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While political analysts have agreed that Daley likely would have won another four years on the job, he was facing grim times at City Hall with a projected budget deficit of almost $655 million. A defensive Daley insisted that privatizing the city's parking meters was a good financial decision, despite widespread complaints about higher parking fees and criticism that the city gave up a money-making operation. He said the only problem was the rollout of the operations to a private company. The mayor said there's nothing major he wants to get done before leaving office in May. He said the city's work will continue and he's planning no dramatic gestures
-- like the time he dug up a small lakefront airport at night so it could become a nature park. "I would never make a move that would be a detriment to the next mayor, because it would be unfair," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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