Topic: Georgia General Assembly


January 19, 2007

Georgia Charter Schools: Engines of Educational Improvement

By Andrew Broy Georgia’s charter schools are outperforming traditional schools and are serving a more diverse and economically disadvantaged population. Theses are the conclusions of the Georgia Department of Education’s […]

January 12, 2007

Scary Truth Amid Government Accountability

By Benita M. Dodd and Geoffrey Segal If ever there was a moment of unvarnished political pass-the-buck, it came during Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin’s annual State of the City address […]

January 5, 2007

Laying the groundwork for major fiscal reform

By Kelly McCutchen With more than a half-billion-dollar budget surplus and a booming stock market, Georgia’s economic future looks bright. Of course, things looked bright in the late 1990s, too. […]

December 5, 2006

Facts Not Fear on Air Pollution

By Joel Schwartz Air pollution has been declining for decades across the United States, yet most Americans still believe air pollution is a growing problem and a serious threat to […]



October 13, 2006

Government interference sends the wrong signal on broadband

By Kelly McCutchen  Telecommuting, telemedicine, virtual schools and other high tech advances hold great promise for a large, rural state like Georgia, but roadblocks to investment will make progress much like […]

September 29, 2006

Base Tax Reform on Principles, Not Interests

By Kelly McCutchen State and local governments operate in a cycle of feast or famine. With projections of surging tax revenues for Georgia after one of the toughest downturns in […]

September 17, 2006

Competition Cuts Costs for Medicare Rx

By Ronald E. Bachman Debate raged last year across the nation over the cost of the new Part D Medicare prescription drug benefit. Now that dueling economic models have been replaced […]

September 15, 2006

Clean Water Markets: A Policy Option for Georgia

By Kristin Rowles Given a choice between two equivalent solutions to a problem, the rational choice is to select the least expensive option. Water quality trading, a hot topic around […]

August 25, 2006

Bumps in Study on Speed Humps

By Randal O’Toole and Kathleen Calongne A recent paper purporting to show that speed humps make residential streets safer for children actually shows nothing of the kind. In fact, the […]



July 28, 2006

Presumptions on Water Quality can Pollute Minds

By Harold Brown Projections of metro Atlanta’s deteriorating water quality are many and presumptive, usually with warnings of looming problems exploited as leverage for some cause or project. According to […]

July 21, 2006

Reservations About Suing Online Hotel Brokers

By Jeff Edgens Name an issue: From eminent domain to fast food, tobacco to Internet taxes, you can find an alliance of politicians and trial lawyers whose ultimate goal is […]

June 23, 2006

Healing America’s Health Care Woes

  By Tom Price America’s health care system, a world leader in medical care, is fundamentally flawed. The focus of the health care delivery system has moved away from patient […]

June 2, 2006

A New Day for Georgia Education

By Dr. Benjamin Scafidi and Dr. Holly Robinson The new, more rigorous statewide curriculum, the Georgia Performance Standards, which will make our students and schools more globally competitive, is now […]

May 19, 2006

Congress Overdue for a Fiscal Spring-cleaning

By Lynn Westmoreland You can’t go outside to play until you’ve cleaned your room, Mom used to say. We could use Mom’s wisdom in Washington: Our fiscal house has escaped […]

May 5, 2006

Health Care: Why Incentives Matter

By Kelly McCutchen As growing numbers of small businesses drop insurance plans amid rising costs, many individuals are opting to go uninsured rather than buy individual insurance. Their decision is […]

April 28, 2006

No Way to Handle a Fuel Crisis

By Benita M. Dodd  You don’t have to have your ear to the tracks to hear the hullabaloo blaming “big oil” and Americans’ “addiction” to foreign oil for alarmingly high […]

April 21, 2006

Securing U.S. Borders Must Come First

By Senator Johnny Isakson  When I was running for Senate in 2004, illegal immigration ranked second only to the war on terror among the issues people asked me about on […]


April 7, 2006

Legislative Session Good for Business

By Kelly McCutchen Georgians won’t know who this year’s political winners will be until November, but the state’s small businesses were the clear winners in the legislative session. And that’s […]

March 31, 2006

Commentary: The Hidden Cost of “Planning”

By Randal O’Toole Planners rarely say, even among themselves, that one goal of growth-management planning is to drive up housing prices in order to discourage people from living on large […]

March 30, 2006

Solving the Woes of Water Infrastructure

By Benita M. Dodd One week after more than 600 people from around the nation participated in an Atlanta conference on how to fund sustainable water infrastructure, the federal Environmental […]

March 24, 2006

Bunker Mentality Won’t Cut Energy Bills

By Benita M. Dodd Hindsight being 20-20, traffic jams became the impetus for transportation solutions as Georgia’s population grew. Fortunately, the state can still pre-empt an energy jam fueled by Georgia’s growing population […]

March 3, 2006

Hot Air Rises with Natural Gas Prices

By Benita M. Dodd Hindsight being 20/20, the critics who back in 1997 were doomsaying the deregulation of Georgia’s natural gas market are back again, gleefully pointing to high energy […]


February 17, 2006

Telework: Transporting Workers into a Global Economy

Just a dozen years ago it was considered avant garde for an organization to allow employees to work from home. Today, increasing numbers of employees are quietly migrating away from […]
Showing 601–630 of 704 posts

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