraordinary decision that Gov. Rick Snyder trampled the Michigan Constitution and acted illegally in approving the Chapter 9 filing.


That ruling and others had threatened to derail the bankruptcy.


Questions about Detroit’s eligibility to turn itself around through bankruptcy “are within this court’s exclusive jurisdiction,” Rhodes said.


He said nothing in federal law or the U.S. Constitution gives a state court a dual role. It was a victory for Detroit, which had warned that it would be “irreparably harmed” if it had to deal with lawsuits in state courts while trying to restructure $ 18 billion in debt with thousands of creditors.


“Widespread litigation … can only confuse the parties, confuse the case and create serious barriers,” attorney Heather Lennox told the judge.


Creditors “will have their day in court” — bankruptcy court, she said.


The courtroom was jammed with lawyers representing creditors as well as rank-and-file city employees and retirees eager to know the outcome. Some wore T-shirts that said, “Detroit vs. Everybody.”


Detroit emergency manager Kevyn Orr, who recommended bankruptcy, sat in the front row for part of the hearing. Outside the courthouse, protesters held a banner with a message for Wall Street: “Cancel Detroit’s debt. The banks owe us.”


Detroit has about 21,000 retirees — police, firefighters, City Hall clerks, trash haulers, bus drivers — who are owed money and fear their income is at risk in a bankruptcy. Orr has said the city has underfunded obligations of about $ 3.5 billion for pensions and $ 5.7 billion for retiree health coverage.


The Michigan Constitution states that public pensions “shall not be diminished or impaired.” An Ingham County judge cited that provision last week when she ordered Snyder and other officials to take no further action in the Detroit bankruptcy.


Sharon Levine, an attorney for a union that represents city workers, urged the bankruptcy judge to let those lawsuits run their course. She said there’s no federal insurance for public pensions once they’re broken, unlike pensions at private employers.


“Our members who participate at most are at or below $ 19,000 a year. There is no safety net,” Levine said.


Although Rhodes ruled in favor of Detroit, he said opponents will have opportunities to make the same arguments in his court in the future. He has many critical issues ahead, including whether Detroit really is broke and entitled to greatly reduce or wipe out debts. The process could last a year or more.


Michael Nicholson, general counsel for the United Auto Workers, was disappointed with Rhodes’ decision.


“State courts have the power to decide what the state constitution means,” Nicholson said outside court. “In our view, retirees’ rights are a matter of Michigan constitutional rights.”


Snyder signed off on Detroit’s bankruptcy on July 18, calling it the only practical choice for a city whose population has plummeted to 700,000 from 1.8 million decades ago. Detroit’s long-term debt has become an urban millstone.


The governor called Rhodes’ decision “excellent” and said it allows one place to settle the city’s finances.


In March, Snyder appointed Orr, a bankruptcy expert, as Detroit’s emergency manager. Orr had sweeping powers to reshape city finances but recommended bankruptcy after failing to reach any significant deals with creditors, including Wall Street bankers and Detroit pension funds. Many of those creditors, however, accused him of being inflexible and believe bankruptcy always was the plan.


Detroit has more than double the population of Stockton, Calif., which had been the largest U.S. city to file for bankruptcy before Detroit trumped it last week.


Detroit fire Lt. James Edwards, 43, attended the court hearing Wednesday with some anxiety.


“It seems as though we’re going to end up being the patsy for a lot of bad decisions that have been made over the years,” said the 18-year department veteran, referring to his future pension. “You base your life decisions on promises made to you when you came on the job.”


Belinda Myers-Florence, 59, said her pension is her only income after working nearly 36 years for Detroit, from bus driver to social services. She can’t believe she may lose money because of the bankruptcy.


“It’s going to have to hit me in the face,” she said. “I just can’t believe that they can go that way.”


___


Follow Ed White at http://twitter.com/edwhiteap


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Judge freezes challenges to Detroit bankruptcy

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Detroit bankruptcy case heads to Wednesday hearing on challenges

DETROIT (Reuters) – Labor unions trying to stop Detroit from cutting pensions filed a new challenge to the city in bankruptcy court as the federal judge overseeing the case said he would hear arguments on Wednesday.


Reuters: Top News



Detroit bankruptcy case heads to Wednesday hearing on challenges

Sunday, June 30, 2013

5 messaging challenges for Obamacare

A banner advertising Obamacare is pictured. | AP Photo

The administration faces challenges in selling Obamacare and its benefits to the public. | AP Photo





The Obama administration and its health-law allies are gearing up this summer to slice through three years of confusion and opposition to Obamacare.


They’ve got their work cut out for them.







Obamacare won’t have a shot at success unless millions of people sign up for insurance — the healthy as well as the sick. For that to happen, the White House and its allies will need to make the case that coverage is worth it for the estimated 50 million people who haven’t been able to afford or access insurance. Supporters are planning to spend tens of millions of dollars to persuade people to get covered under new health insurance options and explain how to sign up.


Organizing for Action, spun off from President Barack Obama’s campaign operation, went up with a seven-figure TV ad buy in June, touting the new benefits and promising to offer “the truth” about the law. Enroll America, a nonprofit group with ties to the White House, wants to leverage the grass roots across the country and engage big-name celebrities for the cause.


Here are five of the messaging challenges they face:


Spread the word about the subsidy — without inflating expectations.


Just about everyone knows there’s an individual mandate in the health law — people must have insurance starting in 2014. But another part of the message didn’t get through: Millions of Americans, including some in the middle class, will get help to pay for that coverage. And low-income people won’t have to pay premiums if they qualify for expanded Medicaid.


(PHOTOS: The eight GOP governors who said yes to Medicaid expansion)


It’s not entirely clear why the White House hasn’t hit that point harder: One reason may be that it doesn’t want to raise expectations and then crush them. Not everyone gets a subsidy. And subsidy doesn’t mean “free ” — it’s a sliding scale depending on income, location and family size. But some assistance is available up to four times the federal poverty level, or about $ 93,000 for a family of four.


“It’s very hard to explain the subsidies … so you end up avoiding it,” said Bob Blendon, an expert on health and public opinion at the Harvard School of Public Health. And old hands at health care remember what happened 25 years ago when Congress passed a law to help people with “catastrophic” Medicare expenses — and then had to repeal it when the overly high expectations collided with the cost-benefit realities.


Ethan Rome, executive director of Health Care for America Now, which strongly backs the law, predicts a massive multi-front education campaign that will start breaking through to people. And it will include a “retail” approach, particularly once enrollment opens Oct. 1.


“When you are talking to potential enrollees about the price of the insurance the best conversation you can possibly have is talking to them about their specific situation,” Rome said. Once people begin to get the subsidies and the coverage, he predicted positive word of mouth will encourage more people to sign up.


(WATCH: TOP 5 complaints about Obamacare)


Reach the hard-to-reach population.


Lots of the people eligible for various government assistance programs don’t actually reach out for them, and that may prove true of the health law, too. A recent Gallup poll found the uninsured knew less about the law than the insured, including the individual mandate.


Many of those who could get Medicaid or subsidized coverage are low-income, and not necessarily English-speaking. They may not see slick ads on English-language TV, and experience shows they may need a lot more than a brochure and a URL to tap into the benefits. They need different messaging and outreach and a lot more hands-on assistance, said Stan Dorn, a Medicaid expert at the Urban Institute.


That’s a conundrum. People can’t be walked through enrollment before it starts in October. But the longer the administration waits to reach this population, the less time they’ll have to break through, said Bruce Siegel, head of America’s Essential Hospitals, whose members treat low-income populations. “Waiting for fall is too late,” he said. Outreach has to be now and it has to target a whole lot of different audiences, from the Spanish-language tweet to a message that can work in a Haitian hair salon in Brooklyn.


Not only that, but the Supreme Court made the law even more confusing for the poor by deciding Medicaid expansion is optional for states. In some states, poor people will get benefits from expanded Medicaid — and in others they’ll get nothing. Even more confounding — the below-the-poverty line Medicaid population can’t tap into the subsidies in the health insurance exchanges, but people who are just few rungs up the income ladder can get that financial help.


“That message is going to be complicated,” HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said last week. “If the governor and legislature choose not to expand Medicaid, there will be a huge gap between what [low-income people] can afford and what is available.”


(QUIZ: Do you know Kathleen Sebelius?)


The “safety net” hospitals and community clinics will try to fill in the considerable awareness gaps when low-income and uninsured patients come in, said Siegel. But how well they do will depend partly on what state they are in, and how much of a buy-in state governments give to Obamacare.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



5 messaging challenges for Obamacare

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Obama challenges Russia to agree to deeper nuclear weapon cuts

BERLIN (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama used a speech in Berlin on Wednesday to call on Russia to revive the push for a world without nuclear weapons, offering to cut deployed nuclear arsenals by a third, but Moscow immediately poured scorn on his proposal.



Reuters: Top News



Obama challenges Russia to agree to deeper nuclear weapon cuts

Obama challenges Russia to agree to deeper nuclear weapon cuts

BERLIN (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama used a speech in Berlin on Wednesday to call on Russia to revive the push for a world without nuclear arms by agreeing to target further reductions of up to one third of deployed nuclear weapons.



Reuters: Top News



Obama challenges Russia to agree to deeper nuclear weapon cuts