Rauner signs bill prohibiting cost-of-living adjustments for lawmakers
Rauner signs bill prohibiting cost-of-living adjustments for lawmakers
HB 643 will prevent the $50,000 daily cost of special sessions from rising even higher in fiscal year 2018.
HB 643 will prevent the $50,000 daily cost of special sessions from rising even higher in fiscal year 2018.
House Joint Resolution 69 would create a special task force to investigate and report on state and local property tax assessment, appeals processes and other property tax policies.
Illinois’ high cigarette tax is a flighty source of revenue with unintended consequences.
Many reforms are still needed in Illinois higher education system despite credit rating affirmations and upgrades to seven Illinois universities.
CPS’ 2017-18 budget shows cuts for many schools as student populations shrink, despite an increase in per-pupil spending for the district as a whole.
Senate Bill 1 is yet another unfair bailout of long-term mismanagement within Chicago Public Schools.
The special session will deal with Senate Bill 1, an education finance bill that contains an annual $215 million pension bailout for Chicago Public Schools.
Suburbs such as Downers Grove make dining out costlier through tax hikes.
Illinois taxpayers deserve to have a voice in budgeting decisions as politicians continually look to hike their taxes.
AFSCME officials proposed seven tax increases for Cook County as a way to save union jobs, including an increase in the county sales tax, a new head tax and doubling the amusement tax to 6 percent, despite the county’s local tax burden already being among the highest in the nation.
Slush fund hits record amounts as Chicago looks to the state for a bailout.
Cash-strapped and debt-ridden Chicago Public Schools plans to increase per-pupil funding by roughly $200 a student over last year’s budget.
The case against Mount Prospect, Ill., shows how tax increment financing districts siphon tax money from school districts and other taxing bodies, and diverts needed resources and puts pressure on taxpayers to make up the difference.
Illinoisans can take a look at their paystubs and notice the state decided to hike their income tax bill by 32 percent.