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The icebergs cometh

Saturday, Jan 8, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

A couple of years ago, I was gazing out my apartment window while people streamed away from the downtown St. Patrick’s Day parade.

As I stood there, trying to warm up before heading out again, I noticed several small pieces of ice fly off the building next to mine, most of them falling harmlessly to the ground below.

But then I watched in horror as a gigantic, flat piece of ice - easily four or five feet across and wide - helicoptered downward a few dozen stories and headed right for a group of revelers strolling arm-in-arm on Randolph Street.

They never knew they were in danger until the huge ice shelf crashed just inches in front of them, spraying ice everywhere, causing them to leap backwards. I breathed a sigh of relief as they instictively covered their heads before furtively scanning the skies to see if any other potentially fatal gifts from God were headed their way.

For a second, though, I really thought they were goners.

Ah, life in the big city.

Anyway, check out the video on this page for some great shots of falling ice.

And in case you’re wondering who gets blamed if someone is hit by wayward ice:


Building managers
were held liable in a 1994 incident in which a Wisconsin man was killed by falling ice on Michigan Avenue.

Killed. Oh, man, that’s not good. I don’t mind getting shot at or blown up, but I don’t want to go out like that.

“Where’s Miller?”

“Didn’t you hear, dude? Killed by a giant ice cube.”

“What a dweeb. Hey, how long before I can ask his widow for a date?”

“I don’t know about you, but I’m waiting until she gets her fat jury check.”

  1 Comment      


Mell spills his guts

Saturday, Jan 8, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

I got a call from one of the boys last night and I’m told there’s more coming on this not-so-little spat. Mell is telling friends he wants to hold a press conference on Monday. Check Monday’s Capitol Fax for more.

Publicly humiliated by Gov. Blagojevich’s administration in a Will County landfill dispute, Ald. Richard Mell came out swinging Friday. He angrily accused his son-in-law, the governor, of ripping apart their family, being so politically manipulative that he would “throw anyone under the bus,” and granting plum appointments in exchange for $50,000 campaign contributions. […]

“He uses people, and he used me. He uses everybody, and when there’s no more use, he discards them,” Mell said. “When he was running, we talked five or six times a day. After he became governor, we never talked. He wanted everyone to believe he got there on his own.” […]

“My wife begged me not to support him for governor. She said you know how he is, and I did it anyway. I remember when there was a problem in his congressional campaign. I told Patti maybe we should just shut this campaign down now. But she said, ‘Oh no, dad, we’ve come so far. No dad, we can’t do that.’ Her mother said shut it down, and I told her my daughter will hate me. Do you think he’d ever have had a chance without me?” Mell said.

Man, that’s harsh. Read the whole story, it’s definitely worth a couple of minutes. Chris Kelly essentially threatens to sue Mell for claiming he’s selling appointments. Mell compares himself to “the old wife” who has been spurned for a fancy, young, new wife (Chris Kelly).

ABC-7 found Mell in Florida yesterday. He was in fine form.

“This governor is trying to put on this mantled cloak of what a great white knight he is when he’s not,” said Alderman Dick Mell […]

“What he is doing borders on being criminal. Using the state’s power to shut down and have a vendetta against me borders on being criminal. What he is doing to the family is beyond approach,” said Gov. (sic) Mell.

The governor’s office denies a vendetta and so does the Illinois EPA, which shut down the landfill owned by a nephew of Alderman Mell.

  4 Comments      


Friday Topinka blogging

Friday, Jan 7, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

(Saturday version)

International Speedway rider Tomas Topinka is from the Czech Republic (not sure if there’s any relation to our Judy). He has a website and he even sells fan club merchandise, like hats and shirts (I really want one of each, but it’s not completely clear how you can buy them).

This is a photo of Tom Topinka from his site:

Cool.

To join the fan club, you are advised to “send a cheque for £4.00 made payable to Tom Topinka” at:

Topinka Racing
C/O 56 Claudette Avenue
Spalding
Lincs
PE11 1HU.

I have no idea what that means.

Topinka has a bunch of personal stuff on the site as well. For instance, his favorite drink is “Guinness & Pepsi.” I’m not sure if he mixes the two or if he likes them in their own right. Cola-beer was a popular kid’s drink when I lived in Germany (half beer, half cola), so he could be a mixer.

  Comments Off      


What does Karl see in Barack?

Thursday, Jan 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

First, there was the post-election meeting with Karl Rove and President Bush at the White House, then, yesterday’s edition of The Hill newspaper had this “photo of the day”:


Karl Rove greets Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) at a ceremony to welcome incoming members of Congress on Monday in the East Room of the White House.

Weird.

  5 Comments      


More than one target

Thursday, Jan 6, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

So, if this is true, why is the president (and, for that matter, many Republicans and Democrats right here in Illinois) only talking about going after the trial lawyers? (link via here and here)

Experts retained by the Bush administration said Tuesday that more effective disciplining of incompetent doctors could significantly alleviate the problem of medical malpractice litigation.

The experts, from the University of Iowa and the Urban Institute, came up with this idea:

Randall Bovbjerg, a researcher at the Urban Institute, said, “If you take the worst performers out of practice, that will have an impact” on malpractice litigation. “Most doctors have few or no claims filed against them. But within any specialty, a few doctors have a high proportion of the claims.”

You gotta wonder how many of those white-coated docs surrounding the president in Collinsville this week were part of the problem, not the solution.

Massachusetts has adopted an approach that experts say may provide a model for other states. Without waiting for a complaint to be filed, the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine conducts a clinical review of any doctor who has made three or more malpractice payments to patients, as a result of jury verdicts or settlements. Nancy Achin Audesse, executive director of the board, said: “Three is a magic number. Doctors who have to make three or more payments are also more likely to be named in consumer complaints and to be subject to discipline by hospitals and the medical board.”

And here’s the kicker:

In Massachusetts during the last 10 years, Audesse said, “one-fourth of 1 percent of all the doctors — 98 of the 37,369 doctors — accounted for more than 13 percent of all the malpractice payments, $134 million of the $1 billion in total payments.”

Amazing. Thirteen percent of the malpractice payments were generated by just a quarter of a percent of all the doctors in the state, yet the solution is to cap non-economic damages. So, if a dirt poor single mother of three is blinded because of a medical error, she gets the capped amount and almost nothing else (if she can find an attorney, and if she then wins her case). If a corporate CEO is similarly blinded, she gets millions in lost income on top of the relatively paltry cap amount.

It would be interesting to see how the numbers work in Illinois, but the state’s website is of little help.

Here’s a good summary of what the Urban Institute’s Mr. Bovbjerg recommended in a recent article:

The current medical liability system works poorly for patients and physicians, the authors say. Because of steep increases in malpractice premiums, physicians tend to practice “defensive medicine,” ordering unnecessary medical tests, procedures, and referrals for their patients. Not only are patients exposed to unnecessary physical risk, but health care costs rise even further. Meanwhile, large numbers of Americans continue to suffer preventable medical injuries.

Bovbjerg points out that in the mid 1980s, anesthesiologists adopted “practice guidelines” that “drastically” reduced patient deaths and insurance premiums.

He also recommended several legislative solutions (highlighting mine):

* States could implement physician licensure requirements, such as the risk management training required by the Massachusetts Board of Registration.

* Insurance regulators could provide premium discounts on malpractice insurance based on doctors’ performance — an up-front investment in quality improvement that would reap savings in the long term.

* Tort reform could be contingent on reporting of errors, or implementing specific activities that increase patient safety.

* Health plans, Medicare, and Medicaid could provide partial subsidies of physicians’ premiums in return for specific safety enhancements.

* Doctors could invest in tools such as electronic prescribing aids and automated systems for tracking of tests.

* Better information on patient safety could be collected and reported to facilitate safety improvement and physician involvement.

But just when you think you’ve got it figured out, you read articles like this and you see the other side. (Registration and fee required, but well worth it.)

A new leader is emerging among Chicago’s powerful medical malpractice plaintiffs lawyers, 50-year-old Kevin G. Burke, who operates with a distinct advantage over his better-known competitors: his eight years spent on the other side, defending doctors and hospitals.

That experience, all but unique among the city’s top medical malpractice plaintiffs’ lawyers, helped Mr. Burke secure verdicts and settlements last year totaling $89.8 million, tops in Chicago.

Man, that’s a lot of dough. Here are his top three verdicts:

Evelyn Arkebauer, et al. v. Northwestern Medical Faculty Foundation, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, et al.
Settlement: $35.0 million
Allegation: Plaintiff’s son was rendered permanently disabled after a delay in treatment.

Misty Campbell, et al. v. St. Francis Hospital and Health Center, et al.
Verdict: $32.0 million
Allegation: Plaintiff’s son suffered brain damage and blindness after the medical staff failed to recognize signs of fetal distress.

Heather Duvall, et al. v. Evanston Northwestern Healthcare, et al.
Settlement: $15.0 million
Allegation: Plaintiff’s son suffered brain damage after physician applied excessive force during delivery.

  5 Comments      


Missing an angle

Wednesday, Jan 5, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Today’s Capitol Fax emphasized one section of the federal “proffer” about George Ryan that I didn’t see anywhere else.

According to the feds, [Ryan pal Ron] Swanson’s withdrawal of tens of thousands of dollars in cash from financial institutions was noteworthy, “not just in their volume, but in their timing… Several [cash withdrawals] coincide with Ryan’s birthday on February 24, a date which is typically noted on Swanson’s calendar.”

* “February 24, 1998, Swanson obtained $3,300 in cash.”

* “On February 23, 2000, at approximately 2:30 p.m., Swanson obtained $5,000 in cash. According to his calendar, Swanson saw Ryan at 6:00 p.m. that night.”

* “On February 21, 2002, Swanson’s assistant, Kent De Lay obtained $3,000 in cash for Swanson at 10:30 a.m. Swanson’s calendar reflects that he was ‘w/Gov. Ryan @ Capitol’ at 12:45 on that same day.”

* We knew that then-Governor Ryan allegedly tipped off Swanson in advance that the state would build a prison in Grayville and that Swanson then allegedly used that information to obtain a $50,000 fee from the locals to “make sure” that the prison would indeed be built there. But, according to the feds, there’s more.

“Swanson deposited the $50,000 fee he had received from Dr. Wilson on or about March 15, 2001. Thereafter, on March 26, 2001, two sequential checks for $7,000 and $8,000 made payable to Swanson were written on his account. The first check, for $7,000 was cashed on March 28, 2001. Swanson’s calendar reflects a meeting with Ryan on March 29, 2001 at 11:30 a.m.”

* George Ryan and Don Udstuen allegedly recommended that a firm hire Swanson as a lobbyist. Swanson then allegedly gave Udstuen, “a $4,000 cash payment in the men’s bathroom of a Chicago restaurant for making the referral of Swanson. After providing Udstuen with the $4,000, Swanson told Udstuen that he was also ‘taking care’ of Ryan.”

We’d heard before about some alleged smalltime grafting by Ryan, but this was the first time that I’d seen allegations about Ryan taking big bucks from his pals. Yet, it was ignored by every print outlet that I read today.

The other thing that stuck out for me was how involved Ryan allegedly was in deciding who would get what and how much. Ryan was supposedly a “hands off” delegator, but if the feds are correct, then he had a firm grasp of details when it came to helping his corrupt friends.

  6 Comments      


New blog

Wednesday, Jan 5, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

The Illinois Civil Justice League, a group that has been fighting trial lawyers for years, has a new blog. It’s pretty in-your-face stuff at times, which makes it an interesting read.

A recent entry has some good links and analysis of Gordon Maag’s $110 million lawsuit against the Illinois Chamber and the Coalition for Jobs, Growth and Prosperity.

  1 Comment      


Mediahoundovich or a helping hand?

Wednesday, Jan 5, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller

Notice who sponsored this relief drive:

**Governor’s Public Schedule**

For Wednesday, January 5, 2005

On Wednesday, January 5, Gov. Rod Blagojevich will volunteer his services at the Chicago Media Tsunami Relief Drive supporting the American Red Cross’ relief work in South Asia. The event is being sponsored by Chicago area broadcasters and Lincolnshire-based Hewitt Associates. The Governor will thank volunteers and help answer calls from donors.

The guv will be at the call center for one hour, from 4:30 to 5:30 pm. I hate to be cynical about anyone helping the tsunami victims, but, sheesh, could this have been more transparent?

Still, I suppose if it helps get people involved it’s a net good.

  2 Comments      


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