Illinois

A woman holds some prescription drugs.

Angry patients spur new state watchdogs to bring down drug prices

BY: - July 16, 2024

Spurred by fed-up consumers, states are trying to curb spiraling prescription drug costs by assembling special public boards to investigate and regulate pricing. The idea is similar to a local utility board: a public group that sets rules or makes recommendations to ensure that what they’re regulating — in this case, prescription medications — is […]

A KFC employee hangs a sign for job openings at a restaurant in Miami.

More states enact salary transparency laws to fight gender, racial pay gaps

BY: - July 10, 2024

To combat gender and racial wage gaps, nearly a dozen states recently have enacted pay transparency laws that require employers to be more open about the wages and benefits they offer. Most of the laws require employers to disclose wages in job postings and some bar them from asking a job candidate about their salary […]

An Amazon truck makes deliveries in Wheeling, Illinois.

Gas taxes can’t pay for roads much longer, but Amazon deliveries might

BY: - July 9, 2024

For decades, states have relied on gas taxes to provide much of the money to maintain roads and bridges. But as cars become more fuel efficient, and some Americans switch to electric vehicles, state leaders say the gas tax won’t pay the bills for much longer. At the same time, many cities have seen their […]

A hearse and van sit outside a funeral home in Penrose, Colo.

Mishandled bodies, mixed-up remains prompt tougher funeral home regulations

BY: - July 5, 2024

The headlines were the stuff of nightmares. One Colorado funeral home owner let the body of a woman decompose for two years in a hearse parked outside a house he rented, while hoarding the cremated remains of dozens of others inside. Last year, authorities discovered nearly 200 improperly stored bodies at another Colorado funeral home […]

A pharmacist with a customer at a drug store.

States struggle to help patients navigate insurance hurdle known as ‘step therapy’

BY: - June 12, 2024

Cassidy Yermal, 32, began experiencing debilitating migraines when she was 17 years old. As a teenager growing up in northeastern Pennsylvania, she saw numerous neurologists and tried a variety of medications before finding one that provided relief. In 2022, her new insurer asked her to prove it. Yermal now lives in Marlboro, Maryland, where she’s […]

For some rural communities, a stripped-down hospital is better than none at all

BY: - June 6, 2024

On many days, some small hospitals in rural Mississippi admit just one patient — or none at all. The hospitals are drowning in debt. The small, tight-knit communities they’ve anchored for decades can do little but watch as the hospitals shed services and staff just to stay afloat. The federal government recently offered a lifeline: […]

A worker in a lab.

As mpox cases rise, experts urge complete, 2-part vaccinations

BY: - June 4, 2024

The number of U.S. mpox cases has more than doubled compared with last year, and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been urging clinicians across states to encourage vaccinations for those at risk. As of May 25, the nation had seen a roughly 150% increase in cases of the disease formerly known […]

A Maryland lawmaker.

Greater focus on crime sparks another wave of juvenile justice bills

BY: - May 31, 2024

For decades, state legislators and criminal justice advocates have worked to change the juvenile legal system, striving to expand access to rehabilitation and keep young people from returning to crime. During this year’s legislative session, nearly every state has considered some form of juvenile justice legislation, according to a National Conference of State Legislatures database. […]

A person watches a sunrise in Austin, Texas.

Low-wage states with cheap housing dominated the post-pandemic jobs boom

BY: - May 29, 2024

More than half of the nation’s jobs created in the past five years have come in two states: Texas and Florida. They’re at the forefront of a job creation revolution in which states with lower wages and a lower cost of living are gaining the highest share of new jobs, according to a new Stateline […]

A house under construction in Houston.

Housing boom in most of the US could ease shortage, but cost is still a problem

BY: - May 16, 2024

Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the country are trying to create more affordable housing.  The United States has added almost 5 million housing units since 2020, most heavily in the South and most of them single-family homes, making a housing shortage look conquerable in much of the nation. Still, even more homes need to be built — […]

A health worker with a patient.

Many states are eager to extend Medicaid to people soon to be released from prison

BY: - May 2, 2024

A new policy that allows states to provide Medicaid health care coverage to incarcerated people at least a month prior to their release has drawn bipartisan interest and a slew of state applications. Federal policy has long prohibited Medicaid spending on people who are incarcerated in jails or prisons, except for hospitalization. As a result, […]

A homeowner and his dog

Black homeowners start to close gap in property values

BY: - May 1, 2024

Black homeowners’ property values are on the rise across the country, with some of the biggest upswings in Midwestern and Southern states. The boon to Black homeowners, after decades of lagging property values, could help them close a racial wealth gap that has kept the American dream out of reach. Home values increased on average […]