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Reporter's Notebook: Breast cancer funding

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McHenry County Public Health Administrator Patrick McNulty had the County Board over a barrel Tuesday when it came to restoring cuts to breast and cervical cancer screening.

As I wrote in today's paper, a number of board members were not happy with McNulty coming before the board to ask that $40,000 be restored to the program in the last six weeks of the 2011 fiscal year. It passed Tuesday morning, 17-5, just one vote more than the two-thirds majority needed for an emergency appropriation.

But displeasure aside, who wants to be the politician with a primary looming who votes against funding during the start of Breast Cancer Awareness Month? Who wants to be stingy with $40,000 when the County Board has more than $47 million in reserve?

And who wants to vote no on the same morning that the Northwest Herald printed in pink to raise awareness, as County Board member Paula Yensen, D-Lake in the Hills, pointed out? (For the record, the pink newspaper on the morning of the vote was coincidence.)

The main opposition to restoring the funding came from the members of the Finance and Audit Committee who opposed it. Chairman Scott Breeden, R-Lakewood, made clear his support of cancer screening, noting that he lost both his parents in their fifties to the disease. But he said that McNulty was going around the established budget process that has kept the county solvent while so many others in Illinois are not.

Both Breeden and John Hammerand, R-Wonder Lake, told McNulty that he had a responsibility to try to live within the cuts.

"I believe it's incumbent on administrators, when the County Board cuts a line item, that they spend less money during that year," Hammerand said.

Neither Breeden nor Hammerand fully accepted McNulty's explanation that he was told he could return to the County Board to ask for more at the end of the year, depending on what the county had left to give. Both members alleged that McNulty did not bother to rein anything in as a result: Breeden said it looked to him like simply coming back was what the health department had in mind "all along," while Hammerand said McNulty "did not expend in a forthright manner."

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About the Author

Kevin Craver

Senior reporter

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

kcraver@shawmedia.com

Kevin has worked at the Northwest Herald since 2000. The Illinois Associated Press awarded his blog this year as the best news blog in the state for medium-sized newspapers. He has won more than 70 state and national journalism awards.

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