Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

How ObamaCare will affect premiums for Springfield residents

How ObamaCare will affect premiums for Springfield residents

Oct. 1 marks the first day of ObamaCare’s open enrollment period. Despite the fact that consumers are expected to start buying plans tomorrow, the state and federal government have been tight-lipped about what will be available on the ObamaCare health insurance exchange. The federal government has begun trickling out bits and pieces about the plans, but...

By Jonathan Ingram

As usual, politicians win, taxpayers lose in legislator pay lawsuit

As usual, politicians win, taxpayers lose in legislator pay lawsuit

In July, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn used his line-item veto power to suspend legislators’ salaries, pledging to withhold legislators’ paychecks until they solved the state’s pension problem. But just Thursday, Cook County Circuit Court Judge Neil H. Cohen ruled that Quinn’s move was unconstitutional. Article IV, Section 11, of the Illinois Constitution prohibits any “changes” to...

Part-time Illinois: Work hours have dropped since ObamaCare signed into law

Part-time Illinois: Work hours have dropped since ObamaCare signed into law

Executive Summary Illinois is in the midst of a decades long struggle to overcome numerous challenges ranging from corruption, high unemployment, underfunded pensions and high taxes. At a time when the state can’t afford any additional obstacles, recent data provide support to the claim that employers have been cutting employee hours to avoid the costliest...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Part-time Illinois: Work hours have dropped since ObamaCare signed into law

Part-time Illinois: Work hours have dropped since ObamaCare signed into law

Illinois is in the midst of a decades long struggle to overcome numerous challenges ranging from corruption, high unemployment, underfunded pensions and high taxes. At a time when the state can’t afford any additional obstacles, recent data provide support to the claim that employers have been cutting employee hours to avoid the costliest aspects of...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

More than 150,000 Medicaid enrollees found ineligible for the program

More than 150,000 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

ObamaCare: How much is it going to cost Illinosians?

ObamaCare: How much is it going to cost Illinosians?

Illinoisans have heard the pitches about how affordable health insurance will be under the Affordable Care Act, commonly referred to as ObamaCare. On Sept. 24, Gov. Pat Quinn was trumpeting the ObamaCare health insurance exchange in Illinois. Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is at it. Both have been cheering the least-expensive health insurance...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Labor law fails to protect whistleblowers

Labor law fails to protect whistleblowers

The ethics of big labor tend to be completely backward, protecting the corrupt while punishing the diligent. One reason why is a federal labor law that fails to protect union officials when they try to protect their members from crime, as James Sherk writes in National Review’s “Corner” blog. In a recent article that appeared...

By Paul Kersey

Illinois’ ‘weak management practices’ land it low on Forbes’ list of best states for business

Illinois’ ‘weak management practices’ land it low on Forbes’ list of best states for business

Forbes released this week its Best States for Business 2013 index. Illinois held onto its 2012 rank of the 38th-best state for business. The study scores all 50 states using 35 data points that are boiled down to six main categories. Illinois’ ranks generally fall in the mid-to high-30s out of the 50 states, with the exception its...

By Benjamin VanMetre

Teachers can reclaim a portion of union dues

Teachers can reclaim a portion of union dues

School has been back in session for about a month now, and teachers across Illinois are busy making lesson plans, grading papers and more. But they should also be thinking about whether or not they want to contribute to their union’s political campaigns. Public school teachers are almost always forced to pay union dues or...

By Paul Kersey

Corruption-fighting inspector general sharing program comes to Cook County

Corruption-fighting inspector general sharing program comes to Cook County

An inspector general investigates allegations of fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, misconduct and related violations of the law involving individuals employed by or doing business with a government agency. With Illinois’ long history of corruption, inspector generals are one of the most important public servants who help make sure taxpayer dollars are being spent appropriately. Unfortunately,...

By Brian Costin

Tax myth: progressive income taxes reduce the tax burden on middle-and low-income earners

Tax myth: progressive income taxes reduce the tax burden on middle-and low-income earners

Several special interest groups and lawmakers in Illinois are pushing to increase taxes by swapping out the state’s constitutionally protected flat rate income tax for a progressive income tax. Advocates for the progressive income tax increase are disguising their plan as a tax cut for middle-and low-income earners. But the legislation that’s been proposed thus...

By Benjamin VanMetre

State pension contributions: Taxpayers bear the brunt of increasing pension costs

State pension contributions: Taxpayers bear the brunt of increasing pension costs

The problem A common refrain sounded by public sector unions is that government workers have consistently “paid their share” into Illinois’ pension systems and the state has not. However, the facts tell a different story. While government worker contributions to Illinois’ five pension systems have increased by 75 percent since 1998, taxpayer contributions have increased...

By John Klingner

Term limits puts career politicians and lobbyists on notice

Term limits puts career politicians and lobbyists on notice

Despite their rationale, critics who oppose term limits are siding with the status quo, which not only keeps intact all-powerful political dynasties but also preserves special-interest lobbyists’ relationships with legislators. Christopher Mooney is one such critic, as he made clear in his recent anti-term limits editorial in Crain’s Chicago Business. By opposing term limits, Mooney isn’t...

By Brian Costin

Illinois’ ObamaCare exchange and Gov. Quinn’s failed math

Illinois’ ObamaCare exchange and Gov. Quinn’s failed math

A Sept. 24 press release from Gov. Pat Quinn’s office announced with excitement that Illinois’ health insurance premiums under the state’s ObamaCare health insurance exchange would be lower than previous government estimates. This statement implies that Illinoisans won’t see their insurance premiums go up despite the massive health insurance expansion about to unfold under ObamaCare. But what...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman