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What We’re Reading This Week, March 14-18

Here’s a selection of articles the Federal Relations team is enjoying this week.

Next Battle Front – As discretionary spending declines, the federal government has used its oversight authority with increasing regularity to intrude in the affairs of colleges and universities well beyond federal aid compliance and basic tax and regulatory concerns — it has begun looking at endowments. Read more in the Huffington Post. 

Divvying Up the Delegates – Senator Marco Rubio lost the primary in his home state of Florida this week, and with that, Rubio suspended his campaign. Meanwhile, Rubio has already collected nearly over 150 delegates and the bulk of them are up grabs to vote for someone else at the convention. How could that impact the convention? Read more in Roll Call.

Aerial View of the House Office Buildings and U.S. Capitol - November 6, 2015(AOC)
Aerial View of the House Office Buildings and U.S. Capitol – November 6, 2015 (AOC)

Top 10 – The Economist has come out with it’s Global Forecast Risk Assessment for April, and the Trump presidency made the list. A potential Trump presidency is a 12 on a scale of 1 to 25—classifying it as slightly less of threat to the world than a new cold war between Russia and the West and slightly more of one than an armed conflict in the South China Sea. See the Forecast here, and get an overview from Slate.

New Nominee – Judge, and Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland has tutored Northeast D.C. students for 20 years. He paid for Harvard Law School by taking a summer job as a shoe stock clerk, selling his comic book collection, and counseling undergraduates. He was also valedictorian of his public high school. At his graduation, a group of parents pulled the plug on another student giving a speech that railed against the Vietnam War. When it came time for Garland to give his speech, Garland ditched what he had prepared and instead delivered an impassioned defense of free speech and First Amendment rights. Read more about Obama’s third Supreme Court nominee in the New York Times. 

https://youtu.be/Wla9c7CmGxU

Courtesy of Jimmy Kimmel Live.

More of a Limping Duck – While Senate Republicans have declared they would not confirm any Supreme Court nominee from Obama, Judge Merrick Garland has been a hit and the Senate has communicated that, while they will not confirm before the election, they will confirm Garland after the election in the lame duck session — depending on who wins the Presidency. Read more in Roll Call. 

Hail the New King – John King was confirmed by the Senate last week. When Obama’s first education secretary, Arne Duncan, announced he would leave the post in October, Obama chose King, then Duncan’s deputy and advisor, to succeed him. At the time, the Administration had no plans to seek his confirmation. With out cry from Congress, the Administration moved forward with the nomination. Here’s a few things you might know about King. Read them in the LA Times. 

Oh, There’s Trouble – The House passed its budget out of the House Budget Committee this week. All but two Republicans on the panel voted to send the bill to the floor, where it is likely doomed because of resistance from fiscal hawks in the House Freedom Caucus. The final vote was 20 to 16 — all Democrats opposed the measure. Without support from the 40-member House Freedom Caucus, the trillion-dollar budget proposal will come up short on the House floor. The House GOP can only afford to lose 28 votes to ensure a bill’s passage without Democratic support. Read more in The Hill. 

Higher Ground – Last fall, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals threw out U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken’s decision allowing college football and men’s basketball players to be paid up to $5,000 per year in deferred money. But the Ninth Circuit upheld that the NCAA’s rules restricting payments to players violate antitrust laws. Ed O’Bannon lawyers have asked the Supreme Court to take NCAA case. Read more at CBS Sports. 

Going Rogue – Carol Greider of Johns Hopkins University became the third Nobel Prize laureate biologist in a month to do something long considered taboo among biomedical researchers: She posted a report of her recent discoveries to a publicly accessible website, bioRxiv, before submitting it to a scholarly journal to review for “official’’ publication. Read more in The New York Times. 

Smart Then Big – When the first tyrannosaurs evolved, about 170 million years ago, they lived in the shadows of larger meat-eaters like Allosaurus. For tens of millions of years, tyrannosaurs remained small. The evolutionary jump of tyrannosaurs from people- and horse-size to behemoths has remained a mystery. A recent fossil finding in Uzbekistan is providing paleontologists with a missing link in the lineage. They have discovered a tyrannosaur with many of the giant’s characteristics — but not its stature or heft, meaning first it got smart, then it got big. Read more in The New York Times. Plus, scientists in Montana have found a pregnant T-Rex, including preserved soft tissue, which is highly unusual. Read more in The Washington Post. 

Iconic – If you’ve been to DC recently with Federal Relations, it’s been hard not to notice that the Capitol Dome is surrounded by scaffolding. The renovation started in 2014, and is finally coming to a close — the scaffolding is currently coming down. See a video about the renovation at Roll Call. 

What We’re Reading This Week, March 7 – 11

Here’s a selection of articles that Federal Relations is enjoying this week.

All Hail – John King was cleared by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee this week to move forward and be confirmed as the next Secretary of Education. Read more in the Washington Post.

Not Really Helpful – In most college sexual assault cases, schools take the early step of instituting a no-contact order between the alleged victim and the accused assailant. The order, similar to a restraining order, serves as an interim accommodation for the person reporting an assault. It helps keep the two parties away from each other before, during or after an investigation by the school, but it does not really protect victims.  Read more in the Huffington Post. 

Midnight sun in Advent Bay, Spitzbergen, Norway (LOC)
Midnight sun in Advent Bay, Spitzbergen, Norway (LOC)

99 Problems – But for college students, the problem is rising tuition prices during the past 15 years coinciding with falling incomes of American families. Read more in The Washington Post. 

InCent-ivizing – A pair of bills would provide tax breaks to employers who help their workers pay of student loans. Companies that offer the benefit typically can’t deduct those payments from their tax bill. Read more in The Huffington Post. 

Auto Law Breaking – A top official at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Tuesday said student loan companies are at risk of breaking the law if they place people in default when the co-signer of their loan dies or declares bankruptcy, signaling that the bureau may start legal action.  Read more in The Washington Post. 

Grads Got It – A new study suggests grad students may outperform faculty members in the classroom and may also benefit from time away from their dissertations. Read more in Inside Higher Education.

Cruz Crawl – As Trump continues to rise — and Senator Marco Rubio politically plummets in his home state — the Republican establishment is now starting to like Senator Ted Cruz…as the only way to stop Trump. Read more in Politico. 

“Likable” Guy – Donald Trump says everyone loves him. That’s not so true. In fact, the Republican has a problem getting Republican women to vote for him (only 29 percent of female Republican registered voters approved of Trump, while a whopping 68 percent did not). Trump’s bigger problem is that he’s driving  female Republican voters to vote for Hillary. Read more in National Journal. Trump also has a problem where his general favorability rating is a negative 40 percent. Read more in Vox. 

Unleash the Dogs of War – As the primaries keep rolling on,  it looks more likely (or people keep talking about) a brokered Republican convention, but what does that really look like? Read about that in The Boston Globe. And who would a brokered convention really help? *Hint, it’s Trump.* Read more at NBC News.

International Women Day was this week and Google had a doodle honoring Clara Rockmore, who’s birthday was March 9th, a thermin master and godmother in electronic music. Enjoy above.

What We’re Reading This Week, February 29 – March 4

Here’s a selection of articles the Federal Relations team is enjoying this leap week.

S-T-O-P – Two days after Super Tuesday, the GOP establishment’s knives are once again out for Donald Trump — whether it’s Mitt Romney’s speech today, tonight’s debate in Michigan, or the new TV ads targeting Trump. And here’s the reality: The opportunity to stop Trump is real. After the Super Tuesday results, it’s clear that Trump had a good (though hardly great) night. Despite winning seven out of the 11 contests, Trump holds just a 23-delegate lead over Ted Cruz from the Super Tuesday delegates. Read more at NBC.

Capitol Dome Restoration - January 2016 (AOC)
Capitol Dome Restoration – January 2016 (AOC)

Security Checks – Many low-income students and children of undocumented parents are having a harder time finishing their financial aid applications this year. That’s because of a new system that’s meant to protect sensitive financial information but in practice keeps out already-disadvantaged populations. Californians must submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by midnight Wednesday to be eligible for the biggest pot of state college funds, the Cal Grant. Officials are asking students to submit even an incomplete FAFSA immediately, so that they make the deadline but can fill in more information later. Read more in the LA Times. 

He Speaks – After a decade of silence on the court, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas asked a question. Read more in The New York Times.  

Broken Crown? – Dozens of students, parents, educators and activists are urging the U.S. Senate not to confirm John King, President Obama’s choice to succeed Arne Duncan as education secretary, because he pushed education policies when he was education commissioner of New York State that they say were “ineffective and destructive.” Read more in The Washington Post. 

He’s BAAACK! – Astronaut Scott Kelly has landed after a year in space, and he . Kelly, an identical twin, spent a year in space to help NASA study the effects of zero gravity on the human body, while his twin stayed terrestrial as a control subject. Read more at Voxx.

What We’re Reading This Week, February 22-26

Here’s a selection of articles the Federal Relations Team is reading this week.

Diverse – NSF has launched it’s long-awaited diversity initiative called INCLUDES.  The program will administer small grants later this year to dozens of institutions to test novel ways of broadening participation in science and engineering. Winners of the 2-year, $300,000 pilot grants will be eligible to compete next year for up to five, $12.5 million awards over 5 years. Read more in Science. 

Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Brown, Milt (Milton) Jackson, and Timmie Rosenkrantz, Downbeat, New York, N.Y., ca. Sept. 1947 (LOC)
Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Brown, Milt (Milton) Jackson, and Timmie Rosenkrantz, Downbeat, New York, N.Y., ca. Sept. 1947 (LOC)

The Very Model of a Modern Major University – In 2009, Georgia State University set out to create a better university, in the heart of a large, diverse city, where many of your students are first-generation or low-income, and who face challenges not seen as commonly at a typical flagship institution. It does so with data tracking and analysis and a team of specialty advisors, who increase student persistence and help them graduate into careers that benefit the community and region. Read more in University Business.

Disproportionate Impact – Students from the poorest households are shouldering more of the pain from rising college costs, borrowing at far higher levels as a share of family income than ever. It is now the norm for U.S. students from the lowest income bracket to borrow at least half of their household income to attend most four-year colleges. At 58% of 1,319 four-year colleges with available federal data, students from households earning $30,000 or less a year left those schools during the 2013 and 2014 school years owing a median $15,000 or more in total debt, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. Read more in WSJ. 

Total Fear of Getting In Line – Speaker Paul Ryan, the highest elected leader and presumptive leader of the Republican party currently, has been working on a conservative policy agenda for the Republicans in Congress and a road map for the Republican presidential nominee.  However, with wins in South Carolina and Nevada, Trump becomes more clearly the Republican presumptive nominee, and Ryan and Trump agree on very little. If Trump becomes the nominee, Ryan and all Republicans are expected to fall in line with Trump’s campaign. Will they? Read more in The New York Times. 

Cracked Up – As Trump’s insurgency continues to overwhelm the party, the recriminations are growing more scathing. Could Donald Trump (now with three primary wins, including the Nevada Caucus) have been stopped? But the Republican Party did try to stop Trump. It just failed. And until the nature of that failure is appreciated, the strength of Trump’s candidacy is going to be underestimated. Read more in Vox. 

Bring in the Billionaires! – As Trump momentum continues to grow, there is still elements at play that could change his fate. Politics is fickle and little things can become big things and sure things can evaporate quickly (ask Hillary in 2004). There are four things that might impact the Trump campaign. Read more in The New York Times. 

 

Cubic Zirconia? – People with more education have higher earnings. Boosting college education is therefore seen by many—including me—as a way to lift people out of poverty, combat growing income inequality, and increase upward social mobility. But how much upward lift does a bachelor’s degree really give to earnings? The answer turns out to vary by family background. Read more in Brookings. 

Turn the Ugly Cheek – Division between the President and Congressional Republicans has reached a new low this year. First, Republicans told the White House budget director this month not to bother making the ritual presentation of a spending plan. Then Senate Republicans announced that they would not act on a nominee for the Supreme Court made by the President. Read more in the The New York Times. 

Inverse Relationship – Jet fuel prices keep falling, but airline prices are going up quickly…why? Read more in NPR. 

In honor of the Academy Awards ceremony this weekend, we enjoyed John Oliver’s take on the Whitewashing controversy connected to this year’s Oscars nominations being nothing but white people. See the take here. 

Bucket List – For those visitors to our nation’s capital with a little extra time on their hands (between Hill and agency meetings with Federal Relations, of course), here’s a list of not obvious sites to see when in DC. Read the list of 20 at Curbed. 

What We’re Reading this Week, February 16-19

Here’s a selection of articles the federal relations team is reading this week.

Standoff –  Education Department is standing by its controversial guidance to colleges on sexual harassment and sexual assault in response to questions raised by a prominent Senate critic.  Catherine E. Lhamon, the department’s assistant secretary for civil rights, defended her agency’s actions in a letter on Wednesday to Sen. James Lankford, who, as head of the Senate’s subcommittee on regulatory affairs and federal management, had accused the department of overreach in pressuring colleges to fight sexual discrimination to comply with the gender-equity law known as Title IX. Read more in The Chronicle of Higher Education. 

Regular Order – Speaker Ryan has pledged to return Congress to regular order, but what is that exactly? Read more in Roll Call.

Not Exactly – In a country where 40 million people owe upward of $1.2 trillion on their student loans, it’s not hard to imagine why a tale about armed federal agents’ showing up at the door of a Texas man to arrest him over unpaid student loans set the Internet abuzz. But as is the case with many stories that go viral, the truth is a bit more complicated: Mainly, the authorities said they had been trying for years to get the Houston resident, Paul Aker, to pay back a single student loan from almost three decades ago. Read more in the New York Times. 

Slash or Burn – Facing a $940 million budget deficit, Louisiana will stop funding its merit-based scholarship program for the rest of the year. And if the Legislature doesn’t find new sources of revenue by June, Louisiana’s commissioner of higher education warned, the state’s public colleges and universities will have to suspend operations. Read more in Inside Higher Ed. 

Building Bernie Buzz – More Democrats are seeing Sanders as electable. Read more in Political Wire. 

Zika – As late as 2007, there had only been 14 documented Zika cases in the world. Research on the virus was so limited, in fact, that printouts of all the world’s published literature could basically fit into a shoebox. With the explosion, scientists still have five big questions. Read more in Vox. 

Cardboard – The ugly side of e-commerce is all the cardboard it uses, and the environmental impact. Read more in the New York Times. 

Payback – It’s not just the amount of student debt that someone takes on that matters. It also comes down to how well positioned one is to pay it back. And that’s an area where racial disparities show up glaringly – in a new set of student-debt delinquency heat maps released Wednesday by two groups pushing for solutions to income inequality. Read more in the Christian Science Monitor.