RALEIGH â Shortly after taking office, President Joe Biden began revving up the federal governmentâs regulatory engine. Heâs already run over the Keystone Pipeline. We can expect a pileup of other rules that will increase the cost of energy, food and many other goods and services across our economy.
Fortunately, thereâs something North Carolina lawmakers can do to lessen the damage. They can ramp up their own efforts to reform state regulation and promote economic freedom more generally.
No, Iâm not saying state governments can nullify federal laws. But the same households and businesses that the Biden administration is about to sock with costly federal rules are also subject to state taxes and regulation. As a new empirical study shows, states that embrace economic freedom tend to suffer less when Washingtonâs regulators go too far.
Unemployment claims in Florida jump 47% orlandosentinel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from orlandosentinel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Congratulations! Your college just signed another articulation agreement. You dedicated the work, time and resources to smooth the transfer pathway. Then why are students still struggling to transfer and losing so many credits in the process?
Higher education institutions rely on articulation agreements formal agreements that define course equivalencies between colleges as their primary means to improve transfer. While articulation agreements are beneficial as a procedural and legal framework on course credits, many institutions stop their work there. This leaves community college students to navigate the transfer pathway on their own. Even with articulation agreements in place, students commonly find they’ve taken too many courses that don’t transfer and are missing courses that they need. These excess credits cost time, waste money and increase the risk of attrition. To meaningfully improve transfer student success, higher education institutions need to invest in strat
Claims for jobless benefits jump in Florida - South Florida Sun-Sentinel sun-sentinel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sun-sentinel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Although the state says a tunnel under the New River would cost $1 billion a mile, the creator of the SpaceX rocket says it could be done for $10 million to $20 million per mile.