Stem cell chairman to step down at end of term

Bob Klein, chairman of California's  stem cell agency oversight board, plans to step down at the end of his six-year term in 2010.

He made his plans clear during a meeting of the board's Finance Committee Thursday. Klein noted that including his involvement in writing and campaigning for Proposition 71 that created the agency he "will have spent eight years on the endeavor cumulatively."

Until December 2008 Klein declined a salary for his position as chairman of the Independent Citizens Oversight Committee (ICOC). He started drawing a salary of $150,000 then.  The amount is based on the board's decision that the post is considered a half-time job.

John Robson, vice president for operations, outlined the proposed budget for the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), which would go into effect July 1.  The proposed total is $12.98 million, a 3 percent decrease from the approved 2008-2009 budget of $13.37 million.  Currently the actual 2008-2009 expenditures are running about 20 percent below the approved budget.

The meeting lacked a quorum so the committee could not take formal action.  CIRM President Alan Trounson did not attend.

Committee members suggested that before the budget is presented to the ICOC for approval next week, comparisons with this fiscal year's projected actual expenses should be included. They also asked for greater detail and backup in the various budget categories.

Robson said that with the recent infusion of cash from a public state bond sale, the agency now has sufficient money to fund planned grants and operations through the end of 2010, perhaps a little longer.

Klein noted that CIRM still has authority to privately place $160 million in bonds, rather than sell then on the open market.  He predicted that California's economic uncertainty could linger into 2011, making  a public bond sale difficult.  Klein suggested that a private placement might come at "the end of this year or the beginning of the next so that you have the funding before I leave."

Rate This Article:

Comments:

Post A Comment

You are not logged in, please do so at the top of the page.

Recent Posts in Protecting Patients:

Blue Cross's taste of what's to come if health reform fails

Those of us who have health insurance--or think we have health insurance--can get complacent about whether the nation needs that big, complicated health reform legislation. But just try getting sick. Is your insurance even real? If it is, can you afford it after the latest round of price hikes? Is your deductible so big that paying it will mean financial ruin? Check out these stories and think about what the White House and Congress, by wimping out again on health reform, will condemn all of us to...

Read More »

Dateline NBC on why being insured isn't same as being covered

Here's the full link to last night's excellent Dateline NBC "Critical Condition," which followed insured patients as they were turned down by their health insurers for critical care.

Read More »

Reform or no reform, insurers will weasel on "out of network" loopholes

The Washington Post today has an eye-opening story today on how a family ended up in crushing debt at an "in-network" hospital apparently jammed with out-of-network doctors. Tens of thousands of dollars later, their little boy's rare and deadly heart defect is at least semi-fixed, but the family finances are in ruins. It's a problem that won't be fixed by reforms that rely on the private insurance industry. But it's also a problem that Congress can partly cure, with or without bigger reforms.

Read More »

MLK and the Massachusetts Senate Disaster

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said little about health care, though the one fragment that is quoted leaves no doubt about where he stood: “Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and the most inhumane.” The quote is hard to confirm, but health care proponents losing ground to a fear campaign need King's power to stoke determination in the service of hope.

Read More »

Patient protections are California's to lose

California has been a leader in patients rights, largely in response to abuses  by HMOs that, for instance, tried to eject new mothers and babies from the hospital a few hours after giving birth, and attempted to require "drive-by mastectomies."  The federal health reform bill could weaken or do away with all that, including a right to HIV/AIDS testing. Rep. Jackie Speier of San Mateo is leading a tough fight to preserve such rights, and so is Consumer Watchdog.

Read More »

View All Next »

Forward This Page To A Friend

Excerpts From Jamie Court's Dateline Interview Covering Health Insurer Hell

Heath Insurers Coercing Employees Into Political Action?