Illinois Department of Revenue publication FY 2004-20 Home Rule Sales Tax in Freeport, Informational Bulletin to: All Retailers and Servicepersons Conducting Business in Freeport. Effective January 1, 2004, Freeport has imposed home rule sales tax on general merchandise at the rate of 0.25 percent.
Illinois Department of Revenue publication FY 2004-18 Change in the Motor Fuel Use Tax Rate, Informational Bulletin To: All licensed Interstate Motor Carriers. Effective January 1, 2004, the Part B rate of the Motor Fuel Use Tax was recalculated for diesel fuel, gasoline, gasohol, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), and compressed natural gas (CNG). The Part B rate is equal to 6.25 percent of the average selling price per gallon of motor fuel sold in llinois. This average is an official figure that is computed annually.
Governor's order to each agency, department, bureau, office, board and commission under his jurisdiction, direction or control order on project labor agreements.
Illinois Department of Revenue publication FY2004-21 What's New for Illinois Income Tax, Informational Bulletin is to: All Income Tax Preparers: This bulletin summarizes the 2003 Illinois Income Tax changes for both the individual and business income tax forms and schedules.
This book is about the Little Village Gang Violence Reduction Project, which was based on the idea that the gang problem is defined not only by the delinquent or criminal behaviors of gangs and gang members but also by what the community institutions do or do not do to prevent and control the problem. Certain youth and the community together - including its component parts, particularly family, police, schools, youth agencies, probation, churches and neighborhood organizations and political administrations as well as larger social, economic and cultural factors - are responsible for the creation and intensification of the problem. The model proposes that a special structure of these agencies and community groups must be developed to focus and implement strategies toward target youth in gang-problem communities.
Three research questions are examined in this report. First, do individual- and household-level correlates of nonfatal victimization differ between males and females? Second, do these correlates differ between males and females across several types of nonfatal violence? And third, do individual- and household-level predictors of nonfatal victimization across victim and offender relationships differ for males and females? To address these questions, Illinois Crime Victimization Survey (ICVS) data were used. The purpose of the ICVS is to ascertain the nature and extent of statewide and regional crime victimization in Illinois. Analyses were conducted using the ICVS data provided by the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (ICJIA). These data were collected using the Illinois Crime Victimization Survey (ICVS) which measured the nature and extent of statewide and regional crime victimization in Illinois during 2002. Recoding and verification tasks were conducted using Statistical Software for the Social Sciences (SPSS), and correlation matrices and logistic regressions were performed using Stata. Analyses offered valuable information about differences in predictors of violence for males and females, including differences by crime type and by victim and offender relationship.