New study finds that Medicaid doesn’t improve health outcomes
New study finds that Medicaid doesn’t improve health outcomes
by Jonathan Ingram Illinois lawmakers set to decide whether or not to adopt ObamaCare’s voluntary expansion of Medicaid may want to read a new study published in the Journal of New England Medicine. In 2008, Oregon officials wanted to expand eligibility for their Medicaid program, but only had enough funding for 10,000 of the 90,000 eligible...
CPS school closings: district spares some schools, but problems still persist
CPS school closings: district spares some schools, but problems still persist
by Josh Dwyer The big news from the Chicago Public Schools school board meeting is that Ericson, Garvey, Jackson and Manierre schools will remain open. Still, 50 other schools are on the chopping block. Forty-eight schools will close in June. Canter Elementary will get a one-year reprieve and Attucks Elementary will close at the end of...
Illinois’ budget: Where does all the money go?
Illinois’ budget: Where does all the money go?
Even with record revenues, Illinois is suffering
By Benjamin VanMetre
The IRS scandal and a partisan union
The IRS scandal and a partisan union
by Paul Kersey National Review Reporter Andrew Stiles recently pointed out another group that may have had a hand in using federal tax law to persecute conservative and free market groups – the National Treasury Employees Union, or NTEU. This group represents Internal Revenue Service employees, and has strong partisan preferences. Stiles wrote: The union endorsed Obama...
CTBA’s pension plan doesn’t fix the problem
CTBA’s pension plan doesn’t fix the problem
Back in January, Ralph Martire of the union-backed Center for Tax and Budget Accountability proposedwhat he called a “solution” for Illinois’ pension crisis. This plan has been getting more attention lately. But before embracing it, lawmakers should ask: does this plan really solve the problem? After all, Martire’s plan is to leave the broken pension system untouched –...
By Jonathan Ingram
Illinois speed limit hike goes to Gov. Quinn
Illinois speed limit hike goes to Gov. Quinn
by Brian Costin The Illinois House voted by an 85-30 margin to raise the state’s speed limits today. Previously, the bill was approved in the Senate by a 41-6 margin. If Gov. Pat Quinn signs this legislation, the speed limit on tollways and interstates would be raised to 70 mph, up from 65 mph. The maximum speed limit...
Michigan’s charter success story
Michigan’s charter success story
by Josh Dwyer According to a 2009 study conducted by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, 42 percent of Michigan’s charter schools outperformed traditional public schools in math and 35 percent outperformed them in reading. Only 6 percent underperformed relative to their traditional public school counterparts in math and only 2 percent did so in...
Medicaid expansion won’t reduce unnecessary ER visits
Medicaid expansion won’t reduce unnecessary ER visits
Proponents of ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion insist that the expansion is necessary to keep people out of emergency rooms for preventable conditions such as hypertension, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The only problem? Medicaid patients are more likely than the uninsured to use emergency rooms, especially for preventable conditions. In 2010, medical researchers at the...
By Jonathan Ingram
ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion bill wrong for Illinois
ObamaCare’s Medicaid expansion bill wrong for Illinois
by Jonathan Ingram Senate Bill 26 passed out of the House Human Services Committee and will head to House for consideration. But the Medicaid expansion this bill proposes is not right for Illinois. First, Illinois is under no obligation to expand Medicaid eligibility. Federal law permits, but does not require, states to expand eligibility levels for...
Capitol Updates: May 20 week in review
Capitol Updates: May 20 week in review
This was an eventful week in Springfield. Though pension negotiations between House Speaker Mike Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton remain at an impasse, the General Assembly passedSenate Bill 2356, which raises the speed limit on Illinois’ tollways and interstates to 70 mph, up from 65 mph. Gov. Pat Quinn remains noncommittal on this issue. Here’s a look at some of the legislative...
By Jane McEnaney
Illinois one of only 7 states with unemployment higher than one year ago
Illinois one of only 7 states with unemployment higher than one year ago
by Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner Illinois continues to have the nation’s second-worst unemployment rate, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ April labor report. The state’s unemployment rate dropped to 9.3 percent in April, down from 9.5 percent in March, and is still nearly two percentage points above the 7.5 percent national average. The state’s drop...
New Oak Lawn mayor to implement Institute’s online transparency checklist
New Oak Lawn mayor to implement Institute’s online transparency checklist
by Brian Costin Residents of Oak Lawn may soon get a much-needed dose of government transparency. Sandra Bury was recently sworn in as the new Mayor of Oak Lawn, a village in the southwest suburbs of Chicago. As one of her first priorities in office, Bury intends to implement the Illinois Policy Institute’s 10-Point Transparency Checklist,...
Cleveland teachers’ contract: It’s better than the one we got
Cleveland teachers’ contract: It’s better than the one we got
by Paul Kersey In my last post, I called attention to the contract between the Cleveland Teachers Union (an affiliate of the American Federation, just like the union that represents Chicago teachers) and the Cleveland Municipal School District. The union and the district both deserve credit for releasing their contract to the media just two days after reaching...
Dick Durbin’s double standard on IRS targeting conservative organizations
Dick Durbin’s double standard on IRS targeting conservative organizations
by Brian Costin The story of the Internal Revenue Service targeting conservative-leaning organizations for special scrutiny in nonprofit status is one of the biggest scandals to hit Washington, D.C., in my lifetime. Even U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin – an Illinois Democrat – has weighed in with outrage about the IRS scandal. From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:...