CEI Weekly: Taxpayers Bear Regulatory Cost Burden
EI Weekly is a compilation of articles and blog posts from CEI’s fellows and associates sent out via e-mail every Friday. Also included in the weekly newsletter is a brief description of CEI’s weekly podcast and a feature on a major CEI breakthrough made during the week. To sign up for CEI Weekly, go to http://cei.org/newsletters.
CEI Weekly
August 19, 2011
>>Featured Story
According to Americans for Tax Reform, August 12 is the day Americans have to work until to pay for taxation and regulation at state and local levels. In The Washington Times this week, CEI Vice President for Policy Wayne Crews explained ways we can cut back on this enormous cost burden. Read his op-ed here.
>>Shaping the Debate
Debt Downgrade: Why Did it Take S&P So Long?
Fred L. Smith’s column in Forbes
Europe’s Short Sightedness
John Berlau’s op-ed in The American Spectator
BPA Law Should Be Canned
Henry I. Miller’s op-ed in The Orange County Register
Bashing EPA is New Theme in G.O.P. Race
Myron Ebell’s citation in The New York Times
Don’t Believe the EPA: PNM Ruling a Rip-off
William Yeatman’s op-ed in The Albuquerque Journal
Finally Free From Government Servitude
Wayne Crews’ op-ed in The Washington Times
The Government War on Free Enterprise
Iain Murray’s op-ed in Big Government
Medical Magellans
Fred L. Smith’s op-ed for the Center of American Experiment
Request for Social Media Curbs in Britain Spark Debate
Ryan Radia’s citation in The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Big Brother Goes Green
Ryan Radia and Marc Scribner’s citation in Human Events
>>Best of the Blogs
Issa: 54.5 MPG Fuel Standard Economy Law Negotiated Outside Scope of Law
By Marlo Lewis
CEI Joins Coalition to Oppose New Air Taxes
By Marc Scribner
EPA-Backed Study: Products Containing BPA Harmless
By Aaron Buchhop
Europe’s Woes No Excuse for Abysmal Job Growth
By John Berlau
>> CEI Podcast
August 18, 2011: How the EPA Makes Electricity Less Affordable
Energy Policy Analyst William Yeatman tells the story of how the EPA is forcing a power plant in New Mexico to install $370 million worth of equipment to improve visibility in a nearby park. Peer-reviewed research says the visibility improvement has a 35 percent chance of being perceptible to the human eye. New Mexican electricity consumers, meanwhile, will be able to perceive their bills going up by an average of $82 per year.