Wednesday, December 15, 2010

GOP: time to deliver the knock-out blows ... by gimleteye

Couldn't help but notice how, even before the Scott administration has taken office, the long knives are out on the GOP side. Ryan Houck, coordinator of the Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries and Big Sugar campaign to defeat Amendment 4, appears in the Orlando Sentinel letters page noting the "crushing defeat" of supporters of growth management and bleats, quoting Friedrich Von Hayek, "the more the state 'plans', the more difficult planning becomes for the individual'. Houck takes aim-- as the GOP legislature is ready to do-- at the Florida Department of Community Affairs; the agency that, among other tasks, holds local government zoning decisions to consistency with planning initiatives like Miami-Dade's Urban Development Boundary (under attack, again, by Homestead land speculators).

Houck is only a bit player, delivering the message. It is being incorporated, too, in the plan to quickly and radically expand the school voucher program throughout the state of Florida. And not just Florida. The fire exploding on the education front is overwhelming. In the past 48 hours, legislation similar to that proposed for Florida has also been introduced in Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Wisconsin. The demise of public education and of teacher unions is the goal of this massive GOP push. When parity and equity in education are diced and divided into a thousand pieces, with children funneled into for-profit schools answerable to shareholders or remaining public schools that shelter the rest, it will be so much easier for corporations to roll up the remainders and to make sure that creating a passive consumer is the highest order of democracy. 1984 wasn't far off the mark. In the United States, the road to serfdom is going to have a lot of exit ramps, for the wealthiest. Click, 'read more'.

My Word: Cut, don't create, red tape
By Ryan Houck
12:00 AM EST, December 14, 2010
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Only weeks after Florida voters tossed Amendment 4 into the dustbin of bad ideas, Jane Healy has managed to misread the most obvious of signals. In her column "Will Scott and Cannon play games with growth?" (Orlando Sentinel, Nov. 28), she calls for new growth controls in the midst of a devastating recession while neighboring states aggressively compete for Florida jobs. Only Healy could imagine that the 67-percent-to-33-percent defeat of Amendment 4 means that Floridians have an appetite for new regulation.
From an armchair seemingly stuck in the outdated attitudes of the 1980s, Healy calls on Gov.-elect Rick Scott to form yet another growth commission and urges the Legislature to extend the life of Florida's renegade Department of Community Affairs — a bloated and predatory agency that aspires to centrally plan major sectors of our economy.
The overwhelming defeat of Amendment 4 suggests that a majority of Florida voters do not share Healy's opinion that more regulation is the answer. Voters made that clear on Election Day by soundly dispatching Amendment 4 at the polls and handing antigrowth activists the most crushing defeat in recent memory.
In "The Road to Serfdom," free-market philosopher Friedrich von Hayek wrote that "the more the state 'plans,' the more difficult planning becomes for the individual." Hayek's point is that government efforts to manipulate the free market through central planning — telling individuals what to produce and where to produce it — create uncertainty and higher costs. These economic hazards invite more central planning, creating an ever-growing, never-sufficient morass of regulation that worsens the problems it is intended to fix.
A legacy of that misguided approach, the DCA has long since strayed beyond its original planning purview and now meddles in issues outside its jurisdiction. Less of a growth guide and more of a growth nanny, DCA presides over a hopelessly byzantine planning process decipherable only to the agency's technocrats and incomprehensible to most of the small businesses and local governments forced to navigate it.
Healy's views and the DCA in its present form are relics of a "Tallahassee-knows-best" mindset — a Soviet-style regulation scheme that has no place in the highly competitive global economy of today. As local leaders work to diversify our economy, attract innovative industry and add high-paying jobs, it is past time to drop the 1980s mindset with its emphasis on planning Florida's economy.
It's time to cut red tape, not create more. Policymakers should abandon the DCA — at least in its current form — and let locals lead. Taxpayers will pocket the savings, and job-hunters will reap the rewards.
Ryan Houck of Orlando is the executive director of Citizens for Lower Taxes and a Stronger Economy.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You said: "The demise of public education and of teacher unions is the goal of this massive GOP push."

Agree that the GOP wants to see teacher unions to be weakened but disagree that it wants demise of public education.

The FTA is killing iteself by supporting the traditional public education's near monopoly. They should be supporting competition so that their members have more options.

The GOP wants public education to suceed; its definition of success is very different from the Dems.

Success is incremental improvement by STUDENTS, not in teacher salaries and benefits.

CATO said...

I attende both Public and Private back in the day, and my children have also experienced private and charter.

Public schools are a joke, Charter schools are put together mostly (not always) by corporate leaches sucking on the School Board (taxpayer teat) in my book private schools where parents write the check are the most responsive and the education is better despite having lower paid teachers. In most cases cost per student is much lower (sometimes less than half0 of public school education.

folks on both sides often forget its not about what the teacher makes (though it can be a factor) but what the child gets out of it.