Process for unionizing non-state workers raises red flags
Process for unionizing non-state workers raises red flags
Illinois is a party to a landmark federal lawsuit, Harris v. Quinn. In this case, the state has been forced to defend before the U.S. Supreme Court its decision to permit the unionization of people who are not state workers. The people in question participate in a state-administered Medicaid program that allows them to provide...
By Paul Kersey
Chart of the Week: What ObamaCare grant paid state’s Democrat insiders
Chart of the Week: What ObamaCare grant paid state’s Democrat insiders
If you have any doubt that political cronyism isn’t alive and well in Illinois, look no further than an ObamaCare scandal that broke late last week. Investigations by the Associated Press and Crain’s found that a subcontractor to a $33 million ObamaCare grant was billing at $282 per hour. Turns out the subcontractor is owned...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Are unions the answer to Chicago taxi drivers’ problems?
Are unions the answer to Chicago taxi drivers’ problems?
It’s hard to make a living as a Chicago taxi driver. A recent study showed that Chicago drivers make an average of just $5.40 an hour, far below minimum wage, and just over $20,000 per year. Some cab drivers have tried to change this by suing the city of Chicago. They argue that because the...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Crony community development organization thinks ‘Mike’s’ is ‘too ghetto’
Crony community development organization thinks ‘Mike’s’ is ‘too ghetto’
A Chicago business owner was told that his nickname – “Mike” – was “too ghetto” to be in the name of his own store. Mike Sharma was told by the University Village Association, or UVA, that his store’s intended name, “Mike’s Wine and Spirits,” wasn’t classy enough for the Little Italy neighborhood. As part of...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
A tale of two governors: Wisconsin vs. Illinois
A tale of two governors: Wisconsin vs. Illinois
In January 2011, the governors of Wisconsin and Illinois took office for their first elected terms. They set their states on two very different paths: one that led to recovery, and one that led to further decline. Gov. Pat Quinn saw a hole in pension funding, so he raised income taxes on all Illinoisans by...
By Michael Lucci
Small businesses give Illinois an F
Small businesses give Illinois an F
The 2014 Thumbtack.com Small Business Friendliness Survey asked 13,000 small businesses across the U.S. to grade the friendliness of their state and locality. Illinois businesses gave the Land of Lincoln an F. Ever the golden child, Chicago earned a D+. These grades are unacceptable. Illinois’ small businesses are sounding the alarm for what’s causing Illinois’...
By Michael Lucci
Lawmakers sweeten pitch for the Obama library with taxpayer dollars
Lawmakers sweeten pitch for the Obama library with taxpayer dollars
Today is the submission deadline for proposals to the Barack Obama Foundation, the organization tasked with accepting bids from various contenders vying for Obama’s future presidential library and museum. The competition as it stands is between Hawaii, New York and Illinois; where President Obama was born, where he received his undergraduate degree and where he...
By Jane McEnaney
Political insiders receive multi-million-dollar contract to promote ObamaCare in Illinois
Political insiders receive multi-million-dollar contract to promote ObamaCare in Illinois
Get Covered Illinois has been hit by two scandals in as many days. A recent Associated Press (AP) investigation into a $33 million federal grant to promote ObamaCare in Illinois revealed that “More than 90 people, including executives from the firm and its subcontractors, billed at least $270 an hour for salary and overhead during...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
The left and the right agree: Scrap ObamaCare’s employer mandate
The left and the right agree: Scrap ObamaCare’s employer mandate
The drumbeat for eliminating the Affordable Care Act’s employer mandate is getting louder. And it is under attack from both sides of the political aisle, according to The Washington Post. The real question is, especially given new opposition from the law’s own supporters: Can it survive? A briefing paper released by the Urban Institute and...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Rahm’s phony pension fix fails taxpayers and city workers
Rahm’s phony pension fix fails taxpayers and city workers
Politicians are celebrating their pension “fix” for the city of Chicago. But their plan is nothing more than a massive property tax hike – it increases city contributions by $4 billion through 2025. More importantly, it doesn’t solve the pension problem. Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s pension plan does nothing to improve the retirement security of city...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Have teachers unions become instruments of injustice? One judge in California thinks the answer is ’yes’
Have teachers unions become instruments of injustice? One judge in California thinks the answer is ’yes’
In a ruling that has already sent shockwaves through public education, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Rolf Treu found in Vergara v. California that five California laws governing the hiring, firing and laying off of teachers – laws that teachers unions favor – violated the California Constitution’s equal protection clause, and should be struck...
By Paul Kersey
Illinois has the second-worst GDP growth in the Midwest
Illinois has the second-worst GDP growth in the Midwest
Illinois recorded the second-worst growth in gross domestic product of any state in the Midwest, according to this week’s release from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The Illinois economy grew by just 0.9 percent in 2013. Only Missouri grew slower, at a sluggish 0.8 percent. The state’s growth ranks near the bottom nationally as well....
By Michael Lucci
‘Fight for $15’ puts workers at risk
‘Fight for $15’ puts workers at risk
The Chicago Tribune recently reported on the links between the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, and various community organizing groups behind the campaign to increase Chicago’s minimum wage to $15 per hour. In her story, reporter Alejandro Cancino found that SEIU and its affiliates had spent at least $2 million on a campaign to organize...
By Paul Kersey
Pedaling backward: Chicago’s attack on pedicabs
Pedaling backward: Chicago’s attack on pedicabs
These new rules are hitting drivers hard, and limiting their ability to make a living.