Illinois’ pension payment set to increase by another $1 billion next year
Illinois’ pension payment set to increase by another $1 billion next year
For the second year in a row, the state’s annual pension payment will increase by nearly $1 billion. The combined payment for all five state pension systems will increase to $6.8 billion next year, up from $5.9 billion this year. Annual payments for Illinois’ five pension systems per year, in millions Illinois ended fiscal year...
By Jonathan Ingram
Veto session: sneak peek of week two
Veto session: sneak peek of week two
Last week in Springfield, there was very little legislative activity during the first week of veto session. Such limited action took place that the House canceled Thursday session, and it is rumored that the Legislature will only meet on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week as well. It is expected that the current two-week veto...
By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney
Tax, borrow and spend in style
Tax, borrow and spend in style
During a House Executive Committee meeting this week, one round of testimony began with the argument that Illinois is in a fiscal crisis because it has $9 billion in unpaid bills. That argument couldn’t be more backward. Illinois’ crisis is due to habitual overspending, that results in unpaid bills. Unfortunately, the recent “solution” offered up...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Veto session: recap of week one
Veto session: recap of week one
The Illinois Policy Institute opposed eight bills and appeared in several committee meetings during the first week of veto session. Our policy team had crucial face time with legislators and discussed our positions on public policy that affects all Illinoisans. We also reached out to many members of the House Republican staff. Here is an...
By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney
Forget reform: Illinois legislators want to borrow $4 billion
Forget reform: Illinois legislators want to borrow $4 billion
It was déjà vu in Springfield as proponents of more debt pushed Illinois to borrow another $4 billion from the bond market. Their promise? That the state’s backlog of bills would finally get paid down. This is exactly what we heard almost two years ago, when advocates of the massive $7 billion income tax increase...
By Ted Dabrowski
Veto session: legislative update
Veto session: legislative update
Veto session commenced yesterday morning in Springfield. Typically, we would expect to see movement on controversial bills during this time because of the lame duck legislators who have been voted out of office but still retain voting power. However, impending Democratic supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature means that we expect to see movement...
By Matt Paprocki, Jane McEnaney
Piglet: $200,000 for eco-friendly customized zip lines
Piglet: $200,000 for eco-friendly customized zip lines
Providing entertainment may seem like a far cry from an essential government service, but not in Illinois. The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) doles out hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars in grants each year. Funding entertainment is one of the many ways in which this money is used. The...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Pensions and the Civic Committee
Pensions and the Civic Committee
Illinois has a long history of fake reforms – legislative proposals that promise to solve the great policy challenges of the day when passed, but never actually accomplish these goals. There is perhaps no bigger fake reform than the 1995 pension ramp passed by the Republican-controlled General Assembly and signed into law by former Gov....
Union perks prevent the upward mobility of all Illinoisans
Union perks prevent the upward mobility of all Illinoisans
Families in Illinois are struggling to afford higher education for their children. Incoming undergraduate students have seen tuition and mandatory fees at Illinois’ public universities increase by more than 60 percent since 2004. But that’s not the only problem. The government expects families to pick up the education bill for state employees, too. The Upward Mobility Program, available...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Twinkies, Ho Hos and the future of Illinois state pensions
Twinkies, Ho Hos and the future of Illinois state pensions
If Illinoisans want a glimpse of the state’s upcoming fiscal cliff, they should look no further than the failed negotiations between the maker of Twinkies and the unions that took them on. Hostess Brand’s bankruptcy is much more than the demise of famous brands like Twinkies, Ho Hos and Wonder Bread. It’s also the tragedy...
By Ted Dabrowski
Lawmakers’ pension fund posts negative investment return
Lawmakers’ pension fund posts negative investment return
For the third time in the last five years, the General Assembly Retirement System (GARS) has posted a negative investment return. Although the pension fund predicted it would earn $4 million in fiscal year 2012, it actually lost $81,448. The fund posted an investment return of -0.14 percent, far below the 7 percent it expected....
By Jonathan Ingram
Illinois’ pension debt grew by nearly $12 billion last year
Illinois’ pension debt grew by nearly $12 billion last year
Illinois’ pension systems are one year closer to complete insolvency. According to actuarial reports, the state’s five public pension systems owe a combined $94.6 billion. That’s up 14 percent from the $82.9 billion reported last year. Worse yet, none of the pension systems have enough assets on hand to pay benefits to those who have...
By Jonathan Ingram
Lessons from Denmark: taxing foods doesn’t trim waistlines – it drives consumers to greener pastures
Lessons from Denmark: taxing foods doesn’t trim waistlines – it drives consumers to greener pastures
Does the government have any business taxing foods it deems unhealthy? That was the status quo in Denmark until recently, when the country got rid of its controversial fat tax. This nanny-state policy, originally put in place about a year ago, increased taxes on all foods with a saturated fat content of above 2.3 percent. Authorities...
By Benjamin VanMetre
The irony of Cook County’s 2013 budget
The irony of Cook County’s 2013 budget
Taxes are about to go up again on many items for Cook County residents under the county’s 2013 budget. The Cook County Board of Commissioners approved a $2.95 billion budget for fiscal year 2013 by a landslide 16-1 vote last week. The budget includes a series of new revenue initiatives– a $1 per pack tax...
By Benjamin VanMetre