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Jolly Time: Not Just Popcorn but a Unique Way of Business

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Filed under: Small Business, Consumer Goods, Entrepreneurs, This Built AmericaSioux City, Iowa, once promoted itself as a metropolis-in-the-making, a new Chicago straddling the westward bend of the Missouri River.

It was a natural crossroads for grain and livestock. The city's scales weighed innumerable tons of wheat and corn. Rail yards fanned out across the flats off downtown, connecting meatpacking plants with stockyards that, at one point, processed more animals per day than any other in the world.

Grain brokers winnowed down to a handful by 1980. The stockyards closed in 2001. Only one major meatpacker remains in town. The city's fortunes ebbed as family-owned businesses gave way to corporations and the consolidation of American industry.

But for 100 years, the American Pop Corn Co., and the Smith family that runs it, has stood against that tide.

*Chapter 1: All in the Family*

At Sioux City's northwestern edge sits a cluster of storage bins and cleaning towers, one bearing the red Jolly Time pennant. Some buildings are newer, but the facility has been churning out popcorn since 1916 when Carlton and Garry Smith's great-grandfather moved his just two-year-old American Pop Corn Co. here.

A small-town entrepreneur from Odebolt, Iowa, Cloid Smith invested in local land after selling a fledgling regional phone company to Bell Telephone in 1912. He took a job with Bell in Sioux City, but leased the land to a tenant farmer, who put in a crop that grew famously well around Odebolt: popcorn.
*Credit: Daniel Iske*

Most corn, called "dent corn," goes back into the agrarian cycle to fatten livestock or, in the case of sweet corn, to people's tables. Popcorn is a different plant, with traditionally smaller stalks and ears bearing distinctive tiny, round kernels with super-dense shells. Those shells pack in internal moisture, the key trigger that, upon heating, explodes and turns a kernel inside-out.

Back then, popcorn sold at the general store in bulk, unprocessed, and had yet to be exploited as a branded product. Cloid Smith would change all that.

In 1914, when a buyer lowballed his tenant on a crop, Cloid stepped in. With the help of his teenage son Howard, he processed and brokered the harvest. The father-and-son team began selling popcorn wholesale to street vendors, carnivals and, of course, movie theaters.

But in 1925, Cloid found the point of differentiation that would make his fledgling brand, now called Jolly Time, a household name. He commissioned a proprietary canister designed to seal in kernels' all-important moisture. The packaging promised: "It's guaranteed to pop!"

Other brands arrived on the shelves, but Jolly Time pioneered marketing popcorn to consumers. In the 1930s, the company sponsored its own NBC radio variety show, General Jolly Time and the Pop Corn Colonels.

Danny Kaye and Bob Hope hawked Jolly Time, and as television brought entertainment increasingly into homes, the company deftly utilized the new marketing opportunity. It put bowls of Jolly Time in the hands of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson. It became a mainstay on daytime game shows as a prize giver and sponsor. The company also bolstered home use with on-pack promotions offering $1 electric poppers.

The Smith family remained at the helm throughout. In 1939, Howard took the reins of the company. Then, in 1966 his sons Chesley and Wrede split the chairman and president positions. By 2002, their respective sons, Carlton and Garry, took over those same positions. Garry's two sisters and a brother all sit on the company board.

Now, a fifth generation is at work at American Pop Corn. Carlton's daughter Kendra consults on marketing. Garry's niece BJ spearheads Jolly Time Koated Kernels, a boutique sub-brand of pre-popped corn with ultra-indulgent toppings. Garry's sons Rett and Alex work in sales and logistics.

"The only reason I can imagine selling this business is if we couldn't compete as a family-owned company, didn't have enough money, enough advertising, I don't know the circumstance," Garry says. "And we've had some downtimes when it's been tough, but there's just no desire."

*Chapter 2: Field to Living Room*

When Carlton and Garry joined the family business in the 1970s, it was still a lean outfit. The entire Jolly Time line had consisted of a blue canister for white popcorn and red one for yellow popcorn until 1957, when Howard finally agreed to add plastic bags.

The advent of the microwave changed everything, and Wrede Smith saw its potential. Popcorn went from the occasional kitchen-intensive family treat into a handy snack people could make in a few minutes and eat every day. "We transformed overnight from grain handlers into food processors," Carlton says.

In 1984, the company brought out its first microwave popcorn. It worked initially with a specialty packager in Chicago instead of investing in machines that might wind up gathering dust if the category didn't take off.

But it did. Sales grew 20 percent a year through the 1980s and early 90s. In 1988, American Pop Corn built a dedicated microwave popcorn plant to keep up with the demand and the competition.
*Credit: Daniel Iske*

That competition became fierce as waves of mergers and acquisitions remapped the packaged goods business. One of the biggest names in popcorn, Orville Redenbacher, sold out to Hunt-Wesson Foods in 1976 and changed hands four more times, eventually landing at food giant ConAgra. By the mid-1990s, Redenbacher settled in as the No. 1 brand, General Mills' Pop Secret at No. 2.

Jolly Time, at No. 3, started drawing suitors.

Buyout offers come weekly, Garry says. "We get a letter or an email, ‛I represent a client who has an interest in an acquisition of your company,' and we have a form letter that says ‛no.'"

"It never went to a Step Two," Carlton says.

Third place is fine with the Smiths. Corporate competitors' sales may triple those of Jolly Time, but the Smiths' independence allows them to invest in farmers and factories uninhibited by pressures to slash overhead, "realize efficiencies" and show quarterly dividends.

"We have nobody to answer to, so if our quarterly number is bad, nobody knows it," Garry says with a big laugh. "And, y'know what, if my brother bitches, I'll give him the keys and he can run the place."

*Chapter 3: Kitchen Table Connection*

At it's heart, The American Pop Corn Co. is a field-to-factory operation dependent on relationships with farmers like Pat Green, who grows popcorn outside Homer, Nebraska.

His grandfather was famously the first farmer to sign a contract with Cloid Smith in the 1930s. Pat's father continued the tradition. Pat helped work the farm as a kid, but after earning an accounting degree in the early 1970s, he took a job with Terminal Grain in Sioux City buying corn and soybeans from farmers.

The company changed hands twice during his tenure, and he wound up working for an agribusiness giant. Green found himself training MBAs who "didn't know the first thing about farming," he says. "At the time I started, there were 22 grain companies, and when I got done working in Sioux City, there was only three. It was pretty stressful."

When his dad wound down full-time farming in the late '70s, Green returned to the farm. This year he committed to 81 acres of popcorn. As his grandfather and father did, Green signs a contract to grow Jolly Time popcorn each spring.

"They would come out and sit at the kitchen table," Green recalls, "and if dad wanted to plant one acre or a thousand, didn't make any difference to them. One is as important as a thousand."

Jeff Naslund, the company's field department manager, is the man across the table these days. He matches hybrid strains to methods and soil conditions of each farmer and monitors the crops through the summer.

The hybrids, the result of a program American Pop Corn began in the '70s, showed their mettle in late June. A violent storm came through the region bringing softball-sized hail. It ravaged some nearby Jolly Time growers' fields, and Naslund wrote off unsalvageable acres and penned letters for the growers' crop insurance.

Green avoided the worst of it. Where earlier generations of popcorn might have "gone over," he says, the sturdier hybrid plants weather big storms better. Their backend payoff is palpable too: the hybrids yield 6,000 pounds of corn per acre versus 2,500 pounds in generations past."Somewhere along the line when you're doing business, something's going to go wrong," Naslund says. "And not everybody handles it with integrity. And doing the job I do, you can do that, knowing you've got full support and you don't have to be someone you're not. If [farmers] make money and do well, we normally get quality popcorn -- they kind of go hand-in-hand."

When they took the helm in 2002, Gary and Carlton wrote a vision statement to codify the company's longtime operating philosophy. The prime tenet: "The culture of our company is family." That didn't just mean the Smith family.

American Pop Corn expends few resources on training because turnover is rare, Carlton says, and that's because the company reinvests in its workforce. In addition to a profit-sharing program, it gives employees a 100 percent family-coverage health insurance plan -- kicking in after only three months on the job -- and a choice of two retirement packages.

"Nobody has a benefit package that can match American Pop Corn Company," Garry says proudly.

That resonated with Kelly Golden. A machine operator in the microwave plant, Golden came to the company after being laid off from a local cleaning service. Her husband's job at a Sioux City construction firm came with a decent healthcare package, but it was going to cost $300 a month to add her to his plan.

This summer, Golden marked five years at the company. Some weeks before the bonus meeting, she was called in to Carlton's office to choose her service award. She started to pick the Wii console for her grandchildren, but Carlton advised otherwise.

"This is for you," the company chairman said. "Pick something for you." She settled on the Bose speakers. Carlton personally buys the awards for every recipient each year.

When she'd hired on, a co-worker told Golden, "If you're here a year, you'll be here forever." Now, she says, "I'll probably retire from here, because there's not too many places anymore that you get what you get here."
 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments Reported by DailyFinance 15 hours ago.

Three things businesses need to know about the Affordable Care Act (Video)

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Business community leaders still have plenty of concerns about the Affordable Care Act stifling economic growth. Any doubters should have seen them pepper two health care attorneys with questions during an hour-long seminar this morning on the 2010 federal health law at the Hilton Albany in downtown Albany, New York. Many in the crowd of more than 50 asked about penalties for employers under the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, which is seeking to expand health insurance while overhauling other government… Reported by bizjournals 15 hours ago.

Express Lane Eligibility: A Common Sense Policy That Works

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More good news on Obamacare came out recently. A new study from The Commonwealth Fund showed that the number of people without health insurance dropped by 9.5 million since late last summer. California, which experienced the greatest success with enrollment of any state, cut its percentage of those without health insurance in half. And when you put those findings next to other reports from Gallup, Rand, and the Kaiser Family Foundation, it's clear that many more people have the peace of mind that comes with having health care insurance. But there are still many people who are eligible for health insurance and need help enrolling. And many more are on waiting lists as states grapple with application backlogs. A forward-looking policy that originated in California is helping to reach that population and the results are clear -- it's working.

The concept behind Express Lane Eligibility (ELE) is quite simple. Why not allow those who are already verified as eligible for public assistance programs, such as food stamps or school lunches, to gain fast track enrollment into the state's Medi-Cal program which shares similar eligibility criteria? It would mean less paperwork for applicants, less bureaucratic red tape, and more people getting health care when they need it instead of when their problem becomes an emergency. A powerful pilot demonstration of the potential for Express Lane Eligibility was rolled out in 100 California schools, enrolling children into Medi-Cal (California's Medicaid program) from their application for the school lunch program. This pilot proved successful in improving the effectiveness of enrolling children into health insurance, and to that extent, was used as a foundation for developing the Express Lane Eligibility process as a national enrollment strategy for all states to enroll children.

More recently, states have begun to use a similar enrollment strategy to jump start enrollment into the new Obamacare Medicaid expansion. California began its "Express Lane Enrollment Project" in February of this year. In just five months, 190,000 adults and 35,000 children in California were enrolled in Medi-Cal based on their CalFresh (SNAP) enrollment, without having to fill out an additional application. Imagine the time, effort, and expense avoided by expediting the arrangements for these more than 200,000 individuals who were already eligible.

With several states facing application backlogs, this expedited enrollment strategy seems to make a lot of sense to move eligible applicants quickly to enrollment. Senator Rockefeller's legislation, which would continue funding for the popular and successful Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) would also make ELE a permanent option for children, and should be enacted. And all states should be able to use this proven and common sense strategy on an ongoing basis to help adults and children renew their Medi-Cal coverage, in addition to being able to help them enroll for the first time.

The numbers are clear -- more uninsured parents and children are getting health care coverage. That's a very good thing. But implementing policies like Express Lane Eligibility that can help get those with limited resources access to health care in a streamlined and efficient way while generating administrative savings, well, that's a great thing. Reported by Huffington Post 15 hours ago.

T minus 48 hours until health insurance rates are out

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Insurance Commissioner Laura Cali will announce 2015 health insurance rates on Thursday morning, giving consumers and businesses a good sense of what kind of health costs they may be facing next year. Several insurers have asked for rate hikes, including Moda Health, which has the largest of the individual market. Others have asked to reduce rates, including Providence Health Plan. The Insurance Commission held public hearings earlier this month and performed an in-depth actuarial review. The decision… Reported by bizjournals 14 hours ago.

College Students Build Bionic Arm for Boy, Costs Less Than $350 (Video)

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College Students Build Bionic Arm for Boy, Costs Less Than $350 (Video) College Students Build Bionic Arm for Boy, Costs Less Than $350 (Video)
College Students Build Bionic Arm for Boy, Costs Less Than $350 (Video)
Education
Science
Technology
Alex Pring
Has Been Optimized

A group of University of Central Florida (UCF) aerospace engineering students recently built a bionic arm and hand for a six-year-old boy for less than $350.

Alex Pring, who was born without an arm, demonstrated his new prosthetic arm last Friday in Orlando, Fla. (video below).

"I just flex," Pring told the Sun Sentinel.

Albert Manero, Mateo Alvarez and other engineering students designed the prosthetic arm with just a 3-D printer and some common electronic supplies.

When Pring flexes his upper arm, electrodes relay the voltage from his nerves and move the hand.

Rather than copyright their bionic arm to make money off disabled people as most U.S. corporations would, the UCF students uploaded their designs and instructions to the web for anyone to download and help another child.

"Our team feels you should not be profiting off of giving children arms," said Manero. "They'll get used for maybe eight months to a year before they need another one. A regular family wouldn't be able to afford it."

Most bionic arms cost $40,000, but are not covered by health insurance companies for children because the kids grow out of them, reports Salon.com.

Alex's mom Alyson found the UCF students through the volunteer website e-NABLE, which is made up of engineers, inventors, scientists and professors. One of the projects that the group offers are children's prosthetics.

"When [Alex} hugged me, he just didn't let go," said Alyson. "It will help him see future possibilities and make them seem all the more reachable. It's important to us that Alex knows he is perfectly made and that he can do anything he wants."

When Alex grows out of his arm, the UCF students can easily program the 3-D printer to make a larger one for about $20.

"I wanted an arm so people would stop calling my arm names," added Alex. "It hurts all my feelings. Everyone is born different. Everyone is special for what they do."

Sources: Salon.com and Sun Sentinel

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Video Piece (This piece contains embedded video content)
OV in Depth:  Reported by Opposing Views 14 hours ago.

Appeals Court Rejects Tax Challenge To Obamacare

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WASHINGTON (AP) — In the latest effort to sidetrack Obamacare, a federal appeals court on Tuesday rejected a challenge by a conservative group that said Congress imposed new taxes unconstitutionally when it created the Affordable Care Act.

The Pacific Legal Foundation and a small-business owner, Matt Sissel, argued that the Affordable Care Act is a bill for raising revenue and that it violated the Origination Clause of the Constitution because it began in the Senate, not the House. The Constitution requires that legislation to raise revenue must start in the House.

In a 3-0 ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit says that rather than being a revenue-raising device, it is beyond dispute that the paramount aim of Obamacare is to increase the number of Americans covered by health insurance and decrease the cost of health care.

"The Supreme Court has held from the early days of this nation that revenue bills are those that levy taxes in the strict sense of the word, and are not bills for other purposes which may incidentally create revenue," appeals judge Judith Rogers ruled.

The challengers to the law said it began in the Senate when Majority Leader Harry Reid took an unrelated House bill and inserted language that became the Affordable Care Act. The original measure was designed to help veterans buy homes.

Appeals judge Judith Rogers, an appointee of President Bill Clinton, wrote the opinion for the court. The other two judges in the case — Cornelia Pillard and Robert Wilkins — are appointees of President Barack Obama. Reported by Huffington Post 13 hours ago.

BVK wins $6.2M New Mexico Obamacare marketing account

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BVK, a Glendale-based advertising and marketing firm, won a $6.2 million contract to continue handling advertising and outreach for the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange. BVK has held the contract since 2013 and was paid $7 million under the original contract, according to Albuquerque Business First, a sister publication of the Milwaukee Business Journal. The new contract will run from July through June 2015. The contract was approved by the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange board of directors… Reported by bizjournals 13 hours ago.

Car Insurance Quote Finder Now Showcases State Discounts from Agencies Online

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Car insurance quote system is now showcasing state level discounts from agencies at the QuotesPros.com website. The system can be searched at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

Jacksonville, FL (PRWEB) July 29, 2014

The research required to find most state level insurance agencies can be difficult for the average person to conduct. The Quotes Pros company is now helping to discover state discounts through its car insurance quote finder installed for usage at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

The finder system is now a part of the tools that can be accessed daily by the public when visiting the Quotes Pros website. A new assortment of companies that are available to sort by state are now in place inside of the finder database. By entering their zip codes, drivers can find nearly any price for an insurance plan.

"The statewide database that we've introduced for the public to explore includes rates information from some of the most well known insurance companies in the USA," said a QuotesPros.com source.

The finder is now connected to a number of companies that help to broaden the exploration that consumers can complete this year. Instead of limiting the price types to only liability, the system helps motorists to connect with full coverage, high risk and collector plans as well.

"Finding a price that is lower than the national average for insurance is possible using our website due to the brokerage data that is supplied," the source included.

The Quotes Pros website search tools that are available to access now present price data for different plans that companies are underwriting. To go with the auto insurance pricing, exact annual price quotes for life, health and homeowner policies can be explored at http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company is now providing a nationwide, local and state level insurer lookup system on its homepage this year. The public has access to the professional tools that find low cost insurance packages in the U.S. The QuotesPros.com company provides free of charge information to consumers when researching and quoting nearly any type of coverage plan that exists for purchase. New agents are included in the rates system regularly. Reported by PRWeb 10 hours ago.

The Senate HELP Bill Limited Exchange Subsidies to Compliant States (but No One Mentioned It)

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The details of a 2009 draft of health care reform have become relevant again this month. Here's what the so-called HELP bill said and why it matters now.

The Halbig case is the one about whether or not tax subsidies can be delivered to people who enrolled on a federal exchange. Last week two courts ruled on the issue in two different directions. The case is being appealed and is expected (though not guaranteed) to end up before the Supreme Court. In the meantime the administration is keeping the subsidies flowing.

One of the issues in Halbig is whether Congress might withhold subsidies from states that refuse to set up exchanges. Why would they do that? Because the federal government is not allowed to order sovereign states to participate in any federal scheme. That's called commandeering. The federal government can offer incentives (such as money or subsidies) but states have to willingly go along.

Plaintiffs in the Halbig case argue that lawmakers worried about commandeering intended the health reform tax subsidies to be just such an inducement. Indeed, that's exactly the position Jonathan Gruber put forward in his two "speak-o"s about the law in 2012. As Gruber said, state implementation was a threat to the law and withholding subsidies was a way to press states to get in line.

One of the data points in the Halbig debate is a version of health reform known as the HELP bill (because is came out of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions). The HELP bill is significant because it explicitly denied subsidies to states which refuse to set up a federally compliant exchange. More specifically, the bill outlines a three step process for states. They can a) agree to set up their own exchange and comply with all the new regulations, b) ask HHS to set one up and comply or c) not comply.

For those states who don't comply, there is a four year waiting period before the feds step in. During that time, residents of the state not in compliance are not eligible for subsidies. Here is the relevant portion of the bill as released in June 2009(note that the draft used the term "Gateways" for what we now call exchanges):



ELIGIBILITY OF INDIVIDUALS FOR CREDITS.
—With respect to a State that makes the election described in subsection (a)(3), the residents of such State shall not be eligible for credits under section 3111 until such State becomes a participating State under paragraph (1).



A summary of the bill from a few months later describes the subsidy issue (though it says it is six years not four):



States have three options regarding their participation in the Gateway. An “establishing state” is one that proactively seeks such status to launch its Gateway as early as possible and which meets the requirements of the law. A “participating state” requests that the Secretary establish an initial Gateway once all necessary insurance market reforms have been enacted by the state into law, and other requirements have been met. In a state that does not act to conform to the new requirements, the Secretary shall establish and operate a Gateway in the state after a period of six years, and such state will become a “participating state.” *Until a state becomes either an establishing or participating state, the residents of that state will not be eligible for premium credits, an expanded Medicaid match, or small business credits.*



There's also this document (pdf) from June 2009 which presents the various options for lawmakers. There are four options listed relating to health exchanges. Option A appears to be something like the House version of the bill, i.e. a plan with a single national exchange. Option B is the HELP bill. Option B reads, "States have the first option to establish Gateways or to request that HHS do so. If they fail to act, the Federal government steps in. Premium credits are available only to residents of states that have enacted insurance reforms and established Gateways."

I offer all of this detail to clarify that Democrats in the Senate led by Ted Kennedy and Chris Dodd did draft a version of health care in which subsidies were withheld, apparently in order to pressure states into compliance with reforms. And yet, today Greg Sargent quotes three former HELP staffers saying it was never anyone's intent to deny subsidies.  Here's David Bowen as quoted by Greg Sargent:



It was clear both in the legislative language in both committees and in the intent of the Senators supporting the bill that the credits would be available in all states, regardless of whether the state or the federal government operated the Gateway. That intent certainly didn’t change during the merger process.



Who are we to believe, these staffers or our lying eyes? The intent may have been to eventually offer subsidies to everyone, but there's no doubt that withholding subsidies for a significant number of years was a conspicuous feature of the HELP bill. That bill was merged with the version from the Finance committee and became the ACA, aka Obamacare.

Speaking of conspicuous features. Another charge supporters of Obamacare have made regarding Halbig is that it's silly to think such a thing could have gone unmentioned. If such a feature were really present in the bill, they claim, it would have been big news and everyone would know about it. That sounds reasonable except for the fact that it was in the HELP bill and, apparently, no one reported on it. Here's health policy wonk Ezra Klein reporting on the HELP bill in July 2009:



*The Health Insurance Exchanges:* States would run them. They would be available for the uninsured, people on the non-group market, and small businesses. There would be a so-called "firewall" preventing larger employers from using the exchanges. In the scenario where employees of a large employer are not offered coverage meeting the minimum standards and costing less than 12.5 percent of their income, then and only then can they go to the exchange.



Notice what he doesn't mention at all? There's nothing about cutting off subsidies to states that don't comply. Perhaps he mentioned it somewhere but if so I haven't found it yet. Klein wasn't the only one to miss it. Here's the NY Times reporting on various reform efforts in July 2009. The piece mentions the exchange and subsidies but doesn't point out that some states might not get them under the HELP bill.

Here's another piece on reform proposals by Kaiser Health News from July 2009. Again, there is lots of talk about exchanges and subsidies in the HELP bill but no mention that some states might be excluded. Here's a story from CNN Money which doesn't mention it. Here's one from PBS Newshour. Here's a CBS story comparing the different proposals. Again, withholding subsidies is not mentioned.

The bottom line here is that language to withhold subsidies from non-compliant states was included in the HELP bill and yet it seems almost no one noticed this significant feature or, if they did, thought it was worth mentioning. Reported by Breitbart 7 hours ago.

Gap Insurance for Car Owners Now Quoted in Real Time at Auto Powered Website

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Gap insurance is now available for car owners to review at the Quotes Pros website. Policies for all vehicle brands are quoted at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

Houston, TX (PRWEB) July 29, 2014

Car owners can now search a new format for insurance coverage using the Quotes Pros website online. Gap insurance for car owners is now being quoted using the real time database located at http://quotespros.com/auto-insurance.html.

The gap plans that are now offered in the U.S. through some agencies are part of the plans that can be reviewed using the newly installed system. The concept of using gap insurance to fill in the missing dollar amounts payable after a collision occurs is helping more drivers to explore alternative coverage.

"A person who is not educated about gap or agreed value insurance can find a lot of price information and insurer data through using our quick finder system," said a Quotes Pros source.

The owners of vehicles who gain entry to the search platform have their pick between different policy types. A person who is not interested in a form of gap coverage can still receive a quote for liability, SR22, full coverage, collector or renters insurance using the open finder system.

"Drivers can find the top agencies through our system as well as companies that are new to the industry to help sort out the best pricing available," the source included.

The Quotes Pros company is now one of the sources that the public uses to find insurer information concerning discounts on the Internet. The auto industry information supplied has added to the growth of the company website this year. Information for health insurance and life protection plans can be located at http://quotespros.com/life-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company is one source to find good prices for all forms of insurance coverage over the Internet. The company prices that are delivered are instantly calculated by insurance agencies throughout the U.S. The QuotesPros.com company provides access to its content through any device with an Internet connection. The insurer search by zip code process that is available is one of the first of its its kind accessible by the public. Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.

Affordable Motorcycle Insurance for All Bike Brands Now Quoted at Insurer Website

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Affordable motorcycle insurance is now searchable for all brands of bikes at the QuotesPros.com website. Providers discounting policies are found at http://quotespros.com/motorcycle-insurance.html.

New York, NY (PRWEB) July 29, 2014

Locating an insurance policy as a bike owner in the U.S. does come with some complications if few resources are available to use for exploration. The Quotes Pros company is now showcasing affordable motorcycle insurance for all brands of bikes in its nationally accessible system at http://quotespros.com/motorcycle-insurance.html.

The policies that are now made available to owners of bikes to review on the Internet are national or state related plans. The motorcycle coverage industry is different in each state and some companies are not underwriting foreign bike brand policies.

"The less expensive plans for coverage found at our website are designed to help bike owners start the price evaluation process," said a Quotes Pros rep.

One issue that owners of motorcycles can have is the loss coverage that is usually left out of a basic liability policy. Because some bikes can have a higher ratio of theft, owners of bikes seeking a policy can have agreed value or other full replacement cost coverage plans quoted using the search system.

"A bike owner who requests a policy uses his or her zip code to find the insurers and rates packages that are suitable for different motorcycle types in our system," the rep added.

The Quotes Pros company has included other forms of insurance inside of its search tool for this year to enhance user experiences. The input of a zip code can help a person to select life, auto, health or renters insurance easily at http://quotespros.com/health-insurance.html.

About QuotesPros.com

The QuotesPros.com company offers insurance package pricing to the public through its open portal on the Internet. The company specialists that help to modify the company database also review different insurers to keep the system accurate. The QuotesPros.com company provides one of the only publicly accessible price location services that is free of charge online. The 50-state company search tool is now showcasing all forms of coverage for the public. Reported by PRWeb 8 hours ago.

Health premiums soared, Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones says

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The cost of health insurance for individuals skyrocketed this year in California, with some paying almost twice what they did last year, the state's insurance commissioner said. Reported by L.A. Times 8 hours ago.

U.S. Census Bureau Daily Feature for July 30

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WASHINGTON, July 30, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Following is the daily "Profile America" feature from the U.S. Census Bureau: MEDICARE ANNIVERSARY Profile America — Wednesday, July 30th. The national government's broad involvement in individual health insurance goes back to... Reported by PR Newswire 6 hours ago.

New Insurance Sales CRM Delivers Enterprise Level Functionality-Features at Fraction of Cost for Small - Mid Size Businesses

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TLD CRM was developed specifically for small-mid size insurance sales companies. It's a web based turn key system that requires no customization or programming and includes all of the vital features a sales office needs ready to go.

Coral Springs, FL (PRWEB) July 30, 2014

There are lots of CRMs on the market today, and yet with so many CRMs available, it's hard to find one that meets the needs of a small business; and even harder if your small business is specialized. Salesforce is obviously the 800 pound gorilla that dominates the market, and is a great Enterprise level and general purpose solution; and if you have a thousands of dollars and an IT team you can make it do almost anything. But what does a small insurance sales company do? Customizing a general purpose, CRM is too expensive and few small businesses even know where to start. Then there are the monthly fees that often exceed $100 per seat, just for the CRM plus all the add ons, phone system, and mass email system.

TLD CRM (The Lead Depot) was developed specifically for small and mid size insurance sales agencies, giving them all the tools and automation of large and highly automated insurance companies. TLD CRM is a web based turn key system offering a full CRM system with an integrated VOIP (Voice Over IP) phone system, automated dialer integration, real time reports and monitoring, digital recordings of verification calls, email drip campaign/followup, and automated lead importing from top lead vendors via API. Since TLD CRM runs from the PC browsers like Chrome and Firefox any web compatible PC will work and no onsite server is required.

A major benefit of this new CRM is it is browser based and does not require an onsite server or any software other than standard Internet browsers such as Chrome or Firefox.

TLD CRM includes a manual power dialer and is compatible with both the Genesis and Five 9 automated progressive dialers. The system is also compatible with major lead vendors and automatically downloads and posts leads to the dialers. This powerful call center solution delivers optimum outbound call performance with the lowest possible cost per call.

TLD CRM also offers real time reporting including phone activity, real time sales and lead transactions, and agent benchmark comparison. The integrated phone system also offers digital recording of verification phone calls.

The system includes an integrated mail campaign module which normally requires a third party service. The TLD CRM mail module automatically sends emails to both sales prospects and current clients based on status and time triggers which can be customized.
TLD CRM is now being offered to insurance sales and call centers nationwide starting at $50 per user with no minimum number of licenses and no long term contracts.

About TLD CRM
TLD CRM is a joint venture between The Benefit Depot, a health insurance sales company and broker, and Esotech, Inc. CRM and web development company. The two firms compliment each other in that, The Benefit Depot teams bring industry experience and in depth knowledge of user requirements and the Esotech team brings cutting edge programming and user interface design to bring the vision to reality. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Upholds Anti-Collective Bargaining Law

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MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Supreme Court has upheld the 2011 law that effectively ended collective bargaining for most public workers, sparked massive protests and led to Republican Gov. Scott Walker's recall election and rise to national prominence.

Thursday's 5-2 ruling is a victory for Walker, who is considering a 2016 run for president and is seeking re-election this year. It also marks the end of the three-year legal fight over the union rights law, which prohibits public worker unions for collectively bargaining for anything beyond base wage increases based on inflation. A federal appeals court twice upheld the law as constitutional.

The high court ruled in a lawsuit filed by the Madison teachers union and a union representing Milwaukee public workers. They had argued that the law, which came to be known as Act 10, violated workers' constitutional rights to free assembly and equal protection.

Walker introduced the proposal shortly after taking office in 2011, a move that was met with fierce resistance from teachers, other public workers and their supporters who flooded the Capitol for weeks in an effort to block the bill's passage. Democratic state senators fled the state for two weeks in a failed attempt to block the bill's passage.

The law bars automatic withdrawals from members' paychecks and requires annual elections to see if members want their unions to go on representing them. It also requires public employees to contribute more toward their health insurance and pension costs, moves that Walker said helped local governments and schools save enough money to deal with other cuts done to balance a state budget shortfall.

Walker's opponent for re-election, Democrat Mary Burke, supports the higher pension and health insurance contributions. But while she supports restoring collective bargaining, Burke has not promised to work for the repeal of Act 10 if elected.

Walker was forced to stand for recall in 2012, a move largely motivated out of anger over the union law. He won, becoming the first governor in U.S. history to defeat a recall.

The union law has been challenged on several fronts since it was introduced, but it's withstood them all.

The state Supreme Court decided to take the case it ruled on Thursday after a Dane County judge sided with the unions and ruled in September 2012 that major portions of the law were unconstitutional.Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Reported by Huffington Post 13 hours ago.

New GAO testimony faults HHS management of federal marketplace project

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- The Department of Health and Human Services failed to properly plan and oversee development of the federal health insurance marketplace despite tight deadlines, ever-changing requirements and the complex nature of the project, according to new congressional testimony released on Wednesday. Reported by Miami Herald 15 hours ago.

On Health Insurance Coverage, the South Really and Truly is the Region with the Most Freedom

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Ain't freedom grand? And what says freedom better than being free from government mandates like the guarantee that you can't be denied health insurance because of a pre-existing condition?

As we all know, the South has forever been a place where people value freedom and liberty for everyone. Why are you snickering? Did I forget something? Anyhoo, it is clear that Southerners are the most free people in the United States, and the above image indicates they are only getting freer. Whereas 41.5% of the nation's uninsured lived in the South last fall--before Obamacare kicked in--by June the number had risen to 48.9%. Just under half of all uninsured Americans are Southerners, even though the South is only 37% of our country's population according to the 2010 census. Those in the South and elsewhere who remain free from the tyranny of health insurance coverage can thank their liberty-loving Republican elected officials for rejecting the expansion of Medicaid offered to their states by Obamacare.

And if the folks who support the recent ruling by the D.C.-based U.S. Court of Appeals in the Halbig v. Burwell case have their way, five million or so Americans living in the states whose governments refused to set up state-based Obamacare exchanges will find themselves free of government subsidies to pay for their health insurance premiums. Yay for liberty! Those states are disproportionately in the South, where a tiny percentage of the region's population (those in Kentucky and Arkansas) live in a state that would be unaffected by the Halbig decision.

Nationwide, of all the states that have purely federal exchanges, only two (Missouri and Montana) have Democratic governors, and both of those have state legislatures overwhelmingly dominated by Republicans who were all too happy to block their states from establishing exchanges.

It is abundantly clear that Southerners and all other Americans who love freedom from government protections and premium subsidies relating to health insurance know exactly whom to thank. Reported by Huffington Post 14 hours ago.

Cigna To Expand On Obamacare Exchanges In 2015

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Cigna Corp. (CI) this morning said will expand its private health insurance products on government exchanges under the Affordable Care Act next year to three more states as the company successfully manages costs in the first year on the marketplaces. Reported by Forbes.com 14 hours ago.

Creighton Unites Peace Officers to Help Counties in Border Crisis

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Creighton Unites Peace Officers to Help Counties in Border Crisis HOUSTON, Texas--Brandon Creighton, State Rep. and Republican candidate for Senate District 4, has called a meeting of law enforcement personnel in an effort to address the problems on the Texas border. Creighton told Breitbart Texas that he preferred taking real action over photo-ops, and coming up with concrete solutions over rhetoric. His idea is to provide local peace officers on the border to help DPS and the National Guard.

Creighton is working with officers from Montgomery County in a pilot program where counties would provide law enforcement officers to help counties near the border. The officers who go to these areas would receive special training. He said “these officers would gain skills which would equip them to better identify MS-13 gang members and illegal immigrants that are traveling through our county down I-45."

Police Chief Andy Walters and Mayor James M. Kuykendall, both of Oak Ridge North, and Police Chief Domingo Ibarra of Magnolia, Texas, want to be part of the solution. They met with Creighton on Monday. The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department, and the Magnolia Police Department are also assisting in this effort.

Creighton wants to help counties “one county in. They really are in a bind,” he said. The former state representative has been moved by the cuts to salaries and the stripping of health insurance benefits that has occurred to officers in these counties. He told Breitbart Texas, “These counties do not receive the same financial assistance that counties right on the border receive. These officers do not want to go on Obamacare.”

Bob Price of Breitbart Texas has reported about the plight of counties like Brook County. He has seen first-hand the financial impact on that county.

“This county is going broke because of the cost of burying the illegal immigrants who die in Brooks County attempting to skirt the Border Patrol checkpoint,” Price said. “They now only have one deputy per shift covering an area about the size of Rhode Island. Volunteer police officers are stepping up to fill in the gap left by budget cuts. Currently volunteers are coming from The Valley region and San Antonio, but they need more help. They need manpower, they need equipment and they need money.”

Creighton hopes to get a pool of law enforcement from Central Texas and Houston. He “hopes the pool gets big and bigger." He said the men “will not be Mavericks or Commandoes, they just want to be where people are needed.”

Creighton is organizing another meeting of law enforcement officers in Brenham, Texas. It will be held in the very near future.

Lana Shadwick is a lawyer and contributing writer to Breitbart Texas. Follow her @LanaShadwick2. Reported by Breitbart 13 hours ago.

Eye Surgery Clinics in the US Industry Market Research Report from IBISWorld Has Been Updated

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The advent of new technologies, particularly to address lower-order and high-order aberrations, including nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism and eye irregularities unrelated to refractive errors, will support the industry. For this reason, industry research firm IBISWorld has updated a report on the Eye Surgery Clinics industry in its growing industry report collection.

New York, NY (PRWEB) July 31, 2014

Over the past five years, the Eye Surgery Clinics industry has benefited from the estimated 151 million individuals that have required some form of vision correction, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO). According to a Consumer Reports National Research Center survey of individuals that have received laser vision correction surgery, a large share of consumers have reported that an integral factor in receiving the elective medical procedure was to eliminate the use of glasses and contact lenses. According to IBISWorld Industry Analyst Sarah Turk, “due to the elective nature of corrective eye surgery, most costs are not covered by insurance companies, which has constrained consumer demand for industry services.” Nevertheless, many health insurance providers have been able to negotiate discounts with LASIK providers (surgery that corrects vision for patients that are nearsighted, farsighted or have astigmatism), which has enabled some eye surgery clinics to appeal to budget-conscious consumers over the period.

“Additionally, some eye surgery clinics have been able to develop a niche market among patients by using innovative technologies and employing highly skilled ophthalmologists,” says Turk. In 2013 (latest data available), the average price for laser vision correction was $2,073 per eye, according to All About Vision, representing a slight increase from 2009. This trend can be attributed to more patients receiving high-cost, customized LASIK options, such as waterfront-guided LASIK, which creates a 3D image of the patient's eye to amend eye ailments related to higher-order aberrations, such as contrast sensitivity, night vision and glare. Over the five years to 2014, industry revenue is anticipated to grow, driven by growing consumer demand for vision correction surgery in line with the high success rates of industry services. Profit has slightly contracted due to many eye surgery clinics slashing their LASIK pricing in response to strong price-based competition.

In the five years to 2019, industry revenue is forecast to grow. Over the next five years, the advent of new technologies, particularly to address lower-order and high-order aberrations, including nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism and eye irregularities unrelated to refractive errors, will bolster industry revenue.

For more information, visit IBISWorld’s Eye Surgery Clinics in the US industry report page.

Follow IBISWorld on Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/IBISWorld
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IBISWorld industry Report Key Topics

The Eye Surgery Clinics industry includes clinics that primarily provide vision correction surgery, also known as refractive and laser eye surgery, using laser equipment.

Industry Performance
Executive Summary
Key External Drivers
Current Performance
Industry Outlook
Industry Life Cycle
Products & Markets
Supply Chain
Products & Services
Major Markets
Globalization & Trade
Business Locations
Competitive Landscape
Market Share Concentration
Key Success Factors
Cost Structure Benchmarks
Barriers to Entry
Major Companies
Operating Conditions
Capital Intensity
Key Statistics
Industry Data
Annual Change
Key Ratios

About IBISWorld Inc.
Recognized as the nation’s most trusted independent source of industry and market research, IBISWorld offers a comprehensive database of unique information and analysis on every US industry. With an extensive online portfolio, valued for its depth and scope, the company equips clients with the insight necessary to make better business decisions. Headquartered in Los Angeles, IBISWorld serves a range of business, professional service and government organizations through more than 10 locations worldwide. For more information, visit http://www.ibisworld.com or call 1-800-330-3772. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.
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