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Monthly Revenue Report

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Monday, March 7:

The monthly revenue report for February, along with commentary from State Budget Director Brian Bailey, has been posted on the State Budget Agency webpage. The report and commentary can be found here: http://www.in.gov/sba/2659.htm. Charts visualizing revenue data are located on the Management and Performance Hub under the State Tax Revenue section: http://www.in.gov/mph/staterevenue.html.

Results

  • General Fund collections for February totaled $718.6 million, which is $44.8 million (6.6%) more than the monthly estimate but $26.8 million (3.6%) below February 2015 revenue.
  • Sales tax collections totaled $536.1 million for February, which is $23.9 million (4.3%) below the monthly estimate and $0.4 million (0.1%) above revenue in February 2015.
  • Individual income tax collections totaled $115.1 million for February, which is $65.2 million (131.0%) above the monthly estimate but $9.1 million (7.3%) below revenue in February 2015.
  • Corporate tax collections totaled negative $16.0 million for February, which is $8.2 million (105.4%) below the monthly estimate and $23.8 million (306.3%) below revenue in February 2015.  Timing of corporate tax refunds is responsible for the variance.
  • Riverboat wagering collections totaled $33.8 million for February, which is $2.2 million (6.9%) above the monthly estimate and $0.6 million (1.7%) above revenue in February 2015.
  • Racino wagering collections totaled $10.2 million for February, which is $1.3 million (14.6%) above the monthly estimate and $0.4 million (3.7%) above revenue in February 2015.

Commentary

Year-to-date General Fund collections totaled $9,071.4 million, which is $52.0 million (0.6%) higher than estimated, and $34.1 million (0.4%) above collections for the same period last year.

Sales tax collections through eight months of fiscal year 2016 were $68.5 million (1.4%) below estimate and $20.7 million (0.4%) below collections through eight months of fiscal year 2015.

Individual income tax collections through eight months of fiscal year 2016 have grown by $96.1 million (3.1%) over the same period a year ago and were $119.7 million (3.9%) above the year-to-date estimate.

Corporate collections eight months into fiscal year 2016 were $51.4 million (11.6%) below year-to-date collections of fiscal year 2015 and $30.4 million (7.2%) below the year-to-date estimate.

 

High Drug Prices Prompt Demands for Transparency

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Pharmaceutical chief Martin Shkreli testifies on Capitol Hill last month about his company’s decision to raise the price of a drug that combats a certain parasite that threatens the lives of some AIDS patients by more than 5,000 percent. Legislators in at least 11 states have filed bills that would require drugmakers to disclose their costs to justify their prices.

Outraged by exorbitant prices for certain prescription drugs, lawmakers in at least 11 states have introduced legislation that would require pharmaceutical companies to justify their prices by disclosing how much they spend on research, manufacturing and marketing.

The bills are similar to a provision in President Barack Obama’s proposed 2017 budget.

The sponsors of the measures say they have a variety of goals: to educate policymakers and consumers about the reason for high prescription drug prices; to shame pharmaceutical companies into moderating their prices; and, in some states, including Massachusetts, to actually place a ceiling on prices that are determined to be unjustified.

“They are price-gouging,” said Massachusetts state Sen. Mark Montigny, the assistant majority leader and the author of a transparency measure in that state. The Democrat said he hopes the disclosures will embarrass drugmakers into setting their prices at levels that would make the drugs affordable to those who need them. “We not only have a right but a responsibility to push back on this special interest and say, ‘Hey, you’ve got to justify your price.’ ”

Unlike in most other Western nations, drugmakers in the U.S. face no limits on the prices they can charge — and those prices have steadily increased over time. The prices of medications rose 9.4 percent between 2006 and 2013, compared to a general inflation rate of 1.5 percent, according to the AARP. Spending on prescription drugs rose by 12.2 percent in 2014, while overall health care spending grew by 5.3 percent, according to the federal government.

And all health care payers — from individuals and private insurers to the federal government and the states — are grappling with how to meet those rising costs.

In addition to Massachusetts, transparency measures have been filed or carried over from last year in Colorado, Michigan, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and Washington. A proposal in New York has the strong support of Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, while one in California was defeated in early January. Unusually in these days of hyper-partisanship, some of the bills have been filed by Republicans and some by Democrats.

‘Trust Us’

A handful of transparency bills were filed last year, but none of them passed. But advocates like Montigny say continued revelations about high prices have only strengthened support for such legislation.

A generation of new drugs to cure hepatitis C, with a price tag as high as $95,000 for a course of treatment, as well as medications for some unusual forms of cancer that cost more than $100,000 a year, have drawn public scrutiny — and outrage.

Then there is the case of Martin Shkreli, a young pharmaceutical entrepreneur who raised the price of a medicine that eliminates a particular parasite that threatens the lives of some AIDS patients from $13.50 to $750 per tablet.

Presidential candidates from both parties have also lambasted pharmaceutical companies for exorbitant drug prices.

For now, those prices are a mystery that the industry has no interest in solving, said Leigh Purvis, director of health services research at AARP’s Public Policy Institute. “It’s basically a ‘trust us’ situation.”

The bills on transparency, Purvis said, demonstrate that the “trust us” approach is no longer satisfying consumers, policymakers, insurers, physician organizations and advocates for better health care access.

The pharmaceutical industry has so far been successful at fending off efforts to control how it sets prices, while keeping a tight lid on any information that would reveal how it arrives at those prices. It has even managed to block Medicare, the second biggest health plan behind Medicaid, from the ability to negotiate better prices for its 50 million beneficiaries.

The industry insists that it is being unfairly targeted by the transparency measures, pointing out that prescription drugs account for only 10 percent of health care spending in the United States, $300 billion out of $3 trillion per year.

Industry representatives also say the information being sought is proprietary and has little to do with the actual price drug companies charge. Pricing, said Priscilla VanderVeer, a spokeswoman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the industry’s main lobbying group, is more related to the marketplace, to competition, and to how beneficial the drugs are.

Drugmakers say only a small fraction of drugs entering clinical trials eventually gain approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration — 7 percent, according to one study. Those that make it to market pay for research and development of the next generation of breakthrough drugs, which will also involve trial and error, VanderVeer said. That’s the way innovative therapies happen, she said.

Tufts University’s Center for the Study of Drug Development, which is largely funded by pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms, says it costs on average $1.4 billion out-of-pocket to bring a new drug to market.

Earlier Measures

In legislative fights across the country, two well-heeled and influential industries are pitted against each other. The pharmaceutical industry has contributed $9.6 million to the campaigns of state lawmakers since 2014, while the insurance industry has spent $21 million, according to the National Institute on Money in State Politics, a nonprofit that tracks campaign donations.

VanderVeer, of the pharmaceutical manufacturers group, says the whole pricing issue has been generated by insurance companies. She characterizes the transparency bills as “a somewhat cynical attempt to rile up pharma by insurance.”

Clare Krusing, a spokeswoman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, which represents commercial insurers, said the proposed legislation represents common-sense public policy: “Health plans have to make rates public and they are scrutinized by consumers and regulators so it’s clear where every dollar of premium is going. We don’t have that with drug pricing.”

Colorado state Rep. Joann Ginal, a Democrat, said her transparency bill has attracted wide support: from health plans, consumer organizations, labor and senior citizen organizations and county governments.

Drugmakers have also enlisted some supporters. In Colorado, their allies include manufacturing groups and social service organizations that advocate on behalf of those with some diseases, such as the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease and the Liver Health Connection. Eileen Doherty, executive director of the Colorado Gerontological Society, a nonprofit serving the elderly, said that although high drug prices are a major burden for the people she serves, “I don’t see any reason why the bill as written would make any difference.”

But Ginal says drug prices have simply reached a tipping point and it’s time that policymakers understand why. “I know lives have been saved” by prescription medications, she said. “But I can’t stand by as these needed medications become out of range for people who need them.”

The transparency bills are only the latest front in states’ attempts to deal with high medication prices. Before this year’s legislative session, at least seven states had capped the amount insurance companies could require patients to pay out-of-pocket for biologics, a class of extremely complex and usually expensive medicines made from organic materials that are most commonly prescribed for certain cancers and auto-immune and nervous system disorders.

Price Ceilings?

The bills around the country are not all the same, and they are likely to change as they move through the legislative process. Most contain some kind of price trigger that would require drugmakers to disclose information about cost. For example, Ginal’s bill would only affect drugs that are priced above $50,000 for a course of treatment or annual supply. Although lawmakers, regulators and consumers would have access to the information, the drug would not be subject to any further government action, such as price setting, under her bill.

“What we need to do is look at why the prices are as high as they are, and I believe without that consumers and policymakers are unable to enter into a discussion about pricing,” Ginal said.

But under Montigny’s bill in Massachusetts, if regulators found that the price set by a manufacturer was unjustified, they could set a maximum allowable price for that drug in the state. (The measures to be used to assess the price have not yet been developed.)

Montigny doesn’t mince words when speaking about the pharmaceutical industry. Other parts of the health care system, such as hospitals, must explain how they set their prices, and there’s no reason drugmakers should stand apart, he said. “Why should everyone else be in the spotlight in health care but them?”

Some experts in drug pricing who are sympathetic to the goals of the transparency bills are dubious that they will accomplish what their sponsors hope.

“There is a problem in trying to attack the problem this way,” said Kenneth Kaitin, director of the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development.

It would be difficult for drugmakers to supply cost information because many of their products are the result of mergers, acquisitions and partnerships, Kaitin said. As for the information that is available, he said even an accountant would find it hard to understand, let alone a lawmaker or a regulator. The proposed bills would seek information about government subsidies and the costs of clinical trials, patent acquisition, advertising, manufacturing and distribution.

Beyond that, Kaitin agrees with industry officials that the cost associated with research and development, manufacturing and marketing are not really relevant to the price drugmakers charge.

“My fear is a lot of energy and emotion is tied up in these proposals to get at drug pricing and in the end it’s just not going to make a difference,” Kaitin said.

But Kaitin said the bills may accomplish something else.

By talking about pricing and transparency, Kaitin said, lawmakers may pressure the industry into talking with policymakers, health plans and others with a stake in health care about “how to make sure tomorrow’s breakthrough drugs are affordable and accessible to the patients who need them.”

Pence Joins Bipartisan Coalition of Governors Urging Congress to Repeal Federal Provision Impacting National Guard Readiness

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Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence has joined more than 40 governors in urging Congress to repeal a provision of the Fiscal Year 2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that requires the conversion of certain National Guard military technicians into non-uniformed federal civilian employees.

Along with the letter, Governor Pence said, “I am deeply concerned that this provision, affecting hundreds of authorized Indiana National Guard military technicians, will impact force readiness and our ability to respond to state emergencies as they might arise.”

Below are key excerpts of the letter:

“The nation’s governors call on Congress to repeal Section 1053 of the fiscal year (FY) 2016 National Defense Authorization (NDAA), which requires the conversion of certain Title 32 National Guard military technicians into non-uniformed Title 5 federal civilian employees. We are gravely concerned about how this provision will affect overall National Guard readiness and our ability to use the Guard to respond to emergencies.”
“These conversions would exacerbate two consecutive years of reductions in National Guard uniformed end strength and deny governors’ access to thousands of dual-status technicians available for immediate military response to domestic emergencies.”

 

Hot Jobs in Evansville

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IS IT TRUE MARCH 7, 2016

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IS IT TRUE we wonder why  District 64 State Rep. Thomas W. Washburn, Old National Bancorp, Evansville thinks he is so special that he can run for State Repersentive and the Indiana Supreme Court positions at the same time?

IS IT TRUE we can’t wait to see how City Council persons Missy Mosby, Jonathan Weaver and Dan McGinn are going to defend City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr 2015 City budget reports at the next Council meeting?

IS IT TRUE we wonder if Mosby, McGinn and Weaver have advanced college degrees in finance or accounting that gives them the expertise to defend City Controller Lloyd Jr. compacated 2015 budget reports?

IS IT TRUE according to City financial reports prepared by City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr states he failed to pay $1.3 million dollars to the city employees HEALTH CARE providers at the end of 2015?

IS IT TRUE that 2015 General Fund report shows that the Parks & Recreation Dept had a deficit $400,000  at and the Golf Fund showed a deficit of $200,000?

IS IT TRUE the 551 people votes in our most recent “Readers Poll”?  …the question was: Do you feel that Evansville Brownfields Corp should be considered a public or private entity? …459 people vote “PUBLIC”, 37 voted “PRIVATE” and 55 said they didn’t know?

IS IT TRUE that 1203 people viewed the video of George Lumley challenging  the not-for-profit Evansville Brownfields Corp board members on our site?  … 600 plus viewed this video on our Facebook?

IS IT TRUE we  hear that Evansville Brownfields Corp Board of Directors  will be receiving some extremely detailed Freedom of Information requests from George Lumley in the very near future.

IS IT TRUE we hear that a couple of extremely well educated citizens are working on styling formal complaints against Evansville Brownfields Corp  Board of Directors with the Indiana Public Access Officer?

IS IT TRUE its important to point out that the Evansville Brownfield Corp deciding not to provide their agenda and financial records to the public have the blessing of Mayor Winnecke?  …isn’t this the same guy that promised transparency in his administration?

IS IT TRUE that a couple member of the Evansville Brownfield board (“secret society”) thinks Geoge Lumley is connected with the City County Observer? …we did discussed with Mr. Lumley about starting a monthly for print newspaper but he decided to go along with this new venture alone ? …we are proud to consider Mr. Lumley as a friend and supporter of the CCO? …we feel the public owes Mr. Lumley a great deal of gratitude for exposing the bad business practices of the Evansville Brownsfieds Corp?

FOOTNOTES: Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday ?

Please take time and read our newest feature article entitled “HOT JOBS”. Jobs posted in this section are from Evansville proper.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com.

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the Evansville Brownfields Corp should provide the general public with annual audits and copies of their meeting agenda?

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

GREGG: TIME FOR EQUAL PAY FOR EQUAL WORK

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GREGG: TIME FOR EQUAL PAY FOR EQUAL WORK

INDIANAPOLIS – As Hoosiers celebrate “Women’s History Month,” today Democratic Candidate for Governor John Gregg released a series of policy proposals to promote pay equity in Indiana.

“In the last campaign, we talked about leveling the playing field and eliminating the pay gap. However, since that time, Governor Pence has done nothing and the problem has gotten worse,” said Gregg, a former small business owner and university president. “As governor, this will be a priority in my administration. I will lead by example and will work with the public, private and non-profit sectors to take this disparity head on.”

According to a recently released report from the American Association of University Women, Hoosier women make 75 percent of what their male counterparts make for equal work. Indiana ranks 41st in the nation for pay equity.

As governor, Gregg pledged to do the following:

• Institute a Pay Equity Policy for State Government
Leading by example, Gregg would enact an “Equal Pay for Equal Work” policy within the executive branch of state government to ensure all state employees are paid fairly. He will also require any contractor or business doing taxpayer-funded work on behalf of state government adhere to the state’s equal pay standards. Additionally, he will encourage other branches of state government and local governments to adopt similar practices.

• Highlight Indiana Businesses that Promote Pay Equity
Working with various state agencies, including the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, the Department of Workforce Development, the Department of Labor and the Indiana Commission for Women, Gregg would hold an annual ceremony honoring Indiana businesses and organizations that voluntarily adopt equal-pay-for-equal-work practices. These entities would then be free to use this state recognition in their marketing and recruitment materials.

• Establish an Anonymous 1-800 Hotline and Website
Working through the Indiana Department of Labor, Gregg would create and promote a toll-free hotline and website in which Hoosiers could anonymously report workplace incidents against women, whether it’s harassment or suspicion of unequal pay scales.

“As governor, my focus will be on growing our economy and creating better paying jobs for all Hoosiers and doing whatever we can to eliminate, or at least lessen, the pay gap must be a part of that,” added Gregg. ”Hoosier women make up the majority of our workforce, our economy won’t achieve its full potential until they are compensated equally.”

John Gregg has worked throughout the public and private sector. He served as President of Vincennes University, Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives, worked for two Fortune 500 companies and is a practicing attorney today. Gregg holds an associate’s degree from Vincennes University, a bachelor’s degree from Indiana University, a master’s degree from Indiana State University and a law degree from Indiana University. He and his wife, Lisa, have three adult children and live in Sandborn in Knox County.

For more information on John Gregg or his campaign for Governor of Indiana, please visit www.greggforgovernor.com or call 317-510-1876.

FOOTNOTES: Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday ?

Please take time and read our newest feature article entitled “HOT JOBS”. Jobs posted in this section are from Evansville proper.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com.

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the Evansville Brownfields Corp should provide the general public with annual audits and copies of their meeting agenda?

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

Questions To Ann Ennis Candidate For State Representative District 64 By CCO

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Questions Proposed To Ann Ennis By The CCO
Why did you decide to run for State Representative?

For more than 10 years I have been a tireless advocate for open admission public education as the key to our American democracy. Our representative has voted time after time to stymie local control and over-rule parents by mandating big government rules on education: well beyond what federal law demanded. He supported five years of constantly changing assessments, standards and tests that have been flawed at best and a money-wasting fiasco in reality. He represents testing companies, out-of-state charters and Indianapolis rather than his district. After three years of no response to a call, email or letter, I said he did not deserve the role of representative.

Our representative is weak on stopping meth production. Meth and now heroin are killing our nieces and nephews, children and grandchildren. Working against law enforcement in drug crimes is not SW Indiana leadership.

Our local county officials want long-term solutions to road and bridge funding problems. Opposite of our current representative, I will listen to what the counties want and work to provide adequate and ongoing funds to care for our bridges and county roads .

Why should I vote for you?

I am tireless and steadfast in supporting local control. I say what I will do and do what I will say. My words are clear and in direct. (I will not write a blog or a speech one month and turn around the next with the opposite vote.) If you support local direction for your kids’ education and government letting our schools alone, then I am your representative. If you support community direction rather than taking orders from big government or out-side the state interests, then I am your representative.

My commitment is to local decisions on schools and testing, to open up infrastructure funds so counties can make their decisions on infrastructure maintenance and improvement, and to listen to the local voices of everyday citizens when battling illegal drugs and their manufacture.

What is your education agenda?

Local control in choosing from among diverse tests (Indiana does not need a unique ever changing test). Local control over grading for rapid turnaround. Funding for remediation: immediately. State government rolls back multiple mandates, and as per the new Every Child Succeeds Federal Law, reduces mandated testing to one test. Approved School Choice and SGO tax credit schools must accept 30 percent low income or complex students. Report data for teacher and school assessment by tracking per student and not groups of students. Include complexity score in reporting test results.

Are you prolife?

Yes. As Roman Catholic Archbishop Wenski of Miami said at Nativity Church in Evansville last fall, “No man should be seen as being a problem.” Pope Francis has said that getting rid of a person cannot be a solution to any problem. I stand pastorally with the Roman Catholic Church and the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Do you support the Second Amendment?

Yes. The Constitution secures the right of the people to keep and bear arms. It is an obvious and popular right. I advocate for better training for all Americans on gun safety, and tax credits for persons who buy gun security devices like owner recognition locks and safes.

Do you support Freedom of Religion and RFRA?

The First Amendment assures religious liberty, which for perceived good or ill, does gives religion a right to discriminate. For example, despite getting public money from vouchers, religious schools can refuse children whose parents are not married. The questions can be big: Can religious hospitals or a nurse of a particular faith refuse to treat an atheist or an adulterer? These are difficult questions. With the Catholic Church, I am for mercy and inclusion.

Are you a “friend of coal?”

Yes. My father drilled exploratory wells all over northern Vanderburgh and Gibson counties mapping coal seams. Coal is the least expensive source of energy we have. As a daughter of a drilling contractor, I will not turn my back on coal, oil, or miners and roughnecks. That said, the future of a coal miner’s 11-year-old is best served outside the mine and job growth is best served in new energy technologies.

Do you support making pseudoephedrine a prescription medication?

I support Indiana’s prosecutors and police. I support stopping substance abuse and making it hard for meth makers to exist. No one is half-way addicted to meth. There is no half-way solution to the problem of addiction. We will be judged if we take half- hearted measures for dubious reasons. If it inconveniences us to keep one young woman from becoming a meth-slave to an abuser, then we need to accept the inconvenience.

Do you support higher taxes for roads and bridges?

I support a long-term funding plan for our roads and bridges that are approaching 50 or more years of age. We cannot only repair bridges when we have a budget surplus. Cigarette and Gas taxes must be considered.

Citations for my positions.

Legislative agenda of the SW Indiana Chamber of Commerce: Support legislation that provides schools and teachers in Indiana communities with more freedom and flexibility to structure education to better fit the needs of students and employers

Infrastructure agenda of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce: House Bill 1001 originally provided means to address Indiana’s $900 million+ annual transportation funding shortfall. We deserve and need a real plan rather than a stop-gap proposal. House Bill 1001 (was a) plan to best meet both immediate and future needs for federal, state and local roads and bridges. This included support for to increasing the amount of our seven-cent sales tax on gas used for transportation infrastructure. The Chamber also viewed HB 1001’s original increase in cigarette taxes as an option to fill hole left by increase in percent for roads from gas tax.

FOOTNOTES:  You can reach Ann Ennis at 812 483-5671 or e-mail her at Annennis85@gmail.com

EDITORS FOOTNOTES: Our next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday ?

Please take time and read our newest feature article entitled “HOT JOBS”. Jobs posted in this section are from Evansville proper.

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com.

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the Evansville Brownfields Corp should provide the general public with annual audits and copies of their meeting agenda?

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

 

FIRST THEY CAME FOR THE IPHONE

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FIRST THEY CAME FOR THE IPHONE By Ron Paul

The FBI tells us that its demand for a back door into the iPhone is all about fighting terrorism, and that it is essential to break in just this one time to find out more about the San Bernardino attack last December.

But the truth is they had long sought a way to break Apple’s iPhone encryption and, like 9/11 and the PATRIOT Act, a mass murder provided just the pretext needed. After all, they say, if we are going to be protected from terrorism we have to give up a little of our privacy and liberty. Never mind that government spying on us has not prevented one terrorist attack.

Apple has so far stood up to a federal government’s demand that it force its employees to write a computer program to break into its own product. No doubt Apple CEO Tim Cook understands the damage it would do to his company for the world to know that the US government has a key to supposedly secure iPhones.

But the principles at stake are even higher. We have a fundamental right to privacy. We have a fundamental right to go about our daily life without the threat of government surveillance of our activities. We are not East Germany.

Let’s not forget that this new, more secure iPhone was developed partly in response to Ed Snowden’s revelations that the federal government was illegally spying on us. The federal government was caught breaking the law, but instead of ending its illegal spying it’s demanding that private companies make it easier for it to continue.

Last week, we also learned that Congress is planning to join the fight against Apple — and us. Members are rushing to set up yet another governmental commission to study how our privacy can be violated for false promises of security.

Of course they won’t put it that way, but we can be sure that will be the result. Some in Congress are seeking to pass legislation regulating how companies can or cannot encrypt their products. This will suppress the development of new technology and will have a chilling effect on our right to be protected from an intrusive government. Any legislation Congress writes limiting encryption will likely be unconstitutional, but unfortunately Congress seldom heeds the Constitution anyway.

When FBI Director James Comey demanded a back door into the San Bernardino shooter’s iPhone, he promised that it was only for this one, extraordinary situation. “The San Bernardino litigation isn’t about trying to set a precedent or send any kind of message,” he said in a statement last week.

Testifying before Congress just days later, however, he quickly changed course, telling the Members of the House Intelligence Committee that the court order and Apple’s appeals, “will be instructive for other courts.” Does anyone really believe this will not be considered a precedent-setting case? Does anyone really believe the government will not use this technology again and again, with lower and lower thresholds?

According to press reports, Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance, Jr. has 175 iPhones with passcodes that the City of New York wants to access. We can be sure that is only the beginning.

We should support Apple’s refusal to bow to the FBI’s dangerous demands, and we should join forces to defend of our precious liberties without compromise. If the people lead, the leaders will follow.

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Required license or certification:. Core A and Core B Certified. _*Medical Staffing Solutions, LLC staffs Nurses, Therapist, Pharmacist, CNAs, and other medical…
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Cintas 1,013 reviews - Evansville, IN
Valid driver’s license. To support our aggressive growth plans, we offer unique opportunities, including advancement, ongoing training, mentoring and the…
United States Postal Service 5,670 reviews - Haubstadt, IN
$16.65 an hour
Applicants must have a valid state driver’s license, a safe driving record, and at least two years of. KSAs include Postal Service driving policies, safe…
USPS - 2:10 PM
Hourglass Cosmetics - Evansville, IN
Valid drivers license and means of transport to commute to various areas within region. Luxury cosmetics brand is seeking a goal oriented Market Trainer in the…
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TLC Management - Newburgh, IN
Provide assistance with residentsÂ’ daily meals such as prepare/portion food items, follow recipes/menus, tray set-up, delivery of meals, put away stock, washing…
Deaconess Health System 12 reviews - Evansville, IN
Certificates, Licenses, Registrations Must be a Registered Nurse licensed in the State of Indiana. Further, the EMS/Trauma Outreach and Prevention Coordinator…
Golden Living Centers 870 reviews - Evansville, IN
As one of the nation’s leading providers of skilled nursing care and inpatient and outpatient therapies, we are dedicated to helping people live fuller, longer…
MotoMart 8 reviews - Evansville, IN
Maintain building and equipment and report items that need for repair. Provide 24 hour supervision of the store by viewing video surveillance and visiting the…
Compass Group Holdings PLC - Evansville, IN
Valid driver’s license may be required; Must possess or able to obtain a valid food handler’s permit and/or alcohol servers’ permit where required by state law….
Compass Group USA - Mar 4