Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Illinois unemployment above 10 percent in many metropolitan areas

Illinois unemployment above 10 percent in many metropolitan areas

Illinois has the nation’s second-worst unemployment rate. At 9.1 percent, it’s 1.5 percentage points higher than the national average of 7.6 percent. The lack of jobs continues to be a major burden to the people of Illinois, at both the state and local level. A year-over-year comparison of Metropolitan Statistical Areas, or MSAs, reveals an uneven...

By John Klingner

New ISAT standards reveal poor performance for Chicago Public Schools

New ISAT standards reveal poor performance for Chicago Public Schools

Illinois parents have been hoodwinked once again. Two years ago, the Chicago Tribune revealed that Illinois’ graduation rates weren’t as impressive as once reported. Now comes news that the state has been inflating district test scores for more than a decade. New Illinois Standard Achievement Test, or ISAT, scores released Tuesday by Chicago Public Schools officials, prove as much....

Illinois unemployment rate increases to 9.2 percent in June

Illinois unemployment rate increases to 9.2 percent in June

The Illinois Department of Employment Security announced today that the Illinois unemployment rate rose to 9.2 percent in June, up from 9.1 percent in May. The U.S. unemployment rate held steady in June at 7.6 percent. The state added 9,000 private sector jobs in June. A year ago, the state’s unemployment rate was 9 percent, while the...

By Chris Andriesen

Chicago’s triple-notch credit downgrade

Chicago’s triple-notch credit downgrade

Pension costs are already unraveling the state’s finances. Now it’s the city of Chicago’s turn. The city’s out-of-control pension liabilities and “accelerating budget pressures associated with those liabilities” has resulted in another credit downgrade by Moody’s Investors Service. The national credit rating agency downgraded the city’s nearly $8 billion in general obligation bonds to A3...

Detroit goes bust

Detroit goes bust

It’s official: the city of Detroit is bankrupt. The Detroit News reported that the city filed a petition for bankruptcy protection this afternoon. The city is in a severe economic crisis and simply lacks the ability to raise sufficient taxes to pay its mounting bills. The city’s population fell more than 26% from 2000 to 2012 and...

By Paul Kersey

Pool of ObamaCare insurance providers continues shrinking in Illinois

Pool of ObamaCare insurance providers continues shrinking in Illinois

The nation’s largest insurance company, UnitedHealth Group, won’t be participating in Illinois’ health insurance exchange, Crain’s Chicago Business reported on Monday. UnitedHealth Group is the second-largest insurance company in Illinois’ nongroup market, the market in which the exchange will operate. Although state officials recently predicted 16 insurance companies would participate in the exchange, Crain’s reports that just...

By Jonathan Ingram

The league of attorneys general: Protecting the people from coffee mugs

The league of attorneys general: Protecting the people from coffee mugs

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan has succeeded in taking down a serious threat to the fight against drug abuse – coffee mugs that look like prescription drug bottles. Madigan, along with attorneys general from more than 20 other states, sent a joint letter on May 22 to Urban Outfitters CEO and Chairman Richard A. Hayne regarding the...

By Hilary Gowins

Medicaid plagued with wasteful spending

Medicaid plagued with wasteful spending

The Medicaid welfare program has long been plagued with wasteful spending. The U.S. Government Accountability Office designates Medicaid as a high-risk program, largely because it is “particularly vulnerable to fraud, waste, abuse and improper payments” and has inadequate oversight to prevent wasteful spending. Indeed, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, reports an improper...

By Jonathan Ingram

The food stamp decade: a million more Illinoisans dependent on SNAP

The food stamp decade: a million more Illinoisans dependent on SNAP

The real story behind Illinois’ decade of fiscal and governance crises is that the number of jobs is shrinking and food stamps are taking their place. Illinois’ massive pension debt, perennial overspending and high taxes are squeezing out the private sector and jobs, while Springfield’s dysfunction and the state’s collapsing credit rating are destroying investor...

By Ted Dabrowski, John Klingner

States to spend millions promoting ObamaCare

States to spend millions promoting ObamaCare

by Jonathan Ingram If you’re like many Americans, you’re already worried about the impact ObamaCare will have on you and your family. So, in an effort to avoid what Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., termed a “huge train wreck” in the making, the federal government has enlisted the help of several state governments to market the law. The...

By Jonathan Ingram

Illinois should look to Wisconsin and Indiana for education reform inspiration

Illinois should look to Wisconsin and Indiana for education reform inspiration

by Josh Dwyer Illinois’ education system is struggling. Fewer than half of public school students are college-ready in reading, math and science, and last year82 percent of Illinois districts failed to make Adequate Yearly Progress – a key measure in No Child Left Behind that gauges school success. What’s even more startling is that these poor outcomes...

Right to Work gives states a competitive advantage

Right to Work gives states a competitive advantage

by Paul Kersey CNBC released its rankings of the friendliest states for business last week. Illinois dropped further down the list, but one nearby state is climbing, in large part because its elected officials passed a Right-to-Work law. CNBC’s Scott Cohn took notice, reporting that the Michigan moved from 33rd to 29th. CNBC’s rating of the state’s...

Twinkies and the bakers union: don’t call it a comeback

Twinkies and the bakers union: don’t call it a comeback

by Paul Kersey Plans to reopen Hostess Brands bakeries, including one in the Chicago suburb of Schiller Park, are going forward. The company has announced that the Twinkie will make its glorious return on July 15. But while the reorganized Hostess is making what it calls “the sweetest comeback in the history of ever,” the bakers...