Sunday, October 21, 2012

Paul Graham Wins $150K Hasselblad Award

©Paul Graham Pittsburgh, (Man Cutting Grass), 2004. From the series ‘a shimmer of possibility.’

British photographer Paul Graham has won the 2012 Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography, the foundation has announced. The award includes a $150,000 prize and an exhibition, which will open October 26 at the Gothenburg Museum of Art in Sweden.

In announcing the award, the foundation recognized Graham as “one of the most brilliant photographers of his generation” who has presented “an extremely focused body of work, at once perfectly coherent and never monotonous” during a career that has spanned nearly 40 years. The foundation also praised Graham for work that “makes tangible the insignificant traces of ‘the spirit of the times’ we do not normally see,” and it credited the photographer with developing “innovative forms of working with all aspects of photography.”

Graham has produced several noteworthy bodies of work, most recently his 2009 12-volume book titled A Shimmer of Possibility. Previous works include American Night (2003) and Beyond Caring (1985).

Graham explained to the Guardian in an interview last year, “”It has steadily become less important to me that the photographs are about something in the most obvious way. I am interested in more elusive and nebulous subject matter. The photography I most respect pulls something out of the ether of nothingness.”

In an interview with PDN, he observed, “The great photography which operates at the core of the medium

View the Original article


Saturday, October 20, 2012

Indiana Has 32 Fungal Meningitis Cases; Michigan, 44

October 19, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Indiana has 32 cases of fungal meningitis linked to injections of a recalled back pain steroid, and authorities in Michigan are reporting 44 cases of fungal meningitis, along with four non-meningitis infection cases related to the same contaminated steroids.

The Indiana State Department of Health reported two new cases Wednesday. Two Indiana patients have died.

The state agency has released no details about the two deaths or the clinics they’re linked to. Its policy is to withhold details about where the Indiana cases are located.

Relatives of 89-year-old Pauline Burema of Cassopolis, Mich., have said they believe she contracted the disease after receiving an injection at the OSMC Outpatient Surgery Center in Elkhart. Burema died Oct. 10, and the family is awaiting autopsy results on the cause. A granddaughter has said the clinic has told its patients it had at least eight cases.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the Michigan count of 48 total infections was up by 20 from one week earlier.

Michigan’s death toll remains at four, including the death of a Cass County woman whose meningitis was linked to treatments for back pain across the state border at an Indiana clinic. Her case is included in Indiana’s count.

A steroid made by a Massachusetts pharmacy has been tied to a national outbreak of the rare fungal form of meningitis. It has killed 19 people nationwide.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Midwest NewsTopics: Indiana, meningitis outbreak, Safety & Loss ControlHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Trial Underway for 4 Accused of Sinking Oil Tanker, Polluting Spain Coast

October 19, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Four people went on trial this week for their role in the sinking of an oil tanker in Spain’s northwestern coast in 2002, triggering one of Europe’s biggest environmental catastrophes.

The defendants include the ship’s Greek captain Apostolos Mangouras, 77, his first officer and the former director general of Spain’s Merchant Marine. Another ship officer is being tried in absentia because his whereabouts are not known.

The four are charged with crimes against the environment and could face between four and 12 years in jail.

The ship, the 26-year-old Prestige tanker, spewed most of its 77,000 metric tons (20.5 million gallons or 77.6 million liters) of fuel oil, unleashing un ecological nightmare for the region of Galicia, one of the world’s richest fishing grounds. The ship had run into problems during a storm and the government ordered it out to sea where it sank six days later. The Prestige’s gooey, black toxic substance was washed ashore and spread along the northern coast to southwestern France. Fishing was banned in much of Galicia for several months.

The trial is taking place in the northwestern city of A Coruna.

Also charged with civil responsibility in the case are The London Steam-Ship Owners Mutual Insurance Association Limited, The International Oil Pollution Compensation Fund and the ship’s owner, Liberia-based Mare Shipping Inc.

The case is expected to last eight months.

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: International NewsTopics: Apostolos Mangouras, Galicia oil spill, International Oil Pollution Compensation Fund, London Steam-Ship Owners Mutual Insurance Association Limited, Spain oil spill, Spain oil spill trial, Spain oil tankerHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

U.S. Weather Forecast: Winter to Continue Hot Weather Trend

October 19, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 CommentsAfter a hot spring and a scorching summer, this winter is likely to continue a U.S. warming trend that could make 2012 the hottest year since modern record-keeping began, U.S. weather experts said Thursday.

Drought that ravaged much of the United States this year may spread in the coming months, said Mike Halpert at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center.

“The large majority of that drought we expect to persist,” Halpert said. “We even see drought expanding westward … into Montana, Idaho and part of Oregon and Washington.”

Dryer-than-usual winter weather is expected in much of the Pacific Northwest, with higher-than-normal precipitation predicted for the Gulf Coast, according to NOAA forecasts.

For much of the country, a three-month (December-February)winter forecast is hard to pin down. The vast majority of states have what the experts said was an equal chance of below-normal, normal or above-normal precipitation.

The densely populated East Coast, along with the southern tier of states from Texas to Florida and the upper Midwest also have an equal chance of colder, normal or warmer weather this winter, according to the forecasters.

Still, there is enough data to predict a warm winter overall, said Deke Arndt, chief of climate monitoring at NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center. The first nine months of 2012 were the warmest of any year on record in the contiguous United States, and this has been the third-hottest summer since record-keeping began.

“The main issues facing the U.S. going into this (winter) outlook period stem from persistent heat and drought,” Arndt said at a telephone briefing. “It is likely that 2012 will be the warmest of the 118-year record for the contiguous United States.”

An El Nino pattern — a recurring patch of warmer than usual water in the equatorial Pacific that can have a potent effect on U.S. weather — gave hints of developing in September but then subsided, the first time this has happened in approximately 60 years of record keeping on this phenomenon, Halpert said.

“This is one of the most challenging outlooks we’ve produced in recent years because El Nino decided not to show up as expected,” he said. A record-warm winter would be in line NOAA’s latest report on global temperatures, which found September 2012 tied for the hottest September in world records going back to 1880.

However, Arndt said that the signal of human-spurred climate change is less apparent now in some U.S. regions, especially in winter. This is due in part to the changing baseline forecasters use.

U.S. government experts look back 30 years to figure out baseline temperatures for the country. In the past, they used the 30-year period from 1971 through 2000; this year, they used 1981 through 2010. That latest period shows little sign of a warming trend in areas like Florida and other parts of the southeast, Arndt said.

That updated baseline helps to “mask” the signs of climate change on a regional and seasonal basis, Arndt said.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: Climate Prediction Center, El Nino, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, warming, weather forecastHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Craig F. Walker, Massoud Hossaini Win Pulitzer Prizes for Photos

Texas Meat Company Recalling Beef, Pork Products

October 19, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

Federal health officials say a Dallas, Texas-based meat distributor is recalling about 8,200 pounds of beef and pork products because they weren’t inspected and were improperly labeled.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service said one product from Lao Chareune Foods could not be labeled as a pork snack stick because it was raw. The agency said the products were distributed to retail stores in Louisiana and Texas.

The products recalled were 3-ounce and 8-ounce packages containing “Pork Snack Stick;” 3.2-ounce packages of “Seasoned Fried Beef;” 1.76-ounce packages of “Fried Pork Skins;” and 1.2-ounce packages of “Sliced Fried Pork Ears.”

Federal officials said they hadn’t received any reports of illness from consumption of the products.

There was no answer at a phone listing for the company.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Texas / South Central NewsTopics: recall, Texas, U.S. Department of AgricultureHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Salmonella Outbreak Tied To Wash. Restaurant

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A salmonella outbreak has led health officials to temporarily close a Vancouver, Wash., restaurant.

Dr. Alan Melnick, the Clark County health officer, says there have been 11 confirmed and five probable cases linked to the On The Border restaurant.

The health department is interviewing employees and customers to find the source of the outbreak. They are also working with restaurant staff to make sure they frequently wash their hands and properly store and handle food.

Melnick says the restaurant was closed Tuesday as a precaution. Anyone who ate there between Sept. 20 and Oct. 8 should go to a doctor if they have symptoms of salmonella, such as fever, chills, diarrhea and abdominal discomfort.

The symptoms typically arrive within three days of exposure. Most people recover without medication.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: outbreak, safety, salmonella, WashingtonHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Md. Woman Convicted of Disability Fraud, Faces Up to 5 Years in Jail

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

Prosecutors say a woman who collected federal disability benefits while operating a fitness center has been convicted of making false statements to obtain those benefits.

A jury convicted 48-year-old Darlene Altvater of Mechanicsville, Maryland, on Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt. She faces up to five years in prison at sentencing Jan. 7.

According to evidence presented at trial, Altvater, who worked for the Postal Service, sustained on-the-job head and neck injuries. She began collecting federal workers’ compensation benefits in 2001.

Prosecutors say from January 2005 through December 2011, Altvater operated a salon, day spa and fitness center. Witnesses testified that Altvater demonstrated the use of fitness equipment. She was still receiving disability benefits.

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: East NewsTopics: Fraud, Maryland, workers' comopensationHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

CNA Canada to Use CargoNet, NER to Combat Cargo Theft

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

CNA, a global business insurer, is now using CargoNet and the National Equipment Register (NER)

View the Original article

Zach Scruggs Denied Appeal on Judge Bribery Conviction

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

The full 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has refused to hear an appeal from Zach Scruggs, who was implicated as having knowledge of a Mississippi judicial corruption scheme that toppled his father, plaintiffs’ lawyer Richard “Dickie” Scruggs.

A three-judge panel of the court in New Orleans in August upheld Zach Scruggs conviction. He then asked the full court to hear the case. The full court refused in an Oct. 1 order.

The younger Scruggs, a law partner with his father, pleaded guilty to failing to report a conspiracy to improperly influence a Mississippi judge in a dispute with other lawyers over $26.5 million in legal fees.

He served a 14-month prison sentence and also lost his law license and paid a $250,000 fine.

Richard Scruggs and three others were convicted in the bribery scheme.

 

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Southeast NewsTopics: Dickie Scruggs, judge bribery, Zach ScruggsHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

N.M. Court Rules Against Residents Suing Oil Company

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

New Mexico’s Court of Appeals has ruled against a group of current and former Hobbs residents who sued an oil company because of illnesses and other damages.

The court on Tuesday upheld a Lea County District Court decision not to grant a new trial in the case against Shell Oil Co. and Shell Western Exploration and Production Inc.

The Hobbs residents alleged there was environmental contamination from oil and natural gas production in an area that became a housing subdivision in the southeastern New Mexico community.

A jury in 2007 ruled in favor of Shell, which had oil storage tanks in the area from 1946 until 1993. There also was an unlined storage pit for oilfield wastes that was buried in the 1960s. Housing development in the area started in the 1970s.

A lawyer for the residents, Michael Newell, said Wednesday that no decision has been made on whether to appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: damages, lawsuit, New MexicoHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Connecticut Insurance Department Names New Captive Manager

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Connecticut Insurance Commissioner Thomas Leonardi today announced that John C. Thomson, a veteran risk management specialist, will manage the new captive insurance regulatory unit.

Commissioner Leonardi said Thomson brings a strong, diverse background in risk management and that he will be a valuable asset in the department’s regulation of the growing captive industry in Connecticut.

The commissioner made the appointment announcement today during the Captive Insurance Education Symposium at the Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts, in Hartford, Conn. The event was sponsored by the Connecticut Insurance & Financial Services Cluster and the newly formed Connecticut Captive Insurance Association.

Thomson began his new position Sept. 28. Prior to joining the insurance department, Thomson was an editor for International Risk Management Institute, the publisher of Captive Insurance Company Reports.

Thomson also was the chief operating officer for energy industry captive, Oil Casualty Insurance, Ltd., and has held leadership positions with General Electric, Aetna, Cigna and Towers Perrin/Tillinghast, a Hartford risk management firm.

Governor Malloy’s special Legislative

View the Original article

Best Agency to Work For: Midwest

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

This year six agencies in all received top honors as a Best Agency to Work For. The Best Agencies to Work For in 2012 include: Bryan Insurance Agency, Graham, Texas; Meyer & Cook Insurance, Walnut Grove, California; Walker Myers Insurance & Risk Management, Austin, Texas; Herbie Wiles Insurance, St. Augustine, Florida; Hausmann-Johnson Insurance, Madison, Wisconsin; American Insurance Services, Clark, New Jersey.

Insurance Journal wishes to thank the many customer service representatives, account executives, producers, managers and other agency staff who took the time to nominate their independent insurance agency in this year’s survey.

Always Striving to be a Cut Above the RestMadison, Wisconsin
Hausmann-Johnson Insurance

“We always do what we say we’re going to do.”

That slogan serves as a guiding light for Hausmann-Johnson Insurance, the agency selected as Insurance Journal‘s Best Agency to Work for in the Midwest in 2012, and one of the many reasons why the firm’s associates endeavored to recognize it as such.

Steve Squires, president and CEO, says he’s pleased but not surprised that the agency’s associates

View the Original article

North Carolina Insurers Seek 17.7% Increase in Homeowners Rates

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

North Carolina homeowners could see their first rate increase in four years as the state’s rating bureau called for a statewide average 17.7 percent increase in loss cost rates.

The North Carolina Rate Bureau filed for the rate increase on behalf of all property insurers. If approved as filed, it would increase loss cost rates by 17.7 percent. That figure includes a homeowners’ rate hike of 17.4 percent, a rental rate increase of 30 percent and a 29.5 percent increase in condominium coverage.

Rate Bureau General Manager Ray Evans said the rate increase is needed due to several factors including the rise of reinsurance. He said reinsurance is a major concern for insurers such as the North Carolina Farm Bureau with a concentration of policies in the state.



View the Original article

Mentally Ill Woman Shot By Los Angeles PD Awarded $3.2M

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

A federal jury has awarded $3.2 million to a mentally ill woman who sued after Los Angeles police shot her and shocked her with a Taser.

The Los Angeles Times reported jurors found that officers were negligent, malicious and used excessive force in their confrontation with Valerie Allen.

Her attorneys say Allen is bipolar and was in a manic episode when she grabbed a wooden stake and knocked down an officer who confronted the incoherent woman in September of 2009.

Other officers shot her three times and shocked her with a stun gun.

Allen was charged with assault with a deadly weapon but the charge was dropped.

Police Chief Charlie Beck says he stands by the officers and a department review concluded they acted reasonably.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: jury award, negligenceHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

David Guttenfelder Wins Two Overseas Press Club Awards

Colorado Hotel Owner Settles Discrimination Suit

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A Hampton Inn & Suites franchise in Colorado has agreed to pay $85,000 in back pay and compensatory damages to non-Hispanic employees who alleged they were fired because the owners believed non-Hispanics are lazy.

The franchise in Craig is owned by Rawlins, Wyo.-based Century Shree Corp. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleged the company fired at least three Caucasian housekeeping and laundry workers and replaced them with Latino workers, believing Hispanics work harder.

Century Shree’s lawyer Tim Kingston said Tuesday the alleged discrimination was by one “rogue” employee who has been discharged and that the owners deny wrongdoing.

The company has agreed to offer the fired workers reinstatement to their jobs, and the owners, managers and supervisors of the company will undergo training on federal anti-discrimination laws.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: Colorado, damages, discrimination, lawsuit, settlementHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Yates Adds Whitehouse and Lopes in Southern California

September 27, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Tustin, Calif.-based managing general agent Yates and Associates has added two new producers and has opened a new office in Westlake Village.

Caleb Whitehouse is a senior underwriter/broker and Esteban Lopes is an associate broker working out of that office.

Whitehouse has spent over 10 years in the insurance industry working as an underwriter and broker for other wholesalers in California.

Lopez has spent the last 10 years underwriting for several large MGA’s in California.

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: Caleb Whitehouse, Esteban Lopes, People, Yates and AssociatesHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Best Affirms Colonial Group and Subs Ratings; Outlook Stable

September 28, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A.M. Best Co. has affirmed the financial strength ratings (FSR) of ‘A-’ (Excellent) and issuer credit ratings (ICR) of

View the Original article

EPA Fines Idaho Gas Companies For Clean Air Violations

September 28, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A pair of gas delivery companies operating in Idaho will pay thousands of dollars in penalties for violating federal clean air laws.

The Environmental Protection Agency announced fines Wednesday for CityServiceValcon, LLC, and Thomas West Fuels, Lubricants & Chemicals, LLC.

EPA officials say both companies failed to follow mandatory rules for unloading fuel into storage tanks at two gas stations _ one in Lewiston and the other on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation in eastern Idaho.

Officials say a lack of vapor control systems caused at least 10 tons of volatile organic compounds to escape at the Lewiston station between January 2011 and January 2012. About five tons escaped at the Fort Hall station.

CityServiceValcon will pay a $48,000 penalty, while Thomas West Fuels will pay a $45,600 penalty.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: Clean Air Act, Environmental Protection Agency, EPAHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Grange Insurance Names Lin as New Chief Actuary

September 28, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Grange Insurance, headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, announced that Ken Lin has been promoted to vice president, chief actuary, effective Oct. 8.

Curt Parker, who has served in this role since 2001, will remain senior advisor to the president and CEO until he retires in February 2013.

Lin brings 15 years of actuarial experience to the position, with seven of those at Grange where he has served as assistant vice president, reserving and personal lines pricing manager; assistant vice president, commercial lines pricing manager; and corporate actuary. Prior to joining Grange in 2005, he held a series of actuarial positions at CNA and Fireman’s Fund.

Lin is a Fellow of the Casualty Actuarial Society.

Source:Grange Insurance

 

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Midwest NewsTopics: grange insurance, lin, Ohio, PeopleHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

PIA in Glenmont, N.Y., Names Deputy Director

September 28, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Kelly Norris has been named deputy director of the Glenmont, N.Y.-based Professional Insurance Agents associations of New York State, New Jersey, Connecticut and New Hampshire and their affiliated organizations.

The PIA affiliates are managed by PIA Management Services, the umbrella corporation that manages 11 organizations, including Young Insurance Professionals, the Professional Insurance Wholesalers Association.

Norris is an experienced association executive, with more than 20 years’ experience working with associations.

View the Original article

Insurers Begin Providing Health Plan Buying Guides

September 25, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleCommentsThe Obama administration on Monday began requiring health insurers to provide user-friendly guides to patients that explain their benefits, aiming to make buying insurance nearly as easy as scanning packages of food for nutrition facts.

Under President Barack Obama’s healthcare reform law, employers and insurers must provide a summary of benefits and coverage in a clearly worded, standardized format that allows the private insurance market’s 163 million beneficiaries to make side-by-side comparisons of plan offerings.

Consumers are also required to have access to a standardized glossary of insurance and medical terms. The rule takes effect just as insurers and employers prepare for annual enrollment periods, when employees select their coverage for 2013.

The benefit guides will also factor into the creation of new state-based health insurance markets due to begin offering subsidized, private coverage to moderate-income consumers in January 2014.

The Department of Health and Human Services released an eight-page sample benefits form to demonstrate how the actual summaries will outline everything from deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses to referrals and network providers.

The guides are also supposed to show what a plan covers for two common medical situations — new births and adult diabetes.

U.S. officials compared the summaries to the Nutrition Facts label required for packaged food sold in the United States.

The rule has been criticized by the insurance industry as a new administrative burden that will increase the cost of healthcare coverage.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: buyers guide, health plan buyers guide, Patient Protection and Affordable Care ActHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

International Center of Photography Names New Director

Alabama Prepares Crackdown on 90,000 Uninsured Motorists

September 25, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle3 Comments

A driver’s chances of being hit by an uninsured motorist in Alabama may go down after Jan. 1.

That is when a new system will start cracking down on the 900,000 Alabama vehicles without insurance. The system will verify within a few seconds whether a motorist is abiding by the state’s law requiring liability insurance.

County license plate offices will verify insurance information when issuing or renewing car tags. Police will do it when they stop cars for traffic offenses. And the state Revenue Department will do random computer checks to find motorists who have dropped their insurance. Then it will contact the motorists, who must provide proof of insurance or risk getting their vehicle registration suspended.

Driving without insurance results in a fine of up to $500 for a first offense and $1,000 for a subsequent offense. It can also result in suspension of the vehicle’s registration. Reinstating it will cost $200 for the first violation and $400 for subsequent violations.

“That’s the teeth,” state Revenue Commissioner Julie Magee said.

The Alabama Legislature passed a law in 2000 to require motorists to carry liability insurance. The Insurance Research Council estimates that 22 percent of Alabama’s more than 4 million private vehicles don’t follow the law, which is the sixth-highest rate of any state.

Many of these motorists will buy insurance when it’s time to renew their tag and show their insurance card to officials issuing tags. Then they quit paying their monthly bills and let the insurance lapse, but they still have an insurance card to show police if they are stopped for an offense or get involved in an accident.

In 2011, the Legislature passed a law, sponsored by Republican Sen. Arthur Orr of Decatur, to crack down on the violators. It resulted in the new system that will allow a police officer who runs information on a car tag to find out at the same time whether the car has insurance. Before stepping out of a patrol car to write a speeding ticket, the officer will also know whether to write a ticket for driving without insurance, Magee said.

The state Revenue Department has been testing the system in the Winston County probate judge’s office. Judge Sheila Moore said the public reaction has been overwhelmingly favorable because motorists who buy insurance want others to do it.

When the system shows that someone doesn’t have insurance, Moore and her staff explain how the cost of a ticket and the registration reinstatement are much more expensive than buying basic liability insurance. Most people leave, buy insurance and return in compliance with the law.

“We have not had anybody be ugly,” she said.

If motorists drop the insurance after one month, Magee is counting on her department’s random computer checks to find them and take action.

Limestone County License Commissioner Greg Tucker said the new system will help motorists who have insurance but don’t respond to letters the Revenue Department sends out randomly each month asking people to verify their insurance. Tucker said some people forget to respond or don’t take the letters seriously and wind up with their vehicle registrations suspended.

With the new system, the random checks will be done by computer rather than letter, he said.

Many states have insurance companies download customer information to a state database, which officials then use to check for insurance. Magee said Alabama is taking a cheaper approach through an Internet-based system that allows a tag official or police officer to enter information and get a response from an insurance company in two or three seconds.

Implementing the new system has cost about $150,000. Magee declined to estimate how much money could be brought in through tickets and suspensions, saying the goal is to crack down on uninsured motorists, not make money.

The goal is to reduce the number of uninsured motorists to less than 10 percent of all drivers, Magee said.

That would not only get Alabama off the council’s list of the 10 worst states when it comes to uninsured drivers, but also would be below the national average of 13.8 percent, said Patrick Schmid, director of research for the Insurance Research Council.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Southeast NewsTopics: Alabama auto insurance, Alabama insurance verification, insurance verification, uninsured motoristsHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Jury Says Alabama Engine Maker Not Liable in Plane Crash

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

An Alabama jury has decided that Mobile-based Continental Motors is not responsible for an airplane crash that killed a Louisville, Ky., man four years ago.

The Press-Register reported  that jurors reached the decision Tuesday in Mobile after more than two weeks of testimony.

Natalie Freeman had sued the Alabama firm, alleging that a faulty crankshaft split apart as her husband flew a single-engine Beechcraft 36 in December 2008. The defense had argued that mistakes in the plane’s overhaul were at fault.

Evan Freeman had taken off from Chicago Midway International Airport on Dec. 18, 2008, bound for Bowman Field Airport in Louisville, Ky.

Freeman reported engine trouble and tried to land the aircraft on a Louisville golf course, where it clipped a tree and crashed.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Southeast NewsTopics: Alabama jury, Product LiabilityHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Nationwide to Settle Harleysville Policyholder Class Action for $26M

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

Nationwide has agreed to settle litigation related to the merger with Harleysville Insurance.

The $26 million settlement relates to In re Harleysville Mutual, a consolidated class action and derivative suit related to the merger of Nationwide Mutual and Harleysville Mutual that has been brought on behalf of former Harleysville Mutual policyholders.

The $834 million merger was completed last May, and Harleysville Insurance is now part of the Nationwide family of companies.

Financial terms of the deal had come under attack by some Harleysville Mutual policyholders as well as by some other third-party observers such as David Schiff, editor of Schiff’s Insurance Observer and an advocate of mutual policyholders. Critics argued that Nationwide offered a significant premium for common stock of Harleysville Group, a publicly traded subsidiary of Harleysville Mutual — which critics contend enriched stockholders including top executives at Harleysville Mutual.

But, the critics also noted, the merger didn’t provide for any consideration to the mutual policyholders of Harleysville Mutual beyond the fact that they would become members of Nationwide.

The suit and settlement were filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia, First Judicial District of Pennsylvania, Civil Trial Division.

Nationwide said it believes that settling this lawsuit was in the best interest of all Nationwide and Harleysville stakeholders, given the potential cost and burden of continued litigation.

Nationwide said it is “pleased to resolve this matter and put the Harleysville class action and derivative litigation behind it.”

The company pointed out that the settlement is not an admission of wrongdoing or liability by Nationwide or Harleysville. The court has not ruled on the merits of the suit, and is not expected to do so in the course of the settlement-related proceedings. The settlement will not be final until it is approved by the court and any appeals from the court’s ruling are resolved.

As part of the settlement process, the parties involved have requested that the court certify a class for the purposes of settlement only. Before the court can approve the settlement, class members must be given notice of the terms of the settlement and their rights with respect to it, and the court must hold a hearing to determine the fairness of the settlement.

The court must still determine a timeline for when class members will receive written notice of the settlement, their deadline for objecting to or opting out of the settlement, and the date of the fairness hearing on the settlement.

 

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: Harleysville Group, lawsuit, Nationwide Mutual InsuranceHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Calif. Plant Recalls Its Peanut Butter Ice Cream

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

Clemmy’s Ice Cream is voluntarily recalling all of its Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip because the peanut butter in it might contain salmonella.

The pints involved have the UPC symbol 8 94509 00231 9 and expiration dates ranging from February 2013 to August 2014.

The peanut butter in the ice cream came from Sunland, Inc., a New Mexico peanut butter manufacturing plant.

No illnesses have been traced to Clemmy’s ice cream, but at least 35 salmonella illnesses in 19 states have been traced to Trader Joe’s peanut butter, which came from the Sunland plant.

Clemmy’s is located in Rancho Mirage, Calif, southeast of Palm Springs, and makes sugar, lactose and gluten-free ice cream. No other flavors are involved.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: California, New Mexico, recallHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Fired Employee Sues School District In Oregon

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

The former business services manager for the Central Point School District in Oregon has filed a $1.4 million lawsuit against the district, alleging she was wrongfully fired.

Vicki Robinson’s court documents state she was let go last year because the school board had been biased against her for years and the superintendent feared he would lose his job if he didn’t fire her.

The school district states it fired Robinson because of poor business practices, including a $1.5 million budgeting error in 2011.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Medford.

The Mail Tribune newspaper reported that lengthy depositions reveal years of animosity between Robinson and board members, with some holding Robinson responsible for another employee’s alleged embezzlement in 2009 that may have led to that employee’s suicide.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Features, West NewsTopics: lawsuit, Oregon, wrongful terminationHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

FEMA Waives Repayment of Nearly $95M in Louisiana Storm Aid

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has waived the repayment of nearly $95 million that the agency believes was improperly paid to victims of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma

According to a report by the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General, FEMA also denied 1,293 requests totaling $6.3 million in improper payments and has recouped $1.3 million from applicants who got improper disaster payments.

At least some of the overpayments were due to FEMA employees’ own mistakes, ranging from clerical errors to failing to interview applicants, according to congressional testimony. In some cases, the errors resulted in FEMA providing applicants with duplicate payments.

FEMA said it is required by law to make an effort to recover improper payments, even if the recipient wasn’t at fault. Last December, Congress approved legislation that would allow FEMA to waive many of the debts.

The Times-Picayune reports the 18,283 waiver cases processed by FEMA represent 20 percent of the outstanding waivers, which total more than $371 million the agency said should be repaid. In addition to the money not recovered, implementing the waiver program has cost FEMA $4.8 million so far, and has resulted in the refund of $2.5 million to individuals who repaid their grant money, but were later granted a waiver, according to the report.



View the Original article

Aon Launches Risk Pooling Practice for Public, Private Sector Groups

October 12, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Aon Risk Solutions, the global risk management business of Aon plc, has formed the Aon Risk Solutions’ Risk Pooling Practice, providing property, casualty and employee benefits pooling products for private and public sector organizations that make group purchasing decisions. The Risk Pooling Practice will address issues such as pool administration and optimal risk transfer products in an ever tightening budget environment.



View the Original article

Lawmaker Warns of New Cyber Threats to U.S. Financial Networks

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle2 CommentsThe head of the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee said on Thursday that significant new cyber threats to U.S. financial networks appeared to be emerging from an “unusual” source.

Committee Chairman Mike Rogers did not specifically identify the purported new threat nor its origin but referred several times to what he described as Iran’s growing cyber espionage capabilities.

“I think they’re (Iran) closer than we’d all like them to be to come in and cause trouble on our financial services networks,” the Michigan Republican told a cybersecurity conference hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Classified briefings about the possible new keyboard-launched threats may have revived prospects for stalled measures aimed at boosting cybersecurity in the “lame duck” congressional session after the Nov. 6 election, he said.

These secret briefings for lawmakers have highlighted a “threat that would target networks here from an unusual – careful here – source that has some very real consequences if we are not capable to deal with it,” he said.

The concern was with nation states that are gaining a cyberwarfare capability beyond those that “we often talk about” Rogers said. An unclassified U.S. intelligence report last year said the governments of China and Russia were expected to remain “aggressive and capable” collectors of U.S. trade secrets, particularly in cyberspace.

Iran says it has been adding to its cyber clout since its disputed nuclear program was damaged in 2010 by malicious computer code known as Stuxnet, reliably reported to have been developed by the United States.

A U.S. financial services industry group last month warned banks, brokerages and insurers to be on heightened alert for cyber attacks after the websites of Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase experienced service disruptions.

Customers of Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., U.S. Bancorp and PNC Financial Services have reported trouble accessing their websites, as unusually high traffic appeared to crash or slow down the systems in the past two weeks.

Rogers on Thursday reiterated his concerns about alleged Chinese cyber theft of U.S. trade secrets, describing Beijing as “ferocious about seeking information.” He also cited what he called media reports that China likely was behind a disruption of a White House computer system disclosed this week.

“What people don’t realize is that we are in war today in cyberspace,” he said. “And this is the biggest national security threat I can think of that we are not prepared to handle in this country today.”

A Senate bill backed by President Barack Obama that would have allowed for greater information-sharing between intelligence agencies and private companies has met opposition from both the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which objected to additional regulation, and the American Civil Liberties Union, which is worried about privacy issues.

Rogers and Representative C.A. Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the committee, have introduced separate bipartisan legislation that would clear the private sector to share information on cyber threats with the federal government and others on a voluntary basis.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: Cyber Risk, cyber threats, cybersecurity, cyberwarfareHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Report: Too Many Teens in Solitary Confinement

Share PrintEmailFacebookTwitterShareBookmark & ShareXGoogleDeliciousDiggRedditStumbleUponTechnoratiCurrentPermalink October 10, 2012

ACLU, Human Rights Watch Call for Ban on Solitary and an End to Housing Adolescents with Adults Behind Bars

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media

View the Original article


Kentucky Recommends Anthem Health Plan as Benchmark for Insurers

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Kentucky has recommended that the Anthem Preferred Provider Organization serve as the benchmark plan for insurers in Kentucky under federal health care reforms.

Anthem’s offerings would be the minimum level of benefits provided for individual and small group coverage under the Kentucky Health Benefit Exchange, an online service that will guide Kentuckians to health coverage beginning Jan. 1, 2014.

Kentucky Insurance Commissioner Sharon Clark said Anthem covers the 10 essential health benefits specified under the federal Affordable Care Act and was the most cost effective of 10 plans reviewed.

Kentucky also is recommending that the Kentucky Children’s Health Insurance Program be the benchmark plan for pediatric vision and dental services.

Both recommendations still have to be approved by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Southeast NewsTopics: Anthem, employee benefits, health exchange, Kentucky health exchange, minimum benefitsHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Court Blocks South Carolina’s Discriminatory Voter ID Law for 2012 Election

American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union

Because freedom can’t protect itself.

Key IssuesTake ActionVideos

View the Original article


Drought Crushes Local Beef Industry In Hawaii

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

National interest in locally grown food and grass-fed beef are catching on in Hawaii, offering ranchers an opportunity to sell cattle in the islands and send fewer of them to states like California and Kansas.

But crushing drought is making it difficult for Hawaii’s ranchers to keep enough cattle here to capitalize on the demand.

Rancher and veterinarian Dr. Tim Richards has been trying for six years to raise more cattle on his family’s century-old ranch.

He holds back some calves he previously would have sent to Oregon, Texas or elsewhere for final feeding, or “finishing.” But eight years of below-normal rainfall have left little grass for the cattle to eat.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: agriculture, drought, HawaiiHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Facebook IPO Lawsuits to Be Heard in Court in New York

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleCommentsDozens of lawsuits against Facebook Inc., the NASDAQ exchange and various underwriters will be centralized before a federal judge in New York, who must sort through the legal aftermath of Facebook’s botched initial public offering.

A panel of federal judges on Thursday ordered that cases filed around the United States be transferred to U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet in Manhattan. Facebook had requested the transfer, while some investors sought to keep their cases in California.

While some of the cases concern different defendants and claims, “they do involve enough common questions of fact, related circumstances and common discovery to warrant centralization,” the panel said.

Facebook said in a statement that it was pleased with the ruling, and that it would “vigorously” defend itself. An attorney for some of the California plaintiffs declined to comment, while a NASDAQ representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Investors say they lost money due to technical glitches on the Nasdaq stock market and accuse the company of selectively disclosing unflattering information about its business prospects to Wall Street analysts who then shared it with privileged investors.

The lawsuits, which are seeking unspecified damages, could cost Facebook millions of dollars to defend as it strives to put the IPO behind it.

Facebook’s stock tumbled as much as 50 percent after its debut at $38 per share. It closed at $21.95 on Thursday.

In at least 33 lawsuits seeking class action status, investors have asked courts to hold the company and its underwriters responsible for causing their losses.

Facebook has said that it did not violate any rules and that NASDAQ was to blame for trading glitches on the day of the offering.

Grouping cases together keeps similar lawsuits from proceeding at the same time in different courts.

Lawsuits against NASDAQ OMX Group Inc., which accuse the exchange of being negligent in failing to execute trades in the face of record-breaking volume during the IPO, will also be in front of Sweet.

But the exchange has already asked that their cases proceed on a separate track from the Facebook lawsuits.

The case is In Re: Facebook Inc, IPO Securities and Derivative Litigation, U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, No. 12-md-2389.

 

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: D&O, Directors & Officers, Facebook IPO, investors lawsuit, NasdaqHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Florida PIP Reforms Reduce Hikes But Not Many Premiums Thus Far

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle2 Comments

Florida regulators are optimistic that the state’s no-fault auto reforms are having a positive effect on the market and will eventually cut premiums for drivers. But for now they are telling the public that the recent law changes will likely only temper the size of insurers’ personal injury protection (PIP) rate requests as opposed to actually decreasing drivers’ premiums.

Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty said that regulators are just beginning to review the 100 plus filings made by insurers by the Oct. 1 deadline.

So far, only eight companies have received rate approval. The early results follow an expected trend whereby rate requests are lower than otherwise would have been filed.

While these savings will not be felt directly by policyholders, regulators remain confident that the market is heading in the right direction.



View the Original article

Troubled Calif. Nuke Plant Aims To Restart Reactor

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

The operator of California’s troubled San Onofre nuclear power plant on Thursday proposed to restart one of the facility’s twin reactors after concluding it could be run safely despite damage to scores of tubes that carry radioactive water.

A plan to return even one reactor to service is a milestone for Southern California Edison, which has spent months unraveling what caused excessive tube vibration and friction inside the plant’s virtually new steam generators, then determining how to fix it.

The proposal was immediately denounced by environmentalists who have argued for months the seaside plant between San Diego and Los Angeles is too damaged to restart safely. About 7.4 million Californians live within 50 miles of San Onofre, which can power 1.4 million homes.

The plan

View the Original article

11 Homes Destroyed in NW Minnesota Wildfire

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

State officials now say 11 homes and 24 other structures were destroyed by the wildfire that threatened the northwestern Minnesota city town of Karlstad.

Jean Goad, a spokeswoman for the Minnesota Interagency Fire Center, said that updated figures show the fire destroyed seven mobile homes, four regular homes, two garages and 22 other structures in the Karlstad area on Oct. 2.

There were no injuries.

The weather has turned considerably colder. The local forecast called for rain, changing over to snow early on Oct. 4 with accumulations of up to 7 inches.

Goad says that will give firefighters a reprieve, but it won’t add up to much moisture to recharge the soils in northwestern Minnesota, which she says is 12 to 15 inches behind on precipitation.

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Midwest NewsTopics: damages, homeowners insurance, Minnesota, wildfireHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Allstate Agents Returning to Massachusetts After 25 Years

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle3 Comments

Allstate Insurance Co. is reopening brick-and-mortar offices in Massachusetts after a quarter century of absence.

Back in 1987, the Northbrook, Ill.-headquartered Allstate closed its offices in Massachusetts and pulled out of the market, citing the state’s strict regulation of auto insurance rates.

But Massachusetts’ regulatory environment has been changing in recent years. In 2008, the state began implementing “managed competition” and took steps to deregulate private passenger auto insurance rates.

This move to managed competition has brought a number of insurers — including GEICO and Progressive — to the state’s auto insurance market. Allstate started to again offer private passenger auto insurance in the state in 2009 — through its agents from neighboring states (including Connecticut, New Hampshire and Rhode Island) as well as through an 800 number (1-800-Allstate).

Allstate Plans ‘Aggressive Ramp-Up’ in Massachusetts

Now, with the opening of new offices, Allstate is expanding its business in earnest. The company says it is planning an “aggressive ramp-up” in coming years.

On Monday, Oct. 1, Allstate opened an office in North Andover, a suburb of Boston. It’s the company’s first brick-and-mortar office in Massachusetts in 25 years. At least two more offices are scheduled to open in the state before the end of the year.

“We just opened our first office in North Andover

View the Original article

Md. Consumers Receive $2M in Restitution From Erie Insurance Companies

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Regulators said Maryland consumers received nearly $2 million in refunded premium and interest payments — after an investigation by the Maryland Insurance Administration discovered that two Erie insurance companies did not provide a notice of premium increase to some policyholders as required by Maryland law.

The entire amount of the additional premiums paid, plus 10 percent interest, was refunded, regulators said this week.

During an investigation by the Maryland Insurance Administration’s compliance and enforcement unit, it was discovered that the companies — Erie Insurance Co. and Erie Insurance Exchange — failed to send a notice of premium increase for private passenger motor vehicle liability insurance to more than 5,500 policyholders.

Regulators stated that as part of a consent order, the Erie companies refunded premiums and interest totaling $1,999,598.32 to Maryland consumers. In addition to refunding premiums and interest, the Maryland Insurance Administration fined the companies a combined $50,000.

Source: Maryland Insurance Administration

 

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: East NewsTopics: Erie Insurance Group, MarylandHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

WC Billing Company to Pay $1M for Alleged Overcharges in Massachusetts

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A workers’ comp pharmacy billing company has agreed to pay restitution after allegedly overcharging Massachusetts and a number of cities and towns within the state for prescription drugs through the workers’ comp insurance system.

StoneRiver Pharmacy Solutions Inc. has agreed to pay approximately $1 million in restitution, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley announced this week.

To date, the AG’s Office has recovered more than $9 million in relief through similar investigations of pharmacy retail stores including Walmart and Target Corp., along with major pharmacy chains CVS, Rite-Aid and Walgreens.

The AG’s Office has also obtained recoveries from both Shaw’s Supermarkets and Stop & Shop regarding their workers’ comp municipal prescription businesses. The settlement with StoneRiver is the eighth of its kind.



View the Original article

Shepard Fairey Pleads Guilty to Criminal Charges in AP Copyright Case


Artist Shepard Fairey has plead guilty to a federal criminal charge for destroying documents, falsifying evidence “and other misconduct” in his civil litigation with Associated Press two years ago, the US District Attorney in Manhattan has announced.

“Shepard Fairey went to extreme lengths to obtain an unfair and illegal advantage in his civil litigation

View the Original article


World Press Photo Multimedia Contest Winners Announced

Calif. State Fund Board: Drop Rates 7%

October 5, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

California’s State Compensation Insurance Fund’s board voted on Friday for a 7 percent decrease in its 2013 rates, a move that reflects State Fund’s anticipated savings from a workers’ compensation reform law set to take effect on Jan. 1, 2013.

The rate filing will apply to a rate filing that’s currently under review with the California Department of Insurance. This is State Fund’s first tiered rating plan.

When the review is complete State fund will revise its filing.



View the Original article

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Collector Sues Eggleston Over New Prints of Limited Edition Works

For Elderly Drivers, Families Can Help Decide When to Give Up the Keys

October 3, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle1 Comments

Ruth Lape of Somerset, Pennsylvania, decided to stop driving in 1999, but it wasn’t because of any limitations that she felt she had.

“It was when we moved to Somerset (from Ohio),” she said. “I prefer not to drive because I don’t know Somerset that well and Somerset drivers don’t use turn signals. I joke they don’t make turn signals in Somerset.”

She started driving when she was 17. She is now 72. Fred Lape, her husband, started driving illegally at 12 or 13. He is now 73 and has no plans to stop driving.

“When my wife tells me to stop, I’ll stop,” he said.

Janet Klink, 74, Somerset, also hasn’t considered when she will stop driving. She drove a school bus for five years and a tractor-trailer for 20 years. She had to drive, she said, because her husband also drove a tractor-trailer and if she didn’t drive her children wouldn’t have been able to go anywhere.

“I guess I’ll stop driving when my kids tell me to stop,” Klink said.

It is that advice from family or from a physician that is key to getting older drivers to turn in their keys. A recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine said when doctors warn patients, and tell driving authorities, that the older people may be medically unfit to be on the road, there’s a drop in serious crash injuries among those drivers. The study didn’t report if those drivers drove less or drove more carefully when doctors pointed out the risk.

An 88-year-old Somerset woman drove through a wall at the Leiss Tool & Die plant in Somerset on Thursday, injuring two workers just two days after hitting the front of Saylor Motor Co.’s building. No one was hurt in the Saylor Motor accident. Legally there is no upper age limit in Pennsylvania for driving.

“We do not use age as a determining factor (in someone keeping a driver’s license) nor are we allowed to use it,” said Trooper Stephen Limani, spokesman for Troop A, Greensburg. “The issue is if someone is not up to standards. If we run across someone whose skills are deteriorating, we can submit their name (to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation) for re-testing. If someone is in a crash, it may be they were traveling in an unfamiliar area or should have a night driving restriction. The one (criterion) that can’t be a factor is age.”

The majority of people who are re-tested are referred by their physicians, he said.

Pamela Kane, press safety officer for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation District 9, said in this area, many drivers decide on their own to stop driving.

“It’s an individual decision,” she said. “Honestly, with a lot of older drivers, it is self-regulating. People get to the point where they can’t see or have other problems and decide to stop. As we get older, people’s bone density is less. They are more likely to be injured. Even in a minor crash an older person can be severely injured.”

The notion that older drivers are more likely to get in crashes is not borne out by statistics. On average, drivers in their mid- to late-80s have lower crash rates per mile driven than those in their early 20s, according to AAA’s statistics. None of those groups drive as poorly as teenagers — the nation’s riskiest drivers.

Debbie Baker, project director of the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program, said drivers may sign up for the AARP Driver Safety Class at age 50 and can get a discount on their car insurance beginning at age 55. Some areas also have safe driving programs through AAA. Pennsylvania has a website www.justdrivepa.org that has various recommendations for older drivers.

“I’m at the younger end of the scale, but Tom Brown (the instructor) pointed out about increasing the distance between your car and the car in front of you and I starting applying that advice,” Baker said. “It’s a very beneficial class.”

 

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: East NewsTopics: Pennsylvania, traffic safetyHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Insurance Institute Names 4 Car Models Top Safety Picks

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleCommentsThe Dodge Dart, the model Chrysler is betting on becoming a top-selling small car, was among four new vehicles on the U.S. market to receive a top crash-test rating by an influential safety group on Wednesday.

The 2013 Dart, the first model jointly engineered and designed by Fiat SpA and Chrysler Group LLC, was named a “Top Safety Pick” by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

Three other 2013 models, each one redesigned from previous model years, also earned the top rating: the Hyundai Motor Co. crossover Santa Fe, the Lexus ES 350 midsize luxury sedan, and the Subaru XV Crosstrek hatchback.

The rating means that each vehicle performed well in test crashes evaluating front, side and rear impacts as well as rollovers.

“We had high expectations for the Dart and our engineers delivered,” said Reid Bigland, chief of Chrysler’s Dodge brand.

Of the 180 vehicles IIHS tested for the 2012 model year, 132 were awarded the Top Safety Pick designation, said Russ Rader, spokesman for IIHS.

The IIHS will issue in December its annual list of the safety report for vehicles sold in the U.S. market. These four models were tested after manufacturers requested the tests ahead of the normal IIHS schedule, Rader said.

Each of the four models were introduced to the U.S. market within the last several months.

Hyundai’s Santa Fe sold the most among the new models in September, at 7,378, an increase of 19 percent over last year, a marked improvement over August sales of 4,524, indicating the attractiveness of the newer model.

Hyundai last month said that it aimed to sell 100,000 of the newly remodeled Santa Fe vehicles in the 2013 model year in the U.S. market.

The Lexus ES, from Toyota Motor Corp , sold 6,553 vehicles in September in the U.S. market, up 81 percent from a year ago. A Lexus spokesman said that 80 percent of the cars sold in September were the new 2013 model.

Dart’s September U.S. sales were 5,235, up from August sales of 3,045.

In its first full month of sales, Subaru’s XV Crosstrek’s September sales were 192.

While 73 percent of the models IIHS tested last year received the top safety rating, next year’s test will be more stringent.

The new front crash tests will evaluate a vehicle’s safety in a crash that impacts the front corners. This will be more demanding because most manufacturers create a structure for vehicles that can better absorb middle-front collisions.

In a recent test of 11 luxury midsize cars by using the new corner-front crash evaluation, only two models earned the top safety ranking, the IIHS said.

Subaru is owned by Fuji Heavy Industries of Japan.

(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Richard Chang)

 

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: automobile safety, crash tests, IIHS, insurance institute for highway safety, top car safety picksHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Best Agency to Work For: West

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

This year six agencies in all received top honors as a Best Agency to Work For. The Best Agencies to Work For in 2012 include: Bryan Insurance Agency, Graham, Texas; Meyer & Cook Insurance, Walnut Grove, California; Walker Myers Insurance & Risk Management, Austin, Texas; Herbie Wiles Insurance, St. Augustine, Florida; Hausmann-Johnson Insurance, Madison, Wisconsin; American Insurance Services, Clark, New Jersey.

Insurance Journal wishes to thank the many customer service representatives, account executives, producers, managers and other agency staff who took the time to nominate their independent insurance agency in this year’s survey.

A Place Where All Work TogetherWalnut Grove, California
Meyer & Cook Insurance

A nice office view, lots of raises

View the Original article

Florida Approves 10.8% Rate Hike for Citizens; Also 21.4% for Sinkholes

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Florida regulators have approved a 10.8 percent statewide average homeowners insurance rate increase and a 21.4 percent increase in sinkhole rates for the state-backed property insurer.

Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty announced the new Citizens Property Insurance Corp. rates that hue closely to the so-called glide path that restricts the insurer’s annual rate increase to 10 percent, plus any surcharges.

The new rates will to all new and renewal policies as of Jan. 1, 2013 and to the new and renewal wind-only policies as of Feb. 1, 2013.

Initially, Citizens had requested a statewide average 11.2 percent increase in its homeowner rates.

McCarty said the new rates will take Citizens one step closer to rates charged by the private market while ensuring that no policyholders will face inordinate increases in their premiums.



View the Original article

Study: Poor Roads Cost Texans $23 Billion a Year

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A nonprofit highway industry group says its study found decaying Texas roads are costing motorists more than $23 billion a year.

TRIP is sponsored by insurance companies, highway and transit engineers and builders and other groups. The Washington, D.C.-based group says decaying roads were hitting Houston-area motorists hardest in the pocketbook

View the Original article

Calif. Jury Awards $10.2M To Dirt Bike Rider For Knee Injury

October 4, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle4 Comments

A superior court jury in central California has awarded a man $10.2 million in damages that resulted from dirt bike collision in 2007 with another vehicle.

Attorneys for Stockton resident Daniel Nixon, 50, say he received what they believe to be one of the largest personal-injury verdicts in Stanislaus County history on Thursday, the Modesto Bee reported.

The case was Nixon, D Vs. Snoke, S. The August 2007 incident occurred when Nixon was riding his dirt bike along an unpaved road and crashed into an oncoming pickup. A lawsuit was filed against the truck’s driver, Susan Snoke, 52, of El Dorado County.  Nixon’s attorney argued that Snoke was in the wrong lane, causing them to collide.

Also named in the case was Yamaha of Modesto.

The crash separated Dixon’s knee, damaged the muscle and nerves in his leg, and ruptured the artery that supplies blood to his lower leg. After hospitalization and rehabilitation he returned to his job climbing and servicing wind turbine towers. But one of Nixon’s treating physicians expects that within 20 years he will need an above-the-knee amputation because of damage done in the crash, according to the Modesto Bee report.

The suit against Yamaha of Modesto, as well as one against one of his treating surgeons was dismissed.

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Rental Firms Agree Not to Rent Recalled Cars

September 28, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticle3 CommentsLeading U.S. car rental companies have agreed to back Senate legislation to pull vehicles from the road when recalled for safety defects, lawmakers and the firms said on Thursday.

The legislation brings car rental companies in line with auto dealers, who are barred from selling a car being recalled for a defect until the fault is repaired.

“Today we are closing this loophole in the law once and for all,” Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat and one of the measure’s sponsors, said in a conference call.

The accord was agreed by Hertz, Avis Budget Group Inc., Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc. and Enterprise Holdings’ National and Enterprise units.

Those companies make up more than 93 percent of the rental car market. The bill is also supported by the American Car Rental Association, the Truck Renting and Leasing Association and AAA.

The measure stems from a 2004 accident in which two California women, Raechel and Jacqueline Houck, were killed in a head-on collision with a truck.

They lost control of their Enterprise rental car when a hose rubbed against the catalytic converter and leaked steering fluid, their mother, Cally Houck, said on the call. The model, a Chrysler PT Cruiser, had been recalled for the hose defect.

Houck lobbied for the bill, which is named for the two women. Schumer said he hoped for Senate approval in the lame-duck session following the November general election.

The measure – the Raechel and Jacqueline Houck Safe Rental Car Act of 2012 – would bar the rental or sale of vehicles subject to a safety recall, require rental companies to ground vehicles under a recall and let rental companies rely on temporary repairs identified by manufacturers.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration also can investigate and police rental companies’ recall safety practices.

 

Copyright 2012 Reuters. Click for restrictions.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: National NewsTopics: aut safety defects, recalled rental carsHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Copyright Watch: The Liability-Proof World of Pinterest

Union Study Recommends Changes at N.M. Fire Agencies

September 25, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

A new study concludes that firefighters aren’t capable of responding to calls within nationally recommended time frames in certain parts of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County in New Mexico.

The Albuquerque Journal reported  that the study completed this month by the International Association of Firefighters points to limited manpower, not enough fire trucks and a lack of real-time communication between the Albuquerque and Bernalillo County fire departments as primary reasons for gaps in service.

The report recommends new ladder trucks for each of the departments, additional pumper trucks for Albuquerque Fire Department and three new battalion commander positions for the AFD.

Albuquerque Fire Chief James Breen disputed parts of the union study, saying the department is meeting national safety standards but agreed with other aspects, such as a finding that fire and rescue responses would improve if the city and county merged their dispatch centers.

Although there are efforts under way to improve communications between the two departments, they don’t use the same computer-aided dispatch software and their radio frequencies aren’t synced in real time.

But Breen took exception with some of the study’s findings, saying AFD is meeting the national standards by creatively dispatching the resources it has.

The standards, laid out by the National Fire Protection Association, say ladder trucks should have at least four firefighters aboard and be able to respond to 90 percent of calls within eight minutes.

AFD and Bernalillo County Fire Department staff the ladder trucks with four firefighters about 40 percent of the time, and according to the study, current staffing levels and equipment prevent them from arriving within eight minutes in certain parts of the city and county.

First-responding units that provide basic life-support services, including pumper trucks for fires and ambulances for medical calls, should be able to reach 90 percent of calls for fire and medical help within four minutes, according to the NFPA standard.

Again, AFD and BCFD don’t have the resources to meet the standard in all areas of the city and county, according to the study.

Another study was being completed by a consultant hired by Mayor Richard Berry’s administration to find ways to cut costs in city government. A draft copy of that report from Matrix Consulting Group, obtained by the Journal after a public records request, lays out a different vision of how to move the fire department forward.

As possible places to cut expenses, the Matrix report questions whether AFD is “over-responding” to fires and whether the department needs two paramedics on each rescue unit. It also recommends ending the practice of staffing the AFD dispatch center with sworn firefighters.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: West NewsTopics: New Mexico, wildfireHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

Certified Professional Insurance Agent Classes Return to Indiana

September 25, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

Professional Insurance Agents of Indiana (PIA), a statewide association of local, independent insurance agents, is the newest sponsor of the AIMS Society’s Certified Professional Insurance Agent (CPIA) designation program.

The CPIA program has not been offered in Indiana for several years.

Earning the CPIA designation requires completion of a series of Insurance Success Seminars. Each of the three, one day CPIA workshops teach practical before-, during- and after-the-sale techniques for producers, sales managers, account managers, service staff, and company marketing representatives.

PIA of Indiana will host the first two seminars in the series on Oct. 30 and 31, 2012.

Agents who complete the seminar can earn seven Indiana continuing education credits for each CPIA course.

Source: PIA of Indiana

 

Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetCategories: Midwest NewsTopics: cpia, Indiana, insurance education, pia of indianaHave a hot lead? Email us at newsdesk

View the Original article

The Job Forecast for Photographers is Not Rosy

RSS By David Walker

The publishing industry will continue to shed jobs for photographers over the next eight years, but other industries will pick up some of the slack, and the total number of photographers

View the Original article


Copyright Claim Against Tumblr May Test Immunity of Photo Sharing Sites

RSS by David Walker

A publisher has filed a copyright infringement case against Tumblr, launching what could be a test of legal rights and responsibilities of photo sharing services and their customers. The outcome could determine the limits of protection photo sharing services such as Tumblr, Pinterest, and Twitpic have from claims over infringements committed by their subscribers.

Perfect 10, a San Diego-based publisher of pornography, has filed suit alleging that Tumblr ignored repeated requests to remove photos that had been uploaded to Tumblr without authorization from Perfect 10.

Perfect 10 says it sent six take-down notices to Tumblr during September, October and December, 2011. But Tumblr has for the most part ignored the notices, Perfect 10 alleges. “Tumblr has failed to completely process any of Perfect 10′s

View the Original article


Kodak to Sell Film and Photo Paper Business

Work-Related Fatalities in Louisiana Decline

September 25, 2012Email ThisPrintNewslettersTweetArticleComments

The number of work-related fatalities in 2011 in Louisiana declined to 109, according to a preliminary report by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries. This is down slightly from the revised figure of 111 deaths in 2010, and from 140 deaths in 2009.

The lower numbers are encouraging news for Louisiana, said LWC Executive Director Curt Eysink.



View the Original article