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House to consider road funds, child-welfare money

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SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House is poised to consider more money for state programs in a plan that takes advantage of new road building funds and shifts money saved from prison closures to child-welfare services, sparing up to 1,900 jobs.

The Executive Committee voted, 9-2, Monday afternoon to move the plan to the House floor. It includes a $675 million boost to transit construction highly prized by businesses and labor unions and $25 million saved from a bitter fight over closing correctional facilities to put nearly 140 more child-abuse investigators on the street.

The legislation is part of an annual exercise aimed at shoring up parts of state government that are running short of money halfway through the fiscal year.

The bill includes $12 million for mental health grants, $25 million for rental housing assistance, $5.7 million for job-training programs and $5 million as the final portion of a $70 million veterans’ home to be built in Chicago. It also includes lawmakers’ OK for agencies to spend federal money, such as the $35 million early childhood instruction grant that the Illinois State Board of Education won.

House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie, who presented the plan to the committee, said another bill will seek to allocate more than $600 million for the second half of the year for state employee group health insurance.

The money had been set aside but not appropriated because Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn’s administration hoped there would be a new contract agreement with employees that would trim health insurance costs. But the governor and the largest workers’ union remain deadlocked on a pact to replace the one that expired June 30.

The so-called supplemental appropriation – including the infusion of road money and the transfer of child-protection funds – failed after political bickering in the Senate during the final days of the last legislative session in early January. A committee controlled by Democrats voted it down when senators objected to funding going to or being withheld from areas such as public schools or horse racing.

That made businesses and organized labor nervous. The Transportation for Illinois Coalition turned up the pressure last week, saying the Legislature needed to move quickly to get the trucks moving this spring – the season begins as early as next month when project bids are solicited for the first time.

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