Chicago

Union waste and pay raises cost thousands of government workers their jobs

By Paul Kersey
08/22/2014
Several of Illinois’ most influential government unions are wasting money on overhead and administrative costs. Workers aren’t getting their money’s worth for the dues they are forced to pay. But state-employee pay has more than doubled over the last decade or so, with lax attendance rules that actually reward workers for showing up late to work....

Illinois businesses burdened by much more than taxes

By Naomi Lopez Bauman
08/19/2014
A recent study of the business tax burden in the 50 states and District of Columbia ranks Illinois as 27th in the nation. Portrayed as being “not so bad” in the media sheds a lot of light on Illinois’ current economic position. But while Illinois ranks in the middle of the pack for business tax...

TAGS: taxes

Liquor license moratoriums highlight unchecked power of Chicago aldermen

By Bryant Jackson-Green
08/14/2014
It may seem obvious that a business owner should have the right to sell their business to someone else. But in Chicago, basic property rights take a back seat to arbitrary regulation and a system of aldermanic privilege that can put those rights in the hands of a single politician. Parlour on Clark, a once-popular...

Scandals pile up for Chicago’s red-light camera program

By Hilary Gowins
08/13/2014
The controversy surrounding Chicago’s red-light camera program just got even more interesting. A judge revealed he is dismissing tickets by the fistful while former key players in the program have been indicted on federal bribery charges. Less than two weeks after Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced that the city will be reviewing more than 16,000...

TAGS: cronyism, red light cameras

SEC charges prove politicians shouldn’t control public pensions

08/13/2014
Illinois taxpayers and government workers got proof in 2013 that politicians can’t be trusted to manage public-worker retirements. That’s when the Securities Exchange Commission charged Illinois with securities fraud. Now, Kansas joins Illinois and New Jersey as one of three states to face SEC civil charges for misleading investors about the health of their pension...

Illinois corruption watch, July 2014

By Brian Costin
08/09/2014
The bad news keeps piling up for Illinoisans. Illinois Policy’s “corruption watch” blog series hit a new high in the month of July with nearly 100 corruption-related stories. Chicago and Springfield are the two cities most synonymous with the state’s corruption woes. Unsurprisingly, both cities dominated headlines with the top two corruption stories of the...

Waukegan, beleaguered, needs school choice for a comeback

08/01/2014
Chicago’s North Shore is synonymous with million-dollar homes and top-notch schools. For decades, families have left Chicago to raise their families and educate their children in the North Shore suburbs. But tucked away within those wealthy villages is a city with schools on the other end of the spectrum. Waukegan, with a population of more...

Quinn passes the buck on cell-phone tax hike, Chicago cashes in

By Austin Berg
07/31/2014
Back on June 6, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation authorizing Chicago city officials to enact a 56 percent per-line 911 fee hike. This measure gave the city of Chicago the authority to raise the city’s per-line 911 fee to $3.90 from the old fee of $2.50. It didn’t take long for Chicago City Council...

TAGS: cell phone tax, taxes

To catch up with Uber, Chicago taxi group proposes … higher fares?

07/29/2014
The taxi industry complains endlessly that ridesharing services such as UberX and Lyft are hurting its business. Now an AFL-CIO-affiliated group of Chicago cab drivers is seeking to improve its members’ fortunes by pushing the city to mandate higher taxi fares. But hiking prices doesn’t seem like a good way to save an industry that...

TAGS: Chicago, Lyft, taxis, Uber