ThinkSouth -- a weblog of the Center for a Better South

3.25.2010

3/25: AL's Gov. Riley says health care plan costs too much for state

Montgomery Advertiser: Alabama governor says health care plan costs too much for state

Gov. Bob Riley said the federal health care plan passed by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama could cost the state an additional $60 million to $100 million a year -- money taken from an already cash-strapped General Fund.

Riley said there are currently 900,000 to a million people on Medicaid in Alabama. He said the federal plan passed over the weekend expanded the qualifications and would add another 400,000 people to the rolls. Riley said the state has a difficult enough time paying for Medicaid now.

Also in the South:

ARKANSAS: Little change to reading scores of 4th and 8th graders since 2007

FLORIDA: State AG says Medicare costs will soar with new health care reform

GEORGIA: State Senate votes to allow guns on university campuses, churches, bars

KENTUCKY: New law mandates sowing flowers on mountaintop mine areas

LOUISIANA: State could lose a seat in Congress with new census data

MISSISSIPPI: House fails to extend legislative session

NORTH CAROLINA: Busing to end in Wake County -- school diversity at risk?

SOUTH CAROLINA: Bill would ban sex offenders from state parks

TENNESSEE: Rep. Bell introduces "Tennessee Health Freedom Act"

VIRGINIA: Gov. McDonnell says health care bill is "truly bi-partisan"


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11.18.2009

11/18: Analysis of tax systems in U.S. released

ITEP: Distributional analysis of tax systems in the 50 states

A state-by-state look at how fair each state's tax systems are, considering both state and local taxes paid by different income groups in 2007. The study shows which states have done the best and worst job of providing fairness in their tax systems overall.

One overall conclusion: Nearly every state and local tax system takes more proportionally from middle and low income families than from the wealthy -- "most tax systems are regressive."

Of the eleven Southern states we cover, Tennessee, Florida, and Alabama are among the ten most regressive tax states among the 50.

Also in the South:

ALABAMA: Black Belt's future projected to be in biofuels, some say

ARKANSAS: 2010 governor's race to be impacted by economy

FLORIDA: Top senators say state should drop out of federal Medicaid system

GEORGIA: On population count, South Georgia could lose legislative seats

KENTUCKY: State considers how to repay federal jobless funds loans

LOUISIANA: Poll finds race relations mostly unchanged in last year

MISSISSIPPI: 79 of state's 82 counties declared a disaster by heavy rain, drought

NORTH CAROLINA: Human trafficking seen as a problem in NC due to highways, agriculture

SOUTH CAROLINA: State's onshore winds may not be enough for power generation

TENNESSEE: State parks may cut jobs, close amenities to save money

VIRGINIA: New economic engine for N. VA could come from Ignite Institute


If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org

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