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(Victor Conte says MLB testers are lousy fishermen)
(DSHS secretary says agency running $25M short — besides the courts’ $30M mental health mandate_0)
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When I heard about the big bust in Florida, of Tony Bosh and his Biogenesis operation, I rang up Victor Conte.
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Social safety net programs overseen by Washington s biggest state government agency are running in the red, and the hole likely will require a $25 million patch from the Legislature in January.That s the assessment of Department of Social and Health Services Secretary Kevin Quigley, who described the situation as a budget crisis. He said a surge in calls to Child Protective Services hotlines, higher costs in welfare <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Bridal>Kate Spade Bridal</a>  programs and mental hospitals, and information technology needs are all driving his agency s budget shortfall.Quigley said that shortfall is in addition to the $30 million needed to stop the practice of psychiatric boarding, which the state Supreme Court ruled last month must stop. The high court has given  until Dec. 26 to halt the practice of sticking such patients in hospital emergency rooms without appropriate treatment.Beyond the psychiatric boarding issues, the department s shortfall which Quigley estimated at $25 million to $26 million includes a gap in Child Protective Services where calls to hotlines reporting abuse or seeking help have been surging. Quigley thinks he ll need $6 million to $8 million in emergency spending to fix the problem, and he may have to add 50 to 100 more staffers.Calls and investigations have increased by 10 to 15 percent and have led to a backlog of 2,000 cases not handled within the 90-day limit his agency must meet. Quigley said there were about 2,000 cases exceeding that limit when Gov. Jay Inslee took office in early 2013. The agency had since reduced the backlog to about 600 cases, only to see it go back up to 2,000. There should be zero cases open more than 90 days. In fact, there should be zero cases open more than 60 days, in my opinion, he said.One other particular area of concern is the state s mental hospitals, which overspent budgets by about $3 million in the year that ended June 30. These facilities will be $6 million in the hole by the time lawmakers return in January, Quigley said. The big challenge normally is if you don t have funding, you have to close <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Sale-Handbags>Kate Spade Sale Handbags</a>  a ward. But the Legislature has been quite clear they don t want to close wards, Quigley said. He said lawmakers of both parties deserve credit for raising funding for mental hospitals, but he expects them to have concerns about the management of overtime pay as they try to contain costs. Other costs are rising in welfare programs, which have required extra personnel to process claims. A big piece of potentially $8 million in extra expenses is in information technology and includes a fix for the computer program used to determine eligibility for benefits. Other costs are for doing incapacity exams for disabled people who are in transition to being covered by Social Security and to move community-services staffers in Vancouver from a leased building to a state-owned structure.The agency is having more success sticking to the budget in other areas. Budgets for aging and long-term care, developmental disabilities and juvenile rehabilitation seem to be in good shape, according to the secretary.Top House and Senate budget writers could not be reached immediately for comment Monday. But the welfare programs division known as Community Services recently staged from Senate Republican Leader Mark Schoesler of Ritzville, who called it a splurge. I m very skeptical <a href=http://www.alportico.net/page.php?sale=True-Religion-Jeans-Sale-Uk>True Religion Outlet Online</a>  of their budgeting. I think they always have slush money tucked away (Agencies) always trot out the most needy or cite a court ruling, Schoesler said Monday. But clearly we re not out of budget difficulties and they ve shown real insensitivity. Quigley defended the trainings, which the agency estimated to have cost $217 for each of the more than 2,100 employees who attended two-day workshops in Tacoma. The state paid $17,500 to a humorist and motivational speaker to address each of three workshops, but Quigley said community service offices have high turnover and it makes sense to spend $217 on boosting a staffer s morale than to spend $25,000 training a new worker.  
Conte was the BALCO scandal kingpin who wound up serving an eight-month sentence, and since coming out has worked with, and offered to work with, numerous anti-doping agencies, lending his insider expertise to the good guys.
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Brad Shannon: 360-753-1688
Conte runs Scientific Nutrition for Advanced Conditioning (SNAC) in San Carlos and trains/sponsors many top athletes, including Frank Gore and Michael Crabtree, and several boxers.
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Here are some of Conte鈥檚 comments from our conversation Tuesday morning:
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鈥淭he federal (sentencing) guidelines have changed since BALCO. I got an eight-month sentence, split into four and four鈥揻our months in a minimum-security prison and four months in an ankle bracelet. . .In my case I was the so-called heavy. Greg Anderson got three-and-three. Being the leader pushed me up into the eight-month category. What I鈥檓 telling you, one, when you have a conspiracy, the leader, Tony Bosch, will get an extra two points, which will push him up into a higher category on the federal sentencing guidelines. And secondly, the Feds have stated publicly that they adjusted the sentencing guideless, post BALCO, where it鈥檚 five times greater punishment now, as a result of the BALCO case. . .
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鈥淭here鈥檚聽 going to be some leniency, (Bosch <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/michaelkorssonline.php> michael kors bags</a>  is) going to roll, I think. . .There was absolutely no cooperation by me with the Feds. The reason was that I was the leader, people trusted me, people were following me, I鈥檓 not going to turn around and give information on others. Early on I made the decision that I鈥檓 going to accept full responsibility and consequences for my wrongdoing, and if that means going to prison, that鈥檚 what I do. . .For me, the right thing to do was to accept full consequences and do my time. . .I guarantee you they will offer (Bosch) some sort of deal to testify against other people, and the punishments are five times greater today than they were for me. . .Unless he decides he can cut some deal and cooperate, takes a completely different approach than I did, it would seem he鈥檚 looking at some minimum security prison time.
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鈥淚 believe these other nine people are going to roll on him. That鈥檚 how the Feds operate, whoever rolls first gets the best deal. . .It鈥檒l be interesting to see who <a href=http://www.museosangennaro.com/Public/wdluk.php>Christian Louboutin Shoes Sale</a>  rolls on who first.
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鈥淎ll this to me seems likely to add up to prison time, and far more time than I served.
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On the list of names of baseball players who were Biogenesis clients that the Feds say they uncovered:
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鈥淩emember when they said (after the initial Biogenesis scandal) there were about 100 players involved? And they came up with 14 or 15 that got some sort of suspension. It will be interesting to see, are they going to dribble out these other 85 names? Are they going to give out a list of all of them at the same time? You remember when the 104 players who tested positive during the survey in 2003, they came out with a couple of the names, and we never heard who the rest of them were? So it will be interesting to see how many of these 85 names come out.鈥?
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On MLB drug testing:
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鈥淚鈥檝e been saying this for years now. If you鈥檙e going to catch the fish, you have to put your hook and line in the water when the fish are biting. In the case of MLB, that鈥檚 the off-season. And believe me, in track and field or any sport, when you use PEDs during the off-season. . .in conjunction with an intense weight-training program, the gains you get will last you throughout the entire competitive season. . .That is my problem, that it says in the MLB agreement that they can test up to 375 players (in the off-season), which is about 30 percent of the league.
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鈥淗owever, what the statistics show is, over the last five years, they average about 50 players per off-season. So if you have the right to test and you鈥檙e serious about cleaning up the sport, and you know when the fish are biting is during the off-season, and you have every right per the collective bargaining agreement to put your hook and line in the water when they鈥檙e feeding and biting, and you can test up to 375 players, why do you only test 50? So I don鈥檛 believe there鈥檚 a genuine interest in catching people. That鈥檚 a giant loophole that needs to be fixed.鈥?
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Conte was saying in 2011 that the biggest loophole in the MLB testing was tht the testing made it easy for players to use synthetic testosterone and get away with it, since it was traceable only for several hours.
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鈥淚 said the biggest loophole is synthetic testosterone, and they鈥檙e using this four-to-one (testosterone-to-epitestosterone) ratio, and not the Carbon Isotope Ratio testing (CIR), because you can circumvent the allowable T-E ratio in <a href=http://www.symbiose.ca/images/christianlouboutin.gwij.php>Christian Louboutin Sale</a>  a matter of a few hours, where the other will be detectable for two weeks. . .
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鈥淚 said at the time that I believe that MLB, on an annual basis, tests less than five percent of the samples collected using this CIR methods. And I said it鈥檚 likely less than one percent. Well, later MLB come out and said they had increased the amount of CIR testing, to 10 percent of the samples.
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鈥淏asically, unless you鈥檙e being targeted because of a previous positive drug test or some other reason, typically in baseball they test you once when you get to training camp, that鈥檚 an IQ test, and then once during the season. Knowing that, once you get the only random test (during the season). . .I believe that means green light, you can use all the drugs you like because you鈥檝e already been tested twice.
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鈥淒o I think a lot of these players that did get in trouble, the 15 with Biogenisis, did that serve as a deterrent, are guys a little more careful? Is there some benefit from this? Yes. But do I believe that the use of PEDs in major league baseball is still rampant? I do.鈥?
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Revision as of 03:59, 24 September 2014

Social safety net programs overseen by Washington s biggest state government agency are running in the red, and the hole likely will require a $25 million patch from the Legislature in January.That s the assessment of Department of Social and Health Services Secretary Kevin Quigley, who described the situation as a budget crisis. He said a surge in calls to Child Protective Services hotlines, higher costs in welfare <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Bridal>Kate Spade Bridal</a> programs and mental hospitals, and information technology needs are all driving his agency s budget shortfall.Quigley said that shortfall is in addition to the $30 million needed to stop the practice of psychiatric boarding, which the state Supreme Court ruled last month must stop. The high court has given until Dec. 26 to halt the practice of sticking such patients in hospital emergency rooms without appropriate treatment.Beyond the psychiatric boarding issues, the department s shortfall which Quigley estimated at $25 million to $26 million includes a gap in Child Protective Services where calls to hotlines reporting abuse or seeking help have been surging. Quigley thinks he ll need $6 million to $8 million in emergency spending to fix the problem, and he may have to add 50 to 100 more staffers.Calls and investigations have increased by 10 to 15 percent and have led to a backlog of 2,000 cases not handled within the 90-day limit his agency must meet. Quigley said there were about 2,000 cases exceeding that limit when Gov. Jay Inslee took office in early 2013. The agency had since reduced the backlog to about 600 cases, only to see it go back up to 2,000. There should be zero cases open more than 90 days. In fact, there should be zero cases open more than 60 days, in my opinion, he said.One other particular area of concern is the state s mental hospitals, which overspent budgets by about $3 million in the year that ended June 30. These facilities will be $6 million in the hole by the time lawmakers return in January, Quigley said. The big challenge normally is if you don t have funding, you have to close <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Sale-Handbags>Kate Spade Sale Handbags</a> a ward. But the Legislature has been quite clear they don t want to close wards, Quigley said. He said lawmakers of both parties deserve credit for raising funding for mental hospitals, but he expects them to have concerns about the management of overtime pay as they try to contain costs. Other costs are rising in welfare programs, which have required extra personnel to process claims. A big piece of potentially $8 million in extra expenses is in information technology and includes a fix for the computer program used to determine eligibility for benefits. Other costs are for doing incapacity exams for disabled people who are in transition to being covered by Social Security and to move community-services staffers in Vancouver from a leased building to a state-owned structure.The agency is having more success sticking to the budget in other areas. Budgets for aging and long-term care, developmental disabilities and juvenile rehabilitation seem to be in good shape, according to the secretary.Top House and Senate budget writers could not be reached immediately for comment Monday. But the welfare programs division known as Community Services recently staged from Senate Republican Leader Mark Schoesler of Ritzville, who called it a splurge. I m very skeptical <a href=http://www.alportico.net/page.php?sale=True-Religion-Jeans-Sale-Uk>True Religion Outlet Online</a> of their budgeting. I think they always have slush money tucked away (Agencies) always trot out the most needy or cite a court ruling, Schoesler said Monday. But clearly we re not out of budget difficulties and they ve shown real insensitivity. Quigley defended the trainings, which the agency estimated to have cost $217 for each of the more than 2,100 employees who attended two-day workshops in Tacoma. The state paid $17,500 to a humorist and motivational speaker to address each of three workshops, but Quigley said community service offices have high turnover and it makes sense to spend $217 on boosting a staffer s morale than to spend $25,000 training a new worker.

Brad Shannon: 360-753-1688
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