Click here to view this media Even after allowing this hostage taking to go right up to the brink of default, Boehner wants us to believe he’s really just worried about doing what’s right for the country and might still be willing to make a deal with President Obama. If he was worried about doing what’s right, he’d help get a clean vote passed on the debt ceiling and we wouldn’t be wondering if the markets might start reacting to this stuff at any moment. Steve Benen has a great post up on this same interview — Boehner claims to be ‘worried about the country’ : House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), as expected, is now fully invested in a temporary debt-ceiling extension. He’ll accept $1 trillion in cuts — with no revenue — now, and then consider another extension next year after additional negotiations over taxes and entitlements. Democrats want one debt-ceiling vote, seeing no need to put the country through this twice in less than a year. Take note of how Boehner responds to this . Boehner suggested Sunday that by trying to put the next debt ceiling debate off for so long Obama was trying to gain political advantage. “I know the president is worried about his next re-election, but, my God, shouldn’t we be worried about the country?” Boehner asked. It’s entirely possible that the House Speaker really is this dumb. With this in mind, I’m trying to think about how to ask the questions in a way John Boehner can understand. How about this: 1. How would the country benefit from two votes on raising the debt ceiling, instead of one? 2. If Republicans are sincerely concerned about economic “uncertainty,” why tell investors, job creators, and international markets that default is a possibility early next year? 3. If getting one debt-ceiling revision through Congress is necessary but difficult, why make lawmakers go through this twice? Steve went on to slam Boehner for having the nerve to try to take the high road here when he has allowed this hostage taking in the first place and wondered if Boehner would care to answer his own question. I don’t expect we’ll see that happen any time soon. Transcript below the fold. WALLACE: There is considerable criticism among House Republicans, and I’m sure some of them are going shake their heads watching what you’ve just said, that you are too eager for this grand bargain. You’re too eager to make a deal with Barack Obama. BOEHNER: What I am eager for is to do the right thing for the country. I didn’t come here to be a congressman, I came here to do something on behalf of my country. I didn’t want to be a speaker of the House because I needed a big fancy job, I wanted to be speaker so that I could lead an effort to do the right things for our country. We have a spending problem. And I am going to do everything I can to try to tackle this problem in as big a way as I can because it is the right thing for the country. WALLACE: Even if it causes heart burn in the House GOP caucus? BOEHNER: This is about doing the right thing for our country. WALLACE: You now say that you and the president are from different planets, you have two entirely different views of the world. What made you ever think, what makes you seem to think that even now that you can make a deal with this president with his views on trillions of dollars in spending, entitlements and taxes? BOEHNER: Well, Chris, I was born with the glass half full. I’m the optimist. And it is about trying to find common ground. Yes, I understand the president feels that we need a bigger government and more spending here in Washington. I believe allowing the American people to keep more of that money is the best way to create jobs and grow our economy. But having said the fact that we’re on — it is almost like we come from two different planets. My job on behalf the country is to find as much common ground as we can to help move the country ahead. WALLACE: But Democrats are saying, and you heard this implied by Tim Geithner just before you, that you end up looking bad with voters because you walked out of the talks twice. And you are willing to risk default because you want to cut Medicare and Medicaid and not cut tax for the wealthy. BOEHNER: I’m not going to get involved in all that political sniping. I am interested in a solution to the problem we face. I don’t want to see default. I don’t frankly want to get anywhere close to it. WALLACE: We are close to it now. BOEHNER: It is bad for our economy and bad for our country. And so I am trying to find a common ground that doable in the time remaining. WALLACE: Well let me just ask you, and that’s the last question, sir. How does disappointed are you, because according to your plan, as we understand it now, and it may change, a trillion in spending cuts in the short term. How disappointed are you that after months of talking, after this urgent deadline, that it seems now that maybe the most that Washington can come up with when you are going to spend $46 trillion over the next decade, is $1 trillion in spending? BOEHNER: After over six months conversations with the president about doing the big deal, about taking a big step in the right direction, it is pretty clear to me that they are just not willing to do it. That the next election matters more than doing what is right for the country. I am not worried about the next election. I told the president months ago forget about the next election. If we do the right thing for the country, we’ll not have to worry about who is going to get elected and who isn’t. WALLACE: Speaker Boehner, I want to thank you always — as always for coming in. And we’ll see how the world turns this week, sir. BOEHNER: We sure will.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Even after allowing this hostage taking to go right up to the brink of default, Boehner wants us to believe he’s really just worried about doing what’s right for the country and might still be willing to make a deal with President Obama. If he was worried about doing what’s right, he’d help get a clean vote passed on the debt ceiling and we wouldn’t be wondering if the markets might start reacting to this stuff at any moment. Steve Benen has a great post up on this same interview — Boehner claims to be ‘worried about the country’ : House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), as expected, is now fully invested in a temporary debt-ceiling extension. He’ll accept $1 trillion in cuts — with no revenue — now, and then consider another extension next year after additional negotiations over taxes and entitlements. Democrats want one debt-ceiling vote, seeing no need to put the country through this twice in less than a year. Take note of how Boehner responds to this . Boehner suggested Sunday that by trying to put the next debt ceiling debate off for so long Obama was trying to gain political advantage. “I know the president is worried about his next re-election, but, my God, shouldn’t we be worried about the country?” Boehner asked. It’s entirely possible that the House Speaker really is this dumb. With this in mind, I’m trying to think about how to ask the questions in a way John Boehner can understand. How about this: 1. How would the country benefit from two votes on raising the debt ceiling, instead of one? 2. If Republicans are sincerely concerned about economic “uncertainty,” why tell investors, job creators, and international markets that default is a possibility early next year? 3. If getting one debt-ceiling revision through Congress is necessary but difficult, why make lawmakers go through this twice? Steve went on to slam Boehner for having the nerve to try to take the high road here when he has allowed this hostage taking in the first place and wondered if Boehner would care to answer his own question. I don’t expect we’ll see that happen any time soon. Transcript below the fold. WALLACE: There is considerable criticism among House Republicans, and I’m sure some of them are going shake their heads watching what you’ve just said, that you are too eager for this grand bargain. You’re too eager to make a deal with Barack Obama. BOEHNER: What I am eager for is to do the right thing for the country. I didn’t come here to be a congressman, I came here to do something on behalf of my country. I didn’t want to be a speaker of the House because I needed a big fancy job, I wanted to be speaker so that I could lead an effort to do the right things for our country. We have a spending problem. And I am going to do everything I can to try to tackle this problem in as big a way as I can because it is the right thing for the country. WALLACE: Even if it causes heart burn in the House GOP caucus? BOEHNER: This is about doing the right thing for our country. WALLACE: You now say that you and the president are from different planets, you have two entirely different views of the world. What made you ever think, what makes you seem to think that even now that you can make a deal with this president with his views on trillions of dollars in spending, entitlements and taxes? BOEHNER: Well, Chris, I was born with the glass half full. I’m the optimist. And it is about trying to find common ground. Yes, I understand the president feels that we need a bigger government and more spending here in Washington. I believe allowing the American people to keep more of that money is the best way to create jobs and grow our economy. But having said the fact that we’re on — it is almost like we come from two different planets. My job on behalf the country is to find as much common ground as we can to help move the country ahead. WALLACE: But Democrats are saying, and you heard this implied by Tim Geithner just before you, that you end up looking bad with voters because you walked out of the talks twice. And you are willing to risk default because you want to cut Medicare and Medicaid and not cut tax for the wealthy. BOEHNER: I’m not going to get involved in all that political sniping. I am interested in a solution to the problem we face. I don’t want to see default. I don’t frankly want to get anywhere close to it. WALLACE: We are close to it now. BOEHNER: It is bad for our economy and bad for our country. And so I am trying to find a common ground that doable in the time remaining. WALLACE: Well let me just ask you, and that’s the last question, sir. How does disappointed are you, because according to your plan, as we understand it now, and it may change, a trillion in spending cuts in the short term. How disappointed are you that after months of talking, after this urgent deadline, that it seems now that maybe the most that Washington can come up with when you are going to spend $46 trillion over the next decade, is $1 trillion in spending? BOEHNER: After over six months conversations with the president about doing the big deal, about taking a big step in the right direction, it is pretty clear to me that they are just not willing to do it. That the next election matters more than doing what is right for the country. I am not worried about the next election. I told the president months ago forget about the next election. If we do the right thing for the country, we’ll not have to worry about who is going to get elected and who isn’t. WALLACE: Speaker Boehner, I want to thank you always — as always for coming in. And we’ll see how the world turns this week, sir. BOEHNER: We sure will.
Continue reading …Lingering risks of contamination from tens of thousands of tonnes of chemicals dumped across UK since first world war Interactive map of UK chemical weapons contamination The Project Cleansweep briefing document The Ministry of Defence has investigated 14 former chemical weapons factories and stores across the UK for contamination, according to an official briefing seen by the Guardian. Tens of thousands of tonnes of mustard gas , phosgene and other lethal chemicals have been made, stored, burned and dumped at sites in England, Wales and Scotland since the first world war. Some areas are still fenced off to protect the public today. After a four-year investigation of the sites considered potentially hazardous – named Project Cleansweep – it has concluded that there is “no indication of significant risk to public health or environment” from the sites. That has been questioned, however, by one expert, who pointed out that there was still no scientific proof that all harmful traces of the weapons have been removed, particularly after they were burnt. Prof Alastair Hay , an expert on chemical weapons and who is a professor of environmental toxicology at the University of Leeds and an official adviser to the health and safety executive , argued that more sampling might still be needed at the sites. Some areas should be kept secure as a failsafe because mustard gas can be very persistent in the environment, he warned. “The more problematic areas are where physical destruction took place,” he said. “Incineration is a well-recognised method of disposal, but you need to ensure all is burned. We have no details of these procedures.” Chemical weapons were extensively used by both sides in the first world war, and have been blamed for 100,000 deaths. Soldiers particularly feared chemical gas attacks because they could cause blindness, blistering and a slow, painful death. The weapons are now outlawed by international agreement in most countries. The MoD launched Project Cleansweep in 2007 to provide “reassurance” that residual contamination at UK sites did not pose a risk to human health or the environment. A briefing on the project has been released in response to requests under freedom of information law. The project initially considered 46 sites, but whittled that down to 14 that required detailed investigation. Although sites may have been cleared in the past, “we do not have scientific evidence that all harmful traces of the agents were removed or disposed of”, the MoD briefing stated. The 14 sites included two former US chemical weapons stores at Aberfoyle in South Lanarkshire and at Worksop in Nottinghamshire. At Bowes Moor in Durham, 17,000 tonnes of chemicals were stored on 564 acres of moorland. According to the MoD, areas historically used for the disposal of mustard gas are still fenced off at Riseley in Bedfordshire and at Spalford Warren in Nottinghamshire . Spalford Warren has also been designated as a site of special scientific interest because of “its importance as a grass-heath habitat”. The sites are now safe, the MoD briefing said, and “suitable for their current use, provided any management systems, restrictions or procedures remain in place”. A comprehensive report on Project Cleansweep is due to be published later this year. Pollution Waste Defence policy Weapons technology Health First world war Rob Edwards guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Relations between activists and military pushed to breaking point by armed attack on march from Tahrir Square Strained relations between Egyptian activists and the country’s military rulers appeared close to breaking point on Sunday after dozens of protesters were attacked by assailants during a rally in Cairo at the weekend. The march on Saturday evening began with a two-week sit-in in Tahrir Square, the iconic heart of the revolution, and was heading towards Cairo’s defence ministry when it came under attack by armed baltagiya – Arabic for thugs. The unidentified assailants appeared to be sympathetic to the ruling generals, who were a pillar of the old regime. Thousands of placard-wielding and chanting protesters, who had approached the ministry of defence in the Abbasyia district, were blocked en route by tanks and hundreds of soldiers stationed behind a makeshift barrier of metal frames and barbed wire. They found themselves trapped and were set upon by armed thugs wielding swords, knives and hurling rocks and molotov cocktails. Among the protesters was Hossam El-Hamalawy, a prominent activist, who later wrote on his blog: “We stood our ground, demanding we pass. We were refused. The attack started. Young men carrying swords and knives flocked to our right, while others were stoning us from the side streets. Soldiers kept firing their machine guns into the air, to be followed later by a chopper circulating around our heads. It was a war zone in every sense of the word.” Dozens were injured in the chaos, as they were showered by rocks hurled from rooftops, while others were hurt in the ensuing stampede. The injured, estimated to run into hundreds, were ferried to nearby hospitals. It was reported that at least one journalist was attacked. Among those detained was a prominent Egyptian blogger and human rights researcher, Amr Gharbeia , who was seized by unidentified men as he attempted to leave the scene of the protest. He was incommunicado for several hours, prompting frantic calls for information on his whereabouts and international demands for his release, including from Amnesty International, his former employer. “I am home, safe and resting. Grateful for everybody,” he later wrote on Twitter. The violence in Abbasyia marked a significant escalation in tensions between activists, who have been at the vanguard of the revolution, and Egypt’s military rulers, known as the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, who assumed control of the country on 11 February. While the military has denied any involvement in Saturday’s violence the protesters have accused them of at least being complicit as they did not intervene to protect them from the attacks. A wall of distrust has been building for several weeks as activists have complained that conservative elements, including the military, were betraying their push for freedom and democracy by shielding members of the former regime. Angered by the lack of progress, protesters reoccupied and erected tents in Tahrir Square on 8 July to pressure the military into bringing those accused of killing protesters during the 18-day uprising to trial and to persuade interim rulers to stick to their pledges of bringing social justice, civil liberties and democracy. Activists want them to move faster in bringing former regime officials to justice and set a date for the transition to civilian rule. The military accuse activists of treason, warning protesters against “harming national interests” and calling on “honourable” Egyptians to confront actions that disrupt a return to normal life. As news of the bloody clashes in Abbaysia was relayed back to Tahrir Square on Saturday night, young activists gathered to discuss whether they too might be targeted by military or armed thugs there. Ahmed, a young man who had camped in the square from the earliest days of the revolution, took a microphone and told the crowd to stand strong. “Tonight we may die here,” he bellowed, as some in the audience applauded. “If you are ready to die then stay. If not, then go home.” As the night wore on the injured from Abbasiya returned to the square to receive treatment as fears of an assault dissipated. Many in the camp felt it was a matter of time before another showdown with the military, who they believe will attempt to clear the square of protesters. “The military are just another face of the old regime,” said one demonstrator. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa Protest Inigo Gilmore guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As Talk Show Sunday bores the heck out of me with its meandering madness, here’s something that’s sure to brighten your day. Think Progress: Marriage equality becomes legal in New York today as hundreds of gay and lesbian couples prepare to tie the knot — the first, Kitty Lambert and Cheryle Rudd , taking their vows just seconds after midnight in Niagara Falls. In New York City, all 823 same-sex and opposite-sex couples who entered a special lottery have “won” the chance to the tie the knot in one of the five boroughs and officials “from more than a dozen cities and towns from Buffalo to Brookhaven said they would open their offices to issue marriage licenses on Sunday, and more than 100 judges across the state have volunteered to officiate at the couples’ weddings on the spot.” NY 1 reports on the story of Phyllis Siegal, 76, and Connie Kopelov, 84, who have been together for 23 years and become the first same-sex couple to legally marry in the city. “It was just so amazing. It’s, it’s, it’s the only way I can describe it,” Siegal said. “I lost my breath and a few tears and it’s indescribable.” “I now pronounce you married.” Words to be cherished if that is your choice.
Continue reading …Liberal shill Arianna Huffington predictably echoed left-wing talking points on ABC's “This Week” Sunday concerning Fox News's coverage of the British hacking scandal being “embarrassing for journalism.” Fortunately for the sake of accuracy, Fox Business Network's Charlie Gasparino was there to set the record straight (video follows with transcript and commentary): ARIANNA HUFFINGTON, AOL HUFFINGTON POST: The coverage of Fox and the Wall Street Journal of this story has been embarrassing for journalism. You know… Actually, one of the biggest embarrassments to journalism in recent memory was AOL buying out the perilously liberal Huffington Post. As such, Huffington is in no position to accuse anyone or anything of embarrassing journalism given what her pathetic website does to the industry on a daily basis. But I digress: CHARLIE GASPARINO, FOX BUSINESS NETWORK: Arianna, we've been covering it more, we’ve been covering it all the time. HUFFINGTON: …editorials in the Wall Street Journal. Forget Fox, you know, nobody really expects Fox to do this seriously… GASPARINO: Fox has been covering this very seriously, Arianna. HUFFINGTON: The Wall Street Journal editorials whitewashing what is a very, very serious scandal that we have not seen the end of. GASPARINO: The company has said it’s serious. CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, HOST: Hopefully discuss this more in the green room. GASPARINO: I think we've covered this well. We have straight news reporters that have covered this all day. Indeed they have. As NewsBusters reported last Sunday, Fox had done at least 30 reports concerning this scandal in the first ten days after it broke. But facts don't matter to shills like Huffington. She wants the only major news organization that doesn't have a decidedly liberal bias to be off the air, and she's going to do whatever she possibly can to accomplish that goal. Once again, it was fortunate for “This Week” viewers that Gasparino was there to counter Huffington's absurd misrepresentations. Nice job, Charlie. Bravo!
Continue reading …Fifth and largest US state so far to pass law, but same-sex marriages still not recognised by national government Just past midnight on Sunday at Niagara Falls in New York, Kitty Lambert and Cheryle Rudd became the first same-sex couple to be legally married in the state. The couple were among hundreds of gays and lesbians married on Sunday as a new law allowing same-sex marriages in New York came into effect. Lambert, 54, and Rudd, 53, were married before more than 100 friends and family members in front of the famous water falls. Lambert and Rudd have been together 12 years and met in Arizona after divorcing their respective husbands. The women have five children and 12 grandchildren between them. “We’re finally getting the same rights as everyone else,” Rudd told Associated Press. “Nobody can take that away from us anymore.” In New York city 823 same sex couples were granted licences to wed on Sunday. Phyllis Siegal, 76, and Connie Kopelov, 84, were the first same-sex couple to become legally married in the city. The couple live in Chelsea and have been together for 23 years. Couples began lining up at the entry to the Manhattan City Clerk’s Office in New York at 4:30 am and a crowd gathered to cheer the newlyweds as they left the building. City Council speaker Christine Quinn, who is gay, told reporters: “They’re here in the most amazing of moments, where their hometown and their state are saying that their family matters, that their family is just as good as everybody else’s. And part of the law that in words said they were less than other people, which wasn’t true, is now gone.” New York mayor Michael Bloomberg officiated at the marriage between his consumer affairs commissioner Jonathan Mintz, and his chief policy adviser John Feinblatt Sunday afternoon at Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s official residence. The mayor has been an outspoken champion of same-sex marriage rights. New York is the largest state so far to legalize same-sex marriage. Six other states including Connecticut, Iowa and Vermont already recognise gay marriages. Gay rights activists are pushing for New York neighbour New Jersey to recognise gay weddings. But most US states have brought in laws or constitutional amendments barring same-sex marriage, and same-sex marriages are not recognised at the national level by the US government. Gay rights New York Michael Bloomberg United States Marriage Relationships Family Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Commons committee to publish critical report on Atos, which determines whether people are eligible for sickness benefits People who are fit and healthy are unlikely to have heard of the company Atos , but anyone who has had to apply for sickness benefits may find that the name triggers (in the words of one MP) a sense of “fear and loathing”. Responsible for carrying out the government’s drive to assess everyone claiming incapacity benefit, to decide whether they may actually be well enough to work, Atos staff are now testing around 11,000 benefit claimants a week, to determine how ill they really are and whether they are eligible for benefit payments. Since the last government launched a campaign to cut the number of sickness benefits claimants, the process has been controversial, with charities and politicians warning that vulnerable people have wrongly had vital payments removed . On Tuesday a select committee will publish a detailed and critical report on the way the Department for Work and Pensions policy has been implemented, looking in part at the way the Atos has carried out its contract to assess claimants. The Work and Pensions committee launched its investigation this year in response to the many complaints about the testing process. More than 400,000 appeals have been lodged against decisions not to grant the benefit since it was launched in October 2008 and 39% are successful. The tribunals service has been forced to double the number of staff handling the appeals, to accommodate the huge volume of complaints; the cost of tribunals is estimated at well over £30m a year. Atos, a Paris-based IT company, is being paid £100m a year to carry out the work capability assessments (WCAs), allowing the government to phase out incapacity benefit and replace it with the employment and support allowance (ESA). The record of Atos Healthcare (a division of Atos) over the initial period of the policy’s roll-out has already been much criticised by disability charities. There are two main areas of concern: unease about the government policy of retesting people’s fitness for work, and alarm about practical hitches in the testing process delivered by Atos. Kate Green, a Labour MP who sits on the committee, said that while she was broadly supportive of the policy to help more people back into work, “the delivery has been absolutely disastrous”. Concern has been voiced more widely, beyond the select committee, over the accuracy of the tests, the high numbers of successful appeals against the medical assessments, the facilities provided by Atos and the treatment of claimants by Atos staff. For the past six months, Atos has been the focus of noisy protests by disability campaigners who have staged meetings outside its London headquarters, organised sit-ins at the medical assessment centres and sent protesters to picket Atos recruitment fairs. Protest banners declare “Atos doesn’t give a toss” and “Atos Kills” (a reference to reports, highlighted by leading mental health charities of people taking their own lives as a result of changes to their benefits ). Those words have been painted on a wall near the company’s London headquarters. During the test, benefit claimants are interviewed by Atos staff (a mix of doctors and nurses) for between 20 minutes and two hours. Staff engage claimants in an often very relaxed conversation, gathering information about the medical problems, and calculating how capable the claimant is of performing simple tasks; a computer programme offers prompts to ensure that all the relevant material is inputted. Staff can capture information in a sideways manner – the question: “Do you shop and cook for yourself?” may be used as an indication of a claimant’s mobility and competence. Atos staff award claimants between zero and 15 points (with 15 points indicating that they are too unwell to work), and send their reports to the jobcentre, where benefits officials make a final decision. Charities have warned that glitches in the system have meant that many seriously ill people have been judged fit for work. A third have appealed, with 39% of decisions overturned by tribunals. The tribunals service spent an estimated £22.15m on processing these appeals between May and September last year. The tribunals service has had to double its capacity in the social security section to deal with the large number of appeals, recruiting an extra 170 additional paid medical panel members. The government accepts that the system has not run smoothly, and set up a review last year, headed by Professor Malcolm Harrington. His initial recommendations have been implemented by Atos. The DWP and Atos now expect the test to run much more smoothly. However, Harrington’s review has not yet addressed all the outstanding issues and will make further recommendations later this year. During the Work and Pensions select committee hearings earlier this summer, MPs asked if Atos was penalised financially for inaccuracy. The company said it was paid per assessment, with no sanction if the decision was overturned on appeal. Anne Begg , Labour chair of the committee, responded: “That adds to the suspicion that you are a private company, you are driven by a profit motive, and the incentive is to get the assessments done, but not necessarily to get the assessments right.” Neil Coyle, director of Disability Alliance , said the government was paying the company to do the test, and was then footing the bill for reviewing flawed assessments. “It’s like paying for a childminder to babysit, and then going home three times in an evening to make sure they are doing their job,” he said. A DWP spokesman said that if a decision were overturned, it did “not necessarily mean the original decision was incorrect”, because new evidence was often produced, or “the tribunal weighs the original evidence differently”. MPs of all parties and from all parts of the country have found that the work capability assessment is a constant feature in their constituency mail bag. Labour MP Tom Greatrex was alerted to the issue last year when a constituent reported difficulties getting through to an Atos helpline. Greatrex’s office called the number 135 times before getting through. Although the phone service has subsequently improved, he said the “experience of both my constituents and my own office of the customer service provided by Atos has been entirely negative”. He too is concerned by the high levels of appeals, particularly now the system is no longer just testing new claimants, but has started retesting all 1.5 million incapacity benefit claimants to see whether they are eligible for the new benefit, ESA. “The acceleration of the assessment process will mean that we end up with more and more mistakes being made. If that many people are winning their appeals, then it is grossly inefficient, apart from anything else,” he said. A lot of his constituents felt that they were “being branded as skivers” and “demonised by the system”, he said. “People have to have confidence that this is about helping them and not punishing them. I am not satisfied that the way in which Atos are doing what they are doing gives people that confidence; they have a responsibility to get it right. There are significant flaws in that process.” The computer-led method by which Atos assessors work out how many points to award each claimant has also caused frustration, Begg said. “One of the big fears, and it was a common theme through all the evidence we got, was the mechanistic nature, the computer-based nature. I think a lot of your clients feel they are in the Little Britain sketch, where it says, ‘The computer says no,’” she told Atos staff at the hearing. The Conservative MP Simon Hart , was warned by Citizens Advice staff in Carmarthen that the test was causing many complaints. In a series of parliamentary questions, he established that 29,000 claimants who originally scored zero in the test were later granted the benefit on appeal. “It seems that some people are not failing by a couple of points. They are failing completely and then going to tribunal and then passing completely. If it were missing by narrow margin, you could understand that… there could always be a margin of error, but for some poor people the system is not working,” he said. “The policy is a sound one, but it has to be fair and there does seem to be a group for whom it is obviously not fair.” MPs also raised concerns about the numbers of assessment centres that were not well equipped to receive people with disabilities (because, for example, they were on the first floor). Simon Gillespie, chief executive of the MS Society , said many people had “expressed concerns that the assessment centres themselves weren’t accessible”, among other complaints. “People with MS have told us they felt their assessor often appeared dismissive, and underestimated the impact of their condition or didn’t actually understand their condition at all,” he wrote in an email. Given the high level of concern expressed about Atos’s current record, MPs wondered how the company was going to manage to deliver the “substantial savings” it promised when its contract was recently extended to 2015. Atos officials told MPs they would do that by “making the process more efficient”. Glenda Jackson , Labour, said she struggled to see how the company could improve its performance, as promised, and simultaneously cut costs. “How will it be possible with a reduced budget to improve and expand training?” she asked. The Lib Dem MP Stephen Lloyd , asked Atos staff how they planned to improve their reputation. “It is not [an] exaggeration that, for x number of people in the UK who are currently going through this process, Atos is feared or loathed in equal terms.” Tom Pollard, policy officer with the mental health charity Mind, said it was often hard for charities to pass on their concerns to Atos. “It often feels like we are kept at arms length from Atos so they are not answerable as much as the DWP is,” he said. Officials tended to respond that the problems highlighted by charities were “one-offs or isolated incidents” and this evidence tended to get “passed off as if they are the exception to the rule”, he said. “Often our experience suggests that the assessment is almost designed to ensure that it is catching out those people that might overplay things… to catch out scroungers. We often hear about people being asked slightly opaque questions… ‘Do you watch Eastenders? ‘ And staff will extrapolate from that, that person will be able to sit repeatedly and reliably for 30 minutes. That’s not quite straight from our point of view. It would be better to have an open conversation, where you don’t need to cloak the questions,” he said. “We don’t believe that people overplay their symptoms or conditions; that doesn’t line up with our experiences of the situation; they’re more likely to underplay it if anything.” Some charities are also uneasy at the prospect of Atos being given further contracts for a new set of medical assessments that the government is to introduce in 2013 to test eligibility for the new personal independence payments (PIP), to replace disability living allowance. Atos has already carried out some trial assessments for this test, with G4S. Richard Hawkes, chief executive of Scope , said: “They are responsible for the WCA and that doesn’t work and so we would have great concerns if they became responsible for the PIP assessment as well.” The public’s anxieties about Atos have been largely aired in blogs. Some disability campaigners have warned that by focusing anger on Atos, which is merely the company contracted to carry out a government policy, protesters are missing the point. When Atos (which is also responsible for IT at the Olympics) appointed athlete Steve Cram to be its UK ambassador for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, protesters turned their frustration on him, with a burst of angry online campaigning. The Disabled People Against Cuts group, wrote to him asking him “politely to reconsider his position”, but say they have yet to receive a reply. Cram’s agent said the athlete had not received a copy of the letter, although she had seen it online, and referred calls to the Atos press office. The company has recently taken legal action requesting closure of at least one website, which had invited people to post descriptions of their experiences of the medical assessment. Phil Lockwood who created a website, afteratos.org, earlier this year, was contacted by the company’s lawyers advising him to take the site down. An Atos spokesman said: “Atos Healthcare is focused on quality to ensure high standards are maintained. Customer satisfaction ratings for Atos Healthcare Professionals regularly exceed 90%.” In an emailed factsheet, the company says it has introduced improvements in partnership with the DWP, including “improved consistency and quality of medical assessment and reports”. A DWP spokesman said the government was continuously improving the test, adding: “Professor Harrington is now undertaking a second independent review of the WCA, which will be published before the end of the year. As part of this he has launched a call for evidence and we would encourage people to respond.” Questions and answers: taking the test A Guardian reader agreed to be accompanied to his recent work capability assessment. He has epilepsy and Asperger’s syndrome and has been suffering from anxiety. He lost his job last year because of his ill health. He was assessed by a nurse, who greeted him kindly and tried to reassure him about the process. The assessment started with an informal chat, and she asked how he had made his way to the assessment centre, clarifying whether it had taken more than half an hour. This was not just small talk, because the answers help build up a picture of potential fitness for work. The nurse asked questions about his diagnosis, but was also interested in his daily life. “Do you go shopping?” “What happens if you have a fit when you’re shopping?” “How long do you need to recover from it?” “Do you do the cleaning at home?” she asked. “Do you do the cooking?” ” Do you worry that you might leave the cooker on?” “Do you have pets?” “Do you have friends?” “Do you meet friends in cafes?” “Do you get the newspapers every day?” Ability to cook and care for pets shows evidence of general competence, but claimants often find this roundabout form of evidence-building confusing. She typed answers into the computer as she spoke, inputting his replies into the LiMA (logic integrated medical assessment) computer programme that processes the responses and helps translate the replies into a score between 0 and 15, with 15 being the point at which sickness benefit is recommended. She apologised for the noise of the keyboard being tapped, and for the fact that she had to take contemporaneous notes. After criticism about assessors looking at the computer rather than at the claimant, staff have been told to improve their eye contact. After a while, the tone of the interview became much more business-like, the sympathetic murmurings stopped and the questions became more rapid. “Do you cry?” she asked, trying to gauge the seriousness of his anxiety. “Do you feel that life is not worth living?” “Do you feel that you can’t on?” The replies (no) were typed in swiftly. Two weeks later, the claimant was informed two weeks later that he was temporarily eligible for employment and support allowance, but would need to take part in “work-related activity” sessions. Welfare Disability Amelia Gentleman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Loan to national transitional council comes as missile strikes by Gaddafi forces hit oil tanks fuelling Misrata’s power generators Germany has announced that it will lend €100m to the Libyan opposition to ease a growing humanitarian crisis in rebel-controlled parts of the country. The £88m loan to the national transitional council (NTC) was secured against frozen Libyan government funds. The money comes as the rebels struggle to pay for essentials, a fact that was exacerbated on Sunday when government missiles struck the oil tanks that fuel the besieged city of Misrata’s power generators. “We have decided to provide the NTC with urgently needed funding for civil and humanitarian measures,” said the German foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, in a statement. “People are suffering more and more from this, particularly in eastern Libya.” Five months into the war, cash is running low and the rebels have tried and failed to get access to billions of dollars held in Libyan government accounts. The situation is most acute in Misrata, Libya’s third largest city, whose only route to the outside world is by sea. The normally affluent city was well stocked with supplies when war broke out, with petrol tanks and grain silos full. But supplies are running low, along with the cash to pay for them. Prices for goods ranging from clothes to fruit have skyrocketed in recent weeks. “You cannot pay for everything you need in Misrata now, you cannot pay for juice, the children must have fruit and we cannot pay for it,” said Bashir Al Zawawi, a lecturer in business administration at Misrata University. On Sunday, one of the four giant tanks holding the city’s oil supplies was hit by three grad rockets fired from government lines, leaving a huge pall of smoke over the city. The most acute shortages are felt in Misrata’s battered hospitals. “We have a shortage of everything,” Dr Khalid Abufalgha, head of the city’s health council, told the Guardian. “We are receiving humanitarian aid but it is never enough.” The rebels say Qatar, one of their key backers, has offered an “air bridge” to fly in food and medical supplies fly out wounded, but only when it is safe to land at the airport. Engineers have cleared the runway of debris and cannibalised wrecked machinery to provide fuel and power for landing planes, but the government frontlines are too near to make landings safe. “We need this airport,” said the airport’s director, Abdul Hamid Garwash. “From our side we’re ready, but permission is needed from Nato.” Earlier this month the NTC spokesman, Abdul Hafiz Ghoga, complained that promises of payments from western donors in May remained unfulfilled. Western officials counter that payments are being held up because the NTC is unable to present a fully transparent accountancy system to allow funds to be checked, and to guarantee that money earmarked for aid is not used for weapons. Nato remains outwardly confident that however bad things are for the rebels, they were worse for government forces, saying that weeks of bombing had inflicted significant damage on Muammar Gaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziyah compound in Tripoli, where bombs reportedly hit early on Sunday morning. “Gaddafi has for decades hidden from the Libyan people behind these walls,” said Major General Nick Pope, spokesman for Britain’s chief of the defence staff. The Gaddafi government insists it remains open to a negotiated solution to the war, with spokesman Moussa Ibrahim saying Libyan officials had a “productive dialogue” with US officials last week. Informal peace proposals will be canvassed this week by special UN envoy to Libya, Abdul Elah al-Khatib, a Jordanian senator. But the sticking point in any negotiations is likely to be the insistence of the US, UK, France and Russia that Gaddafi steps down as a precondition to talks, which Ibrahim said would be rejected. Libya Middle East Africa Germany Europe Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Nato United Nations Chris Stephen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As if it’s not bad enough that Republicans are wrecking what little financial stability we have left with their ridiculous debt-ceiling chicken dance, they’re also working hard in the states to disenfranchise voters. In Wisconsin, the preferred method is to require voters to present valid photo identification at the polls. The Voter ID law passed under Scott Walker’s watchful eye earlier this year, with all due credit to ALEC for their helpful drafting of the legislation for lazy lawmakers. One Wisconsin Now explains how that impacts voters : Wisconsin’s population is substantially less likely to have a state-issued identification. Those without state-issued photo identification and who would need to obtain one under the Wisconsin Voter ID bill include: 23 percent of all elderly Wisconsinites over the age of 65 17 percent of white men and women 55 percent of all African American males and 49 percent of African American women 46 percent of Hispanic men and 59% of Hispanic women 78 percent of African American males age 18-24 and 66 percent of African American women age 18-24 [ Driver License Status of the Voting Age Population in Wisconsin, 6/05 ] Yes, the bill as written does have a provision to provide free identification for some Wisconsinites. Each and every one of these people would have to take the time off (in many cases unpaid) from work or family obligations to flock to Wisconsin DMVs. However, access to the DMV is a problem in Wisconsin; Indiana provides its residents exponentially more access to its Department of Motor Vehicles offices to obtain identification. That post was written in January. It’s now July, and guess what? Governor Scott Walker, citing budget squeezes, is closing 10 DMV offices throughout the state. But these aren’t just any old DMV offices, no. They’re conveniently located in Democratic districts . Michael Shatz, a Wisconsin blogger: This story shows just how stupid neoconservatives think the public really is. Walker and his ilk pass a bill requiring voters to present valid photo identification at the polls. Then, in the same breath, Walker and his ilk propose a bill to close the identification issuing centers (the DMV’s) in the Democratic districts, making ID’s more difficult for low-income voters to obtain. And the reaction when they were called on it was just classic: A high-ranking DOT official rejected that claim, saying the changes were based on economics, not politics. Rep. Andy Jorgensen, D-Fort Atkinson, called on the state Department of Transportation to reconsider its plants to close the Fort Atkinson DMV center. The department plans to expand by four hours a week the hours of a center about 30 minutes away in Watertown. Jorgensen said he was concerned doing that would discourage people from Fort Atkinson from participating in elections. “What the heck is going on here?” Jorgensen said. “Is politics at play here?” Transportation Department executive assistant Reggie Newson denied that politics was behind the office closure plan, saying the decisions were being made based on what made the most economic sense. “This has nothing to do with politics,” he said. “We’re trying to make sure that we can provide service in each county statewide efficiently.” How conveeenient.
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