Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Obama administration throws unions a bone in form of ObamaCare tax break

Obama administration throws unions a bone in form of ObamaCare tax break

The Obama administration is throwing unions a bone on ObamaCare in the form of “tax break.” But if union officials are smart, they’ll throw it back. NPR is reporting that the administration is offering unions some relief from one of the many problematic features of the health care law. The proposal is to terminate a...

By Paul Kersey

It’s time to stop misleading parents about the quality of Illinois schools

It’s time to stop misleading parents about the quality of Illinois schools

State government officials, district administrators and union bosses have been actively misleading parents about the quality of Illinois’ elementary schools for years. New Illinois Standard Achievement Test, or ISAT, scores released last week by the Illinois State Board of Education, or ISBE, prove as much. In fact, most schools across the state experienced significant drops...

Colorado voters defeat a progressive income tax hike

Colorado voters defeat a progressive income tax hike

On Nov. 5, Colorado voters defeated a progressive income tax increase by a two-to-one margin — more than 66 percent of the voters said no to higher taxes. Colorado’s Amendment 66 was a ballot initiative to swap out the state’s competitive flat rate income tax for a progressive income tax increase. Specifically, lawmakers wanted to...

By Benjamin VanMetre

School district salaries left out of Illinois school report cards

School district salaries left out of Illinois school report cards

The Illinois General Assembly may consider much needed pension reform during the second week of fall veto session, which lasts Nov. 5 until Nov. 7. But they will have to do so without the latest teacher and administrator salary information affecting the state’s largest pension system, the Teachers’ Retirement System, or TRS. Last week the...

By Brian Costin

Naperville considers pension double-dipping transparency reform

Naperville considers pension double-dipping transparency reform

Most public employees in Illinois receive a single pension upon retirement. But some workers don’t just get one pension – they get two or three. This is made possible by either working multiple government jobs at the same time, or retiring from one public job and beginning a second within a different pension system. Both...

By Brian Costin

Decline in food stamp benefits no excuse for losing focus on job creation

Decline in food stamp benefits no excuse for losing focus on job creation

This month, the more than 2 million Illinoisans currently enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, will see a cut to their monthly food stamp benefits. An Illinois family of three will see their benefits decrease about $29. Currently, the average Illinois household receives $285 a month in benefits. The cut in benefits is due...

By John Klingner

More than 200K Illinois Medicaid enrollees found ineligible for the program

More than 200K Illinois Medicaid enrollees 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 failed to...

By Jonathan Ingram

Unionization more prevalent in government than private sector

Unionization more prevalent in government than private sector

One of the biggest changes in the union movement has happened mostly under the radar, but it has big consequences for union officials, workers and the public at large. Unions used to be powerful in the private sector. But now, most union workers nationwide are government employees. It has been this way since 2009. Since...

By Paul Kersey

Illinois pensions need to become more transparent

Illinois pensions need to become more transparent

The history of state government pensions in Illinois is fairly simple. Politicians discover that pension funds are running a deficit. Those same politicians develop a plan to eliminate the deficit, which typically involves Illinois taxpayers putting in more money. Taxpayers pony up the funds. The deficit, somehow, gets worse. In 1994, the five state-run pension...

By Paul Kersey

Taxing bodies powerless to stop Schaumburg TIF, property tax increases

Taxing bodies powerless to stop Schaumburg TIF, property tax increases

Village officials in Schaumburg are pushing for $512 million in new property taxes via a Tax Increment Financing, or TIF, district. The taxes would be used to create an entertainment district north of Woodfield Mall. But it’s not just people who pay property taxes in Schaumburg who would foot the bill. TIF districts cause property...

By Brian Costin

Pensions: contributions out of sync with payouts

Pensions: contributions out of sync with payouts

Members of Illinois’ state-run pension systems claim they’ve paid their fair share into the pension funds. To be sure, these workers have paid in what’s been required legally under mutually agreed upon contracts. But the benefits politicians and union bosses have negotiated for retirees are pushing the state’s pension systems to the brink of insolvency....

By Ted Dabrowski

ObamaCare: Congressional membership has its privileges

ObamaCare: Congressional membership has its privileges

While millions across the country are losing their health plans –  despite repeatedly being promised by the president that they could keep them – Congress and the Obama administration have been playing fast and loose with the rules to ensure that many on Capitol Hill won’t lose theirs. Under the Affordable Care Act, or ACA,...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

UPDATE—ObamaCare in the Courts: King vs. Sebelius

UPDATE—ObamaCare in the Courts: King vs. Sebelius

This week, the media and public have been sharply focused on congressional hearings on the calamitous ObamaCare rollout and glitch-ridden health exchange websites. But there may be a far more important ObamaCare venue this week: Richmond, Va. On Oct. 31, a federal judge will hear oral arguments in King vs. Sebelius, a case in which...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Illinois’ pension crisis keeps getting worse

Illinois’ pension crisis keeps getting worse

Even if Illinois pension funds see investment returns that exceed expectations, that still won’t be enough to plug the largest fund’s hole. The Teachers’ Retirement System reported its pension underfunding grew to $55.73 billion as of June 30, 2013 — an increase of more than $3.5 billion since the end of the previous fiscal year...

By Ted Dabrowski