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*** UPDATED x1 *** Gaming and Unions and a Roundup, oh my

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*** UPDATE *** If you’re watching the veto session live blog, you already know that the newly revised gaming bill passed the House Executive Committee 8-2.

[ *** End Of Update *** ]

* As I write this, the House Executive Committee is debating the newly revised gaming expansion bill. Watch the proceedings at our live blog. The Tribune has lots of details on the new bill

The new Chicago casino would keep its 4,000 gambling positions but wouldn’t be allowed to station them at the city’s airports. Slot machines would no longer be allowed on the state fairgrounds in Springfield. Quinn didn’t want the gambling machines there because the fair is a family destination.

Along with Chicago, new casinos still would be authorized for Rockford, Danville, the south suburbs and Park City in Lake County. Quinn specifically had objected to designating Park City as a location for a new casino when he outlined his framework for what would be a more acceptable gambling expansion plan. Quinn preferred to designate Lake County as a whole instead.

Overall, there would be 7,000 fewer authorized gambling positions than in the plan lawmakers approved in late May, which Quinn threatened to veto.

The current 10 riverboat operators would get 4,000 fewer positions under the new plan — being allowed to expand from 1,200 spots to only 1,600 instead of the 2,000 originally promised.

The four new casinos outside Chicago would get 1,600 fewer positions total — each being allowed 1,600 positions to start instead of the 2,000 previously promised. The rest would be cut from the Quad City Downs track and the fairgrounds.

Gov. Pat Quinn, of course, opposes slots at tracks. But a bill without those slots wouldn’t pass. Quinn also wanted a campaign contribution ban from casino owners, but that was dropped as well. Quinn’s campaign received hundreds of thousands of dollars last year from the Pritzker family, which owns part of a casino, and from the children of the Des Plaines casino owner.

* In other news, Illinois Statehouse News has a good report on yesterday’s hearing on Speaker Madigan’s proposal to set a cap on wages and benefits that can be negotiated by the state’s public employees unions

In the fight for control over Illinois’ purse strings, House Speaker Mike Madigan says the Legislature, not Gov. Pat Quinn, decides how to spend the taxpayer’s money and balance the Illinois budget.

“I don’t necessarily subscribe to the view that what the executive (branch) does binds the legislative (branch),” the Democrat from Chicago said at a statehouse hearing Monday here.

The hearing allowed Madigan to further showcase his legislative resolution that would allow the Legislature to indicate how much the state can spend on employee pay during upcoming contract negotiations between Quinn and the state’s largest public-sector union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, or AFSCME.The contract expires in June.

“One of our responsibilities, under the constitution, is to adopt a balanced budget. Which means, under the constitution, we are expected to be involved in budget making,” Madigan said. “We do not want to replace the governor in negotiations.”

Henry Bayer, executive director for AFSCME Council 31, said Monday that the Legislature gave Quinn the authority that Madigan wants to change.

“The Legislature passed the current collective bargaining (legislation), and gave to the governor the power to negotiate collective bargaining agreements,” said Bayer. “We’ve been doing that … since 1984.

But Madigan said Illinois is broke and the Legislature needs to have input in the negotiations.

* More

“We do not want to replace the governor in negotiations,” Madigan said. “It’s about getting a handle on costs. It’s not about repealing collective bargaining.”

The resolution says the state “will appropriate no more than X% for wage increases” for union contracts. The “X” percentage has yet to be worked out.

Bayer said the legislature gave the governor authority to negotiate contracts for employees under his jurisdiction. Putting a limit on raises before negotiations start “does have an impact on collective bargaining very clearly.” he said. Moreover, union members will look at the number as the minimum the state can afford, he said.

“I’m not sure this will do what you want to accomplish,” Bayer said.

* Roundup…

* Big issues undecided as end of Ill. session nears: Advocates for the mentally ill are pushing lawmakers to restore $30 million that they say was mistakenly cut from their funds. They also want to block Quinn’s plan to close three state mental centers, arguing that the governor doesn’t have a clear plan for treating the people now living in those centers. The National Alliance on Mental Illness says Illinois has cut mental health funds by $187 million since 2009, or nearly 32 percent. Only three other states have cut a bigger share.

* Quinn paints bleak picture for Tinley Park Mental Health Center

* Plenty on the table heading into last week of veto session

* Lawmakers betting on new gambling plan

* Unions: Lawmakers shouldn’t be involved in collective bargaining process

* Illinois legislators return to capitol for round two of veto session

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 11:17 am

Comments

  1. –Advocates for the mentally ill are pushing lawmakers to restore $30 million that they say was mistakenly cut from their funds.–

    You so-called “advocates” should be ashamed of yourselves.

    Can’t you see the General Assembly is busy today addressing the most pressing issues of our lives?

    For having the terrible manners to speak out of turn for your so-called “cause,” I hope the GA takes every time you have and gives it to the nice people from CME. As we’ve been hearing for weeks, all of us in the State of Illinois have been very “unfair” to them.

    Comment by wordslinger Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 11:38 am

  2. Wordslinger

    It is incredible that the advocates for the mentally ill or those greedy teachers who want a pension just don’t realize that giving hundreds of millions to the CME or sears is the right thing to do.

    Comment by Fed up Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 12:02 pm

  3. This thread should have came with a warning ‘put coffee mug down before opening and reading comments’.

    Comment by Cindy Lou Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 12:18 pm

  4. “The current 10 riverboat operators would get 4,000 fewer positions under the new plan — being allowed to expand from 1,200 spots to only 1,600 instead of the 2,000 originally promised.”

    Isn’t that a decrease of 400 (rather than 4,000)?

    Or are the General Assembly’s numbers guys doing you math now?

    Comment by titan Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 12:30 pm

  5. @titan, perhaps it is a decrease of 400 per operator. With 10 operators, the overall decrease is 10X400 = 4,000.

    Comment by Robert Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 1:23 pm

  6. I do not understand why a House Democrat would vote for the bill. The vote is certainly going to cost them in support from what has been a core portion of their base. Those whose pensions would be diminished will never forget which members voted for it. Further it is a costly vote for legislation that is unlikely to be implemented. The Senate will probably kill it. If the Senate does not, Quinn could be expected to veto it in order to recover some of his base. Even if it gets passed and signed then rejection by the courts is probable.

    A better, and constitutional, solution needs to be adopted.

    Comment by east central Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 1:23 pm

  7. Oops, meant for my note to appear in the Pension thread. My apologies.

    Comment by east central Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 1:25 pm

  8. The $30 million restortation of funds to mental health services is shifting revenue from the All Kids program to mental health. The eligibility requirements to All Kids was changed and the funds previously allocated to All Kids would support mental health. The question remains: Will those funds actually make it to the community where the most help is needed?

    Comment by Stooges Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 3:28 pm

  9. “One of our responsibilities, under the constitution, is to adopt a balanced budget. Which means, under the constitution, we are expected to be involved in budget making,” Madigan said.

    Too bad no one pointed this out to him a decade ago.

    Comment by CitizenF Tuesday, Nov 8, 11 @ 6:55 pm

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