Opinion
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08/2001: State Legislative Update
Opinion -Florida This year's legislative session was a mixed blessing for the state's residents. -
Bill of Rights . . . or Federal Takeover of Medicine?
Opinion -For decades, the U.S. health care system was the envy of the entire world. -
Bush reaffirms Kyoto opposition
Opinion -Armed with the National Academy of Sciences' just-released study of climate change science, President George W. Bush began to lobby Europe on revisions to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. -
California energy debate heats up
Opinion -Political rhetoric on energy issues from the state of California continues to heat up along with the rising summer temperatures. -
Kern County the answer to California energy woes?
Opinion -Supporters of a balanced, market-based energy policy point to central California's Kern County as an example for the rest of the state to follow. -
Supporters of Bush energy plan deflect criticism
Opinion -After the euphoria surrounding its unveiling, the Bush energy plan is experiencing the hangover of biting criticism from both free-market and anti-market interests. -
Endangered Species Act hits Klamath again
Opinion -Having just lost their water supplies to endangered sucker fish, residents of the Klamath River basin and much of the Pacific Northwest took another hit May 31 as a federal appeals court shut down logging in much of California, Oregon, and Washington. -
Federal study concludes nuclear storage is safe
Opinion -Persons on both sides of the Yucca Mountain, Nevada nuclear storage debate have found reason for encouragement and reason for concern as control of the U.S. Senate was given over to the Democrats. -
EPA panel pushes tough new dioxin rules
Opinion -Stringent new regulations on low-level dioxins are being pushed by an Environmental Protection Agency advisory panel even though scientific studies cannot show any link between current dioxin levels and adverse effects on human health. -
Motor vehicle mileage rules: Making matters worse
Opinion -Global climate change is in the news again, this time as a reason for enacting stricter motor vehicle fuel economy standards for light-duty trucks, including SUVs, vans, and pickups. -
Bush upholds Clinton air particle rules
Opinion -Controversial new air quality rules regarding fine particulate matter, announced by the Clinton administration in 1997 and subject to numerous scientific and legal challenges since, will be kept in place by the Bush administration. -
Taylor recommends . . .
Opinion -ECN: If you were to recommend a short list of books, journals, articles, or Web sites on free market environmentalism, what would be on that list? -
Book review: Exploding the myths of soil erosion
Opinion -The generally accepted opinion is that a large percentage of the world's agricultural land is degraded and is being further degraded year by year. -
Book Review: Privatization: No More Excuses
Opinion -Privatization and Public-Private Partnerships by E.S. Savas New York, NY: Chatham House Publishers, 2000 $34.95 pb; to order call 212/529-4686 or visit www.chathamhouse. -
Troubles Not Over for Texas Teacher Union
Opinion -In June, the Texas State Teachers Association (TSTA), affiliated with the National Education Association, announced exploratory efforts to merge with the Texas Federation of Teachers (TFT), affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers. -
Nearly 1 in 5 Union Members Are School Workers
Opinion -Education industry more heavily unionized than manufacturing or construction Workers in elementary and secondary schools in 2000 accounted for the largest share of union members of any sector in the U.S. -
Conference: The Education Economy Forum 2001
Opinion -Baltimore, Maryland Marriott Waterfront Hotel October 15-16, 2001 This conference brings together leading executives, investors, and analysts to address top issues in the pre-K-12, postsecondary, and corporate learning markets: Which business -
In Memoriam James P. Boyle 1933-2001
Opinion -James P. Boyle, the educator-entrepreneur who founded Ombudsman Educational Services in 1975 and became a leader and role model for the emerging education services industry in the 1990s, died on May 25, 2001, at the age of 68. -
Results from Chicago’s Other Schools
Opinion -Catholic Schools Students at the 264 elementary schools run by the Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago scored as much as 25 percentile points above the national norm on the TerraNova standardized achievement test, according to results released by the -
Supreme Court OKs Bible Club Meetings In Schools
Opinion -On June 11, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered in a 6-3 decision that school districts must give children's Bible clubs the same access to public schools for after-school meetings they provide to other community groups. -
Masters of Their Own Souls: John Taylor Gatto
Opinion -John Taylor Gatto was an award-winning junior high school teacher for 30 years in Manhattan's public schools, and yet he gave it all up abruptly in 1991, resigning very publicly on the op-ed page of the Wall Street Journal. -
Big Hike Approved for GI Bill Vouchers
Opinion -In stark contrast to the rigid rejection that even very modest K-12 voucher proposals have met from Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill, the U.S. -
Parents Save SF Charter School
Opinion -Culminating months of effort, hundreds of largely low-income, minority parents whose children attend San Francisco's Edison Charter Academy were successful in persuading a majority of the city's board of education to keep the school under the management -
Mass. Lawmakers Scramble to Preempt Voter Initiative
Opinion -Perhaps hearing the footsteps of a possible statewide bilingual education reform initiative approaching in their not-too-distant future, Massachusetts policymakers have hurried to pass reform measures they can point to as meaningful, thus preempting a