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Nearing the Goal Line
What To Know: Texas leaders say property tax reform is within reach.
âShowing their usual united front, the stateâs âBig Threeâ political leaders on Friday tried to remake their case for why the Texas Legislature should deliver on long-term, ongoing property tax relief before the session wraps up this month,â the Texas Tribune reports. ([link removed] ) ââŚThe three reaffirmed their commitment to a proposal that would increase the state sales tax one percentage point, raising about $5 billion per year to lower school district tax rates â which many have seen as a long shot from the start, with lawmakers from both parties skeptical about a sales tax hike.â
The TPPF Take: Property tax reform must be paired with spending restraint; otherwise, relief will only be temporary.
âThe good news is that there is still time to fix the budget and put Texas back under spending limits,â says TPPFâs Vance Ginn. âFiscal responsibility is what has made Texas the economic envy of the nation. Letâs not mess that up with fiscal irresponsibility.â
For more on Texasâ success and tax reform, click here. ([link removed] )
Do The Right Thing
What To Know: The Trump administration is now calling on an appeals court to strike down the entire Affordable Care Act.
âThe arguments came in a legal brief the Justice Department filed with the New Orleans-based Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is reviewing a ruling from last December that invalidated all of the ACA,â the Wall Street Journal reports. ([link removed] ) âThat decision, by U.S. District Judge Reed OâConnor, a George W. Bush appointee based in Texas, came in litigation brought by a group of Republican-led states challenging the law. At earlier stages of the case, the Trump-era Justice Department argued against several central provisions of the ACA, but it didnât ask the court to strike down the whole law.â
The TPPF Take: Texas Public Policy Foundation attorneys argued that case on behalf of individual plaintiffs.
âThe Affordable Care Act is clearly unconstitutional, by the Supreme Courtâs own reasoning,â says TPPFâs Rob Henneke. âAnd it continues to hurt Americans by driving up insurance premiums and deductibles, making health care unaffordable for many families. The Fifth Circuit should recognize this in its ruling.â
For more on the ACA, click here. ([link removed] )
Grade Inflation
What To Know: Colleges and universities are graduating the Class of 2019 this month. But the degrees theyâre handing out might not mean much.
âA much bigger and wider scandal rages on college campuses these days than rich parentsâ bribing schools to admit their kids: grade inflation, which overstates academic achievement and misleads employers when these kids graduate,â writes Robert Trowbridge in The Hill. ([link removed] ) ââŚThe prospective employer will not know which schools inflate grades and which do not. And the ones that do are not about to stop.â
The TPPF Take: Thereâs a way to address grade inflation, by adding context to grades.
âThe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, for example, decided to include with each studentâs grade the average grade in the class,â says TPPFâs Tom Lindsay. âSo a student might earn an A, and the transcript would also reflect that the average for the class was a B-. Itâs something Dartmouth and Columbia have both done. But UNC has yet to put its policy into practice. Thatâs disappointing.â
For more on grade inflation, click here. ([link removed] )
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