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.
SEARCH RESULTS
Once More into the Breach: The Path to Effective Workers’ Compensation Reform in Oklahoma
Andrew C. Spiropoulos Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsAs observers of Oklahoma’s public-policy scene are keenly aware, the field of workers’ compensation reform is littered with the remains of failed reforms of years past. Why do our efforts to reform the workers’ compensation system repeatedly disappoint? Because we refuse to address the chief structural feature of our system—its ...
Oklahomans Say Unions Prevent Schools from Getting Better
Brandon Dutcher Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsIn July 2010, the National Education Association (NEA) “decided that $3 million was just the right amount of money to spend in Oklahoma to support SQ 744, a ballot initiative that would have raised per-pupil spending to the regional average,” education reporter Mike Antonucci writes. “However, the union’s best efforts were only ...
Oklahoma Higher Ed Needs Reform, Not More Taxpayer Money
Matthew Denhart and Christopher Matgouranis Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsWith Oklahoma facing budget challenges during this year’s legislative session, higher education appropriations took a 5.8 percent cut. Predictably, this triggered a harsh response from leaders of the state’s universities, who claim that the cut will harm future economic growth. Yet, as we detail in our new report, “Oklahoma Higher ...
How Many Oklahomans Does it take to fund One Goverment Job?
Scott Moody and Wendy P. Warcholik Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsIt takes 18 Oklahomans in the private sector to fund one Oklahoma state government job. In total, for 2009, there were 86,822 state government workers in Oklahoma. These workers earned $4,231,080,000, or an average of $48,733 on a per-job basis. As a result, it would take a total of 1,521,498 private-sector jobs to fund ...
When Highter Education Isn't
Brandon Dutcher Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsOne of the sad and dangerous signs of our times,” Thomas Sowell wrote last month, “is how many people are enthralled by words, without bothering to look at the realities behind those words. One of those words that many people seldom look behind is ‘education.’ But education can cover anything from courses on nuclear physics ...
Tinkering, Not Right-Sizing
Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsCENTER FOR ECONOMIC FREEDOM Tinkering, Not Right-Sizing Thu, Jun 02, 2011 01:16 PM CDT Spending and Budget Left pulled example --> Longtime conservative activist Howard Phillips has a great line: “Don’t read their lips—read their budgets.” Andrew Spiropoulos, OCPA’s Milton Friedman Distinguished Fellow, puts it this way: “You can ...
Oklahoma's Educational Landscape Is Changing
Dan Lips Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsOklahoma is fast becoming a national leader in offering families school choice, thanks to its charter schools and the new scholarship program for children with disabilities. Gov. Mary Fallin and schools Superintendent Janet Barresi both support giving families more options. Looking to the future, Oklahoma policymakers should consider ...
Taxes, Taxes, and More Taxes: 'A Never-Ending Meteor Shower'
Jonathan Small Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsFormer U.S. Senator Zell Miller, a Georgia Democrat, once noted that “government takes too much from our taxpayers—big and little alike. Federal-state-local taxes come at us from every direction. It’s like a never-ending meteor shower.” As OCPA has pointed out before, meteor showers can sometimes produce so many meteors that it ...
How to Solve Oklahoma's College Affordability Problem
Dan Lips Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsHow much should a college education cost? According to the College Board, the average cost of earning a degree at a private, four-year university is now more than $100,000. If tuition prices continue to rise as quickly as they did during the past decade, a college degree will cost more than $200,000 by the time today’s third ...
Oklahoma's Small Private Sector Masks True Tax Burden
Scott Moody and Wendy P. Warcholik Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsWith April 15 behind us, the dreadful thoughts of taxes will soon fade from memory. Yet personal income taxes are only a small part of the tax load that all Oklahomans must bear. This means that paying taxes is really a year-round affair, which makes understanding the tax burden a difficult task. Building on previous research ...
Even with State Budget Crunch, Oklahomans Favor Tax Cuts
Wesley Burt Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsWhile the governor and legislature have been strongly focused on the state budget deficit, a recent SoonerPoll found that essentially half of Oklahomans, 49.8 percent, support a proposal to reduce the Oklahoma state income tax rate. The poll found that only 37.4 percent of respondents opposed lowering the income tax rate, while ...
Public Education Is Being Redefined
Heartland Research & Commentary - Brandon Dutcher Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsOn March 15 in Oklahoma City, the past met the future. Carrying signs that read “Stop the War on Workers,” “Collective Bargaining: Backbone of the Middle Class,” and “Don’t Dismantle Public Education,” hundreds of Oklahoma schoolteachers rallied at the state capitol. They expressed concern over school spending, pension reforms ...
Leveling the Playing field for Oklahoma's One-Earner Families
Scott Moody and Wendy P. Warcholik Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsWhen it comes to equalizing the tax burden for traditional, one-earner families where one spouse chooses to stay home, Oklahoma is a national trendsetter. Economists sometimes speak of “horizontal equity,” meaning that households with the same economic situation should have the same tax burden. But previous OCPA research has shown ...
School Choice Is Back
Heartland Research & Commentary - Greg Forster Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsSchool vouchers, like the Republican Party, are back in a big way. The question for vouchers, as for the GOP, is: Have they learned their lesson? Just a few years ago, the smart people were declaring vouchers dead. “An Idea Whose Time Has Gone: Conservatives Abandon Their Support for School Vouchers” declared the headline ...
Changes in Moody's Credit Scores Could Cost Oklahoma Dearly
Scott Moody and Wendy P. Warcholik Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsMoody’s Investors Service recently made a major change in how it will calculate a state’s credit rating. Oklahoma policymakers should take notice. 1 In a nutshell, Moody’s will now include a state’s unfunded pension liability, along with the traditional net tax-supported debt, when determining a state’s credit rating. This change ...
'Permanent National Recession' Requires Bold Action
Brandon Dutcher Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsRecent news reports informed us the U.S. Postal Service lost $8.5 billion last year. Another informed us that a postal workers’ union had to extend its election deadline because thousands of ballots … got lost in the mail. We laugh, but we shouldn’t be surprised. Create a heavily unionized, government-owned, government-operated ...
Oklahoma's Keystone Choice: A Garden in Winter, with Lots of Sunshine
Patrick B.McGuigan Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsAround America, the month of January saw a dramatic surge of school choice proposals in at least four states, programs designed actually to empower parents in deed, not merely in rhetorical flourishes. On January 11 in Pennsylvania, the Keystone State, Senators Anthony H. Williams (a Democrat) and Jeffrey E. Piccola (a Republican ...
Are Oklahoma's Noncompliant School Districts Violating Civil Rights Laws?
Heartland Research & Commentary - Stacy martin and Patrick B. McGuigan Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsOklahoma public schools that violate the civil rights of students risk losing federal education funds, U.S. Department of Education official Jim Bradshaw told CapitolBeatOK recently. That information may be of particular interest to advocates of, and families with, special-needs schoolchildren—the beneficiaries of a new state law ...
The Blob That Ate the Schools
Heartland Research & Commentary - Greg Foster Oklahoma Council of Public AffairsHere’s an eye-opening school statistic for you: Only half of Oklahoma’s public education employees are teachers. The bureaucracy is now so big, it takes up half the system. It’s the blob that ate the schools. Teachers’ unions, and the lousy teachers they protect, have become the central villain in the epic drama of education ...