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More men finding it harder to balance work, family life

June 16, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
David Goodhue – AHN News Reporter

Chicago, IL, United States (AHN) – The good news is that a lot of men who were laid off during the recession are back at work. But the downside is they are at jobs with leaner staffs, meaning many men are working longer hours away from their families.

CareerBuilder’s annual Father’s Day survey shows that the majority of participants who were laid off over the last 12 months are working again. But more than 20 percent of the respondents say they are working more than 50 hours a week, up from 19 percent last year.

Two in five men spend two hours or less with their children each day, and 16 percent say they spend one hour or less with their kids.

The survey also found more men are taking their work home with them.

“As companies downsized during the recession and work demands accelerated, we saw dads having a harder time finding balance between providing for their families financially and spending quality time with them,” Alex Green, general counsel for CareerBuilder, said in a statement.

A third of the men taking the survey said that work commitments are forcing them to miss significant events in their children’s lives.

Twenty one percent of the respondents say they feel their work has had a negative impact on their relationship with their children.

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Wounded Saleh plans to return to Yemen

June 7, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Sanaa, Yemen (AHN) – Despite his wounds, Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh plans to return to the country to resume is 33-year rule, Vice President Abd al-Rab Mansur al-Hadi said on Monday. Saleh is confined in a Saudi Arabia hospital for treatment of wounds sustained during an artillery attack on his home last week.

Yemen’s opposition said Mansur is acceptable to them, but the vice president is still deferring to Saleh and refused to accept the leadership post. Mansur even met with the U.S. ambassador and senior European Union diplomats to convey Saleh’s message that the latter intends to return to Yemen.

Mansur added that Saleh is recovering swiftly from his battle injuries. Reports said that Saleh required major surgery to remove shrapnel from his chest and to reconstruct his face. He is expected to need at least one week to recover from his medical operations and another week for meetings.

In the light of Mansur’s refusal to accept the president’s position, the Yemeni opposition is eyeing the establishment of a transitional council. The refusal of Saleh to step down from power and the insistence by the opposition of having a new national leader raised fears of a bloody revolution for the strife-torn Middle Eastern nation.

Mansur’s hesitation to take on power could be because of the presence of Saleh’s son, Ahmed, and nephew, Yahya, who lead an elite force based in Sanaa to ensure Saleh’s grip on power.

The British government, in anticipation of bloodier days ahead, sent a contingent of Royal Marines to be on standby off the coast of Yemen ready to evacuate Britons and other western nationals still in the country.

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Large Canadian banks cut residential mortgage rates

May 31, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Vittorio Hernandez – AHN News

Toronto, Ontario, Canada (AHN) – Large Canadian banks reduced their residential mortgage rates by one-tenth of a percentage point for mortgages of one to 10 years.

With the reduction, the rate for a five-year closed mortgage is now 5.49 percent at the Bank of Montreal, Royal Bank of Canada, TD Canada Trust, Scotiabank and the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

The first four banks announced their home mortgage rate cuts last week, while CIBC announced it on Monday.

Interest rates for long-term loans are down due to concerns over the health of the global economy and the chances that the Bank of Canada will not raise its benchmark lending rate until the second half of 2011, at the earliest.

Analysts forecast the Canadian central bank will leave the key lending rate at one percent for the sixth straight time when the bank meets on Tuesday.

An analyst of Scotia Capital predicted that Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney would even hold on to the current interest rate into 2012.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development urged the Bank of Canada last week to approve at least one rate increase in the coming months to show to consumers and businesses that it is doing something to address inflation.

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Lender Feedback Sought for Disclosures

May 19, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Two proposed disclosure forms have been released by the Consumer Financial Protection Agency. The regulator is asking lender to identify which of the two forms would better inform a prospective borrower about loan terms. The two forms include identical information for a 30-year adjustable-rate mortgage to be used for a home purchase.

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‘Squatter Rent’ May Boost Spending as Mortgage Holders Bail

May 7, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Melissa White and her husband stopped paying their mortgage in May 2008 after it reset to $3,200 a month, more than double the original rate. That gave them extra cash to pay off debts and spend on staples until their Las Vegas home sold two years later for less than they owed.

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Graduates Without Health Coverage Should Consider Their Parents’ Plan

May 3, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Washington, DC, United States (KaiserHealth) – In past years, a student’s graduation could mean leaving behind not only the classroom but also health insurance coverage, since family plans often stopped covering dependent children once they left school.

The health-care overhaul has changed that: Adult children can now remain on their parents’ plan until age 26, with few exceptions. (More on that later.) But even if coverage under a family plan isn’t an option, the new law has helped ensure that some of the other choices available to young adults offer better protection than they have in the past.

For many graduates, staying on their parents’ plan is likely to be the best option. “Most employer plans have good benefit packages,” says Sara Collins, a vice president at the Commonwealth Fund, a private organization that studies health-care issues. Keeping an adult child on the family policy probably won’t significantly affect the premium, his or her existing conditions continue to be covered and the new graduate can keep using the same doctors.

Rochelle O’Sullivan is relieved that she can stay on her mother’s plan after she graduates from Boston University this spring. The 22-year-old is on crutches after breaking her hip when she slipped at the airport on her way home to San Francisco for spring break in March. Having health insurance while she mends is critical. But once she kicks her job search into high gear, O’Sullivan doesn’t want health insurance concerns to get in the way.

“I’m worried about getting a job, getting experience,” says the mass communications major. “And if that means taking a job without insurance, I’d do that.”

The law applies to adult children whether or not they live at home or are financially independent. Even married children can stay on their parents’ health policy until age 26.

The biggest wrinkle for young adults: If they take a job whose benefits include health insurance, they can’t choose to stay on their parents’ plan.

If that job offers good coverage, that’s not a problem. But new grads often take entry-level or part-time jobs, which can come with limited-benefit plans that offer low coverage limits providing little protection if they actually get sick. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, however, even inadequate, so-called “mini-med” policies count as insurance, and if young adults are offered such coverage, they can’t be covered under their parents’ plans. Once the health-care law is fully implemented in 2014, mini-med plans will be phased out.

The Bryant family has been negotiating this tricky period. Kelli and Kirk Bryant’s oldest son, Dylan, 21, graduated last September and was working part time at a retailer while looking for a full-time job. The retailer offers a limited-benefit policy with $50,000 in coverage annually, not nearly as good as the comprehensive plan the family has through Kirk’s job at a hospital in Lincoln, Neb.

The retailer said Dylan wasn’t eligible for its insurance, but Kelli was worried that that was a mistake and that he might be on thin ice if questions arose.

That’s no longer a concern. Recently Dylan took a new part-time job as a security specialist at a mental health facility. The new job doesn’t offer health insurance, leaving no doubt that Dylan is free to be covered under the family plan. Ironically, being offered a job without health insurance is, in this instance, a good thing, says Kelli, who says she has contacted one of her U.S. senators about tightening up the definition of on-the-job insurance for young adults.

Of course, many adult children don’t have access to a family health plan. Their parents may not have coverage on the job. Or if the parents are on Medicare or are part of a retiree-only health plan through a previous employer, the new provisions extending coverage up to age 26 don’t apply. But there are other options for young adults.

If they’re healthy, an individual insurance policy may be a reasonable choice. Although coverage is often not as comprehensive as it is with a group plan, individual policies can no longer impose lifetime coverage limits or, in most cases, annual limits, and they must provide a range of preventive services for free. Premiums for young, healthy people may be very affordable, say experts.

Uninsured young people with preexisting medical conditions can consider special state-based insurance plans created under the health-care law. But they can be pricey, and you have to have been uninsured for six months to qualify.

Although the family policy is likely to be the best option, high school graduates going on to college should consider their college’s health plans, say experts. Some are good plans, and recent proposed regulations would require many of them to be classified as individual health insurance plans, with similar protections and standards. That should result in many of the worst student plans shutting down, says Stephen Beckley, a health-care management consultant for colleges and universities in Fort Collins, Colo. “We expect many plans to drop off between 2012 and 2014,” he says.

Still wondering what to do? Young Invincibles, a health-care advocacy group for young adults, has developed a toolkit to help grads assess the options.

“When you graduate, you get an exit interview to discuss your student loans,” says Aaron Smith, the organization’s co-founder and executive director. “There’s nothing like that for health insurance.”

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Medical Device Industry Lobbies IRS and Congress To Dodge Health Law Tax

April 18, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Washington, DC, United States (KaiserHealth) – Like many other interest groups, the medical device industry met with White House officials in the run-up to the health care battle in Congress. But while insurers, pharmaceutical firms and even the American Medical Association made agreements trading their support for specific concessions, the device makers were not able to close a similar deal.

As a result, the final health care reform bill included a 2.3 percent excise tax on device makers that’s expected to produce $20 billion over a decade to help pay for expanded health coverage.

That’s the law, or so it would seem.

But in Washington, it’s never over until it’s over. And like other medical interests who are scrambling to influence the implementation of health care reform, medical device makers are showering cash on friends in Congress and working the halls, hoping that one of five bills that would overturn the excise tax might actually make it into law.

Veteran Hill watchers say that may be a long shot, so to hedge its bets, the industry is also lobbying the Internal Revenue Service to write rules exempting hundreds of devices from the excise tax — even though the health law says the exemption should be limited to items widely purchased by the public from retailers. The outcome of that under-the-radar battle is far from certain.

The medical device business and its lobbyists have a strong record of winning concessions and at least partially deflecting the costs of health insurance coverage expansion. An early Senate “framework” version of the health bill pushed by Democrat Max Baucus of Montana, for example, would have nailed the industry with a $40 billion excise tax bill over ten years beginning in 2010. Shocked at the price tag, the device manufacturers’ trade group, the Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed), pushed back, aided by industry giants Medtronic Inc., Johnson & Johnson, 3M Co., and others.

With the help of a bipartisan group of lawmakers, the device makers succeeded in cutting the tax in half in the final health care law, which also delayed the start date for the tax until 2013, three years later than in the Baucus proposal.

Manufacturers, however, maintain that even the smaller tax in the health care law is catastrophic for them. So the industry is targeting Capitol Hill anew and working the regulatory process, searching for concessions.

Five industry-supported bills currently before Congress would completely overturn the excise tax on medical devices, the most widely supported of which are bills introduced by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Rep. Erik Paulsen, R-Minn. Hatch’s bill has- Republican co-sponsors. Paulsen’s House bill has 119 co-sponsors, including three Democrats.

Hatch, who has been one of the health care law’s fiercest opponents, says the tax on medical devices will increase insurance premiums and the cost of care. Relying on an excise tax “to fund Obamacare will cripple an important engine of opportunity, job growth and innovation,” Hatch said in a January news release.

CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS FROM INDUSTRY

In 2009 and 2010, both Hatch and Paulsen were major beneficiaries of medical device industry money.

Hatch was not up for re-election that cycle but received more than $90,000 in campaign donations from the medical supply industry, which made him the trade group’s third largest political beneficiary, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. The political action committee of the AdvaMed association alone contributed $10,584 to Hatch’s campaign, and $3,150 to Paulsen’s.

The political action committees of individual companies also chipped in. The PAC of Boston Scientific, a major manufacturer of heart and other medical devices, contributed $7,000 to Paulsen’s campaign and $5,000 to Hatch’s. Medtronic, the world’s largest medical device maker — which is based in Paulsen’s home state — donated $3,000 to Paulsen and $5,000 to Hatch.

Paulsen spokesman Tom Erickson said the bill is a response to job loss fears, not industry campaign donations, and that more than 400 medical device companies are based in Minnesota. A Hatch spokesman said the senator’s bill reflects his political philosophy: “It’s something he has felt strongly about for a long time, that taxes are counterproductive,” spokesman Mark Eddington said.

Hatch and Paulsen are only two of the friends the device industry is counting on for help.

In late March, Democrat Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Republican Scott Brown of Massachusetts launched a new Senate medical technology caucus to increase awareness about issues facing the industry. Both represent states with significant medical device manufacturers and have been major beneficiaries of industry money.

Boston Scientific, which in 2010 had $7.8 billion in sales, is based in Brown’s state. In 2010, Brown received more than $30,000 in campaign donations from the medical supply industry, which is dominated by the device makers. Klobuchar received more than $40,000 in contributions.

“These businesses not only spark medical breakthroughs, they save lives,” Klobuchar said in comments released on the day the new caucus was launched. “Every day in every state small medical technology companies are driving the innovation agenda we need to compete in a global economy. I will continue to work to make sure that Minnesota remains a leader in health care innovation by developing innovative products while maintaining patient safety.”

The House medical technology caucus was revamped in February. According to the industry newsletter MedCity, its new website was launched on the same day that Paulsen, who chairs the group together with Anna Eschoo, D-Calif., addressed the Minnesota life sciences trade group LifeScience Alley.

In the halls of Congress, the medical device manufacturers have long pushed the jobs refrain, first to deflect taxes, and second to fend off scrutiny from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which regulates devices. Dr. Josh Makower, the founder of Exploramed, a medical device incubator – who frequently testifies before Congress – said the excise tax will particularly hurt small firms, many of which rely solely on investment capital for years before turning a profit.

“The saddest thing is that these small companies are exactly the ones that are delivering new innovations,” Makower told iWatch News in an e-mail response to questions.

REVOLVING DOOR

In pushing its interests, the device industry benefits from the revolving door connecting K Street with Capitol Hill.

In December, former AdvaMed executive Brett Loper, who lobbied against the excise tax, was named House Speaker John Boehner’s chief policy officer. Elizabeth Kegler, the association’s vice president of government affairs, is a former health policy advisor to Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

Advamed spent almost $1.5 million lobbying Congress on behalf of its members in 2010. First quarter lobby disclosure records for 2011 will not be available until late April, but medical device industry activity suggests the industry has likely not slowed its spending.

Despite device industry campaign donations, powerful allies, and support for the Paulsen bill in the House, George Schutzer, a tax lobbyist and attorney at the Washington firm Patton Boggs, said he doubts Congress is ready to overturn the device tax. A win for the medical device industry would “open the flood gates” for challenges to the health reform bill by other parts of the medical industry, Schutzer said, and would most likely result in an Obama veto.

As a result, the medical device industry has taken the fight beyond Congress to the Internal Revenue Service, which will administer the tax.

That part of the struggle appears to be splitting the industry as manufacturers try to protect their market niches. Although the medical device category includes big-ticket items generally sold to hospitals, including artificial hearts, pacemakers, coronary stents and artificial joints, it also includes a wide range of less expensive items ranging from tongue depressors to examination gloves.

The health law exempts from the excise tax eyeglasses, contact lenses, and any device the Treasury Department determines is generally purchased by the general public at retail for individual use. Certain sectors of the device industry, however, contend that devices from wheelchairs and scooters to home oxygen systems fit the exemption criteria.

In written comments to the IRS, which is expected to publish tax guidance for device manufacturers, DJO Global, the largest U.S. supplier of orthopedic devices, asked for an exemption on all items classified by Medicare as durable medical equipment, prosthetics and orthotics, including bone-growth stimulators and electrotherapy devices. The American Association for Home Care, which represents the home medical care industry, wrote that it believes all durable medical equipment, including complex power wheel chairs, should be exempt.

“Durable medical equipment and home medical equipment fit that exemption language to a tee,” said Jay Witter, senior director of government affairs at the American Association for Home Care, in an interview. Witter quoted a 2009 fact sheet released by former Speaker Nancy Pelosi that said wheelchairs would be exempt, and that the excise tax would apply only to sales of medical devices to hospitals and other institutions. The comment period on the exemption ended in late March; the IRS did not respond to questions on when it might decide who gets the exemption and who doesn’t.

Witter said it is unclear whether wheelchairs and other durable medical equipment were included in revenue calculations that projected $20 billion in revenue from the tax over a decade’s time. But since the majority of home health customers are covered by Medicare, which pays set rates, Witter said the cost of the excise tax cannot be passed on to consumers.

Diana Zuckerman, president of the National Research Center for Women & Families, a think tank that focuses on health issues, said the idea that all durable medical equipment should be exempt from the excise tax is absurd and could impair funding for the health care law.

“If they get what they want, the whole health care bill collapses,” said Zuckerman. “There is too much money involved to get rid of the excise tax or to substantially lower it.”

TAX DEDUCTION WINDFALL?

As device manufactures plead for exemptions, hospitals and group purchasing organizations worry that those who remain on the hook for the tax may simply pass it on in higher prices to hospitals and other purchasers. Curtis Rooney, president of the Health Industry Group Purchasing Association, said the excise tax could even wind up being a windfall for medical device manufacturers.

In a letter to the IRS, Rooney’s organization, along with the American Hospital Association, the Federation of American Hospitals and the Catholic Health Association of the United States, wrote that device manufacturers should be prohibited from passing on the excise tax to consumers, especially if they are allowed to deduct the excise tax when calculating their federal income tax.

Allowing device manufacturers to write off the tax and pass along the cost, the letter says, would “permit a financial ‘double-dip’ that could leave device companies in a better financial position than before the [health law] was enacted.”

Asked if device manufacturers planned to increase the prices charged to hospitals and other consumers to make up for excise tax, an AdvaMed spokeswoman declined to answer. She instead referred to a comment by David Nexon, the association’s senior executive vice president: “Each AdvaMed member company will have to individually decide how to best deal with the damaging effects of the tax. For some, that might mean cutting R&D, reducing staff or other measures. Those are tough business decisions that will have to be made if this tax goes forward and go to the heart of why we opposed the tax in the first place.”

iWatch News is the investigative news report of the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit group focused on investigative journalism.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Matthew McConaughey and girlfriend Camila Alves take turns as chef at home

March 19, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Damian Grass – Celebrity News Service Reporter

Los Angeles, CA, United States (AHN Entertainment) – Step aside, Rachel Ray and Martha Stewart. Matthew McConaughey wants to be a cookbook author.

The actor says he and his girlfriend Camila Alves, who both have two children, Levi, two, and 14-month-old daughter Vida, have a swell time trying out new recipes at home and rarely go out to eat.

“We’ve got a whole bunch of things to fill up a cookbook right now,” the 41-year-old actor joked with Popeater.com.

McConaughey, who plays a slick Los Angeles criminal defense attorney in the film “The Lincoln Lawyer,” with Ryan Phillipe and Academy Award-winner Marisa Tomei, said he and his family have more fun in their kitchen than going out for meals.

“Cooking is one of the main things we do. One-and-a-half-hours to two-hours a day. We eat out like once every two months because we cook.

“It’s really great family time from six to eight. Glass of wine and we start mixing up sauces and trying new things. See what we can pull off and we swap, sometimes I’m the cook, sometimes Camila is the cook,” he said.

But when it gets a little too hot in the kitchen, the actor said he hops into his car for a little “me” time.

“When I’m driving, that’s my favorite place to think. Or not think.

“I like to put myself in a place where the answers sort of show up and my favorite place is behind a wheel, heading somewhere.”

“The Lincoln Lawyer” opens in theaters on Friday, March 18.

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Madonna’s stalker arrested for breaking into her London home

March 15, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Damian Grass – Celebrity News Service Reporter

London, England, United Kingdom (CNS) – A man is behind bars after trying to break into pop singer Madonna’s mansion in London.

Police say 29-year-old Grzegorz Matlok was wrestled to the ground by bodyguards on Saturday while still clutching to several of the singer’s possessions, according to Contactmusic.

Bodyguards at the home told police that the man was a stalker who gained entry to the lavish townhouse by smashing a side window.

At the time of the break-in, Madonna and her children were reportedly in her hometown of Bay City, Michigan attending the funeral of her grandmother.

A senior police source told The Sun newspaper:

“Something dreadful has happened here,” a senior police source told The Sun newspaper. “The security around the world’s most famous pop star should be impregnable.”

This isn’t the first time the singer has been terrorized by a stalker.

Last September, a man was charged with criminal mischief, graffiti and being in a possession of a homemade ice pick, after writing messages to Madonna on the pavement outside her Upper West Side apartment in New York City.

Robert Linhart, a retired fire fighter, carved: “Meet me please, tell me yes or no, and if it’s yes, my dream will come true. If it’s no, I will go.”

According to court documents, he reportedly told officers: “I have a right to do this. I am not doing anything wrong. I keep running into Madonna. I saw her in 1992 and I’d actually like to meet her in person. I won’t stop until I actually meet Madonna.

“I’m going to go right back there and do it again.”

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Travel Insurance: The Revolution Won’t Be Covered

March 5, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

Most policies don’t cover things like Egypt’s unrest or New Zealand’s quake. They typically pay off if you get sick and need a flight home

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