If your loved one is seriously ill or injured and can’t pay for health care, should America provide what she/he needs? If health care costs are beyond the reach of many Americans, should government take action? If you answer “yes”, the next steps are about how to achieve the goals; and it’s time for fact based solutions to the problems of American health care. Continue reading How To Fix Obamacare
Tag Archives: north carolina
Legislators like Tillis betrayed military families and the poor
Thom Tillis and other red-state legislators made it easy for big banks and financial companies to prey on the poor with interest rates as high as 36%. The legislators accepted large contributions from financial industry representatives, and it appears that Tillis got more than any other legislator in the nation. Ignoring the advice of military leaders, these lawmakers sold out low income families trying to climb into the middle class. Click here for specifics. It’s wrong for elected leaders to help big companies take advantage of the poor. Kudos to the NY Times for their research and follow-up.
WHY WOULD RENEE ELLMERS ELIMINATE EPA?
Congresswoman Renee Ellmers (R – NC) wants to eliminate the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the federal agency that sets and enforces standards for safe water and air. She should justify her goal. We need congressional representatives who think carefully and speak wisely about such important matters. Her statement seems reckless, and if she can’t justify it then she does not belong in our Congress. Continue reading WHY WOULD RENEE ELLMERS ELIMINATE EPA?
Does Underage Drinking Fuel Campus Assaults?
I got you in trouble in high school; but college, now that was a ball. You had some of the best times you’ll never remember with me – Alcohol.” (Brad Paisley)
The song masks pain and humiliation behind humor. Many college students arrive with established alcohol habits and binge drinking is popular recreation. Some parents allow pre-college teenagers to have alcohol at parties. Are they protecting their children by letting them learn to drink responsibly under supervision or are they increasing the chances that the children will become alcoholics? In some states that is legal and in others parents could face both criminal and civil penalties. Excessive drinking among teens is associated with academic failure, violence, and financial problems. Continue reading Does Underage Drinking Fuel Campus Assaults?
FRACKING DANGERS ARE WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT
North Carolina’s Republican Governor and a nearly unanimous majority of Republican lawmakers have recklessly dashed ahead to allow hydraulic fracking for production of natural gas. They have ignored the growing body of evidence that fracking imperils our health and the safety of our air and water. They missed the “look before you leap” lesson and took all of us along when they jumped into fracking. Continue reading FRACKING DANGERS ARE WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT
JUST SAY YES TO MEDICAID
The decision by North Carolina’s governing Republicans (every single one of them) to reject Medicaid expansion will cost the state’s residents $37 billion by 2022. That is roughly enough money to run the entire state government for 21 months. They looked at the money and just said “no”. They looked at uninsured people living in poverty and just said “no”. They looked at hospitals and doctors who care for uninsured people, and they just said “no”. And they just said “no” to unemployed workers who would have found jobs in the Medicaid expansion. Continue reading JUST SAY YES TO MEDICAID
REPUBLICAN SOCIALIZED HEALTHCARE?
The following words are from House Bill 1181, passed by the North Carolina House and endorsed by Governor McCrory. “It is the intent of the General Assembly to transform the State’s Medicaid program from a traditional fee-for-service system into a system that provides budget predictability for the taxpayers of this State while ensuring quality care to those in need.” Translation: Instead of paying for whatever health care is used, they want to budget a fixed amount and make doctors and hospitals absorb any additional costs. They want doctors to save money by keeping patients healthy more so than treating them after they are sick. If their plan works everyone wins. If it fails, our poorest citizens will bear the burden. Continue reading REPUBLICAN SOCIALIZED HEALTHCARE?
COMMON CORE STANDARDS
Apparently taking their cue from right wing talk radio and Fox News pundits, leaders of the North Carolina Legislature have begun an assault on the Common Core Standards for education. Some want to repeal the standards which our school systems have been working to implement since they were adopted in 2010 by you know who – the North Carolina Legislature.
What better way to finish demoralizing underpaid and underappreciated educators than to give them the monumental job of organizing to achieve specific goals and then, at the last minute, repeal the goals? The Republicans in charge at the legislature often argue that government should be more efficient and productive, like a successful business. Today it is those legislators, not the educators who need lessons in successful business practices. The idea that we can greatly improve (or damage) education by adopting a set of standards is foolishness. It is the actions taken to achieve the goals that will make a difference. As Russell Ackoff, a renowned professor from the Wharton School of Business put it, “The only problems that have simple solutions are simple problems. The only managers with simple problems are those with simple minds.”
For many years we have known that the educational achievement of American students is lagging behind the achievement of students in many other developed nations. Since public education is largely a responsibility of states, not the federal government, the National Governor’s Association commissioned a project to study the situation and make recommendations. It was strongly supported by governors from both parties and the funding was mostly from the private sector – especially from businesses and foundations which were concerned that American graduates were not prepared for the jobs of the future (or even the present). Educators, psychologists, business leaders and other qualified people worked for years to produce the Common Core Standards which were then adopted voluntarily by 46 states. Only after this was done did the federal government begin to use the standards too.
The Common Core Standards specify very little about curriculum (books, teaching techniques etc.) In fact, the standards anticipate that there will be variance across the country in that regard, and that there may be variance from one classroom to another based the unique styles of individual teachers or the needs of students. If there is to be standardization of curriculum or teaching techniques, it would be done by states or school districts.
How should those of us who are not educators think of the standards? I see them as mileposts for each student to pass on the journey of preparation for successful employment after high school or for college. That was also the goal of the National Governor’s Association and of the private organizations that paid for much of the research on which the standards are based.
One state, Kentucky, has led the way in implementing the standards and more recently they have begun testing to measure how they are doing. The bad news is that their educational performance still lags behind other nations. The very promising news is that in two years their test scores rose 2 percent while their high school graduation rate rose 6 percent. It is too soon to attribute that progress to the common core standards but certainly they can take pride in the achievement.
Edward Deming, who is often credited with introducing scientific process improvement as a business practice, said “Management by numerical goal is an attempt to manage without knowledge of what to do.” It is vital for legislators to understand that. The Common Core Standards provide a yardstick with which we can measure progress. They should be used for planning and improvement, not for appraisal of individual performance. Repealing them will leave educators no generally accepted and standardized measurement and will take away their ability to compare results from various school districts and teaching methods – leaving us in a situation where policy changes will be based on opinion rather than data. Replacing them with state standards will take away our ability to compare our results with other states and will present new opportunities for politicians to insert their personal biases into educational policy. That is the opposite of good business practices.
Rather than taking the goalposts off the field, the legislature can be most helpful by doing its own job – not the jobs of the educators. There is massive evidence that children, especially low income children, do best in nations that provide high quality public pre-schools. The legislature should study how best to create and fund that service. Many legislators (in both parties) want performance-based pay for educators. If that is the case, legislators and school boards must provide management education for whoever will do the performance appraisals and the ongoing communication and coaching throughout the year. Successful performance appraisals don’t surprise people – they are merely summaries of discussions that have been ongoing. They are based on multiple job expectations, not on the results of a single test.
The most critical factor in business success is hiring the right people. That means that we need to provide adequate salaries. We have some great teachers who are terribly underpaid. We have lost some great teachers who had to leave their chosen profession in order to adequately support their families. The legislature can help by funding salaries comparable to professions requiring similar levels of education, skill and stress.
So, legislature, what’s it going to be? Will you choose a businesslike approach to improving quality or more tampering based on the opinions of talk show hosts?
North Carolina Amendment banning gay marriage
Let’s try having some thoughtful conversations about the proposal to amend our North Carolina Constitution to ban gay marriage. The current debate does not make much sense to me and I’m trying to understand why anyone wants state government involved. When I try to think it through, I start with the history of marriage. As best I can tell, it exists in some form in every culture and often, but not always, it is solemnized in a religious ceremony. There is monogamous marriage, polygamous marriage, straight, gay and bi… Marriage may be for love or for political alliance or for convenience. It may be arranged by the family or based on the choice of the marriage partners. It can be intended as a lifelong commitment or a temporary arrangement until the kids are grown. If we look across different cultures and different eras, it becomes clear that marriage is not just one kind of arrangement and it evolves over time. Several years ago a friend who is a Hindu from India was planning to return there to be married to a bride selected by his parents. He had not met her. When I asked him about this custom that was so strange to me, he asked me what the divorce rate is in the US. I don’t recall the number, but it was high. Then my friend asked, “Why should I think that I can do a better job picking a wife than my parents can do?” I prefer doing things my own way, but my friend did have a valid point.
Laws that try to define or govern marriage eventually run afoul of social changes. They become irrelevant or worse, they interfere in the personal freedom of individuals. We have experienced plenty of that within our own nation and our own lifetimes. Many of us can remember when it was illegal for people of different races to marry in some states. That changed gradually then finally our courts recognized inter-racial marriage as a basic civil right which states could not prohibit. Some states recognize “common law marriage”. If a couple live together for some period of time or if they have children together or whatever other criteria are set in the law, they are deemed to have entered an enforceable marriage contract whether they intended to or not. If they move to a state without such a law, are they still married?
We’re headed for an interesting mess with more government intrusion into the personal values and religious persuasions of individuals. There are religious institutions (including Christian Churches in North Carolina) which perform same sex marriages today. They are going to continue regardless of what is in the constitution. Any attempt to stop them will create a head on collision between the State Constitution and the free practice of religion which most of us value highly. There are established churches in our state which now refuse to fill out the State’s paperwork for marriage licenses. The church performs the marriage and leaves it up to the individuals to decide whether to get a license and officially register the marriage with the State. Some of the folks so married claim married status on their tax returns, cover each other as family under insurance benefits and sign up for social security as husband and wife. They view themselves as married in their own eyes and in the eyes of their God.
Today we have an attempt by evangelical Christians to impose their personal view of marriage on everyone else. They stand in the tradition of their Christian predecessors who successfully banned inter-racial marriage and sexual relationships outside of marriage on biblical grounds. These laws were very serious matters. People were jailed for violating them. Why do we need a constitutional ban on same sex marriage? It won’t make homosexuality go away any more than a ban on blue eyes will make them disappear. I can’t see a benefit in this amendment to justify restricting anyone’s personal freedom.
To my evangelical friends, I pose this question, “What would Jesus do?” I have read the New Testament cover to cover in more than one translation. Assuming it to accurately report what Jesus taught, I find a great deal about how people should treat each other. I cannot find one occasion when he proposed enforcing any of his teaching through civil law. Not once. Never. As best I can tell, the idea never arose in Christianity until the Roman Church became a political power and began to impose its beliefs on others. There is, perhaps, one pertinent statement from Jesus that ought to be considered. The Jews of Jesus’ time had many (sometimes conflicting) religious laws governing daily life. Many religious and political leaders did not approve of Jesus’ teaching and one day he was interrogated publicly about the laws. At one point, a lawyer asked him, “Teacher, which is the great commandment in the law?” Jesus replied to him, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with your all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it, you shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets.” He made it clear that he was teaching values about respect for others; always teaching and never imposing his teaching on anyone else. That is what Jesus did.
I can’t find any justification for the State of North Carolina imposing evangelical values on people who do not share those values. I want to live in a North Carolina which fully respects the rights of every individual to live as he or she sees fit as long as they do not harm others. Live and let live. We are far better off not imposing the values of any religion in our constitution.
1/28/2012