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December 18 1148 AM
22 hours ago ago from r.j.'s space - Windows Live
The Health Bill Is Scary - WSJ - I recently suggested that seniors will die sooner if Congress actually implements the Medicare cuts in the health-care bill put forward by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. My colleagues who defend the bill—none of whom have practiced medicine—predictably dismissed my concern as a scare tactic. They are wrong. Every American, not just seniors, should know that the rationing provisions in the Reid bill will ...
Related contentAP, Ohio Media, Gov. Strickland and Dems Call Double-Digit Retroactive Tax Increase a 'Tax Cut Delay'
16 hours ago ago from NewsBusters.org - Exposing Liberal Media Bias
On January 1, 2009, the final 4.2% stage of a four-year, 21% cut in individual income taxes took effect in Ohio. State tax withholding tables reflecting the lower rates went into effect. Ohio employees began seeing a bit more net pay in each paycheck. This past week, the state legislature, faced with an $850 million shortfall and threats of immediate school funding cuts by Governor Ted Strickland, repealed that 4.2% cut for both 2009 and ...
Related contentLA courts face grim future from budget cuts
19 hours ago ago from The West Ranch Beacon - News & Commentary for the Santa Clarita Valley
(From the AP) The judge in charge of California's largest trial court system warned Friday that hundreds of court jobs could be lost and legal business brought to a crawl by deep state budget cuts. Cash-starved Sacramento slashed $393 million from state trial courts this year and state officials ordered California courts to close one day each month to save money as the state contended with a budget crisis that could linger for years. ...
Related contentLayoffs hit district
13 hours ago ago from Times-Herald and Sunday Times Newspapers
By J. PATRICK PEPPER Times-Herald Newspapers DEARBORN — The Dearborn Public Schools Board of Education on Dec. 14 approved layoffs for nearly 200 employees. In total, 74 noninstructional employees and 121 teachers are affected by the staffing cuts. Noninstructional cuts were effective Dec. 15, while the teaching cuts become effective Feb. 1, when the second semester begins. The layoffs are the result of less-than-projected state ...
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