Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Thirty five people killed during Shanghai's New Year's celebrations

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Thirty five people have been killed in a stampede during Shanghai's New Year's celebrations, China's state-run Xinhua news agency reported.


The city government said that another 42 people were injured.


The death and injuries occurred at the city's riverfront Bund area, which can be jammed with spectators for major events.


One Xinhua photo from the scene shows at least one person doing chest compressions on a shirtless person while other people lay on the ground nearby.


Another photo shows the area ringed by police.


The cause of the stampede remained under investigation, the Xinhua report said.


Shanghai's historic Bund riverfront runs along an area of often narrow streets amid restored old buildings, shops and tourist attractions.


The China Daily newspaper in February reported that the city's population was more than 24 million at the end of 2013.



Countdown to 2015! New Year's Eve celebrations around the world

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People across the globe have begun to welcome in the new year, with revellers in New Zealand and Australia among those leading the way.


A giant clock on Auckland's landmark Sky Tower counted down the minutes until the new year, with a huge fireworks display launching from the tower at midnight.


The capital, Wellington, hosted a family-friendly celebration in a park featuring orchestral music and movie clips and culminating in a fireworks display.


After a turbulent year marred by terror woes, Ebola outbreaks and a horrific series of airline disasters, many could be forgiven for saying good riddance to 2014 and gratefully ringing in a new year.


Sydney takes pride in being one of the first major cities in the world to welcome each new year, and it greeted 2015 in its trademark glittery fashion - with a tropical-style fireworks display featuring shimmering gold and silver palm tree pyrotechnic effects.


More than 1.5 million revellers crowded along the shores of the city's famed harbour in warm weather to watch the vivid eruption of light over the Harbour Bridge, Opera House and other points along the water.


At midnight, the crowd cheered as a 12-minute firework display was launched, the third and final light show for the night.


The festivities, however, come just two weeks after an Iranian-born self-styled cleric took 18 people hostage inside a downtown cafe.


A tribute to two hostages killed in the siege was displayed on the pylons of the Harbour Bridge during the main fireworks display, and an extra 3,000 police officers patrolled the city. Still, residents were encouraged to celebrate as usual.


In Indonesia, the loss of AirAsia Flight 8501 and a deadly landslide in central Java are recent tragedies that muted celebrations in the capital Jakarta.


Surabaya's mayor banned any kind of new year entertainment in the country's second-largest city, where most of the 162 people on the AirAsia flight that crashed on Sunday were from.


Hundreds of Surabaya residents, including young children, lit candles in the drizzle at a park and observed a minute's silence for victims of the crash.


In Dubai, celebrations included plans to break the world record for the largest LED-illuminated facade.


Some 70,000 LED panels were wrapped around the world's tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, which draws thousands of spectators every New Year's Eve for an impressive fireworks display.


Emaar Properties said a team from Guinness World Records monitored the preparations. Last year, Dubai won the title for the world's largest firework display, according to Guinness.



Trust admits it doesn't know how many parking tickets handed out at North Tees Hospital


Hospital bosses have admitted they have no idea how many parking tickets have been given to patients since a controversial new parking scheme began.


Patients have complained about fines received from parking at Stockton’s University Hospital of North Tees, since ParkingEye took over running the car park at the beginning of August.


Hospital chiefs say 85% of fine appeals are upheld - but North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust have now admitted that ParkingEye do not report to them how many tickets they hand out.


Labour’s Alex Cunningham, MP for Stockton North, has criticised the trust for a “tremendous lack of transparency around the use of public money when services are handed over to private companies”.


A Freedom of Information request to the Trust revealed that ParkingEye provide reports containing traffic flows, the number of vehicles on site and what time they arrive, and the amount of income from payment machines.


But these reports do not give details of Parking Charge Notices.


Mr Cunningham said: “This highlights the deeper problem of a tremendous lack of transparency around the use of public money when services are handed over to private companies.


“With more and more contracts being outsourced in this way, this is a sterling example of exactly why the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act need to now be extended to those organisations providing services on behalf of the public sector.”


The trust say the new system, introduced in August, has reduced and simplified parking tariffs.


Visitors get the first 20 minutes free, then pay £3 for 12 hours and £10 for a 28 day period.


The system uses automatic number plate recognition on entrance and exit.


After a number of motorists complained to The Gazette in October, Mr Cunningham met with hospital bosses to discuss how to simplify the parking and payment process.


Mr Cunningham continued: “I am pleased ParkingEye and the Trust are seeing sense and upholding a very high proportion of appeals, but had they got visible and clear signage right across the sites in the first instance I am sure there would never have been any need for people to appeal at all.


But Mr Cunningham said he “remains concerned” those rushing to hospital could still be caught out.


Deputy director of support services at the trust, Peter Mitchell, said: “We do not view all of the civil penalty notices issued by ParkingEye.


“If anyone receives a notice they can appeal. We have been advised by ParkingEye that across the 20 health trusts whose car parks they manage that around 85% of appeals are upheld.


“A charge becomes payable if the terms and conditions are not adhered to. If someone has a legitimate reason for not paying for a ticket, such as an emergency, then notices are upheld.


“There are signs across both of our hospital sites with information about how people can pay.”


Motorists can pay on the way out of the hospital at machines, or up to midnight on the same day after leaving the site either by text, phone or through www.paybyphone.co.uk using the site number 83159 for North Tees Hospital.


For more information, contact the trust by emailing carparkingenquiries@nth.nhs.uk


The Gazette could not reach Parking Eye for comment.



Key figure on Teesside business scene awarded MBE in New Year's Honours list


A major figure in the Teesside process industry has been handed an MBE in the New Year’s Honours list.


George Ritchie, 67, from Peterlee, retired as senior vice president for HR at Sembcorp at the end of October after almost 50 years in the process industry, most of it on Teesside.


Mr Ritchie, who was honoured for his services to the process industries and apprenticeships, said: “I am deeply honoured to have received this award. I have had a challenging, varied and wonderful career and worked with some tremendous people.


“I have always believed in the importance of skills development and high quality training in driving businesses and individuals forward and believe the willingness of employers to train and mentor apprentices will be key to the future of the process industries in the years to come.”


Mr Ritchie’s career saw him rise from the bench to the boardroom.


He took a two year technical engineering pre-apprenticeship at Easington Technical College before beginning work at Steetley in County Durham in 1965.


He started as a technical apprentice and carried out a number of engineering roles while taking a degree in Applied Science and Mechanical Engineering at Newcastle University - before he joined ICI in 1978.


Beginning as a construction engineer, before becoming a plant engineer at Billingham, he progressed through a number of engineering roles before overseeing the outsourcing of centralised engineering functions in the early 1990s.


Mr Ritchie was Teesside Services Manager at the time of the massive BASF blaze at Wilton in 1995, working with the police and Cleveland Fire Brigade to ensure the fire - the biggest in peacetime on Teesside - was extinguished safely.


His career took a new turn as energy companies Enron and then Sembcorp took over responsibility for the Wilton International site, effectively ‘retraining’ to take on executive HR responsibilities in both companies.


For the past 15 years he has held many senior local and national positions in the skills, training and apprenticeship arenas and has earned a reputation in both the public and private sectors as a determined and forceful champion of these subjects.


In just over a decade he instigated, shaped and gained financial support for a number of schemes that have led to the creation of almost 1,000 new, high quality apprenticeships on Teesside including those taking the Tees Valley Production Technician (TVPT) apprenticeship.


The Tees Valley Apprenticeship Programme (TVAP) created in 2009, rescued 150 “at risk” apprenticeships following a series of devastating company closures at Wilton and at Corus five years ago.


The scheme was so successful it created a similar number of new apprenticeships and encouraged many local employers to sponsor apprentices, some for the first time.


Mr Ritchie, married with two grown-up children, gained an Outstanding Contribution Award from NEPIC in 2011 and a Special Achievement Award from the Chemical Industries Association in 2012 for TVAP and his contribution to the training and development of young talent.



Chaloner Primary School hopes your Wish tokens will help them plan for next Christmas


Christmas might have passed but a group of Guisborough youngsters is already planning ahead for next year with the help of The Gazette’s Wish campaign.


Chaloner Primary School, on Wilton Lane, is looking for a share of the prize money in this year’s campaign to help fund fun and festive opportunities for 2015.


The school’s Parents, Teachers and Friends Association continuously aims to raise money to benefit all of the children at the school from nursery to Year Six.


The group try and put the fun in fundraising by providing the youngsters with a variety of events throughout the academic year including discos and fairs.


Having entered The Gazette’s Wish campaign last year, the support the school received went towards an outdoor centre trip.


With regards to this year’s campaign, Tracy Marsden of the PTFA, said: “The money will go towards a Christmas pantomime.”


Every year, The Gazette’s Wish campaign gives away thousands of pounds to not-for-profit groups and organisations benefiting the Teesside community.


Each registered group will be guaranteed a share of our £40,000 fund.


The more tokens a group collects, the bigger its share of the prize pot.


Tokens are now appearing daily in The Gazette.


The last token will appear on January 21.


Submissions for tokens will close at 5pm on Monday, February 23.


To help Chaloner Primary School, send your tokens to: Chaloner Primary School, Wilton Lane, Guisborough, Cleveland, TS14 6JA.



New Boro assistant head coach Steve Agnew relishing return visit to Barnsley in FA Cup


Steve Agnew is looking forward to making a return visit to Barnsley.


Boro’s new assistant head coach started his career with the South Yorkshire club, making almost 200 first team appearances.


On Saturday, he’ll be helping Aitor Karanka mastermind a gameplan to overcome Danny Wilson’s League One outfit in a potentially tough FA Cup third round tie at Oakwell.


There’s no doubt the 49-year-old’s local knowledge will come in handy, and he certainly knows his way around the Barnsley first team squad.


It helps that a couple of Wilson’s players were at Boro when Agnew was a member of the Rockliffe Park coaching team.


“Ross Turnbull was at Middlesbrough when I was there and is a good keeper,” he told the Barnsley Chronicle. “Leroy Lita was there too and he’s a good finisher.


“Dale Jennings has got good pace, balance and can go past players.”


Barnsley were relegated from the Championship last season and have found life in League One tough.


The club currently sit 16th, just three points above the drop zone, but Agnew is backing Wilson to turn around their fortunes.


He said: “Obviously relegation from the Championship was not what they wanted but in Danny Wilson they have a manager who is capable of getting them promotion.


“Any team coming to take on a Danny Wilson side are in for a hard game.


“We always seemed to have a good cup run at Barnsley,” he added. “I’m looking forward to coming back.”


“I have lots of happy memories from my time at Barnsley - particularly in the cup.


“I can remember beating West Ham away and getting to play Everton in the quarter-final in front of 30,000 people.


“We also played Liverpool when they had a top, top team.”



Kind-hearted Teessider becomes real life Santa with nearly £1,000 of toys for needy children


A kind-hearted Teesside man became a real life Santa Claus when he bought almost £1,000 worth of toys for needy children.


Event organiser Danny Miller, 22, used the proceeds of a Christmas Eve club night at Middlesbrough bar Mink to buy a range of toys which he will donate to children’s homes run by Middlesbrough Council.


Danny, who splits his time between his home of Thornaby and Ibiza, raised £920 and bought skateboards, kick scooters, a telescope, remote control cars, robots, helicopters and Nerf guns.


He even bought a full sized basketball hoop, underwater speakers, boom-boxes, headphones and perfume for older kids.


The former Egglescliffe School pupil said: “It was just something I wanted to do. I think that I am lucky to have a good family, and it is easy to forget that not everyone can be that lucky at Christmas.”Danny hopes the toys will go to children aged nine to 16 at the Fir Tree and Holly Lodge children’s homes in Middlesbrough.


He continued: “I am not saying that the kids there won’t have had a great Christmas, because I’m sure they did, but I just wanted to give them something a bit extra.


“Hopefully it will put smiles on a few faces.”


Danny has been involved with club nights and events at various Middlesbrough nightspots including The Empire, Medicine Bar and Spensleys.


His Christmas Eve event at Mink, on Corporation Road, began with an acoustic set, before Danny put on a house DJ set late into the night.


He donated his fee from takings on the door to buy the toys, while his pal Joe Thompson, who runs Lazy Joe’s clothes shop on Borough Road, also donated £100 to the cause.


Danny continued: “I want to say thanks to everyone who came along on the night to support the event, and to Joe as well who is going to help me drop off the presents with the council.


“He even said he is designing some children’s clothes, which he doesn’t normally sell, so he can donate them as well.”


Danny is delivering the toys to the council today and he says they should be handed out in the New Year.



North Tees hospital nursery to officially close despite hard-fought campaign to save it


A hospital nursery closes today despite a hard-fought campaign to save it.


North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust confirmed its nurseries at the hospitals of North Tees and Hartlepool are permanently closed from December 31.


The service had provided 178 childcare places across the two sites.


The Stockton-based nursery provided creche facilities primarily for hospital staff’s children aged from six weeks up to seven, but also for families in the wider community.


But the trust said the facility had become “uneconomic to run” and over the past four years it has made a total anticipated loss of more than £765,000 subsidising the nursery.


At the shock news of the closure in September - when more than 50 staff were given 90 days’ notice - campaigners immediately launched a campaign to save the nursery.


Parents Jamie Picken and Debbie Ling set up the Stop the Closure campaign and launched an online petition which garnered nearly 500 signatures in less than two days.


But the campaigners reluctantly threw in the towel last month, saying it was important for parents to secure alternative childcare for their children.


The defeat came after talks between the trust and private firms who had expressed an interest in running the nursery came to nothing.


Earlier this month Cara Woods posted on the Friends of North Tees and Hartlepool Children’s Day Nursery Facebook page: “Very sad end to the day collecting Ethan after his last day at the nursery.


“Huge thanks and praise to all the lovely ladies who have helped Ethan bloom in confidence. All the best to all the staff and thank you so much!”


A spokesperson for North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust said: “Our nurseries will close on December 31 and we would like to thank the staff who have provided a good service for staff and their children and wish them well for the future.”



Hunt for Romanian man wanted in connection with sex attack on grandmother 'very much live'


The hunt for a Romanian man officers want to speak to in connection with a brutal sex attack on a grandmother remains “very much live” say police.


Cleveland Police want to speak to Cezar Florea in connection with an attack close to the A66 flyover, near Lytton Street, on June 7 this year.


Earlier this month, The Gazette reported how the force was seeking a European Union warrant for the arrest of Florea, who it is believed may have left the UK, but had been unable to complete the request.


Speaking at the time, a spokeswoman told The Gazette that the force was unable to reveal details as to why the process had taken so long, because doing so could prejudice the inquiry.


Now Cleveland Police has reiterated the determination to find Florea.


Police believe this CCTV shows Cezar Florea VIEW GALLERY


A spokeswoman said: “This investigation remains very much live and efforts to locate Florea are ongoing, in order that he can be questioned in relation to the attack in North Ormesby early on the morning of June 7.


“A European Arrest Warrant (EAW) is just one tool at our disposal and there are strict criteria which we must meet before obtaining and then issuing an EAW.


“Meanwhile, we continue to work closely with the Crown Prosecution Service and European police forces. Only when this man has been located will we have the opportunity to implement an EAW immediately.


It is believed that Florea, 26, left Teesside following the attack in the North Ormesby area.


The police subsequently made several appeals - including on Crimewatch - for help in locating him.


Once secured, a European arrest warrant would mean that he could be arrested in any EU country and be transferred back to Teesside.


The Gazette understands that in order to secure a European arrest warrant, the police force requesting it must have enough evidence to charge the suspect on arrest.


Speaking in October, Detective Inspector Mark Dimelow, who is leading the investigation, said: “We currently believe Florea to be either in the south-east of England or to have gone abroad, and we are therefore now seeking to secure a European arrest warrant which will allow foreign police forces to conduct any inquiries we request.”


The vicious sex attack left the 51-year-old victim with serious injuries, including a broken shoulder and broken nose.


She was punched and dragged down a footbridge before being sexually assaulted in the early-morning attack, which took place as the victim was walking to work.


It only stopped when a man came to her aid and chased the suspect.


Anyone with information should contact police on 101 or Crimestoppers, anonymously, on 0800 555 111.



Man forced to shove blazing mattress out of first floor window after it was ignited by lit cigarette


A man was forced to shove a smouldering mattress out of a first floor window after it was ignited by a lit cigarette.


Firefighters were called to a house fire on Cargo Fleet Lane yesterday evening.


Cleveland Fire Brigade received reports of a house fire on Cargo Fleet Lane, Ormesby, Middlesbrough , at 8.41pm.


The fire had been caused by a cigarette setting fire to a matress.


On arrival, fire crews found that a man at the address had forced a blazing mattress out of a first floor window and had extinguished a smouldering duvet into a bathtub.


The house sustained fire damage to window frames and some smoke damage throughout the property. Neither the man nor two females at the address were injured.


Two fire crews from Grangetown Fire Station arrived at the incident and used one hose reel, breathing apparatus and ventilation equipment to deal with the smouldering bed sheets.


Grangetown Fire Station watch manager Carl Pearson said: "Luckily nobody was injured. I would have expected the man who threw mattress out of the window to have been burned but somehow he's got away without being hurt.


"Thankfully the smoke alarms in the property were working but it was actually the neighbours who reported the fire when they saw a burning mattress fly past their window.


"I would like to advise people against using smoking materials in bedrooms. Try and smoke outside and make sure you dispose of smoking materials properly."



Adam Reach: 'Hopefully, I'll be in the Premier League with Boro on New Year's Eve 2015'


Playing Premier League football for Boro is where Adam Reach wants to be this time next year.


The past 12 months have seen the talented winger establish himself as a regular starter in Aitor Karanka’s first team.


Following loan spells with Shrewsbury and Bradford last season, the 21-year-old has matured into one of Boro’s most consistent performers in the Championship over the first half of the current campaign.


Looking forward to 2015, Reach is taking nothing for granted but, understandably, knows it could prove to be a hugely rewarding year if he and the club fulfil their potential.


Asked where he hoped he would be in on New Year’s Eve 2015, he said: “Hopefully, I will be playing in the Premier League with Middlesbrough.


“Every player wants to play in the Premier League because it’s the best league in the world and I’m pretty confident we can do that next year.”


Reach’s Boro future was in doubt a year ago but his performances for the club this season earned him a new, long-term contract that runs until the summer of 2019.


“That was a plus,” he admitted. “Personally I wanted to commit my future to the club and it’s nice to know the club wanted me to stay that long.


“It was a reward, really, for some good performances and, hopefully, we can kick on and the team can get rewarded at the end of the season by getting promoted.”


Reach made just three first team appearances for Boro last season, including one solitary start, so to be involved in all but one of the club’s fixtures so far this time around is a remarkable statistic.


His aim, not surprisingly, over the second half of the current campaign is to retain his regular place in the team.


“If somebody said I would play every game apart from one and that I would start so many games, I don’t think I would have laughed but I probably would have been a little bit sceptical.


“But that’s the way it’s turned out and I’m happy about that. Hopefully I can make as many appearances in the second half of the season as I have in the first. I feel very much part of the squad this season.


“Some of the players I’ve known now for two or three years and the new lads have settled in really well.


“This year we’ve got a really good changing room, we haven’t got any players who think they are better than anyone else, everyone is level-headed and I think that’s showing on the pitch away from home and at the Riverside so let’s keep it going.”



Two-year-old shoots and kills mum in US


A mother was shot and killed yesterday morning, whilst shopping with her son, when the boy reached into her handbag and grabbed a small-calibre handgun, which discharged once.


A relative of the woman who was accidentally shot and killed by her two-year-old son at a US supermarket says she was a "loving mother".


The Kootenai County sheriff's department has identified the victim as 29-year-old Veronica Rutledge, of Blackfoot, Idaho.


The victim's father-in-law, Terry Rutledge, says the woman was "taken much too soon".


The shooting occurred in the Wal-Mart in Hayden, Idaho, a town about 40 miles north-east of Spokane, Washington.


Sheriff's spokesman Stu Miller said Ms Rutledge was shopping with her son and three other children, and that her family had come to the area to visit relatives.


The victim had a concealed weapons permit, and her son had been left in a shopping trolley when he took hold of the gun.


Deputies who responded to the Wal-Mart found her dead, the sheriff's office said.


The woman's husband was not in the store when the shooting happened at about 10.20am local time. He arrived shortly after the shooting, and all the children were taken to a relative's house.


Brooke Buchanan, a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, said the shooting was a "very sad and tragic accident".


She said: "We are working closely with the local sheriff's department while they investigate what happened."


There do not appear to be reliable national statistics about the number of accidental fatalities involving children handling guns.


In Washington state, a three-year-old boy was seriously injured in November when he was accidentally shot in the face by a four-year-old neighbour.


The boy was wounded as the children played in a home in Lake Stevens, north of Seattle.


In April, a two-year-old boy apparently shot and killed his 11-year-old sister while they and their siblings played with a gun inside a Philadelphia home.


Authorities said the gun was believed to have been brought into the home by the mother's boyfriend.


Hayden is a politically conservative town of about 9,000 people just north of Coeur d'Alene, in northern Idaho.


Idaho politicians passed legislation earlier this year allowing concealed weapons on the state's public college and university campuses.


Despite facing opposition from all eight of the state's university college presidents, they sided with gun rights advocates who said the law would better uphold the Constitution.


Under the law, gun holders are barred from bringing their weapons into dormitories or buildings that hold more than 1,000 people, such as stadiums or concert halls.



Obamacare’s Annus Horribilis


Health Overhaul Florida There’s no candy coating the truth: Obamacare has had a very terrible, horrible, crappy, none-too-happy year. What it really means is that the victims of Obamacare — taxpayers, health care consumers, health care providers, employers and employees — have had a hellish, nightmarish 2014.


Let’s start with premiums. President Candy Land promised that he’d “lower premiums by up to $2,500 for a typical family per year.” But premiums for people in the individual market for health insurance have spiked over the last year. In fact, Forbes health policy journalist Avik Roy and the Manhattan Institute analyzed 3,137 counties and found that individual market premiums rose an average of 49 percent.


The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services itself admitted this month that average premiums will rise at least five percent for the lowest-cost plans offered by federal Obamacare health care exchanges. Democrats’ reaction? Obamacare rate shock doesn’t matter … because government is redistributing the burden and taxpayers are footing the bill! HHS crowed this week that nearly 90 percent of exchange enrollees received public subsidies in order to pay their premiums.


“Affordable” doesn’t mean what White House truth-warpers says it means — just like everything else they’ve spewed about the doomed federal takeover of health policy in America.


As the White House tries to hype year-end enrollment numbers and hide Obamacare-imposed cancellations, just remember that the administration got caught this fall cooking the books by including 380,000 dental plan subscribers that have never been counted before. Innocent oopsie? The “erroneous” inflation just happened to push the Obamacare enrollment figures over the president’s 7 million goal, while fudging the attrition of more than 1 million enrolled in Obamacare medical insurance plans.


A “mistake was made,” HHS ‘fessed up after GOP investigators discovered the Common Core math antics. Lying liars. Caught red-handed.


So, how about: “If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor?” Well, not if he or she isn’t practicing anymore. After scoffing at conservative warnings for years that socialized medicine-light would create doctor shortages, Obamacare cheerleaders can no longer whitewash the grim reality. The Physicians Foundation found that 81 percent of doctors believe they are “either overextended or at full capacity.” Another 44 percent said they “planned to cut back on the number of patients they see, retire, work part-time or close their practice to new patients.”


Analysts on all sides of the debate agree that massive cuts in Medicaid payments to primary care doctors, which take effect on Jan. 1, will reduce patient access. Meanwhile, a Commonwealth Fund survey found that 26 percent of American adults waited six days or more to see a doctor — with only Canada and Norway performing worse.


A separate physicians’ staffing company’s poll, reported by the left-wing New York Times, found that patients “waited an average of 29 days nationally to see a dermatologist [,] 66 days to have a physical in Boston and 32 days for a heart evaluation by a cardiologist in Washington.”


Translation: If you like your doctor, it doesn’t mean you’ll get to see your doctor. Tick, tick, tick.


How about Obama’s pledge to lower costs? A Congressional Budget Office reported earlier this year that implementation will cost taxpayers $2 trillion over the next decade. That’s just the direct costs. Obamacare’s job-killing regulations continue to discourage businesses from expanding and force more bosses to slash hours to avoid the employer mandate.


Based on estimates by Harvard and University of Chicago economists, health care policy analyst John Goodman concludes that the “indirect cost to the economy … equals more than $8,000 per household per year — or four times the size of the direct budget outlays.”


This includes the tax on innovation. As I’ve reported over the last four years, Obamacare’s reviled medical-device tax has forced companies to cut back on research and development, in addition to catalyzing layoffs of at least 33,000 workers over the past year. A recent study by the New York Federal Reserve found that half of the state’s medical device manufacturers were bracing for “considerably” higher health care costs as a result of Obamacare rules. These include “higher deductibles, increased copays, higher out-of-pocket maximums and an increased employee contribution to the premium.”


Who’s “stupid” now? The fallout from intrepid Philadelphia investment adviser and citizen researcher Rich Weinstein’s exposure of Obamacare architect/deceiver Jonathan Gruber has only just begun. Far worse than Gruber’s insult of American voters, Weinstein notes, is the annual $250 billion tax grab at the heart of Gruber and Company’s scheme. Obamacare’s so-called “Cadillac tax” on expensive health plans was purposely “mislabeled,” Gruber said in video uncovered by Weinstein, in order to pass a tax that will eventually hit all employer plans.


Separately, insurers have been lobbying for a total taxpayer bailout of an estimated $1 billion in 2014. Meanwhile, beleaguered Obamacare non-profit “co-ops” that were supposed to lower costs have sucked up $2 billion in loans to date and hundreds of millions more in emergency solvency funding this year.


The worst is yet to come. Before the midterms, panicked and politically driven Obama bureaucrats delayed premium payment deadlines, high-risk insurance pool cancellations and onerous “meaningful use” mandates on health providers grappling with Obamacare’s disastrous top-down electronic medical records rules. Those chickens will come home to roost in 2015.


One silver lining: A total of 16 Senators who voted for the federal health care takeover either failed to win re-election or declined to run for re-election.


Good riddance to them and farewell to Obamacare’s annus horribilis.


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