2,024 research outputs found
Alternative Formulas for Allocating LOST Revenue to Counties and Municipalities
The focus of our research is on the allocation of the LOST revenues between the county and municipal governments. This research reviewed various aspects of the LOST allocation and considered several alternative methods of distributing LOST revenues between the county and sub-county units. This is a complex problem with high stakes. Because the allocation is a zero-sum game, any change in the allocation is almost guaranteed to make one party worse off than under the current allocation. The real gains lie in both sides being freed from negotiations that are oftimes long and costly in terms of staff time and outside consultants. Report #9
Estimating The Revenue Loss From Food-For-Home Consumption
This policy brief discusses the estimation of the revenue effect from eliminating the state sales tax exemption of food-for-home consumption
The Effect of Insurance Premium Taxes on Employment
This report provides estimates of the effect of the insurance premium taxes on state-level employment in the insurance industry. FRC Report 18
Transportation Funding Alternatives:A Preliminary Analysis
This report explores issues associated with proposed alternative revenue sources for increasing transportation for funding. FRC Report 13
Transportation Funding Alternatives:A Preliminary Analysis - Brief
This report explores issues associated with proposed alternative revenue sources for increasing transportation for funding. FRC Brief 13
Creating a Better Business Tax Credit
This brief discusses the criteria and factors that should be considered on business tax credits
Scorpions of the genus Diplocentrus (Diplocentridae) from Sonora, Mexico, with description of a new species
To date, only two references place members of the genus Diplocentrus in Sonora, Mexico. The first was a passing comment by Francke (1975) that D. spitzeri Stahnke occurs in northeastern Sonora. The specimens he examined and used in his systematic studies on that species are the same as the ones reported here for the first time from a specific Sonoran locality. The second reference was by Sissom and Walker (1992) listing a single record of D. gertschi Sissom and Walker from Libertad on the northern coast. Examination of material from the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), the California Academy of Sciences (CAS), and the Academy of Natural Sciences (ANS) indicates that, in addition to D. spitzeri and D. gertschi, another distinct species occurs in the Alamos and Navajoa areas in southern Sonora. This species is described as new below. It should be noted that a juvenile specimen from the vicinity of Benjamin Hill was also examined that was unassignable with certainty to any of the above species. This indicates that the genus has a wider distribution in Sonora than demonstrated even by the specimens listed in this report. Nomenclature and mensuration utilized herein essentially follows that of Stahnke (1970), with the following exceptions: carinal terminology and cheliceral measurements are after Francke (1975,1977) and trichobothrial terminology is after Vachon (1974). Specimens in the senior author's collection are listed in the records sections as "WDSâ. Because D. spitzeri and the new species are both quite similar to D. peloncil1ensis Francke, the latter is included in the tables for comparison; in addition, the hemispermatophore of this species is also drawn. D. peloncillensis was described from only 6 males, 1 female, and 1 juvenile. The data presented here for D. peloncillensis are derived from these and new specimens available since the original description was published (Francke 1975), thereby providing a better understanding of variation in this species
Financing an Increased State Role in Funding K-12 Education: An Analysis of Issues and Options
This report presents an analysis of replacing school property tax with alternative state revenue sources. FRC Report 11
Personal Property Tax on Motor Vehicles - Brief
This brief shows the expected reduction in the property tax base in each county if motor vehicles were tax exempt. FRC Brief 13
Corticosterone Regulates Both Naturally Occurring and CocaineâInduced Dopamine Signaling by Selectively Decreasing Dopamine Uptake
Stressful and aversive events promote maladaptive rewardâseeking behaviors such as drug addiction by acting, in part, on the mesolimbic dopamine system. Using animal models, data from our laboratory and others show that stress and cocaine can interact to produce a synergistic effect on reward circuitry. This effect is also observed when the stress hormone corticosterone is administered directly into the nucleus accumbens (NAc), indicating that glucocorticoids act locally in dopamine terminal regions to enhance cocaine\u27s effects on dopamine signaling. However, prior studies in behaving animals have not provided mechanistic insight. Using fastâscan cyclic voltammetry, we examined the effect of systemic corticosterone on spontaneous dopamine release events (transients) in the NAc core and shell in behaving rats. A physiologically relevant systemic injection of corticosterone (2 mg/kg i.p.) induced an increase in dopamine transient amplitude and duration (both voltammetric measures sensitive to decreases in dopamine clearance), but had no effect on the frequency of transient release events. This effect was compounded by cocaine (2.5 mg/kg i.p.). However, a second experiment indicated that the same injection of corticosterone had no detectable effect on the dopaminergic encoding of a palatable natural reward (saccharin). Taken together, these results suggest that corticosterone interferes with naturally occurring dopamine uptake locally, and this effect is a critical determinant of dopamine concentration specifically in situations in which the dopamine transporter is pharmacologically blocked by cocaine
- âŠ