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Local Government

Hear This Harris County: Texans Cannot Afford Higher Taxes

This week, the Harris County Commissioner’s Court met to discuss the possibility of raising taxes next year. The reason? “People need more of us,” according to Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo. Judge Hidalgo is partially right—people are in need. The government lockdown and oil market chaos has unleashed a wave of human suffering. Consider that...

August 11, 2020
Health Care

COVID-19 and the Growing Medicare Problem

The government lockdowns due to COVID-19 over the past several months have devastated American families. And that means Medicare is in trouble. According to the recent jobs report, the unemployment rate fell to 10.2%, almost triple the unemployment rate in February before the lockdowns began. In July, the number of insured unemployment was 16.2 million and the four-week...

August 11, 2020
Energy & Environment

Environmental Groups Should Embrace Pipelines, Not Cancel Them

The joyful response from anti-pipeline organizations to the recent news about the scrapping of the Atlantic Coast pipeline and the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to permit delay of the Keystone XL pipeline project demonstrates the need for anti-pipeline groups to take a refresher course on energy. For the foreseeable future, fossil fuels will remain by necessity our primary energy...

August 11, 2020
Economy

Counting the true cost of another shutdown

Some Texans have simply given up. Mick Larkin in Wichita Falls, Texas, has closed down his karaoke club for good. The Lone Star State’s COVID-19 lockdown rules were changed again June 26; Mr. Larkin and his partner dumped the $1,000 in perishable goods they’d just purchased for the weekend and walked away. No decision to...

August 10, 2020
Family

To avoid a homelessness disaster, focus on the individual, not the house

It now looks unlikely that Austinites will get to make their voices heard this November in the controversy over the city’s homelessness policies. The Austin city clerk recently rejected a petition that would have allowed voters to reinstate the camping ban the City Council dismantled last year. Save Austin Now, a nonprofit that supported bringing back the...

August 10, 2020
Higher Education

Credential Inflation: What’s Causing It and What Can We Do About It?

Credential inflation refers to an increase in the education credentials required for a job—for example, a job that used to be done by high school graduates but now requires new hires to have a college degree. Credential inflation has been going on for decades. One of the earliest mentions of it is in professor Randall...

August 7, 2020
Criminal Justice

There is renewed interest in criminal justice reforms

The 2020 Louisiana Regular Session convened with a freshman class of 46 representatives and 18 senators, with Republicans holding a majority in both chambers. A conservative, pro-business legislature brought a refreshed interest in criminal justice reforms focused on making Louisiana reentry ready. These reforms included the removal of barriers for the formerly incarcerated through expanded...

August 6, 2020
Higher Education

Would Martin Luther King Be Able To Get A Job At The University Of Texas Today?

In the 1940s and 1950s, U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) led a movement to purge communists from positions of power. Many government employees, academics, writers, labor union leaders, and entertainers were inappropriately fired or blacklisted for the “crime” of having (or being suspected of having) a different ideology than Sen. McCarthy. Later generations use the...

August 6, 2020
K-12 Education

Coronavirus is forcing a wake-up call on Texas’s education opportunities

It’s time for some hard truths about education. Our current system is failing too many Texas students, especially low-income and minority children. This has been the case for a long time, but the current coronavirus situation has shined a much-needed spotlight on the problem. Unfortunately, Texas isn’t prepared for the fall semester because no matter...

August 5, 2020
Economy

Don’t Let Fear Drive COVID-19 Policy

The media loves to portray Americans as stubborn—refusing to abide by the measures that could help address the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet the data show that Americans were already doing their part, long before measures became mandates. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation has a measure of social mobility. Based on anonymous cell phone data...

August 4, 2020
K-12 Education

Paxton offers needed school guidance

As the beginning of the school year approaches, Texas parents want two things — clarity and choice. We want to know what schools will be offering in the fall, and we want a say in what our children will be doing. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s new legal guidance on school reopening is helping provide...

August 3, 2020
Energy & Environment

Trump energy policy key to reviving economy — Biden plan would destroy jobs, raise energy costs

One of President Trump’s most important accomplishments in office has been the energy revolution that has led to sharply increased oil and natural gas production and job creation in the U.S. But our days of energy insecurity and dependence on other nations in unstable areas of the world to meet our energy needs will return...

August 2, 2020
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