pensions

Decatur’s out-of-control pension costs

03/11/2014
Our recent comprehensive report, “The crisis hits home: Illinois’ local pension problem,” reviewed the fiscal health of Illinois’ 114 largest cities to measure the impact of pension costs on taxpayers, city services and the security of city-worker pensions. Decatur received one of the lowest scores as a result of out-of-control pension costs. Here’s why: Taxpayers...

TAGS: Decatur, IMRF: Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, municipal pensions, pensions

Chicago taxpayers: piggy bank for pensions

By Benjamin VanMetre
03/08/2014
Moody’s Investors Services recently cut the city of Chicago’s credit rating to Baa1 from A3 – citing pension debt as a key factor in the downgrade. Without real pension reform, a chain of credit downgrades will likely follow for Chicago’s sister governments. The Moody’s report noted that the recent passage of pension reforms for the...

TAGS: municipal pensions, pensions

Illinois pension reform resurfaces

By Matt Paprocki
03/01/2014
In December 2013, a pension reform bill passed out of the Illinois General Assembly. Sponsors of the bill estimated $160 billion in savings over the next 30 years, and supporters touted that the pension problem in Illinois was finally fixed. In fact, most of the dialogue throughout the Capitol was that the state-funded pension systems...

TAGS: 401(k), COGFA: Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, defined benefit plans, GARS: General Assembly Retirement System, ILGA: Illinois General Assembly, pensions

Illinois borrowing penalty still three times higher than when Quinn took office

02/06/2014
It didn’t take long for Illinois’ spending machine to cram more debt down taxpayers’ throats. Only two months after signing a pension bill, Gov. Pat Quinn is borrowing yet another $1 billion to fund state construction projects. This will be the first large borrowing for Illinois since it passed Senate Bill 1, a pension fix...

TAGS: borrowing, capital project, debt, Pat Quinn, penalty borrowing rate, pensions

Madigan’s Illinois pension fix: $15B less in savings, more gimmicks

01/28/2014
Not unlike ObamaCare, a bill Congress had to pass “to find out what’s in it,” Illinois’ General Assembly passed a pension fix in December 2013 without an official scoring of the bill. During floor debates, House Leader Mike Madigan and proponents of Senate Bill 1 promised $160 billion in savings over 30 years. Many opponents...

TAGS: pensions, Senate Bill 1

Pension ‘fix’ has many problems, but the Pension Clause isn’t one

01/13/2014
In December 2013, Gov. Pat Quinn signed a pension “reform” bill with many serious flaws. For example, it: barely makes a dent in the state’s unfunded pension liability; guarantees pension funding at the expense of taxpayers and all other government services; creates a fake 401(k) plan; doesn’t means test cost-of-living adjustments, or COLAs; still allows state workers to retire much earlier...

TAGS: pension guarantee, pensions

Illinois drowning in debt: $127 billion and counting

By Benjamin VanMetre
01/07/2014
Illinois is often used as the poster child for how not to run a state. Money-hungry politicians perpetuate the state’s spending problem with higher taxes and more borrowing. Meanwhile, the state’s tax base continues to erode as tapped-out families and businesses move to states with more opportunities and friendlier business environments. Illinois’ debt has grown...

TAGS: bonds, borrowing, debt, pensions

Michael Jordan’s $200K property tax bill can’t cover Highland Park’s No. 1 pensioner

By Hilary Gowins
12/23/2013
Michael Jordan may have paid $178,900 in property taxes on his Highland Park home in 2012. But his property taxes aren’t even enough to cover the annual pension of Highland Park’s highest-compensated retired Teachers’ Retirement System member. Linda Hanson, 66, is a former Highland Park Township High School District 113 superintendent who has been retired...

TAGS: Michael Jordan, pensions, property taxes, taxes