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GOV_charles-chieppo1

Charles Chieppo

Contributor

Charles Chieppo is a policy expert, author and commentator on a variety of issues including public finance, transportation, and good government. From 2003 to 2005, Chieppo served as policy director in Massachusetts’ Executive Office for Administration and Finance where he led the Romney administration's successful effort to reform the commonwealth's public construction laws, helped develop and enact a new charter school funding formula, and worked on a variety of public employee labor issues such as pension reform and easing state restrictions against privatization. Previously, he directed the Shamie Center for Better Government at Pioneer Institute. While employed by Pioneer, Chieppo served on the MBTA's Blue Ribbon Committee on Forward Funding and has written and commented extensively on T and other transportation issues. He was a contributor to "MBTA Capital Spending Derailed by Expansion," by the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation with Pioneer Institute, which won the Government Research Association's "Most Distinguished Research" award.

Chieppo appears regularly on WGBH television’s Greater Boston, WGBH’s Boston Public Radio and WBUR’s RadioBoston.  For several years, Chieppo's columns appeared regularly in The Boston Herald. Other media outlets publishing his work include The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, Education Next, USA TODAY, Washington Times, Providence Journal, Nashville Tennessean, CommonWealth magazine, and Governing.

Chieppo is a graduate of Boston University's College of Communication and Vanderbilt University Law School. Charles Chieppo launched Chieppo Strategies LLC in 2006. 

A public university president's parting payout of nearly $270,000 is raising a lot of questions in Massachusetts.
Two new initiatives show the increasing sophistication of an approach that pays social-services providers only for programs that work.
Reform efforts and an ongoing court case show what happens when the bills come in for overly generous retirement programs.
State policies that require more price transparency could give consumers a powerful tool.
It shouldn't take a budget crisis like the one Kansas is dealing with to force a government to look for more ways to save taxpayer money.
A new GASB rule affecting cities that are part of state cost-sharing retirement plans will be painful, but it's a step forward.
There's something to be said for making all workers chip in for the benefits unions provide. But that doesn't get at the issue of unions that wield too much power.
Plenty more could be done to transform public workforces into meritocracies.
Increases in retirees' longevity are likely to make an already dismal fiscal picture look worse.
By spiking in later years, pension benefits don't align with experience. We need to be fairer to educators who are learning their craft.