Pritzker continues to cast doubt on reports of Illinois' population
decline
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[April 06, 2023]
By Andrew Hensel | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker continues to downplay and cast
doubt on Illinois' population losses, despite U.S. Census data evidence
to the contrary.
The U.S. Census released updated county population numbers late last
month. In Illinois, from July 2020 through July 2021, the state lost
residents in 92 of its 102 counties.
According to the numbers, the state's three largest counties were also
hit by losses. Cook County lost 68,314 residents, second most in the
nation only behind Los Angeles County in California, while Illinois'
DuPage County lost 5,547, and Lake County lost 3,010.
Some of the state's most rural communities also saw a loss in population
as Alexander, Henderson, Perry and Lawrence counties led the state in
population decline as a share of the population.
At an unrelated event on Tuesday, Pritzker said the reports are
exaggerated.
"We all talked about the exodus from the state of Illinois, which I want
to contend to you that some of that data was wrong," Pritzker said. "We
saw they do a survey year after year called The American Community
Survey, and it said hundreds of thousands of people were leaving every
year. Then we did an actual count, the census count in 2020, and it
turns out, no, we actually gained population."
But Illinois lost a seat in the U.S. Congress during reapportionment
because of significant population loss after that 2020 Census loss.
Illinois Policy Institute's Bryce Hill told The Center Square that the
numbers are the numbers, no matter which way Pritzker tries to spin
them.
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Gov. J.B. Pritzker at Northern Illinois
University Tuesday - State of Illinois
"Whether it be Census Bureau estimates, whether it be tax records from
the IRS, whether it be moving day surveys, they all point to the same
thing, which is that hundreds of thousands of people are leaving the
state of Illinois every year," Hill said.
Pritzker said one of the main reasons the state is seeing a population
decrease is due to many students choosing to attend out of state
colleges.
"One of the things that we found out in looking at all the data was that
the largest contingent of people that were leaving the state back then
were high school graduates that were choosing to go to college out of
state," Pritzker said.
Hill suggests people are leaving due to employment, housing and other
problems such as high taxes and pension debts.
"The biggest thing is going to be number one, property taxes. I think
statewide we have the mechanisms in place to essentially enact a
statewide property tax freeze," Hill told The Center Square. "I think
that in light of rising home costs and unaffordability crisis when it
comes to housing, we should be pursuing a statewide property tax
freeze."
Hill said pension debts must also be addressed if the state wants to
shore up employment issues as a means to keep people in the state.
"We need to deal with pensions," Hill said. "We need constitutional
pension reform to reign in unfunded liabilities and allow for changes in
future benefits. Keeping current benefits that retirees have earned but
allowing for changes in future unearned benefits."
Andrew Hensel reports on issues in Chicago and Statewide.
He has been with The Center Square News since April of 2021 and was
previously with The Joliet Slammers.
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