Vicki McCarthy purchased her home in northern Illinois’ Round Lake Beach in 2002, paying $195,000. She now pegs that home’s value at around $180,000 and is staring at a property tax bill of nearly $8,000 a year.
Illinoisans such as McCarthy know all too well the pain of their property tax bill. Researcher after researcher pegs them as some of the highest in the country, if not the highest.
What Illinoisans may not know is that as recently as 1996, property tax bills in the Land of Lincoln were hovering around the national average. But a punishing 80 percent increase in residential property taxes since then, adjusted for inflation, has rocketed Illinois to the top of the table.
What happened in those 20-some intervening years? The truth holds the key to fixing the state. And politicians touting further tax increases and opposing sensible spending changes would prefer voters didn’t know.
The answer, revealed in a new report from the Illinois Policy Institute, is a rapid rise in pension costs.
Take McCarthy’s tax bill. Among other things, it’s paying for the retirements of nearly 100 municipal retirees in Lake County who already have become millionaires via the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund. Their average retirement age was 57 years old, they contributed an average of $74,500 to the pension system over the course of their careers, and receive an average pension check of more than $95,000 each year.
Across the state, home value appreciation is severely lagging the national average despite property taxes increasing at a frenetic pace.
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