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Ill. legislative leaders seeking business tax transparency

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SPRINGFIELD – Struggling to explain to voters where their money goes while Illinois continues to face financial hardship, legislative leaders kicked off their fall session Tuesday with a plan to divulge the names of corporations that escape the tax collector.

Senate President John Cullerton and House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie said their proposal would help lawmakers determine whether tax credits designed to create jobs are working or worthless in a state where officials estimate two-thirds of businesses pay no corporate income tax.

Business leaders immediately condemned the plan, saying it unfairly targets confidential information of a few companies and would add to the burden of conducting commerce in Illinois.

The plan by Cullerton and Currie, both Chicago Democrats, would require publicly traded corporations to publicize more than a dozen points of data relating to their tax liability – a liability that is often softened by credits and incentives created by the Legislature. Companies would not have to report on a given tax year until two years later, a hedge against competitive disadvantages, the lawmakers said.

“Let’s find out what’s happening in the real world so that the policies that we create have some relevance and have some justice and some fairness about them,” Currie said to a roomful of community activists in the state Capitol.

The proposal opened the General Assembly’s six-day fall session, a year after a legislators were criticized for tax breaks approved in an economic downturn which kept Sears Holding Corp. and companies that operate Chicago financial exchanges from leaving the state.

The budget picture hasn’t improved. Lawmakers face spending shortfalls in several state agencies that handle social-service programs such as child protection. A House measure arose Tuesday reviving an idea previously championed by Gov. Pat Quinn to borrow money and pay down some of the $9 billion in overdue bills. And the Senate is looking at a vote Wednesday to override Democrat Quinn’s veto of spending to keep several prisons and other state facilities open.

A House committee approved a resolution that could get a floor vote Wednesday asking that unionized state employees not get a pay increase in the current budget year. Quinn, who wants to freeze worker pay, and the state’s largest public employee union have been unable to agree on terms to replace a contract that expired June 30.

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