PUBLIC CORRUPTION — MAJORITY OF JUDGES HEARING DRILLING MORATORIUM APPEAL ATTENDED OIL-FUNDED JUNKETS: Last month, Judge Martin Feldman, a federal trial judge in Louisiana, handed down a poorly reasoned opinion lifting the Obama administration’s temporary moratorium on new oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Judge Feldman’s most recent financial disclosure form indicates that he is heavily invested in oil companies. Yesterday in New Orleans, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit decided to stay Judge Feldman’s decision in a 2-1 vote, citing the Interior Department’s failure “to show the the federal government would suffer ‘irreparable injury’ if the moratorium is lifted.” According to a new report by the Alliance for Justice, it is unlikely that these Fifth Circuit judges approached the case without the perception of bias. Judges Jerry Smith and Eugene Davis, both of whom were assigned to the panel and ruled in favor of the oil companies, attended expense-paid “junkets for judges” sponsored by oil-industry front group, Foundation for Research on Economics & the Environment (FREE). Both men also worked as oil-industry litigators before their appointments to the federal bench by President Ronald Reagan, and Judge Davis owns as much as $30,000 in oil investments. The one dissenting judge, Judge James Dennis, has not received any free trips from the oil industry, but does hold investments in oil stocks. Incidentally, of the sixteen active judges who make up the full Fifth Circuit, ten have oil investments, including the court’s Chief Judge, Edith Jones. In addition to owning as much as $330,000 in oil investmen
Monthly Archives: July 2010
National Women’s Law Center Update -July
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Patient’s Bill of Rights

It’s been less than four months since President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act — and, because of reform, about 1 million uninsured Americans are expected to receive coverage by next year. And that’s just the start.
A new bill of rights for patients is starting to take effect, and the worst abuses of the insurance industry are coming to an end. As the President recently announced, the Patient’s Bill of Rights will ban rescission of coverage, stop discrimination against children with pre-existing conditions, and place restrictions on annual limits.
This is an incredibly important first step for reform, and we need your help. We’ve put together an information sheet that breaks down exactly what the Patient’s Bill of Rights does. To start spreading the word in your own community, print it out and pass it along to your friends, post in your local coffee shop and grocery store, or bring it along with you when going door-to-door.
There are those who still aren’t sure about health reform, but as the law takes effect, we have a new opportunity to convince the skeptics. OFA supporters are the very best communicators and organizers in communities all across the county — you can bring the debate out of D.C. and into your town, and this information sheet is a great tool we believe will help.
The Affordable Care Act works to put consumers back in charge of their health coverage and care. And because of the Patient’s Bill of Rights, Americans can know that their insurance will be there when they need it most.
The more information sheets we put in visible places, the stronger the message we’ll send about our support for health reform and President Obama. Share it with your friends. Mail it to your family members. If you’re a medical professional, post it in your office or waiting room. Be creative — anything you do will be a huge help in making sure Americans understand what the new law does for them.
Will you help us make the case for change? Download your information sheet and share the Patient’s Bill of Rights with five friends today:
http://my.barackobama.com/patientsbillofrights
Thanks,
Mitch
Mitch Stewart
Director
Organizing for America
Walmart spends millions to avoid regulations …ThinkProgress.org
LABOR — WAL-MART SPENDING MILLIONS TO BLOCK $7,000 FINE THAT COULD BRING NEW REGULATIONS: Hoping to avoid potential new regulations, Wal-Mart is spending “millions of dollars and thousands of man-hours” to combat a small, $7,000 fine from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) which was assessed after a Long Island employee was trampled to death by a crowd of shoppers. The company is arguing, according to the New York Times, “that the government is improperly trying to define ‘crowd trampling’ as an occupational hazard that retailers must take action to prevent.” Despite that claim, Wal-Mart, “seeking to avoid criminal charges,” has established new crowd-control policies nationwide. But the company is fighting hard to avoid the fine, which “has mystified and even angered some federal officials.” “In contesting the penalty, Wal-Mart has filed 20 motions and responses totaling nearly 400 pages and has spent at least $2 million on legal fees, according to OSHA’s calculations.” A spokesman for the company said, “OSHA wants to hold Wal-Mart accountable for a standard that was neither proposed nor issued at the time of the incident. The citation has far-reaching implications for the retail industry that could subject retailers to unfairly harsh penalties and restrictions on future sales promotions.” This is yet another step in Wal-Mart’s on-going battle against workers’ rights. The Wonk Room’s Pat Garofalo notes, “I’d like to think that a regulation along the lines of ‘don’t let crowds run through your store and trample your employees to death’ would be fairly uncontroversial.” He concludes, “Safety regulations are put in place to, among many things, protect workers from the sort of corner-cutting that makes a company’s bottom line look better. … [I]t’d be nice if every proposed regulation weren’t treated as an assault on capitalism itself by the Big Business community.”
“It’s time for a bold plan to get America off of oil. Please sign the Petition.
|
Tomorrow, MoveOn members are delivering our “No More Oil” petition to local Senate offices all across the country.
According to our records, you haven’t signed yet—and to send a clear message to senators as they head back to Washington next week, we need 50,000 more signers today.
This is a crucial time, because the Senate is deciding right now what to include in the bill to respond to the BP oil disaster, and according to news reports, they could vote on the bill within the next two weeks.1
If enough people sign, this petition will be yet another reminder to Congress that Americans want to get off oil for good. So please sign the petition below and make sure to get your name included before we deliver it tomorrow. Just click this link to add your name:
http://pol.moveon.org/nomoreoil/o.pl?id=21641-9640874-1sp8pax&t=5
The petition says: “It’s time for a bold plan to get America off of oil. Please learn from the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico and take action to end the U.S. addiction to oil.”
Also, since this is the final deadline for this important petition, can you also forward this to a few friends and post it on Facebook and Twitter?
Clean energy champions are pushing to make sure the bill responding to the BP disaster includes steps to really get us off oil—like big increases in public transportation and energy efficiency, and cutting taxpayer handouts to Big Oil.
But senators in bed with Big Oil are pushing for giveaways to oil, like Clean Air Act rollbacks, or even, if you can believe it, new offshore drilling.
Momentum to get off oil has increased after President Obama put this goal front-and-center with his address from the Oval Office and the massive outpourings of support at the Oil Spill Vigils and Hands Across The Sand events that MoveOn members helped organize.
But we need to keep pushing, and these petition deliveries can add to that momentum—if enough people sign. Click below to add your name, and then forward this email or share it on Facebook and Twitter to keep it going. Here’s the link to sign:
http://pol.moveon.org/nomoreoil/o.pl?id=21641-9640874-1sp8pax&t=6
Thanks for all you do.
–Steven, Duncan, Laura, Jeff, and the rest of the team






You must be logged in to post a comment.