Former state school employee Deborah Mayer, who retired in April 2017, saved $20,440 toward a pension over 11 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Mary Genzler, who retired in April 2017, saved $78,512 toward a pension over 21 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Lynn Unterberg, who retired in April 2017, saved $44,569 toward a pension over 12 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Denise Lobb, who retired in April 2017, saved $15,461 toward a pension over 10 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Mark Anderson, who retired in April 2017, saved $128,169 toward a pension over 20 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Cynthia Zumwalt, who retired in April 2017, saved $170,677 toward a pension over 28 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Ellen Zimmerman, who retired in April 2017, saved $63,284 toward a pension over 20 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Boyd Fergurson, who retired in April 2017, saved $156,052 toward a pension over 37 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
Former state school employee Richard Palmer, who retired in April 2017, saved $80,674 toward a pension over 20 years working for public schools, Teachers' Retirement System of the State of Illinois records show.
After two years without a budget and a failed attempt to compromise on a "grand bargain," some in Illinois are asking whether bankruptcy is a viable way out of the state's financial morass.
If you put wrong numbers into your calculations, you're going to get wrong answers, McHenry County Clerk Mary McClellan said recently in response to allegations by a conservative government oversight group that her county was among 24 in Illinois to have illegal voter rolls.