CPS layoffs another signal for real reform
CPS layoffs another signal for real reform
Chicago Public Schools, or CPS, officials announced yesterday that the district laid off a group of teachers and other staff. Overall, 1,150 school district employees, composed of 550 teachers and 600 clerical support staff, are being let go by the school district. This round of layoffs comes a year after CPS let go a further...
By John Klingner
What’s at stake in Harris v. Quinn
What’s at stake in Harris v. Quinn
As early as today, the U.S. Supreme Court could announce its decision in the case Harris v. Quinn. Legal experts and unions across the country are watching closely as it could be a landmark decision on the issues of unionization and freedom of speech. The lead plaintiff, Pam Harris, is a suburban Chicago mom whose...
By Paul Kersey
Halbig v. Sebelius ruling could be first step in ObamaCare’s undoing
Halbig v. Sebelius ruling could be first step in ObamaCare’s undoing
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit’s imminent decision in Halbig v. Sebelius could be an important step in toppling ObamaCare. The central issue in Halbig v. Sebelius is whether the Internal Revenue Service can provide tax credits to individuals, as well as impose penalties on employers, in states that did not establish...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
State threatens to ‘fire’ moms and dads caring for children with disabilities
State threatens to ‘fire’ moms and dads caring for children with disabilities
In 2003 and 2009, governors Rod Blagojevich and Pat Quinn, respectively, issued executive orders to unionize parents who receive a modest Medicaid benefit to help pay for the cost of caring for their disabled children. Suburban Chicago mother Pam Harris has bravely taken this decision to the U.S. Supreme Court in what could be a...
By Paul Kersey, Austin Berg
Lawmakers should stand firm in tax-hike extension opposition during lame-duck session
Lawmakers should stand firm in tax-hike extension opposition during lame-duck session
Taxpayers finally scored a victory in Illinois. Lawmakers kept their promise and passed a budget slated to provide income tax relief starting in January 2015. But a threat to that relief still looms large. After the November election this fall, current lawmakers will meet for a final time in January for their lame-duck session. There’s...
By Benjamin VanMetre
End legislative pensions in Illinois
End legislative pensions in Illinois
Illinois’ lawmakers often blame unions for the Illinois General Assembly’s inability to pass real pension reform. “The unions will never allow it” is the common chorus when it comes to proposing bold reforms like those recently passed in Oklahoma, which put nearly all new state workers on 401(k)-style plans, or those passed in many other...
Hoosier playbook: How Indiana lures Illinoisans with opportunity
Hoosier playbook: How Indiana lures Illinoisans with opportunity
Illinoisans cross the border to become Hoosiers at a stunning rate. Illinois had a net loss of 4,100 people and $76 million of annual income to Indiana in 2010 alone, the most recent year of Internal Revenue Service data. That’s because for every three people who left Indiana for Illinois, four left Illinois for Indiana. Illinois’ losses to Indiana are...
By Michael Lucci
Illinois private-sector payrolls fall by 5,400 as workers leave workforce
Illinois private-sector payrolls fall by 5,400 as workers leave workforce
Illinois’ unemployment rate fell to 7.5 percent from 7.9 percent month-over-month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ most recent household survey. But there’s no reason to celebrate. Payroll jobs shrank by 2,600, with a loss of 5,400 private-sector jobs and an increase of 2,800 government jobs. The decline in the unemployment rate was driven...
By Michael Lucci
Pension facts of SB1 lawsuit plaintiffs
Pension facts of SB1 lawsuit plaintiffs
State workers, retirees and public-sector unions groups have filed various lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of Senate Bill 1, the state pension reform bill signed into law by Gov. Pat Quinn in December 2013. The top pensioner of those suing the state will receive $2.4 million in pension benefits over the course of his retirement. That...
By John Klingner
‘Keep Your Promise’: IL lawmakers must let temporary tax hikes sunset
‘Keep Your Promise’: IL lawmakers must let temporary tax hikes sunset
Temporary tax hikes notoriously stick around longer than planned. Pennsylvania passed a 10 percent tax on alcohol to pay for damage from a flood in 1936. The state continued to levy the tax after the flood damage was paid for. Today the rate is 18 percent. But lawmakers across the country have been better at...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Process for unionizing non-state workers raises red flags
Process for unionizing non-state workers raises red flags
Illinois is a party to a landmark federal lawsuit, Harris v. Quinn. In this case, the state has been forced to defend before the U.S. Supreme Court its decision to permit the unionization of people who are not state workers. The people in question participate in a state-administered Medicaid program that allows them to provide...
By Paul Kersey
Chart of the Week: What ObamaCare grant paid state’s Democrat insiders
Chart of the Week: What ObamaCare grant paid state’s Democrat insiders
If you have any doubt that political cronyism isn’t alive and well in Illinois, look no further than an ObamaCare scandal that broke late last week. Investigations by the Associated Press and Crain’s found that a subcontractor to a $33 million ObamaCare grant was billing at $282 per hour. Turns out the subcontractor is owned...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Are unions the answer to Chicago taxi drivers’ problems?
Are unions the answer to Chicago taxi drivers’ problems?
It’s hard to make a living as a Chicago taxi driver. A recent study showed that Chicago drivers make an average of just $5.40 an hour, far below minimum wage, and just over $20,000 per year. Some cab drivers have tried to change this by suing the city of Chicago. They argue that because the...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Crony community development organization thinks ‘Mike’s’ is ‘too ghetto’
Crony community development organization thinks ‘Mike’s’ is ‘too ghetto’
A Chicago business owner was told that his nickname – “Mike” – was “too ghetto” to be in the name of his own store. Mike Sharma was told by the University Village Association, or UVA, that his store’s intended name, “Mike’s Wine and Spirits,” wasn’t classy enough for the Little Italy neighborhood. As part of...
By Bryant Jackson-Green