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Drug overdose deaths soar to double the number of N.J. road fatalities in 2014

Prescription-Drugs

JUNE 17, 2015, 10:02 AM    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 2015, 12:20 AM
BY MARY JO LAYTON
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Drug overdoses from illicit and prescription drugs claimed twice as many lives statewide in 2014 as auto crashes, becoming the leading cause of accidental death in New Jersey, according to a national report and state data released Wednesday.

In Bergen County, heroin overdoses rose sharply, one of the most dramatic increases in New Jersey last year, according to data provided by the state Medical Examiner’s Office.

But there are signs that in North Jersey that trend may be reversing, as more first responders are using the rescue drug Narcan to save people in the throes of an overdose. So far this year, the drug has been used 60 times, resulting in far fewer deaths, said Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli. Since Narcan was approved for use in 2014, more than 45 towns across North Jersey have deployed it to stop overdoses. The drug, which can reverse an overdose in as little as two minutes, is injected or inhaled.

Last month, Cliffside Park police responded to a call at a Day Avenue home and found a 34-year-old Fairview man lying on his back, a potential overdose victim. They administered two doses of the rescue drug in the form of a nasal spray and took the patient to Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen. Other saves occurred in Hillsdale, Lodi, Oakland and Ramsey in recent weeks.

The results have been a reduction in deaths so far this year, with 11 people dying of heroin overdoses, compared with 42 who died all of last year in Bergen County, according to Molinelli, who has organized task forces to rein in the heroin trade in North Jersey.

“All the community outreach being done by addictive service groups, parent and school organizations and law enforcement has been substantial,” Molinelli said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-drug-overdoses-double-over-4-years-become-leading-cause-of-accidental-death-1.1357250

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NUMBER OF HOMESCHOOLED CHILDREN SOARS IN AMERICA: UP 61.8% OVER 10 YEARS

Homeschooling

by DR. SUSAN BERRY19 May 2015473

Newly released data from the U.S. Department of Education shows that between 2003-2012, the number of American children between ages 5 to 17 who are homeschooled has risen 61.8 percent, and that the percentage homeschooled in that age range has increased from 2.2 to 3.4 percent.

According to data published on May 7 by the National Center for Education Statistics(NCES), in 2003 1,096,000 school-aged children were homeschooled in the U.S., representing 2.2 percent of the total number of students in that age range that year. In 2012, the number homeschooled was 1,773,000, or 3.4 percent of elementary and secondary school-aged children that year.

The increase in the number of children homeschooled between 2003 and 2012 is 677,000—or 61.8 percent.

https://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/05/19/number-of-homeschooled-children-soars-in-america-up-61-8-over-10-years/

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Verizon to buy AOL for $4.4B; AOL shares soar

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Fred Imbert | @foimbert

Telecom giant Verizon announced Tuesday it will be buying AOL for $50 per share, or about $4.4 billion. (Tweet This)

AOL’s stock was up more than 17 percent after the announcement. Verizon’s stock was down slightly.

AOL co-founder Steve Case tweeted his approval.

The transaction will be completed this summer and will take the form of a tender offer followed by a merger, after which AOL will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Verizon, the announcement said.

“Verizon’s vision is to provide customers with a premium digital experience based on a global multiscreen network platform. This acquisition supports our strategy to provide a cross-screen connection for consumers, creators and advertisers to deliver that premium customer experience,” said Lowell McAdam, Verizon’s chief executive.

Tim Armstrong, AOL’s chairman and CEO, will remain at his position once the deal is finalized.

“Verizon is a leader in mobile and OTT (over-the-top video) connected platforms, and the combination of Verizon and AOL creates a unique and scaled mobile and OTT media platform for creators, consumers and advertisers,” Armstrong said in the announcement.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/id/102670331

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Thanks to Obamacare, Health Costs Soared This Year

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Thanks to Obamacare, Health Costs Soared This Year
Robert Moffit / October 13, 2014

On November 15, open enrollment in the Obamacare exchanges begins again. Before the second act of our national healthcare drama commences, let’s review what we’ve learned in Act I.

For starters, everyone now knows that federal officials are challenged when it comes to setting up a website. But they’ve demonstrated the ability to dole out a huge amount of taxpayers’ money for millions of people signing up for Medicaid, a welfare program. And they’ve proved they can send hundreds of millions of federal taxpayers’ dollars to their bureaucratic counterparts in states, like Maryland and Oregon, that can’t manage their own exchanges. But there are many other lessons to be gleaned from Year One of Obamacare. Here are three of the most important ones.

1. Health costs jumped—big time. Huge increases in deductibles in policies sold through the exchanges were a big story in Florida, Illinois and elsewhere. While the average annual deductible for employer-based coverage was a little over $1,000, the exchange deductibles nationwide normally topped $2,000.

Notwithstanding President Obama’s specific promise to lower the typical family premium cost by $2,500 annually, premium costs actually increased. D2014 data for the “individual market” shows that the average annual premiums for single and family coverage rose in the overwhelming majority of state and federal health-insurance exchanges all around the country. In eleven states, premiums for twenty-seven-year-olds have more than doubled since 2013; in thirteen states, premiums for fifty-year-olds have increased more than 50 percent. For the “group market,” the Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) estimated on February 21, 2014, that 65 percent of small firms would experience premium-rate increases, while only 35 percent were expected to have reductions. In terms of people affected, CMS estimated 11 million Americans employed by these firms would experience premium-rate increases, while about 6 million would see reductions. So much for “bending the cost curve down.”

2. The law reduced competition in most health-insurance markets. A limited analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that in 2014, large states like California and New York were more competitive, but Connecticut and Washington were less competitive. The Heritage Foundation conducted a national analysis and found that between 2013 and 2014, the number of insurers offering coverage on the individual markets in all fifty states declined nationwide by 29 percent. On a county level, 52 percent of U.S. counties had just one or two health-insurance carriers. In 2014, at least, the law did not deliver on its promise of more personal choice and broader competition.

3. We still don’t know for sure how many people are actually insured. Following the disastrous October 2013 Obamacare “roll-out,” the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that about 6 million (rather than 7 million) would enroll in the exchanges. Last April, administration officials reported that they reached and surpassed their goal, enrolling over 8 million people in the health-insurance exchanges. They then declared the health-care debate, like the Iraq War, “over.”

That declaration appears to be premature. The administration now concedes that there are 700,000 fewer persons in the exchanges. Of course, we can expect some attrition. But exchange enrollment is not the same as insurance coverage. CBO said it best: “The number of people who will have coverage through the exchanges in 2014 will not be known precisely until after the year has ended.” Exactly.

Beyond the seemingly endless surveys, estimates and guesstimates, we do have some raw data. Between October 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014, there was a net increase in individual coverage of 2,236,942, but there was a net decrease in group (employment-based) enrollment: it fell by 1,716,540. Enrollment in Medicaid and the Childrens’ Health Insurance Program (CHIP) increased by about 5 million over that same period. We’ll know more later, as CBO said, especially how many Americans are losing their employment-based coverage.

Who enrolls is also crucial. In 2013, Obama administration officials said that their goal was for young adults between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four to account for 40 percent of exchange enrollments. On April 17, 2014, the White House announced that only 28 percent of those enrolled through the federally administered exchanges were between eighteen and thirty-four years of age—the crucial age bracket for a robust and stable insurance pool—but that 35 percent of the total enrollees were under the age of thirty-five. That made it sound as though the program was fairly close to reaching its target. But thanks to excellent reporting by Politico, we learned that the bigger number included children enrolled in the exchanges. Nice try.

Maybe 2015 will bring better news for Obamacare. But don’t bet on it.

Originally appeared in the National Interest.

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College Tuition Costs Soar: Chart of the Day

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College Tuition Costs Soar: Chart of the Day

By Michelle Jamrisko and Ilan Kolet Aug 18, 2014 6:01 AM ET

The cost of higher education has jumped more than 13-fold in records dating to 1978, illustrating bloated tuition costs even as enrollment slows and graduates struggle to land jobs.

The CHART OF THE DAY shows that tuition expenses have ballooned 1,225 percent in the 36-year period, compared with a 634 percent rise in medical costs and a 279 percent increase in the consumer price index.

Some for-profit schools such as Corinthian Colleges Inc. have collapsed amid enhanced federal scrutiny, and three of the nine worst performers in the Russell 3000 index (RAY) are education companies. Yet university degrees are hardly on sale. The student loan debt burden threatens to overwhelm younger Americans, who already are finding a tougher labor market compared with their older counterparts.

“Some schools are effectively limiting cost increases by bigger tuition discounting, but on the whole college presidents have not adjusted to a fundamental shift in attitudes toward the value of a high-cost education,” said Richard Vedder, director of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity in Washington. “Colleges are too slow to reinvent themselves,” particularly as enrollments are waning, said Vedder, who is a Bloomberg View contributor.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-18/college-tuition-costs-soar-chart-of-the-day.html

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Bacon prices soar due to pig shortage

080514_BACON_DM_8.jpg

photo David Mcglynn

Bacon prices soar due to pig shortage

By Amber Sutherland, Daniel Prendergast and Chris Perez

August 5, 2014 | 8:54pm

Bacon lovers are getting socked in the piggy bank.

City butchers and restaurateurs are beginning to squeal for mercy after the price of bacon rose to the highest it’s been in nearly 30 years — thanks to high demand and a shortage of healthy pigs.

“We’ve had to raise the prices in small increments in the last month,” said Vincent Santiago, an employee at Staubitz meat market in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.

The pork surge began last year when a virus swept through US farms in about 30 states and killed millions of pigs.

Bacon prices have shot up around 10 percent this year alone and reached an all-time high of $6.11 per pound, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Santiago said a half-pound slab of bacon now costs about $3.99, as opposed to last month when they were about a dollar cheaper.

“We don’t like to raise prices, but this is what we do for a living,” he added. “People are still buying it.”

https://nypost.com/2014/08/05/bacon-prices-are-sky-high-during-pig-shortage/

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Health insurance cancellation notices soar above Obamacare enrollment rates

Dr-Obama1

Health insurance cancellation notices soar above Obamacare enrollment rates
Katie McHugh

Hundreds of thousands of Americans who purchase their own health insurance have received cancellation notices since August because the plans do not meet Obamacare’s requirements.

The number of cancellation notices greatly exceed the number of Obamacare enrollees.

Insurance carrier Florida Blue sent out 300,000 cancellation notices, or 80 percent of the entire state’s individual coverage policies, Kaiser Health News reports. California’s Kaiser Permanente canceled 160,000 plans — half of its insurance plans in the state — while Blue Shield of California sent 119,000 notices in mid-September alone.

Two major insurance carriers in Pennsylvania, Insurance Highmark in Pittsburgh and Independence Blue Cross in Philadelphia plan to cancel 20 percent and 45 percent of their total plans, respectively.

Nearly 800,000 New Jersey residents’ health-care plans will not longer exist in 2014, forcing insurers to create new ones for individuals and small business owners that hew to the Obamacare’s new regulations, The New Jersey Star Ledger found in early October.

Read more: https://dailycaller.com/2013/10/24/health-insurance-cancellation-notices-soar-above-obamacare-enrollment-rates/#ixzz2iigdHvjX

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Health Actuaries: Obamacare Rates Will Soar

obey-obama-progress

Health Actuaries: Obamacare Rates Will Soar

But health law supporters are pushing back, noting close ties between the actuaries making the forecasts and an insurance industry that has been complaining about taxes.

By Jay Hancock, Kaiser Health News Staff Writer

THURSDAY, April 18, 2013 (Kaiser Health News) — Few aspects of the Affordable Care Act are more critical to its success than affordability, but in recent weeks experts have predicted costs for some health plans could soar next year.

Now health law supporters are pushing back, noting close ties between the actuaries making the forecasts and an insurance industry that has been complaining about taxes and other factors it says will lead to rate shock for consumers.

“Most actuaries in this country — what percentage are employed by insurance companies?” Sen. Al Franken, a Minnesota Democrat, asked an actuary last week at a hearing of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions.

The committee was discussing a study published last month by the Society of Actuaries (SOA) predicting that, thanks to sicker patients joining the coverage pool, medical claims per member will rise 32 percent in the individual plans expected to dominate the ACA exchanges next year. In some states costs will rise as much as 80 percent, the report said.

https://www.everydayhealth.com/healthy-living/health-actuaries-obamacare-rates-will-soar.aspx

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People Not In Labor Force Soar By 663,000 To 90 Million, Labor Force Participation Rate At 1979 Levels

Labor Force Rate

People Not In Labor Force Soar By 663,000 To 90 Million, Labor Force Participation Rate At 1979 Levels

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2013 08:58 -0400

BLS
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Unemployment

Things just keep getting worse for the American worker, and by implication US economy, where as we have shown many times before, it pays just as well to sit back and collect disability and various welfare and entitlement checks, than to work .The best manifestation of this: the number of people not in the labor force which in March soared by a massive 663,000 to a record 90 million Americans who are no longer even looking for work. This was the biggest monthly increase in people dropping out of the labor force since January 2012, when the BLS did its census recast of the labor numbers. And even worse, the labor force participation rate plunged from an already abysmal 63.5% to 63.3% – the lowest since 1979! But at least it helped with the now painfully grotesque propaganda that the US unemployment rate is “improving.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-04-05/people-not-labor-force-soar-663000-90-million-labor-force-participation-rate-1979-le

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Food crisis fears as US corn soars

RidgewoodFarmersMarket5 theridgewoodblog.net

how long before weather issues effect local produce?

Food crisis fears as US corn soars
By Jack Farchy in London

Is the world on the brink of another food crisis?

It has become a distressingly familiar question. With the price of agricultural staples such as corn, soyabeans and wheat soaring for the third summer in five years, the prospect of another price shock is once again becoming a prominent concern for investors and politicians alike.

The debate marks a dramatic shift from just a few weeks ago, when traders were expecting bumper crops and policy makers were comforting themselves that – if nothing else – falling commodity prices would offer some relief to the troubled global economy.

But since then, scorching heat and a paucity of rain across the US has withered the country’s corn and soyabean crops, with the US Department of Agriculture this week making the largest downward revision to its estimate for a corn crop in a quarter of a century.

https://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/ad1ec426-cd07-11e1-92c1-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=published_links%2Frss%2Fmarkets%2Ffeed%2F%2Fproduct#axzz20b4oM9Qy

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People Not In Labor Force Soar By 522,000, Labor Force Participation Rate Lowest Since 1981

theRidgewood blog ICON theridgewoodblog.net 15People Not In Labor Force Soar By 522,000, Labor Force Participation Rate Lowest Since 1981
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/04/2012 08:40 -0400

Unemployment

it is just getting sad now. In April the number of people not in the labor force rose by a whopping 522,000 from 87,897,000 to
88,419,000. This is the highest on record. The flip side, and the reason why the unemployment dropped to 8.1% is that the labor force participation rate just dipped to a new 30 year low of 64.3%.

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/people-not-labor-force-soar-522000-labor-force-participation-rate-lowest-1981

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>Parasites: Salaries soared for staff at 9/11 memorial

>So now we know what the HUGE toll increase was really for

Parasites:  Salaries soared for staff at 9/11 memorial

SUNDAY, JANUARY 22, 2012  
BY SHAWN BOBURGSTAFF WRITERTHE RECORD
The private foundation seeking federal tax money to run the 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center paid one executive about $440,000 in 2010, recently released tax records show.

Joan Gerner, the foundation’s former executive vice president of design and construction, worked about four months that year before receiving a $296,000 severance payment, the records show. A spokesman for the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum declined to comment on the severance payment or Gerner’s departure, less than three years after she was hired, citing a non-disclosure agreement between the non-profit and Gerner.

Seven other executives, whose offices overlooked last year’s Occupy Wall Street protest in Zuccotti Park, made more than $200,000 at the non-profit, and its president made $378,000.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/137872033_Salaries_soared_for_staff_at_9_11_memorial.html

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>By the numbers: New Jersey’s soaring infrastructure costs

>

By the numbers: New Jersey’s soaring infrastructure costs

Earlier this month, the New Jersey State Planning Commission adopted a sobering infrastructure needs assessment for the state over the next two decades. Although the assessment was based on implementation of the 2002 State Development and Redevelopment Plan, a point often cited by critics, it portrays a staggering requirement to invest in New Jersey’s transportation, environmental, and commerce infrastructure.  (Johnson, NJ Spotlight)

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>Cost to build parking garages soars

>From The Record

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

BY ANDREW TANGEL
STAFF WRITER

When Mountain Development Corp. moved into its Clifton headquarters in early 2002, the company estimated it would pay about $12,000 for each space in a new parking garage. A new garage could have added as many as 300 spots.

Since then, Mountain Development has brought more tenants into its seven-story building at 100 Delawanna Ave. So when the company again considered building a garage late last year, executives were shocked at the new estimates: costs would range from $22,000 to $28,000 a space, said Michael Seeve, the firm’s president.

“The cost has gotten totally out of control,” Seeve said. Mountain Development decided to stick with surface parking for now and attract tenants that require fewer spaces.

The costs of steel and concrete – the main materials of parking garages – have soared in recent years, fueled by rising demand in rapidly developing countries such as China and India. Prices for products made at steel mills, meanwhile, shot up 34 percent in 2004 alone. Following further annual increases, the cost has risen more than 20 percent so far this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The gains are reflected in estimates provided by Walker Parking Associates, an industry consulting firm. A parking space in a garage in New York City, which most closely approximates the New Jersey market, cost about $14,600 to build in 2000, according to Walker’s estimates. This year, an average parking space in New York City runs about $20,100. The price includes costs for financing and engineering, but not land.

The expenses are posing challenges to developers. For builders of office properties, particularly those in suburban areas such as Bergen County, the soaring costs of constructing parking garages pose a dilemma, Seeve said. Developers have treated parking garages as sunk costs, meaning they didn’t intend to pass them on to tenants, he said.

“When you rent space, and tenants compare buildings, they don’t really pay you more because you’ve spent the money on structured parking,” Seeve said. “But if you don’t spend the money on structured parking and you don’t have the requisite parking to lease office space, people just aren’t going to take the space.”

And, he added: “If your employees can’t park when they have to be there, then the building doesn’t work for you.”

The costs also pose problems for developers in urban areas, where space is scarcer and more expensive, and where many tenants often rely on cars even if mass transportation is more available.

“It’s nearly impossible to look at urban development without having a parking deck of some size,” said Russell Tepper, vice president of development at Matrix Development Group in Cranbury.

With pollution remediation and features such as retail space built into the decks, parking garages can wind up costing as much as $35,000 a space in urban areas or more, said Richard Johnson, a senior vice president at Matrix.

For developers to break even on a project, with traditional financing arrangements – for example, an 8.5 percent interest rate for a mix of a bank loan and equity over seven to 10 years – each space would need to generate revenue of nearly $300 a month, Johnson said. That’s generally too expensive for markets in New Jersey.

Parking garage authorities, which can issue bonds that have a lower interest rate over a longer period of time, need to generate roughly $140 a space per month, said Leonard Bier, executive director of the New Jersey Parking Institute, an agency whose primary members are the cities and parking authorities that run garages.

As construction costs for parking garages increase, so too do the prices drivers pay to park. Five years ago, parking authorities needed to generate about $125 a space per month, Bier said.

“There’s an obvious cause and effect” between higher construction costs and more expensive parking, Bier said.

Garage operators must service the debt they incurred when issuing bonds, as well as pay for operating costs and set aside some funds for future improvements, he said.

As garage costs climb, developers have sought tax credits to offset the rising expenses. Johnson said Matrix has sought to reclassify the garages as infrastructure and not real estate, which underwriters expect to pay for itself in relatively few years.

Also, developers have struck public-private partnerships with parking authorities, Bier said. Developers may provide the land, for example, but parking authorities may seek the financing because they typically can issue bonds at lower rates.

On the construction side, engineers have sought to minimize the use of steel in parking garages. One technique involves stretching steel strands, pouring concrete over the steel and then releasing the stress, making the concrete very stiff.

“Almost nobody will build a parking garage unless they have to,” said Greg Neiderer, director of operations in Walker Parking’s mid-Atlantic office in Wayne, Pa. Garages often cost 25 percent of a development, he added.

“The deal might make sense or might not make sense based on the garage,” Neiderer said. “For developers, parking can kill a deal. I see it somewhat often. We have some developers who come to us over and over again to try to salvage a project.”