House Democrats took a promising school funding reform bill and turned it into another handout to Chicago schools at the expense of the rest of the state, Sen. Jason Barickman (R-Bloomington) said before the close of the spring legislative session on Wednesday.
With the adoption of Sen. Jason Barickman’s (R-Bloomington) Senate Resolution 284, the General Assembly has designated June 15 "Elder Abuse Awareness Day" in an effort to encourage Illinois residents to learn more about the issue.
All of the Democrats hoping to unseat Gov. Bruce Rauner in 2018 are backing Speaker of the House Michael Madigan's budget goal of raising taxes rather than enacting reforms, a Madigan spokesman told the Chicago Tribune recently.
As a state lawmaker, Frank Mautino paid nearly $12,500 in campaign fund cash to a man named Joe without keeping any supporting receipts, according to a government oversight group.
Illinoisans pay more in total taxes than anyone else in the nation, so any thoughts about adding to that burden need to be forgotten, a tax analyst argued recently.
Sen. Bill Brady’s (R-Bloomington) budget plan overestimates its spending cuts and overstates its reform efforts, the Illinois Policy Institute argued recently.
Illinois can't grow unless its small businesses grow, Gov. Bruce Rauner told owners and employees of several of the state's 1 million such businesses on a brief tour recently.
Illinois needs to replace its byzantine public education funding plan one with a logical formula, Sen. Jason Barickman (R-Bloomington) said on a morning radio program hours before a hearing on the legislation on Thursday.
A public policy group is calling on Illinoisans to demand that the Senate follow the House's lead and approve a bill that would allow voters to decide to consolidate local governments.
A transparency group has accused the Allin Township Fire Protection District Board of Trustees of forgery and and false billing and the McLean County sheriff of brushing the allegations aside.
The Bloomington Election Commission violated the Open Meetings Act (OMA) twice in December through improper posting of meeting agendas, the Illinois attorney general determined recently.