Morris is ideal corruption fighting location for Illinois capital
Morris is ideal corruption fighting location for Illinois capital
If your goal is to fight public corruption, where should Illinois’ capital be? That’s essentially the question asked in a recent Huffington Post article, which examined the results of two studies on the correlation between the remoteness of state capitals and public corruption. The surprising answer is Morris, a city of 13,636. Morris is also...
By Brian Costin
Fitch downgrades Illinois after lawmakers fail to pass pension reform
Fitch downgrades Illinois after lawmakers fail to pass pension reform
by Ted Dabrowski Fitch Ratings downgraded Illinois’ credit rating to “A-” from “A” after the General Assembly failed to move forward on pension reform before the end of the spring legislative session. In its statement announcing the downgrade, Fitch called Illinois’ pension liability “unsustainable” and said it was concerned about the state being able to...
Congress Hotel strike shows how union representation can leave workers worse off
Congress Hotel strike shows how union representation can leave workers worse off
by Paul Kersey The 10-year strike by housekeepers at the Congress Hotel was not actually the longest in U.S. history. Teamsters at Diamond Walnuts in California staged a walkout that lasted 14 years before agreeing to a contract. But the length of the strike and the sad way the Congress Hotel strike ended demolishes a fond...
Illinois General Assembly reverses Quinn’s education budget cuts
Illinois General Assembly reverses Quinn’s education budget cuts
Just a few months ago, the big education news in Illinois was Gov. Pat Quinn’s proposed $400 million cut to the General State Aid for Education budget – the state’s single-largest education expenditure. This article in the Chicago Tribune captured the frantic pleas of school boards, administrators and teachers at the time: Roger Eddy, a former state...
By Benjamin VanMetre
Illinois’ pension system has spiraled so out of control that not even the architects of the system can fix it
Illinois’ pension system has spiraled so out of control that not even the architects of the system can fix it
Like many, we are disappointed that pension reform was not enacted during the spring legislative session. But make no mistake: the Madigan and Cullerton pension proposals were not pension reform. Taxpayers should be relieved they did not pass. Right now, the job of Illinois government is to provide for the well-being of all the people....
Corri McFadden is betting on Illinois
Corri McFadden is betting on Illinois
When Corri McFadden thinks about the future and growing her business, it always includes Illinois.
By Hilary Gowins
Will Illinois legislators break their promise to reduce taxes?
Will Illinois legislators break their promise to reduce taxes?
by Ted Dabrowski and Paul Schumacher In 2011, when Illinois legislators passed the largest income tax increase in the state’s history, they promised to roll back the increase beginning in 2015. “We have some temporary tax increases that are designed to pay our bills, get Illinois back on fiscal sound footing and make sure that our state...
Budget Rush — Haste makes waste, and secrecy makes more waste
Budget Rush — Haste makes waste, and secrecy makes more waste
by Paul Kersey So, here we are again, scrambling at the last minute to evaluate a complex document that accounts for billions of dollars of state employee wages. In March of this year it was the tentative agreement between Gov. Quinn and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31. The challenge...
The truth behind Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: broken promises and future tax hikes
The truth behind Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: broken promises and future tax hikes
The Illinois General Assembly increased spending to more than $35.4 billion, up approximately $2 billion from what was approved for the current fiscal year. The budget handouts being passed around the Statehouse describe this as an “honest budget,” the same language Gov. Pat Quinn used when he proposed his version of a budget back in March....
By Benjamin VanMetre
Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: chock-full of waste
Illinois’ FY 2014 budget: chock-full of waste
by Ben VanMetre A few years ago there was a popular narrative in Illinois politics about going through the budget line by line and eliminating wasteful spending. Those efforts, of course, never moved forward, and the narrative is dead. That’s a common theme in Springfield, where lawmakers make promises they don’t intend to keep. It...
New bill would take cap on registration fees for electric vehicles from $17.50 a year to $222
New bill would take cap on registration fees for electric vehicles from $17.50 a year to $222
by Kristina Rasmussen House Bill 3637 introduced by state Rep. Barbara Flynn Curre would take the cap on registration fees for electric vehicles from $17.50 a year to $222 — 1168% increase!
Illinois lawmakers hid ObamaCare-related Medicaid spending
Illinois lawmakers hid ObamaCare-related Medicaid spending
If you’re not already disgusted by the budget implementation bill that passed today (shrubbery, Amtrak, grant unaccountability), try this on for size. The General Assembly hid ObamaCare-related Medicaid spending so that it doesn’t show up in the General Revenue Fund budget. A budget amendment hides “all federal matching funds” received to pay Medicaid costs for “individuals eligible for medical...
By Jonathan Ingram
Capitol Updates: May 31
Capitol Updates: May 31
Health care On Memorial Day, the Illinois General Assembly passed Senate Bill 26, which drastically expands the state’s Medicaid program and is one of the key provisions of implementing ObamaCare. During yesterday’s Senate floor debate, state Sen. Heather Steans, D-Chicago, presented the bill that appropriates the funds for fiscal year 2014’s human services budget. Steans admitted that the...
By Jane McEnaney
Moody’s warns Illinois credit rating could fall without pension reform
Moody’s warns Illinois credit rating could fall without pension reform
In what’s become a habit for Moody’s Investors Service, the credit rating agency warned today that Illinois faces more credit downgrades if it fails once again to reform its state-run pension systems. The state already has the lowest credit rating in the nation. This means Illinois pays more to borrow money than any other state. But what’s...