A college professor in my hometown says graduates who watch bodies decompose at the school's proposed body farm will be more marketable to prospective employers.
And down the road, a museum that reanimates long-dead bodies springs back to life.
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A college professor in my hometown says graduates who watch bodies decompose at the school's proposed body farm will be more marketable to prospective employers.
And down the road, a museum that reanimates long-dead bodies springs back to life.
January 31, 2010 in Colorado, Local Life | Permalink | Comments (4)
The historian Alan Brinkley has observed that we will soon enter the fourth decade in which Congress — and therefore government as a whole — has failed to deal with any major national problem, from infrastructure to education. The gridlock isn’t only a function of polarized politics and special interests. There’s also been a gaping leadership deficit.
– Frank Rich on the States of the Union and of Congress
George W. Bush had a much easier time enacting his agenda because he simply decided to finance the entire thing with borrowing and got his party to go along.
The second problem is that, even if Democrats could reduce the deficit on their own and somehow could be insulated from the political harm, they have no incentive to do it. Why should they, when the Republicans don't share the goal? [...] There's no set of fiscal circumstances under which Republicans would not enact large tax cuts if given the votes to do so.
– Jonathan Chait, on the impossibility of fiscal restraint
January 31, 2010 in Politics | Permalink | Comments (0)
Ordinary people, making it by guess and by God, or not quite making it, are just as susceptible to dreams as the ambitious and greedy, and respond as excitedly to the adventure, the freedom, the apparently inexhaustible richness of the West. And the boosters have been there from the beginning to oversell the West as the Garden of the World, the flowing well of opportunity, the stamping ground of the self-reliant.
[...]
If you believe that the world owes you not merely a living but a bonanza, then restrictive laws are only an irritation and a challenge.
— Wallace Stegner, writing about his father, the boom-and-bust West, and its drill, baby, drill spirit
January 28, 2010 in Across the Divide, Environment, Working Stiff | Permalink | Comments (9)
One of the boys I've written about here before was not at school today. In itself, not unusual. There are all kinds of reasons kids don't show up for preschool in the shelter on a given day.
He is an active, bright and cheerful boy who showed some unexplainable fears on a recent field trip. The other teachers knew about it, but with my once-a-week schedule, I'd never seen him running in terror from something so benign, like moving clouds on the ceiling of the Children's Museum. (Even my best monster act never fazed him.)
Today I found out he had some sort of seizure at nap time yesterday and was taken to the ER as a precaution. He's still at the hospital for testing.
I found out one more thing. One of his brothers was murdered; he was a twin, though I didn't catch whether he was the twin of my sweet little charge.
Oh, yes, environment is not destiny. But I wonder how many of those politicians giving us the lecture know these kids. Not just their statistics or their stories or their records, but them.
January 28, 2010 in Home & Homeless | Permalink | Comments (4)
According to the New York Observer, [New York-based Newsday] revealed its 35-member subscription base in a newsroom-wide meeting last week, when a reporter asked how many people subscribed. 35 people at $5 a week for 12 weeks is $2,100. If they are all signed up for the year, that's $9,100 so far. Cablevision purchased Newsday for $650 million in 2008.
I heard NPR's Marketplace report that the Newsday redesign cost $4 million to get the new site ready.
Some critics use the anemic response to question whether the pay model can work, but they miss a couple points, which Ed Kohler can address far better than I.
January 27, 2010 in Media | Permalink | Comments (2)
Political Animal says:
Rep. Michele Bachmann was in town yesterday, and the Animal asked her if she still planned to go [to the National Tea Party Convention]. Bachmann is another scheduled marquee speaker, though she will not receive a speaking fee, her office said. Here is what she told us:
This would not be the first time."At this point I am. I know that we are concerned in light of the Supreme Court decision that came out last Wednesday. We need to make sure that there are no violations of any ethics rules because as I understand it is a for-profit group that is running the convention. And if there's a conflict with ethics rules, then we will have to decline. So, we're trying to get a final answer through ethics in Washington, D.C. as to that decision."That had us scratching our heads, as it did academics familiar with the Supreme Court's recent campaign finance decision. It wouldn't seem to prevent Bachmann from attending, speaking to or visiting an event like this.
A spokesman cleared it up: Bachmann was confused about her situation. "Clearly, our staff failed to communicate this to her well enough," the spokesman emailed us.
January 26, 2010 in Minnesota Politics | Permalink | Comments (0)
Former Strib editor Tim McGuire comments on the move afoot to reduce copy editing as a cost-saving measure. Although many people think copy editing is a form of proofreading that would prevent the increasing bone-headed errors we see cropping up in daily newspapers, McGuire sets it straight:
Copy editing corrects context errors, provides expertise on local points of history and location and supplies subject matter expertise that often saves a piece of copy. Copy editors also supply a little thing called judgment. Every writer pushes a point too far, uses language that is ill-advised or makes assertions that can’t be supported. A copy editors [sic, was that a test?] job is to catch those.
In addition, he points out that copy editors are in the flow of production in a very particular way. They have an appreciation not just of the story being written but where it fits the paper being made and how it's being read.
I've had the varied experiences of being edited at a newspaper, editing the work of experts and not-so experts, editing other writers, and editing myself — as a blogger and the head of writing company where, if we didn't get the nuances as well as the basics right, we lost clients, which is far more painful and concentration-inducing than losing a subscriber.
[Copy editors are invited to have a go at that paragraph.]
I should add that I've had the experience of editing former newspaper reporters, and I would agree with McGuire: "Reporters and others are simply not prepared for the sophisticated enterprise called copy editing." [h/t to Hal Davis, who must be a hell of an editor]
January 26, 2010 in Media, Writing | Permalink | Comments (2)
Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann has announced her "bipartisan legislation, H.R. 502, the Health Care Freedom of Choice Act," which
would make medical expenses, including health care premiums, 100% tax-deductible for all individuals. Under current law, health insurance is tax-free for those who receive it through their employers. My bill would give this same tax benefit to people who buy their own health insurance or pay for medical care “out-of-pocket.” This would give all Americans the freedom to purchase the health plan of their choice, to pick their preferred doctors and to make their own medical decisions.
In the buildup to her rollout, the decidedly non-bipartisan Bachmann said, “We are rejecting politics as usual in Washington D.C. in dealing with this health care issue.”
Apparently, proposing tax cuts as the solution to all that ails us is not politics as usual.
I haven't read the bill, but let's examine her description 100% tax deductibility as giving people freedom to purchase the health plan of their choice.
The context.
The average American family with employer-subsidized health care coverage (earning about $50,000 in household income) pays out about $7,000 per year in its share of premiums and out-of-pocket costs. Employer contributions average nearly $10,000.
The current federal tax system already allows deductibility of medical expenses. You can deduct the amount of your medical and dental expenses that is more than 7.5% of your AGI [Adjusted Gross Income]. For example, if your AGI is $35,000, 7.5% is $2,625. If your family of four paid medical expenses of $7,000, you could deduct $4,375. Filing as the head of the household, you would pay $3,996 in federal income taxes.
So who really benefits from the Bachmann proposal?
The poor? No. They don't save enough to afford insurance.
Taking the example above, the Bachmann bill would lower the family tax bill by $393 — or about 10 percent. That's about enough to pay for one month's premium on a moderately high deductible insurance policy in Minnesota for that family of four.
Claiming higher levels of expenses does not yield any larger relative savings under the Bachmann plan, because the only difference is the tax that's applied to the family's first $2,625 in expenses under the current system.
The real question for lower income households is whether they can come up with the money at all. They are less likely to be covered by employer plans, and they also have less income available to pay regular premiums and out-of-pocket costs. A tax deduction doesn't help the cash flow for people living paycheck to paycheck.
The middle class? They'd see a modest benefit.
The Bachmann proposal would result in an additional $562 in tax savings over the current system — worth a little more than one month's premium for a Medica HSA plan.
The top earners? You won't be surprised.
1. The top 10 percent of earners — at least those who are employed — are generally covered by health insurance. (In 2006, only 8.5% of those earning $75k+ were uninsured, sompared to 21.1% of those earning $25-50k.)
2. The higher the income, the more likely the insured has a Cadillac plan as part of an executive compensation package.
3. Once you reach top 5 percent of earners or so, your own medical expenses cease being deductible under current tax law. For example, at $200,000 AGI, only your expenses above $15,000 would qualify for deduction.
Someone earning $100,000 and paying the average $7,000 for medical expenses would not be able to deduct any of it. Under Bachmann's bill, they could deduct it all, worth $1,680 in tax savings.
The bottom line?
Wealthier tax payers, who are more likely to be well-covered, do better under the tax portion of the Bachmann plan.
A tax-deduction scheme favors those who pay more taxes. Look at it this way. Someone earning $500,000 who had $35,000 in medical expenses could deduct them all and save $12,250 in taxes. Someone earning $35,000 with the same medical costs would simply be bankrupt.
A tax deduction for all also means less revenue, and less revenue means program cuts. No doubt "Health Care Freedom of Choice" would be used to justify cutting public health care expenditures, which primarily benefit low-income people.
Some choice.
January 26, 2010 in Healthcare, Rich and Poor, Taxes | Permalink | Comments (12)
A couple years ago, Grand Junction's economy was still booming, housing was in short supply and local retailers had trouble filling jobs because the oil and gas companies paid better for low-skilled workers.
Some people thought that the energy economy was going to sustain western Colorado and Grand Junction would continue to outperform the state and national economies. After all, gas was around $4 a gallon and it wasn't going back.
Locals who lived through the last boom and bust in the earlier 1980s, or the ones before that, weren't quite so optimistic.
And now the recession and the tail end of the recession is snapping around like a dead alligator's tail. It still has plenty of power to hurt. Some of the impacts are familiar to other parts of the country, but others have a local flavor.
Some recent notes:
Grand Junction lost a greater
percentage of employees than any other metropolitan area in the United
States between November 2008 and November 2009, according to the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics. And once hot real estate sales plunged to their worst levels in 20 years.
*****
Waste mercury is going to Texas instead of my backyard. Damn, more jobs lost because of those damn environmental regs in Colorado!
*****
Tax revenues are down because gas prices are down, along with consumer spending.
*****
State budget cuts closed a skilled nursing unit in town that served severely disabled adults. Without the special unit, residents had to find new homes with non-profit agencies that run group homes in the community.
Surprise — some current residents think the group homes don't fit their neighborhood.
And another subdivision is changing it protections for homeowners who built there before the developer ran into trouble.
*****
Climate change and a stagnant economy are tough on animals, too, horses present special difficulties.
“Abandoned horses and livestock issues are somewhat new,” Dr. Anderson said. “It is a new thing causing some drains on the budgets. Large-scale impounds are going to be drains on the community.”
January 23, 2010 in Business, Colorado, Economy, Environment, Government Effectiveness, Taxes | Permalink | Comments (1)
As a writer, I once made my living from the reality that many highly functional people can't write as well as their as their jobs require. Jack Miller teaches "developmental" English at Normandale Community College, where he sees students who arrive equipped with "life experience" but not the rudiments of written language. For some of them, it's a new language; for most, it's a language they have used for decades but not learned.
Some of his essay for Center of the American Experiment makes the liberal in me cringe, the college scholarship reviewer in me nod, and the citizen in me glad for teachers like Miller.
Don't judge the essay just by these excerpts. The whole thing is worth a read. [h/t Hal Davis]
Other causes, less tangible, contribute to students’ poor record and performance in college (especially that 20 percent or so who demand extra time and energy from the professor), and here I venture on more speculative ground. Some are not sure what is done in the classroom—how to behave. They don’t know when or how to take notes. They perennially miss due dates, drift in late, drift out during the break not to return. They sabotage themselves and then seem to expect forgiveness and accommodation from their professors. Someone showing up one day after having been missing for five or six weeks, only vaguely recognized by the professor, will assume that a way can and will be found to bring him up to speed and on track with the rest of the class. Is all this the result of repeatedly being forgiven in the past? I think so.
[...]
A system is in place to cushion failure, and students who have always been praised for just showing up need it. They have been told time and again, “You can be anything you want.” All that is needed is “passion.” So when the academic path contains a detour, explanations to yourself and to others can come easily. Scholastic problems don’t emanate from within but from without. So determined is the college to offer “support” and so long is the list of reasons to receive that support that almost anything can be explained by or blamed on an external cause—poor time management, attention deficit disorder, you name it.
January 23, 2010 in Education, Writing | Permalink | Comments (19)
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