Quinn pushes pension reform, pressing issues

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CHICAGO (AP) – After keeping a relatively low public profile before the November election, Gov. Pat Quinn is out again, pushing his agenda for tackling Illinois’ most pressing problems in the run up to the Legislature’s veto session later this month.

He says he soon will announce details of a planned grass-roots campaign to promote an overhaul of the state’s pension system, and he’s set a Jan. 9 deadline for achieving reforms. Among the issues likely to arise in the two-week session in Springfield this month is whether lawmakers have enough votes to override his veto of a major gambling expansion bill.

Quinn sat down with The Associated Press this week to discuss his stance on the issues ahead, including his optimism for pension reform, the possibility of an agreement on a new gambling bill and the outlook for gay marriage in Illinois. He also touched on one of his favorite topics, Abraham Lincoln.

Below are edited excerpts of his remarks:

Pensions

Lawmakers failed last spring to agree on a plan to address the state’s underfunded pension system and a later special session on the topic also was unsuccessful. Quinn says one of the biggest hang-ups has been Republican opposition to shifting pension costs from the state to suburban and downstate schools for their own employees, which opponents say could lead to property tax hikes.

Q: How are you prioritizing the biggest issues?

A: “Pension reform is indispensable. I’m 63-years-old and I can say that my entire lifetime, Illinois has had a pension challenge, pension difficulties. It’s been around for 70 years, it’s been aggravated by recent governors ... That’s how we got $90 billion plus in liability.

“We must come together in the next two months and solve the problem. We laid out a formula and structure in the spring ... The ingredients are there to put together a bipartisan solution.

“We’re going to spend more money on pension payments in Illinois than we’re going to spend on education ... That’s a pretty bad signal to what we’re doing for the future.

“There was always the specter of (the November election) behind the discussions in the spring, on both sides. I think this chance – that we have before us on Jan. 9 – doesn’t have that specter of an immediate election in front of it.”

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