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You searched for: 2011-02-11 to 2013-02-11
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Feb 10, 2013

Make Texas Strong: Legislative Priorities for the 83rd Legislative Session and Beyond

TEA Party Caucus Advisory Committee (TPCAC) to the TEA Party Caucus of the Texas Legislature

TEA Party Caucus Advisory Committee (TPCAC) compiles research from several local grassroots organizations and think tanks, as well as The Heartland Institute, to come up with a list of legislative priorities for the TEA Party Caucus of the Texas Legislature. ...

Feb 10, 2013

Texans Debate School Choice Possibilities (short)

Jim Waters

The Texas legislature has been consumed with education during this year’s session, debating lifting the state’s charter school cap, reconsidering 15 tests students must take to graduate, and a court ruling state education funding is unconstitutionally small. Even with Republicans firmly in control of the governor’s office and both ...

Feb 10, 2013

Activists Form Majority of Senior Scientists for Government Climate Report

James M. Taylor, J.D.

A majority of the senior scientists responsible for producing the U.S. Global Change Research Program’s draft report are affiliated with environmental activist groups, investigative journalist Donna Laframboise reports. Of the 13 senior scientists who put together USGCRP’s January 2013 draft report, seven have ties to activist groups ...

Feb 9, 2013

Solar Variance Has Significant Impact on Climate, National Research Council Reports

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Small changes in solar output have a significant effect on the earth’s climate, National Research Council scientists report in a new study published by the National Academies Press. The new study indicates an increase in solar output during the past century has played a greater role in recent global warming than claimed by ...

Feb 9, 2013

New English Speakers Need Phonics, Syntax

Patrick Herrera

After teaching Spanish for many years, I was asked by my school district to teach English as a Second Language. Teaching Spanish, I was told, meant teaching a second language, so the process should be similar. It wasn’t. I didn’t realize the demographics of the learners would present such a profound teaching challenge. My ...

Feb 9, 2013

Pennsylvania E-Cycling Law Takes Effect

Alyssa Carducci

Pennsylvania residents can no longer dispose of electronic equipment through regular garbage pickups. Under a law that took effect January 24, landfills are no longer allowed to accept televisions, computers, printers, and similar electronic devises. Manufacturers Must Act In addition to blocking landfills from accepting electronics ...

Feb 8, 2013

Issue #80: Survey Shows Geoscientists and Engineers Are Skeptics

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Only 36 percent of geoscientists and engineers believe humans are creating a global warming crisis, according to a newly published survey reported in the peer-reviewed Organization Studies . The survey throws cold water on assertions by global warming alarmists that nearly all scientists agree humans are causing a global warming ...

Feb 8, 2013

The High Costs of Regulatory Enforcement

Wayne Crews

U.S. regulatory cost estimates of around $1.8 trillion per year encompass compliance costs paid by the public plus economic drag. But those estimates do not include the costs of administering the regulatory state—on-budget amounts spent by federal agencies to produce rules and to police regulatory compliance are not accounted ...

Feb 8, 2013

Grassroots Environmentalists Break with Larger Groups Funded by Renewable Industry

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Grassroots environmentalists are increasingly calling out large, prominent activist groups for selling out to corporate donors from the renewable energy industry. Nowhere is the split between corporate-type “Big Green” groups and grassroots “Little Green” groups more apparent than in southeastern California, where Big Green activist ...

Feb 8, 2013

Study Shows Need to End Secrecy in Government Union Collective Bargaining

Rob Kramer

Secret negotiations over employment contracts between union representatives and government officials are the norm in nearly every state in the union. This keeps taxpayers in the dark about how compensation packages are awarded and stops journalists from knowing what goes on behind closed doors. In a report released by the Goldwater ...

Feb 8, 2013

Supreme Court Overturns Clean Water Ruling Against Los Angeles Flood Control District

Alyssa Carducci

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed with the Los Angeles County Flood Control District that it did not have to implement special pollution abatement plans for water flowing from concrete-encased storm water channels into more natural portions of the Los Angeles and San Gabriel rivers. The Supreme Court ruled the U.S. Circuit Court ...

Feb 8, 2013

Todd Wynn: Renewable Energy Mandates

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Todd Wynn, director of the Energy, Environment, and Agriculture Task Force for the American Legislative Exchange Council, explains how renewable energy mandates are punishing the economy. ...

Feb 8, 2013

Pa. Governor Divides, Hopes to Conquer Union Opposition to Liquor Proposal

Eric Boehm

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett has unveiled a plan to privatize the Keystone State’s monopoly liquor store system, simultaneously executing a move intended to accomplish a goal of his administration while undercutting some of his loudest critics. In Pittsburgh, Corbett, a Republican, said the proceeds from selling off the state ...

Feb 8, 2013

Fuel Taxes, Tolls Pay for Only One-Third of Road Spending

Joseph Henchman

A key issue for many state legislatures this year is transportation funding. Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) and Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) have proposed sales tax increases for transportation, Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead (R) has proposed raising his state’s second-lowest-in-the-nation gasoline tax, and others have proposed new ...

Feb 8, 2013

Positive Reception for California’s Third Parent Trigger

Ashley Bateman

Exercising their rights under California’s 2010 Parent Trigger law, more than 300 parents delivered petitions to the Los Angeles school district in January, calling for their children’s failing school to be improved or converted into a charter school. Parents are now reviewing proposals from eight different organizations and ...

Feb 7, 2013

Poor Common Science Standards, School Spankings, and More: Daily National News Roundup

Joy Pullmann

Friday's ed news: 1. The forthcoming Common Core science standards are unclear, drop important knowledge, and force failed teaching strategies. 2. Governors Jindal, McDonnell, and Bush get together today to discuss education reform. 3. The high number of teacher absences shortchange students. 4. Testing should be used as a ruler ...

Feb 7, 2013

Benjamin Domenech: Smokers under Obamacare

Benjamin Domenech

Benjamin Domenech talks about how smokers are singled out for Obamacare rate hikes. ...

Feb 7, 2013

Survey: Geoscientists, Engineers Are Global Warming Skeptics

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Only 36 percent of geoscientists and engineers believe that humans are creating a global warming crisis, according to a survey reported in the peer-reviewed Organization Studies . Nearly two-thirds of the 1,077 respondents believe that nature is the primary cause of recent global warming and/or that future global warming will ...

Feb 7, 2013

More Housing Rescues Possible Because of Fannie and Freddie

Carten Cordell

Five years after the housing collapse of 2008, the U.S. government’s role in the mortgage market could have taxpayers on the hook for another multibillion-dollar rescue of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Federal Housing Finance Agency took over both government-sponsored enterprises in 2008 to ensure their solvency in the wake ...

Feb 7, 2013

Study Debunks Tax ‘Myths’ of Political ‘Progressives’

Steve Stanek

The U.S. economy is suffering its deepest and most prolonged recession since the Great Depression. The fundamental causes of the recession and the slow recovery are two decades of poorly conceived housing credit policies and the adoption of failed Keynesian economic policies, say economists Eric Fruits and Randall Pozdena, who ...

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