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New Rules Project
Institute for Local Self-Reliance

1313 Fifth Street SE
Minneapolis, MN 55414
T: 612-379-3815

The New Rules Project invites you to join the conversation!

Comments/Questions to: bailey@ilsr.org

The New Rules Project - Designing Rules As If Community Matters

New Rules is a project of the Institute for Local Self-RelianceD

Balancing Budgets By Raising Depletion TaxesBalancing Budgets By Raising Depletion Taxes
This June 2008 policy brief by Justin Dahlheimer concludes that states could generate hundreds of millions, in some cases billions, of dollars in additional revenue each year by implementing or adjusting depletion tax policies. The report illustrates how current depletion tax policies, in many cases, fail to account for the full value of the natural resources, depriving state and local governments of additional revenue that could be useful in current and future fiscal years. View the Press Release and Download the full report


Concentrating Solar and Decentralized Power: Government Incentives Hinder Local OwnershipConcentrating Solar and Decentralized Power: Government Incentives Hinder Local Ownership
Can residential rooftop solar compete with new utility-scale concentrating solar electric plants? Only if federal and state incentives are amended to level the playing field. This May 2008 report by John Farrell explores the economics of solar PV and concentrating solar and shows how local ownership is hindered unless government solar incentives change. View the Press Release and Download the revised edition of the full report


Driving our Way to Energy IndependenceDriving Our Way to Energy Independence
Updating our pathbreaking 2003 report, this April 2008 report by David Morris describes how commercially available technologies today could transform our petroleum powered transportation system into one powered by electricity and biofuels. Provisions in the recently passed Energy Act could accelerate that transformation. With the adoption of complementary policies, the revolution in our transportation sector can generate an equally profound revolution in our electricity sector. Hundreds of thousands of locally owned wind turbines and solar electric arrays supplying flexible fueled, plug-in hybrid vehicles can allow tens of millions of Americans to become energy producers not just energy consumers.
Executive Summary and Download the full report

Podcast of Driving Our Way author, David Morris, on Minnesota Public Radio's Midday Program - May 23, 2008


Broadening Wind Energy Ownership by Changing Federal IncentivesBroadening Wind Energy Ownership by Changing Federal Incentives
This April 2008 policy brief by John Farrell shows how current federal law discriminates against people owning their own power plants and highlights how the removal of two barriers at the federal level could dramatically enhance local ownership and investment in renewable energy projects. View Press Release and Download the full report


Ethanol and Land UseEthanol and Land Use Changes
This February 2008 policy brief by David Morris criticizes the authors of two recent studies published in Science for advancing a conclusion not supported by their own studies. The paper notes that the vast majority of today’s ethanol production comes from corn cultivated on land that has been in corn production for generations. Since little new land has come into production, either directly or indirectly, the current use of ethanol clearly reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
View Press Release and Download the full report


Carbon Caps With Universal Dividends: Equitable, Ethical & Politically Effective Climate PolicyCarbon Caps With Universal Dividends: Equitable, Ethical & Politically Effective Climate Policy
This January 2008 policy brief by John Bailey concludes that universal dividends are a critically important tool to create the political will and public acceptance for a carbon cap. Universal dividends have the potential to hold harmless a large segment of consumers while we move to a low-carbon economy. Moreover, the universal dividend honors the principle that the sky belongs to all of us equally. Private investment in clean and efficient technologies will be driven by a carbon cap that leads to steady reductions over time of GHG emissions and carbon-based fuels. View Executive Summary and Download the full report


Municipal Broadband: Demystifying Wireless and Fiber-Optic OptionsMunicipal Broadband: Demystifying Wireless and Fiber-Optic Options
This January 2008 policy brief Christopher Mitchell examines how the United States, creator of the Internet, increasingly lags in high-speed access to it. In the absence of a national broadband strategy, hundreds of communities have invested in broadband infrastructure to solve their problem locally. This report highlights how communities are continuing to invest in broadband networks - both wired and wireless - and digs deeper into these technologies and the tradeoffs of each. The solution: wireless solves the mobility problem; fiber solves the speed and capacity problems; and public ownership offers a network built to benefit the community.

View Executive Summary and Download the full report


Policy Gap: Minnesota Energy Policy vs. Minnesota Climate PolicyMinnesota Feed-In Tariff Could Lower Cost, Boost Renewables and Expand Local Ownership
This January 2008 policy brief by John Farrell highlights how several European countries, and more recently the Canadian province of Ontario, have adopted a simple yet powerful strategy to expand renewable energy and benefit local economies. It is called a feed-in tariff: a mandated, long-term premium price for renewable energy paid by the local electric utility to energy producers. Evidence shows that a feed-in tariff achieves greater results at a lower cost than do other strategies like tax incentives or renewable electricity standards.

View Executive Summary and Download Full Report


How to Start a Buy Local CampaignBurlington Telecom Case Study
This August 2007 case study by Christopher Mitchell examines how one community in Vermont solved its broadband problems and created a new revenue source by building a city wide fiber optic network. [see also the summary and recent Future Tense (NPR) podcast]


Big Box Swindle: The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight for America's Independent Businesses

In this deft and revealing book, Stacy Mitchell illustrates how mega-retailers are fueling many of our most pressing problems, from the shrinking middle class to rising pollution and diminished civic engagement. She then shows how communities and independent businesses are effectively fighting back. Buy Big Box Swindle Today! [Also available at your local independent book stores now, published by Beacon Press] Click for more details on the new book


Key Projects and Initiatives
D

Independent BookstoreThe Hometown Advantage

We've already worked with more than 100 communities to develop policies to nurture their locally-owned businesses.  We are the go-to source for cities that are fighting against absentee owned, big box retail, fielding scores of questions each week from communities around the nation. Our resources can help you make your hometown character shine.

Telecommunications As Commons Initiative

ILSR believes that only public ownership of a city's information infrastructure can guarantee citizens a controlling voice in the design and operation of those systems. Information networks can operate like road networks: a common carrier, open to all users and suppliers, small and large, at similar rates. We're working with key officials in a half dozen cities to foster publicly-owned information networks.

Biofuels and Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicles

Driving our way to energy independenceSince we first proposed this strategy in 2003, the concept of promoting plug-in, flexible fueled hybrid vehicles has gone mainstream. In 2006, we helped pass legislation in Minnesota declaring the intent of the state to pay a 10 percent premium for PHEVs and set up a task force to develop new policies to encourage the market transformation.

Climate Neutral Bonding: A Global Warming Solution

We're working with states and communities to enact a policy where no net increase in greenhouse gas emissions can occur as a result of publicly funded building projects. The policy saves taxpayer money, leads to highly efficient public buildings and takes a step in limiting global warming pollution. State enabling legislation passed the MN Senate in May 2006 and several cities are considering adopting the model resolution.


Why New Rules?

Because the old ones don't work any longer. They undermine local economies, subvert democracy, weaken our sense of community, and ignore the costs of our decisions on the next generation. More...


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In The Spotlight

Electric Cars Are the Key to Energy Independence - By David Morris, published on AlterNet, August 2, 2008

City On Solid Ground in Lawsuit - by Christopher Mitchell, published in the Monticello Times, July 31, 2008

Monticello, Minn. Fights TDG Lawsuit - ILSR Release, July 23, 2008

Low prices, but at what cost? - by Stacy Mitchell, July 18, 2008

Money is fleeing: Pennsylvania should get a cut of the state's increasingly valuable natural gas resources - by Justin Dahlheimer, July 2, 2008

Who Decides What You Can Watch on Your Television? - by Christopher Mitchell, June 17, 2008

Monticello Fiber Network Fighting Frivolous Lawsuit - ILSR Release, June 4, 2008

Cellulosic Biofuels: Another Opportunity for Washington to Marry Agriculture and Energy Goal - by David Morris, May 2008

Community-Owned Stores - published in the Forum News, May. 5, 2008

An Energy Incentive is Drifting in the Wind - by John Farrell, published in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, May 1, 2008

25 Vermont Towns Join East Central Vermont Community Fiber Network - ILSR Press Release, March 5, 2008

Public Ownership of Broadband Access Is Best - by Christopher Mitchell, originally published in the Eureka Reporter.

Podcast: Video of a discussion between ILSR's David Morris and Paul Krugman from the New York Times - held in front of 1000+ people in Minneapolis, MN, November 6, 2007

Electric Avenue - by David Morris, Travel+Leisure Magazine, November 2007
A new kind of hybrid uses less gas and more electricity. All-electric cars are already here. What will this mean for the road trip of the future? David Morris plugs in.

e-Bulletins

New Rules Project News
Updates on the New Rules Project and listings of new additions to this web site.

Democratic Energy
Find news stories and rules on how communities and governments are working toward a decentralized energy future.

Hometown Advantage
Find news stories and rules on community efforts to protect and nurture their local economies.
Support Locally Owned Businesses

CD: Catalyzing Your Own "Buy Local" Movement
This CD contains 130 slides synched with audio from a presentation given at the National Main Streets Conference in Philadelphia on April 1, 2008.

Buy Local Slide Show - Examples (87 and counting) of how communities are promoting the importance of supporting locally owned businesses.