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		 CHICAGO 
		ALDERMEN GIVE UP CONTROL OF $100M WORKERS’ COMP PROGRAM 
		Illinois Policy Institute/ 
		Brad Weisenstein 
		A federal corruption charge against Chicago 
		Ald. Ed Burke has led peers to hand control of the $100 million-a-year 
		workers’ compensation program to the city finance department. Burke, who 
		had overseen the program for decades, fought program oversight and 
		staffed it with political allies. | 
        
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 Chicago aldermen are giving up power over the city’s $100 
million-a-year workers’ compensation program as part of the fallout from Ald. Ed 
Burke’s corruption prosecution. 
 Burke resigned as chairman of the council’s finance committee Jan. 4, giving up 
decades of control over the workers’ compensation program, after he was charged 
by federal prosecutors with attempted extortion. Days later, Mayor Rahm Emanuel 
ordered a forensic audit of the program and said oversight of the program should 
move to the city’s Department of Finance.
 
 Finance committee members met Jan. 22, the first time since Burke resigned, and 
voted to hand off control of the program to the Department of Finance. Burke was 
absent. The full City Council voted to pass the ordinance the following day.
 
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 On Jan. 22, Emanuel announced Grant Thornton would conduct the workers’ 
compensation program audit. The mayor had earlier said a preliminary report 
would be released within 60 days of selecting an auditing firm.
 
 Burke had been in charge of the workers’ comp program for decades, and fought 
off any outside supervision or oversight, including by the city’s inspector 
general. A lawsuit filed in July 2018 claimed he used the program to increase 
his political clout, staffing it with workers such as dog walkers, waitresses 
and hairdressers who had no workers’ comp experience.
 
 Federal prosecutors filed an attempted extortion charge against Burke Jan. 3, 
alleging that in 2017 he tried to use his position as alderman to pressure 
Burger King executives to hire his private law firm for the restaurant chain’s 
property tax work. The charge details a cellphone conversation between Burke and 
a ward worker recorded by an FBI wiretap, in which the two discussed withholding 
a building permit to pressure the Burger King executives after they failed to 
contact Burke’s law firm for legal work.
 
 
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 Federal investigators recorded more than a dozen 
			conversations pursuing their case against Burke, according to a Jan. 
			23 report by the Chicago Sun-Times. Ald. Danny Solis for two years 
			wore a wire for federal investigators to collect evidence against 
			Burke. Solis, who is retiring from the 25th Ward, chaired the 
			council’s zoning committee and was considered a trusted ally of both 
			Burke and Emanuel. He did not attend the Jan. 23 council meeting.
 Some aldermen denounced Solis’ involvement with the investigation as 
			a “betrayal,” according to the Sun-Times. Approached in a City Hall 
			elevator by reporters Burke said, “Number one, I’ve done nothing 
			wrong. And no recording that Danny Solis can make would change 
			that.”
 
 Burke, Chicago’s longest-serving alderman, is 75 and has spent 50 
			years on the City Council. His wife, Anne Burke, is a justice on the 
			Illinois Supreme Court. The influential power broker is known for 
			wearing fedoras and pinstripe suits, swaying judicial appointments 
			and raising more campaign cash for politicians than any other 
			alderman.
 
 Burke remains free on a $10,000 unsecured bond. He is seeking 
			re-election to his 14th Ward seat against two challengers.
 
			
            
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