Baltimore Orioles Owners Demand Even More Unnecessary Taxpayer Money
Apparently $600 million to improve a very nice stadium isn’t enough.
Apparently $600 million to improve a very nice stadium isn’t enough.
The 2013 bankruptcy filing didn't make the city more prosperous, more functional, or less corrupt.
Journalism is an activity shielded by the First Amendment, not a special class or profession.
Fault lines emerge as government gets involved in America's weirdest, fastest-growing sport.
State and local governments are moving forward with bans on gas stoves in new residences.
Rent control is getting a rhetorical makeover from progressive policy makers.
That's more than $21,000 per foot. And the tab doesn't include operating costs, which taxpayers will also heavily subsidize.
Massachusetts reformed its notoriously bad public records laws in 2020, but reporters are still fighting to get the police misconduct files they're legally entitled to.
The answer's more complicated than you might think.
The City of Edinburgh Council ordered a woman to repaint her door or face fines up to 20,000 pounds.
Often, it can be exactly the opposite.
The paper's editorial board is happy to endorse the centralization of decision making when it supports their liberal policy preferences.
Publicly funded leagues of cities are fighting zoning reforms in state capitals across the country.
When the state won't shade you, buy a hat.
A good example of why so few stadium deals end up on the ballot.
A pilot proposal to levy civil fines based on income is being considered by the City Council.
Opposing sides of the debate around a New York City subway homicide have found unlikely common ground.
Politicians in the last century accused pinball of being mob activity.
Steven Hedrick rents out roll-off dumpsters to people and hauls them away after. A new city ordinance is mandating that people use county services instead.
Just days after the release of an autopsy showing an activist may not have fired on officers before being shot to death, police arrested activists for putting flyers on mailboxes.
A win for Geraldine Tyler, who is now 94 years old, would be a win for property rights.
It's one small victory for free speech and due process, but similar battles continue to play out elsewhere.
Geraldine Tyler's case is not unique; home equity theft is legal in Minnesota and 11 other states.
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Plus: What the editors hate most about the IRS and tax day
Are political breakups really as American as apple pie?
If a municipality fails to approve or deny a permit by state-set deadlines, developers could hire private third parties to get the job done.
Arlington's successful passage of a modest missing middle housing reform bill after an intense debate raises the question of whether YIMBY politics can practically fix the problems it sets out to address.
Alvin Bragg's case against Donald Trump has put the once-obscure position of district attorney into the national spotlight.
A 9-year-old backed out of a deal to sell her pet goat for slaughter. Local officials and sheriff's deputies used the power of the state to force her to go through with it.
Handouts for tourist-trap museums will be part of the federal funding battleground in the next two years.
He did "what any dad would—he went to hug his crying kid," says former town councilman Keith Kaplan.
"If I disagreed or offered another opinion, I was told I had cognitive dissonance," Josh Diemert says.
Fairytale Farm Animal Sanctuary's work caring for abandoned and disabled animals is imperiled by a demand from the Winston-Salem city government that the nonprofit stop hosting on-site fundraisers and volunteer events.
Legislators will increasingly argue over how to spend a diminishing discretionary budget while overall spending simultaneously explodes.
Now a judge has cleared him of wrongdoing and struck down the rule used to justify the arrest.