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Between 2009 and 2020, Josh published more than 10,000 blog posts. Here, you can access his blog archives.

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Flight into DCA Required to Trim Weight to Reduce Noise

March 14th, 2016

Tonight, I am flying from MIA to DCA on an American 737-800. The flight was completely full. After a 30 minute delay, the Captain announced that we had to reduce the weight of the flight in order to reduce noise. Huh, I thought? She made some offhand comment that people in D.C. were concerned about the noise near Reagan National. We had to reduce the number of people, so less power could be used, and thus create less noise.

How many people you asked? It felt like the Hunger Games. First the standby passenger were ordered to deplane (about 3 or 4 people). Then two jump-seaters. Then, they offered a $500 travel voucher and hotel accommodations for 18 people! After about 5 minutes, they got more than enough volunteers. By my count, about 25 people were taken off the plane. Assuming an average weight of 150 pounds, that is nearly 4,000 total pounds removed from the plane.

I can’t help but think this is due to a recent report that one person filed 6,500 noise complaints near DCA. Providing travel vouchers to 18 passengers who paid full-fare, and having to book them tomorrow on another flight, is pretty extreme.

As if it wasn’t already unpleasant enough travelling to D.C., area man has made it even worse.

Testimony Tomorrow Before House Judiciary Committee’s Executive Overreach Task Force

March 14th, 2016

On Tuesday at 10:00 a.m. I will be testifying before the House Judiciary Committee’s Executive Overreach Task Force. The topic will be “Executive Overreach in Domestic Affairs Part I – Health Care and Immigration.” It will be live-streamed on YouTube.

Here is the list of witnesses, and the prepared remarks.

WITNESSES

Name Occupation Organization Testimony Truth in Testimony
Elizabeth Papez Partner Winston & Strawn LLP
Josh Blackman Associate Professor of Law South Texas College of Law/Houston  Testimony
Simon Lazarus Senior Counsel Constitutional Accountability Center  Testimony
Elizabeth Slattery Legal Fellow Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies; The Heritage Foundation  Testimony

RELATED FILES

Triangle Federalist Society Chapter: Selecting the Next Justice

March 14th, 2016

On March 7, the Triangle Federalist Society Chapter hosted me for a timely discussion of selecting the next Justice, and the future of the Supreme Court. This was my first time in Raleigh, and I really enjoyed the event.

Separation of Powers Symposium Hosted by FIU Law Review

March 14th, 2016

On Friday, March 11, the Florida International Law Review hosted an excellent symposium on the separation of powers. David Bernstein provided the keynote. Also speaking were Ron Rotunda, Brannon Dennings, Lee Strang, Jon Adler, Michael Ramsey, and me.  Video of the entire day is available here. My speech starts around the 5:34:00 mark. Or, you can watch it on YouTube.

The event was a special treat because Ron and David were my constitutional law professors. It is a rare honor that I get to talk about ConLaw with the people who taught me ConLaw!

rotunda-bernstein

fiu-shot

Separation of Powers Symposium

CRS: Obamacare Payments To Insurance Companies “would appear to be in conflict with a plain reading” of the law.

March 11th, 2016

In January, LawProf Seth Chandler identified what seems to be an illegal practice of the federal government raiding the U.S. Treasury, and redistributing funds to suffering insurance companies. To grossly oversimplify, a provision of the ACA requires CMS to tax insurance companies. Part of that assessment is then redistributed to other insurance companies that suffered losses (about $10 billion in 2014), and another portion is to be distributed in the U.S. Treasury (about $2 billion in 2014). The government paid $0 to the Treasury, and paid all of the collected assessments (which totaled far less than $10 billion) to suffering insurance companies.

The House of Representatives requested that the Congressional Research Service investigate this issue. What did CRS find? That CMS’s decision to give $0 to the Treasury, and instead give it to insurance companies, “would appear to be in conflict with a plain reading” of the statute, and is “not entitled to deference under Chevron.”

crs

Unsurprisingly, the Obama administration has defended this flat-out violation of the law based on claims of discretion and allocation of resources.

“We believe that we have the authorities, and as I mentioned [earlier], we actually published for comment and notice the approach that we were going to take to use those authorities, and did not have any of the concerns raised as part of that public process,” Burwell said under questioning at a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing last week.

Burwell added that she did not know if there was a legal memorandum justifying the decision. “I don’t know if it was done in that form,” she said. “I would say that we believe we have the authorities.”

HHS has routinely ignored implementation dates, arguing that there is transitional authority. I don’t buy it, but there are arguments in support of that position. However, clear instructions from Congress to appropriate funds cannot be disregarded–especially when it involves raiding funds reserved for the Treasury!

Tim Jost, offered a modest defense of the payments, calling them “reasonable” because the government did not collect enough money to cover the payments for the Treasury.

Tim Jost, a health law expert at Washington and Lee University who supports ObamaCare, saidthat he found the administration’s interpretation of the law “reasonable,” given that it did not collect enough money to cover all the costs. The primary purpose of the program is payments to insurers, not “general tax collection,” he added.

The reason why not enough money was collected was because HHS under-assessed other insurers, first in 2014, and then, even thought they knew they were under assessing, again in 2015.  CMS could easily have made a supplemental assessment — except that it would piss other insurers off.   The whole problem was/is entirely a self inflicted wound. But this is entirely orthogonal to the fact that the statute mandates payment to the Treasury. The government cannot simply disregard that because insurance companies are losing money under OBamacare.

Jost’s second defense is far more revealing:

“It’s the continuing struggle of the administration to make the statute work,” Jost said.

“There’s no possibility of amending [it] to try to fix the statute, so they just proceed in trying to read the statute in a way that makes it actually work,” he added. “So that’s what they’re doing here.”

As I have noted more times than I can count, the President does not get to ignore the law when Congress is gridlocked. If this is the best defense he can make, then the policy is in trouble.

The government officials involved in making these payments in flat violation of the statute should consider retaining their own counsel. DOJ will not have their best interests at heart.