Pritzker touts infrastructure funding in southern Illinois stops
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[December 09, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker continues to
make frequent stops across the state to tout one of the marquee policy
accomplishments of his first year in office and its ongoing benefits to
Illinois communities.
That is the $45 billion Rebuild Illinois capital infrastructure plan,
and on Wednesday he made multiple stops in southern Illinois to
publicize the projects made possible by the bipartisan-approved
infrastructure package.
The governor appeared at the Benton Municipal Airport with area
Republican lawmakers and Illinois Department of Transportation officials
Wednesday to promote a widening of Interstate 57 in the southern
Illinois region.
He was accompanied by Sen. Dale Fowler, R-Harrisburg, and Rep. Dave
Severin, R-Benton.
“Today's ceremony is an example of good bipartisanship work between both
the federal and state government,” Fowler said. “By investing in
Illinois infrastructure, we are investing in jobs. We're investing in
our local economy, which will continue to put southern Illinois on the
map for many years to come.”
About $268 million from the $33.2 billion in transportation-related
expenditures in the Rebuild Illinois plan will go toward I-57
reconstruction or improvements, according to the governor’s office. Next
month, work will begin on a $67.6 million project to expand nine miles
of I-57 from four to six lanes from north of Illinois 149 to south of
Illinois 154.
The project will install a median barrier, resurface existing lanes,
update guardrails and add rumble strips. It also includes bridge
replacement over the Big Muddy River. The project is expected to
conclude in 2025.
Another $164 million in future years of the Rebuild Illinois plan would
fund an expansion of the interstate to Mount Vernon, as well as bridge
replacements at Marcum Branch, Gun Creek and Dodds Creek. It would also
include reconstruction of the interchange of I-57, I-64 and Illinois 15.
Pritzker also highlighted another $28.4 million in motor fuel tax headed
to southern Illinois counties for infrastructure projects, along with
$33.5 earmarked to municipalities in the IDOT District 9 territory,
which includes Alexander, Franklin, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jackson,
Jefferson, Johnson, Massac, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, Saline, Union, White
and Williamson counties.
The Rebuild Illinois plan was largely funded through a 2019 bill that
doubled the motor fuel tax to 38 cents, a rate that now goes up annually
at the inflation rate. The measure also increased several fees motorists
pay to the secretary of state, including registration fees.
Rebuild Illinois also has a vertical infrastructure component to fund
construction and improvements on state buildings. Those projects are
funded through revenues resulting from a massive 2019 gambling expansion
and an increase to taxes on cigarettes and e-cigarettes.
Also on Thursday, Pritzker visited Carterville in Williamson County for
groundbreaking at the future site of the Walker’s Bluff Casino Resort.
The site would have a casino, 116-room hotel, event center, multiple
restaurants and other attractions.
That site has been in operation since 2008 and is home to a vineyard and
other entertainment and event venues.
“Walker’s Bluff was already a popular attraction, bringing in tourists
and business meetings from across the region,” Pritzker said. “Now with
the addition of hundreds of slot machines and game tables, and an
on-site hotel, this expansion will bring in even more visitors to take
advantage of the beauty and hospitality of southern Illinois.”
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Sen. Dale Fowler, R-Harrisburg, speaks at the Benton
Municipal Airport Wednesday in announcing state infrastructure
spending for work on Interstate 57. Also pictured are Illinois
Department of Transportation director Omer Osman, left, and Gov. JB
Pritzker. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
State tax revenue derived from the casino, as well the legalization of
sports gambling and other new casinos, will go toward the state’s
building infrastructure plan.
Wastewater funding
Pritzker also made a stop in Alto Pass in Union County, announcing $16.8
million in funds will be released to five communities throughout the
state through the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s Unsewered
Communities Construction Grant Program.
Rebuild Illinois included $100 million for sewer projects across the
state over the next five years. Alto Pass will receive $4.4 million in
state funding for infrastructure replacement.
Other grants include $2.2 million to the city of Freeport in Stephenson
County to provide sewer service in a subdivision currently utilizing
private septic systems; $5 million for the village of Westfield in Clark
County to construct a wastewater treatment plant; and $2.2 million in
the city of East Dubuque in Jo Daviess County to extend the sanitary
sewer to 84 residences that are currently on private systems.
The Northern Moraine Water Reclamation District and the village of
Holiday Hills in McHenry County will receive $3.5 million for the first
phase of the extension of sanitary sewer service to 276 single-family
residences in Holiday Hills and 29 homes in in another subdivision.
Water bill assistance
Pritzker’s office on Wednesday announced $42 million is available to
help Illinois residents avoid water shutoffs.
The Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program, or LIHWAP, is funded
through the federal American Rescue Plan Act and other federal sources.
The program was authorized in the state’s operating budget.
Residents unable to pay a water or sewer bill can find more information
on applying for assistance at www.helpillinoisfamilies.com. The funds
are available to low-income families who are facing disconnection, those
who have already been shut off, or those with outstanding bills of $250
or more.
Applications are available online now through August 2023, or whenever
funds are exhausted. Eligible Illinoisans must be at or below 200
percent of the poverty level, meaning a family of four would have a
combined income of $54,000 or less.
More than $200 million in Low-Income Household Energy Assistance Program
funding remains available as well, according to the governor’s office.
More information is available at Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity's website, helpillinoisfamilies.com, or by calling
1-833-711-0374.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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