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Rank-and-file lawmakers submit pension bill

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Nekritz said that a provision of the bill guaranteeing that pension obligations will be met, and therefore eliminating the risk of insolvency, could help sway the Illinois Supreme Court.

For employees hired before 2011, the bill would apply cost-of-living adjustments to only the first $25,000 of an employee’s pension, or $20,000 for employees who are eligible for Social Security. It also would increase the retirement age by one to five years for workers 45 years old or younger, and increase workers’ contributions to their retirement by 1 percent the first year and 2 percent each following year.

The last successful attempt at meaningful pension reform came in 2010 with a bill that limited pension benefits on all new hires as of 2011. The law raises their retirement age from 60 to 67, caps the amount from which their benefits can be calculated to the Social Security cap of $106,800, and limited cost-of-living increases to the lesser of half the rate of inflation or 3 percent. But the new limits were not imposed on state workers hired before 2011.

Franks, D-Marengo, got to review the bill Sunday, but told Nekritz and other supporters that he cannot support the cost shift, which under this bill would be phased in slower than in previous proposals. Opponents of the shift contend that the shift will increase suburban property taxes at a time when residents’ bills are increasing despite depressed home values.

“I thanked them for their initiative in trying to do something without going through leadership and the governor’s office,” Franks said.

Franks and other lawmakers repeatedly have accused Quinn of a lack of leadership in addressing the pension crisis. Although he vowed that pension reform is his top priority, local lawmakers were not impressed with his November launch of a social media campaign aimed at building public support for a fix, complete with a cartoon mascot named Squeezy the Pension Python.

Tryon and Franks said they are concerned over what could become law in the hectic days of the lame-duck session before the Jan. 9 swearing-in of the new General Assembly, when the number of votes needed to pass legislation reverts back to simple majority and outgoing lawmakers can vote on controversial legislation without worrying about re-election. Lawmakers in the 2011 lame-duck session approved the largest income-tax increase in Illinois history, abolished the death penalty, and approved civil unions.


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