Closing imaginary loopholes in Illinois’ public-records law
Closing imaginary loopholes in Illinois’ public-records law
While the Freedom of Information Act is abundantly clear, secrecy-obsessed bureaucrats often claim exemption.
While the Freedom of Information Act is abundantly clear, secrecy-obsessed bureaucrats often claim exemption.
The local revolution that began in Kentucky can spread to Illinois.
Tax revenues in Illinois are up 22.5 percent over pre-recession highs, while 30 other states are collecting less tax revenue today than they were before the recession began.
Only 10 percent of private-sector workers in Illinois belong to a union. But over half of public-sector workers are unionized.
Simple logic. Respect for rights. These are things Illinoisans are not used to seeing from their state government, so perhaps it’s understandable that some are having trouble understanding what Rauner has done and why he has done it.
Tax relief, worker freedom and a health-care win have set the stage for an Illinois comeback in years to come.
The intent of the law is to prevent binge drinking and drunk driving. But it’s not clear this is the best policy to address either of these problems.
A thriving entrepreneurial culture depends on the ability to experiment and take risks without begging for permission from the government.
We have yet to see the full schedule for Quinn’s special session, but one thing is for sure, the governor is gearing up for one last battle on very important issues less than a week before a change of leadership.
City officials don’t get very much right. But if public pressure makes them act to ensure greater police transparency and more protection of individual rights, we may have good reason to be optimistic.
Judy Baar Topinka was larger than life.
Action, or lack thereof, on the 2011 income-tax hikes, a minimum-wage increase, SEIU training and more affect Illinoisans in the wake of a lame-duck death.
More and more households becoming dependent on food stamps reveals the true impact of Illinois’ sputtering economy.
Illinois is now down 138,200 total payroll jobs in the recession era, the second-worst recovery of any state.