Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

CTU plans to sue CPS over school consolidation

CTU plans to sue CPS over school consolidation

by Paul Kersey The Chicago Teachers Union has announced plans to file a lawsuit to prevent the closure of about 50 Chicago Public Schools buildings. The union is hoping to keep as many buildings as possible open, and in the process preserve its members’ jobs. Even if the lawsuit fails, the litigation could delay the implementation...

Cleveland school district, union agree to performance-based contract

Cleveland school district, union agree to performance-based contract

by Paul Kersey In Illinois we have gotten used to being kept in the dark about collective bargaining with government worker unions. Recently a bill to open up the process and have tentative agreements made open to the public before they are signed failed in committee. But it doesn’t have to be like this. In Cleveland of...

The CPS shuffle: moving students and money, with no promise of better results

The CPS shuffle: moving students and money, with no promise of better results

by Josh Dwyer When Chicago Public Schools first announced that it was closing schools, the primary justification it gave was to save money – upward of $500,000 to $800,000 per school. It needed the money to address the looming pension cliff the city is facing next year. When people began questioning those numbers, CPS’s story...

Wildlife Prairie State Park stays open through private nonprofit ownership

Wildlife Prairie State Park stays open through private nonprofit ownership

by Brian Costin Every once in a while, government in Illinois actually gets smaller. One recent example revolves around the Wildlife Prairie State Park, which will drop “State” from its name and will be run by the Forest Park Foundation of Peoria, a private, nonprofit group, effective immediately. Wildlife Prairie Park, located 10 miles west of...

Illinois was the only state to see a double-digit year-over-year jump in food stamp use

Illinois was the only state to see a double-digit year-over-year jump in food stamp use

by Ted Dabrowski     Food-stamp use rose 2.7% in the U.S. in February from a year earlier, with 15% of the U.S. population receiving benefits. The number of recipients in the food stamp program, formally known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), reached 47.6 million, or nearly one in seven Americans. With more...

More Caterpillar layoffs in Decatur

More Caterpillar layoffs in Decatur

Earlier this month, Caterpillar Inc. announced an additional 300 employees will be laid off at the Decatur plant. The latest layoffs would take effect in July. The announcement comes a month after the manufacturer said 460 workers would lose their jobs effective in June. Unemployment in the Decatur metro area is 11.8 percent. Illinois has the...

Proposed TIF district would encompass Buffalo Grove government property

Proposed TIF district would encompass Buffalo Grove government property

by Brian Costin Property tax bills are hitting mailboxes this week for residents across the state. The average homeowner in Illinois has an effective property tax rate of 1.93 percent; this is the second-highest property tax rate in the country. Homeowners in Lake County pay a median effective property tax rate of 2.46 percent, which ranks...

IRS admits to targeting conservative groups

IRS admits to targeting conservative groups

by Paul Kersey The Internal Revenue Service has acknowledged that some of its agents targeted conservative and small government groups for unjustified scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status prior to the 2012 election: IRS agents singled out dozens of organizations for additional reviews because they included the words “tea party” or “patriot” in their exemption applications,...

Cross-Nekritz makes Illinois’ already-broken pension system worse

Cross-Nekritz makes Illinois’ already-broken pension system worse

HB 3411 known as Cross-Nekritz – the latest iteration of Nekritz-Biss – paints over Illinois’ pension crisis with more of the same broken policies that have pushed government retirement systems to the edge of collapse. This bill: Perpetuates unstable, unpredictable and unmanageable defined benefit systems – The key driver of Illinois’ pension crisis is the state’s defined...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Capitol Updates: May 13 week in review

Capitol Updates: May 13 week in review

This week in Springfield, the focus shifted from pension reform to policy issues certain members of the Illinois General Assembly deem important, such as the Lion Meat Act. The Illinois Policy Institute had a big victory this week, as our workforce transparency measure passed the Illinois House and Senate and now heads to Gov. Pat Quinn...

By Jane McEnaney

Illinois state spending has grown 3x population plus inflation since 1990

Illinois state spending has grown 3x population plus inflation since 1990

Some individuals would have you believe that Illinois has a “revenue problem” – that the state needs to increase taxes again because it doesn’t have enough money in its coffers. But don’t be fooled; Illinois’ revenue is at an all-time high. The Illinois comptroller reported that Illinois’ fiscal year 2012 revenue was $68.6 billion. Even...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Capitol Updates: May 6 week in review

Capitol Updates: May 6 week in review

Both chambers were in session this week in Springfield. Moratorium on virtual schools passes out of committee On Tuesday afternoon, House Bill 494 passed out of the Senate Subcommittee on Charter Schools and was subsequently approved by the full Senate Education Committee. The Illinois Policy Institute’s Executive Vice President Kristina Rasmussen and Director of Education Reform Josh Dwyer attended both...

By Jane McEnaney

Apples to oranges: How Rahm Emanuel and a unionized private school can have starkly different relationships with the union world

Apples to oranges: How Rahm Emanuel and a unionized private school can have starkly different relationships with the union world

by Paul Kersey In Tuesday’s Chicago Reader Ben Joravsky essentially snarks that there must be something wrong with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, because the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools where the mayor sends his children manages to work just fine with the American Federation of Teachers, or AFT, Local 2063. Emanuel, on the other hand, remains...

Unemployment woes: regional numbers show residents of Illinois cities still struggling to find work

Unemployment woes: regional numbers show residents of Illinois cities still struggling to find work

by Ted Dabrowski Illinois has the nation’s second-worst unemployment rate. At 9.5 percent, it’s two percentage points higher than the national average of 7.5 percent. That gap translates into lost opportunities and struggle for the many Illinoisans who wish to be gainfully employed. Nearly 130,000 more Illinoisans could be working today if Illinois employed people at the...