The Santa Fe New Mexican, Nov. 7, 2013

Page 1

Lady Horsemen face Santa Fe Prep in quarterfinals Sports, B-1

Locally owned and independent

Thursday, November 7, 2013

www.santafenewmexican.com 75¢

No jail time for armed robber Deal suspends 12-year sentence for former cop. LOcAL, A-7

Poll: Bushee ahead With 39% of city voters still undecided in mayor’s race, contest isn’t over. LOcAL, A-7

Lottery scholarship:

Losing bet for state’s kids?

For sickest patients, time to find insurance runs short

Poverty figure rises A revised census measure shows 1 in 6 Americans is poor. PAge A-2

Man pleads guilty to assault via toe-biting

Coverage through pools ends soon; those suffering chronic conditions face dangerous lapse

Anaya still faces charges in Albuquerque incident

By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press

By Chris Quintana

The New Mexican

A Santa Fe man accused of attacking his former lover several times by biting her toes — and even biting off the tip of a big toe — pleaded guilty Wednesday to several charges of battery and assault. The victim has claimed that Daniel Anaya, reportedly a onetime clerk in the shoe department of the Dillard’s departDaniel Anaya ment store in Santa Fe, suffers from a “severe foot fetish.” Anaya, 28, pleaded guilty in First District Judge Mary Marlowe’s courtroom to a charge of aggravated battery causing great bodily harm, two counts of false imprisonment, an aggravated assault charge and a battery charge. He had been accused in three separate assaults on the 32-year-old woman — on Nov. 22, 2012, Feb. 3 and April

Please see ASSAULT, Page A-4

Chef and culinary instructor Jerry Jeff Dakan speaks with student Monica Anduio, 18, at Santa Fe Community College on Wednesday. Anduio, who is working toward an associate degree, benefits from the lottery scholarship, but it is running out of funds. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Task force seeks ways to shore up fund also works 20 hours a week at Kmart, but she said the tuition assistance is “an enormous help.” If she wants to continue to get tuition help through the state’s lottery scholarship fund, Avila can transfer to a four-year school in the state. But a letter she received last week warned that there is no guarantee the money will be there. Demand for lottery scholarships is exceeding the funds in the program.

By Robert Nott The New Mexican

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Planetarium program Killer Comets and Ominous Asteroids, 7-8 p.m., Santa Fe Community College Planetarium, 6401 Richards Ave. 505-428-1744, no charge.

Jill Morin of Raleigh, N.C., shown with her son, Kyle, suffers from a heart condition. She and thousands of others with pre-existing conditions will see their insurance pools dissolve soon — and many are struggling to find new coverage. GERRY BROOME/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A

raceli Avila isn’t sure whether she would have made it through four semesters at Santa Fe Community College without the New Mexico Lottery Scholarship. “It has meant so much to me,” she said Wednesday. “It makes a huge difference in my education.” She is close to earning her associate degree. Avila

Please see LOTTerY, Page A-4

$40M annual revenues generated by state lottery for scholarship program

$60M

annual lottery scholarship requests

PORTLAND, Ore. — With federal and state online health care marketplaces experiencing glitches a month into implementation, concern is mounting for a vulnerable group of people who were supposed to be among the health law’s earliest beneficiaries. Hundreds of thousands of people across the country with pre-existing chronic conditions such as cancer, heart failure or kidney disease who are covered through high risk-insurance pools will see their coverage dissolve by year’s end. They are supposed to gain regular coverage under the Affordable Care Act, which requires insurers to cover those with severe medical problems. But many of them have had trouble signing up for health insurance through the exchanges and could find themselves without coverage in January if they don’t meet a Dec. 15 deadline to enroll. Administration officials say the federal exchange, which covers more than half the states, won’t be working probably until the end of November, leaving people just two weeks to sign up if they want coverage by Jan. 1. “These individuals can’t be without coverage for even a month,” said Tanya Case, the chairwoman of the National Association of State Comprehensive Health Insurance Plans, which represents the nation’s high-risk pools. “It’s a matter of life or death.” High-risk pools were created by state legislatures to provide a safety net for people who have been denied or priced out of coverage. The Affordable Care Act will forbid insurers from turning away people in poor health. And while coverage can be purchased outside the exchanges,

Please see InSUrAnce, Page A-4

InSIde u Kathleen Sebelius takes heat from GOP senators over health care law’s troubles. PAge A-4

Obituaries

An epidemic of tweet fatigue threatens Twitter

Fidel Lee Gutierrez, 51, Santa Fe, Nov. 3 Gerald Byron Simpson, Nov. 1 Michael A. Robins

As company goes public, growing number of celebrities go private

PAge A-10

By Ryan Nakashima

Today Sunny, warmer. High 57, low 28. PAge A-12

Index

Calendar A-2

Classifieds B-7

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — They loved it. Now they hate it. A growing number of celebrities, athletes and self-promoters are burned out and signing off of Twit-

Comics A-12

Lotteries A-2

ter. Many have gotten overwhelmed. Some people built big audiences on the short messaging service only to have their followers turn against them. Others complain that tweets that once drew lots of attention now get lost in the noise. As Twitter Inc. prepares to go public this week, the company is selling potential investors on the idea that its user base of 232 million will continue to grow along with the 500 million tweets that are sent each day. The company’s revenue

Opinion A-11

Police notes A-10

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Sports B-1

InSIde

TwITTer qUITTerS

u Twitter sets price of $26 for initial public offering of stock. PAge A-4

depends on ads it inserts into the stream of messages. But Wall Street could lose its big bet on social media if prolific tweeters lose their voice. Evidence of Twitter burnout isn’t hard to find. Just look at the celebrities who — at one time or another

Please see TweeT, Page A-4

Time Out B-6

Scoop A-9

Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010

Megan Fox left a

million followers hanging in January.

John Mayer quit

in 2011 so he could write songs again.

Jennifer Love Hewitt

left briefly in January, citing negativity.

Two sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 311 Publication No. 596-440


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