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dylan-scott

Dylan Scott

Staff Writer

Dylan Scott -- Staff Writer. Dylan graduated from the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University in 2010. While there, he won an Associated Press award for Best Investigative Reporting for a series of stories on the university’s structural deficit. He then worked at the Las Vegas Sun and Center for Education Reform before joining GOVERNING. He has reported on the Supreme Court’s consideration of the Affordable Care Act and various education reform movements in state and local government. When out of the office, Dylan spends his time watching classic films and reading fantasy fiction. Email dscott@governing.com | Twitter @DylanLScott  

Two analyses released in the last week estimated the number of uninsured would increase if the ACA were repealed and replaced by the Republican plan.
Five states and the District of Columbia received another round of health exchange establishment grants, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced Thursday.
As states weigh whether to allow parents to take over struggling schools, reformers are still waiting for a successful trigger.
Public trust in state and local government has reached a more than 10-year high, according to a Gallup poll released Wednesday.
Medicaid has tripled as a share of federal outlays to state and local governments since 1980.
New Jersey Senate President Steve Sweeney plans to introduce legislation prohibiting the use of replacement referees for professional sports, his office announced Tuesday morning, in the wake of controversy over the NFL's substitute officials' apparently botched call cost the Green Bay Packers a win in their game against the Seattle Seahawks Monday night.
With more news that the nation's students are falling behind, attention is returning to the next great hope in reform: the Common Core State Standards.
22 states have officially endorsed digital textbooks, and the White House has set a deadline of 2017 for all students to use electronic materials
One in eight older Americans live with Alzheimer’s disease, costing the health-care sector up to $200 billion annually. So what are states doing about it?
Cities and states are taking a page from the private sector and opening on-site health clinics for public workers.