• heartland
  • heartlander
  • somewhat reasonable

The Heartland Institute

Policy Bot

SEARCH RESULTS

You searched for: 2012-11-22 to 2012-11-29
Showing Results 1 - 20 of 29
Nov 28, 2012

Scientists Warn Against Using Invasive Species as Biofuels

Alyssa Carducci

Government officials promoting the use of bioenergy feedstocks should be very careful not to unleash a new wave of invasive species on U.S. soil, more than 200 scientists warn in a letter sent to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and four other top Obama administration officials. Energy Benefits, Environment Harms “Studies have shown ...

Nov 28, 2012

The Streetcar Fantasy

Heartland Policy Brief - Randal O'Toole

Plans to build streetcar lines in San Antonio are based on several critical fallacies, including claims that streetcars are superior to buses in their ability to attract riders and that streetcars promote economic development. In fact, streetcars are slower, less flexible, less capable of moving large numbers of people, and far ...

Nov 28, 2012

As States Consider Program Expansion, Focus Turns to Florida Medicaid Cure

Benjamin Domenech

In the wake of the presidential election, state governors must decide whether to take federal funding to expand their Medicaid programs. The U.S. Supreme Court decided in June states can reject the Medicaid expansion without losing access to their previously negotiated matching funds. According to Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, incoming ...

Nov 28, 2012

Even ‘Organic’ Food Isn’t Truly Natural

Mischa Popoff, Jay Lehr, Ph.D.

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth and final installment in a series of articles by Mischa Popoff and Jay Lehr on modern agriculture and organic farming. With only rare exceptions, all food production is completely unnatural. The means by which science has allowed us to increase production on a smaller piece of land, and to ...

Nov 28, 2012

New Indianapolis School Board Reformers Plan Future

Ashley Bateman

A new reform majority on the Indianapolis School Board is poised to make significant changes in the low-performing Indiana school district. In several close races, voters elected newcomers Gayle Cosby, a Lawrence Township teacher; Caitlin Hannon, a former IPS teacher; and businessman Sam Odle to the board in November, while reelecting ...

Nov 28, 2012

Renewable and Distributed Power in California

Jeremy Carl, Dian Grueneich, David Fedor, Cara Goldenberg Hoover Institution

CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .... 1 CURRENT STRESSES .... 6 The Policy Maze: California's Renewable and Distributed Power Programs .... 6 Rising Utility Costs and Rates: Electricity “Sticker Shock” .... 11 Cost Allocation: Uneven Cost Burdens on Utility Customers .... 16 INSTITUTIONAL CONCERNS .... 20 The Regulatory Institutional Framework ...

Nov 28, 2012

What Went Wrong With the Bush Tax Cuts

Matthew Mitchell and Andrea Castillo Mercatus Center

Critics of the Bush tax cuts often dismiss the tax changes as a failed experiment in free-market economics. Noting that economic growth was slower in the years following the cuts than in the years preceding them, some critics see the experience as evidence that tax cuts do not work. But the claim that these tax cuts exemplified ...

Nov 28, 2012

Benjamin Domenech: The Fiscal Cliff

Benjamin Domenech

Entitlement reform and the fiscal cliff with Ben Domenech and Francis Cianfrocca. ...

Nov 27, 2012

California Recycling Program Suffers Rampant Fraud

Alyssa Carducci

California’s recycling program for aluminum cans and plastic containers suffers rampant fraud, with enterprising criminals claiming multiple refunds for a single recycled container and others bringing in truckloads of containers from out of state to claim illegal refunds. Budget-Busting Losses California officials estimate recycling ...

Nov 27, 2012

Oklahoma Takes Obama Administration to Court Over IRS Rule

Kenneth Artz

Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt has amended his state’s lawsuit against President Obama’s health care law to address a legal problem with the Internal Revenue Service’s distribution of insurance exchange subsidies—an issue which could effectively bar implementation of the law in certain states. Pruitt’s new challenge focuses ...

Nov 27, 2012

Vestas Wind Systems Cuts Workforce by 20 Percent

Cheryl K. Chumley

Alternative energy development has taken another hit as the world’s largest developer of wind turbines, Denmark-based Vestas Wind Systems, trimmed its U.S. workforce by approximately 20 percent. Vestas says the reason for the layoffs is lagging revenues and the uncertain future of federal subsidies. Bleeding Jobs, Value The job ...

Nov 27, 2012

Bat Man Beyond

Maureen Martin

A West Virginia lawyer who beat up his client with a baseball bat, and even continued to beat the client as he lay on the ground, has been disbarred for ethical violations. Aggravating factors were the lawyer previously took money belonging to another client and threw a propane tank through the window of his wife’s ...

Nov 27, 2012

Telecom Hardball--It's Good for Consumers

S.T. Karnick

Another dispute between a TV content provider and a multipoint distributor has arisen, as FierceCable reports : "AMC Networks is warning Verizon ( NYSE: VZ ) FiOS TV subscribers that they will lose AMC, IFC, WE, IFC and Sundance Channel unless the telco agrees to pay increased license fees by Dec. 31." AMC had been an also ...

Nov 27, 2012

Sucker Bait: Tax Rate Cuts for Lost Deductions

Jon Basil Utley

Mitt Romney’s campaign musings about how he would cut income tax rates by 20 percent (when half of Americans don’t even pay federal income taxes) has now floated the ultimate loser for all taxpaying Americans. This is a $17,000 limit per person for all deductions including mortgage interest, charitable, and state taxes. The ...

Nov 27, 2012

Higher Gas Tax Unlikely to Gain Support in U.S. Congress

C. Kenneth Orski

Although some infrastructure advocates are hoping to use the current federal budget negotiations to win support for an increase in the federal gasoline tax, the idea is unlikely to gain support in Congress or the Obama administration. While the 2010 Simpson-Bowles deficit-reduction commission proposed raising the federal gas tax ...

Nov 27, 2012

Oklahoma Supreme Court Tosses Anti-Voucher Lawsuit

Joy Pullmann

School districts cannot sue parents who use state funds to send their special-needs children to private schools, the Oklahoma State Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in November. The state constitution requires the legislature, not districts, to provide a “free public education,” Vice Chief Justice Tom Colbert wrote in the majority opinion ...

Nov 27, 2012

Larry Downes: World Conference on International Telecommunications

Jim Lakely

Technology policy consultant Larry Downes, a columnist for Forbes.com, talks with Heartland’s Jim Lakely about proposals in the United Nations to regulate the Internet. Revisions of the International Telecommunications Regulations treaty will be debated at the World Conference on International Telecommunications in December. ...

Nov 27, 2012

Heartland Institute Presents More than 16,000 Petitions to Congress: Rein in the EPA

Jim Lakely

The Heartland Institute on Tuesday held an event on Capitol Hill with Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK) in which it presented petitions signed by more than 16,000 Americans demanding Congress rein in the Environmental Protection Agency . [Read the op-ed on today's event by Heartland Institute President Joseph Bast at The Daily Caller .] The ...

Nov 26, 2012

Michigan Would Fund Children Directly Under New Proposal

Joy Pullmann

Michigan K-12 students would become free agents, able to attend any in-state public school that will enroll them and even take different classes at different schools, under a proposal Gov. Rick Snyder released in November. The idea alarms State Board of Education President John Austin: “This is a voucher system," he told the ...

Nov 26, 2012

Why the Left is Worried About Obamacare’s Future

Benjamin Domenech

This piece by Jonathan Cohn in The New Republic is amazing for a number of reasons. It lays blame for Obamacare’s potential failure at the hands of a few think-tank critics, particularly (and deservedly so) Cato’s Michael Cannon. Clearly worried about the future of the law’s implementation, Cohn says states that respond to ...

  • 1
  • 2
  • next »
  • last

POLICY FILTERS

HEARTLAND DOCUMENTSHEARTLAND DOCUMENTS
  • Heartland Policy Brief1
TOPICSTOPICS
  • Agriculture1
  • Climate Change1
  • Education4
  • Energy4
  • Environment8
MORE
MOST RECENTMOST RECENT
  • Last 6 Months25
  • Last Year29
  • Last 2 Years29
  • Last 5 Years29
  • Last 10 Years29
DOCUMENT TYPEDOCUMENT TYPE
  • newspaper article21
  • podcast5
  • policy document3
STATESTATE
  • Alaska1
  • California3
  • Federal3
  • Florida2
  • Georgia1
MORE
ORGANIZATIONORGANIZATION
  • Hoover Institution1
  • Mercatus Center1
AUTHORAUTHOR
  • Alyssa Carducci3
  • Ashley Bateman1
  • Benjamin Domenech3
  • Cheryl K. Chumley2
  • James M. Taylor, J.D.1
MORE
The Heartland Institute

ABOUT THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTE

The Heartland Institute is a national nonprofit research and education organization whose mission is to discover, develop, and promote free-market solutions to social and economic problems.

ABOUT POLICYBOT

PolicyBot is the only free and open policy database of its kind. Here researchers can find search through tens of thousands of research, legislation, and policy documents from hundreds of sources available online.

© 2011 The Heartland Institute. All Rights Reserved.

Designed by Heartland Digital    Powered by Enginez