Disappointing start to the new year at capitol

Quinn’s wish list goes unfulfilled in Legislature

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Gov. Pat Quinn wanted pension reform done in the lame-duck session.

Didn’t happen.

He wanted a ban on semi-automatic assault weapons passed.

Didn’t happen.

He wanted a same-sex marriage bill passed.

Didn’t happen.

Hope as a kid he had better luck getting Santa Claus to listen to his wish list.

Grasping the

magnitude

Reps. Elaine Nekritz, D-Northbrook, and Daniel Biss, D-Evanston, had a pension reform bill they hoped would pass. It was comprehensive and combined concepts from a variety of other pension reform proposals. It also saved some real money, which is the whole idea of doing pension reform.

Alas, that bill, like so many others, didn’t have enough support to pass the House. Asked whether there were one or two main objections raised by lawmakers, Nekritz said she wished it were only one or two things. She then ticked off a list of reasons fellow House members gave for not supporting it.

n Some Chicago lawmakers were upset that downstate teacher pension costs weren’t being shifted to local districts because Chicago pays its own teacher pension costs.

n Some thought the benefit changes were too harsh.

n Some didn’t like the fact judges were excluded.

n Some questioned why they should stick their necks out on the bill when there was no guarantee the Senate would consider it.

n And then Nekritz added that there are “a lot of people for whom the depth of the problem hasn’t quite sunk in.”

Think about that.

Nekritz wasn’t talking to people at a town hall meeting who may or may not follow state government news closely. She was talking of other House members, people who are paid a nice salary for dealing with the myriad issues facing the state.

There seriously are lawmakers who at this stage of the game still haven’t grasped the magnitude of the state’s pension funding problems?

We’re all in a load of trouble.

So, what’s going to move things along?

Maybe if Illinois actually gets its credit rating reduced again, lawmakers might be motivated to do something. Obviously, the mere threat of that happening hasn’t been enough to stir them.

The other is lawmakers finally realizing the real-world effects of Squeezy the Pension Python. The cartoon snake is silly, but it does illustrate a very real point. When more and more money goes toward pension obligations, less and less is available for programs that lawmakers like to crow about, like education funding and taking care of the needy.

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