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BRIEFLY
Edited by Rodd Whelpley Budget Illinois has a new spending plan ![]() Illustration by Mike Cramer The General Assembly approved a $49.2
billion budget for the fiscal year beginning
July 1 that created $350 million in new tax breaks
for most Illinoisans’ pockets. The spending blueprint for fiscal year 2001, which is $5.8 billion larger than this year’s budget, was agreed to in the last hours of the shortest legislative session of the past century. Under the agreement, the state will use the initial payments from Illinois’ estimated $9.1 billion in national tobacco settlement funds to provide a one-time property tax rebate for homeowners, boost the state’s Circuit Breaker program that helps seniors pay for prescription drugs and create a state version of the Federal Earned Income Tax Credit for poor Illinoisans. The use of the tobacco money was controversial. Several larger tobacco companies are paying the states as part of an agreement to reimburse them for smoking-related health costs. But Elgin Republican Sen. Steven Rauschenberger, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, argues recent court rulings indicate future income from tobacco money is not guaranteed. Nevertheless, state Budget Director Stephen Schnorf says that in the near term the state could receive as much as $688 million from that agreement. And, under next year’s budget plan, the state will use $280 million from the fund to pay for the property tax rebates, which will equal 5 percent of a homeowner’s property tax bill. The maximum rebate will be $300, while the average check will total about $125, according to Schnorf. Whatever the size of the checks, they’re expected to arrive in mailboxes before the November election. The Circuit Breaker program will receive an additional $35 million. The income limit to qualify for aid will be raised from $16,000 for a two-person household to $28,480. The program will also be expanded to cover drugs for treating cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, glaucoma, lung disease and smoking-related illnesses. An additional 178,000 seniors may be eligible. The new state Earned Income Tax Credit will resemble the federal program that sends rebate checks to qualified low-income working families. The new program will give families a state tax credit equal to 5 percent of the credit allowed on federal returns. The state’s budget calls for $35 million for each of the next three years for that program. Another $225 million of the settlement money will be used to start a Rainy Day Fund. Lawmakers also set aside a pot of next year’s dollars for themselves. Some $380 million for “member initiatives” will be divvied among the four party caucuses in the two legislative chambers. The budget devotes 52 percent of new funds to education, including an increase of $327 million for primary and secondary schools and $130 million for higher education. School spending will total $8.3 billion. House Speaker Michael Madigan was
unsuccessful in his attempt to designate
dollars to cover state mandates at private
schools. The Archdiocese of Chicago and
representatives of other dioceses argued the
state should reimburse private schools for
keeping student records as required by the
state. Madigan wanted $80 million to send
$38 per pupil to all the state’s schools,
including $12 million for private schools.
But teacher unions vowed to take the plan
to court as a violation of the constitutionally
required separation of church and state. That
threat, and the unions’ considerable influence
at the ballot box, caused a small revolt among
rank-and-file legislators. Madigan withdrew
the plan, and the $12 million will be shifted to
textbook and school bus programs, that both
public and private schools can tap.
Illinois Issues May 2000 |10 Legislative checklist KIDS’ LAWYERS GENERIC DRUGS Gov. George Ryan, a retired pharmacist, vetoed legislation last year that would have abolished the council. O’Brien says this latest version represents a compromise among drug companies, the Department of Public Health and Ryan. SCHOOL BREAKFASTS The proposal’s sponsor, Chicago Democratic Rep. Sonia Silva, says Illinois ranks 43rd among states in providing school breakfasts. “Studies have proven that hungry children have less physical, intellectual and emotional development,” she says. Opponents fear the legislation will create another state mandate. LABELING MTBE FISCAL OFFICERS Guns The compromise gives a break to usually law-abiding citizens who transport firearms without first unloading and locking them away. A first offense will be a misdemeanor for such individuals, including hunters. The charge will remain a felony for violators who illegally transport guns that are loaded or can be quickly loaded if they also are found to meet any of nine conditions. Those conditions would be met by individuals who don’t have a valid Firearm Owner’s Identification card, or are members of a street gang or have had an order of protection filed against them within the last two years. The compromise was approved in April after months of debate, and Gov. George Ryan signed it as soon as it got to his desk. The Illinois Supreme Court ruled the 1994 law unconstitutional last year because it lumped together several unrelated topics. Lawmakers separately reapproved seven other provisions of the law,
including criminal penalties for gunrunning and civil penalties for
fraud in the Women, Infants and Children program. A provision
allowing for the privatization of juvenile correctional
facilities was defeated. It’s unlikely to come up again,
says Sen. Kirk Dillard, a Hinsdale Republican. “It
was a jobs issue for the unions,” Dillard says. “It’s
kind of inconsequential as far as keeping neighborhoods
safe.”
Abortion A measure by Naperville Republican Rep. Mary Lou Cowlishaw would prevent Medicaid funding of abortions for women whose health is threatened by pregnancy. The state would continue to pay for the procedure for women whose lives are at stake and in cases of rape and incest. That measure went to the governor. Cowlishaw argued public money
shouldn't be used to pay for abortions.
Opponents argued the restriction
would discriminate against poor
women. Illinois Issues May 2000 |11 BRIEFLY ![]() Photograph and diagram courtesy of The Field Museum .
A REX NAMED SUE Though scientists named the skeleton Sue after the fossil hunter who found “her” in the Black Hills of South Dakota 10 years ago, they don’t know the animal’s sex. Nevertheless, this could-be boy named Sue has been carefully dressed up for its coming out party at The Field Museum in Chicago on May 17. Sue is the most complete, largest and best preserved T. rex fossil yet discovered. Missing only a foot, one arm and a few ribs and vertebrae, Sue has most of the 250 bones that make up a T. rex skeleton. The Field Museum, with the help of McDonald’s Corp. and Walt Disney World Resort, bought Sue at auction for $8.36 million. For the past two years, 10 specialists have cleaned and repaired her bones, readying her for her big day when everyone is invited to appreciate this queen — or king — of the past. Sue will serve as more than just an
exhibit, though. Each bone of the
skeleton is cradled in a special metal
bracket that is hinged and locked so
that individual bones can be detached
and removed for research. Serving
both scientists and the public, the
museum has surrounded Sue with
several exhibits. There are touchable
casts of bones that show some of the
wounds found on Sue’s skeleton. Animated
computer technology images of
the skull take visitors on a
virtual tour inside Sue’s head.
The story of Sue’s discovery
to her arrival at the Field
Museum and the mounting
of her skeleton is told in video clips.
The unveiling of these prehistoric
bones promises to be a cyber event,
with a live Internet feed scheduled to
go online at 6 a.m. on May 17 at
www.fieldmuseum.org/sue/.
WEBSOURCE To follow the end-of-session tax relief measures, as well as other news from state legislatures around the country, go to www.stateline.org. At this site, you can click onto the taxes and budget section and compare budgets and tax relief measures in other states. Many states are including tobacco
settlement money in their budgets.
The latest news, as well as background
information, on the tobacco
settlement can be found in the
National Association of State Budget
Officers’ site at www.nasbo.org/
topical/tobacco.htm. Other recent
tax stories and useful background on
taxes of all kinds are available at
www.taxfoundation.org. If you’re
really into taxes, scour the many links
listed at www.taxsites.com. These are
divided into categories, including
“Policy & Reform” and “State &
Local Tax.”
Illinois Issues May 2000 |12 BRIEFLY
REPORTS: Or so it would seem after reading a 115-page report offering alternatives for restructuring the often-beleaguered system. This report by authority staff concludes that virtually no changes can be made in the system until the quasi-independent highway authority restructures its $854 million bond debt. The outstanding bonds aren’t scheduled to be paid off until 2017. The agency currently relies on toll fees for the bulk of its revenue, projected at $354 million for 2000. The report explores ways to reduce or eliminate those driver-unfriendly tolls. But there are roadblocks to those ideas, too. The current agreement on the agency’s bonds forbids free passage on the tollways, except under limited circumstances, such as construction at a low-revenue site, says Gov. George Ryan’s spokesman Dennis Culloton. To pay off the existing bonds and make a new agreement would require reconstituting the toll authority itself, Culloton notes. Though no action on the report was expected during this spring’s legislative session, shortly after the report’s release Culloton said Ryan’s focus was to determine whether the legislature would approve restructuring the debt. “Right now, we’re very limited in what we can do,’’ he says. Among the report’s scenarios:
Illinois Policy Survey For the 2000 edition of the survey, interviewers with Northern’s Public Opinion Laboratory spoke by phone with 1,179 Illinoisans over the age of 18. The survey was conducted in October and November of last year. Unemployment was the biggest concern of Illinoisans when the survey began in 1984. But this year’s survey shows that education is the No. 1 concern among respondents, as it has been for the last half of the 1990s. Statewide, 24 percent of the respondents named education as their chief concern, with 14 percent saying crime was their top concern. Eleven percent of respondents cited taxes as their chief concern, and 5 percent pointed to unemployment as the biggest worry. In terms of education-related issues, funding was seen as the top problem facing schools. “Nearly three-fourths of respondents said state spending for public schools should be increased,’’ according to the report. Meanwhile, 52 percent of the respondents said they would support allowing parents to choose which public school their children will attend, while 50 percent said they would extend that choice to private schools. Also, 55 percent of the respondents said they would support an increase in state income taxes and a corresponding reduction in local property taxes to pay for education. And 59 percent said they would favor boosting state aid to needy school districts. The general mood of Illinoisans remains optimistic, according to the survey. Responding to the question, Illinois Issues May 2000 |14 “In general, how satisfied are you with the way things are going in Illinois?’’ 49 percent of the respondents in 1999 said they were satisfied, as opposed to 52 percent in 1998. A plurality of residents surveyed gave Gov. George Ryan a favorable rating. Governor’s Commission
on the Status of Women Among new recommendations, the
group urges equitable employment of
women for the governor’s Illinois First
public works program by setting hiring
goals for women and minorities. The
commission supports a requirement that
work site conditions be made more
favorable for minorities and women.
The report also calls for the creation of
hiring incentives and monitoring for
compliance.
Illinois Issues May 2000 |15 Drought or not: May is the critical month What happened in Oakland may portend the plight of other communities in Illinois. Just before Thanksgiving, the city of Oakland in east central Coles County called the state Office of Water Resources for help. The water supply for the community’s 1,000 people would dry up by Christmas Eve. Don Vonnahme mobilized his office and gathered resources from wherever he could: dredge pipe from the Fox Waterway Agency in Lake County, irrigation pipe from the city of Havana, trucks from the Illinois Department of Transportation to haul the pipe and laborers from the nearby prison. In 10 days, they laid a three-mile pipe to the town from a small lake at Walnut Point State Park. They pumped water for 14 days, then tore down the piping system. Rainfall has since replenished the reservoir. This spring, much of the United States, including central Illinois, is in the midst of a worsening drought, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The areas affected by the drought of 2000 parallel those parched by the drought of 1988, the most costly weather disaster in history at an estimated $40 billion in losses. Today, Illinois is more prepared for an extended drought, thanks to the Illinois Drought Task Force. Formed in 1982, the task force has members from several state agencies, including the Department of Natural Resources, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Agriculture and the Emergency Management Agency. Convening only when needed, the task force is now meeting regularly to go over contin-gency plans. “We learned a lot during the drought of 1988,” says Vonnahme, co-chairman of the task force. Since that time, the State Water Survey has issued a monthly report on soil moisture, precipitation averages, amount of surface and ground water, stream flow and depth of wells. The task force monitors conditions and helps communities develop and, if necessary, implement contingency plans for finding new water supplies. During the last drought, Vonnahme says, about 30 communities were on a watch list because their water supplies were dangerously low. This year, seven communities are on the watch list: Bloomington, Springfield, New Berlin, Palmyra, Modesto, Sorento and Paris. The task force has encouraged communities to band together to develop a dependable water supply. Historically, Vonnahme says, the
months of April and May are the
telling time. In more than 100 years of
rainfall records, eight years have been
similar to this year’s pattern: drought
conditions beginning in the summer
months of the previous year and
continuing through the winter and
into spring. “In half of those
instances, rainfall brought the state
out of drought,” he says. “In the other
half, drought continued for another
six to 12 months.”
Illinois Issues May 2000 |17 |
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