Author: SeniorWomenWeb

  • Who Are Organizational Payees? Some Social Security Beneficiaries Rely on Organizations Like Non-profits or Nursing Homes to Help Them Manage Their Benefits.

    Each year, we (GAO)* make more than 1,000 recommendations to help improve the federal government. We alert department heads to the recommendations where they can save the most money, address issues on our High Risk List, or significantly improve government operations.

    This report outlines our 7 priority open recommendations for the Social Security Administration as of April 2020.

    What GAO FoundGAO seal via Seniorwomen.com

    The Social Security Administration (SSA) approves organizational payees — such as nursing homes or non-profits that manage the Social Security benefits of individuals unable to do so on their own — by assessing a range of suitability factors, such as whether the organizations have adequate staff to manage benefits for multiple individuals. However, GAO found that SSA’s policy does not specify how to assess more complex suitability factors, such as whether an organization demonstrates sound financial management. Without clearer guidance, unqualified or ill-prepared organizational payees could be approved to manage benefits. Also, SSA does not currently require background checks for key employees of an organizational payee. In contrast, SSA requires background checks for individual payees — such as a relative or friend of the beneficiary. A comprehensive evaluation could help SSA determine whether and how to expand their use of background checks to organizational payees.

    To ensure organizational payees are managing funds appropriately, SSA uses several monitoring tools, including resource-intensive onsite reviews. Certain organizational payees, such as those that charge fees for their services or have 50 or more beneficiaries (high-volume), receive onsite reviews every 3 to 4-years. In contrast, payees that serve fewer than 50 beneficiaries (low-volume) — the vast majority — are selected for review based on their estimated likelihood of misusing beneficiary funds, and a relatively low percent of them receive onsite reviews (see figure). SSA uses a predictive statistical model to identify higher risk low-volume payees, but the model’s effectiveness cannot be fully assessed by GAO or others due to missing documentation on how it was designed. SSA officials said they will update the model in the future, but do not have a time frame for doing so. Establishing such a time frame and documenting design decisions are key steps toward assessing the model’s effectiveness.

    Number and Percentage of SSA Organizational Payees, by Payee Type, Reviewed Onsite in Fiscal Year 2018.

    Fig HL-5 v07_102716

    Another way SSA oversees organizational payees is by reviewing their annual accounting forms, but shortcomings exist in SSA’s review of the form and in the form’s content and design. For example, SSA lacks timeframes for following up on missing or problematic forms. Also, the accounting form does not capture complete information on whether payees co-mingle beneficiaries’ funds in collective accounts, which can limit SSA’s ability to monitor those risk-prone accounts. Establishing timeframes and revising the form could enhance the effectiveness of the annual accounting form as an oversight tool.

    Why GAO Did This Study

    Nearly a million individuals relied on organizational payees to manage their Social Security benefits in 2018. Due to an aging population more beneficiaries may need organizational payees in the future. These beneficiaries are among the most vulnerable because, in addition to being deemed incapable of managing their own benefits, they lack family or another responsible party to assume this responsibility. SSA reports that misuse of benefits by payees is rare, but its Office of Inspector General has identified cases of misuse that have harmed vulnerable beneficiaries. GAO was asked to review SSA’s organizational payee program.

    This review examines, among other things SSA’s process for approving payees and its monitoring efforts. GAO reviewed relevant federal laws, regulations, policies, and guidance; analyzed SSA data from fiscal year 2018; analyzed the predictive statistical model SSA uses to select low-volume payees for on-site reviews; and interviewed SSA central office staff and regional, area, and field office staff in four regions selected for geographic diversity.

    *GAO provides Congress, the heads of executive agencies, and the public with timely, fact-based, non-partisan information that can be used to improve government and save taxpayers billions of dollars. Our work is done at the request of congressional committees or subcommittees or is statutorily required by public laws or committee reports, per our Congressional Protocols.

  • A 2020 Dr. Fauci YouTube Conversation About Pandemics and His History: National Institutes of Health Begins Study to Quantify Undetected Cases of Coronavirus Infection

    The study will be conducted by researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), with additional support from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI), all parts of NIH.

    Dr. Fauci at NIH.gov

    Dr. Anthony Fauci, right, NIH photo; Courtesy National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, 1981*

    “This study will give us a clearer picture of the true magnitude of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States by telling us how many people in different communities have been infected without knowing it, because they had a very mild, undocumented illness or did not access testing while they were sick,” said Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., NIAID director. “These crucial data will help us measure the impact of our public health efforts now and guide our COVID-19 response moving forward.”

    Investigators will test participants’ blood samples for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, proteins the immune system produces to fight a specific infectious agent. A positive test result indicates previous infection. To date, reporting of U.S. cases of COVID-19 has mostly relied on molecular tests that determine the presence of the virus in a person’s airways using a noninvasive cotton swab. While these cotton swab-based tests rapidly and effectively identify active infection, they do not determine whether a person was previously infected with SARS-CoV-2 and recovered.

    Image of a researcher
    rovide insight as to why these cases were less severe than those that lead to hospitalization.

    After enrollment, study participants will attend a virtual clinic visit, complete a health assessment questionnaire and provide basic demographic information—including race, ethnicity, sex, age and occupation—before submitting samples in one of two ways. Participants working at the NIH Bethesda campus will have blood drawn at the NIH Clinical Center. Other volunteers will participate in at-home blood sampling. Neoteryx, a medical device firm based in Torrance, California, will supply at-home blood collection kits. Researchers will ship each study participant a Mitra®Home Blood Collection Kit and provide detailed instructions on collecting a microsample of blood and mailing it back for future analysis in the laboratory.

    “Researchers have considerable experience using these at-home blood collection kits to track the spread of other infectious diseases like influenza, and this method is safe, effective and easy-to-use,” said Kaitlyn Sadtler, Ph.D., study lead for laboratory testing and chief of NIBIB’s Section for Immunoengineering. “With a small finger-pick, volunteers can help scientists fight COVID-19 from their homes.”

    People interested in joining this study should contact clinicalstudiesunit@nih.gov . For more information on this study, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov using identifier NCT04334954. For more information on the U.S. government response to the COVID-19 pandemic, visit www.coronavirus.gov.

    NIAID conducts and supports research — at NIH, throughout the United States, and worldwide — to study the causes of infectious and immune-mediated diseases, and to develop better means of preventing, diagnosing and treating these illnesses. News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID website.

    About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation’s medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.

    NIH…Turning Discovery Into Health®

    *Editor’s Note: A YouTube Interview With Dr. Fauci at his New York City  High School, Regis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3hpWUciWKXg&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR1aiu6SiVmOBK7ejGuaalYRH04yUaioZx6TdB4923DDQRjhSsILXFoz_Y0

  • Margaret Cullison: Cooking with Grandchildren Including Inauguration Cookies, Orange Julius and Chocolate Birthday Cake

     Drawing for an orange julius stand

    Left: An early 1960s prototype for an Orange Julius building by Maynard Lyndon. Maynard Lyndon papers, Architecture and Design Collection. Art, Design & Architecture Museum; University of California, Santa Barbara.  Right: A photo of Maynard Lyndon’s building for which he won a Governor’s Design Award for California in 1966. Architectural Forum, Jan/Feb 1967

     

    By Margaret Cullison

    Zen Buddhism teaches that people preparing food should do so with silent intent. As in meditation, a focus on mindfulness heightens awareness and appreciation of earth’s bounty. However, this concept isn’t exactly compatible with helping children learn to cook.

    My four sons didn’t show much interest in cooking as children, but they occasionally offered up recipes from schoolmates for me to try. The one for Orange Julius has survived these many years, tucked between the pages of my first Fannie Farmer Cookbook, 1959 edition. My youngest son, Peter, brought home the recipe, written in his boyish scrawl on a three by five-inch index card. He later used the other side of the card to write a note letting his brothers know that he had fed the dog and cats and was ‘on the street.’ Not as risky it might sound, as our suburban street ended in a cul-de-sac where children and animals played freely.

    ing of the Orange Julius craze before we moved to California in 1971. The drink, invented in 1926 in southern California where orange groves thrive, became popular enough to be named the official drink of the 1964 New York World’s Fair. Peter’s fingerprint-smudged recipe card is short on detail, but the Internet offers numerous options. Some suggest adding a raw egg while others prefer using freshly-squeezed orange juice instead of frozen concentrate. For those thirsty for this unique California drink, here is Peter’s version.

    Orange Julius

    1 cup milk

    2 teaspoons vanilla

    1 6-ounce can orange juice concentrate, still frozen

    ½ cup sugar

    1 ½ cups ice cubes

    In a blender, mix the milk and vanilla; add the orange juice concentrate, blending thoroughly. Add sugar and ice and continue to blend until cubes are crushed. If mixture is too thick, add some water. Serves two.

    I’ve always enjoyed baking and, happily, so do my three granddaughters. Peter’s daughter, Abby, first played at cooking with her child-size stove and utensils and served us imaginary tea in tiny cups. By age seven or eight, she had learned to make real cookies. Once when I was looking after Abby and her younger brother, she decided to stir up a batch. I watched as she mixed the dough and arranged small dollops on cookie sheets. Her confidence lulled me into relaxing my attention until, to my great regret, she attempted to remove a hot cookie sheet from the oven without a pot holder and burned her fingers. We both learned valuable lessons that day. For Abby, always protect your hands when touching a hot dish. For me, never assume a young cook’s knowledge of kitchen hazards.

    As a preteenager, Abby had perfected her baking skills enough to hatch a plan to sell three kinds of cookies to family members and friends. For my husband, Rich, a day isn’t complete without a few cookies, so her offer appealed to me as a good way to keep him supplied. A presidential election campaign had almost come to its merciful conclusion that year, and Abby called one of her creations the Inauguration Cookie. Using a basic oatmeal cookie recipe, she substituted dried cranberries for raisins and shredded coconut for nuts. Red and white but no blue. Her first entrepreneurial idea never reached fruition, but this recipe offers a sweet antidote to our current presidential campaign.

  • FactCheck.org’s A Guide to Their Coronavirus Coverage Guide; A Project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center

    In our work fact-checking political claims and debunking viral deceptions, we have found a tremendous amount of misinformation on the coronavirus pandemic.

    Here’s a guide to our coverage of the facts. Click on the headlines for the full stories.

    Trump's 'Presser'... pressconference

    Our Latest Stories

    These are stories published in the last seven days, as of April 17:

    Trump’s Inaccurate COVID-19 Death Rate Comparison
    Available data on confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths contradicts President Donald Trump’s recent claim that “the United States has achieved a significant lower mortality rate than almost all other countries.” As of April 16, there were at least 90 countries with a lower case fatality rate than the U.S., according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

    Stimulus Checks Won’t Reduce Future Tax Refunds
    Social media posts falsely claim that federal payments from the COVID-19 stimulus package could reduce taxpayers’ future refunds. The Internal Revenue Service says the payment “will not reduce your refund or increase the amount you owe when you file your 2020 tax return next year.”

    Trump’s False Claims about Pelosi and Chinatown
    President Donald Trump is making false and exaggerated claims about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Feb. 24 trip to San Francisco’s Chinatown.

    The White House Coronavirus Briefings
    FactCheck.org Managing Editor Lori Robertson spoke with WHYY radio in Philadelphia about fact-checking the White House’s daily coronavirus task force briefings.

    FactChecking Trump’s Attack on the WHO
    In announcing that his administration would halt funding for the World Health Organization, President Donald Trump made a series of false, misleading and unsubstantiated claims about the WHO.

    Reports Didn’t Misrepresent One Man’s Death as Two
    A bogus meme on Facebook suggests that the news media has tried to pass off one man’s death, attributed to complications from COVID-19, as two separate cases. But the headlines cited simply focused on different parts of his biography.

    Conspiracy Theory Misinterprets Goals of Gates Foundation
    A conspiracy theory falsely claims Bill Gates is plotting to use COVID-19 testing and a future vaccine to track people with microchips. The Gates Foundation has advocated for expanded testing and has funded vaccine research, but neither of those involves implanted microchips.

    Constitutional Experts: Trump Lacks Power to ‘Open Up the States’
    Constitutional experts say President Donald Trump is wrong that he, not governors, has the power to “open up the states” where businesses were closed or residents were ordered to stay at home as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Democratic Ad Twists Trump’s ‘Hoax’ Comment
    The Democratic super PAC Priorities USA Action has been running an ad falsely suggesting President Donald Trump called the coronavirus outbreak a “hoax.”

    Trump Falsely Distorts New York Times COVID-19 Science Story
    In a weekend tweet, President Donald Trump erroneously described a New York Times article, falsely stating that it said the coronavirus originated in Europe and suggesting that it had no named sources. The story, which reported on new genomic analyses of some of the first coronavirus cases in the New York area, made no such claim — and quoted no fewer than seven scientists by name.

    TV News Report Prompts Unfounded Attacks on Michigan Governor
    A TV station’s report on Michigan’s fine for those violating the state’s social distancing orders used old footage of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer at a signing ceremony with a crowd of people — prompting false accusations of hypocrisy on social media.

    Trump’s Snowballing China Travel Claim
    In early March, President Donald Trump said that restrictions he placed on travel to and from China “saved a lot of lives,” a claim that grew to “probably tens of thousands” and “hundreds of thousands” by early April. But we found no support for such figures.

    False Claim of Deadly Coronavirus Vaccine Trial in Africa
    Posts across social media are falsely claiming that a vaccine trial for the novel coronavirus in Senegal resulted in the death of seven children. There is no clinical trial for a potential vaccine currently taking place in Senegal.

     

  • Ferida Wolff’s BackYard: Maple Seeds in Abundance; We Are Birds of a Feather: Is Our Tree of Life Starting to Weaken? It’s a Short Step From Tree-worry to People-worry

    Maple seedsMaple Seeds in Abundance

     
    We have a large maple tree in our backyard. Each Spring it produces tons of seeds that offer food to the wildlife and promises of new trees. This year the tree seems to have exceeded its seed production. We have maple seeds all over our yard. It speaks of a burgeoning of life, an opening up of the season of growth and expansion. 
     
    And yet, things happen. This morning one of the branches was ripped from the tree trunk by an incredibly strong wind. It lays upon the grass, the seeds still clinging on. But now it has me thinking about the strength of the parent tree. Is this a harbinger of its decline? 
     
    It’s a short step from tree-worry to people-worry.  Is our tree of life starting to weaken? We seemed strong until the corona virus began playing havoc with us. It is hard to see the bright side of things right now but I try to focus on the positives: a neighbor offering to shop for me, fellow walkers saying hello but carefully avoiding close contact, having a snack virtually with my grandchildren. Small things but they help to keep the positive in view. 
     
    I’m looking forward to a season of healing, whenever that comes about. I hope the squirrels enjoy the feast Nature has offered.  I hope you find whatever is positive around you and that you stay safe and healthy. 
     
    Information about maple seeds: https://www.farmersalmanac.com/maple-copters-everywhere-21588 
     
     
    Edwin Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge
      






    We are Birds of a Featherwe are birds of a feather
                
    We took a ride recently to The Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge*. The Refuge protects more than 47,000 acres of southern New Jersey coastal habitats and is a haven for migratory birds. We drove slowly through the Refuge, observing the birds that were gathering in flocks. When they were flapping around or searching for food, we would park, get out of the car, and take photos. Other people were there, watching as well, but no one was close to anyone else. It was at the beginning of the social distancing rule. All along the road, the cars and the people kept appropriate distances.
                
    It was the time for nesting, for bringing new life into nature. Ospreys were gathering grass and weeds to place within the nesting formations set up for them. Geese were moving in vees and flapping from one part of the marsh to another. Ducks quietly floated, occasionally poking under the water for a treat to eat. Gulls dropped shells in the middle of the road, cracking them open for a meal. They were all together, as Mother Nature designed.
                
    Across the fields was New York City. Tall buildings reminding us of how people needed to stay away from personal contact, such a sad contrast from the what we were seeing. I hope that we are able to connect with each other soon, to enjoy our connections with family, with friends, with our professional contacts. Like the wildlife at the Forsythe Refuge, we are meant to connect with others. May this time of isolation be over soon.  After all, we too, are birds of a feather…  
     
    The Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge:
     
    A wonderful video:

    For bird lovers, here is a website you’ll enjoy:

     
    Editor’s Link
  • Balloon Bombs and Blackouts in World War II; For Some a Familiar Time of Anxiety; Growing Up in the Second World War From England’s Imperial War Museum

    Editor’s Note: We realize how frightening this period is for us all … but there is much of US history during WWII rarely referred to as well as the measures that had to be taken to keep the country safe.

    Blackout, World War II

     

    In order to comply with World War II blackout rules, people covered or painted over the upper part of car headlights.  During the war, Oregonians genuinely feared a Japanese invasion.  The production capacity of Portland’s shipyards made it a likely target.  The blackout rules were intended to make it more difficult for enemy planes to hit targets.  Portlanders were asked to have all lights turned off within 60 seconds of an alarm.

    Oregon lay along the Pacific Coast, and the U.S. government considered it part of the combat zone.  Lieutenant-General J. L. DeWitt, commander of military defense operations in the western United States asked that cities near the Pacific coast be able to meet the 60-second deadline.  Portland Mayor Earl Riley issued the rules in response to DeWitt’s request. 

    Although the feared invasion never materialized, the Japanese military did attempt to use hot-air balloons armed with incendiary bombs that would travel across the Pacific and land on North America.  The incendiary bombs actually did very little damage, but they were involved in the only known incident in which American citizens were killed on U.S. soil as a result of enemy action.  An unexploded bomb was discovered at a church picnic in Bly, Oregon, near Klamath Falls. The bomb exploded while being handled, killing a woman and five children from the Sunday School.

    Blackout rules were just one of the ways in which daily life changed during the war.  Gas and food rationing, housing shortages, civil defense drills, and changes in the composition of the workforce all had substantial effects on wartime living conditions.

    Written by Trudy Flores, Sarah Griffith, © Oregon Historical Society, 2002.

  • Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, Speaking to Kids About the COVID19 Virus; Statement About Small Businesses

    PM Trudeau answering questions

    As a father himself, Trudeau says he understands the challenges of daily life for kids

    It’s pretty much impossible to get through a whole day without hearing the word coronavirus.

    COVID-19 has changed the way we live our lives.

    And the situation keeps changing.

    That’s why the prime minister of Canada took some time this weekend to talk to Canadian kids about the things that are on their minds.

    How this came together

    Leaders in Canada and around the world are speaking directly to kids, since the pandemic is affecting their every day lives.

    Last week, CBC Kids News and Radio-Canada’s MAJ asked kids to send in their questions so we could bring them to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer.

    We were thrilled to receive more than 4,000 submissions and chose 10 questions, which we sent to the prime minister before recording an interview with him.

    Check out the video here to see what he said, or keep reading for some highlights

    When will school start again?

    Trudeau himself is the father of three kids, so he says he understands the reality of school closures and cancelled activities.

    “When we were all off around spring break, they were all like, ‘Yay! No school!’” Trudeau said about his own kids, Xavier, 12, Ella-Grace, 11, and Hadrien, 6.

    “But now they’re realizing they want to see their friends,” he said. “Maybe being at school isn’t so bad when compared to having to sit at the kitchen table and do all your work on your own with your parents sometimes helping.”

    Trudeau said he doesn’t know when schools will open again, but emphasized that physical distancing is important to keep the coronavirus from spreading so they can reopen as soon as possible.

    “It’s going to take a while still,” he said.

    What are you doing to help homeless people?

    Because people are being told to stay home, some kids have been wondering what people who don’t have homes should do.

    Trudeau outlined some of the things his government is doing to help people who are less fortunate.

    “One of the things we’ve done is given a lot of money to homeless shelters,”  Trudeau said, “to try and make sure that they have room for people who need a home.”

    The government is also helping homeless people practise physical distancing by opening more shelters, so they don’t come into contact with others and spread the virus.

  • COVID19 Research Sources From the Federal Reserve Banks Including The Black Death in the Malthusian Economy Article

    The Black Death

    The Black Death, Watercolor by Monro S. Orr;  Map showing the history and distribution of the black death around the world, Iconographic Collections, Wellcome Images

    COVID-19 Research Resources

    The most-current resources related to the COVID-19 pandemic from the economists and staff of the [Federal Reserve] Research Division: preliminary and published analyses, daily data updates and projections, data tools, and a timeline of related events and policy responses. For more related analysis and resources from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, see the Bank’s official COVID-19 page.

    Research by Date

    UPDATEDDaily Data and Projections on COVID-19 Death Rates by B. Ravikumar and Guillaume Vandenbroucke
    posted online March 30, 2020
    updated April 14, 2020

    UPDATEDDaily Data on COVID-19 Infections and Deaths Categorized by Financial Distress by Kartik AthreyaRyan MatherJose Mustre-del-Río, and Juan M. Sánchez
    On the Economy blog, April 3, 2020
    data updated April 14, 2020
    first posted online March 27, 2020

    UPDATEDDaily Data on Corporate Bond Spreads and the Pandemic by Mahdi EbsimMiguel Faria-e-Castro, and Julian Kozlowski
    posted online April 13, 2020

    The Impact of COVID-19 on Labor Markets across the U.S. by Maximiliano Dvorkin 
    On the Economy blog, April 13, 2020
    first posted online April 3, 2020

    PRELIMINARY: Supporting Small Borrowers: ABS Markets and the TALF by Bruce Mizrach and Christopher J. Neely
    posted online April 13, 2020

    The Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility Supports Main Street by Bruce Mizrach and Christopher J. Neely
    Economic Synopses, April 13, 2020
    first posted online April 8, 2020

    How Bad Can It Be? The Relationship between GDP Growth and the Unemployment Rate by YiLi Chien 
    Economic Synopses, April 11, 2020
    first posted online April 1, 2020

    Updated April 4-April 10

    PRELIMINARY: Fed Intervention in the To-Be-Announced Market for MBS by Bruce Mizrach and Christopher J. Neely
    posted online April 10, 2020

    PRELIMINARY: COVID-19 and Households’ Financial Distress Part 3: How Will COVID-19 Affect the Spending of the Financially Distressed? by Kartik AthreyaRyan MatherJose Mustre-del-Río, and Juan M. Sánchez
    posted online April 10, 2020

    PRELIMINARY: Corporate Bond Spreads and the Pandemic II: Heterogeneity across Sectors by Mahdi EbsimMiguel Faria-e-Castro, and Julian Kozlowski
    posted online April 10, 2020

    Protectionism and Import Dependence on Essential Medical Equipment by Fernando LeiboviciAna Maria Santacreu, and Makenzie Peake 
    On the Economy blog, April 10, 2020
    first posted online April 8, 2020

    The Stock Market’s Wild Ride by Bruce Mizrach and Christopher J. Neely 
    Economic Synopses, April 10, 2020
    first posted online April 7, 2020

    PRELIMINARY: The Wage Bills of COVID-19 by YiLi Chien and Julie Bennett
    posted online April 9, 2020

    The Year of Living Dangerously: The COVID-19 Shock and the Probability of Deflation by Kevin Kliesen

  • Julia Sneden Writes: Old Dogs/New Tricks: The Sciences of Lap Swimming and Correct Pencil Grip

    swimming pool

    AUT Millennium, Auckland, New Zealand, swimming pool; Wikipedia

    by Julia Sneden

    I hope that whoever came up with that “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks” line has spent a long time in Purgatory, paying for making such a ridiculous generalization. (On the other hand, I hope that whoever came up with: “No generalization is true including this one” ascended straight to epigram heaven).

    I feel indignant on behalf all the friends, acquaintances, and family members who, after the age of 50, have taken on new learning experiences ranging from RoadScholar trips to career shifts, to taking up crafts like knitting or crochet, to learning new languages, to travel abroad, to rock climbing, to — well, you name it. Learning new tricks gives life some zing, and never more than when the rest of the world expects you to slow down.

    Oh, I know that the phrase should be regarded as metaphor, but even then I question its truth. I don’t for a moment believe that we’re doomed to keep repeating the mistakes of our youth. I know too many people who have taken their lives in hand and reinvented themselves. For instance:

        • A good friend who smoked 3 packs a day for 40 years made up her mind to become completely tobacco free at the age of 60, and did it.
        • A married couple I know sought counseling and rescued a relationship that had become bitter and destructive.
        • The nephew of a friend, who had always wanted to be a wood carver, tossed his banking career away, and moved to the mountains to become a successful artist.

    Mind you, there are a few tricks that we old dogs find especially hard to learn. Try, for instance, making changes that touch upon physical things, things that require muscles or nerves to learn new patterns.

    Shortly after I started lap swimming, it occurred to me that continually turning my head to the left to breathe might well wear out some of the internal mechanisms, or perhaps let similar mechanisms on the right side atrophy. I decided to breathe to the right as I did my smooth crawl up and down the pool. My first attempt was a horror. I rolled like a foundering ship. I swallowed a lot of water (that is what water I didn’t breathe in). It seemed as if the far end of the pool had moved itself back by at least 50 feet as I struggled along. Maybe, I thought, I’ll try alternate-side breathing first. That, too, was not easy, but at least I had the left-breath at every other stroke in which to grab some air. At the end of a couple of weeks, I was moving along smoothly again, and soon was able to do every third lap of the pool breathing entirely on my right side. I was disgustingly proud of myself.

    And then there was the matter of my pencil grip. At the age of 37, I started a new career as a kindergarten teacher. My first day on the job, the lead teacher, who was in her 70’s and scared me every bit as much as she scared the children, watched me writing a note.

    “You’ll have to change the way you hold your pencil,” she said.

    “Excuse me?” I replied, looking down at my hand.

    “You’re using your thumb and middle finger to control the pencil,” she said disapprovingly. “You’re supposed to hold it between thumb and pointer, with tall-man tucked firmly away. It would be very bad for the children to see a teacher holding her pencil like that.”

    The battle of the pencil grip was bad enough, but the first time she saw me cutting a piece of paper with the blunt-nosed, child sized scissors, she threw up her hands in horror.

  • Labor Department Reminds Employers That They Cannot Retaliate Against Workers Reporting Unsafe Conditions During CoronaVirus Pandemic

    The US Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is reminding employers that it is illegal to retaliate against workers because they report unsafe and unhealthful working conditions during the coronavirus pandemic. Acts of retaliation can include terminations, demotions, denials of overtime or promotion, or reductions in pay or hours.

    “Employees have the right to safe and healthy workplaces,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Loren Sweatt. “Any worker who believes that their employer is retaliating against them for reporting unsafe working conditions should contact OSHA immediately.”

    Workers have the right to file a whistleblower complaint online with OSHA (or 1-800-321-OSHA) if they believe their employer has retaliated against them for exercising their rights under the whistleblower protection laws enforced by the agency.

    OSHA’s Whistleblower Protection Program webpage provides valuable resources on worker rights, including fact sheets on whistleblower protections for employees in various industries and frequently asked questions.Principal Deputy asst secy Loen Sweatt

    Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Loren Sweatt, right

    OSHA enforces the whistleblower provisions of more than 20 whistleblower statutes protecting employees from retaliation for reporting violations of various workplace safety and health, airline, commercial motor carrier, consumer product, environmental, financial reform, food safety, motor vehicle safety, healthcare reform, nuclear, pipeline, public transportation agency, railroad, maritime, securities and tax laws. For more information on whistleblower protections, visit OSHA’s Whistleblower Protection Programs webpage

    Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA’s role is to help ensure these conditions for America’s working men and women by setting and enforcing standards, and providing training, education and assistance. For more information, visit www.osha.gov.

    The mission of the Department of Labor is to foster, promote and develop the welfare of the wage earners, job seekers and retirees of the United States; improve working conditions; advance opportunities for profitable employment; and assure work-related benefits and rights.

    Agency: Occupational Safety & Health Administration

    Date: April 8, 2020