Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix

Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix

Spread the love

If Illinois were a family, it would have 1,313 siblings – its cities, towns and villages.

One of them is a trainwreck, repeatedly in crisis, addicted and constantly asking the rest of the family for help.

Not hard to guess: the black sheep is Chicago.

The city’s schools think they are entitled to $1.6 billion from the rest of the family. Chicago’s regional transit systems faces a deficit of at least $760 million, but the Regional Transportation Authority wants $1.5 billion to get itself straight and avoid 40% service cuts and 3,000 layoffs.

Chicago bumps from one crisis to the next, never taking responsibility for its own problems or really wanting to change.

So, what’s the expert advice when there’s a family member who won’t go to rehab?

Set clear and consistent boundaries, prioritize your own well-being through self-care, limit interactions if necessary and seek support for yourself. In other words, don’t keep helping someone who won’t help themselves.

Specifically on the latest ask, the Chicago mass transit system is seeking taxes from everyone else to avoid a fiscal cliff. While the RTA may have delayed the day of reckoning by handing $74 million to the Chicago Transit Authority, this problem was years in the making and the solution is not to repeat the behaviors with no accountability.

Simply blaming the pandemic is to ignore the behaviors. RTA says people en masse worked from home, so they stopped using mass transit from the burbs to downtown. Yes, that was a trigger, but the spending is out of control – up about one-third, or over $1 billion, in just five years.

Commuters are returning, but slowly. Over 20% of the Chicago Transit Authority bus riders remain absent, as well as about 40% of the train and commuter bus riders.

But what about that big check Uncle Sam wrote? It was for $3.54 billion – a significant chunk for a system spending $4.37 billion in 2025. Pandemic money will be gone by the end of this year, so attention turns to the state.

First, state lawmakers were asked to pass a statewide sales tax on services – haircuts, lawn mowing, plumbing repair, etc. That $2.7 billion plan died at the end of the legislative session but could return like a horror movie monster.

Then, there was the $1 billion idea to charge $1.50 per delivery – Amazon, UPS, etc.

And a plan to boost taxes on real estate sales in five suburban Chicago counties – a small fix generating less than 10% of that $1.5 billion ask.

Usually tucked into these proposals is some small amount the rest of the state can share. State Sen. Ram Villlivalam, D-Chicago, offered $200 million of the $1.5 billion for “downstate” transit.

And Chicago area politicians wonder why folks south of Interstate 80 think of themselves as “Forgottonia,” woo Indiana to help them secede or put “Pritzker (Stinks)” signs in their front yards? Chicago gets a free ride, the rest of Illinois gets the smog.

And the exhaust is spreading outside of Chicagoland. Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, a proud son of Peoria, is playing the kindly uncle in favor of helping our beleaguered sibling one more time.

“We come here. We take advantage of the public transportation system. Chicago is very important to Illinois. It’s an economic engine for Illinois, and it’s a part of Illinois,” LaHood told The Center Square.

All due respect to the guy trying to fix gerrymandering in Illinois by pushing a ballot initiative for an independent legislative mapping commission, but this will not be Chicago’s last crisis.

Back to recovery: You can’t help someone who won’t help themselves.

A system in trouble has no business moving ahead with a 5.5-mile extension of the CTA’s Red Line. In 2009, the cost was estimated at $1.09 billion, then after it got $1.9 billion from the feds, the estimate rose to $3.6 billion and now magically has hit $5.75 billion – before any cost overruns, which are pretty much synonymous with “Chicago.” A Metra station recently was 15 years behind schedule and $10 million over budget.

A system in trouble has no business paying 10 workers over $300,000 to work from home at jobs that cannot be performed from their homes. What? Transit employees didn’t want to make the commute?

And a system in trouble has no business hiring a DJ for $37,800 to entertain commuters.

In other words, there is a lot the mass transit systems in the Chicago area should do before coming to the rest of Illinois with thin arguments about their value to the statewide economy and convenience when visiting. The city’s economic value is largely a result of all that corn, wheat and soybeans the rest of the state is growing, so please spare the rest of the family from any “breadwinner” entitlement.

Time for some tough love. Chicago transit needs to fix its own problems by making better decisions and breaking its spending habit.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

BREAKING: Trump fires Bondi, Blanche to lead DOJ

BREAKING: Trump fires Bondi, Blanche to lead DOJ

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump removed Attorney General Pam Bondi from the Department of Justice on Thursday, according to a post on social media. "Pam Bondi is...
Jewish students can’t sue Northwestern over antisemitic protest response

Jewish students can’t sue Northwestern over antisemitic protest response

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Jewish students can't sue Northwestern University for failing to throttle protests and campus-takeover "encampments" supporting Palestinian liberation, which the plaintiffs said turned...
States sue Trump administration over rollback of some air pollution regulations

States sue Trump administration over rollback of some air pollution regulations

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison is co-leading a multi-state lawsuit challenging the Trump administration’s rollback of some federal limits on toxic air pollution. The lawsuit...
Energy affordability report ranks Illinois 31st, warns of 'burdensome' mandates

Energy affordability report ranks Illinois 31st, warns of ‘burdensome’ mandates

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – According to a new report on energy affordability, burdensome mandates are making Illinois more expensive. The American...
Illinois voices weigh in on birthright citizenship case

Illinois voices weigh in on birthright citizenship case

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As the U.S. Supreme Court considers a high-stakes challenge to birthright citizenship, a constitutional law expert...
U.S. rep.: Mexico still not delivering water to South Texas, despite claims

U.S. rep.: Mexico still not delivering water to South Texas, despite claims

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Despite repeated claims by Trump administration officials, Mexico is not delivering water as promised to South Texas in accordance with a long-standing treaty. In January,...
Supporters say will storage option would streamline judicial process

Supporters say will storage option would streamline judicial process

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Supporters say an Illinois House bill allowing county clerks to develop a will depository would streamline judicial...
Dallas Fed: Geopolitical conflicts creating uncertainty for U.S. oil and gas industry

Dallas Fed: Geopolitical conflicts creating uncertainty for U.S. oil and gas industry

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square A new quarterly Dallas Fed Energy Survey indicates the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran and other geopolitical conflicts are negatively impacting and creating uncertainty for the...
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker pushes for E15

Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker pushes for E15

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is asking leaders of the U.S. House on Environment and Public Works Committee...
Beecher Graphic.3

Village Approves $10,000 Emergency Donation to Replace Deteriorating Fencing at Firemen’s Park

Village of Beecher Board of Trustees Meeting | March 23, 2026 Article Summary: Racing against the start of the spring baseball season, the Beecher Village Board agreed to a $10,000...
Washington Township Graphic.2

Washington Township Approves $10,000 Sponsorship for Beecher Concert Series Despite Trustee Concerns

Washington Township Board of Trustees Meeting | February 2, 2026 Article Summary: The Washington Township Board unanimously approved a $10,000 sponsorship for the Village of Beecher’s 2026 Concert in the Park...
Trump addresses nation on Iran strikes; signals conflict nearing end

Trump addresses nation on Iran strikes; signals conflict nearing end

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Just over a month after Operation Epic Fury began, President Donald Trump Wednesday proclaimed U.S. strikes on Iran are nearing completion, while telling allies to...
IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court

IL biometrics privacy reforms apply to past cases, too: Appeals court

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Pending class action lawsuits under Illinois' stringent biometrics privacy law may have become significantly less lucrative, after a federal appeals court declared...
Artemis II heads to the moon with first crewed mission since 1972

Artemis II heads to the moon with first crewed mission since 1972

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square America is going back to the moon, after Artemis II lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Wednesday evening, more than five decades after Americans last...
Pro-life org to Trump: Taxpayers should not be forced to fund killing of unborn children

Pro-life org to Trump: Taxpayers should not be forced to fund killing of unborn children

By Tate MillerThe Center Square The Trump administration’s decision to send tax dollars to the abortion industry by continuing former President Joe Biden’s Title X grant awards to Planned Parenthood...