State senator pushing for health care

By DANIELLE LYNCH dlynch@delcotimes.com @dmlreporter

State Sen. Ted Erickson, R-26, of Newtown, is attempting to garner support for a bill which would help develop and expand community-based health care clinics in Pennsylvania.

Erickson emphasized the importance of the legislation in a letter, dated March 1, to state Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, R-9, of Chester.

As you are aware, I continue to advocate for the passage of Senate Bill 5, which establishes the community-based health care program in Pennsylvania, Erickson wrote in the letter to Pileggi. While this legislation will not totally solve the problem of providing access to health care and to facilities where those who are uninsured in our Commonwealth can receive services, it will result in medical homes for underserved people in rural, suburban and urban settings.

Furthermore, (Senate Bill 5) will decrease the cost of uncompensated care and create alternatives to hospital emergency rooms that currently serve as the primary care providers for many of the uninsured. For these reasons, it is critical that we pass (Senate Bill 5) in the Senate as soon as possible.

Erickson explained during a phone interview and in the letter to Pileggi that his bill is important within the context of President Barack Obamas health care law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

Recently, discussions of providing medical care to Pennsylvanians who do not have access to care have expanded to include the issue of expanding our Medical Assistance program, he wrote. Expansion could occur by taking advantage of the federal (health care law) provision that gives states 100 percent federal funding for individuals up to 138 percent of the poverty level including childless adults.

Erickson cited a policy brief, The Future of Medicaid Long Term Care Services in Pennsylvania: A Wake Up Call, in his letter. He said the brief indicates that Pennsylvania is currently faced with an ever increasing Medical Assistance caseload and related costs regardless of expansion of Medical Assistance under the Affordable Care Act.

Currently, there are approximately 2.1 to 2.2 million people who are (Medical Assistance) recipients and the annual rate of growth in the program has been 11 percent, Erickson wrote, citing the report that he received from Pileggi. If this rate of growth continues, there will be an increase in the rolls this year of over 238,000 individuals. If the cost of providing (Medical Assistance) coverage is $6,000 per person per year, the annual cost will be in excess of $1.4 billion for these 238,000 recipients alone.

As this shows, regardless of any action the state may take with respect to the (Affordable Care Act) and (Medical Assistance) expansion, our costs are increasing. The Commonwealth must make additional efforts to reduce costs by reducing emergency room use, providing preventive care to adults and treating chronic conditions before they require more intensive medical intervention all of which would be addressed under (Senate Bill 5). And, although the expansion of (Medical Assistance) will cost $3 billion over a 10 year period, advocates still believe that there is a potential to reduce overall expenditures in the health care system.

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State senator pushing for health care

S.F. avoids retirees’ health care issue

For politicians who get awfully riled up about exposed genitalia in the Castro or what to call our local airport, the good folks at City Hall sure do have a knack for looking the other way when it comes to matters of huge financial import.

Take the city's $4.4 billion unfunded liability to pay for health care for its employees and retirees over the next 30 years.

A new report from the Pew Charitable Trust crunched figures for the largest city in each of the country's 30 most populous metro regions for a look at how they're faring when it comes to affording the tab on their pension and retiree health care obligations.

On the pension front, San Francisco isn't doing too badly. After the city focused intensely on the issue in 2011 and voters passed a ballot measure making changes to the system - and, after investment returns started improving after the Great Recession - San Francisco's pension system is 97 percent funded.

To cover the gap, each household in the city would have to fork over $1,677.

Just Washington, D.C. is doing better, having enough money on hand to pay 104 percent of its pension obligations. Each household there could get $646 back, and the pension fund would break even. Who says everything in Washington is broken?

Pittsburgh, for the record, is doing the worst with enough money to pay just 39 percent of its pension tab.

But when it comes to retiree health care costs, it's another story. San Francisco has saved less than 1 percent of its $4.4 billion tab - and each household would have to pay $13,487 to make up the difference.

That's actually better than 15 cities - including Boston, Chicago, Sacramento and Seattle - which have saved nothing. Cincinnati is doing the best, having saved 85 percent of what it will owe.

Mayor Ed Lee has said he'll tackle the retiree health care issue, and Supervisor Mark Farrell has called for a hearing on the matter which he said should take place in the next few weeks. He hopes to craft a ballot measure on the issue to take to voters in November.

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S.F. avoids retirees' health care issue

Professor Dinggang Li, M.D. – gene therapy, Gendicine – Video


Professor Dinggang Li, M.D. - gene therapy, Gendicine
Professor Dinggang Li md gene therapy Gendicine. Uploaded by Danni ElKher on Mar 14 2013. Itroduction of the hospitals of Phoenix Hosiptal Group Beijing Health Palace Hospital and Beijing Yanhua Phoenix Hospital with Professor Dinggang Li md in front Gene therapy also known as Gendicine has been proven to be very useful in the fight against cancer Scandinavian patients wwwkirurgirejserdk. Plu Mb 69.

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Professor Dinggang Li, M.D. - gene therapy, Gendicine - Video

Future of Learning: Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Learning Technologies 2013 (Edited) – Video


Future of Learning: Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Learning Technologies 2013 (Edited)
This video is an edited version of http://youtu.be/ui9V995RHrc without the intro and the audience discussion; recorded at https://www.annotag.tv/learningtech...

By: Gerd Leonhard

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Future of Learning: Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Learning Technologies 2013 (Edited) - Video

Energy Games | Combat arms _-Fezinho | HD Futurist – Video


Energy Games | Combat arms _-Fezinho | HD Futurist
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Energy Games | Combat arms _-Fezinho | HD Futurist - Video

‘Marxist’ Obama crushes freedom , conservatives say

OXON HILL, Maryland - Barack Obama is a closet Marxist; liberty, freedom and the American way are under attack; and the federal government is waging a campaign to indoctrinate families.

Welcome to CPAC.

The Conservative Political Action Conference, an annual gathering of grass-roots conservatives, represents a mass meeting of ardent activists eager to swap views on gay marriage, guns, abortion and the economy.

Uniting many attendees, however, is the overriding worldview that the Obama administration and the Democrats are engaged in a sinister campaign to erode their freedoms of religion, consumer choices, weapons and economy.

At a small stand in the conference hall, 58-year-old Cliff Kincaid of the Accuracy in Media watchdog group sold and distributed books and brochures arguing that Obama was brought up as a communist and is therefore a Marxist president.

"He employs a lot of Marxist class warfare rhetoric in order to divide and polarize the American people," said Kincaid.

"Freedoms have not vanished completely, we still have certain First Amendment rights," he added, referring to the freedoms of religion, speech and assembly enshrined in the US Constitution.

"But he has diminished the power of the United States internationally, he is supporting groups like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the Middle East which are anti-American."

The vision of an America under siege is a recurring theme at CPAC, where it is hard to walk even a few steps without being confronted by a leaflet, poster or T-shirt warning of a United States in decline.

The film "America at Risk" was projected onto a screen in one room, while in another, a group distributed "The Ultimate Obama Survival Guide," which teaches conservatives "how to survive, thrive and prosper during Obamageddon."

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'Marxist' Obama crushes freedom , conservatives say

Don’t snuff out beacon of freedom

BRITAINS long, proud status as a beacon of Press freedom is under threat tomorrow, warn anti-censorship crusaders across the world.

It will be SNUFFED OUT if MPs back new laws to control newspapers, they say.

A global alliance of free speech campaigners predicted nations eager to muzzle journalists will be watching the historic Commons showdown.

They will be looking for a signal to crack down on their own newspapers.

Tyrant ... Mugabe

Rex Features

It follows warnings tyrants such as Zimbabwes Robert Mugabe will seize on new UK laws to further curb free speech in their own countries.

Press freedom fighters urged MPs NOT to sign a new tough system of self-regulation into law.

They warned it would have grave implications across the world.

Bitter wrangling over the Press comes to a head in tomorrows Commons vote.

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Don’t snuff out beacon of freedom

Freedom Hawk Kayaks Lures David Rose into the Kayak Fishing Industry

Industry veteran David Rose has returned to the kayak fishing business as President of Freedom Hawk Kayaks. Davids addition and the subsequent move of the Company from Massachusetts to Tennessee brings the home office closer to the manufacturing facility.

Kingston, TN (PRWEB) March 16, 2013

In his new role with Freedom Hawk Kayaks, Rose will be responsible for leading all product line management, marketing, communications, branding and production efforts. Davids addition and the subsequent move of the Company from Massachusetts to Tennessee brings the home office closer to the manufacturing facility, also the manufacturer of Jackson Kayaks, and provides constant and close communication with production and shipping.

David has a wealth of experience that will serve him well in the management, sales and marketing roles and were pleased to welcome him to Freedom Hawk Kayaks. said Dave Cameron, Founder.

The passion for the sport of kayak fishing is evident when speaking with the current Freedom Hawk Kayak owners. They are a tribe loyal to the brand and I look forward to joining the fun. said Rose. Im looking forward to continuing the creation of a unique and versatile brand.

About Freedom Hawk Kayaks

Freedom Hawk Kayaks manufactures the finest kayaks for fishing in the world. Made in the United States with a patented outrigger system, Freedom Hawks angling kayaks, including the Pathfinder and Freedom 12 are specially designed for stand-up kayak fishing enthusiasts who want to stand safely and comfortably.

David Rose Freedom Hawk Kayaks (865) 217-6290 Email Information

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Freedom Hawk Kayaks Lures David Rose into the Kayak Fishing Industry

Freedom Area Citizens’ Council to host public listening session

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Posted: Saturday, March 16, 2013 11:45 pm

Freedom Area Citizens' Council to host public listening session By Alisha George Times Staff Writer Carroll County Times |

The Freedom Area Citizens Council is hosting a public listening session Thursday to provide another opportunity for community input as the review and update of the Freedom Community Comprehensive Plan progresses, according to a county government news release.

This listening session will take place 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the South Carroll Senior and Community Center, located at 5928 Mineral Hill Road in Eldersburg. The updated Freedom plan will incorporate community consensus to aid in defining the future of this region of Carroll County, according to the release.

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Freedom Area Citizens' Council to host public listening session

Lawsuit Tests Bloggers’ Freedom of Speech Rights

A colleague of the late conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart is asking a federal court of appeals to throw out a defamation case brought against him by former government employee Shirley Sherrod, saying the lawsuit violates the blogger's right to freedom of speech.

Sherrod was ousted from her job as an Agriculture Department rural development official in 2010 after Breitbart posted an edited video of Sherrod, who is black, supposedly making racist remarks. She sued Breitbart, his employee Larry O'Connor and an unnamed defendant for defamation and emotional distress after USDA officials asked her to resign and the video ignited a racial firestorm. Sherrod's lawyers say the unnamed defendant is the person whom they believe passed the video on to Breitbart, though the person's identity remains unknown.

Breitbart died unexpectedly a year ago, and his status in the case is unclear as his family does not appear to have notified the court of an estate that can be sued.

The case argued before the court of appeals Friday is one of the first high-profile federal lawsuits to test the freedom of speech rights of bloggers. Backed by large news organizations including the New York Times Co., Washington Post Co. and Dow Jones & Company, Inc., who have filed friend-of-the-court briefs in the case, O'Connor's lawyers argued to have the case dismissed under a District of Columbia statute that aims to prevent the silencing of critics through lawsuits. A federal district court judge rejected their motion to dismiss, citing timing and jurisdictional issues, prompting the appeal.

The lawyers told the court of appeals that O'Connor and Breitbart, before he died, stood by the content, saying the blog post was opinion.

"What happened here is what happens in journalism every day," said Bruce Brown, a lawyer for O'Connor.

Sherrod's lawyers disagree and say dismissal under the District of Columbia statute would violate their right to a trial. The video on Breitbart's website turned out to be edited, and when Sherrod's full speech to an NAACP group earlier that year came to light, it became clear that her remarks about an initial reluctance to help a white farmer decades ago were not racist but an attempt at telling a story of racial reconciliation. Once that was obvious, Sherrod received public apologies from the administration even from President Barack Obama himself and an offer to return to the Agriculture Department, which she declined.

Sherrod's 2011 lawsuit says the incident affected her sleep and caused her back pain. It contends that she was damaged by having her "integrity, impartiality and motivations questioned, making it difficult (if not impossible) for her to continue her life's work assisting poor farmers in rural areas" even though she was invited to return to the department.

The video was posted amid ongoing friction between the NAACP and the tea party movement, each of which were accusing the other of having racist elements among their ranks. Breitbart said at the time that the video showed the NAACP condoning racist comments from a government official.

The full video, however, shows Sherrod explaining to the audience how she eventually became friends with the farmer and helped him save his land from foreclosure.

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Lawsuit Tests Bloggers' Freedom of Speech Rights

Freedom Drug Rehab Starts New Therapeutic Training Routines Course

Freedom Treatment Center is a drug and alcohol recovery facility in Southern Michigan that offers individualized treatment programs to help overcome addiction and enter a successful life of recovery. The center started a new therapeutic training routines course that helps restore the life skills often lost in the cycle of addiction.

Albion, MI (PRWEB) March 16, 2013

Our new therapeutic training routines course works as a rehabilitation tool for the mind, said Freedom Treatment Center representative Brian Kuehne. It helps people regain skills they lost or have long stopped using so they may better deal with their addiction and, above all, better deal with life.

The course teaches people to stop running or attempting to hide from their issues and instead work on their abilities to confront, control and communicate. Simple drills in a classroom setting are a large part of the re-learning process that help people shed old behaviors and incorporate new ones that are conducive to recovery. The course notes that when addiction takes over, people generally lose their ability to face uncomfortable feelings, situations and things. This can lead to avoidance or explosive behaviors when confronted with anything that makes them uncomfortable.

They underlying desire to get rid of uncomfortable situations at all costs continues to drive an addiction long after the substance is gone, Kuehne said. We help people instead learn to confront the uncomfortable situations and things, control their behaviors and communicate in a way that makes the situation better, not worse.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse recognizes an effective recovery program must go deeper than treating people's drug abuse and include a focus on all of their needs. Those needs include their ability to cope with life without the use of alcohol or drugs.

Even if those recovering from drug or alcohol abuse do not once again turn to alcohol or drugs to avoid discomfort, they can easily turn to gambling, sex or other compulsive behaviors that serve the same purpose drugs and alcohol did: a means of escape. Freedom Treatment Centers new therapeutic training routines course helps people stop running so they can start living.

"Drug and alcohol abuse is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to addiction," Kuehne said. "Our new course helps correct the real issues."

Located in a semi-residential pocket of Southern Michigan, Freedom Treatment Center provides the soothing and safe environment and assistance so vital for helping people overcome drug and alcohol addiction. Treatment begins with a natural detoxification and continues with counseling, education and lifestyle changes that help ensure an ongoing and successful recovery.

Nick Thiel Freedom Drug Rehab (877) 210-5311 Email Information

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Freedom Drug Rehab Starts New Therapeutic Training Routines Course

Freedom ‘s Conzola earns gold

LEWISBURG LEWISBURG - "I don't like being seeded first," Freedom's Peter Conzola said. So he was pleased that in the 100 backstroke final, he was seeded seventh based on his morning preliminary time, and was 'hiding" in lane 1.

In fifth place after 50 yards, Conzola turned up the heat and won the race, earning the only gold medal among area boys in the PIAA state swimming and diving championships at Bucknell University's Kinney Natatorium.

"The last 25 of the race I knew it was the last race of mu high school season," Conzola said. "I put everything I had into that last moment. I thought I was behind. Coming up to the last wall I looked over and saw everyone else. I said 'I gotta go. I sometimes have a tendency to bring it out very fast and have good closing speed. This is not the way I would have strategized the race. I like to go out fast and be ahead of everyone, be comfortable. Then just control it the rest of the way. I don't like to be flailing on the last lap. If I'm seeded first I always psych myself out. The pressure's on me to win and everything."

Freedom's Sam Magnan shaved some time of his preliminary tie in the 500 free, but North allegheny's Zachary Buerger shaved even more. Buerger took the gold and Magnan thee silver in the race.

Buerger took off in the first lap and never looked back. "I saw him," Magnan said. "I thought I could catch him and put my head down and gave it all I had in the last lap, but he had too big a lead."

Magnan changed his breathing side every length of the pool so he could watch Buerger.

"Overall, I'm happy with the race," he added. "I'm only a sophomore, so I'll have other chances to get a gold medal. A silver medal isn't that bad.

Zachary Kantz from Bangor matched his silver medal in Friday's 50 freestyle with another silver in the 100 free. Upper Dublin's Robert Bantley won the 100.

Kantz was leading after 50 yards in the 100 and had almost a body length lead going into the final turn.

"I died," Kantz said. "I just didn't have it in me today. My last turn wasn't the best and that cost me the race. After my second turn i got a little cocky I guess."

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Freedom 's Conzola earns gold