Good Government

Meat & Poultry Inspector Supervisors Paid $616K

Meat & Poultry Inspector Supervisors Paid $616K

by Will Compernolle The Department of Agriculture for the State of Illinois paid 11 meat and poultry inspector supervisors $616,597.87 in combined total wages in the fiscal year 2008. The average meat and poultry inspector supervisor was paid an annual salary of $56,054.35 with the highest salary being $61,633. The Illinois Department of Central Management Services website...

Teachers, Unions, and Transparency

Teachers, Unions, and Transparency

by Kate Piercy From S.T. Karnick at The American Culture: In case you missed it, LA Times reporters Jason Felch, Jason Song and Doug Smith used California’s public records law to obtain seven years of math and English test scores from the Los Angeles Unified School District. They asked Richard Buddin, a well-respected analyst at the RAND Corporation,...

Spotlight on Spending #11 – Frogs, Chickens, and Fine Art

Spotlight on Spending #11 – Frogs, Chickens, and Fine Art

The Problem Illinois’s dire fiscal situation continues to worsen year after year, and to turn this bad situation around it’s important to evaluate existing programs to ensure they’re necessary and effective. One such program that needs evaluation is the Environment and Nature Training Institute for Conservation Education (ENTICE) workshops from the Illinois Department of Natural...

By Chris Andriesen

Clout Hiring Alive in Chicago

Clout Hiring Alive in Chicago

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson A clout hiring scandal in Chicago’s Department of Transportation (CDOT) has led to a five-day, unpaid suspension for an engineering technician and the resignation of a Deputy Commissioner. The Chicago Sun-Times reports: Jim Bolster was slapped with the five-day suspension “for assisting” his boss, former Deputy Commissioner Gilberto Quinones, in Quinones’ quest to...

Cook County Job Training Program Under Review

Cook County Job Training Program Under Review

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson A state audit of a Cook County jobs training program is raising concerns about some of the program’s expenditures. The Chicago Tribune reports: Among an audit’s 68 findings were questions about whether youths who were paid more than $1 million were even qualified to be in the program, why $31,000 in pension payments...

Spotlight on Spending #10: When You Need a Hospital, Will It Be There?

Spotlight on Spending #10: When You Need a Hospital, Will It Be There?

The Problem How many hospitals does the Land of Lincoln need, and who gets to decide? In Illinois, the process is far more complicated than you might think—and, unfortunately, it also restricts access to health care for citizens across the state. In 1974, a federal law gave states incentives to create Certificate of Need (CON)...

By Chris Andriesen

Locksmiths Take Home $54K Salaries

Locksmiths Take Home $54K Salaries

by Will Compernolle The State of Illinois hired 33 locksmiths in calendar year 2008 for $1,786,125 in combined total wages. Of the 33 locksmiths, 2 were hired by the Department of Human Services, 30 were hired by the Department of Corrections, and 1 was hired by the Department of Juvenile Justice. The highest paid locksmith...

$2.5M for State Clinical Psychologists

$2.5M for State Clinical Psychologists

by Will Compernolle The State of Illinois hired 33 clinical psychologists in calendar year 2008 for $2,516,451 in combined total wages. Of the 33 clinical psychologists, 32 were hired by the Department of Human Services and 1 was hired by the Department of Corrections. The highest paid clinical psychologist took home a $94,456 salary while...

Summertime Blues

Summertime Blues

by Will Compernolle According to the Chicago Tribune, a new Congressional report called “Summertime Blues” shows stimulus funding has gone to buy iPods for high school students, cell phones for smokers trying to quit, and advertising for the stimulus itself. While the stimulus has been defended as an endeavor to spur job creation, no jobs were...

Electricians Cost State $7 Million

Electricians Cost State $7 Million

by Will Compernolle The State of Illinois hired 107 electricians in fiscal year 2008 for $7,370,091 in combined total wages. The average salary was $68,879 while the highest paid electrician made $110,251. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics website, the average salary for an electrician in Illinois for 2008 was $67,250. The Illinois Department of...

State Nutritionists Make 6.3% More than Private Sector Counterparts

State Nutritionists Make 6.3% More than Private Sector Counterparts

by Will Compernolle The Illinois Department of Human Services hired ten nutritionists in fiscal year 2008 for $543,117 in combined total wages. The average salary for a nutritionist was $54,311 while the highest paid nutritionist took home a $65,165 salary. The Bureau of Labor Statistics website shows the mean salary for a nutritionist in 2008 in Illinois was $51,070,...

$500 Million in Efficiency Savings for NYC

$500 Million in Efficiency Savings for NYC

by Kate Piercy 8,000 vacant desks, nearly 11 percent of the workstations in the city government’s 19 million square feet of office space. Nine separate agencies to handle vehicle maintenance, operating 125 separate maintenance garages, some across the street from each other. Each city agency with its own HR department, with an overall ratio of...

Illinois Gets “D” Grade on Civil Forfeiture Laws

Illinois Gets “D” Grade on Civil Forfeiture Laws

by Brian Costin Unlike criminal asset forfeiture, with civil forfeiture, a property owner need not be found guilty of a crime—or even charged—to permanently lose her cash, car, home or other property, a system which creates perverse incentives for law enforcement and jeopardizes a citizen’s property rights. The Institute for Justice recently released a 50-state report...

Word of Caution About FOIA

Word of Caution About FOIA

by Kate Piercy The News-Gazette sounded a warning today with regards to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), reacting to the efforts to weaken FOIA some have already attempted: The new Freedom of Information law was barely two weeks old when legislators amended it the first time in January, repealing a provision that made evaluations of public school...