Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar


Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives


Previous Post: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Next Post: Rush to endorse Stroger, and other Cook County campaign news

Differing proposals for McPier, and a legislative roundup

Posted in:

* Mayor Daley and Gov. Quinn unveiled a proposal to help reform McCormick Place’s cost structure yesterday, but the House Democrats have other ideas….

The proposal announced by the mayor and the governor calls for giving convention center officials more control over labor rules and taking some of the power away from the many trade unions that work at the convention center, including the right to strike. The proposal also includes an effort to restructure the crushing debt schedule facing the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, which owns and operates the convention hall and Navy Pier.

But in Springfield, lawmakers threw cold water on the idea of giving any more authority to the current McPier managers, appointed by the mayor and governor. Instead, a House committee sent a bi-partisan message with an 11-0 vote for a bill that would dump the current McPier board and put in place a smaller interim panel to examine the growing expenses and loss of convention activities.

“We’re at a crisis, a crisis of management,” said House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie, D-Chicago, Madigan’s top lieutenant. She said lawmakers would not consider going along with the work rule changes or giving the convention authority more borrowing power until they know what went wrong.

“It’s time for a little new broom, a little sweep clean,” Currie said. “If they can convince us that it makes economic sense to extend the taxes or extend their borrowing power, well, we have the opportunity to come back and do it.”

More from Crain’s

“A few hundred workers in one building” would lose some rights, McPier Chairman John Gates said, but in exchange, “Thirty-five thousand (industry) workers would save their jobs.”

One top labor leader, Chicago Federation of Labor President Dennis Gannon, had a mixed reaction to the proposal.

Auditing contractors is a good idea, one that workers have sought for many years, Mr. Gannon said. But despite several questions on the subject, he declined to take a position on the public employment/no-strike clause. “I need to run that up the flagpole with the unions down there (at McCormick Place),” Mr. Gannon said.

* In other legislative action

Prosecuting attorneys would receive advance warning about the early release of prison inmates under legislation a House committee approved Monday.

As proposed, the Department of Corrections would have to notify the relevant state’s attorneys at least 14 days before an inmate could be released early. State law presently proscribes only that state’s attorneys get “reasonable” notice before an inmate is let out before the scheduled date. […]

The amendment approved Monday also will require inmates to serve at least 60 days in the state correctional system before review for early release.

State Rep. Jim Sacia, a Republican from Pecatonica, said he would like to see another addition that would require victims, too, be notified.

* A committee also advanced a bill to allow the state to borrow $250 million to help ease the financial crunch on human service providers…

Gov. Pat Quinn could get the ability to borrow additional millions to make health care payments under legislation that gained initial support from lawmakers on Monday.

Quinn’s attempts at short-term borrowing have been thwarted by Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes, who’s criticized the governor for being inconsistent in his plans and having no real way to pay off the loans. […]

Lawmakers entered the picture on Monday when an Illinois House committee voted to let Quinn access federal health care money to leverage additional borrowing since Hynes has not gone along. If the House and Senate were to approve this deal, Quinn may not need Hynes’ approval.

* Also

Although they rejected the idea in October, the Illinois House is again mulling whether to give Gov. Pat Quinn extra time to craft a proposed state budget.

In action Monday, a House committee endorsed legislation that could eventually push Quinn’s budget address into March. Usually, the governor’s budget plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1 is presented in mid-February.

* And

Republicans Monday continued to push an idea to give people a penalty-free chance to catch up on back taxes in order to generate some quick cash for the struggling state budget.

Republicans first floated the so-called “tax amnesty” plan last year as a chance to get $100 million immediately to pay for the state’s largest need-based college scholarship program.

Democrats largely ignored the idea then, and lawmakers approved spending $200 million on the Monetary Award Program without a way to come up with the money.

At a hearing Monday, a House panel discussed the tax amnesty plan again, but declined to vote on it.

* Meanwhile, Springfield hotel owners want more money

Downstate hotel owners, including those in Springfield, will have to wait to see any adjustment in state reimbursement rates.

The latest effort to get a change went nowhere when it was presented to the Governor’s Travel Control Board in December. […]

In an e-mailed response, Alka Nayyar of the Department of Central Management Services said lodging rates for downstate hotels are set by the Travel Regulation Council, which hasn’t raised downstate rates since 2003.

The Springfield state rate is $70 per night. The federal lodging rate is $83.

* In legislative campaign news, the Chicago Reader has a very good article about how the IVI-IPO endorsement process was subverted by the 47th Ward regulars

On December 29, a group of north-side members of the Independent Voters of Illinois-Independent Precinct Organization gathered to endorse attorney Dan Farley as their candidate in the upcoming Democratic primary for 11th District state representative. This was a coup for Farley, a first-time office seeker. North-side candidates covet the group’s stamp of approval, which gives them an aura of machine-fighting progressivism popular with voters.

The joke of it all is that there was hardly a real independent in the room that night.

In fact, leading the charge for independence was none other than 47th Ward alderman Eugene Schulter, one of Mayor Daley’s most loyal north-side City Council allies.

The IVI-IPO’s endorsement process is a joke.

* And GOP state Rep. Suzie Bassi’s primary opponent has a new Internet video criticizing the incumbent for missing 242 votes during her last term. Take a look


posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 9:59 am

Comments

  1. Am I the only one who sees the irony in the legislature telling McPier that there is a “crisis of management” and that it’s time for a “little sweep clean”?

    Comment by Old Shepherd Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 10:11 am

  2. No, Old Shepard. You’re not the only one.

    Comment by Will County Woman Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 10:14 am

  3. Yes, the IVI-IPO’s endorsement process is a joke. Their extortion of all candidates winning the endorsement to participate in their 200,000 leaflet distribution is far worse.

    Comment by Chicago Cynic Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 10:15 am

  4. The Quinn/Daley proposal really has some meat to it as to getting to the root of the most outrageous Mac Place charges by labor and show vendors.

    That makes the new management makeup Currie is talking about that more important. Currently, the mayor gets the Board Chair while the governor gets the CEO. It seems to me that the CEO would have a much stronger hand under the Quinn/Daley proposal.

    Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 10:20 am

  5. As far as I’m concerned, doing a story on how the IVI/IPO endorsement process is a joke is about as shocking as printing the times of sunrise and sunset in your local paper!

    Comment by fedup dem Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 10:42 am

  6. Daley helped to construct the outrageous costs at these two behemoths and staff them with well connected pols…I find it the epitome of irony that he priced his venues out of the competition for tradeshows and is attempting yet again to have the unions bear the brunt of the pain…let’s get rid of a few overpaid, underworked staffers as well Mr. Mare…

    Comment by Loop Lady Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 11:03 am

  7. Does anyone know of reliable groups for endorsements? Perhaps that could be a question of the day.

    Comment by Just Wonderin Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 11:10 am

  8. Throw the bums out…so we can put in new bums?

    it seems the defect in the board is in part based on the selection process; I support replacing the board, but not with more appointees. Elect em.

    Comment by Ghost Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 11:13 am

  9. Chicago Cynic read my mind. The only benefit of this endorsement is the pleasure of giving them your hard raised campaign cash for them to print an endorsement leaflet that gets thrown in the trash as soon as it gets through the mailbox.

    Farce is too kind a word to explain this endorsement process.

    Comment by Anon Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 11:23 am

  10. Hmmm…good call on Jim Sacia’s part.

    Comment by The REAL Anonymous fka Anonymous Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 2:36 pm

  11. The Quinn/Daley proposal is okay. Everyone’s taking a hit in Illinois and the unions are going to have to take theirs. I don’t know how else we’re going to get out of this hole. Conventions have a huge impact (ask folks from Orlando) so this needs to get fixed, pronto.

    Comment by MarkMac74 Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 4:30 pm

  12. http://www.qctimes.com/news/local/article_cbdac698-ffba-11de-a17e-001cc4c002e0.html

    ==State Rep. Bill Black, R-Danville, said it appeared the legislature was doing an end-around on Hynes, who is challenging Quinn for the Democratic nomination for governor.==

    *roll eyes*

    No, it appears that the legislature doesn’t want to have to deal with a flurry of angry and panicking social service provider phone calls and e-mails etc. So, the GA is just taking the easy way out and making matters worse. It’s not about Hynes, it’s about lazy and cowardly people not wanting to the do the job that they beg every four years to get or to keep.

    What part of you work for the people of Illinois, not Mike Madigan or yourselves, do Illinos lawmakers not understand?

    Borrowing without having a means in place to re-pay for it makes absolutely no sense, and is how we find Illinois in the sad & %&*$#@-up conditon the state is in today and for many more days to come.

    Comment by The GA is back at it again Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 4:35 pm

  13. WOW Democrat friends of the “working man” Quinn and Daley want to have the legislature re-write a labor aggreement? And really WOW Union Boss $500grand Gannon cant say NO to them, without “running up the flagpole”. Everyone lets protect our collective as**ss.As jobs and revinue leave Ill.how quaint.Oh question? does the new bill purge the board or can Quinn and Daley re-appoint they’re cronnies?

    Comment by bwana Tuesday, Jan 12, 10 @ 5:25 pm

Add a comment

Sorry, comments are closed at this time.

Previous Post: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Next Post: Rush to endorse Stroger, and other Cook County campaign news


Last 10 posts:

more Posts (Archives)

WordPress Mobile Edition available at alexking.org.

powered by WordPress.