Educating in the dark

School boards want a reprieve from state FOIA

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n Allow public bodies to seek review of a binding opinion of the Public Access Counselor in the county in which they are located.

Getting the

debate going

At least since the days Gov. Dan Walker (1973-77), there have been calls for better disclosure laws to provide the public with more information on potential economic conflicts of interest of their elected officials.   

And for the last year, the Better Government Association has been working behind the scenes to drum up support for a law that would require more information be provided in the Statements of Economic Interests that all elected officials are required to fill out.

The BGA said the bill would require officials to report:

n Assets valued at more than $10,000;

n Additional sources of income in excess of $2,500;

n Debts over $5,000 incurred by or owed to the filer, other than those owed to a financial institution;

n Lobbyists with whom the filer has an economic relationship;

n Family members of the filer, including a spouse, child, step-child, parent, step-parent or sibling, who are lobbyists registered with any unit of government in Illinois; and

n Gifts with a value of $500 or more.

The push to disclose whether a lawmaker is related to a lobbyist is relatively new.

Last year, Sen. Mike Jacobs, D-East Moline, got into a confrontation on the floor of the Illinois Senate with Sen. Kyle McCarter, R-Lebanon.

McCarter had noted Sen. Jacobs sponsored legislation backed by Commonwealth Edison even though his father, Denny Jacobs, was a lobbyist retained by ComEd.

Here is what Denny Jacobs said Tuesday night when asked what he thought of the bill:

“As many ----- ---- times as The Dispatch and the Quad-City Times have written about me being a lobbyist, if people in Mike’s district don’t know it already, we have a real problem.”

Note to readers – Scott Reeder’s column is underwritten by the Illinois Policy Institute.

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