Tag Archives: John Locke

Ditch Mitch


a repostemilylistChildren’s health coverage? Nope.

Fair pay for women?  Absolutely not.
Unemployment benefits for struggling families? No way.
Expanding protections against domestic violence and sexual assault? Not a chance.
We can likely kiss those things goodbye if Mitch McConnell heads back to the Senate in November. I mean come on. It’s 2014 and thanks to anti-choice extremists like McConnell, we still have to have these conversations. I say it’s time to Ditch Mitch.
Donate to the “Ditch Mitch” fund right now and help Alison kick him out of the Senate in November!
Thinking about McConnell and his egregious agenda really gets my blood boiling. It takes a special kind of horrible to not support the Violence Against Women Act and lie about it. 
EMILY’s List has just the candidate to help ditch him — Alison Lundergan Grimes. Alison agrees that nearly 30 years in the Senate is enough for the ruthless, hyperpartisan McConnell. She’d bring a track record of success in empowering military voters, a pro-family attitude, and a strong advocacy for equal pay to Washington. Seriously — she’s just the woman to Ditch Mitch.
Are you with me? Let’s do this.
Stephanie

Caution: Some Over-the-C​ounter Medicines May Affect Your Driving


driving

 

10/07/2014 11:00 AM EDT
Anyone who operates a vehicle of any type—car, bus, train, plane, or boat—needs to know there are over-the-counter medicines that can make you drowsy and can affect your ability to drive and operate machinery safely.Over-the-counter medicines are also known as OTC or nonprescription medicines. All these terms mean the same thing: medicines that you can buy without a prescription from a healthcare professional. Each OTC medicine has a Drug Facts label to guide you in your choices and to help keep you safe. OTC medicines are serious medicines and their risks can increase if you don’t choose them carefully and use them exactly as directed on the label.
USFDA_footer

We call this vision Solutionary Rail.


Mr. Warren Buffett: End BNSF railroad’s dependence on hauling and burning fossil fuels. Partner with Gov. Inslee to electrify, increase track speeds, and run your trains on 100% renewable energy from Seattle to Chicago.

Backbone Campaign

Don’t let the EPA underestim​ate clean energy


The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) proposed rule to reduce global warming emissions from power plants is our best opportunity to address climate change—but it’s not strong enough. The agency is not sufficiently accounting for the rapid expansion of solar, wind, and other renewable energy. New UCS analysis is helping state decision makers and the EPA understand that this technology is expanding rapidly and is increasingly affordable across the country. Help us ensure carbon-free energy plays a critical role in reducing our country’s global warming emissions. —Karla

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Solar power as cheap as local electricity?
UCS’s recent analysis shows that solar power is as cheap as the grid power in 10 states and will be in more than half of states within 1-3 years! Our analysis is already helping to beat back misinformation and build support for solar projects across the country. UCS experts exposed the errors in a recent Economist piece and our staff have been busy using the report to help demonstrate the environmental and public health benefits of solar power to communities considering large solar projects. READ MORE

Buzz from the UCS Blog: The Equation
  Angela Anderson: Facebook “Dislikes” ALEC’s Climate Change and Clean Energy Deception  Lisbeth Gronlund: New U.S. Nuclear Warheads? Politically and Technically, a Bad Idea
  Doug Boucher: Hershey Bars, Global Warming and Deforestation: a Sweet New Policy

  Sam Gomberg: Ohio Senate President Stacks the Deck against Renewable Energy

MORE

Cartoon of the Month
Hell and high water
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 Infographic: rooftop solar in the U.S.

 EETV On Point: UCS President Ken Kimmell on clean energy’s role in reducing carbon emissions.

 Everything you want to know about the EPA’s new power plant carbon standards.

 Get your copy of Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster now.

Ask a Scientist

Laura Wisland

Laura Wisland, M.P.P.
Senior Energy Analyst,
Climate and Energy Program

 

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Laura’s blog >>
“It would be a lot easier to transition to renewable energy if we had better storage technology. Is there any energy storage technology on the horizon that is likely to succeed?”—H. Bryant, Dandridge, TN.

There are many types of storage technologies in use today—rechargeable batteries, compressed air stored in underground caverns, heat stored in water or molten salts—and most of these technologies can respond within seconds to meet electricity demands. But it’s also important to keep in mind that there are several viable strategies besides storage that can make the electric grid more flexible and enable it to handle more renewable energy. READ MORE

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Walmart’s Choice


By

Walmart’s Decision To Drop Insurance For Part-Time Workers Could In Fact Help Many (But Not All)

“In the long term, this isn’t really news.”

That’s what Washington & Lee law professor Tim Jost told ThinkProgress, upon hearing that Walmart is dropping insurance coverage for about 30,000 part-time employees. The nation’s largest private employer now joins some other big companies like Trader Joe’s, Home Depot, and Target who have made similar decisions recently. While some in the conservative media have tried to use the Affordable Care Act as a scapegoat, the decision is more likely business as usual — and in fact could be good news for many part-time Walmart employees.

Why business as usual? For one, before this decision Walmart was in the minority offering health insurance to part-time employees: Last year, 62 percent of large retail chains offered no health care benefits to their part-time workers at all. In addition, while Walmart acknowledges that an unexpected rise in healthcare costs prompted the move, company executives say that was in large part due to something called the “woodwork effect” — the national attention given to health care in the past year caused more of their employees to sign up for Walmart’s employer-provided insurance plans. That in turn increased the company’s health care costs more than expected.

Why could this be good news for Walmart employees? Unlike when part-time employees lost their health coverage before the ACA, these workers now have an alternative for affordable coverage: the insurance exchanges. Workers with affordable health coverage provided by employers are ineligible for financial assistance through the ACA. With that option now gone, these Walmart employees qualify for subsidies. Vox’s healthcare guru Sarah Kliff crunches the numbers on whether this is a better deal for Walmart’s part-time employees and finds that, typically, it is: a 36-year-old Walmart employee in Washington, D.C. who works 29 hours each week at Walmart’s average wage of $12.73 per hour would save $104 per month in health care premiums by signing up on the exchange.

At ThinkProgress, Tara Culp-Ressler reports that the retail giant is taking proactive steps in other ways to help their employees get covered:

Earlier this week, the company announced that 2,700 of its locations will be staffed with insurance agents to help customers enroll in new insurance plans, either through Medicare or through Obamacare’s private insurance marketplaces. Part-time workers who now need to enroll in Obamacare polices may have an even more personalized option: Walmart told the New York Times that a health coverage specialist will help guide them “through the process of finding alternative coverage.”

With that said, however, not all employees are going to be better off with Walmart’s decision. Employees who fall into the coverage gap — earning below the poverty line in the conservative states that have refused to expand Medicaid — will be out of luck. Walmart now has an obligation to help them by working to make sure those states’ lawmakers change their minds and make the moral and economic choice to expand health care to low-income workers.

BOTTOM LINE: For the most part, the news that Walmart is dropping health coverage for 30,000 part-time workers is nothing to worry about. It could actually save employees who now qualify for ACA insurance subsidies hundreds of dollars a year. But the newly uninsured Walmart employees who fall into the Medicaid coverage gap are not so lucky: Walmart no longer covers them, and now it needs to help them.

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