Thursday, June 4, 2015

Gov. Bruce Rauner prepares closures, spending cuts - News - Journal Standard - Freeport, IL

 

  • SPRINGFIELD -- Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administration said Tuesday it is looking at raising co-payments for subsidized day care, closing youth prisons and state museums and grounding state airplanes if a balanced budget isn’t approved.
    The actions outlined in a news release from the administration late Tuesday afternoon are just the first of “many additional steps” it said it will be taking to deal with a state spending plan the administration said is nearly $4 billion out of balance.
    The Republican administration referred to the spending plan as the “Madigan-Cullerton budget” after House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton, both Chicago Democrats.
    The administration said the deficit contained in the Democrats' spending plan for the fiscal year that starts July 1 is more than double the hole that lawmakers had to plug in the current state budget. They approved fund sweeps and other measures this spring to fill that gap.
    “With the upcoming Madigan-Cullerton budget deficit more than double that of last year, a midyear solution is not possible at this time,” the administration said in its statement. “The administration must immediately begin taking steps to managing state spending.”
    Although lawmakers in both the House and Senate approved the spending plan for fiscal 2016, the bills have never been formally conveyed to the governor for his action. Rauner previously said he would not sign the budget because it is out of balance.
    Madigan and Cullerton have both said they want to continue working with Rauner to produce a balanced budget. Both have said the state needs to find additional revenue rather than balance the budget through cuts alone.
    Rauner, though, said lawmakers have to approve components of his "Turnaround Agenda" before he will talk about revenue increases. The agenda includes items like workers' compensation reform, a property tax freeze and term limits for lawmakers and state officials.
    Legal move?
    Cullerton spokeswoman Rikeesha Phelon said Democrats are willing to work with Rauner if he wants to work with them.
    “The plan passed by the General Assembly is a statement of our priorities to provide vital services and invest in the middle class,” Phelon said in a statement. “If the governor shares that goal, then he is invited to work with us to develop a full plan to fund our shared priorities in education, public safety and community services. Unfortunately, today’s actions signal that the governor would rather slash child care, services for troubled youth and senior care rather than work on a bipartisan budget solution.”
    SEIU Healthcare Illinois issued a statement saying the eligibility restrictions the administration wants to impose on the Department on Aging’s Community Care program “likely contradict Illinois law.”
    Page 2 of 3 - The administration said it will file emergency rules to enact means testing for the program. It said no income eligibility currently exists.
    Among the other spending cuts, the administration wants to end the state portion of the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program on July 1. About $170 million in federal money will continue to be distributed.
    “This will definitely affect hundreds of thousands of families across the state,” said Dalitso Sulamayo, president and CEO of the Illinois Association of Community Action Agencies. “We are looking at about 171,000 households that will be affected.”
    Museums affected
    At the Illinois State Museum in Springfield, one of five state museums the administration said it will "begin the process to suspend operations and close," all questions were referred to the Department of Natural Resources.
    DNR spokesman Chris Young said “the exact date operations will be suspended has not been established yet. Additional details are still being worked out.”
    He said 68 people would be laid off if the five museums closed. In addition to the museum in Springfield, DNR operates the Dickson Mounds site in Lewiston and sites in Lockport, Chicago and Rend Lake.
    Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
    • Immediate suspension of all future incentive offers to companies for business attraction and retention. This includes EDGE Tax Credits, Large Business Attraction Grants, Employer Training Investment Program Incentive Grants and Prime Sites Grants.
    • Will defer application approvals for film tax credits and High Impact Business designations. All commitments previously made in any of these programs will be honored.
    Department of Juvenile Justice
    Begin the process of identifying one or two juvenile correctional facilities for closure. Juvenile system has a surplus of capacity. Capacity at approximately 1,200 beds, with less than 700 occupied.
    Department of Corrections
    • Begin the process of closing the Hardin County Work Camp. Approximately 180 inmates will be moved. Approximately 60 Work Camp staff affected.
    • Department of Healthcare and Family Services
    • Implement an audit review of nursing home reimbursements to ensure payments comply with recently implemented new rate structure.
    • Recover overpayments to nursing homes and implement financial penalties for improper billings.
      • Department of Human Services
        • DHS will pursue cost control strategies through emergency rules to the Childcare Program, including increasing copays for parents using the program and freezing intake and creating waiting lists.
        • DHS will also begin background checks for relatives providing child care. Background checks are currently required for child care licensed centers, group homes and non-relatives who provide care.
        • Page 3 of 3 -
            Department of Natural Resources
            • The Department will not award Open Space Land Acquisition Development Grants in FY16.
            • The Department will begin the process to suspend operations and close the five state museums to visitors. The state will continue to maintain and secure the museums to protect the artifacts and exhibits.
              •  
              • By Doug Finke
                and Seth Richardson
                GateHouse Media Illinois

                Journal Standard

                 

              • From:  Gov. Bruce Rauner prepares closures, spending cuts - News - Journal Standard - Freeport, IL

                IL Governor Rauner's Pal Made $625,000 Per Hour Last Year and Then Gave $10 Million to Rauner Campaign to Attack Unions and Cut Worker Pay | Robert Creamer

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                Unfortunately for Rauner and Griffin, ordinary Illinois voters are not so stupid. A recent poll published by Public Policy Polling found that:

                • Only 33 percent of voters in the state agree with Governor Rauner's agenda on "right to work", compared to 55 percent who think everyone represented by a union should have to pay something toward negotiating and administering its contracts.
                • By 81 percent to 15 percent, voters oppose Rauner's attempts to gut the state's Workers' Compensation system.
                • 68 percent of voters in the state think that the wage standard should continue to be set locally with a prevailing wage, while only 23 percent think the state should be able to pay below the local prevailing wage.
                • Voters just generally disagree with Governor Rauner's philosophy toward unions.
                • Only 42 percent think unions have too much power, compared to 56 percent who think they're necessary to fight for the middle class.
                There is another big difference between Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and the Rauner/Griffin team. Walker was an agent of the 1 percent. Rauner and Griffin are the 1 percent. In fact they are the top .01 percent.

                It's not so easy for people who make as much every minute and a half as a minimum wage worker takes home all year long to convince voters that it's a good idea to cut the pay of working people. It's not so easy for people like Rauner and Griffin to literally propose taking food from the mouths of hungry children by cutting the Illinois nutrition program in order to allow the state to cut taxes for the wealthy.

                Appearances are not so good. And to top it off, Griffin has a massive personal interest in eliminating the rights of workers -- particularly public employees. Griffin's firm owns Service Master, a company that makes part of its money by privatizing public services.

                But Rauner's monomaniacal obsession with eliminating the rights of ordinary people to engage in collective bargaining over their wages and working conditions comes from something deeper than simple desire to put even more money into the pockets of people like himself and his friend Griffin.

                They believe that the rich should have the right to call the shots in society -- it's as simple as that. In fact, Griffin said he believed that wealthy elites have "insufficient influence" over democratic politics -- and politics in general.

                Griffin and Rauner believe that America should be a plutocracy.

                And they deeply believe that if they can buy a company, they should have the unfettered right to pay people whatever the "market will bear." In effect, they think people should be treated like soybeans and corn. Whatever the market price, that's what they should have to pay.

                Fortunately ordinary people in America disagree. Most Americans believe that we are the point of the economy -- not just some "input of production." The goal of the economy is not to make a few people fabulously wealthy, it is to produce widely-shared prosperity for everyone who is willing to work hard.

                And history has shown us that is only possible if everyone has the right to collective bargaining over their wages and working conditions, to demand a fair share of the fruits of their own increasing productivity.

                In the last 35 years, Gross Domestic Product per person in America has grown 77 percent. That should have meant that everyone is 77 percent better off, but instead, the wages of most Americans have been stagnant. That's because the rules of the game have been rigged by people like Bruce Rauner and Ken Griffin to assure that virtually all of that increased wealth went to the top 1 percent.

                Now they have the audacity to demand that ordinary people who work in public employment and make modest middle class incomes shouldn't be allowed to combine their political contributions to influence the outcome of elections. But they are happy to allow the super-rich like themselves to control politics with more and more $10 million contributions.

                Rauner, Griffin, and their whole Koch Brothers-inspired crowd must be stopped now.

                America is still the wealthiest country in the world. We have the technology, the natural resources and the hard-working, trained work force to create the most prosperous society in human history where anyone who works hard can have a fulfilling life.

                But elections have consequences. And 2016 could be a pivotal, historic year -- a turning point year. Imagine what will happen to America if someone who shares Bruce Rauner's values becomes President and the House and Senate continue to be controlled by Republicans. Imagine what it would mean if people who share Griffin's and Rauner's views completely control the Supreme Court for a generation.

                In 2016 we will have a chance to stop the plutocrats like Rauner and Griffin from snatching away that future and returning us to the plutocracy of the Gilded Age. Time for Progressives to saddle up. Failure is simply not an option.

                Read the entire article by clicking on the following:  IL Governor Rauner's Pal Made $625,000 Per Hour Last Year and Then Gave $10 Million to Rauner Campaign to Attack Unions and Cut Worker Pay | Robert Creamer