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AFL-CIO endorses GOP Sen. Sam McCann

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Union members and leaders from up and down the state met on Wednesday to vote on Illinois AFL-CIO endorsements for the 2016 Primary Election.
Nearly 150 delegates representing regional organizations, fire fighters, teachers, construction workers and medical professionals, among many other workers gathered to make candidate recommendations to the state federation leadership.

“One year to the day after Bruce Rauner was sworn in as Governor, we began the work of defeating Rauner’s allies in the General Assembly. Labor is united and ready to mobilize,” said Illinois AFL-CIO President Michael T. Carrigan. “We endorsed against a Democrat that stood with Rauner and his anti-worker agenda and we supported one of the only Republicans to stand up to the Governor. It’s not about political parties, it’s about who is willing to invest in middle class working families. The delegates understood the clear choices in front of them.”

In December, the Illinois AFL-CIO endorsed Juliana Stratton in the 5th State House District against incumbent Democrat Ken Dunkin, who has sided with Rauner on multiple issues and prevented veto overrides by not voting on key measures. On Wednesday, the state federation endorsed Sen. Sam McCann in the 50th District Senate GOP Primary. After publicly sparring with Rauner on labor issues, McCann now faces Republican opposition from a Rauner-backed opponent.

“We expect Rauner to continue poisoning progress with his obsession on passing his so-called Turnaround Agenda,” Carrigan added. “He will give money to candidates. We will knock on doors and talk to our co-workers and neighbors. Rauner has a fat checkbook to buy TV ads, but workers and their unions have thousands of volunteers that will visit neighbors and call friends and co-workers to discuss why his plans only benefit those in the boardroom, not families around the kitchen table.”

The Illinois AFL-CIO, which represents unions with 1.5 million registered voters, endorsed statewide candidates Tammy Duckworth for U.S. Senate and Susana Mendoza for Comptroller in September.

The full list is here.

  26 Comments      


Remap reform group piggybacks on Obama speech

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The non-partisan coalition for Illinois legislative maps to be drawn by an independent commission applauded President Obama’s support of redistricting reform across the nation, and urged the President to support the reform efforts in his home state.

“The President’s words in the State of the Union Address – ‘We have to end the practice of drawing our congressional districts so that politicians can pick their voters, and not the other way around.’ – hold true for redistricting of the Illinois General Assembly where he once served,” said Dennis FitzSimons, Chair of Independent Maps.

“The Independent Map Amendment will end the practice that now allows politicians to pick their voters, and not the other way around,” FitzSimons said. “We are heartened by President Obama’s commitment to travel the country to advocate redistricting reform, and we urge him to bring that campaign to Illinois where reform is so badly needed.”

In his speech, President Obama also stressed that changes in the political process “will only happen when the American people demand it.” The full text of the State of the Union Address is available on the White House website here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/01/12/remarks-president-barack-obama-–-prepared-delivery-state-union-address

“Voters in Illinois are demanding change in the way the Illinois General Assembly is elected,” said Dave Mellet, Campaign Manager of Independent Maps. “Our coalition is diverse and includes many who have supported his past campaigns, as well as some opponents. We don’t agree on all policy issues, but we stand together for reform of the system, for elections to be fair, for votes to count and for voices to be heard.”

* From the address

But that means if we want a better politics — and I’m addressing the American people now — if we want a better politics, it’s not enough just to change a congressman or change a senator or even change a President. We have to change the system to reflect our better selves. I think we’ve got to end the practice of drawing our congressional districts so that politicians can pick their voters, and not the other way around. (Applause.) Let a bipartisan group do it. (Applause.)

He was talking about congressional reapportionment, but I don’t blame them for using it to their own advantage.

  15 Comments      


Goldberg: Tie MAP Grant funding to university spending restrictions or reforms

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* He’s back…

From: Richard Goldberg, Deputy Chief of Staff for Legislative Affairs
To: Members of the General Assembly

Date: January 13, 2016

Re: Illinois Public Universities Need Reform Badly

Over the last 14 years, Illinois public universities raised tuition rates by more than 200%, generating $1.5 billion in new revenue for their Income Funds. Unfortunately, the General Assembly has no control over each university’s Income Fund, no control over the spending that occurs within these funds, nor does it have the information needed to determine how fiscally responsible Illinois universities are with Income Fund revenue.

We encourage members of both sides of the aisle to ask Illinois public universities what reforms they are willing to adopt to cut waste, root out cronyism, improve outcomes and achieve savings of taxpayers money (e.g. cutting waste, procurement reform, pension reform, workers’ compensation reform).

• Administrative Staff: According to the Senate Democratic Caucus’ “Investigative Report” on Executive Compensation at Illinois Higher Education Institutions: From 2004 to 2010, administrative staff at Illinois’ public universities increased 31.1%, while part-time and full- time students increased a mere 2.3%. In FY11, the average student-to-administrator ratio for the nine universities was approximately 45 students for every one administrator. More than 1,500 university employees make more than the statutory salary set for the Governor. 


• Executive Compensation: According to the same report, university executive compensation includes a base salary, pension and health insurance, and in many cases, it includes some or all of the following: car and driver services, memberships to multiple country clubs and social organizations, performance bonuses, annuities, and retirement enhancements. 


• Golden Parachutes: Even when university leaders are forced to resign for misconduct, they are often treated to lavish golden parachutes. Illinois State gave fired President Timothy Flanagan $480,418 in severance after just 7 months on the job. The University of Illinois 
 attempted to pay fired Chancellor Phyllis Wise $400,000 in severance until public outcry led to a reversal.

• Private Jets: According to The Southern, over the past two years, Southern Illinois University administrators spent more than $180,000 on in-house chartered airplane flights. Just last year, SIU spent $1,745.60 to fly legislators to a hearing opposing the Governor’s proposed budget savings. 


• Board Meetings: Between 2008 and 2014, spending on university Board meetings increased by nearly 70%. In 2014, the University of Illinois’ Board met 8 times for a total cost of $166,100. 


• Tuition and Fee Waivers: Despite increases in tuition costs, public universities increased the amount of money spent on discretionary tuition and fee waivers. In FY14, for example, Graduate tuition and fee waivers for all public universities totaled $341.1 million – close to the amount of savings proposed in the Governor’s FY16 budget. 


• Employee Pensions and Health Care: In FY15, taxpayers paid $1.5 billion to support the State University Retirement System (SURS) on behalf of higher education employees. In the past decade, the annual payment the state makes to SURS has increased by $1.3 billion or 466.8%. Meanwhile, the state picks up the tab for 85% of the public universities and community colleges’ contributions to Group Health Insurance (GHI). In FY14, that cost totaled $685 million; in FY15, that cost is expected to rise to $700 million or more. 


• Using State Funds To Lobby The State: Six Illinois public universities employ a combined eight lobbying firms to lobby state government. In the past, Eastern Illinois University paid Senator Dick Durbin’s wife $627,000 over a period of 13 years to lobby on the University’s behalf. 


As you can see, there is a need for a healthy and high-minded debate on how the university system spends the money the state provides and, more importantly, how it spends the money Illinois families are paying in tuition.

As you know, appropriating hundreds of millions of dollars in General Revenue Funds for MAP or general higher education without finding offsets – whether in the form of spending reductions or cost-saving reforms – could trigger a cash flow crisis in Illinois.

Our office stands ready to work with any member of the General Assembly who wants to find a sensible and responsible way to fund MAP and higher education without triggering a cash flow crisis by tying such funding to spending reductions in other areas of GRF or one of many cost-saving reforms.

We discussed that Senate Democratic investigative report, which was a doozy.

The SIU airplane stuff is mostly (but not all) about getting flight time for aviation students. And, of course, the Prince of Snarkness couldn’t help himself from taking a shot at Durbin for his recent comments about the governor.

* The rest of this is pretty much on-point, however, and it’s good to see they’re willing to work on finding a way to fund MAP Grants.

A few Senate Democrats held a press conference today to discuss the importance of those grants, so maybe people can start moving forward.

  67 Comments      


Poll has Shimkus leading McCarter 65-13

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Public Opinion Strategies polled likely GOP voters in Congressman John Shimkus’ district. Shimkus is up against state Sen. Kyle McCarter. If the poll is accurate, McCarter has a very long way to go to even be competitive. From the pollster…

Key Findings

1. Kyle McCarter has wasted three months of the campaign. Neither his name ID nor his
favorables have moved.

Back in October, McCarter had 36% name ID, with a 15% favorable/3% unfavorable image with GOP primary voters. Now, in January, he has 34% name ID, with a 13% fav/4% unfav – which is a statistically insignificant movement.

2. Meanwhile, the work that Congressman John Shimkus and his team have done has paid off.

In October, the Congressman had a solid 56% favorable/13% unfavorable image. Now, it has improved to an even better 63% fav/9% unfav image. (His name ID is 90% or better in both polls).

3. This is a district that likes its Republican leaders – Governor Bruce Rauner has a strong image here.

Bruce Rauner has 97% name ID, with a strong 67% favorable/14% unfavorable image. The Governor’s support for Shimkus is a political plus for both.

4. Shimkus remains well ahead on the ballot test.

In October, Shimkus led McCarter 63%-15% on the ballot. There has not been any statistically significant movement since then, as the Shimkus lead is currently 65%-13%. That’s three months lost for McCarter.

    Shimkus leads 64%-26% in the 22% of the district that is also the 54th Senate District – which McCarter currently represents. If McCarter is not competitive in his own geographic base, it is going to be difficult for him to make gains in the 78% of the district that is new to him.

    Shimkus leads 59%-29% among the 34% of voters who have heard of both candidates, so this is not simply a matter of McCarter raising his name ID to make big gains.

    Shimkus leads 69%-12% among Trump voters and 64%-16% among Cruz voters. Those two candidates earn a combined 54% of the presidential vote. So even the voters for the two strongest outsider candidates in the presidential primary are strongly supportive of the Congressman.

The Bottom Line

John Shimkus is well-positioned to win renomination in the 15th Congressional District primary. He is well-liked by all parts of the Republican electorate. Meanwhile, Kyle McCarter has squandered three months of opportunity to make gains. The election will tighten as undecided voters typically opt for a challenger, but Shimkus is well above 50% on the ballot and even leads in McCarter’s geographic base.

Methodology

Public Opinion Strategies completed a survey of likely primary voters in the 15th Congressional District of Illinois. The survey was conducted January 7-10, 2016 among four hundred likely voters in the district, including 80 cell phone respondents. The survey has a margin of error of +4.9% in 95 out of 100 cases.

McCarter is getting thumped in his own Senate district? Whew.

Also, those are pretty rock solid numbers for the governor among Republicans, but that’s to be expected.

  17 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Freeport Journal-Standard

Pete Kendrick only buys a state lottery ticket if he gets the right change when buying gas.

But the record-breaking $1.5 billion Powerball prize convinced the Freeport resident to purchase a Powerball ticket today.

“Everyone’s buying one and talking about it,” he said, pushing some groceries and carrying his ticket while leaving the Cub Foods grocery store. “You’re crazy for getting one because the odds are worse than anything in the world.”

Yep, the odds are horrible. From Rep. Ron Sandack’s Facebook page

The $1B plus Powerball prize is all the rage now. The odds of winning are 1 in 175M, roughly. So, I started looking at “equalizing” odds. 1) “Thus, if you drive to the store to buy your Powerball ticket, your chance of being killed (or killing someone else) is about 10 times greater than the chance that you will win the Powerball Jackpot.” 2) “Alternately, if you “played” Russian Roulette 100 times per day every day for 79 years with Powerball Jackpot odds, you would have better than a 99% chance of surviving.”

And even after reading that, I still bought ten tickets Monday night.

* The Question: Have you purchased a Powerball ticket? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


survey software

  117 Comments      


Duckworth outraises Kirk, but there’s a catch

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Hill

Rep. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) outraised Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk (R) by almost $600,000 in the fourth quarter of 2015, as the two gear up for what could be one of the tightest elections of 2016.

Duckworth brought in $1.6 million in the quarter, which bumps up her cash on hand to $3.65 million.

Kirk raised $1 million in the quarter, ending 2015 with $3.8 million on hand. […]

Duckworth ended the third quarter with about $2.85 million in her bank account, compared to Kirk’s $3.63 million. She all but closed that gap to end the year, suggesting a more effective quarter of fundraising by the challenger. […]

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) both raised more than $2 million over the same span ahead of similarly difficult reelection bids.

Pretty impressive numbers for Duckworth, but she will likely have to spend a bunch of that haul on her primary race against Andrea Zopp and state Sen. Napoleon Harris.

Kirk, on the other hand, has only token GOP opposition. Even so, his 4th quarter numbers are not particularly heartening.

  8 Comments      


Because… Rauner!

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* IO

In what may be the unveiling of a new Democratic line of attack against Governor Bruce Rauner’s Turnaround Agenda as the 2016 elections loom, State Senator Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) in a radio interview 10-days ago attacked Rauner’s property tax freeze push for, “ironically,” igniting the “biggest tax increase anywhere.”

In a January 2 interview on Peoria’s WMBD-1470, Koehler told talk-show Paul Gordon, “I just want to point this out, a real irony. The governor wanting to freeze property taxes all across the state… His desire to do that and his trying to push that through the legislation has now caused the biggest tax increase anywhere that I’ve ever seen in property taxes,” Koehler said. “Every community, every school district, they’re now going to go out passing property taxes because they want to hedge against what [inaudible].”

House Speaker Michael Madigan’s spokesman, Steve Brown, who also appeared on the program, backed Koehler’s assertion.

“They don’t want to get caught short. And so the exact opposite has happened there,” Brown said. “And the fact that a prolonged debate over the budget has probably just brought more of that on. It is an interesting phenomenon.”

I don’t disagree. We’ve already discussed this topic.

However, Sen. Koehler voted for the Senate Democrats’ property tax freeze bill which passed that chamber in August. And Brown’s boss held somewhere around a kabillion property tax freeze floor votes last year.

It ain’t just the governor. Everybody’s getting into the act.

  26 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE *** Senate session

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m not sure how late session will go today, but they have several non-controversial appointments to deal with. Follow along with ScribbleLive


  3 Comments      


Did the mayor just pull a string?

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz reports that the City of Chicago is now asking $190 million from the tollway for 190 acres at O’Hare’s western edge to finish construction of the Elgin-O’Hare Tollway

In what Chicago officials say is just good bargaining but suburban leaders suspect is designed to send a bigger political message, a dispute has broken out over plans to finally bring western road access to O’Hare International Airport. […]

That asking price has tollway and other officials steaming—and suggesting that Mayor Rahm Emanuel is trying to send a message to Gov. Bruce Rauner, who controls the tollway and has balked at giving Emanuel help for Chicago Public Schools and other needs in Springfield as part of a wider budget war.

No one much wants to say anything in public. Sources close to both the mayor and the governor say the jostling is occurring at the staff level so far. But the battle is raging as both sides sit down today for a formal bargaining session.

Suburban leaders, especially in DuPage County, have long pushed for western access, which they believe would spark development of new hotels, convention centers and other projects like those that have risen in Rosemont, adjoining the only road entrance to O’Hare, from the east. […]

Talks regarding the land transfer had been amicable until recently, when the city dropped the $190 million “poison pill,” says a top official who asked not to be named. That “disturbing” action “raises questions” about whether O’Hare politics suddenly has been pulled into Springfield fighting over the state budget, that source added.

The city says it relied on an appraisal, but won’t release the appraisal.

  30 Comments      


Our sorry state

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Les Winkeler reports on a deal between the Amateur Trapshooting Association and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to keep The Grand American shooting tournament from leaving Sparta’s World Shooting and Recreational Complex this August

Gov. Rauner threatened to close the WSRC, ostensibly as a stick to spur the General Assembly into action, if a budget agreement wasn’t reached by September. And, so one of the world’s largest and most modern shooting facilities has been sitting idle since September.

Compounding the lunacy, Illinois Department of Natural Resources employees are still reporting to work on a daily basis. The state just isn’t allowing anyone to use the facility – sending the state even deeper into debt.

About mid-October the ATA, the body that produces the Grand American, started getting nervous, as well it should. The event attracts thousands of shooters from around the globe. The ATA had to know if Illinois would come to its collective senses, allowing the Grand American to remain in Sparta. […]

The details of the agreement won’t be announced until tomorrow. But, apparently if the state is still without a budget by April 15, the ATA will be given permission to operate the complex through the summer.

  32 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 - Radogno responds *** City won’t help CPS

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’ve all seen the trash talking by Gov. Rauner about how he will refuse to help Chicago’s schools without first getting help from Mayor Rahm Emanuel on the Turnaround Agenda.

But the mayor isn’t planning to help his own schools financially, either…


The city obviously has its own fiscal nightmares to deal with, but even that probably doesn’t help the mayor’s case much.

*** UPDATE *** Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno responds…

“It is so disappointing to read yet another declaration of Mayor Emanuel and the city of Chicago’s refusal to help the Chicago Public School system and the children it serves. How out of touch is the city to be asking for state help for CPS when the city continually refuses to address the crisis itself?”

  17 Comments      


Rauner disputes report that AFSCME made a big new offer

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WUIS

Rauner says after a year and 67 bargaining sessions, he’s seen no progress with AFSCME.

“Our team just asked ‘em: So do you think we’re at impasse. I’m not sure, I think the union said they don’t believe we are,” Rauner said. “So our team is just trying to assess, where do we go from here? We’re spinning our wheels right now and making no progress.”

AFSMCE spokesman Anders Lindall has a different take on how things went down. He says AFSCME leaders were stunned by the impasse offer, because the union made a big new offer of its own, to accept Rauner’s wage terms for one year, and to pay more (though not as much as Rauner wants) for their health insurance.

“It is too reminiscent of the lack of a process that’s left us without a budget. It’s Rauner’s way or no way,” Lindall said.

* I asked the governor’s office for a response…

Rich, here are the “big” changes they claim to have made on Friday. They are not seeking a pay freeze at all. They changed their first year pay increase from a 1.5% general increase to a $1000 automatic stipend for all employees that would be pensionable – so that makes it a salary increase since once it is awarded it can never be reduced. Second, they changed their second year increase from 2.5% to 2.25%. They are still seeking automatic step increases all four years of the contract and they are still seeking additional increases of 3% in Year 3 and 3% in Year 4. So in the course of a full year of negotiations here are their changes:

    1) Automatic four year step increases – NO CHANGE
    2) Year 1: 2% increase – Automatic $1000 pensionable “stipend”
    3) Year 2: 3% — 2.25%.
    4) Year 3: 3% — NO CHANGE
    5) Year 4: 3% — NO CHANGE
    6) They have indicated they will NEVER agree to performance bonuses under any circumstance.

As for health insurance, they renewed their proposal they have made from the beginning to seek a more expensive health plan adding new health and dental benefits to their already expensive platinum plus plan. For 12 months, they have proposed no increases in premiums. Friday for the first time, they proposed to increase premiums on this new, MORE EXPENSIVE plan by between $5 to $11 a month (depending on your salary band it was proposed: $5, $6, $6, $7, $8, and $11 for each current band) in Year 2 only and then no further increases in Years 3 and 4.

There is nothing “big” about these plans and the fact that it has taken us 12 months to get here is why it is entirely reasonable to ask whether future negotiating sessions would be worthwhile. Keep in mind 17 other unions agreed to across the board pay freezes for 4 full years, new less expensive health plans, and performance pay in a matter of weeks of negotiations.

Thanks,
ck

  116 Comments      


CSU expects “massive disruption of operations” by March 1

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Uh-oh

A budget impasse between the General Assembly and Illinois’ Republican governor, Bruce Rauner, could force the state’s only university that serves predominately Black students to either shutter its doors or cut staff and academic programming by mid-semester.

That’s when CSU reserve funds will run out. The university has been operating off reserves that now have dwindled down to $9 million—enough to operate the 7,000 student body university for two more months. It costs about $5 million a month to operate the university that began in 1867 as teacher training school. […]

Ms. Griffin, a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, noted that all public institutions are facing funding shortages, but CSU is hit harder because of its student population. Most students attending CSU are parents, many of whom work while others are working on their master’s degrees, she said.

“It is affecting us the most because we have the most non-traditional Black students,” Ms. Griffin said. “The government knows who relies on what and how much they rely on. So by not funding us, I believe that they know it is going to be detrimental for us.”

“If no state action is taken before March 1 to give CSU the state funds it needs to operate, than we expect a massive disruption of operations to take place,” said Tom Wogan, CSU’s public relations director. “It’s hard to say exactly what that will entail as we are in uncharted waters. There has never been a 7 month delay in state funding before.”

Griffin’s point is well-taken. This isn’t a traditional university, but it is too often compared to traditional schools by outlets like the Tribune.

* Also, Rep. André Thapedi has introduced legislation to send the school some money

Appropriates $25,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Board of Higher Education for the purpose of making grants to those public community college districts and public universities that have a minority student enrollment of at least 75% of the total student enrollment.

So far, though, he only has one co-sponsor, Rep. Thaddeus Jones.

  39 Comments      


Caption contest!

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Per a reader’s request…


  66 Comments      


It Pays to be a Credit Union Member

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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For the second consecutive year, CEFCU, with 20 locations throughout central Illinois, has distributed an extraordinary $40 million dividend. The amount each member received was determined by dividends earned and interest paid during the first 11 months of the year, and deposited into member accounts in early December.

Likewise, Scott Credit Union, based in Edwardsville and serving 15 metro east locations, declared a bonus dividend and loan interest rate in November, giving $1.3 million back to its members. SCU gave active members an additional 3% annual percentage yield bonus dividend on their deposits, and a rebate of 3% of the interest they paid this year on any loan or credit card to thank members for their loyalty.

Share in the success by joining a credit union today! Visit ASmarterChoice.org to locate a credit union in your area.

  Comments Off      


Brown looks back, and forward

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Brown

Bruce Rauner has been Illinois’ governor for one year now, and I would defy you to name one thing off the top of your head that he has accomplished during that time.

There actually are a few things, I would hasten to add, but I’ll bet most of you couldn’t name them because Rauner has made his hallmark what he hasn’t been able to accomplish — which is most everything he named as a priority. […]

As his chief accomplishment, Rauner is citing record state funding for schools. True, except that the Democratic Legislature sent him the education funding bill over his objections after he required Republican lawmakers to vote against it.

There’s also the little problem that there has been no appropriation approved for Illinois’ higher education, which has meant the state’s public colleges and universities are withering on the vine although their leaders are too chicken to speak up.

And then there’s the small matter of Chicago Public Schools, on the verge of financial collapse in 2016 without state involvement in solving its pension funding problems. That’s not Rauner’s fault, but his efforts to use the crisis as the key to his bargaining strategy hardly make him the best friend of schoolchildren.

The governor still has time, three long years at least, to pull off the Rauner Miracle, and I’m not counting him out.

If he’s going to ask for a second term, though, he might want to have a better list of accomplishments on hand by this time next year, which could start with a more realistic set of goals.

Several Republicans are still steamed at Rauner for pushing them to vote against that education appropriations bill and then signing it into law.

And some university types did bemoan their plight on Chicago Tonight last night.

* Rauner, by the way, reiterated his position against helping the city’s public schools again this week

“I don’t know whether [the CTU will] strike. . . . I’ve proposed reforms on local control that could help fix and bring those problems to resolution without a strike. … I’ve proposed all kinds of assistance for Chicago Public Schools. So far the mayor has rejected our assistance. It’s amazing to me: the mayor has just basically publicly said ‘Hurry up and put a massive tax hike on the people of Illinois and send me some of the cash as a bailout.’ It’s stunningly unrealistic and irresponsible. It’s ludicrous.”

* And

“I’m not going to discuss the terrible tragedies with the shootings in Chicago. I will talk about Chicago Public Schools, and the financial condition of Chicago. Chicago has basically the lowest credit ratings of any big city, other than Detroit; massive debt, deficits,” the governor said. […]

“Brutally high taxes, and a massive property tax [hike] coming now, without any real reforms connected to it; and without reforms, the massive property tax hike that’s hitting Chicagoans, and Chicago homeowners and businesses is only the first step of many large tax hikes that are coming in the future years, because so far Mayor Emanuel has refused to do any true real structural reform,” he said.

  39 Comments      


The consequences of bad management

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Illinois child welfare officials forfeited tens of millions of federal dollars in recent years by failing to process basic paperwork, state authorities told the Tribune this week.

After a monthslong bureaucratic effort fixed the lapses, $21.5 million in new federal dollars flowed to the Department of Children & Family Services for the current fiscal year, and $16.5 million is expected in the fiscal year that starts in July, acting Director George Sheldon said.

“My estimate is that just in the last two years we probably have lost out on about $40 million,” Sheldon said. “With the fiscal crisis that Illinois is in, I think it’s inexcusable.”

The problem came down to paperwork and is largely a consequence of having eight DCFS leaders in five years, Sheldon said. […]

The long fight to claim federal dollars for 18- to 21-year-olds has had unexpected benefits, Sheldon said. Last year, Gov. Bruce Rauner’s office proposed eliminating extended foster care services for those older wards as part of sweeping budget cuts, but Sheldon said the additional money has made him optimistic that those services won’t be halted.

Good work.

* Meanwhile, from a press release…

The Illinois Department of Children & Family Services is joining forces with the Cook County Sheriff’s Office in a landmark mission to locate and save runaway state wards, who are particularly vulnerable to crime and trafficking.

As part of a two-year pilot project, the Sheriff’s Office and DCFS will combine resources to broaden the impact of an existing specialized Sheriff’s unit dedicated to recovering missing or runaway wards. Since its formation in October 2012, this Sheriff’s unit has made more than 520 juvenile rescues.

Pending County Board approval, the cross-agency unit will be comprised of seven sworn Sheriff’s officers with specialized training in juvenile justice as well as three DCFS child welfare specialists. The collaborative team, commanded by the Sheriff’s office, will be officially rebranded as the Child Rescue Unit (CRU). DCFS will fund four of the Sheriff’ Office positions within the Child Rescue Unit at a cost of about $400,000 a year.

  19 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** “We hope the Governor uses the magic soon”

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Rauner continues to talk about getting out of judicial consent decrees

“There’s more of a mindset of ‘boy, we’ve gotta do something different.’ That’s one of the, I guess, small side benefits is people are willing to be more creative and aggressive and rethinking how government works.”

Meanwhile the state is spending more than it’s bringing in because of court orders and consent decrees, something Rauner wants to reverse.

“Other governors have ignored that and that’s cost more spending and bad policy. I want to work out a plan where every court order gets dealt with and goes away, consent decrees go away, so the government is actually being run proactively to benefit the taxpayers and the citizens who are receiving services”

OK, that’s a laudable goal. The state had to enter into those consent decrees because it was violating laws, so it’s easier said than done. Even so, it’s a laudable goal.

* But what Rauner hasn’t mentioned so far is that his administration entered into yet another consent decree just last month

“The place is a cacophonous madhouse,” said Alan S. Mills, executive director of the Uptown People’s Law Center, who has visited the facility [Built in 1925 and known as the “roundhouse,” the circular jail at Stateville Correctional Center near Joliet].

Mills and others, including the Illinois Department of Corrections, hope that a settlement reached last month in a class-action lawsuit will provide relief from this place to some of the prison system’s most vulnerable — its more than 11,000 mentally ill inmates.

The settlement in a case filed in 2007 brings some widespread changes to the state’s mental health care system for inmates, which experts said desperately lags behind national standards. The settlement will lead to Illinois’ first psychiatric hospital for prisoners and will allow the hiring of more than 300 mental health professionals.

In a change germane to those living at the roundhouse, the settlement will replace a policy that often puts the mentally ill in segregation, meaning they are left in their cells for nearly 24 hours a day and often constantly monitored to prevent suicide attempts. While this may prevent suicide, Mills said it often causes the mentally ill to “decompensate.”

* And the ACLU of Illinois has offered its thoughts on the matter

Yesterday, in a series of interviews marking his first year in office, Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner said that a “big part” of his administration’s plan going forward would be to seek release from court oversight in various federal consent decrees to which the State of Illinois has agreed.

The American Civil Liberties Union currently represents clients in five ( 5 ) such consent decrees, addressing care for children under the care of the Department of Children and Family Services, youth detained by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice as well as people with intellectual, physical and psychiatric disabilities who have been needlessly warehoused in large institutions and want to live in community-based settings.

Because of this experience and involvement, the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois issued the following statement about the Governor’s comments. The following can be attributed to Edwin C. Yohnka, Director of Communications and Public Policy at the ACLU of Illinois:

    Governor Rauner should know that adherence to terms of a consent decrees is not a political option to be debated in the media. These agreements exist because the State violated the law — often over decades — in ways that impose significant harms to our clients and others in Illinois. If he possesses a magic wand to fix the challenges faced by children in the child welfare system, youth being incarcerated or people with disabilities after years of neglect by the State, we hope the Governor uses the magic soon. The reality is that the way to make getting out of consent decrees a “big part” of his agenda is to bring the State’s dysfunctional systems in compliance with the law by improving the way the State provides services and supports to people who depend on its help.

    We look forward to engaging in that work, rather than debating ideological rhetoric.

*** UPDATE *** From the governor’s office…

The DOC matter was not a consent decree, but simply a settlement agreement. We worked hard to demonstrate to the court that a consent decree was not necessary and the Court agreed. This, in fact, proves the opposite point. This is the first victory of the Governor’s in his efforts to reduce the # of consent decrees the state is tangled in.

Also, the Governor’s point, of course, was not that we are going to get out of the consent decrees by not complying, but rather come up with compliance plans to comply with the decree so we can ask the Court to allow us to exit. We actually agree with the ACLU.

  52 Comments      


Rauner: Turnaround Agenda would help curb Chicago violence

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Amanda Vinicky

Gov. Bruce Rauner says passage of his pro-business Turnaround Agenda would help curb violence in Chicago. […]

“There is tragic violence in Chicago,” Rauner said Tuesday during a private interview with Illinois Public Radio. “I’m not going to comment about the mayor’s failures today about these shooting incidents. My personal view is the violence stems primarily from lack of opportunity — the lack of a future that these young people see for themselves, and then they turn to gangs and then they turn to violence.

“And that means schools, that means jobs and that means supporting families,” he added. “We have a tragic loss of two-parent families in so many communities. That’s the core problem.”

No question that economic development would help. But claiming his Turnaround Agenda is the answer is a bit much.

* Meanwhile

“Sometimes I’m too blunt, too direct, I’d say. I call it like I see it and sometimes that can alienate somebody or a group. Sometimes I’m impatient. Sometimes I’ve just got to be more patient. I’m not that way by nature. I am persistent and that ain’t gonna change but sometimes I’m impatient. I’ve got to learn a little bit more patience.”

Meanwhile the governor says he’s going to stay the course to bring economic and political reforms.

“Every year we’ll introduce reforms. Every year we will never give up on anything we’ve recommended. We may have to delay. Delay is not giving up. Delay is just tactics. We’ve got to keep our eye on the fact that we’re not gonna win every battle. We have to win the long-term struggle to improve the state.”

  72 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Jan 13, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You’re a juvenile success

Because your face is a mess

  4 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dave Dahl at WTAX also interviewed Gov. Rauner yesterday today. The governor’s closing words

You know, democracy is designed for give and take and compromise. I’m willing to compromise. I have compromised and I always will compromise.

But we’ve got to stay the course to grow the economy and get value for taxpayers. That I’ll never back down on.

OK, then find a way to grow the economy and get value for taxpayers which won’t be rejected out of hand by veto proof majorities in both chambers.

Click here to listen to the entire interview. Some fun stuff from the most fun Statehouse reporter.

  49 Comments      


We’ve fallen behind…. Oklahoma?

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* HuffPo

A new report on the state of the solar industry out Tuesday from the nonprofit Solar Foundation shows that the number of jobs in the United States in the solar industry outpaced those in the oil and gas industries for the first time ever.

As of November 2015 there were almost 209,000 people who worked in the solar industry, 90 percent of whom only work on solar-related projects, according to the report.

There were only about 185,000 people working in oil and gas in the United States in December 2015, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The oil industry has had a rough 18 months, as the price of oil slid from more than $100 a barrel in the spring of 2014 to just over $30 a barrel in recent weeks. The low price has caused layoffs in what had been a robust and growing shale oil extraction business.

* Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition press release

With President Obama expected to use his final State of the Union speech on Tuesday to highlight progress in building a clean energy economy, a review of actions taken at the state-level shows Illinois, which once was a clean energy leader, is failing to keep pace in the competition for jobs and investments that these initiatives can deliver.

Members of the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition called on Gov. Bruce Rauner to reverse this trend and to join other governors– including many Republicans– who have taken steps to implement the EPA’s Clean Power Plan (CPP), which gives states tools to create strategies to reduce carbon pollution from existing power plants.

Illinois stands out as one of the only states that have yet to announce its intentions on the CPP.

In addition, Oklahoma recently overtook Illinois as the nation’s fourth-largest wind power producer, which once led the nation in producing wind energy behind Texas, California and Iowa. Illinois installed no new wind capacity in 2014 or 2015, in part because of fractured state energy policies.

Members of the coalition support the Illinois Clean Jobs Bill (SB1485/HB2607) because it contains policy reforms that give businesses the kind of certainty and predictability they are seeking, legislation that represents the best path to meeting EPA goals because it also fix Illinois’ out-of-date energy policies, creating 32,000 jobs and saving consumers $1.6 billion on their electric bills.

Discuss.

  19 Comments      


AFSCME backs Noland

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m told that the Illinois AFL-CIO went neutral in this congressional primary race today, which is good news for Raja considering this development…

Today the Noland for Congress campaign announced that AFSCME Council 31 has endorsed their campaign for Congress. AFSCME Council 31 is one of the largest unions in the state of Illinois. They represent over 100,000 active and retired members.

“At a time when public employees are constantly under appreciated and under attack I’ve been proud to stand up for the working men and women that keep our state running,” said Senator Mike Noland. “Bruce Rauner has made AFSCME and public employees his number one scapegoat. I’ve stood up against his turnaround agenda and when I go to Congress I will continue to stand up for policies that support working families.”

AFSCME Council 31 are the latest member of organized labor to endorse Noland’s campaign. They join the, American Postal Workers Union Local 3140’s executive board, Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois, Bricklayers Administrative District Council of Illinois, Sheet Metal Workers State Council, SMART Transportation Division (formerly United Transportation Union), Fox Valley Building Trades, Elgin Trades Council, IFT Local 1211 (Northwest Suburban Teachers Union), Operating Engineers Local 399, Painters District Council 14 & 30, and Teamsters Joint Council 25. Noland’s campaign has also announced that over 75 elected officials have endorsed his campaign including Senate President John J. Cullerton and former Senate President Emil Jones Jr.

* In other campaign news…

For the third consecutive quarter since entering the race, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate Tammy Duckworth increased her fundraising haul and brought in thousands of new grassroots individual donors, raising $1.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2015. The campaign received over 20,800 individual contributions this quarter, the median amount of which was just $20. Duckworth announced her campaign for Senate at the end of March, and thus far has raised more than $4.7 million from contributions this cycle. The campaign has $3.65 million on hand.

“Tammy continues to articulate a vision for a state and country that looks after its people and grows from the middle out rather than the top down, and it’s clearly resonating,” Tammy for Illinois campaign manager Kaitlin Fahey said. “We’re very excited about the growth and durability of our grassroots fundraising network, which is essential to building a campaign that’s built to win. Once again we’re excited to demonstrate that our campaign will be powered by the everyday Illinoisans Tammy will serve in the U.S. Senate, as opposed to the Wall Street and corporate special interests that fund Senator Kirk’s campaigns.”

Some key highlights from the report, which will be filed with the Senate Office of Public Records and Federal Elections Commission in advance of the January 31st deadline:

    The campaign received 20,856 individual contributions in the fourth quarter, and has received 55,504 individual contributions overall
    Of those 4Q contributions, 94.7 percent were for $100 or less
    The average individual contribution was $66, and the median individual contribution was $20

The Illinois Senate race is consistently ranked as the top race in the country, and Senator Kirk is routinely listed as the most vulnerable Senate incumbent. In the third quarter of 2015, Duckworth out-raised Kirk by $400,000, and outpaced the only primary opponent who had filed to that point by more than $1 million. Kirk has not publicly released his fourth quarter fundraising numbers.

  7 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Batinick says he has bipartisan support for pension proposal

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

State Rep. Mark Batinick (R-Plainfield) is ready to file new legislation to address the state’s mounting unfunded pension liability. In his first year as a legislator, Rep. Batinick proposed for a series of hearings on offering a lump sum buyout option to current and future annuitants nearing retirement, and spoke about the benefits of this initiative on Fox News Chicago and other local outlets. Now he is prepared to push out the legislation that could potentially net the state billions in long-term savings, while paying owed pensioners.

“Many of those nearing retirement may be attracted to having more control over their retirement assets,” Rep. Batinick said, “Yet unfortunately the State does not provide a versatile and competitive alternative to the current pension arrangement. Providing a lump sum payment in exchange for all or a portion of an annuity would provide a voluntary, constitutional approach to addressing the State’s pension obligations, while simultaneously providing participants the options and flexibility needed when planning for retirement.”

In their May ruling declaring the pension reform bill signed into law by then-Governor Pat Quinn in December 2013 unconstitutional, the Illinois Supreme Court laid a framework for the adjustment of benefits through a legal approach called “consideration,” which allows for the adjustment of benefits if both parties agree to the changes. Rep. Batinick’s proposal to offer annuitants a lump sum option would meet this requirement by making any proposed buyout program voluntary.

Underscoring the need for bipartisan action on pension reform, the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA), has calculated the total unfunded pension liabilities of the State retirement systems at $111.2 billion as of June 30, 2014, based upon the actuarial value of assets.

Rep. Batinick has filed the legislation and collected bipartisan support from Representatives Morrison, Jesiel, Sente, and Wehrli, all of whom oversee the Pensions Committee. Representatives Martwick, David Harris, Franks, McDermed, and Andersson have also added their support.

Thoughts?

*** UPDATE *** From Rep. Batinick…

Rich,

I’d like to address some of the comments in the thread. They are comments I have heard for months.

1. Why would a retiree take an accelerated payment?

    A. There are federal tax consequences to taking a monthly annuity. Rolling some or all of your “net present value” into an IRA allows that money to grow tax free. You can also structure your income so that you still qualify for a property tax freeze. Two pensioners from the household may have large federal tax bills. This provides flexibility.

    B. You can’t will a pension. Some people would like to pass on something to the next generation. You can will an IRA.

    C. I’m sure some people would simply like to “take their money off the table”. Can you blame them when you look at how the state operates?

    D. Many of the “net present values” are well over $1M. We are not talking about small sums.

    E. Some people would just prefer to control their own finances.

2. How does the state save money? The accelerated benefit would be offered at a 25% discount to the state.

3. Can the state afford it? The bill limits the number of people each year by making it an election at retirement time. Only those retiring will be presented this option. This prevents a “rush to the door” while also focusing on the group that would help cash-flow the most. It’s more expensive for the state to not do the deal.

I discussed this plan with several state employees and CPA’s. The concept is sound and well-liked by both.

This has often been offered in the private sector. There it has always been an all or nothing deal. My bill offers a partial payout. This I believe is key. Many people would like to have the stability of a pension but maybe also some lump sum that they can will to the next generation or use for whatever they wish.

  115 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Legislator calls for reason, is whacked by state party

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* These guys are so hair-trigger thin-skinned…

The Illinois Republican Party today called on State Rep. Elaine Nekritz (D-Northbrook) to identify which specific reforms proposed by the Governor she would support as part of a bipartisan agreement to balance the state budget.

In a news report by the Illinois News Network, Rep. Nekritz said “the fix must include several things: reforms, cuts and revenues,” but in the same breath “criticized the governor and Democratic leaders for digging in their heels” — as if she is somehow independent from “Democratic leaders” and not a part of the impasse.

“In Northbrook Rep. Nekritz pretends to be independent from Mike Madigan, but in Springfield she’s one his top lieutenants,” ILGOP Executive Director Nick Klitzing said. “She can’t have it both ways, claiming she supports non-specific reforms while blaming the abstract ‘Democratic leaders’ for digging in their heels. She votes to elect Mike Madigan speaker, so unless and until she publicly identifies the specific reforms she could support, she is equally responsible for gridlock and decline as Mike Madigan. If Elaine Nekritz is truly independent, now’s her chance to stand up to her ‘Democratic leaders’ and publicly outline which of the reforms proposed by the governor she believes are ‘the levers that have to be pulled in order to get out of this.’”

As a reminder, Governor Rauner has asked legislators to support six reforms to help turnaround Illinois: legislative term limits, redistricting reform, local control of bargaining and bidding, workers’ compensation reform with causation, lawsuit reform and pension reform.

Here is what she actually said…

Democratic Representative Elaine Nekritz says the fix must include several things: reforms, cuts and revenues.

“Those are the levers that have to pulled in order to get out of this and it’s just not that hard if reasonable people will come together.”

Apparently, there’s no hope for reasonableness from the IL GOP.

Sheesh.

*** UPDATE *** From the state party…

Rich,

I am emailing to follow up to your post regarding the ILGOP press release.

We are also calling for “reason.” We are asking for legislators like Rep. Nekritz to tell the Governor and Republican House members what they would agree to rather than waiting for permission from Speaker Madigan. Rep. Nekritz is blaming Democratic leaders for not compromising, but then she’s not doing anything about it.

We are simply asking for someone - anyone - to have the courage to speak up and meet us in the middle with substantive reform ideas.

Thanks,
Nick

Yeah, that’s exactly what they’re doing. Encouraging her to meet in the middle.

Right.

Sorry, but one doesn’t “encourage” an elected state legislator to compromise by using a misanthropic rhetorical club.

  83 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** A sign of the times?

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the press room…

Reps. Demmer and Guzzardi have canceled their Thursday 10:00 a.m. press conference. The topic of the press conference was the “Future Caucus.”

Apparently, Illinois’ future ain’t ready for a caucus.

*** UPDATE *** The press release…

On Thursday, a dozen young legislators in the Illinois House will announce the launch of the Illinois Future Caucus.

The Future Caucus is a bipartisan group of young leaders who believe that cooperation, not conflict, should be the dominant political paradigm, and who are committed to working together to address the challenges facing the next generation of Illinoisans. Its founding co-chairs are Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago) and Rep. Tom Demmer (R-Dixon).

The group will work in conjunction with the Congressional Future Caucus and similar groups in eleven other states.

Also attending the press conference will be Steven Olikara, the founder of the Millennial Action Project, the group that coordinates the Future Caucuses around the country. Olikara is flying out from Washington, D.C. to lend his support to the new group.

WHAT: Press conference announcing the launch of the Illinois Future Caucus

WHO: Reps. Guzzardi and Demmer and colleagues from both parties and from around the state; Steven Olikara, founder, Millennial Action Project

WHERE: Blue Room at the Thompson Center

WHEN: Friday, January 15, 10:30 a.m.

Notice how the space time continuum is messed up in that release? They’re launching it on “Thursday” with a press conference on “Friday.”

Heh.

  39 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the twitters, with a hat tip to a commenter…


* The Question: Your new name for the Turnaround Agenda?

  134 Comments      


Jail on lockdown after staff doesn’t show up

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What the heck?

The Cook County Jail is on lockdown.

The sheriff’s office reports 18 percent of the jail’s staff did not show up for their 7 a.m. shift Tuesday.

In order to keep corrections officers safe, all inmates must remain in their cells unless they have a health issue or courtroom visit scheduled.

…Adding… Tribune

The 142 correctional officers gave reasons ranging from illness and family issues to the weather for not showing up for the 7 a.m.-to-3 p.m. shift, according to Cara Smith, a spokeswoman for the Cook County sheriff’s office.

Smith said jail officials attempt to “avoid lockdowns at all costs,” but they are not uncommon because of understaffed shifts. “I would say it happens maybe once a month, maybe more frequently,’’ she said.

On an average Tuesday first shift, about 83 of 794 workers take the day off, Smith said.

“They have lives and kids like the rest of us do,’’ Smith said. “Our staff have very difficult jobs working at the jail. It’s a delicate balance.”

  57 Comments      


Unclear on the concept

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno

“The corruption in the police department and potentially with City Hall has taken over and has significantly weakened the mayor, who I thought would have played a much bigger role in this,” she said. […]

“He’s frankly failed the people of this city and lost the confidence of the voters,” Radogno said.

When asked by a moderator to pretend Emanuel was calling her on the phone for advice, Radogno responded: “I would tell Rahm ‘You are whistling past the graveyard if you don’t get to your Democratic brethren and get them into the room to negotiate some real long-term solutions for the city and the state.’ “

OK, wait.

The mayor has been “significantly weakened” by scandal. He’s “lost the confidence of the voters” because he’s “failed the people.”

Yet, he’s still supposed to have some sort of outsized sway over his “Democratic brethren”? Keep in mind that Emanuel has never had the sort of influence over the General Assembly that Richard M. Daley had.

  18 Comments      


Rauner lashes out at Fahner

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz

Democrats and Republicans alike “know that the answer (to the state’s lagging economy) isn’t to just put in a massive tax hike,” Rauner said. “If they really thought that, they’d have done it” already, with Democrats employing the supermajorities they have in the House and Senate.

Rauner conceded that, though he’s “an optimist by nature,” the war over the budget and related reforms has been “tough.” But he summarily rejected the argument made by Chicago business leader Tyrone Fahner, head of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club, that the price of this war is too high, with the state’s unfunded liabilities growing an estimated $33 million a day and institutions like the University of Illinois suffering from disrupted funding.

Fahner “couldn’t be more wrong,” Rauner declared. “There’s not a single businessperson in the state who’s come to me and said, ‘Put in a massive tax hike and forget all of that other (structural reform) stuff.’ ”

* To refresh your memory, here’s what Fahner told Greg earlier this week

But a few will speak for the record. One of those is Tyrone Fahner, a rock-ribbed Republican who once served as Illinois attorney general and now heads the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club, which represents the state’s biggest corporations.

“Not having a budget is harmful to the interests of the state,” says Fahner, echoing almost verbatim recent comments by Madigan. “What the state needs now is for the speaker and the governor to sit down and govern.”

But what about all of the changes in things like workers’ compensation and collective bargaining that Rauner is demanding as the price of a budget deal?

“He has a long term—three more years—to push (the rest of) his agenda,” Fahner says. “But things would be better if we had a budget.”

  48 Comments      


A quick look ahead

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Finke

Rauner said he will continue to press his “turnaround agenda” this year and plans to announce some new proposals shortly. They will include initiatives for education reform and purchasing reform, he said.

“Hopefully, they will be more quickly adopted, but we’ll see,” he said.

…Adding… He previewed some of his education reforms last fall

Throughout the conversation, he expressed disappointment surrounding the need to address the Illinois fiscal crisis before turning to education agenda items such as opportunity scholarships, course choice access, lifting the charter school cap, and Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) for students with special needs. Rauner also predicted that the strength of the teachers unions throughout Illinois will set the stage for a political battle when these items emerge next year.

“I wish I was pounding right now on education bills in the legislature. I can’t do everything at once, I’m pretty good but I’m not that good,” he joked.

Hat tip to a commenter.

* Riopell

Rauner suggested changes in how the state funds schools could be part of a budget deal. Previously, House Republican Leader Jim Durkin of Western Springs said that would have to be put off, but Democratic Senate President John Cullerton has said the effort should continue.

“If he says … let’s have the funding formula be part of our grand bargain now, that’s fine,” Rauner said. […]

Suburban mayors who fear their share of income taxes will be slashed to cover the state’s deficit in a final budget deal will have to keep watching.

“I don’t want to speculate about what the final budget numbers would look like,” Rauner said. “We’ve talked about certain reductions at certain levels from (the local share). My preference is not to have to do that.”

“As part of a grand bargain, I’m not going to sit here today and say what will or won’t be in any final (budget),” he said.

  16 Comments      


Because… Madigan!

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mark Fitton

“Clearly, the biggest disappointment is our failure, so far, to get Speaker Madigan or the legislators that support him to really negotiate in good faith with us to get structural reforms,” Rauner said Monday. […]

Rep. Elaine Nekritz, D-Northbrook, said she thinks there are areas where Rauner and Democrats can come together, including on portions of the governor’s agenda.

But she said Rauner has to take a realistic look at the makeup of the Legislature..

“The governor has overreached given the fact there are Democratic supermajorities in the House and Senate, so to go for the nuclear option just isn’t possible.”

* Riopell

Gov. Bruce Rauner is marking his anniversary in office Tuesday by echoing some of the themes that got him into office, saying both that he’s ready to compromise and criticizing what he called the “stunning failure” of state lawmakers as a historic budget stalemate drags through a seventh month.

“We aren’t doing our duty if we don’t come together and get bipartisan compromise and get a balanced budget. We’re failing,” Rauner said Monday. “The General Assembly, stunning failure.”

Rauner, a Republican, says he’s still optimistic Democrats including House Speaker Michael Madigan will advance some of the pro-business proposals in a package Rauner calls the Turnaround Agenda. He says it’s a necessary first step in passing a budget, but Democrats criticize the plan.

“That doesn’t feel like compromise to me,” state Rep. Elaine Nekritz, a Northbrook Democrat, said. “That feels like, ‘Do it my way, and everything will be fine.’” […]

“I don’t think either the Democrats or the Republicans are going to be able to hang this budget dilemma solely on the other,” [David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute] said.

* Dan Petrella

“To me, the real responsibility for the failure to have bipartisan compromise really rests with the speaker and the legislators who are supporting him,” Rauner said.

While other Democratic leaders, including Senate President John Cullerton of Chicago, have been open to private discussions, they have been “unwilling in public to buck the speaker,” the governor said. […]

Madigan spokesman Steve Brown said Rauner bears the responsibility for the lack of a budget, noting the governor could have used his amendatory veto power to balance the Legislature’s approved budget, which had a $4 billion deficit. Instead, Rauner vetoed all but the portion funding elementary and secondary education.

As for the governor’s proposals not making it through the Legislature, “it’s a question of the governor not being able to persuade either the Legislature or . the voters of the state that this is critical to getting a budget in place,” Brown said.

* Chris Fusco

“Many members of the General Assembly, in private, along with the mayor of Chicago, in private, agree that much of our agenda makes sense,” Rauner told the Chicago Sun-Times Monday, the day before the first anniversary of his taking his oath of office.

Later, he said, “Frankly, if the mayor and the [Senate] President [John Cullerton] were willing to do in public what they talk about in private, I think we’d have worked something out by now. But they are afraid to buck the speaker.”

When asked to name the names of other Democrats in his corner, Rauner sidestepped the question.

“There are many …” he said before pausing briefly. “Publicly?” he then asked.

The governor then continued: “There are, I’ll say, many in the Legislature — in private — and there are many business Democrats in Chicago who are very supportive of us. And they’re saying ‘Stay strong. Don’t back down.’ People know we need change.” […]

“The governor chose to commemorate his first year in office, but rather than celebrating what happened, the year will be remembered for what didn’t happen,” [Emanuel press secretary Kelley Quinn] said. “Illinois is one of only two states without a budget . . . $7 billion in bills that haven’t been paid and college students who are still waiting for their state aid money. With a record like that, it should come as no surprise that he wants to pass the blame to others.”

But…


* Finke

“Big change doesn’t come quickly or easily. It’s OK. We’ll get there,” he said.

Rauner again blamed Madigan, the longtime House speaker, for being an impediment to passing the budget.

“I can’t tell you why the speaker is disproportionately focused on the next election,” Rauner said. “I’m a little bit baffled by it. He’s always put politics ahead of policy by about 10-1. All I can do is stay persistent.”

* AP

Rauner also bemoaned the volume of insignificant bills passed by the Legislature, referring to the lawmaking body as a “do-nothing General Assembly.” He criticized them for focusing on bills that don’t deal with the state’s problems, including addressing the state’s $111 billion pension debt.

Lawmakers passed more than 500 bills last year, including one that Rauner signed into law making pumpkin pie the official state pie.

“Virtually none of them dealt with our problems,” Rauner said of the bills. “And I love pumpkin pie, and I’m glad, I’m glad it’s the state pie. I love it. But you know what? We have a pension crisis. They pass a pie bill. They don’t pass a pension bill. Come on.”

[Madigan spokesman Steve Brown] also took issue with Rauner’s comments, noting that some of the accomplishments the governor listed in a Sunday editorial in the (Springfield) State Journal-Register happened because of his collaboration with lawmakers.

Rauner’s op-ed is here. Brown is right on that point.

  24 Comments      


The governor really wants you to read this

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Rauner told me yesterday that a recent article in Investor’s Business Daily entitled “Illinois Is The Sick Man Of America; Will Bruce Rauner Save It?” was far and away the best analysis of the impasse that he has ever seen. To Rauner, the author summed up the situation perfectly.

A sampling

But in some bizarre inversion, Rauner is the one under pressure to fold and return to business-as-usual politics in Illinois. Even some of the governor’s own putative allies are turning up the heat. These include legacy Republicans such as former Gov. Jim Edgar, one of the key architects of the state’s current pension mess, and some weak-kneed business leaders.

But it’s mostly the usual suspects such as the unions and their allies. This includes the New York Times, which just ran a major hit piece on Rauner claiming he’s the front man for a cabal of wealthy financiers out to hurt the state’s citizens to further their own ideological interests.

The Times, however, couldn’t find room in its 3,000-word extravaganza to even mention Madigan or Cullerton, speaking volumes about its true agenda. Instead, it focuses on Rauner’s union reform proposals.

Make no mistake: The unions and public employees were the top beneficiaries of the Illinois train wreck. Illinois can’t be fixed without curtailing their clout. It’s a testament to how much power unions have in Illinois that it was considered a great victory for reform when exhibitors at McCormick Place no longer had to pay a union electrician to plug in their printers.

Go read the whole thing before commenting, please. Thanks.

  72 Comments      


Rauner wants to move away from court-ordered spending

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

Gov. Bruce Rauner said Monday he will outline a plan to get out from under court-ordered spending that’s plunging Illinois further into debt during a seven-month budget stalemate.

Even without a budget, the state has been required to continue spending on things such as Medicaid and services for people with disabilities because of federal consent decrees and court orders.

Rauner said in an interview with The Associated Press that getting out from under those will “be a big part of our plan going forward,” but he declined to offer specifics on his idea, which one analyst said would require court approval. […]

“He can’t simply say we’re not going to provide services people have a fundamental right to,” said Ed Yohnka, director of communications and public policy for the American Civil Liberties Union in Illinois. Not having a budget will only make it harder for Rauner to show the state is complying with funding requirements, Yohnka said. “If the governor has a magic wand he could wave today for the state to become complaint, we welcome him to use it. It doesn’t exist,” he said. “These are hard, persistent problems. You actually have to do it.”

* And Natasha Korecki at Politico points to recent court action

Rauner made those remarks days after a court-appointed monitor told a federal judge the state failed to comply with a decree aimed to protect adults who suffer from developmental disabilities. In fact, the monitor, Ronnie Cohn, said the state’s system serving those adults reached a “crisis,” point, adding that without a state budget, those in the system face “unprecedented difficulties” including safety concerns. “Until such time as concrete steps are taken to enact a State budget and address the staffing crisis and resulting decrease in service quality as well as lack of development in the community, the Monitor finds noncompliance with this compliance standard.”

Read the report: http://bit.ly/1SfhapV

Last year, advocacy groups sought relief from a federal judge, saying the state — faced with billions of dollars in unpaid bills and no spending plan — stopped paying agencies that provided services to those with disabilities, putting providers at risk of closure. The judge ordered the state to pay for those covered under the Ligas consent decree.

‘Significantly worsened’ — “The current Monitor’s experience in Fiscal Year 2016 thus far is that the status of such resources has significantly worsened. In the current report, there is a finding of noncompliance in this area,” Cohn said in court papers.

Testimonials from Cohn’s report flag a severe staffing crisis due to low wages.

    – “In my 40+years working in the disabilities field in Illinois, I have never encountered such a staff recruitment problem. I would characterize (it) as a desperate situation.”

    – “The most obvious risk is when you truly need two people present and on duty, but you may have only one staff member.”

    – “Providers are reporting double-digit vacancy and turnover rates; staffing programs at bare-minimum levels and focusing staff resources solely on the safety of individuals.”

    – “The agency has a 20% vacancy rate in direct support positions and is taking steps to move people into larger residential settings due to the inability to staff smaller settings. The agency has closed residential intake despite a long waiting list.”

GROUPS POINT AT LAWMAKERS AND GOV OFFICE — “It’s shameful that the state expects that our most vulnerable can be cared for by our lowest paid workers. But for over a decade lawmakers and administrations have ignored the pleas of the community that they provide the resources necessary to recruit and retain a high quality workforce.” — statement from a coalition of disability organizations

* Related…

* Not-for-profits’ plea to state leaders: Think of the seniors, disabled: The message delivered Monday by several not-for-profit service agencies in Jacksonville to state leaders regarding the ongoing budget impasse was simple. “I don’t care what side of the aisle you are on, just get it done,” said Prairie Council on Aging executive director Nancy Thorsen. “I’m even willing to take some cuts. Just get it done so I know what I have to live with.”

  36 Comments      


2020?

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

The top Republican in the Illinois Senate says “it’s possible” the standoff over a state budget could last for several years if Democrats aren’t willing to compromise.

Sen. Christine Radogno spoke Monday before the City Club of Chicago.

She says if Illinois continues to spend money at current levels without raising taxes, the state’s backlog of unpaid bills could reach almost $25 billion in four years. That’s based on a report from Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s budget office.

Radogno says “While I hope it doesn’t happen, I think it’s possible.”

* Reboot

Radogno said she couldn’t rule out the possibility that the state will continue to operate with an “autopilot” budget until June 30, 2020, when the bill backlog is projected to skyrocket to $25 billion.

Referring to a question about whether House Speaker Michael Madigan is willing to wait out Gov. Bruce Rauner until the end of his term in 2018, regardless of the consequences, Radogno said she thinks it’s possible because there’s no incentive for Madigan and Democrats to change the status quo.

“Madigan and his Democrat cronies are being rewarded with unprecedented amounts of cash from special interests — tens of millions,” she said. “And when they’re bundled together to individual legislators and campaign committees, it could end up being hundreds of millions of dollars cash to protect the status quo, which is failing the people of Illinois.”

  40 Comments      


*** UPDATED x2 - Transcript - New audio link *** Five questions for Rauner

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I decided to use some of your questions from yesterday when I interviewed Gov. Bruce Rauner, although I kinda modified a few…

What is your single most significant accomplishment as governor?

In October of 2014, you said, “Pushing any specific labor regulation is not my priority at all.” What changed?

Do you have any specific data about what the return on investment would be for your Turnaround Agenda?

If you accept the fact that neither you nor Speaker Madigan are going to compromise your basic principles, do you think it’s time to try something different to break this stalemate?

Are you willing to go four years with no state budget if you don’t get want you want on your agenda?

* Before you listen to his answers, a warning. I took Oscar with me because he loves the grounds at the governor’s mansion, but he didn’t get a chance to run around before the interview. Stella, the Rauner family dog, wasn’t in town, either, so he was looking all over for her.

The bottom line is Oscar started barking toward the end of the interview. Loud. Insistently loud. The little guy really wanted to go outside and play. So, end of interview.

* Click here to listen.

*** UPDATE 1 *** We killed the audio link because too many people clicked it. Try clicking here instead.

* And here’s a photo of Oscar tearing up the turf, post interview…

Gov. Rauner sat for other interviews, and we’ll have more on them in a bit.

*** UPDATE 2 *** A reader put together a “rush” transcript…

Miller: I saw your op-ed in the SJ-R, but what do you think so far in one year has been your single most treasured accomplishment?

Rauner: I really have to say three: Having a “world record” education fundin’ for Illinois – most we’ve ever had despite no budget. That’s a big deal to me. Gettin’ innovative contracts with the 17 unions. That’s a big deal. And then saving over $700 million from the operating costs of the government.

Miller: Number one, though, all the Republicans voted against that bill and then you signed it – any regrets on that?

Rauner: None at all. We need education funding.

Miller: In October of 2014, you said to IRN “pushing any specific labor regulation is not my priority at all.” So what happened? What changed?

Rauner: Nothing has changed. Why do you say something has changed?

Miller: Well you have been pushing for different labor laws.

Rauner: You and a couple of the other guys don’t see the difference. I’m not sayin’ that communities can’t collectively bargain. I’m not sayin’ collective bargaining rights get stripped away. I’m not sayin’ that people can’t join unions. A lot of communities agree with you and others and they want to pay more taxes for prevailing wage. Terrific! They want to pay higher taxes to support collective bargaining in government. Terrific! I got no problem, I just don’t want one community telling another community how to do it. That’s not advocating some labor law.

Miller: Well it is.

Rauner: It’s not – it’s local control of government, not a labor law. That is democracy at work, getting the democracy to the level of the people. This is empowering the people of Illinois - that is what the agenda is about. 100%

Miller: One of the things that several of my commenters have been asking for months, including one of the top commenters I have on the blog, is do you have any –

::Oscar barks, making his presence known::

Miller: Oscar stop.

Miller: Do you have any specific data about what the return on investment would be on your Turnaround Agenda? For instance, what is the benefit to the state in dollars and cents for your agenda?

Rauner: We have quantified a lot of that stuff. We can send that to you. This is why I am frustrated when the Speaker says this is not related to the budget. For example, if we can get business regulatory change so I can recruit manufacturer’s here and more transportation companies here, and more businesses here, we can generate billions of new revenue without raising tax rates. That’s directly tied to the budget. And if we can get the pension reform I’m asking for and the local control of government costs, we can save billions for the taxpayers that’s directly related to the budget.

Miller: Billions?

Rauner: Billions.

Miller: Because the Illinois Policy Institute did a study on prevailing wage and they didn’t find much savings at all, you’re looking at ¾ of a point.

Rauner: I’d have to see the study. ¾ of what point?

Miller: ¾ of a percentage point on their property tax bills.

Rauner: That’s a lot of money.

Miller: When I took a look at their numbers it’s probably half that, so it’s less than half of a percentage point. That’s not billions of dollars.

Rauner: I didn’t say prevailing wage alone is billions per year, it’s a lot, it’s many, many hundreds of millions. All of those changes together - Local control is billions. Because local control on pensions, what gets collectively bargained, the prevailing wage, HUGE. Some agree with you. Fine! I’m not saying they can’t do what you want but why do the communities who agree with you tell the communities that agree with me how to run their communities? Where does that come off? That’s not what democracy is about.

Miller: Well there is some dispute over whether you can even do that at the local level.

Rauner: Well I don’t agree it’s disputable but let’s have the dispute – that’s fine.

Miller: It’s getting us nowhere because it’s not being accepted, there are veto-proof majorities in both the House and the Senate. You said recently to Dan Proft that we aren’t’ going to get a budget until Mike Madigan changes. And Mike Madigan is not a guy who changes very often. So if you accept the fact, I don’t know if you do or not, that neither you nor the speaker are going to compromise on what you call your “basic principles” –

::Oscar bark::

Miller: Oscar stop.

Miller: Do you think it’s time to try something different to break the log-jam?

Rauner: Well I am up for your suggestions. Let me dispute a couple of your assumptions. I have compromised and I will compromise. There are no one of my six bills that I say have to be the one that passes and any bill that does pass can be tweaked. There is nothin’ that is off the table for me in terms of what will happen. But what we can’t do – and I said this in the op-ed you read – a massive tax hike and nothing else? No. Failure. That’s a disaster for the state. That we can’t go there.. And the reason I am optimistic, the Speaker and I get along perfectly well, it’s not a personal thing. It’s always spun that we hate each other. Not true. The reason I am cautiously optimistic is that Mike has done things in the past that have really ticked off AFSCME or the teachers union or whoever and yes, do some of what I’m recommending do that? Yes, but he’s done it before. It’s not like it’s unheard of for him.

Miller: I agree with you. So I don’t disagree I just don’t see him doing it yet. Do you see him cutting a deal before the primary? Or before the General Election?

Rauner: I don’t know what timing he is going to choose. You know my buddies over in the Democratic caucus, some say that there’s a chance he’ll do it soon, others have said there is no way it’s happening before the primary. And more and more are sayin’ no way until after the general. At some point we got to lead.

Miller: How do you get there? You’ve faced complicated situations in business. You didn’t become who you were by just waiting everyone out.

::Oscar growing increasingly agitated::

Rauner: I haven’t played every card in my hand, I haven’t done everything I can do. I’m just going to keep doing what I can do to try and get a compromise.

Miller: Are you going to wait four years? Before we get a budget? Your entire term?

Rauner: Here’s the thing – I will not sign off on a tax hike that doesn’t have reforms in it.

::Oscar barking madly::

Miller: Oscar please!!

Miller: So, four years? Are you really willing to wait four years?

::Oscar continues barking as if to stop the interview all together::

Miller: Are you really willing to wait four years?

Rauner: I’m not waiting, I’m working my ass off 24/7.

Miller: Ok, are you willing to work your ass off and get nothing 24/7 for four years?

Rauner: We’ve already got a lot in the first year. I’m all about improvin’ the future for the people of Illinois.

Miller: (After a pause) Uh-huh.

  63 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Jan 12, 2016 - Posted by Rich Miller

* He bites on the neon and sleeps in a capsule

Loves to be loved, loves to be loved

  8 Comments      


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