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Today’s number: 2 percent

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The last time I posted something about a bill to lay out requirements for recycling supermarket plastic bags, we got some comments like this one

Just recycle the darn plastic bags people. It’s not hard. Take a big bag. Stick all the little plastic bags in it. When full. take to store for recycling. I do it all the time. I still get the convenience of plastic bags but know that I’m minimizing their footprint by recycling them.

And we need a law for this why???

* But the Kankakee Daily Journal has a much different take

How many of these plastic bags are there? No one really knows. Estimates on the web range from 4 billion new bags a month to 7 trillion a year. Many countries — about a fourth of the world’s population — either ban or heavily tax them out of existence. The bags are either illegal or rare in Belgium, Italy and Ireland.

Because the bags are light, they float and blow easily and travel long distances. It takes only about a dozen bags carelessly discarded, stuck in the trees, to pretty much ruin the appearance of a park. And because the bags have a shelf life of as much as 1,000 years, they will be with us a long time. The Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria have long since decayed. The sword of Charlemagne is a relic. The bag from a foodmart is eternal.

State Rep. Michael Tryon, R-Crystal Lake, has a bill in the hopper requiring plastic manufacturers to set up a network of recycling sites. Most, but not all, grocery stores already have them. Chicago already has a recycling program.

But most people could not be bothered. Tryon noted that only two percent of the bags are recycled now. By contrast, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 72 percent of all newsprint and 85 percent of all cardboard is recycled.

Tryon’s bill is a start. [Emphasis added.]

Discuss.

  45 Comments      


Pols behaving badly

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Kinda blatant, no?

State Rep. Monique Davis’ Democratic friends in the Illinois House Tuesday spared her from a tax bill of at least $444,500.

By a 60-54 vote, with Davis voting present, the House entered into the legal dispute between the longtime South Side lawmaker and the Chicago Board of Education over her refusal to pay back rent and leaseholder taxes on her district office, which is in a school-owned building.

The measure would bar taxation on any property owned by a state or local government leased to another state or local government. It makes no mention of Davis, but the bill would essentially undercut a school system lawsuit against Davis.

That provision was tucked in a broader bill that would exempt a Wheeling office used for “disaster preparedness” and owned by the Mutual Aid Box Alarm System from property taxation.

Davis, who occupies a rent-free Chicago Board of Education building as her district office, was sued in 2009 by the school system in a bid to collect seven years of back rent of $75,000 and uncollected leasehold taxes and penalties totaling $444,500.

* Ugh

A local Democratic contender for a new Illinois House of Representatives seat is facing a domestic battery charge.

Natalie Manley, a Joliet accountant and candidate in the 98th District race, was arrested Tuesday by Joliet police at her home in the 3100 block of Ingalls Avenue.

Police said the arrest stemmed from a dispute Manley had with her 21-year-old daughter. The younger woman reportedly told police she had lost her cell phone and was unable to let her mother know she would be home late.

When the 21-year-old did return to the apartment she shares with Manley at around 2 a.m. Tuesday, police said she was attacked by her mother, who “punched, kicked, knocked her to the ground, struck her in the face [and] hit her with a set of keys.”

* And now onto something a little funny. First, the setup

With the primaries more than a month in the past, two more Democrats will be on the November ballot.

The leaders of the county Democratic committees nominated Wanda Rohl for the 16th Congressional District and Thomas Boken Jr. for the 90th House District at their meeting Tuesday evening.

Rohl, a hospice worker from outside of Ottawa, will face U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Manteno, in the redrawn 14-county district, which includes Lee, Ogle, Bureau and the western half of DeKalb counties.

Kinzinger defeated fellow incumbent U.S. Rep. Don Manzullo, R-Egan, in the March Republican primary.

A hospice worker sounds like a fairly decent candidate. Good for her. She has no chance, but participation in our democracy is a great thing.

* But here’s the rub. Ms. Rohl’s Facebook page has a couple of links (backup screenshots are here and here in case she takes down the links) to her blog, which is called The Chick in the Chair Perspective.

Here is a post from that blog

OK… in case you missed it…. this is an adult conversation!

Today on my hour long commute to class I was flipping through radio stations when I heard ” Do women think about other men while they are having sex?”

OK…the radio guy said “sure they do” while his female co hosts where like “oh hell no…we have to concentrate to get to the big O”.. I laughed and thought oh wouldnt that be nice… I miss the big O, but in true reality as a 39 year old, college student who works, and has three kids… thinking about getting to the big O even if I could, is ususally not what is on my mind…

Things I think about during sex…

God I am tired!
Can the kids here us?
This bed makes way to much noise.
OMG the dog just jumped up on the bed…
Did I remember to lock the door.
I have to get up in 4 hours.
What time is it?
OK the cats are fighting in the basement.
I can’t concentrate… I need to turn the TV off.
…blah, blah, blah……

Oh YEAH….. I Love Him.

Sex is great, but really I am at the point I have to schedule an appointment to have sex otherwise I have other things are on my mind.

So now that you have thought about it the question is… What’s on your mind during sex?

The backup screenshot is here.

Now, there’s nothing wrong with a healthy discussion about sex. But, sheesh, man, at least consider deleting this kind of stuff before you jump into a congressional race.

  36 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The setup, from WUIS

The Illinois Municipal League’s Legislative Director, Joe McCoy, says cities across Illinois are facing similar problems of growing unfunded liabilities. He says it’s a disturbing trend that’s grown in recent years, as stock values tumbled. McCoy says there’s not much municipalities can do about it. They don’t decide what retirement benefits should be offered to employees. The state does.

“The biggest structural problem we have with the system is that the state gets to dictate what the pension benefits are and they don’t have to put in a single dime toward funding the financial obligations that they’ve imposed on local taxpayers,” McCoy said. ”So they don’t have any real incentive to restrain themselves from enhancing benefits. Because they reap all the political benefits of increasing the pension levels, without having to pay the bill.”

* The Question: Should state government be prohibited from setting pension benefits for local government employees? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


  30 Comments      


Illinois Needs Private Sector Jobs Now! Why Labor Leaders Support Senate Bill 1849

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois residents want to cut the deficit and create jobs without tax increases or budget cuts. A recent independent analysis shows that a modest expansion of gaming in Illinois would create 20,500 jobs and $200 million in desperately needed new annual revenue.

That’s why Illinois labor leaders are united in support for the compromise legislation contained in Senate Bill 1849:

“With our unemployment numbers still hovering around 9 percent, the state can’t afford to take a pass on this vital piece of legislation. We’ve got men and women ready to go to work today, and SB 1849 would finally give them the opportunity to earn their living.”
Tom Balanoff, President, SEIU Local 1

“More people at work means more tax revenues coming in to help balance our city, county and state budgets.” Dave Whitmore, Business Manager, Ironworkers Local 4

More than 50,000 jobs are at stake! Not only would SB 1849 create 20,000 new jobs, it would save more than 30,000 agri-business jobs that effect nearly every single one of Illinois’s 102 counties!” Former Rep. Bill Black, Chairman, the Illinois Revenue and Jobs Allliance.

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Boost for Nekritz bill?

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rep. Elaine Nekritz’s bill to repeal Illinois’ supremely goofy law making it a felony with a maximum 15 years in prison to record audio of an on-duty police officer could get a House floor vote today. Her bill came up short last time after opposition from the coppers. This federal appellate court ought to boost her bill’s chances

In a blow to Illinois’ sweeping eavesdropping law, a federal appeals court on Tuesday blocked its enforcement in cases where someone is recording a police officer at work.

It was a victory for activists who had feared that using smartphones or video cameras to record police responding to demonstrations during this month’s NATO summit in Chicago could land protesters and bloggers behind bars for years. It’s also the most serious legal challenge to the measure — one of the strictest in the nation — and adds momentum to efforts by some state lawmakers to overhaul the legislation, whose constitutionality has been questioned. […]

“The Illinois eavesdropping statute restricts far more speech than necessary to protect legitimate privacy interests,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit said in its opinion. “As applied to the facts alleged here, it likely violates the First Amendment’s free speech and free-press guarantees.”

The ruling stemmed from a 2010 lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union seeking to block Alvarez from prosecuting ACLU staff for recording police officers performing their duties in public places, one of the group’s long-standing monitoring missions.

Chicago has already decreed that it won’t arrest people for violating the law during the NATO summit. It’s an unfair, unworkable, unconstitutional statute and the strong opposition by law enforcement to this proposal has no basis in reality.

* It’s tough to pass any legislation that’s opposed by law enforcement agencies, including prosecutors. Videotaping interrogations was going to break the process, according to law enforcement, and state legislation very nearly didn’t pass. But have you heard of any real problems since that requirement became law nine years ago?

Prosecutors recently stopped a proposed constitutional amendment guaranteeing that crime victims can exercise the rights already afforded to them in the state Constitution

The constitutional amendment would have changed the role of victims in the legal process. But uncertainty over how that role would affect a prosecutor’s ability to go after criminals helped sink the bill just days before Sunday’s deadline to put it on the ballot.

Victims’ rights are often a bipartisan rallying cry at the Statehouse. When the amendment first passed the House in February, only two Democrats voted against it. Changes were made in the Senate, but 55 senators still voted for it.

The amendment, HJRCA29, seemed on track to clear the House again until Wednesday, when it met a buzz saw of opposition from both defense attorneys and prosecutors. The lobbying effort by the Illinois State Bar, Illinois state’s attorneys and Illinois public defenders associations forced lawmakers in the House Judiciary Committee on Criminal Law to reconsider their position.

“This, in my mind, has thrown a very interesting dynamic into something that early on was very easy to get behind and strongly support,” said Rep. Jim Sacia, R-Pecatonica. “This opposition has greatly convoluted that.”

* From the Illinois Constitution

SECTION 8.1. CRIME VICTIM’S RIGHTS.

(a) Crime victims, as defined by law, shall have the following rights as provided by law:
(1) The right to be treated with fairness and respect for their dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process.
(2) The right to notification of court proceedings.
(3) The right to communicate with the prosecution.
(4) The right to make a statement to the court at sentencing.
(5) The right to information about the conviction, sentence, imprisonment, and release of the accused.
(6) The right to timely disposition of the case following the arrest of the accused.
(7) The right to be reasonably protected from the accused throughout the criminal justice process.
(8) The right to be present at the trial and all other court proceedings on the same basis as the accused, unless the victim is to testify and the court determines that the victim’s testimony would be materially affected if the victim hears other testimony at the trial.
(9) The right to have present at all court proceedings, subject to the rules of evidence, an advocate or other support person of the victim’s choice.
(10) The right to restitution.
(b) The General Assembly may provide by law for the enforcement of this Section.
(c) The General Assembly may provide for an assessment against convicted defendants to pay for crime victims’ rights.
(d) Nothing in this Section or in any law enacted under this Section shall be construed as creating a basis for vacating a conviction or a ground for appellate relief in any criminal case.

Victims already have some pretty broad rights here. But there is no actual enforcement mechanism if those constitutionally guaranteed rights are denied. And because the Constitution bars appellate relief, this really can’t be resolved through simple legislation.

The deadline for putting constitutional amendments on the ballot has passed. So the opposition won big. It would be nice, though, if the next time this comes around that there was a real effort by prosecutors to help come up with a solution. “Trust us, we know what’s best for them,” isn’t it.

  6 Comments      


Child care rescue?

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 1990’s welfare reform initiative required single moms to work, so child care service was provided to help those mothers, who typically don’t make much money, cope. But when a huge hole developed in the state’s budget for child care services, a shock wave was felt throughout the state. Gov. Pat Quinn now says, however, that he may have found some extra cash between some couch cushions

“We’ve located about $73 million in the budget that will not be spent on the original purpose this year, so we’re going to reallocate that money for the child care subsidy to make sure that working moms and dads have the subsidy they need in order to go to work and make sure their kids are well taken care of,” Quinn said Tuesday.

Officials with Quinn’s budget office said the money will come from a fund originally set aside to pay Medicare premiums.

The proposal is under review by Democratic leaders. A spokeswoman for Senate President John Cullerton of Chicago said he is also open to alternatives, but warned that “the solution will demand a consensus.”

A spokeswoman for House Republican Leader Tom Cross said he wants to work to solve the child care funding shortfall and is examining the proposal.

* While welcome news, the governor’s continued rebuff to those wanting to generate new revenues through gaming expansion is just plain silly

Quinn warned lawmakers against getting distracted by the gambling push, which happens almost every year near the end of the spring session, saying they need to keep their “eye on the prize.”

“We have very, very high priorities in restructuring Medicaid and reforming our pension system and getting a good budget. So, we don’t want to get distracted here,” Quinn said following an appearance at Soldier Field for the opening of the Special Olympics spring games. “I think we’ve got to keep our eye on the prize, and the prize is complete restructuring and reform of two programs that need fundamental overhaul.”

Quinn’s comments came in response to a rally by labor leaders in Chicago urging support for a gambling bill that would bring casinos to Chicago and four other locations across the state. Union groups say the proposal would create thousands of much-needed jobs in Illinois. The gambling expansion was passed by lawmakers last year but stalled after Quinn threatened to veto the bill because it also would allow slot machines at horse racing tracks.

Since then, pro-gambling lawmakers have been trying to work out a deal that would appease horse track owners. Prospects for a gambling expansion likely would improve after the November election, when lame-duck legislators might be more willing to vote for it.

The state needs that money now, governor. Are you really willing to kill off social service functions because you don’t want people to gamble at the track? Dude, no offense, but people are already gambling at the track.

  24 Comments      


Is 67 too old to retire, or do people keep working anyway?

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the SJ-R editorial page

When Rep. Raymond Poe, R-Springfield, stated his belief that such a move would contribute to unemployment by keeping older workers on the job longer (thus keeping young people out of jobs), and that 67 is too old for teachers to work, Emanuel was politely dismissive. A 62-year-old or younger “retiree” is not really a retiree, he said.

“The assumption you have is that people at 62 are retiring, and I don’t think that’s true. Or at 50. In fact, they’re going on with many years of work left in them, and they do work, which is a reflection of … a change that’s going on in society,” Emanuel said. “Actually they go on and continue many years of very healthy and productive work.” […]

“It’s good for the system, it’s good for the employees and it’s honest with everybody that’s expected to pay into it. That in fact they’re not retiring,” Emanuel said. “And at the Social Security level, people who retire at 62 get a lower benefit than people at 67. That’s some of the changes that are going on.”

* And a new Gallup poll kinda backs up Emanuel

Some 39 percent of workers now plan to retire after age 65, up from 30 percent before the recession in 2007 and just 15 percent in 1995. Age 65 remains a popular retirement age, with just over a quarter (27 percent) of workers planning to retire then, a proportion that has remained fairly consistent over the past decade. Older workers generally expect to retire at a more advanced age than younger employees. Those age 40 and older are planning to retire at an average age of 68, compared to age 65 among people under 40.

The proportion of people who think they will be able to retire early has declined significantly over the past five years. Some 13 percent of workers are now aiming to retire in their early 60s, down from 18 percent in 2007. And the proportion of people who think they will retire in their late 50s has declined from 11 percent in 2007 to 7 percent in 2012. Just 6 percent of workers say they will retire before age 55, which is the same proportion of people who thought that in 2007.

Thoughts?

* Related…

* Editorial: ‘The moment of truth’: The mayor talked of the “moment of truth.” Quinn talks of a “rendezvous with reality.” We’d settle for a vote.

* WSJ Editorial: How to Do Pension Reform: Illinois Democrats are spearheading pension reform, and get this—they’re not merely tinkering around the edges.

* Chicago mayor seeks limits to COLA hikes for retirees

* Chicago mayor pushes for pension reform

* Chicago mayor brings clout to Illinois pension debate

* Chicago Mayor Says Without Pension Fix Residents Will Flee City, State

* Chicago Not Alone In Calling For Pension Cuts

* Emanuel presents pension problems to Illinois legislators

* D87 union: ‘We want seat at pension reform table’: President of the Bloomington Education Association Rich Baldwin said teachers can’t stomach everything in the package. He said he doesn’t know of any pension reform package the state’s unions have offered as a counter. “What we’re asking is we’d like to be at the table to discuss some of these things,” Baldwin said. “I’ll personally say some of what the governor is floating I could live with, but I can’t live with the entire package without the obligation that the state is going to commit to paying their part of the plan.”

  50 Comments      


Sen. Kirk releases video, thanks Illinoisans for patience

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You may have already seen this video of Sen. Mark Kirk’s stroke rehab progress, but it’s a heckuva thing, so here it is

* Coverage…

* Emotional Kirk thanks Illinois’ people for “patience” in first video: Kirk, 52, who has been in the care of the Rehabilitation Institute for the last several months, says he is anxious to get back to work but gives no timetable for doing so. He thanks the people of Illinois for “the patience they have given me to recover from a big stroke.”

* In video, Sen. Mark Kirk says he’s anxious to get back to work: In the video, the Highland Park Republican speaks confidently — and occasionally haltingly — into the camera and talks about being anxious to walk the 45 steps up to the Capitol to begin working again…. Video shows him walking determinedly, if not easily, with a walker and on a treadmill with the help of a harness and a physical therapist. Some shots show him using parallel bars to support himself with his right hand. Kirk says he hopes “to climb the 45 steps that my staff counted from the parking lot to the Senate front door to fight for the people of Illinois.”

* Sen. Kirk releases video showing his rehabilitation after stroke

* “My stroke” - Sen. Mark Kirk writes about his illness and rehabilitation

* Senator Mark Kirk walks, talks in video

  14 Comments      


Morning Shorts

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Owen Irwin

* Illinois House votes to retain auditor general

* Tenaska pitches plant that will run on natural gas

* Tenaska wants to strike a deal that eliminates coal

* Not-so-bright solar project

* State limits distribution of cigarette tax stamps during tax hike debate

* Illinois history agency gets new director

* New historic preservation agency director named

* State Lawmaker Wants Greater Transparency

* IL wants to bring nonprofits into transparency portal

* Ill. names 37 districts to receive school grants

* Immigrants Rally in Statehouse

* Lawmakers to sing, rap, raise money to help scholarship fund

* Training programs aim to prepare women for political arena

* City yanks protest permit already granted to nurses union

* Wrigley is not Fenway, alderman says

* Despite Chicago mayor’s intervention, Minnesota AG says she won’t back off Accretive probe

* Sangamon/Menard rural transit expected to start in fall

* Consultant: Centralized fleet would save city of Springfield millions

* Does IDOT move mean Illinois 159 work will be completed in Collinsville?

* Board votes to terminate Meredosia Superintendent Ruth Schneider

* Milwaukee mayor wins Democratic primary, will face Gov. Scott Walker in recall election

  4 Comments      


*** LIVE SESSION COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* BlackBerry users click here

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Wednesday, May 9, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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And then there were four…

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m coming a little late to this, but the Republican county chairmen in the 13th Congressional District has winnowed the possible ballot replacements for retiring US Rep. Tim Johnson to four

* Jerry Clarke, who previously served as Johnson’s chief of staff;

* Rodney Davis of Taylorville, an aide to U.S. Rep. John Shimkus, R-Collinsville

* Former Miss America Erika Harold, an attorney and Urbana native;

* Kathy Wassink of Macoupin County, who owns a business that serves students with special needs.

* The list of those voted off the island

The four candidates eliminated by the 14 Republican county chairmen in the district after a meeting Saturday in Springfield include former Illinois Agriculture Director Becky Doyle of rural Gillespie; Sam Spradlin, a Springfield truck driver; Frank Metzger, a retired ironworker, of Glen Carbon; and Michael Firsching of Moro, a veterinarian.

* Kurt Erickson looks at who is backing whom

“He grew up in the district, knows the challenges facing the people of the district and has the same values as the citizens of the 13th Congressional District,” said state Sen. Bill Brady, R-Bloomington, who is endorsing Clarke. “He has served our nation’s Armed Forces with distinction for more than a quarter century, including three tours of duty as an Army commander and pilot in Iraq.”

Davis also has some heavy hitters on his side. His boss, Shimkus, is backing him.

U.S. Reps. Aaron Schock of Peoria and Bobby Schilling of Colona are said to be in his corner. That trio could pull some heavy duty weight with the county chairmen.

At the same time, a number of the county chairmen are new. They may resent the prospect of top-down pressure from top party officials.

And then there is Harold, the 2003 beauty queen originally from Champaign. The chairmen will have to decide whether voters in the downstate district will support a Harvard educated lawyer from Chicago. They’ll also have to consider whether they’ll have the resources to fend off the national Democrats, who may want to stop Harold in her tracks because of her potential to move up in the ranks if she wins.

* Fundraising abilities were a factor

McLean County Republican Chairman John Parrott said the chairs asked each of the eight candidates various questions, including if he or she will be able to raise enough money for the race towards November.

“By the time we make the decision on this, on the 19th of May, it’s going to take anywhere from $8,000 to $10,000 a day to win this race,” Parrott said.

* In other campaign-related news, the Tribune discovered that a judicial candidate was arrested for allegedly stealing yard signs

Carl Boyd won the Democratic nomination in March for a subcircuit judge post in Cook County and is a shoo-in for the November election because he is running unopposed. But first he must deal with a trial late this month — his own. He faces a misdemeanor charge of allegedly stealing the campaign signs of a primary rival in the middle of the night.

Boyd, a veteran Chicago attorney, was arrested by Chicago police about 2 a.m. the day before the March 20 primary while allegedly in the possession of a dozen signs promoting the campaign of primary rival Chester Slaughter. […]

“I can tell you that the police officer stated that this would make for a great story,” he told the Tribune. “But he certainly did not see me pick up one sign. That much is true.”

The cop may not have seen Boyd pick up a sign, but the police report claims that 12 campaign signs were found in Boyd’s car.

* This may be no joking matter…

Dane Ciolino, a law professor at Loyola University in New Orleans who specializes in legal and judicial ethics, said that even though Boyd was charged with a misdemeanor offense, he could face “significant” problems with legal disciplinary officials. Boyd could be suspended from practicing law or if he wins election as judge, he could be removed from office, Ciolino said.

  34 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The SJ-R posted a photo of a ticket for last night’s big Speaker Madigan fundraiser last night. As the ticket notes, this was the 32nd annual fundraiser on the lake

* From last night’s SJ-R post

As you can see from the $150 ticket, Madigan has had this fundraiser for the last three decades, and it will be packed with lobbyists, lawmakers and other statehouse denizens. It’s no wonder they have to bus people from Lincoln Land Community College to the Island Bay Yacht Club.

* The Question: Caption?

  54 Comments      


Mayor Emanuel testifies to House committee on pension issues (Live Video)

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As subscribers were told earlier this morning, Mayor Rahm Emanuel will visit Springfield today and testify to a House committee

Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Tuesday makes his first physical trip to Springfield since he took office in Chicago last year.

Emanuel’s office confirmed he will testify at 10 a.m. before the Illinois House of Representatives Committee on Personnel and Pensions.

This isn’t the mayor’s first dealing with Springfield. He’s been known to work the phones (i.e. for Chicago speed cameras) and has a team in place, but this time, he’s traveling there himself. […]

Though the meeting is the only thing on the mayor’s Tuesday public schedule, sources say he has an open-ended return to Chicago.


* The hearing begins at 10 o’clock
. Emanuel will probably testify soon after it starts. Follow live Tweets here. You can find the General Assembly’s live audio/video feed for hearing room 114 here. The folks at BlueRoomStream.com have also provided us with a live embed



Live broadcast by Ustream

* Emanuel is not expected to speak to the media, but my intern Owen is on the scene, so we may have some video later.

  14 Comments      


Hundreds of Illinois Voices Opposing the Taylorville Energy Center

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois consumers face a projected cost increase of $400 million every year for the next 30 years from the proposed Taylorville Energy Center coal plant, so it’s no wonder over 300 organizations that operate and do business in Illinois have signed up on the STOP Coalition’s website to publicly oppose this project.

And just last week, 25 health, farm and environmental organizations signed a letter to Illinois lawmakers calling this project “unnecessary, unreasonably expensive, and risky for Illinois”.

The Taylorville Energy Center would have a devastating impact on Illinois families and businesses, who would pay up to nine times today’s market price for electricity to subsidize this project. That’s a lot of hard-earned money up in smoke.

And that’s why such a broad and diverse group of voices across Illinois – consumer advocates, environmental organizations, local government agencies, faith communities, and businesses large and small – are lining up to oppose this project.

You can take action today by urging your State Representative to “Vote NO” on any legislation that supports the Taylorville Energy Center.

You can also voice your opposition to the Taylorville Energy Center by signing on at STOP Coalition’s website or by “Liking” the STOP Coalition Facebook page.

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House Speaker blames media, downplays pension differences with Senate President

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The House Speaker tried to blame the media yesterday for pointing out some very real and substantive differences between himself and the Senate President about how to proceed with pension reform. As I told you yesterday, Speaker Michael Madigan introduced legislation that would change the MWRD’s pension plan in a deal worked out with most of the unions involved. It was seen as a model for reforming the state’s pension funds, but Senate President John Cullerton tacked on an amendment in the Senate which would’ve “nudged” employees into a new pension system by cutting their benefits in the current system. Cullerton eventually backed off that proposal and allowed Madigan’s version to stand. WUIS picks it up from there

Several news reports highlighted the differences. But Madigan was diplomatic.

MADIGAN: “I don’t know that Cullerton took that much of a different approach.”

The speaker says he’s keeping an open mind.

MADIGAN: “I wouldn’t get uptight about the opinions unless of course you want to run a story that there’s a big conflict. If you want to do that, well you’re going to do what you’re going to do.”

Despite what Madigan says, the legal differences between the approaches are central to the debate over what Illinois can and cannot do as leaders look to cut the cost of retiree benefits.

That reporter is exactly right. These may look like technical differences, but they are quite different approaches to pension reform. And if Madigan does his usual thing and insists on his way or the highway, he could divide the two chambers.

Cullerton’s idea looks far more constitutional to many Statehouse eyes. But the reality is that neither may pass judicial muster.

  12 Comments      


Madigan connects retiree health care to budget fix

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Speaker Michael Madigan basically told reporters yesterday that if his proposal to all but eliminate the requirement that the state pay retiree health insurance premiums doesn’t pass, then major budget woes will follow

Illinois’ House speaker isn’t sure lawmakers will finish their business ahead of the scheduled adjournment at the end of the month.

House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, says a lot of work still must be done, particularly on Medicaid. He says much of the budget hinges on the governor’s proposal to cut $2.7 billion out of the program, and Madigan says lawmakers must hit that target.

“If the governor’s requested reductions in Medicaid don’t meet the mark… we need to go back and rearrange all the other numbers,” he says.

Lawmakers will also spend the next three weeks trying to fix what some call the state’s unsustainable pension systems, but that has been difficult as many proposals have preemptively been called unconstitutional.

Madigan says he’s watching his proposal, S.B. 1313, work its way through the legislature. The proposal would eliminate free health care premiums for 78,000 state government retirees, which is how many retirees gave 20 years of service or more. Other government employees who gave less than 20 years, whose premium is calculated based on years of service, would also be affected.

“There’s much to be done in terms of the budget making. Significant reductions that must be done… and if we’re not able to pass S.B. 1313, then I would ask, what are we going to be able to do?” he says. “This will be a reduction budget.”

Translation: Without this cut, other budget items will have to be slashed.

* Related…

* Quinn linking Illinois budget cuts to job growth

* Day Care Providers Stress Urgency Over Funding Gap

* Editorial: Restore funds for child-care program

* Hospitals warn Medicaid cuts could mean fewer services

* Illinois House, Senate deliberating future of enterprise zones

* Dan Rutherford: Put partisan politics aside to fix our problems

* Former budget chief says state needs major reforms

  50 Comments      


*** LIVE SESSION COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Morning Shorts

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Owen Irwin

* Taylor concedes 96th Illinois House Democratic race to Scherer

* Decatur teacher prevails in tight legislative race

* Bill limits university spending on executive searches

* Pension shift plan would cripple most downstate Illinois school districts

* Illinois looks to convert freeways to tollways

* Is Midway Airport privatization deal back in the works?

* City prepares $2.1 billion in bond deals for Midway debt, water and sewer upgrades

* City’s failure to fix crumbling viaduct to cost taxpayers $450,000

* Alderman against Rahm’s plan for area around Wrigley

* Report: Tunney details grievances against Cubs plan

* Former West Chicago Mayor Rennels dies

* Even doubters invested in Peoria Ponzi scheme

* Rita Crundwell: Dixon, Illinois Comptroller Pleads Not Guilty To Stealing $53 Million

* High speed rail cited as critical issue downtown

* Suggestions plentiful for SDAT team

* City seeks funds to finish Capitol Avenue promenade

* State seeking new food vendor at New Salem

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a Statehouse roundup

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, May 8, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yours truly hanging out with Ice T at the Derby (for, like, two minutes)…

* The Question: Caption?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY: This just in…

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pension dispute boils down to individual vs. collective contract rights

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz gives us the story on what could be a very big disagreement between House Speaker Michael Madigan on one side and Senate President John Cullerton and Gov. Pat Quinn on the other over pension reform

As I reported in my blog on ChicagoBusiness.com last week, the bill at issue dealt only with the Water Reclamation District of Metropolitan Chicago. It would have enacted an agreement between the district and all but one of its unions that called on workers to contribute an additional 3 percent of their salaries to the pension fund and the district to double its contribution from property taxes.

The bill passed the House unanimously—a rarity when it comes to pensions. Since workers still would be getting a defined benefit, albeit one that would cost more, everyone seemed pretty happy.

But when the bill moved to the Senate, Mr. Cullerton claimed sponsorship and moved to amend it. Specifically, he wanted to add a clause allowing workers to stay in the current system without paying that extra 3 percent if they froze their pensions at current levels.

Mr. Cullerton obviously hoped that would be a model in negotiations on restructuring the state’s overall pension systems. The Chicago Democrat, like Gov. Pat Quinn, is a strong believer that pension changes cannot be imposed by fiat but only as part of a negotiated process in which workers have some choice.

Anyhow, Team Cullerton seemed to think it had the green light. They filled me in and re-tweeted an item I did on the president’s “big pension move.” And the chief sponsor of the House bill, Rep. Elaine Nekritz, D-Northbrook, told me she was OK with the change.

Then Mr. Cullerton abruptly yanked his own amendment. His folks make it pretty clear that was done at the request of Mr. Madigan. Indeed, Madigan spokesman Steve Brown effectively confirmed that, telling me, “I think the speaker felt the bill was fine as it passed the House.”

What’s not clear as of this writing is whether Mr. Madigan pulled out the rug unfairly at the last second, or whether Mr. Cullerton got a little ahead of things. Different sources are giving me different answers.

* More details from Chris Wetterich

But the two Chicago Democrats see the water reclamation district plan in different ways — Madigan believes changes can be imposed after negotiating with unions, while Cullerton thinks all employees have to be offered a choice.

Cullerton wants to let workers decide between an altered pension, which would cost the employee more but be better funded, and the current system, which would cost workers the same but could have other consequences, such as not having future raises counted when pensions are calculated.

The concept is called “consideration” by Cullerton and the Senate Democrats’ legal counsel, Eric Madiar.

The choice would apply to all public employees, not just those in unions. The state constitution makes public employee pensions a contractual right regardless of whether an employee participates in collective bargaining.

Cullerton and Madiar contend that simply negotiating with unions won’t be enough for any legislation to comply with the state constitution’s language. Late last month, after proposing a plan that follows the Cullerton-Madiar structure, Gov. Pat Quinn said he also believes that simply negotiating with the unions won’t pass constitutional muster.

In the case of the water reclamation district, only about 800 of the 2,000 employees are unionized.

I think Cullerton probably has the right idea here. How can unions negotiate pension changes for systems with lots of people who aren’t union members?

  52 Comments      


Deja vu all over again

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Call it “Blagojevich Lite” or whatever you want, but it became pretty clear last week that state Rep. Derrick Smith’s attorneys are planning the same sort of mockery of the system that Rod Blagojevich’s legal team did during those dark days after the former governor’s arrest.

“While I have been troubled to experience the shenanigans being played by the FBI, to lean on people around me and to get them to say bad things about me, I will not cower,” Smith (D-Chicago) told reporters after he pleaded not guilty to federal bribery charges.

Never mind the fact that nowhere in the arrest report or federal indictment is there any reference to anybody saying “bad things” about him. Smith is accused of taking a $7,000 bribe to help get a state grant for a day care operator, a business that was a creation of federal agents.

Smith also claimed that the people of his district “elected” him on March 20 because “they believed in me.” Yeah. Right. OK.

The voters gave him the Democratic nomination on March 20 despite the fact that he had been charged because party leaders warned them that Smith was up against a white, conservative Republican activist who was posing as a black Democrat. Many of those same Democratic leaders are now calling for Smith’s resignation.

Smith’s pledge to never “cower” in the face of the federal prosecution was right out of Blagojevich’s defiant playbook. Blagojevich loudly declared his complete innocence, vowed to fight to the end, said he had been persecuted by the feds and once even challenged the U.S. attorney to a manliness contest.

Right up until he checked himself into federal prison to serve a 14-year term, Blagojevich said the feds had the wrong guy. Smith, by the way, is now looking at 10 years in a federal penitentiary.

But it was one of Smith’s attorneys, Victor Henderson, who really brought the former governor to mind with his remarks.

Henderson told reporters that Smith had been entrapped, but the lawyer’s evidence of this entrapment was an allegedly phony government website and a fictitious day care center operator. That’s hardly proof of entrapment. Actually, it’s standard stuff for a federal sting operation.

And doesn’t claiming that Smith was entrapped into accepting a $7,000 bribe mean Smith and his lawyers are all but admitting that he took the money? And if he did take the cash, isn’t that enough right there to expel him from office?

The House doesn’t have to consider whether or not Smith is guilty under state or federal criminal statutes. This is not about criminality. It’s about politics.

Under its rules, the House merely has to establish “disorderly behavior” by the offending member. That isn’t a very high bar. Theoretically, the House could expel a member for spitting on the sidewalk if two-thirds of the members so voted.

Henderson did make a good point about the FBI failing to inform a judge of its informant’s extensive criminal record. And he gave the strongest indication yet that he planned to disrupt and distract the process from beginning to end when he quoted anti-Nazi Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemoller’s immortal poem about moral cowardice during the Holocaust.

“First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I am not a Jew. Then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak to, for me.”

“Today it’s Derrick Smith,” Henderson told reporters, according to Chicago Public Radio. “Who is it tomorrow?”

Needless to say, invoking the Holocaust to defend a client accused of taking a cash bribe is more than a bit much.

But now that the House Special Investigating Committee has allowed Smith and his legal team more than enough time to get their feet underneath them by continually postponing the inevitable, we can probably expect a lot more crud such as this.

Henderson told Illinois Issues magazine that his client plans to testify at future House hearings. The next one is scheduled for May 10.

If Henderson was telling the truth about Smith testifying, we can all expect an embarrassing circus.

* Henderson is also raising expectations of incredible new evidence that will clear his client’s name. Sound familiar? It should

Henderson accused the FBI of targeting his client because allegedly he would not supply information about Jesse White and other prominent Illinois public officials.

Henderson declined to provide details about what information the FBI allegedly sought. Druker strongly refuted Henderson’s charges, responding “the focus here is Derrick Smith and not Jesse White. These are just desperate charges.”

“There are going to be some developments that will begin to unfold in the next few days,” Henderson insisted. Smith has pled not guilty and appeared in court on April 30.

At one time, Blagojevich also hinted that the feds were after information about Barack Obama. That was just another of his lies.

* And Mark Brown has some news

A group of Democratic ward committeemen met behind closed doors Friday in search of a strategy to clean up the Derrick Smith mess. […]

An hour or so later, Secretary of State Jesse White, whose support of Smith was key to his earlier selection, emerged to say the group had developed a plan to either replace or defeat the accused lawmaker.

White said a delegation would be sent to speak directly with Smith to ask him to give up the Democratic nomination he won in the March primary. Smith’s victory came only after party leaders stepped in to keep the seat from falling into the hands of his opponent, the former executive director of the Cook County Republican Party.

Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) and Rep. Karen Yarbrough (D-Maywood) will be the official emissaries, White said. […]

If the diplomatic efforts fail, White said Democratic leaders resolved to field a third-party candidate to defeat Smith in November.

Thoughts?

  10 Comments      


Fun with numbers

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Tribune we find a story about the company which manages the state Lottery

Northstar Lottery Group — which took charge of daily operations July 1, a few days after the Illinois auditor general blasted the selection process — promised to boost revenue by more than $100 million.

While the dollars are indeed up, they are expected to fall $55 million short of their projections, renewing criticism from those who had opposed the deal.

* The company promised $825 million in total revenues. It’s on track to bring in $770 million. That may actually be a $100 million increase, as you’ll find if you read way down deep into the article explains…

Northstar said several factors led to the lowered forecast, chief among them the fact that the lottery’s revenue for the previous fiscal year was about $668 million, not the $712 million the state anticipated.

But, as the article notes, the Lottery claims it transfered $690 million last fiscal year to the state budget. Nobody could explain the discrepancy.

Northstar has to meet a specific goal or it’ll be fined. According to the Trib, if the company hits the $770 million projection, it would owe nearly $11 million in penalties

In a move aimed at avoiding possible penalties, Northstar wants the state to lower the goals.

Officials with Northstar and the Illinois Lottery refused to discuss what new revenue targets the company is seeking through arbitration.

What we really need here are the real numbers. The Lottery needs to start sharing. Pronto.

  6 Comments      


Man bites dog

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rare is the day when the Chicago Tribune editorial page blasts Republican state legislators on the budget, but today is that day

Patricia Bellock, Michael Frerichs, Raymond Poe, you are part of the problem.

Suzi Schmidt, Dave Syverson,you are not far behind.

They are all members of the Illinois House or Senate. They sit on the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability. Last week, they reviewed Gov.Pat Quinn’splan to close government facilities around the state.

Illinois has no money. It has to stop spending wherever it can. The governor has made some tough choices.

The commission voted on closing six major facilities the governor wants to close. The commission went 0 for 6.

House Republicans Bellock and Poe and Senate Democrat Frerichs didn’t vote to close one major facility.

Senate Republicans Schmidt and Syverson voted to close only one.

Look, there are plenty of really good reasons not to close some of those facilities. I even agree with some of them, disagree with others. There are decent arguments against closing all of them. For instance, this is from a Treasurer Dan Rutherford op-ed in the very same Tribune

I would prefer a long-range strategic plan before the state closes any of its mental health or correctional facilities

Legislating ain’t always easy, especially in times like these. But there are folks who talk a good game about cutting the budget and then won’t follow through.

* The Trib’s closer…

It’s time for Republicans to get in the game. You want more cuts in Medicaid than the governor has proposed? Put ‘em on the table. You want to spare local schools from pension costs — where’s your better idea? You don’t want to close a costly prison? Then name another state operation you will shut down tomorrow.

Step up.

Hard to argue with that.

* Other stuff…

* DNR hopes to create ’sustainable’ funding support for outdoors programs

* Editorial: Illinois Senate finally gives up scholarships

* Marin: Oh, the pain of giving up a perk

* Editorial: At last, a victory for common sense

  22 Comments      


Cutting Medicaid ain’t easy, Part 9,257

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Associated Press looks into “cutting fraud” as the answer to solving a big portion of Illinois’ Medicaid funding woes

Sen. Kirk Dillard, R-Hinsdale, has argued for years that much of Illinois’ Medicaid problem could be solved by rooting out waste and abuse. He says experts believe 10 percent of Medicaid money is spent improperly, which would amount to nearly $1.5 billion in Illinois.

Unfortunately, there’s little evidence to support that claim.

Dillard attributes the figure to the New York Times. He doesn’t specify, but he may be referring to a series of stories in 2005 on fraud in the New York state Medicaid program. The 10 percent figure popped up for two different kinds of fraud and abuse. One was an estimate of the problem in New York’s badly run Medicaid program, and the other was an estimate of losses in all health care nationwide, not just Medicaid.

Neither figure says anything about fraud and abuse in the average state Medicaid program.

A 2010 report by the National Health Care Anti-Fraud Association said a conservative estimate of fraud in the nation’s total health spending _ not Medicaid alone _ would be 3 percent, although it also noted the FBI had put the rate at somewhere between 3 percent and 10 percent. A spokesman for the group recently put national fraud loss at “tens of billions of dollars” but wouldn’t be any more specific.

The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services says it’s not aware of any 10 percent fraud estimate and doesn’t consider it to be accurate. The department’s fraud recovery each year amounts to tens of millions of dollars _ nothing close to the hundreds of millions that Dillard envisions.

Discuss.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a Statehouse roundup

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, May 7, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend and a shout-out to the new intern

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yeah, I know it’s only Thursday, but the GA is gone for the week and I have to go out of town tonight and didn’t think I’d be able to post tomorrow. I’ll be back Monday. Not much happened Thursday anyway, except for the Senate passing the legislative scholarship ban. And this

Chicago Teacher’s Union President Karen Lewis and other union leaders were reportedly in Springfield, Illinois Wednesday meeting with Senate President John Cullerton and Speaker of the House Michael Madigan in what’s been called a long meeting, according to sources familiar with the situation.

Lawmakers wanted an update on how negotiations with the City of Chicago are going. They’ve expressed concerned a teacher’s strike may happen.

Sources tell Ward Room that Mayor Rahm Emanuel is working furiously behind the scenes and would like to amend the new SB7 bill - as the teachers union sees it - changing the rules at mid stream on a strike authorization vote.

Emanuel reportedly wants the rules to be more specific, and lawmakers wanted to hear directly from the union.

* I’ve known Owen Irwin most of his life. He’s Tom Irwin’s son. Tom is, of course, Springfield’s legendary singer-songwriter and the music writer for the Illinois Times. He’s also one of my oldest Springfield friends.

A month or so ago, Owen asked if I could meet for dinner and get some advice about his future. He graduated summa cum laude from Bradley University with a degree in Economics. He’s since been doing some day-trading, but lately he decided he really wanted to try his hand at politics.

So, we talked for a long time about various options and jobs he could apply for. Finally, it occurred to me that maybe what Owen needed to do first was see if he even liked real politics up close and personal. So I asked if he’d care to intern for me in May. He said he’d love to and he started Wednesday afternoon. Within a half an hour he’d met Speaker Madigan and Leader Cross and then attended a big reception at the governor’s mansion. He says he had a great time. I believe him.

* Now that I have an intern again, we’re going to revive “Morning Shorts” next week sometime. You’ll also be seeing him around the Statehouse. Be kind, please. He’s not only my intern, he’s one of the best guitarists in town. Here he is on the left. Check out the windmill, man

The kid can play.

* Owen sat in with his dad Wednesday night at the Butternut Hut. I asked him yesterday if he’d be cool with doing that every Wednesday evening during May and he said he would. So, depending on the session schedule and Owen’s availability, we may have a weekly late night gathering for Capitol Fax types this month. Bonus!

Anyway, I thought you’d like to know.

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The never-ending nightmare: Child-care payments could be delayed three months

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oy

A new wrinkle in Illinois’ budget crisis unfolded Wednesday when Gov. Pat Quinn’s administration said it has begun to delay payments to more than 40,000 child-care providers.

The move could threaten the fragile budgets of many providers and the family finances of more than 85,000 low-income parents who receive state-subsidized child-care services.

The delays could mean no more subsidy payments to many child-care providers until July 1, said Januari Smith, spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Human Services.

“We don’t have the money,” she said. “We’re very well aware of the burden this will put on working families.”

* The response from Keith Kelleher, President of SEIU Healthcare Illinois and Indiana, which represents more than 35,000 home child care providers…

It’s hard to solve a state budget crisis by putting people out of work. Unfortunately, that’s precisely the predicament Illinois could put itself in, now that state officials have warned child care providers that they may not be paid for three months.

In the wake of yesterday’s announcement that the state has exhausted nearly all of its child care funding three months before the end of the fiscal year – leaving a $73 million shortfall that could incapacitate child care program for the foreseeable future – lawmakers should pass a supplemental appropriation to recover the money, before our already high unemployment rolls start to swell.

More than 35,000 home child care providers could see their businesses crippled by the funding shortage. These are not large commercial enterprises. They are small, independent providers who are already wrestling with fragile finances and simply cannot withstand a delay in their state payments. If they are forced to disrupt service, there will be a ripple effect of unemployment for the 85,000 working families who rely on the child care program to hold down a job and contribute the state’s ailing economy.

Let’s remember that the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) is key source of economic development, providing these 85,000 low-income families with a safe, secure learning environment for their children every day that allows them to go to work. If we allow funding for this program to dry up, we cripple the capacity for these parents to remain employed, which will only exacerbate the state’s budget woes both in the short and long run.

Even worse, the funding delay represent the first blow in a one-two punch that could cause the child care program in Illinois to collapse altogether. Governor Quinn has proposed $85 million in cuts to CCAP in his FY 2013 budget. These reductions would reduce access to the program at a time when the state should be redoubling efforts to help people stay on the job and rebuild our economy.

We urge lawmakers to not only pass a supplemental appropriation to plug the CCAP funding gap in the current fiscal year, but to restore the money that the Governor has threaten to purge from next year’s budget. Failing to do so will cost us even more in the future.

Man, do we ever suck.

  16 Comments      


Sen. Kirk is moving home

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a press release…

Statement from the Family of Senator Mark Kirk

CHICAGO - The office of Senator Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) today released the following statement at the request of Senator Kirk’s family:

“We are happy to say that after suffering a stroke in January, Mark has progressed to the point where he can move home with his family.He will continue to work on his recovery as an out-patient at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. He has begun a rigorous walking study program to further his mobility and independence while maintaining his schedule with staff.”

“We are grateful for the wonderful doctors and personnel at the RIC for their care of Mark, and to the residents of Illinois who have given him privacy and time to heal. We also thank everyone who has shared their prayers and wishes for his return to the U.S. Senate as soon as possible.”

Great news.

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Cross distances himself from “senior pension adviser”

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Marc Levine has an op-ed in Crain’s

Gov. Pat Quinn should be commended for his detailed proposal addressing Illinois’ pension crisis. Unfortunately, the proposal’s fine print prevents real reform and even lays the groundwork for substantially higher property taxes for all of us.

Mr. Quinn’s plan starts out strong, identifying logical reforms to address cost-of-living adjustments, retirement age and employee contributions. He then negates his own reforms, however, by offering all workers the option to avoid the changes if they agree to other, minor benefit adjustments the state needs to implement, anyway. The reason for this central flaw is Senate Democrats’ ongoing canard that any benefit changes are prohibited by the state constitution unless agreed to by union bosses.

So the only way the governor’s plan works is if workers voluntarily and irrationally elect to reduce their own benefits. Good luck with that.

The plan omits other vital reforms as well. More than 60 percent of pension liabilities are owed to current retirees. By leaving those benefits untouched, the plan is limited to tinkering on the edges. Most disappointing is that the plan does not include a 401(k) component and therefore continues to rely on the antiquated and unstable defined benefit structure for all teachers and workers.

* Levine is identified in the piece as “a senior pension adviser to House Minority Leader Tom Cross.” I asked Cross’ spokesperson today whether her boss agrees with his “senior pension adviser.” Her response…

He is an advisor to Tom on pension issues, we don’t agree with him on all of his points in his piece, but he is right on COLAs, increased contributions, and the pension cost shift.

* Let’s look at some of Levine’s proposals that Leader Cross apparently disagrees with. And it’s a good thing that Cross did distance himself from this stuff, because he’d be flooded with angry complaints if he actually agreed with him…

if they agree to other, minor benefit adjustments the state needs to implement, anyway

“Minor benefit changes”? Um, dude, telling state workers that their pensions won’t reflect any future pay increases is not a “minor” benefit adjustment. Also, taking away all of their government subsidy for their health insurance ain’t exactly “minor,” either.

ongoing canard that any benefit changes are prohibited by the state constitution unless agreed to by union bosses.

Actually, no. Nobody has ever said that. Newspapers have reported it, but they were unclear on the concept. These are individual, not collective, contract rights.

So the only way the governor’s plan works is if workers voluntarily and irrationally elect to reduce their own benefits

The can either elect to reduce their own benefits or get their benefits reduced drastically if they have to pay hundreds of dollars a month for health insurance and don’t get to count future pay increases.

More than 60 percent of pension liabilities are owed to current retirees. By leaving those benefits untouched, the plan is limited to tinkering on the edges.

Marc, have you even skimmed the state Constitution?

SECTION 5. PENSION AND RETIREMENT RIGHTS

Membership in any pension or retirement system of the State, any unit of local government or school district, or any agency or instrumentality thereof, shall be an enforceable contractual relationship, the benefits of which shall not be diminished or impaired.

And, finally…

Most disappointing is that the plan does not include a 401(k) component

So, you want the state to start paying into Social Security now?

* By the way, Levine’s not identified in the piece as such, but he is also the Illinois Policy Institute’s Senior Fellow for Pension and Investment Policy.

  17 Comments      


Maybe not

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I mentioned this story today in the subscriber section and now I’m starting to think that I’m kinda sorry I did

State lawmakers are poised to finally ban an oft-abused free college tuition program that’s drawn the scrutiny of federal prosecutors, a push that comes as a new scholarship program is being offered as a bargaining chip to win votes for a long-stalled proposal to build a Downstate power plant.

Those involved say the two issues are unrelated and not the result of the kind of political horse-trading that typically takes place in the General Assembly. But the timing has not gone unnoticed at the Capitol. […]

But even as one scholarship program may be going down, a new one is being offered as a way to attract support from lawmakers for a multibillion-dollar power plant Tenaska wants to build near Taylorville in central Illinois. The Nebraska-based energy company has reached an agreement with African-American and Latino lawmakers to put $1.5 million a year toward scholarships that would be awarded to disadvantaged youth throughout Illinois, according Bart Ford, a Tenaska vice president. […]

Tenaska’s scholarship proposal has grown to $1.5 million a year and $45 million over 30 years.

OK, the Trib makes it appear that the two issues are connected by saying that the “timing” of the Tenaska scholarship plan is somehow curious.

However, according to the Tenaska folks, the $1 million per year scholarship plan was first created in 2010. Back in October of 2011, Crain’s reported that there was a formal agreement on that particular plan with the Illinois Black Chamber of Commerce.

Tenaska says it reached another agreement with the Hispanic American Construction Industry Association which expanded the plan to $1.5 million with a total investment of $45 million. According to the Tenaska folks, the agreement with HACIA was reached on December 12 of last year.

The HACAI agreement is here. The extra cash is outlined in the policy statement.

It’s tough to see how the timing is so curious here since this program is apparently several months old.

Also, according to the Tenaska folks, “the recipients of the scholarships will be chosen by a board of individuals chosen by Tenaska, HACIA and the IL Black Chamber of Commerce.” Legislators will not be eligible to serve on that panel. They might be able to influence the panel, of course, but they won’t actuallyt be on it.

* Related and a roundup…

* Cullerton reverses support for legislative scholarships

* Controversial legislative scholarships could be ending soon

* Legislative scholarship perk could end in Illinois

* Gov. Pat Quinn’s statement: This is welcome news today – we are very encouraged by the Senate President’s move to abolish the legislative scholarship program. This is the right thing for deserving students who need financial assistance to attend college and the right thing for taxpayers who deserve better than the status quo. Governor Quinn has repeatedly pushed to abolish this often abused program and strongly believes there is no way to mend it. As the governor has said many times, scholarships – paid for by Illinois taxpayers- should be awarded only to those with merit who are in true financial need. Members of the House have already voted to end the legislative scholarship program, and we urge the Senate to pass this legislation swiftly.

* Aquifer bill faces more amendments, moves to different committee

* DCFS Data Reveals Confirmed Illinois Child Abuse, Neglect Projected to Drop 27% Since 2008

* House committee passes bill blocking Crete detention center

* Editorial: Panel was right to advise against closing prisons

* Editorial: Politicians talk cuts, but won’t OK them

* Editorial: Prison supporters must keep plugging away

* State budget crisis threatens funding for day-care providers, families

* Rockford area leaders give transport wish lists to politicians

* Surveyed CEOs find Illinois business climate poor

* Bill would legalize citizens to record police

  19 Comments      


ComEd Announces Smart Meter Deployment Plan for Northern Illinois

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

We are pleased to announce an exciting and important milestone for ComEd’s transformation of the electrical system serving northern Illinois. We have submitted our plan to the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) for the installation of smart meters across our service territory. Here are the highlights:

    • The deployment plan will occur over a 10-year period and introduce more than four million smart meters in all.

    • ComEd will install approximately 130,000 smart meters in 2012 in the following communities: Berkeley, Brookfield, Cicero, Elmwood Park, Forest View, Franklin Park, Harwood Heights, La Grange Park, Lyons, Norridge, North Riverside, Northlake, River Grove, Riverside, Rosemont, Schiller Park, Stickney, Stone Park and Westchester. Installation will continue in areas served by the Maywood operating center, where most of the meters were installed for ComEd’s AMI Pilot Program.

    • Beginning next year, we plan to install approximately 400,000 smart meters annually through completion of the program in 2021.

    • Our plan was developed in consultation with Governor Quinn’s Smart Grid Advisory Council and we’ve met with numerous community groups and stakeholders to discuss the plan.

We are proud of the collaboration and coordination that went into this plan and we are excited about the benefits smart meters will bring, including fewer and shorter outages, an improved customer experience, more opportunities for customers to control their energy consumption and save money.

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Cutting Medicaid Slashes Care

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The hospital community understands that the General Assembly has very difficult decisions to make this month, including on Medicaid. But it is important to remember that 2.8 million Illinoisans rely on Medicaid for their health care. More than one-third of all children in Illinois depend on the program, as well as hundreds of thousands of others such as the disabled, elderly and newly unemployed.

It is critical that legislators and health care providers work together on Medicaid reforms that are thoughtful and well-planned. Yes, reforms need to happen; we need to implement ways to make the Medicaid program as cost effective as possible with the best outcomes. But we need to be careful not to make rash decisions that result in unintended consequences and that harm patients.

The Illinois Hospital Association has provided the Governor and General Assembly with our Medicaid Savings Alternatives proposal – with real solutions instead of a $350 million (8%) rate cut to hospitals. (See http://tinyurl.com/6t8doaw)

True Medicaid reform does not happen through blunt cuts or a math exercise. Illinois hospitals are committed to partnering with the General Assembly to ensure that Illinoisans get the quality health care they need.

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The big lie on teacher pensions

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is not true

Teachers are supposed to pay almost 9.5 percent of paychecks into their own retirement accounts. But two-thirds of all public school teachers in the state don’t contribute anywhere near, and many contribute nothing at all, according to a report set for release Thursday by the Illinois Policy Institute, a government watchdog.

* The Teachers Retirement System addressed this canard last year

When a school district “picks up” the contribution, the money still comes from the teacher’s total compensation package. The “pick up” is in reality only a difference of when the district deducts the contribution from the teacher’s salary – either before taxes are deducted or after taxes are deducted. Teacher unions for years have negotiated this point with school boards as part of overall salary and benefit packages for teachers. There is an income tax savings for teachers if the contribution is deducted pretax.

In practical terms, no teacher writes TRS a check every month and mails it, so no teacher in Illinois directly “pays” TRS. All contributions from every teacher in every school district are deducted from paychecks by the school districts and sent to TRS in one lump sum. Member contributions to TRS in fiscal year 2011 totaled $909.6 million.

The IPI conclusion that taxpayers are paying “extra” for the pick-up rings false because, in the end, taxpayers pay for everything in a school district, including all teacher salaries. There is no “extra” $400 million.

If you carry the IPI’s conclusion about TRS contributions to other examples you’ll realize that everyone who participates in Social Security hasn’t paid their share of federal Social Security taxes because their employer is paying the tax for them. No one writes a check to Social Security when they get paid. The FICA tax is deducted from the paycheck. It’s the same thing for TRS contributions. One of the reasons Illinois teachers don’t contribute to Social Security or get a Social Security benefit is because they make the same type of paycheck contribution to TRS.

Teachers negotiate that pension pickup in their contracts, almost always in exchange for wage concessions. Things usually even out, but lower wages mean lower costs to the pension system in the long run. The Policy Institute claim is just plain silly.

* In other news, TRS’ executive director tried to fire up the base this week

While many questions remain about the future of Illinois teacher pensions, hundreds of people attending a forum Wednesday were told to get politically active if they want to keep what they have.

“Contact them (Gov. Pat Quinn and state lawmakers), call, email, write a letter. Get on a bus and go to Springfield. Be engaged with legislators all along. Describe your personal stories,” Teachers Retirement System Executive Director Dick Ingram told about 400 teachers, retirees and members of the public at a town hall-style meeting at Normal Community High school.

* And a Senate committee killed off a pension reform bill

An Illinois Senate committee on Wednesday rejected a measure that would force local government to pick up the tab when it gives an ex-lawmaker a big paycheck to fatten his pension.

The bill passed the House on a 110-0 vote in March. The legislation sought to require cities, villages or other governments employing a former lawmaker for short periods of time to pay for the additional pension expenses that go with the new job, said House Republican leader Tom Cross of Oswego, who sponsored the bill in his chamber.

Surprise, surprise.

  35 Comments      


Madigan points to Dixon as reason to block merger proposal

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Years ago, Illinois had one person who acted as both state comptroller and treasurer. That person got busted embezzling funds, and so the Constitution was changed to split the office into two entities. Speaker Madigan has always pointed to that history as his reason to block a constitutional amendment to combine the two offices, which supporters say would save $12 million a year. Madigan now has a new reason

Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s spokesman [yesterday] defended his opposition to a plan that would merge the Illinois comptroller and treasurer’s offices, by pointing at Dixon—the small northern Illinois town where the single fiscal officer now stands accused of embezzling some $53 million.

“If that doesn’t give them pause, I don’t know what will,” spokesman Steve Brown said of proponents who want to merge the two state offices. […]

Such a change would require a state constitutional amendment. But the Madigan-controlled committee process has kept the measure bottled up, against fervent Republican pressure to let it out for a vote.

“It’s simply tyranny,” the sponsor, Rep. Dennis Reboletti, R-Addison, said in angry floor debate [yesterday].

Madigan and other opponents say there’s no proof the merger would save money. More than that, they say, having separate offices for collecting, investing and dispersing state money ensures checks and balances, reducing the likelihood of fiscal shenanigans by any one office or officeholder.

Discuss.

* Meanwhile, from Illinois Statehouse News

A bill requiring local governments to post financial information could help to expose and prevent fraud, supporters of the measure say.

The Illinois Policy Institute, state Sen. Dan Duffy, R-Lake Barrington, and other lawmakers are pushing Senate Bill 3392, which would require local governments to post their budgets, audits and expenditures. The institute is a nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank that supports free markets.

The proposal comes after federal charges were filed against Dixon comptroller Rita Crundwell, who is accused of taking $53 million from taxpayers.

The Illinois Policy Institute looked at 130 local governments, and measured them based on transparency.

“After seeing how little public information is available on Dixon’s website, it’s no surprise that the alleged theft went under the radar for so long,” said Brian Costin, director of government reform for the institute.

Crundwell became comptroller of Dixon, a town of about 16,000 people, in 1983. Some seven years later, court documents said, Dixon began funneling city funds into personal bank accounts, using the money to buy a horse farm, several cars and a $2.1 million motor home.

  21 Comments      


Cross walks back Madigan health insurance plan

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The SJ-R has a report on a bill which passed the House Executive Committee yesterday that ostensibly ends government subsidies for state retiree health insurance, but does still allow CMS to set premium levels

House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego, a co-sponsor of the bill, said the state spends $876 million on retiree health insurance. He said 78,000 state retirees pay no premiums for their health insurance, something that costs nearly $7,400 per person.

“The goal is not to eliminate health-care coverage, but to make it sustainable,” Cross said. “If you want to have health-care coverage, I think the reality is people are going to have to pay something for it. You can’t provide it at no cost.” […]

Under the bill, the Department of Central Management Services would determine the level of premium payments retirees need to make. Cross plans to add an amendment stipulating that the payments be equal for all retirees, whether state workers or lawmakers, although he also said premiums could be indexed to a retiree’s pension.

“If someone is making $20,000, they should pay a different amount than someone making $100,000,” he said.

This will almost undoubtedly have to be a bipartisan roll call, so if Cross wants changes, he’ll probably get them.

* Madigan also tipped his hand a bit about how this won’t be the final piece of legislation

Madigan said that he does not consider the bill to be linked with negotiations about pension reform. Gov. Pat Quinn has proposed that employees be given the choice of keeping their subsidized health care benefits while seeing a reduction in their pension benefits or footing the bill for their health care while keeping their current benefits.

“[SB1313 is] a significant step, and a step we clearly ought to take if, for no other reason, for no other reason, to set the tone for the budget making for the next 30 days,” Madigan said. He said he is backing the bill, in part, because of a request from Quinn’s office. Quinn ducked the news media after a public appearance in Springfield today, and as of press time, his office had not replied to questions about the legislation.

* React

The American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 31, the public union that represents most of the state state’s workforce, said the legislation interferes with the collective bargaining process now under way. AFSCME Council 31 and Quinn are negotiating a new contract; the current one expires this summer.

The AFSCME Council 31 Legislative Director Joanna Webb-Gauvin said retiree health benefits have been viewed as compensation.

“This has always been a part of the collective bargaining process and we’re in opposition because we feel that process is being violated,” Webb-Gauvin said.

Beyond having an unfunded pension liability of $83 million, the state also has $54 billion in unfunded retiree health care liabilities, according to the Illinois Policy Institute, a right-of-center think tank.

  29 Comments      


Today’s quote: No sleep ’til Brooklyn

Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pat Quinn spoke yesterday to a couple of business groups and had this to say about the urgency of fixing the state’s pension and Medicaid problems and the need to get it done during the spring legislative session

Quinn said spending on pensions and Medicaid will cripple the state’s ability to fund education and capital needs, and he sought to drive home the urgency of the problem.

“I said (there are) 29 days or so until the end of the legislative session,” Quinn said. “Well, it’s 58 days if you don’t sleep, and I don’t plan to sleep.”

The governor previously said about the pension problem: “I know that I was put on earth to get this done.” So, I suppose when you’ve discovered your life’s main mission, you don’t sleep until you accomplish it.

* Related

‘Cause I’ll be rocking this party eight days a week

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Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Thursday, May 3, 2012 - Posted by Rich Miller

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