Opinion

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  • Medicaid Waivers: Wrong Cure for High Drug Prices

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    The Health Care Financing Administration (the agency that runs Medicare and Medicaid) can waive some federal requirements for Medicaid eligibility to allow states to experiment with new ways of delivering health care to the poor.
  • Bush Bilingual Plan Offers Major Changes

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Since 1998, when California voters approved Proposition 227 and virtually ended the state's bilingual education programs, state- and district-wide reform of bilingual education has spread rapidly throughout the United States.
  • Anti-Intellectualism Runs Rampant in U.S. Education: Diane Ravitch

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    "History is more or less bunk. It's tradition. We don't want tradition. We want to live in the present, and the only history that is worth a tinker's damn is the history we make today.
  • The new economy runs on coal

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    The New Economy's primary interface with the old comes down to one thing: electricity. Computers and information technology are huge consumers of it.
  • Recreationists win Illinois access suit

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Two recreational access advocacy organizations have succeeded in overturning a settlement agreement between Heartwood, Inc. and the U.S. Forest Service. The agreement, adopted in U.S.
  • Thompson to Review HIPAA Privacy Rules

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    As one of his first major acts as the Bush administration’s new Health and Human Services Secretary, former Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson has postponed the effective date of privacy regulations called for by the Health Insurance Portability and
  • New evidence casts doubt on global warming

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Fresh doubt has been cast on evidence for global warming following the discovery that a key method of measuring temperature change has exaggerated the warming rate by almost 40 percent.
  • Chemophobia at the crossroads

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Thirty-nine years ago a frightening best-seller written by Rachel Carson, titled Silent Spring, dramatically changed the direction of the environmental movement in the U.S. and worldwide.
  • DDT and Malaria

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Malaria is a devastating global problem, with 300 to 500 million cases and 3 million deaths occurring annually, mostly in children.
  • Who’s afraid of PCBs?

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) are in the news again, with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) planning to mandate the expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars dredging the Hudson River in New York and the Fox River in Wisconsin to remove
  • California’s energy crisis: Who’s to blame?

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    California is experiencing a genuine, though entirely man-made, energy crisis. Companies are being forced to shut down to conserve electricity during peak demand periods, and rolling blackouts of business and residential areas have begun.
  • Minorities Gain Most from Catholic Schools

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Why are comparable homes priced differently in different communities? Part of the answer lies in the relatively higher demand for homes in communities with better public schools.
  • Tax Credits Face Same Challenges as Vouchers

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    "Vouchers may have hit their peak in terms of acceptance. The real action to aid private schools will be in the tax route.
  • Tax Credit Proposals Proliferate

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    While the number of legislative proposals for vouchers has fallen this year, it's not for lack of interest in school choice, as shown by the following tax credit proposals applicable to K-12 education. Federal U.S.
  • ‘Gross Mismanagement’ Found at U.S. Department of Education

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    For an agency whose very existence was questioned by many Republicans during its first 20 years, the U.S.
  • School Ratings–from Standard & Poor’s

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Money is important, but what's even more important is spending money efficiently on education programs that prepare students for lives and jobs in the new economy, according to Standard & Poor's chief economist David A. Wyss.
  • Microsoft Aims to Reach K-12 Market with Encarta Server

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    With an already-strong technological presence in schools, Microsoft Corporation is further extending its reach into the education market.
  • The Education Economy

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    A sampling of education industry news from The Education Economy, a weekly publication of the market research firm Eduventures.com, which conducts research on the pre-K-12, post-secondary, corporate training, and consumer markets worldwide.
  • Mom Could Lose Child Over Homeschooling

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Section 5 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Kentucky states, in part, ". . . nor shall any man be compelled to send his child to any school to which he may be conscientiously opposed . . .
  • Who’s Looking at Your Medical Records?

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Did you know that the federal government is making new rules about who can look at your personal medical records? These rules will make it easier for a wide range of individuals and groups to see your medical information . . . without your knowledge.
  • Top Ten Ways to Fix Health Insurance in the U.S.

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    President George W. Bush and the 107th Congress face important decisions about how to fix the U.S. health care system so that all Americans have access to quality health insurance coverage.
  • Mandatory Vaccination Programs and Medical Ethics

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    The issue of mandatory vaccination programs for infants and children is coming to a head. Battle lines are being drawn.
  • School Choice Victory in Illinois

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    The Institute for Justice won an important victory for Illinois families on February 8 when the Appellate Court of Illinois for the Fourth Judicial District unanimously upheld the constitutionality of the state's 1999 law providing a tax credit for K-12
  • Catholic Schools Losing Ground

    Published April 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    In February, the Archdiocese of New York announced it would close the John A. Coleman Catholic High School in Hurley, New York when the academic year ends in June.

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