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DPS kicks off brand new parent workshops

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DPS kicks off brand new parent workshops for 2012-13 school year

In keeping with its mission to actively engage parents to improve student achievement, Detroit Public Schools today announced a new slate of parent workshops for the month of September in the district’s eight Parent Resource Centers, including two brand new centers that opened at Bennett Elementary and Drew Transition Center this summer. The workshops, which launched today, Tuesday, September 11, 2012, are part of the district’s comprehensive Parent Engagement programs and build upon its success in improving student attendance by encouraging parents to make sure their children are in school on time every day.

Through its parent engagement initiatives, the district has successfully raised parent involvement in school programs by 30%, increased parents’ involvement in their children’s activities by 63%, and raised the percentage of parents reporting their attendance at parent meetings by 49% since last year, according to independent surveys of 3,144 parents. Parent Resource Centers are open Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Bennett’s PRC hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The centers are closed on Fridays.  

September workshops include (see flier for exact times): September 11–14  -- Time Management: Establishing a healthy back-to-school routine Making time to get the homework done Getting everyone to school on time and excited about learning Bedtime routines the entire family can live with Finding the right blend of school, family and social time   September 17–21 -- Understanding: What are Grade Level Content Expectations, AYP and MEAP? Find out what GLCES, AYP, MEAP mean Understanding how you can better support your children in being academically successful   September 24–28 -- Choices: Helping children to make better choices Creating good study habits early Choosing the right friends Using free time to do the RIGHT things Helping them to choose learning first .

The district plans to announce upcoming introductory parent fairs at the new Centers this month at Drew, designed to serve district parents of children with special needs, and at Bennett, serving the families of southwest Detroit.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 17:07

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Reinventing health care in Michigan

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Gov. Rick Snyder announces sweeping changes to how Michigan’s largest health insurance provider is regulated at a press conference, Tues. Sept. 11. 2012. Snyder called for Blue Cross to become a nonprofit mutual insurance company that is regulated under the Michigan Insurance Code like all other health insurers in the state. State Department of Community Health Director Jim Haveman (pictured left) and other officials were on hand for the announcement.

Governor proposes regulatory overhaul for Blue Cross; investment of about $1.5 billion to improve public health Gov. Rick Snyder today proposed sweeping changes to how Michigan’s largest health insurance provider is regulated, calling for it to become a nonprofit mutual insurance company that is regulated under the Michigan Insurance Code like all other health insurers in the state.   The governor’s plan requires Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan to contribute about $1.5 billion over 18 years to a new nonprofit entity whose purpose is to fund initiatives that foster healthier lifestyles, provide better access to health care and improve public health. This is an unprecedented investment in the health and wellness of Michigan families.   “This is an exciting opportunity to improve the health of Michiganders and create a modernized, efficient health care marketplace that spurs innovation and streamlines outdated regulations,” Snyder said. “It’s especially important that we have a system that promotes wellness for our children and seniors. This proposal will ensure that quality health care remains affordable and accessible for everyone.”   Snyder’s plan, which requires approval by the Legislature and the Blue Cross board of directors, follows his call in last year’s Special Message to the Legislature on Health and Wellness to reinvent health care in Michigan so it can be a positive economic driver of the state’s ongoing recovery.   Specifically, the governor’s plan will:  

• Create a nonprofit entity to improve the health of all Michigan residents. The nonprofit will be run by an independent board of directors. It will be funded with about $1.5 billion in contributions from Blue Cross made over the next 18 years.  

• Blue Cross will transition to a nonprofit mutual insurance company that will pay an estimated $100 million a year in additional tax revenue to the state and local governments. 

• Protect senior citizens by freezing “Medigap” coverage rates for four years.  

• Streamline the regulatory environment by regulating Blue Cross under the state Insurance Code, as is the case with all other health insurance companies.  

• Preserve Blue Cross’ nonprofit status and mission while maintaining its tremendous contribution to Michigan’s economy and investments in the state.  

• Eliminate the “tax” currently required on Blue Cross’ small-business and individual customers to subsidize other lines of insurance coverage. That tax costs small businesses and individual Blue Cross members more than $200 million a year.  

• Ensure that Blue Cross continues as a carrier of last resort until Jan. 1, 2014, at which time new federal laws will require all insurers to offer coverage to anyone regardless of health status. With 4.4 million Michigan subscribers, Blue Cross Blue Shield is the state’s largest health insurance provider. Unlike other insurance companies, which are regulated under the state Insurance Code, Blue Cross is regulated by Public Act 350 of 1980. That law was created to designate Blue Cross as the health insurance “carrier of last resort” and ensure that everyone has access to health insurance regardless of health status. Snyder said recent reforms have rendered P.A. 350 obsolete and require Michigan to have a uniform set of regulations for all insurers.   “The old way of doing business doesn’t meet Michigan’s demands today for a competitive and efficient health care system,” Snyder said. “Michigan needs a new regulatory environment that continues our reinvention and allows us to attract the kind of investment that will fuel our comeback. This proposal will help us do that.”

 

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CEO Daniel J. Loepp: Gov. Snyder’s plan preserves Blues’ mission, commitment to Michigan

This is a time of unprecedented transformation in healthcare. Significant changes are coming soon in how people purchase their health insurance and how insurers, like Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, provide it. Everyone has ongoing questions about cost and quality within our healthcare system, and about whether those issues can be resolved. It’s time that leaders across the spectrum step forward to give Michigan the best possible chance for success in the future. To do this, however, it’s necessary to change some of those things that have defined the past.

On Sept. 11, Gov. Rick Snyder offered a proposal that he believes sets Michigan up for success. At the heart of his proposal are two fundamental concepts: The best health insurance system for Michigan is one where all insurance companies play by the same rules. The nonprofit mission of Blue Cross should be sustained to protect health care access, affordability and quality for all of Michigan’s people. While the governor’s plan isn’t exactly what Blue Cross would have proposed, it does contain some fundamental ideas that we agree are necessary for Michigan.

First, our regulations need to be consistent. For more than 30 years, Michigan has regulated its health insurance market using a hodgepodge of different rules. Commercial health insurance companies, nonprofit HMOs and Blue Cross are all regulated under different laws. Some companies pay taxes and some do not. Blue Cross serves as “insurer of last resort,” offering policies to anyone regardless of their health condition — while all other insurers and HMOs are allowed to reject applicants for their health.

Blue Cross’ rates are subject to strict state oversight, while other carriers’ rates are not subject to the same strict review processes. Imagine if food was regulated this way, with rules written for some companies but not for others. Would you be confident that your family’s dinner was ever safe to eat? The governor’s plan cleans up this mess. It regulates all health insurance companies under the same law with the same rules. This will give Michigan health insurance consumers the confidence that the coverage they buy will be governed by the same standards, whichever company provides it.

Next, the governor’s plan recognizes Blue Cross’ legacy in Michigan of giving back as a nonprofit corporation. It sustains our nonprofit status. But it transitions Blue Cross’ contributions to focus on building a better, stronger Michigan in the future, rather than supporting policy objectives that were defined for us way back in 1980 — when everything was different. For those past 32 years, Blue Cross has been known as the “insurer of last resort.” But with federal reforms, all insurers will be required to cover everyone beginning Jan. 1, 2014.

This makes Blue Cross’ role outmoded. The solution is to make the Blues’ mission and our contributions right for the times we live in today, and for the future. The governor proposes an unprecedented contribution toward the future health of Michigan’s people, and in promoting access to health care and ways to keep it affordable. Blue Cross would contribute approximately $1.5 billion over the next 18 years to this effort. It would be managed not by the Blues, but through a nonprofit organization created by the state and informed by a community advisory council to invest in better health for the people of Michigan. Our contribution of approximately $1.5 billion would be about 25 times more than any other nonprofit Blues plan has contributed following its transition to a nonprofit mutual structure.

The governor’s proposal requires change on the part of Blue Cross, including paying state and local taxes for the first time — to the tune of about $100 million a year. But it does move our state forward by ensuring a modern regulatory system, respecting that federal law has strengthened consumer protections. Gov. Snyder also preserves what’s best about Blue Cross — our nonprofit mission and our unwavering commitment to Michigan. Through our continued social mission contributions, the Blues will remain a vital force in improving the quality and protecting the affordability of health care for everyone who calls Michigan home.

Daniel J. Loepp is president and chief executive officer of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan.

 

 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 16:57

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Strike Deadline Looms For Detroit Carmakers

 

TORONTO — (WWJ) The Canadian Auto Workers Union has told local leaders to get ready for a strike, just in case one is needed when their contracts with the “Detroit Three” auto companies expire next Monday night.
 
“We’re making the preparations with the obvious intent of trying to avoid a strike,” said CAW President Ken Lawenza. “We just have to keep working on it. It’s frustrating, because I thought there would be more collaboration based on the incredible combined sacrifices that we’ve made.”
 
Lawenza told WWJ AutoBeat Reporter Jeff Gilbert that the two sides are very far apart, as they enter the final week of bargaining. The union wants to see pay raises. The companies want to move toward bonuses for performance, and lower pay for entry level workers.
 
“If the Detroit Three does not change their position on the multiple issues that we have at the bargaining table, then we have a problem,” said Lawenza.
 
The companies have not been willing to move much from their opening positions, said the union president.
 
“The slow dancing is over,” he said. “We’ve articulated a vision for the CAW membership. A vision for Canadian manufacturing in Canada from the Detroit Three. Obviously the manufacturers themselves have articulated their vision. Today, we have a significant gap.”
 
The car companies have said that they need to reduce their costs in Canada, which, they say, has become one of the most expensive countries to manufacture products. Lawenza says they are trying to force a UAW style contract on a union that is dealing with different realities.
 
“Y’know there’s no recognition today of the cost of living in Canada,” he said. “No recognition to the purchasing power, parity challenges that we have versus the United States. It’s just….simply, it’s a case of whipsawing.”
 
Whipsawing is a labor term for playing one union against another. As we near the deadline, and the talks intensify, executives at the auto companies have become very guarded in their comments.
 
“Our approach is always to collaboratively work together with all of our union colleagues,” said Ford President of the Americas Mark Fields. “Y’know our expectation is we’ll be able to come out with a satisfactory agreement for both parties.”
 
If there is a work stoppage next week, analysts say it won’t take long for auto assembly plans to start closing on the American side of the border. Mike Robinet, who’s managing director of IHS consulting, says there are a lot of Canadian made parts sent across the border to U.S. assembly plants.
 
The timing couldn’t be worse, with car companies scrambling to meet a growing demand for vehicles.
 
“It will be very difficult to make up that production,” said Robinet.
 
Robinet says car companies don’t have a lot of options.
 
“In past years, you’ve been able to work overtime to make up some of that production, once a labor stoppage had been rectified. When you’re already working a tremendous amount of overtime, there’s no slack in the system. Those are lost sales.”
 
While a strike in Canada would cost the major automakers a lot of short term pain, Robinet says the union could be hurt even worse over the long term. With flexible manufacturing, it’s a lot easier for companies to move production of vehicles currently built in Canada to the United States.
 
“This is a watershed moment in the Canadian auto industry,” said Robinet. “If this contract does not necessarily level the paying field with the UAW in other areas of the market, we could have some real issues in terms of the Canadian industry being viable over the next decade.”
 
CAW President Ken Lawenza says he understands this, and will take it into account as union leaders decide whether a strike would be able to accomplish any of their goals.
 
He’s hoping, however, that as negotiations intensify, the two sides can find common ground and prevent a walkout.
 
“The deadline will force both sides, quite frankly, to get to work, if—in fact—an agreement can be reached.”
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 13:58

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Employee Robbed While Making Night Deposit At Roseville Bank

 

ROSEVILLE (WWJ) - Police say an employee of a St. Clair Shores business was robbed while making a night deposit at a Comerica Bank in Roseville.
 
According to police, the employee was attempting to make a deposit around 7:40 p.m. last Saturday when they were approached by the suspect, who lifted his shirt and displayed a hand gun. Police say the suspect ordered the victim to the ground and took a bank bag with cash in it.
 
The employee, who was not injured, told police the suspect made a statement during the robbery about his daughter being sick.
 
The suspect, who was last seen on foot west bound from the area of 10 Mile and Collingwood, is described as a 20- to 25-year-old white male with a thin build a no facial hair. At the time of the robbery, the suspect was wearing a navy blue shirt with black pants that had a large horse shoe design on the back pockets, blue and black Air Max type shoes and an orange winter-type hat.
 
An investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to call the Roseville Police at 586-775-2100.
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 13:43

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Police Chief: Department In Shock Over Officer’s Death

 

WEST BLOOMFIELD (WWJ) – West Bloomfield Police Chief Michael Patton is breaking his silence, now more than 36 hours since the fatal shooting of one of his officers.
 
Patton said his department remains in a state of shock over the death of 39-year-old Patrick O’Rourke, but they still have a job to do.
 
He said his officers approached the Sunday night call to Ricky Covey’s home with elevated concern and were aware the homeowner was armed.
 
“We thought he was a person at risk, he may have harmed himself. We were there to attempt to save his life,” Patton told reporters. “And even though he had no appreciation for that, that’s what we were there for and that was our goal and our objective at the time.”
 
Authorities say Ricky Coley, a former auto executive who was facing business and family troubles, fired on police, killing officer O’Rourke and sparking a 20-hour standoff that ended when a State Police robot spotted Coley dead in a weapons-strewn bedroom.
 
Patton said Police said O’Rourke, a 12-year veteran of the force, was one of their best officers — one of the “rocks of the department.”
 
He said they appreciate the support from the community during these times as they try to come to grips with the tragedy.
 
“Given the line of work that we do it’s always a possibility, we understand that. But it’s still something that we hope never happens and we’re suffering our way through this, but we will work our way through this,” said Patton.”We’re a very strong department and we’re a very tight department.”
 
Patton said they had been called to Coley’s house in the past to check on his welfare at his family’s request given his financial troubles, but he’d showed no signs of imminent danger.
 
An autopsy determined Coley died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. The Medical Examiner is still working to try to determine exactly when he may have taken his own life.
 
Sheriff Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard said it was likely after a second volley of shots, which would have been after 9 a.m. Monday.
 
As a Sheriff’s Office investigation continues, community leaders, citizens, clergy and police officers will gather Tuesday evening for a candlelight vigil in memory of the fallen officer. It will take place in front of the West Bloomfield Police Department on Walnut Lake Road at 7:45 p.m.
 
Those wishing to make contributions to support O’Rourke’s children can do so at any branch of Bank of America to the “Officer Patrick O’Rourke Family Trust.”
 
 
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 13:25

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Snyder Calls For Overhaul Of Health Insurance Regulation

 

LANSING (WWJ) - Gov. Rick Snyder is calling for an overhaul in how Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, the state’s largest health insurance provider, is regulated.
 
Snyder wants Blue Cross to become a non-profit mutual insurance company and contribute money to a new entity that would provide better access to care.  He also wants BCBSM to be regulated by the state insurance code.  Since 1980, it’s been exempt due to Public Act 350, which made it Michigan’s insurer of last resort.
 
“Blue Cross has long advocated for all health insurers to play by the same rules,” said Daniel J. Loepp, BCBSM president and CEO, in a statement. “This plan is not exactly what Blue Cross would have proposed, but it does create a fair and balanced set of rules for health insurance. Regulations should be fair to all.
 
“They should protect consumers, expand choice and competition and preserve an insurance safety net people can count on. Our board is open to considering this proposal because it preserves Blue Cross’ nonprofit mission and sets Michigan’s insurance market up for success in the future,” Loepp said.
 
In addition to transitioning to a nonprofit mutual insurance company structure, officials say BCBSM would evolve its traditional “social mission” by funding a new nonprofit entity to be created by the state with contributions totaling approximately $1.5 billion, payable in installments over the next 18 years. The nonprofit would be governed by its own board, which would include the Michigan Attorney General. The board would be supported by a large and diverse advisory council comprised of community stakeholders. The nonprofit would use BCBSM contributions to fund programs to improve health care in Michigan and keep it affordable.
 
“We are pleased that the Governor respects Blue Cross’ desire to remain nonprofit and continue our longstanding efforts to advance quality and affordable health care for all Michiganders,” Loepp said. “Blue Cross will remain based in Michigan, invested in our communities and focused on improving health care for everyone who calls Michigan home.”
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 13:14

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Donors Get Free Pistons Tickets At 11th Annual Palace Blood Drive

 

AUBURN HILLS (WWJ) - Palace Sports & Entertainment and the American Red Cross of Southeastern Michigan are joining forces once again for the 11th annual Palace Blood Drive on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at The Palace of Auburn Hills.
 
Everyone who donates blood at this year’s Palace Blood Drive will receive special thank you gifts including: Detroit Pistons memorabilia, Pistons tickets to a pre-season game and the first game of the regular season, and a $10 gift card. All gifts are available while supplies last. In addition, everyone who comes to donate will be entered to win a $500 gas card or an iPad.
 
This community drive was organized in 2002 as a way for individuals to commemorate the anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks and give the community an opportunity to help save lives by building the blood supply in Southeastern Michigan.
 
Advance appointments are encouraged. Donors with appointments will be given first priority, and the wait time for those who do not have appointments could be quite lengthy. To make your appointment for the Palace Blood Drive, call 1-800-RED CROSS or visit www.redcrossblood.org and use sponsor code “palace.”
 
Individuals who are 17 years of age (16 with parental permission in some states), meet weight and height requirements (110 pounds or more, depending on their height) and are in generally good health may be eligible to donate blood. Bring your Red Cross blood donor card or other form of positive ID when you come to donate.
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 12:39

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America Remembers 9/11

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Eleven years ago on this day, tragedy struck our nation. The attack of 9/11 is a place in history that will always be remembered. In New York City, where the twin towers where attacked, today’s remembrance marks one of the city’s most horrific days.

“It is extremely important that people never forget what happened on Sept. 11," says New York City Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano, who plans to attend several of the days commemorating events The official commemoration began at 8:39 a.m. ET at the National September 11 Memorial plaza, an area that once housed the twin towers, where now two memorial pools dedicated to the attack victims are placed.

There was a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. ET to honor when the first commercial plane struck the north tower. Houses of worship across New York City rang their bells in remembrance. Throughout the morning family members of those who loss their lives, recited the victims' names. The names of all 2,983 victims from the twin towers and Pentagon attacks, and those on Flight 93, as well as those who died in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, will be read aloud.

There was also a moment of silence for each time a highjacked plane hit its target, one for when Flight 93 crashed in Shanksville, Pa. and there were moments of silence at the times that each of the twin towers fell.

Afterward he shook hands with many of the family members attending the event. Security was tight as Victims' families and others gathered Tuesday at Ground Zero and the Pentagon. President Obama was among the speakers Tuesday at an remembrance for victims and family members of those killed at the Pentagon. "As painful as this day is and always will be it leaves us with a lesson. No single event can change who we are," Obama said. "No terrorist event can change the values that we stand for."

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 12:28

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September 11 Responders Still Waiting For Relief Promised In 2010

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- It's been 11 years since terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center towers, and more than a year-and-a-half since President Barack Obama signed into law a bill meant to compensate responders and survivors sickened from exposure to the hazardous debris and toxins of Ground Zero.
 
But they're going to have to wait a while longer -- perhaps more than a year -- before most of them start to see any of the money authorized in the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act.
 
"It's going to be a process, and I think it's going to take a year or two until that process really gets moving," said Sheila Birnbaum, the special master of the $2.775 billion 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund. "People have to get medical records, they have to do all kinds of things, and they're going to have to get certified that they meet the criteria."
 
The compensation fund was supposed to start work in July of 2011, and many believed that money would start to flow a year later. It hasn't, and although there are explanations for why, people whose lives were shattered by the terrorists' attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, are starting to get frustrated.
 
"These people need the the money. I talk to a lot of them, they're all struggling along and they're not getting anything," said Joe Zadroga, the father of the late police officer after whom the Zadroga Act is named.
 
"These people are really down," Zadroga added. "I just get upset about it because we fought so hard to get that bill passed, and now they're dragging their feet on it."
 
"We still haven't gotten 10 cents," said TJ Gilmartin, a construction worker from Brooklyn who rushed to Ground Zero with a truck after the attacks, and has seen his ability to work deteriorate, along with the health of his lungs.
 
 
"I've had people turn around and say, 'You can go get food stamps,'" Gilmartin said, noting that he believed they meant well. "I'm so lucky, I got a fiancee that's been taking care of me," he said. "My Corvette is gone, my Rolex is gone. Everything that I worked 30 years for in construction, worked hard for, I had to sell to live."
 
While people like Gilmartin and Zadroga are frustrated, they aren't necessarily ready to start handing out blame.
 
That's because a large part of the delay stemmed from the debate over whether or not cancer would be covered under the Zadroga Act. The causes of cancer are complicated, and there was relatively scant data to analyze because the Bush administration hadn't set up the original 9/11 health program to collect it or study it.
 
But the question was finally answered Monday, when the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health issued a rule declaring that some 50 varieties of cancer would be covered for peopled deemed to have suffered sufficient exposure. That rule will be published Wednesday and go into effect after 30 days.
 
Responders are relieved cancer will be covered, but it also creates problems because covering cancer is much more expensive, and potentially opens up the compensation fund to more people, including many who don't yet know if they are sick. At the same time, the money to pay for it is fixed at $2.775 billion, unlike the first compensation fund authorized soon after the attacks, which was unlimited.
 
Simply starting to make payments before the cancer question was answered could have exhausted the money too quickly -- even if responders like Gilmartin are in dire need of assistance now.
 
"Could they have given awards out?" said Michael Barasch, a lawyer who represents thousands of responders and survivors, including Gilmartin and Zadroga. "Sure, but they have to hold money back to make sure that those people in the future who come down with cancer, that there's some money available for them."
 
The special master, Birnbaum, who spoke to The Huffington Post Friday, before Monday's decision, predicted that she could start to work on claims in earnest once the 30-day clock expired. But she warned it would be complicated.
 
First, of the money authorized, Congress specified that only $875 million could be spent in the first round of payouts, with the remainder being held until the sixth year of the program.
 
"It's prorated, based on the amount of claimants and the amount of awards that they're going to get, that we estimate are going to happen," Birnbaum said. "Until the regulations are finalized by NIOSH, we can't estimate how much money we will need to prorate."
 
Estimating the number of potential claimants is another problem. In addition to people who are part of the separate World Trade Center health program -- which got $1.5 billion from the Zadroga bill -- the compensation fund could cover thousands of other people who lived or worked near Ground Zero. Estimates of how many people could wind up eligible vary widely, ranging anywhere from 17,000 to 80,000.
 
And Birnbaum said even among those who are likely to qualify, she has only received a few hundred fully completed applications.
 
"It's nobody's fault. It's not our fault, it's not the lawyers' fault," Birnbaum said, noting that people have to prove they were at the site, that they were significantly exposed, that they suffered covered injuries and what those injuries have cost them.
 
"People are gathering up the documentation they need to prove their claim," she said. "We have very few [completed] forms that even get to the compensation piece yet, so we're not in a position to be giving money yet."
 
There have been bureaucratic complications, as well. The fund was supposed to be up and running in July 2011, though it was not funded until October. Aside from waiting for the rulings on cancer, Birnbaum had to get a complicated computer system up and running. And, in line with one of the more controversial stipulations Congress included, Birnbaum also had to work with the Department of Justice to run the names of 9/11 responders against the terrorism watch list.
 
Birnbaum said none of the few hundred applications that have been run have turned up any terrorist suspects. The lawmaker who included that provision, Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.), recently lost his primary election.
 
Ailing responders are aware of many of the details and remain somewhat forgiving. But they point out that, for some of them, there is little time left.
 
"There's guys dropping dead every week," Gilmartin said. "There must be another 50 dead since this bill's been signed."
 
"It's our responsibility to make sure everybody is treated fairly," said Birnbaum. "We can only do the best we can."
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 12:15

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$15 Flu Shots Now Available Through Macomb Health Centers

 

MACOMB (WWJ) – Starting Monday, the Macomb County Health Department is offering seasonal flu vaccines at the county health centers in St. Clair Shores, Mount Clemens and Warren.
 
County Medical Director Dr. Kevin Lokar tells us who the vaccine is intended for.
 
“The influenza vacine is recommened for everybody, six months of age or older, although it’s specifically important for people with underlying medical conditions, cronic medical conditions, like heart disease, lung disease, those who are immune suppressed,” said Lokar. “It’s also recommended for women who are pregnant during the influenza seasons.”
 
The cost is $15 and the vaccine will be available through January, as supplies last.
 

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 September 2012 11:39

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