Illinois schools pay $8.8M in penalties for pension spiking
Illinois schools pay $8.8M in penalties for pension spiking
Illinois school districts paid out $8.8 million in penalties over two school years to cover salary and sick days in excess of what is allowed by law. Those are dollars taken from classrooms, but only hint at the full taxpayer cost.
By Dylan Sharkey
Bill to boost Chicago police pensions would cost taxpayers $3 billion
Bill to boost Chicago police pensions would cost taxpayers $3 billion
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill to boost Chicago firefighter cost-of-living increases last year, costing taxpayers $850 million. Despite Mayor Lori Lightfoot calling it “irresponsible,” a new bill would do the same for city police at more than triple the cost.
By Adam Schuster
Illinois may borrow $1B for pension buyouts
Illinois may borrow $1B for pension buyouts
Illinois lawmakers might borrow $1 billion to extend pension buyout programs until 2026. Experts warn the efforts have been a disappointment and will do little to ease Illinois’ worst-in-the-nation pension crisis.
By Adam Schuster, Patrick Andriesen
Illinois taxpayers pay nearly 78% of state health insurance
Illinois taxpayers pay nearly 78% of state health insurance
Amendment 1 would stop voters and lawmakers from curbing government unions’ ability to demand more from taxpayers, including platinum health insurance the average Illinoisan doesn’t enjoy.
By Dylan Sharkey
How to eliminate Illinois’ pension debt without hurting retirees
How to eliminate Illinois’ pension debt without hurting retirees
Illinois lawmakers haven’t taken up pension legislation in nearly a decade. It’s time to give voters a chance to fix the problem driving state fiscal woes. A constitutional amendment can fix the unsustainable public pension systems.
By Dylan Sharkey
Chicago’s $43,100 debt per taxpayer driven by pension debt
Chicago’s $43,100 debt per taxpayer driven by pension debt
Fiscal watchdog Truth in Accounting again gave an ‘F’ grade to Chicago, thanks to high debt driven by unsustainable pension costs. Fixing the problem will take amending the Illinois Constitution.
By Justin Carlson
Illinois can save $577M on pensions by adding a date to a law
Illinois can save $577M on pensions by adding a date to a law
Illinois’ pension debt is the highest of any state. An easy fix to state law would start the Tier 3 retirement program, saving $577 million while workers gain options.
By Dylan Sharkey
Skokie is latest Illinois community paying pensions by borrowing
Skokie is latest Illinois community paying pensions by borrowing
The village of Skokie issued $176 million in new bonds to fund shortfalls in public safety pensions. The village joins a growing list of municipalities forced to borrow to meet “unsustainable” pension obligations.
By Patrick Andriesen
To fix Illinois’ pension crisis, first change its constitution
To fix Illinois’ pension crisis, first change its constitution
Illinois allocates more of its budget to pensions than any other state, but pension spending has only skyrocketed. A constitutional amendment is the only way to reform the state’s unsustainable and underfunded pension systems.
By Dylan Sharkey
Mike Crenshaw
Mike Crenshaw
“I just feel that as a taxpayer, I should be able to decide when I give, and receive, my money. Also. I should be able to decide whether I want to contribute to a pension. I know how to budget my own finances from month to month. That’s something that I teach in my classes.”
Illinois pension debt is little less worse, but still worst in U.S.
Illinois pension debt is little less worse, but still worst in U.S.
Illinois’ worst-in-the-nation pension debt shrank slightly after investments more than tripled predictions, thanks partly to COVID-19 stimulus. Experts caution 1 year cannot undo decades of overpromising and underfunding.
By Patrick Andriesen
Illinois police, firefighters push back on state control of pensions
Illinois police, firefighters push back on state control of pensions
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill to consolidate local police and firefighter pensions from across downstate Illinois, but beneficiaries are suing because the state is notorious for poor pension management.
By Patrick Andriesen
Peoria mayor on pensions: ‘We’ll never catch up, not in our lifetimes’
Peoria mayor on pensions: ‘We’ll never catch up, not in our lifetimes’
Peoria leaders said they are in ‘survival mode’ and need to take $4 million from this year’s budget to help make pension payments for the next two years. The mayor calls for state action to fix the pension debt crisis.
By Patrick Andriesen
Michael Levan
Michael Levan
“City officials claim pension payments are going up faster than the city can handle them. Yet, several city officials make comfortable pensions and retirements, and continue to spend our tax dollars on things that don’t serve the taxpayers.”