Rasmussen: 48% See Government as Threat
Rasmussen: 48% See Government as Threat
by Heather Wilhelm “Nearly half of American adults see the government today as a threat to individual rights rather than a protector of those rights,” reports a new Rasmussen poll released today. Fifteen percent are undecided. You can read the poll results, along with Rasmussen’s analysis, here.
Keeping up with the Borrowing Fad
Keeping up with the Borrowing Fad
by Ashley Muchow Eastern Illinois University will borrow up to $7 million to cover university expenses up to August as it eagerly anticipates $19 million in overdue state appropriations. Early this month Governor Quinn signed into law an amendment to Senate Bill 0642 allowing Illinois’s nine public universities to take out loans to cover three quarters of what the...
Democratic Legislature in LA Passes Health Care Choice Legislation
Democratic Legislature in LA Passes Health Care Choice Legislation
by Chad Giganti The Pelican Institute’s Fergus Hodgson reports on the importance of health care choice legislation that passed earlier this week in Louisiana. The bill focuses on challenging an unconstitutional individual mandate that forces people to buy health care insurance (whether they want to or not). The legislation was modeled on American Legislative Exchange Council’s (ALEC) Freedom of Choice...
Slashing Budgets Across the Pond
Slashing Budgets Across the Pond
by Heather Wilhelm “Britain announced a far-reaching deficit-reduction plan Tuesday aimed at saving billions of dollars over the next five years,” reports today’sWashington Post, “becoming the latest European nation to slash spending amid increased worries about rising public-sector debt.” The austerity measures include $145 billion in cuts to public-sector spending (including a two-year freeze on...
Tax Credits in the Slammer
Tax Credits in the Slammer
by Heather Wilhelm When people say they’re going to “the Big House,” they usually mean a football stadium in Ann Arbor, Michigan…or a jail. But prisoners across the country recently gave the latter interpretation of the phrase a whole new meaning, as discovered this week. “Nearly 1,300 prison inmates wrongly received more than $9 million in...
$1.4 Million for Fingerprint Technicians
$1.4 Million for Fingerprint Technicians
According to our transparency website, IllinoisOpenGov.org, the State of Illinois paid 30 fingerprint technicians $1,457,511.64 in fiscal year 2008 in combined total wages. The highest paid fingerprint technician was paid $52,494. According to the State of Illinois’s Central Management Services website, fingerprint technicians are meant to “perform functions related to the automated and manual processing of fingerprint submissions...
Even Small Cuts Matter
Even Small Cuts Matter
by Kate Piercy As we argue in our Spotlight on Spending series, which aims to highlight wasteful or ineffective government spending in Illinois, looking at every type of spending, from smaller to bigger amounts, and asking “Is this the best use of taxpayers’ money,” does matter. David Vaught, state budget director for Illinois, also recognizes the importance...
Meat Factory Given Solar Energy by Taxpayers
Meat Factory Given Solar Energy by Taxpayers
by Will Compernolle The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) gave a $400,000 grant (#05-02206) in fiscal year 2005 to Solargenix Energy LLC to “provide solar thermal collectors to be installed on a meat packing factory roof.” According to the DCEO’s grant tracker, the grant is part of the Renewable Energy Resources Program, meant “to encourage utilization...
Illinois Is the New California
Illinois Is the New California
by Kristina Rasmussen The Manhattan Institute’s Josh Barro has an excellent column on RealClearMarkets today in which he explains how Illinois overtook California as America’s least creditworthy state and why our Pension Funding & Fairness Act is a good way back to fiscal sanity: If you go to Sacramento this week, don’t be surprised to hear champagne corks popping and...
Vouchers in D.C. Rock: New Study
Vouchers in D.C. Rock: New Study
by Collin Hitt Using a school voucher in D.C. significantly boosted students’ chances of graduating high school, according to an official evaluation released today by the federal Department of Education. Students who used vouchers, versus those who were eligible but did not receive or use vouchers, had a 21 percent greater chance of graduating high...
Cartoon Blogging
Cartoon Blogging
by Kristina Rasmussen Another great cartoon from the Tribune’s Scott Stantis:
$1.8 Million to 30 Vocational Instructors
$1.8 Million to 30 Vocational Instructors
by Mark Cavers In 2008, the Illinois Department of Corrections employed 30 vocational instructors who made $1,837,058.27 in combined total wages. The highest paid instructor made $86,477.96 and the average wage for the instructors was $61,000. These individuals provide “occupational instruction in a specific vocation in a correctional facility.” On the other hand, the Illinois Department of Human Services employed 16...
A Jobs Governor?
A Jobs Governor?
by Kristina Rasmussen Governor Pat Quinn fancies himself the “jobs governor.” Let’s see if the numbers hold up. From the Bureau of Labor Statistics: Quinn’s first month in office: February 2009 February 2009 employment: 6,035,873 Illinoisans February 2009 unemployment rate: 8.7 percent Quinn “jobs governor” claim: June 2010 April 2010 employment (latest available): 5,943,140 Illinoisans April 2010...