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- Education
- A. Education as a public function
- 1. Plato, Aristotle, and
Jefferson saw an educated citizenry as essential to good government
- 2. Free compulsory public
education is now an established fact, but many had opposed it in the
past as leading to social unrest and giving government control over the
young
- 3. State and local governments
have primary responsibility for education; federal dollars have been
declining
- a. One-third of all state and local expenditures are fore education
- b. The state percentage varies greatly; state role is increasing
recently as a way of equalizing access
across local school districts
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- 1. The local school district is
the basic unit; 14,000 of them
- 2. The state has a superintendent
or commissioner of education with supervisory and financial powers
- 3. Local authorities enforce
policies
- 4. State money is distributed
through formula; trend is to equalize educational expenditures
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- 1. Federal involvement began with
Sputnik in 1957, rose to 9 percent of funding in 1980, and has declined
in the 1990s to 6 percent
- 2. The federal government makes
grants to the states at the elementary, secondary, and higher-education
levels, but the funding comes with many regulations
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- 1. Most support the trend to
separate schools from politics, especially partisanship, but there are
many
- controversial issues
- 2. Public school integration was
a major concern in 1970s and 1980s; now school busing battles are
- over but inner city schools are racially segregated
- 3. Goals 2000: Educate America Act
- a. States are encouraged to set standards, helped by federal aid
- b. Some are opposed to federal goals and standards, but most states
have participated as the act
provided for state and local control
- c. Education has now become part of presidential election politics
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- a. Vouchers inject competition into the system by permitting parents the
freedom to choose where to send their child to school; they would
presumably spend their vouchers on the best school, so schools competing
for vouchers would have a powerful incentive to improve their product
- b. The political movement pushing vouchers has lost some of its impact
because of ballot-initiative defeats, the opposition of the NEA, and the
AFT, the failure of the idea to do well in state legislatures, and court
rulings that have said poor families do not have the right to demand
vouchers from government to allow their children to attend better
schools
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- a. Some states grant charters to individuals or groups to start schools
and receive public funds if they can meet prescribed standards specified
by law; charter schools deal directly with the local school boards
- b. Charter schools are intended to interject the competition of the
marketplace into elementary and secondary education; opponents contend
that the schools are little more than vouchers in charter-school
uniforms
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- a. National tests and national norms would be administered to students
periodically to assess how individual students, classrooms of students,
schools, school districts, and states are doing compared with one
another; would include a year-to-year measurement of individual students
as they progress through the public schools
- b. Opponents argue that such a measurement will not induce positive
change in education
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- A. Administration
- 1. Since the end of World War II,
there has been a major expansion of community colleges; the trend is
- to create separate college districts to operate and raise funds for
local community colleges
- 2. States support many kinds of
universities and colleges; state colleges and universities are governed
by
- boards appointed by the governor in some states and elected by the
voters in others
- 3. With over 78 percent of
college students attending publicly supported institutions, control and
- support of higher education have become significant political questions
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- 1. Almost all of our institutions
of higher education receive some kind of government subsidy, so that
students seldom pay the full cost of their education
- 2. The national government and
most states provide some kinds of need-based student financial
assistance in the form of loans and grants, with students in the
greatest financial need at the higher-cost institutions eligible for the
most aid
- 3. There is an inverse
relationship between rising state spending on corrections and decreasing
state spending on higher education
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- A. Welfare
- 1. The 1996 welfare reform law shifts the administrative burden entirely
to the states; AFDC is now
- Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), which states direct
through block grants that generally require state matching funds
- 2. The welfare overhaul legislation of 1996 was an act of catching up
with state welfare programs
- 3. States are now the prime laboratories for social policy
- a. Responsibility contracts
- b. Workfare programs
- c. Opportunity zones
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- 1. Prevention and disease control are still major public health
activities
- 2. Public health issues of today are smoking, pollution, and AIDS
- 3. Every state has an agency,
usually called a Department of Health, that administers the state
program and supervises local health officials
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- 3. The U.S. health care crisis
has become acute; it involves access and the dramatic rise in costs
- 4. HMOs are a focal point in the
debate; they try to keep costs down but many charge they provide
inadequate care
- 5. States have won massive
compensation from tobacco companies for costs of treating
tobacco-related illnesses; 1998 suit with $206 billion settlement
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- A. Major state and local powers stem from police powers of protecting
safety of citizens
- B. The state police became a part of our law-enforcement system for many
reasons
- 1. The breakdown of rural law enforcement
- 2. The coming of the automobile
- 3. The need for a trained force to maintain order during emergencies
- 4. With mobility,
professionalism, and rigorous training, state police are less likely to
develop the problems of local police
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- 1. There are liquor law
enforcement officials, fish and game wardens, fire wardens, detective
bureaus, and special motor vehicle police
- 2. At the local level, almost
every municipality maintains its own police force; the county has a
sheriff and deputies, and some townships have their own police officers
- 3. With the increase in crime,
violence, and gangs, the importance of local law enforcement officers
has grown; currently, local governments spend more than $35 billion on
police protection
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- 1. The national government has gradually moved into law enforcement
- 2. Federal law enforcement agencies include the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF),
and the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)
- 3. With increased national and state expenditures, crime rates have been
declining
- E. Racial Profiling
- 1. Some police have used profiling techniques based on race
- 2. Courts have not agreed in the practice of racial profiling
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- A. Zoning laws
- 1. The most common method of
assuring orderly growth is zoning - creating specific areas and limiting
- the uses to which property may be put in each area
- 2. Zoning ordinances are no
better than their enforcement; incentives to make exceptions are
powerful
- 3. Planning is now also concerned
with quality of life, with many policy areas involved
- B. Controlling growth
- 1. Critics are skeptical about
whether state and local officials can stop “Los Angelization” of the
United States
- 2. Planning and sensible growth
depend on public support, market forces, and political collaboration
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- A. National environment standards
- 1. The Federal Environmental Protection Act, passed in 1970, created the
Environmental Protection Agency;
other acts dealing with specific environmental problems followed
- 2. The basic model of environmental regulation has been for the federal
government to set national standards in water quality and air quality;
state and local governments are then charged with implementing these
standards and monitoring compliance
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- 3. States have long argued that these unfunded mandates impose a heavy
financial burden on them; water and sewage services are the largest
local government expenditure
- B. Waste management is an area
with increased state involvement
- C. Some states have taken the lead in environmental
regulation (e.g., California)
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- A. Highway construction
- 1. The national government has
supported state highway construction since 1916, and federal aid has
increased over the years;
- 2. States do the planning,
estimate the costs, arrange the construction work, and submit their
plans and have their work inspected by the U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT)
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- 3. Under the Federal Highway Act
of 1956, states planned and built the National System of Interstate and
Defense Highways
- B. Major surface transportation act passed in 1998
- 1. $216 billion for highway
construction, repairs, safety programs, mass transit
- 2. Act was financed by federal
gas tax of 18.3 cents per gallon
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- A. State and local governments have recently emphasized economic
development to provide jobs for citizens
- B. States compete with one another because economic development is the
key to increasing the tax base that funds government services
- C. “Competitive federalism” between states has intensified in the 1990s,
to the point that localities are worried about keeping the jobs they
have, not just persuading new companies to move to their area
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- A. Public utilities
- 1. Public utilities include water plants, electric power companies,
telephone companies, railroads, and buses
- 2. Distinguished from other businesses because government gives them
special privileges, such as the
power of eminent domain, the right to use public streets, and
protection from competition; in return, utilities are required to give the
public adequate service at reasonable rates
- 3. Every state has a utilities commission to ensure that utilities
operate in the interest of the public; the commissions must strike a balance
between fair rates for consumers and adequate profits for the utility
companies
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- 4. Technology and innovation are
driving the deregulation of utilities across the nation, especially
telephone and electricity
- 5. Politics of regulation is
growing interest to many consumer groups
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- 1. Health and safety legislation
- 2. Workers’ compensation
- 3. Child labor
- 4. Consumer protection—for safety and fraud prevention
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- A. State role has been strengthened as the national government has
turned to the states
- B. Strong economy and innovative governors have also encouraged dynamic
state policy actions
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