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  • Extend Credits but Price Carbon Too

    Currently our nation’s nascent alternative energy industry is being buoyed by a system of tax credits and energy grants that are set to expire at the end of the year. Absent a price on carbon, these incentives are needed to keep the new market’s pulse from stopping. It may be that extending these credits will be all the support for alternative energy that will come from a federal government heading for gridlock, but we should not fool ourselves into thinking we have done enough, or done the right thing.

  • Institute for Policy Integrity’s Livermore discusses emerging state strategy

    With no hope for a national comprehensive climate package in the near term, the focus is shifting to the states and their existing emissions policies. Can the states create the United States’ climate policy? During today’s OnPoint, Michael Livermore, executive director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law, discusses the emerging policy strategy in the states and explains how U.S. EPA’s pending regulation of emissions will affect existing state greenhouse gas programs.

  • Our View: Pension logs a good example of bad regs

    The Institute for Policy Integrity last week issued a report on regulatory systems of individual states, and New York received a grade of D-plus. The underlying problem for the state’s poor grade was not the regulatory system’s size or the costs it adds to employers, taxpayers and others. Those are true problems, for sure, but this report focused much of its analysis on the effectiveness of the regulations.

  • Empire state’s big-biz rules D-ficient: study

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that affect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by a think tank. “It’s not a problem of too much regulation,” said Richard Revesz, faculty director of the Institute for Policy Integrity, which conducted the study. “It’s a question of crafting the right kind of regulation.”

  • Study: NY’s regulatory system gets a D-minus grade

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that effect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by an independent think tank.

  • Study: N.Y.‘s regulatory system gets a D-plus grade

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that affect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by an independent think tank.

  • Study: NY’s regulatory system gets a D-minus grade

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that effect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by an independent think tank.

  • Study: NY’s regulatory system gets a D-minus grade

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that effect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by an independent think tank. But unlike the long-running argument between businesses that say the state is over-regulated and environmentalists and other advocates who seek more protections from monied interests, the independent report questions the whole decision-making process in New York’s penchant for regulation. “This is not a problem of too much regulation,” said Richard Revesz, dean of the New York University Law School. “It’s a question of crafting the right kind of regulation.”

  • Study: NY’s Regulatory System Gets D+

    A new independent study gives New York a D+ grade for its regulation of industries that effect air and water quality, job growth and other major areas. The independent report questions the whole decision-making process in New York’s penchant for regulation of businesses.

  • New York regulatory system gets D+ grade

    New York gets a D-plus grade for its regulation of industries that effect air and water quality, job growth and other essentials, according to a report by an independent think tank. But unlike the long-running argument between businesses that say the state is over-regulated and environmentalists and other advocates who seek more protections from monied interests, the independent report questions the whole decision-making process in New York’s penchant for regulation.