Quinn’s final battle: governor calls special session for comptroller special election, minimum-wage hike
Quinn’s final battle: governor calls special session for comptroller special election, minimum-wage hike
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.
By Donovan Griffith
Illinois Policy threatened with arrest at union-led trainings
Illinois Policy threatened with arrest at union-led trainings
State police have been threatening staffers from Illinois Policy with arrest because the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, doesn't want us to tell home-based caregivers about their rights.
By Paul Kersey
Allegheny Technologies to modernize retirement benefits with 401(k)-style plan
Allegheny Technologies to modernize retirement benefits with 401(k)-style plan
Allegheny Technologies is making the switch to a 401(k)-style plan despite the fact that the company’s defined-benefit plan is currently 87 percent funded. Regardless of how well funded some defined-benefit plans can be, the plans are no longer affordable or sustainable.
By Benjamin VanMetre
No more blank checks for ObamaCare insurers
No more blank checks for ObamaCare insurers
The new federal spending bill, dubbed the “CRomnibus,” codifies that the ACA payments to insurers are budget-neutral, as the revenue to fund them will come from fees already assessed on health-insurance plans. This is not the blank check that insurers were hoping for.
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Rauner named most important pension player in the nation
Rauner named most important pension player in the nation
There’s a reason Bruce Rauner topped Institutional Investor’s Pension 40 list – he has the potential to fix the nation’s worst pension crisis.
By Benjamin VanMetre
Jobs serve as a stopgap for Chicago teen violence
Jobs serve as a stopgap for Chicago teen violence
But Chicago’s minimum-wage hike is a stopgap for jobs.
By Austin Berg
Chicago minimum-wage timing could spell disaster
Chicago minimum-wage timing could spell disaster
Chicago City Council claims that over 400,000 workers in Chicago will get pay hikes. What lawmakers should be studying is how many tens of thousands of those workers are going to be unnecessarily thrown out of work the next time the economy slows down, property taxes go up or a new technology comes along that can replace human labor.
By Michael Lucci