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Local lawmakers call Quinn address a letdown

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“I was hoping that he would say, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, the state of the state is in peril, and needs to be fixed ... We have to fix this and that’s all we should be focusing on – fixing the pensions and balancing our budget. Nothing else matters. Nothing else matters, because if we don’t fix this, nothing’s left,” Franks said.

Sen. Pamela Althoff, R-McHenry, said this year’s address had “much of the same rhetoric that it does each year,” without an action plan that the state desperately needs.

“I’m disappointed in the direction the state has taken over the last decade, disappointed in the lack of leadership that should be coming from the governor’s office, and I’m disappointed at how those two things combined have severely hurt our businesses and citizens,” Althoff said.

Quinn spent more time on issues such as green energy, infrastructure, adding manufacturing jobs and clean water. He pushed lawmakers to approve gay marriage, raise the minimum wage to $10 an hour and ban semiautomatic assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines.

While Rep. Barbara Wheeler, R-Crystal Lake, said she was pleased that Quinn “sees the reality of our broken fiscal house,” she was not at all pleased with the call to raise the minimum wage – now $8.25 an hour – by more than 20 percent. She pointed out that just two years ago Democratic lawmakers raised the income tax on individuals and businesses.

“We are in a stagnant economy and leaders are proposing increasing the state’s minimum wage to $10 an hour. How are employers and small businesses supposed to pay for this?” Wheeler said.

The 2011 tax increase – 67 percent on individuals and 46 percent on businesses – was meant to help state government pay down its backlog of bills. But almost all of the increased revenue has been swallowed by the state’s ballooning public pension obligations. The state now owes more in unpaid bills than it did at the time of the tax increase.

Quinn put his most substantial talk on pensions near the end of his address, urging lawmakers to get behind a reform bill submitted by Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago.


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