Ahad, 3 November 2013

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What's up with Obamacare and my health care? - CNN

Posted: 03 Nov 2013 08:32 AM PST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Over half the population is minimally impacted by Obamacare
  • Small business owners will have more policies to pick from
  • Individuals who are uninsured will benefit most from Obamacare marketplaces

(CNN) -- As the politicians fuss and fight over the merits of the biggest overhaul of the health insurance system in this country, you may be wondering, "What does this all mean to me?" Here's what we know so far about what's up with your health care.

It's all about me

The Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, as it is now commonly known, went into effect in 2010 and was affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2012, despite the 42 times the House Republicans tried to repeal it.

It will have the most dramatic impact on the 48 million Americans who don't or haven't been able to get insurance. By 2014, everyone -- with a few exceptions -- has to have insurance or face a penalty.

I get insurance through work. Why should I care?

More than half of Americans get health insurance through work. For those keeping score at home, that's 55.1% of the population, or about 149 million non-elderly people, according to U.S. Census data.

If that's you, news about Obamacare marketplace computer problems and people getting letters saying they're losing their coverage -- that doesn't affect you.

What you do have to worry about is that e-mail reminder your company sends you this time every year telling you about open enrollment season.

You may notice that information packet is a lot easier to read and the different plans are a lot easier to compare. You've got Obamacare to thank for that, since it is now mandatory that these companies communicate clearly about what they have to offer.

5 things you need to know about picking your insurance plan

If your child is under the age of 26, under Obamacare, they can stay on your insurance. It doesn't matter if they live with you or not or whether they're married or single. As long as they don't get insurance anywhere else, you can keep them covered.

Also because of Obamacare, many health plans must offer you free preventative care services. You can get your blood pressure or cholesterol checked, get a colonoscopy or a mammogram, ask for a flu shot, seek counseling for alcohol or smoking, find out if you are depressed and seek other preventative screenings. Since studies show 70% of all health care conditions are considered preventable, in theory this should keep a lot of people healthier.

If you are a woman, you no longer need a referral to see a gynecologist. Maternity care is provided. So is birth control, which would come at no cost in most plans.

Now if you are denied a payment new rules give you a chance to appeal a decision and if that doesn't work Obamacare lets you take your appeal to an outside independent review panel. The law now says the insurance company has to let you know why your claim was denied and they have a time limit in which they have to answer your appeal.

Will I pay more for my insurance?

Your plan will probably take a little more out of your check next year, but really that's nothing new.

Some companies, such as UPS and Delta, did blame Obamacare for rising insurance costs, but experts say employees will pay more for their policies because the economy is improving. When people feel more secure financially, they go to the doctor more and get test and procedures they put off when they felt less secure, according to Tim Nimmer, the chief health care actuary at Aon Hewitt an employee benefits administrator.

Aon Hewitt's research on the cost of insurance predicts employees will spend just under $5,000 on premiums and out-of-pocket expenses next year. That's up 9.5% from the year before -- higher than the increases for 2013, which were more in the 5% range. Over the past 10 years, average premiums for a family have kept going up a whopping 80%, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation report.

Get ready for higher health insurance costs at work

Another reason you'll pay a little more is because employers are continuing to shift the cost of insurance to employees, studies show. There are also new fees on employers and insurers to help cover insurers with new high-risk enrollees.

"I think they key point is to recognize that victory in health care is not that the cost of your health care is going up, it is that it is going up more slowly," said Jonathan Gruber, one of the architects of both the Massachusetts and Obama health care plans and the author of a graphic novel that simply explains health care reform.

What happens when I use my benefits?

When you do use your benefits and go to the doctor, you may have to wait a little longer for an appointment since you'll be competing with more patients who now have insurance.

Doctor shortage could crash health care system

You may have already been waiting a bit, since there is a primary care physician shortage according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. We're down about 20,000 now, and the number is expected to get worse as physicians age. And it's not just doctors who are in short supply; we also need more nurses, according to the Institute of Medicine.

"Keep in mind, the Affordable Care Act didn't create this crisis," said Dr. Reid Blackwelder, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. "We've got an aging population that needs more care and a growing population."

If you do go to the hospital, in theory you should be leaving it healthier. The ACA penalizes hospitals that see patients return after treatment, and facilities have started a number of innovative programs to try and keep patients well and out of the hospital.

If something catastrophic happens to you and it's expensive, that's also where Obamacare will make sure your insurance continues to cover you. In the past, insurance companies could dump you if you spent too much. Those costs are capped under the ACA and there are no lifetime spending limits.

The one thing that was supposed to change under the ACA that has been delayed is a mandate that all companies with more than 50 full-time employees get benefits. Companies will eventually face fines if they don't offer insurance. That doesn't go into effect until 2015.

What if I own -- or work for -- a small business?

A giant part of the small business community, 96% of small businesses have fewer than 50 workers. If you own that kind of business, you don't have to worry about that employer mandate. If you work for one, you will be able to buy a policy in the new Obamacare marketplaces.

If you do employ more than 50 people, chances are you already offer insurance to your workers -- 90% do -- and business owners who are happy with their insurance plan can stick with it. In fact, many insurance companies are offering discounts to clients who renew their policies.

If you are in that 3% with more than 50 workers and you do not provide insurance, you will have to start -- or you'll have to pay a penalty starting in 2015.

The government has opened a small business marketplace, also known as the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP). It is meant to provide an easier and cheaper venue for business owners to shop for insurance for their employees. SHOP's website lets business owners compare plans.

The government offers tax credits to these smaller business to help pay for this insurance. These are worth up to 50% of your premium costs. Small businesses can still deduct the rest of their premium cost not covered by the tax credit. It is only available for plans bought through SHOP.

Is anyone directly impacted by all this Obamacare talk?

If you don't have insurance or haven't qualified for insurance in the past, you'll need to have it by March 31 of next year. If you don't, you'll be fined up to 1% of your income or $95, whichever is greater.

Obamacare 101: Everything you need to know

You can buy a plan from a broker at any time. If you want to buy through the new Obamacare marketplaces, open enrollment stretches through March 31. You'll only get a tax break/subsidy if you buy a policy through the marketplaces.

If you are like Jeff Jones in Lexington, Kentucky, who wants a policy to start on January 1, you'll have to make up your mind on which plan is right for you by December 15.

Jones lost his job with the University of Kentucky and is unable to get on his partner's policy. "I've been shopping around online but haven't decided on which policy yet," he said.

Jones has been comparison shopping through Kentucky's state marketplace website. There have been some technical hiccups, but he's been able to see what he'd qualify for based on his expected income. A diabetic, he says he is grateful this is an option now. Currently, insurance companies could deny him a policy since he has this pre-existing condition. Obamacare ends that practice next year.

CNN Money: Obamacare pricier for some individual buyers

If you can get into the website, you can sign up for a policy through Healthcare.gov. There's also a phone number to call: (800) 318-2596 (TTY: (855) 889-4325). The number is staffed round the clock. Information is available in more than 150 languages.

There will also be specially trained advisers in communities. These "navigators," as they are known, can help you in person. If you would like to find the closest navigator, go to Localhelp.healthcare.gov. Plug in your ZIP code and it will give you the closest location to get help.

So bottom line, what does this cost?

Costs of plans vary, depending on where you live in this country and your age; the White House says you should be able to buy a plan for less than a $100 a month. If you want to see what your bill may look like, check out the Kaiser Family Foundation's calculator. The nonpartisan foundation's tool provides an estimate of your costs, depending on where you live and the plan you pick.

For many the President's promise of health care choice doesn't ring true

The bronze level is basic, silver is midrange and gold and platinum are higher-end. There is also a catastrophic option. Catastrophic insurance covers three doctor visits per year at no cost and preventive care such as screenings and vaccines. This plan will carry a higher deductible.

What do I get for my money now?

All plans bought through the exchanges must offer the same coverage benefits. Mental health is covered, behavioral health is covered, maternity care, emergency care, hospitalization, newborn care, prescription drugs, rehab, lab services, and pediatric services. All offer free preventive care. Nearly all cap out-of-pocket costs to $6,350 and $12,700 per family. No one can be turned away. No one will be penalized because of their gender (women often paid more in the old insurance system). Only smokers may be penalized in some plans and some older people may pay more.

Dental is covered for kids, but it is not for adults. You'll have to buy a separate policy for that or find a policy that offers it.

Dental crisis could create 'State of Decay'

There are more limited doctor and hospital networks offered in these plans. That's how insurance companies have been able to keep costs down and offer all these benefits. Insurance brokers advise you look to see if your doctor or favorite hospital is considered in-network with whatever plan you buy. Otherwise, you will have to switch doctors or pay a higher fee for seeing him or her.

Didn't Obama say I can keep my policy?

Some people who do buy their own insurance have been getting letters from their insurance companies saying their plan has been canceled. That's because their old plans don't qualify under these Obamacare rules that mandate insurance cover all these benefits.

With these plans you will pay a monthly premium, and may also have a co-pay or be asked to meet a deductible when you go to the doctor or hospital.

Video: Woman scores great deal on Obamacare -- a policy for under $2

Is there help to pay for all this new insurance?

The good news is, if you go through the exchanges rather than buy directly from an insurance company, you will likely be eligible for tax breaks and subsidies to pay for your insurance. The assistance is available to those with incomes of up to four times the federal poverty level -- this year, that's $45,960 for an individual or $94,200 for a family of four -- and will be calculated on a sliding scale.

You can take this subsidy as a tax credit or the government will pay the insurance company directly.

You may also want to check to see if you will qualify for Medicaid. So far, 26 states are moving toward expanding who is eligible for the federal government-funded health program for lower income families and individuals.

I've got Medicare. Does Obamacare change that?

You are in a group that doesn't need to worry about Obamacare. Medicare doesn't change with Obamacare.

So then, why the fuss?

Studies show people are politically riled up about all this change in health insurance, but when it comes down to it, Gruber said the sky won't fall next year and things should get better.

"Once people experience it and go through this initial transition, which is going to be rocky, then they're going to realize the benefits of having a system like this," Gruber said.

"Yes, if you are young and healthy it will be more expensive, but right now this is an insurance market which not only is discriminatory, but the typical person who buys their own insurance has a very weak insurance plan. (Under Obamacare) everyone will have will have guaranteed, real insurance that's fairly priced."

Prosecutor: LAX suspect shot TSA officer, left, returned to shoot him again - CNN

Posted: 03 Nov 2013 08:32 AM PST

A passenger embraces a TSA screener at Los Angeles International Airport's Terminal 3 after it was reopened on Saturday, November 2. The day before, a gunman opened fire in the terminal, killing a TSA officer. Four other people are recovering from injuries in the shooting.A passenger embraces a TSA screener at Los Angeles International Airport's Terminal 3 after it was reopened on Saturday, November 2. The day before, a gunman opened fire in the terminal, killing a TSA officer. Four other people are recovering from injuries in the shooting.
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Fatal shooting at Los Angeles airport
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Note may shed light on LAX gunman - USA TODAY

Posted: 02 Nov 2013 09:00 AM PDT

LOS ANGELES — As investigators scour the Los Angeles International Airport terminal for evidence into what could have been a massive kill zone Friday, the nation's third-busiest airport was heading back toward normal operations Saturday.

Terminal 3 - where lone gunman Paul Ciancia allegedly shot and killed Transportation Security Administration officer Gerardo Hernandez and wounded two others - remains closed except for ticket purchases as FBI and Los Angeles Police forensics teams continue to gather evidence.

Most of LAX was functioning early Saturday after 1,550 lights, including 724 arrivals and 826 departures, were either canceled or diverted by Friday's shootings. Departing passengers were tweeting early Saturday that there were few problems accessing the airport. Still, LAX officials urge passengers to check with airlines for potential departure and arrival delays. Those who left luggage at Terminal 3 during Friday's mayhem aren't able to recover their belongings yet.

Ciancia, 23, was shot four times by airport police and remains hospitalized. Aside from Hernandez and the two wounded TSA officers, a person suffered a broken ankle.

The carnage could have been far worse, investigators say. Police say the shooter, armed with a semi-automatic rifle, brought 150 rounds of ammunition to the airport. Investigators recovered a rambling message from the bag the shooter was allegedly carrying, which detailed an intent to "kill" TSA officers, said two federal law enforcement officials familiar with the message's contents. The officials, who are not authorized to comment publicly, said it was written in a way that suggested the author expected to lose his life.

Terrified witnesses say the suspect also asked them whether they worked for the TSA.

Leon Saryan told ABC News that the gunman approached him and pointed a long-barreled gun at him.

"I was cowering in a corner, he looked at me and he said, 'TSA?' I shook my head no, and he kept on going," Leon Saryan said. "I just prayed to God. That's all I did. I just prayed," Saryan said.

MORE: Suspect made suicidal references to family

MORE: TSA workers mourn death of first officer killed on duty

One of the officials described the incident as a suicide mission.

In recent days, one of the officials said, the New Jersey family of the alleged shooter had become worried about his emotional state and called local police, who relayed their concerns to Los Angeles authorities. The official said Los Angeles police reportedly were in contact with the alleged shooter's roommates, who indicated that he appeared to be OK.

According to a report by the Associated Press, a law enforcement source said the gunman's note referred to how he believed his constitutional rights were being violated by TSA searches and that he was a "pissed-off patriot" upset at former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

The suspect entered Terminal 3, pulled out an assault rifle from a bag, then began to open fire at a screening checkpoint, according to LAX Police Chief Patrick Gannon. He then proceeded up to a screening area, where he continued shooting, then went past the screeners back into the airport itself, Gannon said. He continued to move along a terminal corridor until apprehended at a Burger King in the food court, where airport police officers shot him four times, including in the mouth and leg. There was no word on his condition.

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The dead TSA officer, Gerardo I. Hernandez, 39, was a behavior-detection officer tasked with spotting suspicious activity and identifying potential terrorists, said TSA Administrator John Pistole.

Hernandez is the first TSA officer killed in the line of duty in the 12-year history of the agency, created after 9/11. Another victim was listed in critical condition, and at least two of the injured were TSA employees.

Friends and neighbors remembered Hernandez as a doting father of two and a good neighbor.

Before arriving in the LA area, Ciancia lived with family in a quiet, wooded neighborhood in Pennsville, N.J., police said.

Joshua Pagan, 17, has lived across the street from Ciancia's residence in Pennsville for the past 10 years. He said Ciancia has a brother close in age to him.

"I've seen (Paul) a few times, but I did not know him personally," Pagan said. "From what I've seen and heard, he was just a normal person — just an every-day guy. Right now, I am still trying to process this. Did this really happen? Did they get the wrong guy? Because if they told me they got the wrong guy, it would make a lot more sense to me."

The shooting left much of the nation's third-busiest airport shut and the surrounding area in gridlock. The Federal Aviation Administration canceled or diverted 746 flights. Airport roadways were closed. Travelers were stuck on incoming and departing planes on the tarmac, on buses or sidewalks.

Monitored in real-time by scores of terrified bystanders on social media websites such as Twitter and Instagram, the incident was the latest in a recent spate of mass shootings. Some passengers built walls of luggage to protect themselves from flying bullets. Others fled through emergency doors and onto the tarmac, including some who were briefly handcuffed and questioned by swarming groups of police before they were released.

"They probably thought I was the shooter. They handcuffed me and told me not to move," said Nick Pugh, who was attempting to fly to New York to watch Sunday's New York Marathon.

Aleksander Fiksdal, 22, was in a security checkpoint line for a flight to his native Norway when he heard shots ring out. "I turned and saw a guy with a rifle and I threw myself on the ground," Fiksdal said. Other passengers in the security line did the same, while some broke and ran.

"I really thought I saw death," said Anne Rainer, who witnessed the gunfire with her 26-year-old son Ben. The pair were about to leave for New York so her son could see a specialist for a rare genetic condition he has.

They took refuge behind a ticket counter where she said people prayed, cried and held hands. She watched as one person jumped from a second-floor balcony to get away from the gunman.

"Adrenaline went through my head, my body went numb, and I said, 'If I have to go, it's OK because I'm not going to feel it, but I have to save him,'" Rainer said.

Friends Mara Allen, 42, of Yuba City, Calif., and Vicki Powell of Sacramento had just arrived on a flight so they could go on a cruise to celebrate Powell's 50th birthday. Gathered with others around a baggage carousel, they were startled when a police officer started yelling for people to flee. Wheelchair-bound Powell wasn't sure how she was going to get out.

"I was waving. Come get me. Help!" Powell caught the attention of an attendant who wheeled her outside. The pair had to leave their luggage behind, and it was unclear whether they'd be able to retrieve it before their ship leaves LA for Mexico. "This is something I see on TV. I don't want to be in it," Powell said.

Among the people evacuated from the airport, more than dozen were treated for minor injuries such as twisted ankles, exhaustion or stress.

The Radisson Hotel close to LAX was turned into a makeshift refugee center crammed with passengers. One large group gathered around a television set in the bar, where a clot of them were glued to coverage of the unfolding drama.

The last shooting at the airport occurred in July 2002, when an Egyptian immigrant shot and killed two bystanders in a rampage at the El Al ticket counter.

Woodyard and Welch reported from Los Angeles. Contributing: Bart Jansen in Washington, D.C., Bill McMichael, The Wilmington News Journal and the Associated Press.

'Subway Vigilante' Goetz busted in pot sale - New York Post

Posted: 02 Nov 2013 07:54 AM PDT

Bernhard Goetz — the infamous "subway vigilante" who became part of New York City lore when he shot four youths who he said were threatening him on the subway in 1984 — was busted Friday evening for peddling $30 worth of pot to an undercover female cop, The Post has learned.

The New York Post's 1984 front page.

Goetz was arrested at 15th Street and Fifth Avenue near his Union Square pad at about 5:45 p.m., police sources said.

"He told her he wanted to get high with her and sold her a small amount of pot in a ­tissue," a source said.

Goetz, 65, met the undercover on the street, chatted her up and walked with her back to his apartment, where he went upstairs to get the weed.

Bernie Goetz is escorted by police in 1985.

When he came downstairs to allegedly give her the pot, he was arrested, the source said.

New Yorkers who live and work near the scene of the crime couldn't believe Goetz had been busted for pot.

"Bernie? Oh, come on, they arrested him for that? It's just pot, they should let him go," said doorman John D'Antonia, 71, who works in a building near Goetz's.

"People will now probably say he shot those kids because he was high."

Goetz, 65, was walked from the Sixth Precinct station house on West 10th Street early today — with several cops shielding him from the media — and then driven to Manhattan Central Booking.

Cops escorting Goetz into booking screamed at news photographers and reporters to get across the street, and then pulled the van carrying him directly to the courthouse door so he cold not be photographed.

Goetz was expected to be charged with criminal sale of marijuana, a misdemeanor and several other charges, a police source said.

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HealthCare.Gov Memo: Six Completed Signups on First Day - Wall Street Journal

Posted: 01 Nov 2013 08:32 AM PDT

"Ongoing issues" include descriptions of high capacity on the website, which the administration attributed the bulk of the problems to immediately after its troubled launch. But the notes also cite problems with Experian's ability to credit-check people going through the enrollment process, and several other technical problems such as direct enrollment options for people trying to sign up directly with specific insurers.

By Oct. 3, those issues had grown considerably to include problems with issuers failing to receive enrollment information they needed, and problems with verifying people's identities that went beyond the 36 states where Washington was running the exchange.

There had been 248 enrollments from people getting all the way through the process in the first two days, the Oct. 3 notes show.

"War room" notes (PDFs): Oct., 2 a.m. | Oct. 2, p.m. | Oct. 3, a.m.

The administration has been criticized for failing to publish enrollment data, with critics initially alleging it was because the administration was embarrassed to show how few people were interested in signing up. But HHS Secretary said when she testified on Wednesday that there was another reason the administration had held back, one that could provide more grist for critics: enrollment data coming through the exchanges is faulty.

HHS spokeswoman Joanne Peters said Friday that the documents were notes and didn't reflect "official enrollment statistics" and said again that the administration was concerned about enrollment data. 

She also added that the administration still expected the pace of people signing up to tick up over time. People can enroll through the exchanges until March 31 and the administration tweaked the ways it would penalize people for not having coverage so that nobody would be fined as long as they buy by that date.

The documents were obtained by the House Oversight and Government Reform committee, which on Thursday issued a subpoena to get more information from the Department of Health and Human Services. HHS said at the time it was "disappointed" the committee believed it needed to use the subpoena.

More

Obama Tempers Insurance Pledge as Health Fight Rages

Sebelius Sorry for Website Woes, Determined to Stay in Job

Complete Coverage: Health Law Rollout

47M Americans hit by food stamp cuts starting today - USA TODAY

Posted: 01 Nov 2013 08:41 AM PDT

A new reduction in food stamps will force recipients to feed themselves on less than $1.40 per meal. VPC

Doug Stanglin, USA TODAY 11:31 a.m. EDT November 1, 2013

Food stamp benefits will be cut to more than 47 million Americans starting Friday as a temporary boost to the federal program comes to an end without a new budget from a deadlocked Congress to replace it.

Under the program, known formally as the Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program, or SNAP, a family of four that gets $668 per month in benefits will find that amount cut by $36.

SNAP, which benefits one in seven Americans, is administered by the Department of Agriculture and is authorized in a five-year omnibus farm bill covering all agricultural programs.

Vulnerable populations will be hardest hit by the cuts. In New York, more than 1 million elderly people or those with disabilities will feel the impact, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive think tank. About 2.3 million children in both California and Texas will be affected.

In California overall, the cuts will affect more than 4 million residents and will amount to the equivalent of losing roughly 21 individual meals per month, based on calculations used by the Department of Agriculture, the San Jose Mercury News reports.

Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, head of the Ohio Association of Foodbanks, says the state's charities and food pantries, which distributed $227 million in food to needy residents in 2012, will not be able to make up a $190 million deficit in 2014, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reports.

"We will have to do what low-income people do, which is reduce the amount of food we hand out and ration," she said. Hamler-Fugitt tells the newspaper that she expects increased hunger in the state, affecting the health of senior citizens and people with disabilities and forcing more school children to go to classes without eating.

Last year, the average monthly benefit per household for all 50 states and the District of Columbia was $278, according to Stateline, the daily news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts.

"(They) will take away more food in our city than we, Food Bank for New York City, the nation's largest food bank, distribute in an entire year," said Margarette Purvis, the Food Bank's president and CEO, the Daily News of New York reports.

NATIONWIDE: How food stamp cuts will affect your state

Two factors are driving the fiscal squeeze. The first is the windup of additional SNAP allocations under President Obama's 2009 stimulus bill. The second is the inability of Congress to agree on a new farm bill.

Negotiations on a new bill, including cuts to the SNAP program, began Wednesday. Five-year farm bills passed by both the House and the Senate would cut food stamps, reductions that would come on top of the cut that goes into effect Friday. But the two chambers are far apart on the amounts.

The bill passed by the Republican-controlled House would cut $39 billion from the program over the next decade. It would also end government waivers that have allowed able-bodied adults without dependents to receive food stamps indefinitely and allow states to put broad new work requirements in place. The bill passed by the Democratic-controlled Senate calls for only a $4 billion cut.

A farm bill usually win bipartisan support because it includes funds for agricultural programs favored by farm and business interests and SNAP, which is supported by liberal and urban interests.

If a joint bill is not passed by the end of the year and current farm law is not extended, certain dairy supports would expire, possibly raising the price of milk. Farmers would start to feel more effects next spring.

"It took us years to get here, but we are here," House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, R-Okla., said. "Let's not take years to get it done."

Contributing: Associated Press

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FAA loosens rules for e-devices on airline flights - USA TODAY

Posted: 31 Oct 2013 08:30 AM PDT

Bart Jansen, USA TODAY 11:32 a.m. EDT October 31, 2013

Airline passengers soon will be able to use electronics such as readers and games during takeoffs, landings and throughout flights, the Federal Aviation Administration announced Thursday.

Before the new rule takes effect, airlines must demonstrate that aircraft won't be at risk because of potential interference from portable electronic devices.

That is expected to take place quickly and the devices approved for use by the end of the year in most of the nation's airline fleet.

Connecting to the Internet remains prohibited when the plane is less than 10,000 feet in the air. Voice calls also are banned during the entire flight, under a Federal Communications Commission rule.

Passengers should continue to follow all instructions from flight crews regarding the use of the devices, FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said.

"We found that we could protect aviation safety and at the same time address the passenger desire for use of their portable devices," Huerta said."The committee determined that most commercial airplanes can tolerate radio interference from portable electronic devices."

"We believe today's decision honors both our commitment to safety and consumers' increasing desire to use their electronic devices during all phases of flight," Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said.

Flight attendants welcomed the opportunity to ease enforcement of the prohibition against gadgets. Laura Glading, president of the Association of Professional Flight Attendants, said the change in rules will benefit passengers and crew members.

"Once the new policy is safely implemented – and we're going to work closely with the carrier to do that – it will be a win-win," Glading said. "We're frankly tired of feeling like 'hall monitors' when it comes to this issue."

Delta Air Lines spokesman Paul Skrbec said the airline already has preformed the required tolerance tests on all of its aircraft and has submitted the necessary paperwork to the FAA for its approval, so that passengers might be able to use electronics as early as Friday, pending FAA approval.

"All of our aircraft are ready to go," he says, adding that the airline is now awaiting word from the FAA. "That could come as early as today for us."

JetBlue Airways also expects to be among the first airlines to allow electronics because it has a relatively small fleet less than 200 aircraft and only two types of planes, according to spokeswoman Jenny Dervin. "We intend to be the first airline to allow fleet-wide PEDs," she said.

JetBlue Capt. Chuck Cook, who served on the advisory committee that recommended the policy change, said electronics were never a proven hazard, but they were never cleared of risk, either. Cook said now airlines will demonstrate the devices are safe.

"With this guidance, the airlines are able to accurately assess the risk," Cook said.

The policy change will take some time to be adopted because planes must be certified and crew members must be trained how to deal with electronics

"I believe we will do it very briskly," Cook said.

Electronics have always been allowed once a plane reaches 10,000 feet in the air. On planes that are equipped with their own wifi hot spots, passengers have been able to connect to the internet while the flight is cruising.

But Thursday's decision marks a major change for passengers eager to keep reading an electronic book, listen to music or play a game while the plane is less than 10,000 feet in the air, when those activities have been prohibited.

The decision follows a report Sept. 30 from a 28-member committee representing airlines, manufacturers, electronics makers, pilots and flight attendants.

The prohibition against electronics began decades ago because of concerns about interference with cockpit communications and navigation equipment. But passengers have sought easier use of their gadgets as electronics become more widespread and as aircraft equipment has become less susceptible to stray signals.

Consumer groups and lawmakers such as Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., have argued that electronic readers are no more dangerous than books during takeoff and landing. "This is great news for the traveling public—and frankly, a win for common sense," McCaskill, chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, said of the FAA's decision. "I applaud the FAA for taking the necessary steps to change these outdated regulations and I look forward to the airlines turning around quick plans for implementation."

The Association of Flight Attendants voiced support for the decision provided that electronic devices are proven not to interfere with onboard communications.

"In order to expand the use of PEDs safely, the commercial aviation industry must first demonstrate that airplanes can tolerate electromagnetic interference from passenger devices," the AFA said. "At the same time, appropriate policies and procedures, supported by effective crew training programs and focused safety messaging from the industry to travelers, are needed to ensure that expanded use by passengers does not degrade safety and security."

Huerta said in perhaps 1% of flights with low visibility, electronics will still be banned at some points in flight on some planes.

"In those cases, passengers may be asked to turn off devices," Huerta said. "It's important for everyone's safety that passengers obey requests to store such devices if need be."

Tap on Merkel Provides Peek at Vast Spy Net - New York Times

Posted: 31 Oct 2013 08:23 AM PDT

WASHINGTON — It was not obvious to the National Security Agency a dozen years ago that Angela Merkel, a rising star as the leader of the Christian Democratic Union, was a future chancellor of Germany.

But that did not matter.

The N.S.A., in a practice that dates back to the depths of the Cold War and that has never ended, was recording her conversations and those of a range of leaders in Germany and elsewhere, storing them in databases that could be searched later, if the need arose. It is unclear how often they searched the databases for her conversations, if at all.

But once she became the country's leader, everything she talked about on her personal cellphone — like her support of the Afghan war, the efforts of European allies to halt Iran's nuclear program, and Germany's central role in quelling the European financial crisis — took on greater importance for the American eavesdroppers.

How the N.S.A. continued to track Ms. Merkel as she ascended to the top of Germany's political apparatus illuminates previously undisclosed details about the way the secret spy agency casts a drift net to gather information from America's closest allies. The phone monitoring is hardly limited to the leaders of countries like Germany, and also includes their top aides and the heads of opposing parties. It is all part of a comprehensive effort to gain an advantage over other nations, both friend and foe.

What the United States has learned from Ms. Merkel's calls since 2002, the year when surveillance on her began, according to a database described last week in the German newsmagazine Der Spiegel, remains unknown. But no one has denied that she was being monitored.

In testimony to Congress on Tuesday, the director of national intelligence, James R. Clapper Jr., gave only the roughest sketch of the size of the N.S.A.'s surveillance program, but suggested that the leader of the United States' most powerful European ally was a single fish in a very big sea.

"We're talking about a huge enterprise here with thousands and thousands of individual requirements," he said, using a phrase that appeared to mean individual surveillance targets. Mr. Clapper said that the United States spies on foreign leaders and other officials to see "if what they're saying gels with what's actually going on," and how the policies of other countries "impact us across a whole range of issues."

German political and intelligence officials went to the White House on Wednesday looking for answers to some of the questions the administration has been reluctant to discuss, and eager to use the incident to broker a far closer intelligence-sharing agreement with Washington that, among other things, would end the surveillance of its leaders.

If put into effect, such an arrangement could begin to dismantle a system that has grown ever larger, and more sophisticated, during a decade in which supercomputers and the algorithms used to search vast databases have put the N.S.A. far ahead of rival intelligence services. President Obama has asked whether the technology has outrun common sense, and the Merkel episode has raised in a very public way the question of whether the benefits of spying on friends outweigh the damage if such spying becomes known.

Even after the flood of information about surveillance operations made public by Edward J. Snowden, the former N.S.A. contractor, American officials are still loath to speak in detail about eavesdropping on friendly governments. But former officials with knowledge of the system described an intelligence apparatus with both a voracious appetite and a growing ability to warehouse huge amounts of data.

The N.S.A. tries to gather cellular and landline phone numbers — often obtained from American diplomats — for as many foreign officials as possible. The contents of the phone calls are stored in computer databases that can regularly be searched using keywords.

"They suck up every phone number they can in Germany," said one former intelligence official.

The databases are different from those housing telephone "metadata" — information about phone numbers on each end of a call and the call's length — to find links between terrorism suspects. "Metadata is only valuable if you are trying to track the activities of a terrorist or a spy," said the former American intelligence official.

By comparison, allied leaders are low-level priorities. In the "National Intelligence Priorities Framework," a matrix approved by the president and updated regularly, information on members of Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups, the whereabouts of nuclear weapons in Pakistan or North Korea, or the conversations of nuclear scientists in Iran are all front-burner intelligence issues. Ranked just below them are questions about the leadership of adversaries, like Russia, China or Iran, or the state of their economies.

Alison Smale contributed reporting from Berlin, and Mark Landler from Washington.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 31, 2013

An earlier version of this article misstated a word in the name of the party that Angela Merkel led a dozen years ago as a rising star of German politics and continues to lead today. It is the Christian Democratic Union, not the Christian Democratic Party. An earlier version also misspelled part of the name of the German weekly in which Helmut Schmidt, a former German chancellor, discussed the National Security Agency spying scandal. It is Die Zeit, not Die Ziet. And an earlier version of this article referred incorrectly to the person who said on behalf of the French government that "the N.S.A. director's denials do not seem very plausible."  The person who commented, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, is a woman, not a "spokesman."

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