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You searched for: 2012-06-13 to 2012-06-20
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Jun 19, 2012

Obamacare’s Uncertain Replacement

Benjamin Domenech

This likely represents the final edition of the Consumer Power Report prior to the Supreme Court’s ruling on President Barack Obama’s health care law. As I’ve noted in the past, the likeliest outcome is a partial strikedown – one that eliminates the individual mandate as well as the attached requirements of community rating ...

Jun 19, 2012

Strap Happy

Maureen Martin

In New Jersey, a ticket for failing to wear a seat belt costs $46, but failing to buckle up your pet can land you in jail for up to six months or fines ranging from $250 to $1,000. Failing to restrain pets in cars is considered animal cruelty. Special pet seats and harnesses can be purchased to attach directly to ...

Jun 19, 2012

California Health Care Providers Offer Discounts for Cash Payment

Kenneth Artz

Many hospitals and doctors offer cash discounts for medical bills for their patients, regardless of income. But there's a catch: The lowest price is usually available only if the patients don't use their health insurance. The savings are impressive in some states. A Long Beach hospital recently charged a patient $6,707 for ...

Jun 19, 2012

Research & Commentary: Earned Income Tax Credit vs. Minimum Wage Laws

Heartland Research & Commentary - Matthew Glans

The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and minimum wage laws have been two of the primary mechanisms the federal and state governments have used to help low-income families move out of poverty. A debate is currently ongoing in many state legislatures and Congress over which of these two policies is more effective and should ...

Jun 19, 2012

California Prepares to Auction Carbon Credits

Whitney Stewart

The central component of California’s Global Warming Solutions Act (AB32) takes effect this year, and with the state facing a $15.7 billion deficit, political leaders have ended a long debate over how to spend revenue the Act is expected to generate. The central component is “cap and trade,” a complex system aimed at reducing ...

Jun 18, 2012

Taxi Protectionism in Portland Lands City in Federal Court

Tim Kelly

Portland, Oregon officials have made it a crime for certain businesspeople to give customers more value for their dollar. Now the city is in federal court trying to defend the constitutionality of their action. In 2009, Portland passed an ordinance requiring a $50 minimum fare for limousine and sedan rides to or from Portland ...

Jun 18, 2012

Fracking Is Unlikely to Cause Earthquakes

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Hydraulic fracturing does not present a significant risk of causing earthquakes, according to a newly published report by the National Research Council. The National Research Council, which is a branch of the National Academy of Sciences, found the only significant risk of earthquakes related to hydraulic fracturing comes from ...

Jun 18, 2012

EPA’s Rules Need to be Rationalized

Bernard Weinstein

Last December, the Environmental Protection Agency unveiled new standards that sharply limit emissions of mercury and other toxic pollutants from the nation’s coal- and oil-burning power plants. Shortly, EPA will be issuing similar rules for industrial boilers. If the Utility Maximum Achievable Control Technology Rule (U-MACT) is ...

Jun 18, 2012

Research & Commentary: Mitt Romney’s Education Platform

Heartland Research & Commentary - Joy Pullmann Heartland Institute

Presumptive Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney announced his education policy platform in May. He supports tying federal education dollars directly to poor and disabled students to help them attend public, charter, or private schools or pay for online education and tutoring. He also supports reversing the nationalization ...

Jun 18, 2012

Research & Commentary: Health Insurance Exchanges in Small States

Heartland Research & Commentary - Kendall Antekeier

Several states have halted the creation of health insurance exchanges, awaiting a decision from the U.S. Supreme Court on the federal health care law. Meanwhile, others are finding they are too small to run an exchange successfully, regardless of the Court’s ruling. States with smaller populations can expect fewer individuals ...

Jun 18, 2012

Obama Administration Hesitantly Agrees to Continue D.C. Vouchers

Joy Pullmann

Speaker of the House John Boehner and Sen. Joe Lieberman have reached a deal with the U.S. Department of Education to continue funding the endangered DC vouchers program. The agreement means no cap on program enrollment, current students can continue participating, and new students can apply. A U.S. Department of Education spokesman ...

Jun 16, 2012

Poorly Suited

Maureen Martin

The New York man claiming he’s entitled to a huge share of Facebook, Inc. is about to lose his ninth set of lawyers after his latest counsel asked the court for leave to withdraw after representing him for less than three months. Paul Ceglia claims he has a contract with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg entitling him ...

Jun 16, 2012

New Hampshire Health Insurance Exchange Ban Headed to Gov. Lynch

Grant Bosse

The New Hampshire legislature has sent a ban on the implementation of the health insurance exchanges mandated under President Obama’s health care law to the desk of their governor. The New Hampshire House agreed to Senate changes to a bill blocking implementation of the exchanges, sending the legislation to Democratic Gov. John ...

Jun 15, 2012

States, Religious Institutions Sue HHS Over Contraceptive Mandate

Kendall Antekeier

In response to the Obama administration’s federal contraceptive mandate, 43 religious institutions have now filed 12 lawsuits against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, claiming the mandate violates their religious liberties. The mandate, put in place by a provision in President Obama’s health care law, requires ...

Jun 15, 2012

Scott Cleland: The Administration’s Antitrust and Net Neutrality Obsessions

Bruce Edward Walker

Scott Cleland, chairman of NetCompetition and president of Precursor LLC, discusses his Daily Caller essay “Obsolete Analysis Will Doom DOJ’s Antitrust Probe of Cable.” ...

Jun 15, 2012

California City Might Grab Amazon.com Sales Tax . . . for Amazon

Mike Reid

Amazon.com Inc. is planning to partner with at least one California city to collect sales taxes from the entire state. Most of the collected tax money would go back to Amazon. The company is building warehouses in Patterson and San Bernardino, California. Under state law, purchases made by customers anywhere in the state can ...

Jun 15, 2012

Truth Squad: Have Families Really Lost 40% of Wealth?

Steve Stanek

The recent Federal Reserve announcement that the Great Recession caused median family net worth in the U.S. to fall nearly 40 percent, from $126,400 in 2007 to $77,300 in 2010, prompted us here at Finance, Insurance & Real Estate Policy News to ask experts in economics, public policy and investing their reaction to the news ...

Jun 14, 2012

Ohio Delays Obamacare Exchange Implementation Pending Supreme Court Case

Jason Hart

The Ohio Department of Insurance has delayed creating the health insurance exchange mandated by President Obama’s health care law for so long, compliance is now likely impossible. Obama’s law requires the creation of state health insurance exchanges, which the federal government will attempt to implement in states that have not ...

Jun 14, 2012

Blue Crab Population Surges in Chesapeake Bay

Cheryl K. Chumley

The juvenile blue crab population in Chesapeake Bay has surpassed its highest level ever recorded, and the overall blue crab population in the Bay reached its highest level since 1993, according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources. Huge Increase over Last Year The DNR issued its findings after its winter dredge survey ...

Jun 14, 2012

School Reform News Roundup, June 11 to 15

Joy Pullmann

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush discusses the Common Core, Parent Trigger, ALEC, third grade retention, and federal involvement in education. California lawmakers prefer to the governor's budget one that would spend a billion more on education. A judge's ruling means student test scores may soon be used to evaluate Los Angeles teachers ...

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