Mayor Emanuel’s minimum wage executive order doesn’t apply to political pals
Mayor Emanuel’s minimum wage executive order doesn’t apply to political pals
With great fanfare, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel recently announced an executive order requiring city contractors and concessionaires to pay their employees no less than $13 per hour. The move was highly touted in both the Chicago Sun-Times and Chicago Tribune, as well as a number of other publications and television news broadcasts. None of these...
By Brian Costin
Months after new regulations imposed, pedicabs struggle
Months after new regulations imposed, pedicabs struggle
Four months ago, Chicago passed an ordinance regulating the city’s burgeoning pedicab industry. What’s been the effect so far? By many accounts, business has taken a major hit. Before the ordinance, it was estimated that Chicago had as many as 400 pedicabs operating throughout the city. But since the ordinance took effect, the city has...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
IEA continues wasteful union spending
IEA continues wasteful union spending
The Illinois Education Association, or IEA, has gotten even more wasteful, according to new LM-2 spending reports filed with the U.S. Department of Labor. IEA has a history of being a very wasteful union. In my review of union spending, I went through IEA operations spending – money that went into representation, politics and lobbying,...
By Paul Kersey
WARN report: amidst 600 layoffs, state picks phone favorites
WARN report: amidst 600 layoffs, state picks phone favorites
Nearly 600 Illinois workers will be laid off come 2015, according to notices filed in accordance with the Workers Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, or WARN. Among the layoffs – which include 123 workers at Dixon, Illinois-based Anchor Coupling Inc.; 82 workers at plastics products-maker Pp Il LLC; and 58 workers at Jim’s Formal Wear,...
By Austin Berg
Chicago grifts drivers with shorter yellow lights
Chicago grifts drivers with shorter yellow lights
The Chicago Tribune released findings from their ongoing investigation into the city’s red-light camera program on Thursday, revealing that with the city’s transition to a new camera vendor came a “subtle but significant lowering of the threshold for yellow light times.” The new vendor, Xerox State & Local Solutions, took over the program in 2013...
By Austin Berg
New app gives Illinois voters access to legislation, timely legislative information
New app gives Illinois voters access to legislation, timely legislative information
Since January 2013, the Illinois General Assembly has filed 6,305 bills in the House and 3,667 bills in the Senate. These figures don’t account for the myriad amendments that are tacked on to many bills before the full legislature votes on them. With that many pieces of legislation, the average concerned citizen needs a mechanism...
By Jane McEnaney
Illinois has given companies more than $830M in EDGE tax credits since 1999
Illinois has given companies more than $830M in EDGE tax credits since 1999
Illinois’ Economic Development for a Growing Economy, or EDGE, tax credit program has been making the news from time to time during recent months, mostly in the context of discussions on how to reform Illinois taxes and grow Illinois’ economy simultaneously. The program is on the chopping block. Notably, talk of changes to the EDGE...
By Robert Steere
Federal judge: Pensions not as protected as you think
Federal judge: Pensions not as protected as you think
Contrary to popular belief, government-worker pensions are not untouchable, at least according to the federal courts. The federal judge in charge of the bankruptcy proceedings of Stockton, California, has ruled that city-worker pension debt must be treated like any other form of debt and could be adjusted under federal bankruptcy law. The ruling is a...
By John Klingner
ObamaCare insurer bailout is illegal, according to government’s own reports
ObamaCare insurer bailout is illegal, according to government’s own reports
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, is moving forward with a bailout of ObamaCare health-insurance exchange insurers for 2015 even though they have been told that their scheme is illegal. The Affordable Care Act, or ACA, includes provisions to pay insurers for their financial losses in the ObamaCare exchanges. Money is...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Illinois’ recovery is still 7 years away
Illinois’ recovery is still 7 years away
The Great Recession knocked 500,000 Illinoisans out of work from January 2008 to November 2009, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ household survey. And since then, only 200,000 Illinoisans have gone back to work. This stands as one of the country’s slowest recoveries. As a result, Illinois has 300,000 fewer people working today than...
By Michael Lucci
$95 million in hidden spending revealed at College of DuPage
$95 million in hidden spending revealed at College of DuPage
Illinois’ second-largest college was revealed on Oct. 2 to have hidden more than $95 million in spending since 2009, according to data from American Transparency’s openthebooks.com. The waste therein has cost students and taxpayers dearly. Illegitimate spending at the College of DuPage, or COD, included $13,800 in membership dues to a private shooting club for...
By Austin Berg
Senate Dems live in denial, turn to propaganda
Senate Dems live in denial, turn to propaganda
Denial— a failure to acknowledge an unacceptable truth or emotion or to admit it into your consciousness, used as a defense mechanism. Illinois’ Senate Democrats launched a website called “I Like Illinois.” The explicit purpose of the site, according to their tweets, is to “counter negativity of Illinois Policy Institute.” This purpose is ironic, given...
By Michael Lucci
Which school will the Lake County Federation of Teachers shut down next?
Which school will the Lake County Federation of Teachers shut down next?
On Oct. 2, the Lake County Federation of Teachers, or LCFT, began a public-employee union shutdown of Waukegan Unit School District 60 schools, which serve 16,138 students. In the wake of the strike, the Waukegan community is dealing with a dramatic disruption to their lives, with closed schools and parents struggling to find childcare and...
By Brian Costin
Judge OKs Peoria SWAT raid over parody Twitter account
Judge OKs Peoria SWAT raid over parody Twitter account
If someone made fun of you on Twitter, how would you respond? If you’re Peoria, Illinois, Mayor Jim Ardis, you just pressure the police to raid the prankster’s home; and apparently the courts will back you up. Back in March, Jon Daniel of Peoria created the Twitter account “@peoriamayor” from which he sent out a...
By Bryant Jackson-Green