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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (562602)4/23/2010 3:46:11 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1578141
 
make a sacrifice and stay home with the little children but the Obama's are too selfish, it's all about them. typical liberals, fukk the kids,me,me,me.



To: Road Walker who wrote (562602)4/23/2010 4:01:36 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1578141
 
Crist Expected to File as Independent Next Week

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist's is reportedly set to declare that he is an independent candidate for the U.S. Senate, according to a report by News-Press.com.

Crist is expected to file as an independent next week -- bypassing the Aug. 24 Republican primary for the Senate.

As an independent, Crist can remain a member of the Republican Party but he goes on the November general election ballot, without a primary.

Top GOP leaders have been advising Crist to drop out of the race, since he trails Rubio by double digits in many recent polls. Meanwhile, an impressive cadre of Republican leaders has endorsed the former House speaker.



To: Road Walker who wrote (562602)4/23/2010 4:20:19 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1578141
 
Obama’s Medicaid Cuts Add Cost in Kansas

"In-home services" are much cheaper than residential nursing homes. But the federal law requires nursing home payments. So in the name of "cost savings," the elderly get much more expensive care — or die waiting for service.


April 23, 2010 - by Patrick Richardson As the recession continues to cut into state budgets, many states, my home state of Kansas — which is looking at a $510 million budget shortfall next year — included, are looking for ways to trim the fat.

Unfortunately, the method many are choosing is to cut “optional” programs like the Medicaid waiver.

In January of this year Kansas Governor Mark Parkinson slashed funding for the Medicaid program by 10 percent across the board.

The problem is, Parkinson isn’t thinking very clearly in the places he makes his cuts.

The cut to the Medicaid funding would save the state $22 million — so far, so good, right?

Wrong.

Federal law mandates funding for people who qualify for Medicaid and need to go into a nursing home or other institution. You cannot cut that funding.

What the waiver does is allow Medicaid funding to be used to cover non-hospital expenses, such as in-home care for people with physical disabilities. That program, by federal law, is optional: states are not required to fund those services, and so of course they were on the chopping block. The dirty little secret here is that by cutting that funding, they left $55 million in federal funding on the table.

The even dirtier little secret is it costs about $3,800 per month to keep someone in a nursing home, on average. It costs around $1,800 per month on average to keep someone at home.

Worse, the requirements for the waiver are identical to those for putting someone in a nursing home — so it’s not even good math to cut this funding.

Just getting half the 1,800 or so people who were admitted to nursing homes just since December 2009 back into their homes would save the state a little over $20 million a year. Which is a big chunk of the $22 million they cut. This leaves aside the fact that keeping people in their homes and communities is not only cheaper, but is better for the people on the waiver and for their communities.

These people are often able to stay in their jobs or otherwise contribute to the community, the organizations who help the disabled employ people to help care for them, and the state saves money on their care — everyone wins.

The Kansas legislature at least recognized Parkinson’s cuts were perhaps less than bright. The legislature is proposing to shift funds from the general fund monies normally allocated to services for the disabled to cover the waiver costs. However, this still leaves these agencies with major budget shortfalls and hard choices to make. One Kansas agency has lost 30 jobs and cut administrative salaries by 10 percent across the board.

More money out of the economy at a time when we need more, not less.

In the meantime, according to Greg Jones of Southeast Kansas Independent Living Inc., 65 people in the state of Kansas have died while waiting for the sorts of services the waiver provides.

Kansas is far from the only state facing these woes. According to the Western New York Law Center, multiple states are either cutting the waiver program entirely or limiting Medicaid benefits in other ways. Even a cursory Google search brought up news story after news story of states cutting the waiver program in an attempt to save money.

I grant that in economic times like these everyone is having to make cuts, but these are stupid.

The solution to the problem is really quite simple — and therefore apparently beyond the capability of Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebilius to understand. Simply require in-home services to be reimbursed in the same way as nursing home services.

We now have the so-called Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. If the goal of that “reform” was really to save costs and make sure people were covered, this would have been a simple way to do so.

The real problem here is cookie-cutter solutions imposed from the outside forcing states to make tough choices which cause the most vulnerable citizens to fall through the cracks.

The real solution is to give states the freedom to solve their own problems, not mandate solutions from the outside.
Too often, those simply make the problems worse.

In the meantime, people continue to die waiting for help, or stack up in nursing homes they are unlikely ever to leave. If all of the people waiting for in-home services were to go into a nursing home tomorrow it would overwhelm the system — there are simply not enough beds for them.

A little common sense in where money is spent and where the budget is cut would go a long way to solving budget crises nationwide.

Unfortunately, common sense is anything but common.

Patrick Richardson is a 12 year veteran of the community newspaper business, and currently the Managing Editor of the Columbus Advocate and the Baxter Spring News. He is that rare bird, the conservative journalist. Living his whole life in Kansas, he has come to appreciate the conservative values of hard work, honesty and honor.

pajamasmedia.com



To: Road Walker who wrote (562602)4/23/2010 4:58:58 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1578141
 
I knew this was an unusual market.

U.S. stocks gain Friday; Dow's 8-week win streak is longest since 2004



To: Road Walker who wrote (562602)4/24/2010 1:49:29 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1578141
 
It was an accounting error.....I swear!

GOP feuding casts shadow over Fla. Senate race

By MARTIN MERZER (AP) – 1 hour ago

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Now that Republicans have made him the U.S. Senate front-runner, Marco Rubio is trying to weather potentially damaging revelations about his credit card use, double billing for airfare and murky finances.

A few months ago, the former Florida House speaker seemed an unlikely bet to beat Gov. Charlie Crist in the party's Senate primary. And in those months, Rubio's lavish spending has come under scrutiny of federal investigators.

In that same stretch, his poll numbers have soared, carrying him well ahead of Crist and forcing the once seemingly unbeatable governor to consider running as an independent for Senate. Crist has until Friday to decide.

The federal investigation of Rubio's spending habits comes as the Republican National Committee and its chairman, Michael Steele, draw ridicule for excessive expenditures, including a nearly $2,000 bill to entertain campaign donors at a Hollywood club featuring simulated bondage and lesbian sex.

Spending by Rubio and other GOP officials who cast themselves as fiscal conservatives opens them to charges of hypocrisy in a state hard hit by the recession. Florida's unemployment rate was 12.3 percent in March, above the national average, and home foreclosures are widespread.

Republicans see the potential for significant gains in this fall's congressional elections, with a legitimate shot of regaining control of the House and perhaps the Senate. But a family feud in Florida combined with questionable spending habits could thwart their political gains.

During his 25 months as House speaker, according to a series of stories by The Miami Herald and St. Petersburg Times based on leaked documents, Rubio might have skirted fundraising laws and party rules. The newspapers have raised questions about his spending at two political committees he formed to raise money for and support Republican legislative candidates; his wife was treasurer of one of the committees.

Much of the attention has focused on credit cards issued to Rubio and 27 other Republican leaders. The Internal Revenue Service is looking into the spending by Rubio and others Republican leaders, including a former state party chairman, Jim Greer, hand-picked by Crist.

Rubio charged nearly $110,000 to the party-issued card during his time as House speaker. Among the charged items were repairs to Rubio's family minivan, grocery bills, plane tickets for his wife, and retail purchases, including one from a wine store.


Campaign aides have said some of the charges were legitimate; for instance, they said, the minivan had been damaged while being used on GOP business. They also said Rubio paid American Express $16,052.50 to cover nonparty expenses when they happened.

Rubio recently sent the party a $2,417.80 check as reimbursement for personal airline flights he said were mistakenly charged to the GOP credit card. Rubio blamed the expense on an accounting error.

Rubio acknowledged that he made personal purchases on his party-issued credit card but said he paid those bills out of his own pocket. Other spending, he said in a statement, was "for legitimate political purposes that helped advance the goals and policies of the Republican Party."

Among the expenditures that have been called into question: a $134 charge at a men's salon in Miami; hotel rooms for a family get-together; and purchases at a wine store.

"I have not been contacted and don't know anything about any potential inquiries, but I welcome the chance to set the record straight once and for all," Rubio said in the statement.


So far, none of the reports has stalled Rubio's campaign. He trailed Crist by 46 percentage points among Republican voters in the Quinnipiac University poll last year; this month, Rubio led Crist by 23 points in the same poll. A three-way poll of a general election between Rubio, Crist and U.S. Rep. Kendrick Meek, the leading Democrat, shows Crist with a slim lead. Meek trails badly in head-to-head matchups with either Rubio or Crist.

Crist's campaign keeps swinging at Rubio, but it hasn't moved the polls numbers yet.

"We need to concentrate on those who misused donor money, and I don't think he (Rubio) falls into that case," said Sharon Day, the state's GOP national committeewoman.

Crist, 53, gave up a likely easy re-election as governor to jump into the Senate race to replace Republican Mel Martinez, who resigned last year. Crist appointed his former chief of staff, George LeMieux, to serve out the balance of Martinez's term.

Crist, mentioned as a possible vice presidential pick two years ago, told reporters Friday he plans to use all of his remaining time to make his decision about whether to leave the party.

"I'm just trying to do what's right and good for the people of Florida," he said.

If he decides to launch an independent bid, Crist has $7 million in the bank, almost double what Rubio has.

David Johnson, a Tallahassee-based Republican strategist, says internal GOP polling shows party voters know about Rubio's spending issues, but they still support him.

"They're concerned, yep, 'But we're voting for him,'" Johnson said. "I think people are believing Marco's statement that there is nothing to this beyond accounting errors."

Associated Press Political Writer Brendan Farrington contributed to this report.

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