Thursday, February 28, 2013

Hiring A Search engine optimisation Professional | CulturaPopulara.ro

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Source: http://culturapopulara.ro/?p=27191

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Afraid of Negotiating? Just Consider It Expected of You

Afraid of Negotiating? Just Consider It Expected of YouMany of us shy away from negotiating, even though not negotiating could cost you thousands of dollars on your salary, next car, or other big-ticket item. To feel more comfortable and confident negotiating, consider it expected of you.

The DailyWorth financial blog notes that many companies significantly mark up their items just so there's room to negotiate. These include furniture stores (80% or more mark up) and jewelry stores (as much as 200% mark up). Even nursing homes are willing to compromise on price. While not every store or service will be open to negotiating, these examples suggest that you shouldn't fear looking like a tightwad if you try to bargain.

The article also cites a recent study that showed when salary is described as negotiable, job applicants were more likely to pursue salary discussions. (This was true even for women, who typically don't negotiate salary as much as men do.)

So if you're nervous about negotiating something, just think of it as something you're supposed to do. For tips on getting started, see the source article below or our previous negotiating tips.

9 Tricks to Negotiate Anything | DailyWorth

Photo by Nizzam (Shutterstock)

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/s6aZBwdSJRc/afraid-of-negotiating-just-consider-it-expected-of-you

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Monday, February 18, 2013

SiriusXM Canada Plays of the Week: Feb 15

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Source: http://capitals.nhl.tv/team/console.jsp?catid=-6&id=202195&cmpid=rss-whatsnew

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Obamacare: Hope For The GOP?

A reader writes to say she?s a conservative who?s as fed up with the GOP as many of us, but today discovered a potential avenue for a Republican comeback. She says she and her husband spent the day with their tax preparer, and had their eyes opened:

The tax preparer had (by her employer?s rules) to show us a form illustrating how much money the IRS will confiscate from us in 2014 and 2015 if we show up without health insurance (which we have, but she has to show the form to everybody). People were wondering about how the collection mechanism for the ?fine? would work, and this is how: you lose your tax refund and/or have your tax burden increased if you can?t prove that you have health insurance.

So the IRS is going to be involved in the new government ?health care? industry and will be collecting the penalty for not buying health insurance?proving that this baby was always about increasing taxes, and never really about reforming health care.

In addition, the lady doing our taxes told us about how her adult daughter and son-in-law are about to lose their full-time jobs. They?re not being laid off; they?re just going to have their hours cut to <30/week so the company that employs them won?t have to buy them health insurance (it hasn?t been providing employer-contributed health care up to now, and I got the impression we were talking about a small local business). Her daughter could theoretically be put on mom?s health insurance for a year or so until she passes age 26, and with part-time hours for the couple their child qualifies for the ?free? state children?s health insurance program, but the dad is out of luck. Oh, and since their payroll taxes increased in January this young educated working couple can?t even dream of buying their own family health insurance plan. So in effect they could be penalized with higher taxes for not buying something that the rules embedded in the health care plan make it impossible for them to buy (by effectively encouraging their employer to cut their hours).

Out running errands after the tax appt., we saw more panhandlers than I?ve ever seen in daylight hours away from the downtown area?on street corners, drifting through parking lots, moving from place to place with their cardboard signs begging for help. And the real hard times haven?t even started yet.

What do you think?

Source: http://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/obamacare-hope-for-the-gop/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=obamacare-hope-for-the-gop

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Our vast energy reserves can restore prosperity, but we must remove federal barr...

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Experts: North Korea years from a bomb

Following the third nuclear test conducted by North Korea, two natural questions are how long it will take the country to build a real nuclear weapon, and whether the U.S. could pull off a military strike before then to stop the program.

The short answers: It will be at least a few years before North Korea is capable of building a bomb that threatens close neighbors, and several years before it can threaten the United States directly. Meanwhile, a military strike would be a roll of the dice.

First, the facts of the test: The North Korean government confirmed that it had conducted one Tuesday (Feb. 12), and the seismic activity from the underground blast indicated an explosion equal to about 6,000 to 7,000 tons of high explosive.

To put that in perspective, that?s a fraction of the power of the bombs the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, and even tinier when compared with most current nuclear weapons. Even so, a bomb that size would be a real threat.

"Seven kilotons would do a lot of damage in downtown Seoul," Hans Kristensen, director of nuclear information at the Federation of American Scientists, told TechNewsDaily.

The explosive yield of the test also marked a big jump ? by a factor of three or more ? from previous tests conducted by North Korea.

[Air Chemistry May Reveal Details about North Korea Nuke]

While Pyongyang has demonstrated that it can pull off big explosions, making a nuclear weapon is different, Kristensen said. The North Korean news agency claimed that the tested device was "miniaturized," but the North Koreans don't seem to have anything they can strap under the wing of a plane or mount onto a missile, he said.

Such a bomb isn't easy to develop, as the U.S. learned in 1945. Scientists were able to set off a test nuclear explosion at the Trinity site in New Mexico, but it still took a lot of work for America to simultaneously develop bombs that could be carried on airplanes of the period ? this despite having a lot of money, some of the best engineering and scientific talent in the world, and the urgency of a war. So although the leadership of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea seems determined to build a bomb, that doesn't mean they can do so as quickly as they might want or as many people fear.

A big factor will be what kind of weapon the North Korean military is shooting for. Uranium-based nuclear bombs, like the one dropped on Hiroshima, involve a cylinder of uranium fired into another cylinder of uranium. Those are relatively easy to design, but they tend to be larger and need more fissionable material for a given yield. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima, for example, required some 100 pounds of uranium to work. Kristensen said it doesn't look as if the North Koreans have gone that route, at least not yet.

The second design, called the implosion type, consists of a sphere of plutonium surrounded by explosive charges. It's the design that has been used in every known nuclear weapons program so far. This design requires a lot less plutonium and offers more powerful blasts, but is trickier to implement. All the charges must go off at exactly the same time, and they have to compress the plutonium equally on all sides.

"If they don't, it's like squeezing a banana," Kristensen said. "Designing something in theory is one thing, but in engineering there are always unforeseen problems."

Another challenge North Korea will face is the issue of transporting the bomb. North Korea doesn't have a bomber that can reach any part of the U.S., so that leaves missiles as the delivery mechanism. While North Korea has tested rockets that can launch satellites, they don't appear to have one that can reach the continental United States, at least not yet, said Nick Hansen, an analyst at the 38North blog who writes extensively about the country's missile program.

"What they need, to make their threats credible, is not the Unha-3 rocket. It has many shortcomings as an ICBM, and most experts agree as a weapon it has very limited utility and is probably a dead end," Hansen told TechNewsDaily in an email.

A larger rocket might appear after 2015. The missile that has some potential, he said, is called the KN-08, but it isn't likely to put North Korea into "The ICBM Club" until late in the decade.

Developing a missile that can reach the U.S. couldn't be done in secret, Kristensen noted ? it's just too big a project, and the launches are too visible.

Some might ask why Pyongyang doesn't simply load a bomb onto a ship and sail it into a port. The answer: Aside from the difficulty of a North Korean ship entering an American or U.S. ally's harbor, such an action would be a pre-emptive strike, and that would be suicidal. Most experts agree Kim Jong-Un and his government want to survive.

Considering North Korea?s perceived global security threat, there has been talk of possibly taking out either its nuclear facilities or launch pads. William J. Perry, who had been secretary of defense under Bill Clinton, said in 2006, for example, that such action should be considered.

But doing so might prove difficult. David Straub, associate director of Korean Studies Program at Stanford University's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, noted that the locations of all the country's nuclear facilities may not be known. "Their main facility is at Yongbyon," he said, but "most experts believe they have an additional facility and likely multiple ones in the country." Even Perry, at a symposium in Seoul earlier this month, said he opposed the idea.

Kristensen said while it is possible to do a lot of damage to the North Korean weapons program, and push back its timetable by years, unleashing a military assault on the country could have serious consequences.

"North Korea is not Syria or Iraq," Kristensen said, referring to countries whose nuclear facilities were targets of Israeli raids. Neither country retaliated for the raid ? Iraq was already in a war, against Iran; and Syria only lodged protests. The North Korean government, by contrast, might fire on South Korea? using missiles armed with conventional or even chemical warheads, or it might mobilize an attack on the demilitarized zone.

"The North Korean leaders are perfectly happy to play brinksmanship with their populations," Straub said. "Our side is not."

This story was provided by TechNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/experts-north-korea-years-bomb-231839173.html

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Yahoo's latest mobile acquisition mirrors Marissa Mayer's final efforts at Google

SUNNYVALE -- Yahoo (YHOO) picked up Tuesday where it left off in 2012, acquiring the team behind another mobile application, the third such move since Marissa Mayer arrived as CEO in July and one that mirrors Mayer's final Google (GOOG) effort.

Yahoo confirmed Tuesday that it had purchased Alike for an undisclosed sum, bringing to Yahoo a team that developed

Marissa Mayer, Chief Executive Officer of Yahoo!, smiles during the 43rd Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Keystone/Laurent Gillieron) (Laurent Gillieron)

a mobile application focused on suggesting nearby businesses a user may enjoy based on their previous preferences.

"The Alike team created an app that focuses on personalization -- using the restaurants and places you like to find the ones you'll love. We were very impressed by the team and their approach to building personalized experiences," Yahoo said in a statement Tuesday.

Mayer, who was employee No. 20 at Google and worked in a variety of positions at the Mountain View search leader, spent her last two years with the company working on Google's local efforts -- combining the acquisitions Zagat and Frommer's into different Google products to give users the ability to find info on nearby restaurants and other businesses as

well as opinions on those entities.

The Alike app for iPhone asked users to input their favorite destinations, then would tell them of similar businesses near to their current location. That type of offering is popular in Silicon Valley beyond Google, with San Francisco-based Yelp staking its reputation on user-generated reviews of local offerings, and Facebook recently offering up a search option that will help users find businesses popular with their friends.

The app was founded by Maria Zhang, previously of Microsoft and Zillow, who has said in interviews that the app is more founded on the idea of "Big Data" than local recommendations.

"We've painstakingly collected hundreds of terabytes of data and crafted complex algorithms to really understand the essence of a place. We compare these essences to discover similar places. The great thing about this big data approach is that there is no waiting for a critical mass of 500 of your friends or 10 million other people for the service to be useful," Zhang said in an interview with GeekWire in October.

Yahoo will use those abilities to build out its mobile team, a focus of Mayer's since arriving at Yahoo. In her first conference call with analysts in October, Mayer said that "at some point, at least half our technical workforce should be working on mobile ... because Yahoo should be a predominantly mobile company."

Just three days after that statement, Mayer backed it up with the purchase of Stamped, a similar app to Alike that allowed users to "stamp" restaurants and other businesses or media they enjoy for friends to see and share. The leaders of Stamped -- Robby Stein, who once worked for Mayer as a product manager at Google, Bart Stein and Kevin Palms -- were seen as the leaders of Yahoo's new mobile efforts, with Yahoo exec Adam Cahan saying in a blog post that the crew would "create a new center of mobile product development for Yahoo."

Alike joins OnTheAir, a San Francisco video-conferencing startup that Yahoo acquired in December, as mobile acquisitions that will work with the Stamped team to build Yahoo's mobile efforts.

The Alike app will no longer be supported by the Seattle-based group that created it, as they move to Yahoo's offices in Sunnyvale and San Francisco.

"We believe that distilled information, deeply personalized and made accessible anytime and anywhere, is what makes mobile experiences a part of our customers' daily lives," the Alike team said in a post on the company's website Tuesday.

Yahoo stock, which has struggled for years as the company has run through a series of CEOs, hit its highest price since 2008 for the second consecutive trading session Tuesday. At 11 a.m. Pacific time, less than two hours after the acquisition was announced, shares were trading for $21.34, a gain of 44 cents, or 2.1 percent.

Contact Jeremy C. Owens at 408-920-5876; follow him at Twitter.com/mercbizbreak.

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_22573663/yahoos-latest-mobile-acquisition-mirrors-marissa-mayers-final?source=rss

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Grammys 2013: Justin Timberlake, Frank Ocean Steal The Show

Black Keys, Fun., Gotye and Skrillex big winners as Mumford & Sons take Album of the Year.
By Gil Kaufman


Justin Timberlake performs at the 2013 Grammys on Sunday
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701731/grammy-2013-highlights-moments-justin-timberlake-frank-ocean.jhtml

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AP Exclusive: Inmate lawsuits cost Calif. $200M

FILE - In this Jan. 8, 2013 file photo, Gov. Jerry Brown gestures to a stack of reports on California prisons as he discusses his call for federal judges to return control of California prisons to the state during a news conference at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 8, 2013 file photo, Gov. Jerry Brown gestures to a stack of reports on California prisons as he discusses his call for federal judges to return control of California prisons to the state during a news conference at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this March 2, 2012 file photo, an inmate stares out a window at the Deuel Vocational Institution in Tracy, Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. One of the lawsuits involves crowding in state prisons. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2009 file photo, correctional officers stand watch over an inmate receiving treatment in the emergency room at California State Prison, Corcoran, in Corcoran, Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. One of the lawsuits involves inmates' medical care. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2009 file photo, an inmate on suicide watch is escorted by correctional officers at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility in Corcoran, Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. One of the lawsuits involves inmates' mental health care including suicide prevention efforts. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 17, 2011 file photo, concertina wire and a guard tower are seen at Pelican Bay State Prison near Crescent City, Calif. Gov. Jerry Brown is criticizing attorneys representing inmates and court-appointed masters and experts who he says have a financial incentive to drag out lawsuits against the state. One of the lawsuits involves crowding in state prisons. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

(AP) ? Gov. Jerry Brown has begun aggressively challenging federal court oversight of California's prison system by highlighting what he says is a costly conflict of interest: The private law firms representing inmates and the judges' own hand-picked authorities benefit financially by keeping the cases alive.

How much are they making?

A tally by The Associated Press, compiled from three state agencies, shows California taxpayers have spent $182 million for inmates' attorneys and court-appointed authorities over the past 15 years. The payments cover a dozen lawsuits filed over the treatment of state prisoners, parolees and incarcerated juveniles, some of which have been settled.

The total exceeds $200 million when the state's own legal costs are added.

While the amounts are a blip on California's budget, they provide a continuous income stream for the private attorneys and experts involved in the ongoing litigation. And that is the point Brown is trying to make.

The AP sought the tally after the Democratic governor began using court filings and public appearances to call for an end to two major lawsuits that have forced the state to spend billions of dollars improving its medical and mental health care for prison inmates. Brown says the complaints are expensive, frivolous and motivated by attorneys' own financial interest.

"They don't want to go away," he said last month, standing behind a stack of court documents. "I mean, the name of the game here is, 'Come to Sacramento and get your little piece of the pie.'"

Brown says that, thanks to recent overhauls, California now offers inmates the best medical and mental health care of any prison system in the nation.

Inmates' lawyers and the court-appointed authorities overseeing inmate medical and mental health say the system, with more than 132,000 inmates, remains crowded and still has problems with suicides and mentally ill prisoners who deserve better care. They say they are not motivated by profit, but by a desire to protect prisoners' constitutional right to be free from cruel treatment.

"It's ridiculous for the governor to merely characterize these cases as being about money, when in fact these cases have been the only impetus in the last 20 years for reducing the prison population and improving conditions," said Donald Specter, director of the nonprofit Prison Law Office in Berkeley, which has won several major cases against the state.

The nonprofit, which has taken the lead in suing the state over inmate health care, and other legal firms have been paid $8.3 million in that case.

Many of the lawsuits are continuing despite the billions of dollars spent to improve treatment for the state's felons and a massive realignment of the state's penal system. The realignment has transferred responsibility for incarcerating tens of thousands of convicts from the state to the counties to reduce prison crowding.

Brown says inmate care now exceeds constitutional standards. He argues that what he called "the prison lobby" ? lawyers and the court-appointed special master overseeing penitentiary improvements ? is perpetuating the legal action to make money.

"We've got hundreds of lawyers wandering around the prisons looking for problems," Brown said.

The state has paid nearly $83 million to private law firms and the court-appointed authorities involved in the two major lawsuits that have forced the state to reduce its prison population and improve inmate medical and mental health treatment, according to the figures provided at the AP's request. The costs were provided by the corrections department, the state Department of Justice and the prison medical receiver's office and compiled by the AP.

In his budget address last month, Brown said the money that would be saved by ending court oversight in the two major mental health and health care cases could be spent instead on inmate education, substance abuse treatment and other rehabilitation programs, as well as to supervise convicts once they leave prison.

The governor has taken particular aim at the court-appointed monitor overseeing inmate mental health care, Matthew Lopes.

The state has paid the special masters in that case and the prison experts they have hired more than $48 million since 1997, the earliest year for which reliable records can be found, according to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

The beneficiaries of those payments include Lopes, who has been the special master for more than five years, and his Rhode Island law firm, Pannone Lopes and Devereaux LLC. The previous special master, Joseph Keating, left in 2007.

In a court filing last month, the governor's administration said Lopes' ever-expanding standards for care have no relation to the real world and do not acknowledge the steps the state has taken to improve treatment.

"Perhaps the reason is because there is no incentive for the special master to be objective in this case," the administration said in disputing Lopes' conclusion that the state still provides substandard mental health care. "Further monitoring ensures that this revenue stream will continue."

Lopes said he could not comment because the matter is part of the ongoing legal dispute.

"There's no evidence that backs that up, other than saying, 'Oh, he got all that money' and they don't like his reports," said Michael Bien, the lead attorney representing the welfare of mentally ill inmates.

Bien's San Francisco law firm, Rosen Bien Galvan and Grunfeld, is among the firms that have been paid $19 million by the state in the inmate mental health lawsuit.

He said Brown and the state would be better off complying with a prison population cap supported by the U.S. Supreme Court and by working with Lopes to reduce inmate suicides and improve mental health treatment.

The state never objected to the special master's prior reports, Bien said, nor to his invoices for payment. The easiest way for the state to end the lawsuits is to improve the treatment of inmates to the level set by the courts, he said.

Later Monday, the inmates' attorneys planned to file their formal response to Brown's criticism of Lopes' recent report.

Bien and other inmates' attorneys are paid by taxpayers only if they can prove a federal or constitutional violation, and by law are then paid at an hourly rate hundreds of dollars below what they would usually charge. They also have to pay out of pocket for the expert witnesses they hire to counter the state's experts.

"This is really offensive to say that I'm doing this for the money," Bien said. "I didn't do it to get rich."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-11-Calif%20Prisons-Legal%20Costs/id-f9795ce3a64b458395e23c541622c407

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CAF president Hayatou defends South Africa?s Cup of Nations

This year?s Cup of Nations drew to a close on Sunday as Nigeria defeated Burkina Faso 1-0 in Johannesburg. Libya was originally due to host the tournament, only for it to be switched to South Africa amid security concerns. The Cup of Nations marked South Africa?s first major football tournament since it hosted the 2010 FIFA World Cup, but the event has faced criticism over poor attendances at certain games and substandard playing surfaces.

However Hayatou told CNN: ?The challenge was to have a successful Africa Cup of Nations because some people thought we couldn't succeed because South Africa isn't at the top of the sport at the moment. But the organising committee showed a lot of effort and did everything to ensure that this competition would go well. Of course, all the stadiums are not full, unlike what happened at the World Cup but for an Africa Cup of Nations I think we've had a record attendance level. We have sold just over 750,000 tickets which is a very good result.?

Meanwhile, Hayatou has confirmed his exit strategy from the presidential post he has occupied since 1987. ?If I?m elected, this will be the last term,? he told reporters on Friday. Hayatou is poised to extend his long-running tenure as president of the CAF after he was revealed as the only candidate standing for the post at March?s elections. CAF in December confirmed that Hayatou will be unchallenged for re-election.

The subject of the CAF presidency has proved a thorny one in recent months after a controversial amendment was made to the Confederation?s statutes back in September. CAF member nations voted to introduce a measure that will permit only executive committee officials to run for the organisation?s presidency. The measure was announced at the CAF Congress in the Seychelles and seemingly put paid to officials such as Jacques Anouma?s hopes of running against Hayatou at the Confederation?s general assembly in Morocco.

Ivory Coast Football Federation (FIF) president Anouma formalised his intention to run for the presidency in July, but the new CAF rule stipulates that anyone seeking the presidency must be a voting member of the CAF executive committee. Anouma is a member of CAF?s executive committee only because he serves as one of the continent?s representatives on FIFA?s Executive Committee. As such he does not have any voting rights in CAF matters, but has fought a long-running battle to be recognised as a candidate.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sportbusiness/~3/PGJfZ-Y1Kto/caf-president-hayatou-defends-south-africa-s-cup-of-nations

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Phone companies prepare for storm power outages

NEW YORK (AP) ? Phone companies topped off fuel at cell-tower generators in Northeastern states Friday, preparing for a storm that could bring power outages, and with them, a loss of cell service.

Cell-towers are dependent on electric power from the grid, but many of them have backup batteries, and in some cases generators that can power the antennas independently for longer. Prolonged power outages, such as those after Superstorm Sandy, can bring down cell service in an area.

Verizon Wireless prides itself on having at least eight hours of backup power at all its cell towers, and spokesman Tom Pica said technicians were busy making sure the generators that kick in once batteries are depleted had fuel.

"We also contract with local (fuel) suppliers to ensure regular deliveries if there are extended commercial power issues, as we did during Sandy to positive effect," Pica said.

AT&T Inc. and Sprint Nextel Corp. were making similar preparations, and lining up portable generators to truck out to cell towers with no permanent generators.

"With a storm of this magnitude, we may have some outages. But if service goes down, we'll do all we can to get it back up as fast as possible." said Marissa Shorenstein, president of AT&T New York.

The companies also have "mobile cell towers" ? trucks that can act as replacement antennas in areas where towers go out and prove hard to restore.

Telecommunications landlines are less susceptible to power outages. The lines carry all the power corded phones need to function, and phone companies have massive battery banks and generators to back them up. Cordless phones won't work without power, though. Phone service from cable companies is also dependent on power, but most companies supply backup batteries to power the phones for some hours in an outage. Verizon's "FiOS" fiber-optic landline service is also dependent on power and backup batteries.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-08-Northeast%20Snow-Telecoms/id-b0c369266d314405ae4881e36f564237

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Video: Drivers stranded after ignoring road closure warnings

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50753386/

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Snowstorm hits NYC, Boston; 1 to 3 feet feared

Edgewater resident Soonmee Lee cleans show from her car at the Municipal Parking Lot in Fort Lee, N.J. as a winter storm hits the region on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/The Record of Bergen County, Marko Georgiev) ONLINE OUT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; NO ARCHIVING; MANDATORY CREDIT

Edgewater resident Soonmee Lee cleans show from her car at the Municipal Parking Lot in Fort Lee, N.J. as a winter storm hits the region on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/The Record of Bergen County, Marko Georgiev) ONLINE OUT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; NO ARCHIVING; MANDATORY CREDIT

This image released by NASA from NOAA's GOES-13 satellite captured at 9:01 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013 shows a massive winter storm coming together as two low pressure systems merge over the northeast U.S. Snow began falling across the Northeast on Friday, ushering in what was predicted to be a huge, possibly historic blizzard and sending residents scurrying to stock up on food and gas up their cars. (AP Photo/NASA)

A man braves the snow on Teaneck Road in Teaneck, N.J. on Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/The Record of Bergen County, Viorel Florescu) ONLINE OUT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; NO ARCHIVING; MANDATORY CREDIT

Traffic moves along Route 17 in Ridge, N.J. as snow falls Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/The Record of Bergen County, Michael Karas) ONLINE OUT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; NO ARCHIVING; MANDATORY CREDIT

Private contractors working for the N.J. Dept. of Transportation wait for the snow to start falling as 13 tracks are lined up just off exit 3 on Rt. 78 in Greenwich, N.J., Friday, Feb. 8, 2013. Snow began falling across the Northeast on Friday, ushering in what was predicted to be a huge, possibly historic blizzard and sending residents scurrying to stock up on food and gas up their cars. The storm could dump 1 to 3 feet of snow from New York City to Boston and beyond. (AP Photo/Rich Schultz)

(AP) ? A storm that forecasters warned could be a blizzard for the history books began clobbering the New York-to-Boston corridor on Friday, grounding flights, closing workplaces and sending people rushing to get home ahead of a possible 1 to 3 feet of snow.

From New Jersey to Maine, shoppers crowded into supermarkets and hardware stores to buy food, snow shovels, flashlights and generators, something that became a precious commodity after Superstorm Sandy in October. Others gassed up their cars, another lesson learned all too well after Sandy. Across much of New England, schools closed well ahead of the first snowflakes.

"This is a storm of major proportions," Boston Mayor Thomas Menino warned. "Stay off the roads. Stay home."

The wind-whipped snowstorm mercifully arrived at the start of a weekend, which meant fewer cars on the road and extra time for sanitation crews to clear the mess before commuters in the New York-to-Boston region of roughly 25 million people have to go back to work. But it could also mean a weekend cooped up indoors.

Rainy Neves, a mother of two in Cambridge, just west of Boston, did some last-minute shopping at a grocery store, filling her cart to the brim.

"Honestly, a lot of junk ? a lot of quick things you can make just in case lights go out, a lot of snacks to keep the kids busy while they'd be inside during the storm, things to sip with my friends, things for movies," she said. "Just a whole bunch of things to keep us entertained."

In heavily Catholic Boston, the archdiocese urged parishioners to be prudent about attending Sunday Mass and reminded them that, under church law, the obligation "does not apply when there is grave difficulty in fulfilling this obligation."

Halfway through what had been a mild winter across the Northeast, blizzard warnings were posted from parts of New Jersey to Maine. The National Weather Service said Boston could get close to 3 feet of snow by Saturday evening, while most of Rhode Island could receive more than 2 feet. Connecticut was bracing for 2 feet, and New York City was expecting as much as 14 inches.

By Friday evening, the New York-to-Boston corridor was getting blowing, swirling snow and freezing rain. Early snowfall was blamed for a 19-car pileup in Cumberland, Maine, that caused minor injuries.

The snow was expected to be at its heaviest Friday night and into Saturday. Forecasters said wind gusts up to 75 mph could cause widespread power outages and whip the snow into fearsome drifts. Flooding was expected along coastal areas still recovering from Superstorm Sandy, which hit New York and New Jersey the hardest and is considered Jersey's worst natural disaster.

Meteorologist Jeff Masters, of Weather Underground, said the winter storm was a collision of two storms and may end up among the Boston area's Top 5 most intense ever.

"When you add two respectable storms together, you're going to get a knockout punch with this one," he said.

It could break Boston's all-time snowstorm record of 27.6 inches, set in 2003, forecasters said. The storm also comes almost 35 years to the day after the Blizzard of '78, a ferocious storm that dropped 27 inches of snow, packed hurricane-force winds and claimed dozens of lives.

Masters said the region could get a break from warmer air trailing behind that is expected to push temperature up to the 40s by Monday.

"It's going to be not that difficult to dig out, compared to maybe some other nor'easters in the past, where it stayed cold after the storm went through," he said.

Drivers were urged to stay off the streets lest their cars get stuck, preventing snowplows and emergency vehicles from getting through. New York City ran extra commuter trains to help people get home before the brunt of the storm hit.

Amtrak stopped running trains in cities around the Northeast on Friday afternoon. Airlines canceled more than 4,300 flights through Saturday, and New York City's three major airports and Boston's Logan Airport shut down.

Interstate 95 was closed to all but essential traffic in Rhode Island, where the governor said outages remained the biggest threat.

"With tree branches laden with heavy, wet snow, the winds picking up and the temperatures plunging all at the same time, it's a bad combination," Gov. Lincoln Chafee said.

In Massachusetts, Gov. Deval Patrick enacted a statewide driving ban for the first time since the Blizzard of '78. Hours before the ban went into effect at 4 p.m., long lines formed at gas stations, some of which were almost out of fuel.

James Stone said he was saving the remaining regular gas at his station in Abington, south of Boston, for snowplow drivers.

"It hasn't snowed like this in two years," Stone said. "Most people are caught way off-guard."

In New York, Fashion Week, a series of designer showings with some activities held under tents, went on mostly as scheduled, though organizers put on additional crews to deal with the snow and ice, turned up the heat and fortified the tents. The snow did require some wardrobe changes: Designer Michael Kors was forced to arrive at the Project Runway show in Uggs.

For Joe DeMartino, of Fairfield, Conn., being overprepared was impossible: His wife was expecting their first baby Sunday. He stocked up on gas and food, got firewood ready and was installing a baby seat in the car. The couple also packed for the hospital.

"They say that things should clear up by Sunday. We're hoping that they're right," he said.

Said his wife, Michelle: "It adds an element of excitement."

The snow was too much of a good thing in some places. In New Hampshire, the University of Connecticut's Skiing Carnival was canceled because of the snowstorm. In Maine, the National Toboggan Championships in Camden were postponed from Saturday to Sunday, and the Camp Sunshine Polar Plunge was put off until March.

At Rosie's Liquors in Abington, customers were lined up eight to 10 deep Friday, snapping up rum, wine and 30-packs of beer.

"We've been absolutely slammed. It's almost been like Christmas here," manager Kristen Brown said. "A lot of people are saying, 'I'm going to be stuck with my family all weekend. I need something to do.'"

___

Associated Press writers Denise Lavoie in Whitman, Rodrique Ngowi in Watertown, John Christoffersen in Fairfield, Conn., and Bob Salsberg in Boston contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-08-Northeast%20Snow/id-aa2ba6e7d8014e76a37ed2033321b771

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Gay News Headlines: Relationships, Marriage, Adoption

GAYTWOGETHER disclaims any and all responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, completeness, legality, reliability, operability, or availability of information or material displayed on this site and does not claim credit for any images or articles featured on this site, unless otherwise noted. Usually we try to give credit when and where we can. All visual content is copyright to it's respectful owners. Information on this site may contain errors or inaccuracies, the site's proprietors do not make warranty as to the correctness or reliability of the site's content. If you own rights to any of the images or articles, and do not wish them to appear on this site, please contact us via e-mail and they will be promptly removed. GAYTWOGETHER contains links to other Internet sites. These links are provided solely as a convenience to you and are not endorsements of any products or services in such sites, and no information in such site has been endorsed or approved by GAYTWOGETHER.

Source: http://gaytwogether.typepad.com/gaytwogether/2013/02/gay-news-headlines-relationships-marriage-adoption.html

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Cop shot, killed during murder hunt for ex-LAPD officer

By Jonathan Lloyd, NBCLosAngeles.com

Published at 10:30 a.m. ET: A former Los Angeles Police Department officer who is believed to be targeting officers and their families is wanted in connection with the ambush-style slaying of a Riverside officer Thursday morning at a stop light, according to police.

Three officers were shot -- two in Riverside, one in Corona -- Thursday morning, and all of the shootings are likely connected to Chistopher Dorner, a former Los Angeles Police Department officer wanted in connection with a double slaying last weekend in Irvine.

For more coverage go to KNBC

Police said two Riverside officers responded to Magnolia and Arlington avenues at about 1:30 a.m. Thursday after receiving a call for assistance. The response occurred during a search that began with a report of a vehicle matching the description of Dorner.

"By all accounts, it appears they were stopped at a red light and just ambushed by the suspect," said Riverside Lt. Guy Toussaint.

Both Riverside officers were shot and transported to a hospital, where one was pronounced dead. The second officer remained in surgery, police said.

"The suspect did flee the scene, and we're in the process of trying to identify and apprehend the suspect at this time," said Toussaint.

The LAPD confirmed officers are looking for Dorner in connection with the Riverside shooting.

Corona Sgt. Brent Nelson confirmed that the Riverside shooting is connected to another Thursday morning shooting in Corona.
LAPD's Newton Division confirmed early Thursday that two of its officers were involved in a confrontation with a man believed to be Dorner.

One of the officer's was shot, suffering what was described as a "minor" graze wound. The officers were providing protection for subjects mentioned in an online manifesto in which Dorner issued threats involving several officers and their families, police said.

"The attacks will stop when the department states the truth about my innocence," Dorner states in the manifesto.

Every officer mentioned in the document was provided with police protection, said Sgt. Rudy Lopez.

"It's extremely intense," Lopez said. "We're trying to identify where he's been, where he's going.

"In this case, we are the targets. He's brazen. He's on a hunt to do whatever havoc he can."

More news from NBCLosAngeles.com

The officers were flagged down by someone who recognized Dorner's vehicle. The vehicle was described as a gray Nissan Titan with California license plate 8D83987. That information was displayed on freeway signs Thursday morning in Southern California.

Officers in protective gear were at the locations in Corona and Riverside.

Also early Thursday, the San Diego Harbor Police Department confirmed a badge with Dorner's picture identification was found at about 2:27 a.m. in the center divider on Harbor Drive, near San Diego International Airport.

A third officer-involved shooting was reported at about 5:30 a.m. in Torrance. Officers later confirmed that shooting was not connected to the Dorner search.

Authorities asked for the public's help in finding Dorner, whose last known address is 4931 Sharon Dr. in La Palma. Dorner is described as 6 feet tall, about 270 pounds with black hair and brown eyes.

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/07/16884539-cop-shot-killed-during-hunt-for-ex-lapd-officer-wanted-over-calif-slayings?lite

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Recovering 'Good Morning America' host Robin Roberts sets return

(Reuters) - "Good Morning America" host Robin Roberts will rejoin the ABC morning television show on February 20 after treatment for a rare blood disorder, the show said on Thursday.

Roberts' doctors deemed her healthy enough to return to work five months after receiving a bone marrow transplant to treat myelodysplastic syndrome, a bone marrow disorder triggered by treatment for breast cancer five years ago.

"I'm excited to rejoin my wonderful 'GMA' family," Roberts, 52, said in a note posted online on Thursday. "I'm also looking forward to thanking YOU ... for your many prayers and well wishes. Your compassion has been an enormous source of comfort to me and my family."

Roberts will begin appearing on an abbreviated schedule and eventually return to working five days a week, co-anchor Sam Champion said on the show.

Roberts revealed her illness in June and started medical leave in August.

(Reporting by Eric Kelsey, editing by Jill Serjeant and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/recovering-good-morning-america-host-robin-roberts-sets-192616710.html

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Seagull Nebula Spreads Cosmic Wings in Amazing Photos

Eye-popping new images from a telescope in Chile reveal a new look at the Seagull Nebula soaring through a cosmic unicorn in the night sky.

The new nebula photos were released Wednesday by the European Southern Observatory in Chile's Atacama Desert. They show the Seagull Nebula as a wispy set of red glowing clouds amid dark black dust lanes and bright stars.

ESO officials released a stunning video tour of the Seagull Nebula in addition to the new photos.

The Seagull Nebula is located about 3,700 light-years from Earth in one of the outer arms of the Milky Way galaxy. It is perched between the night sky constellations of Monoceros (The Unicorn) and Canis Major (The Great Dog). From wingtip to wingtip, this cosmic seagull has a wingspan of about 100 light-years. [Strange Shapes Seen in Nebulas (Gallery)]

The red hue of the nebula's dust and gas clouds, which make up the Seagull's celestial wings, is a telltale sign of ionized hydrogen gas, ESO scientists said. In fact, most of the Seagull Nebula is made of hydrogen gas, they added.

"Hot new stars form within these clouds and their intense ultraviolet radiation causes the surrounding gas to glow brightly," ESO officials said in an image description.

The Seagull Nebula's bird shape is actually made up of three different celestial objects. The nebula is officialy known as IC 2177, but the three clouds that make up its head and two wings have their own designations.

"These objects are all entries in the Sharpless nebula catalogue, a list of over 300 glowing clouds of gas compiled by American astronomer Stewart Sharpless in the 1950s," ESO officials said.

The new ESO photo is close-up of the Seagull Nebula's captured by La Silla Observatory and shows the cloud making up the bulk of the seagull's head, a cloud known as Sharpless 2-292.

"It shows only a small section of the nebula, a large cloud that is furiously forming hot stars in its interior," ESO officials said. The image is peppered with several bright stars, including a dazzling star that serves as the Seagull's "eye," they added.

The Seagull Nebula is an example of what astronauts call HII region, vast areas of hydrogen gas that are primarily found along the outer arms of spiral galaxies like the Milky Way. HII regions are a clue that active star formation is still going on inside a galaxy, ESO officials said.

You can follow SPACE.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter?@tariqjmalik.?Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter?@Spacedotcom?and on?Facebook.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/seagull-nebula-spreads-cosmic-wings-amazing-photos-125257412.html

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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Graphic Design / Visual Communications Designer at Recurly ...

We're looking for a graphic designer to join our team who will own the development of our visual communications. From layout, to asset creation, through delivery by working with our front-end team.

This role will span from webpages to application interface design. User Experience is critical for our business, and the graphic designer will play a key role in ensuring that our visual communications are clean, simple, intuitive and pixel perfect.?

This person will ensure that we maintain a consistency in our design aesthetic from the moment that a customer comes to our website, through signup and on boarding, and beyond into newsletter communications and webinars.

About you
  • You're passionate about designing achingly beautiful websites.
  • You think in terms of design systems.
  • You get giddy when thinking about designing a full icon set.
  • You have an opinion about flat vs skeuomorphic interfaces.
  • You're a type nerd.
  • You get excited about helping shape the direction of an app used by thousands of people.
  • You can use design to drive conversions.
  • You have an eye like a hawk for detail.
  • You feel physical pain when elements are aligned to a grid.
  • You can cogently communicate about your work to non-designers.

Source: http://www.authenticjobs.com/jobs/15900/

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Pacific locked in 'La Nada' limbo

Feb. 6, 2013 ? Sea-surface height data from NASA's Jason-1 satellite show that the equatorial Pacific Ocean is still locked in what some call a neutral, or 'La Nada' state. This condition follows two years of strong, cool-water La Niña events.

A new image, based on the average of 10 days of data centered on Jan. 26, 2013, shows near-normal conditions (depicted in green) across the equatorial Pacific. The image is available at: http://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov/images/latestdata/jason/2013/20130126P.jpg .

This latest image highlights the processes that occur on time scales of more than a year, but usually less than 10 years, such as El Niño and La Niña. These processes are known as the interannual ocean signal. To show that signal, scientists refined data for this image by removing trends over the past 20 years, seasonal variations and time-averaged signals of large-scale ocean circulation.

The height of the water relates, in part, to its temperature, and thus is an indicator of the amount of heat stored in the ocean below. As the ocean warms, its level rises; as it cools, its level falls. Yellow and red areas indicate where the waters are relatively warmer and have expanded above normal sea level, while green (which dominates in this image) indicates near-normal sea level, and blue and purple areas show where the waters are relatively colder and sea level is lower than normal. Above-normal height variations along the equatorial Pacific indicate El Niño conditions, while below-normal height variations indicate La Niña conditions. The temperature of the upper ocean can have a significant influence on weather patterns and climate. For a more detailed explanation of what this type of image means, visit: http://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov/science/elninopdo/latestdata/ .

"This past spring, after two years of La Niña, the expected El Niño was a no-show," says Bill Patzert, climatologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "La Niña faded and 'La Nada' conditions locked in."

"This absence of El Niño and La Niña, termed 'neutral' by some, has left long-range climate forecasters adrift," Patzert added. "Seasonal, long-range forecasting works best when signals like El Niño and La Niña are strong." Patzert calls the present condition 'La Nada,' because the word 'neutral' misleadingly implies to some that weather will be 'normal.'

"For me 'normal' is the cycle on a washing machine," Patzert said. "I never say the word 'normal' when it comes to winter weather in the American West. For instance, in the last 100 years, we've only had a total of six 'normal' years of rainfall in Los Angeles, meaning about 15 inches of rain per winter in downtown L.A. Historically, La Nadas have delivered both the wettest and driest winters on record. For long-range forecasters, La Nada is a teeth grinder." NASA scientists will continue to monitor this persistent La Nada -- now in its 10th month -- to see what the Pacific Ocean has in store next for the world's climate.

The comings and goings of El Niño, La Niña and La Nada are part of the long-term, evolving state of global climate, for which measurements of sea surface height are a key indicator. Jason-1 is a joint effort between NASA and the French Space Agency, Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES). Jason-2 is a joint effort between NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, CNES and the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT). JPL manages the U.S. portion of both missions for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. In early 2015, NASA and its international partners CNES, NOAA and EUMETSAT will launch Jason-3, which will extend the timeline of ocean surface topography measurements begun by the Topex/Poseidon and Jason 1 and 2 satellites. Jason-3 will make highly detailed measurements of sea level on Earth to gain insight into ocean circulation and climate change.

For more on NASA's satellite altimetry programs, visit: http://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov .

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/8oBcHDVR6bU/130206155825.htm

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Mental health funds sought as help falls short - Capital Update - The ...

JORDAN SCHRADER | Staff writer ? Published February 04, 2013 Modified February 04, 2013

It?s nothing new: horror stories about people whose mental illnesses turned them into killers; a safety net that failed to catch them; and now, politicians in Olympia vowing to do something.

?There?s suddenly a lot of movement, and it?s sad that it?s taken a series of catastrophic tragedies to start addressing this, but it?s a catalyst,? said Larry Thompson, a therapist at Western State Hospital in Lakewood who said he?s more hopeful for change than he has been in years. ?Maybe the iceberg that has been funding for mental health is starting to thaw and break apart.?

Momentum does seem to be building for action on mental health. But state lawmakers still haven?t paid the bill from the last time they acted.

That was in 2010, when they voted unanimously to make it easier to detain potentially dangerous people for treatment of mental illness.

The new standards would have allowed more consideration of a patient?s past behavior for what is known as an involuntary commitment, which now requires some kind of immediate threat or danger. But cost estimates pushed lawmakers to postpone most of those changes until mid-2015.

?We?re seeing the impacts of that. The amount of mentally ill in the jails just awaiting evaluation has skyrocketed,? Thompson said. So many mentally ill inmates have crowded the Pierce County Jail, many while awaiting a Western State Hospital evaluation, that corrections officers are piling up overtime.

?The system is probably as broken as I?ve ever seen it in 40 years,? said Thompson, a member of the Washington Federation of State Employees union who has worked in the mental health field since his days in the Air Force at the age of 18.

Similar sentiments accompanied the 2010 law, inspired by the New Year?s Eve 2007 stabbing death of Shannon Harps in Seattle and a 2008 shooting spree in Skagit County that left a sheriff?s deputy and five others dead.

This time around, the cases include a sleeping father in Tacoma slain with a hatchet, allegedly by his son; a Key Peninsula market shooting, allegedly by a woman who told detectives she wanted to try killing others before she committed suicide; and much farther away in Connecticut, the massacre of children at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

BOTTOM OF STATE RANKINGS

Sen. Karen Keiser, a Kent Democrat, introduced a proposal ? Senate Bill 5480 ? Thursday to put the more expansive standards for involuntary commitments into effect next January.

Lawmakers will have to find money to do that ? or even to start preparing for the July 2015 date, as former Gov. Chris Gregoire called for in her budget.

And money is hard to come by as the Legislature grapples with a shortfall approaching $1 billion and calls for devoting another billion or so to schools to comply with a state Supreme Court ruling. Similar shortfalls in past years have led to cuts that have closed wards at Western State and shrunk options for less restrictive treatment.

The number of state-hospital beds for civilly committed patients as a share of the state?s population has declined by a third over the past 11 years, according to the Legislature?s nonpartisan staff, which said space for patients coming from the criminal system has actually stayed roughly steady.

In the private hospitals where many patients go first, Washington?s number of psychiatric beds per person in 2009 trailed 46 other states, according to American Hospital Association rankings cited in a state-commissioned study. It is generally believed that the shortage of beds in those community treatment programs is contributing to the surge in mentally ill inmates at jails.

18 MONTHS: $22 MILLION?

The changes now postponed until 2015 would have added up to an extra 2,700 short-term commitments a year, on top of the 7,500 in 2009, according to the study by the Washington State Institute for Public Policy. That would require up to 168 more short-term beds across the state and up to 25 beds at Western and Eastern state hospitals.

One estimate had put the cost to the main state budget at $22 million for the first year and a half.

The Washington chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness advocacy group disputes the state cost estimates as too large, and wants to implement the changes sooner. So do lawmakers such as Democratic Rep. Tami Green, whose district includes Western State.

?We?re seeing heavier and heavier demand for services with nothing for people to go to unless they?re in crisis,? said Sandi Ando, chairwoman of NAMI Washington?s public policy committee.

PAYING FOR THE EXTRA BEDS

Lawmakers like Green and Puyallup Rep. Dawn Morrell, who chairs a panel on human-services funding, see an opportunity in new federal money that is about to flow to Washington if their fellow Democrats have their way.

Many previously ineligible psychiatric patients will suddenly be eligible for Medicaid health insurance if the Legislature decides to accept the funding in President Barack Obama?s health law. But the strings attached to the funding worry many Republicans, including responsibility for matching a fraction of the money in the future.

That funding would free up state money going to the same patients now. Depending on decisions legislators make, the two-year savings for mental health could top $60 million, the Legislature?s staff estimates.

?The fight is going to be: I?m going to want to keep that $60 million in mental health, and other people are probably going to want it to go other places,? Green said.

In her final budget proposal before leaving office, Gregoire proposed devoting about $52 million in new state and federal funding to mental health. She called for getting ready for the 2015 rules by restoring two 30-bed state-hospital wards and opening several new facilities, including three 16-bed facilities for mental evaluations and short-term commitments, and 42 beds spread among multiple small facilities that would be alternatives or follow-ups to hospital commitment.

The Legislature long ago authorized, but never funded, those alternative sites.

Gregoire?s successor, Democrat Jay Inslee, is developing his own budget plan. Health officials in his administration?s Department of Social and Health Services are rethinking the call for new wards, they told lawmakers at a briefing Wednesday, considering responding to the increased need with more outpatient treatment instead.

Similarly, Cheri Dolezal, director of the mental-health network that serves Pierce County ? one of 11 throughout the state but the only one run by a private company, Minnesota-based OptumHealth ? told lawmakers Wednesday that they should spend money on alternatives to involuntary commitments. She said her network would like another triage unit like the one it operates in Fife that mostly serves voluntary patients.

Green wants to focus on outpatient care that doesn?t require more hospital beds, but does involve detaining potentially dangerous patients. She calls for creating a new category of court-ordered care, this one for outpatient treatment and modeled on those of other states including New York, whose so-called Kendra?s Law is named for a woman who was pushed to her death in front of a subway train.

Green, a nurse who treats mentally ill patients and has dealt with her own depression, said people with mental illness are more likely to be the victims of crime than the perpetrators ? but said she isn?t one to turn down an opportunity to address the need.

?Sadly, tragedies like Sandy Hook and all the gun shootings we?ve had, and tragedies we?ve had here, are sort of what?s giving people the political will to make things happen,? Green said.

LATEST SOLUTION

Lawmakers could move to make it easier to commit people like Jonathan Meline, who, months after a release from Western State, was sent back there on charges of killing his father as he slept in their Tacoma home.

His case presents special circumstances because Meline, like several others in recent cases being cited in the Legislature, had been charged with crimes before but was found incompetent to stand trial.

The standards for incompetency are different from those used to commit patients. Prosecutors have proposed tying the two areas together for situations when mental illness forces them to drop a violent felony charge. Under their proposal, being shepherded by Rep. Jamie Pedersen, D-Seattle, and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam, a court would have a separate, lower standard for committing someone whose mental illness makes similar criminal acts likely.

The proposal, in the form of House Bill 1114, is scheduled for its first vote Tuesday in a House committee.

Prosecutors say a relatively small number of offenders would be affected. Still, mental-health advocates say some money would be needed to expand beds to meet the new need. The prosecutors? state association agrees, said its executive leader, Tom McBride ? although he argues that without the law, released patients who end up back in the legal system are costly in other ways.

?We?re spending a lot of money on them now,? he said.

Another solution would provide for certain mentally ill patients who are now being considered incompetent to stand trial to be declared ?guilty and mentally ill? and sentenced to prison, while also receiving treatment. It?s proposed by Sen. Mike Carrell, a Lakewood Republican and chairman of the Human Services committee. He says it would save money by housing offenders in prisons instead of special secure ? and costly ? wards at state hospitals.

Civil-liberties advocates and defense lawyers oppose both, saying they would deny patients due process.

?They?re looking for a simplistic answer to a complex problem, and that?s the difficulty here. Everybody wants the silver bullet and there isn?t one here,? said Bob Cooper, a lobbyist for defense attorneys.

Carrell also wants to convene a task force to rethink the whole mental-health system. He said money is only part of the problem.

?If we?re spending $180,000 a year for the average person at Western State Hospital,? Carrell said, ?it?s pretty hard to say we?re not spending a lot of money on it.?

Jordan Schrader: 360-786-1826 blog.thenewstribune.com/politics jordan.schrader@ thenewstribune.com @Jordan_Schrader

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2013/02/04/2409671/mental-health-funds-sought-as.html

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