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Dispatches from the war on corruption

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The people have won a handful of small victories over the past week over Illinois rampant culture of corruption. It's like a three-pack-a-day smoker cutting back by one cigarette, but it's something.

Allow me to celebrate, and do a little gloating:

• NO INFLATED PENSION FOR YOU:A bill awaiting Gov. Pat Quinn's signature limits the blood-boiling practice of veteran ex-lawmakers spiking their pensions by briefly working other public-sector jobs.

Under the law, any local government that hires one of these lawmakers has to pay for their pension increase instead of state taxpayers.

The bill was inspired by a Chicago Tribune investigation revealing that former Rep. Robert Molaro, D-Chicago, doubled his legislative pension by working one month for Chicago Democratic Alderman Edward Burke.

The $12,000 he pulled down for the one-month gig was multiplied by 12 months for a $144,000, doubling Molaro's pension to more than $110,000.

What did Molaro do for a month for Burke? He wrote a 19-page white paper on ... pensions!

The new bill only affects about a dozen former lawmakers. A 1994 ethics law ended the abuse of end-of-career pension boosts for General Assembly members, but only for new ones elected after the law's effective date. However, the new bill does not apply if the lawmaker's new job lasts more than two years – the logic of the Senate that amended the bill is that such a duration means the job is an honest one, and not a "sweetheart deal" as Sen. Matt Murphy, R-Palatine, said.

As I wrote in a 2011 story on the state lawmaker pension system, one of the highest pensioners in the system for state lawmakers exploited a similar boost, which helped inspire the 1994 reform. Former Republican Sen. John Friedland, whose pension now exceeds $140,000 a year, boosted his $30,000 pension in the early 1990s to more than $80,000 by working for a few months with the Fox River Water Reclamation District.

• NO MORE FREE RIDES: The century-old (can you believe that?) and rapaciously corrupt and patronage-laden legislative scholarship program is the newest addition to the dust bin of history.

Under this program, each of the state's 177 lawmakers gets to hand out two state university tuition waivers a year to students in their districts, although not all of them do.

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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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