Legion of Angels News Archive » Arizona

Posts Tagged ‘Arizona’

Source: Olson To Step Down 20 Wins Shy Of 800

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Lute Olson will step down immediately as head coach of the Arizona men’s basketball team, FOXSports.com has confirmed.

The news, which was initially reported by ESPN’s Dick Vitale, was confirmed by a source close to the program.

Olson has not officially informed the team yet. Associate coach Mike Dunlap, a former national championship-winning coach at Division II Metro State and an assistant with the Denver Nuggets, will take over on an interim basis.

It’s highly unlikely Dunlap will be named the head coach permanently until the end of the season at earliest, due to the debacle last season with Kevin O’Neill.

O’Neill had been hired as an assistant before last season, with the intention that he would take over for Olson when he retired. O’Neill was then pressed into interim head coaching duty when Olson took a leave of absence for personal reasons. When Olson decided to return to the program, a rift developed between the two and O’Neill was eventually let go.

Olson, 74, will retire 20 wins shy of 800 for his career. He won a national championship with Arizona in 1997.

Source — FOX Sports

Small Business Is Latest Focus In Health Fight

Friday, July 11th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The states are taking a variety of approaches. To help ease the burden of insurance premiums that have roughly doubled since 2000, some, like Arizona, are extending tax credits to small employers that provide medical coverage.

Others, including New Mexico and Montana, are exploring ways to let small businesses band together to amass the purchasing power of big employers. Massachusetts plans to let small businesses benefit from its state-supervised insurance program. And some states, like Colorado, have passed tougher laws governing what insurers can charge small companies.

“States are being aggressive experimenters, and those lessons learned are going to be invaluable to us in looking at national health reform,” said Michelle Dimarob, manager of legislative affairs for the National Federation of Independent Business.

Congress, meanwhile, is considering legislation that, among other steps, would make it significantly easier for small businesses to organize insurance-buying pools. Despite bipartisan backing in both the House and Senate, it is uncertain whether the bills can be passed in this, an election year. But proponents say the legislation would almost certainly be reintroduced next term.

Because smaller businesses cannot spread the costs and risks of an individual’s high medical bills over a large work force the way a big company can, they often must settle for less-generous coverage that leaves workers with substantial out-of-pocket medical expenses. Many small employers simply choose not to provide health benefits, which can cost more than $12,000 a year for a family of four.

Of the 47 million uninsured people in this country, at least 20 million are employed by small businesses or work for themselves — a figure that has increased by an average of more than 500,000 a year since 2000. That is why, even as the presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama are floating ideas for making insurance easier to obtain by individuals, there are also efforts under way to address the needs of small businesses.

“Half of the uninsured people in our state are working for small business,” said Nancy Wyman, the state comptroller for Connecticut.

As the number of people without health insurance continues to rise, many states and Congress have begun to focus on one of the biggest causes: the growing number of small business owners and their workers who are unable to afford coverage.

Despite broad interest in the issue, though, making significant changes at the state level can be difficult, politically and practically, as Connecticut’s recent experience shows.

In June, the state’s Republican governor, M. Jodi Rell, vetoed a measure passed by the Democratic-led legislature that was meant to help small employers by letting them join a state-run insurance-purchasing pool.

Big insurers lobbied heavily against the move, arguing that it would do nothing to stem the rising health costs that are reflected in high premiums.

“This debate continues to focus on the premiums rather than health care costs,” said David R. Fusco, the president of Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Connecticut, the state’s largest insurer for small businesses. “We have to look at the issue of the underlying cost.”

Connecticut Democratic legislators have vowed to try again next year.

Massachusetts, in its widely watched effort to overhaul health insurance, has focused so far on making affordable coverage available to individuals. But later this year the state plans to expand the program to small employers, letting them participate in the state-supervised marketplace set up to give individuals group purchasing power.

Nationally, the percentage of businesses with fewer than 200 employees that offer insurance fell to 59 percent last year, down from 66 percent as recently as 2002, according to the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. And less than half of the smallest companies, those with under 10 employees, were providing coverage last year.

Not only does the cost of insurance tend to be a bigger burden for a smaller business, but Jon R. Gabel, a health policy researcher at the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, estimates that small firms pay 18 percent more for the same insurance than big companies.

And employers that do continue to provide health benefits are tending to ask workers to pay more of the overall premiums. So even when small business owners offer coverage, their employees may not be able to afford to sign up.

Louis Lista runs the Pond House Cafe in Hartford, where he employs about 50 people, depending on the time of year. Some of his workers are dishwashers, making just $10 or $11 an hour. Although Mr. Lista pays half of the cost of coverage, his employees must nonetheless come up with as much as $150 a month for their share of health insurance. Some choose to go without.

“When they’re sick, they go to the emergency room,” Mr. Lista said. One of his waitresses who has chosen not to take insurance, for example, recently ran up $15,000 in medical bills from an emergency room visit. “She doesn’t have the money to pay for it,” he added.

In Connecticut, Governor Rell has said that despite her veto she wants to work with legislators to address the concerns of small business. Legislators had sought a way for small businesses to join with the state’s 200,000 employees to spread their risks and take advantage of the state’s negotiating clout with insurers.

Even before the governor’s recent veto, Connecticut had already taken significant steps meant to help small employers provide affordable health coverage. It was among the first, for example, to pass laws intended to limit the large annual jumps in premiums that tend to plague small businesses.

“Connecticut was one of the first states to do it right,” said Gary Claxton, who researches health insurance for the Kaiser Family Foundation.

But even Connecticut has yet to find a way to reduce the potential risk to a small company or insurer if even a single employee develops a serious illness and runs up tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical bills.

And small businesses in Connecticut and elsewhere still complain of the shock of sharply higher rates when, for example, they replace a 25-year-old man with a 35-year-old woman — insurers know that women tend to go to the doctor more frequently — or when a worker celebrates a milestone birthday.

In Virginia, a florist shop in Culpeper that covers three people had its premiums raised by more than 50 percent last year, after the owner turned 60. The business, which pays the full premium for employees, now spends nearly $1,800 a month on health insurance, up from $1,100, and it elected not to seek a reduction in rates by cutting benefits.

Cutting benefits is “not fair to your employees,” said Carol Inskeep, the shop’s manager. Many small business owners say it is hard to understand how their insurers are pricing the premiums. “The last few years have been puzzling,” said Thomas Massingham, a florist in Dover, N.H., who employs three people and pays half of the cost of their coverage.

Mr. Massingham has seen premiums go up by about 50 percent in some years, only to fall drastically after New Hampshire in 2006 began forbidding insurers from using the health of a company’s employees to set premiums and put stricter limits on rate increases. Even so, this year he was faced with a rate jump of nearly 40 percent, to about $600 an employee a month, to keep the same coverage.

By switching the type of plan and raising everyone’s annual maximum out-of-pocket expenses to $2,000, up from $1,500 last year, he limited the premium increase to 15 percent. He and his employees will split the $500 monthly premium per person.

State laws now typically make it impossible for businesses to cross state lines to create their own purchasing pools, and small companies have had little success to date in being able to band together in sufficient numbers within state borders.

But the federal legislation would let businesses form such purchasing pools more easily, even across state lines. The legislation would also prevent insurers in any state from basing their premiums on the health status of employees — a prohibition now on the books in only a minority of states. The legislation would also offer tax credits to businesses that provide coverage insurance to their employees.

The Senate version of the bill, introduced in April and supported by Democrats Dick Durbin of Illinois and Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas and Republicans Olympia J. Snowe of Maine and Norm Coleman of Minnesota, would give states the ability to regulate the insurance plans offered through the pools, to prevent them from being abused. A similar House version was introduced this month.

The bipartisan legislation is supported by a number of small business groups, including the National Federation of Independent Business, as well as consumer groups.

The states, meanwhile, will continue experimenting with their own efforts, according to Richard Cauchi, who follows state health initiatives for the National Conference of State Legislatures. “There’s certainly momentum and growing interest on the state level,” he said.

In Connecticut, Ms. Wyman, a Democrat who supported the measure the governor recently vetoed, continues to push for creation of some sort of state-directed purchasing pool. But she recognizes the challenges ahead. “This is not an easy problem to solve,” she said. “We know it.”

Source — The New York Times

Shaping Lives

Monday, April 28th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

An Arizona developer is offering housing to poor Mexicans–if they agree to a few conditions.

Ana Maria Camacho Zavala, a factory worker, and her husband and two children used to live in a two-room cinder block shack without plumbing or electricity on the outskirts of Agua Prieta, a dusty Mexican desert town 50 miles south of Tucson, Ariz. “Everything was dirty, and it was difficult to eat some days,” Camacho recalls.

But in 2000 a sleek, master-planned community arose out of the sand, a manicured island in a sea of makeshift homes of cardboard and scrap metal. Powell (Gil) Gillenwater, a Scottsdale, Ariz. real estate investor, raised $1 million to build 42 two-bedroom, 700-square-foot duplexes. Painted in desert hues, the homes face a spacious courtyard with a grill and playground, encouraging neighbors to socialize. Camacho’s family was selected from among 700 applicants to get one of the houses. She pays $75 a month, or 12% of her income.

Gillenwater’s aim is in part to stem the flow of illegal immigrants across the border to Arizona, which happens to be home to a large chapter of the Minutemen, a vigilante group. His project, called Vecinos Dignos Sin Fronteras–or Dignified Neighbors Without Borders–is also an experiment in social engineering. He has set down a series of conditions residents must meet. Kids must remain in school and earn a high school diploma, while adults must hold down a job, take courses in health and nutrition, including birth control, and devote 250 hours a year to volunteer work. Three families who couldn’t come up with the time for volunteer work or to attend adult education classes have been asked to leave. “These people are prisoners of their own poverty,” says Gillenwater. “But writing a check is disastrous. It’s only through education that they can change their lives.”

A Mexican government-funded child care center provides a paycheck for 35 people, 10 of them Vecinos residents, and watches 165 children whose mothers would otherwise not be able to work. Gillenwater’s nonprofit, Rancho Feliz, will build a $350,000 education center this year to offer computer classes to anyone in Agua Prieta.

A student of Buddhism, Gillenwater, 54, made his fortune as a land speculator in Phoenix. His Century 21 real estate agency in Phoenix was the highest-producing in the Southwest. In 1981 Gillenwater and two partners started buying up land outside Phoenix. Their portfolio swelled to 10,000 acres, but now they are selling off the last parcels, at $70,000 an acre.

Gillenwater courts adventure. He smuggled a raft onto Tibet’s Yarlung Tsangpo River and walked in sandals across the snow-peaked Himalayas. In 1987 on Thanksgiving Day, on a whim, he and his brother Troy left the dinner table, bought $2,000 worth of groceries and headed to Nogales, Mexico. Recalls Gillenwater, “We were going to drink Tecates and hand out food to people and get to be heroes for a day.” They made a wrong turn and ended up in Agua Prieta, a dirty border town where abandoned children were living in cars and warming food over burning tires. For several years Gillenwater informally supported a small orphanage called Rancho Feliz, then established the nonprofit named for the orphanage in 1992.

He raised $1.5 million from fundraising events like the Frijole 500, a 519-mile bike ride from Santa Fe, N.M. through the Rocky Mountains to Telluride, Colo. Most of the $5.2 million in donations since 2000 has come from Gillenwater’s well-to-do friends, like Campbell Soup (nyse: CPB - news - people ) heir and Arizona developer Bennett Dorrance and JDA Software founder James Armstrong.

For Gillenwater and his friends volunteering in Agua Prieta is part recreation and part do-gooding. “Working down here has liberated me from my own ego,” Gillenwater says outside a small bodega, a cold six-pack in hand. “It has allowed me to throw off the shackles of this narcissistic ego and open myself up to the world around me.”

Most residents of Agua Prieta hail from distant Mexican cities and Central America. Many hoped to cross the border but were robbed along the way, were too poor to continue north or to return home, or were stopped by U.S. border agents. The floater population requires housing and other services the city of Agua Prieta is not equipped to provide. So in 2000 Gillenwater asked executives in Arizona’s home building industry to re-create their work on a cheaper scale.

Armstrong pays $128,000 a year for the tuition of 58 students at a bilingual private school. He and his wife, Jo-Ann, fly into Agua Prieta aboard their private plane several times a year. They have been supporting college-bound high school student Nayeli Ruiz since she was 9.

When people ask Gillenwater why he doesn’t operate a charity in the U.S., he says he does a service for overprivileged Americans by exposing them to how the other half lives. Americans come down to build houses and “to feed their souls,” he says. They pay $10 a night to stay in the nonprofit’s dormitory.

Source — Forbes

Texas Takes Legal Custody Of 401 Sect Children

Monday, April 7th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

(CNN) — Authorities said Monday they have taken legal custody
of 401 children who lived on an isolated West Texas polygamist retreat
built by imprisoned “prophet” Warren Jeffs.

The children are being kept at a temporary shelter at historic Fort
Concho in nearby San Angelo while authorities investigate whether a
child bride gave birth on the ranch at age 15.

The children in state custody are joined at the shelter by 133
women, most of them mothers, who were taken during the past few days
from the sprawling Yearning for Zion ranch, said Marleigh Meisner, a
spokeswoman for the state’s Child Protective Services agency.

The women are free to return to the 1,900-acre compound, officials
said, but many have chosen to remain. At this point, officials said,
the children’s fathers are not permitted to see them.

Court proceedings began Monday to determine whether there is enough
evidence to remove the children from their homes on the ranch, which is
near Eldorado, Meisner said. A hearing is scheduled April 17.

The children will be appointed lawyers and legal guardians in about two weeks, she added.

Meisner said the temporary shelter is filling up quickly, and officials
are facing a “critical shortage” of foster homes. Officials will try to
keep siblings together, she added.

Law enforcement officials
would not provide many details of their investigation, but Meisner said
the 401 court affidavits being filed Monday should shed some light on
the alleged abuse.

The investigation, which began Thursday
night, is continuing and authorities remain on the property to search
for evidence and other children, said Tela Mange of the Texas
Department of Public Safety.

One man has been arrested, allegedly for interfering with investigators. He faces a misdemeanor charge, authorities said.

Investigators said they believe more children will be found at the
ranch, but Mange stopped short of saying they were being hidden.

Authorities would not say whether they have located or identified the teen tipster whose call prompted the raid.

On March 31, a 16-year-old called and reported physical and sexual
abuse on the ranch, authorities said. She said she was married to a
50-year-old man. Authorities are looking for evidence the girl had a
child at the age of 15.

It remains unclear whether the girl
who reported being abused is among the children being interviewed — or
was whisked away from the compound under a different name before
authorities arrived.

“I am confident that this girl does
indeed exist,” Meisner said earlier. “I am confident that the
allegations that she brought forth are accurate.”

One issue
compounding an already difficult and sensitive investigation is the
difficulty pinning down exact names and ages of the people being
interviewed — as well as of the people being sought.

The
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints bought the
ranch four years ago and began erecting dormitories and a large, white
temple. Hundreds of Jeffs’ followers moved from Arizona and Utah as
authorities there stepped up their investigations.

The name is taken from one of Jeffs’ spiritual songs, “Yearning for Zion.”

Authorities began blocking roads to the YFZ ranch Thursday, then raided
the compound and began busing women and children off the property. Most
were girls, and most wore hand-sewn prairie dresses.

Officers entered the compound with a search warrant for 50-year-old
Dale Evans Barlow, who they believed was married to the 16-year-old
tipster. The search warrant authorized law enforcement to seize any
evidence of a marriage between the two including CDs, DVDs and a
computer hard drive, The Associated Press reported.

Barlow was
sentenced to jail last year after pleading no contest to conspiracy to
commit sexual conduct with a minor, the AP said.

Barlow was
ordered to register as a sex offender for three years while on
probation, the wire service reported. Barlow’s probation officer, Bill
Loader, told The Salt Lake Tribune in Utah that he was in Arizona and
did not know his accuser.

It remained unclear, the spokeswomen
said, whether that was the same Dale Barlow named in their warrant.
They acknowledged the man they are seeking might not be in Texas, but
said they had no other details about his whereabouts.

CNN’s
previous visits to the ranch revealed the compound was guarded by armed
men equipped with night-vision gear and other high-tech surveillance
tools.

Authorities would not say Monday whether they had found any weapons.

Jeffs remains jailed in Kingman, Arizona, where he awaits trial on four
counts of incest and sexual conduct with a minor stemming from two
arranged marriages between teenage girls and their older male relatives.

Jeffs was sentenced in November to two terms of 5 years to life for being an accomplice to the rape of a 14-year-old girl who said she was forced to marry her cousin.

Source — CNN