Illinois population drop, departures among worst in U.S.
Illinois population drop, departures among worst in U.S.
Illinois lost 83,839 residents who moved to other states, one of the highest rates in the U.S. and driving a 10th consecutive year of population decline. It ranks near the bottom on multiple other population measures, too.
By Bryce Hill
Illinois’ Midwest-leading minimum wage increases again in January 2024
Illinois’ Midwest-leading minimum wage increases again in January 2024
Non-tipped workers will see their hourly wage hit $14 an hour while tipped employees will collect $8.40 thanks to the next minimum wage hike on January 1, 2024.
By Patrick Andriesen
All neighbor states grow as Illinois population shrinks by 32,826
All neighbor states grow as Illinois population shrinks by 32,826
Illinoisans moving to other states was the sole reason for population decline in 2023. It’s not a Midwestern thing, because our neighbors are growing.
By Bryce Hill
Every 6 minutes, 16 seconds, Illinois loses another resident
Every 6 minutes, 16 seconds, Illinois loses another resident
People choosing to move out of state again drove Illinois’ population to decline from July 2022-July 2023. Another one left every 6 minutes and 16 seconds.
By Bryce Hill
Too much occupational licensing could stop people from moving to Illinois
Too much occupational licensing could stop people from moving to Illinois
Illinois has seen continual population loss for a decade. While taxes and lack of opportunities are driving people away, the state’s licensing requirements could be keeping people from moving in.
By Joe Tabor
Illinois’ occupational licenses make it easier for holiday burglars
Illinois’ occupational licenses make it easier for holiday burglars
Illinois’ burdensome licensing for security alarm installers discourage potential workers, potentially making Illinois an easier target for burglars such as the Grinch or the Wet Bandits from “Home Alone.”
By Dylan Sharkey
Most Illinois metro areas add jobs in November, four await pandemic recovery
Most Illinois metro areas add jobs in November, four await pandemic recovery
Nearly two-thirds of Illinois’ metro areas added jobs in November, led primarily by the Chicago-Naperville-Elgin metro adding 10,300 jobs since October. Four metros still have yet to reach pre-pandemic levels.
By Patrick Andriesen
Illinoisans in moving vans drives 10th straight population drop
Illinoisans in moving vans drives 10th straight population drop
People choosing to move out of Illinois led to the 10th consecutive year of population decline, new data from U.S. Census Bureau shows. Politicians can change that.
By Bryce Hill
Illinois population drops for 10th year in a row during 2023
Illinois population drops for 10th year in a row during 2023
People moving out of Illinois led to the 10th consecutive year of population decline, new Census Bureau data shows.
By Bryce Hill
Rob Calvin
Rob Calvin
Rob Calvin is a real estate agent with @properties. He’s concerned about how the proposed “mansion tax” will impact Chicago’s housing market, hurting properties well below the $1 million price point Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson is targeting through a ballot question. “I was watching [the city council] on Oct. 4 when they got into the...
Vallas: ‘Illinois is back,’ but only in Pritzker’s active imagination
Vallas: ‘Illinois is back,’ but only in Pritzker’s active imagination
Gov. J.B. Pritzker told Crain’s Chicago Business, “Illinois is back.” But with a long list of state and local fiscal and economic problems, that is more spin than reality.
By Paul Vallas
Shopping small on Saturday? Good. Small businesses lead Illinois’ job growth.
Shopping small on Saturday? Good. Small businesses lead Illinois’ job growth.
Small Business Saturday offers a reason to be thankful: Illinois businesses with fewer than 20 employees were the ones creating the most new jobs.
By Dylan Sharkey
Voters oppose Chicago mayor’s tent city plan over 2 to 1
Voters oppose Chicago mayor’s tent city plan over 2 to 1
New polling shows Chicago voters mostly oppose Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan for using tent cities to house asylum-seekers in the city.
By Dylan Sharkey