
Medical Devices
The FDA has approved a device to help doctors' detect skin cancer.
Senior Fellow Greg Conko explains what happened.
Capital Bikeshare
Last week, the D.C. Capital Bikeshare program celebrated its one-year anniversary.
"The Capital Bikeshare bikes cost around $1,000 a piece and have a life cycle of six years. Annual operating costs are somewhere closer to $2,000 per bike. In the past two years, I have spent approximately $500 on my personal bike that I commute to work on daily — $250 a year. And I average more trips per day and distance per trip than Capital Bikeshare. The program’s costs given the benefits are simply absurd. If the District’s transportation elite must maintain their warped set of priorities and subsidize cycling to induce ridership, why not instead offer vouchers to partially cover the initial purchase and annual maintenance of a bike? It would certainly be cheaper, although that would take the look-at-the-shiny-objects-we-wasted-tax-dollars-on fun out of the whole thing."
CEI Podcast
In the new CEI podcast, Director of CEI's Center for Investors and Entrepreneurs John Berlau talks about what's going to happen when debit card price controls go into effect on Saturday.
Listen here.