Articles
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Education
Free Market Friday: Children better off without Neu
When the Board of Education that governs Oklahoma City Public Schools recently voted to sever ties with Superintendent Rob Neu, there was much media speculation about why. After all, the board had welcomed Neu less than two years earlier and voted to pay him $240,000, plus a hefty $65,000 in benefits. It’s an understatement to say that Neu’s tenure has been filled with turmoil. For example, Neu hastily led the district in revamping its student disciplinary system. Neu gleefully reported that student suspensions were down. Unfortunately, a survey of district teachers showed that classroom chaos was up.Jonathan Small | May 6, 2016
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Health Care
Out of Balance Study Summary
Jonathan Small & Jonathan Ingram | May 4, 2016
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Health Care
Medicaid 'rebalancing' the wrong prescription
Writing today in the Enid News & Eagle, OCPA president Jonathan Small critiques the Oklahoma Health Care Authority's latest proposal to expand Medicaid in the state and explains options to reform the program instead.Jonathan Small | May 3, 2016
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Education
Let Families Grade Schools
Want to hurt kids? Put state bureaucrats in charge of evaluating the schools in school choice programs.Greg Forster, Ph.D. | May 1, 2016
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Education
A Mosaic of Options
We hear a lot of talk these days about popular anger at elites. This rage has surprised not a few of our leaders. They, including the members of the Oklahoma Supreme Court, were especially shocked by the popular revulsion at the Court’s Ten Commandments decision. We witnessed a genuine “pitchfork” moment, where ordinary people are outraged by policies imposed on them by elites and moved to loudly say so.Andrew C. Spiropoulos | May 1, 2016
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Education
Free Market Friday: One size doesn’t fit all
There are a number of good reasons to support creation of an Education Savings Account program that provides Oklahoma parents a portion of their child’s per-pupil allocation for education to use for public or private school tuition and other services. But one of the best reasons is that no one school can meet the needs of all children who live in the local area, regardless of the best efforts of those who work in that school.Jonathan Small | April 29, 2016
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Health Care
Out of Balance
The Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA) has proposed a plan to “rebalance” Medicaid eligibility in the Sooner State. But this “rebalancing” is really just an Obamacare expansion by another name. The plan has three major components: (1) increasing taxes to raise reimbursement rates for traditional Medicaid, (2) shifting enrollees (women and children) out of Medicaid in 2019, and (3) expanding Medicaid eligibility to a new class of able-bodied adults under Obamacare.Jonathan Small & Jonathan Ingram | April 28, 2016
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Higher Education
Free Market Friday: Content of their privilege
If you’re white you shouldn’t sing a Rihanna song. That’s what a white student in a human relations theory class at the University of Oklahoma was told during a recent lesson on “privilege” and “microaggressions.”Jonathan Small | April 22, 2016
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Education
Brandon Dutcher: Oklahoma's budget hole could be $1 billion deeper
In the Tulsa World this last weekend, OCPA’s Brandon Dutcher wrote about the fiscal impacts of educational choice programs, pointing to the cost savings happening for choice programs at the higher-ed level.Brandon Dutcher | April 19, 2016
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Health Care
Free Market Friday: Continue pursuit of freedom in health care
Oklahoma has become known for a number of efforts recently to implement policy with the intention of promoting freedom in the delivery and payment of health care. Oklahoma lawmakers have passed laws that protect the ability of medical providers and their patients to negotiate with each other and set up payment arrangements that benefit both parties.Jonathan Small | April 16, 2016