maybe yes or maybe no |
By Mike Flannery
Mayor Lori Lightfoot is warning taxpayers that City Hall may dip into their pockets to bail out a big budget shortfall.
CHICAGO - Mayor Lori Lightfoot is warning taxpayers that City Hall may dip into their pockets to bail out a big budget shortfall.
Unlike other mayors around Illinois, though, Lightfoot has not cut any jobs. In fact, the city is still hiring.
On Tuesday, after revealing the city of Chicago will fall at least $700 million short of balancing this year's budget, Mayor Lightfoot finally mentioned the solutions some aldermen believe she has already chosen.
“Raising property taxes and layoffs have to remain on the table. Those are the last choices and tools that I want to use,” Lightfoot said.
The mayor said new hiring has slowed down while City Hall was shut down but has continued even as tax revenues plunged, especially from the hospitality industry in Chicago.
Hospitality and tourism help power the boom downtown, where 65-percent of Chicago’s economy is and a huge proportion of tax payments come from. But the Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association says some of its members are already broke, killing more than 130,000 jobs.
“As our hotels struggle to fill their rooms and generate business, I think what were temporary furloughs are now more and more becoming permanent eliminations or layoffs,” said Michael Jacobson.
FOX 32 asked Jacobson if the city is going to lose some hotels and/or if are they simply going to go out of business.
“Yes. You're already hearing some hotels [have been] sent to special servicers to begin the foreclosure process,” he answered.
“Now our $700 million shortfall is conservative, in part, because no one can predict with any accuracy now how a recovery will take hold,” Lightfoot said.
Some experts, though, do offer a prediction. They say it will take at least 3 to 4 years before Chicago’s once-booming tourism and convention business returns to pre-COVID levels, which is very bad news for downtown.
Beetlejuice and Jabba turned Chicago into the next Detroit in less than one term in office!
ReplyDeletewho and what are they going to tax??
ReplyDeleteYou can only recycle toilet water so many times.......
ReplyDeleteThe people who use the city services the most should pay the highest taxes: Looters, rioters, protesters, public school users, 911 callers, etc.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, they will pay the lowest taxes.
if you want to know what happened to Rome and why the Empire failed..........
ReplyDeleteI see white flight on the horizon. A once tremendous and beautiful city destroyed in less than 2 years by Beetlejuice.
ReplyDeleteShe just found 5 million for illegal aliens that didn't get a federal stimulus check, this broad needs to be recalled. Alderman can make this happen
ReplyDeleteDemocrats, enjoy what you created by blindly voting for anyone with a D by there name, and by all means now that you are not welcome in Indiana.
ReplyDeleteIndiana has Democrats too, in Indianapolis, Hammond, Gary, Merreville and East Chicago. ☹️
ReplyDeleteCops should pay for all the looting and burning they have caused
ReplyDeleteCorrect me if I am wrong, but isn't that the same $700 million inherited from the Rham Emanual administration?
ReplyDelete