CHICAGO-AREA WATER DISTRICT OFFICIAL RESIGNS WITHOUT EXPLANATION,
COLLECTS $95K SEVERANCE PACKAGE
Illinois Policy Institute/
Eddie Damstra
David St. Pierre is the latest Illinois
government employee to receive a generous severance package, despite
leaving under questionable circumstances.
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The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago,
or MWRD, the special-purpose state agency tasked with treating wastewater and
preventing flooding in Cook County, agreed July 12 to award a $95,000 severance
package to former executive director David St. Pierre, according to the Chicago
Sun-Times. The agreement also includes six months of health insurance.
St. Pierre had resigned from the agency effective June 27, following an
investigation by the MWRD board, the contents of which have remained
undisclosed. The agency officially announced St. Pierre’s resignation July 5,
but declined to offer an explanation for his termination. MWRD Commissioner
Debra Shore said the investigation did not involve sexual or criminal conduct
but refused to comment further, due to a non-disparagement clause in the
severance agreement.
St. Pierre is far from the first government worker in Illinois to receive a
substantial severance payout under unclear circumstances. In fact, such
extravagant severance packages, or “golden parachutes,” have been awarded to
public officials across the state – from former Metra CEO Alex Clifford to
former Des Plaines Elementary District 62 superintendent Floyd Williams Jr. –
despite resigning amid controversy.
In 2016, College of DuPage trustees paid former President Robert Breuder a
$763,000 severance package – one of the largest in state history – despite
having hid nearly $100 million in public expenditures during his tenure.
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More recently, Southern Illinois University, agreed
to a $215,000 severance payout for outgoing President Randy Dunn.
The university also offered Dunn a six-figure job as a visiting
professor at the university’s Edwardsville campus, a position he
will assume Jan. 1, 2019.
Fortunately, some Illinois lawmakers are seeking to
curtail golden parachutes for government workers. Senate Bill 3604,
which passed unanimously in the Senate and with strong bipartisan
support in the House of Representatives, would bar government
employees terminated due to misconduct from receiving severance pay.
Moreover, the bill caps all severance payouts for government
employees at an amount equivalent to 20 weeks of compensation. SB
3604 has been sent to Gov. Bruce Rauner’s desk and currently awaits
his signature.
Illinoisans face one of the highest tax burdens in the nation. Too
often, taxpayer money is wasted on parting gifts for government
officials. While the details surrounding St. Pierre’s resignation
remain concealed, what’s clear is that eliminating golden parachutes
would reduce government waste. Rauner should sign SB 3604 into law
and bring an end to rewarding failure in public office at the
expense of taxpayers.
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