Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Could today’s Halbig decision topple ObamaCare?

Could today’s Halbig decision topple ObamaCare?

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Court has ruled today that the Internal Revenue Service does not have the ability to circumvent the original intent of the Affordable Care Act and provide insurance subsidies or impose individual and employer penalties in a state that has not created its own ObamaCare health-insurance exchange....

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Red-light cameras a case study in Chicago corruption, waste and failure

Red-light cameras a case study in Chicago corruption, waste and failure

Chicago has the most red-light cameras of any city in the country. Since 2003, the city’s 352 cameras have levied nearly half a billion dollars in fines. These cameras are sold to the public as a way to promote traffic safety, but the real outcome of the city’s program has been to grift lawful drivers...

By Austin Berg

Pension benefits of Chicago workers

Pension benefits of Chicago workers

The problem Opponents of pension reform at the state and local level often argue that the average government-worker pension is modest. In a May 2011 commentary, government union chiefs Ken Swanson and Henry Bayer wrote that “at the end of a working life devoted to public service, an Illinois teacher, firefighter or librarian retires with...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Flint offers grim look at the future of Illinois’ pension crisis

Flint offers grim look at the future of Illinois’ pension crisis

Illinois isn’t the only place where retiree health insurance costs are destroying state and local budgets. For the latest example of where the Land of Lincoln could be heading, look no further than Flint, Michigan. Unless the city of Flint enacts reform, retiree pension and health expenses will consume $0.32 of every $1 in Flint’s...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois workforce shrinks by largest margin in state history

Illinois workforce shrinks by largest margin in state history

In June, Illinois suffered the largest monthly workforce loss in recorded state history. June’s workforce loss was worse than the worst month of the Great Recession. Overall, 21,700 Illinoisans gave up and left the workforce in June; in September 2008, 17,500 Illinoisans quit the workforce. (Bureau of Labor Statistics data go back to 1976.) This...

By Michael Lucci

Illinois should strive for better marks on hair-braiding regulations

Illinois should strive for better marks on hair-braiding regulations

The state of Illinois received a near-failing grade for the quality of its natural-hair-braiding licensing rules, according to a new study released by the Institute for Justice. The study overviews natural-hair-braiding (a popular beauty practice among African and African-American communities in the U.S.) regulations in every state in the country, ranking each one based on...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

Analysis of GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner’s ‘Bring Back Blueprint’

Analysis of GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner’s ‘Bring Back Blueprint’

Illinois GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Rauner released yesterday another portion of his “Bring Back Blueprint,” acknowledging Illinois’ jobs crisis and identifying many of the pain points that make Illinois the lowest performing state in the Midwest, economically. The Illinois Policy Institute has reviewed Rauner’s proposal, and while the plan is not perfect, it addresses many...

By Michael Lucci, Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois has a cow over raw milk

Illinois has a cow over raw milk

The Illinois Department of Public Health is posed to release new, stricter regulations on the sale of raw milk in Illinois this month, several media outlets report. But many small-farm operators are concerned they won’t be able to meet the new standards. Raw milk sales have only been growing more popular in recent years, and...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

‘Lewis for mayor’ is a fundraising force to be reckoned with

‘Lewis for mayor’ is a fundraising force to be reckoned with

For years the left has complained about the influence that money has on politics. And almost without fail, they have focused on money held and used by private businesses. But money is money, whether it comes from companies or some other source, and it can be used to buy political influence, or political office, just...

By Paul Kersey

Illinois teacher licensing clouded by corruption, needs reform

Illinois teacher licensing clouded by corruption, needs reform

Illinois’ public schools are in trouble. As if shuttering schools, the faltering Chicago Public Schools system and unfunded pension liabilities weren’t enough, it seems the teacher licensing system is mired in clout and corruption. A front page story from the Chicago Tribune on July 12 details findings of “nearly 100 cases in the past five...

By Anthony Trania

Local Transparency Project

Local Transparency Project

The Local Transparency Project is an encouraging example of a successful grassroots effort and a great resource for citizen activists looking to organize and mobilize.- Sunlight Foundation For democracy to work citizens need access to the information about what government does. Proactive transparency is the best way to educate society about the actions of government....

Elgin taxpayers contribute almost 3 times more to pensions than city employees

Elgin taxpayers contribute almost 3 times more to pensions than city employees

Local pension crises are severely affecting cities, towns and villages across Illinois. Even local governments that have a good track record with transparency and high credit scores are struggling to pay for pensions. Take the AAA-rated city of Elgin, for example. To get its pension system’s funding level up to par, the city would have...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Liquor license red tape favors the politically connected

Liquor license red tape favors the politically connected

How much political influence should you need to get a liquor license in Chicago? The Chicago Sun-Times highlighted the role of “clout” in helping Pete’s Fresh Market, a grocery chain opening a new location on Chicago’s underserved West Side, get one. On its face, the article is a critique of how well-connected people use political ties...

By Bryant Jackson-Green