• heartland
  • heartlander
  • somewhat reasonable

The Heartland Institute

Policy Bot

SEARCH RESULTS

You searched for: 2007-04-14 to 2012-04-14 -> newspaper_article
Showing Results 1 - 20 of 5,278
Apr 13, 2012

FreedomWorks: Don't Accept a Soft Obamacare Mandate

Benjamin Domenech

One of the big questions on the minds of many in Washington at the moment is: what comes after the individual mandate? Should the Supreme Court strike the requirement down but not strike down President Obama's entire law, some substitute will likely be proposed by the White House and its allies in Congress. Health policy ...

Apr 13, 2012

Insurers Profit from Obama’s Mandate

Loren Heal, Benjamin Domenech

Health insurance companies have experienced dramatically higher stock prices in the two years since the passage of President Obama’s health care law, thanks to the individual mandate to purchase their product. Wellpoint (WLP) was at about $80/share in 2007, dropped significantly in price shortly after the 2008 election, and is ...

Apr 13, 2012

Retired Illinois Teachers May Pay the Price of State Insolvency

Vicki Alger

A confidential memo from the director of Illinois’ largest state pension system said decades’ worth of unfunded liabilities may require the state to cut benefits for current and retired teachers. With the state currently owing $43 billion to the fund, Illinois Teachers Retirement System Director Dick Ingram cited forecasts predicting ...

Apr 13, 2012

States Report Strong Tax Revenues in Fiscal 2011

Lucy Dadayan

State government tax collections in Fiscal 2011 showed strong year-over-year growth compared to fiscal 2010 collections, according to Census Bureau data released April 12. Fiscal 2011 ended on June 30, 2011 for 46 states. Fiscal 2011 total state government tax collections increased by 8.9 percent. Personal income tax grew by ...

Apr 13, 2012

South Carolina Considers Reviving Incandescent Light Bulbs

Bonner R. Cohen

Federal energy policies designed to rid the nation of traditional incandescent light bulbs continue to encounter popular resistance, with South Carolina’s legislature considering its own unique act of defiance. Intrastate Bulbs Considered Lawmakers in Columbia are pondering a proposed “Incandescent Light Bulb Freedom Act,” a measure ...

Apr 12, 2012

Agriculture Secretaries Support Genetic Improvement

Kenneth Artz

A panel of seven former U.S. Department of Agriculture secretaries representing Republican and Democratic presidents alike spoke in favor of genetic engineering and large, corporate farms at a Feb. 23 agriculture conference in Virginia. The former secretaries said environmental activist groups that oppose corporate farming and the ...

Apr 12, 2012

White House Data Shoot Down Buffett Rule Claims

Scott Hodge

President Obama this week re-launched his advocacy for a "Buffett Rule," which maintains that no millionaire should pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than a middle-class family. On Tuesday, the National Economic Council issued a white paper justifying the Buffett Rule as a “basic principle of tax fairness.” Yet ...

Apr 12, 2012

Dense Housing to Boost Transit Does Little for Lower-Income Workers

Wendell Cox

One of the most frequently recurring justifications for housing densification policies (smart growth, growth management, livability, etc.) lies with the assumption that automobile-based mobility disadvantages lower-income citizens. Much of the solution, according to densification advocates, is to discourage driving and orient both urbanization ...

Apr 12, 2012

Film by Upstate New Yorker Documents Wind Power Impacts

John Monaghan

Meredith, New York seems like an idyllic place—patchwork farms roll tranquilly along the western foothills of the Catskill Mountains, interspersed with small ponds and temperate woodlands. Gentle breezes blow through the tall grasses, symbolizing the town’s serene lifestyle. That same breeze, however, has divided Meredith’s 1,529 ...

Apr 12, 2012

Illinois Medicaid Squeeze Could Hike Everyone’s Hospital Bills

Andrew Thomason

The average Illinois household could be facing higher hospital bills under Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn’s $33.8 billion proposed budget, which decreases how much the state compensates providers treating patients on Medicaid. Quinn’s office said under normal circumstances Medicaid spending should jump by $2.7 billion. But spending on ...

Apr 12, 2012

Louisiana Lawmakers Pass Nation’s Broadest School Choice Bills

Joy Pullmann

Louisiana lawmakers sent to Gov. Bobby Jindal two education bills that would establish the largest voucher program in the country, curtail teacher tenure, tie educator pay and job security to student performance, and expand charter schools. House bills 974 and 976 passed by solid margins a month after they were introduced, amid ...

Apr 11, 2012

Critical Drug Shortages Reaching Crisis

Ashley Bateman

A rise in shortages of key drugs is reaching crisis level for many patients nationwide as demand outpaces supply. Legislation has been introduced in Congress to address the issue, but questions remain as to whether the bill would address the real drivers of shortages. Cancer, Behavior Drugs Hardest Hit The American Society ...

Apr 11, 2012

Don Berwick: Giving Patients More Control Over Health Spending "Vicious Idea"

Benjamin Domenech

It didn't take long for Don Berwick, the controversial former head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services under President Obama, to start being honest again about his anti-market views once he left the administration. In a forum with health care policy expert Jim Capretta, Berwick reacted strongly to the idea that ...

Apr 11, 2012

NC Muni Broadband Spurs City-Town Lawsuit

Bruce Edward Walker

Two North Carolina municipalities are at odds over funding of one city’s broadband system. The City of Salisbury and the Town of Spencer—both located in Rowan County—will likely wind up in court to settle whether Salisbury possessed authority to borrow $5 million from Spencer’s water and sewer capital reserve fund to help finance ...

Apr 11, 2012

President Aims to Shift National Testing Focus

Ashley Bateman

In his $70 billion 2012 budget request for the U.S. Department of Education, President Barack Obama seeks to reduce funding for the nation’s top education comparison test, the National Assessment for Educational Progress, by $6 million. The money isn’t going back to the taxpayers, though. The president is requesting the same ...

Apr 11, 2012

Public-Private Partnerships Praised at Chicago Conference

Phil Britt

Public-private partnerships can help solve some of the “horrific” problems currently being faced by governments, according to Laurence Msall, president of the Civic Federation of Chicago. Msall spoke during a March conference on private-public partnerships, presented by the Federation in partnership with the Federal Reserve Bank ...

Apr 11, 2012

Do Real Temperature Measurements Matter?

James M. Taylor, J.D.

What do you do if you are a global warming alarmist and real-world temperatures do not warm as much as your climate model predicted? Here’s one answer: you claim that your model’s propensity to predict more warming than has actually occurred shouldn’t prejudice your faith in the same model’s future predictions. Thus, anyone ...

Apr 10, 2012

Report: Obamacare Could Increase Deficit by Over Half a Trillion Dollars

Benjamin Domenech

A new report by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University finds that contrary to promises by President Obama and others in arguing for the passage of his health care law, Obamacare actually adds to the deficit, as opposed to decreasing it. Much of this has to do with the double-counting of funding within the law, a ...

Apr 10, 2012

Why Medicare’s Pilot Programs Failed

John C. Goodman

The failure of Medicare’s demonstration projects to reduce the costs of care has been the subject of much disappointment in the health policy world. Recall that these are critical to President Obama’s challenge “To find out what works and then go do it.” If nothing works, the fallback weapon in Obamacare is to reduce fees ...

Apr 10, 2012

$50 Light Bulb Wins Government Prize for Green Affordability

Kenneth Artz

What constitutes an affordable “green” light bulb? According to the U.S. Department of Energy, $50 per light bulb is our most promising future. No Likely Market The Department of Energy (DOE) has awarded a $10 million prize to Philips, a Dutch electronics company that is one of the leading manufacturers of light bulbs sold ...

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • next »
  • last

POLICY FILTERS

HEARTLAND DOCUMENTSHEARTLAND DOCUMENTS
TOPICSTOPICS
  • Agriculture6
  • Budget109
  • Civil Rights1
  • Climate Change34
  • Economic Development23
MORE
MOST RECENTMOST RECENT
  • Last 2 Years1,190
  • Last 5 Years4,153
  • Last 10 Years5,278
DOCUMENT TYPEDOCUMENT TYPE
  • newspaper article5,278
STATESTATE
  • Alabama6
  • Alaska5
  • Arizona10
  • Arkansas10
  • California70
MORE
ORGANIZATIONORGANIZATION
AUTHORAUTHOR
  • Abigail Wood1
  • Adam Kissel1
  • Alicia Constant6
  • Alyssa Carducci79
  • Arnold Kling1
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