What’s driving Illinois’ $111 billion pension crisis
What’s driving Illinois’ $111 billion pension crisis
Retirement ages, COLAs and out-of-sync pension payouts
Retirement ages, COLAs and out-of-sync pension payouts
To get ex-offenders back to work and reduce crime, Illinois needs to lift restrictions on the right to earn a living .
Concept of “consideration” allows state workers to negotiate for new benefits and could pave a path toward pension reform.
Millionaires are playing a large role in the broader Chicago exodus.
Several instances of corruption and mismanagement of public property and trust came to light in March and included new developments in cases involving Chicago Public Schools’ former CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett and former Gov. Rod Blagojevich.
A new 30-cent-per-gallon tax hike would make Illinois gas taxes the highest in the nation by far, and pour more money into a broken system.
Budget gridlock in Springfield caused the Illinois secretary of state’s office to suspend mailing vehicle-registration-renewal reminders in October 2015; as a result, during the first three months of 2016, the state took in $2.7 million more in fees for late license-plate renewal than it did during the same period in 2015.
Should a teenage crime of desperation shackle an ex-offender for life? This is the question facing Illinois state politicians, who, due to a law they passed in 2011, must reckon with the likes of Lisa Creason, a 43-year-old mother from Decatur, Illinois. By all accounts, Lisa Creason is a respected member of her community. She’s...
After returning from vacation, Illinois lawmakers will operate under rapidly approaching deadlines to pass legislation.
Creating a tax increment financing district around the Lathrop Homes redevelopment will ensure that 100 percent of property-tax revenue generated on the site will go to a city-run slush fund.
The union’s one-day strike is an illegal, aggressive political power play, and its attempt to coerce its members to participate violates its own constitution. Here’s a breakdown of the timeline, the law and the political statement the union is making.
Since 1990, the average property-tax bill in Illinois has grown more than three times faster than the state's median household income.