LABORERS -LOCAL #561 ENDORSES COUNTY COMMISSIONER BEN SHOULDERS FOR RE-ELECTION
LABORERS -LOCAL #561 ENDORSES COUNTY COMMISSIONER BEN SHOULDERS FOR RE-ELECTION
Labor Day 2020 will occur on Monday, September 7. Labor Day pays tribute to the contributions and achievements of American workers and is traditionally observed on the first Monday in September. It was created by the labor movement in the late 19th century and became a federal holiday in 1894. Labor Day weekend also symbolizes the end of summer for many Americans and is celebrated with parties, street parades and athletic events
Labor Day, an annual celebration of workers and their achievements, originated during one of American labor history’s most dismal chapters.
In the late 1800s, at the height of the Industrial Revolution in the United States, the average American worked 12-hour days and seven-day weeks in order to eke out a basic living. Despite restrictions in some states, children as young as 5 or 6 toiled in mills, factories and mines across the country, earning a fraction of their adult counterparts’ wages.
People of all ages, particularly the very poor and recent immigrants, often faced extremely unsafe working conditions, with insufficient access to fresh air, sanitary facilities and breaks.
As manufacturing increasingly supplanted agriculture as the wellspring of American employment, labor unions, which had first appeared in the late 18th century, grew more prominent and vocal. They began organizing strikes and rallies to protest poor conditions and compel employers to renegotiate hours and pay.
 How a Deadly Railroad Strike Led to the Labor Day Holiday
Many of these events turned violent during this period, including the infamous Haymarket Riot of 1886, in which several Chicago policemen and workers were killed. Others gave rise to longstanding traditions: On September 5, 1882, 10,000 workers took unpaid time off to march from City Hall to Union Square in New York City, holding the first Labor Day parade in U.S. history.
The idea of a “workingmen’s holiday,†celebrated on the first Monday in September, caught on in other industrial centers across the country, and many states passed legislation recognizing it. Congress would not legalize the holiday until 12 years later, when a watershed moment in American labor history brought workers’ rights squarely into the public’s view. On May 11, 1894, employees of the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago went on strike to protest wage cuts and the firing of union representatives.
On June 26, the American Railroad Union, led by Eugene V. Debs, called for a boycott of all Pullman railway cars, crippling railroad traffic nationwide. To break the Pullman strike, the federal government dispatched troops to Chicago, unleashing a wave of riots that resulted in the deaths of more than a dozen workers.
In the wake of this massive unrest and in an attempt to repair ties with American workers, Congress passed an act making Labor Day a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the territories. On June 28, 1894, President Grover Cleveland signed it into law. More than a century later, the true founder of Labor Day has yet to be identified.
Many credit Peter J. McGuire, cofounder of the American Federation of Labor, while others have suggested that Matthew Maguire, a secretary of the Central Labor Union, first proposed the holiday.
READ MORE:Â The Labor Movement
Labor Day is still celebrated in cities and towns across the United States with parades, picnics, barbecues, fireworks displays and other public gatherings. For many Americans, particularly children and young adults, it represents the end of the summer and the start of the back-to-school season.
The Uniform Monday Holiday Act of 1968 changed several holidays to ensure they would always be observed on Mondays so that federal employee could have more three-day weekends. The Act, signed into law on June 28, 1968, moved Washington’s Birthday Memorial Day, and Columbus Day to fixed Mondays each year.
Physicians Premier ER charged Dr. Zachary Sussman’s insurance $10,984 for his COVID-19 antibody test even though Sussman worked for the chain and knows the testing materials only cost about $8. Even more surprising: The insurer paid in full.
Dr. Zachary Sussman. His employer charged his insurance plan $10,984 for a COVID-19 antibody test. (Sharon Chischilly for ProPublica)
When Dr. Zachary Sussman went to Physicians Premier ER in Austin for a COVID-19 antibody test, he assumed he would get a freebie because he was a doctor for the chain. Instead, the free-standing emergency room charged his insurance company an astonishing $10,984 for the visit — and got paid every penny, with no pushback.
The bill left him so dismayed he quit his job. And now, after ProPublica’s questions, the parent company of his insurer said the case is being investigated and could lead to repayment or referral to law enforcement.
The case is the latest to show how providers have sometimes charged exorbitant prices for visits for simple and inexpensive COVID-19 tests. ProPublica recently reported how a $175 COVID-19 test resulted in charges of $2,479 at a different free-standing ER in Texas. In that situation, the health plan said the payment for the visit would be reduced and the facility said the family would not receive a bill. In Sussman’s case, the insurer paid it all. But those dollars come from people who pay insurance premiums, and health experts say high prices are a major reason why Americans pay so much for health care.
Sussman, a 44-year-old pathologist, was working under contract as a part-time medical director at four of Physicians Premier’s other locations. He said he made $4,000 a month to oversee the antibody tests, which can detect signs of a previous COVID-19 infection. It was a temporary position holding him over between hospital gigs in Austin and New Mexico, where he now lives and works.
In May, before visiting his family in Scottsdale, Arizona, Sussman wanted the test because he had recently had a headache, which can be a symptom of COVID-19. He decided to go to one of his own company’s locations because he was curious to see how the process played out from a patient’s point of view. He knew the materials for each antibody test only amounted to about $8, and it gets read on the spot — similar to an at-home pregnancy test.
He could even do the reading himself. So he assumed Physicians Premier would comp him and administer it on the house. But the staff went ahead and took down his insurance details, while promising him he would not be responsible for any portion of the bill. He had a short-term plan through Golden Rule Insurance Company, which is owned by UnitedHealthcare, the largest insurer in the country. (The insurance was not provided through his work.)
During the brief visit, Sussman said he chatted with the emergency room doctor, whom he didn’t know. He said there was no physical examination. “Never laid a hand on me,†he said. His vitals were checked and his blood was drawn. He tested negative. He said the whole encounter took about 30 minutes.
About a month later, Golden Rule sent Sussman his explanation of benefits for the physician portion of the bill. The charges came to $2,100. Sussman was surprised by the expense but he said he was familiar with the Physicians Premier high-dollar business model, in which the convenience of a free-standing ER with no wait comes at a cost.
“It may as well say Gucci on the outside,†he said of the facility. Physicians Premier says on its website that it bills private insurance plans, but that it is out-of-network with them, meaning it does not have agreed-upon prices. That often leads to higher charges, which then get negotiated down by the insurers, or result in medical bills getting passed on to patients.
Sussman felt more puzzled to see the insurance document say, “Payable at: 100%.†So apparently Golden Rule hadn’t fought for a better deal and had paid more than two grand for a quick, walk-in visit for a test. He was happy not to get hit with a bill, but it also didn’t feel right.
He said he let the issue slide until a few weeks later when a second explanation of benefits arrived from Golden Rule, for the Physicians Premier facility charges. This time, an entity listed as USA Emergency sought $8,884.16. Again, the insurer said, “Payable at: 100%.â€
USA Emergency Centers says on its website that it licenses the Physicians Premier ER name for some of its locations.
Now Sussman said he felt spooked. He knew Physicians Premier provided top-notch care and testing on the medical side of things. But somehow his employer had charged his health plan $10,984.16 for a quick visit for a COVID-19 test. And even more troubling to Sussman: Golden Rule paid the whole thing.
Sussman was so shaken he resigned. “I have decided I can no longer ethically provide Medical directorship services to the company,†he wrote in his July 13 resignation email. “If not outright fraudulent, these charges are at least exorbitant and seek to take advantage of payers in the midst of the COVID19 pandemic.â€
Sussman agreed to waive his patient privacy so officials from the company could speak to ProPublica. USA Emergency Centers declined interview requests and provided a statement, saying “the allegations are false,†though it did not say which ones.
The statement also said the company “takes all complaints seriously and will continue to work directly with patients to resolve issues pertaining to their emergency room care or bill. …The allegations received pertain to a former contracted employee, and we cannot provide details or further comment at this time.â€
Physicians Premier advertises itself as a COVID-19 testing facility on its website, with “results in an hour.†According to the claims submitted by Physicians Premier to Golden Rule, obtained by Sussman, the physician fee and facility fees were coded as emergency room visits of moderate complexity. That would mean his visit included an expanded, problem-focused history and examination. But Sussman said the staff only took down a cursory medical history that took a few minutes related to his possible exposure to COVID-19. And he said no one examined him.
The claims also included codes for a nasal swab coronavirus test. But that test was not performed, Sussman said. The physician’s orders documented in the facility’s medical record also do not mention the nasal swab test. Those charges came to $4,989.
The claims show two charges totaling $1,600 for the antibody test Sussman received. In a spreadsheet available on its website on Friday, Physicians Premier lists a price of $75 for the antibody test.
For comparison, Medicare lists its payment at $42.13 for COVID-19 antibody tests. That’s because Medicare, the government’s insurance plan for the disabled and people over 65, sets prices.
Complicating matters, Texas is the nation’s epicenter for free-standing emergency rooms that are not connected to hospitals. Vivian Ho, an economist at Rice University who studies the facilities, said their business model is based on “trying to mislead the consumer.†They set up in locations where a high proportion of people have health insurance, but they don’t have contracted rates with the insurers, Ho said. They are designed to look like lower-priced urgent care centers or walk-in clinics, Ho said, but charge much higher emergency room rates. (The centers have defended their practices, saying that they clearly identify as emergency rooms and are equipped to handle serious emergencies and that patients value the convenience.)
The day after he resigned, Sussman texted an acquaintance who works as a doctor at Physicians Premier. The acquaintance said the facility typically only collects a small percentage of what gets billed. “I just don’t want to be part of the game,†Sussman texted to him.
Shelley Safian, a Florida health care coding expert who has written four books on medical coding, reviewed Sussman’s medical records and claims at ProPublica’s request. The records do not document a case of a complex patient that would justify the bills used to code the patient visit, she said. For example, the chief complaint is listed as: “A generic problem (COVID TESTING).†Under “final acuity,†the medical record says, “less urgent.†Under the medical history, it says, “NO SYMPTOMS.â€
Safian described the charges as “obscene†and said she was shocked the insurer paid them in full. “This is the exact opposite of an employee discount,†she said. “Obviously nobody is minding the store.â€
Congress opened the door to profiteering during the pandemic when it passed the CARES Act. The legislation, signed into law in March, says health insurers must pay for out-of-network testing at the cash price a facility posts on its website, or less. But there may be other charges associated with the tests, and insurers generally have tried to avoid making patients pay any portion of costs related to COVID-19 testing or treatment.
The charges for Sussman’s COVID-19 test visit are “ridiculous,†said Niall Brennan, president and CEO of the Health Care Cost Institute, a nonprofit organization that studies health care prices. Brennan wondered whether the CARES Act has made insurers feel legally obligated to cover COVID-19 costs. He called it “well-intentioned†public policy that allows for “unscrupulous behavior†by some providers. “Insurance companies and patients are reliant on the good will and honesty of providers,†Brennan said. “But this whole pandemic, combined with the CARES Act provision, seems designed for unscrupulous medical providers to exploit.â€
It’s illegal for medical providers to charge for services they did not provide. But ProPublica has previously reported how little insurers, including UnitedHealthcare, do to prevent fraud in their commercial health plans, even though experts estimate it consumes about 10% of all health care costs. For-profit insurance companies don’t want to spend the time and money it takes to hold fraudulent medical providers accountable, former fraud investigators have told ProPublica. Also, the insurance companies want to keep providers in their networks, so they easily cave.
In mid-July, Sussman used the messenger system on Golden Rule’s website to report his concerns about the case. Short-term health plans are typically less expensive because they offer less comprehensive coverage. Sussman said he appreciated that his plan covered the charges, and felt compelled to tell the company what had happened.
That led to a phone conversation with a fraud investigator. They went line by line through the charges and Sussman told him many of the services had not been provided. “His attitude was kind of passive,†Sussman said of the fraud investigator. “There was no indignation. He took in stride, like, ‘Yep, that’s what happens.’†The investigator said he would escalate the case and see if the facility had submitted any other suspect claims. But Sussman never heard back.
Maria Gordon-Shydlo, a spokeswoman for UnitedHealthcare, which owns Golden Rule, would not provide anyone to be interviewed. She said in an emailed statement that the company’s first priority during the pandemic “has been to ensure our members get the care they need and are not billed for COVID testing and treatment. Unfortunately, there are some providers who are trying to take advantage of this and are inappropriately or even fraudulently billing.â€
“Golden Rule has put processes in place to address excessive COVID-related billing,†the statement said. “We are currently investigating this matter and, if appropriate, will seek to recoup any overpayment and potentially refer this case to law enforcement.â€
Golden Rule’s 100% payment of the charges may simply come down to “incompetence,†said Dr. Eric Bricker, a Texas internist who spent years running a company that advised employers who self-fund their insurance. Insurance companies auto-adjudicate millions of claims on software that may be decades old, said Bricker, who produces videos to help consumers and employers understand health care. If bills are under a certain threshold, like $15,000, they may sail through and get paid without a second look, he said.
UnitedHealth Group reported net earnings of $6.6 billion in the second quarter of 2020. Bricker said the company may be paying bills without questioning them because it doesn’t “want to create any noise†by saying no at a time its own earnings are so high, Bricker said.
Texas has a consumer protection law that’s designed to prevent businesses from exploiting the public during a disaster. The attorney general’s office has received and processed 52 complaints about health care businesses and billing or price gouging related to the pandemic, a spokeswoman from the office said in an email. The agency does not comment on the existence of any investigations but has not filed any cases related to overpriced COVID-19 tests.
Sussman said he got one voicemail from a billing person at Physicians Premier, saying she wanted to explain the charges, but he did not call back. He said he spoke out about it to ProPublica because he opposes Medicare-for-all health care reform proposals. Bad actors in the profession could cause doctors to lose their privilege to bill and be reimbursed independently, he said. Most physicians are fair with their billing or even conservative, he said. “If instances like these go unchecked it will provide more ammo for advocates of a single-payer system.â€
Using the Old Style calendar, it was on this day in 1620 that the Mayflower sailed from Plymouth, England, bound for the New World.
sent to the CCO by Ron Riecken, Evansville
The passengers called themselves Separatists or Saints, but today we call them Pilgrims. They had come to believe that the only way to practice their religion freely would be to separate themselves from the Church of England. They moved at first to a village near Amsterdam, where the government was more religiously tolerant, but eventually decided to travel to the New World to start a society from scratch.
They originally commissioned two boats for the journey: the Speedwell and the Mayflower. But when they set out, the Speedwell began to leak. They returned to England and tried to repair the Speedwell, but it was not fit for travel. So on this day in 1620, they set sail in the Mayflower, leaving the Speedwell behind.
Having wasted time trying to repair the Speedwell, they had to start their journey later in the summer, when the winds were less favorable. Because of strong crosscurrents, the Mayflower averaged only two miles an hour.
There are no records left as to the size and shape of the Mayflower, but historians believe it was about 90 feet long. In addition to the 102 passengers, it carried food for the journey as well as stores for the winter, livestock, and tools needed to start the new colony. The passengers of the Mayflower had to make themselves comfortable in the large open cargo area called the orlop. One nice thing about the Mayflower was that it smelled sweet, because it had previously been used to transport wine.
Some of the richer families brought partitions for their areas on the boat, but most passengers on the Mayflower had no privacy. There were no sanitary facilities, and there was little fresh water for washing. Many of the passengers became seasick. They ate cold food — cheese and fish or salted beef.
The Mayflower’s destination was supposed to be near the mouth of the Hudson River, but it had sailed off course and landed near Cape Cod. The Pilgrims spent the next month searching for a place to settle. On December 21, just over three months after they left England, the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, their new home.
Only half the colonists and crew survived that first winter. But today, an estimated 35 million people are direct descendants of those Mayflower Pilgrims.
Notice is hereby given of an Executive Session of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Merit Board beginning at 4:00PM on Tuesday, September 08, 2020 in the Sheriff’s Headquarters Conference Room, 3500 N. Harlan Ave, Evansville, IN, for the purposes of:
CORBETT, Ore. — The sounds floating down the beach at Rooster Rock State Park were unmistakable, and after months of social distancing, felt almost illicit. The thump of music. The “woo-hoo!†of a crowd.
Was that … a party?
It was. Not just any party, but a socially distanced drag show, held outdoors at what may be one of the few state parks in America with an official clothing-optional beach.
Alexis Campbell Starr, a longtime Portland, Oregon, drag performer, knew that many fellow entertainers had seen their income dry up during the pandemic, as clubs closed or restricted access. So she decided it was time for drag queens to return to the stage, even if it was a hot, sandy one at a riverfront state park 25 miles east of the city. Fans — and random beachgoers — got a socially distanced live performance.
“We were like, ‘Let’s just put on a show out there,’†Campbell Starr said. “We’ll bring some equipment, we’ll take it out. We’ll make sure people are spaced out, spaced apart from each other. And let’s just shock the hell out of the beach.â€
The sanctioned nudity at Oregon’s Rooster Rock and the novelty of an outdoor drag show are no doubt anomalies among state park systems in America. But the crowded parking lot on a hot August day was not. State parks all over the country have seen record numbers of visitors this summer, as people look for ways to safely get out of their homes for some fun.
“This is not going to come as a surprise to anybody, but anything that has well-developed access to a river, a stream or a lake has been running much busier than normal,†said Chris Havel, associate director of the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.
Several states, including New Mexico, banned out-of-state residents at their parks. As COVID-19 cases ballooned in neighboring Arizona and Texas, New Mexico decided to close all campgrounds this summer and barred out-of-state visitors from state parks, said Susan Torres, a spokesperson for the state’s Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department. And Ute Lake State Park closed to visitors for two weeks in August after several employees tested positive for COVID-19.
“It is a balance we were trying to find and are still trying to find, where we want people to still be healthy and go outside,†Torres said. “But we really wanted to make sure that people weren’t traveling. We wanted to make sure that people weren’t spreading anything in the communities, and we really wanted to make sure we were protecting those communities.â€
In Tennessee, the state parks office compiled a list of five lesser-known parks for people to visit to avoid crowds at some of the most popular destinations. Things got so crowded in the spring that park rangers were praying for a rainy weekend, one park ranger at Harpeth River State Park told the Tennessean newspaper.
For visitors contemplating Pennsylvania’s 121 state parks, there’s a warning on the state parks website: “Some state parks are experiencing overcrowding which is causing visitors to be turned away. Be prepared to find alternate locations for recreation.†State park use in Pennsylvania in June skyrocketed to 6.6 million visitors, compared with 5.6 million the previous year, WHYY reported. In neighboring New Jersey, officials in August closed two state parks to divert workers to busier parks overwhelmed by visitors.
Wyoming’s 12 state parks closed to out-of-state visitors early in the pandemic but reopened to everyone this summer. By the Fourth of July weekend, all state park campsites were booked at capacity.
“Having full state parks is a great problem to have,†said the state’s parks director, Darin Westby. “However, it can come with challenges, especially during this pandemic.â€
Among them: urging visitors to comply with local regulations about masks and social distancing. An anonymous respondent to a survey by the National Recreation and Park Association shared another common complaint: “As we slowly reopen certain facilities, enforcing mask regulations is a big challenge for staff. It is an ongoing, tireless and thankless task and many staff members are not skilled at handling it in a non-confrontational manner.â€
Oregon also discouraged out-of-state visitors from already crowded campgrounds — an estimated 45% of state campground visitors each year are from outside of the state. Oregon on Aug. 10, started charging non-residents extra to camp at state parks. RV camping went from $33 to $42 a night. Tent camping fees rose from $19 to $23 a night for out-of-staters. The surcharge is aimed at deterring long-distance travel so that Oregonians have space to recreate closer to home, Havel said.
“In the here and now, you ought to ask yourself: Is there a way for me to get what I need from outdoor recreation, closer to home?†Havel said. “If you live out of state, there may be a place closer to where you live that you can enjoy.â€
If the fee doesn’t discourage visitors from elsewhere, it will at least bring in an estimated $500,000 extra in operating money for the state agency. In Oregon, state parks are funded mostly with user fees, parking passes, and lottery receipts, all of which plummeted during the pandemic. The state park system now has a $22 million budget shortfall going into 2021.
And the shortfall has a cascading effect: There are more people than ever at parks, but the state has the money to hire only half its seasonal parks workforce this year. That means overflowing parking lots and trash bins, and no one to clean them up or enforce parking rules.
Overcrowding isn’t limited to state parks. National parks and federal public lands also have seen an influx of visitors this year. At Oregon’s Crater Lake National Park, staffing shortages have made it difficult for rangers to manage crowds, The Bulletin reported; dorms that normally would house summer employees can’t operate because of social distancing rules.
In Montana, the Blackfeet Nation, which borders Glacier National Park, closed one entrance of the park to keep visitors from the reservation. The coronavirus has been especially deadly for Indigenous people in Montana. Native Americans makeup just under 7% of the state’s population but represent about a third of Montana’s 104 COVID-19 deaths.
State parks have faced other pressures this summer unrelated to the pandemic, particularly in the West. Fires sparked by lightning burned through California’s beloved Big Basin Redwood State Park near Santa Cruz, destroying the headquarters and scorching many redwoods, including 1,800-year-old trees that stretch 300 feet into the sky. The park, which dates to 1902, was the first in the California state system, and its creation helped lead the way for the preservation of additional coastal redwoods.
Before the pandemic, nearly half a million people visited Big Basin annually. As it reopened in late June, Big Basin’s staff warned potential visitors that the park had been filling to capacity on weekends and holidays. Parking wasn’t guaranteed, and visitors could be turned away. “Traffic on the winding mountain roads can be heavy at times and visitors can expect long delays while making their way to Park Headquarters,” the park cautioned.
In Oregon, where most schools don’t start until early September, crowds persist anywhere there’s water. Late in August, the state issued a warning to people visiting some of the more popular beaches along the northern coast, which offer free parking at day-use areas. (Rooster Rock charges $5 per car.) The state installed more than a dozen new advisory and “No Parking” signs along U.S. 101, the two-lane highway that hugs the coast. They also began ticketing — and in some cases, towing — cars parked unsafely.
The state’s parks director, Lisa Sumption, begged day-trippers to take their trash home with them: “If you love the coast,†she said, “show it.â€
At Rooster Rock, a small crowd of about 100 people watching the drag show formed an expansive circle on the wide, sandy beach along the Columbia River. Music blasted from portable speakers. Performers, many of whom wore clear plastic face shields, danced in the middle. One got so overheated during Laura Branigan’s “Gloria†that as the song ended, she ran straight into the water. It was “hilarious,†Campbell Starr said, and one of the benefits of performing on public lands.
“Drag queens are meant to brighten people’s days, to make people happy and have fun,†Campbell Starr said. “When we were walking up, there was a little girl on the beach and she saw the three of us walking towards her. She was like, ‘Oh my God, RuPaul’s Drag Race is here.’ No, not quite. But something like it. The closest thing you get to it.â€