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Who's the Fairest of Them All?: The Truth About Opportunity, ... 
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Publication Archive Archive
Impact - October 2006
PRI Impact
10.31.2006

PRI Ideas in Action - October 2006
Policy Update and Monthly Impact Report
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Upgrading America's Ballot Box: The Rise of E-voting (2nd edition)
PRI Study
10.31.2006

"E-voting" machines are a safe way to cast votes on Election Day, but efforts to add burdensome regulations may diminish their benefits, according to a new edition of a policy study released today by the Pacific Research Institute (PRI), a non-partisan think tank based in California.
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How California drives highly qualified teachers out of the classroom
By: Rachel Chaney
10.25.2006

Last week, California education leaders held four public forums across the state to gather comments on how to modify the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law, due for reauthorization in 2007. California education officials, led by state superintendent Jack O'Connell, are eager to criticize the federal law and its accountability standards.

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How Proposition 90 Would Stop Caltrans from Spreading Blight
Capital Ideas
By: Anthony P. Archie
10.18.2006

Advocates of eminent domain tout it as a tool to eliminate blight. Government use of eminent domain, however, actually creates blight, according to a recent investigative report by the Orange County Register.
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Putting the "con" in consensus
Environmental Notes
By: Amy Kaleita, Ph.D
10.17.2006

Celebrities, politicians, and media pundits often speak of the scientific consensus on the issue of global warming. But this presumed consensus is not what some might have us believe.

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On No Account: The back story of Arnold's education vetoes
By: K. Lloyd Billingsley
10.11.2006

SACRAMENTO, CA - Last month, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed Senate Bill 1769, which would have created a special curriculum for students learning to speak English. The story of this bill and veto will prove educational to parents and policymakers alike.

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Three Cheers for Capitalist Feminism
The Contrarian
By: Sally C. Pipes
10.10.2006

Let's start with a quick question on the economic side. Over the past decade, what has contributed more to the growth of the world economy: the burgeoning power of China, new technology, or the increase of female participation in the labor force?
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Proposition 86: Keep Tobacco Money Out of Our Hospitals
PRI Pamphlet
By: John R. Graham
10.10.2006

California hospitals are seduced by the New Tobacco Industry. This industry makes nothing that it sells to those who voluntarily buy. Instead, it feeds off a river of cash, a Leviathan wreathed in smoke rising from the billions
of dollars that the government extracts from the Old Tobacco Industry and its customers every year.
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Proposition 89: No Clean Sweep
PRI Pamphlet
By: K. Lloyd Billingsley
10.10.2006

Proposition 89, the “California Clean Money and Fair Elections Act of 2006,” slated for the November 7 ballot, provides for public funding of political campaigns. Though participation is not mandatory, the measure limits the contribution amounts for privately funded candidates. Prop. 89 also imposes new contribution limits on ballot measures. The public funding is paid for by raising corporate taxes from 8.84 percent to 9.04 percent — a hike of 0.2 percent. The measure also raises the double-digit tax rate on financial institutions from 10.84 to 11.04, a similar 0.2 percent increase.


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Proposition 90: Righting Property Wrongs
PRI Pamphlet
By: Steven Greenhut
10.10.2006

On the November 7, 2006 ballot, California voters will have a chance to vote on the Protect Our Homes Initiative, Proposition 90, which would include significant restrictions on the ability of governments to use eminent domain for economic development purposes and to pass regulations that limit property rights. Why did Prop. 90 get on the ballot, and do California property owners really need its protections?


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Why More Class-Size Reduction is a Bad Idea
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D., Rachel L. Chaney
10.4.2006

SACRAMENTO, CA - There's no more popular education program among politicians and teachers than reducing class sizes in kindergarten through third grade. No other program, however, has spent more tax dollars for less result. Now lawmakers are pushing a bill that would fund class-size reduction (CSR) for additional grades.

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Proposition 88: No Bang for the Tax Buck
PRI Pamphlet
By: Lance T. Izumi, J.D.
10.1.2006

“Few initiatives in California history have incorporated so many flawed ideas as Proposition 88,” said Lance Izumi, director of Education Studies at PRI and co-author of “Proposition 88: No Bang for the Tax Buck.” The new pamphlet is part of a Decision 2006 policy series published by PRI
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Mending the Medical Malpractice Mess
Health Policy Prescriptions
By: Diana M. Ernst
10.1.2006

Medical malpractice law does not serve justice, because it fails to redress patients’ grievances while lining the pockets of lawyers.


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