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You searched for: 2011-02-19 to 2013-02-19
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Feb 18, 2013

James Taylor: The future of energy and environment policy

James M. Taylor, J.D.

James M. Taylor, senior fellow for environment policy at The Heartland Institute and managing editor of Environment & Climate News, talks with Jim Lakely about the future of energy and environment policy in a second term for Barack Obama. Taylor and Lakely cover the Interior Department’s decision to put 1.6 million ...

Feb 18, 2013

Ohio’s Kasich Embraces Obamacare Medicaid Expansion

Jason Hart

Ohio Gov. John Kasich detailed in a budget proposal his plans for expanding Medicaid eligibility as called for under President Obama’s health care law. Kasich, a Republican, faced pressure from liberal groups devoted to increasing the entitlement program, as well as from health care providers backed into a corner by Obama’s ...

Feb 18, 2013

No. 11-796 Amicus brief to the Supreme Court of the United States

American Soybean Association

Amicus Brief to the Supreme Court of the United States prepared by the American Soybean Association in support of the preservation of patent law for genetically modified soybeans. The brief argues doing so will support the development of new seed biotechnology that will enhance efficiency and profitability by controlling weeds ...

Feb 18, 2013

Scott Walker and the Third Way

Benjamin Domenech

For governors who can’t just say no to the Medicaid expansion for political reasons, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s stance is going to be the guide: expansion into the exchanges, not the Medicaid program. Governor Scott Walker (R-Wisconsin) announced Wednesday that Wisconsin will not accept federal funding under the Affordable ...

Feb 18, 2013

Incriminating Emails, ‘Smell of Payback’ in Feds’ Lawsuit Against S

Steve Stanek

Standard & Poor’s is the only credit rating agency to have downgraded U.S. government debt, and now it is the only credit rating agency to be sued by the government over its ratings of housing-backed securities. Whether it remains the only one to be sued remains to be seen. The U.S. government and several states have announced ...

Feb 18, 2013

Texans Debate School Choice Possibilities

Jim Waters

While Texas lawmakers have so far proposed relatively small school choice programs, more than that may happen in this legislative session, say local observers. Even with Republicans firmly in control of the governor’s office and both houses of the legislature, “advancing school choice in Texas has proven enormously difficult,” said ...

Feb 18, 2013

Wisconsin’s Walker Proposes More School Choice

Joy Pullmann

School choice advocates are optimistic Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s education proposals released February 18 will become law in some form, but they predict more protests in the state capitol before then. Walker’s proposals include expanding the Milwaukee and Racine voucher program statewide, developing an independent board to oversee ...

Feb 18, 2013

Research & Commentary: Maine Parent Trigger

Heartland Research & Commentary - Joy Pullmann Heartland Institute

Maine legislators are considering an education reform that has garnered significant national attention: the Parent Trigger. The legislation, first passed in California, has been considered in approximately 20 other states, and legislators in five states have stated their intention to propose it in early 2013. A Parent Trigger would ...

Feb 17, 2013

Idaho Reconsiders Common Core

Lindsey Burke

Idaho’s House Education Committee heard testimony in January concerning the Common Core education standards, an effort to standardize what schools across the country teach through common K-12 standards and assessments in 45 states. “We lose our educational sovereignty,” said Stephanie Zimmerman, founder of Idahoans Against Common ...

Feb 16, 2013

Bipartisan Leaders Rethink Indiana’s Common Core Participation (updated)

Joy Pullmann

Indiana’s Senate passed a bill to withdraw the state from Common Core national education standards in February, after the bill morphed into a bipartisan bid to have the state reconsider with more public input. Senate Bill 193 passed 38-11, with three Democrats joining every Republican in voting for it. When 46 states signed ...

Feb 16, 2013

Students, Teachers Abandon Academics

Will Fitzhugh

“We have now sunk to a depth at which the restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men.”—George Orwell While we spend billions on standards for skill-building and assessing skills, we don’t seem to notice that U.S. students, in general, are not doing any academic work. This assumes a connection between ...

Feb 16, 2013

States Should Not Dictate Curriculum

Audrey Spalding

Recently, en route to Michigan’s northernmost point, it struck me that Calumet is more than 500 miles away from Lansing, where state legislators make policy. Yet the notion of drafting statewide policies to govern school curriculum and practices in places as different as Lansing, the Upper Peninsula, and Detroit is rarely criticized ...

Feb 15, 2013

Vouchers Stopped in Mississippi but Supported by Democrats, and More: Daily National News Roundup

Joy Pullmann

Friday's ed news: 1. How desperate poor parents convinced "lifelong Democrat" Michelle Rhee to support vouchers . 2. President Obama visited Georgia to tout its government preschool program , but results there are spotty. 3. Montana's Senate authorizes a limited tax-credit voucher . 4. Missouri's House education chairman stopped several ...

Feb 15, 2013

Bill Would Withdraw Georgia from Common Core

Joy Pullmann

A lawmaker has filed a bill that would withdraw Georgia from Common Core national education standards and prohibit personal information collected on the tests from being shared outside the state. That makes Georgia the eighth state to formally reconsider the Common Core, a list defining what K-12 tests and curricula must cover ...

Feb 15, 2013

Monetary War: The Latest Version of Protectionism

Alvaro Vargas Llosa

French president Francois Hollande’s statement that the euro should not fluctuate according to the mood of the market; the complaint by Eurogroup president Jean-Claude Juncker about the euro being “dangerously high”; and the Bank of Japan’s recent decision to weaken the yen with “aggressive” quantitative easing confirm what we ...

Feb 15, 2013

The Leaflet - Questions To Ask Before Expanding Medicaid

The Leaflet - Robin Knox Heartland Institute

Despite the Supreme Court’s ruling last year that states could not be forced to expand Medicaid under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, some states have decided “free” federal money is too hard to pass up. Just this week Ohio Gov. John Kasich became the fifth Republican governor to endorse the expansion of Medicaid ...

Feb 15, 2013

Yuri Maltsev: To Prosper, We Must be Free

Steve Stanek

Professor Yuri Maltsev has won international accolades for his work for freedom and prosperity. He is the only economist who ever advised top government officials in both the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War era. He joins us to discuss freedom and government. ...

Feb 15, 2013

Iowa Ranks Low on Teacher Prep as Governor Seeks Revamp

Sheena Dooley

DES MOINES, Iowa—Iowa’s teacher-preparation programs fail to produce graduates who are ready to lead a classroom, according to a new study that quickly drew fire from some educators. The National Council on Teacher Quality released its “2012 State Teacher Policy Yearbook” in January, grading Iowa’s teacher preparation as just ...

Feb 15, 2013

A Hidden Tax Hike on Seniors

Nicole Kaeding

Last summer, Americans for Prosperity analyzed the disappointing Medicare reforms in the President’s signature health care law. This week, the President suggested additional so-called reforms to Medicare in this State of the Union speech. Just like his reforms in 2010, these proposals fail to address the underlying issues in Medicare ...

Feb 15, 2013

The Incredible Lowering of the Medicare Drug Benefit Baseline

James C. Capretta

This week, President Obama took credit for the slowdown in health care cost inflation, proclaiming in his State of the Union address that “[a]lready, the Affordable Care Act is helping to slow the growth of health care costs.” This is a real stretch, to say the least. For starters, as others have noted, the slowdown in ...

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