Or he could buy a new 2011 Cadillac CTS sedan with heated leather
seats, GPS, MP3, a sunroof and four cup holders. Instead,
taxpayers will shoulder nearly $50,000 a day, if Gov. Pat Quinn
calls lawmakers back to the Capitol for special session.
Each of Illinois' 177 legislators would receive $111 per diem
plus 39 cents per mile. For the 118 members of the House, the total
is $32,414, and for the state Senate's 59 members, the cost would be
$14,500. The grand total -- for just lawmakers -- is $46,914 each
day.
Brad Hahn, spokesman for Illinois Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka,
said these daily expenses could be used to whittle away at the
114,530 unpaid bills, dating back to Dec. 29, that sit on Topinka's
desk.
In 2007 and 2008, the last time Illinois lawmakers spent their
summers in special session, the daily expense was $40,000. Former
Gov. Rod Blagojevich ordered lawmakers back to the Capitol for a
record 26 special sessions in those two years, but few lawmakers
attended, so the actual costs were less.
The nearly $50,000 daily expense facing taxpayers now could be
avoided if legislative leaders call lawmakers back for regular
session, said John Patterson, spokesman for state Senate President
John Cullerton, D-Chicago. Lawmakers are only paid for special
sessions between June and the beginning of the veto session in
October. They would not be paid for regular session days.
"Our hope is we can come to an agreement so there won't have to
be a special session," Patterson said.
Legislative leaders can call for additional regular session days,
but Quinn this past week said he is looking to call a special
session, so lawmakers can address questions about added spending and
the statewide construction plan.
Steve Brown, spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan,
D-Chicago, said the speaker will meet with Quinn on Wednesday to
discuss the need for a special session.
"The governor has a variety of options," said Brown. "Quinn could
use the lapse-period spending (extension) provided by the
Legislature."
That lapse-period spending would allow summer construction to
continue and give Illinois until December to pay bills normally due
in July.
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Quinn has said he wants a special session so lawmakers can work
out a dispute over $430 million in new spending for education and
human services that has been linked to the statewide construction
program.
Adam Andrzejewski, former candidate for governor and conservative
advocate, said Quinn should be calling lawmakers back to cut
spending even further.
"Illinois' special sessions are costly to taxpayers on many
levels," said Andrzejewski. "The sessions cost $50,000 per day and
are used to fund insiders, road contractors and politically
connected vendors. In a bankrupt state, the gravy train rolls on."
A special session may come with a financial cost, but it also may
have a bigger political payoff for the governor in the long term,
said Kent Redfield, political science professor at University of
Illinois Springfield.
"If you bring everybody back to Springfield and you actually
accomplish something, then that's worth the costs," Redfield said.
"It's risk-rewards sort of thing for the governor."
[Illinois
Statehouse News; By BENJAMIN YOUNT]
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