Monday, 06 September 2010
Home
article thumbnail Consumer Voices Missing from VA Healthcare Panel
Tuesday, 24 August 2010 | Olympia Meola | Richmond Times Dispatch

The composition of Virginia's new health-care advisory panel is causing some consumer advocates heartburn. Gov. Bob McDonnell's council is tasked with helping the state prepare...

Afghanistan/Iraq/Iran

article thumbnail Norman Solomon - Progressives and Obama
Friday, 09 July 2010 | Real News Network

More at The Real News

Finance Reform

article thumbnail The New Finance Bill: A Mountain of Legislative Paper, a Molehill of Reform
Friday, 16 July 2010 | Robert Reich | Robert Reich's Blog

As if to prove him wrong, Goldman Sachs simultaneously announced it had struck a deal with federal prosecutors to pay $550 million to settle federal claims it misled investor — a sum...

Restore Our Vote

article thumbnail An End to Prison Gerrymandering
Tuesday, 24 August 2010 | NY Times Editorial

Gov. David Paterson of New York took a stand for electoral fairness earlier this month when he signed legislation that bans prison-based gerrymandering - the cynical practice of counting...

Citizens United

article thumbnail Citizens United against Citizens United
Friday, 16 April 2010 | Public Citizen

  Visit www.DontGetRolled.org to learn more!  

 
 
Court Throws Out AG UVA Suit

Monday, 30 August 2010 | ACLU Virginia

article thumbnail ACLU of Virginia filed amicus, urged UVA to fight AG's demands Charlottesville, VA- An Albemarle County Circuit Court judge today ruled that the University of Virginia  is...
+ Full Story

Rights Groups Ask Court to Reject AG's Demand for Records of University of Virginia Climate Science...

Tuesday, 17 August 2010 | ACLU Virginia

article thumbnail Amicus brief supports university's efforts to protect academic freedom Oral arguments in case to take place in Charlottesville on Friday Charlottesville, VA--Four...
+ Full Story

Jeff Barnett Seeks PDA VA Endorsement

Monday, 16 August 2010 | Andrea Miller

article thumbnail   Jeff Barnett is running for U.S. House of Representatives in the Virginia 10th District; Jeff is currently the Democratic nominee and he is seeking a PDA Virginia State...
+ Full Story

Rick Waugh Seeks PDA National Endorsement

Thursday, 05 August 2010 | Rick Waugh for Congress

article thumbnail Candidate Rick Waugh has requested National endorsement for his U.S. House of Representatives race against Republican incumbent Eric Cantor. On Sunday, August 2, 2010 Rick received the...
+ Full Story

Obama Administration Applies Stupak Amendment to High Risk Pools

Friday, 16 July 2010 | Jessica Arons

article thumbnail PCIPs are temporary health insurance pools that states or the federal government must establish or expand in every state to cover people who do not currently qualify for individual health insurance...
+ Full Story

Virginia pilot program adds Amtrak train to link Richmond and the District

Friday, 09 July 2010 | Jennifer Buske | Washington Post

article thumbnail Operated by Amtrak and funded by the commonwealth, the train will start July 20, leaving Richmond at 7 a.m. and stopping at Ashland, Fredericksburg, Quantico, Woodbridge and Alexandria before...
+ Full Story

IN DEFENSE OF HELEN THOMAS - on apologizing to apologists

Tuesday, 08 June 2010 | Paul Jay

article thumbnail Helen Thomas is the dean of the White House Press corp.  She has a fifty-year history of tough-minded journalism and is one of the very, very few journalists in the mainstream press who has had...
+ Full Story

ACLU Threatens Legal Challenge to Anti-Solicitation Ordinance Proposed by Herndon Town Council

Tuesday, 08 June 2010 | ACLU

article image Herndon, VA -- The ACLU of Virginia today informed members of Herndon's Town Council that the organization is prepared to mount a court challenge if the town passes a proposed anti-solicitation...
+ Full Story

New York Times Hails Webb Criminal Justice Commission

Tuesday, 11 May 2010 | Sen. James Webb (VA)

article thumbnail Introduced by Senator Webb in March 2009, the National Criminal Justice Commission Act creates a blue-ribbon bipartisan commission charged with undertaking an 18-month comprehensive review of...
+ Full Story

 

Environment

article thumbnail Cuccinelli Loses Round 1 on Climate Change
Monday, 16 August 2010 | Glen Besa | VA Sierra Club

  By now you may have heard the US EPA has dismissed VA Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli's petition challenging the EPA's efforts to regulate greenhouse gases. ...

Accountability

article thumbnail Obama Nominee for Justice Withdraws
Friday, 09 April 2010 | Associated Press

The Senate Judiciary Committee had recommended Johnsen's confirmation on party-line votes. But several Republicans objected to her sharp criticisms of terrorist interrogation policies under...

 

Net Neutrality

article thumbnail Internet Freedom and Innovation at Risk
Sunday, 11 April 2010 | ACLU Newsletter

 
 
PDA - Virginia
Consumer Voices Missing from VA Healthcare Panel PDF Print E-mail
Written by Olympia Meola | Richmond Times Dispatch   

The composition of Virginia's new health-care advisory panel is causing some consumer advocates heartburn.

Gov. Bob McDonnell's council is tasked with helping the state prepare for implementing the massive federal health-care reform and also with overseeing a broad inspection of the state's system of care.

The 24 people doing that work include health-care professionals, insurance executives, legislators and members of the business community. Missing at the table, some say, are the consumers.

"The people who provide the services have one perspective and the people who use the services have another perspective," said Sarah Williams, a Bristol resident who supported the federal health-care legislation. "I don't think that with a one-sided panel that the consumer interest will be reflected."

Williams recently wrote a letter to the editor of her newspaper calling for consumers to be added to the Virginia Health Reform Initiative Advisory Council -- a cry echoed in other corners of the state.

"I understand that the administration wanted it to consist largely of people with day-to-day expertise on implementation and health-care delivery, but it seems like they're really missing the mark with not having uninsured and underinsured people who have not been able to get care as part of the panel from the get-go," said Mira Signer, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Virginia.

"Those are the people who can really describe very accurately what's really wrong with the system, what's missing, what really needs to be addressed and what works well."

Dr. Bill Hazel, secretary of health and human resources, serves as the panel's chairman. He said yesterday that he thinks the administration has done a thorough job of bringing together people with different perspectives, including that of the patient.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 August 2010 10:51
 
An End to Prison Gerrymandering PDF Print E-mail
Written by NY Times Editorial   
Share/Save/Bookmark

Gov. David Paterson of New York took a stand for electoral fairness earlier this month when he signed legislation that bans prison-based gerrymandering - the cynical practice of counting prison inmates as "residents," to pad the size of legislative districts. The new law, which requires that prison inmates be counted at their homes, deserves to be emulated all across the country.

Prison-based gerrymandering mattered little when inmate populations were small. But by the 1990s, when more than a million people nationally were behind bars, lawmakers had perfected the art of inflating the political clout of underpopulated areas by drawing legislative districts around prisons.

More than a dozen New York counties with large prisons already take inmates out of the count when they draw districts for county offices. According to an analysis by the Prison Policy Initiative, a New York-based research group, seven New York State Senate districts could now have trouble meeting federal population requirements, which means that those districts will have to be drawn along different lines.

The new law could lead to a political realignment in places like Rome, the upstate city where inmates at the Mohawk and Oneida correctional facilities make up about half the residents of one City Council district. Currently each resident there has twice the voting power of a resident who lives elsewhere in that city.

Republican politicians who represent upstate prison districts have predictably tried to portray the new law as a power grab by New York City Democrats. But only about half of the nearly 60,000 people held in New York prisons come from the city while nearly 40 percent of inmates are from upstate areas. They will now be rightfully counted in the places they come from - and to which they will eventually return. By upholding the principle of one person, one vote, the new law will benefit citizens in all parts of the state.

Link to Original Article

Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 August 2010 08:39
 
Cuccinelli Loses Round 1 on Climate Change PDF Print E-mail
Written by Glen Besa | VA Sierra Club   
Share/Save/Bookmark

 

By now you may have heard the US EPA has dismissed VA Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli's petition challenging the EPA's efforts to regulate greenhouse gases.  Cuccinelli's challenge will proceed in federal court, where we remain hopeful his case, unfortunately brought at taxpayers' expense, will be quickly dismissed.  All the snow this past winter may have been an inspiration for our Attorney General who can't tell weather from climate change, although he seems to ignore all the record breaking heat this summer.

 
Virginia Suit Against Health Care Law Moves Forward PDF Print E-mail
Written by John Schwartz   
Share/Save/Bookmark

 

A federal judge has refused to block a challenge to the Obama administration’s health care law brought by the Commonwealth of Virginia.

The administration had asked the judge, Henry E. Hudson of Federal District Court, to dismiss the challenge by Virginia’s attorney general, Ken T. Cuccinelli II.

Mr. Cuccinelli had argued that Congress, in passing a measure that requires people to buy insurance or face a penalty, exceeded its limits under the Constitution’s Commerce Clause and tax powers. Mr. Cuccinelli had also argued that the federal law violated a state law, the Virginia Health Care Freedom Act, which declares that residents cannot be forced to buy health insurance.

Mr. Cuccinelli is one of 21 state officials fighting the health care law, and this is the first ruling by a federal court on the important question of whether states have the standing to sue.

Monday’s opinion does not address the merits of the health care law. It has no direct effect on the other state challenges, but it may influence the other judges.

In its briefs, the federal government argued that “this court would have to make new law and ignore decades of settled precedent” and “step beyond the proper role of the judiciary” to claim jurisdiction and block the legislation. Case after case has shown that the government’s powers to regulate interstate commerce and to create taxes reach far.

The federal government argued that Virginia had no standing to sue over the law, and that it had not stated a case it could win.

Judge Hudson, who was appointed to the federal bench by President George W. Bush, disagreed. In a 32-page opinion, he wrote that the law “radically changes the landscape of health insurance coverage in America.” 

Last Updated on Friday, 06 August 2010 10:18
 
ACLU Advises Law Enforcement - Ignore Cuccinelli PDF Print E-mail
Written by Andrea Miller   

 

Concerned that the Attorney General's recent opinion allowing police to inquire about an individual's immigration status will lead to racial profiling and illegal detentions, we sent a letter to Virginia police chiefs and sheriffs telling them not to follow Cuccinelli's advice.  The letter refutes the Attorney General's reasoning, which is legally faulty.

Gabriel Walters
Legal Fellow
gwalters@acluva.org

Richmond, VA--The ACLU of Virginia yesterday sent a letter to Virginia police chiefs and sheriffs telling them not to follow a recent opinion from Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli on investigating immigration status, because the opinion is legally faulty and would lead to adverse public safety consequences.

Cuccinelli's July 30 opinion states that Virginia law enforcement officials have the authority to question individuals about their immigration status during a stop or arrest to the same extent as Arizona law enforcement under a recently passed law.

Yesterday's letter from ACLU of Virginia legal director Rebecca Glenberg notes that Cuccinelli's opinion cites no Virginia law for the proposition that Virginia police have the authority to inquire about an individual's immigration status.  He simply asserts that such authority exists.

Last Updated on Friday, 06 August 2010 10:19
 
Voting Behind Bars PDF Print E-mail
Written by Linda Greenhouse   
Race, the Supreme Court, voting rights act

Another public conversation about race may be the last thing the Obama administration wants, but thanks to the Supreme Court, one is very likely on the way.

It has been nearly three months since the court “invited” — that is to say, ordered — Solicitor General Elena Kagan to “express the views of the United States” on whether laws that take away the right to vote from people in prison or on parole can be challenged under the Voting Rights Act as racially discriminatory.

The order came in a case from Massachusetts, Simmons v. Galvin, an appeal by prison inmates challenging a 10-year-old state constitutional amendment that stripped them of the right to vote while incarcerated. They seek Supreme Court review of a ruling, issued a year ago by the federal appeals court in Boston, that Congress never intended the Voting Rights Act to apply in prison. The federal government was not involved in the case. Now the administration — presumably under the direction of whomever President Obama names to succeed Ms. Kagan as solicitor general — has to come up with a position.
 
«StartPrev12345678910NextEnd»

Page 1 of 21

redEVENT Latests

Upcoming Events

Video

John Nichols on PDA
Rating:
Category: 
Chip Jennings on Palestine (Part 1)
Rating:
Category:Middle East

Latest group walls

  • Rethinking Afghanistan Welcome to our Wall! For a start to discussion, I've located the Foreign Affairs article by Rubin ...
  • Restore Our Vote Virginia is one of only two states to not restore voting rights to any felon after completion of the...
  • Restore Our Vote On April 28th PDA has organized a lobby day in Washington DC for the Democracy Restoration Act. We w...

Activity Stream

5 months ago
Andrea Miller added a new wall post in the group, Restore Our Vote Apr 09
6 months ago
Myron and Andrea Miller are now friends Mar 10
Brenda Hill joined the group PDA Steering Committee Feb 12
Brenda Hill joined the group Rethinking Afghanistan Feb 12
Brenda Hill joined the group Restore Our Vote Feb 12
7 months ago
Marcello Rollando and Andrea Miller are now friends Jan 13
Marcello Rollando joined the group Healthcare Jan 13
Marcello Rollando joined the group Restore Our Vote Jan 13
 

Online Users

0 users and 4 guests online | Show All

Latest Members

Cost Of War




click here to learn more about the cost of war in your State or County.

Corporations Are Not People

Syndication

feed-image Feed Entries

Follow PDA Virginia

Facebook Twitter

Follow PDA National

Facebook Flickr Twitter YouTube

Rokin Gallery Module

Add Site to FavoritesAdd Page to FavoritesMake HomepagePrint This PageShare This PageSave Page as PDFEmail This Page

Subscribe Newsletter

Newsletter
Test


Receive HTML?

Statistics

Members : 67
Content : 214
Web Links : 35
Content View Hits : 33611

Support PDA

cheap web hosting

Share PDA Virginia

Facebook Share

Share on facebook

Healthcare

article thumbnai
31 December 1969

Books and Film

article thumbnailBooks on Ex-Felon Disenfranchisement
08 March 2010
To learn more about the history and societal problems of ex-felon disenfrancisement the following books are available from Amazon.com. The Disenfranchisement of Ex-Felonsby Elizabeth HullIn fourteen states some or all former prisoners who have completed their sentences, their paroles, and the...

Restore our Vote

article thumbnailDemocracy Restoration Act of 2009
24 February 2010
Democracy Restoration Act of 2009 - Declares that the right of a U.S. citizen to vote in any election for federal office shall not be denied or abridged because that individual has been convicted of a criminal offense unless, at the time of the election, such individual is serving a felony sentence...

In the General Assembly

article thumbnailElectronic Privacy Law in Need of Update
11 April 2010
In 1986, there was no World Wide Web, nobody carried a cell phone, and the president was a man born in 1911. That was the year that the statute that protects the privacy of your electronic life—email, search terms, cloud computing, cell phone location records, postings to Facebook—was passed...