Saturday, January 7, 2012

Gov't defends core of health care overhaul (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Defending President Barack Obama's signature health care overhaul, the administration is urging the Supreme Court to uphold the contentious heart of the law, the requirement that individuals buy insurance or pay a penalty.

The administration filed a written submission with the court Friday describing the 2010 law as an appropriate response to a "crisis in the national health care market."

The justices will hear arguments in the high court's biggest case this term over three days in late March. The outcome, expected in late June, has the potential to affect President Barack Obama's bid for re-election.

One federal appeals court struck down the so-called individual mandate as exceeding Congress' power under the Constitution. But two other federal appeals courts upheld the law and agreed with the administration's argument that Congress was well within its power to adopt that requirement.

Florida and 25 other states, as well as the National Federation of Independent Business, told the court in separate briefs that if the justices strike down the individual requirement, they should invalidate the rest of the law as well. Thirty-six Republican senators echoed the states' argument in their own filing.

The law is aimed at extending health insurance coverage to more than 30 million previously uninsured people and would, by 2019, leave just 5 percent of the population uninsured, compared with about 17 percent today, according to the Congressional Budget Office. About half of the increase would come from the individual requirement; the rest would come from an expansion of Medicaid and other provisions.

The health care law has attracted intense opposition from Republicans, including the party's presidential candidates, all of whom have vowed to repeal it if elected. The individual insurance requirement has been a particular lightning rod because it forces people to buy a product from a private insurer whether they want to or not, or pay a penalty for failing to do so.

This provision was struck down by a divided panel of the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the only appeals court that has ruled against the law among the four appeals courts that have considered it. One appeals court held that it was too soon to rule on the law.

But the administration said the requirement falls within Congress' power under the Constitution's Commerce Clause because health care is an issue of supreme national importance that consumes nearly 18 percent of the U.S. economy.

People may lack insurance, but they still get health care, and the costs get passed on to the insured, the administration said.

"Congress found that the cost of tens of billions of dollars in uncompensated care provided to the uninsured is passed on to insured consumers, raising average annual family premiums by more than $1,000," the administration said.

The individual mandate also goes hand in hand with another part of the law that prohibits insurers from denying coverage to people with existing medical conditions or increase their premiums, the administration said.

Separately, the insurance industry reinforced this point to the court, arguing that it needs the larger pool of people so that it can afford to cover people regardless of their medical history.

America's Health Insurance Plans and the BlueCross BlueShield Association ? major trade groups ? said in their court papers that if the individual requirement is struck down, the ban on denial of coverage based on pre-existing medical conditions must also go. Otherwise, premiums will rise and healthy people will drop coverage. The groups did not take a position on the constitutionality of the law.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120107/ap_on_go_su_co/us_supreme_court_health_care

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Friday, January 6, 2012

Sprint says no to throttling, still offering ?true? unlimited data

After Dow Jones misconstrued some comments by Sprint CEO Dan Hesse, Sprint has come out with an official statement saying they do not throttle regular subscribers under their unlimited data


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/DV4TqHTiofs/story01.htm

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Record heat in the Dakotas poses fire danger

Dirk Lammers / AP

Anglers gather on the Missouri River below the Fort Randall Dam for some winter fishing Wednesday in Fort Randall, S.D., where temperatures hit the high 50s.

By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

Record high January temperatures may be nice for the average resident of the Dakotas, but they're worrying for farmers and firefighters alike.

Temperatures in the mid-50s were recorded across North and South Dakota. The record high of 55 Wednesday in Bismarck, N.D., was 32 degrees above normal.?In fact, in some parts of the Dakotas, it's warmer this January than it is in many parts of Florida.

Florida oranges survive cold snap

Record warmth was forecast again in many areas. In Minot, N.D., the forecast low temperature Thursday is in the mid-30s. That's 15 degrees warmer than the average daytime high for early January, said Justin McHeffey, weather director at NBC station KMOT.


With highs forecast in the 60s later this week in some areas, following a period of below-average precipitation, authorities warned that the risk for a wildland fire ? in winter ? is higher than usual.

"The conditions are ripe," said Dennis Gorton, administrator of the Pennington County, S.D., Fire Department.

"If we had 6 inches of snow cover ... it wouldn't be any kind of concern," Gorton told NBC station KNBN of Rapid City. "But we just don't have the snow cover this year."

The lack of snow is also a problem for farmers. While it may seem paradoxical, hardy Northern crops need at least 3 inches of snow cover to keep them warm during the winter months ? the snow, which is at or just below freezing, is actually much warmer than air temperatures that routinely drop into double digits below zero. So if a cold snap were to hit now, crops would be at risk.

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Agriculture officials in both states rated snow cover protection for alfalfa and winter wheat as poor. That's because the average snow depth this week is about only two-tenths of an inch; it's usually more than a foot and a half in January.

Lower but still higher-than usual temperatures are forecast across most of the region by the weekend.

NBC stations KFYR of Bismarck, N.D.; KMOT of Minot, N.D.; and KNBN of Rapid City, S.D., contributed to this report by Alex Johnson of msnbc.com.?

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Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/04/9957591-record-heat-in-the-dakotas-poses-fire-danger-threatens-crops

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

China local government debt audit finds $84 billion problem


BEIJING | Wed Jan 4, 2012 11:15am GMT

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's state audit office uncovered 530 billion yuan (54 billion pounds) worth of irregularities with local government debt, leaving investors wondering how much work remains to be done to clean up after 2008's stimulus-fuelled credit binge.

The findings of the National Audit Office report published on China's central government website (www.gov.cn) reveal a litany of bad practice.

But the figure is barely a fraction of the 2-3 trillion of sour loans economists reckon are buried in the 10.7 trillion yuan of debt local governments had by the end of 2010.

"It is becoming increasingly obvious that significant debt restructuring will need to take place at the local level, the scale of which has yet to be fully understood," Alistair Thornton, a Beijing-based economist with IHS Global Insight said in a note to clients.

The audit report, conducted for the 2010 budget year, found problems including 46.5 billion yuan worth of "irregular credit guarantees," 73.2 billion yuan worth of loans secured against irregular collateral, 35.1 billion yuan spent on stocks, houses and polluting plants and 132 billion yuan worth of expenditure not made by its approved deadline.

"A fifth problem is the fraudulent and underpayment of registered capital in financing vehicles, which amounted to 244.15 billion yuan," the report said.

The local governments involved have been ordered to correct wrongdoings, but the clean-up work remains less than half done in some areas, the report shows.

Of the 46.5 billion yuan of problematic guarantees, only 22 billion yuan had been corrected by the end of October, while just 23 billion yuan of the 73.2 billion yuan linked to irregular collateral had been resolved through re-negotiating terms with banks.

Meanwhile only 98 billion yuan of the 244.2 billion yuan of unpaid capital had been corrected by the end of October, despite measures such as capital injections by local governments and the introduction of strategic investors.

Around half of the 10.7 trillion yuan local government debt pile was amassed after Beijing launched its massive economic stimulus programme to counter the 2008/09 global financial crisis, with thousands of local government financing vehicles mushrooming up and borrowing big -- often from state-backed banks.

Stanley Li, a banking analyst with Mirae Asset Securities in Hong Kong, said much of what is owed has been rolled over.

"Banks are extending the loans to local governments so that non-performing loans won't surface," Li said.

"Although there will be no massive defaults, headlines about individual default cases will pop up, and that will be a long-term negative fact for bank share prices," Li said.

IMPAIRED ASSET ESTIMATES

The scale worries investors, because if the 2-3 trillion yuan estimate of impaired assets is right, there's much more left to be admitted to and it could rock the banking system.

Most borrowing funded massive infrastructure projects that have created pristine empty highways, auditoriums without audiences and ghost towns of uninhabited apartments.

Yao Wei, an economist for Societe Generale in Hong Kong, was not surprised at the findings from the National Audit Office and said the basic issue was clear: "Even there is no corruption, it will be very difficult for local governments to make interest and principal repayments."

Yao said the investment returns of most local government projects were too low to be commercially viable.

"Down the road, they will hit the rock," she said.

Even projects that were properly sanctioned and costed and not part of the audit investigation are running into trouble.

The National Aquatics Centre -- the iconic Water Cube in which Michael Phelps swam to eight gold medals at the 2008 Beijing Olympics -- is now in financial difficulty as revenues are insufficient to cover maintenance costs.

Yang Qiyong, a manager of the venue, told local media last week that running the Water Cube resulted in 11.3 million yuan losses in 2011.

WORKING ON A PLAN

The audit office said China's cabinet was still working on an overall plan on how to resolve the debt mess.

"The State Council is studying proposals to enhance local government debt management and to address fiscal and financial risks," the audit office said in the report, which ranged widely beyond the local government debt issue.

The Ministry of Finance and the banking regulatory commission have sought to assure investors that the local debt problem is under control.

Zhao Xijun, a professor with the People's University of China in Beijing, said that the Chinese government has vast resources to prevent systematic risks, such as a local government default on a massive scale.

"Fresh financing channels are being opened, like local government bond issuance, and the door can be opened wider if the trials prove successful," Zhao said, referring to China's decision in late October to allow Shanghai, Shenzhen, Zhejiang and Guangdong to sell bonds.

The nationwide check of China's budget implementation in 2010 has resulted in 139 criminal cases, "administrative and intra-party punishment" for 699 offenders and imprisonment for another 81, the audit office said.

(Reporting by Zhou Xin and Kevin Yao; Editing by Nick Edwards)

Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/01/04/uk-china-debt-idUKTRE8030M020120104?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews

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NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the North Union Township

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Source: he-www2.heraldstandard.com --- Sunday, January 01, 2012
NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the North Union Township Municipal Services Authority shall hold heir Reorganization & Special Meeting on January 4, 2012 at 6:00 pm at the Authoritys office located at 6 South Station Road, Lemont Furnace, PA Lawrence McLaughlin Secretary ...

Source: http://he-www2.heraldstandard.com/classifieds_plain/ads/27094001/?market=admarket

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BBC Football Pundit Credits Scott Parker for Tottenham Transformation

Mark Lawrenson believes Tottenham Hotspur star Scott Parker has "transformed" Harry Redknapp's side since he arrived at White Hart Lane in the summer.

The aforementioned Match of the Day pundit claims he was surprised to see Parker in the Football Writers' individual accolade last season, but suggests his form since he moved to Tottenham has illustrated what a superb player he is and why Harry Redknapp was desperate to get him to Spurs.

Parker moved to Tottenham for just ?5.5 million in the summer and he has been a mainstay of the north London Premier League club's scintillating form this season. The industrious Spurs star has struck up a brilliant midfield partnership with Luka Modric and Lawrenson suggests Parker has been the focal point of Spurs' excellent surge up the table. ?

Lawrenson believes Parker's form for Tottenham and West Ham in 2011 makes him the best player in the last calendar year and a dead-cert for inclusion in Fabio Capello's England squad.

"I was surprised when Parker got the Football Writers' Award." Lawrenson said of the Tottenham talisman. "He was always going to stand out in a struggling team.

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"But since joining Tottenham, he has reinforced what a top player he is.

"He has made them a better team. He has also established himself for England. Robin van Persie deserves an honourable mention. His goal tally is remarkable. But Parker has transformed Spurs' fortunes and will surely start the Euros for England."

Parker was forced off injured during Tottenham's draw against Swansea at the weekend and will face a late fitness test ahead of Spurs' game against West Brom.?

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Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/275551/20120103/bbc-football-pundit-credits-scott-parker-tottenham.htm

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Rebels capture Syrian troops in north: opposition (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? Armed Syrian rebels captured dozens of members of the security forces by seizing two military checkpoints on Monday, the opposition said, even as the Arab League chief reported cautious progress in a peace monitoring mission.

The opposition said army deserters also clashed with security forces at a third checkpoint, killing and wounding an unspecified number of troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.

Assad is struggling to defeat a popular uprising and avoid becoming the latest president to be toppled by "Arab Spring" revolutions, after the leaders of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen.

After nearly 10 months of violence in which the United Nations says more than 5,000 people have been killed, an Arab monitoring mission has spent the past week assessing Assad's compliance with a peace plan.

In partially upbeat comments, Arab League Secretary General Nabil Elaraby said Syria's military had withdrawn from residential areas and was on the outskirts of the country's cities, but gunfire continued and snipers were still a threat.

"The latest telephone report said there is gunfire from different places, which makes it hard to say who is shooting who," said Elaraby. "Gunfire should be stopped and there are snipers."

"We call upon the Syrian government to fully commit to what it promised," he said in Cairo.

The Arab League plan calls for Assad to withdraw troops and tanks from the streets, release detainees and talk to his opponents.

Elaraby said the monitors had achieved the release of 3,484 prisoners and succeeded in getting food supplies into Homs, one of the centers of the violence. "Give the monitoring mission the chance to prove its presence on the ground," he said.

But many Syrian opposition activists are skeptical that the mission can put real pressure on Assad to halt the violence.

NORTHERN CLASHES

The reported attacks on military checkpoints came three days after the anti-government Free Syrian Army said it had ordered its fighters to stop offensive operations pending a meeting with the Arab League delegates.

Rami Abdelrahman, director of the opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said Monday's operation took place in the northern province of Idlib. It was not immediately clear how many people had been killed or captured by the rebels.

Separately, the Observatory said two people were killed by gunfire in Homs on Monday, and the bodies of another two were handed over to their families. Security forces killed a farmer in Douma, on the northeastern edge of Damascus, as they carried out raids searching for suspects wanted by authorities, it said.

Kinan Shami, a member of the Syrian Revolution Coordinating Union activists group, said from Damascus that people were taking huge risks by gathering in cities where Arab League monitors were expected, in the hope of talking to them.

"People expected them in Daraya yesterday on New Year's day and thousands went to the main square, raised the Independence Flag on a mast and gathered around it. Security forces shot at them and killed two protesters," Shami said.

"The people are trying to show the monitors the repression and are risking their lives to meet them because everywhere they go the monitors are surrounded by security... Other than getting arrested and beaten or killed, they could easily face endless counts of treason and communicating with foreign powers."

But Issam Ishak, a high-level member of the main opposition Syrian National Council, said the monitors must be given a chance. "Their presence is helping further erode the fear factor and is encouraging the expansion of the protests."

The Syrian government bars most international journalists from operating in the country, making it difficult to verify accounts of incidents. Assad blames the unrest on foreign-backed armed Islamists who officials say have killed 2,000 security personnel.

State news agency SANA said a worker at a school in the city of Hama was killed by armed men who captured her three days ago after her husband, who worked at the same school, refused their demands that he leave his job.

SANA also said a journalist working for state radio died on Monday from wounds sustained when gunmen shot him several days ago in Daraya, in Damascus province.

(Additional reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis in Amman; writing by Mark Trevelyan; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120102/wl_nm/us_syria

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