Monday, July 1, 2013

GAO Report Points to Challenges in Setting Up Federal Health ...

Testing of computer systems and training of consumer assistance guides are behind schedule, but the Obama administration has met other deadlines in its efforts to open new marketplaces where millions of consumers might shop for insurance starting this fall, according to a Government Accountability Office report released Wednesday.

The federal government expects to operate these marketplaces, also called exchanges, in 34 states that opted not to run their own. Seven of those states are working as partners with the federal government. The other 16 states are setting up marketplaces on their own with federal funding.

The report said that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, ?has many key activities remaining to be completed,? including those that deal with eligibility and enrollment in the exchanges, development and implementation of a ?data hub? that will connect the exchanges with other federal and state agencies to determine applicants? eligibility, and review and certification of the health insurance plans offered to consumers.

?Much remains to be accomplished within a relatively short amount of time? for the exchanges to work properly on Oct. 1, the GAO said. The ?still unknown and evolving scope? of activities that CMS must provide in states that have chosen not to participate is problematic, investigators said, as are the ?large number of activities remaining to be performed ? some close to the start of enrollment.?

While the deadlines missed so far may not affect the law?s implementation, ?additional missed deadlines closer to the start of enrollment could do so,? GAO found.

In a response included in the report, the Department of Health and Human Services said the agency has made progress in establishing exchanges and that the exchanges would be up and running in all states by Oct. 1.

Opponents of the health law said the report proves the measure won?t work as intended and that Americans will suffer. ?News of delays and missed deadlines are now just as prevalent as reports of Obamacare?s broken promises and the looming rate shock in store for millions of Americans,? House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., said in a statement.

Upton, along with Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who chairs the House Oversight and Investigations Committee, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who is the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, requested the study.

The GAO reports that CMS is behind schedule on consumer assistance activities to the states with federal exchanges. For example, CMS was two months late in announcing funds to ?navigators? ? community organizations and nonprofits that will hire and train people to help consumers sign up for health insurance. CMS had planned to issue the funding announcement in February, allowing enough time for two rounds of awards in July and September. Instead, the agency did not announce the grants until April, leaving time for only one round of awards, which is expected on Aug. 15.

The navigator grants will total up to $54 million for the federally run marketplaces ? ?a drop in the bucket,? according to Stan Dorn, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Urban Institute. Some states received as little as $600,000. That?s far less than states running their own marketplaces. California, for example, is spending $50 million to fund in-person help for consumers.

All navigators are expected to complete a web-based training and certification course. CMS had expected to begin training by July, but the course may not be ready until August.

Nonetheless, CMS officials indicated that the navigators would be available by Oct. 1, when enrollment for 2014 plans begins, according to the GAO report.

Insurers that want to sell health coverage on the exchanges had to apply by May 3, and CMS, along with help from a contractor, expects to evaluate and certify those plans by July 31, according to the GAO report. Information about those plans is expected to be available on the exchange website by Sept. 15.

The GAO analysis also took a close look at the status of the complicated technology that will be needed for the exchanges. GAO said that some limited testing has begun of the information technology systems needed to determine whether consumers seeking coverage in the marketplaces are eligible for federal subsidies and to enroll them in health coverage. But it noted that much more needs to be done before October.

?While CMS has met project schedules, several critical tasks, such as final testing with federal and state partners, remain to be completed,? the report said.

Critics said the report shows that CMS and other agencies are falling behind, but others said the conclusion was that much progress has been made.

?It is the GAO?s job to outline problems that could occur,? said Dan Mendelson of the private consulting firm Avalere Health, but the report?s conclusions are ?getting spun through this lens of political discontent, so as a result, everyone is freaking out about it.?

States, he said, are rightly concerned that delays in the income and eligibility information technology might not operate efficiently at first.

?That would force them to do manual enrollment ? get on the phone with people ? and that?s expensive,? said Mendelson, who oversaw health programs at the Office of Management and Budget during the Clinton administration.

Mark McClellan, who was in charge of the rollout of the Medicare drug benefit in 2006 for the George W. Bush administration, said testing of some IT systems for that project began not long after the law was passed in 2003. But, he said, work continued right up to and even after the program began. That rollout was initially marked by glitches that included enrollment problems, and some seniors who qualified for subsidized coverage were mistakenly told they didn?t have it when they showed up at pharmacy counters.

?You are limited in what you can test ahead of time,? said McClellan. Once real data starts flowing through a system, unexpected problems crop up because real data is always messier than test data sets, he said.

While the Obama administration still has time to get the testing done, McClellan said, he cautioned that ?it is tight.?

The GAO report also states that CMS has spent $394 million from fiscal year 2010 through March 31 of this year on various activities to get the federal funded exchanges established and listed the major contracts. CMS officials said the totals did not include agency salaries or other administrative costs.

The report on the federal insurance marketplaces was one of two on health law implementation released by GAO Wednesday. The other report looked at federal and state efforts to establish the Small Business Health Options Programs (SHOPS) in which small employers can buy coverage for their workers. In that report, GAO found that ?CMS and states have made progress in establishing SHOPS, although many activities remain to be completed and some were behind schedule.?

This article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Source: http://studentdoctor.net/2013/06/gao-report-points-to-challenges-in-setting-up-federal-health-insurance-marketplaces-2/

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Japan war shrine reflects ruling party nationalism

A group of Japanese lawmakers leave after they offered prayers at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo during an annual spring festival on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Dozens of Japanese lawmakers paid homage at the national war shrine Tuesday morning, risking more anger from neighbors South Korea and China over visits they see as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past. The sign reads " Reception for lawmakers who support Yasukuni Shrine visit." (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

A group of Japanese lawmakers leave after they offered prayers at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo during an annual spring festival on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Dozens of Japanese lawmakers paid homage at the national war shrine Tuesday morning, risking more anger from neighbors South Korea and China over visits they see as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past. The sign reads " Reception for lawmakers who support Yasukuni Shrine visit." (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

A group of Japanese lawmakers visit the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo during an annual spring festival on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Marking the spring festival, nearly 170 lawmakers paid homage to the controversial war shrine. Policy Chief of the Liberal Democratic Party' Sanae Takaichi, front left, and a member of Japan Restoration Party Takeo Hiramu, third right in the second row, were among the group. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

A group of Japanese lawmakers, seen silhouetted in the middle of the photo, offer prayers at the Yasukuni Shrine, which honors Japan's war dead, including World War II leaders convicted of war crimes, in Tokyo during an annual spring festival on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Dozens of Japanese lawmakers paid homage at the national war shrine Tuesday morning, risking more anger from neighbors South Korea and China over visits they see as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

South Korean protesters tear a Japanese wartime flag during a rally to protest against Japanese lawmakers' visit to Yasukuni Shrine, which honors Japan's war dead, including World War II leaders convicted of war crimes, in front of the residence of Japanese ambassador in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Dozens of Japanese lawmakers paid homage at a national war shrine Tuesday morning, risking more anger from neighbors South Korea and China over visits they see as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past.(AP Photo)

South Korean protesters tear a Japanese wartime flag during a rally to protest Japanese lawmakers's visit to Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, in front of the residence of Japan's ambassador in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. Dozens of Japanese lawmakers paid homage at the national war shrine Tuesday morning, risking more anger from neighbors South Korea and China over visits they see as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past. (AP Photo)

(AP) ? Visits by Cabinet ministers and lawmakers to a shrine honoring Japan's war dead, including 14 World War II leaders convicted of atrocities, signal Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's determination to pursue a more nationalist agenda after months of focusing on the economy.

Nearly 170 Japanese lawmakers paid homage at Yasukuni Shrine on Tuesday. A day earlier, visits by three Cabinet ministers, said by the government to be unofficial, drew protests from neighbors South Korea and China over actions they view as failures to acknowledge Japan's militaristic past.

China and South Korea ? Japan's No. 1 and No. 3 trading partners, respectively ? bore the brunt of Tokyo's pre-1945 militarist expansion in Asia and routinely criticize visits to the shrine. Almost seven decades after the war ended, it still overshadows relations.

Adding to the discord, Chinese surveillance vessels were patrolling Tuesday near a cluster of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea that are controlled by Japan but claimed by both countries.

China's State Oceanic Administration said Tuesday that its maritime surveillance ships had chased away a group of Japanese ultra-nationalists who visited the area.

The Japanese government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, said the intrusion by a record eight Chinese vessels into Japan's territorial waters was "unacceptable" and that Tokyo had lodged formal protests with the Chinese government. The nationalist group that China accused of attempting to land on the islands could not be immediately reached.

Abe told parliament Tuesday that if Chinese citizens were to land on the islands, Japan would forcibly remove them.

"Naturally, we will forcibly expel (the Chinese) if they were to make a landing. I should make that clear," Abe said in response to a question from a fellow lawmaker on his commitment to defending the island.

But he also said Japan's relations with China are among the most important bilateral relations in the world, and their economies are inseparable.

"It is wrong for China to take provocative actions or totally cut ties just because there is a problem," he said. "Our door for dialogue is always open."

Over the weekend, Abe did not visit Yasukuni but instead donated ceremonial ornaments marked "Prime Minister" to the shrine, whose compound has a war museum glorifying Japan's wartime past.

If Abe was attempting to avoid pointed responses from Japan's neighbors by not visiting the shrine himself, he was unsuccessful.

"The way they recognize history and treat the issue of the Yasukuni Shrine is an important criterion, based on which their close neighbors in Asia and the global community will watch and learn what road Japan will take in the future," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying.

South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young urged "deep soul-searching" by Japan to discover how such visits are seen in neighboring countries.

"Yasukuni Shrine is a place to ... glorify wars," he said.

Several vice ministers and top executives of Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party joined Tuesday's group pilgrimage to the shrine. This is one of several times during the year when lawmakers customarily pay their respects.

Among the ministers who visited over the weekend was Taro Aso, a former prime minister now serving as finance minister. He said he usually visits Yasukuni two or three times a year.

"It's nothing new such that it should have an impact on foreign relations," Aso told reporters Tuesday.

Leaders of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan generally refrained from visiting the shrine when the party was in power, from 2009 until late last year.

The shift toward a more conservative agenda under Abe was bound to happen, sooner or later.

Though Abe has focused mostly on economic policy since taking office in December, he has campaigned for revising Japan's U.S.-inspired constitution, which renounced war after the country's defeat in World War II, and for recognizing the country's Self-Defense Forces as a national military. He also favors revising Japan's past apologies for atrocities committed by its Imperial Army before and during World War II. Those aims are outlined in the LDP's platform.

The party holds a strong majority in the lower house of parliament, but needs a robust showing in upper house elections in July to gain the mandate it wants for pushing ahead with other priorities, including constitutional revision. Even if it gains a strong upper house majority, it faces a tough decision by next fall on whether to go ahead with a commitment to raise the sales tax ? a move expected to anger voters and possibly throw the economy back into recession.

Abe enjoys approval ratings of more than 70 percent, but the liberal-leaning Asahi newspaper said Tuesday he was jeopardizing much of that support by turning away from the economy at a time when there are no clear signs of a strong recovery.

"Why spark a source of friction?" Asahi asked. "What on earth is the Abe administration doing when improved relations with neighboring countries are most needed?"

Koichi Nakano, a political scientist at Tokyo's Sophia University, said Abe's party has been "remarkably successful in staying on message, in staying focused on the economy."

"Some would still want to be cautious and try to focus on the economy, but the desire to talk about other nationalist policies may be too tempting. We have to see how much further they will go in this direction," Nakano said.

Abe last visited Yasukuni in October, when he was opposition leader. As prime minister in 2006-2007, before resigning for health reasons, he refrained from making any visits. As recently as February he said his decision not to visit the shrine during that time was his "greatest regret."

Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said Tuesday he would try to avoid adverse fallout from the latest Yasukuni visits.

"I will handle the situation so that this will not affect our bilateral relations," he said. "It is important to communicate on a political level, and our door for dialogue is always open."

Although government spokesman Suga earlier described the visits by members of Abe's Cabinet as "private," at least one Cabinet minister, National Public Safety Commission chief Keiji Furuya, told reporters that he prayed as a state minister during his visit Sunday.

The visits appeared to add to the chill between Beijing and Tokyo.

A group of Japanese parliamentarians belonging to a Japan-China parliamentarian friendship group scrapped plans for a May 1-3 visit to China after Beijing said they could not meet with President Xi Jinping and other top Chinese officials. LDP officials said the island dispute was to blame, not Yasukuni, because China's message came before the weekend visits.

Anger over the islands dispute last year provoked anti-Japanese riots in China that hammered exports to the country's biggest market. Beijing quashed those demonstrations a few weeks after they started, but the risk to business ties and even of outright conflict persists.

Nakano said Japan may have miscalculated how China and South Korea would respond to the shrine visits.

"Japanese politicians fail to realize (the visits) are seen as provocations. It's one thing after another. It's the rightward shift of Japanese politics that I think (Seoul and Beijing) are more worried about," Nakano said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-23-AS-Japan-War-Shrine/id-3c3e5a9195ac4220a8458aff51f0e29d

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

3 Doors Down Bassist Charged With Vehicular Homicide

Robert Todd Harrell told police he had been drinking and taking prescription medication when he struck another vehicle on Friday.
By Gil Kaufman


3 Doors Down bassist Robert Todd Harrell's booking photo
Photo: Davidson County Sheriff

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706097/3-doors-down-bassist-robert-todd-harell-arrest.jhtml

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WTH? Reese Witherspoon Arrested For Disorderly Conduct! (Mugshot Photo)

WTH? Reese Witherspoon Arrested For Disorderly Conduct! (Mugshot Photo)

Reese Witherspoon & Jim Toth mugshot photosReese Witherspoon and her husband Jim Toth were arrested on Friday night in Atlanta, Georgia. The actress was arrested for disorderly conduct after refusing to listen to police orders when they pulled her husband over for suspicion of driving under the influence. What is this world coming to if sweetie-pie actress Reese Witherspoon was arrested? ...

WTH? Reese Witherspoon Arrested For Disorderly Conduct! (Mugshot Photo) Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/wth-reese-witherspoon-arrested-for-disorderly-conduct-mugshot-photo/

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Obama's inaugural raised $43 million

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama's inaugural committee raised more than $43 million for his second inauguration, with corporations chipping in a major portion.

Reports filed with the Federal Election Commission show the committee fell about $7 million short of its $50 million fundraising goal.

For his first inauguration, Obama raised $53 million in private money, turning away corporations and individual contributions exceeding $50,000. This time, Obama reversed that policy.

The biggest sum came from AT&T Inc., who gave $4.6 million. Microsoft Corp. donated $2.1 million. Boeing Co. and Chevron Corp. gave a million each.

The largest individual donation of $500,000 came from Timothy Gill, a technology entrepreneur and gay rights activist.

The government pays for official activities like the swearing-in, but donations fund the inaugural balls and other celebrations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamas-inaugural-raised-43-million-161942161--politics.html

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

7.8 Magnitude Quake Strikes Iran and Pakistan

A very large 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck near the border between Iran and Pakistan on Tuesday. According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS) , this quake had an intermediate depth which likely resulted in fewer casualties and destruction than a much shallower quake would have.

* The USGS located the epicenter of this earthquake about 52 miles east of Khash in southeastern Iran, near that country's border with Pakistan.

* The website Earthquake-Report.com reported that there have been at least 34 deaths in Pakistan and one death in Iran.

* Earthquake-Report.com also reported that Pakistan TV stated that at least 150 people were injured in the Pakistani town of Mashkeel Tehsil, which is located in southwestern Pakinstan in a province known as Baluchistan. The website also reported that more than 1,000 homes were damaged in the same area.

* Reuters reported that shaking from this temblor was felt as far away as India and the Gulf Arab states.

* Reuters also reported that the earthquake cut communications in the sparsely populated region around the epicenter. The location of the epicenter is a mountainous desert region in southeastern Iran and is far from any Iranian nuclear facilities.

* Last week, a 6.3 magnitude quake struck southwestern Iran near the Bushehr nuclear power plant, which is located along the Gulf coast. The earthquake resulted in 37 deaths and 850 injuries in Iran.

* According to the USGS, the Iranian region is seismically active and the location of Tuesday's quake saw a 7.2 magnitude quake in January of 2011 approximately 120 miles to the east.

* Tuesday's earthquake was larger than the largest magnitude quakes that have been registered in Iran in the past. Historically, the largest magnitudes recorded for earthquakes in Iran were 7.3 to 7.4 range, according to the USGS .

* The most devastating and deadly quake to strike Iran the last 50 years occurred in 1990. According to the USGS , a 7.4 magnitude quake struck western Iran, leaving 50,000 people dead and injuring 60,000. Landslides and major destruction resulted from this large earthquake. More than 400,000 people were left homeless following the quake.

* In Pakistan, the deadliest earthquake in modern times occurred in 2005 when a 7.6 magnitude quake struck about 65 miles northeast of Islamabad. According to the USGS , that quake killed at least 86,000 people, injured more than 69,000 and caused massive damage in the northern part of Pakistan.

Tammy Lee Morris is certified as a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) member and is a trained Skywarn Storm Spotter through the National Weather Service. She has received interpretive training regarding the New Madrid Seismic Zone through EarthScope -- a program of the National Science Foundation. She researches and writes about emergency preparedness, earthquakes, volcanoes, tornadoes, weather and other natural phenomena.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/7-8-magnitude-quake-strikes-iran-pakistan-210300888.html

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PFT: Chiefs would deal Albert for second-rounder

David QuessenberryAP

David Quessenberry is going to be drafted, but he still might enlist.

The San Jose State offensive line prospect said that if his NFL dreams didn?t pan out, he might join the military, as so many in his family have done.

Quessenberry earned notice during the Senior Bowl for playing every position along the line, and figures to be a mid-round prospect. But after growing up listening to his father?s stories about the Navy, he said he?s considering pursuing his own career in the service when he?s finished.

?Yeah, it?s definitely something I have thought about. It?s something I?ve been around my whole life,? Quessenberry told Mike Garafolo of USA Today. ?Playing in the National Football League is a dream of mine, but [military service] is not off the table.?

Of course, he might find in an NFL locker room part of what draws him to the armed forces.

?You see that camaraderie they have, it?s special,? Quessenberry said of his father?s Navy buddies. ?It?s an intense bond that you get from basically that feeling you?re laying it all on the line. You just get that feeling when you?re around them that these guys would literally do anything for each other.

?It?s something you only find in the military and on the football field.?

He?s probably not going to resort to that just yet, as he could go as high as the third round.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/15/chiefs-willing-to-trade-branden-albert-for-a-high-second-round-pick/related/

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