Today’s Headlines – Oct. 14, 2011

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including more status reports on the super committee’s deficit-reduction deliberations.

: Congress Funnels Deficit-Cutting Ideas To 鈥楽upercommittee鈥
When it set up a “supercommittee” to find $1.5 trillion in deficit reduction, Congress also asked other committees to weigh in with advice about what spending to cut. Today is the deadline for those recommendations. And much of the advice so far is about what not to cut (Korte, 10/14).

: Dem Govs Lobby Supercommittee
Fearing deep cuts in federal support to their states, several Democratic governors set up a series of meetings Thursday to lobby supercommittee members and White House officials. Maryland Gov. Martin O鈥橫alley, the chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, and Govs. Mark Dayton of Minnesota and Christine Gregoire of Washington met separately with the Senate Democratic supercommittee members and the House Democratic supercommittee members in the Capitol. Gov. Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, a close ally of President Barack Obama, was expected to join the calls by telephone. Later in the day, the governors had scheduled a meeting with White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley (Allen, 10/13).

For more headlines …

: Dem Governors Huddle With Debt 鈥楽upercommittee鈥 Members
A quartet of Democratic governors is huddling Thursday with members of Congress鈥檚 debt-reduction 鈥渟upercommittee鈥 on Capitol Hill, urging lawmakers on the panel to focus on job creation and avoid making cuts or changes to entitlement programs that would result in a greater burden on the states. 鈥 In a letter to the supercommittee鈥檚 members, O鈥橫alley, who last December was elected to head the DGA, backed the White House鈥檚 call for a debt-reduction package including both cuts and revenue increases. He also urged the panel鈥檚 members not to avoid changes to Medicaid that would increase the burden on state governments (Sonmez, 10/13).

: Blue Shield To Return $283 Million In Excess Profits To Policyholders
Blue Shield of California says it will give customers in the state a $283-million credit on their insurance premiums, saying it is fulfilling a promise to return money to policyholders when its net income exceeds 2% of revenue (Helfand and Henningan, 10/14).

: More Doctors, Nurses Participate In Program That Helps Communities With Little Health-Care Service
As a result of stimulus spending and increased funding through the 2010 health-care law, the number of clinicians participating in a federal program to expand access to care in under-served communities has nearly tripled in the past three years. About 10,000 doctors, nurses and other providers now participate in the National Health Serv卢ice Corps, the highest number since the program was established in 1972, according to figures released by the Obama administration Thursday (Aizenman, 10/13).

: Eating Disorders A New Front In Insurance Fight
People with eating disorders like anorexia have opened up a new battleground in the insurance wars, testing the boundaries of laws mandating equivalent coverage for mental illnesses (Pollack, 10/13).

: House Votes To Stop Abortion Coverage Under New Health Care Law
The House on Thursday returned to an abortion issue that nearly sank President Barack Obama鈥檚 health care law last year with legislation that bars an insurance plan regulated under the new law from covering abortion if any of its customers receive federal subsidies. Providers that offer abortion coverage would have to set up identical plans without abortion coverage to participate in the health insurance exchanges to be set up under the new law. The legislation, which passed 251-172, is unlikely to be considered by the Democratic-led Senate and faces a veto threat from President Barack Obama (10/13).

: House Passes Bill To Block Funding For Abortions
The House approved an anti-abortion bill Thursday that takes aim at the health insurance subsidies in President Barack Obama鈥檚 health care law 鈥 and gives both parties another chance to rally their bases over yet another abortion fight. The 鈥淧rotect Life Act鈥 would ban women from using the health reform law鈥檚 tax subsidies to purchase health plans that cover abortions and would allow hospital and health care providers to refuse to provide abortions if they have objections on grounds of conscience (Nocera, 10/13).

: The Caucus: House Passes Another Bill To Reduce Access to Abortions
House Republicans have had a laserlike focus on dismantling various forms of federal regulations this month, the centerpiece of their job creation agenda. But on Thursday the chamber pivoted back to another topic that has been the subject of various pieces of legislation this year: how to reduce access to abortions though federal health insurance programs (Steinhauer, 10/13).

: Lower Medicaid Dispensing Fees May Pressure Pharmacies
In Rio Grande City, Rene Martinez鈥檚 Starr Pharmacy has one line for Medicaid patients and another for non-Medicaid patients. On some days, most of his clients can be found waiting on the Medicaid line, a testament to the importance of that federal-state health insurance program in this poor city along the Texas-Mexico border 鈥 and to Mr. Martinez鈥檚 bottom line (Cardona, 10/14).

: Brown Vetoes Bill To Extend California Nursing Board
The authority of the California Board of Registered Nursing to license and discipline the state’s nearly 400,000 registered nurses will expire Jan. 1. The powers would have been extended another four years under a seemingly routine “sunset bill” passed by the Legislature. But Brown vetoed the bill over the weekend, saying he objected to a provision that would have added to the state’s pension costs (Sewell, 10/14).

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