Chicago Sun-Times

IHSA DUCKS, HIDES FROM TAXPAYERS

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When your tax dollars keep an organizati­on in business, you have a right to know how every penny is spent.

Yet some quasi- private organizati­ons, such as the Illinois High School Associatio­n and Chicago’s tourism agency, Choose Chicago, do not believe they are accountabl­e to you. Ask to look at their books and they show you the door.

Here’s where the Illinois Supreme Court could do the public a great service, just by explaining how freedom of informatio­n is supposed to work in an open society. On Tuesday, the Better Government Associatio­n correctly argued before the state’s highest court that the IHSA, as a matter of law and the state constituti­on, must be required to open its books. The IHSA, said the BGA, “performs a government­al function” that should make it subject to the state’s Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

The IHSA governs high school sports. It is a not- forprofit organizati­on, but not a charity, that sets rules for participat­ion in high school sports and penalizes schools and athletes that break its rules.

About 85 percent of the IHSA’s nearly 800 members are public high schools. The associatio­n runs state playoffs and some high school championsh­ips at public schools and other public venues. Without public schools, the IHSA would not exist.

In making a case to the court that the IHSA should be subject to public informatio­n requests, even when it comes to private sponsorshi­ps with companies such as Gatorade, BGA lawyer Matt Topic argued that the IHSA has “the ability to make money from things that are paid for with tax dollars.”

“It’s these schools that are fielding those teams,” Topic said. “It’s the schools that paying for uniforms. It’s the schools that are paying for coaches.”

And who foots the bills for the public schools? You, the taxpayer.

The IHSA wants to keep private its financial records even though, according to its web site, its mission is to promote participat­ion in activities “in an educationa­l setting which provide enrichment to the educationa­l experience.” It’s all about the schools.

Two other quasi- private organizati­ons that hide their finances, though they are largely bankrolled by taxpayers, are Choose Chicago and Navy Pier Inc. How public in reality is Choose Chicago? Mayor Rahm Emanuel created the agency in 2012.

As for Navy Pier Inc., it calls Navy Pier the “people’s pier.” And it is entirely dependent on taxpayer dough. But it refuses to comply with informatio­n requests for salaries, benefits, perks and leases.

How can you, the taxpayer, know whether you’re getting a fair shake? How do you to know that big Ferris Wheel is not the only ride they’re taking you on?

 ?? FRED ZWICKY/ JOURNAL STAR VIA AP ?? Whitney Young boys basketball players celebrate after winning the Class 4A state title earlier this month.
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FRED ZWICKY/ JOURNAL STAR VIA AP Whitney Young boys basketball players celebrate after winning the Class 4A state title earlier this month. |

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