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Hatch Defends 'Obamacare' Repeal in Tax Bill

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A Senate Finance Committee hearing got heated Wednesday as the committee's chair, Sen. Orrin Harch, defended the decision to include in the tax bill a repeal of the Obamacare requirement for Americans to get health insurance. (Nov. 15)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 7 hours ago.

The Senate Republican tax plan raises taxes on families and cuts healthcare spending to fund corporate tax cuts

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The Senate Republican tax plan raises taxes on families and cuts healthcare spending to fund corporate tax cuts· *Senate Republicans are proposing to cut corporate taxes permanently, but individual tax cuts would be temporary.*
· *This exposes a clear priority in the Republican tax plan, along with their decision to include proposed cuts to healthcare spending in the tax bill.*

--------------------The Senate Republican tax plan achieves something that is difficult within the context of Senate rules: It would permanently and significantly reduce corporate tax rates, and it can pass the Senate under a simple majority vote.

Individual taxpayers are not so lucky: Our tax cuts would be scheduled to expire at the end of 2025.

The plan also would include a significant individual income tax increase — a change to the way tax brackets are indexed to inflation, which would expose more of your income to higher tax rates over time — that would be permanent.

That means, starting in 2026, the plan would impose a tax increase on most families, and would use that tax increase to finance a corporate tax cut.

The plan would also lead to a permanent reduction in federal spending on healthcare, relative to current law. This would also be key to financing the corporate tax cuts.

Republicans will say this: Ignore what the charts say about your taxes in 2026. Those tax expirations aren't real. They're needed to satisfy budget rules. But we'll come back later and extend out your tax cuts. We promise.

The choice to put corporations' permanent tax cut into legislation while families get a pinky swear reveals priorities — as does the choice to reduce healthcare spending and increase the number of uninsured Americans, which can't be passed off as a mere budget gimmick.

*How the bill pays for its permanent corporate tax cut*

As I wrote Tuesday, the Republican tax plan has to fit inside a box. To comply with the Budget Act of 1974, the bill has to be written so it doesn't increase the deficit except within the next 10 years. That's why Republicans can't make all the tax cuts permanent — doing so would blow up the deficit far into the future.

But Republicans can make the corporate tax cuts permanent. They've made that math work without raising the deficit in the long run.

How? First, the cuts in corporate tax rates come with the elimination of certain business tax deductions, which partly offset the cost of the tax rate cuts. But despite this, companies still get a large, permanent tax cut on net.

Second, the permanent tax increase on individuals from the change in the way taxes adjust for inflation raises a surprising amount of money — about $500 billion in the decade starting in 2027.

Third, repealing the individual mandate to carry health insurance sounds like a tax cut, but its main fiscal effect would be to reduce government spending on healthcare. This change would lead to about 13 million fewer Americans having health insurance by 2027, according to the Congressional Budget Office. In many cases, those new uninsured people would be foregoing Medicaid or government-subsidized private insurance — reducing the deficit and freeing up money to finance corporate tax cuts.

So, the math adds up to pay for a permanent corporate tax cut because Republicans offset the deficit effects by raising taxes on families and cutting spending on healthcare.

Sad!

*Temporary tax cuts sometimes prove temporary*

Milton Friedman once said "there is nothing so permanent as a temporary government program," and conservatives have often applied this adage to tax changes as well — both tax increases and tax cuts.

But we've seen evidence over the last few years that temporary tax changes sometimes really are temporary.

The Bush tax cuts of 2001 were temporary because they were passed using the same budgetary procedure Republicans are proposing to use for this tax bill. And while some of the tax changes were made permanent by Congress in 2012, provisions aimed at higher earners were allowed to expire.

Barack Obama ran for president proposing to establish a permanent "Making Work Pay" credit for lower- and middle-income families. This was established as a temporary program in the 2009 stimulus bill and was not extended.

There would surely be strong political pressure to extend individual income tax cuts when they expire in 2025. But decisions about whether to do so would be subject to both political and fiscal considerations.

Until a few months ago, Republicans were eager to warn about the pressure that deficits and rising entitlement costs will put on government budgets in the future. Those pressures would be made worse by a tax cut package that would add $1.5 trillion to the government debt over a decade. In a few years, they may be saying it is unaffordable to extend these tax cuts unless they are packaged with cuts to entitlement programs, like Medicare.

That will be a political negotiation. But one stakeholder in that negotiation will be in an advantaged position: the corporate sector, whose tax cuts will have already been made permanent.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Everything we know about the mysterious SR-72 — Lockheed Martin's successor to the fastest plane ever Reported by Business Insider 8 hours ago.

'You're On Your Own': Study Describes Impact Of Military's Abortion Policy

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Women in the military are more likely than civilian women to experience an unplanned pregnancy. But they generally can't get abortions at military facilities, or using military health insurance. Reported by NPR 7 hours ago.

MSNBC Declares GOP Stepped on ObamaCare ‘Landmine’

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Worried about Senate Republicans adding repeal of the ObamaCare health insurance mandate to tax reform legislation, on Wednesday, MSNBC repeatedly claimed that the GOP had stepped on a “landmine” and awakened a “sleeping giant” by taking up the issue. Anchors and correspondents eagerly predicted that the move would get Democrats “fired up” in opposition.  
  Reported by CNSNews.com 5 hours ago.

America is Too Big, Like Going to a Restaurant with 20 Friends

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Via The Daily Bell

Have you ever tried to go out to dinner with a party of 20? This is a group of people with presumably the same core value: you all want to have dinner with some friends. So everyone is in agreement on the goal, even if a few guys just go along to make their wives happy.

The decision of where to go out to eat is usually left to just a few people in the group. Some people might voice support for this or that restaurant, and perhaps veto others.

“Have you all tried the new Italian place?”

“No Chinese food!”

But somebody ends up taking the bull by the horns. For better or worse one person calls to make the reservation.

Once at the restaurant, you all sit down around a pieced together table awkwardly stuck in the middle of the room. It takes the wait staff about 20 minutes just to wind their way around the table. Other diners in the restaurant form a bottleneck trying to get around the makeshift banquet table to the bathroom.

Officially you have a party of 20 people successfully dining together. But can you talk to all 20 of your friends? Of course not. If you are stuck at the end of the table, you have three people to chat with. Some lucky people in the middle can converse with five different friends. But not a single person can actually enjoy the company of all 20 dinner guests.

Then it’s time to order. Some restaurants give a limited menu to a party of this size. Others might insist you order communal dishes to share. Otherwise, it is unlikely that all the food comes out at once. Do you let yours get cold waiting politely for the next person’s meal to come out?

And finally, with a party that size, the restaurant automatically adds 20% to the bill for gratuity. It doesn’t matter how good or bad the service was. And now you are all left to figure out who owes what. Are you going to go full commie and just split it evenly? Well, Susan just got a salad and no wine, so that’s not fair. Ron doesn’t have any cash, can they run multiple cards? Does anyone have change for a $50?

It is a nightmare. And you don’t have to do it.

The best thing to do is fracture into four or five groups and all go out to dinner separately. In practice, you can still converse with the same number of people, but you get to choose which ones. Other benefits of splitting up include more influence over the restaurant your group chooses. You can order whatever you want. There are no complications with finding enough seating, waiting for other’s food, figuring out how to split the check and so on.

But there was still some drive in the group to all go out together. The group is pretending to be one cohesive unit. Yet based on the noise levels and seating distance, you are limited to interacting with only a few friends. Worse, it is almost random who you will be stuck sitting next to. If you split into smaller groups, you can link up with the other folks you actually want to talk to.

Then you could all coordinate as individuals if you want to meet at a bar afterward. That is more accommodating to floating around and mixing with your 20 friends.

This is the story of America.

Why is America still trying to eat at the same large table in a crowded restaurant when we could be going out with smaller groups of our choosing?

This week a bunch of U.S. Mayors and Governors are meeting in Germany to tell world leaders they are still on board with their climate change agenda. California Governor Jerry Brown and former NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg were among them.



The group just released a report that said if these non-federal entities were a country, their economy would be the third largest in the world.



If only they were their own countries! Then all the voters and leaders from New York City and California wouldn’t be ordering our meals for us. We wouldn’t be plopped next to these people who we don’t want to talk to. We wouldn’t be forced to split the bill with people who are ordering expensive and unnecessary appetizers. But if they happen to come up with something that works, we can meet them later at the bar and see if it makes sense for us as well.

In DC, Congress is trying to decide whether to force Americans to pay the individual mandate penalty for not having health insurance. This is the forced 20% tip for terrible service. And it is also like having a small salad and no drinks, then having to split the bill with people who order full entrees, appetizers, and wine galore.

I don’t smoke, I exercise, I eat healthily. I’ve never had to go to the hospital in my life. I rarely get sick, and when I do, I treat myself with plenty of tea and spices. Why should I pay thousands of dollars a year for health insurance? I can save that money, and pay out of pocket if anything happens. Even if something catastrophic happens, why not set up a payment plan after the fact, rather than paying for insurance before? The bottom line is it should be my choice. Being grouped with 320 million Americans doesn’t let me order what I want.

And all this is beside the fact that we are stuck in an expensive American healthcare system. That is like not having the choice of what restaurant to eat at. Some employers are now paying for week-long Caribbean vacations for their employees who need knee replacements because it is cheaper than getting the operation done in the U.S.

These are just some examples, but the analogy applies to almost everything. Most problems in America stem from trying to group 320 million people together. But we really can’t associate with everyone anyway, so why are we pretending to be one cohesive unit?

If we all just agreed to go our separate ways at state, or even city levels, we would get along much better. Places could team up for joint programs if they wanted. America could even exist as a voluntary defense organization that states are free to join or not–like meeting at the bar later.

But there wouldn’t be countless squabbles and arguments to overcome. California could do what it wants in regards to climate change, and New York City could implement a full-fledged police state. Texas could decide if they want a border wall, and Colorado banks could accept cash from marijuana sales.

I’m a big believer in individual action. There are plenty of ways to live free by moving to a better jurisdiction, ignoring the laws you can, and creatively and legally reducing your tax and regulatory burdens.

But if you still believe in the political process, focus locally. Get your local and state governments to protect their citizens from federal overreach. Treat your congressman like a lobbyist to protect your region from the feds.

Better yet, join the secession movements in California, Texas, and New Hampshire.

The dinner example may be a little silly, but I think it is a pretty good analogy. Where else do you think it could apply? Reported by Zero Hedge 8 hours ago.

Hatch defends 'Obamacare' repeal in tax bill

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A Senate Finance Committee hearing got heated Wednesday as the committee's chair, Sen. Orrin Harch, defended the decision to include in the tax bill a repeal of the Obamacare requirement for Americans to get health insurance. (Nov. 15)

 
 
 
 
 
 
  Reported by USATODAY.com 6 hours ago.

Senate moves to repeal individual mandate, Daines on board

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Senate Republicans plan to pull the plug on an Obama-era requirement that people who don’t buy health insurance pay a fine, a move Montana Sen. Steve Daines applauds. Reported by Harrison Daily 3 hours ago.

People are underrating the odds of a government shutdown in December

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People are underrating the odds of a government shutdown in December· *Washington is lurching toward a federal government shutdown in early December.*
· *President Donald Trump and congressional leaders prevented one fairly easily in September. This time will be different.*

--------------------In September, President Trump and Congressional leaders had a pretty easy time avoiding a government shutdown.

All parties agreed to defer hard questions about spending levels for a few months, passing a temporary bill to keep the government open — and Trump caved to Democrats' demand that all aspects of the deal, including the increase in the federal debt limit, be kept short-term.

You may recall this as the period of warm relations between Trump and "Chuck and Nancy"— Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

That short-term government funding deal reached during that brief period will run out on December 8. And I don't think a compromise is going to be so easy to reach this time.

*The tax bill gives Democrats a reason not to agree to an easy deal*

After the September deal was reached, there was some murmuring that Democrats had made a blunder. Because Congress didn't have to spend September debating spending bills to keep the government open, Republicans had time to make one more run at repealing Obamacare before the budget resolution enabling them to do so ran out on September 30.

Ultimately, that effort (known as the Cassidy-Graham proposal) didn't pan out. But there's a relevant lesson for Democrats: Cutting an easy deal on government funding would give Republicans more time over the next few weeks to focus on passing a tax bill that Democrats hate.

A shutdown would considerably complicate the politics of passing the tax plan. Are Republicans going to cut corporate taxes while government offices and national parks are closed?

*A shutdown threat gives Democrats rare policy leverage*

In September, when Trump struck his government-funding deal with "Chuck and Nancy," there was a thought the spending deal might be a prelude to a bipartisan deal to provide a legislative fix for the legally shaky Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which Trump had announced would end in March 2018.

Talks about a bipartisan deal to fix DACA have stalled. So have talks about shoring up Obamacare's individual health insurance markets. So have talks about reauthorizing the Children's Health Insurance Program. So have talks about prohibiting bump-stock devices of the sort used in the Las Vegas massacre.

Democrats are in the minority in Congress. But their votes are needed to move a spending bill through the Senate, and therefore are needed to either avert or end a government shutdown.

This is their best opportunity to make demands about those stalled issues, and you can expect them to do so. Those demands will be hard for Republicans to meet. It's a reason to think we won't avoid a shutdown like we did in September.

*SEE ALSO: The Senate Republican tax plan raises taxes on families and cuts healthcare spending to fund corporate tax cuts*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The world's largest pyramid is not in Egypt Reported by Business Insider 6 hours ago.

‘Obamacare’ mandate repeal would remake market for consumers

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions are expected to forgo coverage if Congress repeals the unpopular requirement that Americans get health insurance, boosting premiums for others. Just as important, the drive by Senate Republicans to undo the coverage requirement under former President Barack Obama’s health care law fits neatly with the Trump administration’s effort to write new […] Reported by Seattle Times 5 hours ago.

Senate Republicans Make Big Changes To Their Original Tax Bill

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Senate Republicans changed their tax bill to scrap the individual mandate on health insurance. The bill would also make many tax cuts for individuals temporary, while business tax cuts would be permanent. Reported by NPR 3 hours ago.

BBB Warning: Beware Medicare and ACA Scams During Open Enrollment

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Scammers use open enrollment as an opportunity to take advantage of consumers.

Arlington, Va. (PRWEB) November 15, 2017

Open enrollment is now going on for both Medicare and the Affordable Care Act (also known as “Obamacare”). Both started in October and continue through December (Medicare through Dec. 7 and the ACA through Dec. 15).

Selecting a health insurance plan can be challenging and complex. Scammers know this and use open enrollment as an opportunity to take advantage of unwary consumers. Some dishonest brokers may try to sell you plans that don’t fit your needs just to benefit them financially. Scammers may pose as government representatives to steal your identity.

Check the full article on BBB.org for tips on avoiding and reporting open enrollment scams.

ABOUT BBB: For more than 100 years, the Better Business Bureau has been helping people find businesses, brands and charities they can trust. In 2016, people turned to BBB more than 167 million times for BBB Business Profiles on more than 5.2 million businesses and Charity Reports on 11,000 charities, all available for free at bbb.org. The Council of Better Business Bureaus is the umbrella organization for the local, independent BBBs in the United States, Canada and Mexico, as well as home to its national and international programs on dispute resolution, advertising review, and industry self-regulation

MEDIA CONTACTS: For more information, journalists for national media outlets should contact Katherine Hutt (212-705-0131 or khutt(at)council(dot)bbb.org). Journalists for local media outlets should contact their regional spokesperson (bbb.org/bbb-locator). Reported by PRWeb 2 hours ago.

Business News Roundup, Nov. 16

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Health Mandate change’s impact: 1.7 million Up to 1.7 million people in California would no longer have health insurance by 2027 if the requirement under the Affordable Care Act to buy health insurance or pay a tax penalty — known as the individual mandate — is repealed, which is under consideration by Senate Republicans. The latest version of the GOP tax proposal, released late Tuesday by the Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, would end the mandate starting in 2019. Reported by SFGate 2 hours ago.

Steve Mnuchin’s Money Shot With Wife Makes Twitter Drip With Sarcasm

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Steve Mnuchin’s Money Shot With Wife Makes Twitter Drip With Sarcasm Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and his wife Louise Linton were in the money Wednesday — and Twitter was rich with sarcastic replies about it.

Social media erupted with sarcasm after a photo of Mnuchin and his wife posing with giant sheets of paper money were published. Twitter users had no problem minting humor from the situation.

“These are gonna look great in documentaries about financial crimes that happened on Mnuchin’s watch,” one tweet prognosticated.

*Also Read:* Steven Mnuchin Requested $25,000-an-Hour Government Jet for European Honeymoon

“Steve Mnuchin and his wife basically spend every day trying to convince people they should be the first to go in a revolution,” read another response.

“Why do Treasury Sec Mnuchin and his wife insist on posing for photos that make them look like Bond villains?” wondered another observer.

“So we now have The Trophy Wife posing with the new currency? This tone deaf clown Mnuchin and Marie Antoinette-Mnuchin should be chased out of our country,” commentator Keith Olbermann chimed in.

*Also Read:* Mnuchin Wife Louise Linton's Ex Paid $200K to Get Her Cast in a Movie, Director Says (Exclusive)

“Beautiful photo of Louise Linton with the love of her life and also Steven Mnuchin,” one wag wrote.

“I’m starting to get the feeling that Louise Linton may not have married Steven Mnuchin because of his charm, wit, or rugged good looks,” read another response.

Mnuchin and Linton have struggled with the public’s perception of them as out of touch with the American public in the past. In August, a Twitter user went at Linton after she tagged her clothes with designer labels on Instagram.

*Also Read:* Louise Linton Apologizes for Tagging Designers on Instagram, Arguing With Commenters

“Glad we could pay for your little getaway #deplorable,” jennimiller29 wrote on Linton’s Instagram page, noting Linton’s post naming designers like Valentino and Tom Ford she was wearing in the photo, taken when she and Mnuchin stepped off a U.S. government plane in Kentucky.

Linton didn’t help matters much when she shot back, “Have you given more to the economy than me andmy [sic] husband? Either as an individual earner in taxes OR in self sacrifice [sic] to your country? I’m pretty sure we paid more taxes toward our ‘trip’ than you did.”

Linton later apologized for tagging the clothes.



These are gonna look great in documentaries about financial crimes that happened on Mnuchin’s watch pic.twitter.com/vbSjc0z8qj

– Adam Khan (@Khanoisseur) November 15, 2017





Steve Mnuchin and his wife basically spend every day trying to convince people they should be the first to go in a revolution. pic.twitter.com/wYesfTFS3t

– Mike Drucker (@MikeDrucker) November 15, 2017





Why do Treasury Sec Mnuchin and his wife insist on posing for photos that make them look like Bond villains? pic.twitter.com/2auZr3LGoP

– Christina Wilkie (@christinawilkie) November 15, 2017





So we now have The Trophy Wife posing with the new currency? This tone deaf clown Mnuchin and Marie Antoinette-Mnuchin should be chased out of our country: https://t.co/J5H6kGo1sR

– Keith Olbermann (@KeithOlbermann) November 15, 2017





Beautiful photo of Louise Linton with the love of her life and also Steven Mnuchin pic.twitter.com/MOfKzrF9u1

– Jason O. Gilbert (@gilbertjasono) November 15, 2017





I’m starting to get the feeling that Louise Linton may not have married Steven Mnuchin because of his charm, wit, or rugged good looks. pic.twitter.com/6ADfGuemKP

– Andrew Weinstein (@Weinsteinlaw) November 15, 2017





Find someone who looks at you the way Louise Linton looks at Steve Mnuchin holding a sheet of dollar bills with his name on them pic.twitter.com/3fGXmJti6c

– Christopher Ingraham (@_cingraham) November 15, 2017





Mnuchin: We need to fight the perception that we’re just a couple of out-of-touch plutocrats
Treasury PR person: Hold on boss I’ve got just the thing pic.twitter.com/uFT2vGzujw

– Christopher Ingraham (@_cingraham) November 15, 2017





Just a friendly reminder that the GOP wants to raise taxes on the middle class & take health insurance away from millions of Americans so people like Louise Linton and Steve Mnuchin can get a tax cut. pic.twitter.com/TbBG2dcWsx

– Caroline O. (@RVAwonk) November 15, 2017



*Related stories from TheWrap:*

Steven Mnuchin Bashes NFL on Anthem Protests: 'Players Have the Right for Free Speech Off the Field'

Steven Mnuchin Requested $25,000-an-Hour Government Jet for European Honeymoon

Mnuchin Wife Louise Linton's Ex Paid $200K to Get Her Cast in a Movie, Director Says (Exclusive) Reported by The Wrap 11 hours ago.

Bipartisan Plan Would Boost Health-Insurance Markets

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Republican lawmakers looking to repeal a rule requiring most people to have health insurance said they were now more open to a bipartisan plan to bolster the insurance markets, since they would likely face political responsibility for the health-care system. Reported by Wall Street Journal 21 hours ago.

Insurance Forums Takes Major Step Forward With Revamped Website

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New site went live in October, further enhancing the reach and capabilities of the World’s Largest Insurance Community.

(PRWEB) November 16, 2017

Insurance Forums, the World’s Largest Insurance Community, is pleased to announce that its new totally redesigned website is now live and features a wide range of improvements that greatly enhance the user experience. The redesigned website, which went live in October, can be found at http://www.insurance-forums.com.

The new site is built with state-of-the-art software considered to be among the most secure and well-supported frameworks available today. The updates provide a dramatic improvement to website performance, security and usability – and to mobile usability in particular. The site’s visitors and more than 70,000 members are able to interact and engage with fellow members and visitors much more easily through the site’s new design and functionality.

"As online content consumption continues to evolve, we need to keep innovating on our user experience,” said Justin Blase, Director of Digital Strategy at Insurance Forums. “The new and improved website not only looks much better, but all pages are much easier to interact with on mobile devices, they load quicker and the overall site experience is just generally much better.”

The insurance media landscape, especially for the life and health market, has seen significant contraction in recent years, with several formerly prominent magazines and websites being shuttered. Meanwhile, Insurance Forums continues to grow, thanks it its continuous stream of strong, relevant peer-to-peer content and newsletters that includes news and feature articles in addition to more than 83,000 discussion threads and more than a million messages from a dedicated and loyal base of members.

The Insurance Forums community has grown organically for the past decade to become the “central water cooler” of the insurance industry. In addition to the main website, Insurance Forums also manages the Women’s Insurance Network, Producer Growth, and the Insurance Professionals LinkedIn Group – the world’s largest insurance group with more than 150,000 members. And coming in 2018, Insurance Forums will launch Insurance Selling magazine to further serve the needs of life and health insurance producers.

Insurance Forums provides a broad range of advertising, email marketing and custom lead generation opportunities for industry partners ranging from carriers to marketing organizations and third-party service providers. For more information, contact Pam Sheehan at pam(at)insforums(dot)com. Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

National Social Security Association Selects Two National Social Security Advisors of the Year

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Two financial advisors have been selected National Social Security Advisor (NSSA) Advisors of the Year for their dedication to Social Security education for their clients and the general public. NSSA is the first and largest Social Security education certificate program in the nation.

CINCINNATI (PRWEB) November 16, 2017

The National Social Security Association has selected two financial advisors committed to Social Security education as National Social Security Advisor (NSSA®) Advisor of the Year.

NSSA Advisors Wm. Steve Wright, managing member of Wright Legacy Group in Elizabethtown, Ky., and Steven Roeth, director of wealth management at Sun City Financial in Las Vegas, were selected NSSA Advisor of the Year for helping retirees and those planning for retirement maximize Social Security income, said Marc Kiner, board member for the National Social Security Association.

“These men received their certificates as National Social Security Advisors just a few years ago, and have run with the concept of expanding Social Security education in their communities and throughout the nation,” said Kiner. “Both men are dynamic public speakers who focus on counseling clients to help them claim Social Security at the right time, in the right way, to maximize lifetime Social Security benefits."

Kiner is a partner in Premier Social Security Consulting of Cincinnati, which teaches the NSSA Advisor® Social Security education program to CPAs, financial advisors, insurance agents, enrolled agents and other professional advisor organizations about Social Security so they can in turn advise clients about Social Security program changes and recommend optimal claiming strategies.

The National Social Security Association awards certificates to professional advisors who take the NSSA Advisor course and pass an assessment. More than 1,500 advisors have earned certificates since the program began in 2013. NSSA Advisor training will be offered in 19 cities across the nation in 2018.

Wright said he promotes his expertise in Social Security education in Kentucky, Kansas and Ohio through seminars; a monthly newsletter; a weekly financial column in his local newspaper; a local TV show; and a self-published book he wrote titled, The New Rules of Social Security 2016: What You Need to Know to Obtain Thousands of Extra Dollars in Benefits.     

Wright said the NSSA Advisor certificate allows him to counsel clients on the best way to claim Social Security benefits in order to maximize lifetime Social Security income.

“We serve very middle class business owners and career workers who earn $40,000 to $60,000 a year,” said Wright. “We’re in the heart of the middle class. That’s why Social Security is so important to our planning discussions. It provides a predictable monthly income that is the cornerstone of a retiree’s monthly budget.”

Roeth, 37, has worked in the financial services industry for 14 years, opening his own business as an independent life, annuity and health insurance broker in 2005. He expanded into commercial real estate development and business projects before selling his business and partnering with Sun City Financial in Las Vegas in 2015 to open its Wealth Management Division.

Sun City Financial is the largest Medicare and health insurance brokerage in the state of Nevada. Roeth offers fee-based financial advising and wealth management as an Investment Advisor Representative of Redhawk Wealth Advisors, Inc., an SEC Registered Investment Advisory firm headquartered in Minneapolis.

“In order to build and protect wealth, comprehensive financial planning is needed,” said Roeth. “Some people look at investment performance only, and neglect risk management or taxes. Less than 10 percent of people develop a formal financial plan. They don’t plan to fail, but a lot of people fail to have a plan.”

Since Roeth earned his NSSA Advisor certificate in 2015, he has offered clients 480 pro-bono Social Security analysis appointments. He has taught 76 Social Security classes since 2015.

“A lot of financial education classes are designed to sell an annuity or wealth management services,” said Roeth. “Mine are designed to help people learn some of the techniques they need to succeed in building and preserving wealth.”

Both Roeth and Wright said the NSSA Advisor certificate has provided a boost to their businesses.

“Having a certificate and the information Jim Blair provides is phenomenal,” said Wright. “We get Social Security updates from Jim and Marc on a timely basis. I tell clients who come to my workshops that I want them to know 95 percent more about Social Security than their friends or the people they play golf with. Having the NSSA Advisor certificate gives you credibility and access to the latest information on Social Security.”

Jim Blair is a 35-year veteran of the Social Security Administration and partner in Premier Social Security Consulting.

“Baby boomers turn 65 years old at the rate of 10,000 a day, yet the majority know little about how to maximize their Social Security income,” said Blair. “Since retirements today can last up to 30 years, Social Security is increasingly important to help retirees not outlive their money. That’s why we developed the NSSA Advisor certificate program—to help advisors teach clients everything they need to know about Social Security, but didn’t know they should ask.”

About 76 million Americans are classified as baby boomers.

Premier has announced a tuition rate increase in 2018 to take the NSSA Social Security training program, with a discount for registrations made before December 31. Projected tuition for the live class after Dec. 31 will be $995, with web-based and on-demand classes at $695. Premier also provides private, on-site classes for organizations that need to provide in-house Social Security training to multiple professional advisors.

For more information about the NSSA Advisor certificate program and its 2018 class and webinar schedule, go to http://www.nationalsocialsecurityassociation.com or http://www.premiernssa.com or call Kiner at (513) 247-0526.    

For more information about the Wright Legacy Group, contact Wright at Steve@WrightLegacy.com or call (270) 723-0333.

For more information about Roeth or Sun City Financial, visit http://www.suncityfinancial.com or call Roeth at (702) 551-4949.

#     #     #

Contact: Marc Kiner
Email: mkiner@mypremierplan.com
Phone: (513) 247-0526

About the National Social Security Advisor program:

Marc Kim and Jim Blair are partners in Premier Social Security Consulting of Cincinnati, which teaches the National Social Security Advisor (NSSA) certificate program. The men educate professional advisors nationwide on the Social Security program so advisors can counsel their clients on how to maximize Social Security income. Reported by PRWeb 18 hours ago.

Consumers’ market remake if ‘Obamacare’ mandate repealed

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions are expected to forgo coverage if Congress repeals the unpopular requirement that Americans get health insurance, gambling that they won’t get sick and boosting premiums for others. The drive by Senate Republicans to undo the coverage requirement under former President Barack Obama’s health care law is a sharp break from the […] Reported by Seattle Times 18 hours ago.

Consumers' market remake if 'Obamacare' mandate repealed

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions are expected to forgo coverage if Congress repeals the unpopular requirement that Americans get health insurance, gambling that they won't get sick and boosting premiums for others. The drive by Senate Republicans to undo the coverage requirement under former President Barack Obama's health care law is a sharp break from the idea that everyone should contribute to health care. And just as important, it fits neatly with the effort by President Donald Trump's administration to write new regulations allowing for skimpier plans with limited benefits and lower premiums. Put the two together and the marketplace for about 18 million people buying their own health insurance could look very different in a few years. Reported by SeattlePI.com 18 hours ago.

Community Health Choice Gets Jefferson County Students Moving and Learning with GoNoodle

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Through a 3-year partnership, 53 public and private schools and over 24,000 elementary students in Jefferson County will have access to GoNoodle’s premium version, GoNoodle Plus, at no cost

BEAUMONT, Texas (PRWEB) November 16, 2017

Community Health Choice has partnered with GoNoodle to get thousands of kids in Jefferson County moving more at school and at home. GoNoodle’s online movement videos and games get kids running, jumping, dancing, stretching, and practicing moments of mindfulness right next to their desks. Grounded in research, GoNoodle delivers proven results by bettering behavior, more focused time-on-task, and improved academic performance.

Through this 3-year partnership, 53 public and private schools and over 24,000 elementary students in Jefferson County will have access to GoNoodle’s premium version, GoNoodle Plus, at no cost.

Fully funded by Community Health Choice, the goal of this partnership is to increase physical activity amongst kids. GoNoodle has hundreds of movement and mindfulness videos, and GoNoodle Plus includes additional games that bring movement and core-subjects together to develop fluency in grade-specific math and ELA topics. With GoNoodle Plus, Jefferson County elementary teachers have the ability to customize GoNoodle content, which further supports their lesson plans and academic goals of the classroom.

“Community Health Choice is dedicated to community wellness and knows that schools play a critical role in promoting the health of young children and helping them establish lifelong healthy behaviors,” said Amber Buchanan, Marketing Manager for Community Health Choice. “We are excited to partner with GoNoodle in an effort to get more students engaged and interested in being active while also learning.”

According to the CDC, only one-quarter of today’s youth meet the current recommendation of at least 60 minutes of physical activity per day. Together with Community Health Choice, GoNoodle is helping local students earn vital minutes of physical activity with entertaining experiences that feature high-energy dance music, fitness routines, virtual field trips and physical challenges. Over 12 million kids play GoNoodle each month, generating over 5 billion minutes of movement in the past year alone.

To use GoNoodle, teachers need to have a computer with an internet connection and a shared screen such as a projector or interactive whiteboard. At home, kids can create and customize their accounts (with parent verification), and get playing GoNoodle online, on mobile, or on Apple TV. Teachers, parents and kids can sign up for free at gonoodle.com. Courtesy of Community Health Choice, public and private school teachers, parents and kids in Jefferson county will have free access to GoNoodle Plus by signing up at gonoodle.com.

"Regular physical activity is critically important to the healthy development of kids. And, we know healthy kids do better in school,” said Scott McQuigg, CEO and co-founder of GoNoodle. “Thanks to the generous partnership with Community Health Choice, it’s great to see GoNoodle help make Jefferson County classrooms active spaces where kids can earn important minutes of physical activity while also enhancing learning."

About Community Health Choice
Community Health Choice (Community) is a non-profit Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) licensed by the Texas Department of Insurance. Through its large network of providers and hospitals, Community serves over 400,000 members in 20 counties in Southeast Texas with Medicaid, CHIP and Health Insurance Marketplace medical insurance. Community’s mission is to improve the health of underserved residents of Southeast Texas by opening doors to coordinated high quality, affordable healthcare and health-related social services.

About GoNoodle
GoNoodle (launched in 2013), gets kids moving to be their smartest, strongest, bravest, silliest, bestest selves. GoNoodle is among the fastest adopted online resources used by elementary teachers, connecting movement, mindfulness and learning for their students. Delivering measurable gains in academics and health, GoNoodle’s 100’s of short interactive videos and games get kids moving throughout the school day, keeping them energized and focused, while introducing curricular topics, practicing mindfulness or just getting the wiggles out. GoNoodle supports teachers in optimizing learning opportunities while creating a joyful classroom. Currently, more than 14 million kids and over 650,000 teachers use GoNoodle each month. GoNoodle is used in 80% of U.S. public elementary schools in all 50 states and worldwide in 185 countries. Over 2 million families use GoNoodle at home, turning screen time into active time, either through gonoodle.com, apps for the iPhone and Apple TV and through the GoNoodle YouTube channel. Learn more at http://www.gonoodle.com.

Contacts:

Community Health Choice
Amber.Buchanan(at)communitycares(dot)com
713-295-6704

GoNoodle
Kelly.Hill(at)gonoodle(dot)com
615-975-6232 Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Nevada considering running its own health exchange again

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevada officials are considering moving the state’s online health insurance marketplace off a federal website and onto a state-run platform. Heather Korbulic, the executive director of the Silver State health exchange, said the U.S. government’s healthcare.gov site limits the insurance marketplace’s access to information and how much time customers can spend […] Reported by Seattle Times 7 hours ago.
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