Chicago has the nation’s highest travel taxes
Chicago has the nation’s highest travel taxes
Thanks to Chicago’s high travel taxes, spending one night in the city is more expensive than all other top 50 travel destinations in the nation. For example, it is 81 percent more expensive to stay one night in Chicago than it is to stay one night in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Businesses take such numbers into...
By John Klingner
Illinois has the highest sales taxes of its neighbors
Illinois has the highest sales taxes of its neighbors
Illinois has high sales taxes. As of January 2013, Illinois had the 12th-highest combined state and average local sales tax rate in the country at 8.13 percent – higher than all bordering states. Chicago’s combined sales tax rate of 9.75 percent tied with Los Angeles as the highest sales tax among major U.S. metropolitan areas...
By John Klingner
Illinois has the nation’s 2nd-highest property taxes
Illinois has the nation’s 2nd-highest property taxes
Illinois’ property tax rates have skyrocketed since 2010. The average property tax rate as a percent of home value has soared from 1.93 percent in 2010 to 2.28 percent in 2012. This represents an 18 percent property tax rate increase in just two years. This rate spike is due to declining home values and local taxing bodies increasing property tax levies....
By Brian Costin
Don’t buy mom Illinois bonds for Christmas
Don’t buy mom Illinois bonds for Christmas
Would you invest your mother’s money in municipal bonds? In a recent interview on Fox Business News, host Gerri Willis asked me that very question. It didn’t take me long to say I’d certainly do my homework first. Based on the growing number of city bankruptcies from Alabama to Rhode Island to California, it’s clear to me...
Michael Jordan paid $200K in property taxes in 2012 on suburban Chicago home
Michael Jordan paid $200K in property taxes in 2012 on suburban Chicago home
Michael Jordan paid nearly $200,000 in property taxes in 2012 on his Highland Park home. And now, he’s having trouble getting the property off his hands. Interested buyers had the opportunity to own the six-time NBA champion’s 56,000 square foot Highland Park home at auction on Monday – if they had $250,000 to throw down...
By Hilary Gowins
Illinois’ penalty for borrowing now 7 times higher than when Quinn took office
Illinois’ penalty for borrowing now 7 times higher than when Quinn took office
This week Illinois borrowed $350 million to pay for projects including roads, bridges and schools. The state issued 25-year taxable general obligation bonds, the first borrowing by Illinois since the state passed its pension “fix” in early December. But not unlike someone with a terrible credit score, Illinois must pay the highest penalty rate of...
Current government retirees turn sick days into pension dollars
Current government retirees turn sick days into pension dollars
The pensions that government workers receive in Illinois are often based upon more years of service than these employees actually worked. That’s because, among many other perks, government workers can apply unused sick days to their pensionable service credit. In the Teachers’ Retirement System, or TRS, Illinois’ largest state pension fund, a 55 year-old teacher...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Pension bill’s accounting gimmicks ignore $6-$8B in debt
Pension bill’s accounting gimmicks ignore $6-$8B in debt
House Speaker Mike Madigan and proponents of the temporary pension “fix” enacted last week promised taxpayers that it would immediately reduce the state’s unfunded pension liability by about $20 billion. But despite these promises, the credit rating agencies have indicated that they would be waiting for actuarial analyses before making any decisions on how the new law...
By Jonathan Ingram
Delaying the day of reckoning
Delaying the day of reckoning
While the media and politicians across Illinois celebrate the state’s “landmark,” “monumental” and “courageous” pension fix, for most Illinoisans nothing has changed. Taxpayers will continue to hear calls for higher taxes to keep the state’s pension systems afloat. Government workers and retirees are still trapped in a pension system that gives them no voice, no...
Amazon Associates back in business in Illinois thanks to Supreme Court decision
Amazon Associates back in business in Illinois thanks to Supreme Court decision
On Wednesday, thousands of Illinois residents got good news when Amazon announced that its Amazon Associates program – which allows bloggers and others with websites to make money when people click links on their sites to make purchases – would once again be open to them. Amazon dropped Illinoisans from the program in April 2011...
Property tax rates skyrocket in Illinois, 2nd-highest in U.S.
Property tax rates skyrocket in Illinois, 2nd-highest in U.S.
Illinois’ property tax rates have skyrocketed since 2010, according to new analysis done by the Tax Policy Center. The survey examined the 23 Illinois counties with populations exceeding 65,000. The average property tax rates as a percent of home value has soared from 1.93 percent in 2010 to 2.28 percent in 2012. This represents an 18 percent property...
By Brian Costin
What the Detroit bankruptcy ruling means for Illinois
What the Detroit bankruptcy ruling means for Illinois
Today U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Steven Rhodes ruled that “nothing distinguishes pension debt from any other debt” – and that Detroit’s pension debt can therefore be partially discharged in bankruptcy. What does that mean for Illinois, where huge unfunded pension liabilities threaten to render the state government and many local governments insolvent? If the courts...
Pension proposal a move in the wrong direction
Pension proposal a move in the wrong direction
House Speaker Mike Madigan’s latest pension proposal is a giant step backward. The overall effect of this plan would be to leave Illinois pensions worse off than they are today – and that’s saying something, considering the state has $100 billion in official pension debt. If this plan passes, both taxpayers and government employees will...
By Paul Kersey
Detroit ruling reveals pensions not protected in bankruptcy
Detroit ruling reveals pensions not protected in bankruptcy
As lawmakers in Springfield prepare to vote on a controversial pension reform plan, a federal bankruptcy court judge in Detroit issued a ruling that could have major consequences for government employees throughout the country. Dealing with numerous objections to the nation’s largest municipal bankruptcy, Judge Steven Rhodes ruled that pension debts were not given “extraordinary...
By Paul Kersey