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Economy

SPEAKING FREELY: City council proposes ordinance without regard for local businesses

Business and labor are two sides of the same coin. Hurt one and the other does not go about unharmed. The Austin city council ignores this truth with their newly proposed ordinance mandating paid sick leave. The proposed plan would force “any person, company, corporation, firm, partnership, labor organization, non-profit organization or association” in Austin...

February 1, 2018
Family

Texas is already taking effective steps to improve foster care without federal intervention

  In 2011, Children’s Rights, a New York offshoot of the ACLU, filed a federal class action lawsuit against Texas, claiming to represent the interests of a subset of the state’s foster children. This month a federal court in Corpus Christi issued a final order in the case. The ruling threatens hard-won reforms to the...

February 1, 2018
Economy

Why Texas laws have breweries shedding tears in their beer

  The direct result of a new law will discourage out-of-state entrepreneurs from opening new breweries with taprooms in Texas and limit the growth of existing ones. Special interests are at work to obtain government favors, the bitter fruit of which can be partially seen in the recent shakeup at the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission....

February 1, 2018
Criminal Justice

Trump’s Conservative Approach to Criminal Justice Reform

This commentary was originally featured in The Daily Signal on January 31, 2018.

February 1, 2018
Taxes & Spending

SPEAKING FREELY: New audit exposes more careless city spending in Austin

A stunning new audit of Austin’s Matched Savings Account (MSA) program reveals the city irresponsibly managed hundreds of thousands of dollars to the point of “basically giv[ing] away free money.” MSA’s stated purpose is to financially empower low-income citizens by amplifying their savings accounts, specifically to buy a house, start or grow a small business,...

January 29, 2018
Energy & Environment

Renewable Energy Subsidies: Picking Winners and Losers

The government shouldn’t pick winners and losers in the marketplace – but they try.  Renewable energy, driven by state and federal subsidies, is driving out baseload producers and jeopardizing the reliability of the electricity grid. According to ERCOT’s 2017 Capacity, Demand, and Reserves report, the expected 2018 peak reserve margin for the Texas electricity market has...

January 29, 2018
Property Rights

SPEAKING FREELY: Local Govt. Employment Surge Pushing Property Taxes Higher

Property taxes continue to skyrocket, at great expense to taxpayers and at great gain to Texas’ local governments. Despite repeated attempts to stifle a growing tax burden, the local property tax “remains the largest tax assessed in Texas” representing nearly half of all Texan tax revenue (47.92% in 2015). Not only is the property tax...

January 25, 2018
Taxes & Spending

Should Texas Keep Increasing Public Education Spending?

Texas’ public education spending, in inflation-adjusted dollars, has increased in recent years with little-to-no improvement in the quality of education received. A problem with the philosophy of throwing more money at the education problem expecting a different result is that it doesn’t work. As you can see in Figure 1, per-student education expenditures have been...

January 25, 2018
Economy

California and the definition of insanity: Why do Democrats love tax hikes so much?

  California is already seeing residents and businesses flee the state because of its sky-high taxes. Yet unbelievably, two Democratic state assemblymen have proposed to more than double the state business tax – hiking it from 8.84 percent to 18.84 percent on businesses with annual net incomes of more than $1 million. This would be the highest...

January 24, 2018
Economy

Why Texas and the Energy Sector Should Support NAFTA

Just as Americans mutually benefit from voluntary exchange domestically, so can individuals in different countries within the rule of law. A perfect trade agreement would be one sentence that provides no more than a contractual obligation: “There shall be no trade barriers among countries X, Y, and Z.” The Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF) recently...

January 23, 2018
Economy

SPEAKING FREELY: Plastic Bag Ban and Liberty Await Fate at the Texas Supreme Court

Don’t California my Texas. That phrase has increasingly made its way into the vernacular of Texas freedom lovers, especially notable as we wait for a decision in the Texas Supreme Court case City of Laredo v. Laredo Merchants Association. At issue in the case, which could well establish a statewide precedent, is whether various overreaching...

January 23, 2018
Economy

Why Supreme Court should rule against bag ban

  Shoppers might soon discover that the grocery store is less expensive and more convenient. Two weeks ago, the Texas Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case questioning the legitimacy of municipal bans on plastic bags. If justices reaffirm an appellate court ruling, consumers will be unburdened from this clear example of government overreach....

January 22, 2018
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