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August 10, 2013

In Almere more than 700 people have no healthcare insurance

Based on Dutch government healthcare figures close to 19,000 people have no healthcare insurance in the Netherlands with  Almere picking up about 4% of that number.

This means that approximately 750 people in Almere are not insured, regardless of the fact that  many of these uninsured are still registered with local healthcare centers.

People in the Netherlands who have no health insurance and visit a Dr. will have to pay for the visit in cash or can request to have the bill forwarded to their home. Presently the standard rate for a DR's visit as established by the government is euro 29.28.

Almere-Digest




August 9, 2013

The Netherlands: Are we lazy or clever? - work output lowest in the industrialized world.

Overall, the entire workforce in the Netherlands averages around 29 hours of work a week -- the lowest of any industrialized nation, according to the OECD.  However they earn some of the highest average annual wages: euro 35.000 ($47,000)

The four-day workweek is nearly standard in the Netherlands, especially among working moms.
About 86% of employed mothers worked 34 hours or less each week last year, according to Dutch government statistics. Among fathers, about 12% also worked a shortened workweek.

Dutch laws promote a work-life balance and protect part-time workers. All workers there are entitled to fully paid vacation days, maternity and paternity leave. A law passed in 2000 also gives workers the right to reduce their hours to a part-time schedule, while keeping their job, hourly pay, health care and pro-rated benefits.

Read more: World's shortest work weeks - Netherlands (1) - CNNMoney

August 7, 2013

Tourism: Biking: Almere: No better place in the Netherlands for a biking vacation

Almere is not only the newest and most modern city in Europel but probably also the best area for biking with its hundreds of km's of safe biking trails.
Biking in the serenity of Almere nature

The city is also competing for the national  title of bike city of the Netherlands for 2014

One of the curious facts of the Netherlands is that nearly 85 percent of the population own at least one bicycle. They use it regularly, often daily. 

Today there are about 17.5 million bicycles in Holland, slightly more than one for every inhabitant. About 1.4 million new bicycles are sold every year. 

Convenience is probably one of the main reasons for the Dutch to cycle as much as they do. They take their bike to go shopping because it is easier, faster and more convenient than taking the car or another mode of transport. In order to get cycling this convenient you need good infrastructure, safe streets and a place to park your bicycle at the grocery store or any other end-destination. In the Netherlands 27 % of all trips are taken by bike. Bike paths are everywhere. In a way they are like bike highways, with their own bridges, tunnels and throu

Obviously to accomplish this you need to have a bike-friendly infrastructure and local municipality ordinances which support it. The Netherlands certainly meets that criteria and the results are obvious. 

By Dutch law, bicycles must have white front and red rear lights which must be in working order at night, and fines are payable for those who fail to observe this. Cyclists are generally required to observe the same road rules as motor vehicle users, unless there is a road sign indicating otherwise.Helmets are not required by law but recommended. 

To the Dutch there’s nothing more natural than cycling with their children. Manufacturers of Dutch baby front bike seats tell their customers they can be used from the time a baby is 6 to 9 months old, or, more accurately, when a baby is able to sit upright on its own.  Some experts say that in their eyes the time a baby is one year old is a safer starting point. But in the Netherlands much younger babies are already transported on bicycles. 

For older, school going kids there now are even apps with safe biking routes to their schools.

Recently the US government adopted Dutch-style cycling as a real American transport and health choice

The rise of the electric bike set last year continued in the Netherlands. An increase of 30 percent is expected for 2009 with more than 150,000 e-bikes. The electric bike presently has a market share of 10 percent, with an average selling price of around euro 1900 good for 25% of the total bicycle sales revenues. 
  
Obviously with the rise of the electric bike also comes the loss of health benefits achieved by "human powered" biking. Fortunately studies in the Netherlands also showed that electric bikes are mainly bought by people with health problems who still want the benefit of the fresh air associated with biking in the open air.

The generally flat Dutch terrain combined with 20,000 km of "fietspaden" bicycle paths makes cycling in the Netherlands an extraordinarily pleasant activity, and one not exclusively for the very fit or sporty. 

Safely biking everywhere in and around Almere
If you can't bring your own bike you will find them for rent near, or just about at every train station. To do an advance bike rental booking just check out the Internet. Mind you those will be more expensive than the bike rentals at the train stations. Prices vary from euro 7.00 to euro 20.00 a day depending from whom you rent your bike.

If you know how to bike and want a healthy interesting vacation Holland is your country and Almere the place to go. 

EU-Digest

Dutch Government Planned Student Loan Program Could Fail Based On US Experience

As the costs of higher education continue to skyrocket across the USA and Europe, the student loan debt bubble in America is reaching unprecedented heights as more and more young adults are not able to repay their loans.

A new analysis from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in America  found that only half of the more than $1 trillion in student loan debt is being repaid. Specifically, only 42 percent of direct student loans are in repayment while 60 percent of Federal Family Education Loans are in repayment.

The CFPB also found that 13-14 percent of borrowers are defaulting on their loan, which will have secondary effects of making things like buying a home or a car that much more difficult. Experts have said this could create an entire generation of students who can’t achieve the American dream.

An additional 18 percent of former students are either in deferment, putting off paying the loan, or in forbearance because they don’t make enough money to be able to pay the loan and make payments on the rest of their bills.

The CFPB said there are several ways to reduce payments including a plan called Pay As You Earn where payments are equal to 10 percent of your income above the poverty line and after 20 years any remaining balance is forgiven.

The main issue with the government-backed student loans, however, is that these loans have created an education bubble. Both Stafford loans and private bank loans are given to essentially anyone who applies, and this has inflated the cost of education overall. On an individual level, even if a person was to declare bankruptcy later in life, his or her student loans will still stick.

Therefore, banks can make risky loans to students because they know that the government will still back those loans. In addition, with the ease of loan dispersal, students feel less of an incentive to choose degrees that will allow them to easily pay back their student loans and may instead choose programs with less job security.

Unlike 30-50 years ago, it’s nearly impossible for students today to graduate on time without the assistance of student loans or military grants. While scholarships can be a viable answer for some students—particularly those who are eligible for need-based financial aid—the majority of students can’t rely on scholarships and grants alone. So not only are loans necessary to achieve academic goals, but the costs of those goals are increasing as a result of government-backed loans. Like during the housing market crisis, prices are rapidly inflating, but people who aren’t particularly good loan candidates are still getting them because banks know that if borrowers default, then the government will bail them out.

Pursuing higher education is a valuable endeavor and can definitely result in a higher quality of life in the long run. For many, loans are the only way to afford an education. But the ease of receiving government loans is a double-edged sword that both expedites the process for people with solid career prospects and encourages risky behavior by making it easier for students to get degrees that won’t necessarily be valuable in the job market. While the increase in student loan rates is a hardship for most, what may be an even greater hardship is the difficulty of making ends meet later in life, when crippling student loan debt prevents individuals from getting what they want from their careers.

The Dutch government should take note of the above, given the very negative results achieved with the program in the US.

For more: EU-Digest

August 6, 2013

New ice stadium in Almere: KNSB

Artist design of new Almere Ice-dome
The Dutch skating association KNSB recently announced it has given the green light to Almere as its preferred location for the new speed skating stadium.

The KNSB chose the Icedôme as the new home for top-level speed skating over the Thialf stadium in Heerenveen and the new TransSportium in Zoetermeer.

The decision has sent shockwaves through the skating world. Heerenveen has played host to top-level competition since the 1980s and the province of Friesland has already allocated €50m to build a new state-of-the art stadium there.

The decision means Almere, which is closer to Amsterdam, will be the new training and competition centre for Dutch skaters and host an annual international event.

The KNSB says other international competitions could be held in Heerenveen and Zoetermeer.

Top skaters such as Sven Kramer, coaches and local government officials have already spoken out about the decision. Heerenveen and Zoetermeer are to appeal.

Frank Kolsteeg of AEG Europe en Folkert Buiter, promoters of the Ice- dôme Almere confirmed recently that the American Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) is said to be interested to manage the new stadium in Almere.

Almere-digest


August 3, 2013

Turkey: Erdogan’s Crisis With Pregnant Women - by Semih Idiz

It is no wonder that Turkish soap operas — depicting a range of issues from equality between the sexes and the empowerment of women, to liberal lifestyles and contemporary forms of leisure — are so popular in the Middle East, where millions are clamoring for more equality and modernity in their lives.

But true life experiences and debates are much more relevant for the region than mere products of fiction, and Turkey certainly has no shortage of these, as the latest heated debate concerning the “morality of pregnancy” — which has been raging for days — clearly demonstrates.

It all began when Omer Tugrul Inancer, an Islamist lawyer and commentator on religion, asserted on the state-owned television network TRT that it was shameful for pregnant women to go out on the streets. He was speaking during a special Ramadan talk show broadcast just before iftar on July 26.

“Declaring your pregnancy with drums is against our understanding of decency. You cannot walk on the streets with such bellies. To get a bit of fresh air, a woman in the seventh or eighth month of her pregnancy can go around a little in her husband’s car in the late afternoon,” Inancer, who is also known to Islamic circles as an expert on Sufi mysticism, said. He went on to add that despite this, pregnant women of all shades are to be seen everywhere in Turkey nowadays, including on television, and added, “This is shameful, shameful! This is not realism, this is vulgarity.”

The outcry following Inancer’s remarks was instant with women from all walks of life protesting him. Protesters included pregnant women and their husbands as well as women and men feigning pregnancy and prominently displaying distended bellies. Most of the demonstrators saw Inancer’s remarks as more evidence of creeping Islamism in Turkey under Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

Government circles and AKP supporters insist, of course, that Inancer’s remarks have nothing to do with them. Given the way Turkey has become divided along secularist and Islamist lines under the AKP, however, it seems almost inevitable that the finger of blame should be pointing at the government.

Inancer poured more fuel on the debate later, when he not only stood by his remarks, but added that the ugly sight of pregnant women was putting young girls off the idea of pregnancy. Not surprisingly, the topic went instantly viral on Twitter under #direnhamile (meaning “pregnant women resist”). This was clearly inspired by “#direngezi” (meaning “Gezi resist”), the battle cry for the recent Gezi Park protests. One highly popular Twitter post read “Down with pregnant women, long live storks!”

While the topic became the No. 1 social issue in Turkey overnight, it was clear that women on the Islamist side of the fence were not too pleased over Inancer’s remarks either. Ozlem Zengin Topal, a lawyer and the head of the AKP’s women organization in Istanbul, for example, said she also found Inancer’s remarks disturbing. “Of course pregnant women can go on the streets. It is their natural right,” she said.

But trying to deflect some of the anger away from Inancer — who is highly respected among Islamists — Topal nevertheless felt the need to add that she did not think the debate he had started was about pregnancy itself, but the manner in which some pregnant women dress.


Editorial note: Its high time the political establishment  calls a spade a spade: Turks voted Erdogan in power and only Turks can vote the man out of power. God forbid that the already decapitated military does a coup, which would even put Turkey in a more precarious state.

It also seems totally illogical for the EU to continue negotiating with a government which does not respect human rights, privacy freedom of the press and now wants to degenerate women by conspicuously installing Sharia Law - unless was instructed by its Anglo-American leadership to do so. - which is far more likely. 

After all isn't Mr.Gulen who has been the guiding example for Mr. Erdogan's policies also a US protege? Bottom - line remains - Turks have got to clean-up their act.

EU-Digest
 

August 2, 2013

Almere: Fun City - Sunday entertainment program for "Almere Centrum"

This Summer Almere Center is not only open for shopping but also  provides fun and entertainment for the whole family.

This month the fun activities planned (from 13: 00 hours) include::

Sunday August 4: Glitter tattoos-children's entertainment team to get your own beautiful tattoo
.
Sunday, August 11: Citymall Music: Esther Robinson (location: Belfort ) influenced by great artists such as Donny Hathaway, Stevie Wonder, John Mayer, India Arie and Esther created its own soul like Chaka Khan, pop sound. Esther writes her soul songs at the piano.

Sunday August 18: Trainrides through Citymall (location Belfort 15) fun for kids and parents. A beautiful train ride through Citymall Almere. For a small fee (€ 1-€ 2) you can take a ride.

Sunday August: 25: Citymall Music: Sandy Dane (Forum) Sandy Dane is already a well-known Citymall's Sandy Dane new single New Generation is a catchy combination of pop and folk, a sound as we know her.

Sunday September 1: Mr. and Mrs. Popcakes popcakes share Free Pop out. That his cookies on a stick. You may choose your own dip. Yummy feast, so!

Almere-Digest