Kankakee County asks voters to hike county-level sales taxes by 800%
Kankakee County asks voters to hike county-level sales taxes by 800%
Kankakee County already has one of the highest average property tax rates in the country. In 2012, the Tax Foundation ranked Kankakee County as having the 79th-highest property taxes in the nation out of more than 800 of the largest counties in the U.S. Soon, Kankakee County could have one of the highest sales-tax rates...
By Brian Costin
School districts should stop using tax dollars to support ballot measures
School districts should stop using tax dollars to support ballot measures
Should a school district be allowed to use your tax dollars to promote a ballot measure that would raise sales taxes? Of course not. In fact, the Illinois State Officials and Employees Ethics Act requires all units of local government, including school boards, to adopt policies prohibiting their officials and employees from using government resources...
By Jeffrey Schwab
Champaign County breaks promise on sales-tax hike
Champaign County breaks promise on sales-tax hike
Property taxes for school districts in Champaign County have risen substantially, despite property-tax relief promises made regarding the County School Facility Sales Tax enacted in 2009. And there’s reason to believe districts across the state might suffer the same fate. In April 2009, Champaign County passed a referendum for a 1 percent increase in the...
By Shawn Tonge
Illinois has given companies more than $830M in EDGE tax credits since 1999
Illinois has given companies more than $830M in EDGE tax credits since 1999
Illinois’ Economic Development for a Growing Economy, or EDGE, tax credit program has been making the news from time to time during recent months, mostly in the context of discussions on how to reform Illinois taxes and grow Illinois’ economy simultaneously. The program is on the chopping block. Notably, talk of changes to the EDGE...
By Robert Steere
Legislative exemption ignores the real budget crisis
Legislative exemption ignores the real budget crisis
As the state of Illinois moves deeper into budgetary crisis, the people of Illinois are depending upon government leaders to confront serious fiscal challenges with maturity, wisdom, courage and responsibility. The character exhibited by our governor and legislative leaders in this crisis will determine the trajectory of our state for years to come. Focus on...
By Robert Steere
State, suburbs double down on Divvy
State, suburbs double down on Divvy
Chicago’s Divvy bikes will soon be pedaled down suburban streets. On Sept. 29, Gov. Pat Quinn approved a $3 million state grant expanding the bike-share program to the suburbs of Evanston and Oak Park, while adding 50 new docking stations to Chicago’s Garfield Park, Austin, Rogers Park and West Rogers park neighborhoods. Seven hundred new...
By Austin Berg
Bad blood makes for bad policy in General Assembly’s budget exemption
Bad blood makes for bad policy in General Assembly’s budget exemption
Does bad blood between political leaders justify bad public policy? Most Illinoisans don’t think so, especially when the result is legislation that exempts their lawmakers from budgetary oversight. Earlier this year, at the midnight hour of spring session, Illinois’ legislative leaders carved out a special exemption for themselves from the state budgeting process. They enacted...
By Robert Steere
Illinois General Assembly exempts itself from spending cuts, appropriations process
Illinois General Assembly exempts itself from spending cuts, appropriations process
In the throes of Illinois’ fiscal crisis, nearly every nook and cranny of the Illinois state budget should be fair game for review and reduction. But some state lawmakers don’t seem to think so, especially when it comes to their money. In the waning hours of the final day of this year’s spring session, state...
By Robert Steere
Chicago takes pole position in race for Obama library, no tax dollars required
Chicago takes pole position in race for Obama library, no tax dollars required
On Sept. 15, the Barack Obama Foundation announced four semifinalists in the battle to build Barack Obama’s presidential library and museum. The four potential host sites include the University of Chicago, the University of Illinois at Chicago, Columbia University in New York City and the University of Hawaii. Holding two of the four slots, the...
By Jane McEnaney
Illinois school districts seeking 14 countywide sales tax hikes in November
Illinois school districts seeking 14 countywide sales tax hikes in November
School districts in 14 Illinois counties are pushing for countywide increases in sales tax rates. These counties are utilizing the 2007 Illinois County School Facility Tax Act, or ICSFTA, which allows school boards representing 51 percent of a county’s population to put a referendum on the ballot for a countywide sales tax increase to fund...
By Brian Costin
Everything you need to know about North Riverside’s budget battle
Everything you need to know about North Riverside’s budget battle
On Sept. 12, the village of North Riverside took a big step forward in addressing its budget crisis. The village filed a suit with the Cook County Circuit Court asking for the right to terminate its currently expired firefighters contract. This effort is part of the village’s larger plan to deal with its budget crisis...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Good politics makes bad policy on Emanuel minimum-wage hike
Good politics makes bad policy on Emanuel minimum-wage hike
On Sept. 3, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel signed an executive order requiring city contractors to immediately hike wages for the city workers they employ to $13 per hour from the current rate of $11.93 per hour. The current rate is already nearly 45 percent higher than the statewide minimum wage of $8.25 per hour. Illinoisans...
By Jane McEnaney
Government workers watch stock market boom as their retirement security collapses
Government workers watch stock market boom as their retirement security collapses
Stock markets have reached all-time highs just a few years after the market meltdown of the Great Recession. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index has more than doubled since the end of 2008 and many individuals have replenished their retirement accounts, and then some. But if you’re an Illinois government worker stuck in a state-run...
Can Illinois’ dead-last credit rating get any worse?
Can Illinois’ dead-last credit rating get any worse?
According to ratings agency Standard & Poor’s 500 Illinois’ credit rating is the worst among the 50 states. We are the only state in the country with an A- credit rating – on par with nations such as Botswana, Latvia and Slovenia And Illinoisans should be aware of the possibility that we could be headed...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman