Friday, June 28, 2013

Small business owners support Obama’s clean energy and environmental policies, poll shows


The Washington Post
June 27, 2013

Most small business owners support some of the climate control and clean energy plans outlined this week by the Obama administration, according to a poll released Thursday.

More than three-fourths (79 percent) of small employers think the the government should set a national goal to increase energy efficiency by half over the next decade, and nearly twice as many believe government incentives for clean energy innovation should be a high or top priority than believe they should be a low or non-priority.
The results are part of a report released by the American Sustainable Business Council, a business advocacy and research organization. David Levine, the group’s chief executive, noted that most of the responses did not vary based on respondents’ political persuasions.

“Small business owners across the country and across the political spectrum believe that clean energy makes sense not only for the environment, but it makes good business sense, too,” Levine said in an interview. “There’s a recognition that these clean energy policies really are better for their financial bottom lines.”
During a speech in Washington on Tuesday, Obama announced several ambitious proposals aimed at reversing recent climate changes and making the country more self-sufficient. Most notably, he ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to limit carbon dioxide emissions for coal- and gas-powered utilities by 2015.

“I refuse to condemn your generation and future generations to a planet that’s beyond fixing,” Obama told students during the event at Georgetown University.
Small business owners support that objective, too. Nearly two-thirds think the EPA should cap emissions in existing power plants, including 86 percent of Democrats and 54 percent of Republicans.

More than half of employers believe the government should also encourage banks to consider environmental criteria when evaluating loan applications and investment opportunities, according to the poll, which was based on 515 responses from employers with fewer than 100 employees. Sixty-three percent support a government mandate that would require 20 percent of electricity to be generated from sustainable energy sources.
It’s a slightly surprising stance from a group that is often considered purely anti-regulations and anti-government involvement, but one small business owner noted that these rules would mainly affect large energy and electricity producers, not firms on Main Street.

Susan Labandibar, president of Tech Networks of Boston in South Boston, Mass., added that devastation from recent natural disasters, including Hurricane Sandy and the twisters in the Midwest, has probably prompted some small employers to take climate shifts more seriously.
“Small businesses are uniquely vulnerable to severe weather events, and there has been a huge amount of disruption from some of these storms,” Labandibar said, noting that her own firm was hit hard by Sandy.

Meanwhile, Levine says the overarching “businesses-hate-regulations” notion has been fueled by policy discussions that have more to do with political sparring than reviving the economy.
“This shows that, when you ask some of these questions outside of the political arena, you get a different take than what you hear in Congress,” he said. “We need to change the dialogue in Washington, and get away from party-line rhetoric and talk more about what’s actually good for business and what’s actually good for the economy.”

Thursday, June 27, 2013

New Poll of Small Business Owners


Reveals Strong Bipartisan Support for Clean, Safe Energy, Including Measures in Obama’s Climate Plans

Large Majorities in Both Parties Want Increased Limits on Carbon Emissions, Energy Efficiency, Disclosure of Chemicals Used in Fracking and More

To view the full survey results, visit: http://bit.ly/ASBCEnergyEnvironmentPollReport

June 27, 2013, Washington, D.C.A national, scientific poll shows that small business owners across party lines, support safer, cleaner, more efficient and renewable energy. The poll, which asked a range of energy and environment questions, including some in President Obama’s climate proposals announced this week, was commissioned by the American Sustainable Business Council (ASBC), a business policy group of which the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce is a member.

 Frank Knapp Jr, President and CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce (SCSBCC) and Chairman of the ASBC Action Fund said, “This poll reaffirms what the SCSBCC has been saying for many years.  We need to protect our small business tourism industry from rising sea levels that will put coastal business communities like Cherry Grove and Folly Beach underwater, flood much of Charleston and wash away most of the state’s beaches.  The solution is to transition our country to a clean energy economy that dramatically cuts carbon emissions since they lead to climate change and rising sea levels.”

Richard Eidlin, Director of Public Policy for ASBC said, “Large majorities of small business owners want the country to focus on energy development that is clean and renewable. Whether Republican, Democratic or Independent, they want the government to promote energy efficiency and clean technologies and don’t want our tax dollars to continue subsidizing coal, oil and gas.”

 The poll, conducted by Lake Research, was designed to gauge opinions on several policy issues currently under consideration in states and in Washington, DC. The telephone survey included 47% Republican, 14% Independent and 27% Democratic business owners.

Key findings from the survey are:
--79% of small business owners support increasing energy efficiency by 50% over next ten years.
--72% of small business owners think incentives for clean energy are a priority.
--63% of small business owners support EPA efforts to limit carbon dioxide emissions of power plants.
--62% of small business owners oppose continuing subsidies to oil, gas and coal companies.
--63% of small business owners support a national renewable energy standard.
--57% of small business owners want banks and other investors to include environmental benefits in business investment decisions.
--80% of small business owners support requiring disclosure of chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing (fracking).

 
ASBC is collecting signatures of small business owners in support of the climate declaration, launched recently by BICEP (Business for Innovative Climate and Energy Policy) and signed by 150 larger companies, including General Motors Co., Unilever, IKEA, Stonyfield Farm and more than 100 ski areas. The declaration calls on U.S. policymakers to capture the economic opportunities of addressing climate change. It can be found here: http://asbcouncil.org/campaigns/sign-climate-change-declaration-today

To view the full survey results, visit: http://bit.ly/ASBCEnergyEnvironmentPollReport

 Poll results represent findings from a scientific national phone survey of owners of small businesses (with 2 to 99 employees), commissioned by the American Sustainable Business Council and conducted by Lake Research Partners. The nationwide live phone survey was conducted between March 14-25, 2013. It has a margin of error of +/- 4.4%.

###


The American Sustainable Business Council and its member organizations represent more than 165,000 businesses nationwide, and more than 300,000 entrepreneurs, executives, managers, and investors. The council includes chambers of commerce, trade associations, and groups representing small business, investors, microenterprise, social enterprise, green and sustainable business, local living economy, and women and minority business leaders. ASBC informs and engages policy makers and the public about the need and opportunities for building a vibrant and sustainable economy. www.asbcouncil.org

 

 

 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

S.C. consumers due $6.2M in health insurance rebates thanks to Obamacare

Columbia Regional Business Report
By Bill Poovey
bpoovey@scbiznews.com
Published June 25, 2013

 
More than 119,000 South Carolina consumers whose health insurers failed to spend enough premium dollars on patient care are due to get rebates totaling $6.2 million from the insurers.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the rebate checks average about $70 per family in South Carolina.
The rebates announced by the federal agency stem from 2012 health insurer data required by the Affordable Care Act’s medical loss ratio, or 80/20 rule. Insurers must spend at least 80 cents of every premium dollar on patient care and quality improvement, an HHS statement said. If they spend more on other expenses like profits, marketing and salaries, they owe the rebates back to consumers.

HHS reported a total of $500 million in rebates nationwide.
In South Carolina, the state’s largest health insurer, BlueCross BlueShield, owes the largest total to individuals, at $3.4 million, with its Blue Choice Health Plan due to pay $133,357. The report shows Golden Rule Insurance Co. owes rebates totaling $1.24 million; Carolina Care Plan Inc., $701,174; Freedom Life Insurance Co. of America, $171,333; John Alden Life Insurance Co., $167,407 for individual and $17,138 for small group; Mid-West National Life Insurance Co. of Tennessee, $137,200; Trustmark Life Insurance Co., $89,021 for small group; and United Healthcare Services, $47,416 for small group.

BlueCross BlueShield said in a statement Tuesday that rebate checks will be mailed in late July to about 58,000 individual members of BlueCross and BlueChoice HealthPlan. BlueCross spokeswoman Patti Embry-Tautenhan said the insurer’s records do not show that any of its small or large business groups qualify for rebates.
The rebates average $71 for BlueCross members and $15 to BlueChoice HealthPlan members.

Jim Deyling, president of private business at BlueCross BlueShield of S.C., said in the statement that “governmental MLR requirements do not address the root cause of rising health care expenses. We are complying with the law, but our concern remains that rebates not only create a false impression of overpricing, but also reveals the fundamental flaw of the legislation, which is that it does nothing to reduce health care expense for members.”
HHS said the insurance companies that failed to meet the standard will notify consumers.

The rebates will be paid in mailed checks, in lump-sum reimbursements to credit or debit card accounts used to pay premiums, or in future premium reductions. In some cases, employers will apply the rebate in a manner that otherwise benefits employees, such as more generous benefits.
HHS said insurance companies operated more efficiently last year than in 2011 nationally, saving consumers more than $3.4 billion in premiums. In South Carolina, rebates totaled $19.6 million in 2012 and the average refund was $131.

https://www.columbiabusinessreport.com/news/48100-s-c-consumers-due-6-2m-in-health-insurance-rebates

News Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 20, 2013
Contact: HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343

Consumers saved $3.9 billion on premiums in 2012

Health care law will provide families an average of $100 back in premium rebates

Today, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announces that nationwide, 77.8 million consumers saved $3.4 billion up front on their premiums as insurance companies operated more efficiently.  Additionally, consumers nationwide will save $500 million in rebates, with 8.5 million enrollees due to receive an average rebate of around $100 per family.

Today’s report includes the 2012 health insurer data required under the Affordable Care Act’s Medical Loss Ratio, or “80/20 rule.”  The report shows that, compared to 2011, more insurers are meeting this standard and spending more of their premium dollars directly toward patient care and quality, and not red tape and bonuses.

Created through the Affordable Care Act, the rule requires insurers to spend at least 80 cents of every premium dollar on patient care and quality improvement.  If they spend a higher amount on other expenses like profits and red tape, they owe rebates back to consumers.  For many consumers, the report found that the law motivated their plans to lower prices or improve their coverage to meet the standard.  This new standard and other Affordable Care Act policies contributed to consumers saving approximately $3.9 billion on premiums in 2012, for a total of $5 billion in savings since the program’s inception.

“The health care law is providing consumers value for their premium dollars and ensuring the money they pay every month to insurance companies goes toward patient care,” HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said.  “Thanks to the law, 8.5 million Americans will receive $500 million back in their pockets and purses.”

If an insurer did not spend enough premium dollars on patient care and quality improvement, rebates will be paid in one of the following ways:
·         a rebate check in the mail;
·         a lump-sum reimbursement to the same account that they used to pay the premium if by credit card or debit card;
·         a reduction in their future premiums; or
·         their employer providing one of the above, or applying the rebate in another manner that benefits its employees, such as more generous benefits.

Insurance companies that do not meet the standard will send consumers a notice informing them of this new rule.  The notice will also let consumers know how much the insurer did or did not spend on patient care or quality improvement, and how much of that difference will be returned as a rebate.

The 80/20 rule, along with the required review of proposed double-digit premium increases, works to stabilize and moderate premium rates.  And, with the new market reforms, including the guaranteed availability protections and prohibition of the use of factors such as health status, medical history, gender and industry of employment to set premiums rates, this policy helps ensure every American has access to quality, affordable health insurance.



 

Public Hearing on Duke Energy's Proposed Rate Hike Thursday in Anderson

Public hearings on Duke Energy's proposed average 15.1% electric rate hike continue tomorrow night, June 27th,  in Anderson. That hearing will start at 6 PM in the Anderson Civic Center, Ballrooms A&B, 3027 MLK Jr. Blvd., Anderson.

Attend the hearing and let the SC Public Service Commission know how you feel about the rate hike. The SC Small Business Chamber is intervening in the rate case to oppose the rate increase. More on that later.
The next public hearing will be held on August 1st  evening at 6PM in Columbia at the Public Service Commission, 101 Executive Cener Drive, Columbia.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Watch President Obama's speech on climate change today at 1:35PM EST


At 1:35 pm EST today, June 25th, President Obama will speak at Georgetown University on the growing threat of climate change. He will lay out his vision of where we need to go to do what we can to address and prepare for the serious implications of a changing climate. Tune in at whitehouse.gov/live. A video preview is available here

Monday, June 24, 2013

Public Hearing on Duke Energy's Proposed Rate Hike Tonight in Greenville

Public hearings on Duke Energy's proposed average 15.1% electric rate hike continue tonight in Greenville. That hearing will start at 6 PM in the Greenville County Council Chambers, 301 University Ridge, Suite 2400, Greenville.

Attend the hearing and let the SC Public Service Commission know how you feel about the rate hike. The SC Small Business Chamber is intervening in the rate case to oppose the rate increase. More on that later.
 
The next public hearing will be held this Thursday evening at 6PM in Anderson at the Anderson Civic Center.








 

 

Friday, June 21, 2013

Small Business Chamber opposes Duke rate hike


GSA Business Journal
June 21, 2013
The president of the S.C. Small Business Chamber of Commerce said before the first public hearing on Duke Energy’s request for a third rate increase since 2010 that the request is “not justified and particularly not justified for small businesses.” Frank Knapp Jr. has filed as an intervenor in the rate case.
By Bill Poovey


The president of the S.C. Small Business Chamber of Commerce said before the first public hearing on Duke Energy’s request for a third rate increase since 2010 that the request is “not justified and particularly not justified for small businesses.”
Frank Knapp Jr. has filed as an intervenor in the rate case.

“We are opposing the proposed rate hike,” said Knapp, whose Columbia-based group has more than 5,000 members. “There is no justification for it. The rate of return on equity is way too high.”
The utility is seeking to increase rates by an average of 15.1% to boost revenues by $221 million annually.

The request would increase rates by an average 16.3% for residential customers, 14% for commercial customers and 14.4% for industrial users. Duke Energy’s rates in South Carolina are among the lowest in the Southeast, but rates are determined in part by utilities’ profit margins, or return on equity. Duke is requesting a return on equity of 11.25%, up from 10.5%. The PSC will determine whether to allow that increased profit margin and decide what the 540,000 retail customers in the state can afford.
Ryan Mosier, a spokesman for the utility in Greenville, said previously that the rate increase application is based on the actual costs of new power plants and upgrades, as well as the 11.25% return on equity rate recommended by outside consultants. He said that maximum profit margin is a limit, not a guarantee.

“Like any other business, we still must manage our business and costs to achieve a return on our investments,” he said.
The filing for higher rates could start hitting customers’ pocketbooks in the fall. It follows two recent increases for the Charlotte-based utility. In 2010, Duke sought a 7.2% increase, or $104 million, and was allowed a 5.2% increase, or $74 million. In 2012, Duke sought a 14.2% hike to raise annual revenues by $216 million. The PSC approved a 6% increase that added $93 million in new revenues.

Duke wants the extra revenue mainly to provide $673 million for the new Dan River natural gas plant in Eden, N.C.; $236 million for high-efficiency technology at its Cliffside Steam Station in Mooresboro, N.C.; $141 million for safety and security measures at the Oconee Nuclear Station near Seneca; and $135 million for upgrades at the McGuire Nuclear Station in Mecklenburg County, N.C.
Knapp made the comment hours before the S.C. Public Service Commission’s public hearing on the request at Spartanburg Community College, the first in a series of hearings also set in Greenville, Anderson and Columbia.

The PSC takes up the increase in Columbia starting July 31.
The schedule for the remaining hearings that start at 6 p.m.:

  • June 24, Greenville County Council Chambers, 301 University Ridge, Suite 2400, Greenville.
  • June 27, Anderson Civic Center, Ballrooms A&B, 3027 MLK Jr. Blvd., Anderson.
  • Aug. 1, Public Service Commission, 101 Executive Center Drive, Columbia.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Public Hearing on Duke Energy's Proposed Rate Hike Tonight

Public hearings on Duke Energy's proposed average 15.1% electric rate hike start tonight in Spartanburg. That hearing will start at 6 PM at the Tracy Gaines Building (auditorium) located at 800 Brisack Road, Spartanburg.


Attend the hearing and let the SC Public Service Commission know how you feel about the rate hike. The SC Small Business Chamber is intervening in the rate case to oppose the rate increase. More on that later.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

June 2013 Newsletter


South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce


2013 Legislative Wrap-Up

The 2013 South Carolina legislative session was not a great success for small businesses.

Affordable health insurance was rejected by the General Assembly. The health insurance premiums small businesses and individuals pay for family coverage will continue to be about $1000 more each year because both the House and Senate rejected efforts to use Federal money to expand Medicaid. A bill (S.145) that would also make health insurance more affordable by ending anti-competitive behavior by insurance companies was put off until next year.

Legislation (H.3425 and S.536) that would make solar energy equipment affordable for residential and commercial buildings was killed-off or stalled. And unfortunately a special interest bill (H.3369)that would possibly increase workers’ compensation insurance premiums for all businesses in order to benefit a handful advanced from the House to the Senate.

But there was some good news. Legislation (H.3125)that would direct the SC Department of Commerce to develop financial resources for microbusiness lenders crossed the hall to the Senate. A bill (H.3437) to establish a committee to take a big-picture look at all legislation that would impact small businesses advanced from the House to the Senate.  

The Legislature will pick up this two-year session starting in January.

Duke Energy’s Massive Rate Hike Proposal

The S.C. Small Business Chamber of Commerce is opposing Duke Energy Carolina’s proposed 15.1% average electric rate hike. By intervening in the upcoming Public Service Commission rate hearing on Duke Energy’s filing, the Small Business Chamber is a party of record and will present a witness and cross examine witnesses. This is the seventh time either the Small Business Chamber or its President, Frank Knapp, has intervened in a utility rate case but the first against Duke. For a complete review of the amazing success the Small Business Chamber and Mr. Knapp have had in dramatically reducing rate increases on small businesses to as little as 0.08%, click here.

Members Saving Money with Our Health Insurance Plan

The Small Business Chamber in partnership with Carolina Care Plan is saving our members money with our health insurance plan. Find out if our plan can make health insurance more affordable for your business by clicking here.

Listen to what our members are saying about our health insurance plan:

“Not only do we now have a plan with better benefits than our previous plan, but we also will be saving thousands of dollars in premiums during our first year,” says Bruce Fewell of Corporate Concepts in Columbia.

“I am already seeing better benefits and lower deductibles. Plus, we will save over $8,000 in premiums in the first 12 months,” says Leslie Hagan of Hagan Heating & Air Conditioning in Anderson.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The G8 nations and small businesses have something in common


The split in business opinion (see story below) on whether the economic world powers represented at the G8 summit should crack down on offshore tax havens that deprive nations of corporate tax revenue is easily understood. 
Organizations like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which represents multinational corporations, want to protect their big dues paying members from paying their fair share of taxes.  Organizations representing small businesses, like the American Sustainable Business Council, want to protect their members from subsidizing the government services multinational corporations receive from the countries where they avoid paying taxes. 

Multinational corporations are the “takers” and we are the “givers”.  And we’re tired of getting screwed.  Apparently so are the G8 nations based on their declaration this morning on combatting tax avoidance.
(In the interest of full disclosure, I serve as chairman of the American Sustainable Business Council Action Fund.)
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The Wall Street Journal
June 18, 2013

The Morning Risk Report: Companies Divided on Taxation as G8 Zeroes In


The business community is making noise about one of the top agenda items at this week's G8 summit, corporate taxes, but the conversation sounds more like a shouting match than a chorus.

By Christopher M. Matthews

The business community is making noise about one of the top agenda items at this week’s G8 summit, corporate taxes, but the conversation sounds more like a shouting match than a chorus. Dueling letters sent to the White House this month about corporate taxation, and more specifically, cracking down on tax havens, seem to indicate that many companies don’t see eye-to-eye on the issue.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, who’s hosting the leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations, has said corporate taxes are a top priority. The issue is one that President Obama, who hopes to reform the tax code, can get behind. “Tax avoidance is as much about countries and country rules as it is about companies, because the loopholes that the companies use are the results of the rules that countries set,” White House international-economic-policy coordinator Carolyn Atkinson, told reporters before leaving for Europe. Obama hopes to translate international support into political capital back home.

He’ll need it, because back in the U.S., there is little consensus on the issue, even among the corporate community that arguably stands to lose the most. In a letter to the White House earlier this month the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable, and others expressed concern about aggressive efforts to crack down on corporate tax evasion. “Recent tax initiatives in a number of foreign countries, including several of our G8 partners, appear to be primarily targeting American companies with global operations in the guise of combating tax avoidance, potentially harming both the U.S. companies’ competitive position and the U.S. Treasury,” they wrote in the letter.

Meanwhile, the American Sustainable Business Council, which represents 165,000 businesses, and non-profit group Avaaz sent competing letters to the White House. Avaaz said its letter was signed by 15,000 business owners. “Tax dodging deprives our nation of revenue needed to maintain and modernize the infrastructure and services underpinning a strong economy,” ASBC Executive Director David Levine wrote in the letter. The council also released a poll that found that 85% of small business owners oppose a territorial tax system, which the Chamber advocates and which critics say allows U.S. companies to shield overseas profits from domestic taxation. At least one major U.S. company has put its name on the issue, as Google’s Eric Schmidt said he welcomed the taxation debate (if not exactly advocating a specific change.)

http://stream.wsj.com/story/latest-headlines/SS-2-63399/SS-2-255673/ 


 

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Remembering Palin's "death panels"

Remember “death panels”?

It was a Sarah Palin creation based on the provision originally in the healthcare reform legislation that became Obamacare.  She successfully morphed the intent to pay physicians for end of life counseling into a government program to decide which seriously ill people would be treated and which would be deemed unworthy and have medical treatment withheld.
 
Because of all the uproar Palin created, Congress struck the end of life counseling from the bill.  But Palin wasn’t satisfied and has pointed to the law’s Independent Payment Advisory Board as the “death panel”.  The IPAB will eventually make recommendations to the White House and Congress on ways to control Medicare costs. 

Palin calls these future recommendations, which might be developed after 2018, the “subjective rationing of care”.  In other words—“death panels”. 
 
But helping to fuel Palin’s calculated public paranoia was another part of Obamacare calling for comparative effectiveness research to give us better healthcare while controlling costs.  The law even set up the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute to focus the effort to conduct the needed research to determine the effectiveness of medical options and provide this information to healthcare provides.

The story in the Contra Costa Times (below) explains why comparative effectiveness research is important not only for controlling healthcare costs but for better medical treatment.  Critics also have expressed concern that this research will lead to rationing. 
But the Kaiser Permanente has used comparative effectiveness research for decades for cost control and better health of its over 8 million health plan members across 9 states and the District of Columbia.

No one apparently has charged Kaiser Permanente with using “death panels” but that’s probably because it doesn’t provide services in Alaska.
-------------------------------------------

Contra Costa Times
June 10, 2013

Kaiser research method has potential to transform U.S. health care system


It was a nuisance and David Gassman put it off for three weeks, but he finally put a little stool sample into a tube and mailed it to a Kaiser Permanente lab.
It's a good thing he did. The test indicated he had colon cancer.

The 68-year-old Oakland resident, who is recovering from surgery, can thank an emerging field known as "comparative effectiveness research." It's an idea that sounds so obvious it's hard to believe it isn't already routine: Rather than simply analyzing whether a drug or treatment method works, researchers compare options to determine which ones do the best job for patients.
Many experts say the approach has such potential to transform the U.S. health system that the federal government will spend $3.5 billion on it through 2019 under national health reforms.

After Kaiser's comparative research revealed that a low-cost, mail-in stool test is more effective than previous stool tests, the health system began offering it widely to patients in the mid-2000s, aware that many would find it more appealing than an intrusive colonoscopy.
Kaiser screening rates jumped from less than 45 percent to nearly 85 percent, potentially saving hundreds of lives.

Critics have complained that comparative effectiveness research could lead to health care rationing. But the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research in Oakland with 550 employees has been doing it for decades to improve patient care and is considered a national leader in the field.
Why is it needed?

Drug companies spend millions of dollars testing their next blockbuster drug, and the federal government devotes large sums to studying diseases, but little is spent on research to help doctors and patients answer such crucial questions as:
·  Does a costly new drug work better than the cheaper medication that has been around for decades?

·  Should I spend thousands on a painful back surgery or would physical therapy work just as well?

·  What offers the best results for treating a sleep disorder?

"Patients and clinicians often are forced to make decisions without good evidence," said Dr. Joe Selby, executive director of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, an independent nonprofit that Congress set up to oversee the program.
The United States has had major gaps in comparative effectiveness research, said Dr. Tracy Lieu, who directs Kaiser's Northern California research division. "Drug companies are not particularly eager to fund studies that might find that their drugs should be used on fewer patients," she said.

Although Gassman had never heard of such research, it may have saved his life. He had a sigmoidoscopy several years ago and he says it could have been several more years before his doctor recommended a colonoscopy. The mail-in stool test, which Kaiser sends out annually to its 50- to 75-year-old members, enabled doctors to catch his colon cancer early.
If the test finds blood in the stool, a sign of cancer, the results are confirmed with a colonoscopy. Gassman had surgery in May and now jokes that he has a semicolon.

"We have to continue monitoring the situation to be sure it doesn't return, but supposedly we got it all," he said.
 
Kaiser has changed its colon cancer screening policies over the years as a result of comparative effectiveness research. In 1993, when many patients weren't being screened, Kaiser invested millions of dollars to offer sigmoidoscopies, which are similar to but less invasive than a colonoscopy, after finding that it could save lives. The study was headed by Selby, who was director of Kaiser's Oakland research division before he was tapped to head the national institute.

But in part because many patients find sigmoidoscopies uncomfortable, Kaiser could never get its screening rates above 45 percent.
 
A later Kaiser study found a new version of a stool test identified more cancers and polyps and had fewer false positives than older stool tests, said Dr. James Allison, an emeritus investigator in Kaiser's research division. Screening rates soared when Kaiser made the mail-in stool tests widely available in the mid-2000s. Today, Kaiser urges its members to take a yearly stool test, or a colonoscopy every 10 years, or a sigmoidoscopy every five.

The screening has had results: Kaiser found 331 cancers among the 340,000 stool tests it analyzed for its Northern California members in 2011.
 
In one of its latest projects, Kaiser teamed with UC San Francisco to look at the best way to control high blood pressure in African-Americans, who have much higher rates of the condition than whites.

They will examine whether giving African-Americans a higher dose of diuretics or telephone sessions with a health coach can be effective, said Dr. Stephen Sidney, director of Kaiser's stroke prevention research program.
 
These are the kinds of effectiveness questions that will be pursued with the federal research money at institutions around the country. Congress allocated $1.1 billion for comparative effectiveness research in 2010 in the federal stimulus bill and set aside $3.5 billion more in the Affordable Care Act.

Critics said they fear such research could lead to health care rationing if the government uses the results to ax effective treatments simply because they cost too much.
To address such criticisms, legislation discouraged the new institute from doing cost comparisons.

That has erased many of the concerns initially raised by groups such as the Partnership to Improve Patient Care, a private organization formed in 2008 that includes representatives of drug manufacturers, device-makers and patient groups. Now the group's chairman, former Rep. Tony Coelho, a Democrat who represented the San Joaquin Valley area, said he wants to make sure that patients are involved in the new institute's decision-making and that doctors and patients can understand the research findings.
 
The new institute has patients on its advisory committees and people can suggest research questions on its website, Selby said.

To avoid having its findings sit on a shelf, he said, the institute will work to see "that decision-making actually changes and health status improves."

Thursday, June 13, 2013

President Obama--Close down tax havens

American Sustainable Business Council
1401 New York Ave., N.W. Suite 1225, Washington, DC  20005

June 7, 2013


President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20005

Dear Mr. President:

As business leaders, we are writing to urge you to support the efforts of Prime Minister David Cameron and other world leaders to develop shared strategies for ending offshore tax abuse and addressing corporate tax avoidance through aggressive profit shifting when you represent the United States at the upcoming G8 meetings.

When companies play one country’s tax laws against another, and have developed a system in which their international subsidiaries hold billions of dollars of profits untaxed in any nation, this is a problem for all nations. It is also a problem for our country’s small and mid-size businesses.

America’s businesses, especially small and medium sized companies, understand that the current corporate tax system is badly broken. It provides powerful incentives to shift investment and jobs offshore. The biggest crisis small business owners face is the lack of spending power in this country. It is easy to make the connection that unemployed and underemployed people can’t be our customers, and their lost income can’t circulate and enliven the economies of our communities.

American small businesses are angry that they are subsidizing large multinational corporations who have lobbied for, won and use tax loopholes that in many cases allow them to avoid paying any federal income taxes despite reporting billions of dollars of profits to shareholders. These very same companies are now using their political clout to argue for failed policies like a territorial tax system that would only accelerate current problems.

America needs one corporate tax system -- one that is fair for all businesses, large and small.
These views are shared not only by the businesses we represent, but small business owners regardless of affiliation or party. Last year, ASBC, together with other business organizations, commissioned a nationwide, scientific poll of small business owners. Ninety-one percent of the business owners surveyed said it was a problem when multinational corporations used accounting loopholes to shift their U.S. profits to offshore subsidiaries to avoid paying taxes. Republicans outnumbered Democrats in the poll. Offshore tax abuse is not a Democratic issue or a Republican issue, it is an American issue. We agree with Prime Minister Cameron that it is a global issue as well.

This year, ASBC jointly commissioned another poll of independent small business owners, this time on specific pending tax proposals. Eighty-five percent of small business owners said they opposed a shift to a territorial tax system for corporations (including two-thirds of Republican small business owners polled). More than three-quarters of small business owners polled support replacing the current corporate tax system with a system based on formulary apportionment, and almost two-thirds support ending deferral and taxing the global profits of multinational firms with full offset for foreign taxes paid, as a means of addressing the inequities of the current system.

The American Sustainable Business Council and its members represent 165,000 small and medium sized businesses in all 50 states. These and many other businesses face many unmet needs in running their businesses. They suffer from our deteriorating infrastructure, which causes shipping delays and the need to carry extra inventory. They worry about water main breaks or power system failures that would cause them to close their doors while repairs are made. And too many struggle with access to capital needed to fund their on-going businesses and support expansion opportunities.
As concerned business leaders, we hope we can count on you to support efforts to close down the world’s tax havens at the upcoming G-8 meeting and to insure that in this country we work toward revenue-positive corporate tax reform that demands that all businesses pay their fair share so that we have adequate revenue to invest in America’s infrastructure, schools and small businesses, allowing all of our businesses to thrive and to be competitive in the 21st century global economy.

Sincerely,

David Levine, CEO
American Sustainable Business Council
Connie Evans, President and CEO Association of Enterprise Opportunity
 
Frank Knapp, CEO South Carolina Small Business Chamber
Holly Sklar, Executive Director Business for Shared Prosperity
 
Ajax Greene, Executive Director Re>Think Local (NY)
Michael Kramer, Executive Director Sustainability Association of Hawaii
 
Paul Tarnoff, Executive Director Iowa Sustainable Business Alliance
Mark McLeod, Executive Director
Sustainable Business Alliance (CA)
 
Michael Lapham, Executive Director Responsible Wealth
Todd Larsen, Division Director Green America