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Lawmakers balk on House pension bill

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Illinois Rep. Elaine Nekritz, D-Des Plaines, speaks to lawmakers Sunday after a House committee hearing at the Illinois State Capitol. Time is winding down and there's no deal yet between Gov. Pat Quinn and legislative leaders to fix Illinois' $96 billion pension crisis. (AP photo)

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The fate of a last-minute pension reform plan is in doubt after the Illinois House adjourned Monday afternoon without calling for a vote.

The House is scheduled to reconvene today, but local lawmakers are skeptical that the attempt to tackle the state’s $96 billion unfunded pension liability will be approved.

Today is the last full day of the lame-duck session. On Wednesday, the General Assembly elected in November will be sworn in. If the House approves the measure, the Senate would have to be called back into session to vote on it for it to pass.

A House committee Monday afternoon approved a compromise bill that would freeze cost-of-living increases and require higher contributions from employees in the five state-run pension systems. Controversial language to shift the burden of teacher pensions to local school districts was dropped for the time being.

McHenry County’s two veteran House members expressed doubt at the bill’s chances – not only of passage but also of surviving an inevitable court challenge from the state’s powerful public-sector unions.

Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, said he needs more information on what Senate Bill 1673 will accomplish if approved. “I need to see hard numbers, and I need to see the analysis of the constitutionality,” he said ­Monday ­afternoon. “I’m not convinced this is the right bill yet.”

The bill before the House is an amended version of a bill proposed in December by House Pension Committee Chairwoman Elaine Nekritz, D-Northbrook. It would push back the age that retirees can get their automatic 3 percent cost-of-living increases to 67 years, and increase employee contributions by 2 percent of salary, spread out over two years. Furthermore, the cost-of-living increase would be applied only to the first $25,000 of a retiree’s pension.

Another provision would require the state to fully fund its contribution to pensions under threat of legal action by the accounts’ administrators. The requirement is aimed at placating state workers who have spent decades paying their share from each paycheck into the system while state lawmakers have either underfunded their contribution or skipped it altogether to spend it on other things.

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