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Question of the day

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* When it rains

There should be enough pumpkins for Halloween this year, but that might not be the case for the canned pumpkin used in pies come Thanksgiving, according to crop experts in Illinois, the country’s top pumpkin-producing state.

“I would not wait until Nov. 20,” University of Illinois professor Mohammad Babadoost said, referencing the Nov. 26 holiday. “I’d buy it whenever it comes to the store.”

Large canned-pumpkin manufacturer Libby says yields could be off by as much as a third this year in Illinois, where about 90 percent of the pumpkins grown in the U.S. come from within a 90-mile radius of Peoria.

Libby’s corporate and brand affairs director Roz O’Hearn said the company, which has had a central Illinois pumpkin-processing plant since 1929, is confident it will have enough pumpkin for autumn holidays.

But, she said, “once we ship the remainder of the 2015 harvest, we’ll have no more Libby’s pumpkin to sell until harvest 2016.”

* The Question: The next great calamity to befall Illinois?

Snark is heavily encouraged, of course.

  91 Comments      


Prepare for a skewering

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Daily Show comes to Oglesby

The Comedy Central talk show has set its sights on the state’s budget crisis and unwillingness to pay lottery winners.

The show’s crew made their way to Oglesby on Sunday to interview Danny Chasteen, who won $250,000 on an Illinois scratch off ticket in July, and his girlfriend Susan Rick.

The Illinois Lottery has not paid Chasteen his winnings and has said they won’t be able to pay any winnings over $25,000 until a state budget is passed. […]

The day started when camera crews arrived between 11 and 11:30 a.m. The whole thing, including an interview at around 1 p.m., a makeover at JCPenney and a dinner, wrapped up around 9 p.m.

I’m hearing today that the Lottery may run out of money in the next week or so to pay off the smaller winners as well.

  27 Comments      


Rauner apologizes for no budget, blames Dems

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor spoke to reporters the other day. And even though he talked on Friday, it’s still worth watching him artfully dodge some questions and responsibilities.

From our pals at BlueRoomStream

* Coverage…

* Rauner ‘personally committed’ to UI, ‘very unhappy we don’t have a budget’: “We’re going through some financial difficulties right now. I apologize for that,” Rauner said during his dedication remarks. “The university and other institutions suffer because of that.”

* Rauner Tells University Presidents He’s Working For Better Funding, Despite One-Third Cut: “I have made it clear to the [U of I] president that I am very unhappy that we do not have yet a budget,” Rauner said. “It’s outrageous, there’s no reason for this to be dragged on so long…and I’m working with the [U of I] president to help him get efficiencies and economies inside the administration so we can save money wherever possible.” Rauner also says he wants to increase state support for universities. That’s despite his spending plan, which cuts nearly a third of higher education dollars from the state’s budget.

* Rauner Sympathizes with U of I: He suggested getting more resources to the university but earlier this year proposed a 31 percent cut in state funding to the universities and also decried what he characterized as a fat-cat culture of administrators. With reporters after the event, the governor blamed lawmakers for not passing a balanced budget, not raising taxes if they so desire, and ignoring his Turnaround Agenda.

* Bruce Rauner on Dems: We’re still talking, but they need to take action

  61 Comments      


This just in… Mautino to be recommended for Auditor General

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* He’ll be a good choice…


…Adding… Daily Herald

[State Sen. Jim Oberweis], a Sugar Grove Republican, said he was the one vote against the recommendation. He preferred Hoffman Estates native and California resident Mary Modelski for the job because she had more auditing experience and fewer political connections than Mautino.

“She had a perfect background for the job,” Oberweis said.

  25 Comments      


Study: Four of the ten worst cities for African-Americans are in Illinois

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* HuffPo

For decades, black Americans have faced higher poverty rates, lower incomes and higher incarceration rates than white Americans. While African Americans in every U.S. city face such problems, racial inequality is much worse in some parts of the country. By examining the disparities between white and black Americans in several economic and social measures, 24/7 Wall St. identified the 10 worst cities for black Americans.

Four of the cities with the worst racial inequality are in Illinois, two are in Iowa, and all are in the Midwest. 24/7 Wall St. interviewed Valerie Wilson, director of the program on race, ethnicity, and the economy at the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a progressive think tank. Wilson associated the geographical clustering of these cities to the Great Migration — the relocation of millions of African Americans from the South to cities in the North and Midwest between 1916 and 1970.

Over that period, African Americans fled from the oppressive Jim Crow policies of the South, among other forms of racism, to cities such as Chicago and New York. These areas — the Midwest in particular — were undergoing a manufacturing boom at the time, and black and other Americans sought economic opportunities there. However, the industrial Midwestern economies have declined dramatically since 1970, and the region today is a part of what is commonly known as the Rust Belt.

The manufacturing industries in those areas offered relatively well-paying jobs to relatively uneducated people — many of whom were African American. As Wilson explained, “those industries have essentially dried up, and the opportunities are no longer there, but the people still are.”

Methodology is here. If you’re gonna talk methodology in comments, then make sure to click that link first.

* The Illinois cities

8. Kankakee, IL

    > Pct. residents black: 14.9%
    > Population: 111,375
    > Black median household income as pct. of white: 48.7%
    > Black unemployment rate: 20.6%
    > Unemployment rate, all people: 8.1%

More than one in five black workers in Kankakee is unemployed. The black unemployment rate exceeds 20% in only 16 other U.S. cities, three of them among the worst cities for African Americans. Lack of job opportunities likely contribute to a higher poverty rate among black residents. At nearly 40%, the poverty rate among black residents is not only far higher than the comparable rate for white residents of 7.3%, but also one of the highest in the nation. A typical black Kankakee household earns $31,119 annually, lower than the median annual income for black households nationwide, and less than half the median income for white Kankakee households.

6. Peoria, IL

    > Pct. residents black: 9.1%
    > Population: 379,520
    > Black median household income as pct. of white: 49.1%
    > Black unemployment rate: 16.5%
    > Unemployment rate, all people: 7.2%

Located in central Illinois, Peoria is one of the worst cities in the country for black Americans. The poverty rate of 28.2% among the city’s black population is well above the poverty rate among the city’s white residents of 10.4%. Similarly, the median annual income of $58,563 for white households is more than double the annual income of $28,777 for a typical black household.

While black Americans are about five times more likely to be incarcerated than their white counterparts, in Illinois, they are more than eight times more likely to be incarcerated than whites. As is the case in many other U.S. cities, the incarceration rate is likely far higher in urban areas such as Peoria.

4. Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI

    > Pct. residents black: 16.8%
    > Population: 9,553,810
    > Black median household income as pct. of white: 50.1%
    > Black unemployment rate: 18.5%
    > Unemployment rate, all people: 7.0%

Slightly more than 7% of white Chicago area residents live in poverty, while the poverty rate for the city’s black population is nearly 30%. Similarly, while 43.7% of white adults had at least a college degree, 21.8% of black adult Chicagoans were college educated. In addition to socioeconomic racial disparities, black area residents had far higher mortality rates compared to white residents. The Chicago metro area black population leads the nation with 1,550 deaths per 100,000 African Americans in a year, versus the mortality rate for white Chicagoans of 713 per 100,000 white people.

Chicago is one of the nation’s most diverse cities. It is also one of the nation’s most segregated, however, and in the city’s neighborhoods there is little racial diversity. Wilson explained that outcomes worsen for anyone — black or white — living under poor socioeconomic conditions. However, she added, not only do black urban dwellers suffer more under such conditions, but also racial inequality and segregation are themselves harmful to communities.

2. Rockford, IL

    > Pct. residents black: 11.1%
    > Population: 342,411
    > Black median household income as pct. of white: 44.2%
    > Black unemployment rate: 28.9%
    > Unemployment rate, all people: 8.3%

Located less than 100 miles northwest of Chicago, Rockford is home to about 342,400 people. Rockford is struggling economically. The area’s unemployment rate of 8.3% is more than 2 percentage points higher than the national unemployment rate of 6.2%. While poor economic conditions affect everyone, the city’s black population has been hit the hardest.

Of the 201 metro areas examined, the median income of $22,651 among black households in Rockford is lower than in all but 10 other cities and significantly lower than the $51,264 median income among white households. Even more astounding, 28.9% of the city’s black working population is unemployed, a larger share than in any other city in the country. The poverty rate among the city’s black residents is 43.1%, over four times the city’s white poverty rate.

Milwaukee was first.

Discuss.

  52 Comments      


Lip service

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a gubernatorial proclamation declaring Breast Cancer Awareness month and Mammography Day

Did you notice the lower numbers for FY 2016? So did Heather Eagleton, Illinois government relations director for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network…

“It’s good to see Governor Rauner taking time to remember breast cancer patients and survivors with his proclamation highlighting Breast Cancer Awareness Month. But what would actually improve outcomes for the 10,000 Illinois women expected to be diagnosed with breast cancer this this year would be if the governor prioritized funding for the Illinois Breast and Cervical Cancer Program (IBCCP).

“As the governor noted in his proclamation, IBCCP served 19,944 women with free breast and cervical cancer screenings in fiscal year 2015. But more than 75,000 Illinois women still lack access to health-care coverage and are eligible for screenings through the program. And if the governor’s originally proposed 70-percent funding cut and elimination of Medicaid eligibility goes into effect, even fewer women will receive life-saving cancer treatment and screenings.

“State budget inaction has already forced many IBCCP agencies to reduce services, staff and hours of operation. Some agencies have moved to a ‘priority’ status, only referring women who have already had an abnormal screening result. Because of that, women who may have cancer and are not yet aware are currently on a waiting list, while this cancer continues to grow.

“If Governor Rauner wants to help fight breast cancer, fully funding IBCCP should be at the top of his priorities. Breast cancer is the second-leading cause of death among women today, and early detection is critical to identifying and surviving the disease. A proclamation helps raise awareness, but it does not provide necessary screening and treatment. We urge Governor Rauner to take action and fund this program.”

  15 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* John Kass

How about Sen. Mark Kirk, the kinda-sorta Republican? Kirk’s campaign manager Kevin Artl ran wiggling to a blogger, shrieking that a Tribune reporter had asked harassing questions for a possible story.

Way to go Team Kirk/Artless Artl. Reporters ask questions. Deal with it.

Kirk, time to retire. And Artless? A month of Moutzas just for you

Kirk’s not really a Republican?

  45 Comments      


War of words resumes

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois Policy Institute’s news service

Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administration wants to abolish step increases, or scheduled raises based on time in service, according to the state’s largest public-employee union.

The Rauner administration, however, says that’s a stretch of the truth and argues the governor has never proposed a compensation system based solely on merit.

Council 31 of the the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees told its members that the administration has “clearly stated across the bargaining table that … (the state’s) demands include not just a step freeze, but the abolition of the step plan in state government.”

The union says Rauner is taking a no-compromise approach that belies his stance before the legislators and the public, according to the memo obtained by WMAY Radio in Springfield.

* As noted, the story was originally broken by WMAY. Many thanks to my buddy Jim Leach for sending me a copy. Click for a larger image


* Full response from the governor’s office…

AFSCME members should ask their leaders to start telling them the truth because this bulletin is false and misleading.

The Governor has never proposed eliminating step increases. In fact, he has proposed a temporary freeze until the budget is balanced and the State can once again afford to pay automatic increases.

The Governor has never proposed eliminating protections against privatization. In fact, he has proposed expanding those protections by giving the union the right, it currently does not have, to be awarded a contract if it can meet or exceed the savings from private companies.

The Governor has never proposed eliminating worker protections from layoffs. In fact, the Governor has proposed that workers identified for layoffs could move into any open vacancy for which they are qualified before that vacancy can be filled by a non-state employee.

The Governor has never proposed a compensation system based solely on merit. In fact, the Governor proposed a bonus system that would include an automatic immediate bonus to every AFSCME employee before January 1, 2016 and additional bonuses to those employees with exceptional performance based on objective performance standards.

The Governor has also guaranteed that at least 25% of the state workforce will receive these performance bonuses every year of the contract. AFSCME has made clear that it does not want its exceptional employees paid more for their hard work and outstanding performance.

Thoughts?

  100 Comments      


BND collects two more scalps

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Belleville News-Democrat article last month

A month-long governor’s office investigation of state parole board member Adam P. Monreal’s bankruptcy, in which he reported income less than half his actual board salary, has been expanded to include a review of annual state economic interest statements he filed since being named to the board in 2010.

In each of five economic statements filed during 2011-2015, Monreal, 48, of Chicago, reported he was paid for work not connected to his parole board duties, despite a state law prohibiting such employment for parole board members, who earn more than $85,000 a year. […]

As a parole board member, Monreal, an attorney and former assistant prosecutor in Cook County, receives a salary of $85,855. In 2011 he was the board’s chairman and received $91,400. He filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in May of that year listing his salary as $38,673 and his position as “director, state of Illinois penitentiary,” according to bankruptcy court documents. The bankruptcy was approved four months later. […]

In [state parole board member Eric Gregg’s] pending bankruptcy, he listed an income of approximately $48,000 from an energy business in addition to his parole board salary. That was potentially a violation of the law prohibiting parole board members from receiving additional income.

Gregg has since stated in a court deposition that the $48,000 listed on his bankruptcy, which is pending, was a mistake, and should have been filed under his wife Patti’s name, even though she was listed as a “non-filing spouse.” Patti Gregg is a full-time teacher’s aide.

* And from the BND on Friday

Gov. Bruce Rauner on Friday removed a member of the state parole board and another submitted his resignation a month after the Belleville News-Democrat reported on improprieties in their federal bankruptcy filings and economic interest statements filed with the state.

Former Harrisburg mayor Eric E. Gregg, a Republican, was removed from the Illinois Prisoner Review Board and former board chairman Adam P. Monreal, a Chicago Democrat, resigned effective in two weeks, according to a written statement released by the governor’s press office Friday afternoon.

The governor’s office began investigating the two after news stories by the News-Democrat.

  13 Comments      


McCarter gearing up to challenge Shimkus

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois Review

The longest-serving member of Illinois’ Republican congressional delegation may be facing a challenge in the March 2016 Republican primary.

State Senator Kyle McCarter (R-Vandalia) appears to be preparing a bid to unseat Republican John Shimkus (IL-15), who has been representing Illinois’ southernmost congressional district since 1997.

While the rumor has been persistent for a while, reports are that McCarter made several calls over the weekend to downstate Republican leaders, notifying them of his intentions to primary Shimkus in 2016. They say Shimkus’ longtime loyal staffers, as well as Governor Rauner’s, have unsuccessfully tried to dissuade McCarter from his plans.

McCarter did, indeed, start making calls on Friday.

* Roll Call

In the last few days, McCarter has been calling various Republicans across the state and has unveiled a new campaign logo (noticeably void of the office he intends to seek) at the Little Egypt parade in Salem on Saturday. According to one GOP source, McCarter may even announce in Collinsville, Shimkus’ hometown, even though only a portion of the city is in the 15th District.

The congressman had $1.2 million in the bank on June 30, but is not unbeatable in the primary, according to local sources. At the same time, GOP insiders believer McCarter would need significant help from outside anti-establishment groups to put a real scare into Shimkus.

Shimkus, who was first elected in 1996, has a lifetime 66 percent rating with the Club for Growth, but his 2014 grade fell to 34 percent in 2014. That’s the type of score that could attract some attention to the race if McCarter is deemed to be credible. But there is no evidence that the club, or another major outside group, is poised to get involved immediately.

The logo

He’s never been happy in the Senate, he’s not easily swayed by party leaders and probably doesn’t care what could happen to him if he runs, so after some initial hesitation, I can now see him pulling the trigger.

  34 Comments      


Caption contest!

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* No introductions needed…

  65 Comments      


Sorry to see him go, happy to see the other guy leave

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bernie

A couple of decades of Illinois Statehouse reporting experience in the person of KURT ERICKSON of Lee Enterprises newspapers are moving on to the Show-Me State.

In December, Erickson will join the Jefferson City, Missouri, bureau of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

The Post-Dispatch is a Lee newspaper, but Erickson’s main job in Springfield has been to supply stories to Lee newspapers in Bloomington, Decatur, Mattoon, Charleston, Carbondale and the Quad Cities as well as Munster, Indiana.

Erickson became Springfield bureau chief for The Pantagraph of Bloomington in 1996. Lee purchased that newspaper 10 years ago.

Erickson, who has also done a weekly column, “demonstrated a knack for finding exclusive stories apart from the herd,” said a memo to the Post-Dispatch staff about his hiring.

They’ll never be able to fully replace that guy.

* Feder

The future of the Sun-Times appeared more cloudy than ever Monday with the resignation of Timothy Knight as chief executive officer of parent company Wrapports LLC. […]

Knight never achieved his stated goal of making Wrapports profitable by introducing “cutting-edge technologies, new content portals and other tools that will expand and drive richer and more satisfying content to readers, while providing more targeted and measurable promotion options for our advertising partners.” Mostly, it seemed, the company failed with a series of half-hearted initiatives while cutting staff and selling off assets.

As it jettisoned its portfolio of suburban daily and weekly publications and websites — nearly 40 in all — Wrapports invested in a hyperlocal news-aggregation startup called Aggrego, and created the Sun-Times Network, an array of clumsy and useless digital sites targeting cities across the country. In 2012 the company acquired the Chicago Reader, the alternative weekly, which remains its only other print product along with the daily Sun-Times.

Knight was instrumental in some of the most controversial and unpopular moves at the Sun-Times, including the firing of the newspaper’s entire photography staff and the elimination of all endorsements of political candidates by the editorial board. Under pressure, both moves later were scaled back.

Ugh.

  15 Comments      


“Unclear” on the concept

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* If you missed the Better Government Association’s report last week about how the Chicago Public Schools system was caught fudging its graduation rates, you should most definitely click here. Good, solid stuff.

* But this BGA story about e-mails sent by Nancy Kimme to the Rauner folks regarding hiring? Not so much

Among them was one sent to Kimme Jan. 6 — less than a week before Rauner was sworn in to succeed Pat Quinn. It came from Dave Gross, chief of staff to Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago. Gross asked Kimme to help save the jobs of two state bureaucrats who were slated to be fired and to be replaced with Rauner political hires.

Though the law bans political considerations in much hiring in state government, that ban doesn’t cover many key policy jobs.

It’s unclear how Gross’s requests were handled. One of the state workers Gross asked Kimme about left state government later that month, records show, and the other left in February.

Um, wait, it’s “unclear” what happened to Gross’ requests? Huh? They didn’t keep their jobs, for crying out loud. How much more clarity do you need?

To sum up, we have a big story about how a Democrat failed to convince a Republican to keep a couple of Democrats on the governor’s payroll.

Wow, BGA. That’s some real Pulitzer-level snooping there.

  14 Comments      


A complete leadership stalemate

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The Illinois Senate had been scheduled to return to Springfield on Oct. 6 after not being in session since Sep. 9. But last week, the Senate President postponed session until Oct. 20.

The reason is pretty straightforward.

The Senate has overridden several gubernatorial vetoes. It’s pretty easy for the majority party because the chamber has 39 Democrats, three more than the three-fifths required to override a veto.

The House has 71 Democrats, the exact number of votes required to overturn a veto in that chamber. So, while the Senate Democrats can be missing a few people or have some folks who don’t want to go along, they can still override the governor on partisan votes. But the House Democrats need every member in town and they all need to be voting the same way for that chamber to succeed.

Because of that tight margin, and because the Republicans have marched in lock-step with their party’s governor, the House has only overridden one veto this entire year: the Heroin Crisis Act.

And the House was only able to override that bill because Gov. Bruce Rauner allowed House Republicans to vote against his amendatory veto, which stripped out state Medicaid funding for heroin addiction treatment. Rauner now gets to portray himself as fiscally conservative, while the Republicans got to do the right thing and make the much-needed criminal justice reform legislation an actual law.

To date, the governor and his staff have successfully fought off 62 override attempts, mainly in the House.

So much for Speaker Madigan’s much-vaunted veto-proof House majority.

And because of this House failure, there are currently no vetoes requiring Senate action during the constitutionally mandated 15 calendar-day period after successful House action. And since the legislative leaders aren’t meeting with the governor and no other visible progress is being made to end the months-long stalemate, there really wasn’t much sense in coming back to town.

Just to show you how divided the Statehouse is right now, the governor used his amendatory veto powers on 20 bills, but the Democrats adamantly refused to accept a single one of those changes he made.

The Democrats even ignored a plea from the Illinois chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws to accept the governor’s amendatory veto of House Bill 218, which vastly reduced penalties for pot possession.

The governor tweaked the marijuana legislation to increase some of the penalties, but Illinois NORML said those changes were acceptable, and called his veto “a very easy win” for proponents.

The bill only received 62 votes in the House when it passed in April, so there was no way to override the governor. But instead of just accepting his changes, the legislation was allowed to die. Months of hard work came to diddly squat.

The House Speaker is traditionally loathe to accept amendatory vetoes as a way of discouraging the governor (any governor) from using that broad power, which was long ago upheld by the courts. Rauner, for his part, is proving to be just as stubborn.

And the end result is nothing happens.

We have a whole lot of nothing going on these days. For instance, a minor fuss was made recently at the Statehouse when a city of Chicago honcho showed up to testify about Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s property tax proposal without having actual written legislation to talk about.

But, in reality, that thing ain’t going anywhere.

So far, the governor is opposed to the plan, which would exempt homeowners with houses appraised at $250,000 or less from Emanuel’s massive property tax hike. The main burden would fall on commercial property owners and Rauner has said their opposition is valid and that everyone’s property taxes should be capped at current levels—despite Chicago’s horrific fiscal problems.

As long as Rauner remains opposed, it’s highly unlikely that the House could pass such a bill. The House Democrats have not yet convinced the Republicans to break with their party’s governor on anything, and they’re surely not going to do so over a vote for Chicago, and it’s doubtful that all Downstate and suburban Democrats will go along without some relief for their own taxpayers.

The city is simply going to have to find another way to solve its problem unless and until the governor and the legislative leaders work things out. Which may be never at the rate they’re going.

The Democrats can’t go around Rauner, they can’t go through him, they can’t go over him. But Rauner can’t get anything done without them. They all need to start facing reality here.

  31 Comments      


Behind the impasse

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My Crain’s Chicago Business column

What’s happening in Springfield might best be explained by World War I.

We have an invading army (Gov. Bruce Rauner) aggressively marching right over one enemy (former Gov. Pat Quinn) before slamming headlong into trench warfare (legislative Democrats led by House Speaker Michael Madigan).

Now, before anybody gets their kerchiefs in a bundle, I’m not at all saying that Rauner actually is Kaiser Wilhelm II nor implying that the Democrats are the French, although Quinn most definitely was Belgium. OK, that was a joke. I’m just attempting to use a broad historical analogy here. No offense intended to Belgians.

As with the Great War, we’ve seen monumental blunders on both sides. To start with, the Democrats completely misjudged the man who beat Quinn.

In 2002, Rauner and his wife hosted a fundraiser at their home for U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. After introducing Boxer, the future governor launched into a long tirade about

Click here to read the rest before commenting, please. Thanks.

  37 Comments      


Report: Child care more expensive than state university tuition

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Voices for Illinois Children…

As Governor Rauner’s new child care restrictions shut out 9 in 10 new applicants who would have previously qualified for child care assistance, quality child care increasingly is out of reach in Illinois even for middle-class families, a new report finds.

“Without assistance, too many Illinois parents simply cannot afford the child care that enables them to balance work and family,” said Emily Miller, director of policy and advocacy at Voices for Illinois Children.

According to the report by the Washington DC-based Economic Policy Institute, in Illinois:

    * A parent working full time at the state minimum wage needs to spend more than half of her income for quality child care for a 4-year-old.

    * For an infant, that parent needs to spend nearly $4 out of every $5 earned.

    * Annual child care for an infant is now more expensive than full-time, in-state public college tuition.

    * In the Chicago area, a family squarely in the middle class with an infant and 4-year-old will spend 29% of its income on child care.

These conclusions are based on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ estimate that child care costing more than 10% of a family’s income is not affordable. On top of stagnant hourly pay and the failure of economic growth to trickle down to most Illinoisans, the governor’s cuts are worsening the situation.

Before Governor Rauner’s cuts, a parent with one child could earn up to $2,456 per month (about $14 an hour working 40 hours per week) and still be eligible for child care assistance. Now, a parent re-entering the workforce with one child loses child care assistance if she makes more than $664 per month, only about 20 hours per week at the state’s minimum wage.

“A minimum-wage working man or woman in Illinois simply cannot afford child care without assistance,” Miller said. “When welfare reform was passed in the 1990s, there was bipartisan consensus that families struggling to get by needed assistance to afford the child care essential to parents being able to work. Governor Rauner’s decision has made getting by just about impossible for many hard-working families.”

Illinois families harmed by the Governor Rauner’s child care rules — which were put in place outside of the state budget process — will testify against the cuts at an Illinois Department of Human Services hearing today in Springfield and tomorrow in Chicago.

The full report is here.

  48 Comments      


We’re not exactly Old Faithful here

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ah, life in Illinois

[South Beloit School District Superintendent Scott Fisher] said the district typically receives a little over $3 million in general aid from the state. The district’s saving grace is its upward enrollment, Fisher said.

“There are no clear payment dates and its not on time,” said Fisher. “We never budget all our money and that has helped us.”

Fisher said typically the district reduces the budget by 10-20 percent when planning due to the lack of certainty in the state.

Sean Milner, finance director at Hononegah Community School District, agreed. The district relies on local revenue at 77 percent, while only 20 percent of funding comes from the state and 3 percent from federal funds. The district’s total general state aid was $4.3 million this year.

Milner said the district typically receives mandated category funding one quarter behind and that district only budgets to receive three of the four scheduled payments, which amount to about $300,000 each.

“We prepare not to receive that money,” Milner said.

  11 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crank it up

Fire, fire upon your wicked tongue

  4 Comments      


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Tuesday, Oct 6, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

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One more day

Monday, Oct 5, 2015 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m extending my weekend by a day. We’ll talk again tomorrow.

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