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NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Friday, November 30, 2018

After pressure from Congress, VA reverses course and promises full benefits to veterans




More proof that this administration doesn't give a shit about our military or our veterans.
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NBCNEWS.COM
VA Secretary Robert Wilkie issued a statement saying that all student veterans would get their full monthly housing stipends under the Forever GI Bill rates.


By Phil McCausland
After a day of pressure from members of Congress, the Department of Veterans Affairs reversed course on Thursday and announced that it would pay veterans the full amount of benefits they are due under the Forever GI Bill.
On Wednesday, NBC News reported that VA officials privately told congressional staffers that they would not retroactively pay veterans whose checks were less than they were owed because of VA's ongoing computer problems.
Members of Congress from both parties sharply criticized VA for this potential policy during a hearing on Thursday, and late in the afternoon, VA Secretary Robert Wilkie issued a statement saying that the student veterans would get their full monthly housing stipends in accordance with the Forever GI Bill.
“Although VA has encountered issues with implementing the Forever GI Bill on Congress’ timeline, we will work with lawmakers to ensure that — once VA is in a position to process education claims in accordance with the new law — each and every beneficiary will receive retroactively the exact benefits to which they are entitled under that law,” Wilkie said in his statement.
In the hearing before the House Veterans Affairs Committee, Paul Lawrence, who oversees the Veterans Benefits Administration, was questioned by lawmakers on whether VA would retroactively pay veterans rates determined by the Forever GI Bill once the law is fully implemented in spring 2020.
Lawrence had said that going back to inspect potentially hundreds of thousands of education claims could be a “tremendous amount of activity for no gain.”
But Wilkie, his boss, later made it clear that position was changing.
VA has in some cases sent delayed or miscalculated GI Bill benefit payments over the past semester because of computer issues that came up when it tried to implement two sections of the Forever GI Bill involving housing calculations. The law, passed in July 2017, was supposed to take effect Aug. 1, 2018, but the VA announced Wednesday that it would delay the housing allowance changes until December 2019.
The agency said on Wednesday that it will not implement the Forever GI Bill’s housing allowance calculation until it has updated its computer systems, setting a deadline of Dec. 1, 2019. That is more than a year after the law came into effect.
Wilkie’s statement Thursday means VA will go back through its education claims prior to December 2019 to ensure that all veterans are paid correctly. The secretary also clarified that all GI Bill recipients who had been impacted by delayed or incorrect payments in the past academic year would have their housing benefits “based on Forever GI Bill rates.”
"To clear up any confusion, I want to make clear that each and every post-9/11 GI Bill beneficiary will be made 100 percent whole — retroactively if need be — for their housing benefits for this academic year based on Forever GI Bill rates, not on post-9/11 GI Bill rates," Wilkie said in his statement.
A House Committee of Veterans' Affairs spokeswoman said in an emailed statement that the committee was pleased with Wilkie's announcement.
“The Secretary’s new statement is unambiguous and we believe that VA has every intention to ensure that all student veterans are paid in full what they deserve in accordance with the law," she said.


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/ncna941946?__twitter_impression=true&fbclid=IwAR3OjEgYSX1VaqnBMklFTOKCtYksyUI-x2wKYQeHVUpzWloOT4PoCyiPIvo




That study going around on Bernie Sanders' 'Medicare for All' plan comes with a big catch — the US would actually be saving money overall on healthcare




About this website

Jul. 30, 2018,
A new report on Sen. Bernie Sanders' "Medicare for All" plan outlined a whopping cost for the federal government. But the price tag may not be as overall eye-catching as it initially seems.

The report, from the libertarian Mercatus Center, found that Sanders' plan to extend Medicare to all Americans would increase federal healthcare costs by $32.6 trillion from 2022 to 2031 if implemented as written.

Republicans pounced on the number, arguing that it showed such a plan was not feasible.

House Speaker Paul Ryan tweeted: "$32.6 trillion dollars. That's how much Washington Democrats' single-payer healthcare proposal would cost over 10 years. Even doubling all federal individual and corporate income taxes wouldn't cover this cost. It is just absurd."
But the cost for the federal government tells only part of the story. The government is one piece of the health-system puzzle.

The Department of Health and Human Services also measures the total amount spent on healthcare in the US, including by states, private citizens, the federal government, businesses, and more. This all-encompassing number is known as the national health expenditure, or NHE.

According to the Mercatus model, total health spending would actually come in about $303 billion lower in 2031 than under current projections, with $7.35 trillion going to healthcare that year versus $7.65 trillion expected now. Total national health spending would be $2 trillion lower from 2022 to 2031 under the plan, the report found.

While the price tag for the federal government would increase 
significantly, decreased spending by other groups would lower total healthcare spending over that 10-year period. Meanwhile, the model also assumes that 30 million more people would get access to healthcare, and many people would get more robust services.

The savings would come from a variety of places, such as the government's ability to leverage its bargaining power into lower prescription-drug costs and mandating all healthcare providers take the lower Medicare payment rate.

The study contains assumptions, and there are numerous political and practical concerns in shifting the burden of healthcare payments to the federal government. But based on the Mercatus model, tens of millions of uninsured Americans would get access to healthcare, and the US as a whole would end up spending less than it is expected to right now.










FOCUS: Trump Emerges as a Central Subject of Mueller Probe




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30 November 18

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30 November 18
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FOCUS: Trump Emerges as a Central Subject of Mueller Probe 
Robert Mueller. (photo: Getty)
Carol D. Leonnig and Josh Dawsey, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "In two major developments this week, President Trump has been labeled in the parlance of criminal investigations as a major subject of interest, complete with an opaque legal code name: 'Individual 1.'"
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Jeffrey Toobin | The Legal Perils That Michael Cohen's Guilty Plea Poses for Donald Trump





Reader Supported News
30 November 18
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
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Jeffrey Toobin | The Legal Perils That Michael Cohen's Guilty Plea Poses for Donald Trump 
The timing of the guilty plea from Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, is extremely significant. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty)
Jeffrey Toobin, The New Yorker
Toobin writes: "The question at the heart of the Russia investigation has always been one of motive. Why has Donald Trump, both as a candidate and as the President, been so solicitous of Russia and of its leader, Vladimir Putin?"
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Investigators carry boxes away from Ald. Ed. Burke's 14th Ward office on the city's Southwest Side on Thursday, November 29, 2018. (photo: Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)
Investigators carry boxes away from Ald. Ed. Burke's 14th Ward office on the city's Southwest Side on Thursday, November 29, 2018. (photo: Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)

Federal Agents Raided a Former Trump Attorney's Office: What We Know
CBS News
Excerpt: "Federal agents raided the offices of powerful city Alderman Edward Burke on Thursday, papering over doors and windows to keep out prying eyes, CBS Chicago reports. FBI officials confirmed the raids Thursday afternoon."
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Investigators carry boxes away from Ald. Ed. Burke's 14th Ward office on the city's Southwest Side on Thursday, November 29, 2018. (photo: Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)
Investigators carry boxes away from Ald. Ed. Burke's 14th Ward office on the city's Southwest Side on Thursday, November 29, 2018. (photo: Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune)

Concerns Raised About 'Traumatized' Immigrant Children Still in Custody
Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN
Shoichet writes: "Advocates for immigrant families that were separated by the US government said Thursday they're concerned about a group of children who've remained in custody for months even though their parents had designated sponsors to take them in."
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Wildfires destroyed a large area of California. (photo: Olga R. Rodriguez/AP)
Wildfires destroyed a large area of California. (photo: Olga R. Rodriguez/AP)

Protesters Demand an End to Bailouts for California Company That May Have Caused Wildfires
Sophie Weiner, Splinter News
Weiner writes: "Protesters took over a California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) meeting on power company PG&E's safety culture Thursday morning, responding to the company's possible role in starting the Camp Fire, SF Weekly reports. The hearing was part of a three year investigation into PG&E's safety practices by the CPUC."
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Law enforcement and protesters clash near the site of the Dakota Access pipeline in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, in November 2016. (photo: Morton County Sheriff's Department/AP)
Law enforcement and protesters clash near the site of the Dakota Access pipeline in Cannon Ball, North Dakota, in November 2016. (photo: Morton County Sheriff's Department/AP)

2 Years After Standing Rock Protests, Tensions Remain but Oil Business Booms
Jeff Brady, NPR
Brady writes: "Two years ago in North Dakota, after months of protest by thousands of indigenous and environmental activists, pipeline opponents celebrated when the Obama administration denied a key permit for the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL)."
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The former manager of Desa Sergio Rodríguez, right, and the seven other people accused of killing the Honduran environmental leader Berta Cáceres, wait to hear their sentence. (photo: Orlando Sierra/Getty)
The former manager of Desa Sergio Rodríguez, right, and the seven other people accused of killing the Honduran environmental leader Berta Cáceres, wait to hear their sentence. (photo: Orlando Sierra/Getty)

Berta Caceres: Seven Men Convicted of Murdering Honduran Environmentalist
Nina Lakhani, Guardian UK
Lakhani writes: "Seven men have been found guilty of the murder of the Honduran indigenous environmentalist Berta Isabel Caceres. An eighth defendant, Emerson Duarte Meza, was cleared and freed on Thursday."
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Monarch butterfly. (photo: iStock)
Monarch butterfly. (photo: iStock)

The Insect Apocalypse Is Here
Brooke Jarvis, The New York Times
Jarvis writes: "Insects are the vital pollinators and recyclers of ecosystems and the base of food webs everywhere."
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Plymouth seeks extended benefits as Pilgrim closes



Plymouth seeks extended benefits as Pilgrim closes


By Christine Legere 
Posted Nov 29, 2018 

Land, annual payments on list of requests for new plant owner.
PLYMOUTH — With Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station set to shut down in six months, Plymouth officials are scrambling to get some current financial commitments extended to ease the loss of benefits the town has enjoyed since the plant went online in 1972.
Holtec International is looking to buy Pilgrim from current owner Entergy Corp. once the plant shuts down May 31, and both parties already have filed a request for a license transfer with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Plymouth Town Manager Melissa Arrighi said it was important that items on the selectmen’s negotiating priority list be settled before the license transfer takes place.
“We have dealt with Entergy for a long time, and now there is a new LLC coming to take over,” Arrighi said. “We believe some things need to be addressed prior to them becoming our neighbor. We want to get all the people together and say, ‘We welcome you as a new partner, but here are these issues.’”
Topping the priority list is negotiation for the transfer of about 1,600 acres of “pristine forest” that are part of the Pilgrim site but outside the area involved in nuclear power generation, according to Arrighi.
Although the town has right of first refusal on the acreage, leaders say they should get it at no charge.
“It’s a central area to the community, and the decisions on its use should be made by the town,” Arrighi said. There has always been an understanding with Entergy that the town would be given the land, she said.
The town wants the transfer of title and ownership to take place within 30 days of the license transfer to Holtec.
“The company can take it as a tax deduction,” said Sean Mullin, a Plymouth businessman and chairman of the Nuclear Decommissioning Citizens Advisory Panel. “It’s a write-off.”
Also on the selectmen’s list of items to negotiate with Holtec is a continuation of annual $9.5 million payments in lieu of taxes until six months after all nuclear spent fuel has been transferred into dry casks.
Holtec expects that task will be complete in 2022.
Town officials also want Holtec to continue to provide $2.6 million annually to maintain the current level of emergency planning and $300,000 to maintain current levels of charitable support until six months after spent fuel is in dry casks.
Officials would then renegotiate all payments with the expectation that money would continue to flow into the town until the spent fuel is moved to “a remote repository.”
To date, no permanent repository has been identified. Holtec is moving forward with federal review of a proposed interim site storage facility in New Mexico and has said Pilgrim’s spent fuel would be shipped and stored there. 


“These are small numbers when you’re talking about a no-bid $1.1 billion decommissioning project,” Mullin said of the annual payments and land donation. Since Holtec is trying to establish itself as the leader in nuclear plant decommissioning, it would be worthwhile for the company to agree to those financial commitments to create goodwill, he said.
“They need to get on the phone with the town right now,” Mullin said. “This is an opportunity for them to sit down with the town and the region and be open and reasonable. As I told them, we can be your best recommendation going forward, or we can be your worst nightmare.”
Other priority items on the list include written assurance and financial guarantee that Holtec will provide sufficient funding to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health to cover off-site radiological monitoring and testing and that it will repair or replace dry casks that crack or leak; written and financial assurance that it will remediate and remove any structure materials and soils that contain detectable levels of tritium even if the levels fall below NRC requirements; that a mutually agreed-upon level of security remain to protect spent fuel; and written and financial guarantees that a dedicated amount of money will be set aside to support job retraining for current Entergy employees, with the goal of retraining them in Plymouth.

https://www.capecodtimes.com/news/20181129/plymouth-seeks-extended-benefits-as-pilgrim-closes?utm_source=SFMC&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=GHM_Daily_Newsletter_Cape_Cod_Times&utm_content=GTDT_CCT


Nuclear panel questions cask life span




Nuclear panel questions cask life span

By Christine Legere
Posted Nov 29, 2018 


Potential Pilgrim buyer outlines plan for spent fuel.
PLYMOUTH — Massive concrete and steel casks, described by their manufacturer as providing “an impregnable barrier,” will protect the public from radiation emitted by the 4,000 spent fuel assemblies left behind at Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station when the reactor permanently shuts down in May.
But how long will that protection last?
Developed by Holtec International, the company planning to buy Pilgrim and handle its decommissioning, the HI-STORM 100 casks are certified by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for 20 years. Yet the spent fuel contained inside will remain radioactive for thousands of years.
Those facts were troubling to members of the Nuclear Decommissioning Citizens Advisory Panel on Wednesday, as Holtec representatives highlighted the “robust” program they plan for long-term handling of Pilgrim’s spent nuclear fuel.
The fuel assemblies will be placed into stainless steel canisters equipped with baskets of neutron-absorbing material developed by Holtec and capable of withstanding the heat generated by high burnup fuel.
The steel canister is then housed in an outer shell of carbon steel, with 27 inches of poured concrete separating the two.
The casks, each weighing 350,000 pounds, could take a direct hit from an F-16 fighter plane filled with fuel, a Boeing 767 traveling at 350 mph and withstand a raging brush fire with no release of radiation, Holtec representative Joy Russell said.
The company envisions the design life of the casks to be about 100 years, according to Stefan Anton, Holtec’s vice president of engineering and licensing. Once the 20-year federal certification is up, Holtec will return to the NRC for extensions, Anton said.
Advisory panel member John Flores, a Barnstable town councilor, questioned how the 100-year figure was arrived at, since the first such cask was loaded with spent fuel only in 2000.
“The 100-year life expectancy is theoretical,” Flores said. “In reality, 18 years is all you have as evidence.”
Even 100 years falls considerably short of what is needed, noted panel member Daniel Wolf, a former Cape and Islands state senator, who said the fuel would be radioactive for much longer. “We’re putting something that lasts for thousands of years into a container that lasts for 100,” he said.
Panel member Kevin O’Reilly, of Plymouth, asked Anton how his company came to the conclusion a cask could last for 100 years.
“As long as we take care of it, it is going to last a long time,” Anton said.
Inner canisters would be randomly tested for leakage, he said. If a leak was detected, the canister would be placed into a slightly larger one. “We’ve never had to do that,” he said.   


Duxbury resident Mary Lampert, president of Pilgrim Watch, pointed out only one canister is chosen for testing. “That doesn’t mean you’ll get the important one — the one with the crack,” she said.
Wolf asked Russell how long the casks were under warranty, and was told the information was confidential since it was a contractual issue.
The answer frustrated panel Chairman Sean Mullin.
“We are the people that are going to have to live with it, so if it’s a confidential contract, that’s going to be a real problem,” he said. “A lot of the answers you have given are soft, so we may come back and ask you in writing.”

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https://www.capecodtimes.com/news/20181129/nuclear-panel-questions-cask-life-span