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Will County seeks alternatives to jail

Will County seeks alternatives to jail

To reduce jail time for offenders who suffer with mental illness or are non-violent, Will County officials are exploring a number of options.
In an effort to reduce the number of incarcerated people with mental illnesses, Will County plans to participate in a “Stepping Up” initiative with the National Association of Counties (NACO), part of a national program to address this issue.
The county board’s judicial committee passed a resolution at its Tuesday meeting, which noted that adults with mental illness tend to stay longer in jail, have a higher risk of recidivism, and 75 percent also have substance abuse disorders.
The county has had some success by referring people to its drug and mental health court programs, which tries to keep them out of jail by voluntarily participating in treatment programs.

The Stepping Up initiative will allow the county to share information and resources with other counties, it was noted.
Through this program, the county will be able to:
•Draw on leaders from multiple agencies who are committed to safely reducing the number of people with mental illness in jails.
•Assess individual needs to better identify adults as they enter jail.
•Determine what services and programs are available and identify policy and funding barriers.
•Develop a plan with measurable outcomes.
•Implement research-based approaches.

•Create a process to track and report on progress.
To help reduce the number of non-violent offenders in the jail, judicial committee chairman Darren Bennefield, R-Aurora, said he plans to invite firms that supply monitoring bracelets to non-violent offenders to the July meeting, and talk to officials at other jails that have implemented this technology.
Officials said they need to know the cost of a monitoring program, establish criteria for who would qualify, and determine how many current inmates would be eligible.
Warden Brad Josephson said it now costs $97 per day to house an inmate. He told the committee that offenders pay for bracelets and the company provides monitoring.
The county sheriff would receive an alarm alert if there was a problem, and would send a deputy to investigate.
“There are numerous false alarms,” he said.
Board member Steve Balich, R-Homer Township, said keeping people in jail comes at a cost to society, if they lose their jobs, require public assistance, or turn to crime.
Board members said the monitoring program should result in a significant savings to the county, and not require additional personnel.
In a related matter, it was announced that the county will receive an allocation of $335,500 from the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts (AOIC), to enhance the services of its specialty courts, for drug offenders, veterans and those offenders with mental illnesses.

Rep. Batinick talks "Springfield"

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Mark Batinick
Anyone tuned into Illinois politics knows that the General Assembly adjourned its regular Session May 31 without passing a budget. Illinois has been without a budget since July 1st of last year. That means we are about to enter our second fiscal year without a comprehensive fiscal plan. At this time there is a constant push for “stop-gap” budgets, in which six-month budgets are drawn to allow us to keep kicking the can down the road, and pay those in need in time. This is not what Illinois needs. This State needs a full budget along with long-term solutions to the problems that ail it.
For the better part of the last eight years the State of Illinois has been careening from crisis to crisis. We had a tax increase that expired with no plan on how to shrink the size and cost of government. We had pension reform that was ruled unconstitutional by Illinois’ Supreme Court. We have failed to address the business climate that is seeing jobs leave the state. We have passed dishonest budgets, and we’ve always kicked the can down the road and made terrific groups and individuals wait for their due funding.
Our job in Springfield is to be good stewards of the State of Illinois. We have some of the greatest natural and man-made resources in the country, and the only thing holding us back is a handful of people unable to put policy ahead of political games. The worst part of the budget crisis is the uncertainty it creates for so many individuals. Planning becomes difficult, costs increase. This is true for individuals, businesses, and non-profits. Everyone operating in and/or with the state is affected by the uncertainty. When social service providers are unsure about funding, they are unsure about making all financial decisions. Should they extend a lease? Hire a new qualified person? Lay someone off? Etc. Also, the vendors that work for the state are up-charging us because they must wait so long to be paid, which means that we are paying MORE for LESS services. Providing certainty would allow us to do the opposite. And when we must push for emergency stop-gap budgets, they only guarantee more uncertainty for at least the next six months.
The budget impasse has been going on for a year and a half. It’s time for a balanced budget. It’s time to address our unfavorable job climate. It’s time for students to have faith in our Higher Education system again. It’s time for social services to have certainty in their funding. It’s time for the state to address its inefficient ways of providing government service. A six month budget is not the final solution. The people of Illinois shouldn’t have to wait another day for a full-year budget solution.
Knowing this, since the budget impasse began I have stated that Members of the Illinois General Assembly should go without pay until the budget impasse is ended. I want more comprehensive solutions for Illinois, and less notorious political games. Feel free to head over to www.nobudgetnopayil.com to sign my petition which makes it clear that legislators shouldn’t be paid until they pass a balanced budget.
UPCOMING FAIRS
Please mark your calendar for my three upcoming Fairs! These Fairs help me stay in tune with District 97, and add to my office’s service to its constituents.
FRIDAY, JUNE 17 9AM to 12:00PM – SENIOR FAIR at St. Mary’s Immaculate Parish. The Senior Fair will involve many state, county, local and health organizations to help constituents with any concerns. Free refreshments, and a Shred Truck to dispose of unwanted paper, will be on hand.
SATURDAY, JUNE 18  9AM to 12:30PM – KIDS FAIR at Plainfield Central High School. The Kids Fair will involve a Reptile Show, a Touch-a-Truck Exhibit with over 25 exciting vehicles for the kids to see, touch and sit in, and a LIFESTAR helicopter will be at the Fair from 9:30am-11:30am. Over 40 area vendors will be on hand. Demonstrations will include dances by DanceQuest of Plainfield (9:30am), and the YMCA Dance Ensemble (10:00am), the Reptile Show (10:30am), Martial Arts of America (Noon), and a drawing for give aways (12:30pm).
SATURDAY, JUNE 25 9AM to 12:30PM – JOBS FAIR. I will be having a Jobs Fair at Minooka Central High School from 9:30am-12:30pm. Many local employers will attend, and there will be workshops on resumes, interviewing, and mastering your job search.
Hope to see you this Summer!
Mark Batinick
Mark Batinick
http://repbatinick.com

Russian Government Hacks DNC Server

BREAKING: Russian Government Hacks DNC Server


Russian government hackers penetrated the computer network of the Democratic National Committee and gained access to the entire database of opposition research on GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, according to committee officials and security experts who responded to the breach.
The intruders so thoroughly compromised the DNC’s system that they also were able to read all email and chat traffic, said DNC officials and the security experts.
The intrusion into the DNC was one of several targeting American political organizations. The networks of presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were also targeted by Russian spies, as were the computers of some GOP political action committees, U.S. officials said. But details on those cases were not available.

Source: Washington Post

Tags: Issues: #TrumpTrain; Categories:

Read more at http://americanactionnews.com/articles/trump-dnc#V5tmKiX37fVrBwXs.99

1968 Riots in Chicago, SDS, Weather Under Ground Black Panthers / Videos

We lived through turbulent times in the past. Things have a ways to go before they get like this again. It was a time of anger, Hatred of America, anti traditional life glorified.
 
After Martin Luther Kings murder
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B68dx-JXFVWwUXBRWlRmZWg0U1E/view

 

 

 




 









More Young Americans 18-34 Are Living At Home Than Anytime Since Great Depression

May 25, 2016   Jonathon Low

More Young Americans 18-34 Are Living At Home Than Anytime Since Great Depression

And more are likely to live with their parents versus any other possible rooming situation since the 1880s when records were first kept.
And analysts wonder why the electorate seems so frustrated? JL  
Camila Domonoske reports in Pew Research:

Male unemployment has been on the rise for decades. (And) for young men  inflation-adjusted wages have been falling since 1970. American men ages 18-34 live with their parents 35 percent of the time, and with a spouse or partner 28 percent of the time. For women, the numbers are reversed; 35 percent live with a partner, while 29 percent live with their parents.
Americans ages 18-34 are more likely to live with their parents than in any other living situation, according to a new analysis by the Pew Research Center.
In that age group, 32.1 percent of people live in their parents’ house, while 31.6 live with a spouse or partner in their own homes and 14 percent live alone, as single parents or in a home with roommates or renters. The rest live with another family member, a nonfamily member or in group-living situations such as a college dorm or prison.

"Alone/head of household" includes single parents and people who have roommates or renters living with them; "other" includes those living with family members (not parents), with nonfamily members or in group housing.
“Alone/head of household” includes single parents and people who have roommates or renters living with them; “other” includes those living with family members (not parents), with nonfamily members or in group housing.

Pew notes that this is not a record high percentage for the number of young people living at home — in 1940, for instance, approximately 35 percent of people in that age range lived at home.
But back then, living with a spouse or partner was even more popular than that. Today not so: More people choose an alternative living situation, and out of the crowded field of choices, life with Mom and/or Dad has become the top pick for millennials.
Well — some millennials. Men, for starters.
American men ages 18-34 live with their parents 35 percent of the time, and with a spouse or partner 28 percent of the time. For women, the numbers are nearly reversed; 35 percent live with a partner, while 29 percent live with their parents.

Less educated young adults are also more likely to live with their parents than are their college-educated counterparts — no surprise, Pew notes, given the financial prospects in today’s economy.
Black and Hispanic young people, compared with white people, are in the same situation.
For black people in particular, the “new” milestone isn’t so new at all. Black young adults have been more likely to live with their parents than in any other situation since 1980. Today, 36 percent of black millennials live with their parents, while 17 percent live with a spouse or partner.
Meanwhile, taken as a whole, women, white people, Asian/Pacific Islanders and people with bachelor’s degrees are still more likely to live with spouses or partners than with their parents.
But the overall trend is the same for every demographic group — living with parents is increasingly common.

(Young Americans are still less likely to live with their parents than their southern European friends. In Macedonia, more than 70 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds reportedly live at home, Pew says.)
For many millennials, Pew’s conclusions might seem both unsurprising and easy to explain: The Great Recession happened, of course!
But the rise in the number of young adults living at home started before the economic crash — and so did the possible contributing factors. Male unemployment has been on the rise for decades, Pew says. Even those who have jobs are making less than they would have in their parents’ day — for young men, Pew notes, inflation-adjusted wages have been falling since 1970.
And then fewer young people are married than in decades past. Even accounting for the increased popularity of cohabitation, there are just fewer paired-up 20-somethings and 30-somethings than there used to be.
In general, the study shows how dramatically the living situations of 18- to 34-year-olds have changed since 1880, when the data begin.
Living alone, as a single parent, or with roommates — once a rarity — is now the choice of 14 percent of people in that age group. And a full 25 percent of young men are now living with other family, nonfamily or group quarters.

Male prosperity rose steadily, and more and more men left the nest — until the ’60s and ’70s, when wages started to drop and more men stayed home.
And women? For decades women who worked were more likely to live with their parents than with a partner or spouse — because wives were discouraged from having jobs, per Pew’s straightforward interpretation.
But now more and more young women have jobs, and it’s unemployed women who are more likely to live with their parents. And yet, even as female prosperity rose, so did the number of young women living at home.
Pew speculated it might because of men’s lower earnings keeping women from marrying and moving out. Seem plausible? The question might make for a fruitful conversation in households across America tonight … just ask Mom to pass the peas and the theories.

Argonne National Laboratory drops Transgender Atomic Bomb on employees

Argonne National Laboratory drops Transgender Atomic Bomb on employees

Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Illinois, USA
Editors Note: Argonne National Laboratory is a science and engineering research national laboratory operated by UChicago Argonne LLC for the United States Department of Energy located outside Chicago.  In the post-war era the lab focused primarily on non-weapon related nuclear physics, designing. The lab eventually took part in building the first power-producing nuclear reactors and atomic bombs.
________________________________________________________________________________________________
Amidst the scrutiny across America, Argonne National Laboratory issued a Informational Memo with the subject “Federal and Laboratory Policy on Nondiscrimination against Transgender people, Including Restroom Use”on May 10, 2016.
According to William S. Elias II, General counsel: “A person does not need to undergo any medical Procedure or supply any kind of medical certification to be considered a transgender man or a transgender woman.”
It is hard to believe that a National Laboratory is putting its employees on edge with regards to transgender people using any restroom of their choice. When according to ABC News, Ariane de Vogue CNN Supreme Court reporter, the Virginia County School Board Transgender bathroom case may be heard by the Supreme Court and obviously is not locked in stone yet.
You can read the full memo here: 
argonne
It is obvious there has been no consideration about the rights of the individuals who are actually the sex that is on the door of the restroom. When did the employees who are using the correct restroom according to their birth gender waive their rights?
The memo sent out to all employees cites the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) for the facts used for their decision.
Now I don’t know about you but for a memo to be based by federal organizations which its primary job function is safety in the workplace to be used as primary agencies that are capable of making these types of decisions is quite alarming.
These federal agencies do not contain any individuals with degrees in medicine, yet they are making decisions that effect approximately 4,000 employees. So lets get this straight, if you are a transgender at Argonne National Laboratory you can use ANY restroom of your choice.
I wonder if the policy makers behind this decision use public bathrooms at the National Laboratory.
Unfortunately, some of the employees in these agencies have their own private restrooms to use at work. Again the rules do not apply to all while the rest of the employees are left in a very uncomfortable situation. Whose rights are really being discriminated against in the workplace.
 
Do you have an editorial you would like to submit to Hypeline? Email info@hypeline.org if interested.

Will County forest culled 200 deer this season

Will County forest culled 200 deer this season

Susan DeMar LaffertyContact ReporterDaily Southtown 6/10/2016
The annual deer management report sparked a brief debate during the monthly meeting of the Forest Preserve District of Will County, with some members suggesting they research other methods of thinning the herd.
Board members Bob Howard, D-Beecher, and Judy Ogalla, R-Monee, wanted to look into how the state of Indiana handles the deer population, since their district borders that state.
“The geography is identical. All the woods are interconnected,” said Howard, who wanted to be sure Will County was not over culling the deer.
The forest preserve program is controlled by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, said Ralph Schulz, chief operating officer for the district.

Forest preserve staff does aerial monitoring in the region that goes beyond its borders, counting deer and showing the damage done by the animals, allowing for a threshold of 20 to 30 deer per square mile. IDNR then tells them how many deer to cull, he said.
“But we pull the trigger. We have the power of life and death over the deer,” Howard said.
Board Speaker Jim Moustis said he was “tired of talking about deer.”
“You have the ability to stop the program — then stop it. But quit bringing it up about how they should not cull deer in your area. You always make it sound like we are culling too many. Let’s quit hashing this out every few months,” he said.

Moustis’ district includes the Hickory Creek Preserves, in the Mokena/New Lenox area, where the most deer — 60 — were culled this season.
People in his area wanted the herd managed better, he said.
In 2012, Homer Glen residents voted down an advisory referendum to continue deer culling in its preserves – Messenger Woods and Messenger Marsh.
Commissioner Steve Balich, R-Homer Township, said because of that he and his fellow Commissioner Mike Fricilone, R-Homer Glen, will continue to oppose the deer culling program.
Balich said his issue is the counting of deer, noting that the animals “meander everywhere.”
This season the forest preserve district was permitted to cull 205 deer.
According to its annual report, 200 deer were culled in the 2015-16 season, from October to February, resulting in 8,955 pounds of ground venison being donated to the Northern Illinois Food Bank.
The meat of only one deer was destroyed, due to chronic waste disease.
The district spent $29,400 on its sharpshooting staff and another $18,200 for operational costs, such as processing, ammunition and bait, for an average cost of $239 per deer, according to the report.
The DNR paid for 25 of the deer because it wanted additional deer culled in the Kankakee Sands, Braidwood Dunes and Sandridge Savanna area.
In addition to Hickory Creek, 45 deer were culled at Kankakee Sands, 30 at McKinley Woods, 20 each at Romeoville Prairie and Goodenow Grove, 15 at Lockport Prairie and 10 at Raccoon Grove.
Last year, the deer culling program was criticized by the animal rights group SHARK – Showring Animals Respect and Kindness – which secretly videotaped the sharpshooters in several preserves.
SHARK questioned the need to cull, claiming there were only a few deer at the bait sites, and claimed that deer were wounded but not killed, and dead animals were left for hours, making their meat inedible.
The forest preserve responded by improved monitoring of its program, and tracking any second shots needed to be sure the deer was dead.
In the 2014-15 season, 201 deer were culled.
slafferty@tribpub.com

Which state or city is most likely to follow Puerto Rico’s example

After Puerto Rico’s collapse, is your city or state next?

By   /   June 6, 2016  /   News  /   9 Comments

This island of 3.6 million is losing residents, who are fleeing massive government debts. Debt migration could become more common over the next decade.

This island of 3.6 million is losing residents, who are fleeing massive government debts. Debt migration could become more common over the next decade.

SEA OF DEBT: This island of 3.6 million is losing residents, who are fleeing massive government indebtedness. Debt migration could become more common over the next decade.

Which state or city is most likely to follow Puerto Rico’s example, and beg Congress for a legal mechanism to get out of its crushing bond and pension debts?
A detailed new study from the Mercatus Center at George Mason University gets us part of the way to an answer.
Puerto Rico’s finances are uniquely terrible, according to this study of state finances, ranking dead last in five major measurements of long- and short-term solvency. But the worst-run states are much closer to Puerto Rico’s condition than they are to states with balanced budgets and reasonable debt.
With short-term budget troubles and colossal long-term debt, Kentucky, Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Connecticut, in particular, are much closer to the basket case economic condition of the Caribbean territory on the Mercatus fiscal health index than they are to states such as Texas, the Dakotas, Florida, or Nebraska, where budgets are balanced and public pension systems may yet be salvaged.
For example, Connecticut, which ranks 50th out of the states for fiscal health, has run up $67 billion in debt, compared to Puerto Rico’s $118 billion, while both have populations of around 3.6 million. But personal income in Puerto Rico is less than one-third of Connecticut’s. If that seems reassuring, consider that the Nutmeg State’s debt figure grows to $124 billion if you recalculate pension debt, assuming it will all be paid — an assumption one no longer makes for Puerto Rico, which gave up on funding its pension system a decade ago and is now just draining the balance.
The sliver of good news for the states ranking at the bottom of the study, written by Eileen Norcross and Olivia Gonzalez, is that they may be just wealthy enough to afford the inevitable tax increases headed their way.

The study weights current budget troubles much heavier than long-term financial problems, but even so, those same states tend to show up at the bottom.
The bottom 10 states on the overall rankings – Maryland, New York, Maine, California, Hawaii, and the five states mentioned above – all have Democratic majorities in their legislatures. The top 10 states – Alaska, Nebraska, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Florida, Utah, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Montana – all have Republican majorities. But heavy debt and fiscal health have both been developed over many years, through administrations of both parties in most states.
Since all 50 states strive – with varying degrees of vigor – to run their affairs on a balanced budget, and they are also forbidden by federal law from declaring bankruptcy, states are less likely than individual cities to be following Puerto Rico into insolvency, at least in the near term.
Local governments are much more likely to try shirking their debts. Even in healthy states, a rogue agency can get into Puerto Rico-level trouble. For example, Texas, which is the picture of fiscal health at the macro level, is speckled with jurisdictions incapable of managing their money.
There are 18 school districts in Texas that – all by themselves – have run up bond debt per capita in excess of the $20,366 per person that Puerto Rico has created. These tend to be small districts – 6,200-resident Prosper ISD, with bond debt of $43,578 per person, or 8,608-resident Spring ISD, with $63,934 – but even massive Texas districts can get almost halfway to Puerto Rico-level debt on their own. Frisco ISD outside of Dallas owes $9,416 in bond debt for each of its 185,000 residents. Northwest ISD in San Antonio owes $7,169 for each of the 106,780 people within its borders. 
So the next local bankruptcy could from anywhere, but it’s very likely to come from one of the 10 most troubled states, as identified by Mercatus. So we started there, then added in statewide local debt figures from the Census, to see who was in the neighborhood of Puerto Rico’s total debt figure of $33,224 per person (that’s general debt plus pension debt plus retiree health care obligations).
For the cities that maintain their own pension systems, we added in their specific debts, using guaranteed-to-be-paid numbers recently calculated by Prof. Joshua Rauh at Stanford University for most, and a rule-of-thumb actuarial estimate for two others. These numbers do not include pension debt for most county and small local agencies.
It’s worth keeping in mind that personal income stateside is about 2.5 times higher than in Puerto Rico, and the ability to repay debts is correspondingly greater.
We knocked Maine off the list right away, as it made the Mercatus Bottom 10 owing only to some short-term cash troubles.  Its debts aren’t that bad, relatively speaking.
At No. 9, we’ve got Louisville, although most of Kentucky faces the same risk. The state and local debt load per capita in Kentucky is $26,600, and the radically underfunded state pension system (44 percent funded by conventional measure) creates a huge strain on member governments. Louisville has paid what was asked of it, but those amounts were always too small.
At No. 8, we’ve got Baltimore, where residents carry a combined state and local debt load of $27,500, with $7,000 of that just for city pensions.

Boston Back Bay this is.

Boston Back Bay this is.

At No. 7, we’ve got Boston, with $29,600 in state and local debt per capita, including $6,700 for local pensions, but not including some $5 billion the city owes for retiree health care.
At No. 6, we’ve got Bridgeport, Connecticut, with some $37,300 in combined debt, like the rest of the state, whose finances were ranked worst by Mercatus. However, the state legislature just passed an amendment allowing the city to postpone pension payments for six years, a respite that is both a sign and a cause of disaster.
At No. 5, we’ve got Honolulu, representing Hawaii, where folks labor under $37,800 in debt. The state doesn’t just have budget problems in the near term and debt problems in the long-term, it doesn’t have much room to raise taxes to pay for them.
At No. 4, we’ve got New York City, which has whopping debts of $46,400 per capita. Some $15,500 of that comes just from the city’s pensions. Despite unfathomable unfunded liabilities of $131.5 billion in the city system (using risk-free rates), the city’s tremendous wealth keeps the behemoth from collapsing. Also, New York is much more aggressive than any other major city in setting aside (nearly) enough money in the budget to keep the system viable. So New York’s probably not the fourth most likely city to become a disaster, but we’ve been sticking to the numbers.
However, at No. 3, we’re going to cheat just a bit, and mention four cities from California: San Jose, San Diego, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. This is not to say they’re tied. San Diego has started digging itself out of the hole, and San Jose has tried, but found itself thwarted by state officials. The statewide average for state and municipal debt is $30,200, but that doesn’t tell the whole picture. San Francisco and Los Angeles almost certainly have debt per capita figures north of $40,000, although we haven’t disentangled their debts from the state pools. Rauh’s estimates for pension debt alone for San Francisco and Los Angeles work out to $14,141 and $9,152, respectively, although Los Angeles County’s $35.5 billion in unfunded liability would put it roughly on par. That’s about triple the local pension debt of San Diego and San Jose, which are better known for their pension troubles. Both San Francisco and Los Angeles owe $5 billion or more for retiree health care, as well.

Luigi Novi / Wikimedia Commons

Luigi Novi / Wikimedia Commons

DEBT HALL:  The people running city hall in Jersey City, New Jersey, have made a mess of things.

At No. 2, we’ve got Jersey City, which has its own local pension disaster to pair with the state’s pension nightmare. The $4,800 or so that residents owe for the local system on top of all their other state and local debts comes out to debt of $41,800. The problem is a statewide failure, though one that’s produced New York levels of debt without a New York economy.
At No. 1, with no drumroll at all necessary, comes Chicago, with $56,900 in state and local pension debt. You could throw in half of Cook County’s $16 billion pension debt. Actually, this doesn’t even include tens of billions of dollars in pension debt for the Transit Authority, the Water Reclamation District, and a handful of other independent agencies that would make comparisons difficult. But that debt would put the figure upwards of $70,000 per capita. It represents debt Chicagoans will be paying, at least until they give up and move. The abyss grows ever wider. A study by Rauh in April found that aside from a broken school district in St. Paul, the worst local agencies in the country for contributing to their pension funds were the city of Chicago and Chicago Public Schools. Just to keep the hole from getting bigger, the city would need to spend 32 percent of its revenue on pensions; it’s actually dedicating 7.5 percent. Chicago Public Schools would have to spend 56.5 percent of its revenues on pensions; it’s actually contributing 20.3 percent. The difference goes on the card.
Neither the city of Chicago nor its school district has the money to pay its bills, and the depth of its debt makes that unlikely to change, absent some sort of radical restructuring, one that could take cues from Puerto Rico.
These cities, of course, aren’t the only ones in trouble. From Portland, Oregon, to Omaha, Nebraska, there are cities in otherwise healthy states that have gotten into pension trouble.
RELATED: Congress sends signal to debt-ridden cities by shrugging off Puerto Rico debt guarantee
Special mention should be made of Ohio, which looks fine in the short-term, thanks to a budget balanced by tapping future revenues. Long term, Ohio doesn’t much resemble the picture painted by Gov. John Kasich during his abortive presidential campaign. It has $295.7 billion in combined bond, pension, and retiree health care obligations, and no plan to pay it off. There’s no reason Cleveland or Cincinnati couldn’t join the list of failed cities somewhere down the line.
Even in Texas, which prides itself on small government, there’s reason to worry, and not just because of those indebted school districts. Rauh’s study ranks cities by how many times bigger their pension debt is than their annual revenues. Chicago is first, of course, followed by Detroit. But the next three are Dallas, Houston, and El Paso.
Contact Jon Cassidy at jon@watchdog.org or @jpcassidy000.

You’re paying big, fraudulent Obamaphone bills

 
You’re paying big, fraudulent Obamaphone bills
Posted on June 8, 2016 by Sam Rolley
Woman taking photos with her phone
Woman taking photos with her phone
If that hefty cellphone bill you pay every month so that you can keep in touch with family and keep business running smoothly sometimes makes you twitch, you’re not going to like this story at all.
Remember all those voters Obama got by handing out free cellphones? Well, they’re costing taxpayers, many of whom are dealing with hundreds of dollars in cellphone bills themselves, a boatload of money.
Even worse, regulators are saying that many recipients of Obamaphones through the Lifeline program shouldn’t even be eligible for the taxpayer-subsidized devices. In fact, Federal Communications Commissioner Ajit Pai recently reported that taxpayers have forked out nearly $500 million to people who don’t meet the need criteria for the phones every year.
One of the biggest problems with the program, the official said, is that the FCC relies on cell phone carriers to verify that customers meet qualifications and aren’t applying for duplicate Obamaphones.
“The carrier essentially, on its own say-so, tells the FCC … ‘we pinky swear that this is a legitimate subscriber,’” Pai told reporters.
The incentive for carriers to enroll as many customers as possible into the program, even if that means fudging numbers and stretching the truth, is obvious. Many of the Obamaphone users might not otherwise become customers or would possibly opt for a package cheaper than that for which the government is willing to pay.
The FCC recently targeted Obamaphone provider Total Call Mobile with a $51 million fine for such enrollment packages, saying the California-based provider enrolled “tens of thousands of duplicate consumers” in the program. The company did so by overriding a single government check in place designed to ferret out duplication in the welfare phone program.
Currently, around 18 million Americans who are on food stamps and Medicaid qualify for Obamaphones, so it’s safe to assume that there’s plenty more duplication afoot.
“Given what happened in the Total Call Mobile case … it seems pretty clear to me that there are substantial problems with the way the program is being administered now and unscrupulous actors have no problem filling the vacuum so to speak when the enforcement mechanism isn’t robust,” Pai said.
No kidding.
So how easy is it to get an Obamaphone? Well, according to a recent column by Robert Morely over at the Trumpet, it’s so easy you could do so by accident.
Only after a lengthy argument with his cell phone provider did Morely get back on his regular plan.
“I might have had a tax payer-provided phone with free monthly minutes and unlimited text messaging for life! Plus a whole lot of free Internet access too,” he wrote. “That’s how close I came to my very own Obamaphone.”
“It’s a testament to the efficiency of the United States’ welfare industry—and it gives new meaning to the concept of ‘the land of the free,’” he continued. “A person doesn’t even need to sign up for a government-sponsored social program; they can simply end up in one.”
Thanks, Obama.
 
 
 

Police can seize Cash if there is probable cause to a crime

sddefaultA police department near you could soon begin using technology that allows officers to scan debit and prepaid financial cards and freeze or empty the accounts if they have a hunch about possible illegal activity.
We’ve routinely told you stories about officers deciding to confiscate motorists’ cash based on suspicion the money was made illegally during routine traffic stops. In cases where the officers are wrong, the victims of this civil asset forfeiture usually end up going through a long, tedious process in an effort to get their money back. Sometimes they never see it again.
That’s because civil asset forfeiture is a shady area of the law under which cops can assign criminal status to an inanimate object without actually ever charging the rightful owner with a crime. Police departments, of course, have an incentive to hang on to the property they seize because it can later be used to pad their bottom lines. And inanimate objects are notoriously lousy at testifying to their innocence.
You probably haven’t worried about this nefarious process personally unless you are in the habit of traveling around with large amounts of cash.
But things are changing.
Thanks to new technology called ERAD, Electronic Recovery and Access to Data machines, a cop can take a look at your bank account or any type of prepaid card during a traffic stop if he has reason to believe you’re up to something suspicious.
ERAD’s makers boast:

The annual value of illegal and illicit activities occurring in the U.S. is estimated to be more than $120B. And while most of that money is transported in bulk-cash shipments, more and more is being transferred with prepaid cash cards and other electronic methods. Unlike cash, the money associated with prepaid cash cards can be moved by criminals using a mobile phone or internet application in minutes, even after the criminals have been arrested and the prepaid cards confiscated. With billions of dollars being illegally loaded on prepaid cash cards, Law Enforcement needs the tools to obtain a balance, freeze or confiscate those funds.
Now there’s a solution that can do in seconds what used to take hours.
The ERAD credit, debit, prepaid, and gift card cloud based program provide real-time analytics, recording, and balance information at law enforcement’s fingertips.

Cha-Ching!
Cops in Oklahoma have already begun using the technology, claiming that it really does make residents safer.
Here’s a report from the state’s News9

Here’s how it works. If a trooper suspects a person may have money tied to some type of crime, the highway patrol can scan and seize money from prepaid cards.  OHP stresses troopers do not do this during all traffic stops, only situations where they believe there is probable cause.
“We’re gonna look for different factors in the way that you’re acting,” Oklahoma Highway Patrol Lt. John Vincent said. “We’re gonna look for if there’s a difference in your story. If there’s someway that we can prove that you’re falsifying information to us about your business.”
Troopers insist this isn’t just about seizing cash.
“I know that a lot of people are just going to focus on the seizing money. That’s a very small thing that’ s happening now. The largest part that we have found … the biggest benefit has been the identity theft,” Vincent said.
“If you can prove can prove that you have a legitimate reason to have that money it will be given back to you. And we’ve done that in the past,” Vincent said about any money seized.

That’s right, they’re protecting folks from identity theft with the threat of actual theft by agents of the state. The cops have now evidently become some sort of weird combination of superhuman lie detectors and digital extortionists.
If you’ve ever endured the misfortune of back and forth questioning with a cop, you know how badly this can turn out for people who don’t understand their rights. He’s your buddy, just tell him what he needs to know and there will be no trouble. Just go along, he’ll lead you where he wants you and, remember, everything will go just fine if he hears the right version of the truth.
Officers are trained to leave benefit-of-the-doubt thinking at home. You’re guilty until proven innocent. Even if you aren’t guilty of anything at all, every second that ticks by during an interaction increases your chances of being charged with something. After all, there are so many laws on the books that we’re all probably breaking at least one at any given moment.
But what about the 4th Amendment? Cards stashed in your vehicle that could contain nearly every financial detail about a person would seem pretty clearly to fall under “papers and effects” protected against unreasonable search and seizure.
They don’t. At least not according to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals which said in an opinion last week that reading the magnetic strips on credit, debit and gift cards does not require a warrant.
Better have your story straight next time you head out, comrade.

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