Reduced Debt.

Reduced Debt.

Hey there! Thanks for dropping by our Site! Subscribe to get Tips Become Debt Free via email!, and Learn More about Going From Debt to Wealth!

Category : business debt

Students Clamor Over Higher One Fees

LOS ANGELES (CN) – Higher One Holdings preys on college students by giving them bank accounts and debit cards for their financial aid money, and then charging “deceptive, undisclosed and unconscionable service fees,” a class claims in Federal Court.

View full post on All Stories

No Forensic Background? No Problem

ProPublica Staff

Washington, DC, United States (ProPublica) – by Leah Bartos, Special to ProPublica

This story was co-published with PBS Frontline.

This is how I — a journalism graduate student with no background in forensics — became certified as a “Forensic Consultant” by one of the field’s largest professional groups.

One afternoon early last year, I punched in my credit card information, paid $495 to the American College of Forensic Examiners International Inc. and registered for an online course.

After about 90 minutes of video instruction, I took an exam on the institute’s web site, answering 100multiple choice questions, aided by several ACFEI study packets.

As soon as I finished the test, a screen popped up saying that I had passed, earning me an impressive-sounding credential that could help establish my qualifications to be an expert witness in criminal and civil trials.

For another $50, ACFEI mailed me a white lab coat after sending my certificate.

For the last two years, ProPublica and PBS “Frontline,” in concert with other news organizations, have looked in-depth at death investigation in America, finding a pervasive lack of national standards that begins in the autopsy room and ends in court.

Expert witnesses routinely sway trial verdicts with testimony about fingerprints, ballistics, hair and fiber analysis and more, but there are no national standards to measure their competency or ensure that what they say is valid. A landmark 2009 report by the National Academy of Sciences called this lack of standards one of the most pressing problems facing the criminal justice system.

Over the last two decades, ACFEI has emerged as one of the largest forensic credentialing organizations in the country.

Among its members are top names in science and law, from Dr. Henry Lee, the renowned criminalist and pathologist, to John Douglas, the former FBI profiler and bestselling author. Dr. Cyril Wecht, a prominent forensic pathologist and frequent TV commentator on high-profile crimes, chairs the group’s executive advisory board.

But ACFEI also has given its stamp of approval to far less celebrated characters. It welcomed Seymour Schlager, whose credentials were mailed to the prison where he was incarcerated for attempted murder. Zoe D. Katz – the name of a house cat enrolled by her owner in 2002 to show how easy it was to become certified by ACFEI — was issued credentials, too. More recently, Dr. Steven Hayne, a Mississippi pathologist whose testimony helped to convict two innocent men of murder, has used his ACFEI credential to bolster his status as an expert witness.

Several former ACFEI employees call the group a mill designed to churn out and sell as many certificates as possible. They say applicants receive cursory, if any, background checks and that virtually everyone passes the group’s certification exams as long as their payments clear.

Some forensic professionals say the organization’s willingness to hand out credentials diminishes the integrity of the field.

“I am insulted by it,” said Dr. Victor Weedn, a forensic pathologist for Maryland’s chief medical examiner office and the vice president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. “They seem like an organization that’s all about the money.”

Robert O’Block, ACFEI’s founder, vigilantly defends the group’s work, saying it has helped make forensics more accessible. He told ProPublica and PBS “Frontline” that the ACFEI credentials are not designed to qualify experts in court and emphasized only a judge can make that determination.

O’Block also said he’s been unfairly criticized by other professional groups that compete with ACFEI in certain regards, including the AAFS, Weedn’s group.

“I have been fighting for 20 years for an open educational certification and accreditation in forensic examination,” O’Block wrote in an email. “But they have painted me as the bad guy.”

* * *

The judges who must determine whether to qualify a witness as an expert face an alphabet’s soup of organizations with differing standards. Some, like the American Board of Criminalistics, vet members extensively, requiring them to pass intensive board exams to demonstrate their skills. Others, as noted in the NAS report, are far less stringent.

Experts in the field worry that inconsistent standards and training for forensic examiners can lead to miscarriages of justice – to the guilty walking free and the innocent being locked up or worse.

“There are a lot of people practicing, but there’s no assurance that they have the requisite training and board certification to see if they do have the skills to do the practical ,” said Dr. Marcella Fierro, one of the NAS report’s authors and the former chief medical examiner of Virginia.

Under state and federal rules of evidence, judges decide whether prospective expert witnesses can testify, but they sometimes rely heavily on the titles and letters around someone’s name.

“Credentials are often appealing shortcuts,” Michigan circuit court judge Donald Shelton said. Fancy titles can have a disproportionate effect on juries, he added. “Jurors have no way of knowing that this certifying body, whether it’s this one or any other one, exacts scientific standards or is just a diploma mill.”

– Provided by ProPublica.org

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

Student loan application SOS

The federal government has tried to make it easier to apply for financial aid for college by creating a standard form that all schools accept. So you only need to fill it out once. It’s called FAFSA — Free Application for Federal Student Aid. But we got an email from one viewer who almost ended up paying to fill out that free application.

View full post on All Stories

IMF chief looks beyond eurozone crisis

Speaking ahead of IMF and World Bank spring meetings, Christine Lagarde says ‘breathing space’ should be used to complete repair work on global economy

Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, has praised Europe’s efforts to tackle its sovereign-debt crisis and said the “breathing space” should be used to complete the repair work on the global economy.

Speaking ahead of next week’s spring meetings of the IMF and the World Bank, Lagarde said the policy moves taken in Europe had helped ease the strain and meant the Fund no longer needed quite so big a war chest to deal with the problems left behind by the financial crisis and recession.

“The steps taken by the Europeans in recent months are a timely reminder of the power of policy resolve and action,” Lagarde said in a speech at the Brookings Institution in Washington. She urged European policymakers to “keep up and build on” their efforts, including through action in individual countries, support from the European Central Bank, repairing the banking system and fiscal integration. “The much-expected decision of euro area ministers to strengthen the European financial firewall has also been crucial,” she said.

Lagarde’s comments came as Italy was forced to pay sharply higher interest rates when it auctioned €5bn (£4.1bn) worth of bonds on Thursday, underlining anxiety in financial markets about the health of the eurozone’s crisis-hit economies.

The Italian government, which is pushing through a series of unpopular economic reforms in a bid to kickstart growth, raised €4.88bn from investors, but was forced to pay an average yield of 3.92% for three-year loans, far higher than the previous auction last month.

Markets were rattled by the tricky sale, although bond yields fell in afternoon trading, amid rumours that the ECB may have resumed its emergency purchases of Spanish and Italian bonds in a bid to prevent borrowing costs reaching unsustainable levels.

With Spain still in the markets’ sights too, prime minister Mariano Rajoy repeated his insistence that his country would not need financial aid. “Nobody is considering a bailout, it is on nobody’s agenda,” he told a press conference in Poland, where he was on an official visit.

He also said he had spoken with Italian premier Mario Monti, who had denied blaming Spain’s travails for rocketing Italian bond yields. Meanwhile, unemployment in Greece rose to 21.8%, up from 12.5% two years ago.

The veteran speculator George Soros warned that Europe’s “deflationary debt trap threatens to destroy a still incomplete political union”.

In an FT article, Soros said the single currency had entered a “more lethal phase” and outlined a series of measures to solve the crisis – including an idea that all countries should be able to refinance their debt at the same interest rate.

Soros, known as the man who broke the Bank of England by betting that the UK would be forced to devalue the pound during the 1992 currency crisis, said that “far from abating, the euro crisis has recently taken a turn for the worse”.

Soros, who is chairman of Soros Fund Management – which in 2011 stopped managing money for outside investors – warned that Europe was facing “a long period of economic stagnation or worse” whether or not the euro endures. He also warned that while countries in Latin America suffered a lost decade after their economic crisis in 1982, the European Union would not survive such an economic malaise. IMF Economics Eurozone crisis European Union Financial crisis Euro Europe Larry Elliott Heather Stewart guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

View full post on All Stories

The Media Line Staff

Jerusalem, Israel Arieh O’Sullivan / The Me – Israel is one of just a few countries that subjects its women to mandatory draft and has a female major-general sitting on the army’s general staff. Until recently, the chief justice of the Supreme Court and the head of the parliamentary opposition were both women.

From appearances, it would seem that women have a respectable role in Israeli establishment. But appearances can be misleading.

“Israel has the lowest representation of women out of any Western country in strategic leadership positions in the field of security and conflict resolution,” says Julia Chazkel, the co-founder of the Israeli branch of Women in International Security (WIIS).

A dozen years ago, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1325 calling on member states to increase the representation of women “at all decision-making levels in national, regional and international institutions and mechanisms for the prevention, management, and resolution of conflict.”

It also urged states to include women as special envoys, participants in peace negotiations and in military peacekeeping operations. Israel adopted this into law over a decade ago, but has yet to fulfill any of the requirements under the resolution, Chazkel told The Media Line.

“There are very few women who are in the strategic positions that they said they were going to. There is yet to be a woman who is on the front lines of peace negotiations with the Palestinians. This is a promise that they have been making for over 10 years that hasn’t been fulfilled,” says Chazkel.

Chazkel founded the Israeli chapter of WIIS in September 2010 with Lea Landman with the declared aim of boosting the influence of women in foreign and defense affairs in Israel and the Middle East. They were teaming up with the mother organization sitting in Washington DC, which was established in 1987 and today boasts some 5,000 members in nearly 50 countries.

Chazkel comes from a background in counter-terrorism analysis and international law. Landman, a former Israel Air Force intelligence officer, is a research fellow on national security and economic affairs at the Herzilya Interdisciplinary Center (IDC).

To its credit, Israel is one of a handful of countries where women have served as prime minister. Golda Meir did so during the tumultuous 1973 Yom Kippur War. Until last month, the head of Kadima, the largest political party in Israel, was Tzipi Livni, a former Mossad agent and foreign minister under the government of Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert. Livni lost out in a leadership contest in March to her rival, former army Chief of Staff and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz.

But Meir and Livni are the exception. In its 64-year history, only 10 women have served as ministers, (including Meir and Livni) and there are currently three female ministers out of Binyamin Netanyahu’s unprecedentedly large 29-member Cabinet. These include Minister of Agriculture Orit Noked, Minister of Immigration Absorption Sofa Landver and Minister of Sport and Culture Limor Livnat.

Ironically, one of the major leaders in last summer’s social protests by huge swaths of Israel’s middle class was a Daphni Leef, a 25-year-old videographer.

Based at IDC, the WIIS helps students and young professionals prepare their resumes and hone their interviewing skills. They also hold monthly lectures on security, women’s rights and conflict resolution.

Chazkel said the group has three main target groups: students, mid-level career women and women in senior positions. Students are given mentors and help in career opportunities and linked in to entry-level job opportunities in the security sector.

With women at mid-level careers, Chazkel said they help them earn promotions by various training.

“These training programs fit perfectly in institutional barriers in the places that they already work to help them achieve higher and reach leadership positions in the security sector,” she said, but did not elaborate.

“And then we work with networking opportunities for women at the highest levels to get them to know each other and to really build an All Girls Club and counter the All Boys Club,” Chazkel said.

“We are doing major research to find out what are the institutional barriers. I think a lot of them have to do with sexual harassment, feelings of a lack of role models – which is why we think the mentoring opportunities are the most important thing, so that women that are coming into the field know that there is someone there to help them,” she said.

Politics and the defense establishment are male-dominated. There were those who saw the option to changing this by presenting an alternative. In Israel, there are today more than 50 registered women’s organizations, the majority of which are devoted to providing solutions, such as preschool daycare, assistance to single mothers, and legal counseling, to the problems women face. Others are focused on issues such as peace, security, and social welfare, such as The Women in Black, Rachelim Women and Four Mothers.

Interestingly enough, public opinion surveys usually show no differences between the views of Israeli men and women on issues related to peacemaking.

“Women don’t necessarily think differently than men when it comes to peace negotiations and security, but the perception of women is that we do,” said Chazkel.

According to a dissertation written by Fania Oz-Salzberger, who now teaches at the University of Haifa, Palestinians were more willing to accept women on their peace negotiating teams than Israelis.

“This isn’t necessarily because women are more inclined to peace, but rather because the perception of us is that we are,” Chazkel says. “So I personally believe, and believe strongly, that these are reasons that we need to put women into strategic positions. Because we have a unique thing that we bring to the table and we have something that adds to the table and it’s important to bring women into strategic positions.”

Chazkel believes that Israel is progressing, albeit slowly.

“If we want to continue progressing ourselves as a Western society that’s moving toward democratic, and equal opportunities, we need to make sure we represent ourselves at the level the Europeans are and the level that the Americans are. So, in order to do that, we need to make sure there are more women in leadership positions—because that’s the future,” Chazkel said.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

WHITE MOUNTAINS – Representatives from Northland Pioneer College’s Financial Aid Office will be visiting communities throughout Navajo and Apache counties during April to provide assistance to those a

View full post on All Stories

United States (KaiserHealth) – Once a year, employees of the Swiss Village Retirement Community in Berne, Ind., have a checkup that will help determine how much they pay for health coverage. Those who don’t smoke, aren’t obese and whose blood pressure and cholesterol fall below specific levels get to shave as much as $2,000 off their annual health insurance deductible.

Daryl Martin, 60, Swiss Village Executive Director, uses the chest press machine in the early morning hours at the Swiss Village Wellness Pavilion (Photo by William Rozier for USA Today/KHN).

At Chicago-based Jones Lang LaSalle, a real estate firm, workers can earn up to $300 in cash for having a physical and hitting certain medical goals, or completing health coaching programs.

Gone are the days of just signing up for health insurance and hoping you don’t have to use it. Now, more employees are being asked to roll up their sleeves for medical tests — and to exercise, participate in disease management programs and quit smoking to qualify for hundreds, even thousands of dollars’ worth of premium or deductible discounts.

Proponents say such plans offer people a financial incentive to make healthier choices and manage chronic conditions such as obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes, which are driving up healthcare costs in the USA. Even so, studies of the effect of such policies on lifestyle changes are inconclusive. And advocates for people with chronic health conditions, such as heart disease and diabetes, fear that tying premium costs directly to test results could lead to discrimination.

Consumer Tips: Workplace Wellness Plans

More and more employers are tying financial reward and penalties to workers completing a set of medical tests. KHN’s Julie Appleby says the tests can include blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar. Watch the video.

Employee reaction has also been mixed. “It’s an invasion of privacy,” says Bradley Seff, 54, a court reporter who filed a lawsuit against his employer, Broward County, in August, 2010, for introducing such a plan.

Nonetheless, such plans could be the wave of the future. Faced with crippling healthcare costs, the number of employers embracing such programs shot up from 49 percent in 2010 to 54 percent last year — and more say they expect to do so soon, according to a survey by consultants Aon Hewitt. Big-name participants include insurer UnitedHealthcare, car rental firm Hertz, postage meter maker Pitney Bowes and media owner Gannett, owner of USA TODAY.

And more employers are expected to adopt them starting in 2014, when the health law allows them to offer larger incentives or penalties than they can now.

“We’re seeing a big move in this direction driven by employers’ concern about rising health costs and their sense that employee behavior has a lot to do with high costs,” says Kevin Volpp, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, who has studied the use of incentives in health insurance programs.

Cost Savings Seen

Julie White, 50, Swiss Village Director of Nursing Services, swims laps in the early morning hours at the Swiss Village Wellness Pavilion (Photo by William Rozier for USA Today/KHN).

Leaders at Swiss Village credit their eight-year-old wellness program, along with a high-deductible insurance plan and an on-site fitness center, with slowing health care cost increases. Workers saw no increase in their health premiums from 2005 to 2011.

“We continue to embrace what we’re doing,” says Daryl Martin, executive director of the nonprofit organization. Still, a few high-cost medical issues among its 230 covered employees and their dependents last year caused it to raise employee costs- percent this year.

What’s important, Martin says, is that the company’s approach keeps health “at the forefront of what people are thinking about.”

Of the employers who offer such programs, about one-third offer financial incentives to those who undergo specific medical tests, according to the Aon Hewitt survey. And 5 percent of those tie the financial rewards or penalties to meeting specific medical-based standards.

The survey also found the use of medical screening tests poised to expand to family members: 57 percent of employers said they planned to add incentives for spouses and dependents in the next three to five years.

“A lot of costs come from spouses, but only 29 percent had incentives for spouses,” says Cathy Tripp, a senior vice president at Aon.

Starting in 2014, federal law allows employers to raise the value of the perk or penalty from 20 percent of the cost of a worker’s health insurance plan, to 30 percent. Based on the average cost of employer-offered insurance today, that means firms will be able to offer annual discounts or penalties of more than $4,500 a family, or $1,600 for individuals.

Joe Burkhead, 61, Swiss Village Director of Information Services, uses the leg curl machine in the early morning hours at the Swiss Village Wellness Pavilion (Photo by William Rozier for USA Today/KHN).

Employers will still have to craft plans to comply with federal and, in some cases, state requirements, Volpp says. The programs must be voluntary — meaning an employer can’t require a worker to participate as a condition of coverage. And the employer must offer a “reasonable alternative” to qualify for the reward, or to avoid the penalty for those who can’t achieve the sought-after medical goals.

But Dick Woodruff, vice president of federal relations for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, worries there’s no definition of what a reasonable alternative must include.

Some workers complain the programs are an intrusion into their private lives.

“They portrayed it as voluntary, which it isn’t, because if you don’t participate, they fine you every paycheck,” says Seff, the former Broward employee who is suing over the program. He has since retired on disability with back and neck problems. “I don’t think any employer should do it.”

In an effort to slow rising health care costs, Broward County in 2009 began asking workers to fill out a health information form and have a finger-stick blood test each year to check blood sugar and cholesterol levels, according to court filings. Workers who declined were docked $40 a month.

Those who did participate were offered disease management programs if they had asthma, high blood pressure, diabetes, congestive heart failure or kidney disease. The county stopped docking those who declined to participate Jan. 1, 2011, after Seff’s suit was filed, court documents say.

The lawsuit, which argues the county’s program violates the Americans with Disabilities Act, is likely the first of its kind in the nation, says Seff’s attorney Daniel Levine in Boca Raton, Fla. Without ruling on whether the wellness effort was voluntary, a federal district court judge backed the county in April, 2011, saying the plan fell under provisions of the law meant to protect bona fide benefit programs. The case is now on appeal. Broward County attorneys did not return requests for comment.

Some state lawmakers are also concerned about the potential for discrimination. Colorado passed legislation in 2010 that requires wellness programs to be accredited, bars penalizing workers for not participating, or failing to meet a health standard — and allows appeals if an employee is denied an alternative. A similar bill was brought unsuccessfully in California last year, according to a February report by Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute.

While supporting wellness programs in general, several patient advocacy groups warned the Obama administration last March that additional consumer protections are needed. Tying medical test results to financial incentives or penalties in premiums or deductibles could discriminate against some workers, especially those who already have health problems, the groups said.

“When you start increasing premiums or pumping up the deductibles, you’re making it more expensive and harder for people to access insurance,” says the Cancer Society’s Woodruff, who adds that offering gift cards or bonuses are a better way to reward people for participation.

Employers, however, argue that since they’re on the hook for the bills, they can ask workers to take more responsibility.

“House money, house rules,” says Ken Sperling, global healthcare practice leader at Aon Hewitt.

Humble Beginnings

The first worker wellness programs, which began about a decade ago, rewarded simple participation: attending a health fair or filling out a “health risk assessments,” with the worker perhaps receiving a $25 gift card in return.

Today, many offer discounted premiums to workers who meet standards related to blood pressure, cholesterol and weight, with the value of those discounts running between $30 and $60 a month, says Jim Pshock, founder and CEO of Bravo Wellness in Avon, Ohio. Pshock administers such wellness programs for about 220 employers nationwide, including Colorado construction firm Oakwood Homes and Nashville’s Ardent Health Services.

Although employers may set specific goals — such as a body mass index (BMI) below the 30, the level considered obese — many also reward achievement of less daunting targets. One employer rewarded workers if their test results didn’t get any worse, Pshock says.

At Swiss Village, workers get $500 off their deductible for each of these measures: not smoking, having a BMI of 27.5 or less, a low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level (LDL) of 130 milligrams per deciliter or less, and blood pressure of 130/85 or less. LDL levels above 129 are associated with higher risk of heart disease, while blood pressure greater than 120/80 is considered a risk factor for heart attack and stroke.

A second tier of awards allow workers who approach those ranges to earn $250 per category. The testing takes place at an on-site health fair, or at a doctor’s office with the results gathered by an independent insurance firm that runs the program for the company.

Federal laws allow employers to require workers to fill out a health risk assessment, but bar them from learning a specific worker’s answers, although they can get results in aggregate. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 also limits employers’ ability to ask about family history or require genetic testing.

The information is generally gathered by firms that run wellness programs or insurance plans. UnitedHealthcare, which offers its “Personal Rewards” program to large, self-insured clients, says it does not use the information to set premiums.

Pshock says some of his clients share the information with their insurers, who may “recognize the significance of a program … with a 3 percent to 6 percent rate reduction.” Many insurers, however, take “more of a wait-and-see-if-the-health-improvement-results-in-fewer-claims approach,” he says.

But Do They Work?

Given the available data, it’s hard to parse how much of the reported savings from such programs come from improved health, and how much from the frequent pairing of such programs with high deductible policies, which shift more costs onto workers.

“We just don’t know how effective (incentives) are,” says Volpp. There is pretty good evidence they help smokers quit, he says, but less that they prompt workers to lose weight and keep it off.

Weight gain is partly a function of genes and environment, he says, so programs that tie incentives to achieving a particular weight range are “in essence, penalizing people for factors they can’t control or can only partly control” – either because they’ve failed to lose weight or haven’t participated in the program.

Volpp says the medical literature shows that incentives work best when participants have choices: get below a certain BMI, or lose 5 percent of current body weight, for example. And, he says, rewards should be immediate.

“If you want the employee to do a health assessment or (medical) screening, you should give them the reward right after they do it” he says.

At Jones Lang LaSalle, workers who make a pledge — on the honor system — that they don’t smoke, or will take a stop-smoking class, and achieve a healthy weight, get 10 percent off their contribution toward insurance premiums.

In 2010, the firm added a cash bonus program, offering $50 to workers who get a physical and another $50 for every one of four medical tests they take: weight, blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol, plus an extra $50 if they do all the tests. If they meet specified goals — or complete a coaching program — they get the money in the form of a cash bonus. Spouses and domestic partners are also eligible, says Howard Futterman, senior vice president of benefits.

Last year, 65 percent of employees participated. While it’s early, he says, indications are the program is having an impact on costs: health spending rose 6 percent in 2010, but only 3 percent in 2011.

“Our long term goal is to make health and well-being part of our culture and everyday values,” says Futterman. “When people start doing it naturally and you don’t have to pay them for it, that’s when you know you’ve succeeded.”

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

Clean energy crucial for poor countries

Oil importing costs have outweighed overseas financial aid received by developing countries in Africa, highlighting why Africa needs clean energy.

View full post on All Stories

Tim Medeiros is in his third year at Simpson University, where he plays soccer, works two jobs and serves as the student body president while studying education and history.

View full post on All Stories