Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

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

Legislative exemption ignores the real budget crisis

Legislative exemption ignores the real budget crisis

As the state of Illinois moves deeper into budgetary crisis, the people of Illinois are depending upon government leaders to confront serious fiscal challenges with maturity, wisdom, courage and responsibility. The character exhibited by our governor and legislative leaders in this crisis will determine the trajectory of our state for years to come. Focus on...

By Robert Steere

U.S. recovery jumps forward, Illinois falls back

U.S. recovery jumps forward, Illinois falls back

The U.S. hit a major milestone in September. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics household survey, the number of Americans working has finally surpassed pre-recession levels. In addition, the national jobless rate fell to 5.9 percent to 6.1 percent. The number of Illinoisans working, however, is far from recovery. There are now 220,000 more...

By Michael Lucci

Wrongful red-light tickets left unexplained as City Hall offers few refunds

Wrongful red-light tickets left unexplained as City Hall offers few refunds

Chicago officials announced Wednesday that dozens of drivers will receive refunds from the city for wrongfully issued red-light camera tickets. But thousands more were left in the dark regarding the cause of their tickets and the overall soundness of the city’s red-light camera program, which has been mired in scandal for months. The city reviewed...

By Austin Berg

Waukegan teachers strike puts union first

Waukegan teachers strike puts union first

Here’s what Waukegan High School student Kyra Lyons had to say to CBS Chicago on the subject of the Waukegan public-school teacher strike: “Neither of them are doing anything to help the students. It’s just about money and what they want.” Kyra is a perceptive young woman. The Lake County Federation of Teachers, which has...

By Paul Kersey

Illinois court rules state owes AFSCME workers

Illinois court rules state owes AFSCME workers

On Sept. 31, a panel of judges from an Illinois appellate court found that state employees were owed back pay under the contract between the state and Council 31 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, or AFSCME. This has set off celebrations at AFSCME, whose position all along was that the...

By Paul Kersey

Workforce shrinks in 9 of 10 metro areas

Workforce shrinks in 9 of 10 metro areas

Though unemployment rates fell in August for Illinois’ major metropolitan areas, 19,000 workers dropped out of the workforce, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Because of these dropouts, the workforce shrank in every metropolitan statistical area, or MSA, except Champaign-Urbana. Workforce dropouts drive down the unemployment rate because unemployed workers who leave the workforce...

By Michael Lucci

401(k)-style retirement plans: a viable alternative

401(k)-style retirement plans: a viable alternative

Illinois politicians have mismanaged government worker pensions for decades, creating one of the nation’s worst pension crises. Illinois’ five state pension systems collectively have only 41 cents on hand for every dollar they need to pay for future benefits. In the private sector, such a low funding level would mean bankruptcy. Even though politicians have...

By John Klingner

Federal court strikes down ObamaCare subsidies

Federal court strikes down ObamaCare subsidies

People who don’t like the lawlessness displayed by the Obama administration in its implementation of the Affordable Care Act have something to celebrate. On Sept. 30, a federal court in Oklahoma ruled that the Affordable Care Act means what it says: ObamaCare insurance subsidies are only available in states that have established their own health-insurance...

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