Why a Medicaid card ≠ care in Illinois
Why a Medicaid card ≠ care in Illinois
A recent report from the Inspector General at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, confirms that it will likely become harder to get access to care through Medicaid’s managed care program – a program that Illinois is using to provide care to an increasing number of Medicaid enrollees. With Medicaid enrollment...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Wilmette 7th in Illinois to ace online-transparency test
Wilmette 7th in Illinois to ace online-transparency test
The village of Wilmette is a leader when it comes to online transparency of local governments in Illinois. It recently became the seventh local government in Illinois to score a perfect 100 percent on the Illinois Policy Institute’s 10-Point Transparency Checklist. With nearly 7,000 local governments in Illinois, Wilmette’s score places the village in the...
By Brian Costin
State, suburbs double down on Divvy
State, suburbs double down on Divvy
Chicago’s Divvy bikes will soon be pedaled down suburban streets. On Sept. 29, Gov. Pat Quinn approved a $3 million state grant expanding the bike-share program to the suburbs of Evanston and Oak Park, while adding 50 new docking stations to Chicago’s Garfield Park, Austin, Rogers Park and West Rogers park neighborhoods. Seven hundred new...
By Austin Berg
Illinois Sunshine Award winners
Illinois Sunshine Award winners
Illinois is known for its culture of government corruption, fiscal mismanagement and cronyism. That reputation is backed up by hard statistics that say Illinois is the third most corrupt state in the country and the Chicago region is the most corrupt area in the country. Illinois’ citizens deserve better. Illinois’ government culture on the state...
Jobs vs. food stamps: Illinois last in the Midwest
Jobs vs. food stamps: Illinois last in the Midwest
Since the Great Recession ended, Illinois’ food-stamp enrollment has outpaced job creation by a ratio of nearly 2-to-1. The jobs versus food stamps comparison is a strong indicator of economic hardship. And compared to the rest of the Midwest, Illinoisans are truly feeling the pain. Since the Great Recession ended, Illinois is the only state...
By Michael Lucci
From first to worst: Illinois tops nation in legislative leader experience
From first to worst: Illinois tops nation in legislative leader experience
Here’s an interesting argument against term limits: Government business is hard. That’s why we need politicians to hold office for a long time – so they can gain the experience they need to understand how to govern effectively. That’s effectively what Christopher Mooney, director of the institute of government and public affairs at the University...
By Brian Costin
Illinoisans pay twice for their legislators
Illinoisans pay twice for their legislators
Illinois’ active legislators will each cost the state budget about $180,000 next year.
By Ted Dabrowski
5 reasons why anti-Right-to-Work study is flawed
5 reasons why anti-Right-to-Work study is flawed
A few weeks ago, Frank Manzo IV of the Illinois Economic Policy Institute teamed up with Robert Bruno from the University of Illinois Labor Education Program to release yet another demonstration of how sophisticated mathematical analysis can’t fix bad data. Their report, titled “Free Rider States: How Low-Wage Employment in Right to Work States is...
By Paul Kersey
America’s digital divide: Startups fly, storefronts struggle
America’s digital divide: Startups fly, storefronts struggle
This article was written by Satta Sarmah and featured in Fast Company on September 26, 2014. When 30-year-old Chicago native Sheyla Jarocz talks about how a brick and mortar storefront survives in the city’s North Center neighborhood, it sounds like a lonely mission. “I’ve tried to do promotions with nearby businesses,” said Jarocz, who opened Maash Boutique two years...
By Michael Lucci
School districts seek union advice on Institute FOIA requests
School districts seek union advice on Institute FOIA requests
Over the course of the summer, the Illinois Policy Institute has been attempting to assess how many teachers have made use of their Hudson rights – their legal right to prevent their dues from being used for union politics – and how well Hudson rights are understood in Illinois public schools. Do teachers even know...
By Paul Kersey
Chicago pension debt grows despite high market returns
Chicago pension debt grows despite high market returns
The city of Chicago’s four government-run pension funds each beat their expected investment returns in 2013, according their most recent financial reports. Yet the city’s unfunded pension debt grew by nearly $800 million. The assumed investment return for the city’s four pension funds ranges from 7.5-8 percent. Yet the 2013 investment returns were 13 percent...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Bad blood makes for bad policy in General Assembly’s budget exemption
Bad blood makes for bad policy in General Assembly’s budget exemption
Does bad blood between political leaders justify bad public policy? Most Illinoisans don’t think so, especially when the result is legislation that exempts their lawmakers from budgetary oversight. Earlier this year, at the midnight hour of spring session, Illinois’ legislative leaders carved out a special exemption for themselves from the state budgeting process. They enacted...
By Robert Steere
What you aren’t being told about a state-based exchange in Illinois
What you aren’t being told about a state-based exchange in Illinois
A recent piece in the Chicago Tribune shows that some in Illinois remain very interested in establishing a state-based health insurance exchange. Under the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, states have the option of applying for federal dollars to establish a state-based health insurance exchange instead of using the federal exchange, healthcare.gov. But not only...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Body cameras for police a win for citizens, officers and taxpayers
Body cameras for police a win for citizens, officers and taxpayers
What’s a low-cost way to improve police accountability in Illinois while saving taxpayer dollars? Some say body cameras for police officers. After the events in Ferguson, MO, several editorials have encouraged Illinois police officers to wear body cameras as a way to deter misconduct, and some departments have already signed on to the idea. But...
By Bryant Jackson-Green