Welcome to our Monday morning show. Today’s show is hosted by Dr. Merrill Matthews resident scholar with the Institute for Policy Innovation, a research-based, public policy “think tank.” In the first hour, he is joined in-studio by Angela Paxton, and since November is Adoption Awareness month, Angela tells us about her own adoption story, she also shares about her passion about adoption. We hope that you will join in the conversation when you call us in-studio at 800-351-1212.
In the second hour we hear from Tom Giovanetti, president of the Institute for Policy Innovation. He discusses his article titled Passage of Tax Bill Major Step Towards “Right Kind” of Tax Reform.
Angela attended Baylor University, where she earned a degree in Mathematical Science and became the first person in her family to graduate from college. She continued her graduate studies and earned and Masters in Education from the University of Houston – Clear Lake.
An educator by profession and passion, Angela Paxton has 22-years of experience in public and private schools as well as homeschooling. As a teacher, she’s previously taught pre-calculus, trigonometry, geometry, and college algebra. After five years of teaching math and mentoring high school students at Legacy Christian Academy, for the past six years she had the privilege of working with the LCA families as a school guidance counselor.
Angela and her husband, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, met at Baylor University. They have been married for 31 years and have four grown children: Tucker, a software engineer; Abby, a 2nd Lt. in the U.S. Air Force at Goodfellow Air Force Base; Mattie, a junior education major at Texas A&M; and Katie, a freshman nursing major at Texas A&M.
A pro-life conservative, Angela has been an outspoken defender of the unborn, and her personal story of adoption was published in McKinney Women Making a Difference. The Paxton’s attend Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano.
Mr. Giovanetti writes for IPI and for other publications on a wide variety of policy topics including tax reform, intellectual property, Social Security personal accounts, communications policy, Internet governance, education reform, the broadband revolution, and out-of-control government spending. In addition to being published in leading papers including the Wall Street Journal, Washington Times, Investor's Business Daily and The Dallas Morning News, he also appears regularly on a number of radio and television programs.
Mr. Giovanetti represents IPI many national and international organizations, including the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), where IPI is an accredited NGO. IPI was also accredited as an observer organization with the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), where he argued against UN involvement with Internet governance, and with the UN's Internet Governance Forum (IGF). Mr. Giovanetti also participated during meetings of the World Health Organization's (WHO) Intergovernmental Working Group on Public Health, Innovation and Intellectual Property, and represents IPI as a stakeholder during trade agreement negotiations such as the current Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
There’s also the dysfunctional, ideologically driven State Legislature, which spent the last weeks of this year’s session debating, of all things, who gets to use which bathroom. Then there’s the oil and gas sector, which, as it has so many times before, expanded into a bubble and then, as global energy prices sank, popped, taking thousands of jobs with it.
Texas’ woes are interconnected. Rising energy prices allow politicians to take their hands off the legislative wheel. Less attention to smart, controlled growth at the state and local level allowed unchecked sprawl along the coast. And now declining revenues will make it harder for the state to address its very real needs, assuming the Legislature can get its act together.
“Overall, broad indicators of the Texas economy continue to point toward moderate growth in the months ahead,” says Keith R. Phillips, Dallas Fed assistant vice president and senior economist. “With the stabilization of the energy sector and some recent improvement in the manufacturing sector, the Texas economy is on solid ground and will likely improve moderately in 2017.”
A report Wednesday in Health Affairs, a health policy journal, examined four years of medical outcomes in Texas, Arkansas and Kentucky and found that health measurements in the latter two states, both of which expanded Medicaid, dramatically improved in nearly all categories.
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The improvements included steep drops in the uninsured rate among the poor, less reliance on emergency rooms for routine care and fewer people skipping their medication because of cost.
The Texas Legislature closed out the special session Tuesday night amid a stalemate on property tax reform, leaving unfinished Gov. Greg Abbott's top priority.
Hours earlier, the House abruptly adjourned sine die – the formal designation meaning the end of a session – after advancing a school finance compromise to Abbott's desk but declining to further negotiate on a key property tax proposal. When the Senate returned later in the night, it rejected the only remaining option to get the bill across the finish line, which was to accept the House's version.
Top Texas lawmakers have called for reviews of sexual harassment policies at the state Capitol following reports detailing how current procedures offered little protection for victims. Proposed solutions have included better training aimed at preventing harassment and informing victims of their rights.
But legislative leaders will likely face a roadblock if they want to force lawmakers into any sort of anti-harassment training: They can’t require it of individual legislators, some of whom were behind the worst behavior recounted to the Tribune.