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Ill. legislative leaders seeking business tax transparency

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Legalization of medical marijuana also could get a House vote today and lawmakers are planning a roll call Thursday on a proposal to require illegal immigrants to have driver’s licenses. It remained unclear Tuesday whether the General Assembly will take on a Quinn veto of a massive gambling expansion measure.

Cullerton said the tax-disclosure plan would help legislators educate taxpayers on where their money goes and how much comes from business taxes.

“More importantly, we would find out how much corporations don’t pay,” Cullerton said. “That is really the mystery that we’re trying to solve.”

A national study released earlier this year listed Illinois as among two dozen states that do little if any evaluation of business tax credits. Illinois offered $273 million in tax breaks in 2010, up from $64 million four years earlier.

Mark Denzler, vice president of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, doesn’t believe the plan is truly designed to provide more information for deciding tax policy. He said the state Revenue Department knows how much it collects from each company and how much various tax deals cost.

The plan would further burden businesses, force them to provide out-of-context numbers, and open doors to competitors in gaining an edge, according to Todd Maisch of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce.

“Not only will you have to put all this sensitive information out there, where in almost every other state it’s completely private, but now they’re going to have to call a press conference to try and explain it,” Maisch said.

A House plan for the state to borrow $4 billion to take a chunk out of its backlog of overdue bills was delayed Tuesday when the measure’s sponsor, Rep. Esther Golar, D-Chicago, said she is still working on language.

Quinn supported a similar idea a year ago but failed to win approval. His office would not comment on Golar’s plan and it’s uncertain if it has any traction. Aides said neither Cullerton nor Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan of Chicago have taken a position on it.

Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka told the House Executive Committee it’s a bad idea to cover red ink with red ink.

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