Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

ObamaCare Navigator Grants in Illinois

ObamaCare Navigator Grants in Illinois

Perhaps there is good reason that Illinoisans don’t place much confidence and trust in their elected officials. A nonbinding resolution that would have called for oversight of federal ObamaCare Navigator funds being spent by the state couldn’t muster enough support to make it out of committee this month. State Rep. Darlene Senger’s resolution, House Resolution...

By Bobby Shaw

How union leaders have added to the VA crisis

How union leaders have added to the VA crisis

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, or VA, is coming under fire for providing poor care to veterans who rely on it. Wait lists for essential medical procedures have extended for months, and veterans of the armed forces have lost their lives as a result. Administrators at VA hospitals have made matters worse by faking...

By Paul Kersey

Online transparency measures advance in Illinois

Online transparency measures advance in Illinois

A key portion of the Institute’s 10-Point Transparency Checklist, the posting of audits online, has made its way through the Illinois General Assembly. House Bill 5503 passed both Illinois House and Senate unanimously, and now awaits the governor’s signature. If signed into law by the governor, HB 5503, introduced by state Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon,...

By Brian Costin

Illinois metro areas a long way from jobs recovery

Illinois metro areas a long way from jobs recovery

Illinois’ metropolitan statistical areas are a long way from jobs recovery, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The release shows that Danville, Decatur and Rockford are still plagued with double-digit joblessness. All 10 of Illinois’ metro areas have jobless rates above the national average. Despite economic improvement and jobless rates falling nationally,...

By Michael Lucci

Illinois paid more than $12 million in health costs for dead people

Illinois paid more than $12 million in health costs for dead people

Rather than push for true Medicaid reform that might ensure patient access to high quality care and protect taxpayer dollars, Gov. Pat Quinn is about to sign legislation that will further prop up this failing system. As evidence of just how dysfunctional the system is, Auditor General William Holland reported that the state paid $12 million for dead...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Illinois proposes potential damaging rules on brew pubs

Illinois proposes potential damaging rules on brew pubs

On May 14, one day before the official start of Chicago Craft Beer Week, the Illinois Liquor Control Commission, or ILCC, proposed a harsh new cap on the amount of beer Illinois’ brew pubs would be allowed to sell. Under the proposed rules, a brew pub would not be allowed to sell more than 50,000...

By Justin Hegy

Chicago has nation’s worst travel tax burden

Chicago has nation’s worst travel tax burden

There’s nothing like summer in Chicago – after months of winter weather, the city awakens and becomes a haven for residents and tourists alike. But travelers who come to the city take in its splendor at a high price, on top of what they pay for hotel rooms, dinner and entertainment. Out-of-towners shell out more...

By Hilary Gowins

Cook County’s pension reform flop

Cook County’s pension reform flop

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle struck a pension deal for county employees earlier this month. The plan recently materialized into legislation that quickly moved through the Illinois Senate, but has not passed in the Illinois House. Preckwinkle’s plan fails to fundamentally reform pensions and may result in massive tax and fee increases, a reduction...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Illinois House defeats soda tax

Illinois House defeats soda tax

Illinois lawmakers have voted down a proposal that would have imposed a $0.01 per-ounce tax on soft drinks sold in the state of Illinois. According to the Illinois Manufacturers Association, the tax would have added $2.88 to the cost of a case of soft drinks. It would also have added to the already-heavy regulatory burden...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

5 steps to immediately save Illinois more than $1.8 billion next year

5 steps to immediately save Illinois more than $1.8 billion next year

Illinois politicians passed a record income tax increase in January 2011. Part of the deal they made was to allow most of that tax hike to sunset in 2015. That deadline is quickly approaching – Illinois’ income tax rates are legally required to come down in nearly six months. Lawmakers should have been preparing for...

By Benjamin VanMetre

More than half of state-funded ObamaCare exchanges scrapped or on verge of collapse

More than half of state-funded ObamaCare exchanges scrapped or on verge of collapse

There are some in Illinois who continue to beat the drum for establishing a state-funded health insurance exchange as part of the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as ObamaCare. But mounting evidence from around the country now confirms that Illinois lawmakers were wise when they didn’t dive in to adopt a state-funded exchange. Fourteen states...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

‘Cupcake girl’ saved from crushing regulation

‘Cupcake girl’ saved from crushing regulation

After health department officials shut down the cupcake business of a little girl from Troy, Ill., lawmakers tried to craft a new set of rules for “kitchen businesses.” But one Illinois senator had added so many harmful requirements into the bill that would have crippled the home kitchen industry – fortunately, his version of the bill...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

Chicago a ‘dystopian nightmare’ for entrepreneurs

Chicago a ‘dystopian nightmare’ for entrepreneurs

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce ranked the regulatory environment in 10 major U.S. cities, and the results aren’t pretty for Chicago. One writer described starting a professional services business in Chicago as a “dystopian nightmare.” Professional and business services make up 780,000 payroll jobs in the Chicago metropolitan area, a major part of current employment...

By Michael Lucci

ObamaCare numbers: Even less transparency

ObamaCare numbers: Even less transparency

Finding out who is actually covered under ObamaCare just became more difficult. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS, has announced that it will no longer be regularly reporting on the law’s progress. Not only does this announcement mean that it will be virtually impossible to obtain information on the law’s progress...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman