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Alabama's budget is in dismal shape, Gov. Robert Bentley says
Alabama's budget is in "dismal" shape, and it may take years for the state to recover financially, Gov. Robert Bentley said today. Read more: The Birmingham News
Submitted 1 years 111 days ago

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Tennessee colleges face cuts, new rules this year
Tennessee higher education officials are bracing for an eventful 2011. This will be the year that the federal stimulus money runs out, dropping Tennessee's colleges and universities back into a deep budget crater. The Tennessean
Submitted 1 years 111 days ago

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Report: NC Named Worst At Teacher Salaries
North Carolina was labeled the worst at teacher salaries. The map sources an article posted by the Institute for Southern Studies in 2008 comparing teacher salaries to pay in 16 jobs with similar training. Asheville,N.C., Citizen-Times
Submitted 1 years 112 days ago

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One Nation, Indivisible
Fifteen years ago, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit flouted Supreme Court law when it struck down affirmative action at the University of Texas Law School. Last week, in an act of redemption, the appellate court upheld an admissions plan for undergraduates at the University of Texas at Austin that takes race into account to encourage diversity. Read more: The New York Times
Submitted 1 years 112 days ago

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Governor: Tenn. not 'anti-teacher'
Gov. Bill Haslam says new proposals to end collective bargaining and tenure for teachers is not a sign of “anti-teacher” sentiment in the Republican-controlled Tennessee legislature. Read more: The Tennessean
Submitted 1 years 113 days ago

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Doing the math on W.Va. education
CQ Press published an exhaustive study of education statistics that compares and ranks the states in more than 400 categories, including average class size and spending per pupil. Despite limited resources, West Virginia does well on both counts. Unfortunately, small classes and small schools mean more teachers must divide the teacher compensation pot. Read more: Charleston Daily Mail
Submitted 1 years 113 days ago

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Georgia could feel the federal freeze
Everything from road and port projects to school lunch programs could be affected by federal government plans to freeze or cut spending. On Tuesday night, President Obama announced a proposal for a five-year freeze on discretionary, non-security spending in hopes of slowing the growth in federal spending. Read more: Atlanta Journal Constitution
Submitted 1 years 113 days ago

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Politics may nix SUNO, UNO union: James Gill
Southern University in New Orleans was a failure from the beginning, which is good news considering that its express purpose was to keep black students out of the LSU satellite 2 miles away, now known as UNO. Read more: Nola.com
Submitted 1 years 113 days ago

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It's time for Oklahoma to excel in education
The 2011 legislative session presents a historic opportunity for Oklahoma to lead in improving our children's future through comprehensive education reform. The combination of a reform-minded Legislature, governor and state school superintendent, along with an engaged public, provides a unique window for passing the greatest educational improvements in our lifetime. Daily Oklahoman
Submitted 1 years 114 days ago

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Ga. Gov. Deal casting wide net for advice on issues
Gov. Nathan Deal said Tuesday that he will reach out to experts in both the government and private sectors to help Georgia create jobs, improve education and build new water supplies. Read more: Atlanta Business Chronicle
Submitted 1 years 114 days ago

 

 

Features & Opinion

 
OPINION
By Dennis Cuneo
 

Much has been written about the need to expand and diversify our energy base. With the recent spike in gasoline prices and the Iranian threat to disrupt global oil supplies, some are calling for the equivalent of a Manhattan Project to develop alternative energy sources. Others say that renewables are still too expensive and that we shouldn’t encourage them at the expense of fossil fuels. The highly publicized failure of Solyndra has called into question whether the federal government should continue the U.S. Department of Energy loan program, initiated under the Bush Administration, to provide funding for alternative energy projects. Supporters of the program say that without government funding, we risk ceding leadership of the alternative energy market to China.

 

 

 FEATURE  
By Glenn McCullough, Jr.
 
On February 9 the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission did something it has not done in 34 years: approve a license (two in fact) to build two advanced nuclear reactors. For a consortium of utilities constructing two advanced nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle on the Georgia-South Carolina border, this means major strides generating 2,200 megawatts of new electricity, enough for approximately one million homes and businesses.
 
 
FEATURE  
By Dan Juneau
 
National, state, and local business groups from around the country opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (aka “ObamaCare”) when it was being debated in Congress last year.
Many trade association representatives (including this writer) went to Washington to express business community concerns about the legislation and to request votes against it. History records that the legislation (all 2700 pages of nearly incomprehensible jargon) was finally enacted on party line votes in both chambers and signed into law by President Obama.
 
 
by Mike Randle
 
The headline above is of a great song from the '70s. It was by The Outlaws and was recorded in 1975 (go straight to You Tube to listen to it and bring the entire staff into your C-suite and rock on). I was a student but more like the starting shortstop for the University of Tampa Spartans baseball team in 1975.
 


 

 


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