Measuring the McCarran-Ferguson Act’s Antitrust Immunity

That insurance regulation rests primarily with the fifty states has become axiomatic and even cliché.  Around the country are operational state insurance commissions, and for much of the twentieth century, the federal government has let these agencies be.  The Employee Retirement Income Security Act’s (ERISA) sweeping preemptive force is cabined by a savings statute that allows the business of insurance to escape federal employee benefit plan regulation.  And the McCarran-Ferguson Act, generally speaking, provides that three comprehensive federal statutes sanctioning anti-competitive, unfair, and deceptive market activity—namely the Sherman Act, the Clayton Act, and the Federal Trade Commission Act—do not reach the insurance industry inasmuch as the business of insurance is regulated by the states.

This state-centric arrangement has come under fire in the last couple of decades, with the federal government staking its ground regulating insurance first around the periphery and then increasingly at the core of the insurance industry.  Some federal statutes make certain practices with certain aspects of an application for or policy of insurance illegal, whether proscribing genetic discrimination, as the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) does, or limiting the pre-existing condition as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) did.  Also regulating health insurance at the federal level is the monumental Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA or “Obamacare” as it is more popularly known).  The PPACA statu

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Rutgers now plays at High Point Solutions Stadium

PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) — Rutgers football stadium has a new name.

For the next 10 years, it’s going to be known as High Point Solutions Stadium.

The university formally announced Tuesday the New Jersey-based information technology company acquired the naming rights to the 54,454-seat facility.

Rutgers President Richard McCormick says the deal will provide new revenue for the athletic program. It’s not immediately known how much money the school will receive.

Rutgers is the birthplace of college football, with the first game being played against Princeton in 1869.

Jazz launches third week of CSU Summer Arts performances

A jazz concert kicks off the week’s public performances in Part II of the 2011 CSU Summer Arts festival, signaling the beginning of the end of the program’s 13-year run at California State University, Fresno.

Bug will play at 7 p.m. Sunday, July 10, at the Concert Hall in the Music Building at Fresno State. The group brings multiple musical influences into confluence with each concert. Guest artist is saxophonist Hashem Assadullahi.

Also during the week:

  • Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder will play a jazz concert at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 11, at the Concert Hall.
  • Eric Merrell and Samantha Minear’s artist lecture and slide presentation, will begin at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 13, at the Fresno Art Museum (Yale Avenue and First Street, Fresno).
  • Alexandra Billings, Eric Hunicutt and David Razowsky will offer improvisational comedy at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 14, at the John Wright Theatre in the campus Speech Arts Building.
  • Rick Garcia and William Malpede will lecture on digital music and media at 7 p.m. Friday

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Penn’s Environmental Toxicology Center Part of Group to Analyze Seafood Safety Following Gulf Spill

PHILADELPHIA — Penn’s Center of Excellence in Environmental Toxicology (CEET), is part of a consortium that has been awarded $7.85 million from National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) to determine seafood safety following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The consortium is led by the Environmental Health Sciences Core Centers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB).

Edward Emmett, MD, professor of Occupational & Environmental Medicine, will co-lead the Community Based Participatory Based Research Project (CBPR) and the Community Outreach and Dissemination Core (CODC). Emmett is an authority on the principles and practices that underlie the CBPR approach and will use this to translate possible human health concerns from the oil spill to affected communities. <

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PTA treasurer charged with stealing thousands

There were some furious parents and students in court Monday for the arraignment of a former PTA treasurer accused of embezzling tens of thousands of dollars.

She’s accused of using it to pay for her family’s lavish lifestyle and for fertility treatments.

“She was a fragile person I believe she’s much stronger now,” Stephen Flamhaft, Hogan’s attorney said.

She’s a changed woman, although Providence Hogan looked clearly concerned about her past.

The disgraced former PTA member was visibly nervous as she faced a judge Monday morning.

Hogan admits, she stole roughly $82,000 from the PTA at P.S. 29 in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn where she was a treasurer from 2006-2008.

But her lawyer says at the time, Hogan’s personal life was a mess, that she was dealing with psychological and emotional issues after having several miscarriages, her husband, who was by her side Monday, had lost his job and her business which was her day spa which was in financial trouble.

But Stephen Flamhaft insists that’s all behind her.

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