Chlebek says Illinois has ‘No Excuse’ as Florida advances property tax plan


Casey Chlebek
Florida voters may soon decide on eliminating property taxes. Casey Chlebek says Illinois should give voters the same chance.


PARK RIDGE, ILL - In a political moment where property taxes are usually treated as an unavoidable fact of life, Republican U.S. Senate candidate Casey Chlebek says Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis just cracked the door wide open and Illinois leaders are pretending not to notice.

As DeSantis moves forward with a 2026 ballot initiative that would eliminate property taxes on primary residences in Florida, Chlebek is renewing his call for Illinois to let voters weigh in on whether the state should do the same. For Chlebek, the contrast between Florida’s momentum and Illinois’ silence is becoming harder to ignore.


Illinois has the highest effective property tax rate in the nation. Florida does not rank in the top 20.

“Governor DeSantis just proved this isn’t a pipe dream,” Chlebek said. “Florida is putting this question directly to voters in 2026. Illinois should do the same.”

DeSantis announced last week that Florida voters will be asked to approve a constitutional amendment eliminating property taxes on homesteaded properties. The proposal would require 60 percent voter approval and includes safeguards to protect funding for schools and law enforcement. It also lays out a phased approach that includes $1,000 rebate checks for homeowners in December 2025 and long-term revenue replacement through spending reforms and alternative funding sources.

Chlebek has been making a similar argument in Illinois since September, when he first called on Gov. JB Pritzker and the General Assembly to place a statewide advisory referendum on the 2026 ballot. Florida’s move, he said, strips away the usual excuses coming out of Springfield.

Illinois has the highest effective property tax rate in the nation. Florida does not rank in the top 20. Yet Florida’s governor is pushing for elimination while Illinois leaders continue to describe meaningful reform as too complicated or politically risky.

“We have the worst property tax crisis in America, and our leaders are doing nothing,” Chlebek said. “Florida’s taxes are lower than ours, and they’re still saying enough is enough.”

The stakes, he argues, are not theoretical. Since 2019, more than 1,000 Cook County residents have lost homes worth an estimated $108 million over roughly $2.3 million in unpaid property taxes. That group included at least 125 seniors. The difference between the tax debt and the home’s value was kept by the government and private investors, a practice the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional in 2023.


Families across the political spectrum are drowning in property taxes.

Despite that ruling, Illinois has yet to fully reform its property tax foreclosure laws.

“In Florida, they’re fighting to eliminate property taxes for homeowners who can pay,” Chlebek said. “In Illinois, we’re seizing homes from seniors who fall behind and keeping their equity. That’s not tax collection. That’s state-sanctioned theft.”

Florida is not acting alone. Republican leaders in Texas, Kansas, Montana and Pennsylvania are advancing their own property tax relief or elimination proposals. Several states have already moved to stop home equity theft following the Supreme Court’s decision. Illinois, Chlebek noted, has done neither.

“This is a national movement, and Illinois is being left behind,” he said.

Chlebek’s proposal would place a nonbinding advisory question on the November 2026 ballot asking voters whether Illinois should pursue abolishing property taxes on primary residences and replace them with alternative funding for schools, police, fire protection and local services. While local governments control property taxes under the Illinois Constitution, Chlebek says an overwhelming vote would send a clear signal to lawmakers.

“Put it on the ballot. Let the people decide,” he said. “If they say yes, Springfield has to act. If they say no, fine. But at least give them the choice.”

He points to Florida as proof that the issue can cut across political divides. DeSantis and the Florida Legislature have clashed on other issues, yet both chambers are aligned on sending the property tax question to voters.

“This isn’t partisan. It’s practical,” Chlebek said. “Families across the political spectrum are drowning in property taxes.”

For Chlebek, the issue comes down to the basic meaning of homeownership.

“You can pay off your mortgage and still lose your home if you fall behind on taxes,” he said. “That’s not ownership. Florida gets it. Illinois voters get it. Now it’s time Springfield gets it, too.”





Illinois property tax reform referendum 2026, Casey Chlebek property tax abolition proposal, Illinois home equity theft property taxes, comparison of Illinois and Florida property tax laws, Illinois advisory referendum on property taxes

The Sentinel On This Day |
December 12


As December arrives with festive lights and winter’s chill, we revisit the stories that defined our community — from holiday traditions and year‑end reflections to local sports highlights, civic milestones, and spirited debates. Explore archived posts published on this day in December across Champaign County and beyond, curated by The Sentinel.


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TAGS: Cohen Building renovation and grandopening, Illinois continues to tax tips,

Illinois will continue to tax tips, no relief for Illinois workers despite federal decree



by Catrina Barker
Center Square


CHICAGO - Illinois is not adopting the new federal “no tax on tips” provision, meaning tipped workers in the state will still owe Illinois income tax on tips, even when those tips are exempt at the federal level.

Manish Bhatt, senior policy analyst with the Tax Foundation, said Illinois’ tax structure makes it possible for the state to decline the new tip exemption.


Photo: Brett Sayles/PEXELS

A new federal law from the Trump Administration allows eligible workers to deduct up to $25,000 of reported tip income from their federal income tax. Tipped income remains subject to state and other taxes like Social Security and Medicare in Illinois. The deduction for tipped employees is temporary, ending in 2028.

“Only those states that begin state-level income tax calculations using the federal definition of taxable income have it automatically incorporated into the tax code,” Bhatt explained. “I don't believe Illinois does that. So I think the states are certainly able to not incorporate that individual sort of exemption on tips and overtime wages.”

Even for states that do automatically conform to federal tax changes, Bhatt said it may be wiser to “decouple” from the federal rule.


Illinois remains a high-tax state, with one of the nation’s highest property tax burdens.

“It’s much more sound tax policy to not create carve-outs for certain taxpayers at the expense of others,” he said. “More general reform certainly needs to happen to bring the tax burden down for everybody.”

Bhatt said taxpayers who are seeing and hearing about the no tax on tips at the federal level might not think about having to actually add those back into their state return.

“It’s not that those individuals are trying to avoid taxation. They just don’t know to add that back into their state income tax,” Bhatt told The Center Square.

Bhatt warned that confusion could lead to filing mistakes or the need for paid tax preparation services.

“If these individuals now have to hire a professional tax preparer when they were otherwise doing it at home by themselves,” he said, “there’s a number of inefficiencies … that lawmakers need to be aware of.”

Illinois remains a high-tax state, with one of the nation’s highest property tax burdens. Bhatt acknowledged that it may be difficult to persuade a tipped worker, already facing rising tax pressures, that opting out of the exemption is sound policy.

“This is an example where good politics doesn’t always make good policy,” he said. “When you create a carve-out for a certain industry or a certain company, you're shifting the burden onto somebody else.”

Illinois, he said, should instead pursue broad-based reform that benefits all taxpayers—not just certain groups.

“Lawmakers should prioritize sound and broad tax reform in the state so that everybody benefits,” he said.

Bhatt emphasized that while not taxing tips may sound attractive to workers, selective exemptions distort the tax code.

“You could have two workers earning the same salary but facing different tax burdens simply because of the nature of their jobs and how they're paid,” he said.

He offered a simple example: a bank teller and a waiter each earning $30,000 in a hypothetical flat-tax state. Under a no-tax-on-tips system, the waiter would pay dramatically less than the teller—even though they take home the same amount.

The imbalance could also push employers to restructure compensation.

“If this is implemented around the country, there will be the incentive for employers to shift the way that their workers earn their money,” Bhatt said. Some industries may try to shift employees into tip-eligible roles “to attract and retain workers on the promise of a lower tax bill.”



Photo of the Day |
Rockets set to return to girls' shootout at SJO


Unity will be without last year's senior standout Lauren Haas this Saturday at the 2025 Country Financial Shootout at St. Joseph-Ogden High School. The Rockets take the court at 5:30 p.m. hoping to beat 8-1 Tri-Valley.

Unity senior Lauren Haas looks for an open teammate under the basket

Photo: PhotoNews Media/Clark Brooks

Lauren Haas looks for an open teammate to pass the ball during the Unity's 2024 Country Financial Shootout game against Watseka. Scoring consistently across all four quarters, Haas led the Rockets' offense with 12 points in the team 52-46 loss to the Warriors. Both teams return to this year's installment with Watseka (8-1) facing shootout host St. Joseph-Ogden (5-1) at 4 p.m. Unity (4-5) will take on the 8-1 Tri-Valley Vikings in the nightcap starting at around 5:30 p.m. at St. Joseph-Ogden High School.


TAGS: Unity girls basketball, Country Financial shootout at St. Joseph-Ogden High School, Unity Rockets fall to Watseka, Lauren Haas leads Rockets with 12 points


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