December 31, 2018

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Trump Orders Pay Freeze In 2019 For All Civilian Federal Employees

President Trump has ordered a pay freeze for the federal workforce, sparking protests at a time when hundreds of thousands of federal workers are already furloughed or working without pay.



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Hundreds of thousands of federal employees have gone without pay for more than a week now. And the financial squeeze may outlast the partial government shutdown. President Trump has ordered a pay freeze in 2019 for all civilian federal employees. NPR’s Scott Horsley reports.

SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: The president’s been telegraphing his plans for a pay freeze for almost a year – first in his annual budget and again last summer in a letter to Congress. Trump pointed to the government’s dire fiscal situation. Thanks to tax cuts and increased spending, the deficit has ballooned to more than a trillion dollars this year. It’s just bad timing that the president’s formal order for the pay freeze comes in the midst of the partial government shutdown. Some 800,000 federal workers are already furloughed or required to work without pay.

JACQUELINE SIMON: It is adding insult to injury.

HORSLEY: Jacqueline Simon’s with the American Federation of Government Employees, the largest federal workers union.

SIMON: Just to put an exclamation point on the fact that the administration doesn’t really have any concern whatsoever for the economic well-being of 800,000 middle-class families.

HORSLEY: The president’s penny pinching on civilian workers stands in marked contrast to his professed generosity towards the military. Just last week in Iraq, Trump falsely claimed to have boosted military pay by 10 percent.

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PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I had plenty of people that came up. They said, you know, we could make it smaller. We could make it 3 percent. We could make it 2 percent. We could make it 4 percent. I said, no. Make it 10 percent. Make it more than 10 percent.

HORSLEY: In fact, service members are getting a pay raise of 2.6 percent this coming year. And Simon says their civilian counterparts welcome that.

SIMON: Of course, the military deserve their pay increase, and we’re strongly in favor of it. And, in fact, for many, many years – decades, even – there was parity between the civilian and the military workforces in terms of their pay adjustments.

HORSLEY: For the last two years, though, paychecks for civilian government workers have grown more slowly than those in the military. And the president’s pay freeze would widen that gap if it stands. But Simon’s counting on lawmakers to undo Trump’s order. The Senate has already OK’d a pay raise for federal workers of 1.9 percent. And the new Democratic House is expected to follow suit. Scott Horsley, NPR News, Washington.

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Next 3 Surprising Comedies: 'The Upside,' 'What Men Want,' 'Tyler Perry's A Madea Family Funeral'

Holmes & Watson

Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly star in Holmes & Watson as the legendary detectives in a funny and surprising take on the team’s pairing. Really, though, it’s more about the chemistry between the actors, who previously starred together in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby and Step Brothers, as it is about any sort of mystery. (By the way, Reilly also appeared in a cameo role in Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues, which featured Ferrell in the starring role.)

Two upcoming comedies offer new different, surprising takes on material that has been previously told. The third is a sequel that may be the final installment in a long-running series and may offer a big surprise in its resolution. Here’s what we know about three movies that we hope will amuse us all.

The Upside

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Bryan Cranston stars as a disabled man who is wealthy, yet unhappy. Kevin Hart stars as a poor man on parole who desperately needs a job, yet displays a great sense of humor. The two wind up together and soon embrace the idea that they each have something to offer the other.

Nicole Kidman also stars. Look for The Upside in theaters on January 11, 2019.

What Men Want

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Note: the red-band trailer above is not safe for work.

Taraji P. Henson stars as a talented executive whose rise to the top is stymied by the men around her. Then, after a wild night, she wakes up with the ability to read minds — but only the inner thoughts of men. Will the unexpected gift be a blessing or a curse?

The raucous comedy also stars Aldis Hodge, Richard Roundtree, Wendi McLendon-Covey and Tracy Morgan. What Men Want will open in wide release on February 8, 2019.

Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral

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A family gathering in rural Georgia edges from comedy into drama when an expected death means that a funeral must be planned. Filmmaker Tyler Perry, who created the character of Madea in 1999 and has played her ever since in stage plays, on television, and on the big screen, says that this will be her final appearance.

Still, we expect that Perry will freely mix both comic and dramatic elements throughout his film, similar to what’s he’s done in the past. Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral will open in theaters everywhere on March 1, 2019.

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Serena Williams And Roger Federer To Face Off For The First Time

Serena Williams and Roger Federer, shown here at the Wimbledon Championships 2012 Winners Ball, are set to play each other at a mixed doubles match on New Year’s Day at the Hopman Cup in Perth, Australia.

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On New Year’s Day, two of the greatest tennis champions ever will stride out onto a court in Perth, Australia, and play each other for the first time.

Serena Williams and Roger Federer have been on the international tennis circuit for decades — both are 37 years old — and they have won 43 Grand Slam titles between them.

“I’ve always thought, ‘How is it to return that serve, or to go head to head with her?’ ” Federer said, according to Tennis.com.

They’ll meet in a mixed doubles match at the Hopman Cup. Williams, representing the U.S., will play with Frances Tiafoe, while Federer will compete alongside Swiss player Belinda Bencic.

The match has been compared to the 1973 exhibition match known as Battle of the Sexes, where Billie Jean King roundly beat Bobby Riggs.

Both Federer and Williams say they’re excited about the historic matchup. Williams has called it a “dream come true,” the BBC reports. “I have been looking forward to it. This is so cool.”

As Tennis.com notes, Williams said: “You know, I’ve been training in the off-season to be ready for Roger. I’m not sure how I’m going to do, but we’ll see.”

Federer stressed that both players are looking for victory. “I admire everything she’s done on and off the court, we are both fierce competitors and we always want to win,” he said, according to Agence France-Presse.

“It is going to be one time, probably never again. She is one of the biggest champions in our sport ever, men and women combined, so it is great to be playing against her,” Federer added.

“I don’t know her very well,” he said. “In the corridors and cafes, walking by each other, sometimes in the past she has asked me how are the kiddies and how is everyone doing, but if I said I know her it would be a bit of an exaggeration.”

At the Hopman Cup, eight teams representing their nations compete in a round-robin format. Competitors play a men’s and women’s singles match along with the mixed doubles match.

Williams defeated Greece’s Maria Sakkari on Monday in her first tournament appearance since she lost to Japan’s Naomi Osaka in September’s controversial U.S. Open Final.

During the final against Osaka, Williams received multiple penalties from umpire Carlos Ramos. In an escalating argument, she called him a “thief” and accused him of stealing a point from her. Some commentators have suggested that Williams was penalized unfairly due to sexism and racism.

Federer also won his first match of the Cup on Sunday, easily defeating Great Britain’s Cameron Norrie, 6-1 6-1.

He and teammate Bencic are the defending champions at Hopman. Federer also won 17 years prior to that victory when he teamed up with tennis star Martina Hingis.

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Opioid-Makers Face Wave of Lawsuits in 2019

Oxycodone pain pills prescribed for a patient with chronic pain.

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The next 12 months might just redefine the way America thinks about and responds to the opioid epidemic that now claims more than 40,000 lives each year. The nation’s biggest drugmakers and distributors face a wave of civil lawsuits that could total tens of billions of dollars in damages.

Thousands of state and local governments, including cities and tribal governments, are demanding that companies like Purdue Pharma, Walmart and Rite-Aid compensate them for the costs of responding to the crisis. They’re also pushing companies to reveal far more internal documents, detailing what they knew about the risks of prescription pain medications.

“Our next battle is to get the documents that are being produced made available to the public instead of everything being filed under confidentiality agreements so we can get the facts out,” said Joe Rice, an attorney representing local governments suing the drug industry.

How we got here

Some of that internal information could be explosive, changing the way America views the opioid crisis. We know already that in the 1990s there was growing pressure in the health care industry to treat pain more aggressively. Purdue Pharma created a game-changing, long-acting opioid called Oxycontin. The company marketed the drug aggressively to doctors as a safe medication that provided long-term relief.

“In fact, the rate of addiction amongst pain patients who are treated by doctors is much less than one percent,” claimed one of the company’s advertisements at the time, aimed at convincing skeptical physicians. “These drugs should be used much more than they are for patients in pain.”

In their lawsuits, local and state governments claim that dozens of companies — including drugmakers, suppliers and pharmacies — made billions of dollars flooding the U.S. with a variety of prescription pain pills. Critics also say there was a concerted effort by firms to mislead the public and physicians about the dangers.

One of the arguments being made is that pharmacies and drug distributors, including Walgreens, Walmart and CVS, knew that they were selling too many pills, helping to create dangerous levels of addiction and a new black market.

We now also know that the public health risk was severe.

Since 1999, millions of Americans have abused prescription opioids. The federal government reports that more than 130 people now die each day from opioid overdoses, though not all of those drugs were obtained by prescription.

The growing number of people who became addicted also overwhelmed many government agencies, from law enforcement to drug rehab clinics to foster care programs. That’s where a lot of these lawsuits come in. Thousands of local and state governments, tribes and cities argue that companies should pick up the tab for battling the epidemic.

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“We are still in the throes of a public health crisis in Summit County,” said Greta Johnson, a county official helping to coordinate the response in Akron, Ohio. She argued that the drug industry should be financially responsible for programs designed to ease the suffering in communities like hers. “We’re confident the court will see it that way as well.”

Paying the price for recovery

Public officials hope for an outcome similar to the massive tobacco settlement of the 1990s. Cigarette-makers have paid out more than $100 billion over the past 20 years to compensate Americans for high rates of illness and public health costs tied to smoking. Some of that money went to programs aimed at helping smokers quit.

Local and state officials say they desperately need that kind of cash settlement to solve this crisis. A lot of the worst opioid abuse is happening in poor, cash-strapped communities. A settlement worth tens of billions of dollars could revolutionize the national response, creating more drug rehab programs, detox beds, and more training for first responders.

Many claims will be tossed

NPR talked with experts who predicted that many of the specific claims in these lawsuits will eventually be tossed out for technical legal reasons. In court filings, companies have argued that local and state governments are the wrong entities to seek financial damages from the epidemic and that statutes of limitations have expired in many jurisdictions.

The industry has also argued that the epidemic was caused by numerous factors, including the actions of government regulators and policymakers, suggesting that firms profiting from opioid sales shouldn’t be held liable for misuse. They’ve also changed their marketing strategies in response to escalating rates of addiction.

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“Earlier this year we ended our practice of promoting opioid medications to prescribers through sales representatives,” Purdue Pharma announced on its website in 2018.

But legal scholars following these cases say evidence has emerged already that suggests significant wrongdoing by some of these companies, which could leave them vulnerable financially.

“The judge has made it clear that he wants a settlement ultimately from this, along the lines of the tobacco settlement,” said Richard Ausness, a law professor at the University of Kentucky who follows these cases closely. “If that is indeed the way that he feels, he is probably not going to let the defendants off the hook.

He was referring to Judge Dan Polster, whose federal court in Ohio is handling one of the largest test cases, which includes hundreds of consolidated lawsuits. Last month, Polster referred to the opioid crisis as a “man-made plague,” but so far no national settlement has materialized.

That sets the stage for big court fights around the country over the next year.

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