The Illinois House adjourned for spring break after legislative
session ended March 8. House members won’t return to Springfield for over a
month, with the next regular session scheduled for April 9.
State representatives spent their final day of legislative session in March
approving seven resolutions and two bills. Lawmakers also passed 14 bills out of
committee.
The lengthy break gives many members time off to campaign during primary season,
with voters heading to ballot boxes March 20.
 Though their work is technically part-time, Illinois’ state lawmakers are among
the highest paid in the nation. Illinois state lawmakers, taking home a base
salary of nearly $68,000 a year, are paid far more than lawmakers in neighboring
states. The average lawmaker salary including bonuses is $82,000.
[to top of second column] |

When adding the cost of health insurance, dental
insurance, mileage reimbursements, per diem payments and normal
pension costs, taxpayers are on the hook for more than $100,000 per
lawmaker in total annual operating costs.
And that’s not all.
Taxpayers pay once for politicians’ salaries and another 1.5 times
for their bankrupt pension system. Taxpayers contributed the
equivalent of nearly $123,000 for each lawmaker in 2017 just to keep
the General Assembly Retirement System, or GARS, afloat.
House Bill 3707 would eliminate GARS in favor of 401(k)-style
retirement plans for state lawmakers. But the bill has been stuck in
the notorious House Rules Committee for nearly a year.
Click here to respond to the editor about this article |