ObamaCare: Companies changing health plans for 2014
ObamaCare: Companies changing health plans for 2014
President Barack Obama promised Americans that under the Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as ObamaCare, “If you like your health plan, you can keep your health plan.” The unfortunate reality is that only a lucky few can keep their health plan. As the new law is implemented, many employees will be left with less...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Sebelius uses video contest to attract young people to ObamaCare
Sebelius uses video contest to attract young people to ObamaCare
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius recently announced a video contest offering cash prizes to young people for pro-ObamaCare videos. According to Sebelius: “Soon the Health Insurance Marketplace will give uninsured young people the opportunity to enroll in affordable health insurance, and the Healthy Young America video contest will help them tell their stories to other young...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Unions and ObamaCare – It just gets worse and worse
Unions and ObamaCare – It just gets worse and worse
The more that unions get to see of ObamaCare, the uglier it gets. At its annual convention the Nevada State AFL-CIO passed a strongly-worded resolution calling for changes to the “Affordable Care Act”. They aren’t the first, but the Nevada group’s statement might be the sharpest critique of ObamaCare to come out of the union movement yet. It...
By Paul Kersey
Chicago City College likely to cut hours for adjunct professors and tutors due to ObamaCare
Chicago City College likely to cut hours for adjunct professors and tutors due to ObamaCare
Here in Chicago it would be rather awkward if a local union were to go out of its way to criticize President Barack Obama or his signature achievement, Obamacare – he’s a Chicagoan after all. But there is at least one area union that is having a little trouble on account of the national health...
More than 115,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
More than 115,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
In January, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or HFS, began a new project verifying eligibility for Illinois’ 2.7 million Medicaid enrollees. For years, state workers had failed to take adequate steps to ensure the people receiving Medicaid benefits were actually eligible for the program. As an auditor general report noted, state workers...
By Jonathan Ingram
Detroit: A story that must be told
Detroit: A story that must be told
Two weeks ago I took in the demise of Detroit with my own eyes. I was fortunate to be with my colleague, Detroit native Paul Kersey. As we embarked on the trip, he told me “Detroit is a story that must be told.” He was right. I’d seen the pictures and knew the history, but...
By Ted Dabrowski
The work vs. welfare trade-off in Illinois
The work vs. welfare trade-off in Illinois
A new study by the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., takes a state-by-state look at the value of the welfare benefits package. While no one in America receives welfare benefits from all 72 federal welfare benefits programs that provide direct cash or in-kind assistance, long-term welfare beneficiaries are more likely to receive benefits from multiple programs. Highlights...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Illinois ACT scores post biggest drop in a decade
Illinois ACT scores post biggest drop in a decade
New ACT scores reveal that Illinois schools are still struggling to prepare their students for life after graduation. Overall, only 25 percent of the state’s students were considered college-ready in all four subjects – the exact same percentage as last year and 1 percentage point below the national average. This is still too low, especially for a...
Chicago’s Divvy bike-sharing program costing taxpayers big
Chicago’s Divvy bike-sharing program costing taxpayers big
Divvy bike stations are expanding throughout Chicago, offering riders low membership costs and 24-hour rental fees. But this multimillion-dollar project is bringing in only a fraction of the money necessary to fund it. Last year, the city of Chicago announced a controversial $65 million contract with ALTA Bicycle Share to operate a 4,000 bicycle bike-share program in...
By Brian Costin
McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission and the case for capless campaign spending
McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission and the case for capless campaign spending
Not long after the Supreme Court announced earlier this year that it would hear McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, a case concerning election contribution limits, political commentators began to hype the alleged dangers of money in our political process. In recent weeks, with the Supreme Court scheduled to hear arguments in the case in October,...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Chicago’s latest money grab: 300 speed cameras could generate up to $4.3 billion in fines from local motorists
Chicago’s latest money grab: 300 speed cameras could generate up to $4.3 billion in fines from local motorists
Cash-strapped Chicago is about to get an injection of money from motorists. The city is installing its controversial speed cameras at four neighborhood parks on Monday, and has plans for eight additional locations in the next few months. The city announced the results from a test of the new technology that showed surprising results. During a December trial,...
New blended learning program nearly doubles math learning
New blended learning program nearly doubles math learning
Opponents of education innovation should be worried. The U.S. Department of Education just released one of the largest studies on blended learning ever conducted, and the results are amazing. Students who used a new blended learning program learned nearly twice as much math as they normally would in a year. The two-year study – the largest conducted...
Parents and students lost in the CPS struggle over power and money
Parents and students lost in the CPS struggle over power and money
When Chicago Public Schools, or CPS, unveiled its list of 50 schools to be closed this past summer, Chicago Teachers Union, or CTU, President Karen Lewis acted as if the union she leads was a victim of the city’s $1 billion deficit — not a willing accomplice in its creation. Lewis will probably never say...
Money walks
Money walks
Nine states with the highest personal income tax rates lost $90.05 billion in taxable income between 2000 and 2010.
By Ted Dabrowski