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8 votes
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This town banned cars (except tiny electric ones)
64 votes -
Environmental experts have criticised the Swedish government's plan to build at least ten nuclear reactors in the next twenty years
22 votes -
Cool it! Eco-friendly New York ice cream trucks are here to serve.
3 votes -
Private equity firms in US health insurance - the private-equity backed health insurer Friday Health Plans shut down under order by Colorado state regulators in July
27 votes -
AP psychology effectively banned in Florida over lesson on sexual orientation, gender identity
64 votes -
Fitch downgrades US credit rating from AAA to AA+
65 votes -
A charge on supermarket single-use plastic bags has led to 98% drop in use in England since 2015
88 votes -
Wisconsin’s dairy industry relies on undocumented immigrants, but the state won’t let them legally drive
20 votes -
Hackers exploited a zero-day flaw in Ivanti's software undetected for at least three months, US and Norwegian cybersecurity agencies warn
14 votes -
Michigan tests road layout where oncoming cars share a lane to make room for bikes
33 votes -
How Big Tech rewrote the USA's first cellphone repair law
11 votes -
US District Judge blocks Arkansas law allowing librarians to be criminally charged over ‘harmful’ materials
50 votes -
How to ensure you won’t have public transportation
27 votes -
The bewildering architecture of skybridges
4 votes -
New York City announces major public space and transit improvements for Downtown Brooklyn
17 votes -
Richmond (Virginia, USA) transit is expanding into the counties and adding a "micro-transit" service
12 votes -
New Florida standards in schools
48 votes -
New Jersey files federal lawsuit to block NYC’s congestion pricing plan; Staten Island sets up legal action
25 votes -
Cleveland: New city policy would eliminate mandatory parking near transit corridors
12 votes -
Parking laws are strangling America
49 votes -
San Francisco’s downtown becomes a wake-up call for other cities in the US
60 votes -
Transit groups in New York call for congestion toll to be passed on to for-hire vehicle riders
19 votes -
Microsoft lost its keys, and the US government got hacked
25 votes -
Australia Commonwealth Games 2026: Victoria cancels event after costs blow out to $7bn
9 votes -
The inventor of glitter, Henry Ruschmann, also helped develop the atomic bomb
14 votes -
Why does market fundamentalism have so much clout in economics?
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market...
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market fundamentalism because it seemed to best describe precisely what I'm talking about. I mean the belief that the market is capable of self-regulation and that governmental intervention will cause damage to the economy.
I'm asking this because there's still a lot about economics that I don't know about and so I was hoping someone with a background in the subject who would be able to better answer the question. But I realize it's probably also a political question. I wonder if it's more of an issue of our politicians pressing these views than economists and academics.
Personally, with my life's experience, it seems almost obviously wrong. I've lived through several market downturns and even a crash, and looking through history it seems like every market crash can be attributed to the market failing to correct itself.
21 votes -
The post Dobbs dilemma for US emergency healthcare - Navigating the conflict between EMTALA and State abortion restrictions
21 votes -
2022 guidance from President Biden's administration assures doctors they’ll be protected by US federal law for providing emergency abortion care even if their state bans the procedure
40 votes -
Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
US states scrutinize the amount of charity spending from nonprofit hospitals in light of high salaries and large tax breaks
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/nonprofit-hospitals-tax-breaks-community-benefit/ POTTSTOWN, Pa. — The public school system here had to scramble in 2018 when the local hospital, newly...
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/article/nonprofit-hospitals-tax-breaks-community-benefit/
POTTSTOWN, Pa. — The public school system here had to scramble in 2018 when the local hospital, newly purchased, was converted to a tax-exempt nonprofit entity.
The takeover by Tower Health meant the 219-bed Pottstown Hospital no longer had to pay federal and state taxes. It also no longer had to pay local property taxes, taking away more than $900,000 a year from the already underfunded Pottstown School District, school officials said.
The district, about an hour’s drive from Philadelphia, had no choice but to trim expenses. It cut teacher aide positions and eliminated middle school foreign language classes.
“We have less curriculum, less coaches, less transportation,” said Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez.
The school system appealed Pottstown Hospital’s new nonprofit status, and earlier this year a state court struck down the facility’s property tax break. It cited the “eye-popping” compensation for multiple Tower Health executives as contrary to how Pennsylvania law defines a charity.
The court decision, which Tower Health is appealing, stunned the nonprofit hospital industry, which includes roughly 3,000 nongovernment tax-exempt hospitals nationwide.
“The ruling sent a warning shot to all nonprofit hospitals, highlighting that their state and local tax exemptions, which are often greater than their federal income tax exemptions, can be challenged by state and local courts,” said Ge Bai, a health policy expert at Johns Hopkins University.
The Pottstown case reflects the growing scrutiny of how much the nation’s nonprofit hospitals spend — and on what — to justify billions in state and federal tax breaks. In exchange for these savings, hospitals are supposed to provide community benefits, like care for those who can’t afford it and free health screenings.
More than a dozen states have considered or passed legislation to better define charity care, to increase transparency about the benefits hospitals provide, or, in some cases, to set minimum financial thresholds for charitable help to their communities.
The growing interest in how tax-exempt hospitals operate — from lawmakers, the public, and the media — has coincided with a stubborn increase in consumers’ medical debt. KFF Health News reported last year that more than 100 million Americans are saddled with medical bills they can’t pay, and has documented aggressive bill-collection practices by hospitals, many of them nonprofits.
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15 votes -
Who really wants megastructure cites?
3 votes -
EU passes nature restoration law in knife-edge vote
19 votes -
Some major cities in the US are getting rid of bus fares
71 votes -
In the Northern Rockies, grizzly bears are on the move. As grizzlies recover, they’re no longer content to roam within the boundaries we’ve contrived for them.
12 votes -
UK House of Lords votes to modify proposed legislation to target 'harmful' algorithms
9 votes -
The manufacturing backlash: No factory in my backyard
15 votes -
Plastics have shaped nearly every aspect of society. Now what?
22 votes -
Tennessee ban on gender-affirming care for minors to go into effect for now
39 votes -
The history behind Orkney's vote to ‘join Norway’
9 votes -
France passes bill to allow police to remotely activate phone camera, microphone, and GPS, in order to spy on people
79 votes -
How Chicago solves its overheating problem
11 votes -
Free transit in Stavanger, Norway, places the city in a growing vanguard of municipalities that have made buses, trains and trams free at point of use
12 votes -
Vote to block Georgia spaceport upheld by state’s high court
17 votes -
Iowa joins dozens of other US states in legalizing sales of raw milk
57 votes -
Florida bill allowing radioactive roads made of potentially cancer-causing mining waste signed by Ron DeSantis
43 votes -
Italian soccer players banned from wearing No. 88 on jerseys in campaign against antisemitism
15 votes -
How a megachurch wields power in a regional California city and influence in the music industry
7 votes -
SEPTA Board approves $1.69 billion FY24 operating and capital budget ahead of expected fiscal cliff
11 votes -
Controversy over lack of renewable in plans to rebuild electrical grid in Puerto Rico
10 votes