This blog is focused on the politics and social news of the 58th District of Illinois (Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Highwood, Highland Park, Deerfield, Northbrook, Riverwoods, Bannockburn and Glencoe) and serves as a discussion group for concerned residents of the District and the State of Illinois who want to change the direction of our broken state government and improve the lives of all Illinoisans.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

General Assembly Back in Session "working" for you and I...

The General Assembly returned to Springfield April 1st and boy the joke is certainly on the voters.

One of the first items they took up was a plan to raid dedicated funds and sweep the money into the state's general fund (read--steal the money from pledged causes and use it to shore up run away spending and failure to cut budgets). The money would come from dedicated funds for things like open space, environmental protection, among other things.

This is a purely political act of a desparate group of people who need money to fuel their addiction to new programs and cover up past abusive spending. The people of Illinois have got to stand up to this nonsense and say enough is enough. It starts by sending new people to Springfield to clean up this mess.

Here is a recent article from the Springfield State Journal-Register explaining the raid proposal:

Democrats’ plan would raid funds
Senate panels OK bills that add spending; Madigan calls idea ‘delusional’

By DOUG FINKE
STAFF WRITER

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Illinois Senate Democrats on Wednesday put forward a plan to fill the state’s three-quarter-of-a-billion-dollar budget hole, but it calls for additional spending and raiding restricted funds.
House Speaker Michael Madigan’s office called the idea “delusional.”

Senate committees controlled by Democrats approved bills that expand health-care programs by $43 million for the budget year that ends June 30 and add back $53 million in House Democrat pet projects that Gov. Rod Blagojevich cut from the budget last fall.

To pay for it all, Blagojevich would be given authority to take $530 million out of hundreds of state accounts that are set aside to pay for certain programs and are not funded with general tax dollars — for example, regulatory funds set up to collect licensing fees from certain professions.

Money left over after the increased spending would be used to close the shortfall in the fiscal 2008 budget, estimated by Blagojevich’s office to be $750 million. The shortfall, caused by lagging tax receipts from the economic slowdown, has further delayed payments to state vendors and others reliant on government spending.

Some Democrats said they were trying to send an olive branch to Madigan, who was furious when his members’ pet projects were cut from the budget while those of Senate Democrats were left intact. Madigan believes

Senate President Emil Jones, D-Chicago, broke a promise to restore any such cuts made by Blagojevich.

“This is a carrot that may get the speaker back to the (bargaining) table,” said Sen. Donne Trotter of Chicago, the Senate Democrats’ top budget negotiator.

However, Madigan spokesman Steve Brown said the plan makes no sense, even if some of the money would go to House Democrats’ districts.

“We’ve been talking for weeks about a $700 million deficit, and now we are talking about new (spending)?” Brown said. “It’s a delusional act.”

Brown also said it makes no sense to again tap into restricted accounts, given the lawsuits that have been filed challenging the state’s authority to do that.

The special funds have about $3.2 billion in them, Trotter said. Since 2003, the legislature have taken $1.6 billion from the funds to balance state budgets.

Although the health-care expansions would cost $53 million through June 30, Republican lawmakers said it will add $300 million to next year’s budget.

“This is not chump change,” said Sen. Christine Radogno, R-Lemont. “We’re not addressing the problem … We just keep spending more and more and more.”

The bills approved in committee now go to the full Senate for a vote. They must also pass the House and be signed by Blagojevich before they would become law

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

this is sick. can we recall them all now?