Fair
59°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Lawmakers balk on House pension bill

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

Related Links

Public-sector unions have vowed to sue should the bill become law, citing the provision of the Illinois Constitution that states that public pension benefits cannot be diminished or impaired. Although state Rep. Mike Tryon, R-Crystal Lake, fully supports pension reform, he has said that Nekritz’s bill would have no chance of holding up in court.

“This bill, I believe, is probably the most unconstitutional [pension] bill we have seen,” said Tryon, who is not attending the lame-duck session because of a death in the family.

But newly sworn Rep. David McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills, said he will support the bill should it come for a vote, and believes it will pass constitutional muster. He said the bill is not perfect but reduces costs without raising taxes and without shifting the cost of teacher pensions toward local property taxes. McSweeney said he would have opposed the bill had the cost-shift provision remained.

“The unions will challenge any reform legislation that is passed. The state right now is in dire financial straits, and we need to make these changes,” McSweeney said.

Almost all of the revenue generated by the historic 2011 income-tax increase – 67 percent on individuals and 46 percent on businesses – has been swallowed by the state’s public pension obligations. Supporters had touted the tax as a way for the state to pay down its multibillion-dollar backlog of unpaid bills.

Franks said Nekritz is to be commended for proposing the bill – she and other supporters, frustrated over the lack of leadership in moving reform forward, took the initiative and proposed the fix on the last day of the fall veto session. He said any failure should be put at the feet of Gov. Pat Quinn, whom Franks alleges has shown little leadership aside from giving lawmakers a Wednesday deadline to enact pension reform.

“He has said that the reason he was put on God’s green Earth was to solve the pension problem, and all he’s done is brought out Squeezy the Pension Python,” Franks said.

Squeezy the Pension Python is a cartoon character introduced in fall as part of a Quinn-led awareness campaign to draw attention to Illinois pension problem.


Reader Poll

Which gaming system do you own?

Xbox
Wii
PlayStation
other
more than one