February 20: “Pension Solvency and Public Education: The Case for Reforming Georgia Teacher Pensions,” a Leadership Breakfast on Tuesday, February 20. Speakers are Len Gilroy, Senior Managing Director of the Pension Integrity Project and Director of Government Reform at Reason Foundation, and Georgia State Rep. Chuck Martin (R-Alpharetta), Chairman of the House Budget and Fiscal Oversight Committee. 8 a.m. at the Georgian Club. $30. Registration and information here.
February 26: The Foundation co-sponsors Georgia Justice Day 2018 at the State Capitol, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., highlighting criminal justice reforms, juvenile justice reforms and removing barriers to re-entry. Find out more here.
Transportation
Congestion index: Metro Atlanta’s traffic congestion is ranked No. 8 on the latest Inrix Global Traffic Scorecard. Georgia is building out its metro area managed lanes into a network of dynamically priced express toll lanes that will serve as a transit network for express bus service, too. Expect mobility to improve as driving patterns change: Much like Georgians have learned to price airfares by time of day and hotel stays by season, commuters will learn to consider the value of their trip time and route.
Transit’s decline: Transit ridership is falling, according to December 2017 (latest) data from the Federal Transit Administration. Nationally, commuter rail ridership declined 3.5 percent over December 2016; heavy rail was down 3.9 percent; light rail was down 4.7 percent; and bus ridership was down 6 percent. A bill in the Legislature proposes giving regional transit operations to MARTA, so its numbers are especially relevant. MARTA’s December rail ridership was down more than 4 percent over the same period in 2016 and its bus ridership is nearly 7 percent. Compared to December 2010 (middle of the Great Recession), MARTA bus ridership is down nearly 10 percent and rail ridership is down almost 11 percent.
Taxes and spending
Pension uncertainty: On January 28, 2018, the Dow Jones stock index closed at a record high of 28,610. Nine days later, the Dow index hit an intraday low of 24,198, a drop of over 15 percent. Since then the Dow index has recovered somewhat. As states deal with their pension liability, such fluctuations are “a sobering reminder that permanently high returns on investment are not guaranteed,” Edward Ring of the California Policy Center notes.
Tax returns: Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal announced this week he will push for tax relief for Georgians, seeking to adjust state taxes to account for the impact of the federal tax reform bill Congress passed in December.
Health care
Room for reform: The 2017 tax overhaul doubled the child tax credit, without necessarily increasing the percentage of children with health coverage, John Goodman notes in Forbes. CHIP (PeachCare in Georgia) remains the must-go-to single-payer health insurance for children: “Parents aren’t able to use their CHIP funds to enroll in a private plan. There is no expansion of Health Savings Accounts. No opportunity for low-cost, very efficient concierge (direct pay) care. As far as health care taxes and children are concerned, it was business as usual.”
Dying younger: A combination of drug and alcohol abuse and suicides has led to a decline in U.S. life expectancy for the second year in a row, according to a new report in the BMJ, formerly known as the British Medical Journal. Source: USA Today |
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