An Oregon man stabbed his four children—all under the age of 8—and his wife before torching his house yesterday, police believe. Firefighters arrived to douse the flames after someone called in the fire around 9am, and found the family inside. They pulled the bodies onto the lawn and…
Continue reading …You can’t keep a bad singer down. Rebecca Black, the brunette Brittney Spears wanna-be America loves to hate since her whiny Friday , is taking out her revenge in a new video This Is My Moment . “Were you the one who said I’d be nuthin’? I’m about to prove you wrong…
Continue reading …The latest Harry Potter film has chalked up a feat of political magic: It made Sarah Palin’s new documentary nearly “obliviate” from the public’s mind. The Los Angeles Times calls it a case of Harry Potter vs. The Order of Palin, noting the biggest box office smash in history made…
Continue reading …More than £1bn of NHS services are to be opened to competition from private companies and charities, including wheelchair services for children The government will open up more than £1bn of NHS services to competition from private companies and charities, the health secretary announced today, increasing fears that it will inevitably lead to the “privatisation of the health service”. In the first wave, beginning next April, eight NHS areas – including musculo-skeletal services for back pain, adult hearing services in the community, wheelchair services for children and primary care psychological therapies for adults – will be open for “competition on quality not price”. If successful, the policy, known as “any qualified provider”, would see non-NHS bodies allowed from 2013 to deliver more complicated clinical services in maternity and “home chemotherapy”. Admitting that the government’s initial plans for competition in the NHS were too ambitious – and stung by criticism by Steve Field, the senior doctor called in by David Cameron to review the government’s reforms, that the proposals were “unworkable”, Andrew Lansley has slowed down the roll-out of competition in the health service. The health secretary said his plans would now “enable patients to choose [providers] … where this will lead to better care”, Critics, however, warned of “huge dangers lurking in the plans”. The trade union Unison said that “patients will be little more than consumers, as the NHS becomes a market-driven service, with profits first and patients second. And they could be left without the services they need as forward planning in the NHS becomes impossible.” A spokesman for the British Medical Association questioned “the assumption that increasing competition will always mean improving choice. The ultimate consequence of market failure in the NHS is the closure of services, restricting the choice of patients who would have wished to use them.” Officials in the Department of Health dismissed these charges. One senior civil servant said the policy would benefit patients by bringing many services out of hospital – which would make it easier to access healthcare. “It is a pain to turn up for hospital and wait for 45 minutes for a blood test. Far better that you could walk into a local Boots or Lloyds chemist or a local health centre and get it done.” The civil servant, who briefed on the condition of anonymity, also said that the new policy would promote innovation – highlighting the “Tony Blair example”. He pointed out that the former prime minister’s abnormal heart rhythms could today be treated by using the telephone to measure the heart beats and give an instant diagnosis, followed by a call from a nurse advising on whether the patient needed to “go to hospital or not”. “You could cut dramatically the number of hospital admissions like this.” He also pointed out that major savings could be made, citing the example of chronic leg wounds, where the NHS pays out £18,000 per patient over four years, often without curing them. One not-for-profit company – Wound Healing Centre in Sussex – manages to treat patients successfully for £720. To underline the commitment to the new policy, Lansley’s commissioning czar, Dame Barbara Hakin, said the NHS must push ahead with the agenda to offer patients more choice despite the financial challenges and the period of “significant transition”. The NHS has to save £20bn over the next four years in efficiencies. Labour disputed the gains, saying the policy was just a step towards privatisation. John Healey, the shadow health secretary, said: “The Tory-led government is pushing ahead with its wasteful and unnecessary NHS reorganisation, rather than focusing on improving patient care. David Cameron’s plans for the NHS are not about giving more control to patients, but setting up a full-scale market.” NHS Health Privatisation Andrew Lansley Voluntary sector Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A pair of threatening armed robbers in Los Angeles turned tail and fled when confronted by an angry … chihuahua. The pair ran off before getting all the cash they wanted after the 10-pound dog ferociously barked at them at jumped at one robber’s leg, the Los Angeles Times reports. The…
Continue reading …A bungled bust outside a movie theater in Connecticut left the suspect and two police officers needing hospital treatment. A pair of officers confronted a suspect wanted on child pornography after he left a late-night screening of the new Harry Potter movie. The suspect resisted arrest and reached for his…
Continue reading …A new baby doll that little girls “breast feed” is giving parents heart palpitations. The doll, created in Spain, is now heading to US toy stores. Creators of the ” Breast Milk Baby ” insist the toy triggers a perfectly natural pretend play process that teaches girls the very valuable lesson that…
Continue reading …• Figures down on £19bn paid out in 2007 • Average finance bonus of £12,500 disguises huge disparities • Base salaries rise for high-earners in City City bonuses were kept in check last year as banks and insurance companies restricted the total to £14bn, according to analysis by the Office for National Statistics. The figure reveals a dramatic fall in payments to financial sector staff since the height of the banking boom in 2007 when £19bn was paid out in bonuses, though it marks a recovery from 2008 when the figure was £12bn. Overall, £35bn was paid out in bonuses to staff across the whole economy, unchanged on the year before. The latest figure is expected to cheer Tory and Liberal Democrat politicians who have called for pay restraint in the City to help overcome public anger at the part played by bonus incentives in the banking crash. George Osborne has emphasised the need for bankers to accept lower bonuses to help restore trust in the sector. However, the average £12,500 annual bonus paid to finance staff in the year to April is likely to disguise huge disparities in the amounts paid to senior investment bankers compared with retail banking staff outside London and the south-east. Earlier this year Barclays revealed that its new chief executive Bob Diamond got a bonus of £6.5m for 2010 on top of his £250,000 annual salary. According to the bank’s remuneration report he was awarded the sum for his performance as head of Barclays’ investment banking and wealth management operations. A trend to pay higher salaries also offsets the effect of lower bonus payments in City institutions, according to a report by recruitment firm Kennedy Associates. In a recent report it found an average investment bank managing director received £300,000 to £400,000 in base salary as opposed to £175,000 four years ago, at the peak of the market. The average paid to finance staff also contrasts with the average public sector annual bonus of £180. Public sector employees, who make up 22% of the workforce, accounted for 1.5% of the £35bn bonus payments across the economy. TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said City bonuses were still too high. “The chancellor’s austerity message has failed to reach the City, where a small clique of super-rich bankers has grabbed 40% of all bonuses paid out in the UK. “City bonuses are still far too high and the incentives for risky and damaging decisions far too great, especially when bankers know that taxpayers will have to pick up the tab.” Bonuses have played an increasing role in the incomes of ordinary private sector workers after a 58% rise in payments since 2000. Most payments will be related to individual, team or company performance. Executive pay and bonuses Banking Financial sector Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A Florida teen killed his parents with a hammer and stashed their bodies in a bedroom before hosting a wild house party for dozens of friends, police say. Tyler Hadley, 17, was arrested and charged with first-degree murder after police acting on an anonymous tip-off arrived at the house and…
Continue reading …Only 40 cases have been prosecuted since new offence came into effect in April 2010, Home Office strategy reveals The failure of police and prosecutors to enforce a law that criminalises men who pay for sex with trafficked women is jeopardising the attempt to tackle human trafficking into Britain. A Home Office strategy published on Tuesday says that only 40 cases have been prosecuted since the new offence came into effect in April 2010 and that includes prosecutions of kerb crawlers. “Enforcement of this offence would be a key part of the chain that leads to women being trafficked into the country and help deter those that may consider paying for sexual services from someone who may be trafficked, thereby reducing demand,” says the strategy. The document calls for a greater effort to target the demand for “inexpensive, unprotected and often illegal labour” and to create a business environment where it is neither considered desirable or readily available. “There is growing awareness amongst consumers of the harm caused by unethical business practices. But more needs to be done to increase understanding and encourage greater corporate moral and social responsibility within the private sector,” the strategy acknowledges. Home Office minsters are to review by the end of this year the current legislation on trafficking to ensure that it supports the effective prosecution of human traffickers. The strategy recognises that there are some problems caused by the fact that trafficking for sexual exploitation is prosecuted under the 2003 Sexual Offences Act while labour trafficking comes under the 2004 Asylum and Immigration Act which has a different standard of proof. “While there have been successful prosecutions under both, there are some disparities which make the legislative framework less straightforward than it could be for prosecutors. In addition, the different levels of proof mean that it is more difficult to prosecute for labour exploitation,” says the new strategy. Crown Prosecution figures show that just 48 people were prosecuted over trafficking offences in England and Wales. The official strategy says a key element in disrupting the market for trafficking and reducing its profitability is to target those who pay for sexual services from trafficked women. In particular it cites the 2009 Policing and Crime Act which introduced an offence of paying for the sexual services of a prostitute subjected to force, deception, threats or any other form of coercion. “This means that someone who pays for the sexual services of a woman (whether or not they know the woman has been trafficked) can be arrested and prosecuted,” says the strategy. It notes that as of June only 40 offences have involved somebody being charged since April 2010 and that includes cases of kerb crawling. The strategy confirms that from this month the Salvation Army will play a central role in the £2m-a-year programme to support the adult victims of trafficking. It also advocates a more targeted focus on the countries that are the major source of trafficking; extending the use of powers to seize the assets of traffickers and establish closer relationships with overseas law enforcement agencies. The immigration minister, Damian Green, said the new strategy would send the message that Britain was not a soft touch for traffickers. “We will pursue and disrupt trafficking networks overseas wherever possible to stop them before they ply their trade in the UK and then bring them to justice,” he said. Human rights charities have criticised Britain’s human trafficking strategy in the past, arguing that it has backfired, increased the suffering of victims and undermined attempts to prosecute the criminal gangs who abused them. The Crown Prosecution Service earlier this month issued new guidance that women and children who were suspected of having been trafficked should no longer be treated as criminals. Human trafficking Prostitution Alan Travis guardian.co.uk
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