State Policy Network
Week in Review: January 5, 2024

Announcements   

Alabama Policy Institute released its 2023-2024 Educational Freedom in Alabama report, which showed the benefits of putting families first instead of allowing the government and failed education bureaucracy to control all education dollars. 

Beacon Center of Tennessee released its third quarterly Beacon Poll, a statewide poll of 1,302 registered Tennessee voters, which covered questions about political races, policy issues and more. 

Blugrass Institute released an analysis of trends in K-12 education spending and performance in Kentucky over the past few decades. Notably, the analysis revealed that funding has risen dramatically but test scores saw only modest change. 

The Buckeye Institute released updated Economic Freedom of North America rankings in partnership with Canada’s Fraser Institute. These rankings, which rate every state based on its economic freedom, as measured by government spending, taxation, and labor-market freedom, saw Ohio move up two spots. 

Dad Saves America podcast hosted Kristi Kendall, the director of the feature film Undivide Us, and Ben Klutsey, Director of the Program on Pluralism and Civil Exchange at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, in their latest episode, Toxic Polarization, Civil War & Local Conversation

John Locke Foundation’s Brain Balfour explored a new report from The Archbridge Institute, revealing North Carolina’s 23rd-place ranking in social mobility. While Locke’s Dr. Andy Jackson examined the changes to voter registrations in North Carolina over the past two years. 

Mountain States Policy Center announced its top recommendation for the Idaho 2024 Legislative Session and looked back on some of their favorite memories from 2023. The Center also announced the launch of its Sawtooth Leadership Academy, which aims to train and inspire the next generation of free market leaders. 

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Freedom through the Courts: The Latest Litigation Efforts across the Network  

Mackinac Center announced it is appealing the Michigan Court of Claims’ denial of Mackinac’s motion for summary disposition as a part of their suit to preserve a $700 million tax cut for state taxpayers. 

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Success Stories  

Alabama: With the start of the new year, Alabama became the first in the nation to eliminate the overtime tax. Previously, workers paid a 5% state tax on any overtime work (Alabama Policy Institute). 

Liberty Justice Center enjoyed a free speech win on Jan. 1, as California’s repeal of the physician censorship law AB2098 officially took effect. 

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Solutions from the States: This Week’s Policy Briefs   

Alaska Policy Forum published a brief in partnership with the Reason Foundation that examined a proposed bill that would likely cost Alaska $9 billion in the coming decades while benefiting only a small group of people. 

Cesar Rodney Institute issued a brief breaking down the costs and scant potential benefits of the Delaware Governor’s potential agreement with an offshore wind developer that would bring power cables ashore in Delaware Seashore State Park. 

Empire Center released a brief examining how New York state lawmakers have retained little control over state renewable energy spending. 

Illinois Policy published a brief pointing out how state licensing policies are hurting jobseekers, especially the poor. 

John Locke Foundation’s Bethany Torstenson examined the sixteen newly enacted laws now operative throughout North Carolina, examining their implications for the state’s residents. Locke’s John Sanders also discussed the energy policies proposed by North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper. 

Libertas Institute released briefs with information supporting proposed bills that would streamline Utah’s regulatory sandbox by waiving rules or regulations that place unnecessary burdens on innovation and remove barriers for microschools by permitting them in all areas of a city or county and more. 

Mountain States Policy Center issued a brief unpacking Alaska v. Alaska State Employees Association which has the potential to enhance the First Amendment rights of workers from being forced to subsidize union speech they may disagree with. 

Washington Policy Center issued a brief examining the absurd and ineffective environmental policies espoused in the state – a stark contrast to private environmental innovation that accelerated in 2023. 

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Tracking Positive Reforms: Updates from Network Affiliates   

Washington: A ballot initiative that would allow W2 workers to keep more of their paycheck by opting out of WA Cares and its payroll tax collection is gaining momentum. Supporters announced that they have gathered over 420,000 signatures – more than the 324,519 needed to get it on the November 2024 ballot (Washington Policy Center). There are also several other tax repeal proposals currently collecting signatures that if passed would provide needed relief in the state (Mountain States Policy Center). 

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Policy News from the States 

Topics:

K-12 Education  

API Report Reveals Hurdles, Hope for Universal School Choice in Alabama 
Alabama Policy Institute 

No, Universal Preschool Won’t Solve Kindergarten Readiness Issues in Kentucky 
Bluegrass Institute 

Pennsylvania’s Christmas Gift to K-12 Students 
Cascade Policy Institute 

School Choice Won in Pennsylvania This Year—And 2024 Is Even More Promising 
Commonwealth Foundation 

Ready Or Not, Montanan High Schoolers Are Heading to College 
Frontier Institute 

AZ Gov. Hobbs’ Bizarre Attack on ESA Families 
Goldwater Institute 

School Spending Plan Doesn’t Make the Grade 
Mackinac Center 

Lessons from PRI’s School Board Member Conferences: Your Superintendent Does Not Have the Final Say – You Do 
Pacific Research Institute 

What Democrats and Republicans Have in Common on Education Curriculum Beliefs 
Sutherland Institute 

What Is the Georgia Department of Education Trying to Hide from Parents? 
Georgia Public Policy Foundation 

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Energy and Environment  

The 2023 Energy Year in Review 
Center of the American Experiment 

Drilling Set to Probe Major Minnesota Helium Gas Deposit 
Center of the American Experiment 

Winter Storm Elliot: The Ghost of Christmas Future 
Center of the American Experiment 

Colorado PUC Trims Xcel’s Unprecedented Renewables Plan 
Independence Institute 

Power And Higher Prices to the People 
Pacific Research Institute 

RGF Shares Concerns about EV Charging Station Mandate (and 750 Petitions in Opposition) 
Rio Grande Foundation 

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Healthcare 

Expanding Interstate License Reciprocity Can Improve Access to Healthcare 
Show-Me Institute 

Repeal Certificate of Need for the Health and Welfare of Missourians 
Show-Me Institute 

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Housing Affordability 

Duluth’s 195k Tiny House Faces Likely Foreclosure in Affordable Housing Fiasco 
Center of the American Experiment 

An Ode to the Suburb 
Pacific Research Institute 

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Jobs and State Economies 

Delawareans are Moving to these Three Southeast States 
Caesar Rodney Institute 

Reviving Downtown Portland Requires Stronger Medicine 
Cascade Policy Institute 

Data Show That Texas Keeps Beating Minnesota 
Center of the American Experiment 

Pizza Hut Laying Off Delivery Drivers Ahead of California’s $20 Minimum Wage 
Center of the American Experiment 

Out of Work but Optimistic 
Libertas Institute 

Michigan Population Council Says Out with the Old And…In with the Old 
Mackinac Center 

The Success Sequence Is Not So Simple 
Mississippi Center for Public Policy 

Study Shows Minimum Wage Hike Will Cost Jobs, Opportunity 
Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs 

Oppressive State Policies Keep Cities Shackled in Chains 
Pacific Research Institute 

One Door to Lift Louisianans Out of Poverty 
Pelican Institute for Public Policy 

Two-Time Pulitzer Winner T.J. Stiles on Cornelius Vanderbilt & American Business 
Pioneer Institute 

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State Budgets  

Minnesota Now Has the Highest Rate of Corporate Tax in the United States 
Center of the American Experiment 

New Jersey Taxpayers Cannot Tolerate a $1b Shortfall for NJ Transit 
Garden State Initiative 

First Half of Fiscal Year Sees Slight Revenue Dip 
Iowans for Tax Relief Foundation 

Why Don’t We Remove the Floor from Missouri’s Income Tax Triggers? 
Show-Me Institute 

Illinoisans Pay Nation’s Highest Wireless Cell Phone Service Tax 
Illinois Policy 

Paid Administrative Leave: A Costly Illusion of Stern Action 
Yankee Institute 

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Workplace Freedom 

Mayo Clinic Austin Medical Workers Oust Steelworkers Union 
Center of the American Experiment 

When Unions Play Politics 
Commonwealth Foundation 

Membership Plunges Again for Michigan and National Teachers Unions 
Mackinac Center 

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Other 

What We Can Learn from Tradition 
Georgia Public Policy Foundation 

‘E Hana Kākou’ Works at the Dinner Table Too 
Grassroot Institute of Hawaii 

How Free are We in Minnesota? 
Freedom Foundation of Minnesota 

Here’s Some Hope for 2024 
Indiana Policy Review Foundation 

Idaho’s Continued Population Growth Could Increase Congressional Clout in 2030 
Mountain States Policy Center 

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The Network in the News 

In the 1819 News, the Alabama Policy Institute’s Stephanie Holden Smith calls for Alabama to start putting students first. 

In The Courier Journal, the Bluegrass Institute‘s Jim Waters notes Republican legislators must resist over-spending in Kentucky’s 2024’s budget. 

In The Topeka Capital-Journal, The Buckeye Institute’s Rea S. Hederman Jr. and Kansas Policy Institute’s Ganon Evans highlight the findings of a joint report and call on Kansas lawmakers to pursue responsible tax and spending reforms. 

At Broad + Liberty, the Commonwealth Foundation‘s Gordon Tomb considers if ‘green’ agendas are carrying governors to political cliffs. 

In the New Jersey Herald, the Garden State Initative‘s Regina Egea points out New Jersey taxpayers cannot tolerate a $1B shortfall for NJ Transit. 

In his recent column, the Georgia Public Policy Foundation‘s Kyle Wingfield notes state legislators should demand to know what’s happening with student achievement. 

In the Chicago Tribune, the Illinois Policy Institute‘s Paul Vallas looks at the state of Illinois as we head into the new year. 

In his column for The Denver Gazette, the Independence Institute‘s Jon Caldara outlines the problems with Colorado’s shopping bag ban. 

In the Orange Country Register, the Independent Institute’s Lloyd Billingsley notes how California will see plenty of new laws but few actual solutions to the state’s problems. 

At the Wall Street Journal, the Institute for Reforming Government’s C.J. Szafir recaps the left’s failed attack on school choice in the Wisconsin Supreme Court. 

In the Daily Caller, the Liberty Justice Center’s Jacob Huebert discusses efforts to defend the Second Amendment and challenge government overreach in Nebraska. 

  In the Daily Signal, the Liberty Justice Center’s Dean McGee discusses the threat posed by special interest groups intent on destroying school choice. 

In the Washington Examiner, the Mackinac Center‘s Molly Macek notes Michigan gets an ‘F’ for educational accountability. 

At National Review, the Mackinac Center‘s James M. Hohman points out that special interests have realized they don’t have to fight with each other for taxpayer funding.

At Fox Business, the Mackinac Center‘s James M. Hohman highlights how the Big Three automakers are still receiving large subsidies despite laying off workers.

In The Center Square, the Mississippi Center for Public Policy‘s Douglas Carswell shares what he loves about living in America.  

In The New York Post, the Texas Public Policy Foundation‘s Greg Sindelar and the Pelican Institute‘s Daniel Erspamer point out the simple reform Congress can make to move millions from welfare to work. 

At The Spokesman-Review, the Washington Policy Center’s Donald Kimball highlights how most voters think that state and local governments are more effective than the federal government. 

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Categories: News
Organization: State Policy Network