Edith Sanford Convenes National Thought Leaders Council

Sioux Falls, SD (PRWEB) June 11, 2013

The Edith Sanford Breast Cancer Foundation is breaking new ground in the nonprofit space by looking to successful entrepreneurs and social innovators to help reach its philanthropic goals. Last week in Sioux Falls, S.D., the Foundation convened the first meeting of its National Thought Leaders Advisory Council, a think tank designed to help formulate fresh new strategies for building grassroots support.

“The Edith Sanford initiative was founded as a catalyst for transformational change in the way we think about and treat breast cancer,” said Kimberly Simpson, president of the Edith Sanford Breast Cancer Foundation. “Part of our success depends on going beyond the mainstream and leveraging the experience, connections and insights of creative, entrepreneurial thinkers from a wide variety of professional backgrounds.”

Edith Sanford stands out because it embraces innovation in everything from its mission to the way it does business, said council member Ron McCray, a private investor and corporate director who has also served as chief administrative officer of Nike, Inc. and as chief legal officer of Kimberly-Clark Corporation. Every for-profit business knows that a culture of creativity and innovation is the key to success, but its unique for a charitable nonprofit to be so nimble and forward thinking.

The distinguished council represents recognized leaders in areas including biotechnology, IT, health care, food, consumer goods, apparel, digital media, finance, and political consulting. Each member was carefully selected to ensure a diversity of experience and perspective that the Foundation will draw on to help identify and maximize engagement, grassroots fundraising and major gift philanthropy opportunities.

In addition to McCray, the council boasts names such as Jan Fields, former president of McDonald’s USA, LLC, who has been named to the Forbes list of The Worlds 100 Most Powerful Women.

“I am very excited about the bold new approach to breast cancer,” said Fields. “I think Edith Sanford is the answer to finally ending this devastating disease.”

Another leader on the council is Craig Arnold, president and CEO of Permara LLC. Arnold previously served as a director of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, where he led initiatives to bring access to computers and the internet to small towns and large cities in the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Chile.

“I believe in Edith Sanford’s approach to ending breast cancer and raising the standard of care for women everywhere. I’m eager to contribute to the success of its mission,” said Arnold.

Council Members:

Ron McCray

McCray is a private investor and corporate director. He previously served as the chief administrative officer of Nike, Inc., and chief legal officer of Kimberly-Clark Corporation. McCray is the minority owner of the Boston Celtics NBA franchise and serves on the boards of Cornell University and the Harvard Law School. By nomination of President Obama and Senate confirmation, he is also a member of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.

Janice (Jan) Fields

Fields is the former president of McDonald’s USA, LLC, and one of the most widely recognized women in business leadership. She currently serves on the boards of St. Louis-based Monsanto, The Field Museum, The Global Board of Ronald McDonald House Charities, and chairs the Board of United Cerebral Palsy. She is also a member of The Chicago Network, an organization of professional women in the upper echelons of business, the arts, government, and academia.

Fields has been named to the Forbes list of The Worlds 100 Most Powerful Women, Fortunes 50 Most Powerful Women in Business list, The Wall Street Journals 50 Women to Watch list, and Crains Chicago Business list of 25 Women to Watch.

Craig Arnold

Arnold is the president and chief executive officer of the technology company Permara LLC and a former director of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, where he led one of the foundations earliest initiatives to bring access to computers and the internet to small towns and large cities in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Chile. Arnold has also served as chief executive officer at Plymouth Energy and has been a board for NPower.

Katie Behnke

Behnke is managing partner and cofounder of The Starboard Group. She is a successful political and fundraising campaign advisor who has worked with a veritable whos who of Colorado politics, including U.S. Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell and Gov. Bill Owens.

Ralph Kauten

Kauten is the chairman and chief executive officer of Quintessence Biosciences, Inc. located in Madison, Wisc. Kauten has served as co-founder and leader of a number of biotechnology companies including Promega Corporation, PanVera Corporation, and Mirus Corporation. He has also been designated as an Entrepreneur of the Year by Ernst and Young.

Clare A. Martorana

Martorana is a digital media executive who has held senior leadership positions with WebMD Health, including the role of senior vice president of partnerships and editor-at-large at WebMD Health, and the senior vice president and general manager of the WebMD Network. Before joining WebMD, she served as chief operating officer at Oncology.com. Martorana’s previous experience includes the positions of vice president and executive producer at CBS HealthWatch by Medscape, where she developed CBS HealthWatch radio and broadcast programming as well as special projects for CBS. Martorana has also worked as an independent film producer at SDR Films and Coleman Parker Productions in New York where she produced numerous feature films and documentaries.

Pierce H. McDowell III

McDowell is a co-founder and current president, co-chairman and co-chief executive officer of South Dakota Trust Company LLC and South Dakota Planning Company LLC. The former is a national trust boutique company for the wealthy based in Sioux Falls, S.D., and the latter a trust/estate planning consulting, marketing and sales firm based in New York City.

Matthew Meskell

Meskell works on operations, product and strategy at a privately-held company based in Silicon Valley whose software enables integrating, analyzing, and visualizing large-scale data. He previously served as a managing director for a multi-billion dollar investment fund dedicated to macro trading strategies. Meskell has also served as a law clerk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and practiced law with a focus on intellectual property disputes.

Catherine Rodewald

Rodewald has served as the president and chief executive officer with Prudential Asset Resources, Inc. and the managing director/chief information officer for Prudential Mortgage Capital Company. Rodewald has also held leadership positions with AMRESCO (international publicly traded diversified financial services corporation) and Ernst and Young (formerly Kenneth Leventhal & Company). She was also formerly president of the Komen affiliate in Dallas.

Dwayne Spradlin

Spradlin is the chief executive officer of Health Data Consortium, a Washington, DC-based nonprofit public private partnership advocating and enabling improvements in health and health care through better use of health data. He previously served as president and chief executive officer of InnoCentive, the pioneer in open innovation and crowdsourcing, president of Hoovers Online, president and chief operations officer of StarCite Inc., senior vice president at VerticalNet Inc., and director at PriceWaterhouseCoopers, where he spent ten years delivering technology and strategy solutions to Fortune 500 clients.

Spradlin recently coauthored The Open Innovation Marketplace, published by FT Press; and his article Are You Solving the Right Problem? was pu

Experts embrace new US strategy on nuclear waste

Warrendale, PA, USA and New York, NY, USA (PRWEB) March 19, 2013

The re-awakening of a United States strategy to bury nuclear waste deep underground has won the support of experts, who claim it has always been the best option for dealing with the countrys growing nuclear waste stores.

Prachi Patel’s article, “United States launches new direction to manage nuclear waste”, http://journals.cambridge.org/MRSEQPatel, in the March 2013 edition of Energy Quarterly (EQ) in MRS Bulletin recounts the obstacles on the road to successful nuclear waste storage so far and explores what happens next. EQ is published in MRS Bulletin by Cambridge University Press for the Materials Research Society (MRS). This Energy Sector Analysis article, for which Rod Ewing, Professor in the Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences at the University of Michigan, served as Feature Editor, concludes that science is ready with solutions but questions whether political obstacles and public mistrust can be overcome.

Since the first nuclear power plant opened in the US in 1958, plus the waste from the countrys nuclear weapons programs, the problem of what to do with the accumulating nuclear waste has never been successfully addressed. The result is that 70,000 metric tons of spent fuel now sits marooned at power plants, contained either in swimming pool-like structures or in metal or concrete casks.

This waste contains nearly 40 billion Curies of radioactivity, hundreds of times the amount released from the Chernobyl accident and an amount expected to double by 2040. Storage of this type is safe only up to 100 years and poses a continual threat of leakage.

The main previous strategy to deal with the situation involved creating a geologic repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada. However, after two decades and $ 15 billion spent, the project hit social and political buffers resulting in the Obama administrations decision to shut it down in 2010 and set up a Blue Ribbon commission to explore new options. The commission responded last year by reiterating that a geological repository was the only viable solution. The Obama administration has now endorsed a plan for a pilot interim storage facility estimated to begin operation in 2021, a larger interim facility to accept waste by 2025 and finally, a geological repository operational by 2048.

The international scientific community agrees with the US approach of storing nuclear waste hundreds of meters below ground. The fuel needs to be converted to the right form, be enclosed in multilayer containers and then placed underground in boreholes in suitable geology.

However, what sounds like a straightforward process is fraught with complexity. The “host rock” can change over time and the researchers’ most vital current task is to estimate how well a repository will isolate radioactive waste for hundreds of thousands of years. Exposure to water and air are the two big dangers. Countless materials and geological studies will now be required as well as highly complex computer modeling.

And there are still many social and political objections to be overcome. While scientists now have the solution they believe to be the right one it remains to be seen how politicians and the public will react to this latest chapter in the nuclear waste debate.

Read the full article here: http://journals.cambridge.org/MRSEQPatel.

Obama quotes, part 1

Get to know the real Barrack Obama by listening to his words. Think is this what you stand for, is this what you believe. 90% of this stuff is just flat out lies and do you want to elect a president that does nothing but lie? part 2 link: www.youtube.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Attorney Halls SSA Prediction Comes True


Pikeville, KY (PRWEB) October 26, 2012

Attorney Halls SSA Prediction Comes True

Nearly one year ago prominent Social Security Attorney Charles T. Hall wrote that he was “skeptical” that an investigation into the Huntington, West Virginia Social Security Hearing Office would “ever come up with evidence of serious criminal offense. Hall’s prediction, made in his popular blog on Social Security (socsecnews.blogspot.com), has come true.

Last month a U.S. Senate subcommittee issued a report after conducting an extensive 18-month investigation into alleged problems within the Social Security Administration, both in West Virginia and elsewhere. The subcommittee investigation was commissioned by Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla) after a series of Wall Street Journal articles on disabled Social Security alleged problems.

The 136-page Senate report makes no allegations of wrongdoing. Instead, the report focuses primarily on its conclusion that certain Social Security benefit claims are being granted by the SSA without properly addressing insufficient, contradictory and incomplete evidence. The report cites examples to support its findings. In particular, the report discusses Judge Howard OBryan of Oklahoma City, who it says awarded benefits for about 90 percent of over 5,400 cases from just 2007 to 2009, the majority of which were decided on-the-record which means without the need for a hearing. The average lifetime disability award costs taxpayers $ 300,000. These concerns prompted Senator Coburn to ask during a hearing on this issue whether benefits [are] going only to those who are supposed to be getting to them?

Overall, the report concluded that the Social Security Administration improperly awarded benefits in more than 25% of the cases it reviewed, which were decided between 2006 and 2010. This does not mean that these claimants were not entitled to benefits but rather that, according to the report, their claims were not sufficiently evaluated prior to an award of benefits. The report also found that since January 2009 the Social Security Administration has placed another 5.9 million Americans on disability. This may be as a result of the difficulty of finding work in a sluggish economy.

One reason cited by the report for the Social Security Administration’s insufficient process was that some ALJs appeared to assign more weight to medical reports and records from claimants attorneys than to the doctors who performed reviews and evaluations for the Social Security Administration. The report stated, however, that sometimes these attorney-provided medical reports were no more than one- or two-page forms.

The report also set out problems with the quality of certain hearings that the Senate staff examined. The report found that some judges held hearings that were so short that it would have been difficult to adequately assess the credibility of the claimant. Further, in some of these hearings questions were only asked by the claimants attorney and no questions were asked by the ALJ.

The Social Security Administration has three ways that benefits can be awarded. The first of these ways is to find that the claimant meets or equals a medical listing. Medical listings do not permit much flexibility for the ALJs as the standards for medical listings provide specific medical requirements that are met or not met. The second of these ways is to use what are called the medical- vocational guidelines. The medical-vocational guidelines consider the claimants chronological age in combination with the claimants vocational history. The medical-vocational guidelines were established to obviate the need for vocational experts in many cases. The medical-vocational guidelines give great weight to the age of a claimant. A claimant between the ages of 50 to 55 years of age is considered an individual closely approaching advanced age. A claimant between the ages of 55 to 60 years of age is considered to be of advanced age. The underlying notion of the medical-vocational guidelines is that claimants with more chronological years find themselves with less job opportunities. The third of these ways is based on vocational factors. Vocational factors primarily include the work history and age of the claimant in combination with the claimants medical problems. In order for the ALJ to grant benefits because of the vocational factors the use of a vocational expert is generally required at the claimants hearing. This third ways allows significant discretion on the part of the ALJ whether to grant or deny benefits.

The report indicated that the Social Security Administration was using the medical-vocational guidelines four times more frequently than the medical listings. In the past, the ratio of cases granted on the medical-vocational listings was not so high.

The report suggested to the Social Security Administration that it should consider having its own lawyers at disability hearings. The report indicated that the Social Security Administration having its own lawyers at disability hearings would assist in the ALJs considering all of the evidence and providing more thorough decisions. This has been tried by the Social Security Administration in the past, however, and was not successful. The ALJ is already expected to consider the SSA’s interests during the hearing.

In the early 1980s, the Social Security Administration initiated a pilot project at selective hearing offices throughout the United States to test the effect of the Social Security Administration being represented at hearings. In a 1985 congressional hearing the Social Security Administration released preliminary information from the pilot project that suggested that ALJ awards made in error could be cut by 50% if the Social Security Administration were represented at appeal hearings. The Social Security Administration halted the project because of a court injunction issued in July 1986. The court concluded that the entire notion of having the Social Security Administration represented at the hearing violated procedural due process. In May 1987 the Social Security Administration concluded that the pilot project should be halted permanently because the administration resources committed to it could be better used elsewhere.

The report discusses decisions from several different ALJs. One of whom is former ALJ David B. Daugherty. Allegations have been made regarding Daugherty of judicial wrongdoing. From 2006 through 2008, the report found that Judge Daugherty rendered 3,645 cases approving benefits in the vast majority of these cases. This prompted complaints from some in the legal community about the volume of cases brought before the judge by one lawyer. The lawyer, Eric C. Conn, was the third highest paid lawyer by the Social Security Administration.

The report found fault with the thoroughness of ALJ Daughertys decisions but did not report any findings suggesting legal wrongdoing by Judge Daugherty. The report found fault with some practices of attorneys who appeared before Judge Daughtery, but the report did not make any findings suggesting wrongdoing by Attorney Conn.

The Social Security Administrations spokesperson Mark Hinkle has stated that [w]e share the subcommittees concern that a small number of judges have failed our expectations with regard to a balanced application of the law, proper documentation, proper hearings and proper judicial conduct[.] Further, Hinkle said that the Social Security Administration does recognize the need for further improvement and are working hard toward that goal[.]

Michael J. Astrue is the present Commissioner of the Social Security Administration and was sworn in on February 12, 2007 for a six-year term that expires on January 19, 2013. Astrue was appointed by Former President George W. Bush. Commissioner Astrue has been praised for succeeding in significantly reducing the Social Security Admin

Pres. Obama quotes “The Valkyries” by Paulo Coelho

In the video above, Presiden Barack Obama quotes “The Valkyries” by Paulo Coelho : ‘Our two nations face many challenges. On the road ahead, we will certainly encounter many obstacles. But in the end, it is our history that gives us hope for a better tomorrow. It is the knowledge that the men and women who came before us have triumphed over greater trials than these — that we live in places where ordinary people have done extraordinary things. It’s that sense of possibility, that sense of optimism that first drew pioneers to this New World. It’s what binds our nations together as partners in this new century. It’s why we believe, in the words of Paul Coelho, one of your most famous writers, “With the strength of our love and our will, we can change our destiny, as well as the destiny of many others.” Muito obrigado. Thank you. And may God bless our two nations. Thank you very much. ‘ Source : www.whitehouse.gov