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Editorial Roundup: Pennsylvania

PennLive. May 18, 2024

At a time when fire departments are desperately trying to recruit young people into their ranks, Swatara Township has shuttered a volunteer fire house due to what authorities say are credible reports of racial discrimination.

At a time when fire departments are desperately trying to recruit young people into their ranks, Swatara Township has shuttered a volunteer fire house due to what authorities say are credible reports of racial discrimination.

We need more firefighters, and anything that discourages people from considering the profession needs to be firmly dealt with right away.

Fire chiefs throughout the nation say they need all the help they can get as the nation faces a dramatic decrease in the number of volunteer firefighters. It makes no sense whatsoever to keep a closed-door attitude that welcomes white men only.

We applaud the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office for reopening its investigation of the Bressler Friendship Fire Company, which had been the subject of a similar investigation in 2022.

Then, a 35-year veteran firefighter charged the Bressler station had a policy that welcomed only white people into the social club.

It seems at least one firefighter who guarded entry to the club made it clear accepting Black firefighters would “never happen.”

As a result of the first investigation, the company was supposed to take unspecified “remedial actions.” At the very least, the fire department’s social club was supposed to update its bylaws and website to ensure its statements were non-discriminatory. But attitudes needed to be updated, too.

The most recent allegations against the Friendship Fire Company involve not allowing a Black man to join its social club. It sent a clear and intentional message that people of color are not welcome.

That is not only misguided and illegal, it’s downright stupid. Racism generally is.

When your house catches fire, do you really care if the firefighter who rushes to put it out is Black or white? Do you want the Black firefighter to stay outside and only let the white firefighter in? Does it really matter what color the man or woman is who rushes into the fire to save your life?

We should be grateful for the men and women of all colors who are willing to do such dangerous work. It hurts the entire community when there aren’t enough of them to answer the call for help.

The nation is facing an alarming shortage of firefighters. In fact, many fire chiefs will tell you the profession is facing the greatest staffing crisis in modern times.

Eric Bernard, board of the National Volunteer Fire Council and a volunteer firefighter in Maryland, told “Fortune” magazine the situation is especially dire for volunteer fire departments. They have seen significant decreases in young people willing to do the dangerous work of fighting fires and not get paid.

But fire officials also say fewer young people are coming into their line of work even when there is a good salary. In fact, since the pandemic, officials say there’s been a massive drop in recruits for both volunteer and paid fire departments.

Add to that the fact that retiring Baby Boomers are leaving serious vacancies in the firefighter ranks. We thank them for their service, but too few millennials and Gen Z’s are rushing in to take their places.

We urge Swatara Township and the Attorney General’s office to provide clear information to the community about why appropriate actions weren’t taken in 2022 to address racial discrimination at the Bressler station.

And we call on both the township and the Attorney General’s office to ensure the “whites only” attitude is not allowed to fester within fire departments or anywhere else in our community.

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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. May 18, 2024

Buprenorphine, the only drug currently available at pharmacies to treat opioid use disorder (OUD), is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. It’s an unfortunate side effect of a pharmacy system under pressure and, ironically, regulations that were meant to curb the opioid epidemic in the first place.

New guidelines must make a clear distinction between opioids that cause addiction, and opioids that treat it – specifically buprenorphine, a medicine that, when used properly, safely staves off withdrawal by replacing some of the effects of illicit opioids. Its effectiveness is tied to its molecular similarity to other, more addictive opioids.

Unlike methadone, buprenorphine doesn’t require daily attendance at an Opioid Treatment Program (OTP), and the strict supervision that comes with it. In rural areas, OTP sites are rare and far apart. Many people with OUD, especially those who are poor, can’t get to a site every day. While legislation to free methadone from these requirements advances at the federal level, buprenorphine remains the only OUD treatment option that is available at most pharmacies.

But, unfortunately, as an opioid itself, federal regulations implemented in the last decade aiming to curb suspicious opioid prescriptions now also affect treatment options. While these regulations were necessary to reel in pharmacies that acted as pill mills, supercharging the epidemic, addiction management drugs should not be treated the same way.

These restrictions are a strain for pharmacies already struggling under middlemen all too content to reimburse pharmacies at unsustainably low rates for the medicines they supply. While filling buprenorphine scripts was never lucrative, the trend is bleak: Updated reimbursement rates for patients on Medicaid have made these patients a financial drain on pharmacies.

Only punishments

Meanwhile, the legal framework for buprenorphine offers no guidelines, only punishments.

According to a 2022 Journal of the American Medical Association study, pharmacies may be “flagged by wholesalers and distributors as suspicious when aggregated pharmacy orders of opioid products, including buprenorphine, are above a prespecified, but largely unknown, threshold or opioid quota.” A pharmacy’s available supply of buprenorphine may then be restricted or cut off altogether. In the worst case, they can be reported to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), opening them up to a slew of legal repercussions.

These issues are also symptomatic of the broader collapse of the pharmacy business due to middlemen, known as pharmacy benefits managers (PBM), paying reimbursement rates that force pharmacies to take a loss on supplying life-saving drugs. And buprenorphine is among the medications with the worst reimbursement rates.

In McKeesport, for instance, the abrupt closure of a pharmacy left roughly 150 people with OUD scrambling to find other providers. As the Editorial Board described in urging PBM reform, this creates a financial contagion: These patients are a net drain on pharmacy businesses, because their medications cost more to fill than the reimbursements PBMs pay for them.

Collapsing system

But it gets worse. Wholesalers and the DEA, often unaware of recent pharmacy closures, will look at a patient traveling for long distances or crossing state lines for their medications, and identify him or her as an addict trying to game the system — rather than someone desperately trying to do the opposite by managing their addiction treatment. This can result in pharmacies’ opioid quotas being cut, not to mention law enforcement investigations, meaning those businesses can serve even fewer patients.

Then there’s the stigma of treating people with OUD. They are often more desperate, with fewer resources and more complex treatment needs than other patients. The only other way for these patients to stave off withdrawal is through the illegal drug market, now increasingly tainted with fentanyl or horrifying animal tranquilizers. There is no leeway for people with OUD to miss a dose without serious consequences.

Pharmacists describe frantic phone calls from patients hours away, patients they can’t help because they don’t have the necessary buprenorphine stock or the capacity to shoulder extra costs. With the support for helping these patients so low, and the cost of accepting them so high, some pharmacies are no longer accepting OUD patients at all.

A changing field

Treating OUD is a dynamic and changing field, shifting with the makeup of the opioid drug supply and new discoveries in addiction treatment. For example, prescription doses of buprenorphine have risen in tandem with the potency of new, super-strong additives like fentanyl. While the use of buprenorphine has been shown to help patients with OUD live longer, an ideal treatment time frame has not yet been established. No one knows how long buprenorphine patients should use their medication. This makes capping its supply a guessing game.

But what we can say right now is that the supply, artificially controlled by regulation, is not meeting the demand.

Pennsylvania stands at a critical juncture for treating the opioid epidemic: Funds from the lawsuit against massive drug manufacturers are currently bolstering local nonprofits and community organizations doing frontline work. This is the time to ensure that treatment standards keep up with known best practices.

Wholesalers and regulators must stop treating buprenorphine, the medication helping people emerge from opioid addiction, as primarily a cause of addiction. And PBM reform must ensure pharmacies are reimbursed fairly for the life-sustaining medicines they dispense

Because right now, the already fragile system of care for people with OUD is on the verge of collapsing entirely. Public and private authorities must not let reforms designed to combat the opioid epidemic become policies that extend it.

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Scranton Times-Tribune. May 18, 2024

The PUC giveth and the PUC can taketh away.

Following a hefty, and welcome, rate reduction last December that cut natural gas prices for residential customers of UGI Utilities Inc. by 20%, the utility announced last week it will increase rates in June and December, provided the state Public Utility Commission approves.

Last year’s decrease set the average monthly cost of gas at $93.17 for consumers across UGI’s territory in Northeast Pennsylvania. By next December, if the PUC fully adopts UGI’s request, the average monthly cost will reach $101.99. Monthly bills will still be roughly $15 smaller than they were before last year’s deep cuts. But if history is any guide, they will likely move up in coming years.

Energy markets are volatile and utilities are required to pass the cost of the natural gas they purchase directly on to consumers without any markup. But the actual cost of the gas, known as the commodity charge, only represents about 54% of each monthly bill, according to UGI. The rest comes from distribution and customer charges, which are also regulated by the PUC.

The current rate-setting system offers a substantial degree of financial certainty for UGI, which had an adjusted net income of more than $600 million in 2023, but offers little stability for consumers, including commercial customers who will see their rates increase from 9 to 10% by the end of this year if the PUC grants UGI’s request. Furthermore, the frequent swings in utility rates complicate matters for consumers trying to save money by choosing alternate suppliers, some with fixed rates and terms, through the PA Gas Switch program.

To add insult to injury, UGI’s gas customers are also subject to a “weather normalization adjustment” that applies to distribution charges from October through May. If temperatures in any given month are 3% warmer than the 15-year average for that month, customers pay a surcharge, which averages about $4 to $5 for residential customers, according to UGI. A credit is applied if temperatures are 3% colder than the 15-year average.

UGI argues the adjustment is “revenue neutral,” but, given warmer temperatures due to climate change, it seems stacked against the consumer. The surcharge, instituted under a five-year pilot program approved by the PUC, will be reviewed in 2027.

With consumers facing price pressures for everything from food to clothing to housing, the PUC should closely review UGI’s calculations of future gas prices and reduce or hold the line on the requested rate increase if possible.

In the long term, state leaders should review how utility rates are currently formulated and consider reforming the process so that the PUC can succeed in its stated mission “to balance the needs of consumers and utilities; ensure safe and reliable utility service at reasonable rates; protect the public interest; educate consumers to make independent and informed utility choices; further economic development; and foster new technologies and competitive markets in an environmentally sound manner.”

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Uniontown Herald-Standard. May 18, 2024

If you have a child in a day care program, congratulations are in order. You were lucky that you were able to get them enrolled in one, given how long the waiting lists are at some child care centers.

And here’s something you might have noticed when you drop off your child in the morning or pick them up in the evening – there’s an awful lot of turnover at child care centers. A staffer who reads stories to your child, keeps an eye on them on the playground, monitors them as they eat or work on art projects and changes their diaper at least three or four times per day might be there for only a handful of months before they depart.

It’s not hard to understand why. Working in child care is very, very hard work, and it’s work that is not adequately compensated. Right now, the median wage for a child care worker is $15.48 per hour. Compare that to the average wage of an employee at a fast-food establishment in Pennsylvania, which is almost $18 per hour.

Leah Spangler, president and CEO of the Learning Lamp and Ignite Education Solutions nonprofit agency in Johnstown, said in a March legislative hearing that she had roughly 100 job openings and more than 500 children on a waiting list. She explained, “I don’t have a beer cave. I can’t sell lottery tickets. I can’t sell tobacco. How am I going to raise wages?”

But a paucity of available slots at child care centers and low wages are just two of the problems that have beset the child care industry right now. A third one is the simple reality that child care has become prohibitively expensive for many families.

On Wednesday, NBC-TV’s evening newscast aired a story about a Wisconsin couple, both of them nurses, who have found the cost of paying a mortgage, paying for child care, and covering all the other expenses of life to be so onerous that the father has decided to become a stay-at-home dad because the cost of day care was just too much for them to afford. For many families, the cost of day care meets or exceeds their monthly housing costs.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, child care is considered affordable when it costs families no more than 7% of their household income. That’s something most families can only dream about – it’s typically more like 24%.

With an election year in full swing and Congress and the presidency up for grabs, there’s not likely to be any kind of solution coming from the federal government anytime soon. A proposal from the Biden administration would spread $500 million among the states in block grants to lower the cost of child care for low-income families and increase the wages of child care workers. In Pennsylvania, Gov. Josh Shapiro has asked for $100 million for early learning, early intervention and child care programs. Advocates argue, though, that much more is needed.

Having an affordable and accessible child care system is vital to the U.S. economy and also vital for children, who acquire early developmental and social skills. Helping workers who provide child care and families who need it should be much more of a priority for lawmakers than it currently is.

Dos muertos, tres heridos en tiroteo en compañía en Pensilvania

El lugar del tiroteo en la compañía Delaware County Linen en Chester, Pensilvania, el 22 de mayo de 2024. (Foto: AP/Matt Rourke)

CHESTER, Pensilvania, EE. UU.— Un empleado descontento abrió fuego en una compañía de lino cerca de Filadelfia el miércoles, matando a dos colegas de trabajo e hiriendo a otros tres, informaron autoridades.

El hecho ocurrió en la compañía Delaware County Linen a eso de las 8:30 de la mañana en la ciudad de Chester, a unos 29 kilómetros (18 millas) al sur de Filadelfia.

El agresor huyó en un vehículo pero fue capturado poco después en una parada de tráfico en la cercana Trainer, dijo el fiscal distrital Jack Stollsteimer. Las autoridades no han difundido su nombre y el motivo específico sigue sin conocerse. Informes previos habían dicho que el tirador era un exempleado.

“Esto es parte del problema de las armas de fuego en Estados Unidos”, dijo el alcalde de Chester, Stefan Roots, añadiendo que la pequeña ciudad había disfrutado de un período de calma relativa en años recientes y que la delincuencia estaba disminuyendo. “La violencia siempre es impredecible. No sabemos en qué condiciones está la gente, en una ciudad que se ha empobrecido como la nuestra”.

Roots llamó a los legisladores estatales a encarar la crisis de la violencia armada, especialmente cuando está relacionada con personas con problemas psicológicos.

“No podemos tener armas en manos de la gente equivocada”, dijo Roots. “Tiene que haber habido algún problema de salud mental cuando un empleado entra a su lugar de trabajo en un día laboral y se desquita de esa manera tan violenta. No solo contra su jefe, sino contra sus colegas, con quienes probablemente trabajó durante años”.

Tres personas siguen hospitalizadas, por lo menos una en condición crítica, dijo la policía.

La empresa llevaba en la comunidad más de 30 años y algunos trabajadores vivían tan cerca que venían caminando, dijeron residentes. Algunos de los trabajadores que estaban allí cuando estallaron los disparos luego se reunieron a la entrada de una iglesia al otro lado de la calle, detrás de barreras policiales. Uno tenía la mano vendada.

“Aquí siempre está tranquilo. No tenemos muchos problemas, así que esto es sorprendente”, dijo Doneshia Johnson, quien vive al lado de la compañía y estaba afuera con un su nieto de 1 año. Dijo que cuando estallaron los disparos ella había salido.

“Uno nunca sabe. Por eso cuando te despiertas tienes que rezar y esperar a que ese día regresarán a casa sano y salvo”, añadió.

Department of Aging’s New Domiciliary Care Campaign recruitshomeowners with extra room to open their doors and hearts 

(Foto: Ilustrativa/Pexels)

Governor Josh Shapiro’s 2024-25 budget proposal includes $5.2 million for Pennsylvania’s 52 Area Agencies on Aging to offer and expand innovative housing initiatives.


Harrisburg, PA –The Pennsylvania Department of Aging today announced it has launched its first-ever marketing campaign to promote its Domiciliary Care housing program, also known as Dom Care, to Pennsylvanians who have some extra room in their home and wouldn’t mind some extra company. 

Dom Care providers open their homes to offer a family-like living environment, daily support and supervision to adults aged 18 and older who are unable to live independently in their community, yet do not require the level of care provided by a long-term care facility. Dom Care providers receive monthly compensation and many other rewards. When surveyed on why they participate in the program, Dom Care providers have reported they enjoy helping and giving back to others in the community, welcoming residents and watching them succeed, providing a secure home to another in need, and companionship.

The “Open Your Door” campaign, which features television and online ads including Facebook, is now running, and is designed to reach and appeal to multiple age groups.

“The Dom Care program offers a person the opportunity to live in a safe, caring home with a host provider who has the room, capability, compassion, and understanding to supply the basic necessities so the residents can live and thrive in their communities in a home setting,” said Secretary of Aging Jason Kavulich. “The Department is truly grateful for the homeowners who have been serving as Dom Care providers over the years. Unfortunately, we’re seeing many of them age out of the program and in need of help themselves. We encourage everyone in the counties offering the Dom Care program to consider hosting a community member who needs some extra support and a place to call home.”

The Dom Care program is currently available in 31 counties: Adams, Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Centre, Columbia, Crawford, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Fayette, Greene, Huntingdon, Jefferson, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Luzerne, McKean, Mifflin, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Snyder, Somerset, Washington, Westmoreland, Wyoming, and York.

Dom Care providers must be aged 21 and older and receive certification by the local Area Agency on Aging (AAA) to provide supportive services in their home, to no more than three eligible individuals. Providers receive a monthly stipend for sharing their home and providing services to Dom Care residents.

How does Dom Care work? The local AAA works with Dom Care providers and Dom Care residents to match them based on needs, preferences, and interests. A trial visit is set up prior to the resident moving into the Dom Care home to ensure the provider and resident are a compatible match. Once a resident moves into the home, they receive supervision, a bedroom with basic furnishings, three nutritious meals a day, assistance with personal care, laundry, medications, and transportation to non-emergency medical appointments. The AAA supplies ongoing care management to the residents and support to the provider.

Residents pay their Dom Care provider a monthly rate, established by the Department of Aging. Individuals receiving Social Security Income (SSI) are eligible to receive a state supplement which covers the monthly payment to their provider and provides the individual with a monthly personal needs allowance.

There are currently 286 Dom Care providers serving 538 residents in Pennsylvania.

In addition to the marketing campaign to promote Dom Care, PDA has requested $5.2 million in Governor Josh Shapiro’s proposed 2024-25 budget to strengthen the 52 AAAs’ capacity to offer and expand innovative and unique housing opportunities, including Dom Care.

Pennsylvanians interested in learning more about Dom Care Program opportunities in their area, including how to qualify, can either contact their local Area Agency on Aging or call 717-783-1550.

La NFL anuncia que Pittsburgh será la sede del Draft 2026

NFL
(Foto: EFE/CAROLINE BREHMAN)

Redacción Deportes. – Roger Goodell, comisionado de la NFL, la Liga Profesional de fútbol americano anunció este miércoles que Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, hogar de los Steelers, será la sede del Draft 2026 de la liga.

«El Draft de la NFL es uno de los eventos deportivos más importantes y esperados del año, y estamos encantados de asociarnos con los Pittsburgh Steelers para nuestro evento del año 2026», informó el comisionado a través de un comunicado.

Pittsburgh será la décima ciudad en albergar el Draft desde que éste se convirtió en un evento itinerante en el 2015, en el 2025 el evento está programado para realizarse en Green Bay, Wisconsin.

«Tenemos una oportunidad única de destacar esta maravillosa comunidad en un escenario global, beneficiando a la economía de Pittsburgh y entreteniendo a los fanáticos del fútbol de todos los mercados».

«Sabemos que esta ciudad, joya de Pennsylvania, brillará en 2026», subrayó Goodell.

Este año el Draft, que se realiza desde 1936, se llevó a cabo en Detroit, Michigan, hogar de los Lions.

Fue una edición histórica que registró un récord de asistencia de más de 700.000 mil personas que disfrutaron del evento que se efectuó en la explanada del Hart Plaza, en el centro de Detroit, del 25 al 27 de abril.

Art Rooney II, presidente de los Pittsburgh Steelers, reconoció los beneficios que llevará el Draft a esta ciudad.

«Estamos entusiasmados de que la ciudad de Pittsburgh haya sido seleccionada para albergar el Draft de la NFL de 2026. Será un evento increíble que resaltará todo lo que la región tiene para ofrecer a nivel nacional e internacional», afirmó Rooney.

El directivo destacó que el evento en el que los equipos seleccionan a los mejores talentos del fútbol colegial se ha convertido en un atractivo para los aficionados no sólo en Estados Unidos.

«Esperamos con ansias a los fanáticos del fútbol de todo el mundo. El país viene a disfrutar de la cultura de nuestra ciudad y al mismo tiempo mostrar nuestra rica historia y tradición futbolística en la región», concluyó Art Rooney.

Lawsuits claim 66 people were abused as children in Pennsylvania’s juvenile facilities

The entrance to the state-run Loysville Youth Development Center in Loysville, Pa., is seen on Monday, May 20, 2024. A set of newly filed lawsuits claims children who were sent to juvenile detention centers in Pennsylvania, including Loysville, suffered a range of sexual abuse, including violent rapes. (Photo: AP/Mark Scolforo)

HARRISBURG, Pa. — Dozens of children suffered physical and sexual abuse including violent rapes inside juvenile detention centers and similar facilities in Pennsylvania, according to four related lawsuits filed Wednesday.

The lawsuits describe how 66 people, now adults, say they were victimized by guards, nurses, supervisors and others. Some attacks were reported to other staffers and were ignored or met with disbelief, the lawsuits allege.

Their claims point to a broken juvenile justice system, said Jerome Block, whose New York law firm has also pursued similar lawsuits in Illinois,Maryland, New Jersey and Michigan.

“The purpose of the juvenile justice system is to rehabilitate and educate and reform, to equip them to lead healthy, productive lives,” Block said before filing the suits. “Instead these men and women were sexually traumatized as children. They came to these facilities needing help. Instead, they had trauma inflicted upon them.”

The lawsuits name the state-run Loysville Youth Development Center, South Mountain Secure Treatment Unit and North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville; Merakey USA’s Northwestern Academy outside Shamokin, which closed in 2016; and facilities run by Tucson, Arizona-based VisionQuest National Ltd. and Villanova-based Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health.

Department of Human Services press secretary Brandon Cwalina declined comment on the lawsuit but said the agency has zero tolerance for abuse and harassment. He urged anyone suspecting child abuse at any facility to call Pennsylvania’s ChildLine at 1-800-932-0313.

«We take seriously our responsibility to protect the health and safety of children at licensed facilities,” Cwalina wrote in an email.

Merakey said it will comprehensively review the allegations, some of which date back 25 years, and if they prove credible will have an obligation to help the former residents heal. But the company’s statement said it has found no records corroborating the alleged conduct, and staff who worked there at the time said they have no knowledge that such abuse was reported.

Devereux vice president Leah Yaw also declined to address specific allegations, but said it has worked to prevent abuse and improve safety by including training and outside accreditation on sexual abuse prevention, improving the pipeline for people to work in nonprofit behavioral health and spending millions to improve its facilities and technology.

“There is no setting in which people work with other people that is entirely immune from the risk of abuse,” Yaw said, but Devereux is trying “to create a comprehensive culture which prevents abuse before it can happen and ensures safety and quality.”

Messages seeking comment also were left for VisionQuest.

All the plaintiffs were born after Nov. 26, 1989, and meet Pennsylvania’s standards for filing claims of sexual abuse when they were children.

Block’s said his legal team also represents more than 100 people who were abused too long ago to file civil claims. Proposals to open a two-year filing window have been blocked by Senate Republicans in the General Assembly.

Eighteen of the latest plaintiffs describe rapes and other sexual abuse at Devereux facilities. One says that when he was 14 and sedated during “major anger outbreaks,” a staff member sexually abused him while he was restrained “so he could not fight back.”

Other claims say children at the state-run facilities “have long been subjected to a culture of exploitation, violence and rampant sexual abuse» committed by guards, counselors and other staff. The sexual abuse «has ranged from inappropriate strip searches to rape using violent physical force,” according to their lawsuit, which alleges negligence and failed oversight.

One plaintiff says a violent rape by a counselor at North Central left her pregnant as a teenager about 20 years ago, and another staffer didn’t believe her when she reported the rape. The lawsuit doesn’t describe what happened regarding her pregnancy.

Merakey USA, which operated Northwestern Academy before it shut down in 2016, is accused of a “culture of sexual abuse and brutality,” including “inappropriate and criminal sexual relationships with children,” who were granted or denied privileges to pressure them into sex.

That lawsuit says one 14-year-old girl who had not been sexually active was forced into sex acts by two Northwestern Academy staffers, and when she complained, she was accused of lying and her home leave passes were removed.

A male therapist then had her write about her sexual encounters during twice-a-week sessions for five months, telling her it was treatment for sex addiction and for a book he was writing. When she asked for the book upon leaving the facility, its director told her the book did not exist and her experience «would not be considered mental health treatment,” the lawsuit says.

A task force to address Pennsylvania’s juvenile justice problems — established by legislative leaders, the court system and then-Gov. Tom Wolf — concluded in 2021 that too many first-time and lower level juvenile offenders were being locked up, and Black offenders were disproportionately prosecuted as adults.

A Democratic-sponsored bill to adopt some of the task force recommendations is pending in the House after passing the Judiciary Committee in September on a party-line vote with all Republicans opposed. Supporters say talks also continue about legislation to establish an independent Office of Child Advocate.

Malik Pickett, a senior attorney at Juvenile Law Center in Philadelphia, said the lawsuits «ring far too familiar for what we know from our nearly 50 years of advocacy.”

«We have experienced one crisis for youth in detention after another,» Pickett said, while failing to pass meaningful changes.

Menores detenidos sufrieron abusos en centros correccionales de Pensilvania, según demandas

abusos
En la imagen la entrada del Centro de Desarrollo Juvenil de Loysville, dirigido por el estado, en Loysville, Pensilvania, el lunes 20 de mayo de 2024. (Foto: AP/Mark Scolforo)

HARRISBURG, Pensilvania, EE. UU. — Decenas de menores enviados a centros de detención e instituciones similares en Pensilvania sufrieron abusos físicos y sexuales que incluyeron violaciones violentas, de acuerdo con cuatro demandas relacionadas, presentadas el miércoles.

En las demandas se describe cómo 66 personas, que actualmente ya son adultas, afirman haber sido victimizadas por los guardias, enfermeros, supervisores y otros. Algunos ataques fueron reportados a otros miembros del personal y fueron ignorados o recibidos con incredulidad, se señala en las demandas.

Las demandas indican que el sistema de justicia juvenil de Pensilvania no funciona, señaló Jerome Block, abogado de Nueva York cuyo bufete presentó los nuevos casos y contribuye a impulsar demandas similares en Illinois, Maryland, Nueva Jersey y Michigan.

“El propósito del sistema de justicia juvenil es rehabilitar, educar y reformar, equiparlos para vivir vidas sanas y productivas”, dijo Block en entrevista telefónica antes de presentar las demandas. “En cambio, estos hombres y mujeres fueron traumatizados sexualmente cuando eran niños. Llegaron a esas instituciones con una necesidad de ayuda. En lugar de eso, les fue infligido un trauma”.

Las demandas se presentaron contra el Centro de Desarrollo Juvenil de Loysville, la Unidad de Tratamiento Seguro de South Mountain y la Unidad de Tratamiento Seguro de North Central en Danville, todas ellas dependientes del Departamento de Servicios Humanos de Pensilvania, además de la Academia Noroccidental de Merakey USA en las afueras de Shamokin, que cerró en 2016, e instalaciones dirigidas por VisionQuest National Ltd., con sede en Tucson, Arizona, y Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health, con sede en Villanova.

La mañana del miércoles se enviaron copias de la demanda a voceros del Departamento de Servicios Humanos, Devereux y Merakey solicitando sus comentarios. En los últimos días, se dejaron varios mensajes a VisionQuest.

Todos los demandantes nacieron después del 26 de noviembre de 1989, y cumplen los estándares legales del estado para presentar demandas de abuso sexual cuando eran menores de edad.

Block indicó que el equipo legal también representa a más de 100 personas que sufrieron abusos similares, pero que ocurrieron hace demasiado tiempo, según los límites temporales para presentar demandas civiles. Las propuestas para abrir un periodo de dos años para esas demandas antiguas han sido bloqueadas por republicanos del Senado en la Asamblea General.

Biden y su gran reto electoral: que la fortaleza de la economía se convierta en votos

economía
Composición de dos fotografías de archivo donde aparece el presidente de Estados Unidos, Joe Biden (i), y el expresidente, Donald J. Trump (d). (Foto: EFE/Jim Lo Scalzo/Giorgio Viera)

Si se cumpliera la estadística de que ningún presidente estadounidense posterior a la Segunda Guerra Mundial (1945) ha perdido unas elecciones cuando la economía es boyante, Joe Biden lo tendría todo para ganar en noviembre: la bolsa en máximos históricos, el Producto Interior Bruto (PIB) lejos de la recesión, la inflación bajando y el desempleo en mínimos.

Sin embargo, a día de hoy las encuestas no solo dan como ganador al expresidente republicano Donald Trump (2017-2021), sino que dibujan una realidad distinta a la que describen los números: los ciudadanos están preocupados por la economía y por los altos precios.

¿Por qué la fortaleza económica, que los demócratas y el propio Biden enarbolan en cada evento público, no acaba de permear en la población? La profesora de Comunicación de la Universidad de Boston, Tammy R. Vigil, lo ve claro: «Los demócratas son tradicionalmente muy malos enviando mensajes, particularmente cuando se trata de ciertos logros y muy específicamente en lo relacionado con la economía», cuenta a EFE.

Y los republicanos, explica por su parte el economista Harry M. Kaiser, profesor de la Cornell University, «han hecho un excelente trabajo al convencer a la gente, apoyados de los medios conservadores, de que la economía está mal, de que las tasas de criminalidad han aumentado y que Estados Unidos está en una situación terrible», explica a EFE.

«El hecho de que la Administración no esté recibiendo mucho crédito por las medidas económicas es bastante sorprendente, ya que normalmente una buena economía favorece fuertemente a la Administración actual en las elecciones generales», añade.

Fotografía del 20 de mayo de 2024 donde aparece el presidente de Estados Unidos, Joe Biden, mientras habla durante una celebración realizada en el Jardín de Rosas de la Casa Blanca en Washington. (Foto: EFE/Shawn Thew)

¿Es tan fuerte la economía estadounidense?

Pero ¿está la economía estadounidense tan boyante como Biden dice? En opinión de Kaiser, está «en buena forma»: «la tasa de desempleo es muy baja (3,9 %), las inflación (3,4 % en abril) está bajando y los ingresos reales están aumentando significativamente más rápido que la tasa de inflación».

En cuanto a los mercados, la semana pasada el Dow Jones de Industriales rebasó por primera vez en su historia la barrera de los 40.000 puntos.

Así que, a priori, todo parecería indicar que en Estados Unidos -ya lejos de la recesión y con un crecimiento en el primer trimestre del PIB del 1,6 % (tasa anualizada)- la economía va bien, aunque los ciudadanos no lo perciban del todo.

Y es que existe, como lo bautizaba el Nobel de Economía Paul Krugman en un reciente artículo en The New York Times, «una desconexión» entre «las percepciones de la economía» y «lo que la gente ve en sus propias vidas», apuntaba en el texto.

«Aunque la mayoría de los estadounidenses tienen una visión negativa de la economía, como manifiestan en las encuestas, en sus propias circunstancias financieras la mayoría de los estadounidenses se sienten relativamente positivos acerca de sus propias finanzas», afirmaba Krugman, quien destacaba que las encuestas se centran siempre en hablar sobre la economía general y menos sobre las circunstancias personales.

Por lo tanto, los demócratas tienen por delante el «desafío político» de superar la «falsa narrativa de que a la economía está yendo mal», señalaba el economista.

La economía del día a día

Pese a que las cifras macroeconómicas sostienen la visión de Biden, existe también un detalle que afecta en la noción que los ciudadanos tienen sobre la economía, el hecho innegable de que -pese a que la inflación esté descendiendo- ciertas cosas cotidianas son mucho más caras que antes y que no van a bajar.

«Hay ciertas cosas son muy caras, como los restaurantes y la comida, cosas que afectan al día a día de las personas», explica a EFE el profesor de Economía de la Universidad de Boston, Laurence J. Kotlikoff.

La gente, añade, se molesta cuando «va a un restaurante y paga 30 dólares por un sandwich, que equivale a una hora de trabajo», afirma.

Así como ningún presidente que se ha presentado a la reelección ha perdido en las urnas cuando la economía era fuerte, ninguno ha logrado ganar si en los dos años previos había habido una recesión.

Una muestra más de que, recuerda la profesora de Ciencias Políticas de la Universidad de Stanford, Brandice Canes-Wrone, la economía «es tradicionalmente un factor importante» y decisivo en las urnas.

Por ello, «los próximos meses serán críticos» y los demócratas tienen el reto de convencer a la gente de que «se ha dado un giro» y de que la inflación también «se está estabilizando».

Blinken pone a México como ejemplo contra el fentanilo y dice que China debe hacer más

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El secretario de Estado de Estados Unidos, Antony Blinken. (Foto: EFE/WILL OLIVER)

El secretario de Estado de Estados Unidos, Antony Blinken, afirmó este miércoles que México es un «buen ejemplo» de cooperación contra el tráfico de fentanilo y opinó que China ha tomado medidas «importantes pero aún insuficientes».

Según la Administración de Joe Biden, los cárteles mexicanos fabrican este opioide sintético a partir de precursores químicos que adquieren de China y luego trafican con él en Estados Unidos, país que sufre la peor crisis de opiáceos de su historia.

En una audiencia ante un comité de la Cámara de Representantes estadounidense, Blinken dijo que es muy importante «fortalecer» la cooperación con los socios de Estados Unidos para combatir el tráfico de esa sustancia y subrayó que «México es un buen ejemplo de ello».

Según el secretario de Estado, Washington ha «incrementado significativamente» la cooperación con México en los últimos años para desmantelar el tráfico de drogas.

El intercambio de información entre ambos gobiernos ha permitido, de acuerdo con Blinken, que se produjeran «arrestos de actores de primer y segundo nivel» en organizaciones del crimen organizado así como incautar «una cantidad récord de fentanilo».

Asimismo, el jefe de la diplomacia estadounidense pidió al Congreso más fondos para poder «implementar la tecnología más moderna y efectiva» en la frontera con México para detectar el tráfico de drogas dado que «la inmensa mayoría del fentanilo que ingresa al país proviene de los puertos de entrada oficiales».

Sobre China, el secretario de Estado recordó que ambos países establecieron un grupo de trabajo para abordar el tema de los opioides y explicó que Pekín ha tomado «medidas importantes pero aún insuficientes».

Blinken opinó que el Gobierno chino debe aumentar los arrestos y condenas contra quienes participan en el comercio ilegal de precursores de fentanilo y cortar el nexo financiero que existe entre ciertas empresas químicas con cárteles mexicanos.

Según datos oficiales de los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades (CDC), las muertes por sobredodiss de droga en Estados Unidos cayeron el año pasado un 3 %, de las 111.029 de 2022 a las 107.543 de 2023.

Shapiro trae “Great American Getaway” a Filadelfia para el 250º aniversario

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El gobernador visita la icónica estatua de Rocky y las escaleras del Museo de Arte.

El gobernador Josh Shapiro y el vicegobernador Austin Davis han traído la gira “Great American Getaway” a Filadelfia para promover la ciudad como un destino turístico de primer nivel de cara al 2026, para celebrar el inicio de un calendario de eventos y programas que culminarán con el 250º aniversario de la nación en ese año.

El lunes, en el condado de Lackawanna, el gobernador Shapiro lanzó la nueva marca de turismo estatal de Pensilvania: “The Great American Getaway.” La nueva marca muestra todo lo que el estado tiene para ofrecer como un destino de escapadas de fin de semana de primer nivel con miles de atracciones.

Mientras estuvieron en Filadelfia, el gobernador Shapiro y el vicegobernador Davis visitaron lugares históricos icónicos, promovieron pequeñas empresas locales e incentivaron a más personas a visitar Filadelfia y Pensilvania.

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El gobernador Shapiro se une a Visit Phila para anunciar el robusto calendario de eventos hasta el 2026.

Lanzamiento del Aniversario de EE. UU en el 2026

Shapiro, Davis y el secretario Siger se unieron a la presidenta y directora ejecutiva de Visit Philly, Angela Val, la representante de la ciudad de Filadelfia, Jazelle Jones, el director ejecutivo de TED Conferences LLC, Jay Herratti, y el director de “2026 Filadelfia”, Michael Newmuis, para dar oficialmente inicio al 250º aniversario de la independencia de la nación, anunciando la primera ola de un robusto calendario plurianual de programas, eventos y actividades hasta el 2026.

El anuncio incluyó el lanzamiento de “TED Democracy”, la primera serie de eventos de TED centrada en el futuro de la democracia, que se llevará a cabo en Filadelfia durante los próximos 3 años.

Después de declarar iniciadas las celebraciones del 250º aniversario de la nación, el gobernador Shapiro y la directora ejecutiva del Centro de Visitantes Independencia, Kathryn Ott Lovell, visitaron la icónica estatua de Rocky, las escaleras del Museo de Arte de Filadelfia, y luego recorrieron la nueva tienda de Rocky, que abrió en octubre pasado. La gira continuó con una visita al Salón de la Independencia, donde el gobernador y el vice recorrieron la Cámara del Concejo de Gobernación, que sirvió como la cámara ejecutiva para el gobernador de Pensilvania hasta 1799.

Apoyo a las grandes atracciones y las pequeñas empresas

El gobernador Shapiro y Austin Davis también visitaron el BOK Building, una antigua escuela técnica que se ha transformado en espacios de trabajo para pequeñas empresas, organizaciones sin fines de lucro y artistas de Filadelfia. Mientras estuvieron allí, el gobernador y el vice recorrieron varias pequeñas compañías, entre ellas, Remark Glass, Firth & Wilson Transport Cycles y Greenly Plant Company.

Luego, el vice Davis visitó The Garden en Cherry Street Pier, un espacio público de uso mixto durante todo el año en la ribera central del río Delaware que sirve como incubadora de creatividad, mercado, lugar de actuaciones y espacio social, creado por y para la comunidad de Filadelfia.

Por la noche, Shapiro y Davis se unieron a Visit Philadelphia para organizar la “Great American Happy Hour” en Mural City Cellars. El gobernador y su vice estuvieron acompañados por líderes de Filadelfia y destacados creadores de viajes y lifestyles para resaltar todo lo que el turismo de Pensilvania tiene para ofrecer, mientras ofrecen apoyo a negocios familiares y negocios latinos.

Shapiro y Davis visitan Greenly Plant Company y otras empresas en el edificio BOK.

La nueva marca promociona a Pensilvania

El turismo es una pieza clave de la estrategia de desarrollo económico del gobernador, generando $76 mil millones y sosteniendo más de 486,000 empleos al año en PA, y la nueva marca se basa en la propuesta del gobernador Shapiro de una inversión de $18 millones en el área del turismo para impulsar la economía, atraer más visitantes y apoyar empleos bien remunerados.

Un nuevo informe publicado por la Oficina de Turismo de Pensilvania en marzo muestra que la industria del turismo en Pensilvania generó $76.7 mil millones en impacto económico; sostuvo 486,871 empleos, contribuyó con $4.7 mil millones en impuestos estatales y locales y recibió 192.4 millones de visitantes en 2022.

En 2023, el informe anual de Visit Philadelphia mostró que el turismo en Filadelfia generó $6.6 mil millones en impacto económico, sostuvo 50,525 empleos, contribuyó con $387 millones en impuestos estatales y locales y recibió 25.8 millones de visitantes en 2023.

Desde las industrias locales de hotelería y entretenimiento hasta los parques estatales, senderos deportivos y negocios de recreación al aire libre, el turismo es un poderoso motor económico, beneficiando casi todos los rincones de Pensilvania y brindando a cada viajero la oportunidad de perseguir sus sueños.

PHRC announces two new dates in its statewide Beloved Community tour

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Harrisburg, PA- The Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission (PHRC) is excited to announce two upcoming stops in Montgomery County, as part of its statewide tour, «PHRC on the Road: Building a Beloved Community.»

  • Wednesday, May 22, 2024
    • 5:30- 7 p.m.
    • Montgomery County Community College, College Hall 140, 340 DeKalb Pike, Blue Bell, PA 19422
    • To register, click here.
  • Wednesday, June 5, 2024
    • 6:30-8 p.m.
    • Hosted by the Abington Township Human Relations Commisssion
    • The Crestmont Clubhouse, 2595 Rubicam Avenue, Willow Grove, PA 
    • To register, click here.

“This statewide tour will provide a forum where the PHRC can listen and better understand the concerns of the community,” said PHRC Executive Director Chad Dion Lassiter, MSW. “It will also serve as an opportunity to better our Beloved Community, create relationships and partnerships with local leaders and organizations to help them solve controversial issues within communities.”

The PHRC created the Beloved Community framework to assist communities of the commonwealth to intentionally build a culture of peace, understanding and tolerance despite our differences within the context of an increasingly diverse and interconnected world.

The PHRC launched the statewide tour in 2023. The PHRC has visited Bucks, Centre, Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Lancaster, and Philadelphia counties.

Each listening session will include a presentation on the Beloved Community framework and an overview of the services and programs offered by the PHRC. Lassiter will then open it up for questions from the community. Details about additional stops will be released as they become available. PHRC is still looking for locations to host upcoming sessions, anyone interested in partnering with the PHRC should contact Stacy Waters at stwaters@pa.gov.

The PHRC, the state’s civil rights enforcement agency, urges anyone who has experienced acts of discrimination or hate to file a complaint by calling 717-787-4410.  Information and resources are also available at www.PHRC.pa.gov. Follow the PHRC on XFacebookInstagramLinkedIn, and YouTube, and subscribe to our monthly newsletter.