Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Allegheny Institute for Public Policy

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President
  
Jake Haulk

Budget
  
Revenue: $1,506,436Expenses: $499,346(FYE December 2015)

Location
  
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

Address
  
305 Mt. Lebanon Blvd., Suite 208Pittsburgh, PA 15234

Website
  
www.alleghenyinstitute.org

The Allegheny Institute for Public Policy is a conservative American think tank based in Western Pennsylvania. Using its expertise in economic development, tax increment financing, and eminent domain, it works with property owners and taxpayers to bring free market solutions to local government. The Institute performs detailed research on local policy issues, then publishes its findings in reports and policy briefs. Unlike many think tanks, it actively promotes its findings by providing this information to local policy makers.

The Institute has frequently asked governments to show that the benefits of proposed public projects outweigh their costs, and to evaluate social services projects on their outcomes basis rather than their inputs. This advocacy of improved business and regulatory environments goes counter to what they call the region's traditional political machine approaches.

The institute was founded in 1995. In 1997, its activities contributed substantially to the defeat of a proposed regional tax referendum to fund the construction of sports stadiums.

In 1999 and 2000, the institute publicly stated concerns about the prospect of a merger between Bell Atlantic and GTE. The institute and other institutions formed a coalition to investigate how the merger would affect consumers. The institute supports utility competition and created a special organization called the Center for Competitive Markets in 1998 to serve as a public "watchdog" around utility competition issues.

References

Allegheny Institute for Public Policy Wikipedia


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