Sunday, May 20, 2012

Addressing Violence Against Native Women in the Violence Against Women Act Reauthorization

Last week, the House Judiciary Committee considered legislation to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA).  However, the bill that came out of the House Judiciary Committee failed to include a key provision which has already been accepted by the Senate on a bipartisan basis and is essential to protecting Native American women.  

Since 1994, the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) has been an essential tool in helping to protect victims of domestic and sexual violence.  Since the passage of the Act, annual incidents of domestic violence have dropped by more than 60 percent. Over the years, Congress has continued its commitment to addressing violence against women by working with advocates, law enforcement officials, court systems, and victims in order to build on what we have learned and make improvements to the Act in each subsequent reauthorization.  This was recently demonstrated by the Senate’s VAWA reauthorization bill (S. 1925), introduced by Senators Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Mike Crapo (R-ID) which  passed last month with strong bipartisan support. 

The Leahy-Crapo VAWA reauthorization bill addresses many pressing issues facing all victims of domestic violence, including those in Indian Country.  Rates of domestic violence against Native women in Indian Country are now among the highest in the United States and the Leahy-Crapo bill directly confronts this epidemic.    

Tribal police, prosecutors, and courts have had significant success in combating crimes of domestic violence committed by Indians in Indian Country, but tribes cannot prosecute a non-Indian, even if he lives on the reservation and is married to a tribal member.  As a result, all too often, non-Indian men who batter their wives or girlfriends go unpunished.  One provision of the Leahy-Crapo bill addresses this legal gap by providing tribes with concurrent authority to hold domestic violence perpetrators accountable for their crimes against Native women – regardless of the perpetrator’s race.  

Under the bill’s tribal-jurisdiction provisions:

Tribes could prosecute non-Indians only for domestic violence, dating violence, and violations of protection orders.  Crimes between two strangers, or between two non-Indians, or committed by a person with no ties to the tribe, would not be covered.Federal- and state-court jurisdiction over domestic violence would be unaffected.Defendants would effectively have the same rights in tribal court as in state court, including due-process rights, an indigent defendant’s right to free appointed counsel meeting Federal constitutional standards, and the right to an impartial jury with the jury pool reflecting a fair cross-section of the entire community, including non-Indians.Defendants could protect their rights by appealing their convictions to a tribal court and filing habeas petitions in Federal court.

Unfortunately, Republican leaders in the House have taken a different approach, with the introduction of a VAWA reauthorization bill (H.R. 4970) authored by Rep. Sandy Adams (R-FL) which excludes these common-sense provisions that would improve the effectiveness and efficiency of tribal justice systems in combatting violence against Native women.   On Tuesday, on a narrow vote of 17-15, House Republicans passed this measure out of the House Judiciary Committee, with one Republican voting with Democrats to oppose this because of the exclusion of these tribal protections.

The Adams bill adds burdensome, counter-productive requirements that compromise the ability of service providers to reach victims, lacks important protection and services for LGBT victims, weakens resources for victims living in subsidized housing, and eliminates important improvements to address the response to dating violence and sexual assault on college campuses.  Additionally, among the most troubling components of this bill are those that jettison and drastically undercut existing and important protections that remain vital to the safety and protection of battered immigrant victims. 

The long-standing bipartisan commitment to ending domestic violence must continue to be supported and strengthened to better protect all victims from violence, abuse, and exploitation.  We urge the House of Representatives to join with the Senate in passing a bipartisan VAWA reauthorization bill that protects all victims.  

Jodi Gillette is Senior Policy Advisor for Native American Affairs and Lynn Rosenthal is the White House Advisor on Violence Against Women.


View the original article here

Tech at Night: Pirate Bay DDoSed by copyright defenders? Net Neutrality continued. Issa takes on another treaty.

Tech at Night

Earlier we covered Microsoft’s new Pirate Pay, which I said sounded like a DoS attack against copyright infringers. Others agree and say it may be illegal, which is true. Sure enough, Pirate Bay is under DDoS attack. Has Pirate Pay gone rogue? Cybersecurity and copyright, all in one issue.

This week Less Government hosted a debate on tech issues in DC, and it got feisty at times. I found it fascinating though. Gigi Sohn and Andrew Schwartzman (Thomas Gideon was detained and missed much of the fun) on the left were constantly talking about how they don’t favor big government, they support only minimalist regulation to preserve a competitive, free market, and all that good stuff. They went to great lengths to sound centrist. I believe they also revealed a strategy of fighting one issue at a time, separately, whether the individual arguments conflict or not. This lets them advance the ball any way they can.

Seton Motley, Phil Kerpen, and Andrew Moylan were less conciliatory. They were aggressively vocal about a small government perspective, and in particular Kerpen was a beast on offense against Net Neutrality. This kind of passion and insistence on core principles may make it tougher to sever fights to build winning single-issue coalitions, but it keeps us consistent. I think we need to be mindful of the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. We could never build a coalition like Save the Internet, as the radicals did for Net Neutrality.

But Net Neutrality is still technically in effect, and will be unless and until the courts throw out the Open Internet order. As long as it’s there, it’s worth making strong arguments against it, such as Richard Bennett’s. It’s also worth noting that content-based services like Dish’s ad skipping could be considered non-neutral and illegal innovation if applied to the Internet.

Remember the ACTA treaty, negotiated in secret that threatened to be a global SOPA? Well, some appear to be say ing that the Trans-Pacific Partnership has similar provisions, or at least threatens to. So Darrell Issa is publishing key portions of the treaty for public scrutiny. Interesting.

Ron Wyden, like me and early opponent of SOPA and Protect IP, has come out against the Lieberman-Collins cybersecurity bill favored by the President. And, credit where it’s due: so has Al Franken, though both do so on privacy grounds, not power-grab grounds. But, referencing the above discussion of single-issue coalitions, I’m not going to complain, and instead will question whether a Democrat bill can pass when it’s losing both tech centrist Ron Wyden and reliable lefty Al Franken. Seriously: Obama has lost Franken on this issue. Wow.

On the Republican side, I sounded the alarm that Jon Kyl and Roy Blunt may be trying to form a Gang of Four to undermine the John McCain-led Republican team against Lieberman-Collins, and instead push a ‘compromise.’ That meeting has been put off to allow McCain and co. to attend and presumably to pitch the virtues of the SECURE IT alternative bill. I’m glad.

House Republicans question whether LightSquared was a victim of FCC’s troublesome, opaque practices as Chuck Grassley has moved on from LightSquared as his target to Google. This is remarkable. I remember when I’d make pro-LightSquared comments and get dogpiled by people insisting LS was the new Solyndra. Now, there seems to be a chance on this issue, to recognize how disappointing it is that LightSquared can’t add its technological distinctiveness to our own national 4G market, and raise the bar of competition.

I join these calls for spectrum to be freed up. Especially as FCC goes out of its way to destroy the secondary market for spectrum, in all its forms, we need a way for spectrum to be allocated to firms for faster, newer wireless technologies.

Google’s defeat in the Java/Android case goes to the damages phase, despite claims that Google didn’t really lose yet. I’m honestly shocked at how much defense Google gets even from the right, when nobody denies that Google lifted heavily from Java, and even hired former Java people to clone it for Android’s virtual machine technology.


View the original article here

Infographic: How Refinancing Can Help Families

Ed. Note: This post was originally published on Treasury Notes.

Today, millions of Americans who are current on their mortgage payments cannot refinance at historically-low interest rates. The President is proposing legislation that would allow more homeowners to refinance. Under the President’s plan, they would have two refinancing options.

Check out what those options are in this infographic (click here or on the image below to see the full infographic):

How Refinancing Can Help Families (May 11, 2012) Jenni LeCompte is Assistant Secretary of Public Affairs at the Treasury Department.

View the original article here

Defiant NLRB ‘Determined To Move Forward’ With Ambush Union Elections

Ambush elections could be reinstated 'within a week or two'...

On Monday, when the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia smacked down the Obama NLRB’s new “ambush” election procedures, the court made clear that the union-controlled labor board overstepped its bounds by imposing its new rules without a proper quorum (as required under a U.S. Supreme Court case).

That, however, has not deterred the NLRB’s chairman (and union attorney) Mark Pearce from vowing to find a way to re-impose the ambush election procedure on America’s union-free workplaces.

According to a press release issued Tuesday, the NLRB chief stated:

“We continue to believe that the amendments represent a significant improvement in our process and serve the public interest by eliminating unnecessary litigation,” he said. “We are determined to move forward.” [Emphasis added.]

As the NLRB’s ambush elections were established without a proper quorum, the NLRB may end up simply re-voting on the issue using a quorum comprised of President Obama’s constitutionally-questionable recess appointments.

That re-vote could happen within a week or two, according to Industrial Relations Professor Gary Chaison.

According to the NLRB’s press release, in the two weeks that the Board’s ambush election procedures were in place, there were “about” 150 election petitions filed.

Given that there were 1595 elections in all of 2011, the 150 election petitions filed over the two-week period indicate that unions are relying on ambush elections in order to target more unsuspecting employers, and it’s easy to see why:

Unions win 87 percent of elections held 15 days or less after a request, a rate that falls to 58 percent when the vote takes place after 36 to 40 days, according to a February report by Bloomberg Government. [Emphasis added.]

With the union-appointees in control of the National Labor Relations Board, this week’s victory over the NLRB’s ambush elections may be short-lived.

_____________

“Truth isn’t mean. It’s truth.”
Andrew Breitbart (1969-2012)

Cross-posted on LaborUnionReport.com


View the original article here

By the Numbers: $1 Billion

Thursday is the fourth day of National Women’s Health Week. Women often play a leading role in making medical decisions for their families, but their own health needs are often unmet, which is why President Obama worked to make health care more accessible and affordable for women across the country through his health reform law, the Affordable Care Act.

For example, women who purchase health insurance on the individual market pay an additional $1 billion each year because insurance companies charge them more than men, simply because of their gender. Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, health insurers will be prohibited from discriminating against women by charging higher premiums.

President Obama’s health reform law also requires new health insurance plans to cover preventive services such as mammograms, pap smears, and well-woman visits with no co-pay or deductible. Because of this provision in the Affordable Care Act, more than 20.4 million women with private health insurance have received preventive health services at no additional cost.

For more information:


View the original article here

Watch Live: Ambassador Rice and Nick Kristof Discuss Foreign Policy in a Google+ Hangout

Today, join Ambassador Susan E. Rice and New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof as they break ground on the frontier of social media and U.S. foreign policy. In a live Google+ Hangout, Ambassador Rice and Mr. Kristof will discuss the world’s most pressing challenges and America’s role in an increasingly interconnected world. They will be joined live by a selection of citizens who will ask questions from the U.S. and overseas. 

Watch the conversation live at 2:30 p.m. EST on The Times’s homepage or on the New York Times Google+ page, and join the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #NYTHangout. For more work on U.S. work at the United Nations, follow @AmbassadorRiceand @USUN on Twitter and ‘Like’ Ambassador Rice on Facebook.

Susan Rice

Ed. Note: Follow the White House on Google+ for news, behind-the-scenes photos and chances to join White House Hangouts with administration officials.


View the original article here

My First Job: Gene Sperling

My First Job: Gene Sperling | The White House Skip to main content | Skip to footer site map The White House. President Barack Obama The White House Emblem Get Email UpdatesContact Us Go to homepage. The White House Blog Photos & Videos Photo Galleries Video Performances Live Streams Podcasts State of the Union

Watch the Enhanced Video

Jobs Act Speech

Briefing Room Your Weekly Address Speeches & Remarks Press Briefings Statements & Releases White House Schedule Presidential Actions Executive Orders Presidential Memoranda Proclamations Legislation Pending Legislation Signed Legislation Vetoed Legislation Nominations & Appointments Disclosures Visitor Access Records Financial Disclosures 2011 Annual Report to Congress 2010 Annual Report to Congress on White House Staff 2009 Annual Report to Congress on White House Staff A Commitment to Transparency

Browse White House visitor logs

President Obama greets White House visitors

Issues Civil Rights It Gets Better Defense End of Iraq War The Way Forward in Afghanistan Disabilities Economy Jobs Reform and Fiscal Responsibility Strengthening the Middle Class Supporting Business Blueprint for an America Built to Last Education Energy & Environment Ethics Fiscal Responsibility Excess Federal Properties Interactive Map Foreign Policy Health Care Homeland Security Immigration Rural Rural Tour 2011 Seniors & Social Security Service Taxes The Buffett Rule Tax Receipt Technology Urban Policy Veterans Joining Forces Women We Can't Wait

See executive actions President Obama has taken

We Can't Wait

Your Federal Tax Receipt

See how your federal tax dollars are spent

Calculate Your Federal Taxpayer Receipt

The Administration We the People

Create and Sign Petitions Now

We the People

President Barack Obama Vice President Joe Biden First Lady Michelle Obama Dr. Jill Biden The Cabinet 2010 Video Reports White House Staff Chief of Staff Jack Lew Deputy Chief of Staff Nancy-Ann DeParle Deputy Chief of Staff Alyssa Mastromonaco Counselor to the President Peter Rouse Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett Executive Office of the President Other Advisory Boards About the White House Inside the White House

Take an interactive tour

Interactive Map of the White House

Inside the White House History Décor and Art Interactive Tour Video Series Google Art Presidents First Ladies The Oval Office The Vice President's Residence & Office Eisenhower Executive Office Building Camp David Air Force One White House Fellows President’s Commission About the Fellowship Current Class Staff Bios News and Newsletters White House Internships About Program Presidential Department Descriptions Selection Process Internship Timeline & FAQs Tours & Events 2012 Easter Egg Roll 2011 Easter Egg Roll Holidays 2011 Kitchen Garden Tours Our Government The Executive Branch The Legislative Branch The Judicial Branch The Constitution Federal Agencies & Commissions Elections & Voting State & Local Government Resources /* Maximize height of menu features. */if(typeof(jQuery)!='undefined')jQuery.each($('.topnav-feature','#topnav'),function(i,v){var o=$(v),oh=o.height(),sh=o.siblings().height();if(oh Home • The White House Blog   #subhead-wrapper{background: url("/sites/default/themes/whitehouse/img/blog_breadcrum.jpg") top left no-repeat !important;height: 16px;}.blog-header{ background: url("/sites/default/themes/whitehouse/img/blog_header.jpg") no-repeat scroll left top transparent; height: 84px; width: 976px; position: relative;}.blog-header-text{ color: #FFFFFF; font-size: 3em; margin-bottom: 15px; padding: 20px 0px 0px 20px; text-shadow: 2px 2px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3);}.blog-header-text a{ color: #fff; text-decoration: none;}.blog-header-text a:hover{ text-shadow: 3px 3px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3); text-decoration: none;}#breadcrumb{ color: #fff; height: 16px}#breadcrumb a{ color: #fff !important;}.header-subscribe{ position: absolute; right: 21px; top: 54px;}The White House BlogSubscribe Our Top Stories President Obama Calls for a Simpler Refinancing ProcessPresident Obama Calls for a Simpler Refinancing Process President Obama to Barnard College: "Fight for a Seat at the Head of the Table"President Obama to Barnard College: "Fight for a Seat at the Head of the Table" President Obama's To-Do List for Congress: Reward American Jobs, Not OutsourcingPresident Obama's To-Do List for Congress: Reward American Jobs, Not Outsourcing President Obama on Ending the War in AfghanistanPresident Obama on Ending the War in Afghanistan My First Job: Gene Sperling Colleen Curtis
Colleen CurtisMay 15, 2012
06:58 PM EDT Share This Post Summer Jobs+ is a call to action for businesses, non-profits, and government to work together to provide pathways to employment for young people in the summer of 2012. It's about helping people find their first jobs.

Today Gene Sperling is the Director of the National Economic Council. In the video below, he talks about his first job as a ball boy. He swept the court and cleaned up after the players, which he thought was "way cool." More importantly, he learned what makes you stand out as a great employee.  

So far, employers have listed more than 300,000 jobs, mentorships, and other employment opportunities this summer through Summer Jobs+.

You heard about Gene Sperling's first job. Now go find yours.

Learn more

Watch Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor to the President, talk about her first jobWatch Cecilia Munoz, Director of the White House's Domestic Policy Council, talk about her first job.Watch Jimmy Fallon talk about his first job.See the list of participating employers and organizationsCheck out a range of web and mobile apps designed to connect young people to jobs. Related Topics: Economy, Education PREVIOUS POST
President Obama Pays Tribute to Fallen Police OfficersNEXT POST
President Obama Congratulates the LA Galaxy #content #featured-content-block .title { font-size: 17px !important; font-weight: normal; text-indent:0;}.blog-featured-content-queue { float: left; margin-top:15px; margin-right:49px; width: 197px;}#featured-content-block .last {margin-right: 0;}#blog #content .blog-featured-content-queue-title {font-size: 12px;line-height: 14.4px;}#featured-content-block {margin-bottom:55px;margin-top:20px;}Featured ContentWe Can't WaitJob Resources for Returning HeroesJob Resources for Returning HeroesIraq TimelineEnd of the Iraq War Economy and Jobs WHITEHOUSE.GOV IN YOUR INBOX Sign up for economy and jobs updates PHOTOS OF THE DAY President Barack Obama And First Lady Michelle Obama Greet Family Of Specialist Leslie H. Sabo, Jr. President Obama at the National Peace Officers Memorial Service President Obama Waves As He Walks to Marine One President Barack Obama Greets Supporters In Reno First Lady Michelle Obama Greets Guests During A Mother’s Day Tea VIEW PHOTO GALLERIES JUMP TO: Other White House Blogs The White House Blog Middle Class Task Force Council of Economic Advisers Council on Environmental Quality Council on Women and Girls Office of Management and Budget Office of Public Engagement Office of Science & Tech Policy Office of Urban Affairs Open Government Faith and Neighborhood Partnerships US Trade Representative Office National Drug Control Policy   Home The White House Blog Photos & Videos Photo Galleries Video Performances Live Streams Podcasts Briefing Room Your Weekly Address Speeches & Remarks Press Briefings Statements & Releases White House Schedule Presidential Actions Legislation Nominations & Appointments Disclosures Issues Civil Rights Defense Disabilities Economy Education Energy & Environment Ethics Fiscal Responsibility Foreign Policy Health Care Homeland Security Immigration Rural Seniors & Social Security Service Taxes Technology Urban Policy Veterans Women The Administration President Barack Obama Vice President Joe Biden First Lady Michelle Obama Dr. Jill Biden The Cabinet White House Staff Executive Office of the President Other Advisory Boards About the White House Inside the White House Presidents First Ladies The Oval Office The Vice President's Residence & Office Eisenhower Executive Office Building Camp David Air Force One White House Fellows White House Internships Tours & Events Our Government The Executive Branch The Legislative Branch The Judicial Branch The Constitution Federal Agencies & Commissions Elections & Voting State & Local Government Resources The White House Emblem En español Accessibility Copyright Information Privacy Policy Contact USA.gov Subscribe to RSS Feeds Apply for a Job

View the original article here

National Plan to Address Alzheimer's Disease

Today, as many as 5.1 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer’s. As the baby boomers march past age 65, that number could more than double in just a few decades.

We’ve made considerable progress in the fight against Alzheimer’s and other dementias, but much more needs to be done right away, because people who face the challenges of caring for someone with Alzheimer’s need help now.

The Obama administration has announced an historic $156 million commitment to address what is needed to confront Alzheimer’s disease. The National Plan to Address Alzheimer’s Disease is a roadmap that will help us meet our goal to prevent and effectively treat Alzheimer’s disease by 2025. This is a truly national plan, based on a strong partnership with every part of the Alzheimer’s community, including scientists, patient advocates, and people living with the disease.

This plan lays out a blueprint for expanding research in prevention and treatment and getting the most-promising drugs from discovery into clinical trials. We will also figure out ways to move best practices out of the research journals and into exam rooms as soon as possible.

As we asked for input on the plan, it was crystal clear that our nation couldn’t wait until the strategy became final to start taking action. Thanks to the President’s commitment, work is already underway, including exciting new clinical research projects that may yield breakthroughs in just a few years.

To help those who are dealing with Alzheimer’s today, we have launched a targeted awareness campaign to help people with Alzheimer’s and their caregivers find resources that can help them manage the disease.

We’ve launched www.Alzheimers.gov, a website that caregivers told us they need. This site is a one-stop shop for information about a range of questions that people helping people with Alzheimer’s often face:

What is Alzheimer’s, its symptoms and risk factors?How is it diagnosed?What treatments are available? What are clinical trials and how can I participate?How to pay for care? How to plan for future needs?How can I cope with the everyday challenges?Where can I find help near me?What are my options for home care and residential care?

The TV ad below is part of a national campaign to inform the public about the resources available at  Alzheimers.gov.

In creating this plan we also heard that we needed more information for health care providers. So we have funded Geriatric Education Centers around the country to develop curricula and free training on Alzheimer’s and dementia for health professionals. Videos and fact sheets to help busy providers recognize the symptoms of Alzheimer’s and improve the care they provide will be posted on the new website this summer.

These steps in research and education are the cornerstones of an ambitious and aggressive agenda to improve the lives of people living with Alzheimer’s disease and their families.

Kathleen Sebelius is the Secretary of Health and Human Services

View the original article here