Comptroller’s Race: Mendoza touts state’s fiscal progress; Teresi
focuses on recent corruption
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[October 04, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – When former Gov. Bruce Rauner
and the Democratic-controlled General Assembly spent more than two years
at an impasse in negotiating a state budget from mid-2015 into 2017, the
office of Illinois comptroller was thrust onto center stage.
As the state’s chief fiscal officer, the comptroller is often referred
to as manager of the state’s checkbook. But without an approved budget,
the comptroller had no legal authority to write checks on state funds,
leaving vendors, contractors, health care providers and many others in a
lurch.
More than 500 days into that impasse, there was a special election for
comptroller. The last elected person to hold that job, Judy Baar Topinka,
died unexpectedly just a few weeks after winning reelection in 2014.
Rauner, a Republican who had just been elected himself, appointed Leslie
Munger, a business executive, to fill the seat until another election
could be held to serve out the remaining two years on Topinka’s term.
And in that election, Chicago City Clerk and former state Rep. Susana
Mendoza, a Democrat, prevailed by 5 percentage points.
“And so I probably signed up for the toughest job in government at that
time,” she said during a podcast interview with Capitol News Illinois.
“You'll recall, we basically had, I wouldn't say an absentee governor,
but we had a governor who was actively destroying the state's finances
and decimating the state's social safety network.”
Mendoza was reelected to a full four-year term in 2018 and is now
seeking another term, this time facing McHenry County Auditor Shannon
Teresi in the Nov. 8 general election.
“I am running because Illinois is the most corrupt, the most fiscally
mismanaged, highest taxed, highest foreclosure rate in the nation,”
Teresi said in a separate interview. “And I am running because I am a
(certified public accountant), I am a certified fraud examiner, I'm a
certified internal auditor with a proven track record and financial
leadership experience the state has never had before in its history of
the comptroller's position.”
Each candidate participated in interviews with Capitol News Illinois for
the Capitol Cast podcast as part of a series of pre-election interviews
conducted by the news organization. You can find the full interviews
here or on most podcast apps.
The budget impasse ended up lasting just over two years, from July 2015
to August 2017. During that time, the state’s backlog of past-due bills
reached a high of $16.7 billion while the state’s credit rating fell to
just one notch above “junk” status.
Mendoza cites paying down that backlog as her biggest accomplishment in
office. Today, she said, vendors are being paid usually within 10 days
and the state is operating on a regular “accounts payable” cycle.
In addition, each of the three major credit rating agencies has raised
the state’s rating by two notches, meaning it is still the lowest of any
state in the nation but moving in a positive direction.
“That is nothing short of remarkable,” Mendoza said. “And I'm very proud
that the people of Illinois trusted me not just once, but twice by
electing me twice to this position.”
Teresi, however, counters that the credit upgrades and paying down
past-due bills was more the result of federal pandemic relief money that
was pumped into Illinois.
“(Gov. JB) Pritzker right now is campaigning on the bond rating when we
have the worst bond rating in the nation,” she said. “The state has
received over 185 billion collectively to not just the state, but all
the agencies within the state. And this has bolstered the economy. And
they are trying to take credit for it.”
The $185 billion figure she cites includes all pandemic relief combined,
including stimulus checks to individuals, aid to local governments and
schools, Paycheck Protection Program loans to businesses, and various
kinds of enhanced unemployment benefits for laid-off workers.
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Democratic Comptroller Susana Mendoza is
facing Republican McHenry County Auditor Shannon Teresi in the
general election for comptroller. (Capitol News Illinois photos)
According to state records, the state itself received about $8.1
billion, which Mendoza and the Pritzker administration say was all used
for one-time expenses related to the pandemic. The other
pandemic-related revenues, meanwhile, have increased base revenues
across the U.S. in the two most recent fiscal years.
Mendoza also cites as one of her early accomplishments the passage of
the 2017 Debt Transparency Act, which lawmakers approved over Rauner’s
veto. It required state agencies to report monthly the volume of bills
they were holding but had not yet sent to the comptroller’s office for
payment. It also required agencies to report bills that were more than
90 days past due and thus subject to late-payment penalties of 1 percent
per month.
“And now agencies are disincentivized from holding onto those bills for
a long time, because they look like they're being irresponsible,” she
said. “And so now you'll actually see that it's rare to find an agency
holding on to a bill for longer than, let's say 60 days, because we'll
know that they're doing that.”
Lawmakers took other actions during that time to address the bill
backlog. In 2017, when the backlog hit its peak, they authorized issuing
$6 billion in bonds, taking the total backlog down to about $9.1
billion. And in 2018, they authorized a new Vendor Payment Program that
allowed third-party investors to purchase unpaid bills that were owed to
vendors and then collect the interest when the state eventually paid the
bill.
In 2020, as the state was making progress paying down the backlog, some
investors who took part in the program complained vocally when Mendoza
made a decision to pay the principal owed on the bills, but not the
interest penalties. A spokesman in her office said in an email that the
state still owes a little more than $43 million in late-payment
interest.
Mendoza said she’d like to see a phase-out of that program as the
state’s finances stabilize.
“Hopefully, we will never ever be in a situation where we need to rely
on these-third party lenders, because that's what those investment
companies are,” she said. “They made a huge amount of profit on the
state's dysfunction.”
Teresi earned a master’s degree in accounting from Northern Illinois
University and began her career as an associate at the accounting firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers in 2007. She joined McHenry County government in
2016 as a financial reporting manager and was elected as county auditor
in 2018.
This year, she ran unopposed in the primary as part of a slate of
candidates endorsed by GOP megadonor Ken Griffin. She has focused much
of her campaign on the theme of rooting out corruption in state
government.
“There hasn't been a top-down approach at addressing corruption on the
state level, and fraud, waste and abuse,” she said.
As comptroller she said she’d launch a statewide initiative addressing
corruption, noting, “the largest amount of corruption and fraud is found
based on tips.
“And so, as your next comptroller, I will be working with the inspector
general's office and promoting the hotline statewide tasking every
taxpayer, business, vendor that works with the state government to
report fraud, waste and abuse.”
Teresi said she was excited about the GOP ticket, including
gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey, a state senator who has made
several controversial statements such as calling Chicago a “hellhole”
and comparing abortion in the United States to the Holocaust.
“What we see is a movement with Darren Bailey’s race and the Republican
Party as a whole,” she said, later adding, “I think there’s a lot of
enthusiasm. …I’m happy to run with Darren Bailey and all of the other
statewide candidates.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |