
Christopher Wilson
Articles
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Jan 13, 2025 |
reason.org | Christopher Wilson |Jude Schwalbach
Open enrollment lets students attend traditional public schools other than their assigned ones. There are two types of open enrollment: Cross-district lets students transfer to public schools outside their assigned districts. Within-district open enrollment lets students transfer to other public schools inside their school district. Full Backgrounder: K-12 Open Enrollment in MissouriPublic Schools Without Boundaries: Grading every state’s public school open enrollment laws
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Dec 3, 2024 |
reason.org | Christopher Wilson
Commonly referred to as “the year of universal school choice,” 2024 has ushered in the introduction and—more importantly—the enactment of an unprecedented number of policy advances for educational freedom across the country.
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Aug 21, 2024 |
lexology.com | Robert Atkins |Joseph J. Bial |Rebecca Coccaro |Lina Dagnew |Andrew J. Ehrlich |Reuven Falik | +19 more
A federal district court in Texas ruled on the merits that the FTC does not have statutory authority to promulgate the Non-Compete Clause Rule and that the rule is arbitrary and capricious. As a consequence, the court set aside the rule under the Administrative Procedure Act and ordered that it “shall not be enforced or otherwise take effect.” The order is nationwide in scope and not party-specific. Two other challenges to the rule are pending in other district courts.
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Aug 16, 2024 |
desertsun.com | Christopher Wilson
Christopher WilsonSpecial to CalMattersToday, 1 in 6 eligible Californians is not registered to vote, and a disproportionate share are people of color. That’s not necessarily surprising when you consider how long California disenfranchised people of color, poorer residents and immigrant citizens.
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Aug 14, 2024 |
paloaltoonline.com | Christopher Wilson
Today, 1 in 6 eligible Californians is not registered to vote, and a disproportionate share are people of color. That’s not necessarily surprising when you consider how long California disenfranchised people of color, poorer residents and immigrant citizens. California legislators waited 92 years before ratifying the 15th Amendment, which granted Black people the right to vote, because they were worried what that would mean for Chinese, Mexican and Native Americans.
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