Guest guest Posted November 19, 2004 Report Share Posted November 19, 2004 Fri, 19 Nov 2004 08:30:14 -0800 Progress Report: Mis-Spellings " American Progress Action Fund " <progress The Progress Report by Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin November 19, 2004 EDUCATION Mis-Spellings HEALTH CARE The Feckless FDA CLINTON LIBRARY Sunshine and Rain UNDER THE RADAR Go Beyond The Headlines EDUCATION Mis-Spellings This week, President Bush tapped longtime friend and close adviser Margaret Spellings to take the reigns as the new Secretary of Education. Analysts expect " no major change in direction in education policy with Spellings at the helm of the department. " The Christian Science Monitor points out that " Spellings has no experience managing a big organization, and the Education Department has been a challenge for anyone taking it on. " What she does have: deep, unquestioning loyalty to the president. One of the major challenges Spellings faces now is inadequate federal funding for the nation's schools. As the Boston Globe writes, " As Bush has spent more than $1 trillion on tax cuts and two wars, funding for No Child Left Behind has been horribly paltry. " In his new term, President Bush is already pushing for greater accountability standards by pushing for two more years of testing in high school grades. Accountability minus resources, however, equals failure; one of Spellings's first goals must be to get schools the money they need to comply with the mandate already set. NEEDED: QUALIFIED TEACHERS: Inadequate funding has had one major consequence in the nation's schools: disadvantaged schools are having an increasingly difficult time holding on to qualified teachers. A new report by the Center for American Progress, together with the Institute for America's Future, shows poor schools have a " revolving door, " losing large numbers of qualified teachers well before they are due to retire. The reasons? Low compensation, inadequate support from administration, intrusions on classroom teaching time, and limited faculty input into school decision making. (For more on these challenges, read the American Progress report.) American Progress is taking steps to bring attention to this national problem, co-hosting a major forum with Gov. Janet Napolitano in Phoenix today to come up with effective strategies for addressing teacher quality issues. OHIO CLOSING SCHOOLS: Ohio schools, faced with drastic budget cuts, are struggling to stay afloat. Cash-strapped Cincinnati is planning to completely eliminate seven schools next year, cramming their students into other existing schools by raising class sizes and using mobile classrooms. This will also eliminate as many as 600 teachers and staff, or more than 10 percent of the district's 5,800 employees. The National Priorities Project estimates underfunding for the administration's No Child Left Behind Act directly affected these budgets with a $225.7 million shortfall in grants to the Buckeye State for Title I (the program designed to improve educational outcomes for disadvantaged students) and an $8.8 million shortfall for programs to improve teacher quality. GOODBYE TO AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAMS: A lack of money is squeezing Indiana schools. The Indianapolis Star reports class sizes are on the rise at the same time after school extracurricular activities are being cut to the bone. In the growing Hamilton Southeastern district, for example, long-standing programs like school newspapers and swim teams were cut this year. In Minnesota, students are tearfully petitioning school boards to avoid making planned cuts to music programs. Schools in Cleveland face serious cuts: two schools, Independence and West Geaugua, recently cut all funding for athletic teams, forcing students to raise cash on their own to pay for coaches, buses, and referees; a third school is considering eliminating its athletic teams altogether. COMPOUNDING WOES: The public school system in Detroit, MI, is facing a $150 million shortfall in educational money. Faced with the prospect of slashing spending, firing teachers and eliminating schools, the district is considering taking out floating bonds to cover its budget deficit. The Detroit News writes that borrowing money is a bad idea: There's no evidence the budget situation will be any sunnier next year, and " every dollar paid in interest is one less dollar that goes into the classrooms of the future. " HEALTH CARE The Feckless FDA Yesterday, additional evidence emerged that, in the Bush administration, the Food and Drug Administration is more concerned about its relationship with the drug industry than the safety of the American people. Dr. David Graham, who has worked at the FDA for more than 20 years, told the Senate Finance Committee that the agency had become " feckless and far too likely to surrender to demands of drug makers. " The hearing's primary focus was the recent withdrawal of the pain reliever Vioxx, produced by Merck. Graham estimated that – based on Merck's own studies – 139,000 Americans suffered from a heart attack or stroke as a result of taking the drug. Of that group, " 30 percent to 40 percent probably died. For the survivors, their lives were changed forever, " according to Graham. He called the Vioxx scandal " the single greatest drug safety catastrophe in the history of this country or the history of the world. " (For more details on the Vioxx scandal, see last week's Progress Report.) TOP ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS ATTACK THE MESSENGER: Not surprisingly, the Bush administration attacked Dr. Graham for speaking honestly. Before his testimony yesterday, FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford called Dr. Graham " a maverick who did not follow Agency protocols. " But Graham's supervisor at the FDA said the paper that formed the basis of his testimony was " an excellent study and analysis of a complex topic. " Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA) said Crawford's comments were " intended [to] intimidate a witness on the eve of a hearing. " Grassley recommended Crawford spend time " on the problem rather than going after congressional witnesses who helped identify the problem in the first place. " MERCK CEO'S DISHONEST DEFENSE: Raymond V. Gilmartin, the CEO of Merck, also appeared before the Finance Committee. Gilmartin adamantly defended the company's conduct. He claimed that " Merck has promptly disclosed the results of Merck-sponsored studies of Vioxx to the FDA, physicians, the scientific community and the media. " Gilmartin cited the fact that, after a study it conducted in March 2000, the company " immediately issued a press release providing its conclusions. " But that press release didn't include the conclusions of Merck doctors who believed the data indicated that an increased risk of cardiovascular events among those taking the drug was " clearly there. " The following month, Merck issued another release titled, " Merck confirms favorable cardiovascular safety profile of Vioxx " and claiming the data shows " NO DIFFERENCE in the incidence of cardiovascular events. " Merck didn't release the data to the FDA until June 2000. MERCK'S SHAMEFUL ADVERTISING BLITZ: Long after it was aware of the dangers associated with the drug, Merck continued one of the largest direct-to-consumer advertising campaigns ever, spending $160 million dollars. Millions more was spent marketing Vioxx to doctors. Last year, Vioxx sales totaled $2.5 billion. VIOXX IS A SYMPTOM OF A LARGER PROBLEM: According to Graham, " it is important...the American people understand that what happened with Vioxx is really a symptom of something far more dangerous to the safety of the American people. " Graham named five major medications already on the market – " the anti-cholesterol drug Crestor, the pain pill Bextra, the obesity pill Meridia, the asthma drug Serevent and the acne drug Accutane " – whose safety needs to be " seriously looked at. " BEXTRA – THE NEXT VIOXX?: Bextra, produced by Pfizer, is a painkiller similar to Vioxx that is still on the market. Studies have shown that Bextra " increase the risks of heart attacking patients undergoing cardiac surgery [and] in rare cases...can also cause a fatal skin reaction. " Moreover, it " has never proved to be any more effective at reducing pain or protecting the stomach than older medicines like ibuprofen that are a fraction of the price and pose none of these suggested or proven risks. " THE PRICE OF SAFETY: How can the pharmaceutical companies get away with it? Over the past four years the industry has contributed over $68 million to federal candidates – including almost $1.5 million to President Bush. Pfizer, the manufacturer of Bextra – a drug still on the market but singled out by Graham as potentially unsafe – contributed over $120,000 to President Bush. CLINTON LIBRARY Sunshine and Rain Bill Clinton opened the doors of his presidential library yesterday, pledging to use the new 27-acre complex to build political and diplomatic bridges. He was joined by three fellow presidents " on a rain-pelted stage by the Arkansas River " for the dedication. " What it is to me is a symbol of not only what I tried to do but what I want to do with the rest of my life, building bridges from yesterday to tomorrow, building bridges across racial and religious and ethnic and income and political divides,'' said the former president. In an important contribution to government transparency, Bill Clinton is asking that 100,000 previously unreleased presidential documents be made public immediately, long before the law requires. In contrast, the New York Times noted on 5/25/02, shortly after taking office President Bush signed an executive order that " grants both the sitting president and the former president whose records are being sought the right to indefinitely postpone public release just by withholding their permission. " The order " essentially repealed the presumption of public access at the heart of a proud post-Watergate reform – the Presidential Records Act of 1978. The bipartisan act established that a president's White House records are not his personal property but rather belong to the American people. " Under the Radar INTELLIGENCE – GOSS MOVES TO DIRECTORATE: Fresh off his politically motivated purge of the CIA's spying division, evidence indicates incoming Director Porter Goss is moving on to the Directorate of Intelligence, the division that was pressured by Vice President Cheney and his staff to inflate claims of weapons of mass destruction before the war in Iraq. Slate's Fred Kaplan points out that the analytical branch is " where integrity and independence are vital. That's where the Bush administration's prime movers – Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld – stuck their fingers in the run-up to the war in Iraq, pressuring analysts to drop the maybes and on-the-other-hands from their reports about…weapons of mass destruction and connections to al-Qaida. " If Goss demands the same compliance from the Directorate that he has demanded from other agents, it could severely compromise the CIA's intelligence-gathering abilities. AFGHANISTAN – DRUG BUSINESS BOOMING: Despite political progress epitomized by the country's first national elections last month, a new U.N. report fingers a major ongoing problem in Afghanistan: " Heroin production is booming…undermining democracy and putting money in the coffers of terrorists. " The report " called on U.S. and NATO-led forces get more involved in fighting drug traffickers. " Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, said, " Fighting narcotics is equivalent to fighting terrorism. It would be an historical error to abandon Afghanistan to opium, right after we reclaimed it from the Taliban and al-Qaida. " The U.N. agency responsible for the report " said cultivation of opium…has spread to all of Afghanistan, with 10 percent of the population benefiting from the trade. " GAY MARRIAGE – PRESIDENT'S BROTHER SAYS BALLOT INITIATIVE " NOT NECESSARY " : Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said Monday he " would not support " a campaign by Florida's Southern Baptists to amend the state constitution to ban same-sex marriages, adding such a ban was " not necessary, " given existing laws already prohibiting gay marriage. Bush said the effort, led by Florida Baptists who voted last week to lead a campaign to place a constitutional same-sex marriage ban on the 2006 ballot, seeks to remedy " a problem that doesn't exist " in Florida. The same could be said for most of the eleven states which banned same-sex marriage with ballot measures on Nov. 2. HEALTH – WARNER FIGHTS OBESITY IN SCHOOLS: Yesterday, Virginia Gov. Mark Warner (D) kicked off the second phase of his three-part Healthy Virginians initiative, focused on health in schools. " The schools part has two components: a nutrition and physical activity scorecard that will reward schools for voluntarily encouraging exercise and good nutrition, and a proposal for a 5-cent subsidy on school breakfasts, " particularly targeted toward low-income kids who often skip breakfast, then " load up on french fries " at lunch. In the past 20 years, Warner noted, the number of overweight children in the United States has doubled, and the number of overweight adolescents has tripled. Warner is trying to reduce the cost of poor health in his state, which spends " almost $400 million a year on employee health benefits and Medicaid payments related to diseases arising from 'unhealthy lifestyles.' " CULTURE – TEXAS FEARS ROLE REVERSALS: A tiny Texas school district is scrapping a homecoming tradition in which boys dress like girls and vice versa after a parent " complained about what she regarded as the event's homosexual overtones. " As a substitute, the school has decided on " Camo Day, " with " black boots and Army camouflage to be worn by everyone who wants to participate. " Mother Delana Davies explained the danger behind the seemingly innocuous tradition: " It's like experimenting with drugs, " she said. " You just keep playing with it and it becomes customary…If it's OK to dress like a girl today, then why is it not OK in the future? " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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