Tuesday, 30 December 2014

Boehner's Upcoming Congress Already Has Personnel Challenges



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





The 114th Congress has yet to convene but already members of the new majority have personnel issues to confront.




Copyright © 2014 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


Copyright © 2014 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.



First Black Republican Congresswoman Wants To Be Known For More



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





Earlier this fall, voters in Utah elected the first black Republican woman to the House of Representatives. Mia Love is a Haitian American who previously served as the mayor of Saratoga Springs, near Provo, Utah.




Copyright © 2014 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


Copyright © 2014 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.


NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.



2014 Brought Lasting Action On Climate Change Policy



Smoke is seen rising from a power plant near Hengshui in China's Hebei province. In November, President Obama announced a landmark carbon-cutting deal with China — the world's leading producer of greenhouse gases. And the Chinese government has announced plans to cap the use of coal within five years.i i



Smoke is seen rising from a power plant near Hengshui in China's Hebei province. In November, President Obama announced a landmark carbon-cutting deal with China — the world's leading producer of greenhouse gases. And the Chinese government has announced plans to cap the use of coal within five years. Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty Images hide caption



itoggle caption Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty Images

Smoke is seen rising from a power plant near Hengshui in China's Hebei province. In November, President Obama announced a landmark carbon-cutting deal with China — the world's leading producer of greenhouse gases. And the Chinese government has announced plans to cap the use of coal within five years.



Smoke is seen rising from a power plant near Hengshui in China's Hebei province. In November, President Obama announced a landmark carbon-cutting deal with China — the world's leading producer of greenhouse gases. And the Chinese government has announced plans to cap the use of coal within five years.


Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty Images


Some of the stories that gripped our attention in 2014 will probably be forgotten in a few years — if not a few weeks. But there's one story that President Obama argues we'll be living with for decades to come.


"There's one issue that will define the contours of this century more dramatically than any other. And that is the urgent and growing threat of a changing climate," he said in September, addressing the United Nations Climate Change Summit.


Even as Obama struggled with other big challenges this year, climate was one area where he managed to get some traction.


As the threat of a changing climate became more obvious and immediate, governments here and around the world began to respond. In June, the EPA unveiled new rules governing power plants — the number one source of greenhouse gases in the U.S.




"It's almost a jihad against fossil energy, but particularly focusing on coal. ... This is the electricity generation that you depend on for your air conditioning in the summer and your heat in the winter."





"2014 is the year in which a lot of these initiatives took form and became public ... So this has been a big year," says David Doniger of the Natural Resources Defense Council. He says those long-awaited rules are the centerpiece of the president's effort to fight climate change.


The administration has also taken steps to boost energy efficiency and promote cleaner sources of electricity that don't produce carbon pollution. None of that sits well with the coal mining industry that Luke Popovich represents. He's Vice President of the National Mining Association.


"It's almost a jihad against fossil energy, but particularly focusing on coal. ... This is the electricity generation that you depend on for your air conditioning in the summer and your heat in the winter," Popovich says.


Obama's plan does call for significant cuts in greenhouse gases — cuts the president calls "ambitious but achievable." And he's not just focused on U.S. pollution. In November, Obama announced a landmark carbon-cutting deal with China — the world's leading producer of greenhouse gases.


"This is a major milestone in the U.S.-China relationship. And it shows what's possible when we work together on an urgent global challenge," Obama said.


The U.S.-China deal provided a jump-start for international climate talks, expected to culminate in Paris this coming year.


Critics complain that while the U.S. is already cutting its carbon pollution, China's emissions are allowed to keep growing until 2030. China is already making big investments in clean energy, though. And the Chinese government has announced plans to cap the use of coal within five years. Doniger of the NRDC says China's choking smog problem gives it a big incentive to clean up its power plants. What's more, he says, the Chinese government is genuinely worried by increasingly dry weather in the northern part of the country and rising sea levels in the east.


"They understand climate change is real. And when their scientists tell them it's real, they don't have a bunch of ideologues who tell them it's a hoax," Doniger says.


Obama's climate agenda is about to face new political headwinds, though. His announcement in China came just eight days after the midterm elections, which gave Republicans control of not only the U.S. Senate but also two-thirds of state legislative chambers. States are responsible for implementing the new EPA rules. And the National Mining Association's Popovich says that could be next climate battleground if some try to delay or thwart the administration's policy on power plants.


"It's going to come down to governors in two, three dozen states saying, 'you have to tear this up and start over again. We can't expose our citizens to these kinds of cost increases for so little benefit,'" he says.


EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy is not backing down. She points to polls showing most Americans want the government to cut greenhouse gases, even if that means they have to pay a bit more for electricity.


"I feel very confident that the American people want EPA to continue to protect them and their family and most importantly their kids....They are worried about climate change. And they want us to do something. So I'll hopefully let democracy work," she told reporters in November.


One unexpected wrinkle in climate policy stems from the steep drop in oil prices. With gasoline now averaging less than $2.40 a gallon nationwide, demand for SUVs and pickup trucks has picked up, potentially undermining some of the gains of the administration's tougher fuel economy standards.


And there's one more way this year has marked a climate milestone. If the numbers from November and December follow the trend of the first ten months, 2014 will go down as the hottest year on record.



The More Radical Your Politics, the More Bodacious Your Physique, Study Says


The farther left or right you lean politically, the more active you are, a new study conducted throughout Europe has found. Adrian Bauman of the University of Sydney’s School of Public Health led a team that surveyed residents of 32 European countries, finding that those who identify as liberal or conservative are more active and engage in more strenuous activity per week than those who consider themselves political centrists. Mental and physical apathy, it turns out, could be related.


Participants surveyed in the study were asked to asked to rate their political orientation on a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being very liberal and 10 being very conservative. They were then asked to record how many minutes per week they engaged in "vigorous" physical activity, "moderate" physical activity, walking, and sitting. Those with defined political preferences participated in, on average, about an hour more physical activity and 30 minutes more vigorous physical activity per week than those in the middle.


“Busy people at both ends of the political spectrum do not seem to have as much time for idleness,” wrote Bauman in the report, which was published by The BMJ.


If a person's apathetic nature can apparently extend across several aspects of their life, it makes sense that the conviction of the more fervently minded among can also manifest itself in both thought and action. But to those with a more blasé attitude toward the goings on in Washington, don't get any bright ideas. We're pretty sure that simply adopting a particular set of political beliefs does not translate into physical fitness.


“Centrists and the politically uncommitted may be at greater risk of non-communicable diseases because of their inertia,” continued Bauman. “The politically uncommitted and centrists could consider adopting a stronger political stance for their health.”


...On the other hand, maybe it's worth a shot.


[H/T: Huffington Post]



Watch: What Your Dog Does When You Leave the House


For centuries, dog owners have pondered the same unanswerable question: Just what is it that my trusty canine does when I'm not at home? Based on the way your loyal pup desperately follows you to the door (and is eagerly sitting by it when you walk in), it seems like every minute is spent awaiting your return. But that can't just be it. Surely he must spend at least some of that time hunting down a nice pair of shoes to chew on and sampling the water from every cup we've accidentally left out? At the very least he must make himself comfy in the normally off-limits bed, right?


To finally answer this burning question, one man attached a Go-Pro video camera to his beloved pet, and left the house. The results are quite moving and, at the same time, exactly what we always figured — and posssibly dreaded. Poor guy.


Originally published by Good Housekeeping


More Reasons to Love Your Pets:

Watch This Bulldog Adorably Play a Childhood Game

10 Reasons Your Pet Makes Your Life Amazing

This Dedicated Dog Hitched a Ride to the ER



Fact Checking Obama's Assessment On Race


President Obama made headlines with his recent comments on race relations. In a Morning Edition interview, NPR's Steve Inskeep asked the president if he thinks America has become more racially divided during his administration.


"No, I actually think that it's probably in its day-to-day interactions less racially divided," Obama replied, later saying that this year's much-publicized racial incidents have made people feel more divided than they are. (You can read the full transcript here.)


It's not easy to measure just how divided America is, but pollsters have tried for decades.



There's one question Gallup has asked since 1963: "Do you think that relations between blacks and whites will always be a problem for the United States, or that a solution will eventually be worked out?"


The answer has stayed relatively the same since 2008 for about 60 percent of white Americans. They're optimistic — just like half of African-Americans who responded in 2008 and 2013.


Gallup's Editor-in-Chief Frank Newport says even though sentiments don't seem to have shifted during the Obama administration, there remains a significant gap between how whites and blacks perceive race and equality.


"Blacks see a world that has barriers, structural barriers and discrimination. Whites, much less so," Newport explains.


A Different Poll, A Different Answer


"Whites are more optimistic about race relations than blacks are," says Jocelyn Kiley, associate director of research at the Pew Research Center. Since 2007, that pollster has surveyed Americans with this question: "In general, how well do you think blacks and whites get along with each other these days?"


Almost 70 percent of respondents said "very well" or "pretty well" when asked this year, more than a week after protests began in Ferguson, Mo. But that share was seven points lower compared to a 2009 survey.


Still, polls – even those that account for Latinos, Asian-Americans and Native Americans — won't give you the final answer on race relations.


A recent poll by The New York Times and CBS News says they've stayed about the same since Obama became president, while a Bloomberg Politics poll says they've gotten worse under the first black president.


'Beyond The Opinion'


"We need to get beyond the opinion, beyond the ideas and really ask, 'How is race really working in terms of allocating power and resources in our society?' " says Ian Haney López, author of Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class.


He says a more objective way of measuring race relations is to look at how segregated we are as a country through institutions like neighborhoods, schools and workplaces. Haney López, who also teaches law at the University of California at Berkeley, adds that special attention should be paid to the racial makeup of our most elite institutions, including Congress and Fortune 500 companies.


Examining these socioeconomic indicators can tell you a contradicting story about the status of African-Americans today, according to Peniel Joseph, founding director of Tufts University's Center for the Study of Race and Democracy.


"From a privileged perspective, things are, yes, dramatically different, "Joseph says. "Those same [black] folks in 1964, even with a Harvard degree, many, many doors of opportunity would be closed. But 50 years later, Obama's the president of the United States. But many, many African-Americans don't have the same access."


Access that, Joseph says, is key to truly understanding race relations today.



Getting Higher Quality at Lower Costs: The Biggest Health Story You May Have Missed This Year

While 2014 is ending with evidence of the dramatic gains in health coverage, a more subtle revolution is occurring in how health care is delivered. Using new authorities created by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), in partnership with health care providers, payers, and patients, we have made significant advances in getting better care at lower costs by changing the incentives for the way care is given and putting more information in the hands of health care providers and patients.


Before the ACA, most of the health care system had incentives to do more -- more tests, more procedures, more visits to the doctor meant more money for hospitals and physicians. Now, through a series of innovative approaches, these incentives are changing and health care providers are being paid based on the quality and efficiency -- not quantity -- of the care they give. This practice, known as “value based purchasing,” and other efforts under the ACA to create systems where doctors help coordinate care for patients to avoid hospital readmissions and get patients the care they need on sooner. These systems also are putting in place safeguards to avoid simple mistakes that that have caused many Americans to pick up infections or to suffer other medical complications when they went into a hospital for care in the past.


read more