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Blogs:
First Bell - On Education:
No City of Akron basketball tonight
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Pet telethon re-airs
The Heldenfiles:
Chipmunks "Squeakquel" on DVD/BD March 30
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Late surge gives Zips ugly road win
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Blogmail response on Hafner
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Stallworth's contract terminated
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QB in Browns future: another mock draft
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – February 9
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NBA Power Rankings from Around the Internet
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes grab 18 players on signing day
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Five local gridders to play in Big33
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Palin At The Tea Party Convention
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Republican Pre-Conditions
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Law, Love and Chocolate
Car Chase:
Collector Car Hobby Loses One of the Best—Jim Roll
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Decisions Decisions: Credit Cards or Your Mortgage?
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Loucile is looking for a Lake Erie getaway in June for three kids, ages 1, 3, and 5.
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Talk of the Town – Top entertainment picks for the weekend
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OFCCP Report
Akron Gamer:
Makers of 'Castle Crashers' unveil 'BattleBlock Theater'
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Do IT this week: Layering
Lawmakers happy with progress; critics unhappy with how much still left
Published on Saturday, Mar 28, 2009
Associated Press
WASHINGTON: Groups often at odds over health-care reform consumers, insurers, doctors, employers reached a broad agreement Friday that could serve as a starting point for lawmakers trying to overhaul the system.
Although the long-awaited report of the Health Reform Dialogue avoided some of the most contentious issues, the agreement does have the kind of far-reaching support lawmakers will need to meet their goal of passing legislation this year.
''You can bet I'll be working closely with these groups,'' said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., who is trying to find consensus on Capitol Hill.
The groups said the uninsured should be covered through a mix of expanded government programs and subsidies to buy private health coverage. They called for savings from making the health system less wasteful and urged that prevention become the foundation for medical care. Many of their ideas are shared by President Barack Obama and influential lawmakers such as Baucus.
But the five-page proposal was thin on details, starting with how to pay for the plan. And the groups avoided such divisive issues as whether insurers should be forced to compete with a new government-sponsored plan, as Obama has proposed.
Critics minimized the result. ''They've moved the health care debate forward a few inches,'' said Richard Kirsch, director of Health Care for America Now, a campaign backed by labor.
The 18 groups met for six months. Along the way, two major unions pulled away, but other groups representing seniors, businesses, nurses, drug makers and patients kept talking.
''What the agreement tries to do is achieve a balance for coverage expansion through the two key pillars of health care today,'' said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, a liberal advocacy group that stayed in the talks. ''One is employer-sponsored private coverage and the other is safety-net coverage.''
Other participants included the National Federation of Independent Business and the health insurance industry, who were instrumental in sinking the last attempt at a health care overhaul in the 1990s.
Get the full article here.
