Cover-Up? 80% of H1N1 Cases Didn’t Even Have the Flu!

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Category : Federal Labor Law

One wouldn't expect a left-leaning media outlet like CBS to blow the whistle on a like-minded government (Bush, of course, would be fair game), but the network recently conducted a study on the H1N1 pandemic and discovered that  the statistics being used to support widspread vaccinations and the declaration of a national emergency have been gamed.

The network first asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for its statistical records on those who were reported to have contracted or been exposed to the H1N1 virus, but the CDC declined to cooperate. So CBS then examined the records of the states themselves. Turns out that 80 percent of the people in the statistics didn't even have the flu, let alone the swine flu (see graph).


CBS graph on the swine flu

CBS didn't make any accusations, but it appears that individuals connected with the CDC, through waivers of conflict of interest, stand to gain financially from the swine flu vaccines that were rushed into production with iron-clad waivers of liability for the producers. (Obama is rumored to own stock as well.)

That's right, if you get a swine flu vaccination and then, say, develop Guillain-Barre Syndrome (as happened in 1976 during another swine flu scare), you can't sue anyone. No one is liable under terms of 2006's PREP (Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness) Act unless the plaintiff can prove "willful misconduct" and get the Health and Human Services Secretary to grant a waiver to sue. Good luck on that.

CMS Takes Obama Marching Orders, Censors Pharma

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Category : Federal Labor Law

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), on obvious marching orders from the Obama administration, has halted all mailings and communications by drug companies about upcoming health care reform. At least one company was found to be mailing its enrollees a warning that the $500 billion proposed cut in Medicare benefits would reduce services and access (no doubt entirely true).

“We are concerned that the materials sent to our beneficiaries may violate Medicare rules by appearing to contain Medicare Advantage and prescription drug benefit information, which must be submitted to CMS for review,” said Jonathan Blum, acting director of CMS’ Center for Drug and Health Plan Choices.

“We also are asking that no other plan sponsors are mailing similar materials while we investigate whether a potential violation has occurred. We are concerned that, among other things, the information in the letter is misleading and confusing to beneficiaries, who may believe that it represents official communication about the Medicare Advantage program.”

In other words, you’re not allowed to let the proverbial cat out of the bag (how the heck did it get in there to begin with?).

However, House Republican Leader John Boehner (R.-Ohio) responded to the CMS stance by criticizing actions of the Obama administration to impose what he referred to as a gag order on critics of the $500 billion in Medicare cuts proposed by the congressional Democrats. He released a statement contending, "It is outrageous that the Obama administration is trying to keep seniors in the dark about the consequences of congressional Democrats’ costly government-run health care bills."

You get what you vote for, and in this case that’s censorship and thought control from on high.

Should/Will Organizers Be Allowed on Work Site Property to Unionize?

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Category : Federal Labor Law

One of the alternatives to card-check organization in the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) is to allow for quicker secret-ballot elections and permit union organizers to meet with employees on the work site being unionized.

Elections are currently scheduled at about the 39-day point after the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) receives organizing cards signed by 30 percent of a site’s employees. During that period, employers can hold on-site meetings to present their case against unionization, but organizers are not permitted the same access.

EFCA to the rescue. Even without a rewrite to drop card check, most current versions of the EFCA provide for workplace access by organizers. The Supreme Court has ruled in the past, however, that the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), the 1935 law governing unionization, does not permit violations of private property–in this case, the workplace. The NLRA merely prohibits employers from interfering with organization activities. It does not require employers to aid and abet the union’s efforts.

In Lechmere Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, the Supreme Court in 1992 clarified the sanctity of private property in organization efforts.

Lechmere owned a retail operation in a mall and held an ownership stake in the mall’s parking lot. When union organizers took to placing union pamphlets on employee cars in the parking lot, Lechmere ordered them off its private property, and the police obliged by enforcing the order. The retail workers’ union took the issue to the NLRB, which ruled that Lechmere was engaging in an "unfair labor practice" under Section 8 of the NLRA.

Not so, the 6-3 decision of the Supreme Court said, reversing the NLRB. The majority opinion said that granting third parties access to private property for their own purposes would be a dangerous precedent. Employers, it further said, are not required to facilitate unionizing efforts, just not to obstruct such efforts. Further, in cases where employees are otherwise "inaccessible" except on company property, the court said access legislation could be passed on those grounds.

The EFCA, obviously, goes well beyond the "inaccessible" standard set by the Supreme Court and envisions blanket on-site privileges to organizers in all cases.

The question is whether today’s Supreme Court would uphold Lechmere and strike down this portion of the EFCA if it should pass and become law.

The answer is "probably," but it would take years for challenges to wend their way through lower courts, and by then perhaps the conservative, pro-business majority on the Supreme Court might no longer exist.

Might, but one must remember that the conservative majority, craftily reaffirmed by Dubya with relative youngsters John Roberts and Samuel Alito, still has a long-distance hold on the court…providing the unusual and unforeseen doesn’t occur (such as early retirement or death).

So, employers, get ready to throw open your companies’ doors as the EFCA takes you on Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride into unionization.

 

SAD People Earn Ticket to the Choicest Offices With Windows

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Category : Federal Labor Law

I’d never heard of this before, but I may have a mild case of it myself. "It" is SAD, or seasonal affective disorder, which means that as natural light decreases, so do affected individuals’ moods. As we morph into non-daylight savings time, the daylight hours naturally get shorter, so SAD people get sadder.

The American Academy of Family Physicians reports that as many as six of every 100 people in the United States suffer from SAD. Another 10 percent to 20 percent may experience some milder form of the illness.

How this comes into play in a labor law situation is through the reasonable accommodation requirement of the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA). With the ADA Amendments Act throwing open just about everything to qualifying as a disability, SAD people can now request an accommodation to offices (or work stations) with windows and max daylight.

In fact, a denied SAD request has already been decided in the requester’s favor by a court in Wisconsin. Suit was brought by a teacher named Renae Ekstrand when Somerset School District transferred her to a classroom with no windows and then refused her request for one with windows after she brought in a doctor’s certification. She ended up going on medical leave for depression for two years before landing another job in South Dakota. She sued the district and won because the jury found that the accommodation could’ve been made by the district with "little hardship."

So if the SAD come calling, find them a place in the sun ASAP.

I just may try this myself. The former CEO’s office is vacant with abundant light. Hmmmm….

 

Puerto Rico Finds the Answer, White House Should Listen

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Category : Random Musings

Of course, there’s no way in hell the Obama administration would ever be smart enough to adopt something similar to Law 7 in Puerto Rico.

In response to Law 7, labor unions throughout Puerto Rico are staging a general strike today, but Governor Luis Fortuno isn’t backing down. He’s threatening to charge protestors with terrorism if they disrupt commerce.

Behind all this, the Reagan-like (in policy) governor is using the powers granted him under recently passed Law 7 to unload government workers and onerous union contracts, which Law 7 voids. At stake are at least 30,000 government jobs, which are being axed to help close a $3.2 billion budget shortfall.

With unemployment already at 16 percent on the island, no one likes the idea of more people out of work, but unions are always looking to shift burden and sorrow on others while locking in golden parachutes for themselves. This is one instance where they may meet their comeuppance.

As I mentioned, the states of the union and the federal government itself should seriously consider a Law 7 themselves. In my home state of California, the public service and teachers’ unions have a stranglehold on state spending stretching far into the future with guaranteed pensions sometimes totaling more than 100 percent of the workers’ salaries.

Good deal if you can get it, but eventually governments run out of other people’s money, and that’s why we need our own Law 7.

But I doubt any of our union-backed politicians could give a hoot. They can always raise our taxes to pay off their cronies who fund their elections.

Despite Feds, Sheriff Joe to Sic His Posse on Illegals As Usual

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Category : Random Musings

Sheriff Joe Arpaio and his PosseSheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County, Arizona (greater Phoenix), has had his wings clipped by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which withdrew its 287(g) program that infused local authorities with the power to conduct illegal immigrant raids.

But "The Sheriff," as he calls himself, is undeterred and will round up what he calls his "Posse" for another weekly immigrant raid this Friday.

“Nothing will change,” he said. “I’m not going to be deterred by any bully.”

Arpaio said he’ll rely on state laws against human smuggling and other measures to justify his raids. If ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) officials won’t take his prey, he said he’ll drive them to the border and turn them over to border guards–if they’ll accept them.

Arpaio, to say the least, has been less than nice with those he rounds up. He parades them around town in striped prison garb and makes them work on chain gangs. That may have to stop, but we can be sure he’ll make a grand spectacle of whatever he does with those he arrests on Friday. Maybe he’ll march them to the border in striped uniforms and balls and chains on their legs.

 

Obama Applies Geithner Rule in Making Top ICE Appointment

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Category : Federal Labor Law

The man slated to be the Obama administration’s Director of Investigations for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is now under investigation himself–for embezzlement.

Robert Schoch and his assistant, Jennifer Sillman, were arrested this past Friday by ICE officials in Long Beach, Calif., and stripped of their badges and pistols while an investigation into charges of embezzlement and misuse of ICE funds is carried out.

Remember back to late 2008 when Timothy Geithner came up for Senate approval to be Secretary of Treasury, and it turned out that he’d conveniently forgotten to pay a gob of taxes? When he said the tax code (which the Treasury secretary must by law enforce) was too difficult to understand, he was conveniently given a bye with understanding shrugs from Democratic Senators (and howls of derision from some Republicans who hadn’t engaged in similar behavior).

So, at least the Obamites are being consistent: If we want you, we’ll forgive you your transgressions.

But it’s pretty baffling to conceive that a man with little true investigative experience (read this) who himself is under investigation could seriously be considered as the nation’s top investigator in matters of customs and immigration.

Baffling but all too typical of this administration.

Karoshi: ‘Death from Over-Working’ Comes to U.S.

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Category : Random Musings

Twenty-four employees of France Telecom have committed suicide in the past 18 months, deaths that have been attributed to pressure in the workplace to reach impossible goals. In other words, these 24 couldn’t pass the stress test.

Japan has a great word for all this, karoshi, which means "death from over-working." The Japanese government actually keeps track of karoshi incidents, and it says there have been 337 such deaths so far this year. Independent observers claim the figure is closer to 10,000. One man in the statistics worked for Toyota and died of a heart attack after averaging 80 hours of overtime each month. (It took just two months of this before the heart attack cured the overtime.)

Add it to your vocabulary–karoshi, death by over-work. With our devastated economy, ruined retirement accounts and reduced workforces, we may be witnessing many karoshi deaths ourselves. Does Obama have a Karoshi Czar yet?

Good News on the Job Front: Some Employers Plan on Rehiring

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Category : Random Musings

Or at least 40 percent of employers in a survey say they plan to rehire laid-off workers in the coming months, but not all of these jobs will be full-time. Some will be part-time, others consulting, and still others project-based.

The survey by OI Partners also found, however, that 37 percent of employers have no plans to rehire ("Good riddance, you freeloaders!"–my take) and 23 percent are undecided.

The main reason cited for this rehiring is that the laid-off employees’ skills are known and needed. Other reasons were that the former employees fit well into the company culture, their skill-sets were hard to fill on the open market, and rehiring them was less risky than new hires.

The survey found that financial services companies are most likely to rehire some laid-off employees, while manufacturing companies are the second-most likely. Government agencies and non-profit institutions are least likely to rehire laid-off workers, followed by health-care employers.

Health Care Public Option, Meet Mini-You, the Stealth Device!

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Category : Federal Labor Law

The Senate Finance Committee last week killed the full-blown public option for health care reform, but proponents of governmentalizing (ultimately, socializing) health care found a way to slip in a mini-version with little to no fanfare.

MedPageToday reports that Senator Maria Cantwell (D.-Washington) managed to get an amendment added that  "would set aside $200 billion for block grants to states that want to set up their own public insurance plans."

Afterward, Cantwell cackled that this was a "foothold." The obvious intent is to let states set up mini-public plans that quickly go broke, allowing Democrats to cry "the sky is falling" and take over the entire system on the federal level.

Poof! Full-blown public option in no time flat.

The socialists in our midst won’t give up, will they?