Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 19:56:16 -0600 From: reason@free-market.net ("Jeff Taylor") Subject: Reason-Express: REx13, v3 To: ReasonExpress@free-market.net (Reason Express List Member)
Welcome to Reason Express, the weekly e-newsletter from Reason magazine. Reason Express is written by Washington-based journalist Jeff A. Taylor and draws on the ideas and resources of the Reason editorial staff. For more information on Reason, visit our Web site at www.reason.com. Send your comments about Reason Express to Jeff A. Taylor (jtaylor@reason.com), Virginia Postrel (vpostrel@reason.com), and Reason editor-in-chief Nick Gillespie (gillespie@reason.com).
REASON Express March 27, 2000 Vol. 3 No. 13
1) High Court Nixes Race-Based Pupil Assignments 2) Net Tax Panel Punts to Congress 3) Justice Pokes Its Nose Into Emailgate 4) Quick Hits
- - Lesson Learned - -
The Supreme Court sent a jolt through public school administrators across the country last week when it refused to hear an appeal in acase that found race-conscious school assignments unconstitutional.
The parents of a Montgomery County, Maryland, student sued the school district after their white child was denied a transfer to a math-and-science magnet school because the school he was attending needed all the white students it could get. Plus, the school he was trying to transfer to was already plenty white, according to school officials.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit found that such racial bean counting violated the boy's ight to equal protection under the laws. The school district, backed by the National School Boards Association among other groups, appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court.
Now that the district's appeals have been exhausted, Montgomery County schools, as well as those with similar policies, have to go back to square one to design pupil assignment plans which do not rely on race. And there can be little doubt that whatever route Montgomery County takes, many other districts will try to follow.
The suburban D.C. district is one of the naton's gold-plated public school systems, spending over $1.2 billion a year on 135,000 students, half of whom are white. The district is also 21 percent black, 15 percent Hispanic, and 13 percent Asian.
The great fear of the Montgomery school administrators, like many around the country, is that pockets of low-scoring minority students will drag down test scores at selected schools, causing white families to pull out of those schools by putting their kids in private schol or moving altogether.
Hence the concern that a school might be left "too black" if a white student was allowed to transfer out.
Notice that what might be best for individual students doesn't enter into this kind of thinking. Now might be a good time to start thinking about that.
http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-03/21/122l-032100-idx.html http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-03/21/052l-032100-idx.html
Michael Lynch tells of the flip side of administrators picking and choosing schools for kids--letting their parents decide at http://www.reason.com/opeds/ml032000.html
- - No New Taxes - -
To no one's real surprise, the Internet tax commission ended its work with little more than a recommendation that the current moratorium on Net-specific taxes be extended. Congress will still have to navigate the complex issues surrounding basic fundamentals of taxation to settle the matter--which means the matter will likely never be settled.
The most interesting of the commission recommendations is the call for a radical simplification of state sales levies. This could be an opening through which an overall modernization of government revenue departments might be driven.
The Clinton administration, speaking for technocrats everywhere, also backs simplification. Deputy Treasury Secretary Stuart Eizenstat called for states and localities to develop these simplified sales taxes within the two next years. So there is some momentum behnd the idea.
But it would have to move far beyond simply making governments more efficient at picking the pockets of private enterprise. Compliance costs should be--and could be if done right--near zero for any entity which is made to remit transaction taxes of one kind or another.
http://www.zdii.com/industry_list.asp?mode=news&doc_id=RTC20a1338reuff http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-03/21/026l-032100-idx.html
- - Smoking Email - -
Well, just as a civil suit was digging up interesting information about the Clinton White House's email problems, along comes the Justice Department to announce it will conduct a criminal inquiry into the email follies.
Another big embarrassment for the Clintons and Al Gore, who seems to have lost an unusual share of email due to the glitch, right? Perhaps not so big a problem as it would be if the Justice Department didn't get involved.
Seven years of Justice Department political prosecutions and persecutions forces the question of whether the investigation is being launched to help stifle the civil suit that is now under way. Justice could tie up potential witnesses from testifying under the "ongoing investigation" rubric until the November elections are passed, Al Gore is either a private citizen or in the White House, and Hillary and Bill are back flinging lamps in Little Rock or in the Senate cloakroom.
Or perhaps someone at Justice really does find it odd that not only did White House email go poof in 1996, Al Gore's went missing all the way back to 1994.
http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-03/24/203l-032400-idx.html
QUICK HITS
- - Quote of the Week - -
"That's why it's good to have direct deposit, for instances like this and for the convenience. Come pay day, I used to have to chase down my check," U.S. Postal Service clerk Randy Rueb, 40, on the 150 paychecks that were "missent" to Postal Service employees n Florida from a postal "data center" in Minneapolis. Workers without checks will receive loans from future wages until the checks are found.
http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/news/Today/Local/ST004.htm
- - Hacked Out - -
Netpliance announced that it is modifying how its $99 i-opener email box is made to prevent the hack that turned it into a full-service computer.
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,35156,00.html
- - Australian for Dumb - -
The Australian Broadcasting Authority is up and mailing out orders to Aussie Web site operators to take down objectionable content. Some 27 Australian-based sites have received takedown notices from the ABA directing them to remove X- or R-rated content. Some sites have responded by moving ops to the U.S.
http://www5.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2469620,00.html?chkpt=zdnntop
- - Home of the Brave - -
President Clinton, who has presided over the transformation of the White House grounds from a park-like setting to bunker-like one, nonetheless scraped up the courage to fly to Pakistan. Braving real threats this time, Clinton called on the country to stop its pointless border war with India.
http://search.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-03/26/267l-032600-idx.html
- - Photo Finish - -
A man in Canada is up on child porn charges because of nude photos of his four-year-old son. An employee at Costco called authorities after the roll of film was dropped off for processing. The pictures were of the general kiddie-frolic variety, both clothed and nekkid.
http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/mcrae.html
REASON NEWS
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