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Jul 18, 2012

School Reform News Managing Editor Joy Pullman at CPAC Chicago

Jim Lakely

Joy Pullmann, managing editor of The Heartland Institute's School Reform News and editor of the Education section of the Heartlander digital magazine, spoke at CPAC Chicago on the "Lake Woebegon Effect" on education. The introduction rightly credits Heartland's SRN as being a pioneer in publishing news and information on school ...

Jul 18, 2012

Most States' Education Policies Now Subject to Obama Administration Review

Lindsey Burke

The U.S. Department of Education has now waived No Child Left Behind for 32 states that agreed to reconfigure their education systems according to the executive branch’s preferences, with four more waiver applications under review. Washington DC also received a waiver. NCLB governs most federal K-12 spending and mandates. The ...

Jul 17, 2012

Abysmal Civics Knowledge Prompts Florida to Implement Middle School Test

Caleb Whitmer

This school year Florida’s seventh graders will have to take a new standardized civics test. In 2014-2015, students must pass it to move up to high school. After four years of tinkering with the idea in response to extremely low civics knowledge among Florida’s students and general public, the Florida House and Senate unanimously ...

Jul 17, 2012

Honolulu Authority Requests $1.55 Billion for Rail Project

Malia Zimmerman

Calling it “a great milestone,” Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation CEO Dan Grabauskas has submitted a Full Funding Grant Agreement to the Federal Transit Administration requesting $1.55 billion for Honolulu’s 20-mile elevated steel on steel rail project. This is the first step toward getting funding for the $5 billion ...

Jul 17, 2012

More Hedge Funds Buying Key Man Life Insurance

SKCG Group, Inc.

Talk about key man. More than $600 billion is currently managed by hedge funds whose founders will turn at least 60 years old in the next decade, according to Institutional Investor magazine. The retirement – or death – of star traders can wreak havoc on an asset management firm. “Billions of dollars worth of assets . . . are ...

Jul 17, 2012

Chevy Volt Costing Taxpayers $250,000 Per Car

James M. Taylor, J.D.

Despite $700 million dollars in development costs and taxpayer subsidies of $250,000 per vehicle, Chevrolet is selling very few Chevy Volts, Seton Motley of News Busters reports today in an eye-opening column. The federal government and various state governments repeatedly bill taxpayers for a litany of “can’t miss” automobile ...

Jul 16, 2012

Cell Phone Customers Required to Pay for Free Phones

S.T. Karnick

If you own a cell phone, you're paying for someone else's phone as well, every month (h/t Patrick O'Meara). ...

Jul 16, 2012

Missouri Passes Law Allowing More Charter Schools

Vicki Alger

Gov. Jay Nixon has signed Missouri’s first major piece of charter school legislation since its first in 1998: Senate Bill 576 will allow charter schools to open statewide and make it easier to close poor-performing ones. “[The law] will make sure there is transparency and openness and will give students a better chance at ...

Jul 16, 2012

The Media’s Myth About Replacing Obamacare

Benjamin Domenech

Of all the absurd memes repeated by the policy-bereft media these days, the idea that Republicans have no plan to replace Obamacare is one of the most irritatingly false. Here’s the latest example at Politico , headlined “Still no GOP plan to ‘replace.’” Keep in mind how bizarrely ignorant this piece is by considering this ...

Jul 16, 2012

Dodd-Frank Not Likely to End Bailouts as Promised

Thomas Jacobs

July 21 marks the two-year anniversary of the passage of the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory act. So let us ask: Has the intervening regulatory and industry activity fulfilled the promise that Dodd-Frank will end bailouts? Bailouts are an attempt to prevent something worse such as the collapse of the financial system. As there ...

Jul 16, 2012

Californians Regret Approving High-Speed Rail

Bonner R. Cohen

Four years after approving a $9 billion high-speed rail proposal, Californians strongly oppose high-speed rail and would vote against it if given another chance, a University of Southern California/ Los Angeles Times poll reports. Only 33 Percent Support In the 2008 elections, Californians approved borrowing $9 billion for high-speed ...

Jul 16, 2012

Baltimore More Than Doubles City’s Bottle Tax

Cheryl K. Chumley

Bottled water, iced tea, soda, and juice at Baltimore groceries and convenience stores began costing more on July 1. City Council members increased the bottle tax from 2 cents to 5 cents a bottle, over the objections of store owners and business groups that say the tax places them at a competitive disadvantage. The tax means ...

Jul 16, 2012

Supreme Court Healthcare Ruling Affects Education

Vicki Alger

Because it limits how the federal government can require states to do its bidding in exchange for taxpayer dollars, the Supreme Court’s recent healthcare ruling could have consequences for education policy. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s individual health insurance mandate under Congress ...

Jul 16, 2012

Questioning the Messianic Conception of Smart Growth

Wendell Cox

A new analysis from the United Kingdom concludes that smart growth (compact city) policies are not inherently preferable to other urban land use policy regimes, despite the proponents' claims. "The current planning policy strategies for land use and transport have virtually no impact on the major long-term increases in resource ...

Jul 16, 2012

Enviro Groups Rally Against Fast-Tracking California High-Speed Rail

Kenneth Artz

Two prominent environmental activist groups, the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, are rallying against California Gov. Jerry Brown’s efforts to fast-track construction of high-speed rail in the state. Special Environmental Exemptions Brown is asking the state legislature to give high-speed rail special exemptions ...

Jul 13, 2012

Judge Scraps License for Colorado Uranium Mill

Bonner R. Cohen

A state judge has struck down a license for a uranium mill issued by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. In his much-anticipated ruling, Denver District Judge John McMullen said CDPHE did not allow adequate public comment before issuing a license to Energy Fuels, Inc. to operate the mill in rural Paradox ...

Jul 13, 2012

High-Speed Rail Advocates Discredit Their Cause -- Again

Aaron M. Renn

Is there any high-speed rail boondoggle big enough to make rail transport advocates reject it? Sadly, for all too many of them the answer is no, as two recent developments make clear. The first is in California, where the state continues to press forward on a high-speed rail plan that could cost anywhere from $68 billion ...

Jul 13, 2012

Supporters of Inflation Ignore Long-Term Harm, Income Redistribution

Tyler Watts

Two wrongs may not make a right, but a second dose of poison might just cure the first dose. That’s at least what Paul Krugman, America’s most prominent left-wing economic pundit, is saying about an untapped remedy for our economic woes. In his April 5 New York Times column, “Not Enough Inflation,” Krugman repeated his claim ...

Jul 13, 2012

Daily School Reform News Roundup, July 9 to 13

Joy Pullmann

The U.S. Department of Education granted Alaska a No Child Left Behind waiver , though the state has not adopted the required Common Core standards. The D.C. council should be careful about meddling with schools , opines the Washington Post. Los Angeles school district officials are fighting a court order requiring the district ...

Jul 13, 2012

Hundreds of Thousands Seek Education in U.S. History, Government

Ashley Bateman

Surging interest in U.S. history and government among citizens has recently followed decades of lackluster civic education and test results. Recent data is dismal. On the 2010 National Assessment of Educational Progress, 24 percent of seniors rated proficient in civics, while fourth and eighth grader proficiency also ranged between ...

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