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Chicago mayor vows full court press on pensions

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CHICAGO – Faced with an employee pension crisis that could become his biggest challenge, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Thursday he is putting his full force behind getting lawmakers in Springfield to achieve an overhaul of the state’s pension systems.

The mayor expressed frustration with legislative leaders and the gridlock in the state Capitol that has stalled negotiations over reforms. He said he expects lawmakers to take up the issue in January, after the November elections.

“They need to get in gear, pick up the game,” Emanuel said. “I’ve told the speaker [of the House], I’ve told the Senate president, I’ve told the minority leaders and the governor, I’ll spend as much or as little [political] capital as you think it takes.”

Emanuel stressed the pension issue in a meeting with reporters, a day after delivering a budget address in which he underscored how his city’s pension crisis stands to undermine many of the goals he has set out for his four years in office. The crisis could come to a head when a big portion of the city’s pension debt must be paid in 2015.

But it remains to be seen whether Emanuel can help move the ball toward a solution. Lawmakers have been trying and failing to solve the state’s own pension problems for years, and until that happens, nothing is likely to be done about Chicago’s separate pension woes. The General Assembly must approve any changes in public employee pensions on the state or local level.

If the General Assembly fails to act, Chicago’s payments to meet its obligations could reach $1.2 billion by 2015, the mayor’s office says. That’s equal to 22 percent of the city’s annual budget, or about the amount spent each year on salaries for the entire police department.

To cover that bill without cutting basic city services, taxpayers would have to pay 150 percent more in property taxes – an option Emanuel has called “unpalatable” and “absolutely unacceptable.”

Chicago’s pension problems are tied to the state’s in more than one way. Emanuel said the city is in a particularly perilous position in large part because its residents are the only ones in the state who are “double hit” on retirement costs for education. Chicago residents help pay education costs around the state, through income and sales taxes. They pay separately for Chicago teachers.

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