Saturday, December 29, 2012

A Florida Mom's Lonely Fight for Her Disabled Son ? HCAFeNews

By Carol Marbin Miller, The Miami Herald

Tereza Pereira had cared for her woefully disabled son at home for most of his life. But she was in her 50s now, working two jobs to stay afloat, and state health administrators had repeatedly refused to pay for enough in-home nursing care to keep Bryan safe.

Pereira wanted her teenage son to live at a place called Baby House, a small group home for medically fragile children and young adults, with a long track record of treating children like Bryan as family. His care would have cost the state $300 per day there.

State health and disability administrators had a different plan: For $200 more each day, Bryan would live in a nursing home.

?I don?t want my son in this place,? Pereira wrote to disability administrators of the Florida Club Care nursing home in Miami Gardens. ?If something happened with my son, (if) he died,? she wrote, ?I will feel that this place killed? him.

Two years later, that is just how Pereira feels.

Disability administrators insisted that Bryan move to the nursing home. And there he died, a year later, on July 29, 2010.

?The best place for Bryan was with me,? Pereira said. ?I wanted my son to leave this world in peace ? not the way he passed away.?

Bryan Louzada was one of five medically complex children to die at Florida nursing homes in the last six months of 2010 ? and among 130 such children who have died in those homes since January 2006, records show. Though medically fragile children who live with their parents, or in a community setting, also die, state records show they die in far lower numbers.

State health administrators insist that the choices of parents like Pereira are the guiding force behind their decisions on where sick children live. But interviews and records show Pereira had fought for half Bryan?s life to find a homelike setting for him. And at every turn state health and disability chiefs steered him toward an institution or nursing home.

It is the dirty little secret of Florida?s health and social service system: Though institutional care can be dramatically more expensive than in-home care, state agencies push children toward institutions.

Here?s why: Medicaid, the state and federal insurance program for needy and disabled people, has become the insurer of last resort for virtually all children with catastrophic disabilities. Under federal law, a nursing home or facility bed is an entitlement, and that means Florida health administrators must provide such a bed to any family that asks. Sometimes-far-less-costly in-home nursing services are not an entitlement. Because they can, Florida lawmakers cap spending for such care, resulting in a waiting list of 25,000 for home- and community-based services.

Federal health polices ?lead to irrational outcomes,? said Jim DeBeaugrine, who was director of the state Agency for Persons with Disabilities under former Gov. Charlie Crist. ?People go into higher-cost facilities than what they need, and, quite frankly, what is best for them.

?It?s referred to as the ?institutional bias,? and that?s what the system has, because that?s where the dollars have to go. It?s nonsensical.?

The irrational outcome in Bryan?s case was that a sickly teen was forced to live in a nursing home that is considered one of the state?s worst ? Golden Glades, formerly known as Florida Club Care, is on the state ?nursing home watch list? of homes that did not meet even minimum standards of care during a recent inspection.

After a year of pleading, Pereira said disability administrators told her they would consider removing him from the nursing home in May 2010. Before they could, he died.

?I didn?t have a choice,? Pereira said. ?Now Bryan has passed away. What will I do with the rest of my life??

The U.S. Justice Department has sharply criticized the state, saying it is warehousing disabled children like Bryan in adult nursing homes, violating their rights in the process.

Liz Dudek, head of Florida?s Agency for Health Care Administration, has vigorously disputed that.

?The bottom line is simple: Florida cares about kids,? she wrote to the?Miami Herald.??We provide every medically necessary service and we are in compliance with the law.?

Officials with Golden Glades did not return phone calls seeking comment.

A second chance

Pereira, a psychologist in her native Brazil, was still grieving the AIDS-related death of her 5-year-old son, Bernardo, who had hemophilia and had been given an infected blood transfusion, when she learned she was pregnant with Bryan. It was as if she?d been given a second chance.

But when Pereira was 27 weeks into her term ? and on a trip to Miami ? she suddenly went into labor. The consequences were calamitous.

Bryan suffered a hemorrhage, and spinal fluid flooded his skull. He began to experience seizures. Before doctors could insert a shunt to drain the cerebral fluid, he contracted meningitis, a life-threatening infection.

In the nursery at Jackson Memorial, Bryan?s head swelled, his eyes bulged. Pereira went to a local Catholic church to pray when she was interrupted by a parishioner. ?A lady touched me. She said, ?talk to me.? ? The woman was a pediatrician at Miami Children?s Hospital, and Pereira transferred her son there.

?My son is dying,? she said. ?I have nothing to lose.?

At Miami Children?s, doctors inserted two shunts into Bryan?s underdeveloped brain and fought his infection. And though he slowly recovered, the list of his final diagnoses proved to be long and terrible: cerebral palsy, mental retardation, blindness, seizures, severe reflux, asthma and hemophilia.

Medical professionals told Pereira to send her son to an institution. Instead Pereira ? whose husband returned home to Brazil, leaving her with two small children ? took him home, and organized her small Kendall apartment into a makeshift hospital.

For the next 18 years, Pereira kept detailed records of Bryan?s health and his often-cruel journey through the state?s medical and social service system.

There were visits to the pediatrician, the hematologist, the neurologist, the gastroenterologist and the child development experts. Physical therapists stretched and relaxed Bryan?s legs, and occupational therapists worked to keep his fists from becoming permanently clenched. Speech therapists helped him suck and swallow.

Doctors charted every milestone, though they were few, and far between. At one year of age, Bryan had the cognition and the fine motor skills of a one month old.

Bryan remained with his mother until he was about 6.

Pereira says disability administrators refused to provide her with enough nursing hours to enable her to both work and be a caregiver. Hospital case notes quote a case worker as saying Pereira ?lacked the facilities at home to provide care for Bryan.?

Bryan?s older sister was a teenager, and was struggling over the caregiver demands on her life. ?She was crying. She said, ?I want a normal life. I can?t stand this anymore.? ?

That?s when the Department of Children & Families intervened, strongly recommending Bryan leave the house, Pereira said.

Pereira felt like the state was forcing her to choose between her two children.

?All the social workers and doctors pressed me to put my son in a group home, because my daughter was very depressed, without any attention,? Pereira wrote years later in an email to the state. ?But Bryan will continue to be my son, and I am his guardian.?

Pereira said she asked disability administrators to place her son in Baby House, a specialty group home run by United Cerebral Palsy, a national disability provider. Pereira had toured the home, and liked what she saw.

But Baby House is not an institution, and Medicaid administrators refused to pay. Bryan ended up in what is called an intermediate-care facility, an institution for people with severe disabilities.

Bryan spent most of the next decade bouncing between developmental disability institutions, nursing homes and Miami Children?s, which had become the hospital where Pereira felt her son was safest. In 2005, when Pereira had to move her son from one facility to another, disability administrators gave her a state handbook. ?You?re The Driver? it said, under a picture of a gas station. The message: Parents and guardians are decision makers over how and where loved ones receive care.

To Pereira, it seemed like a cruel joke. ?He was my son,? she said. ?I wanted to make the decisions for him.?

Pereira?s records document a litany of disappointments: At one institution in Miami, Bryan was repeatedly bitten by another child. At a nursing home in Plantation, his hemophilia was so poorly controlled, she said, that he developed raccoon eyes from internal bleeding.

Reordering her life

By the mid 2000s, Pereira had had enough. Bryan was at a nursing home in Broward for only a month when Pereira called police to report he?d been sorely neglected, police reports show. ?I was scared he would die,? she said. ?I was scared he would suffer.?

She removed him from the nursing home, and took him home ? again.

Photos from that time show how Pereira rearranged her world to take care of her then-16-year-old son. She moved all the furniture out of her cramped living room to accommodate Bryan?s hospital bed. White plastic shelves were moved in to store diapers, wipes, a dozen medications and a host of medical gadgets and supplies. An IV towered over the bed, along with an adjustable lamp to illuminate Bryan when his mom fed him and administered medications.

But the ping-ponging continued: Unable to care for Bryan with limited in-home nursing. Pereira agreed to send him again to a disability institution. ?What time am I going to take a shower? I am alone,? she said. ?If I had to go to the supermarket, who would take care of Bryan??

Bryan went to Baptist Hospital in Miami, then back to Miami Children?s. The hospital was eager for him to leave, but Pereira was not eager to place him in another nursing home. ?The hospital is making my life impossible,? she wrote to the state, adding social workers were insisting Bryan once again go to a nursing home.

Bleak choices

The state offered Pereira two choices: Bryan could return home with 10 hours each day of in-home nursing help ? an option a judge later called ?unacceptable as it would not allow the mother to work, and would not meet (Bryan?s) medical needs, as he requires an extensive amount of care just for feedings.?

Or he could go to a nursing home.

Pereira wanted a third choice. She had been to Baby House, in a small, nondescript ranch house off of Northeast 163rd Street in North Miami Beach. Baby House?s director, Carol Montiel, had visited Bryan. ?She said my son is a lovely, handsome boy,? Pereira wrote, and she would take very good care of him.

At Baby House, she wrote, staff would see him as a human being, ?not as a dollar.?

In March 2007, Pereira began her futile campaign to move her son to Baby House. She applied for a state program that provides money for noninstitutional care for disabled people, and was, instead, placed on a long waiting list.

Pereira wrote a longhand note to health administrators. ?I am alone in this country,? she said. ?I am not able to care (for) Bryan in home even with home care,? because the nursing hours weren?t sufficient, and because the nurses often failed to show up, or showed up late, even when they were scheduled.? It was, she wrote, ?a disaster.?

A March 24, 2007, email to the Department of Children & Families had this in the subject line: ?Please. I beg.?

?I want to beg, please, that my son be approved? for community-based care, the only funding pot the state could use to pay for Baby House. ?I don?t have anybody in this country. All my family is in Brazil,? she wrote

?If Bryan survived so far, it is because I have been a good mother caring for my son,? she added. ?I cannot permit Bryan to suffer any more.?

The waiting list

To get Bryan into Baby House, Pereira would first have to get him off the state?s disability wait list ? where he was languishing along with 25,000 other Floridians. The only way to get off that list, records show, would be for Bryan to become ?homeless,? or ?in danger of being neglected or abused.? Pereira was being punished for being a good mother.

In a letter dated July 23, 2008, a worker told Pereira the Agency for Persons with Disabilities planned to cut spending on those in community-based programs to accommodate a few clients stuck on the waiting list. The shift, which might have moved him up a few notches, was referred to as a ?cost efficiency.?

?They were only interested in dollars and cents, and I told them that,? said Carol Montiel, the Baby House director who had been speaking with Pereira for years, and was trying desperately to help.

Pereira wrote letters to then-U.S. Reps. Kendrick Meek and Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and Sen. Bill Nelson. She went to Washington for a family advocacy day and was pictured in the?Herald?alongside Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.

?Please remember,? she wrote to the state, ?that Bryan is a person with very involved medical and emotional needs, and not just another ?case.?

?I want to be with my heart full and happy that I did the best for him. I don?t want him to suffer anymore.?

?Mommy is here?

Two of Pereira?s thick files document a desperate mother?s attempt to keep her son out of a nursing home ? in legal format: notices of continuance, subpoenas for deposition, proposed orders to dismiss, multiple notices of hearings, and a final order.

At a hearing in July 2007, an administrator with Florida?s Agency for Persons with Disabilities and a nurse with the state?s Agency for Health Care Administration testified that Bryan?s medical needs could be met in a nursing home. Pereira, who speaks fluent Portuguese but strained English, represented herself. The state, she said, ?hired a lawyer to go to court.?

A state administrative law judge ruled against her two months later. He offered Pereira a half-sentence as a consolation:

?That (Bryan) has survived to the age of 15 is a testament to his mother?s devotion, and the skilled medical care he has received since birth, primarily at Miami Children?s Hospital.?

Bryan was sent to the nursing home.

He remained there for a year, and his mother drove the length of Miami-Dade County as often as she could to see him.

In the middle of the night on July 29, 2010, Pereira says, she had a premonition: ?I called there to ask how he was. They told me he was fine; he was sleeping.?

At 5:30 a.m., Bryan was rushed to the Joe DiMaggio Children?s Hospital Emergency Room in Hollywood. Though she had instructed the nursing home to transport him whenever his heart rate exceeded 130, his heart had raced to 178, she said. ?Somebody should have noticed.?

At the hospital, Pereira found a doctor performing CPR. She yelled at him to stop. The compressions, she said, would cause him to bleed uncontrollably.

?I said, Bryan, Mommy is here. I will be with you.?

Bryan died at 11:39 a.m. Cause of death: respiratory failure. Pereira said she wanted an autopsy, wanted to know if the death could have been avoided, but doctors told her she?d have to pay $4,000 to get one.

Without an autopsy, a lawyer told her, she had no recourse against anyone.

?He was safe with me,? Pereira said.

Aside from the nursing home, Pereira said she holds state social service administrators responsible for Bryan?s death ? for forcing her to make a terrible choice.

?I want to know the reason why my son passed away,? she said.

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Tags: Agency for Health Care Administration, Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Baptist Hospital of Miami, Bill Nelson, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Department of Justice, Elizabeth Dudek, Florida Department of Children and Families, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Miami Children's Hospital, United Cerebral Palsy

Source: http://hcafnews.com/2012/12/28/a-florida-moms-lonely-fight-for-her-disabled-son/

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Essential Apps for Kids and Teens - YPMN

So you just got a new smartphone or tablet. Now what? If you're wondering what apps to load it with, we've got you covered. Whether you've got an iPad, iPhone, Android phone or tablet, or a Kindle Fire, we have a ton of great app suggestions to start your kids off right.

Just look up your device, and you'll see picks arranged by age groups.

Our expert editors are completely independent, so their selections are based solely on kids' best interests. We've provided buy links for many apps, but they're simply for your convenience.

Full article and resource download

Source: http://ypmn.blogspot.com/2012/12/resources-essential-apps-for-kids-and.html

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Comments - Structured Settlements 4Real? Blog - Typepad

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  • "I always appreciate when he (John Darer) keeps us informed on regs and rules. No one does it better"- structured settlement industry colleague and reader 7/26/2012

  • "Amen - and continued thanks for your vigilance, John"- RL 8/18/2011

  • "Thanks for writing these great blogs on your site John! As an individual investor I have learned so much about the secondary market (for annuities, structured settlements, lottery payments, etc.) from your blogs and video series!!!" (6/5/2011)

  • I have found the intelligent and forthright information on your site a godsend. So much so I have tried in a small way to pass on my findings to others. Please keep up the good work and enhance your well deserved reputation as the authority on this subject- Mike 4/29/2011

  • John - I can't thank you enough for bringing this to my attention. In my wildest dreams... PJ-May 12, 2011

  • John, I love reading your blog! Not only have I found very useful information there, but the comedy is much appreciated! Thanks for talking about "the big pink elephant in the living room" that everyone else ignores! Thank you again for your help via phone and blog! I really needed to hear what you had to say today! BM 11/23/2010

  • John?this (video published 11/2010) is a well done piece. I like the way you always stick to the facts-AM

  • What a wonderful blog you have! I have completely enjoyed reading some of your posts (4/16/2010)

  • Thank you so very much for discussing my concerns about Symetra, my annuity company. I am amazed that PI attorneys as well as a settlement broker in San Diego, could not answer the simplest questions I had regarding the Safeco/Symetra issue. Your blog/web site is most interesting and informative, and I am grateful you have take on the "watchdog" role! Thank you so much again (3/25/10)

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    Thursday, December 27, 2012

    The Stoner Channel: A Drummer's View of NIN, Devo Plays Paris, and Bob Dylan Takes a Drug Drive with John Lennon

    More »


    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VieMycN4pW8/

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    Workers with iPods: the downside ? Business Management Daily ...

    It is estimated that approximately one-third of employees listen to music at work using an iPod, MP3 player, or other portable music device. Employees claim that listening to music improves their job satisfaction and productivity, so it may be beneficial to allow workers to use their iPods, etc., in the office.

    However, you should be aware of the potential negative effects that iPods and other portable music devices could have on communication, performance and safety.

    • Communication can break down among co-workers because of the difficulty in getting an employee?s attention while he or she is listening to music through earbuds. This sends the message, ?Unless you have something really important to tell me, don?t bother me.?
    • If an employee plays an iPod or other portable music device through computer speakers, co-workers near that employee can find it disruptive, hampering their concentration.
    • Safety is a concern because employees wearing earbuds may miss alarms, warning signals, or shouts by co-workers informing them of potential harm.

    Like what you've read? ...Republish it and share great business tips!

    Attention: Readers, Publishers, Editors, Bloggers, Media, Webmasters and more...

    We believe great content should be read and passed around. After all, knowledge IS power. And good business can become great with the right information at their fingertips. If you'd like to share any of the insightful articles on BusinessManagementDaily.com, you may republish or syndicate it without charge.

    The only thing we ask is that you keep the article exactly as it was written and formatted. You also need to include an attribution statement and link to the article.

    " This information is proudly provided by Business Management Daily.com: http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/33983/workers-with-ipods-the-downside "

    Source: http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/33983/workers-with-ipods-the-downside

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    Rihanna Donates $1.75 Million In Memory Of Grandmother

    'Diamonds' singer donates large sum to the radiotherapy department of a Barbados hospital.
    By Brendan Dempsey


    Rihanna
    Photo: NBC

    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1699421/rihanna-donates-to-hospital-in-memory-grandmother.jhtml

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    Tuesday, December 25, 2012

    facebook-target-gets-a-boost-and-3-social-media-stocks-seeing-action

    Facebook, Inc. (NASDAQ:FB) price target has been increased by Needham & Co. from $25 to $33, 27 percent higher than current trading levels. According to Monday?s research note, the analysts decided to increase their 2013 revenue estimate to $6.5 billion from $6.27 billion and their earnings-per-share estimate has been raised to 65 cents a share from 59 cents. The firm cited expectations for strong mobile revenue growth along with an upside coming from Facebook?s global platform.

    LinkedIn Corporation (NYSE:LNKD): Staples Inc., which is the second largest internet retailer, decided to team together with LinkedIn, which is the most prominent professional network globally, to launch SUCCEED: Small Business Network.?The online forum is expected to act as a platform for networking, advice, and content that is intended mainly for small business professionals, according to LinkedIn.?In SUCCEED, Staples and LinkedIn are creating an online community that enables small businesses to connect and collaborate. The group has provided small business professionals with the opportunity to network and discuss important issues, along with sharing success stories and professional hurdles via an online forum that has been created especially for them.

    Catalysts are critical to discovering winning stocks. Check out our newest CHEAT SHEET stock picks now.

    Groupon, Inc. (NASDAQ:GRPN) acquired CommerceInterface as it attempted to improve the manner in which its e-commerce business operates as attempts to expand globally. CommerceInterface provides a Web-based platform has been designed as a way to help manufacturers, distributors, and retailers facilitate online sales, interact with vendors, and manage their operations. Shares recently traded at $4.82 premarket, which is the same as Friday?s market close.

    Zynga, Inc. (NASDAQ:ZNGA) launched landing pages which are precursors to real money online gambling in the United Kingdom. Zynga introduced its social online gambling web site with the tag lines like ?Casino For The People? and ?Poker For The People.? This has been launched as marketing efforts and will be viewable in America, but when the sites go live they will only be accessible to those those who are eighteen years old and over and resident in the United Kingdom.

    Don?t Miss: Facebook Pulls a Fast One.

    To contact the reporter on this story: staff.writers@wallstcheatsheet.com
    To contact the editor responsible for this story: editors@wallstcheatsheet.com

    Source: http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/facebook-target-gets-a-boost-and-3-social-media-stocks-seeing-action.html/

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    Friday, December 21, 2012

    Texas air cargo company founder gets 30 years in child porn case

    (Reuters) - The founder of a Texas air cargo company was sentenced to 30 years in prison Wednesday for possessing and distributing child pornography and attempting to sexually exploit children, prosecutors said.

    A federal judge in Brownsville, Texas handed down the sentence to Robert L. Hedrick, 61, who was convicted in May.

    Hedrick founded Pan American Airways, a cargo company based in Brownsville that shares a similar name but is unrelated to the now-defunct international carrier Pan American World Airways. A phone number listed on cargo carrier's website has been disconnected.

    When Homeland Security agents arrested Hedrick on July 18, 2011, they found hard drives that contained more than 2,400 images and 18 videos of child pornography, prosecutors said.

    The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Texas also presented evidence that Hedrick was chatting with an undercover agent he thought was a 14-year-old girl in Louisiana.

    A jury convicted Hedrick of attempted sexual exploitation of children, transfer of obscene materials to a minor and distribution and possession of child pornography after a six-day trial in May.

    Hedrick's defense had argued that he was setup by relatives or business associates, saying others may have accessed his computers to conduct the chat sessions.

    U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen ordered Hedrick to pay more than $5.4 million in restitution and to remain on supervised release after he finishes his prison sentence, prosecutors said. He was also ordered to register as a sex offender.

    (Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Leslie Gevirtz)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-air-cargo-company-founder-gets-30-years-222254416.html

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    Thursday, December 20, 2012

    2K Games Holiday Sale Includes Borderlands Legends, NBA 2K13 and More

    Starting today and through January 2, 2013, 2K Games will offer several iOS titles for only $0.99/?0.89. Most of these games are only available on Apple?s mobile platform, though some might arrive on Android as well.

    All in all, to celebrate the holidays, 2K Games discounted the following iPhone and iPad games to only $0.99/?0.89: Borderlands Legends, Carnival Games, Civilization Revolution, Sid Meier?s Pirates and NHL 2K11.

    NBA 2K13 is also part of 2K Games? Holiday Sale, but this game has been discounted to $2.99/?1.99, instead of $0.99/?0.89.

    Obviously, all games are available via App Store and are fully compatible with all iPhone and iPad devices running iOS 4.2 or later.

    More details on the games included in this sale, along with links to App Store can be found in the original announcement.

    Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/2K-Games-Holiday-Sale-Include-Borderlands-Legends-NBA-2K13-and-More-316160.shtml

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    Traffic congestion can be alleviated throughout a metropolitan area by altering trips in specific neighborhoods, model shows

    Dec. 20, 2012 ? In most cities, traffic growth has outpaced road capacity, leading to increased congestion, particularly during the morning and evening commutes. In 2007, congestion on U.S. roads was responsible for 4.2 billion hours of additional travel time, as well as 2.8 billion gallons of fuel consumption and an accompanying increase in air pollution.

    One way to prevent traffic tie-ups is to have fewer cars on the road by encouraging alternatives such as public transportation, carpooling, flex time and working from home. But a new study -- by researchers at MIT, Central South University in China, the University of California at Berkeley and the Austrian Institute of Technology -- incorporates data from drivers' cellphones to show that the adoption of these alternatives by a small percentage of people across a metropolitan area might not be very effective. However, if the same number of people, but from a carefully selected segment of the driving population, chooses not to drive at rush hour, this could reduce congestion significantly.

    The study, published in the Dec. 20 issue of the journal Scientific Reports, demonstrates that canceling or delaying the trips of 1 percent of all drivers across a road network would reduce delays caused by congestion by only about 3 percent. But canceling the trips of 1 percent of drivers from carefully selected neighborhoods would reduce the extra travel time for all other drivers in a metropolitan area by as much as 18 percent.

    "This has an analogy in many other flows in networks," says lead research Marta Gonz?lez, the Gilbert W. Winslow Career Development Assistant Professor in MIT's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. "Being able to detect and then release the congestion in the most affected arteries improves the functioning of the entire coronary system."

    The study, designed by Gonz?lez and former MIT postdoc Pu Wang, now a professor at Central South University, is the first large-scale traffic study to track travel using anonymous cellphone data rather than survey data or information obtained from U.S. Census Bureau travel diaries. Both of these are prone to error because of the time lag between gathering and releasing data and the reliance on self-reporting.

    Gonz?lez and Wang used three weeks of cellphone data to obtain information about anonymous drivers' routes and the estimated traffic volume and speed on those routes. They inferred a driver's home neighborhood from the regularity of the route traveled and from the locations of cell towers that handled calls made between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. They combined this with information about population densities and the location and capacity of roads in the networks of two metropolitan areas -- Boston and San Francisco -- to determine which neighborhoods are the largest sources of drivers on each road segment, and which roads these drivers use to connect from home to highways and other major roadways.

    In the Boston area, they found that canceling 1 percent of trips by select drivers in the Massachusetts municipalities of Everett, Marlborough, Lawrence, Lowell and Waltham would cut all drivers' additional commuting time caused by traffic congestion by 18 percent. In the San Francisco area, canceling trips by drivers from Dublin, Hayward, San Jose, San Rafael and parts of San Ramon would cut 14 percent from the travel time of other drivers.

    "These percentages are averages based on a one-hour commute with additional minutes caused by congestion," Wang says. "The drivers stuck in the roads with worst congestion would see the greatest percentage of time savings, because the selective strategy can more efficiently decrease the traffic flows in congested roads."

    To validate the study's methodology, Alexandre Bayen, an associate professor of systems engineering at Berkeley, and graduate student Timothy Hunter compared Gonz?lez and Wang's estimations of travel time based on cellphone data with their own data obtained from GPS sensors in taxis in the San Francisco area. Using GPS data, Bayen and Hunter computed taxis' speed based on travel time from one location to another; from that speed of travel, they then determined congestion levels. Their findings agreed with those of Gonz?lez and Wang.

    Because the new methodology requires only three types of data -- population density, topological information about a road network, and cellphone data -- it can be used for almost any urban area.

    "In many cities in the developing world, traffic congestion is a major problem and travel surveys don't exist," Gonz?lez says. "So the detailed methodology we developed for using cellphone data to accurately characterize road network use could help traffic managers control congestion and allow planners to create road networks that fit a population's needs."

    Gonz?lez and Wang are currently studying road use in the Dominican Republic, France, Portugal, Rwanda and Spain. They treat the anonymous cellphone data with the privacy-protection measures required for the treatment of human subjects under an institutional review board.

    Katja Schechtner, head of the Dynamic Transportation Systems group at the Austrian Institute of Technology and a visiting scholar at the MIT Media Lab, is a co-author on the Scientific Reports paper with Gonz?lez, Wang, Bayen and Hunter.

    "We are now at a time where it is less difficult to get mobility data, thanks to mobile phones and other devices, and the main problem we have is how to extract useful information from all these data," says Marc Barthelemy, a senior researcher at the Institute of Theoretical Physics at CEA in France. "[Gonz?lez] and her team proposed a very interesting and new idea of constructing the network of road usage, which allows us to understand where individuals on a given road are coming from, and enables us to propose new strategies for mitigating congestion. This approach will certainly open new avenues of research in the very active field of mobility in urban systems."

    The study was funded by grants from the New England University Transportation Center, the NEC Corporation Fund, the Solomon Buchsbaum Research Fund and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. Wang received funding from the Shenghua Scholar Program of Central South University.

    Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The original article was written by Denise Brehm.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Pu Wang, Timothy Hunter, Alexandre M. Bayen, Katja Schechtner, Marta C. Gonz?lez. Understanding Road Usage Patterns in Urban Areas. Scientific Reports, 2012; 2 DOI: 10.1038/srep01001

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/OKjCDXrnDso/121220143742.htm

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    Fear keeps Egypt's Christians away from polls

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, towers of churches are silhouetted against the sun in the village of El-Aziyah near the city of Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back.(AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, towers of churches are silhouetted against the sun in the village of El-Aziyah near the city of Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back.(AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, women sit with their children in their house in the village of El-Aziyah near the city of Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, men ride a motorcycle past a church in Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, women attend a class in a church in the village of El-Aziyah near the city of Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back.(AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    In this Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012 photo, an elderly woman walks in a church in Assiut, southern Egypt. After a campaign of intimidation by Islamists, most Christians in this southern Egyptian province were too afraid to participate in last week?s referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they desperately oppose, residents say. Some of the few who dared try to reach polls were pelted by stones. The disenfranchising hikes Christians? worries over their future under Egypt?s empowered Islamists, but some young members of the community are starting to push back.(AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

    ASSIUT, Egypt (AP) ? A campaign of intimidation by Islamists left most Christians in this southern Egyptian province too afraid to participate in last week's referendum on an Islamist-drafted constitution they deeply oppose, residents say. The disenfranchisement is hiking Christians' worries over their future under empowered Muslim conservatives.

    Around a week before the vote, some 50,000 Islamists marched through the provincial capital, Assiut, chanting that Egypt will be "Islamic, Islamic, despite the Christians." At their head rode several bearded men on horseback with swords in scabbards on their hips, evoking images of early Muslims conquering Christian Egypt in the 7th Century.

    They made sure to go through mainly Christian districts of the city, where residents, fearing attacks, shuttered down their stores and stayed in their homes, witnesses said.

    The day of the voting itself on Saturday, Christian voting was minimal ? as low as seven percent in some areas, according to church officials. Some of those who did try to head to polling stations in some villages were pelted by stones, forcing them to turn back without casting ballots, Christian activists and residents told The Associated Press this week.

    The activists now see what happened in Assuit as a barometer for what Christians' status will be under a constitution that enshrines a greater role for Shariah, or Islamic law, in government and daily life. Even under the secular regime of autocrat Hosni Mubarak, Egypt's Christians complained of discrimination and government failure to protect them and their rights. They fear it will be worse with the Islamists who have dominated Egypt's political landscape since Mubarak's ouster in February 2011.

    "When all issues become religious and all the talk is about championing Islam and its prophet, then, as a Christian, I am excluded from societal participation," said Shady Magdy Tobia, a Christian activist in Assiut. "If this does not change, things will only get worse for Christians."

    But some of the Christians of Assiut are pushing back against the emboldened Islamists. In recent weeks, young Christians joined growing street protests to demand that the charter is shelved, casting aside decades of political apathy.

    Assiut province is significant because it is home to one of Egypt's largest Christian communities ? they make up about 35 percent of the population of 4.5 million, perhaps three times the nationwide percentage. At the same time, it is a major stronghold of Egypt's Islamists, who now dominate its local government. The province was the birthplace of some of the country's most radical Islamist groups and was the main battlefield of an insurgency by Muslim militants in the 1990s.

    It was one of 10 provinces that voted in the first round of Egypt's referendum. Nationwide, around 56 percent voted in favor of the draft charter, according to preliminary results. Assiut had one of the strongest "yes" votes at more than 77 percent. It also had a turnout of only 28 percent ? one of the lowest in a round marred by a low participation of only 32 percent nationwide.

    The second and final round will held the coming Saturday in 17 provinces, including in Minya, which has the country's highest proportion of Christians, at 36 percent.

    Rights groups reported attempts at suppression of the "no" vote in many parts of the country. But Christians say intimidation and suppression are more effective in this smaller, largely rural province.

    "In Assiut, we face more danger than in Cairo," said businessman Emad Awny Ramzy, a key organizer of local protests against Islamist President Mohammed Morsi and his ruling Muslim Brotherhood. "Here they can easily identify, monitor and attack us."

    A senior figure of the Gamaa Islamiya ? which was once one of the main groups waging the Islamic militant insurgency in Assiut but has since renounced violence and is allied to Morsi's government ? dismissed the Christians' allegations of intimidation in the province.

    The claims are "just lies and rumors that surface every time we have an election," Assem Abdel-Magued said. The Brotherhood and officials in Morsi's government have similarly dismissed claims of violations around the country.

    The draft constitution, finalized by Islamists on a Constituent Assembly despite a boycott by liberals and Christians, has polarized Egypt, bringing out huge rival street rallies by both camps in the past four weeks. Opponents of Morsi accuse him of ramming the document through and, more broadly, of imposing a Brotherhood domination of power. Morsi supporters, in turn, accuse his opponents of seeking to thwart a right to bring Islamic law they say they earned with election victories the past year.

    Egypt's main Coptic Orthodox Church and smaller ones have taken an uncharacteristically assertive approach in the constitutional struggle. They withdrew their six members from the Constituent Assembly to protest Islamist domination of the process and later refused to send representatives to a "national dialogue" called for by Morsi.

    The new Coptic pope, Tawadros II, enthroned last month, publicly called some of the charter's articles "disastrous."

    In response, the Muslim Brotherhood ? which usually keeps a moderate tone toward Christians ? has turned toward more inflammatory rhetoric.

    Senior Brotherhood figure Mohammed el-Beltagi in a newspaper interview this week depicted mass anti-Morsi rallies outside the presidential palace in Cairo this month as mainly made up of Christians, hinting at a Christian conspiracy against the president.

    In a recent speech, Safwat Hegazi, a famous Islamist preacher linked to the Brotherhood, warned Christians against joining forces with former Mubarak regime figures to topple Morsi.

    "I tell the church, yes, you are our brothers in Egypt, but there are red lines. Our red line is Morsi's legitimacy. Whoever dares splash it with water, we will splash him with blood," he said, using an Arabic saying.

    In Assiut, Tobia, Ramzy and other Christian activists spoke of an atmosphere of intimidation ahead of the vote, including the large Islamist march.

    They said threatening messages were sent on mobile phones and on social networking sites. During an opposition demonstration on Dec. 7 outside the offices of the Brotherhood's political party in Assiut, suspected Morsi supporters seized six protesters ? five Muslims and one Christian ? beating them and shaving the head of one.

    With tension building up over the last four weeks, many Christian voters registered at polling centers located in predominantly Muslim areas did not vote, fearing violence, they said.

    Those who made it to polling centers in districts with significant Christian populations were soon frustrated by the long lines or delays, which activists said was intentional. In some cases, they said, Islamists who had voted elsewhere then went to stand in lines in mainly Christian areas to make them longer, increase delays and prompt Christians to give up and leave.

    Two Christian clerics said that outside the province's main cities, only about 12 percent of registered Christian voters left their homes on Saturday to vote and that no more than seven percent were able to cast their ballots. They based the figures on statistics gathered by members of the Coptic Church's youth group who monitored voting across the province. The two clerics spoke on condition of anonymity because of sensitivities over the church role in political issues.

    In the Christian village of el-Aziyah, only 2,350 of the village's 12,100 registered voters cast ballots on Saturday, according to acting mayor Montaser Malek Yacoub.

    Yacoub is among the growing number of Christians who are pushing back against persecution.

    He has taken advantage of the tenuous security situation of the past two years and built two churches without permits and reclaimed a large area of state-owned desert that lies outside the village's boundaries toward a rock mountain. Under Mubarak's rule, Christians rarely received permits to build or renovate churches.

    "Let me just tell you this: As far as I am concerned, this is our country and everyone else are guests," he said. But "we're ready to cooperate with anyone who shares Egypt with us."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-12-19-Egypt-Christians/id-33c521a6b29f43ca8ca907d51e619aa0

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    Video: Remembering Robert Bork, Supreme Court nominee (cbsnews)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/271988919?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Intensive Weight Loss Programs Might Help Reverse Diabetes

    Type 2 diabetes has long been thought of as a chronic, irreversible disease. Some 25 million Americans are afflicted with the illness, which is associated with obesity and a sedentary lifestyle, as well as high blood pressure. Recent research demonstrated that gastric bypass surgery--a form of bariatric surgery that reduces the size of the stomach--can lead to at least temporary remission of type 2 diabetes in up to 62 percent of extremely obese adults. But can less drastic measures also help some people fight back the progressive disease? A new randomized controlled trial found that intensive weight loss programs can also increase the odds that overweight adults with type 2 diabetes will see at least partial remission. The findings were published online December 18 in JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association. "The increasing worldwide prevalence of type 2 diabetes, along with its wide-ranging complications, has led to hopes that the disease can be reversed or prevented," wrote the authors of the new paper, led by Edward Gregg of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The study tracked 4,503 overweight adults with type 2 diabetes for four years. About half of the subjects received basic diabetes support and education (including three sessions per year that covered diet, physical activity and support). The other half received more intensive lifestyle-intervention assistance. This second group received weekly individual and group counseling for six months, followed by three-sessions each month for the next six months, and refresher group sessions and individual contact for the subsequent three years. The interventions aimed to help individuals limit daily calories to 1,200 to 1,800--in particular by reducing saturated fat intake--and to help them get the recommended 175 minutes per week of physical activity. After two years about one in 11 adults in the intervention group experienced at least partial remission of their diabetes, meaning that a patient's blood sugar levels reverted to below diabetes diagnosis levels without medication. Only about one in 60 in the control group, which received only basic support and education, saw any remission after two years. The findings suggest that "partial remission, defined by a transition to prediabetic or normal glucose levels without drug treatment for a specific period, is an obtainable goal for some patients with type 2 diabetes," the researchers noted. The improvement, however, was not indefinite for everyone. After four years, only about one in 30 people in the intervention group were still seeing an improvement in their condition. Researchers think that regaining weight and falling behind on diet and physical activity goals increase the risk that people will return to a diabetic state. About one in 75 in the intervention group saw complete remission of their diabetes, in which glucose levels returned to normal without medication. The study did not find, however, that individuals in the lifestyle intervention group had lower risks for heart trouble, stroke or death than did those in the control group. "This recently led the National Institutes of Health to halt the [trial]," noted David Arterburn, of Group Health Research Institute in Seattle, and Patrick O'Connor, of HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research in Minneapolis, in an essay in the same issue of JAMA. Similar results have come out of studies looking at more intensive medical treatment of diabetes. "A more potent intervention--bariatric surgery--already appears to achieve what intensive medical and lifestyle interventions cannot: reducing cardiovascular events and mortality rates among severely obese patients with type 2 diabetes," they noted. As with any disease, however, prevention is the best strategy. "The disappointing results of recent trials of intensive lifestyle and medical management in patients with existing type 2 diabetes also underscore the need to more aggressively pursue primary prevention of diabetes," Arterburn and O'Connor noted. One recent study found that compared with no treatment at all, lifestyle interventions reduced the onset of type 2 diabetes by 58 percent in people with pre-diabetes (and the medication metformin reduced the onset rate by 31 percent). Bariatric surgery seemed to reduce the onset of diabetes in obese patients by 83 percent, Arterburn and O'Connor pointed out in their essay. For people who already have diabetes, however, those who are still in the early stages and those with the biggest weight loss and/or fitness improvement had the best odds for beating the disease. And even if lifestyle interventions aren't capable of dialing back the disease entirely, any reduction--whether through lifestyle or other changes-in the need for medication and in medical complications due to diabetes can be considered an improvement in managing the disease, which already costs the U.S. health system $116 billion each year and is estimated to affect 50 million Americans by 2050. Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
    ? 2012 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/intensive-weight-loss-programs-might-help-reverse-diabetes-215700869.html

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    Wednesday, December 19, 2012

    Question to Obama: Where Have You Been on Gun Violence?

    TAPPER: It seems to a lot of observers that you made the political calculation in 2008, in your first term and in 2012 not to talk about gun violence. You had your position on renewing the ban on semiautomatic rifles that then Senator Biden put into place, but you didn't do much about it. This is not the first issue - the first incident of horrific gun violence of your four years. Where have you been?

    PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, here's where I've been, Jake. I've been president of the United States, dealing with the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, an auto industry on the verge of collapse, two wars. I don't think I've been on vacation.

    And so, you know, I think all of us have to do some reflection on how we prioritize what we do here in Washington. And as I said on Sunday, you know, this should be a wake-up call for all of us to say that if we are not getting right the need to keep our children safe, then nothing else matters. And it's my commitment to make sure that, that we do everything we can to keep our children safe. A lot of things go - are involved in that, Jake. So making sure they've got decent health care and making sure they've got a good education, making sure that their parents have jobs - those are all relevant as well. Those aren't just sort of side issues. But there's no doubt that this has to be a central issue. And that's exactly why I'm confident that Joe is going to take this so seriously over the next couple months.

    Also Read

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/where-gun-violence-todays-q-o-12-19-182928454--abc-news-politics.html

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    India to slash Iran oil imports in 2013/14: sources


    NEW DELHI | Wed Dec 19, 2012 4:17pm IST

    NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India plans a cut of 10 percent to 15 percent in imports of Iranian oil in the next fiscal year and will buy even less if Tehran does not lower prices to compensate for bigger borrowing costs as sanctions make banks reluctant to finance oil trade, sources said on Wednesday.

    Iran's top Asian oil buyers -- China, India, Japan and South Korea -- have all cut imports after the United States and the European Union targeted oil sales with sanctions aimed at curbing Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

    The sanctions have more than halved Iran's oil exports this year, costing Tehran up to $5 billion a month in lost revenue.

    "Next year our import will be 10 percent to 15 percent less than this year," said a government official with direct knowledge of the matter, who declined to be identified as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

    "If they don't cut prices, the decline will be substantial. Indian refiners have genuine problems with credit availability."

    India, the world's fourth-biggest oil importer and Iran's second biggest client, relies on outside supplies for 80 percent of its oil needs, or about 3.5 million barrels per day (bpd).

    Officials at state refiners said they had yet to receive any directive from the government to cut imports from Iran in the year beginning April 2013, when annual contracts start, but that they would cut imports anyway, because of high costs.

    The push for cheaper prices is similar to a move by Chinese refiner Sinopec, Iran's biggest buyer, last year. As rising international pressure forced other buyers out of the market for Iranian oil, Sinopec strongarmed Iran into giving it better terms on contract oil deliveries.

    The United States is looking for importers to make further cuts in purchases from Iran in 2013 to avoid sanctions, a State Department source said this month.

    South Korea has already told the United States it will cut imports by about a fifth from a year earlier in the six months to May, government and industry sources said this month.

    On Wednesday, the Petroleum Association of Japan said imports from Iran in 2013 were likely to be capped at 160,000 bpd. That would be down nearly 15 percent from around 188,000 bpd so far this year.

    There is no clear indication yet on 2013 imports by China. Daily imports into China in the first ten months of 2012 were down 22 percent on the 2011 figure.

    During the current fiscal -- and contract -- year, New Delhi had asked refiners to cut purchases from Iran by 15 percent. Refiners have instead bought more from Saudi Arabia, the top supplier, and Iraq, pushing Iran out of the number two slot.

    TOO EXPENSIVE

    Indian refiners say Iranian crude has become more expensive because sanctions force them to borrow at high domestic interest rates to finance purchases and face continuing volatility in the rupee against the dollar.

    Banks have refused to issue short-term dollar credit, also known as buyers' credit, for Iranian oil imports because of the sanctions, officials at refiners said.

    "Economically Iranian oil is not viable. My borrowing cost has gone up," said an official at a state-run refiner.

    Starting February 6, U.S. law will prevent Iran from bringing home oil export earnings, a measure that will "lock up" a substantial amount of Tehran's funds, U.S. officials have said.

    That could affect the continuation of India's existing payment system with Iran, which settles 55 percent in euros through Turkey's Halkbank. The rest is settled in rupees through a local bank. (Reporting by Nidhi Verma; Editing by Jo Winterbottom and Simon Webb)

    Source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/12/19/india-iran-imports-idINDEE8BI07R20121219?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews

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    Utah boy charged with bringing gun to school, cites fears of Newtown attack

    SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - An 11-year-old Utah boy who said he brought a gun to school to protect himself from a Newtown-style attack, then brandished the pistol at three classmates during recess, has been detained on assault and weapons charges, a school spokesman said on Tuesday.

    The boy, a Utah sixth-grader, took the unloaded .22-caliber handgun to his school south of Salt Lake City in his backpack on Monday, a spokesman for the Granite School District said.

    Some ammunition was also found in the backpack, but it did not appear to go with the gun, said the spokesman, Ben Horsley.

    No one was injured in the incident, which occurred as jittery parents, teachers and students around the country faced their first day back at school since 20 children and six adult staffers at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, were shot to death by a lone gunman last Friday.

    The 11-year-old student at Utah's West Kearns Elementary, who was not publicly identified, has insisted he brought the gun to school to "protect himself and his friends from a Connecticut-style incident," Horsley said.

    However, the boy is accused of waving the gun at three classmates on a soccer field during recess. Later on Monday, one of those students and a second classmate alerted their teacher, who "immediately took the student into custody and took him down to the principal's office," Horsley said.

    After being briefly questioned, the boy admitted bringing the gun to school, and the weapon was recovered minutes later.

    Some parents questioned the decision not to initiate a security "lockdown," but school administrators reasoned that it made no sense to risk alarming students when the threat was so quickly averted, Horsley said.

    The boy was booked into a local juvenile detention center on Monday night on one count of possession of a deadly weapon on school property and three counts of aggravated assault. He was also suspended from school indefinitely.

    Horsley described the boy's parents as shocked by the incident and cooperating with investigators, who found the gun belonged to a relative who has been living temporarily with the boy's family.

    He said the community was "rightfully" shaken by the incident. "Because of the tragic occurrence in Connecticut, people's emotions with respect to children's safety is right at the surface, and we're just as concerned as the parents."

    Because the incident unfolded less than an hour before classes were dismissed, parents could not be notified until well after the school day had ended, and only then by telephone, he said.

    (Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/utah-boy-charged-bringing-gun-school-cites-fears-023430546.html

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    Cliff talks hit a lull with Boehner's 'Plan B'

    Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by the Republican leadership speaks to reporters about the fiscal cliff negotiations with President Obama following a closed-door strategy session, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by the Republican leadership speaks to reporters about the fiscal cliff negotiations with President Obama following a closed-door strategy session, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada speaks to reporters following the Democratic policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

    Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, left, and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., right, as they finish a news conference about the fiscal cliff negotiations after a closed-door GOP strategy session, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by the Republican leadership, speaks to reporters about the fiscal cliff negotiations with President Obama following a closed-door strategy session, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by the Republican leadership speaks to reporters about the fiscal cliff negotiations with President Obama following a closed-door strategy session, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    (AP) ? Just two weeks from an economy-threatening deadline, fiscal cliff talks hit a lull Tuesday as House Speaker John Boehner announced that Republicans would also march ahead with their own tax plan on a separate track from the one he's been pursuing with President Barack Obama.

    The White House and leading congressional Democrats immediately rejected Boehner's "Plan B," which would extend soon-to-expire Bush-era tax cuts for everyone making less than $1 million but would not address huge across-the-board spending cuts that are set to strike the Pentagon and domestic programs next year.

    "Everyone should understand Boehner's proposal will not pass the Senate," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

    Boehner's surprise move came after significant progress over the past several days in talks with Obama ? talks that produced movement on tax rate hikes that have proven deeply unsettling to GOP conservatives and on cuts to Social Security benefits that have incensed liberal Democrats.

    Just Monday, Obama offered concessions, including a plan to raise top tax rates on households earning more than $400,000 instead of the $250,000 threshold he had campaigned on. And the two sides had inched closer on the total amount of tax revenue required to seal the agreement. Obama now would settle for $1.2 trillion over the coming decade while Boehner is offering $1 trillion.

    By contrast, protecting income below $1 million from a hike in the top tax rate from 35 percent to 39.6 percent would raise only $269 billion over the coming decade.

    But the outlines of a possible Obama-Boehner agreement appeared to have shaky support at best from Boehner's leadership team and outright opposition from key Republicans like vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, R-Wis., a House GOP aide said. That aide spoke only on condition of anonymity because the aide was not authorized to discuss the situation publicly.

    Though Obama spokesman Jay Carney had nothing good to say about Boehner's new option, he said, "The president is willing to continue to work with Republicans" toward a broader agreement.

    The narrower Plan B faced plenty of opposition. Democrats announced they would oppose it, and many conservative Republicans continued to resist any vote that might be interpreted as raising taxes. Republicans were refining the measure Tuesday in hopes of building support among the GOP rank and file, but passing the measure exclusively with GOP votes could prove difficult.

    "I think it's a terrible idea," said Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho. "For a lot of reasons."

    Republicans noted that top Democrats like Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California and Sen. Charles Schumer of New York have in the recent past supported the million-dollar threshold for rates hikes. "We've had an election on the President's tax plan, the President won, and Republicans can't turn the clock back," said Schumer spokesman Brian Fallon.

    Boehner's back-up plan would extend current income tax rates except for income exceeding $1 million, set a 20 percent tax rate on capital gains and dividend income for income over $1 million instead of 15 percent now, and retain current rules regarding the estate tax instead of tighter parameters sought by Obama.

    It would also prevent an expansion of the alternative minimum tax that would otherwise hit 28 million middle- and upper-class Americans with an average $3,700 increase on their 2012 tax returns.

    Several rank-and-file House Republicans said the message they heard at an evening caucus was that passing plan B would strengthen Boehner's hand in negotiating steeper spending cuts with Obama.

    If the Senate decides not to vote on the House bill or ignores it, "That's not our problem," said Rep. Patrick Tiberi, R-Ohio. "The ball's in Harry Reid's court."

    Democrats said Boehner's move made it clear he was abandoning efforts to reach an agreement with Obama ? much as he quit talks with Obama 18 months ago.

    "Plan B is yet another example of House Republicans walking away from negotiations," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., top Democrat on the Budget Committee.

    At the White House, officials remained cautiously optimistic that the talks could get back on track despite Boehner's maneuvering.

    Boehner, however, said Obama is the one proving to be too inflexible, even as he held out hope that talks with Obama might yet bear fruit.

    "He talked about a 'balanced' approach on the campaign trail," Boehner said. "What the White House offered yesterday ? $1.3 trillion in revenue for only $850 billion in spending cuts ? cannot be considered balanced."

    Boehner also displayed new flexibility on the politically explosive issue of raising the Medicare retirement age from 65 to 67. Boehner said the idea ? anathema to Democrats ? didn't need to be dealt with this year but could be kicked over into a broader negotiation next year.

    "That issue has been on the table, off the table, back on the table," Boehner said. "I don't believe it's an issue that has to be dealt with between now and the end of the year."

    Just Monday, the Capitol bristled with optimism that Boehner and Obama might strike a bargain.

    In a new offer, Obama dropped his long-held insistence that taxes rise on individuals earning more than $200,000 and families making more than $250,000. He is now offering a new threshold of $400,000 and lowering his 10-year tax revenue goals from the $1.6 trillion he originally sought.

    The new Obama plan seeks $1.2 trillion in revenue over 10 years and $1.2 trillion in 10-year spending reductions. Boehner aides say the revenue is closer to $1.3 trillion if revenue triggered by a new inflation index is counted, and they say the spending reductions are closer to $930 billion if one discounts about $290 billion in lower estimated debt interest.

    The two sides also differ on the estate tax, extending unemployment benefits and how to address the need to raise the government's borrowing cap to prevent a first-ever U.S. default and a re-run of last year's debt crisis.

    The White House was facing its own backlash, with labor, liberal and elderly advocacy groups mounting an organized campaign against any adjustments in cost-of-living for Social Security beneficiaries.

    "President Obama and other Democrats campaigned saying Social Security doesn't affect the deficit," said Roger Hickey, co-director of the liberal Campaign for America's Future. "Social Security recipients are going to notice and they are either going to blame John Boehner or President Obama."

    The change would reduce annual cost-of-living increases for beneficiaries of Social Security and other government programs. It also would push more people into higher tax brackets by making smaller annual adjustments to brackets.

    The administration appeared confident that most Democrats would reluctantly vote for the idea in an attractive enough budget package, particularly one that has the backing of Obama.

    "I think many of us still have faith that the president will ultimately, if he strikes a deal with the Republicans, give us a plan that we can vote on that provides that fairness and balance," said Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif.

    White House spokesman Carney described the inclusion of the inflation adjustment as "a technical change" that was "not directed at one particular program." He also said that if instituted, the administration would ensure that the most vulnerable beneficiaries would not be affected.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Jim Kuhnhenn and Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-12-18-Fiscal%20Cliff/id-1bc945d43f454e2991845e673204e637

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