Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Teachers can opt out of paying for union politics

Teachers can opt out of paying for union politics

As the start of a new school year approaches, Illinois teachers deserve to know their rights. That includes the right to join or not join a union, and the right to support or not support union politics as the political season in Illinois heats up. Teachers unions are one of the most powerful lobbying groups...

By Paul Kersey

Medicaid’s broken ‘doctor fix’

Medicaid’s broken ‘doctor fix’

When the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, was signed into law, three out of 10 physicians were not accepting new Medicaid patients. So to entice more physicians to participate in the Medicaid program, the federal government began temporarily paying higher reimbursements for some of primary care physicians’ routine services. But temporarily boosting a narrow subset...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Illinois still 170,000 jobs away from recovery

Illinois still 170,000 jobs away from recovery

Illinois gained 10,300 jobs in July, according to the Illinois Department of Employment Security, or IDES. The Quinn camp was quick to tout this number as an indicator of the administration’s success. However, by comparison Illinois only created 10,600 net new jobs in first 66 months of Quinn’s tenure. Perhaps the Quinn administration believes that...

By Michael Lucci

Taxpayers on the hook for risky investments in state pension systems

Taxpayers on the hook for risky investments in state pension systems

Politicians have made a mess of Illinois’ finances, in large part through their mismanagement of state and local pension systems. With most of the state’s pension funds heading toward insolvency, it’s no surprise that politicians’ actions – from using government-worker retirements as slush funds, to trading retirement benefits in exchange for union support, to taking...

Liquor license moratoriums highlight unchecked power of Chicago aldermen

Liquor license moratoriums highlight unchecked power of Chicago aldermen

It may seem obvious that a business owner should have the right to sell their business to someone else. But in Chicago, basic property rights take a back seat to arbitrary regulation and a system of aldermanic privilege that can put those rights in the hands of a single politician. Parlour on Clark, a once-popular...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

Traditional pensions a bad fit for teachers, millennials in Illinois

Traditional pensions a bad fit for teachers, millennials in Illinois

More mobile than any generation before them, millennials need retirement plans, such as 401(k)s, that are just as flexible. But if you’re a millennial looking to become a state-government worker in Illinois, you may want to look elsewhere. Mobility isn’t a priority for state officials. Illinois almost exclusively offers its government workers traditional pension plans....

Scandals pile up for Chicago’s red-light camera program

Scandals pile up for Chicago’s red-light camera program

The controversy surrounding Chicago’s red-light camera program just got even more interesting. A judge revealed he is dismissing tickets by the fistful while former key players in the program have been indicted on federal bribery charges. Less than two weeks after Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that the city will be reviewing more than 16,000...

By Hilary Gowins

SEC charges prove politicians shouldn’t control public pensions

SEC charges prove politicians shouldn’t control public pensions

Illinois taxpayers and government workers got proof in 2013 that politicians can’t be trusted to manage public-worker retirements. That’s when the Securities Exchange Commission charged Illinois with securities fraud. Now, Kansas joins Illinois and New Jersey as one of three states to face SEC civil charges for misleading investors about the health of their pension...

Nation’s worst credit rating costs Illinois millions more in interest payments

Nation’s worst credit rating costs Illinois millions more in interest payments

Illinois has the lowest credit rating in the nation. And just like people with poor credit scores, the state must pay higher interest rates. Higher rates mean higher interest payments that drain the budget and leave less money for education, health care and public safety. For every $1 billion of new borrowing, Illinois taxpayers are...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois paychecks shrink

Illinois paychecks shrink

Illinoisans enjoyed a larger paycheck than their Iowa counterparts for 30 years – until 2012. For the first time ever, the median household in Iowa surpassed its Illinois counterpart, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. If you lined up all households in order of income, the median household would be the one in the very...

By Michael Lucci

National Employee Freedom Week tells workers about their options

National Employee Freedom Week tells workers about their options

Aug. 11 marks the start of National Employee Freedom Week, when nonprofit organizations in 44 states reach out to workers across the country to let them know they have choices when it comes to union membership. Even in states that do not have a Right-to-Work law, such as Illinois, workers don’t have to join a...

By Paul Kersey

Illinois: Turning around or running in place?

Illinois: Turning around or running in place?

Gov. Pat Quinn is claiming that Illinois is making a comeback. But the evidence, supported by public opinion, belies that fact. Illinois remains an economic basket case: The state has the fastest-shrinking workforce in the nation Illinois has the second-highest property taxes in the country, as well as a high tax burden on individual and business incomes Illinois is the third-most corrupt state in the country Illinois loses one resident...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Illinois corruption watch, July 2014

Illinois corruption watch, July 2014

The bad news keeps piling up for Illinoisans. Illinois Policy’s “corruption watch” blog series hit a new high in the month of July with nearly 100 corruption-related stories. Chicago and Springfield are the two cities most synonymous with the state’s corruption woes. Unsurprisingly, both cities dominated headlines with the top two corruption stories of the...

By Brian Costin

Appellate court rules Cook County can’t tax goods bought outside the county

Appellate court rules Cook County can’t tax goods bought outside the county

Can Cook County make its residents pay taxes on things they buy elsewhere? This week an Illinois appellate court said no, upholding a lower-court decision striking down the county’s “Non-Titled Personal Property Use Tax,” which charged an extra tax on Cook County residents who bought goods worth more than $3,500 outside of the county. In...

By Bryant Jackson-Green