Capitol Update: The Status of the Pension Reform Bill
Capitol Update: The Status of the Pension Reform Bill
Collin Hitt, the Institute’s Senior Director of Government Affairs, gives an update on S.B. 512 from just outside the Capitol Building on the afternoon of Friday, May 27. The bill, which would reform public employee pensions going forward, passed out of committee yesterday and could see a vote in the House very soon.
Pension Reform, Illinois’s Future
Pension Reform, Illinois’s Future
(UPDATED: action in House pension committee. See below) by Collin Hitt A bold proposal to reform government employee pensions has been put forward, Senate Bill 512. It is the broadest and best legislation yet introduced by legislative leaders hoping to address the long term debt, and insolvency, of Illinois’s public employee pension funds. Illinois taxpayers...
Pension Costs Will Hit Home: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Pension Costs Will Hit Home: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Download a pdf of this report and chart here. The required pension payment for Chicago city government and Chicago Public Schools will jump to $1.92 billion from $650 million between now and 2020. Current law will require local taxpayers to foot the bill. That’s a citywide per capita jump to $715 from $241. Illinois is...
Teacher Retirement Costs Exceed General State Aid to Schools: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Teacher Retirement Costs Exceed General State Aid to Schools: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Download a pdf of this report and chart here. The funding of Illinois’s Teachers’ Retirement System (TRS) has become a major obstacle for future increases in state education spending. Years of overly generous pensions and delayed funding by the Illinois legislature have left the TRS approximately $47 billion short of its obligations. Historically, the largest...
Illinois’s $100,000 Plus Workforce: Strong and Growing
Illinois’s $100,000 Plus Workforce: Strong and Growing
by Mark Cavers Illinois will have $8.3 billion in unpaid bills by the end of the fiscal year, a projected deficit of $1.7 billion for fiscal year 2012 and $86 billion in unpaid pension liabilities. A contributing factor to our deficits, and a major reason behind calls for higher taxes is government employee’s pay and benefits. Rather...
Will HB149 Take Away Previously Earned Pension Benefits? No
Will HB149 Take Away Previously Earned Pension Benefits? No
Pension reform is needed now. This five minute video addresses the misinformation about HB149, including the number one question people have: will it take away benefits that have been previously earned? The answer is no. Watch the video and then call your legislator and urge them to support HB149. Phone the Illinois Capitol Switchboard: (217) 782-2000.
What Voters Want – Pension Reform: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
What Voters Want – Pension Reform: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
A January poll asked likely Illinois voters how the state should address its increasing pension payment. Sixty-four percent of respondents said that benefits for current public employees should be reformed to work within the state’s financial constraints. Earlier this year, lawmakers passed a record 67 percent tax hike. At the time, taxpayers were told the...
Capitol Update: Pensions
Capitol Update: Pensions
Collin Hitt, Senior Director of Government Affairs, discusses the latest news on pensions.
Pension U: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Pension U: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Download a pdf of this report and chart here. If Illinois continues on its current path, the amount of money that state government spends on the State Universities Retirement System, or SURS, will eclipse the amount of general funds given to public universities and community colleges. The graphic below demonstrates how the rising costs of...
There’s Nowhere to Go but…Down?: Illinois’ pension crisis
There’s Nowhere to Go but…Down?: Illinois’ pension crisis
by Mark Cavers A new report from the Pew Center on the States takes a look at how each state is doing in funding their pension obligations. The report, based on data from fiscal year 2009, shows that Illinois had the lowest funding ratio, with 51% of our pension liabilities funded. The next closest state is...
Because You’re Not Paying Enough In Taxes Already
Because You’re Not Paying Enough In Taxes Already
by Kristina Rasmussen As Illinois’s service sector grows (accounting for 32 percent of Illinois’s economy in 1977 and 48 percent in 2009), so has the desire to tax it. In 2009, the Illinois Senate tried to expand the state sales tax to a number of services (chimney sweeps, animal shelters, interior design services, and so on),...
Chicago’s Big Hurt on Pensions: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Chicago’s Big Hurt on Pensions: Charting Illinois’s Pension Crisis
Chicago residents face twin financial crises at Chicago Public Schools and City Hall, driven by the costs of public employee pensions. The steep tab for the retirement benefits of school and city employees is coming due. More retirees than ever are collecting pension checks. And state law will soon require the City and CPS to...