Showing posts with label could. Show all posts
Showing posts with label could. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

HEADACHE CONTINUES New England snowstorm could last several days

bostoninternal211616.jpg Feb. 7, 2015: A worker uses a front-end loader to remove piled snow Saturday, Feb. 7, 2015, from a street in Marlborough, Mass. (AP)

BOSTON –  Winter-weary New England saw more snow flurries on Saturday and braced for several days of heavy snowfall, possibly totaling a foot or more.

A winter storm warning posted by the National Weather Service was to begin at 10 p.m. and remain in effect for a large swath of southern New England, including in Boston, in Providence, Rhode Island, and in Hartford, Connecticut, until the early morning hours of Tuesday. Light snow began falling in the Boston area earlier in the day, but what forecasters are calling a “long duration” storm is expected to become more intense on Sunday.

By Monday night, 12 to 18 inches of fresh snow could be on the ground in parts of the region, which is still coping with the aftereffects of storms that hit over the last couple of weeks and dumped record-high snowfall totals in some places.

Michelle Currie, a mother of five whose kids have already missed several days of school, posted on her Facebook page a photo of a weather map showing up to 18 inches of snow could fall on her home in Dracut, less than an hour’s drive north of Boston.

“I have to laugh because otherwise I may cry,” she said.

The snow is likely to cause problems for commuters on Monday, though it’s not expected to accumulate as rapidly as in some of the earlier storms, including a record-busting late January blizzard. There also is little risk seen of significant coastal flooding, a problem during last month’s winter blasts.

Boston’s transit system, the nation’s oldest, has been particularly hard hit. The buildup of snow and ice on trolley tracks combined with aging equipment has stalled trains in recent days, delaying and angering commuters. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority general manager Beverly Scott said Saturday that crews were doing everything they could, including deploying massive jet-powered snow blowers, to clear tracks before the next storm.

Gov. Charlie Baker acknowledged on Friday that the MBTA was handed an extraordinary situation with old equipment but said the system’s overall performance was unacceptable.

In many New England communities, the obvious problem is where to put the next batch of snow.

In Revere, just outside Boston, schoolteacher Ingrid Samuel said there were “mountains of snow” and the streets “can’t take another hit of snow on top of what’s here.”

“There’s a bunch of snow everywhere, and there’s no more place to put it,” said Samuel, who lost a week of work after the last snowstorm canceled classes. “There are no sidewalks left in Revere. My whole yard is covered with snow. Where will it end?”

David Lombari, public works director for West Warwick, Rhode Island, told the Providence Journal his town was already clogged with snow piles several feet high and school buses were parked in the usual snow storage lot.

“I don’t know what we’re going to do yet,” Lombari said. “It’s tough trying to find a place that meets all the proper (environmental) criteria.”

State snow disposal guidelines require that communities use locations that won’t harm environmental resources and have barriers that prevent contaminants from seeping into groundwater when the snow melts.

Adding injury to insult perhaps, the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency warned that potentially record cold temperatures and wind chills are expected to move into the region later in the week after the storm.


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HEADACHE CONTINUES New England snowstorm could last several days

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Congressional travel to Cuba surged last year - Raul Castro demands U.S. pay back Cubans for "damages," return Guantanamo - OPINION: Five ways Obama could make Castro pay Cuba"s $6 billion debt to Americans

Travel by members of Congress to Cuba shot up last year ahead of President Obama’s December executive action normalizing relations with the island nation.

Thirteen Democratic House members traveled to Havana in 2014 on at least three separate trips sponsored by nonprofit outside groups, according to travel reports members are required to file with the House Ethics Committee.

One of the trips, in which at least seven lawmakers participated, ended just one day before Obama’s Dec. 17 announcement of a détente with the Castro regime.

The visits coincide with a furious behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign from longtime advocates for normalizing relations with Cuba and pressing Obama last year that the time was right to make a bold move and ease sanctions and lift travel restrictions.


Read more on WashingtonExaminer.com

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Congressional travel to Cuba surged last year - Raul Castro demands U.S. pay back Cubans for "damages," return Guantanamo - OPINION: Five ways Obama could make Castro pay Cuba"s $6 billion debt to Americans

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Aamer could return to cricket next month

KARACHI, Pakistan (AFP) — Disgraced Pakistan paceman Mohammad Aamer could return to first-class cricket as early as next month after a relaxation of the conditions of his ban for spot-fixing, an official said yesterday.

Aamer, 22, was banned for five years along with Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif in a spot-fixing case in England in 2010, and the trio were jailed by a UK court in 2011.

The paceman was interviewed in Lahore yesterday by the International Cricket Council (ICC), after the governing body revised the players’ code of conduct in November last year, adding a provision that allows a banned player to play in domestic games for a certain period prior to the end of the ban.

The change of rules prompted the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to file an appeal with the ICC to relax certain conditions of Aamer’s ban last year.

A final decision on Aamer’s appeal will be taken in ICC Board meeting in Dubai next week.

A PCB spokesman confirmed Aamer’s potential return.

“It is most likely that Aamer will get reprieve to play domestic cricket,” said the spokesman Agha Akber.

PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan last week said Aamer will be monitored in first-class cricket before returning to international cricket.

His five-year ban expires in August this year.

PCB has said that since the other two banned players — Butt and Asif — took time to plead guilty, and have not completed a mandatory rehabilitation, their cases will not be taken up with the ICC.

Before the ban Aamer was described as cricket’s “hottest property” by legendary Pakistan pacer Imran Khan.


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Aamer could return to cricket next month

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Rookie pacer Cotterell could be surprise element -- Lloyd

CENTURION, South Africa (CMC) — Rookie pacer Sheldon Cotterell is being tipped to be a surprise element for West Indies in the three-Test series starting tomorrow.

The 25-year-old has played just one Test, but recent spells in the WICB Professional Cricket League and an explosive five-wicket burst in last week’s three-day tour match, have raised hopes of the left-armer playing a key role in the tourists’ attack.

“Left-arm quick bowlers don’t come often and he is somebody we need to nurture and take along with us as long as possible,” chief selector Clive Lloyd told reporters here.

“He could be very lively. On these pitches here, if he swings it and bowls as well as he has been bowling, he could give batsmen some trouble.”

His single Test has come against India, in Kolkata last year when West Indies were hammered 3-0 in that series. He has, however, remained in the selectors’ frame, and they have kept him involved on A-team campaigns.

Concerned about his fitness following an injury on the recent Sri Lanka A tour, selectors asked him to delay his departure with the rest of the squad to South Africa and contest the fourth round of the PCL with Jamaica.

He subsequently blew away Trinidad and Tobago with a five-wicket haul in the first innings, to set up victory for his side.

“I watched Sheldon Cotterell play a game in Trinidad the other day. We asked him to play that game because we wanted to see how fit he is,” Lloyd explained.

“He is always very enthusiastic and being a soldier, I think he is fit enough and he wants to play.”

Cotterell could take the final fast-bowling spot in the Windies attack, with senior seamers Kemar Roach and Jerome Taylor expected to share the new ball.

Lloyd expects combative left-armer Sulieman Benn to carry the burden of the spin attack, and believes the Barbadian will be an asset for the side overall.

“I would think we would play Sulieman Benn,” said the former West Indies captain.

“He is our best spinner, he has got a lot of experience and he tends to get the team going. He too is very enthusiastic and looks ready for the challenge ahead.”


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Rookie pacer Cotterell could be surprise element -- Lloyd

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Success against Proteas could be key to WC campaign, says Gayle

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (CMC) — Chris Gayle believes success in the limited overs series against South Africa in coming weeks will put West Indies in good stead for the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand starting in February.

West Indies opened the three-match Twenty20 International series with a four-wicket win on Friday at Newlands and also face the Proteas in five One-Day Internationals from January 16.

“With the World Cup right around the corner, you need momentum leading up to the World Cup,” the veteran opener pointed out.

“I know it’s T20, but there are five important ODIs against South Africa and if we can actually gain a lot of momentum going up to the World Cup, it will give us more confidence. It will be important for us to cash in on this ODI series.”

The victory was the first for the Windies on the South Africa tour, after losing the preceding three-Test series 2-0.

Chasing 166, the Caribbean side were propelled by Gayle’s breathtaking 77 off 31 balls, as they reached their target with four balls to spare. Predictably, he was voted Man-of-the-Match.

The second T20 is set for Johannesburg today, with the final contest carded for Durban on Wednesday.

“We lost the Test series 2-0 and to actually get off to a good start in the [T20] series [is a good thing],” Gayle said.

“Hopefully we can build on this momentum and go forward. What would actually be better for us is if we win this T20 series which would give us a boost going into the ODIs. We’re looking forward to it and I know the guys are happy to get a win here in South Africa.”

Gayle sped to the fastest half-century by a West Indies player when he raised his landmark off just 17 balls. The innings marked his 12th T20 International half-century and overall, he struck five fours and eight sixes.

“The wicket was a pretty decent wicket to bat with the new ball … but it was just one of those nights. I am happy it came off and hopefully I can have many more of these nights.”

Remarkably, the innings came with Gayle still not fully fit. He pulled out of the preceding Test series with back problems which have plagued his career in recent years, but said he was continuing to monitor the injury.

“I never say I am a hundred per cent fit,” he said, laughing.

“[My back] was a bit stiff this morning and I was a bit nervous, to be honest, but it pulled up well so with an innings like this I’ll see how [I feel] tomorrow [especially] after a game like this, and I’ll take it from there.”


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Success against Proteas could be key to WC campaign, says Gayle

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Brother Of Girl Who Was Starved To Death By Mother, Brought Food To Her Funeral ‘So His Sister Could Eat In Heaven’

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The five-year-old brother of a girl who was beaten and starved to death by their mother brought food to her funeral so she would have enough to eat in heaven, it was revealed.
‘Monster mom’ Carlotta Brett-Pierce was found guilty of murder last month and sentenced to 32 years to life in prison yesterday.
Her four-year-old daughter Marchella died covered in bruises and open wounds and weighing only 19 pounds in September 2010. She was found drugged and beaten, tied to her SpongeBob SquarePants bed at the Brooklyn home.

The little girl, who was force-fed allergy pills, was often beaten in front of her brother Tymel.
Prosecutor Jacqueline Kagan revealed that Tymel, now seven, was deeply traumatized by the events he witnessed at home and still grieves for his sister.
When he attended her funeral, he had brought food with him so that he could help his sister.


Ms Kagan said: ‘He brought with him food because he knew she didn’t get enough. And he told his foster mother, ”I hope that she gets enough food and water in heaven,”’ according to the New York Post.
The month-long trial of Brett-Pierce, 32, in a Brooklyn court room finished quickly on May 9 with the jury requiring only one hour to deliberate over her guilt.


When Marchella Brett-Pierce was found, she was tied to her bed with jump ropes, had been beaten, starved and drugged.
Prosecutors say she had dozens of marks and open wounds on her tiny body which was so emaciated, every rib could be seen.
Carlotta Brett-Pierce was emotionless when the jury proclaimed her guilty of her daughter Marchella’s death. Her punishment did not even stop her from giving the judge some attitude when asked if she understood.
‘I heard what you said,’ the 32-year-old said.


She has refused to accept blame for the death of her daughter, blaming the jurors, lawyers and the press for her murder conviction, calling it a ‘tragedy’.
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Patricia DiMango said yesterday: ‘This child, at her tender age, was subjected to a hell that no one should have to endure.
‘What kind of person could do this to a child, let alone their own child?’ she said, according to DNAinfo.com
During the trial, Brett-Pierce’s answers painted a ghastly picture of their home life.
She said of her daughter near the time of her September 2010 death: ‘To me, at the time, it didn’t look bad.’


Brett-Pierce said that her daughter lost weight by running around in the heat and sustained the bruises from falling in the stairway.
Judge DiMango also sentenced grandmother Loretta Brett to five to 15 years in prison for manslaughter in the death.
Throughout the trial, her lawyers switched between disproving the prosecutions tales of horrific beatings and arguing that Brett-Pierce was an overwhelmed mother with a sick daughter that she didn’t know how to care for.
Marchella spent the first three-and-a-half years of her life in hospital after she was born prematurely with severe breathing difficulties.
Her mother admitted on the stand that in the seven months she was in her care, she never took the four-year-old to a pediatrician.


A prosecutor showed the mother a doctor’s note indicating that her youngest boy weighed 18 pounds at nine months – roughly the same weight as four-year-old Marchella when she died.
She told the court she fed her daughter ‘potato chips, fried chicken and cheese doodles’, but an autopsy recorded that only a single corn kernel was found in her body, along with a high level of antihistamines.
Marchella should have been on a specialized diet and fed through a tube, which prosecutors say the mother totally ignored, instead feeding her junk food.


During questioning she denied certain things she had already told police and called Marchella ‘my baby’ as opposed to ‘that b***h’ – which she was heard calling her in a recorded jail conversation played for the jury saying: ‘That b***h wasn’t that f***ing light.’
When she was released from hospital seven months before her death, she weighed 26lbs- a stark contrast from her final weight of 18.9 pounds.
The Administration for Children’s Services became involved with the family after Brett Pierce gave birth to a boy who tested positive for drugs.
Two social workers from ACS who had involvement in Marchella’s case were charged separately with criminally negligent homicide for failing to prevent the tragic death.
Damon Adams and Chereece Bell were both charged with criminally negligent homicide, official misconduct and endangering the welfare of a child. Their case is due to begin.

Posted in: Breaking News, Current News, International. Tags: Brother Of Girl Who Was Starved To Death By Mother, Brought Food To Her Funeral ‘So His Sister Could Eat In Heaven’.

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Brother Of Girl Who Was Starved To Death By Mother, Brought Food To Her Funeral ‘So His Sister Could Eat In Heaven’

Monday, October 27, 2014

Police say human remains could be missing UVA student Hannah Graham - VIDEO: Remains sent to Richmond to be identified

Police say human remains found Saturday in Virginia could be those of missing University of Virginia student Hannah Graham – who was last seen on Sept. 13.

Further forensic tests are needed to confirm whether the remains are those of Hannah Graham, Charlottesville Police Chief Tim Longo told a news conference. The remains were found on an abandoned property in southern Albemarle County by a search team from the Chesterfield County Sheriff’s Office, Longo said. They are being transported to Richmond for identification.

“Right now we have the discovery of human remains and a great deal of work ahead of us,” said Col. Steve Sellers, Albemarle County Police chief. “We cannot and will not jump to any conclusions regarding today’s discovery. I ask for the public’s patience as we move forward and pursue what is now a new, ongoing death investigation.”

Authorities are asking anyone who recalls seeing any suspicious activity or vehicles in the area of Old Lynchburg Road in Charlottesville – where the remains were found – to contact the Albemarle County Police Department at 434-296-5807.

Thousands of volunteers had searched for the 18-year-old Graham in the weeks since her disappearance.

Jesse Leroy Matthew Jr., 32, has been charged with abduction with intent to defile Graham. A preliminary hearing is set for Dec. 4 on the charge. In the meantime, Matthew is being held in the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail.

Police officials Saturday afternoon had blocked the road leading to the site where the remains were found.

Surveillance videos captured some of what Graham did the night she vanished. Authorities say she met friends at a restaurant for dinner Sept. 12 before stopping by two parties at off-campus housing units. She left the second party alone and eventually texted a friend saying she was lost, authorities said.

She can be seen walking unsteadily and even running at times, past a pub and a service station and then onto a seven-block pedestrian strip that includes the Tempo Restaurant.

Tempo Restaurant owner Brice Cunningham has said Graham appeared to be incapacitated as she walked away with Matthew. Police have said they have no reason to believe she and Matthew knew each other before their encounter.

Matthew, an operating room technician at the university’s hospital who sometimes drives a taxi, had been drinking at the bar earlier that night before he encountered Graham, Cunningham has said.

A week after Graham went missing, Longo publicly described Matthew in detail without naming him, saying investigators wanted to talk to the “person of interest” and had searched his apartment because he was the last person to see her.

Matthew showed up at police headquarters, asked for a lawyer, and then sped away, according to a police account. His exit prompted a warrant for “reckless driving,” a charge that Longo cited as he named the suspect and appealed for information from anyone who saw him with Graham the night she disappeared.

Matthew was arrested a few days later in Galveston, Texas.

While Matthew was a fugitive in Texas, Virginia police added a charge of abduction with intent to defile, a violent felony that under Virginia law compels suspects to submit to DNA testing.

Very quickly thereafter, Virginia State Police announced a “forensic link” to Harrington’s killing. That case, in turn, has been linked by DNA evidence since 2012 to the rape of a woman in Fairfax, Virginia, who survived after a passer-by startled her attacker, the FBI has said.

Following Matthew’s arrest, Christopher Newport University released a statement noting that he had been named in a police file involving a Sept. 7, 2003 sexual assault on the Newport News campus. Matthew was a student there from January 2003 through Oct. 15, 2003.

Matthew had transferred to CNU after three years at Liberty University, where he also was briefly on the football team.

When he was at Liberty University, he was accused of raping a student on campus. That charge was dropped when the person declined to move forward with prosecution, Lynchburg Commonwealth’s Attorney Michael Doucette said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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Police say human remains could be missing UVA student Hannah Graham - VIDEO: Remains sent to Richmond to be identified

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Once-sleepy South Dakota Senate race could pose problem for GOP

rounds.jpg Then-South Dakota Gov. Mike Rounds speaks during a press conference at the state Capitol in Pierre, S.D. (AP)

South Dakota’s once-sleepy Senate race appears to be waking up – and it could throw a wrench into Republicans’ plans to seize control of the chamber next month.

The state’s Senate race for months had been considered a virtual lock for Republicans. But a new poll shows the independent in the race surging, and Democratic fundraisers have started to pour money into the contest.

Now, just as a late shake-up turned the Kansas Senate race competitive and prompted Republicans to rush to the incumbent’s aid, South Dakota could soon represent another Republican headache.

“I think the dynamics in South Dakota are putting pressure on Republicans,” said Nathan Gonzalez, managing editor of The Rothenberg Political Report.

The latest poll showed front-running former GOP Gov. Mike Rounds leading in South Dakota – but not by much.

According to the Survey USA/KOTA/KSFY/Aberdeen American News poll taken between Oct. 1 and Oct. 6, Rounds is only leading independent Larry Pressler 35-32 percent among likely voters. (Pressler is a former GOP senator who has not said how he would caucus if elected.)

Not far behind is Democrat Rick Weiland, with 28 percent.

Gonzalez said he’s not “completely surprised” over the poll findings, because “I didn’t think Rounds ever closed the deal in this race.”

But he added: “I do tend to be surprised when a third-party candidate is getting more than 20 percent.”

The survey results are raising eyebrows all over the political spectrum because the poll before it, commissioned by CBS/NYT/YouGov, had the former governor leading Pressler 42-12 percent in late September, with Weiland getting 27 percent. A Survey USA poll taken earlier that month showed Rounds with a comfortable double-digit lead ahead of both Pressler and Weiland, as did every other poll dating back to April.

So what’s happening?

Dick Wadhams, senior strategist for the Rounds campaign, told FoxNews.com the poll is an anomaly, and that “the race is not nearly as close as that.”

In fact, Rounds is still ahead with double digits, Wadhams insisted.

But the Democrats must sense the dynamics are the shifting, too, as they’re putting new resources into the race. FoxNews.com has confirmed the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) is devoting $1 million to the race – an investment that suggests they believe Pressler will peel just enough votes off Rounds to give their candidate a fighting chance. If either wins, that’s one fewer race Republicans can count on for the six total seats they need to seize control of the Senate.

“The DSCC must have their own data or else they wouldn’t be putting so much money into this,” Gonzalez said.

That money will add to a push of negative ads funded by other Democratic super PACs already weighing in on the race. According to reports, Every Voice Action started running TV ads on Sept. 18 criticizing Rounds. Meanwhile, Mayday, a super PAC co-founded by Harvard University law professor Lawrence Lessig, said it would start a $1 million campaign in supporting Weiland and against Rounds.

Rounds, for his part, has been dealing with questions over the so-called “EB-5 scandal,” which refers to a federal program that allowed immigrants to earn green cards by investing $500,000 in American businesses. Rounds expanded the program, which is now being scrutinized for corruption and abuse, during the tail-end of his 2003-2011 term.

“I think Rounds has not run a spectacular campaign and his fundraising has lagged,” added Gonzalez. “He’s let Pressler and Weiland define themselves, and I think he’s been averse to running negative or contrast ads,” allowing his “opponents to be whatever they want to be.”

In Pressler’s case, that’s a sage, moderate, three-term former senator who feels it’s his duty to get back to Washington for the sake of his state. Pressler, 72, has one paid staffer and only $100,000 in the bank, but his message must be resonating somewhere if the recent numbers are to be believed.

“I wouldn’t put too much stock in that,” Pressler told FoxNews.com, referring to the polls, “but I do feel we have never been so warmly received as we (he and his wife, Harriet) have been as we travel across the state.”

Pressler, who was first elected in 1978 and served three terms, was ousted by current Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson, who is retiring this year. A Vietnam War veteran, Pressler is known for being the only lawmaker approached in the infamous Abscam sting who deliberately turned down the offered bribe.

“It’s somewhat audacious, but I want to do public service,” said Pressler, now a grandfather of four. He wants to serve only one term in order to bring back revenues and jobs to South Dakota, and to help break the gridlock in Washington. He counts fellow independent Sen. Angus King, of Maine, as a friend, and has not yet decided if he would caucus with the Democrats or Republicans if he upsets Rounds on Nov. 4.

But Wadhams says that is not likely to happen and so far, the political tip sheets agree. While acknowledging that the dynamics seem to be shifting, Gonzalez says the Rothenberg Political Report still has the race “leaning Republican.” Cook Political Report, too, has the race in “likely” standing, between “leaning” and “solid” Republican.

“Larry Pressler has had a bit of a honeymoon in this campaign,” Wadhams said, suggesting the gloves in the Rounds corner are about to come off.

A similar shift has taken place in Kansas, where GOP Sen. Pat Roberts now faces a challenge from independent Greg Orman – and has hammered Orman as a liberal.

In South Dakota, Wadhams said: “Voters are going to find out that there are no fundamental differences between Weiland and Pressler, that a new, liberal version of Pressler has emerged. Anyone who says he has voted for Obama twice, who supports ObamaCare and gun control – there is something wrong with that.”

Pressler acknowledges voting for President Obama, and supports the Affordable Care Act, but with modifications. He also supports limited background checks on gun purchases, he said.

“I am a practical moderate,” he said. “I would say we have a very liberal Weiland and a very conservative Rounds. I am a moderate centrist and I want to work to solve problems.”


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Once-sleepy South Dakota Senate race could pose problem for GOP

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Analysts warn of dangers in ObamaCare automatic re-enrollment - VIDEO: Automatic re-enrollment could spell trouble

After the rocky rollout last fall of the ObamaCare website, the administration wants to re-enroll those already in the system in hopes of avoiding another technological embarrassment.

But analysts warn that just blindly re-enrolling could mean trouble for consumers.

“This notion of just sit back and re-enroll is really misleading and I think could cause a lot of harm to people,” said Bob Laszewski of Health Policy and Strategy Associates.

“The automatic renewal, it’s easy, it will keep people getting ObamaCare,” added Rosemary Gibson of the Hastings Center. “But you have to trust but verify. You have to go look. You just can’t be on automatic pilot for health insurance.”

That’s because of the way subsidies are determined. They’re pegged to the cost of the second lowest silver level plan, but that cost is likely to change and with it, the subsidy a consumer would get.

“Everyone’s going to have differences in their subsidies,” Laszewski said. “The vast majority really probably need to change plans in order to continue with the same out of pocket premium. And they’re not going to know if their premium has changed unless they go in and re-enroll.”

Said Gibson, “What’s the different costs and what are the different benefits? Have they upgraded the benefits? Or, have they dropped providers in this case of health care, out of the network?”

Jim Capretta of the Ethics and Public Policy Center noted that “a lot of people aren’t even clear yet whether their physician or the services they typically need will be covered by the plans they’ve been given through the exchanges. So if they’re automatically enrolled in perhaps a subpar plan for their needs, that doesn’t really help them going into 2015.”

In addition, there is always the question of which doctors and hospitals are included in any given plan.

Health economist John Goodman explained, “And those networks leave out the best doctors, they leave out the best hospitals, a lot of those plans charge you extra if you need an expensive drug for your cancer treatment, for example.”  

Jim Angle currently serves as chief national correspondent for Fox News Channel (FNC). He joined FNC in 1996 as a senior White House correspondent.


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Analysts warn of dangers in ObamaCare automatic re-enrollment - VIDEO: Automatic re-enrollment could spell trouble

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Soy could speed up spread of breast cancer – study

3d rendered illustration of a transparent female brest with tumor

NEW YORK, United States, Wednesday September 10, 2014 – Experts have cautioned that eating soy, in the form of tofu or milk, could speed up the rate at which breast cancer cells spread in women already diagnosed with the disease.

The warning came after scientists at the Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre in New York studied 140 women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer.

Between seven and 30 days before the women had surgery to remove their tumours, half of them were given soy protein powder containing genistein, while the other half received a placebo.

The researchers compared tumour tissues from before and after the operation. In the women who had taken the soy supplement, changes were found in the expressions of certain genes that are known to promote cell growth.

These findings suggested that soy protein could potentially accelerate the progression of the disease.

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In the words of the study, which was published in the September 4 edition of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute: “These data raise concern that soy may exert a stimulating effect on breast cancer in a sub set of women.”

Participants in the study had recently had breast biopsies, were diagnosed with stage one or two breast cancer, and were scheduled to have a mastectomy or lumpectomy in two to three weeks.

According to co-author of the study Jacqueline Bromberg: “Although the genes were being expressed, it is not clear that this will translate into actual tumour growth. But the concern is that there may be the potential.

“Only 20 percent of those patients who took the soy had really high levels of the genistein metabolite.”

Dr Bromberg said the reasons behind the disparity are unclear, adding that there is no way to predict who would have this reaction after consuming soy.

She went on to explain that of the women with high genistein levels, a few of them experienced changes in a specified set of genes that are known to affect breast cancer cell growth, death, or some aspect of breast cancer pathology.

Women who consumed around 51.6 grams of soy, the equivalent of about four cups of soy milk a day, exhibited the changes.

It was thought likely that those who eat soy regularly could “reasonably consume that amount” daily, particularly vegetarians and those who do not eat dairy products.

The scientists cautioned that women living in Asian countries could be especially at risk, due to the high levels of soy and tofu in traditional diets.

The research did not address the question of whether soy would have any effect on women who have not already been diagnosed with breast cancer.


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Soy could speed up spread of breast cancer – study

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Sierra Leone’s “lockdown” could lead to further spread of Ebola, says medical group

Illustration concept of Ebola originating from Africa vector and raster

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone, Monday September 8, 2014 – In a bid to stop the relentless spread of the deadly Ebola virus, the government of Sierra Leone plans to order every man, woman and child in the country not to leave the areas immediately surrounding their homes for a period of three days starting September 19.

According to the country’s deputy information minister Theo Nichol, the three-day shutdown would also make it easier for medical workers to trace suspected cases of the disease.

Nichol added that the period may be extended if needed, echoing the words of a presidential official who had previously indicated that the “lockdown” would last for four days.

International medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) nevertheless begs to differ over the proposed countrywide quarantine, which it claims will not help control an Ebola outbreak and could lead to the disease spreading further as cases are concealed.

“It has been our experience that lockdowns and quarantines do not help control Ebola as they end up driving people underground and jeopardising the trust between people and health providers,” said MSF.

“This leads to the concealment of potential cases and ends up spreading the disease further,” added the medical charity, which has been helping battle the world’s biggest ever outbreak of the disease across West Africa.

MSF added that door-to-door screening required high levels of expertise and, even when cases were detected, there were insufficient treatment centres and other essential facilities for patient care.

The international medical charity reiterated its calls for nations with civilian and military biological-disaster response capacities to send equipment and teams to West Africa.

“This remains our best hope of bringing this deadly outbreak under control as quickly as possible,” it said.

The outbreak was first identified in Guinea in March and has since spread across much of Liberia and Sierra Leone. Cases have also been recorded in Nigeria and Senegal, while a different strain of the virus has surfaced in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Late last week, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said that more than 2,100 people have died.

The WHO went on to say that it will take months to bring Ebola under control and forecast as many as 20,000 cases.

Following a trip to the region, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr Tom Frieden warned that the Ebola outbreak is much worse than official figures show and is “spiralling out of control.”


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Sierra Leone’s “lockdown” could lead to further spread of Ebola, says medical group

Friday, August 1, 2014

"Disabled could be shut out of rental market" - Communicaitons Specialist

With the pending implementation of huge fines for rental properties that do not have facilities in place to accommodate the disabled, it’s feared that the disabled could be shut out of the rental market.

According to the recently passed Disabilities Act, rental premises are mandated to provide facilities to accommodate the disabled, with fines being imposed for non-compliance.    

But Martin Henry, a prominent academic and public commentator fears this may have unintentional consequences. Henry, who was a guest on RJR’s That’s a Rap, argued that it may promote back-door deals being made which ultimately may cause discrimination.

“Already we have a very difficult rental market for non disabled persons.  The more you load the system with requirements, it may have the opposition effect of making premises  Of making premises not available, we are in a sort of non-legal kind of negotiation that could be made….  I’m pretty certain that the   negative fallout will be the withdrawal of some premises in the market place,” Henry said. 

In weighing in on the issue, Commentator Nadine Spence, who was also on “That’s a Rap,” said a mind-set change is needed, so that no one will not consider it a burden, to make modifications in order to accommodate the disabled.


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"Disabled could be shut out of rental market" - Communicaitons Specialist

Friday, July 25, 2014

New pieces of legislation could be challenged in court

Two pieces of  tax legislation which were passed in the House of  Representatives on Wednesday could be challenged in the courts in the wake of  concerns about their constitutionality.

Opposition Spokesman on Finance, Audley Shaw, is conducting a review to determine whether the Bills breach the Constitution. Mr Shaw has raised questions about the Tax Collection (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act and the Tax Penalties (Harmonisation) Act which seek to give certain government agencies more power.

He argues that the Opposition is not ruling out court action to get the matter resolved as its exceedingly dangerous legislation. Under the provisions, assets could be transferred to the State, as the Commissioner-General of  Tax Administration Jamaica (TAJ) receives additional powers.

Meanwhile, Mr. Shaw has outlined the specific issues he has with the legislation.  Chief  among them is the ability of  the TAJ boss to register a certificate of  tax with the Supreme Court. This would have the same effect as a judgment of  the court.

He believes this eliminates the judiciary from the process and does not allow for due process or the seperations of   powers that are protected by the Constitution.

And Chair of  the Taxation Committee of  the Jamaican Bar Association, Debbie Ann Gordon, has also raised concern about the legislation. She has described some of  the provisions as draconian, and may give too much power to TAJ. Ms Gordon has expressed concern about the ability of  the Commissioner General to lodge a certificate which would act as a court judgment. This she argues eliminates the ventilation of  the matter in the Court, and is unfair to those being assessed.


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New pieces of legislation could be challenged in court

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Silent witnesses to child abuse could be jailed – new Barbados law

Sunday, June 22, 2014 | 3:05 PM    

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — Persons who may be aware of instances of child abuse, but do not inform the authorities, could be brought before the courts and face possible jail according to a looming law.

Child Care Board Director, Joan Crawford, says Cabinet is about to consider a proposal making it mandatory for school principals, church leaders, social workers, court officials, and media workers, among others to report knowledge of child abuse.

“There are no ifs or buts. It will be that you … are bound to report,” she said Thursday. “The only exception there is that lawyer-client privilege, but all others are not considered that way.”

Further explaining the proposal before the Cabinet she said, “Failure to report a suspected case should carry a sanction in the form of a fine, with the alternative of imprisonment”.

Crawford’s revelation came during a symposium on student sexual abuse, where UNICEF Representative, Knu-Sandi Lwin, suggested that education officials and others involved in the delivery of education can be blamed for not disclosing all information on probable cases of child abuse.

“All of us, in one way or another, have been sinning, the sins of omission,” she said.

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Silent witnesses to child abuse could be jailed – new Barbados law

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Murders could follow maths law

13 August 2013 Last updated at 04:25 ET By Melissa Hogenboom Science reporter, BBC News Military policemen frisk residents during an operation at the Brejal shantytown in Maceio The team says its approach describes how crime and poverty increase as the population grows A mathematical formula could predict how many murders will occur as the population in Brazil increases, say scientists.


The formula can also be applied to other factors such as unemployment and literacy, they claim.


Brazil is known to have extremely high murder rates, which the team argue could now be better anticipated.


The scientists say their work, published in journal Plos One, could one day help prevent crime.


Gang and drug violence are among the factors accounting for many of Brazil’s cities being classed as the most violent in the world.

Continue reading the main story
Unveiling relationships between crime and urban metrics can help to guide public policies”
End Quote Dr Haroldo Ribeiro State University of Maringa, Brazil Now a team has analysed data from Brazilian cities from the year 2000 and found that mathematical laws emerge when looking at how several factors – what they refer to as “urban metrics” – relate to each other.

Criminologists are less convinced and say statistics and formulas are too far removed from the social issues that affect crime.

Money problems

“We have shown that most of the indicators that we use to characterise cities – such as GDP, the number of illiterate, the number of unemployed – are closely related with the population of the cities,” said Haroldo Ribeiro, from the State University of Maringa, Brazil, one of the co-authors of the study.


“Usually, the indicators increase with the population size, following a well-defined mathematical law.”


Members of the anti violence group Paz de Rio protest against the increase of the murder rate in Brazil, during the draw for next June Increasing murder rates in Brazil has led to many campaign groups protesting

He told BBC News that the same mathematical law can be applied to homicides as well as 11 other urban indicators, including cases of child labour.


However, it was hard to predict the most likely indicator for crime, added Dr Ribeiro, although he found that factors relating to money – such as unemployment and family income – had more influence on the number of homicides, something already well established by criminologists.


“While this work is not focused on preventing crime… I believe that unveiling relationships between crime and urban metrics can help to guide public policies towards more effective investments, and, consequently, to help prevent crime.”


Despite the problems Brazil is facing, Dr Ribeiro said his country was becoming better at tackling its crime problems. But he added that justice was very slow, which could keep spreading a “culture of impunity”.

Emotional triggers A member of Special Police Operations Battalion raids a slum Police in Brazil frequently raid areas known to be high in crime such as its slums

Criminologist David Wilson of Birmingham City University, UK, said that although murders “do tend to be concentrated in parts of cities with low levels of income”, the idea that there was a mathematical formula related to population growth “entirely ignores” the emotional triggers – or “foreground factors” – that lead to crime.


“Murder is usually about the loss of face; it’s about young men in circumstances in which there’s some kind of conflict that results in one of those young men wanting to extract revenge.


“It’s about the foreground factors much more than the background factors – which this study looks at.


“This study doesn’t capture the phenomenon of murder. It’s such a complicated phenomenon based on emotion,” Prof Wilson told BBC News.


He added that statistical correlations could be found in many kinds of data “but that doesn’t prove cause and effect”.


But Luis Bettencourt of the Santa Fe Institute, US, who works with data from cities to analyse human behaviour, said the formula could be applied to other cities too.


“When you look at a city and want to characterise it in some way, the obvious one is population size. What’s interesting about crime is that the levels of homicides tend to increase on a per capita basis, the larger the city.


“The explanation is essentially that cities exist to promote social interaction. And crime is one such social interaction.”


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Murders could follow maths law

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Smaller US trade gap could lift growth

WASHINGTON DC, USA — A sharp decline in the trade deficit with other nations suggests the US economy grew this spring at a faster pace than previously estimated, helped by a record level of exports.

The Commerce Department said that the US trade gap fell more than 22 per cent in June from May to US$34.2 billion, yesterday. That’s the lowest level since October 2009.American companies shipped more aircraft engines, telecommunications equipment, heavy machinery and farm goods. As a result, exports rose 2.2 per cent to an all-time high of US$191.2 billion.Imports declined 2.2 per cent to US$225.4 billion, in part because oil imports fell to the lowest level in more than two years.Economists said the steep drop in the trade deficit will likely lead the government to revise its economic growth estimate for the April-June quarter.“We could see a sizeable upward revision,” said Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.Last week the government said the economy grew at a lacklustre 1.7 per cent annual rate in the second quarter, in part because trade cut nearly a full percentage point from growth.But after seeing the June trade figures — which were not factored into last month’s growth estimate — some economists said growth could be closer to a 2.5 per cent annual rate. The government reports its second estimate of growth for the April-June quarter on August 29.A smaller trade deficit lifts economic growth because it means consumers and businesses are spending less on foreign goods than companies are taking in from overseas sales.Many economists think overall growth has started to rebound in the July-September quarter. Some say growth could near a three per cent annual rate. A key reason is that several export markets, including Europe, are seeing improvement.For June, US exports to the 27-nation European Union rose 1.5 per cent. That helped shrink the deficit with the region to US$7.1 billion.The deficit with China fell 4.3 per cent to US$26.6 billion, while America’s deficit with Japan rose 2.2 per cent to US$5.5 billion in June.Gregory Daco, senior economist at IHS Global Insight, said he still thinks trade will drag on the economy in the second half of the year. That’s because he expects imports will increase at a faster pace than exports, reflecting the health of the US consumer and weaker growth overseas.“We still have relatively modest global growth which will constrain US exports,” Daco said.Still, Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors, said the rise in exports underscored the importance that manufacturing plays in the US economy.“A number of companies are doing whatever they can to bring back as much production as they can to the United States,” Naroff said. “They are facing rising wages in countries such as China and other problems of doing business there.”US factories are already starting to show more strength after slumping earlier this year, helped by increases in business spending and less drag from government cuts.Activity at US factories increased in July at the fastest pace in two years in July, according to the Institute for Supply Management’s closely watched manufacturing index.And US factories added 6,000 jobs in July, the Labour Department said Friday. That was the first month of manufacturing job growth since February.The container ship Baghira (foreground) and the oil tanker Seabulk Arctic (rear) are anchored off shore as they wait to enter Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. (Photo: AP)

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Smaller US trade gap could lift growth

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Dhoni could lead India against Sri Lanka in today"s ODI final

Sport

Thursday, July 11, 2013

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (AFP) — India and Sri Lanka meet yet again, this time in the final of the Tri-Nation Series at Queen’s Park Oval today, amid increasing speculation that Mahendra Singh Dhoni will be back to lead the World Cup and Champions Trophy holders.Dhoni sustained a right hamstring strain while batting against the West Indies in his team’s first match of the tournament on June 30 at Sabina Park in Kingston, and an announcement was made the following day that he was ruled out of the rest of the competition with uncapped batsman Ambati Rayudu being flown in as his replacement.However, India’s most successful captain ever has remained with the squad, and while there has as yet been no official word from the touring party, his presence on the field in pre-match warm-ups and in full team uniform during and after the final preliminary fixture against the Sri Lankans on Tuesday increase the likelihood that he will be back at the helm for the final.Stand-in captain Virat Kohli hinted as much at the toss ahead of the comprehensive victory over Angelo Mathews’ side when he expressed hope that Dhoni had been recovering well enough to be able to play if they had gotten through to the final.Should he be passed fit, it is expected that Murali Vijay will make way for the man increasingly regarded as the finest international captain in the contemporary game.With or without Dhoni though, India are bracing for a much tougher Sri Lankan challenge than what transpired on Tuesday when fast-medium bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar produced the outstanding figures of four for eight and engineered the demolition of the 1996 World Cup winners for just 96.Sri Lanka had all but qualified for the final ahead of that encounter and their performance with the bat on the way to an 81-run defeat on the Duckworth/Lewis Scoring Method reflected a noticeable lack of intensity that is not expected to be repeated in the final.They have their own injury concerns with a question mark lingering over the availability of fast-medium bowler Nuwan Kulasekara, who injured a finger on his left hand while attempting to take a return catch off Chris Gayle in the match against the West Indies that concluded on Monday.Given the almost inevitable intervention of inclement weather at the start of the rainy season in the Caribbean, the toss is again expected to be a key factor this morning while both teams will be tailoring their tactics in keeping with the unsettled conditions in the air and the green, seamer-friendly pitch that should make for an intriguing duel.DHONI… sustained a right hamstring strain while batting against the West Indies at Sabina Park on June 30

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Dhoni could lead India against Sri Lanka in today"s ODI final

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Tropical Storm Chantal could affect eastern parishes tonight

News

Wednesday, July 10, 2013 | 3:27 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica could begin feeling effects of Tropical Storm Chantal as early as tonight as the system passes in the vicinity of the island either as a tropical wave or tropical cyclone, the Meteorological Service says. A tropical storm watch remains in effect for the island as a weakening Chantal moves quickly westward and could pass close to the island’s eastern coastline.The main threat at this time is for outbreaks of heavy showers and thunderstorms to develop over the island, starting with eastern parishes, during the course of tonight and into Thursday.  Some flash flooding is, therefore, possible over eastern parishes, the Met Service says.  Periods of strong, gusty winds are also possible in thunderstorms.  Marine operators should remain on alert due to unfavourable sea conditions through Thursday.

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Tropical Storm Chantal could affect eastern parishes tonight