Hence, a continuing erosion of the city's ability to keep up budgetarily. I like the ideas presented, but they will likely not succeed long-term unless our population within city limits grows and then stays put.
@Turnit10 : Agree and I'll add two keys items to this. Police and fire pensions being burdened all locally (other City workers are in the Statewide IMRF plan which is 100% funded) and erosion of Peoria D150 schools by Dunlap D323 siphoning off students and taxes from the northside. Both of these items need to be addressed by legal measures in Springfield.
The Dunlap **** is nearly verbatim 1980s Kansas City Supreme Court ruling material (note: 1980s Supreme Court). In this case, they've circumvented Kansas City's disproportionate funding from within the District by white flighting to a "different", yet overlapping district in Peoria, all together. Dunlap, a village of 1,386 residents doesn't make for a school district of D323's size and stature.