FACT CHECK: Obama left blanks in oil spill speech
President Barack Obama is photographed after delivering a televised address from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday June 15, 2010. President Obama said the nation will continue to fight the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico for

WASHINGTON (AP) - In assuring Americans that BP won't control the compensation fund for Gulf oil spillrecovery, President Barack Obama failed to mention that the government won't control it, either.

That means it's anyone's guess whether the government can, in fact, make BP pay all costs related to thespill.

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Nation

Toy soldiers run afoul of school's weapons ban
his image made from video provided by WPRI on Thursday, June 17, 2010 shows a hat created by 8-year-old David Morales to honor American troops, for an assignment to decorate a hat in his second-grade class at Tiogue School in Coventry, R.I. School officials told him he could not wear the cap he decorated, saying it violated the district's no-weapons policy because the toy soldiers were carrying tiny weapons.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Christan Morales said her son just wanted to honor American troops when he wore a hat to school decorated with an American flag and small plastic Army figures.

But the school banned the hat because it ran afoul of the district's zero-tolerance weapons policy. Why? The toy soldiers were...

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Economy

Unemployment bill dealt Senate defeat

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republicans and a dozen Democratic defectors in the Senate dealt a defeat to President Barack Obama Wednesday, just days after he pressed Congress to renew pieces of last year's economic stimulus bill.

A catchall measure combining jobless aid for the long-term unemployed, aid to cash-strapped state governments and the renewal of dozens of popular tax breaks for businesses and individuals failed to muster even a majority in a test vote, much less the 60 votes that would be required to defeat a GOP filibuster.

Now, Obama's Democratic allies have been forced back to the drawing board in their efforts to pass the measure, which also would protect doctors from a looming cut in Medicare payments and...

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Texas

EPA tells companies to bypass Texas air permitting

HOUSTON (AP) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency told two more companies Tuesday to bypass Texas regulators and apply directly with the federal government for their clean-air permits.

The latest development in the battle between Texas and the federal government over clean-air permits for petrochemical companies involves the Chevron Phillips Cedar Bayou plant and Garland Power & Light, a utility in north Texas.

The companies have until Sept. 30 to reapply for the permits directly with the federal agency, according to letters from the

 

EPA to the companies. The EPA has threatened to take over Texas' air quality program, insisting the state is violating the federal Clean Air Act.

The EPA has rejected nearly 40 operating permits issued by Texas late last year. After Texas failed to meet agency demands that the permits be fixed, it barred Texas from issuing an operating permit to a refinery last month and promised to take similar action for the remaining plants.

"The people in Texas deserve...

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Healthcare

Dieting for dollars? More US employees trying it

ATLANTA (AP) - How much money would it take to get you to lose some serious weight? $100? $500?

Many employers are betting they can find your price. At least a third of U.S. companies offer financial incentives, or are planning to introduce them, to get their employees to lose weight or get healthier in other ways.

"There's been an explosion of interest in this," said Dr. Kevin Volpp, director of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Health Incentives.

Take OhioHealth, a hospital chain whose workforce is mostly overweight. The company last

 
ADVANCE FOR JUNE 2; graphic shows survey results of incentive rewards companies offer employees for better personal health

year embarked on a program that paid employees to wear pedometers and get paid for walking. The more they walk, the more they win - up to $500 a year.

Anecdotal success stories are everywhere. Half of the 9,000 employees at the chain's five main hospitals signed up, more than $377,000 in rewards have

 

already been paid out, and many workers tell of weight loss and a sudden need for slimmer clothes.

But does will this kind of effort really put a permanent dent in American's seemingly intractable obesity problem? Not likely.

"It's probably a waste of time," said Kelly Brownell, director of Yale University's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity.

Brownell's assessment is harsher than most. But the science seems to back him up.

Only about 15 to 20 U.S. studies have tried to evaluate the effect of financial incentives on weight loss. Most of those studies were...

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