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	I kid you not. 
		
			
				| TAXPAYERS GET THE BIRD: Illinois is flying to Kansas to 
				round up prairie chickens and bring them back to the Land of 
				Lincoln. | 
	State aircraft are flying to Kansas and transporting prairie chickens back 
	to the Land of Lincoln.
 
 And at a time state lawmakers are looking at raising the state income tax, 
	Illinois state employees have been hiking across Kansas trapping these 
	chickens.
 
 Talk about fowl fiscal deeds.
 
 State pilots have flown between Illinois and Kansas not once, not twice but 
	14 times this year taking prairie chickens to downstate Jasper and Marion 
	counties.
 
 “Illinois is the Prairie State and prairie chickens are an endangered 
	species here, so we thought it would be a good idea to bring them back,” 
	said Scott Simpson, site manager for Prairie Ridge State Natural Area in 
	Newton, Ill.
 
 
	The feds are chipping in $337,000 toward the program and the state will pay 
	$117,000. Some of the cost to state government may be offset by private 
	fundraising done by the Audubon Society, Simpson said.
 
 That puts the total cost of the program at $455,000 for the next three 
	years.
 
 That’s hardly chicken scratch.
 
 At a time when both our federal and state government are running massive 
	deficits, is this really the best use of taxpayer money?
 
 So far this year, the state has relocated 50 cocks and 41 hens. That puts 
	the cost of the program at $1,166 per bird.
 
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			 And the expenditure already has 
			lawmakers grousing. “This is an egregious abuse of tax 
			dollars,” said state Rep. Bill Mitchell, R-Forsyth. “I don’t care if 
			the money is coming from a grant or not. It doesn’t seem like a 
			smart way to do business.”
 Mitchell long has been a budget hawk, calling for the elimination of 
			most of the state air fleet, which he said is mostly used to ferry 
			lawmakers and other bigwigs between Chicago and Springfield. In 
			2013, the state spent $7.3 million operating its aircraft.
 
 It would be much cheaper for lawmakers and others to drive or take a 
			train.
 
 It ought to be pointed out that this is all happening at a time that 
			basic state services are being cut, state pensions are underfunded 
			by more than $100 billion and Illinois has at least $6.7 billion in 
			unpaid bills. And now lawmakers are backpedaling on their promise to 
			let the “temporary” 67 percent income tax hike expire.
 
 In other words, our fiscal chickens are coming home to roost.
 
 Despite this, taxpayers are spending nearly half a million dollars 
			to fly prairie chickens here.
 
 That’s nothing to crow about.
 
 The Illinois Department of Natural Resources spokesman did not 
			return calls seeking comment.
 
 But it appears the state is spending the money and the taxpayers are 
			getting the bird.
 			
			[This 
			article courtesy of
			
Illinois Watchdog.] 
            
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