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UTOPIA Muni Broadband Program Facing Debt and Failure
Matthew GlansOne of Utah’s most ambitious municipal broadband programs is facing serious subscribership and funding problems. The Utah Telecommunications Open Infrastructure Agency (UTOPIA), a municipal broadband program organized in 2002 by a group of communities in the Wasatch Front area of the state, is facing massive debt, low enrollment ...
Property Casualty
Maureen MartinTwo years ago, the town of Harvey Cedars in New Jersey had a two-story sand dune constructed in front of 190 ocean-front homes to protect them from storms. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers did the construction. In the case of Hurricane Sandy, the project worked, and none of the homes was damaged. But the 22-feet-high dunes ...
John Nothdurft: Fairness Act Just a Tax Grab
Steve Stanek, John NothdurftIn this "Best of" Heartland podcast, Momentum appears to be building in Congress for the Marketplace Fairness Act, which would allow states to collect sales tax from online sales even when a retailer has no physical presence in the state. Heartland Institute Government Relations Director John Nothdurft tells us what's happening ...
Central Banking’s Hogwarts Syndrome
Matthew StevensonCentral banks—the US Federal Reserve is one—come with the mystique of Oz. While the Fed fiercely denies that it is powerful enough to cure recessions with a click of the heels, there are those who believe it's true. If, however, you look behind the velvet curtains and columned lobbies, you will find good men but bad wizards ...
States Lack Power to Limit Abortion via Insurance Exchanges
Kendall AntekeierAs states decide whether to implement a health insurance exchange under President Obama’s health care law, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has encouraged states to do so by touting the flexibility of implementation. One area where exchanges will likely provide little or no flexibility, however, is in the distribution ...
Research & Commentary: The Medicaid "Cure"
Heartland Research & Commentary - Kendall AntekeierThe United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has told the states there will be no flexibility in implementing Medicaid expansion: either expand fully or don’t expand at all. The announcement came as states were hoping to receive extra federal assistance by expanding their programs only partially: for example ...
Oklahoma Surgery Center Resists Third Party Payer Model
Loren HealA surgery center in Oklahoma has returned to a direct fee-for-service business model in an attempt to resist tight government controls and avoid heavy reliance on health insurance and the third-party payer system. The Surgery Center of Oklahoma, founded by Dr. Keith Smith and Dr. Steven Lantier, has cut out the insurance middleman ...
EPA's carbon regs not based on sound science
Joe D'Aleo( Originally published in The Washington Examiner ) In 2007, a divided Supreme Court ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency must treat carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases as "pollutants," and must therefore analyze whether the increasing concentrations in atmospheric carbon might reasonably be anticipated to endanger ...
Affordable Care Act Issues and Solutions
Gary D. AlexanderGary D. Alexander, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Public Welfare writes to The Honorable Joseph R. Pitts, Chairman of the Subcommittee on Health and The Honorable Frank Pallone, Jr, Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Health with recommendations to improve the Affordable Care Act. ...
Harrisburg, Pa., Burns Through More Cash Than Trash
Melissa DanielThere was a time when the Harrisburg, Pa., incinerator was a successful waste-to-energy plant. Then, with the stock market rising and every American looking like a sharp investor, politicians hooked up with Wall Street in a series of exotic financial deals designed to finance plant upgrades. After a decade, they’ve incinerated ...
Donn Dears: Natural Gas Fracking
James M. Taylor, J.D.In this "Best of" Heartland podcast, Energy economist Donn Dears discusses the economic benefits of natural gas fracking and its outstanding environmental record. ...
Beer Battle
Maureen MartinIt’s the real-world equivalent of Jarndyce v. Jarndyce, the fictional lawsuit Charles Dickens wrote about in Bleak House . The Jarndyce case in the chancery courts in Britain dragged on for so many generations the legal fees devoured the probate estate over which the parties were haggling. Evidently there’s no risk of that ...
Bill Gunderson: Housing Recovery Looks Real
Steve StanekIn this "Best of" Heartland podcast, Investments expert Bill Gunderson says, in many markets, a real recovery in housing looks to be underway. It's the result of good old supply and demand coming into alignment after several years of a depressed housing industry ...
Nevada Restaurant Owners on Obamacare: ‘We Can't Pay For This’
Kyle GillisNevada restaurant owners—increasingly anxious about the future of their businesses under the Affordable Care Act—are echoing statements by national restaurant chains about the excessive costs President Obama’s health care law will impose on them. "I don't know what secret [the politicians] know, where they just assume we can write ...
Steven Titch: Internet Sales Tax
Jim LakelyIn this "Best of" Heartland podcast, Steven Titch, policy analyst for the Reason Foundation, discusses internet sales tax and the marketplace fairness act. ...
As States Consider Medicaid Expansion, Obama Administration Limits Options
Benjamin DomenechWith the passing of the deadline for states to inform the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services whether they will implement an exchange under President Obama’s law, the next big decision facing governors and legislatures is whether to participate in expansion of the Medicaid program—a decision HHS recently announced would ...
Vicki Alger: How Rising College Costs Hurt Families and Society
Joy PullmannIn this "Best of" Heartland podcast, Many government efforts to make U.S. colleges more affordable and accessible has actually made them more expensive and inaccessible, writes Vicki Alger in a new report for the Independent Women’s Forum. Alger joins the podcast to discuss her report, the moral hazard of student loans, and ...
Report: Nation’s Best School Districts Trail Global Competition
Mary Petrides TillotsonWealthy suburban school districts lack the academic heft many believe they have, according to the Global Report Card 2.0 . The updated 2012 findings match the 2011 edition’s conclusion: Even the best U.S. school districts rate mediocre when compared to international peers. “Suburbanites falsely believe that education reform has ...
Brian Balfour: More Jobs, Bigger Paychecks
Steve StanekNorth Carolina has the region's highest income tax burden, high unemployment, and slow personal income growth. The Civitas Institute in Raleigh, N.C., proposes ending the state's personal and corporate income taxes and franchise tax and replacing them with a consumption-based tax that research shows could boost employment and ...
Issue #74: Real-World Data Show Warming Is Modest, Beneficial
James M. Taylor, J.D.It has been nearly 25 years since James Hansen first regaled Congress with predictions of imminent global warming doom and gloom. At the time, the Earth had only recently emerged from a 30-year cooling period and projections of future warming had little empirical data to back them up. Accordingly, computer models ruled the ...