Pro Fastpitch Opens Championships Tomorrow–NPF Gains Prominence as Olympics Ban

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WPCNR FASTPITCH NATION. From National Pro Fastpitch, Denver, Colorado. August 18, 2009 (EDITED):  On the heels of last week’s announcement from the IOC regarding their recommendation to not include softball on the 2016 slate, the National Pro Fastpitch League suddenly becomes a more important focus for the fastpitch softball community. Fans, players, manufacturers, and media outlets are all asking the question “What will become of softball at the highest level?” and wondering if the National Pro Fastpitch League has the wherewithal to step into the void that will inevitably be left by no further Olympic competition.


Cowles Cup Opening Ceremonies, August, 2004 Featuring the New York Juggernaut and The New England Riptide.

A WPCNR query to the United States Olympic Committee as well as USA Softball on whether the Committee would continue to fund the USA Softball International team efforts nationally in view of the International Olympic Competition Committee rejecting softball for the 2016 Olympics as well as the 2012 Olympics has not been responded to yet by the USOC.

“We are obviously all disappointed by the decision of the IOC to omit softball as a medal sport in Olympic competition. Knowing the enthusiasm that has been generated for this sport in the past 13 years on the coat-tails of Olympic softball, the disappointment is surely felt worldwide by athletes, fans, coaches, and organizations,” commented Cheri Kempf, NPF Commissioner and President.




 

 








Women’s fastpitch softball was first added as a full medal sport on the 1996 Olympic Games held in Atlanta, GA. Softball remained on the slate of summer sports through the next three Games set in Sydney Australia, Athens Greece, and Beijing China. The United States captured the Gold Medal in 1996, 2000 and 2004, but fell to Japan in 2008, taking silver instead of gold for the first time in history.

 

“We have seen the entire sport of fastpitch softball explode in this country especially once softball became an Olympic sport. There has been overwhelming support from colleges and Universities in not only adding the sport (for some) to their competition agendas, but also in the allocation of funding to support the programs, teams, and athletes. The Women’s College World Series is second in NCAA Championships only the Women’s Final Four in popularity,” stated Kempf. “That speaks volumes for our sport.”

 

Women’s Professional Fastpitch has existed in the United States on and off since the early 70’s. Professional competition has remained consistently for the last 12 years in some form and the NPF is currently on its 6th year of existence. The League currently has five teams that compete over a 40 game- 3 month regular season. The NPF Regular Season championship was just captured for the second year in a row by the Chicago Bandits. League play concludes in the coming week with the top 4 teams competing for the Championship Series Cowles Cup, which this year will be held in Akron Ohio at Firestone Stadium.

 

“I would like to see the support that was focused on the Olympic reinstatement be re-focused now that we know Olympic competition is no longer possible. There is absolutely no reason why women’s pro softball should not be an overwhelming success in the United States,” commented Kempf. “NPF proudly boasts the top athletes in the world. We have former Olympians that include Jennie Finch, Cat Osterman, and Crystl Bustos alongside NCAA superstars that include the likes of Angela Tincher, Megan Gibson and Caitlin Cochran. There’s no better fastpitch softball competition in the world than right here in the NPF.”

 

Former Gold and Silver Medalist, Crystl Bustos, retired from international competition following the 2008 Olympic Games to return to Akron Ohio to play for her former professional team. “Professional Fastpitch gave me my opportunity to be an Olympian. I was a pro before I was on the Olympic roster and it was important for me to return to Akron before retiring.” Bustos led the regular season in the top three offensive statistical categories of batting average, home runs, and RBI’s in 2009. “The competition in this League is much better than you will see with international teams and in international competition. The League has come a long way on that front,” said Bustos. “International play does not compete with what you are about to see in the NPF’s Championship Series.”

 

Two-time Olympic Gold Medalist and Silver Medalist in the most recent games, Cat Osterman, is a member of the Rockford Thunder. Osterman boasts a 11-1 record on the season helping to qualify her squad for the Series in Akron. “Obviously it’s sad for our sport that we are no longer included in what’s deemed the biggest sporting event internationally, but at the same time it gives us an opportunity to showcase other avenues to play post- college,” said Osterman.  “The NPF allows all of the top athletes an opportunity to continue to compete at the highest level, so hopefully now we can turn the focus to our pro league in order to help the sport continue to rise.”

 

“The biggest sporting events in the nation are the NFL Super Bowl and the MLB World Series. There is absolutely no reason why professional fastpitch softball should not be the platform for the highest level of competition in our sport. I am confident that the NPF has the structure in place to accomplish this and I urge softball supporters to put their enthusiasm behind the efforts of the NPF and professional fastpitch.” said Kempf.

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County Biz Icon, Reader’s Digest to File Bankruptcy, Restructure $1.6B Debt

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WPCNR DOLLAR DAILY. From Reader’s Digest News Release. (EDITED)  August 18, 2009: The Reader’s Digest Association, Inc. (RDA), a global multi-brand media and marketing company, based in Chappaqua, New York, announced Monday it has reached an agreement in principle with a majority of its senior secured lenders on the terms of a restructuring plan to significantly reduce its debt burden and strengthen the company financially for the future. The restructuring agreement provides that the company’s senior secured lenders will exchange a substantial portion of the company’s $1.6 billion in senior secured debt for equity and provides for a transfer of ownership of the company to the lender group.


Mary Berner, RDA’s President and Chief Executive Officer, said the company will continue to operate normally throughout the restructuring process. “This agreement in principle with our lenders follows months of intensive strategic review of our balance-sheet issues to financially strengthen the company,” she said. “We are gratified to have this support from our secured lender group. The company has strong brands and products, a leadership position in many markets around the world and a solid plan for the future. Restructuring our debt will enable us to have the financial flexibility to move ahead with our growth and transformational initiatives.”


The company has elected not to make a $27 million interest payment due today on its 9 percent Senior Subordinated Notes due 2017. Instead, the company is using the 30-day grace period available on the interest payment to continue discussions with its lender group and other stakeholders regarding the terms of final documentation and to gain additional support for the consensual de-leveraging transaction. Use of the 30-day grace period does not constitute a default that permits acceleration of the Senior Subordinated Notes or any other indebtedness. In addition, RDA continues to be in compliance with its financial covenants. The company’s business operations remain strong, with anticipated Fiscal 2009 revenue declines (not yet reported) in the low single digits, currency neutral, despite the global recession.


As part of the agreement in principle, RDA anticipates implementing the restructuring under court supervision through a voluntary pre-arranged filing under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, which it expects to complete on an expedited basis while operating business as usual. During the 30-day grace period, the company will seek further consensus among its lenders and other stakeholders in advance of such a filing to facilitate the completion of RDA’s restructuring objectives.


The agreement in principle includes a commitment from certain members of the senior lender group to provide $150 million in new money Debtor-in-Possession (DIP) financing, convertible into exit financing upon emergence, which the company expects will ensure sufficient liquidity during the reorganization process and beyond. In addition to providing RDA with the necessary capital to emerge from Chapter 11, the arrangement also establishes the substantive terms of the $550 million in debt that will remain on RDA’s balance sheet upon emergence, a 75 percent reduction from the current $2.2 billion in debt.


As a result of the agreement reached with a majority of the senior lenders, the company expects that, subject to court approval, the vast majority of its suppliers and vendors will recover in full under a Chapter 11 plan. The Chapter 11 filing will apply only to the company’s U.S. businesses — its operations in Canada, Latin America, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia-New Zealand will not be affected. RDA’s International operations are expected to have adequate funding based on continuing operations and access to proceeds from the DIP financing.


“We thank our sponsor Ripplewood Holdings, who has provided inspired vision and stewardship over the last two and a half years, including during this process,” added Chairperson Berner. In March 2007, Ripplewood led a consortium of investors in a transaction that resulted in the company’s acquisition. All of the members of the company’s Board of Directors who have served since the March 2007 acquisition, with the exception of Berner, have resigned from the company’s Board. The two recently appointed directors also continue to serve on the Board.

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One for the Tiger

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WPCNR View from the Clubhouse. By Bull Allen August 17, 2009: The headlines this morning out of windswept Chaska, Minnesota, disgust me, and once again distinguish the majority of the “professional” sports writing jury —the play writers out there – for their fickleness,  savagery, and glee they show in attacking great players when they are down.


 



Lake Placid Club. 2009


 





They love doing that.


 


Tiger Woods is being described as “blowing” the PGA Championship to Y. E. Yang, and in one article, a writer called Woods a “choker.”


 


Please. No choker wins 14 majors before age 35. No choker comes from behind in pain on one bad leg to win the U.S. Open as he did last year at Torrey Pines.


 


Tiger Woods is the greatest golfer of all time.


 


His comebacks have been legendary.


 


 He is the greatest competitor you will ever meet. He is a gentleman, despite his temper on the course (mostly directed at himself).  He never loses his will to win, unlike the sports writing hacks who never write a guts column which might take them off the suck-up express. He fights to the last shot.


 


These are the same “reporters” who never reported steroid use, never report womanizing  or hom0sexuality in the NFL by athletes and never had to make a play in a big spot, never have  their writing dissected by fans on whether they should have used an adjective there or asked this question or that, and they never write a big story that will take them off the press box buffet.


 


Could we write something about Mr.Yang and the incredible round he shot yesterday? That, at age 37, he has put Asian golf on the map?


 


The vast majority of writers are not concentrating on Mr. Yang’s wind game. How was he able to master the howling gusts of Hazeltine? Was it his clubs? Let’s concentrate on why Yang won, and not dismiss the Yang triumph by saying Mr.Woods lost it.


 


Also, could we have the courtesy to tell everybody the first two names of Mr. Yang in reporting who won the PGA Championship. (For the record, The Times reported Tuesday his full name is Yong-eun Yang. Took them long enough, didn’t it?)


 


Mr. Yang won the PGA  with a guts-ball shot on eighteen, when he fired away at the green giving it all he had, risking flying the green and the win, because he knew who he was playing. An iron into the green with the lead is going for the clincher, not playing it safe.


 


Yang won the way a big time golf tournament is always won. The Yang shot will take its place with Tom Watson’s chip-in on 18 at Pebble Beach, and Tiger’s own 12 foot putt for birdie to force a playoff at Torrey Pines.


 


Mr. Woods about a year after his catastrophic knee surgery has already won a couple of tournaments this year.. When Ben Hogan recovered from his auto accident in 1951, (far more serious, admittedly), it took him 3 years to recover. Woods, through his sheer force of will is still getting back his game. 


 


Woods practices very hard. So does Mr. Yang.  He plays to win every tournament. He essentially is still getting back his game. He had a day when nothing dropped for him, just as great pitchers sometimes find their stuff is not working for them.


 


To Mr. Woods’ credit, though severely disappointed in his own performance, he came out for the news conference, when I am sure he wanted to head straight to the airport. It was a horrible day for him.


 


The PGA Tour is nothing without Tiger Woods, and they need him more than ever. He is the standard. He is the only player on the tour, who playing on one leg last year, kept winning consistently. And, you know what, Woods never used his leg as an excuse for not winning last year. Unlike some super stars who make excuses all the time.


How consistent has The Tiger been in a game where you make so much money every week, you don’t have to win every week?


 



  1. Woods has won 70 official PGA Tour events, third all time behind Sam Snead and Jack Nicklaus.
  2. Woods has won 14 majors, second all time, behind Jack Nicklaus.
  3. Woods is 14-1 when going into the final round of a major with at least a share of the lead.
  4. Woods owns the lowest career scoring average and the most career earnings of any player in PGA Tour history.
  5. Woods is one of five players (along with Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, and Gary Player) to have won all four professional major championships in his career, known as the Career Grand Slam, and was the youngest to do so.[1]
  6. Woods is the only player to have won all four professional major championships in a row, accomplishing the feat in the 2000-2001 seasons. This feat became known as the “Tiger Slam”.
  7. Woods set the all-time record for most consecutive cuts made, with 142. The streak started in 1998, he set the record at the 2003 Tour Championship with 114 (passing Byron Nelson‘s previous record of 113) and extended this mark to 142 before it ended on May 13, 2005 at the EDS Byron Nelson Championship. Many consider this to be one of the most remarkable golf accomplishments of all time, given the margin by which he broke the old record (and against stronger fields in terms of depth than those in Nelson’s day) and given that during the streak, the next longest streak by any other player was usually only in the 10s or 20s.[2][3][4][5]
  8. Woods has won a record 30% (70 out of 234) of his professional starts on the PGA Tour

For any writer to say Tiger Woods chokes, well, that writer would be back covering curling if I were the editor.


 


This year, coming back from injury, Mr. Woods still works harder, and plays consistently better than any one else.  Over the weekend we had a cluster of big names who could not shoot par – “good guys who have not won,” that the sportswriting  fraternity loves to write up about as deserving of winning and wants sentimental favorites to win. They think Tiger is boring. Tiger wins because he works hard at his game, and at the same time is by all reports a model father.


 


He doesn’t carry illegal guns into night clubs. He doesn’t pick up strippers and take them back to his team hotel. He does not go on the Disabled List with a twinge in his thigh. He doesn’t do drugs. He carries himself with a maturity beyond his years and you’d be mad, too, if you did not meet your own standards set as high as Tiger sets his. He’s just too good. We love it when underdogs win. It is how the champions react to disappointment that set them apart.


 


 What happened with those “every man” heroes at Hazeltine the sports writers love ? If Tiger was playing so badly, how come they were way down? If Tiger “choked,” those other good guys the sportswriters love, gagged big time.


 


Woods was in it, despite having a bad day,  to the 272nd hole, and it took a   Yang clincher miracle guts approach to beat him. Yang earned it.


 


Mr. Yang can look back on this day as the beginning of a path to greatness, should he choose to take it.


 


Woods is a proud person. A man who when he fails, does not like the taste of it and he takes personal responsibility for it and has the guts to apply himself to make himself better.


 


Next year, Mr. Woods will set himself a goal of winning all the majors – the Grand Slam – to make up for lost time in this, his comeback year—which would tie him with The Golden Bear – another great competitor who also did not like to lose often.


 


Mr. Woods should not attend news conferences in the future considering the vile stuff being written about his performance today by the “sporting press” who are anything but sporting.


 


But he will attend them..


 


Because he has class.


 


Class is something the national sportswriting contingent does not know anything about – because the majority of them do not have it.


 


Mr. Woods, though most likely will be practicing today.

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Hockley to File Signatures to Contend for Mayor Tues. Bradley Fund-Raises.

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN2009. August 17, 2009: Councilman Glen Hockley who has been seen gathering signatures on petitions around the city by himself extensively the last few weeks told WPCNR Monday he is planning on filing petitions to run as an independent candidate for Mayor of White Plains on Tuesday. Mr. Hockley declined to say whether he had an “excess” of signatures (1,000 are needed from registered voters), that he was planning on filing with the Board of Elections in White Plains.


 



Glen Hockley, Councilman, announcing his candidacy for Mayor  (opposing Adam Bradley) in June as an independent candidate.


 


Meanwhile, (on another side of town) the frontrunner in the campaign for Mayor, Adam Bradley, continues to fundraise. An invitation to a so-called “Insiders Briefing from Assemblyman Adam Bradley” is being circulated to e-mail on his behalf by the former resident of White Plains, Jeffrey Binder and Paul Noto of  “The Strategic Politic Group for the Bradley Campaign.” The briefing costs $150 per person and will be held September 23 at the home of Karen and Ted Sewitch on Hillair Circle.


Bradley has all five lines on the November ballot: Democrat, Republican, Working Families, Conservative, Independence, but apparently is taking nothing for granted. Mr. Bradley’s Friends of Adam Bradley campaign fund related to his assembly office has  90,223 in its coffers as of July 31, and his other campaign fund, Adam Bradley for White Plains has $149,420.67 in it as of July 31, for a grand total of $239,643.67.


 



 


Jeffrey Binder, who runs the Strategic Planning Group for the Bradley Campaign, voting in 2003, when he ran for Common Council on the Republican line.


 


Binder also represented Councilman Larry Delgado in opposing Glen Hockley’s election to the Common Council (enabled, in part, due to a jammed voting machine in the 2001 election. In that lengthy progression of legal meaneuvers that led to the New York State Court of Appeals which ruled in favor of Mr. Hockley, Mr. Binder’s opposing counsel representing Hockley was Adam Bradley. Now Mr. Binder is supporting Mr. Bradley in his run for Mayor.


 


The Strategic Political Group for the Bradley Campaign has not filed any campaign reports that WPCNR could find on the Board of Elections website. Jeffrey Binder, White Plains political observers may recall ran for Common Council on the Republican Ticket in 2003 with Timothy Sheehan, and since then Mr. Binder has changed his political affiliation to Democratic, to the extent he is now co-chairing a political action committee for Mr. Bradley, apparently. Binder is associated with Jeffrey M. Binder & Associates, P.C. in White Plains.


 


Mayor Joseph Delfino, the current Mayor of  White Plains who announced he was not running for a fourth term in the spring of this year, still maintains a Friends of Joe Delfino campaign fund that contains $106,644.96 as of July 31, 2009. The Mayor by Board of Elections rules, may  keep this money and not return it to contributors as long as it is used for political or charitable purposes, and not diverted to personal use. The Mayor has to date, not indicated he plans to use the money to fund Republican candidates for Common Council or Mr. Hockley, should Mr. Hockley get on the November ballot.


 



 


 


 


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Worker Files Discrimination Suit Against City for Tolerating Racial Harassment

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW. From News Reports. August 14: Clarence Thrower, an employee of the White Plains Department of Public Works has filed a federal law suit in U.S. District Court against the City of White Plains in which he alleges the city allowed “severe and pervasive racial taunting” directed at him.  The suit alleges a pattern of harassment against him was allowed to exist by the city, that included racial slurs allegedly cast at him “regularly” by a foreman. The forms of harassment included  racial effigies displayed in the workplace and pranks directed at him and two colleagues supporting Thrower in complaining about Thrower’s  treatment by the foreman to supervisors in the Department of Public Works. The suit filed Monday does not request a specific sum of damages Mr. Thrower seeks.

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Nita Lowey On the Need for Health Care Reform

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By U.S.Congresswoman Nita Lowey, 18th Congressional District. August 14, 2009: In recent months, over 13,000 residents in New York’s 18th Congressional district have contacted my office, participated in telephone town halls, or shared thoughts via my website regarding health care reform. I hope that through continued public dialogue on this incredibly sensitive issue in the coming weeks, all Americans will gain confidence that reform will improve the health, well-being, and financial security of families, businesses, and our economy.  


 


Supporters and opponents of the House proposal are united in one notable way – concern about the serious impact of Congress’ action on cost, quality, and choice in our health care system.


 Consider for a moment the price we are already paying for health care that is failing millions of Americans.


·       Personal premiums doubled since 2000, consuming 17% of median family incomes. 


·       Care for 47 million uninsured greatly increases costs for taxpayers and the insured. 


·       In 2007, 60% of U.S. bankruptcies resulted from medical costs.


 Without reform, over the next 10 years:


·        the U.S. is expected to spend nearly $33 trillion on health care; 


·        a family health insurance plan will cost an estimated $24,000 per year, nearly half of household income;


·        The number of uninsured will swell to 66 million, 11 million of whom will lose employer-sponsored health care; and


·        Insurance companies will continue to deny coverage or charge higher premiums for those who need catastrophic care, have pre-existing conditions or are simply more likely to need health care based on gender or age.


 The centerpiece of the House health reform proposal is an insurance Exchange in which uninsured individuals — and ultimately businesses – could purchase insurance from private insurers or a public plan.  These plans are designed to provide competitive rates, benefits similar to those of Members of Congress and federal employees, and protections from denials of coverage or care when patients need it most. Low-income individuals and small businesses would receive tax credits or subsidies to buy into the Exchange.


 In Westchester and Rockland Counties, 22,100 small businesses could receive tax credits to provide coverage to their employees; 8,800 seniors would avoid high out-of-pocket drug costs in the Medicare Part D ‘donut hole;’ 460 families could escape health care-related bankruptcies; 53,000 uninsured individuals would gain access to care; and health care providers would be paid fairly for the services they deliver.


 Unfortunately these and other benefits in this bill have been overshadowed by escalating rhetoric in this debate, particularly regarding misconceptions about the proposal.


·        For example, employers and those with insurance will not be forced to change plans but could find better, more affordable plans over time through the Exchange.


·        Medicare benefits would remain unchanged, except for elimination of the Medicare Part D ‘donut hole.’


·        Older Americans will not be required to receive counseling about end-of-life care, but Medicare would cover the service for the first time. 


·        Reform would actually stop “rationing” by insurance companies, giving patients and doctors control of the care patients receive and protecting patients from denials for coverage.


·        Finally, the government would not “socialize” medicine. In fact, private insurance would be offered through the Exchange to give consumers more affordable choices that include coverage standards to protect patients.


 An open and respectful dialogue is essential for Americans to learn about health care proposals and for my office to address your concerns. Until Congress votes in September, I will continue this discussion through meetings with constituents; roundtables with various groups like seniors, doctors, businesses, and disability advocates; telephone town halls; and updated information and polls on my website so that you can voice your opinion and get the facts on reform.


 The status quo is simply unacceptable for our economy and for the financial security of families and businesses held hostage by insurance companies. I look forward to working constructively with residents of the 18th district and my colleagues in Congress to pass reform that contains costs, preserves choices, and improves health care for every American.


 


 

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Journal News Cuts 50 Newsroom Jobs. 20 Ad Jobs. Rehire Some. Cites $$$ Drain

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WPCNR MONEYWIRE. August 13,2009: The Journal News announced yesterday in a meeting with their news staff it was cutting 50 jobs from the 195-person news operation at the Westchester-Rockland newspaper, and an additional 20 persons from the paper advertising staff.


 


Fisch, the publisher,  in the Journal News article that can be found on page  8C of the Thursday Business Section in the back of the  Sports section said revenues of the paper had dropped 30 to 35% in the last year. He said the company had been planning such a reorganization “for a while now.”


 


Those being let go have until Friday to reapply for positions with the “new” Journal News that have been “recast” (as the paper describes them) to “accommodate the industry’s greater digital emphasis.” Publisher Michael Fisch announced the layoffs to the newsroom in person Wednesday afternoon. Last week, the paper reported today,  it had eliminated 57 other positions in production areas.


 



Journal News reported its layoffs in the newsroom Thursday morning.


 


Sources speaking on condition of anonymity told WPCNR that the news layoffs were pitting friends against friends for the remaining jobs. The staff asked extensive questions about the paper’s future format but were not told what editorial changes were being contemplated as to content, appearance and news assignments the paper would be making in the weeks ahead.


 


The laid off  news personnel expect to learn whether or not they have been rehired by August 28. There is a rumor that the Poughkeepsie and Westchester offices might merge. One source said they could not see how the news coverage would be improved by cutting the news staff, and predicted less local news and more regional stories. Morale, our source reported is low among members of the news-gathering staff.


 


 

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Lowey Meets with Victims of Broken Health Care System. Notes What’s Wrong.

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WPCNR WASHINGTON WIRE. From the Office of  Congresswoman Nita Lowey. August 13, 2009: Congresswoman Nita Lowey (D-Westchester/Rockland) today hosted a roundtable meeting of Westchester County residents who have personally dealt with the difficulties of accessing affordable health care or have been denied care by insurance companies.  Lowey also detailed the urgency of health insurance reform and the benefits this reform would bring to New York.


“Families and individuals across the nation – and right here in Westchester County – have real difficulties accessing affordable health insurance,” said Lowey.  “Even those who are insured may be arbitrarily denied necessary treatment if it will hurt the insurance company’s bottom line.  I am working to ensure health insurance reform moving through Congress makes care more affordable for individuals and families and ends egregious practices that put care out of reach for those who need it.


Although the legislative process is ongoing,  she said the health insurance reform legislation taking shape in the House of Representatives would benefit Westchester and Rockland Counties the following ways:



  • 22,100 small businesses could receive tax credits to provide coverage to their employees;


  • 8,800 seniors would avoid the donut hole in Medicare Part D;
  • 460 families could escape bankruptcy each year due to unaffordable health care costs;
  • 53,000 uninsured individuals would gain high-quality, affordable health insurance; and
  • Health care providers would be paid for $147 million in uncompensated care each year.

 


 


 Evidence of the crisis in our health care system is clear:



  • Since 2000, personal premiums have more than doubled, now consuming 17% of the median family’s income.
  • 47 million uninsured often forgo preventive care and rely on hospital emergency rooms for primary care, increasing costs for all taxpayers including those with insurance.

 In 2008, the average individual spent $4,704 per year on health insurance premiums and the average family spent $12,680.


 Without reform, these trends will get worse.



  • The cost of a family health insurance plan will increase to an estimated $24,000 per year in 2019, approximately 45% of household income.
  • The number of uninsured will reach 66 million – including 11 million who will lose employer-sponsored health care – raising costs for all.

 Some individuals may be denied insurance coverage if they have a pre-existing condition. Others who have access to employer-sponsored health insurance or who can afford a family or individual policy may have their policy dropped if they become ill, or may be denied coverage or necessary treatments.


 Health insurance reform will make it possible to switch jobs without worrying whether your new employer offers coverage.  You can get sick without facing the prospect of higher premiums.  There would be no exorbitant out-of-pocket costs or lifetime limits on benefits that can lead to medical bankruptcy.  And expanding coverage to those without insurance will mean lower premiums for the insured than you would see otherwise.


 

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The Lowey Dialogue Continues

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WPCNR WASHINGTON WIRE. August 13, 2009: WPCNR continues its exclusive coverage of the first Telephone Town Meeting Congresswoman Nita Lowey of the 18th Congressional District held involving over 4,000 phone-in residents of the county Tueday evening. In the this second half of the meeting, the Congresswoman calls for cutting profits of insurance companies  and pharmaceutical companies to finance a major portion of the health care plan; she outlines how the House of Representatives Health Care Bill aids small business to afford health care plans, and goes on record as saying neither Medicare Advantage nor Medicare benefits are going to be cut. She also assures that mental health care will be required as part of any health plans going forward should the bill pass. We return now to the WPCNR record of the call:


Lowey expanded on her answer to Bryron of Larchmont, predicting dire consequences if health care reform was not addressed now:


 


“Addressing this crisis is not going to be cheap, but the cost of inaction is far worse. The U.S. currently spends 2.4 Trillion dollars a year on health care. Without reform, and at the pace we’re going, we could spend 33 Trillion in health care over the next decade which would threaten our economy as rising health cost results in millions of families losing jobs and insurance. I’m concerned about the costs, too. The President guarantees us it won’t increase the deficit. We really have to go after a lot of the waste.”


 


The moderator relayed a question on many phoner-ins’ minds, have members of congress read the bill? Lowey said, yes:


 


“You should have been with us at one of the caucuses. 7 hours straight. I flew down to Washington. We had a teach-in for members of congress. We all had the bills. We had  about a half dozen of the experts. We went through the bill section by section. And, we are closely monitoring ongoing changes to the bill in the committees of jurisdiction  and in ongoing negotiations on the bill. In addition, members of the House Democratic Caucus are continuing to review the bill, and my staff is working very hard on it. And we have a guarantee that the members (of the House) will have 72 hours to review the final bill, including any changes before floor consideration…I am very much up on it…I need all the advice I can get. If you have any questions just call us we’ll be happy to answer.”


 


Doug of Rye asked  “Why are you trying to run this by us? (when recent polls say Americans don’t want it and are happy with present plans):


 


Lowey replied, “If you have a plan you’re happy with. That’s terrific. But if you look at it, since 2000, personal premiums have more than doubled. A group of business people (large, small, medium-sized) met with me two weeks ago. When I said they (the premiums) had doubled, they said, are you kidding? They’ve all gone up 73% and many of them pay a hundred per cent for their employees.  So  since 1967, the cost of an average family health insurance policy has risen from 7% of median family income to 17%. And if you look at the bankruptcies, 60% of all U.S. bankruptcies were due to medical costs. …if you’re happy with your premiums, your health care, if you don’t mind the insurance companies raising the premiums. Keep it. No one is telling you you have to participate here. If you’re happy, you’ll be able to keep exactly what you have.”


 


Corey in White Plains phoned in  concerned the health bill would clandestinely fund abortions. Lowey allayed that fear: “abortion isn’t mentioned once in the bill. No taxpayer now pays for abortion.”


 


Christiana in White Plains, called in saying she had lost her job and did not have medical coverage as a result, “Why can’t I get any coverage here from the government. Is there anything in the bill that addresses this issue?”


 


Lowey said the bill would make this possible: “Sure. You would be able to go to the exchange and get an affordable plan with benefits comparable to members of congress, and tax credits would be available for individuals with incomes up to about $88,000 for a family of four.” She invited Christiana to come into her office in White Plains.


 


POLL 2: How Phone-Callers Felt on Health Plan Financing


 


The Moderator than took the opportunity  to conduct a poll on how the telephone phone-in audience felt on how the health care plan should be financed.


 


The choices were, Do You Believe the Health Care Plan Should Be Financed by


 


1.Taxing those with incomes over $1 Million a year


 


2.Taxing Insurance Companies on their profits.


 


3. Individuals should be taxed on their health benefits.


 


4. By eliminating inefficiencies and waste in the health care system.


 


or


 


5. Taxing junk food, alcohol and tobacco.


 


The results from the over 4,000 callers on the call-in were:


 


The majority, 37% felt the program should be paid for by eliminating waste and inefficiency in the health care system.


 


A  total of 24%  felt insurance companies should be taxed more on their profits.


 


Only 19% felt junk food, alcohol and tobacco should be taxed.


 


 


A total of 16% of callers on the phone-in felt the program should tax persons with incomes over $1 Million a year.


 


Only 4% felt individuals should have their health care benefits taxed.


 


 


Lowey’s comment on this was, “There is no question that we have to squeeze savings out of the insurance companies and pharmaceutical questions. “


 


The moderator followed with a consensus question from the callers about whether their Medicare benefits would be cut.


 


Lowey responded, “ First, the vast majority enrolled in traditional Medicare will not see their benefits cut. Seniors who are chronically ill and use a lot of prescription drugs will really see significant savings on their medication. The pharmaceutical industry has agreed to pay 50% of the cost of drugs stuck in the donut hole, where they currently must pay 100% of their costs (when the current year benefits run out). Furthermore the house bill will gradually eliminate the donut hole entirely.”


 


She said Medicare is one of the most successful government health inititatives in the nation’s history and she is committed to preserving stability in affordable benefits. “For those that say I don’t want a government-run program. Medicare is a government-run program, and I don’t know any seniors that want to give up or cut out Medicare. It is a rumor that Medicare benefits will be cut or eliminated entirely.”


 


Geri in Dobbs Ferry asked “What do you think about this bill in terms of procedures that need to be done. Am I going to have some person tell me, no, I can’t have a procedure done, will I have  to wait forever to have surgery?”


 


Lowey said, “ If you came in here (to my office) and talked to my staff, you’d see how much rationing is going on right now. The insurance company will say no before they ever say yes.  The truth is what many people consider rationing already happens with some insurance plans.


              There’s no insurance public or private that covers everything at any price. But many insurance companies limit drug formularies that the patient’s doctor may feel he or she needs, but instead of allowing  insurance company bureaucrats make those decisions based on the bottom line, not what treatment is most appropriate, the house proposal would support research to determine which treatments are best, but would not force doctors to use them….patients will still be able to  obtain further tests, treatments, or medications, but by pursuing the most effective treatments first, patients can be treated more efficiently and  effectively.”


 


Small Business Effects


 


Heidi from Yonkers, a small business owner asked if they would be required to offer and pay benefits for their employers.


 


Lowey said, “Small businesses will be among the greatest beneficiares of comprehensive health care reform. ….by making individual, family and ultimately employer provided plans more affordable through a health insurance exchange, health care reform will relieve businesses of an impossible choice: providing unaffordable insurance, or leaving employees uninsured and losing employees altogether.  The bill will also provide tax credits to tens of thousands of small businesses of New York’s 18th district to help provide health care benefits to their employees. The (tax) credits   are calculated are based on number of employees and average salary. Business who fail to provide health care to their employees even with affordable rates and tax credits,  will be required to pay a fee equal to a very small percentage of a business payroll to support the exchange from which employees will likely seek coverage.


          I supported the updated proposal to insure this fee does not hurt the small businesses, who are the backbone of our economy. You’re not going to have to do anything unless your payroll is over $500,000.”


 


 


Neil in New City was next up, a mental health provider, asked the bill’s effect on mental health coverage. Lowey said the bill would require insurance companies to cover mental health services as a standard benefit.


 


Estelle in New City asked about Medicare Advantage….Lowey said, the house proposal does not eliminate Medicare Advantage for most seniors. “Right now the government”  she said “pays $177 Billion over ten years to insurance companies to participate in Medicare Avantage. Insurance companies already making tens of billions in exhorbitant profits should not be subsidized in my judgment. That’s the kind of savings we need to strengthen the health care system overall.By using these unnecessary subsidies in other areas of health care we can bolster benefits for seniors and increase the longterms solvency by at least five years.”


 


Supports Eliminating Insurance Companies exemption from anti-trust laws:


“We’re seeing collusion everywhere in the insurance industry.”


 


Paul from Chappaqua asked, why isn’t congress removing the anti-trust exemption the insurance companies now operate under, “Is that exemption going to be removed?”


 


“ President of hospitals can’t talk to each other because they’ll accused of collusion. But we’re seeing collusion everywhere in the insurance industry, and to me there is no reason why we shouldn’t repeal it, other than that they’ve had too influence in the congress and I think it’s outrageous. McCarren-Ferguson should be repealed.”


 


On the poll results on financing, Lowey commented that “We have to take as much as we can from the insurance industry. Also, the pharmaceutical companies they keep going up and up. And there is so much fraud in Medicare, and we really have to go after the fraud in Medicare.”


 


Health Care Now Vital Part of Keeping Economic Recovery Going


 


Andy from Scarsdale asked, why not spend the time to do it right instead of rushing the matter.


 


Lowey said, “some of us may remember the Hillary Clinton health care proposal. If we don’t do anything, it will cost $33 Trillion. Health care reform is a critical part of our economic recovery. If we don’t act soon,  there’s a real concern that skyrocketing health costs will get worse  for the families and businesses…health care costs are hitting taxpayers hard and putting our nation deeper into debt. The cost of inaction is too great.


 


        Lowey said how she does supermarket visits during the year and that this (health care costs) comes up all the time: “People worry. They lose a job How are they going to pay for their insurance. This bill may not be perfect, but unfortunately there are too many people who just want it to fail. They’re just saying no, no, no.  I’d like to see a good bipartisan bill. The main responseto your question, is this the right time. Everyone I speak with, especially in the business community, health care reform is a critical part of our economic recovery.”


 


Ms. Lowey then wrapped up the one-hour conference call.

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Les Paul, Pop Master of the 50s, Inventor of Electric Guitar Departs This Life

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WPCNR MILESTONES. August 13,2009: Les Paul, who with his partner, Mary Ford, invented and popularized the twangy expressive new sound of an instrument he invented — the electric guitar — died today in White Plains Hospital of pneumonia at 94 years of age, but his and Mary Ford’s  recordings will live forever.



Les Paul, right, and his sweetheart of song, Mary Ford. They combined Mr. Paul’s virtuoso electric guitar sound with Ms. Ford’s delightful mellowtone on Tennessee Waltz, Vaya Con Dios, Mockin’ Bird Hill and I’m Confessing, Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart, Mister Sandman.


Paul was given his first guitar by his mother and learned to play guitar in the army.He was inspired by the original Singing Cowboy, the great Gene Autry, who also mentored Les.  Mr. Paul  began his musical career playing for Fred Waring and Bing Crosby. He invented the solid-body amplified electric guitar and pioneered multi-track recording to create the unique, finger-snapping, Les Paul and Mary Ford sound.

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