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House lawmakers to test pension bill in committee

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Also Sunday, the House sponsor pushing approval of medical marijuana said he didn’t expect the issue to come up before Wednesday, when new lawmakers are sworn in.

The amended pension bill, sponsored by Nekritz, would not award annual cost-of-living increases until the age of 67 and would increase employee contributions by 2 percent of salary, spread over two years. Once cost-of-living increases took effect at 67, they would be applied only to the first $25,000 of a retiree’s pension.

Finally, it would require the state to fully fund its portion of pensions under threat of legal action by the accounts’ administrators.

That’s key to hundreds of thousands of workers and retirees who have been forced to pay their share over the years. Decades of inattention by lawmakers and governors to save up for state workers’ retirement plans, including years where they skipped payments, led to the huge shortfall.

Quinn says the deficit grows by $17 million a day. The piling debt has hurt the state’s credit rating, limiting its ability to borrow. It has also eaten up more and more money for education and other public services.

Various plans for bumped-up contributions and less-generous benefits for current employees, raising the retirement age and reducing cost-of-living adjustments for retirees, have been floated in the past year. But the “cost shift” of the employer portion of teachers’ pensions from the state to school districts has stymied attention.

Democratic Senate President John Cullerton has said he wants lawmakers to pass a more modest alternative that the Senate adopted last spring. That proposal affects only a portion of the workers and retirees but would be a starting point for expansion and Cullerton is concerned that more ambitious efforts could be unconstitutional.

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The bill is SB1673.

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Online: http://www.ilga.gov

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Associated Press writer Sara Burnett in Chicago contributed to this report.

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