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Poll: Majority of Likely Voters Oppose ObamaCare's HHS Mandate

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Poll: Majority of Likely Voters Oppose ObamaCare's HHS Mandate A new poll released by Family Research Council (FRC) has found that 53 percent of likely voters oppose ObamaCare’s HHS mandate that requires most employers to provide contraceptives, sterilization procedures, and abortifacients to employees without charge through health insurance plans.

The survey of 901 likely voters, conducted by Wilson Perkins Allen Opinion Research on behalf of FRC, was performed between May 1-4, and has a margin of error of +3.3 percent.

Results showed that most likely voters oppose the HHS mandate 53-43 percent, including 40 percent who strongly oppose it, even among key demographic groups that typically support Democrat candidates.

The HHS mandate was opposed by most women, 50-45 percent, with 36 percent strongly opposed. Among independents, 53 percent oppose the mandate and 43 percent support it, with 41 percent strongly opposed to it.

Likely voters between the ages of 18-44 oppose the mandate 49-47 percent, with 33 percent strongly opposed. Hispanics split their opposition and support of the HHS mandate evenly, 50-50 percent, with 31 percent strongly opposed.

In rankings released by Nate Silver’s fivethirtyeight.com of 2008 election data, Wilson Perkins Allen Opinion Research was statistically tied as the most accurate partisan pollster and was found to be significantly more accurate than other partisan pollsters.

In a press release, FRC president Tony Perkins said regarding the survey,

"As the debate over the HHS mandate has played out in the media and the courts, Americans oppose the mandate because it puts the jobs, livelihoods, and healthcare of Americans at risk.”

Perkins said the mandate “forces those who stand up for their conscience to choose between paying crippling fines that could shut down their business or dropping the healthcare of all their employees.”

"Respecting freedom of conscience is a long-held American tradition and the government should not impose mandates or laws that force individuals and businesses to violate these beliefs just to hold a job, own a business, or have health insurance," Perkins continued. "This is a flawed mandate within a flawed law."

“Americans should not be forced to violate their religious beliefs to purchase health insurance, hold a job, or operate a business in their country,” he concluded. “Freedom of religion, the American people believe, extends to the freedom to practice your religion in your healthcare plan, as outlined by the First Amendment of the Constitution and illustrated in these poll results." Reported by Breitbart 8 hours ago.

Boehner Refuses to Commit to Another Full Term: 'I'm Living on Borrowed Time'

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Boehner Refuses to Commit to Another Full Term: 'I'm Living on Borrowed Time' House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) refused to commit to serving another full term in Congress if he is reelected in the fall and retains his position as Speaker. 

Speaking to The Texas Tribune's Evan Smith at a San Antonio luncheon sponsored by the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce on Monday, Boehner was asked about "talk on the street" that he would "entertain winning reelection this November and not serving out a full term the next time." Smith asked Boehner to "disabuse" some of the cynicism among the press.

"I fully expect to be Speaker," Boehner replied. 

Smith then asked, "Do you fully expect to serve out your full term, Mr. Speaker?"

"I can't predict what's going to happen. I'm going to be 65-years-old in November," Boehner replied. "I never thought I'd live to be 60. So I'm living on borrowed time."

Breitbart News has reported on a condo Boehner purchased in Florida. That purchase, combined with House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) and other conservative representatives jostling behind the scenes to potentially replace Boehner as Speaker, fueled retirement rumors. 

On Monday, Boehner's press secretary left "Boehnerworld" to accept a position with a health insurance lobbying group. Reported by Breitbart 6 hours ago.

Lost in Space With Ben Tanzer

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Ben Tanzer is the author of the books My Father's House, You Can Make Him Like You, So Different Now, Orphans, and Lost in Space, among others. He also oversees day to day operations of This Zine Will Change Your Life, directs Publicity and Content Strategy for Curbside Splendor, and can be found online at This Blog Will Change Your Life the center of his growing lifestyle empire.

*Loren Kleinman (LK): In your latest book Lost in Space you reflect on fatherhood from regrets to acceptance. How did you come up with the title? How does the title reflect fatherhood?*

Ben Tanzer (BT): The title is from an essay titled "Lost in Space," about my then newborn, now eight year-old son, Noah who was born with this small dimple on his lower back. It's the kind of thing that would otherwise seem benign, but can signify that a newborn's spine may become tethered and unable to descend properly. It's scary stuff, but what makes it all the worse, is that they can't know if it will require surgery until they run a CT Scan at two months of age.

During those months you have to act like nothing is happening, and that things are normal, even as you're floating somewhere outside of yourself doing everything possible not to think about it. When Noah finally got the CT Scan, it showed there was nothing there, and never had been, literally, there was a just a space, and all that fear and concern went out the window. Parenting is much like this. We look to fill the spaces in our lives with children. We look to fill the spaces in their lives. And we try not to lose ourselves in all the unknown and scary spaces that randomly, endlessly, and irrationally, appear along the way.

*LK: One of the worst things to ever consider when I was young was to end up like your parents. Not until I got older did I begin to realize that my parents were just people and that, like me, did stupid things sometimes. I don't fear that. I actually embrace their shittyness and their extraordinary capabilities. Do you think history repeats itself? Are you like or unlike your father? In what ways?*

BT: Oh man, have you been talking to my therapist again? Or, maybe my mom? The funny thing, is that my father was a painter, and he was amazing. But he was also tortured about his perceived lack of success, and he worried about making money all of the time, and I know that growing-up around his struggles, at least partially influenced my inability to start writing for many years after I wanted to. Further, as an adult, I have pursued structured, 9-5 jobs with health insurance and 401(k)s. This always seemed normal to me, but it no seems like a clear reaction to all of that, and to somehow not be like him, or at least feel like him, and this despite the fact that he was a really caring, engaged father.

Lately, however, I'm more and more like him all of the time. I eat maple frosted donuts at Dunkin' Donuts. I constantly repeat his dumb jokes to my children. For example, I always say, "apples are nature's candy, yo," when they are begging for some sugary snack and I offer them an apple instead. Not that he said, "yo" mind you. I am endlessly incredulous that I never quite have enough time to get everything done. I'm always hustling, looking for any opportunity to get my work out there and saying yes to anything anyone asks me to do that might help accomplish this. Just like he did. And I'm insanely jealous of people who can ignore their children to focus on work, or can somehow bear to live without health insurance or steady paychecks so they can create art. Also, the whole working 9-5 in an office every day thing, something my dad may have briefly tried once in his life, I'm definitely losing interest in that, despite my massive need for structure and actual paychecks.

*LK: I recently attended one of your readings and you read this amazing essay about your son Myles. I think I almost saw you tear up a bit. Can you tell us more about the inspiration Myles gives you?*

BT: What has happened to me in particular as a parent, is that I'm suddenly, and violently, in touch with this whole range of emotions I had never been willing, or able, to tap into before: love, joy, sadness, fear, anxiety, hope, dreams, and rage, so much fucking rage. It's overwhelming, and yet quite amazing. The feelings are so intense and intimate all at once, and so with essays such as these, I am wrapped-up in all this roiling stuff, and the writing, even the humorous parts, are raw to me. It's like pricking at exposed nerves, and I don't know if that's inspiration, which means I may have ignored your question, but it's powerful, and that power is an inspiration, because it's so deep and wide, and the feelings, and material, are so endless.

*LK: I love how you give a Dad's emotionally telling and honest perspective and translation of fatherhood in Lost in Space. Do you feel that more dads should talk about fatherhood more openly? Maybe we should embrace or encourage Daddy Bloggers? *

BT: I appreciate the kind words, and I am always careful about telling anyone, much less writers and dads what to do. However, as a culture I think we need to better embrace fathers' roles in the lives of their child. Which isn't to express great sadness for the role of men in culture, I'd say we're doing fine in general. But it is to say that when it comes to children we need to better focus on integrating men into the institutions that serve children, just as we need men to play an active role in the lives of children, all children. It is also to say, that we benefit as a society, when we give fathers permission to discuss their experiences, be they good, bad, ugly, or sad.

We don't necessarily expect men to feel anything, much less talk about it, but what if we did? Imagine all of the possibilities around healthier dialogue and healthier people, not to mention the potential for less violence and who knows what, if they, we, did, talk more about what they felt?

*LK: Would you want your kids to read this book? What's the first thing you think they'd say after finishing it?
*
BT: Yes, maybe, some day. No, yes for sure. I don't know. I do know that I would like it to be later, and not because they need to be protected from what I think about them, or parenting, though I'm sure there will be questions. But just as I sought to protect their secrets as I wrote about them and our relationship in these essays, I would like to protect them from some of my secrets. I clearly don't have an issue with the public knowing how fucked I am, or how paralyzing parenting can be, much less how I feel about having a dead father myself, but I'm not sure they boys need to know all of that yet. They're still kids and there's no reason that what they think they know about us as parents, and people, shouldn't remain somewhat mysterious. That said, someone asked me this question after a reading recently, and I answered it in much the same way as I am here, though I also noted that I felt conflicted, because Myles himself had just asked me why he couldn't read the book, if, as he says, "it is about me." This questioner said Myles could, and should, read the essay titled "The Boy With The Curious Hair," which is a love letter to him, David Foster Wallace, first haircuts, and Game of Thrones. And I agreed, so I suggested that to Myles when I got home, but he has yet to take me up on the offer. So there's that.

*LK: What's next for "The Tanzer"?*

BT: I am going to have a sandwich, and maybe take a nap, and then something to do with world peace, for sure. Leading the Cubs to the World Series is also on tap. And I am hoping to finalize my new perfume and designer jeans lines. Working as George Clooney's butt double in Ocean's Twenty-Two is also a possibility. The options are endless really. I am also happy to share, however, that I am one of four authors, along with the quite rock star Dave Housley, Tom Williams, and BL Pawelek, in the upcoming collection Four Fathers. The collection is coming out from Cobalt Press, and my section is comprised of flash fiction pieces, which given the title, are not unsurprisingly about fathers and sons and everything in between.

I'm simultaneously finalizing a group of stories for an ongoing project loosely titled The New York Stories, that I have been involved in with for several years with CCLaP, a local publisher here in Chicago. I am also working on a new novel about a drug-dealing teenage girl and her possibly alien abductee older brother, as well as, the next book in the Orphans science fiction trilogy, which is titled Foundlings, and is looking like a mash-up of among other things, the Wizard of Oz, Flowers in the Attic, and Dante's Inferno. I should add, that while I have planned this to be a trilogy, no one that I am aware of is actually asking for that. Which might otherwise seem like an impediment, but I'm so confident in the perfume and designer jeans lines blowing-up, I feel like I can write whatever I want, regardless if anyone is interested or not. Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

How the Right Wing Is Killing Women

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According to a report released last week in the widely-respected health research journal, The Lancet, the United States now ranks 60th out of 180 countries on maternal deaths occurring during pregnancy and childbirth.To put it bluntly, for every 100,000 births in America last year, 18.5 women died. That's compared to 8.2 women who died during pregnancy and birth in Canada, 6.1 in Britain, and only 2.4 in Iceland.A woman giving birth in America is more than twice as likely to die as a woman in Saudi Arabia or China.You might say international comparisons should be taken with a grain of salt because of difficulties of getting accurate measurements across nations. Maybe China hides the true extent of its maternal deaths. But Canada and Britain?Even if you're still skeptical, consider that our rate of maternal death is heading in the wrong direction. It's risen over the past decade and is now nearly the highest in a quarter century.In 1990, the maternal mortality rate in America was 12.4 women per 100,000 births. In 2003, it was 17.6. Now it's 18.5.That's not a measurement error because we've been measuring the rate of maternal death in the United States the same way for decades.By contrast, the rate has been dropping in most other nations. In fact, we're one of just eight nations in which it's been rising. The others that are heading in the wrong direction with us are not exactly a league we should be proud to be a member of. They include Afghanistan, El Salvador, Belize, and South Sudan.China was ranked 116 in 1990. Now it's moved up to 57. Even if China's way of measuring maternal mortality isn't to be trusted, China is going in the right direction. We ranked 22 in 1990. Now, as I've said, we're down to 60th place.Something's clearly wrong.Some say more American women are dying in pregnancy and childbirth because American girls are becoming pregnant at younger and younger ages, where pregnancy and birth can pose greater dangers.This theory might be convincing if it had data to support it. But contrary to the stereotype of the pregnant young teenager, the biggest rise in pregnancy-related deaths in America has occurred in women 20-24 years old.Consider that in 1990, 7.2 women in this age group died for every 100,000 live births. By 2013, the rate was 14 deaths in this same age group -- almost double the earlier rate.Researchers aren't sure what's happening but they're almost unanimous in pointing to a lack of access to health care, coupled with rising levels of poverty.Some American women are dying during pregnancy and childbirth from health problems they had before they became pregnant but worsened because of the pregnancies -- such as diabetes, kidney disease, and heart disease.The real problem, in other words, was they didn't get adequate health care before they became pregnant.Other women are dying because they didn't have the means toprevent a pregnancy they shouldn't have had, or they didn't get the prenatal care they needed during their pregnancies. In other words, a different sort of inadequate health care.One clue: African-American mothers are more than three timesas likely to die as a result of pregnancy and childbirth than their white counterparts.The data tell the story: A study by the Roosevelt Institute shows that U.S. states with high poverty rates have maternal death rates 77 percent higher than states with lower levels of poverty. Women with no health insurance are four times more likely to die during pregnancy or in childbirth than women who are insured.What do we do about this? Yes, of course, poor women (and the men who made them pregnant) have to take more personal responsibility for their behavior.But this tragic trend is also a clear matter of public choice.Many of these high-poverty states are among the twenty-one that have so far refused to expand Medicaid, even though the federal government will cover 100 percent of the cost for the first three years and at least 90 percent thereafter.So as the sputtering economy casts more and more women into near poverty, they can't get the health care they need.Several of these same states have also cut family planning, restricted abortions, and shuttered women's health clinics.Right-wing ideology is trumping the health needs of millions of Americans.Let's be perfectly clear: These policies are literally killing women.
ROBERT B. REICH's film "Inequality for All" is now available on DVD and blu-ray, and on Netflix. Watch the trailer below: Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

Is There Evidence for Skyrocketing Health Premiums?

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At a public talk at Rollins College, Jeb Bush claimed that health insurance premiums would increase 40 to 50 percent in 2015. (Photo Credit: Scott Cook)

Republicans have been predicting that premiums will skyrocket since the Affordable Care Act was first proposed. For example, when former Florida Governor Jeb Bush spoke at Rollins College this past March, he remarked, "Most of these [health insurance] plans, if not all of them, will have losses. And the losses will require 40 to 50 percent increases in premiums. When 2015 premiums are announced, many insurance companies will drop out, or people will drop it, because it is too costly." If this were to happen, it would certainly be a definitive failure for the Obama administration. But the question is, do we have enough evidence to support Bush's proposition?

Predictions that premiums will rise do have some grounding. Health care companies set their insurance prices by spreading the cost of risks over large groups of people. Given that young people on average have significantly lower health care costs than older populations, the more young people who are in a risk pool, the cheaper insurance will be. Therefore, it is necessary for a significant number of young people to sign up for insurance in order for premiums to stay low. Using this logic, Republicans have been claiming for months not only that not enough of the younger generation will sign up for health care coverage, but also that not enough people in general will sign up to make the government exchanges a success.

Although the Obama administration has surpassed its goal of 7 million people signing up for insurance, thus dispelling the fear that not enough people would sign up, the number of young people enrolled in the exchanges is less than some hoped for. Larry Levitt from the Kaiser Foundation said that having 40 percent of people who signed up for health care be between ages 18 to 34 is what would be ideal to keep premiums down. But as of April 2014, only 28 percent of those who signed up for health insurance were in this age group. However, this lack of response from the younger generation is predicted to contribute a mere 1 to 2 percent increase in premium costs, a far cry from Bush's 40 to 50 percent.

To make matters even more complicated, in some states, premiums have gone up, and in others, premiums have gone down. This is due to the fact that states have had a huge disparity in how well they have implemented the reform and that each state is its own individual risk pool in the exchanges. For example, at the end of March 2014, 54 percent of those eligible to sign up for private insurance in Vermont had enrolled, while in South Dakota, only 6 percent of those eligible for insurance had done so.

Because of this, it is difficult to determine how much premiums will rise overall. The New York Times reported:
Premiums are not expected to spike next year, but insurers say they will be somewhat higher because of many last-minute changes in government rules and policy. Premium increases, like premiums themselves, will vary from state to state.
Furthermore, the ACA contains programs and additional subsidies that would take effect if enrollment is less healthy than expected, which would prevent the general population from feeling the effects of severely rising premiums.

Therefore, Bush's claim that premiums will rise 40 to 50 percent is deeply misleading. At this time, not even insurance companies possess the information to determine specific percentage increases of future premiums, but they will almost certainly be lower than the predictions of most Republicans. Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

HUFFPOST HILL - Southern Dems Miraculously In Lead, Benghazi Probably To Blame

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John Boehner is surprised he’s lived to 65, which really is surprising given his body’s inability to metabolize chuckleheads. Beyonce's sister employed Michael Grimm tactics against Jay Z. And Mark Pryor holds a commanding 10-point lead over Tom Cotton, proving that Pryor’s inability to resonate with Arkansas’ voters is… resonating with Arkansas’ voters. This is HUFFPOST HILL for Monday, May 12th, 2014:

*BOEHNER WON'T COMMIT TO TWO MORE YEARS AS SPEAKER... ALSO BAR BAR BAR BENGHAZI TRUTHS!!! BAR BAR BAR* - Hell no, he can't! Politico: "John Boehner says he fully expects to be speaker of the House after the next election. But whether he serves a whole term is another question. *The Ohio Republican, speaking to a luncheon here sponsored by a group of local chambers of commerce, said he can’t 'predict what’s going to happen,' and stopped short of fully committing to serving another full two-year term*. 'Listen, I’m going to be 65-years-old in November,' Boehner said. 'I never thought I’d live to be 60. So I’m living on borrowed time.' It’s extraordinarily rare for Boehner to sit down for an open-ended, live interview, but he did so here with the Texas Tribune’s Evan Smith, a mainstay of the Lone Star State’s journalism scene. He touched on issues ranging from immigration to Benghazi, to his quiet campaign to convince Jeb Bush to run for president...But Boehner’s non-committal response about his future will reverberate from here all the way back to Capitol Hill and K Street. His future has been a topic of constant chatter among political types. Even people inside his orbit privately wonder why the Ohio Republican would want to serve another term wielding the speaker’s gavel, given the tumultuous political climate in Washington. Last week, Boehner beat back two primary opponents to ensure his House reelection." [Politico]

*Hmmmmm*: "A top aide to House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) is departing to serve as spokesman for an association representing thousands of health insurers. Brendan Buck, who has served as one of Boehner's top spokesmen for more than three years, will depart today to head up communications for America's Health Insurance Plans, which represents thousands of health-care providers. Buck is a towering, lanky presence in the U.S. Capitol perhaps best known to political reporters nationwide as one of the few voices who speaks on behalf of Boehner and the broader House Republican Conference. He has focused especially on rapid response to comments and policy introduced by President Obama and congressional Democrats." [WaPo]

*PARANOID SELF-LOATHING GOP LOBBYIST ENRAGED BY DOUBLE STANDARDS* - HuffPost Hill's Paranoid Self-Loathing GOP Lobbyist, whose fear of polonium 210 has been rekindled in the wake of Russia's aggressive behavior in Eastern Europe, kept his Russophobia at bay just long enough to send us Rand Paul's op-ed demanding an appellate court nominee's views on drones be made public. "I just wish you guys would hold Obama to half the standard you held Cheney to," PSLGOPL writes. "Oh well, life is pointless." Thanks, PSLGOPL!

*IF AMERICA REALLY CARED ABOUT MOMS WE WOULDN'T TREAT THEM LIKE CRAP* - Just a reminder that American moms get no maternity leave, no paid vacation, no sick leave. [Vox]

*DAILY DELANEY DOWNER* - From our ongoing series PASTED: The Email of the Jobless: "Lost benefits in December, working with 3 different employment agencies..fill out at least 10 applications a day. On a dozen job sites daily...being evicted from my apartment..got food stamps... Owe family money that barely has it for themselves.. Referred to a psychologist for mental health..utilities are past due with shut off...." [Hang in there!]

Does somebody keep forwarding you this newsletter? Get your own copy. It's free! Sign up here. Send tips/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to huffposthill@huffingtonpost.com. Follow us on Twitter - @HuffPostHill

*BENGHAZI FOCUS MESSING UP U.S. OPERATIONS IN AFRICA* - John Kerry should send a passive aggressive memo to all State Department employees informing them that "these colors" do, in fact, "run." Josh Hersh: "In early January, as a violent rebellion flared across South Sudan, the world's youngest country, the U.S. State Department announced that it would contribute $50 million to emergency programs to alleviate the suffering... In the days prior to the announcement, U.S. officials had been evacuated from the embassy in the capital of Juba, along with the rest of the mission's 'non-emergency personnel' -- a move that for the next few months would leave Juba with as few as one American staffer from USAID and a 'skeletal' selection of other diplomatic officials. The decision to empty out the embassy in Juba came amid a frenzy of violence in South Sudan, including rebel attacks on the capital itself, which officials say left embassy staff in grave danger. Four American service members were wounded by gunfire during the evacuation itself. But the move was also made, several current and former U.S. officials with Africa experience say, in an atmosphere colored by the ongoing political fallout from the September 2012 attacks on a U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, which left four Americans dead and caused a surge of partisan outrage on Capitol Hill...*Africa experts and former officials say the politicized uproar from Republicans in Congress over parts of the controversy not directly related to safety -- like a set of White House talking points -- has created another consideration for bureaucrats and political appointees who weigh the risks of maintaining a diplomatic presence in dangerous places*: the fear of being dragged before a congressional hearing or pilloried on the Sunday morning talk shows should anything go wrong." [HuffPost]

*POLL: KENTUCKIANS HATE OBAMACARE, DON'T HATE OBAMACARE* - Ariel Edwards-Levy: "Residents of Kentucky may hate Obamacare, but they're much less hostile toward Kynect, the state's health exchange created to comply with the law. *In a survey released Monday, NBC News and Marist asked half the respondents what they thought about Obamacare and the other half what they thought about Kynect. Neither program was especially popular: Just 33 percent felt favorably toward Obamacare and just 29 percent toward Kynect. But a 56 percent majority disliked Obamacare, while just 22 percent felt negatively toward Kynect*. Most Kentucky residents were undecided about the state exchange, with 50 percent saying they'd never heard of Kynect or weren't sure how they felt. Less than 12 percent were unsure about or unfamiliar with Obamacare. Kynect's largely successful rollout hasn't generated goodwill for Obamacare, but the new survey numbers suggest the state exchange has avoided being mired in partisanship to the same degree. The biggest difference in views of the two programs comes among Republicans. The percentage of GOP respondents who were unfavorable toward Obamacare was 51 percentage points higher than the percentage who felt that way about Kynect. That margin was 42 points for independents and 18 points for Democrats." [HuffPost]

*DEMOCRATS POLLING WELL IN THREE SOUTHERN STATES* - NBC News: "Democratic candidates are holding their own in three key Senate races despite a daunting political environment for their party in the upcoming midterm elections, according to new NBC News-Marist polls of Arkansas, Georgia and Kentucky. And in one race in particular, Democrats are more than just competitive. *In Arkansas, with less than six months until Election Day 2014, incumbent Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., leads Republican challenger Tom Cotton by 11 points among registered voters, 51 percent to 40 percent*. (That finding is largely in line with other polling from that race since April showing Pryor either leading or tied.) In Georgia, Democratic Senate candidate Michelle Nunn is running neck and neck against all of her potential GOP opponents in November. And in Kentucky, Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes is within one point of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell among registered voters, 46 percent to 45 percent...The NBC-Marist polls of states holding primaries on May 20 also show that establishment Republicans are leading their Tea Party rivals in the intra-party contests in Georgia and Kentucky." [NBC News]

*CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHIEF PRESSES GOP ON IMMIGRATION REFORM* - Strong words from Washington's own silver fox (sorry, Anderson). Elise Foley: "U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue promised Monday to keep pushing for immigration reform, quipping that the GOP should just stay home in the next presidential election if it doesn't address the issue. '*If the Republicans don't do it, they shouldn't bother to run a candidate in 2016,' Donohue said at an event to discuss the nation's infrastructure. *'I mean, think about that. Think about who the voters are.' Pro-immigration reform conservatives have been saying since the 2012 election that if Republicans don't get on board with an immigration bill, they will doom their chances with Latino voters, a majority of whom support reform. After GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney's disastrous result with Latino voters, Republicans quickly acted to draft and pass a comprehensive reform bill in the Senate. The Chamber of Commerce, led by Donohue, helped reach a deal on worker provisions with the AFL-CIO labor federation that was instrumental in moving the bill. But immigration reform has gone nowhere in the House. Donohue said he believes the House could pass a bill this year, and his organization will keep up the pressure. Last week, the Chamber of Commerce announced a $3 million ad buy that will be supportive of Republican candidates, including two who have been supportive of immigration reform: Reps. Mike Coffman (R-Colo.) and David Valadao (R-Calif.)." [HuffPost]

*The "Morning Joe" set are picking their candidates*: "Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg says that it's 'cheap politics' to attack Hillary Clinton for her handling of the Sept. 11, 2012, attacks in Benghazi, Libya. He spoke highly of the former secretary of state as well as potential 2016 rival Jeb Bush in a recent interview with Politico. “Hillary, you know, I’ve worked with [when she was a] senator and just as a friend, that sort of thing. I think most of the criticisms of Hillary are totally unfounded — you can maybe disagree with her policies, but what’d you expect her to do in Benghazi?” he said. “I mean, it’s that kind of cheap politics which I don’t like. She’s very competent...Jeb’s on the board of the [Bloomberg] Foundation. I think he did a very good job on education in Florida. He’s good on education,' Bloomberg said. 'He’s good on immigration, and he’s had the courage to stand up.'" [HuffPost]

*MCAULIFFE ORDERS REVIEW OF VIRGINIA'S ABORTION CLINIC RESTRICTIONS* - The abortion issue aside, there's something darkly hilarious about Terry McAuliffe bemoaning "political interference." Laura Bassett: "*Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D) announced on Monday that he is appointing five new members to the state Board of Health and ordering the board to review controversial abortion clinic regulations*. 'I am concerned that the extreme and punitive regulations adopted last year jeopardize the ability of most women’s health centers to keep their doors open and place in jeopardy the health and reproductive rights of Virginia women,' McAuliffe said. The new regulations, part of a nationwide push for so-called 'TRAP' laws, short for Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers, require existing first-trimester abortion clinics to comply with construction standards used for hospitals. It forces them to build hallways that are specific widths, locker rooms for staff members, new ventilation systems and larger parking lots. The law has already caused five of Virginia's 23 abortion clinics to close, because the clinics could not afford to undergo extensive renovations. The remaining abortion clinics in Virginia have until the end of June to comply with the regulations, which will remain in effect while the board reviews them. McAuliffe said the regulations were 'arbitrary' and 'marked by political interference.'" [HuffPost]

*Well if this doesn't become the inspiration for history's strangest "Law and Order" episode, we don't know what will*: "Former 'American Idol' star Clay Aiken's (D) primary opponent has died suddenly, his company confirmed to The Hill. Former North Carolina Commerce Secretary Keith Crisco (D) was found dead Monday afternoon, an employee for his company, Asheboro Elastics Corp., said. According to The Courier-Tribune, he sustained injuries from a fall around 1 p.m. and was dead when emergency workers arrived at his home. Crisco and Aiken had been in a too-close-to-call primary, with Aiken leading by 369 votes following last Tuesday's election for the nomination to face Rep. Renee Ellmers (R) in the conservative district." [The Hill]

*BECAUSE YOU'VE READ THIS FAR* - Here is a bunny apply lipstick

*YOU SAY NEVEDA, I SAY NEVADA* - What a Monday. Samantha Lachman: "Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval's campaign sent out a fundraising flier last week touting his economic record ahead of the state's primary. However, as Jon Ralston noted Monday, the mailer spelled the state's name as 'Neveda.'" [HuffPost]

*COMFORT FOOD*

- This blind dog playing fetch will melt your heart... unless you're a heartless monster. In that case, keep reading and/or resume your childflesh-eating. [http://bit.ly/SUgDhI]

- A U.S. distillery is breeding pigs that taste like whiskey. We have achieved the American singularity. [http://bit.ly/1sEme89]

- Computers have had a difficult time mastering the ancient game of Go. No word on its Angry Birds acumen. [http://wrd.cm/1guCP78]

- A preview of Team USA's chances in the World Cup. [http://es.pn/1iJOzH5]

- That time Jay-Z played it cool while he was attacked by his sister-in-law. [http://bit.ly/1sEx5Pr]

- These boys' Mother's Day surprise didn't go as planned -- don't trust kids on carpets. [http://bit.ly/RAPQ8U]

- A soft-shell turtle stole the show at this weekend's Players Championship. [http://bit.ly/1iKkbMO]

*TWITTERAMA*

@lizzieohreally: Geithner memoir reminds me that a transcript from a trip with him had so much profanity, it got stuck in the Bloomberg compliance filter.

@elisefoley: Howdy! RT @DarrellIssa: Howdy, twitter! It's a brand new week. How was your Mother's Day weekend?

@KagroX: Private business owners must be allowed to fire workers for being gay, but cannot be allow to fine workers for being anti-gay.

*Got something to add? Send tips/quotes/stories/photos/events/fundraisers/job movement/juicy miscellanea to Eliot Nelson (eliot@huffingtonpost.com), Ryan Grim (ryan@huffingtonpost.com) or Arthur Delaney (arthur@huffingtonpost.com). Follow us on Twitter @HuffPostHill (twitter.com/HuffPostHill). Sign up here: http://huff.to/an2k2e* Reported by Huffington Post 4 hours ago.

Obamacare- Even Better than I Expected for My Family

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So I completed my New York Obamacare insurance application yesterday. So did this Obamacare booster get a rude awakening?

Not. For two adults and two kids, we got a $500 deductible and $15 primary care visits (and $8 generic drug costs), paying a total of $250 per month.

Now, this incredible result has a few caveats that make it a bit unusual and may not repeat with quite this good a deal in future years for our family-- but it still reflects how much more affordable Obamacare has made health insurance for most families.
· First, when you switch into a health plan part way through the year, any income from a job you just left for the year does not count in calculating yearly income, so our subsidies were boosted for this year. This makes sense since you don't want to hold a high previous income against the newly unemployed or those with a now lower salary, but it does create a temporary bonus for transitioning workers.
· Secondly, I have self-employment income so I can reduce our adjusted family income through increasing 401K contributions shifted from other savings, so that increases the health care subsidies. This reflects our poorly designed pension subsidy system, but Obamacare does create a massively greater incentive for moderate income families to save.
· Third, New York has extended its Childrens Health Plus coverage (CHiP) up to 400% of poverty, so we only had to purchase a couples insurance plan on the exchange, then pay a bit more per kid for the CHP coverage. That was especially important for us, since our main pediatrician was not on any of the cheaper exchange plans, but was on a number of the CHP plans.
Still, the plan we have is the kind of plan available to all moderate income New Yorkers and to slightly higher income New Yorkers like our family transitioning to new ventures in the middle of the year. That seems to me an unqualified reason to celebrate the success of Obamacare.

There is still the problem of a ridiculously large drop in subsidies as people move towards upper middle class incomes (i.e. crossing the 400% of poverty line). In NY, that means not only seeing the last of any subsidies disappear but you also lose access to the CHP program. If our adjusted annual income was in that range, we would have been paying more like $1300 to $1500 per month for a family plan, probably with a higher deductible. Still far better than what existed in the individual market in the past, but that means that a gain of something like 30-40K in income would lead to the loss of something like $12,000 in subsidies yearly-- that's equivalent to something like a 25-33% tax on additional income on top of regular payroll and income taxes.

The answer is to improve subsidies for moderate income families and stretch them out to higher income levels to make the marginal tax changes less onerous. Or better yet, transition to a single payer system and just collect premium costs through the regular progressive tax system.

That said, we are incredibly relieved and happy that Obamcare delivered so well for our family. And did I mention there was even a cheap dental plan available for the adults on the exchange (the kids are covered for dental by CHP)? Reported by Huffington Post 14 hours ago.

The Terrible Truth About Income Inequality

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The Terrible Truth About Income Inequality Economic inequality has emerged as the central political challenge of the 21st Century. Left wing academics and politicians are quick with quack remedies--higher taxes on the wealthy that will only send more investment abroad and smother growth.

For most Americans, good-paying jobs are scarce, and many feel powerless to improve their lot. Yet, for those at the very top of business and in a few charmed professions things have never been better.

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders (I) recently asked Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen “are we still a capitalist democracy or have we gone over into an oligarchic form of society in which incredible economic and political power now rests with the billionaire class?”

Yellen deflected, saying she preferred not to assign labels, but Sanders struck a nerve.

Russia’s oligarchy has two salient characteristics. The government uses its power to regulate markets to concentrate wealth in the hands of an influential few, while most of its citizens stay poor by western standards.

In recent decades, the federal government has enabled monopolization in many industries--for example, in cable TV and high speed Internet, banking and health care--by failing to use its antitrust and regulatory powers to curb abusive practices.

Comcast enjoys monopoly access to most homes it services. Each year, it raises rates for cable TV bundled with high-speed Internet faster than the rate of inflation, because federal policies prohibit local governments from regulating cable prices as those do for electric and water utilities.

Its fee structure discourages subscribers from purchasing only high-speed Internet and independently obtaining entertainment content over the Net. Now Comcast proposes to acquire Time Warner Cable and establish a virtual national monopoly, giving it huge bargaining leverage with content providers, such as ESPN, Turner, and Fox , even though it already owns NBC.

Comcast is transforming a public utility into an international media giant on the backs of overtaxed subscribers. Yet federal regulators will likely approve its acquisition of Comcast, because it has “close ties” with the Obama White House. 

Similarly, Dodd-Frank financial reforms impose regulatory costs so onerous that small banks are selling out to bigger ones. In the bargain, small business loans and mortgages are tougher to obtain, and grandma can’t get a decent rate on CDs. Bank executives pull down huge bonuses but also make generous contributions to political candidates.

ObamaCare has effectively monopolized many local markets for health insurance and hospital care, and reinforces pharmaceutical companies’ ability to charge higher drug prices than prevail in other wealthy countries like Germany and Holland.

To salve the masses, Washington politicians exempt nearly 50 percent of voters from income taxes, and offer subsidized health care, food stamps, and the earned income tax credit for lower income Americans.

All are great vote buying schemes financed by heavy taxes on most upper income Americans.

But those politicians skillfully exclude from those high taxes the very top of the one percent--the oligarchs in communications, finance, and other industries are often paid in stock options, which are subject to much lower capital-gains tax rates.

A recent Wall Street Journal poll found the majority of Americans view the economic and political system stacked against them, and most are dissatisfied with Obama’s handling of the economy.  

Meanwhile, the economics profession--composed mostly of left leaning academics--is enamored with French economist and author Thomas Piketty’s thesis, in the new bestseller, "Capital in the Twenty-First Century," that growing inequality is the natural outcome of capitalism and confiscatory taxes are the answer. 

Both notions are wrong.

Washington corruption--in the pattern of Vladimir Putin--is driving inequality and sinking family incomes. Higher taxes may catch your family doctor in the near future but politicians will still find a way to exempt their supporters among the very wealthy.

Politicians offering ordinary voters a free ride on taxes, subsidized health care and other enticements are really picking their pockets by giving the country away to the oligarchs.

Peter Morici is an economist and business professor at the University of Maryland, national columnist and five-time winner of the MarketWatch best forecaster award. He tweets @pmorici1 Reported by Breitbart 13 hours ago.

Bioscape Digital Wins Impact Award for Health IT

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Technology Association of Georgia: Southeastern Software Association Honors Bioscape for Innovation in 5th annual awards ceremony in the "Where Georgia Leads: Health IT Category."The TAG Southeastern Software Association (SSA), one of the founding members of the Technology Association of Georgia (TAG), announced Bioscape Digital as the winner of the Impact Award in the "Where Georgia Leads: Health IT" category at the their 5th annual event on April 24th, 2014.

TAG is the state's leading association dedicated to the promotion and economic advancement of Georgia's technology industry, and the SSA is one of the South's oldest technology organizations and was the largest of TAG's three founding organizations, along with WIT and B&TA in 1998.

This year's Impact award winners were selected from 96 nominated companies, from which 23 finalists were selected across the five categories: Technology Solutions Provider, Independent Software Vendor, Corporate Internal Software Development Group, Where Georgia Leads: Healthcare IT, and Emerging Megatrend. The finalists in the Where Georgia Leads: HealthIT were Accuhealth Technologies, Azalea Health, Bioscape Digital, Bluetube, BrightWhistle, and ER Express. The selection criteria were based upon the complexity of the problem, creativity of the solution, and the overall business impact of the product. The winners were announced at an awards dinner on April 24th at the Hyatt Regency in Marietta, GA.

"The Southeastern Software Association Impact Awards recognize companies and their teams who have demonstrated outstanding leadership in bringing new technology solutions to the market," said Bates Mattison, Executive Director of the Institute for Healthcare IT and guest judge for the Impact Awards. "Congratulations to Bioscape Digital for their innovation and creativity in winning the Health IT award, and the testament to the skill, ingenuity and vision of its creators".

Bioscape Digital's award-winning platform places proprietary tablets loaded with text, audio and 3D visual imagery into health systems (i.e. ER and Imaging Centers). The service also allows providers to give patients discharge instructions through the platform, to collect patient feedback so that it can be addressed in real time (before the patient fills out an HCAHPS form) and even help patients understand their health insurance options. Additionally, Bioscape offers a suite of services (PictureRx) around medication compliance and history. Clients include multiple national hospital systems as well as major regional healthcare providers and a number of other healthcare companies.

"This is a fantastic honor," said Stuart Bracken, CEO of Bioscape Digital. "We are excited to have been recognized out of such an impressive group of finalists, since there is such a great ecosystem of Health Technology companies in the area. We will continue to innovate and improve as we look to transform the patient experience at hospitals around the world."

About TAG SSA
TAG SSA's mission is to be the leading resource for software and information technology for executives and professionals to connect and develop business opportunities. The SSA strives to be the catalyst to drive economic growth of the software and information technology industry by attracting and supporting the advancement of innovative companies, talent and capital in the region. For more information visit http://www.tagonline.org/tag-southeastern-software-association.php.

About The Technology Association of Georgia (TAG)
TAG is the leading technology industry association in the state, serving more than 22,000 members through regional chapters in Metro Atlanta, Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Macon/Middle Georgia and Savannah. TAG's mission is to educate, promote, and unite Georgia's technology community to foster an innovative and connected marketplace that stimulates and enhances a tech-based economy. The association provides networking and educational programs; celebrates Georgia's technology leaders and companies; and advocates for legislative action that enhances the state's economic climate for technology. TAG hosts over 200 events each year and serves as an umbrella organization for 34 professional societies. Additionally, the TAG Education Collaborative (TAG's charitable arm) focuses on helping science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education initiatives thrive.

For more information visit the TAG website at www.tagonline.org or TAG's community website at www.TAGthink.com.

To learn about the TAG-Ed Collaborative visit http://www.tagedonline.org/.

About Bioscape Digital
Founded in 2012, Bioscape Digital is a patient engagement service enabler that delivers relevant information into health systems utilizing tablet based technology. With Bioscape, patients are empowered to engage in their health, providers are enabled to practice medicine more effectively and health systems are elevated to the next level in quality of care. Bioscape also recently earned finalist recognition for the 2013 Intel Innovation Awards, and was selected as a TAG Top 40 Innovative Technology Companies for 2014.

To learn more, visit http://www.bioscapedigital.com, http://www.mypicturerx.com or follow @bioscapedigital on Twitter.

For press inquiries please contact: marketing@bioscapedigital.com

Company Contact Information
Bioscape Digital
Jon Harmer
3565 Piedmont Road
Suite 1-510
30305
404-688-3076

News and Press Release Distribution From I-Newswire.com Reported by i-Newswire.com 13 hours ago.

BCBSNC enrollees from Affordable Care Act are sicker than other customers

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Those who signed up for ACA health insurance plans through BCBSNC have higher rates of depression, chronic pain and diabetes. That’s in addition to findings reported last week that showed the enrollees were older than Blue Cross anticipated, and therefore carried more risk than initially thought. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, the state’s largest health insurer, reported that 232,000 people enrolled – and paid premiums – for plans under the Affordable Care Act. A self-reported… Reported by bizjournals 13 hours ago.

Health Insurance CEO: ‘We Have to Break People Away From the Choice Habit'

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“We have to break people away from the choice habit that everyone has,” Marcus Merz, chief executive of PreferredOne, a Minnesota health insurer,
OBAMACARE WEBSITE-CROP FOR INTERIOR.jpg

read more Reported by CNSNews.com 11 hours ago.

Employers May Start Paying You To Buy Health Insurance

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It costs a lot for companies to buy health insurance, so the idea of giving employees money to buy their own coverage has a lot of appeal. But it might end up being more expensive for workers. Reported by NPR 12 hours ago.

3 Reasons to Buy the Market's Biggest Health Insurer

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The Affordable Care Act's shaking up the health insurance landscape, but UnitedHealth's looking forward to a bright future regardless. Reported by Motley Fool 11 hours ago.

Governor Jerry Brown Releases Record California Spending Plan

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday released a state budget that includes record-high spending as part of a plan that shows California government awash in tax revenue.

The revised budget projects $107.7 billion in spending from the general fund, the state's main checkbook for paying day-to-day operations. That's nearly $1 billion more than the budget Brown proposed in January.

"This is good news for California," he said.

The spending represents a 24 percent increase over the $87 billion general fund budget approved during the 2011-12 fiscal year, the low point of the recession when California cut billions of dollars from state programs and furloughed state workers.

Tax revenue in the current fiscal year is running ahead of expectations by more than $2 billion, but the governor's office said expenditures increased at a similar rate.

That includes about $1.2 billion in additional costs this year for Medi-Cal, the state's health insurance program for the poor, which saw 1.4 million more enrollees than the state projected in January. Brown's office said the additional cost will climb to $2.4 billion in the next fiscal year as even more people enroll.

The spending plan also includes a 30-year plan to start paying down California's massive teacher pension liabilities that would split the costs between the state, school districts and teachers, with about $450 million going in in 2014-15. The state Legislative Analyst's Office has estimated the liability is nearly $74 billion.

Brown's plan now goes to the Legislature, where many Democrats want to restore social services and take steps to combat poverty. Brown favors an approach that prioritizes savings and paying down the state's debts and unfunded liabilities.

"There are many good ideas, in health care, in schooling, environment, prison reform, court expansion, but we only have so much money," he said.

The governor characterized his latest budget plan as one of "restraint and prudence." Lawmakers have until June 15 to make changes and pass a balanced budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1.

He announced an agreement with legislative leaders last week to replace a rainy day fund measure on the November ballot with a different, bipartisan plan that would set aside revenue of up to 10 percent of California's general fund and dedicate some of the reserve to paying down the state's massive debts and unfunded liabilities.

California's debts remain massive, even as Brown proposes to spend more to pay them down.

Legislative Analyst Mac Taylor said last week that California has $340 billion in debts and unfunded liabilities, or more than $8,500 for each of its 38 million residents. Much of the long-term liability comes from the shortfall in the teachers' retirement system and health benefits promised to 277,000 retired state employees. Reported by Huffington Post 10 hours ago.

UAlbany and Harvard studies: U.S. health care wasting money and performing unnecessary procedures

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The U.S. health care system is wasting billions of dollars and putting people at increased risk by performing potentially unnecessary medical procedures, recent reports show. Two colleges -- Harvard Medical School and University at Albany School of Public Health -- tackled those issues in separate studies released this month. Researchers at Harvard analyzed data connected to Medicare, the federal program providing health insurance to elderly people. They found that Medicare spent $1.9 billion in… Reported by bizjournals 11 hours ago.

teamfocus Launches The First NSA Proof Task Management System

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teamfocus is an Australian start-up offering a unique collaborative task management system which focuses on fully customizable workflows. In an industry first, teamfocus offers the ability for customers to "NSA proof" their information by encrypting data before it is sent to teamfocus, which means that if we are ever ordered to hand-over your data to a third party or government agency, all they will ever see is encrypted data.

(PRWEB) May 13, 2014

May 13th 2014 — A founding team with years of business experience, teamfocus launches its collaborative task system, re-imagining the way companies approach project management. It creates a modern web application aimed at keeping teams in sync.
teamfocus solves the problems created by an increasingly distributed workforce, providing organizations with the ability to easily keep track of tasks and work assignments.

*teamfocus is the solution to an increasingly remote workforce, letting organizations easily keep track of tasks & assignments

*Strong encryption enables teamfocus customers to store data without third parties ever being able to see the data

*Since the NSA spying scandal, trust in the industry is weak. Security is the most vital element customers look for in cloud services. teamfocus is private and secure.

*CBI reports the percentage of companies with remote workers increased from 45% in 2007 to nearly 60% in 2011, increasing the demand for product management services

*The Australian startup scene is flourishing; teamfocus aims to be the next breakout success from down-under

***

Co-founder & CEO Kevin Withnall began development of teamfocus three years ago, initially for his 12-person development company. Rather than trying to stay organized through emails, spreadsheets and meetings, he wanted a system that was more agile, and one that could better manage tasks.

teamfocus intuitively complements the rise in remote product management, and it provides a powerful solution to the associated challenges. “For the last decade or so, the way people work and communicate with one another in teams has gone through dramatic and rapid changes,” says Withnall, who has founded multiple development firms before co-founding teamfocus.

“We created teamfocus because we didn’t see a product fulfilling the need in the market. teamfocus was built to be the world’s most complete collaborative task system”, added the Australian innovator.

According to a CBI study, between 2007 and 2011 the percentage of companies with remote workers increased from approximately 45% to close to 60%. And this number is only expected to increase, creating a larger demand for product management services like teamfocus.
teamfocus is fully customizable, and is suitable for any workflow, ranging from a simple to-do list to an organization’s complete work process.

The product provides team members with one central location, where they can see what their peers are working on, and easily tell how a project is progressing. The B2B software is a comprehensive product, and was designed from the start to evolve as organizations grow.

A key teamfocus feature is the use of Workflows, where tasks are forced to flow through a pre-determined set of steps to ensure nothing is missed. They also help identify the cause of bottlenecks. A full API, to be released later this year, allows companies to use teamfocus workflows and storage in their own applications.

Another unique feature allows users to store tasks without teamfocus ever seeing any of the data. This is achieved by encrypting the tasks/data at the client end. The NSA spying scandal dealt a heavy blow to customer trust in traditional cloud services, raising serious concerns over user privacy. The large services used by major online service providers such as Dropbox, Google Docs and Facebook also mean bigger risks.

"Public cloud services are all built on the foundation of the data center, and it’s a treasure trove of personal information that’s vulnerable to data breaches, or vulnerable to being accessed by the service providers,” said Withnall. teamfocus allows users to create and keep their own encryption keys in their browser so that the datacentre only ever sees an encrypted version.

This therefore means that teamfocus represents the most secure option for the public. Studies have shown that security is the most vital element for customers looking for cloud storage devices, with cloud hosting company Peer1 finding that 96% of those surveyed considered this to be the most important factor.

Despite the well-funded competition, teamfocus believes it can compete well in the marketplace. Says Co-Founder Jason Weaver, “We believe the beauty of the task management market is that the best product can win. We've spent three years building and validating teamfocus, and we - and our clients - believe this is the best product in the market, with a set of features not found in any other task management software.”

The issue that many people are finding with the current offerings of online task managers is that they quickly hit a barrier in terms of the scope of the product and its ability to grow. Simply put, people can quickly outgrow the system they have just signed up for. This is where teamfocus is different. teamfocus is fully customisable and so grows as your business expands.

Innovative companies from the Australian start-up scene continue to flourish, with organizations such as Atlassian, Health Engine, HiSeis, and Agworld receiving international attention and funding. Investors are also entering the space, including Qualcomm Ventures, Golden Gate Ventures, and Telstra. teamfocus is aiming to be the next breakout success from the country down-under.

teamfocus is free for the first three users, with a monthly charge for subsequent users' subscriptions.

The company also provides customized enterprise solutions.
teamfocus was founded in 2010 by Kevin Withnall and Jason Weaver. Withnall previously worked with MSN in Australia, and is the founder and CEO of a 12-person development firm. Weaver has come from roles as an eBusiness Manager with a large Health insurance company, and as a Project Manager at ING.

The teamfocus mission is to create a product that can best manage workflow between teams. teamfocus is the world’s most complete collaborative task system.
Learn more about teamfocus at: http://www.teamfocus.me

About teamfocus
teamfocus was founded in 2010, when Kevin Withnall and Jason Weaver came together to solve a common problem: managing workflow between teams.
Contact Information
Kevin Withnall, Co-Founder Mobile: (+61 412 453846) Skype: (kevinwithnall)
Email: kevin(at)teamfocus(dot)me Website: http://www.teamfocus.me Reported by PRWeb 10 hours ago.

Washington insurance rate increases proposed

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The companies that sell health insurance to individuals in Washington state are proposing rate increases that average 8.25 percent. Reported by Miami Herald 10 hours ago.

In Red States, Obamacare Outreach Boosts Medicaid Enrollment

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Though 26 states decided against going along with an expansion of the Medicaid health insurance program for the poor under the Affordable Care Act, 17 of them have seen a boost in enrollment thanks to “increased outreach and awareness,” a new analysis indicates. More than 550,000 new Medicaid beneficiaries signed up [...] Reported by Forbes.com 9 hours ago.

Health Insurance May Help Cover Rhinoplasty Surgery Costs When Breathing Issues Are Present Prompting Dr. Joseph T. Cruise to Now Provide Medical Necessity Evaluation

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Dr. Joseph T. Cruise advises patients wanting to improve the appearance of their nose about the possibility of health insurance providing some reimbursement if airway issues are present. Often times during the examination, findings show the structure of the nose is impairing breathing, which can be corrected during rhinoplasty surgery.

Newport Beach, CA. (PRWEB) May 13, 2014

As one of the top rhinoplasty surgeons in Orange County and the U.S., Dr. Joseph T. Cruise believes patients considering a nose job (http://orangecountycosmeticsurgery.com/nose-surgery/) should be informed about the possibility of using their health insurance benefits to help cover the cost. He explains he often finds a person has been so focused on how much he/she dislikes the way their nose looks, they haven't recognized there are airway issues as well. If a patient has health insurance, they are even more surprised to learn their surgery may be partially covered.

"I see a fair amount of cases where the patient does in fact have breathing obstruction, which insurance has covered as part of their rhinoplasty surgery, " explains Dr. Cruise.

To learn more about rhinoplasty and airway issues, please visit:

http://orangecountycosmeticsurgery.com/nose-surgery/.

Orange County rhinoplasty surgeon, Dr. Joseph T. Cruise has performed thousands of nose surgeries over his career. This expertise has provided him the opportunity to truly understand the intricate nature of rhinoplasty surgery. Dr.Cruise believes it is by far the most complex surgery of all cosmetic procedures. As part of his thorough evaluation during rhinoplasty consultations, Dr. Cruise exams the interior of the nose to determine if there are any issues present causing airway obstruction.

Health insurance companies typically provide coverage for breathing issues and trauma to the nose. Difficulty breathing is often times associated with septal deviation and/or turbinate hypertrophy. Trauma (past or present) to the nasal area leading to nasal fractures is usually covered. Either problem mentioned above can be corrected at the same time as rhinoplasty surgery. In general, health insurance will not reimburse for a cosmetic procedure such as rhinoplasty, which is strictly for aesthetic improvement. There must be an underlying problem deemed to be a medical necessity before they will consider the claim.

About Cruise Plastic Surgery:

Cruise Plastic Surgery, located in Newport Beach, Orange County, California, is one of the top plastic surgery practices in the Southern California region. The director, Dr. Joseph T. Cruise, is a fully trained, board-certified plastic surgeon specializing in facelift, breast augmentation, tummy tuck and other cosmetic surgery procedures. Dr. Cruise is also one of the region’s best known surgeons for rhinoplasty (nose surgery), neck lift surgery and gynecomastia. His dedication and focus is clearly evident in the comprehensive educationally based web site he manages and the concierge-like customer service his patients receive from the entire office. Experience and predictably good results have earned him the distinction of being one of the best plastic surgeons in Orange County. Reported by PRWeb 9 hours ago.

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey Executive Honored with YWCA Tribute to Women and Industry (TWIN) Award

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Horizon's Controller honored for excellence and leadership

Newark, NJ (PRWEB) May 13, 2014

Catherine Merlino, Controller for Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey (Horizon BCBSNJ), was honored at the 35th annual Tribute to Women and Industry (TWIN) awards gala, which was held earlier this month at the Bridgewater Marriott. Sponsored by the YWCA Union County, the TWIN award honors women who have excelled in their fields and made significant contributions to industry in executive, managerial and professional roles.

“Horizon applauds all of this year’s TWIN honorees and we are especially proud of Catherine’s recognition as a role model to other women in her profession and the health insurance industry,” said Alison Banks-Moore, Chief Diversity Officer, Horizon BCBSNJ. “Catherine’s contributions to our company serve as an example of excellence for all current and future leaders.”

As Controller, Ms. Merlino is responsible for serving as the company’s technical accounting expert and determining proper procedures for all accounting transactions. Ms. Merlino assesses the potential impact of any accounting changes on the company’s financial position and operations. Through her oversight of internal controls and commitment to applying best practices in the processing of financial data, Ms. Merlino ensures the accuracy of Horizon BCBSNJ’s financial reporting.

In addition to her technical expertise, Ms. Merlino is an advocate of employee engagement and career development.

“I am honored to be recognized by the YWCA Union County for my contributions to Horizon and feel privileged to be considered a role model for others,” said Merlino, a resident of Vernon, New Jersey. “I feel fortunate to be part of a company that sets the standard for integrity in finance and accounting and motivates its employees to grow and excel as leaders.”

The TWIN awards program originated in New Jersey in 1975 and was introduced to Central New Jersey in 1979. Now a national and international award program of the YWCA, TWIN has honored more than 800 women from companies large and small throughout central New Jersey. The program also recognizes corporations whose policies and practices encourage high achievement by women and who promote equal advancement opportunities for women of diverse backgrounds.

About Horizon BCBSNJ’s Diversity programs
Horizon BCBSNJ has instituted many programs aimed at promoting diversity within the company including: paid minority internships and manager development programs, as well as a Diversity Council and minority leadership programs. To learn more about Horizon BCBSNJ and its diversity efforts, visit: http://www.HorizonBlue.com/diversity

About Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, the state’s oldest and largest health insurer, is a tax-paying, not-for-profit health services corporation, providing a wide array of medical, dental, and prescription insurance products and services. Horizon BCBSNJ is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, serving 3.7 million members with headquarters in Newark and offices in Wall, Mt. Laurel, and West Trenton. Learn more at http://www.HorizonBlue.com.

### Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.
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