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2 more Illinois lame duck lawmakers get state jobs

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Government jobs for tax-increase votes?

The Illinois Senate on Wednesday approved the appointments of two lame-duck lawmakers to state jobs. Each voted for the historic 67 percent state income-tax increase last year.

Robert Flider was confirmed on a 33-16 vote to head the Illinois Department of Agriculture, a job that pays $133,273 a year. Flider, who was nominated in February, campaigned against the tax increase but voted “yes” after he lost his re-election bid.

Michael Smith was confirmed on a 33-21 vote to a seat on the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board. The seat, which meets once a month and can be attended by phone, pays $93,926 a year.

Six of the 12 Democratic lame-duck members who voted for the tax increase in 2011, inlcuding Flider and Smith, have landed government jobs. The others:

Careen Gordon ended up with an $84,000-a-year job as an attorney with the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. Gov. Pat Quinn first nominated her for an $86,000-a-year seat on the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, but she withdrew after Senate Republicans promised a grilling on the perception of quid pro quo.

David Miller, a dentist who served 10 years before running for comptroller and losing to Republican Judy Baar Topinka, was hired at $117,000 a year as oral health chief for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

John O’Sullivan was hired in May 2011 as a regional superintendent with the Cook County Forest Preserve District.The job pays $85,704 a year. He was fired five months later.

Michael Carberry was hired by Cook County at $100,000 a year as deputy director in the county’s Department of Facilities Management.

Sources: Illinois General Assembly, Illinois Transparency and Accountability Portal, Northwest Herald archives

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