Parks and wreck
Parks and wreck
The Illinois General Assembly today approved a pension bill that requires taxpayers to pay an additional $75 million into the Chicago Park District pension fund in addition to tripling the taxpayer contribution to the troubled pension fund. Unfortunately, this bill is mistakenly being heralded by some as a potential model for pension reform. Make no mistake:...
By Ted Dabrowski
Chicago Park District total debt exceeds $1.4 billion
Chicago Park District total debt exceeds $1.4 billion
Chicago Park District total debt: $1.4 billion The Chicago Park District is responsible for overseeing museums, beaches, parks, pools and other attractions. Chicago Park District has an annual operating budget of $410.9 million and employs approximately 3,000 workers. Chicago Park District’s debt burden totals more than $1.6 billion, including debt, health insurance and pension liabilities....
By Benjamin VanMetre
Colorado voters defeat a progressive income tax hike
Colorado voters defeat a progressive income tax hike
On Nov. 5, Colorado voters defeated a progressive income tax increase by a two-to-one margin — more than 66 percent of the voters said no to higher taxes. Colorado’s Amendment 66 was a ballot initiative to swap out the state’s competitive flat rate income tax for a progressive income tax increase. Specifically, lawmakers wanted to...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Taxing bodies powerless to stop Schaumburg TIF, property tax increases
Taxing bodies powerless to stop Schaumburg TIF, property tax increases
Village officials in Schaumburg are pushing for $512 million in new property taxes via a Tax Increment Financing, or TIF, district. The taxes would be used to create an entertainment district north of Woodfield Mall. But it’s not just people who pay property taxes in Schaumburg who would foot the bill. TIF districts cause property...
By Brian Costin
Pensions: contributions out of sync with payouts
Pensions: contributions out of sync with payouts
Members of Illinois’ state-run pension systems claim they’ve paid their fair share into the pension funds. To be sure, these workers have paid in what’s been required legally under mutually agreed upon contracts. But the benefits politicians and union bosses have negotiated for retirees are pushing the state’s pension systems to the brink of insolvency....
By Ted Dabrowski
Illinois’ pension crisis keeps getting worse
Illinois’ pension crisis keeps getting worse
Even if Illinois pension funds see investment returns that exceed expectations, that still won’t be enough to plug the largest fund’s hole. The Teachers’ Retirement System reported its pension underfunding grew to $55.73 billion as of June 30, 2013 — an increase of more than $3.5 billion since the end of the previous fiscal year...
By Ted Dabrowski
2014 Chicago budget includes tax increases, no pension solutions
2014 Chicago budget includes tax increases, no pension solutions
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel released today his 2014 plan to close the city’s looming $338.7 million budget gap. His proposal is heavy on tax hikes and short on solutions. The mayor vowed not to close the budget gap with higher property taxes this year. Instead, the plan is to nickel and dime Chicagoans with tax...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Flat is Fair
Flat is Fair
State Rep. Naomi Jakobsson, D-Urbana, recently revealed a new progressive tax proposal with rates that hit Illinois’ middle and working classes hard. Under current Illinois law, the individual income tax rate will be 3.75 percent in 2015. Under Jakobsson’s new plan, however, a higher 4 percent rate kicks in for people earning just $18,000. That income tax...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Emanuel pushes $0.75 cigarette tax hike for Chicago
Emanuel pushes $0.75 cigarette tax hike for Chicago
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel plans to increase the cigarette tax in Chicago by 75 cents per pack. The tax hike would increase the per-pack total to $7.42 — making Chicago the most expensive city in the nation in which to buy a pack of cigarettes. This tax hike is one of the plans Emanuel is considering to...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Illinois Supreme Court strikes down Illinois ‘Amazon Tax’
Illinois Supreme Court strikes down Illinois ‘Amazon Tax’
The Illinois Supreme Court today struck down the state’s “Amazon Tax,” a state law that forced online retailers to pay Illinois taxes regardless of whether they had a storefront or other physical presence in the state. In its ruling, the Supreme Court indicated that it struck down the law because it conflicts with a federal...
Illinois lawmakers who have signed anti-progressive tax resolution
Illinois lawmakers who have signed anti-progressive tax resolution
As the Illinois General Assembly heads back to Springfield for veto session next week, here is a quick look at what elected officials have signed on to the Illinois Policy Institute’s legislative efforts to prevent lawmakers from amending the state’s constitution to permit a progressive income tax hike, which would increase taxes on 85 percent...
By Jane McEnaney
Progressive tax hike proposal attacks Illinois’ working and middle classes
Progressive tax hike proposal attacks Illinois’ working and middle classes
State Rep. Naomi Jakobsson, D-Urbana, recently revealed a new progressive tax proposal with rates that hit Illinois’ middle and working classes hard. Under current Illinois law, the individual income tax rate will be 3.75 percent in 2015. Under Jakobsson’s new plan, however, a higher 4 percent rate kicks in for people earning just $18,000. That...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Hidden consequences of Illinois’ credit downgrades
Hidden consequences of Illinois’ credit downgrades
Illinois’ credit rating is in a free fall. Rating agencies have downgraded Illinois 13 times under Gov. Pat Quinn. Most recently, Moody’s Investors Service reduced Illinois’ credit rating to A3 from Aa3 – just four notches above junk status. Even before this downgrade, Illinois already had the worst credit rating in the nation. Illinois’ constant...
By Ted Dabrowski