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House to consider road funds, child-welfare money

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The money includes a $175 million infusion of federal money after Congress adopted a new national transit strategy last summer. There’s $225 million of state money available this year from healthy motor-fuel tax revenues and leftovers from previous projects that cost less than expected.

Because of the additional revenue and other favorable conditions, the Department of Transportation, which plans improvements in five-year increments, also plans to move up $275 million in work scheduled for the final four years and break ground this spring, Transportation Secretary Ann Schneider said.

The Department of Children and Family Services would avoid as many as 1,900 layoffs with its $25 million boost, spokesman Dave Clarkin said. Middle management positions have been eliminated and the agency has moved staffers into “front line” positions.

Those positions include 138 investigators who knock on doors in response to abuse complaints, staff members to recruit foster parents because of shortages, and other employees to focus on moving foster kids back into homes with their birth families.

Currie said legislative appropriations leaders identified more than $58 million in general revenue that had been appropriated last spring but which won’t be spent. The measure she floated Monday calls for $54 million of that, so it’s possible lawmakers will identify other needs that the balance can cover. Tens of millions of dollars in other spending comes from sources outside the general checking account but need legislative authority before checks are cut.

Rep. Ed Sullivan, a Mundelein Republican, grilled a Quinn staff member over appropriations of more than $1 million for what appeared to be salaries for high-level agency administrators, such as assistant directors in cabinet-level agencies. Sullivan maintained that lawmakers told Quinn they did not want people in these posts, particularly when the state is $9 billion behind on paying bills to vendors.

But Ben Winick of Quinn’s Office of Management and Budget said some of the positions were already occupied but weren’t previously funded, others remain vacant, but that all are “important for the operations of state government.”

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The bill is HB190.

Online: http://www.ilga.gov

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Contact John O’Connor at https://www.twitter.com/apoconnor

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