Opinion

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  • Most Economists Reject Global Warming Petition

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    A highly publicized effort by proponents of the theory of global warming to enlist the support of the nation's economists has fallen well short of the mark.
  • Supreme Court Allows Landowners Hurt by ESA to Sue

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    In a landmark victory for farmers, ranchers, and other private property owners, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on March 19 that persons adversely affected by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) can sue the government.
  • Great Lakes Environmental Controversies Heat Up

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    An ambitious, 25-year-old federal effort aimed at reducing water pollution in the Great Lakes region has undergone a steady erosion in public confidence in recent years.
  • EPA’s WasteWi$e Program Highlights Others’ Efforts

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    WasteWi$e is an EPA effort that encourages businesses to develop comprehensive waste reduction programs. WasteWi$e recently announced its 1996 Program Champions.
  • Farm State Senators Caution Gore on Proposed Climate Treaty

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    A bipartisan group of farm state senators has written Vice President Al Gore saying they are "increasingly concerned with the lack of adequate attention given to agricultural concerns" in the administration's plans to sign a climate change treaty later
  • Documents Reveal Internal Criticism of EPA Enforcement Policies

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Internal EPA documents released April 2 as a result of a lawsuit reveal that the agency’s own consultants are highly critical of methodology employed by EPA in computing proposed fines in enforcement cases.
  • Environmental Regulations Blamed for California Floods

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    One of the most destructive floods in recent California memory--one that caused three deaths and over $2 billion in damages--is being attributed to the regulatory zeal of federal and state agencies rigidly enforcing environmental regulations, notably the
  • Emerging Water Markets Help Reduce Shortages

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    One of the most pervasive fears on the minds of millions of people throughout the world is the fear of an imminent water shortage. Some see this as proof that the world is running out of water. Not so! is the emphatic reassurance from Terry L.
  • Environmental Compliance: Full Immunity Is Key

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    In the Great Lakes State, we have enjoyed one of the most remarkable economic runs in our history over the last few years. Unemployment has fallen to record lows and the number of people with jobs has risen to record highs.
  • Environmentalism at Odds with Free Trade?

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    At the inaugural meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference in Singapore last December, proponents of linking strict international environmental standards clashed with supporters of free trade.
  • GAO: Superfund Cleanup Pace Slows

    Published June 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Superfund, the nation's costly and singularly unloved hazardous waste cleanup program, has few supporters save for the legions of lawyers who have made small fortunes exploiting the statute’s vast litigation web.
  • Community-Based Schools: Educationally and Economically Essential

    Published May 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    African-American children in public schools are failing in record numbers, crippling their futures and limiting their careers. For some African-American parents, doing nothing about the problem was not an option.
  • Unions the Major Obstacle to Market-Oriented Reforms

    Published April 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Those familiar with the school reform movement, and with this newspaper, are keenly aware of the key role--sometimes positive, more recently quite negative--that teacher unions have played in school reform debates nationwide.
  • Six Myths of School Finance Reform

    Published March 5, 1997
    Opinion -
    The Illinois General Assembly is debating whether and how to change the way the state finances its public schools.
  • Where High Expectations Are Met … And More

    Published March 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Twenty-five years ago, Marva Collins left a public school teaching position to open her own school, in her own home.
  • PAVE-ing a Road to Parental Choice

    Published February 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Michael Joyce is president of the Milwaukee-based Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. The Foundation is devoted to strengthening American democratic capitalism and the institutions, principles, and values which sustain and nurture it.
  • This Environmentalist Opposes More Strict Air Quality Standards

    Published January 29, 1997
    Opinion -
    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed lowering the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for ozone from 0.12 parts per million (averaged over one hour) to 0.08 (averaged over eight hours).
  • Private Schools: Saving Illinois Taxpayers $2 Billion a Year

    Published January 6, 1997
    Opinion -
    Thank the Lord for the Illinois parents who send their children to parochial or private schools. By keeping their students out of tax-supported government schools, those parents save Illinois taxpayers over $2 billion a year.
  • Failing Schools Get New Leadership for Turnaround

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    As President Clinton prepares to take the helm of the nation in Washington, D.C. for another four years, a retired three-star army general has taken control over the “deplorable” public schools in that city.
  • Minority Academic Progress Falters

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    Reading scores for minority students are falling further behind those of white students, according to a report released in December by the Education Trust, a nonprofit group that monitors student performance.
  • Houston May Contract with Private Schools

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    What’s a school superintendent to do when he has serious overcrowding, increasing enrollment, 84 school buildings in need of renovation, and taxpayers who just rejected a $390 million bond issue designed to address those problems?
  • Choice Advances in Pennsylvania

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    On November 5, Pennsylvania voters improved the prospects for educational choice in the state by increasing the Republican majorities in both chambers of the state government.
  • Choice Students Score Better

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    A new performance analysis of Milwaukee, Wisconsin’s school voucher program has found that low-income minority students do better with choice.
  • Whole Language Reading Instruction Faulted

    Published January 1, 1997
    Opinion -
    In a new report issued by the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, Dr. James J. Campbell, a Fulton, New York pediatrician, concludes that whole language reading instruction is responsible for a wide range of learning disorders.

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