Voters to decide on pension amendment

Unions, conservative group oppose move

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STERLING – If voters approve a state constitutional amendment, government bodies at all levels will have a higher hurdle to sweeten the pensions of government workers.

But no one is saying it’s a solution to the state’s pension crisis. The state pensions’ unfunded liability is $83 billion.

Voters will decide on Amendment 49 in Tuesday’s election.

The amendment would require a three-fifths majority of the Illinois House and Senate to pass any increase to workers’ current pensions.

The three-fifths requirement also would apply to local governing bodies such as city councils and school boards.

Now, such changes need only a simple majority.

The House passed the amendment unanimously, with only two senators, including Mike Jacobs, D-East Moline, voting against it.

Rep. Jerry Mitchell, R-Sterling, who is retiring, said the amendment would stop a partisan majority from “ramrodding” pension bills through the General Assembly. Bills with bipartisan support, he said, are preferable.

“You see what happened with Obamacare. There were no Republican votes,” Mitchell said. “Because of that, there’s a lot of mistrust with it. I can’t see a downside to voting no” on the amendment.

Despite strong legislative support, the amendment’s opponents range from unions to the conservative-leaning Illinois Policy Institute.

Diana Rickert, a spokeswoman for the institute, said the amendment does nothing to erase the unfunded pension liability. Besides, she said, nearly all pension sweeteners over the years have passed with much more than three-fifths support.

“This is a classic case of do-nothing reform,” Rickert said. “If they [lawmakers] wanted to make this strong reform, they should have included a clause that there be no pension sweeteners until there is no more pension liability.”

AFSCME Council 31, which represents many government workers in Illinois, shares the institute’s opposition, but not its reasoning.

Anders Lindall, an AFSCME spokesman, said the amendment allows politicians at the state level to shift the blame for pension problems to workers.

“They can get away from the responsibility for pension debt they caused,” Lindall said.

For decades, employees contributed to the pension systems as required, but the state often failed to pay its share. Two-thirds of the liability is due to those missed payments, Lindall said, and a third is due to the Wall Street meltdown in 2008.

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