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    Bottom Line: Post-Iraq Investment Scenario

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    WASHINGTON, March 19 (UPI) — Vast changes are in store for the world economy in the coming weeks, as the United States and its allies invade and liberate Iraq.

    Oil prices should continue to coast down toward $25 and even $20 a barrel — albeit with a final spike if Saddam Hussein attempts to destroy his country’s wells and lobs a pre-emptive chemical strike at U.S. troops or tankers, Israel, possibly even Saudi Arabia.

    Business, investment and consumer decisions that have been put on hold for six agonizing months will go forward in April — with an actual impact on the real economy.

    It’s time, then, for a review of the U.S.-led world economic turnaround that’s about to begin, one that will have implications for every country from Africa to Russia, from the Americas to Southeast Asia.

    Our guide for this tour de force is John Mueller, the co-creator of the “world dollar base,” a measurement of dollar creation by not only the U.S. Federal Reserve Board but also by other central banks that buy and sell U.S. Treasury securities, and in so doing, “monetize” them.

    He’s well-placed to provide the kind of global perspective critical to understanding a global economy that runs on global dollars. Mueller isn’t a household name, but he should be.

    As the former economic counsel for the House Republicans (1981-87) and longtime adviser to Jack Kemp, Mueller designed perhaps the best flat-tax package ever conceived, the Kemp-Kasten tax bill, which essentially became law in 1986. He was also a force for getting House Republicans, and Democrats for that matter, to pay attention to Fed monetary policy throughout the 1980s.

    He then transitioned to the real world to co-found a private-sector forecasting firm, Lehrman Bell Mueller Cannon, Inc., in 1988. (The firm is now incorporated as LBMC, LLC.)

    At LBMC, he has compiled an enviable track record, particularly at projecting major turning points up to two years ahead. Most economic “forecasts,” by contrast, amount to bean-count estimates for the coming three to six months and are usually little more than slightly adjusted extrapolations of recent trends.

    Mueller’s best calls include a 1989-90 “double dip” recession call, followed by a 1993-94 observation that welfare reform could significantly reduce the “natural” unemployment rate, and thus, combined with surging world dollar creation, lift stock markets and economic growth.

    With the latter, Mueller provided insight into something few Republicans seem able to explain: namely, the Clinton economic boom of the 1990s.

    In late 1997, Mueller did a careful study of demographic trends for a private-sector Social Security reform commission, which was weighing various options for privatization. While Mueller favors Social Security reform (in the form of a tax cut), he was rightly cautious about projections for never-ending stock market growth that would make privatization painless.

    Noting the rapid aging of the U.S. population, he projected a generation of generally flat stock market returns, through about 2015.

    Accordingly, Mueller was bullish on bonds from 2000 onward, and generally bearish on the stock market when his stock market buy-sell index turned negative. Along the way, he took first place in the group of 50 economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal for his 1999-2000 interest rate calls.

    Anyone who sold stocks and bought bonds in the spring or summer of 2000 was considered a nervous ninny at the time, but in retrospect, it was a heck of a call.

    The firm’s worst calls include a call for a 1995 slowdown and mild 1996 recession, when there was a non-recession slowdown, and a 2000-01 slow growth call, when there was a very mild recession.

    Investors who traded those notions, however, didn’t suffer severely if they were investing the firm’s short-term buy and sell signals on the stock market. The same model had investors mostly out of the market in 2001-02, with one timely “buy” interval including the market surge months after the Sept. 11 attacks.

    At present, Mueller sees a number of strong trends of note for global investors. Let’s focus on just two, which are likely to be at the core of the world economy over the next 12 to 24 months.

    ”First: A Return to Oil Normalcy”

    For all the talk of supply shocks, the recent rise in oil prices has been (as are all prices) a tale of supply and demand. Mueller’s oil model predicted a surge in oil prices in the second half of 2002, although Mueller would be the first to say that this demand-side surge was strongly aided by interrupted supplies from Venezuela, Nigeria, and the threat of war in the Middle East.

    The same model now points to a return to oil normalcy at $25 a barrel and below by the summer — a projection “the bottom line” highlighted several months ago in advising readers to sell off oil positions in the high $30s.

    Even if Saddam destroys Iraq’s ability to pump oil in the short term, there will likely be a release of supplies from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve to compensate. In the longer term, there will be not an embargo on Iraqi oil, but a liberation of it. Thus, the move in prices, eventually, could be even sharper.

    On the demand side, such forces, Mueller’s model suggests, are already in play. The spike in dollar creation lagged by two to three years peaked last fall and is coasting down.

    Another result will be a greater boost to corporate profit margins in the U.S. and the world than after the first Gulf War, because of the greater squeeze on pricing power that took place this time around.

    In the last Gulf War, producer input prices, measured by the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ broad commodity index, rose 7 percent in the year leading up to war. The prices that producers charge, measured by the BLS’s finished goods index, also rose 7 percent — a relative wash for profits.

    In the 12 months through this February, by contrast, prices for producer inputs rose 8.2 percent, while finished goods prices rose only 3.5 percent.

    Thus, conversely, a return to oil normalcy will provide greater relief than in 1991. This assessment of the impact of oil price normalcy differs from that of many other economic forecasts.

    The bottom-line implications of this forecast: Take profits in oil stocks and futures and oil-sensitive economies such as Russia, Indonesia and Mexico. Or, keep those positions, but hedge against oil price declines.

    Buy U.S. cyclicals and technology and their Asian equivalents, as oil returns to normal. Japanese and Taiwanese technology stocks are a value play and a growth play.

    And if (as we expect) there is continued and even heightened geopolitical unrest surrounding the North Korean nuclear program, you can short the South Korean market as an Asian-crisis hedge.

    ”Second: The Bush Recovery”

    Mueller agrees with the economic consensus that the U.S. first and second quarter will be weak. But he parts company with many in seeing a strong (4 percent) third quarter this year, surging toward 5 percent in third-quarter 2004 and 6.5 percent growth in the fourth.

    None of which makes Mueller especially bullish on U.S. or other world stocks over the coming months. His model of price-earnings ratios on the U.S. market implies a range of as low as 700 on the S&P 500 index through summer.

    If his short-term indicator is right, then rallies like the recent it-will-soon-be-over Iraq surge are a time to lighten up, at least into May and June.

    The same model, however, implies an upside to the S&P 500 of perhaps 1,400 by late 2004, and of perhaps 2,500 on a revived NASDAQ market.

    Assuming there is perhaps one more sell-off to test recent lows in the United States, Europe and Asia, this implies taking some profits, or putting on short-term-expiration puts, on rallies in March and April. By summer, Mueller would be fully invested — expecting the biggest market gains in 2004 but wary of missing the rally by holding off too long.

    The one caveat, Mueller says, is if the Fed cuts interest rates again, in the common but false assumption this will stimulate the economy.

    At this point, Mueller said, further rate cuts have the primary effect of delaying an economic upturn as investors, employers, and consumers continue to wait for the bottom before locking in loans to expand output. A further Fed rate cut, say during the Iraq war, wouldn’t reverse the long-term upsurge, but it might (like last fall’s move, Mueller argues) delay it.

    ”The Bottom Line Implications: Sell U.S. Bonds. Now.”

    Buy equities, especially in the technology and cyclical sectors in the United States and Asia, hedging on rallies over the near term. Utilities, as we’ve said before, should also be a value play, and many will actually provide an interest payout, through dividends, to match or exceed the rate on U.S. Treasurys.

    Latin equities, in sympathy with the U.S. market, should be a strong buy around the third quarter — especially as a new round of trade liberalization kicks in. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, initially an opponent of Bush’s proposed pan-American free trade zone, has quietly toned down his opposition.

    There’s a second-order implication to all of the above that is political and long-term in nature, but no less important.

    There will, at least in the United States, be a surge in Bush’s job performance ratings, and, accordingly, in his ability to win domestic legislation. Assuming he shows the same confident stubbornness he did in dealing with the Democrats in Congress last November, and the United Nations this February, Bush will win a major tax rate cut, probably even the majority of the dividend tax cut he is seeking.

    Deficit projections reaching into the heavens will prove, as in the 1980s, to be unduly pessimistic, especially in 2004 and 2005. If this is combined with the rapid establishment of self-rule in Iraq, and a Middle East economic boom built around U.S.-led free trade agreements, all these affects will reinforce one another, synergistically.

    The prospects for Social Security and medical insurance reform, a Middle East Marshall Plan, and other Bush initiatives, should all rise.

    The upshot would be a classic election-year bull market, and a likely Bush sweep at the polls in 2004. If the Mueller model pans out, Bush will have no need to rely on chads in Florida. The only political question, at that point, will be who Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush will put on their respective party tickets in 2008.

    It’s possible to look this far out thanks to minds like Mueller’s, which treat economics as a science, but a human one, and make actual predictions. It’s part of what makes an encounter with this true forecaster both interesting and potentially profitable.

    Harry Truman, tired of hearing his advisers answer questions by saying, “on the one hand,” this, and “on the other hand,” that, once impatiently asked his chief of staff to go out and “get me a one-handed economist.” Mueller has only one hand, but it’s highly skilled.

    The bottom line is, sell oil and the countries that go up with it, get out of bonds, and buy into a long-term surge in equities starting, approximately, in May or June — if Mueller is right. He usually is.

    ”’Gregory Fossedal is chief investment officer of the Democratic Century Fund, managed by the Emerging Markets Group. His firm may hold some of the securities mentioned his articles. Individual investors should contact their own professional adviser before making any decisions to buy or sell these or any related securities.”’

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.

    HealthSouth Charged with $1.4 Billion Fraud

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    WASHINGTON, March 19 (UPI) — The government charged HealthSouth Corp. and Richard M. Scrushy with civil accounting fraud Wednesday, accusing the nation’s largest for-profit hospital chain and its chairman and chief executive officer of overstating its earnings by $1.4 billion since 1999.

    In a complaint filed in federal court in Birmingham, Ala., the Securities and Exchange Commission alleged that at the insistence of Scrushy, the company overstated its earnings in order to meet or exceed Wall Street earnings expectations.

    The company’s assets were overstated by at least $800 million — or 10 percent — by the third quarter of last year, the commission said. The false increases in earnings were matched by false increases in the company’s assets, the commission said.

    “HealthSouth’s standard operating procedure was to manipulate the company’s earnings to create the false impression that the company was meeting Wall Street’s expectation,” said Stephen M. Cutler, the SEC’s director of enforcement.

    Cutler also called the charges an “appalling betrayal of investors.”

    The SEC suspended trading in the company for two days. When halted, shares of HealthSouth were trading at $3.91 on the New York Stock Exchange. The company’s stock Wednesday was trading near its 52-week low of $2.79, after reaching a 52-week high of $15.90.

    Standard & Poor’s, the credit rating agency, on Wednesday said it cut HealthSouth’s debt rating three notches to “B-minus,” its sixth highest “junk” grade.

    Meanwhile, the Justice Department said a former chief financial officer at HealthSouth would plead guilty to criminal fraud charges.

    In a statement released early Wednesday, the Birmingham, Ala., -based company said it continues to cooperate with authorities in their investigation.

    “The recent events at HealthSouth’s corporate office does not affect our ability to provide quality patient care,” a company spokesman told United Press International late Wednesday. “Our operations across the country continue uninterrupted.”

    The government’s complaint alleges that HealthSouth had been overstating earnings at Scrushy’s asking since the company went public in 1986, two years after he founded the company. The SEC said that even when senior executives periodically tried to persuade him “to abandon the scheme,” he refused, once saying “not until I sell my stock.”

    Scrushy, 49, has sold at least 7.7 million shares since 1999, the complaint said. He also received a $6.5 million bonus payment on inflated returns in 2001.

    He founded HealthSouth and was chief executive officer from 1994 until Aug. 27, 2002. He returned to his post as CEO in January.

    The Justice Department said the company’s former chief financial officer, Weston Smith, has agreed to plead guilty to securities fraud, conspiracy to commit securities and wire fraud, as well as false certification of financial records that were designed to inflate the company’s revenues and earnings by hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Smith, 42, of Hoover, Ala., has agreed to cooperate with the federal government’s investigation, the Justice Department said.

    The maximum sentence for conspiracy is five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Smith also faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $1 million fine on the charge of securities fraud, as well as a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and $1 million fine on the charge of filing false certification with the SEC.

    “This case demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to real-time enforcement in corporate fraud cases,” said Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson. “We will move swiftly in our efforts to root out corporate fraud and restore investor confidence in the marketplace.”

    The charges came a day after FBI agents served a search warrant at the company’s headquarters and were given access to current and historical financial records and other materials.

    HealthSouth is the nation’s largest providers of outpatient surgery, diagnostic and rehabilitative services. The company operated approximately 1,900 locations in 50 states, Puerto Rico, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.

    Grassroot Perspective – March 20, 2003-A New Political Calculus; State Opportunities To Provide Affordable Health Coverage Under the Trade Law; Forum on Prescription Drug Promotion; States Crack Down on Families That Shed Assets to Get Benefits; Democrats Focus on Health Care for All

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    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – A New Political Calculus

    Author: Grace-Marie Turner

    Source: Galen Institute, 2/21/03

    Political leaders have been struggling for decades to provide citizens with access to health coverage. Legislators have expanded government programs like Medicaid to cover more and more people and have allocated tens of billions of dollars for new programs, like the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. Despite these attempts, the number of uninsured remains stubbornly high. It seems clear that new approaches are needed. Coupled with deregulation, federal tax credits are needed to empower an army of consumers to shop for the health policies that best suit their personal needs.

    Full text: https://www.galen.org/news/022103b.html

    – State Opportunities To Provide Affordable Health Coverage Under the
    Trade Law

    Authors: Nina Owcharenko and Edmund Haislmaier

    Source: The Heritage Foundation – Backgrounder #1626, 2/25/03

    Nina Owcharenko and Edmund Haislmaier suggest the health care tax
    credits in the Trade Act of 2002 provide an important “opportunity to
    think creatively about how to improve existing private health insurance markets and to enhance choice, competition, and portability.” They recommend that the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program serve as a model for states to set up a system that creates a health insurance “service center;” determines a core group of participants; establishes rating rules that ensure portability of coverage offered through the service center; and sets in place a reinsurance pool mechanism to cope with adverse selection. “Through such a system, states could allow tax credit recipients to select the health plan that best suits their financial and medical needs, offering them a choice of plans while developing an infrastructure that could be extended to and benefit other populations,” say the authors.

    Full text: https://www.heritage.org/Research/HealthCare/bg1626.cfm

    – Forum on Prescription Drug Promotion

    Authors: Joel S. Weissman et al., Robert Dubois, and John E. Calfee

    Source: Health Affairs Web Exclusive, 2/26/03

    Two new papers, by Joel Weissman of Harvard Medical School et al. and by Robert Dubois, senior vice president of Zynx Health Inc., offer new data and insights on the effects of direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising. Weissman and colleagues conducted a national phone survey to discern the effects of DTC advertising and found that the majority of patients who talked to their doctors about advertised drugs “felt better, encountered reduced symptoms, and obtained improved diagnostic test results.” Dubois questions whether drug promotion leads to inappropriate drug use and finds “DTC advertising probably confers substantial benefit and little if any harm.”

    In his response to these two papers, John Calfee, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, says, “The emerging evidence on DTC advertising is therefore consistent with a larger pattern in which marketing has been found to improve markets and increase consumer welfare.” Calfee also notes that health care analysts may eventually view DTC advertising “not as an exception to the benefits of advertising but as a striking example of those benefits. The strongest impact of DTC advertising may prove to be not the initiation of prescriptions but the improvement of drug therapy compliance, an extraordinarily costly problem that has eluded all efforts to assuage it.”

    Full text: https://www.healthaffairs.org/WebExclusives/Pharma_Web_Excl_022603.htm

    – States Crack Down on Families That Shed Assets to Get Benefits

    Author: Michelle Higgins

    Source: The Wall Street Journal, 2/25/03

    In the arcane loopholes of the Medicaid law lie opportunities for people to divest themselves of income, essentially choosing to become poor, in order to qualify for the program’s health benefits. Among the practices the Journal points out are people transferring assets to relatives, putting all their assets in an annuity, and splurging on a nice house and car because these items are excluded in most states. But during times of budget deficits, states are cracking down on this practice. Studies show that as much as 22 percent of the $47 billion Medicaid spends pays for nursing home care for those who could afford to pay for months or even years of care, but have sheltered assets to qualify for government assistance. “We make people poor,” boasted Jennifer Cona, an elder law
    attorney in Jericho, New York.

    Full text (requires subscription):
    online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB1046113343874461543,00.html

    – Democrats Focus on Health Care for All

    Author: Ronald Brownstein

    Source: Los Angeles Times, 2/24/03

    “The competition now under way in the Democratic race virtually
    guarantees that the argument over how best to cover the uninsured will play a larger role in the 2004 presidential race than it did in 2000,” says reporter Ron Brownstein. The article highlights the health-care plans of presidential hopefuls Rep. Richard Gephardt and former Vermont governor Howard Dean. Gephardt’s plan would require all employers to offer coverage for their workers, but would give employers a tax credit worth around 60 percent to 65 percent of the cost of the insurance. Even those employers currently providing coverage would receive the tax credit, which would replace the current tax benefits for employment-based health insurance. The plan would cost the government close to $2 trillion over 10 years, predicted Sarah Bianchi, a Democratic health care analyst. Dean’s plan would expand Medicaid to all Americans younger than age 23 and give subsidies to small employers for health coverage.

    Full text:
    https://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-health24feb24,1,2826405.story

    Above articles are quoted from Galen Institute Health Policy Matters
    Feb. 27, 2003

    ”Roots (Food For Thoughts)”

    – Long-term Rx for State Budget

    Take These 10 Ideas to Get on Road to Financial Recovery

    Feb. 24, 2003

    By Lawrence W. Reed

    Gov. Jennifer Granholm and the Michigan Legislature are grappling with combined budget deficits of about $2 billion for the current and next fiscal years. Deep spending reductions will be required to meet the near-term shortfalls in revenue, but that also raises the question: What can be done to minimize the chances for similar crises in the future? Make no mistake. Lansing needs to focus on more than short-term fixes. No one can forecast when future economic downturns will occur or how deep and prolonged they will be, but state government can reduce their negative impact with some long-term structural changes in the way it conducts its budgetary affairs. Here are a few ideas worth consideration:

    *1. Employ “sunset” provisions. Far too many budget items are introduced in one year and are automatically included in subsequent years with little legislative scrutiny. If more line items automatically expired in one, two or three years, the Legislature would be forced to take a hard look at them on a regular basis. Isn’t this why we pay legislators to be full-time?

    *2. Adjust user fees to reflect real costs and inflation. User fees are assessed for a plethora of state government services and many of them are woefully below the real cost of service delivery. For example, the Secretary of State’s fee for notary public applications is still a mere $3, where it was set 61 years ago in 1942.

    *3. Phase down revenue shared with local units of governments. In recent years, the actual percentage of revenue sharing has exceeded the state constitutional mandates. The state should meet its constitutional requirement but otherwise let local governments raise additional revenue themselves. When we send our money to Lansing first, it tends to have a night on the town before it comes back anyway.

    *4. Cut the pork. Just one whopper bill in 2000 appropriated more than $600 million in pork barrel projects that included a polar bear exhibit for the Detroit Zoo. If that revenue had been banked instead, today’s deficit would be one-third smaller. An ongoing, independent commission would be one way to blow the whistle when legislators go hog wild to bring home the bacon.

    *5. Revive the PERM process. An innovative program in the first Engler term required departments to analyze their work to determine which makes the most sense: Privatize, Eliminate, Retain or Modify. It died due to bureaucratic resistance and lack of strong directives from the governor’s office. It should be revived. The best private businesses subject their work to such scrutiny every day.

    *6. Apply the “Yellow Pages test.” If someone suggests that state government do something but the same service can already be found in the Yellow Pages directory, that’s as far as the suggestion ought to go.

    *7. Renegotiate state labor contracts. Governors in other states are leveraging budget crises into a case for modifying overly generous contracts with state employee unions, saving millions in health-care costs and outmoded work rules. With prescription co-pays now at a mere $7 and $12 for state workers, why shouldn’t Michigan?

    *8. Consider a two-year budget. This idea has pros and cons, but policymakers in biennial-budget states focus more on long-term and strategic budgeting, rather than narrow “number crunching” for a single year. Most of Michigan’s Midwest neighbors work on two-year budgets. Ohio Gov. Bob Taft has already introduced executive budgets for fiscal years 2004 and 2005.

    *9. Don’t crank up new initiatives. Granholm has properly emphasized spending cuts, but she proposed a dozen new programs in her State of the State speech. Any money spent on them means her cuts in everything else have to be even deeper. Nix the new stuff and focus exclusively on the deficit, just like families or businesses do when they overspend.

    *10. Eliminate costly subsidies for special interests. The pain of budget cuts wouldn’t be so bad for schools if they didn’t have to spend $150 million more than necessary every year because of a 1965 handout to organized labor called the “Prevailing Wage Act.” The state itself spends more than necessary for its printing of everything from stationery to lottery tickets because of a similar law dating back to 1937.

    While there’s always a temptation to think no further than the
    here-and-now, today is the tomorrow that yesterday’s short-sighted
    policy makers didn’t plan for. Let’s not make that mistake again.

    Lawrence W. Reed is president of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a research and educational institute headquartered in Midland. Write to him in care of the Free Press Editorial Page, 600 W. Fort St., Detroit, MI 48226.

    Above article is quoted from Mackinac Center commentary www.mackinac.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quote)”

    “Naturally the common people don’t want war … Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders … All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism.” — Hermann Goering

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii. He can be reached at (808) 487-4959 or by email at:”’ mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com ”’For more information, see its Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    From Religious Fanaticism to Loss of Appetite

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    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    ”Spirituality – When is it Unhealthy?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    My son spent last summer abroad where he was exposed to some religious indoctrination. After his return home, that influence prompted him to want to be removed from life and everyday experiences. This went on for about three months, and luckily he grew out of his fanaticism and now he continues his spiritual quest but keeps his feet on the ground. I know of some other kids who aren’t as fortunate as my son, and have not outgrown destructive indoctrination. How can this conditioning be prevented.

    Earthbound

    A: Dr. Gelb says . . .

    Dear Earthbound:

    It is so unfortunate when rapid indoctrination of spiritual or religious concepts motivates a fanaticism, not unlike what you describe. The participants’ fear that if they do not adhere to what they have been introduced to then heaven is unattainable.

    As children develop, it is natural for them to reach out and explore the meaning of life and parents need to be so careful not to allow their children to participate in fly by night introductions to spirituality and religious concepts. I believe that parents must be the indoctrinators of the science of religion and this exposure must be planned and considered carefully. This is why parental control and vigilance is so important to childrearing.

    ”Eating – Why Has it Lost its Appeal?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    I have battled overeating for years, but since my dog died a few months ago I have lost my appetite. Everything tastes like cardboard. I appreciate the weight loss, but why do I feel like there is no point in eating?

    Tasteless

    A: Dr. Gelb says . . .

    Dear Tasteless:

    If the natural process of grieving losses and expressing anger safely and constructively is not utilized, then suppression of emotion can cause one to feel depressed. By this I mean that the system shuts down and many things can lose their appeal, including food.

    In such instances, sharing one’s feelings with a caring friend can be helpful. Some people have also gained relief via assistance from a competent mental health provider to resolve the grief and anger about a particular loss. Then lost appetites tend to return and if weight loss is desired, more appropriate means to accomplish this need to be sought.

    Dear Readers:

    Today’s answer can be supplemented with excerpts from “Yesterday’s Children” (Q2: p. 40) written by psychologists Marti Barham, R.N., Ph.D. and Tom Greene, Ph.D. For more information visit my Web site at https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    ”’Suzanne J. Gelb, Ph.D., J.D. authors this daily column, Dr. Gelb Says, which answers questions about daily living and behavior issues. Dr. Gelb is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Honolulu. She holds a Ph.D. in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Human Services. Dr. Gelb is also a published author of a book on Overcoming Addictions and a book on Relationships.”’

    ”’This column is intended for entertainment use only and is not intended for the purpose of psychological diagnosis, treatment or personalized advice. For more about the column’s purpose, see”’ “An Online Intro to Dr. Gelb Says”

    ”’Email your questions to mailto:DrGelbSays@hawaiireporter.com More information on Dr. Gelb’s services and related resources available at”’ https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    Legislative Hearing Notices – March 20, 2003

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    The following hearing notices, which are subject to change, were sorted and taken from the Hawaii State Capitol Web site. Please check that site for updates and/or changes to the schedule at

    “Hawaii State Legislature Sidebar”

    Go there and click on the Hearing Date to view the Hearing Notice.

    Hearings notices for both House and Senate measures in all committees:

    Hearing

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB426 SD1 RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. EDB

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB1172 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO AIRLINES. EDB

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB1253 SD1 RELATING TO ECONOMIC DATA. EDB

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB1284 SD1 RELATING TO THE SMALL BUSINESS REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ACT. EDB

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB1517 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION. EDB

    3/20/03 8:30 AM SB664 SD2 AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS AND MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF A VETERANS AFFAIRS LONG-TERM CARE FACILITY. PSM/HLT

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HCR110 REQUESTING THE CONSUMER ADVOCATE TO ASSIST IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF STANDARDIZED POWER PURCHASE AGREEMENTS TO REDUCE THE APPROVAL PROCESS TIME FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF NEW RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HCR115 REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO INCLUDE IN ITS “RENEWABLE ENERGY RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, COMMERCIALIZATION, AND EXPORT PROMOTION PLAN FOR HAWAII”, A PLAN FOR THE ISSUANCE OF REVENUE BONDS OR OTHER FORMS OF REVENUE FINANCING FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS IN PUBLIC FACILITIES. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HR94 REQUESTING THE CONSUMER ADVOCATE TO ASSIST IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF STANDARDIZED POWER PURCHASE AGREEMENTS TO REDUCE THE APPROVAL PROCESS TIME FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF NEW RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HR100 REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO INCLUDE IN ITS “RENEWABLE ENERGY RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, COMMERCIALIZATION, AND EXPORT PROMOTION PLAN FOR HAWAII”, A PLAN FOR THE ISSUANCE OF REVENUE BONDS OR OTHER FORMS OF REVENUE FINANCING FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEMS IN PUBLIC FACILITIES. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB354 SD2 RELATING TO ENERGY. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB855 SD1 HD1 RELATING TO ENERGY. EEP

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HCR183 REQUESTING THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT AN ANALYSIS OF ITS CURRENT EFFORTS TO DETERMINE TO WHAT EXTENT IT IS UTILIZING PROMISING ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES IN ITS DEVELOPMENT DISTRICTS. EEP/WLH

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HR147 REQUESTING THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT AN ANALYSIS OF ITS CURRENT EFFORTS TO DETERMINE TO WHAT EXTENT IT IS UTILIZING PROMISING ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES IN ITS DEVELOPMENT DISTRICTS. EEP/WLH

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB325 RELATING TO SPECIAL PURPOSE REVENUE BONDS. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB624 SD1 RELATING TO INFORMED CONSENT. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB661 SD1 RELATING TO SEXUAL ASSAULT. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB745 SD2 RELATING TO EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB963 SD1 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR THE POISON CENTER. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB1241 RELATING TO CANCER EXAMINATIONS. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB1356 SD1 RELATING TO REGISTRATION OF VITAL STATISTICS. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB1357 SD1 RELATING TO VITAL STATISTICS REGISTRATION DISTRICTS. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB1361 SD2 RELATING TO PRESCRIPTION DRUGS. HLT

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB964 SD1 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR TREATMENT SERVICES FOR CHILD VICTIMS OF INTRAFAMILIAL SEXUAL ABUSE. HLT/HSH

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HB562 RELATING TO SEXUAL ASSAULT. JHW

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HB562 RELATING TO SEXUAL ASSAULT. JHW

    3/20/03 9:00 AM SB1619 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO TAXATION. PSM/TAC

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HB1077 HD1 MAKING EMERGENCY APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE OFFICES OF THE GOVERNOR AND LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. WAM

    3/20/03 9:00 AM HB1307 HD1 RELATING TO THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS. WAM

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 9:15 AM SB88 SD1 RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLES OWNED BY MILITARY PERSONNEL. PSM/TRN

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HCR76 URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO SUPPORT THE PASSAGE OF H.R. 664, RELATING TO IMPROVING BENEFITS FOR FILIPINO VETERANS OF WORLD WAR II. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HCR77 URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO SUPPORT THE PASSAGE OF S. 68, RELATING TO IMPROVING BENEFITS FOR FILIPINO VETERANS OF WORLD WAR II. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HCR190 REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING AND GENERAL SERVICES AND THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO COMPLY WITH CRITERIA FOR HURRICANE-RESISTANT SHELTERS ESTABLISHED BY THE ADJUTANT GENERAL. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HR74 URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO SUPPORT THE PASSAGE OF H.R. 664, RELATING TO IMPROVING BENEFITS FOR FILIPINO VETERANS OF WORLD WAR II. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HR75 URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO SUPPORT THE PASSAGE OF S. 68, RELATING TO IMPROVING BENEFITS FOR FILIPINO VETERANS OF WORLD WAR II. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM HR154 REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF ACCOUNTING AND GENERAL SERVICES AND THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO COMPLY WITH CRITERIA FOR HURRICANE-RESISTANT SHELTERS ESTABLISHED BY THE ADJUTANT GENERAL. PSM

    3/20/03 9:30 AM SB634 SD2 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR TWO COUNSELORS TO TREAT WOMEN INCARCERATED FOR DRUG-RELATED OFFENSES ON MAUI. PSM

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 9:45 AM SB377 SD1 RELATING TO TAXATION. TAC/EDB

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 11:00 AM SB1611 RELATING TO THE DEPOSIT BEVERAGE CONTAINER PROGRAM. EEP/EDB

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 11:15 AM HCR145 REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO STUDY THE UTILIZATION OF RECYCLABLE PLASTICS AND OTHER ALTERNATE ENERGY SOURCES FOR THE GENERATION OF POWER. EEP

    3/20/03 11:15 AM HCR175 REQUESTING THE CONVENING OF AN EMISSIONS TASK FORCE TO MEASURE THE STATE’S POWER PLANT AND MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSIONS AND DEVELOP COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIES TO REDUCE EMISSIONS. EEP

    3/20/03 11:15 AM HR139 REQUESTING THE CONVENING OF AN EMISSIONS TASK FORCE TO MEASURE THE STATE’S POWER PLANT AND MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSIONS AND DEVELOP COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGIES TO REDUCE EMISSIONS. EEP

    3/20/03 11:15 AM SB840 SD1 RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENTS. EEP

    3/20/03 11:15 AM SB848 RELATING TO THE ISLAND OF KAHOOLAWE. EEP/WLH

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 1:00 PM HB1510 HD1 RELATING TO CHIROPRACTIC. LBR

    3/20/03 1:00 PM HB291 HD2 RELATING TO THE JOB CREATION INCOME TAX CREDIT. LBR/ECD

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB21 HD1 RELATING TO CORPORATE DISCLOSURE. ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB685 HD2 RELATING TO ENTERPRISE ZONE. ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB1579 HD1 RELATING TO THE ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION AUTHORITY. ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SCR63 REQUESTING A STUDY ON RENOVATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OPTIONS FOR ALOHA STADIUM. ECD/TSM

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SR41 REQUESTING A STUDY ON RENOVATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OPTIONS FOR ALOHA STADIUM. ECD/TSM

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB1405 HD1 RELATING TO BIOFUEL. ENE

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB1395 HD1 RELATING TO SPECIAL FACILITY PROJECTS. TSM

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB1554 HD1 RELATING TO COUNTY TAXES. TSM

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SCR38 REQUESTING THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY TO PROMOTE HAWAII FILMMAKERS AND LOCALLY MADE FILMS AS A MEANS OF PROMOTING TOURISM. TSM-ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SCR63 REQUESTING A STUDY ON RENOVATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OPTIONS FOR ALOHA STADIUM. TSM-ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SR24 REQUESTING THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY TO PROMOTE HAWAII FILMMAKERS AND LOCALLY MADE FILMS AS A MEANS OF PROMOTING TOURISM. TSM-ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SR41 REQUESTING A STUDY ON RENOVATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OPTIONS FOR ALOHA STADIUM. TSM-ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM HB1400 HD1 RELATING TO HOTEL CONSTRUCTION AND REMODELING TAX CREDIT. TSM/ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SCR38 REQUESTING THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY TO PROMOTE HAWAII FILMMAKERS AND LOCALLY MADE FILMS AS A MEANS OF PROMOTING TOURISM. TSM/ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SCR42 REQUESTING THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY TO DESIGN, IMPLEMENT, AND EVALUATE A CULTURAL TELEVISION AND FILM PILOT PROJECT. TSM/ECD

    3/20/03 1:15 PM SR24 REQUESTING THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY TO PROMOTE HAWAII FILMMAKERS AND LOCALLY MADE FILMS AS A MEANS OF PROMOTING TOURISM. TSM/ECD

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 1:30 PM HB146 HD2 RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. ECD

    3/20/03 1:30 PM SCR196 REQUESTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A STRATEGIC ACTION PLAN TO ESTABLISH AN EXPANDING AND SUSTAINABLE FILM AND TELEVISION PRODUCTION INDUSTRY IN HAWAII. ECD

    3/20/03 1:30 PM SR136 REQUESTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A STRATEGIC ACTION PLAN TO ESTABLISH AN EXPANDING AND SUSTAINABLE FILM AND TELEVISION PRODUCTION INDUSTRY IN HAWAII. ECD

    3/20/03 1:30 PM SCR39 REQUESTING THE FILM INDUSTRY BRANCH OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO ASSIST HAWAII FILMMAKERS IN EXPORTING THEIR PRODUCTS OUT-OF-STATE AND TO DO ALL THINGS NECESSARY TO PROMOTE LOCALLY MADE FILMS. ECD/SAT

    3/20/03 1:30 PM SR25 REQUESTING THE FILM INDUSTRY BRANCH OF THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO ASSIST HAWAII FILMMAKERS IN EXPORTING THEIR PRODUCTS OUT-OF-STATE AND TO DO ALL THINGS NECESSARY TO PROMOTE LOCALLY MADE FILMS. ECD/SAT

    3/20/03 1:30 PM HB288 HD2 RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION INITIATIVES. ENE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 1:45 PM HB1394 HD2 RELATING TO TAXATION TO STIMULATE THE ECONOMY. ECD

    3/20/03 1:45 PM HB1628 HD1 RELATING TO EDUCATIONAL LOANS. ECD

    3/20/03 1:45 PM SCR36 REQUESTING THE LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE BUREAU TO CONDUCT A FEASIBILITY STUDY ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF PERMANENT FAIR GROUNDS ON THE LOWER HALAWA PARKING LOT AT ALOHA STADIUM. ECD

    3/20/03 1:45 PM SR23 REQUESTING THE LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE BUREAU TO CONDUCT A FEASIBILITY STUDY ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF PERMANENT FAIR GROUNDS ON THE LOWER HALAWA PARKING LOT AT ALOHA STADIUM. ECD

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 1:55 PM SB361 SD2 RELATING TO THE WEED AND SEED PROGRAM. JUD/PSM

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 2:00 PM SB534 SD2 RELATING TO AGRICULTURE. HED

    3/20/03 2:00 PM SB576 RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII. HED

    3/20/03 2:00 PM SB919 SD1 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR BIOREMEDIATION RESEARCH. HED

    3/20/03 2:00 PM SB1138 SD1 RELATING TO INTERMEDIATE SANCTIONS. PSM/JUD

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB11 RELATING TO TEMPORARY PUBLIC SCHOOL FACILITIES. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB459 SD1 RELATING TO CAMPAIGN SPENDING. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB610 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO INDIVIDUAL CLAIMS RESOLUTION UNDER THE HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS TRUST. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1156 RELATING TO THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1238 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1324 SD1 RELATING TO CONCILIATION PANELS. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1393 SD2 RELATING TO THE EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS OF STATE GOVERNMENT. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1404 SD1 RELATING TO IMPACT FEES. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1477 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO MUNICIPAL LEASES. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1514 SD1 RELATING TO FORFEITURES. JUD

    3/20/03 2:05 PM SB1514 SD1 RELATING TO FORFEITURES. JUD

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR14 REQUESTING THE BOARD OF REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII AND THE GOVERNING BODY OF EACH ACCREDITED PRIVATE OR INDEPENDENT COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY IN HAWAII TO ADOPT POLICIES REGULATING THE ON-CAMPUS MARKETING OF CREDIT CARDS TO STUDENTS. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR19 SUPPORTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A RURAL HEALTH CARE CENTER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII AT HILO. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR60 EXPRESSING SUPPORT FOR THE SCHOOL OF OCEAN AND EARTH SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR101 URGING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A TEACHER CADET PROGRAM TO RECRUIT HAWAII’S BRIGHTEST AND BEST PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS FOR TEACHING CAREERS IN THE HAWAII PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR102 REQUESTING A RECODIFICATION OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION STATUTES. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR104 REQUESTING THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII TO ACTIVELY RECRUIT NONRESIDENT STUDENTS. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR184 RECOGNIZING THE WESTERN INTERSTATE COMMISSION FOR HIGHER EDUCATION ON THE OCCASION OF ITS FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HR18 SUPPORTING THE DEVELOPMENT OF A RURAL HEALTH CARE CENTER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII AT HILO. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HR91 URGING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A TEACHER CADET PROGRAM TO RECRUIT HAWAII’S BRIGHTEST AND BEST PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS FOR TEACHING CAREERS IN THE HAWAII PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HR92 REQUESTING A RECODIFICATION OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION STATUTES. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HR148 RECOGNIZING THE WESTERN INTERSTATE COMMISSION FOR HIGHER EDUCATION ON THE OCCASION OF ITS FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY. HED

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HCR149 STRONGLY URGING THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII TO REQUIRE ALL STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII SYSTEM TO SHOW PROOF OF FULL IMMUNIZATION AGAINST THE HEPATITIS B VIRUS PRIOR TO ENROLLMENT. HED/HLT

    3/20/03 2:15 PM HR120 STRONGLY URGING THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII TO REQUIRE ALL STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII SYSTEM TO SHOW PROOF OF FULL IMMUNIZATION AGAINST THE HEPATITIS B VIRUS PRIOR TO ENROLLMENT. HED/HLT

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 2:45 PM HB512 HD1 RELATING TO HEALTH. HTH

    3/20/03 2:45 PM HB1217 HD1 RELATING TO CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES. HTH

    3/20/03 2:45 PM HB1572 HD3 RELATING TO PARKING FOR DISABLED PERSONS. HTH/TMG

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    3/20/03 3:00 PM SB38 HD1 RELATING TO THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY. JUD

    3/20/03 3:00 PM SB1279 SD2 RELATING TO TOBACCO. JUD

    3/20/03 3:00 PM SB1351 RELATING TO BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR ADULT SERVICES PROGRAMS. JUD

    3/20/03 3:00 PM SB1675 HD1 RELATING TO HEALTH. JUD

    ”’To reach legislators, see:”’ “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance”

    State Budget Shortfall-Let's Bet on Legalized Gaming

    0

    Highlights of Legalized Gaming:

    *1. Shipboard (2-3 ships; about 800 gaming positions each with about 6-hour cruises around the clock) gambling potential annual increase in tax income to state at $28M, $43M and $78M; with 998, 1,508 and about 3,795 direct and indirect new net job gains as shown in the pessimistic, moderate and optimistic scenarios presented in Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism 1997 report.

    See https://www.hawaii.gov/dbedt/gaming/index.html

    *2. Shipboard (4 ships; also around the clock operation permanently moored in harbor) with an estimated potential annual increase in tax income to the state of $200M-$300,000,000; and at least 3,000 new jobs created, as shown in the HGEA testimony dtd Feb 8, 2000.

    See https://www.hgea.org/testimony/gaming020800.html

    *3. Establishment of a new State Lottery, especially if net proceeds assigned to for example education including programs such as Ready to Learn or a Hawaii high school scholarship for accredited local institutions of higher learning would according to many gaming studies be less detrimental to society than other forms of legal gambling. A respectable lottery could probably net around $25M annual increase in (non-tax) income to the state.

    *4. According to the Colorado Lottery, the average lottery player is middle aged, has middle income, with at least some post high school education.

    See https://www.coloradolottery.com/about/demographics.cfm

    *5. Also, according to a Harvard Medical School Division on Addictions Wager article “An increase in the number of gambling venues in a given area does not necessarily lead to an increase in the prevalence of pathological gambling. If pathological gamblers participate solely in illicit gambling activities, then it is possible that a doubling or even tripling of legal gambling opportunities would have little or no effect on prevalence.”

    See https://www.thewager.org/Backindex/Vol4HTML/w410.html

    ”’Bruce Bennett is a resident of Mililani. He can be reached via email at bru@Hawaii.rr.com”’

    State Budget Shortfall-Let’s Bet on Legalized Gaming

    0

    Highlights of Legalized Gaming:

    *1. Shipboard (2-3 ships; about 800 gaming positions each with about 6-hour cruises around the clock) gambling potential annual increase in tax income to state at $28M, $43M and $78M; with 998, 1,508 and about 3,795 direct and indirect new net job gains as shown in the pessimistic, moderate and optimistic scenarios presented in Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism 1997 report.

    See https://www.hawaii.gov/dbedt/gaming/index.html

    *2. Shipboard (4 ships; also around the clock operation permanently moored in harbor) with an estimated potential annual increase in tax income to the state of $200M-$300,000,000; and at least 3,000 new jobs created, as shown in the HGEA testimony dtd Feb 8, 2000.

    See https://www.hgea.org/testimony/gaming020800.html

    *3. Establishment of a new State Lottery, especially if net proceeds assigned to for example education including programs such as Ready to Learn or a Hawaii high school scholarship for accredited local institutions of higher learning would according to many gaming studies be less detrimental to society than other forms of legal gambling. A respectable lottery could probably net around $25M annual increase in (non-tax) income to the state.

    *4. According to the Colorado Lottery, the average lottery player is middle aged, has middle income, with at least some post high school education.

    See https://www.coloradolottery.com/about/demographics.cfm

    *5. Also, according to a Harvard Medical School Division on Addictions Wager article “An increase in the number of gambling venues in a given area does not necessarily lead to an increase in the prevalence of pathological gambling. If pathological gamblers participate solely in illicit gambling activities, then it is possible that a doubling or even tripling of legal gambling opportunities would have little or no effect on prevalence.”

    See https://www.thewager.org/Backindex/Vol4HTML/w410.html

    ”’Bruce Bennett is a resident of Mililani. He can be reached via email at bru@Hawaii.rr.com”’

    American and Coalition Forces Strike Iraq

    0

    My fellow citizens, at this hour, American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger.

    On my orders, coalition forces have begun striking selected targets of military importance to undermine Saddam Hussein’s ability to wage war. These are opening stages of what will be a broad and concerted campaign. More than 35 countries are giving crucial support — from the use of naval and air bases, to help with intelligence and logistics, to the deployment of combat units. Every nation in this coalition has chosen to bear the duty and share the honor of serving in our common defense.

    *Why We Know Iraq is Lying

    *What Does Disarmament Look Like?

    *U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell Addresses the U.N. Security Council

    To all the men and women of the United States Armed Forces now in the Middle East, the peace of a troubled world and the hopes of an oppressed people now depend on you. That trust is well placed.

    The enemies you confront will come to know your skill and bravery. The people you liberate will witness the honorable and decent spirit of the American military. In this conflict, America faces an enemy who has no regard for conventions of war or rules of morality. Saddam Hussein has placed Iraqi troops and equipment in civilian areas, attempting to use innocent men, women and children as shields for his own military — a final atrocity against his people.

    I want Americans and all the world to know that coalition forces will make every effort to spare innocent civilians from harm. A campaign on the harsh terrain of a nation as large as California could be longer and more difficult than some predict. And helping Iraqis achieve a united, stable and free country will require our sustained commitment.

    We come to Iraq with respect for its citizens, for their great civilization and for the religious faiths they practice. We have no ambition in Iraq, except to remove a threat and restore control of that country to its own people.

    I know that the families of our military are praying that all those who serve will return safely and soon. Millions of Americans are praying with you for the safety of your loved ones and for the protection of the innocent. For your sacrifice, you have the gratitude and respect of the American people. And you can know that our forces will be coming home as soon as their work is done.

    Our nation enters this conflict reluctantly — yet, our purpose is sure. The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder. We will meet that threat now, with our Army, Air Force, Navy, Coast Guard and Marines, so that we do not have to meet it later with armies of fire fighters and police and doctors on the streets of our cities.

    Now that conflict has come, the only way to limit its duration is to apply decisive force. And I assure you, this will not be a campaign of half measures, and we will accept no outcome but victory.

    My fellow citizens, the dangers to our country and the world will be overcome. We will pass through this time of peril and carry on the work of peace. We will defend our freedom. We will bring freedom to others and we will prevail.

    May God bless our country and all who defend her.

    ”’Return to this article at:”’
    https://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/03/20030319-17.html

    Disarmament has Begun: Hawaii is Prepared, Governor Says

    0

    White House spokesman Ari Fleischer Wednesday night announced the initial phase of U.S. disarmament of Iraq had begun. The president addresses the nation at 10:15 EST, Fleischer said.

    Earlier today, Gov. Linda Lingle announced the state security alert status will be raised from “blue” to “yellow” beginning at 3 p.m. HST today, March 19.

    The governor made the decision this morning to coincide with Pres. George W. Bush’s announcement on Monday giving Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave the country at that hour.

    It also follows the move by National Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge to raise the federal homeland security alert status to “orange” and implement “Operation Liberty Shield.”

    The governor says the heightened security level means homeland security team will implement numerous precautionary measures to increase our state’s readiness to prevent terrorist attacks, which will ultimately protect our residents and visitors, Gov. Lingle says.

    “The decision to raise our security alert status was based on the best available intelligence provided by the U.S. military and the Department of Homeland Security,” Gov. Lingle adds. “Although there is still no credible or direct threat to the state of Hawaii, we are aware of increased terrorist activity worldwide due to the initiation of conflict with Iraq. It would be prudent for the citizens of Hawaii to be at this elevated level of awareness.”

    Under the color-coded Hawaii Homeland Security Advisory System, the yellow condition indicates an elevated risk of a terrorist attack. The yellow level also means there will be increased surveillance of critical locations, coordination of emergency plans, assessments and further refinement of protective measures, and implementation, as appropriate, of contingency and emergency response plans. For security reasons, details of the exact measures that will be implemented are not being released.

    The Hawaii Homeland Security Advisory System complements the National Security Advisory System, which provides practical guidelines for individuals, families, businesses and organizations to plan for a potential terrorist threat.

    Lingle says she and her appointees are in constant communication with the federal government and are working closely with our entire Hawaii homeland security team.

    That includes the military and civilian partners to implement certain planned security measures as a result of the heightened security alert status, according to Major General Robert Lee, Hawaii’s adjutant general.

    “The latest intelligence indicates that there is still no credible threat to Hawaii, however, with increased threats worldwide, raising Hawaii advisory status is a prudent step to take,” he says.

    The governor emphasized the importance of keeping alert, while going on with normal daily lives. She also extended her full support to America’s military men and women, who she says, like countless of brave Americans before them, stand to defend the principals of freedom and democracy for which this nation stands.

    Additional information about the Hawaii and national security alert guidelines and recommendations can be viewed at:

    Hawaii State Civil Defense: https://www.scd.state.hi.us/

    The National Strategy For Homeland Security: Office of Homeland Security: https://www.whitehouse.gov/homeland/

    American Red Cross Hawaii Chapter: https://www.hawaiiredcross.org/

    Gov. Lingle’s Web Site: https://www.hawaii.gov/gov

    War in Iraq Begins

    0

    The United States and its allies began a war of disarmament of Iraq early Thursday Baghdad time, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer announced. U.S. President George W. Bush planned to address the nation just over two hours after expiration of the deadline given Saddam Hussein to leave Iraq or face war.

    “The initial phases of the disarmanent of Iraq have begun,” Fleischer said.

    ”Anti-aircraft guns were heard firing in Baghdad.”

    Earlier, U.S. and British aircraft earlier Wednesday pounded targets in Iraq’s southern no-fly zone and dropped leaflets telling Iraqi soldiers how to surrender, a U.S. Air Force spokeswoman based at an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia told United Press International. She said the targets of the strikes were communication, artillery and air defense facilities.

    Similar strikes have been carried out regularly since December 1998, but the leaflet drop was the first time that Iraqi troops have received instructions on how to avoid being harmed should the invasion begin.

    The leaflets, in Arabic, advise soldiers to park their vehicles in square formations and then stay at least a kilometer away from them. It says that they should display white flags, disarm themselves and avoid approaching U.S.-led forces.

    About 250,000 American, 45,000 British and 2,000 Australian troops were massed in the Persian Gulf to be used against Iraq.

    On Monday, Bush gave Saddam and his two sons a 48-hour ultimatum to leave Baghdad or face war. The deadline expired at about 8 p.m. EST, or 4 a.m. Thursday Iraq time. Despite stiff opposition at the U.N. Security Council, Bush said past U.N. resolutions gave him the authority to disarm Iraq by force.

    It seemed as if some Iraqi soldiers took the leaflets to heart right away. Pentagon officials told UPI that 17 had surrendered to U.S. forces Wednesday, even before the start of hostilities. They said they could not provide further details, but CNN reported the men had been taken into custody by Kuwaiti officials.

    A separate news report suggested the might have started already.

    The British Evening Standard newspaper reported on its Web site that British and American Special Forces were already fighting near Basra, the southern Iraqi port city that was heavily targeted in the first night of the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

    Pentagon officials would not comment on the report.

    At the White House, officials said the president — after his usual round of intelligence briefings — spent much of the day going over war plans with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, among others.

    Later he sent Congress a formal notification of his plans to use military force in Iraq, saying that further diplomacy would neither adequately protect the national security of the United States nor lead to the enforcement of U.N. Security Council resolutions calling for Iraq’s disarmament of its suspected chemical and biological weapons.

    The White House said there were no plans to officially mark the passage of the deadline. Spokesman Ari Fleischer could not say whether the president was seeking any type of spiritual guidance or support as he was about to give the order for war.

    At some point either prior to the war or shortly after hostilities begin, Bush is expected to again speak to the nation, this time from the Oval Office.

    The mood inside the executive mansion was subdued as Bush’s deadline passed.

    There was no indication that the president would order immediate military action, and some areas in middle Iraq faced wind and sand storms. But the reality of military action did not seem far off. Fleischer told reporters “Americans ought to be prepared for loss of life. Americans ought to be prepared for the importance of disarming Saddam Hussein to protect the peace.”

    In London, Prime Minister Tony Blair also convened a meeting of his war Cabinet, and the U.K. Foreign Office issued a warning to Britons all over the world to beware. “The risk of indiscriminate terrorist attacks in public places, including tourist sites, will be especially high during military action in Iraq,” a statement said.

    Tuesday, Saddam and his eldest son, Uday, rejected Bush’s ultimatum, with Uday saying Iraqis “will make the mothers and wives of the U.S. and British invading soldiers shed blood instead of tears on their sons and husbands” if a they start a war.

    The Iraqis intensified their preparations for a war, and prices of drinking water, gold and dollars rose. Ministries and government institutions were fortified with sandbags.

    Hadir al-Rabie, a 37-year-old journalist, told UPI the Iraqis were also trying to access water by digging wells in their gardens.

    “We are also stockpiling fuel,” said al-Rabie, but he added that he worried that “if a bomb strikes near the house, it will immediately be set on fire.”

    Bush’s ultimatum Monday came at the end of two days of failing diplomacy. He and the leaders of Britain, Spain and Portugal, blunted by Russian and French veto threats in the U.N. Security Council last week, met in a hurriedly prepared summit in the Azores Sunday. They agreed that March 17 would be the last day of diplomacy in the Iraq crisis.

    Monday morning, U.S. and British representatives decided against seeking a vote on the U.N. resolution that they proposed several weeks ago to try to get Security Council support for force.

    The draft required nine votes in the Security Council to be approved but had only the support of the United States, Spain, Britain and Bulgaria. Six other members — Angola, Cameroon, Chile, Guinea, Mexico and Pakistan — were undecided. France and Russia threatened a veto. Germany, China and Syria also opposed the motion.

    Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States — permanent members of the panel — have veto power in the council.

    The impasse at the Security Council began last September when Bush told the U.N. General Assembly to confront the “grave and gathering danger” of Iraq — or stand aside as the United States acts. In November, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved the U.S.-sponsored Resolution 1441, which authorized the return of weapons inspectors to Iraq and “serious consequences” if Baghdad failed to cooperate.

    Since then, Bush has repeatedly maintained that Saddam has lied to the international community and must be disarmed with force. He said if the world body did not act against Iraq, the United States will along with a “coalition of the willing.”

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.