This time, the governor added what it appears he hoped would be sweeteners for
the financially troubled Chicago Public Schools system, including two years
worth of CPS pension payments made by the state at about $200 million each.
Further, the bill would allow CPS to end the practice of picking up the employee
pension contribution.
Lesley Nickus, Illinois News Network
Lesley Nickus, Illinois News Network
Gov. Bruce Rauner
The governor also proposes an additional $74 million for high-poverty school
districts, as well the formation of a commission to study and suggest a new
general state aid formula for Illinois schools.
But the governor is again tying those ideas to another set of proposals that
Democrats — who hold supermajorities in both chambers of the Legislature — have
consistently turned a cold eye toward:
Local-option opt outs from much of collective bargaining for public workers.
Local-option opt outs from the state’s Prevailing Wage Act.
Changes to the state’s worker’s compensation system, including a new “causation”
standard, or standard by which an injury is deemed compensable because it is
work-related.
“I believe this is the single most important piece of legislation we can pass
this session,” Rauner said in a news conference at the James R. Thompson Center
in Chicago. “This is good bipartisan reform.”
“This will be a transformational change and improvement for the state of
Illinois and allow us to move forward and complete the rest of the budgeting
progress,” the governor said.
Democrat leaders responded with a “no,” saying the governor is trying to connect
unlike issues.
“We’ve been talking about and taking votes on these things for the last eight
months. Unless the governor has unleashed a new wave of persuasion, I expect the
reaction (in the House) will be the same,” said Steve Brown, spokesman for
Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago.
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Brown also reiterated the speaker’s stance on Rauner’s proposals
regarding collective bargaining, prevailing wage and workers
compensation: “There’s a general belief statewide that harming the
middle class is not going to help the prosperity of Illinois,” he
said.
House Democrats urge the governor to “get back to talking about
the budget. The budget is still Job 1,” Brown said.
Reaction from Senate Democrats was similar.
“The governor’s proposal is totally unacceptable,” said John
Patterson, a spokesman for Senate President John Cullerton,
D-Chicago.
Patterson called it a “thinly veiled series of half measures
attempting to mask (Rauner’s) intent to slash middle-class wages and
benefits.”
He advocated Cullerton’s own plan, Senate Bill 318, which
establishes a two-year local property tax freeze; has the state pick
up a roughly $200 million payment for Chicago Public Schools; and
changes the payment schedule or “ramp” for CPS.
It would also end the state’s general aid formula for schools by
June 1, 2017, to be replaced by a new one drafted much like in the
Rauner proposal. It does not include changes to collective
bargaining, prevailing wage or workers compensation law.
Senate Bill 318 passed the House on a 37 to 1 vote, with 18 members
voting present, earlier this month. It has not yet been called for a
vote in the House.
Rauner argues the measures in his proposal — along with reforms such
as independent legislative redistricting and term limits for elected
officials — are necessary to lift Illinois from running economic
crisis; instill confidence in the state’s political and economic
environments; attract employers and jobs; and lift the standard of
living for all.
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