Show-Me Institute Hosts First Freedom Celebration

We hope you will join us for the Show-Me Institute’s first Freedom Celebration at 6:30 p.m. on Fri., Sept. 27 at the Log Cabin Club in Saint Louis. U.S. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) will join us for a special reception to benefit the Show-Me Institute. The cost to attend is $250 per person.

Sen. Lee calls ObamaCare a “train wreck” and is leading the campaign to “defund” the program. He is a real champion of the kinds of policies that are needed to break through the current mess in Washington, D.C., and get America — and Missouri — growing again. Sen. Lee currently serves on the Energy and Natural Resources, Joint Economic, Armed Services, and Judiciary Committees in the U.S. Senate. Intelligent and thoughtful in his presentation, he is highly sought after by the likes of Chris Wallace and others in the media to address issues ranging from U.S. energy and defense policies to economics and our nation’s founding constitutional principles.

We invite you to attend this important event and help advance liberty in Missouri. For more information and to register online, please click here. All proceeds will benefit the Show-Me Institute, a 501(c)(3) organization.

Banner Year For Charter Schools

I’m not sure I would call myself a prophet. I’m sure many of my predictions don’t come true. For instance, I was sure A-Trak and Tommy Trash would win best cinematography at Sunday night’s VMAs for their amazing display of dominoes in their song “Tuna Melt.” However, when it comes to charter school performance, my forecast a year ago was spot on.

The coming year should be a banner year for charter schools throughout the state. With the closure of the Imagine schools and the steady improvement of existing charter schools, I expect to see significant gains in overall charter performance in 2013.

For the first time in Missouri, the performance of charter schools surpassed the performance of the nearby school districts in math and language arts. As you can see from the graphs below, charter schools continue to show steady improvement in both subjects.

This steady improvement should not come as a shock for two reasons.

1. We have known for years that Missouri charter schools are producing significantly larger learning gains than the urban districts. Just a couple months ago, the Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) at Stanford University released a report indicating that students in Missouri charter schools learn approximately three weeks more material in reading and an extra month’s worth of material in math than their counterparts in the surrounding district schools.

2. Not only are Missouri charter schools producing larger learning gains, the bad charter schools are closing. That is the beauty of charter schools — when a school doesn’t perform, it closes.

This was a banner year for charter schools in Missouri. No predictions for next year, but I certainly hope the progress will continue.

Percent of Students Scoring Proficient or Advanced: English Language Arts

2009-2013 charter school performance ELA

Percent of Students Scoring Proficient or Advanced: Mathematics

2009-2013 charter school performance math

(These graphs were completed using student achievement data at the district level from the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE).)

Should Springfield Require Prescriptions For Cold Medicine?

The question of whether to require a prescription for cold medicine that can be used to make meth is a difficult one. Tonight, the Springfield City Council may vote on an ordinance requiring prescriptions for many cold and allergy medicines.

Generally speaking, my own opinion on drug policy is that we should be spending much more on treatment and education and much less on incarceration and interdiction. More on point, I have never understood the desire to address the illegal use of a legal product by imposing onerous requirements on the people who use it legally.

I don’t have serious allergies, nor do I get many colds, but I know people who do. (I am sure we all know people who do.) I can’t get behind rules that are going to impose new regulations on people who simply want to treat a cold, allergies, or some other readily treatable illness. I simply cannot understand the desire to make their lives harder. And yes, forcing an unnecessary visit to the doctor’s office — even if infrequently — to get a prescription for cold or allergy medicine makes a person’s life harder. We already have a tracking system in place for purchases of medicine that can be used to make meth. Sure, it can be abused through straw purchasers, but some people can (and will) get around and abuse any system.

If someone is abusing meth, we should help him or her get treatment. If they commit a crime to support their habit, then we should send them to jail, perhaps for a long time. But just moving the sales around with some places requiring prescriptions seems fruitless. Addressing that criticism with a statewide requirement to get a prescription seems like a royal pain for the many Missourians who simply want to treat their allergies or colds.

Address the crime; don’t punish the law-abiding.

The Citadel Project Is Why Missouri Needs TIF Reform

The Wall Street Journal recently published a story about the very controversial Citadel Project in Kansas City. If anything, the article understates the problems with the project. For example, it makes no mention of Tax Increment Financing (TIF) for the project, other than a reference to bond sales, which the reader will not automatically assume is a taxpayer subsidy. (It is.) Unfortunately, the article downplays the use of subsidies as a part of urban reinvestment across the country.

That aside, it does a nice job of chronicling the myriad of problems with the Citadel Project. TIF will always be a political process, and as such, political games, favors, and targets will always influence the process. It’s inevitable, and all the more reason not to have government involved in those choices in the first place.

TIF is one of the prime reasons Missouri is littered with failed projects like this. TIF allows projects that should not go forward to do so, or it causes the failure of certain shopping centers because it subsidizes their competition. Most of all, by subsidizing something (retail sales) that has absolutely no need to be subsidized, it distorts our overall economy. Missouri needs TIF reform just as badly as we need an income tax cut.

Is St. Louis the next Detroit? (Not in my view)

As first appearing in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on August 16, 2013:

When the St. Louis Cardinals played the Detroit Tigers in the 1968 World Series, the whole nation was watching (it captured an astounding 57 percent of television viewers) and both cities — as well as both teams — were looking good. Detroit was still the unchallenged auto capital of the world, and St. Louis was home to a dozen of the nation’s biggest and best-known companies.

Since then, the two baseball teams have fared better than their cities. When they met again in the 2006 World Series, the rest of the nation yawned — 83 percent of viewers tuned out. Who cared about a baseball rivalry in two dying cities in flyover country?

From 1950 to 2010, Detroit’s population dropped from about 1.8 million to 714,000 — a 61.4 percent decline. Over the same period, St. Louis City dropped from 857,000 residents to 319,000 – a 62.7 percent decline.

Think of Detroit as a larger St. Louis — more than twice the size in area as well as population. Drive through north St. Louis and you see block after block of abandoned and boarded-up buildings; drive through Detroit and it is mile after mile of the same. It is the Empty Quarter of cityscapes — which partly explains why it takes an hour for Detroit’s police to respond to a 911 call.

Detroit leads the nation’s cities in violent crime, followed by Oakland and St. Louis. According to FBI statistics, your chances of being the victim of a violent crime (murder, rape, robbery, and assault) are not a whole lot less in St. Louis City than they are in Detroit. The incidence of such crimes is only 13 percent lower in St. Louis than Detroit. I worked in Detroit from 1976 to 1982 as a reporter and anchor at WXYZ-TV. Coleman Young was the city’s first black mayor, notorious for playing the race card (though most white politicians were no better). I once asked him about his girlfriend’s exorbitant salary as the administration’s PR person. That night, the station ran his response — an expletive-filled rant accusing me of racism for even raising the question. Later, many city employees — both black and white — thanked me for spotlighting the mayor’s favoritism.

Lee Iacocca took over a struggling Chrysler in 1978 and refused to meet union demands to match GM and Ford wage rates at $18 an hour. He told the union: “At $13 an hour, you can have 20,000 workers . . . at $18, you’ve got zero.” He understood the Big Three were on thin ice.

After 13 years anchoring and reporting at KSDK in St. Louis, I returned to Detroit for a year in 1999 at WDIV TV. I was astonished at how much worse the city looked. Gone were the well-kept, middle-class neighborhoods. The drugs and violence were so bad that city cops often would ride four to a squad car.

Therein, I think, is a principal difference between Detroit and St. Louis. Things in St. Louis never reached the same pitch of hopelessness.

St. Louis experienced its biggest out-migration of people in the 1980s, when the population fell 27.2 percent. From 2000 to 2010, the city’s population was down just 8 percent.

By contrast, Detroit’s population over the last decade fell a stunning 24.9 percent.

So, no, I do not think that St. Louis City is following Detroit down the road to ruin — or to bankruptcy, either. In a recent column in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Dave Nicklaus pointed out that with slightly more than twice the population of St. Louis, Detroit has six times as much debt.

What’s more, St. Louis has not experienced a massive breakdown in vital services. Far from taking an hour to respond to a call , St. Louis police, on average, are at a crime scene in 10.32 minutes. And where Detroit police cleared only 11.3 percent of murders and 12.7 percent of reported rapes through arrests in 2011, St. Louis police cleared 66.4 percent and 71.8 percent of such crimes, respectively.

Though far from perfect, St. Louis City still works for most people. Many old neighborhoods are flourishing again. Let’s hope that we are on the cusp of a real turnaround in the city’s fortunes.

Rick Edlund is the communications director at the Show-Me Institute, which promotes market solutions for Missouri public policy.

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Blitz: Gov. Rick Perry To Visit Missouri And Run Ads Promoting Texas’ Business Climate

He’s already visited businesses in other floundering states — including Illinois, California, and New York — in an effort to get them to move to Texas. So it was inevitable that Gov. Rick Perry would eventually make a play for Missouri businesses, too. The only question was “when.” And as it turns out, the answer is … “now.”

Texas Gov. Rick Perry is at it again.

Next week, he’ll travel to Missouri to tout Texas’ low taxes, less regulation and high job creation rate.

Starting today, a 30-second television advertisement is running in the St. Louis, Springfield and Columbia-Jefferson City markets in Missouri. The ads feature small and immigrant business owners and women talking about what Texas offers, such as no state income tax. [Emphasis mine.]

And when it comes to job growth, he’ll have plenty to discuss.

While in Missouri, Perry plans to meet with employers, business leaders and the Missouri Chamber of Commerce to talk about things like Texas being a top job producer. Texas added 19,900 jobs in July, ranking No. 5 nationally, but it created 293,000 jobs in the last 12 months, more than any other state.

Now, you can love it or hate it, but to derisively call visits like this “poaching” is like calling the best looking guy in the room a girlfriend poacher: it’s an excuse for failure. Of course we lost, they’ll say. Texas is poaching. And there’s no mystery about what Perry’s objective is on his trip — it’s to get Missouri’s businesses.

But if we all know the score, the question is, will Missouri just let Texas take our businesses and jobs without a fight? Missouri entrepreneurs may have come here with the Show-Me State, but that doesn’t mean they’ll be leaving with it at the end of this economic dance. Is Missouri just going to sit there and take it as Texas continues to walk off with the state’s wealth?

A Tale Of Two Airports

The Kansas City Aviation Department has proposed building a new terminal. Boosters for the plan, perhaps in an attempt to appear flexible, note that this is the second proposal — the first was rejected because it sought to move the airport south. But really, the plan is the same: an expensive new terminal.

Columbia Airport Alterantives

Meanwhile, the Columbia, Mo., aviation department also wants to build something new. It is a much smaller market and as a result, the plans are much more modest. But the report that officials provided to the public actually includes several different alternatives and a comparison of each.

Mind you, Columbia Regional Airport’s leadership has some of its own bad ideas, including airline incentives, tax increase proposals, and flawed assumptions about growth. But  officials haven’t hid alternatives from the public.

Imagine how much time and energy would have been saved if Kansas City Aviation Department leadership did the same, allowing officials and the public to consider various alternatives. Instead, they’ve tried selling the public on a huge and unpopular plan that seems to purposefully conflate figures.

The Master’s Degree Bump Boondoggle

I have heard a lot of bellyaching lately in Missouri about how we need more money for education. However, little has been said about the other side of the coin — spending. As we have seen with recent audits of the Rockwood School District and the Early Childhood Development, Education, and Care Fund, not all of our dollars are being spent wisely. Yet, $22,500 for an in-home child care facility that has no children is just a drop in a bucket compared to another boondoggle that is staring us in the face in the form of automatic pay raises for teachers who receive a master’s degree.

A 2009 study by the Center on Reinventing Public Education estimated that Missouri is spending an extra $146,603,923 to fund the bump received when a teacher earns a master’s degree. The problem is that there is no evidence that earning a master’s degree actually makes a teacher better in the classroom. I can say this as someone who has studied the issue thoroughly and as someone who earned a master’s degree while teaching. Moreover, many teachers are receiving bumps for degrees, like administration, that will simply take them out of the classroom.

The master’s degree bump draws money away from other worthy endeavors that might improve educational outcomes for students. The editorial board of the Des Moines Register gets this. They recently wrote, “If Iowa truly wants to spend education money wisely, such automatic pay increases for teachers should be rethought.”

North Carolina recently moved to eliminate the master’s bump. Maybe Missouri school districts should follow that lead.

Fall Internships At The Show-Me Institute

If you are a college  or graduate student, or a recent graduate looking for a fun fall opportunity, consider applying for a Show-Me Institute internship. Interns research, write, blog, and help with videos for all the topics that the Institute covers. Previous interns have had op-eds and letters to the editor published by major Missouri newspapers. We have part-time and full-time openings for the fall.

Check it out — the deadline is this Friday. (If you are just hearing about this and contact us by 5 p.m. Friday to let us know the application will be in by the end of the weekend, that will be acceptable.)

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The work of the Show-Me Institute would not be possible without the generous support of people who are inspired by the vision of liberty and free enterprise. We hope you will join our efforts and become a Show-Me Institute sponsor.

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