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CBO Report May be the Death Blow to ObamaCare

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By: John Poderitz

The Affordable Care Act, a k a ObamaCare, became law almost four years ago. It became operational last Oct. 1. Yesterday, Feb. 4, 2014, the ACA may well have been dealt its death blow.

The Congressional Budget Office released a major study of the government’s budget and its effect on the overall economy over the next 10 years. In dull bureaucratic language, it delivers a devastating analysis of the inefficiencies, ineffectualities and problematic social costs of ObamaCare.

The one-two punch: Virtually as many Americans will lack health coverage in 10 years as before the law was passed — but 2 million fewer will be working than if the law hadn’t passed.

One killer detail comes on Page 111, where the report projects: “As a result of the ACA, between 6 million and 7 million fewer people will have employment-based insurance coverage each year from 2016 through 2024 than would be the case in the absence of the ACA.” ObamaCare’s key selling point was that it would give coverage to a significant number of the 30-plus million Americans who lack it. Now the CBO is telling the American people that a decade from now, 6 million-plus of their countrymen won’t get health care through their employers who otherwise would have.

Even more damaging is this projection: “About 31 million nonelderly residents of the United States are likely to be without health insurance in 2024, roughly one out of every nine such residents.”

Why? Because, in selling the bill to the American people in a nationally televised September 2009 address, President Obama said the need for ObamaCare was urgent precisely because “there are now more than 30 million American citizens who cannot get coverage.”

Now the CBO is saying is that in 10 years, about the same number of people will lack insurance as before. This, after new expenditures of as much as $2 trillion and a colossal disruption of the US medical system.
If that’s not startling enough, there’s also the telling projection about ObamaCare’s impact on employment — “a decline in the number of full-time-equivalent workers of about 2.0 million in 2017, rising to about 2.5 million in 2024.”

Overall employment will rise, the report says, but not steady, secure, long-term assured employment. The possibility of securing government-provided health-care without employment will give people a new incentive to avoid it. “The estimated reduction stems almost entirely from a net decline in the amount of labor that workers choose to supply,” the report says.

Indeed, overall, between 2017 and 2024, the actual amount of work done in this country will decline by as much as 2 percent.

How come? Because of perverse incentives ObamaCare provides in the form of subsidies to some and higher taxes to others.

First, the report says Americans will “choose to supply less labor — given the new taxes and other incentives they will face and the financial benefits some will receive.”

Here’s why: Poor people get certain subsidies, which disappear once a worker achieves a certain level of compensation. So it may be better to work less, or not work at all, rather than reach that higher pay level, because the pay increase won’t offset the loss of the subsidy.

This is the classic problem of a government handout: It can become more alluring to those who receive it than the prospect of a life lived without it.

As the report says, “If those subsidies are phased out with rising income in order to limit their total costs, the phaseout effectively raises people’s marginal tax rates [the tax rates applying to their last dollar of income], thus discouraging work.”

There’s a problem on the other end as well — among those whose tax dollars pay for the whole shebang: “If the subsidies are financed at least in part by higher taxes, those taxes will further discourage work or create other economic distortions, depending on how the taxes are designed.”

The White House hastened to do damage control yesterday, and the “senior official” who did the background briefing for reporters said a shocking thing: The projected decline in work is good news.

“It reflects the fact that workers have a new set of options and are making the best choices that they can choose to make for themselves given those options,” the official said.

Really? Really? You know, if that’s the best they can do, certain American workers — those elected to Congress and their staffs — might find themselves forced to make new choices regarding their employment come this November and November 2016.

For the past year, Obama and his supporters have taken to demanding that ObamaCare’s opponents quit trying to undo it because it’s now the law of the land.

Not so fast: With this and the other blows it has been dealt over the past six months, and undoubtedly with new blows to come, ObamaCare really and truly may no longer be the law of the land after the president leaves office.

EPD Activity Report February 4, 2014

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EPD PATCH 2012SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report February 4, 2014

Every defendant has a story

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

The lady of the night arrested plying her trade offered some words of encouragement as Stacy Uliana, then a law student, and her professor prepared to defend the woman in court.

“You ladies go get ’em,” the prostitute said.

Recalling that client and her words still makes Uliana giggle. It is a funny memory, but it is also the point where she became assured of her career path.

uliana-stacy-15col.jpgAttorney Stacy Uliana (IL Photo/ Aaron P. Bernstein)

“That’s when I knew I would like this,” Uliana said. “I had a skinny, crack-addicted prostitute saying, ‘You ladies go get ’em.’”

Since that time, Uliana has spent much of her legal practice working as a defense attorney. A 1997 graduate of Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, she found criminal law to be the most interesting with its courtroom confrontations and constitutional issues. She confessed she ended up on the defense side partly because that was the job she was offered.

Much of her work is at the appellate level. She will take just about any case that lands on her desk, but she prefers cases that have a legal or factual issue in dispute, giving her something challenging to argue rather than falling on the mercy of the prosecutor to get a good plea.

“I’m not very good at that,” she said.

Freeing David Camm 

Her biggest and most exhausting case has been fighting for David Camm. The former Indiana State Police trooper was arrested in 2000 and twice convicted for the brutal slayings of his wife and two young children.

Uliana and her mentor, Bloomington attorney Katharine “Kitty” Liell, became familiar with the case by chatting with Camm’s first attorney, Mike McDaniel. After the trial ended in a guilty verdict, Camm’s relatives approached Uliana and Liell for help.

That began Uliana’s 11-year commitment to a defense that would include two reversals, changing theories of the crime and two additional long and brutal trials. Uliana worked on the appeals and second trial with Liell. For the third trial, she worked with Indianapolis attorney Richard Kammen.

Camm was tried three times for the murder of his family before a jury in Boone County acquitted him in October. When the not guilty verdict was read, the defense table was overwhelmed while Stanley Levco, the special prosecutor appointed for the third trial, was devastated and certain he would forever be known as “the guy who lost the Camm trial.”

Watching the closing arguments, Liell saw Uliana speak to the jury for one-and-a-half hours, summarizing evidence, cutting through the red herrings and appealing to the jurors’ common sense.

Like Uliana, Liell maintained Camm did not commit or have any involvement with the murders. She is not surprised that he was arrested, charged and sent to prison, nor does she believe he is the only wrongfully convicted individual serving time.

“I think there are more innocent people in prison than we would ever care to think about,” Liell said.

The third trial turned on forensic science and the testimony of convicted felon Charles Boney.

When she started the case, Uliana, who holds a bachelor’s degree in chemistry, saw problems with the evidence. Part of her focus on the defense team was to separate the real science from what she called the junk science.

“If you look at the entire case, it is so clear he did not do it,” Uliana said of Camm. “And not one piece of evidence that has surfaced since the first three days when Dave got arrested, not one piece of evidence has shown guilt rather then innocence.”

In fact, Uliana said, the defense discovered Boney, whose DNA was later identified at the crime scene, and exposed the state’s key expert, Robert Stites as, in her words, “a complete fraud.” He had, she said, never been to a crime scene, never testified before a jury and had little background in science.

Levco concedes that with hindsight, the state could have waited instead of charging Camm three days after the murders and should not have relied on Stites.

The defense contended Boney was responsible for the Camm murders and, Uliana said, during the third trial, the jury was able to see the type of person Boney really was and that he was playing games.

On the stand at the third trial, jurors saw Boney making hand gestures which Uliana said were to convey to Camm that he did murder his family. Also, the jurors saw Boney continually staring and nodding at Camm as if, Uliana said, taunting Camm.

Ten hours after getting the case, the Boone County jury had reached a verdict. Uliana was at home, starting to sort through a pile of household papers that had gotten put aside during the 11-week trial.

After the guilty verdict in the second trial, Uliana said she needed a couple of months before she could make the decision to continue helping defend Camm. Turning it over to the Boone County jury, she said the third trial was fairer. The defense felt they had done everything they could to win.

Levco credited the defense team for their work in the courtroom.

“They were really well prepared as any defense attorneys I ever saw,” he said. “I didn’t see them miss anything.”

The verdict and her conversations with the jurors afterward led Uliana to believe the third jury may now view the criminal justice system differently after the Camm case. They may see the system is not always right or just and much comes down to hoping the people in power are right or they can see when they are wrong.

Telling their stories

Uliana’s office is on the second floor of a massive brick building next to the railroad tracks in the tiny hamlet of Bargersville. Up the stairs and down at the end of the hall is her workspace, brightly lit and decorated with her children’s crayon-colored artwork on the walls.

She peers at visitors through plastic-framed glasses, holds her hands in her lap and turns her head to look out the window when she finishes answering a question. She is relaxed and smiles easily.

Uliana does not consider her approach to defense as pushing back against the state or “getting ’em.” Rather she wants to give a voice to the other side.

“I see it as everything in gray,” she said. “Nothing is really black and white. Well, sometimes it’s black and white … but most of the time it’s gray, and the defendant always has a story and they just need someone to tell it.”

She remembered one client who came to her after he had been convicted and sentenced. He had a criminal record and a reputation from a courtroom outburst where he had yelled and cursed at the judge.

Uliana braced for what she expected would be a difficult client. She fought on what she thought was a good search-and-seizure issue but she lost. Her client, to her surprise, was grateful for her hard work.

“It made me understand what our role is,” Uliana said. “You’re not always going to win. Your clients most of time are not innocent, but there is a story and they do have something that needs to be heard.”•

Thompkins Teacher Receives February Cause for Applause Award

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Thompkins Science Teacher Bruce Wright is the February winner of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation’s Cause for Applause award. The award is given monthly to an EVSC employee who goes above and beyond his/her normal job responsibilities.

 

According to Thompkins Principal Bryan Perry, Wright puts all his energy and efforts into helping students succeed. In his nomination letter, Perry cites numerous ways Wright reaches students and goes beyond the school day and the classroom. Each year, Wright hosts a star gazing trip to New Harmony State Park so students have the opportunity to learn outside of school, he also takes students to fast food restaurants to have them gauge the caloric intake and fat in the choices they make as part of his walking club, which he hosts three days a week for students. Wright also coordinates the school’s annual Pumpkin Carving contest each year and involves students in gardening to beautify areas outside the school, along with many other activities.

 

“Bruce Wright can always be counted on to assist students and staff in any activity,” writes Perry. “He has taught for 30 plus years and still maintains his love of students and making school fun. When he decides to retire, he will be missed and impossible to replace.”

 

 

Anyone can nominate an employee of the EVSC for the award. Deadline for nominations is the third Friday of each month. Go to http://www.evscschools.com/community/nominate-evsc-employees-exemplary-work for the nomination form. Paper forms are available at the schools for those without access to the Internet.

EVSC Friends and Alumni Association Formed

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EVSC

 

            The Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation is bringing its school family closer together through the formation of the new EVSC Friends and Alumni Association.

The organization is led by President Ben Shoulders, a 1996 graduate of Harrison High School and corporate relationship manager at Old National Bank.  Other officers include:  Vice President Andy Owen, a 1996 graduate of Central High School, athletic director and coach at Central; Treasurer Phil Rawley, a 1997 graduate of Mater Dei High School and CEO of Tri-State Orthopaedics; and Secretary Brenda Beeler, a 1962 graduate of Bosse High School,retired teacher and coach from Reitz.

The Friends and Alumni Association was created to connect and engage all EVSC graduates, alumni, supporters, and current students with others in the EVSC family.  Regular communication and  special events are planned.

            Information will soon be distributed explaining how to become a member. Watch www.evscschools.com/alumni for additional information. Members will receive newsletters, invitations and advance notice to special events, and possible special discounts from local area businesses.

Sen. Becker’s Bill Aimed at Reducing Drug Abuse among Pregnant Women Clears Senate

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Becker_2012_tnSTATEHOUSE (Feb. 4, 2014) — State Sen. Vaneta Becker’s (R-Evansville) bill requiring hospitals to diagnose and report neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) unanimously passed the Senate today by a 47-0 vote.

 

NAS occurs in newborns when the mother abused illegal or prescription drugs during pregnancy. It can cause newborns to experience drug dependency, seizures, slow weight gain and many other symptoms.

 

Senate Bill 408 would task Indiana hospitals with reporting NAS cases to the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) so that research on prevention and treatments can be conducted.

 

According to the Indiana Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force, the overall rate of newborns being diagnosed with NAS has tripled over the past decade. In 2009, approximately one infant born per hour in the United States had signs of drug withdrawal.

 

“There is concern that drug abuse among pregnant women is rising and causing irreparable harm to newborns,” Becker said. “Today’s bill starts the conversation about how to prevent and treat this unfortunate condition, and makes sure our medical professionals are prepared to help keep both mothers and infants safe.”

 

SB 408 now moves to the House of Representatives for further consideration.

IS IT TRUE February 5, 2014

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Mole
Mole

IS IT TRUE the Evansville region is once again hunkering down for a period of cold, snowy, and icy weather?…it will certainly be accompanied by the usual infrastructure failures like more broken water mains and the threat of the sewage treatment facility getting jammed up?…if this winter is not a lesson in planning maintenance for the City of Evansville and it’s residents then there must be a learning disability both inside and outside the Civic Center?

IS IT TRUE the Evansville Redevelopment Commission (ERC) is back in the news with the trial of alleged money launderer and former ERC member Jay Carter being delayed because his attorney has removed himself from the case?…this all happened shortly after Carter decided no plea bargain was acceptable and that he wanted to go to trial asap?…the antics and failed oversight of the ERC has been a real source of embarrassment for the City of Evansville in recent years with this alleged crime, failing to VET anything competently, not knowing or not practicing the skills they were appointed for, and alleged rubber stamping of mayoral desires feeding the call by some to just abolish the ERC altogether?

IS IT TRUE we hope you will take time and view our new advertising section to the right of this column?  …this section is designed to provide advertisers with an affordable way to visually promote their businesses?  …if your interested in obtaining more information about our advertising package please call Mollie at 1-812-760-4233?

IS IT TRUE the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) started a firestorm yesterday when it published its latest findings with respect to the impact of ObamaCare on the American economy?…from liberal and conservative publications the words of the CBO report are remarkably the same but the spin is where both sides departed from reasonable positions?…the headline number was the CBO’s claim that 2.3 Million less full time equivalent jobs would be in the workforce by 2021 due to incentives built into the health plan?…that does not necessarily mean 2.3 Million people will lose their jobs, but what it means is that the collective loss of wages by people who either voluntarily work shorter hours to keep themselves eligible for the incentives plus those who just decide not to work so they can collect the incentives will amount to the efforts of 2.3 Million full time jobs?…that amounts to roughly 4.6 Billion hours per year and may be spread over more than 2.3 Million people?…the net economic result is the same either way and the thing that is most disturbing is that people who are capable of providing valuable services will be put in a position that makes their best economic decision to opt out and put out their hand?…the demeaning of the value of a person’s labor is unprecedented in the United States for working age men and women and will passivating effect on the American workforce?…it is one thing to fall behind in a competitive effort, it is quite another to be paid to quit by the government?…whether one likes it or not, this is not a positive piece of news?

IS IT TRUE the Associated Press summed it up pretty well in stating, “The estimated reduction stems almost entirely from a net decline in the amount of labor that workers choose to supply, rather than from a net drop in businesses’ demand for labor?”…that is a very elegant way to say that many American workers will just say to hell with it when it comes to earning more money?…Social Security has been like that from many years as have pension plans that pay out the same or more than one would earn working?…in the case of Social Security that is because people do not age equally and some people are worn out when they reach retirement age while others are still ready to get up and hit the grind every day?…this writer has never understood an incentive not to work or even in some cases a penalty for doing so?…this, coupled with the slight decline of wages (1%) that the CBO mentioned would be disruptive to an ambitious nation and its people?…the good old USA may not have that American spirit of ambition by 2021 so get out the saddle and strap it on folks, paid laziness in at our door?

EVSC Closed Tomorrow

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EVSC

Due to the severe weather conditions, the EVSC will be closed tomorrow, Wednesday, Feb. 5. When the EVSC is closed, all activities and events associated with the EVSC are cancelled.

EVSC Schools Dismissing Two Hours Early

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EVSC

Due to the impending weather, schools in the EVSC will be dismissing two hours earlier than normal dismissal times.

In an early dismissal:

-Title 1 PreK classes at Daniel Wertz, Caze, Evans, Cedar Hall, and the Culver Family Learning Center will dismiss one hour earlier than their school location.

-PreK classes at Little Husky World, Little Panther World and Dexter, as well as the Bosse TLC program, will close one hour after their school location.

-Afternoon classes at the Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center; Early College High School at Ivy Tech; Medical Professions Academy at Central High School; Randall Shepard Academy for Law and Social Justice, and the JROTC    Program at Harrison High School will be cancelled.

-The high school International Newcomer’s Academy at Bosse will be cancelled.

-Classes will be cancelled for students on the P.M. alternate schedule  at the Academy for Innovative Studies-Diamond campus.

-After school extracurricular activities will be cancelled.

-The Extended Daycare program will remain open until all children have been picked up.

 

Winter weather road conditions‏

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EPD PATCH 2012

 SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Indiana’s next blast of winter weather is upon us. Warnings about hazardous driving conditions will be issued by city, county and state law enforcement as well as by local and national media. Many will heed the warnings. Many more will ignore the warnings. With another major storm approaching, the Evansville Police Department, again, remind motorists to limit travel when possible. If travel is not necessary, then stay home. Most calls for service received by the EPD and other police agencies during winter storms are for crashes and motorists that slide off state roads and interstates. It is important to remember that snow and ice covered roads do not cause crashes. The crashes are caused by unsafe driving on the snow and ice covered roadway. If you choose to drive during poor or hazardous driving conditions you must: 1. Leave sooner and expect your travel time to be twice as long as normal 2. Drive slower 3. Increase the following distance between you and the vehicle in front of you by at least five times greater than normal 4. Approach intersections with great care; other drivers not paying attention will slide through red lights 5. Signal all lane changes and turning movements The posted speed limit may be more than twice as fast as the reduced speed drivers should travel to reduce the possibility of a collision or loss of control that puts a vehicle into a retaining wall, ditch or another motorist. Indiana code 9-21-5-1 specifies “Speed shall be restricted as necessary to avoid colliding with a person, vehicle, or other conveyance on, near or entering a highway.” Motorists losing control of their vehicle or who are involved in a crash resulting in a police report should expect to be cited for this offense, which carries a maximum fine of $500. If you are involved in a crash, are uninjured and all vehicles are drivable, involved drivers should move to a safe place completely off the road, be it the next exit or to the parking lot of a business to await law enforcement response for a police report. It is important to remember crashes involving injury or lane blockage receive priority attention ahead of property damage crashes. So, keep in mind, it may be an extended period of time before law enforcement arrives. The reason and purpose for moving drivable vehicles off the road is to avoid secondary crashes of other inattentive motorists crashing into your scene or sideswiping you if you’ve only moved to the side of the road. Something else to keep in mind, crash scenes with vehicles disabled in the roadway and state police presence may have the state police vehicle facing the wrong way with emergency lights and headlights on. This is to warn approaching motorists of impending danger. Remember, Indiana’s Move Over Law states motorists MUST change lanes away from the emergency or utility vehicle if they can do it SAFELY. If not possible to move away from the emergency vehicle, motorists must SLOW DOWN and proceed with caution. Please give us room to work. We are asking motorists to SLOW DOWN and/or MOVE OVER WHEN SAFE TO DO SO.

Vehicles included in the Move Over law are: • Police vehicles • Ambulances • Fire trucks and rescue equipment • Highway incident-response vehicles • Highway work vehicles-including snow plows • Vehicle recovery equipment (tow trucks) The point of not calling police agencies for road information during snow emergencies cannot be overstressed. Calling police departments about road conditions may delay action on critical life emergency 911 calls. Road conditions are likely the same for the area you want to know about as it is looking out your front window. If you call for road conditions call the Indiana Department of Transportation’s Road and Weather automated system at 800-262-7623 or visit the INDOT traffic map at http://indot.carsprogram.org/main.jsf. The 800 phone service is voice activated and updated with timely road conditions across Indiana. The INDOT web link allows users to check on specific locations for current closures and other road information. For Indiana County Travel Status Reports, visit this link: http://www.in.gov/dhs/traveladvisory.