Illinois quick hits: Chicago school board raises property tax levy
Chicago school board raises property tax levy
By a vote of 15 to 5, the Chicago Board of Education raised its property tax levy for fiscal year 2026 to generate an additional $25 million to $30 million in revenue.
Chicago Public Schools Acting Chief Financial Officer Wally Stock said the levy increase from 3.8% to 4.78% would be reduced by county calculations. Monday’s vote came just over a week after the Chicago City Council passed a $16.7 billion budget that sweeps roughly $1 billion in tax-increment financing dollars to CPS.
The Chicago Board of Education’s Office of Inspector General recently found that “severely deficient” travel expense procedures resulted in CPS spending roughly $23.6 million in overnight travel-related expenditures from 2019 to 2024.
State taxpayers dollars going to Planned Parenthood
The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) says it is investing $4 million to pay for Planned Parenthood’s Medicaid “family planning” programming.
According to HFS, the funding will go toward services like contraception, sexually-transmitted infection testing and treatment, and cancer screenings in order to counteract the federal defunding of Planned Parenthood.
According to HFS, abortions are not paid for with federal dollars but are covered on state Medicaid plans with state funds.
State Fair goes digital
The Illinois State Fair is transitioning to digital ticketing for 2026. After a trial run in 2025, fair officials say the modernized process will provide guests with more convenient, secure, and streamlined entry. The 2026 Illinois State Fair is scheduled from August 13 through August 23 in Springfield.
Latest News Stories
Michigan House Republicans demand Benson release SPLC records
Lone Tennessee U.S. House Democrat, Cohen, says he’s done
Illinois Quick Hits: Madigan: ‘Accept the federal scholarship tax credit’
Beecher Officials Lobby Springfield Legislators Against Governor’s “Build” Proposal
Will County Health Department Warns of Potential Federal Funding Cuts and Rising Healthcare Costs for FY2027
Highland Liquors Cleared for Video Gaming Expansion Following Zoning Approval
Lawmakers spar with Fairfax County leaders over sanctuary policies
Advocates call on tax reform to reduce national debt
Supreme Court allows mail-order abortion drugs
McCuskey, coalition of AGs urge SEC to review OpenAI
Springfield strains for balanced budget; Illinois revenue forecast shifts down
DOJ targets healthcare fraud in California, Arizona, Nevada