Defending the Pittsburgh area taxpayers and businesses against the burdensome taxation and regulation of Big Government

Mission Statement

The Allegheny Institute is a non-profit research and education organization. Our mission is to defend the interests of taxpayers, citizens and businesses against an increasingly burdensome and intrusive government. To that end, we will formulate and advocate public policies that roll back the size and scope of local government as well as create a more accountable government. Our efforts will be guided by the principles of free enterprise, property rights, civil society and individual freedom that are the bedrock upon which this nation was founded.
At just about every level of government these days, and little matter to political persuasion, the “need” for an “industrial policy” has invaded the psyche of far too many public policy makers. It’s as if the producers of “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” now have produced a sequel – “Invasion...

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Accomplishments

Policy Briefs

vol25
No: 19

Recently, a newspaper article noted that electricity rates across the state are going to rise as supply is failing to keep pace with demand.

After years of little or no demand growth, a federal push for electric vehicles and household appliances such as stoves to replace those using fossil fuels, has boosted the demand for electricity.  In conjunction with the retiring of fossil fuel plants such as the one in Springdale Boro, Allegheny County and Homer City in Indiana County, the demand began to outstrip supply.  An increase in electricity price was inevitable.

vol25
No: 18
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, River, sunset, 2014

Summary: The city controller presented Pittsburgh’s 2024 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report on May 1, summarizing results from 2024 while expressing concerns over the financial future of the city. All general fund actual and budget figures are reported on a budgetary basis for comparison purposes.

Colin Mcnickle At Large

Op-Ed

How Pa. can best support the AI revolution

vol25
No: 19

It certainly is on its way to become the “it” phrase of 2025: Data centers.

The rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology has fueled the rush to build data centers to crunch all the algorithmic permutations that are part and parcel to AI.

And all that crunching takes a lot of energy, as in electricity and energy sources to generate it.

But can Pennsylvania’s energy supply keep up with what’s expected to become an exponential demand? And how best can government foster a more stable supply and demand equilibrium in the face of the continuing AI explosion?

Calculating those NFL Draft economic benefits

vol25
No: 17

“All that glitters is not gold,” goes the aphorism made most famous by William Shakespeare in his “The Merchant of Venice.” And a researcher at the Allegheny Institute for Public Policy says we should keep that phrase in mind when it comes to the claimed economic impact Pittsburgh can expect from next April’s NFL Draft.

“No doubt that optimism stems from the economic impact studies for cities that have hosted the draft in recent years,” says Jake Haulk, president-emeritus of the Pittsburgh think tank (in Policy Brief Vol. 25, No. 17).

In The News

Will the NFL Draft deliver? Pittsburgh’s projected windfall faces scrutiny
With an official countdown clock on the North Shore ticking down the days until Pittsburgh hosts next year’s NFL Draft, local officials are betting big on the three-day event.
As Pittsburgh confronts affordable housing crisis, mayor touts successes but data shows shortfalls
For months on the campaign trail, Mayor Ed Gainey has trumpeted claims of aggressively attacking Pittsburgh’s affordable housing crisis in ways no mayor has in decades.
Proposed Pa. minimum wage hike is bitter pill for many business owners
Gov. Josh Shapiro’s proposal to raise Pennsylvania’s minimum wage by more than 100% — from $7.25 to $15 an hour — is being panned by area business owners.

Blog

Pittsburgh’s 2024 Finances: A Review

ByAllegheny Institute |

Skill Games

ByAllegheny Institute |

PRT’s Doomsday Scenario

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pittsburgh’s Charitable Challenges

ByAllegheny Institute |

Tolls for the turnpike: how much longer?

ByAllegheny Institute |

Pittsburgh’s 2025 Budget

ByAllegheny Institute |