Illinois’ comeback story starts here.

Chicago: 2nd Worse Charter School Environment

Chicago: 2nd Worse Charter School Environment

by Collin Hitt That, according to a new survey of thirty American cities by the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation.  Overall, the study attempted to rank major cities based on their attractiveness for school reform – the charter school element was only one piece.  Chicago got a C and was ranked 11th out of 26 states offered an...

Pension Systems Selling Assets to Cover Benefits

Pension Systems Selling Assets to Cover Benefits

by Kristina Rasmussen From Crain’s: Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, Springfield, plans to sell $3 billion in investments, or about 10% of its $33.1 billion in assets, in the current fiscal year to pay pension benefits, according to Dave Urbanek, public information officer. The system is the fifth Illinois statewide defined benefit plan to sell off investments this...

The State Un-Fair Questions and Answers

The State Un-Fair Questions and Answers

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson The Institute recently released “Spotlight on Spending #9: The State Un-Fair” reviewing the Illinois and DuQuoin State Fairs between fiscal year 2001 and fiscal year 2009. There has been some confusion about the paper, and we’d like to take a blog post to help clarify some of these questions. 1. “If you can...

Meat & Poultry Inspector Supervisors Paid $616K

Meat & Poultry Inspector Supervisors Paid $616K

by Will Compernolle The Department of Agriculture for the State of Illinois paid 11 meat and poultry inspector supervisors $616,597.87 in combined total wages in the fiscal year 2008. The average meat and poultry inspector supervisor was paid an annual salary of $56,054.35 with the highest salary being $61,633. The Illinois Department of Central Management Services website...

Illinois borrows to pay unemployment benefits

Illinois borrows to pay unemployment benefits

by Kristina Rasmussen Add this to Illinois’s debt tab. According to the State Journal-Register: Illinois has borrowed more than $2.2 billion from the federal government since July 2009 to pay unemployment benefits. Unemployment benefits are funded through withholding taxes on employers; raising those taxes in a fragile economy is a non starter.  

SEC Charges NJ — is IL Next?

SEC Charges NJ — is IL Next?

by Kristina Rasmussen This bit of news is creating quite a stir in certain circles: The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged the state of New Jersey Wednesday with lying and withholding information to investors in billions of dollars worth of municipal bond deals. The allegations involve $26 billion of bond offerings from 2001 to 2007 in...

Public Education 2.0

Public Education 2.0

by Collin Hitt A new national group has formed to advance online and technology-driven learning in public schools, the Digital Learning Council. I’ve been asked to serve on the council, an honor considering the accomplished careers of those who’ll also be joining the group – for starters, the council is co-chaired by former governors Bob Wise and Jeb Bush. It looks...

Teachers, Unions, and Transparency

Teachers, Unions, and Transparency

by Kate Piercy From S.T. Karnick at The American Culture: In case you missed it, LA Times reporters Jason Felch, Jason Song and Doug Smith used California’s public records law to obtain seven years of math and English test scores from the Los Angeles Unified School District. They asked Richard Buddin, a well-respected analyst at the RAND Corporation,...

Unfunded Public Pensions

Unfunded Public Pensions

by Kate Piercy R. Eden Martin, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago, offers some solutions to the critical pension problem facing Illinois in today’s Wall Street Journal. Martin concludes, “Public pension funds are in dire need of change, but state and local hopes for a federal bailout now stand in the way...

Top Marginal Tax Rate of 88 percent!

Top Marginal Tax Rate of 88 percent!

Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University constructed the diagram below using data from the Congressional Budget Office during the very early stages of the Great Recession and before the Obama presidency. It shows the increase in marginal tax rates required to fund entitlement spending for 2010, 2050 and 2082. The required increase...

By Chris Andriesen

Recovery Numbers Not as Rosy as They Seem

Recovery Numbers Not as Rosy as They Seem

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson At the end of July, the White House’s Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board claimed more than 750,000 jobs were funded by the economic stimulus package last quarter. This estimate was the highest total reported so far, and some saw this as “encouraging news.” But Veronique de Rugy, a senior research fellow at...

Spotlight on Spending #11 – Frogs, Chickens, and Fine Art

Spotlight on Spending #11 – Frogs, Chickens, and Fine Art

The Problem Illinois’s dire fiscal situation continues to worsen year after year, and to turn this bad situation around it’s important to evaluate existing programs to ensure they’re necessary and effective. One such program that needs evaluation is the Environment and Nature Training Institute for Conservation Education (ENTICE) workshops from the Illinois Department of Natural...

By Chris Andriesen

Clout Hiring Alive in Chicago

Clout Hiring Alive in Chicago

by Amanda Griffin-Johnson A clout hiring scandal in Chicago’s Department of Transportation (CDOT) has led to a five-day, unpaid suspension for an engineering technician and the resignation of a Deputy Commissioner. The Chicago Sun-Times reports: Jim Bolster was slapped with the five-day suspension “for assisting” his boss, former Deputy Commissioner Gilberto Quinones, in Quinones’ quest to...

Film Review: The Myth of the Middle Class School

Film Review: The Myth of the Middle Class School

by Kristin Nisbet* The Pacific Research Institute and director Nick Tucker created a film adaption of a book titled “Not as Good as You Think” by Lance Izumi, Vicki Murray and Rachel Chaney.  This film of the same name questions the assumption that having a well manicured lawn and owning a house in the suburbs is key to gaining access to...