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Baltimore police officer charged in drug corruption case
A Baltimore police officer accepted cash payments and provided protection for a man she believed to be a drug dealer — a man who was actually working with department investigators and FBI agents to build a criminal case against her, authorities...
Tags: Judges, Drug Trafficking, Rod J. Rosenstein, Prosecution, FBI
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Medicare not going broke as fast as once predicted
Florida's senior citizens and millions of baby boomers preparing for a long retirement can breathe just a little easier, but not much. Medicare is not going broke quite as quickly as once feared, government trustees reported on Friday, while Social...
Tags: U.S. Congress, Bankruptcy, Career and Workplace, Miami Shores, Retirement
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How does tenure affect financial planning?
Dear Liz: My spouse has tenure at a university. Given that one of us will always be employed, should we change the way we look at the amount of money we keep in an emergency fund or our risk tolerance for investments? Answer: Even tenured professors can...
Tags: Financial Planning, Career and Workplace, Retirement, Credit and Debt, Unemployment Benefits
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Spain's Rajoy promises encouraging jobless figures next week
ReutersMADRID, June 1 (Reuters) - Data on unemployment and the number of people receiving social security to be released by Spain's Employment Ministry next week will be "clearly encouraging", Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said on Saturday. "I'm not counting...Tags: Personal Data Collection, Unemployment, Spain, Politics, Career and Workplace
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Do you qualify for Medicare Extra Help?
Q What is Medicare “Extra Help”? A Part of the Medicare prescription drug (Part D) program, the Extra Help low income subsidy can help pay for parts of Part D monthly premiums, annual deductibles and co-payments. If on Medicare, people receiving...Tags: Government Health Care, Personal Data Collection, Prescription Drugs, Drugs and Medicines, Politics
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U.S. Medicare outlook improves, Social Security outlook unchanged
ReutersWASHINGTON, May 31 (Reuters) - The budget outlook for the U.S. government's Social Security pension program is largely unchanged while the outlook for its healthcare program for the elderly has improved slightly because of lower hospital and nursing...Tags: Government Health Care, U.S. Congress, Medicare
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How 10 major tax breaks benefit the rich -- and the poor
A new Congressional Budget Office report on the cost and beneficiaries of 10 of the largest federal tax breaks includes one surprising factoid that could make it harder for lawmakers to simplify the tax code by winnowing the thicket of credits, deductions...
Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Politics, Personal Income, Taxation, Justice System
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Medicare outlook improves as healthcare costs grow more slowly
WASHINGTON — In another indication of the impact of slowing healthcare costs, the federal government Friday upgraded its assessment of the financial health of the Medicare insurance program for the elderly and disabled. Medicare’s main trust...Tags: Insurance, Republican Party, U.S. Congress, Politics, Kathleen Sebelius
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Identifying a danger in immigration reform
If immigration reform passes, life will get tougher for foreigners who want to come here illegally. Those trying to sneak in will face more agents, fences and drones. Those who slip through will find it harder to get work — thanks to a mandatory...
Tags: Migration, Employment Opportunities, Personal Data Collection, Politics, American Civil Liberties Union
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LETTER: Illegal Immigration Bad For Country
With the state recently adopting drivers licenses for "undocumented" immigrants and rallies calling for immigration reform, the media is full of immigration stories. Many of them leave out the word "illegal." The immigration issue is not about legal...Tags: Migration, Personal Data Collection, Politics, Illegal Immigrants, Immigration
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Colorado governor signs law to compensate exonerated convicts
Colorado became the latest state to pass a law that compensates the wrongfully convicted for their time behind bars. Gov. John Hickenlooper signed the bill Wednesday in Denver, accompanied by exonerated convict Robert Dewey, who had fought for its...Tags: Executive Branch, Crime, Law and Justice, Lobbying, Prisons, Politics
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Column: Boomers aren't working forever, after all
ReutersCHICAGO (Reuters) - Baby boomers have been talking a good game for years about working longer and reinventing the last third of life. Now that it's game time, their retirement decisions look somewhat conventional. More than half the oldest boomers -...Tags: T. Rowe Price, Financial Planning, Career and Workplace, Retirement, Natural Disasters
May 31, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 31, 2013
|Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
May 31, 2013
|Column| Los Angeles Times
Jun 1, 2013
|Story| Reuters
May 31, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
May 31, 2013
|Story| Reuters
May 29, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 31, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jun 6, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Jun 5, 2013
|Story| Hartford Courant
Jun 5, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 30, 2013
|Story| Reuters
Original site for Social Security topic gallery.