House kicks off lame duck session; governor announces tax code change
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[January 09, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI, PETER HANCOCK and RAYMON TRONCOSO
Capitol News Illinois
News@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois House lawmakers were
back in the capital city Friday for the first time since May, kicking
off a five-day “lame duck” legislative session.
No substantive action was taken in the brief House session Friday, which
began with Republican Minority Leader Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs,
requesting greater access for members of the media in the Bank of
Springfield Center which hosted the session. Only a handful of reporters
were allowed on the second level of the 7,700-seat arena due to strict
COVID-19 restrictions.
The venue is the same as it was in May, but reporters had requested
better access to lawmakers on the floor of the center. No such expanded
access was granted Friday.
Shortly after convening, Democrats called for a closed-door caucus
meeting to discuss an expansive criminal justice reform measure and
other priorities of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus.
Prospective candidates to unseat House Speaker Michael Madigan, who has
held that position for all but two years since 1983, were also schedule
to make their case in the private caucus meeting. Stephanie Kifowit,
D-Oswego, Kathleen Willis, D-Addison, and Ann Williams, D-Chicago, are
the three declared challengers to Madigan.
At least 19 members of the House Democratic caucus have said they will
not support Madigan, putting him several votes shy of the 60 needed to
retain the gavel. The 102nd session of the General Assembly is set to
convene Wednesday, following adjournment of lame duck session, at which
point a speaker must be chosen before substantial action can be taken.
The Senate was to set to convene for committees Saturday and full floor
action Sunday.
Gov. JB Pritzker also announced his top priority for the lame duck
session, a series of tax changes that he says would save the state about
$520 million for this fiscal year.
The bulk of that, roughly $500 million, would come from decoupling a
portion the state’s tax code from the federal tax code so that business
tax cuts approved by Congress as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and
Economic Stimulus, or CARES Act, last year would not automatically
reduce Illinois state revenue.
Without decoupling, the governor’s office said, those changes at the
federal level would automatically reduce the amount of business income
that is taxable by the state of Illinois.
Pritzker also announced that he is unilaterally delaying the effective
date of certain business tax credits that the Illinois General Assembly
passed in 2019, and which were scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, as part
of a package known as the Blue Collar Jobs Act. Those involved
expansions of certain tax credits that businesses could take for
relocating to Illinois or expanding existing facilities in the state.
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Illinois House members gather on the floor of the
Bank of Springfield Center on Friday in Springfield to kick off the
final five days of the 101st General Assembly. Lawmakers returned to
the capital for a lame-duck session. The House is meeting at the
Bank of Springfield Center because of COVID-19 safety precautions.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
“Right now, we cannot afford to expand tax breaks to businesses that
already receive tax breaks,” Pritzker said in a news release. “As we
recover from the pandemic, we must focus on job creation and
balancing our state budget.”
But House Republicans, especially those who helped negotiate the
Blue Collar Jobs Act, said Pritzker’s actions would hurt small
businesses that have been severely affected by the recession brought
on by the COVID-19 pandemic and would ultimately make Illinois less
economically competitive.
“That’s precisely the kind of tool that we’ll need as we emerge from
the pandemic and the entire world starts to rebuild the economies
that have been so profoundly impacted by these closures,” Rep. Tom
Demmer, R-Dixon, said during a news conference.
Meanwhile, in a committee hearing on the BOS Center floor, lawmakers
advanced Senate Bill 54, which allows for the home delivery of
liquor throughout the state.
The bill allows retailers to use third-party groups via phone
applications or internet service while removing liability for
retailers if those services violate age verification laws.
In what came as a surprise to some members, the committee allowed
testimony through videoconference – a first for the Illinois House.
No one aside from lawmakers or staff is otherwise allowed on the BOS
Center’s floor to testify.
The Illinois Craft Brewers Guild testified to ask for an amendment
to allow for small brewers and distillers to deliver their own
products, which the bill does not allow for, despite wineries having
those abilities.
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. |