Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Waukegan, beleaguered, needs school choice for a comeback

Waukegan, beleaguered, needs school choice for a comeback

Chicago’s North Shore is synonymous with million-dollar homes and top-notch schools. For decades, families have left Chicago to raise their families and educate their children in the North Shore suburbs. But tucked away within those wealthy villages is a city with schools on the other end of the spectrum. Waukegan, with a population of more...

Wisconsin Supreme Court upholds union reforms

Wisconsin Supreme Court upholds union reforms

The Statehouse was packed. Protestors crammed the building, chanting, pounding drums and marching around with signs. The historic Wisconsin state Capitol had become overrun with sleeping bags and activists. In some cases, lawmakers were harassed. Doctors diagnosed fake illnesses so protestors could be excused from work. The Senate Democratic caucus fled the state. Within days,...

By Paul Kersey

Quinn passes the buck on cell-phone tax hike, Chicago cashes in

Quinn passes the buck on cell-phone tax hike, Chicago cashes in

Back on June 6, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation authorizing Chicago city officials to enact a 56 percent per-line 911 fee hike. This measure gave the city of Chicago the authority to raise the city’s per-line 911 fee to $3.90 from the old fee of $2.50. It didn’t take long for Chicago City Council...

By Austin Berg

Health insurance premiums increase across Illinois

Health insurance premiums increase across Illinois

If you live in Illinois and have private insurance – either through your employer or purchased on your own – your premiums likely increased this year as a result of the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as ObamaCare. Instead of reducing premiums by an average of $2,500 per family as promised, ObamaCare has increased what...

By Bobby Shaw

401(k)-style retirement plans are the new normal; Illinois should get on board

401(k)-style retirement plans are the new normal; Illinois should get on board

401(k)-style retirement plans have become America’s primary retirement vehicle. In 1985, only one in 10 Fortune 100 companies offered 401(k)-style retirement plans to their employees. Today, seven in 10 Fortune 100 companies provide only defined-contribution, 401(k)-style retirement plans to new employees. This trend is in line with the private sector overall, where nearly 85 percent of...

By Benjamin VanMetre

To catch up with Uber, Chicago taxi group proposes … higher fares?

To catch up with Uber, Chicago taxi group proposes … higher fares?

The taxi industry complains endlessly that ridesharing services such as UberX and Lyft are hurting its business. Now an AFL-CIO-affiliated group of Chicago cab drivers is seeking to improve its members’ fortunes by pushing the city to mandate higher taxi fares. But hiking prices doesn’t seem like a good way to save an industry that...

Capital bill waste shows need for reform

Capital bill waste shows need for reform

Illinois is often seen as the poster child when it comes to bloated government, wasteful spending and public corruption. As a recent WICS news story highlighted, Illinois’ capital bill is a perfect example of why the state holds such a reputation: the state budget is chock full of wasteful spending and pet projects. Take Decatur...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Why Medicaid coverage does not equal care

Why Medicaid coverage does not equal care

The problem When the Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as ACA or ObamaCare, was first implemented, more than three out of 10 physicians across the country were not accepting new patients in Medicaid, a joint state-federal program that is meant to cover the costs of providing health care to the poor. But rather than offering...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Illinois’ disappearing workforce

Illinois’ disappearing workforce

Since the Great Recession began, Illinois’ workforce participation has dropped more than that of any other state in the Midwest. That means that working-age Illinoisans have given up and left the workforce more rapidly than in surrounding states. A full 3.9 percent of Illinois’ adult population has quit the workforce since January 2008. The state’s...

By Michael Lucci

Illinois website transparency standards improved for 2015

Illinois website transparency standards improved for 2015

An online transparency bill inspired by the shocking Rita Crundwell corruption scandal that cost Dixon, Ill. taxpayers more than $53 million will take effect starting Jan. 1, 2015. House Bill 5503, introduced by state Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, will require Illinois counties and municipalities to be more transparent about how they spend taxpayer dollars. The...

By Brian Costin

Quinn seeks unpaid interns, higher minimum wage

Quinn seeks unpaid interns, higher minimum wage

Perusing Gov. Pat Quinn’s website, one can easily find calls for increasing Illinois’ minimum wage to $10 from $8.25. Just a few clicks away is an application to work for the governor, full time: for free. If Quinn did what he says he wants every Illinois employer to do – pay these workers $10 an...

By Austin Berg

Taxpayers on the hook for billions in hidden government-worker health-care costs

Taxpayers on the hook for billions in hidden government-worker health-care costs

The problem Skyrocketing retirement costs for Illinois’ state and local government workers are wreaking havoc on governments’ ability to provide core services such as public safety, education and infrastructure. States and cities across the nation continue to struggle with massive pension and health-care costs, which force residents to pay higher taxes and fees to receive...

By Benjamin VanMetre, John Klingner

The ACA fault line: Individual patient care vs. the insurer

The ACA fault line: Individual patient care vs. the insurer

According to cancer-patient advocate Robert Goldberg, “The latest innovation in cancer care isn’t a medical breakthrough but an app to ration new drugs. It’ll measure care in terms of what it costs health plans, instead of what it means for patients’ lives.” This “innovation” may be used to conceal the best-available cancer treatment options from...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Chicago Public Schools’ ‘creative accounting’ symptom of a larger problem

Chicago Public Schools’ ‘creative accounting’ symptom of a larger problem

In a creative-accounting maneuver that would make Wall Street proud, Chicago Public Schools’ leadership fashioned a 14-month year for fiscal year 2015. CPS is adding 60 days to its 2015 calendar, allowing it to “generate” one-time revenues of nearly $650 million – just enough to cover its skyrocketing pension costs and help balance its budget....