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Dispatches from the war on corruption

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This is Illinois, of course, so the definition of a deserving student often turns out to be one whose daddy contributed to the lawmaker's campaign or did the lawmaker a favor.

And on a number of occasions, the student never even lived in the lawmaker's district. The U.S. Attorney's Office recently subpoenaed the records of Sen. Annazette Collins, D-Chicago, over the waivers she's doled out.

The bill signed Wednesday by Quinn allows one more round to be awarded for the upcoming academic year with a Sept. 1 deadline. One more shot at rewarding favors, and socking universities that the state has long owed millions to with students they have to educate for free.

And if Molaro's name from the aforementioned pension bill rings a bell, it's because investigators looked into him because he doled out four of those waivers, totaling $94,000 in free college education, to the family of a longtime political supporter.

• PUBLIC SALARY, PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE: As I wrote earlier this week, another new law adds county, municipal and township employee salaries to the searchable Illinois Transparency and Accountability Portal.

Such salaries have long been public information under the Illinois Freedom of Information Act. But under this law, taxpayers will be able to look up the salaries on the portal, which also has salaries of state employees.

Besides, as I wrote last month, studies show that far too many of our local taxing bodies still don't understand FOIA and are not complying with the law and our legal right to know.

As I blog here ad nauseam, your taxing bodies use your property taxes to pay lobbyists to fight transparency laws, and several of them lobbied against this one. And this time, they lost.

Savor. Then again, the lobbyists still get paid with our money to work against the public interest, so maybe the joke's on us.

• GIVE ME A (TAX) BREAK:A bill signed into law last week requires the state's main economic development agency to list all details of tax break agreements with companies.

The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity now has to publish online the details of incentive agreements doled out under its Economic Development for a Growing Economy program. Before, the DCEO would publish an annual list of what companies get the incentives, but not the terms or the amounts.

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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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