An american city named DeKalb, Illinois says it desperately needs money. But the city council so far refuses to tax gas stations or increase parking fees. Instead, they consider a tax on groceries.
Wealthy, in DeKalb? You won't get any revenue that way. DeKalb is mostly just a university town. A lot of the people who go to that university commute from Rockford or the Chicago suburbs.
Northern Illinois leaders consider reinstating grocery sales tax at local level
Seems like it's going to affect more than DeKalb, see the article title.
Regardless, I lived in a rural university town myself in the past - much more rural than DeKalb. There were plenty of rich people tucked away in their massive homes. At least enough to raise their taxes just a bit to generate 800k of revenue.
Tax literally anything instead of food, I say - groceries are high enough and not everybody struggling qualifies for food stamps.
Since so many in the comments didn't seem to read, the tl:dr is:
There is currently a statewide sales tax in Illinois on groceries of 1% with some items (alcohol, candy etc.) exempt and taxed at the higher state sales tax rate
The state is set to end this tax on 1/1/2026 but local municipalities can continue it
Dekalb expects that loss of tax revenue to be impactful and is considering it at the local level
There are likely other ways they could make up the revenue but if they wouldn't be implementing a new tax, just keeping the existing one going at a local level.
I'm not familiar with Dekalb but I went to college in a college town where the population doubled during the academic year. There were taxes and fees of higher rates designed to impact the student residents more than locals to make up for the loss of residents during the off time.
It appears they changed the article contents? I looked and couldn't find anything about making a parking fee or gas tax. Only that the state is removing a 1% grocery tax and is giving each county the option of keeping or removing the tax.
So it must be implicit that they'll only tax unnecessary/unhealthy groceries like alcohol, tobacco, candy, eggs, and meat. I dont see a problem with this. We should be taxing these things anyway. But I wish the funds would be used directly to lower the cost of healthy foods like rice, beans, vegetables, fruits, flour, oats, etc