Thursday, August 20, 2015

Bradley says Rauner is disrespecting process | The Rock River Times

 

Bradley says Rauner is disrespecting process

August 19, 2015August 19, 2015 Shane Nicholson 276 Views 1 Comment

From Illinois News Network
ilnews.org

A leading Democrat says the Republican governor is not helping solve the budget impasse by not sending administration officials to testify at a recent committee hearing in Chicago.

Democratic Representative John Bradley said the absence of anyone from the Governor Bruce Rauner’s office at Monday’s House Revenue and Finance Committee was disrespectful.

“We’re all duly elected officials. This committee has a reputation for integrity and for bipartisanship, and working together and a failure to offer any attempt to cooperate is an afront to the entire state.”

Rauner said rather than debating his proposed Turnaround agenda, some members want to debate “side issues” in Chicago, not in the state’s Capitol.

The hearing sought information from the Governor about current levels of state employment, whether any wage increases have been issued and how employee travel reimbursements are being handled.

Bradley says Rauner is disrespecting process | The Rock River Times

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Report: Poplar Grove incorrectly billed residents, needs to improve internal controls - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

 

POPLAR GROVE — Years of haphazard record keeping and disorganized cash-management procedures have cost the village of Poplar Grove a “significant,” but unspecified, amount of revenue and jeopardized finance and personnel files.
Earlier this month, the accounting firm Lauterbach & Amen completed a 21-page report for village leaders that recommended 28 changes to improve the village's internal controls. The report revealed several problems with the way village staff handles cash and other administrative duties.
According to the report, sensitive financial information and personnel files have been kept in unlocked cabinets in the front office of Village Hall, residents have been billed incorrect amounts for public utilities, and information on payments to employees has been downloaded onto USB devices that have been lost, misplaced or kept overnight by staff members as part of the transport to banks to initiate payment.
The evaluation found village employees and leaders have routinely ignored an ordinance requiring the Village Board to approve purchases totaling $2,500 or more. There have also been frequent delays in check deposits, sometimes for days or weeks at a time, and delays in posting revenue receipts into the village's accounting system, which "causes difficulty in investigating and identifying discrepancies," the report states.
In one bizarre example of the village's poor financial management, the report said staff members occasionally took money from a nearby soda machine to make change for residents attempting to pay utility bills.
“When you don’t have proper procedures in place, correct checks and balances, you open yourself up to a lot of scrutiny and things could happen that are faulty,” said Matt Beran, who oversaw Lauterbach & Amen’s evaluation. “You allow that there could be fraud happening, there could be some things going on. Those are your risks if you don’t actually do anything … and some of those things were actually (affecting) the village’s bottom line — they weren’t billing and getting money that they’re actually, rightfully owed.”
Because the village doesn’t maintain a formal rate schedule detailing utility charges for residents, there have been “several instances” in which rate changes were not communicated to village employees, resulting in lost revenue, according to the report. Employees also had different interpretations of how utility charges were calculated and applied.

To read  the entire  RR Star article :  Report: Poplar Grove incorrectly billed residents, needs to improve internal controls - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

 

To read the actual auditors report:  http://www.villageofpoplargrove.com/vertical/sites/%7BBB8156E5-19AE-4976-960A-C2DC686F7EB9%7D/uploads/VPG_Board_Agenda_Back-up_08-17-15.pdf

Governor Rauner escalates attacks on homecare | RiverBender.com

 

Administration Announces Suddenly They Will Cut Off Payments to Providers

ALTON – After repeated assurances from Bruce Rauner that state workers would continue to get paid despite the continuing budget impasse, his administration’s Department on Aging has issued a letter reversing course. The agency letter informs providers (Including Senior Services Plus) in the Community Care Program (CCP) that payments will not be processed for services performed since July 1st – the day Rauner’s government shutdown began – and will not be paid until the impasse is resolved. 

This declaration by the Rauner administration contradicts a verbal understanding between CCP providers and agency staff, while flying in the face of consent decrees requiring the state to pay these providers.

The agency letter politely asks CCP providers it informs of the cutoff to “please continue normal operations” in the interim.

Gov. Rauner’s payment cutoff is just the latest salvo in his ongoing war against home healthcare and its providers. Rauner previously announced cuts to homecare programs that would end services for 50,000 Illinois seniors and people with disabilities, jeopardizing their health and independence—and likely forcing them out of their homes into more expensive nursing home care. 

“Gov. Rauner is engaging in relentless attacks on critical services that provide a lifeline to our state’s seniors and people with disabilities, and now he has escalated that war to include their providers,” said Bob Thieman, executive director of the Illinois Association of Community Care Program Home Care Providers.

Senior Services Plus and other local CCP providers ask that the public call and voice their opinions to those in power: Governor Rauner (217-782-0244); Speaker Michael Madigan (217-782-5350); President John Cullerton (217-782-2728

Governor Rauner escalates attacks on homecare | RiverBender.com

Monday, August 17, 2015

Illinois governor offers revamped property tax freeze bill - Yahoo News

 

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner unveiled on Monday a revamped bill to freeze local property taxes that hopes to woo Democratic votes by boosting funding for financially struggling school districts, particularly the Chicago Public Schools (CPS).

The measure couples a two-year tax freeze with a $74 million increase in state funding for high-poverty school districts and the creation of a commission to change Illinois' school funding formula. The state would contribute $200 million a year for two years toward pension and healthcare costs at CPS without a reduction in the district's $600 million state grant funding, according to the Republican governor.

The bill also contains elements that Democrats, who control the House and Senate, have been unwilling to embrace. These include allowing local governments and schools to limit collective bargaining, to adopt their own prevailing wage requirements, and to restrict workers' compensation claims.

"This will be a transformational change, improvement for the state of Illinois and allow us to move forward and complete the rest of the budgeting process," Rauner told reporters.

He called on powerful House Speaker Michael Madigan to take up the bill in its entirety and urged individual lawmakers to vote for their residents and not "for some higher power."

There was no immediate comment from Madigan or Senate President John Cullerton on Rauner's proposal.

Illinois on Wednesday will mark its seventh week of operating without a fiscal 2016 budget. Rauner said his administration was negotiating over the budget "almost every single day." In the meantime, certain services and state payroll are being funded under court orders.

CPS, the nation's third-largest public school system, is drowning under rapidly rising pension costs that are largely to blame for a $1.1 billion budget hole. The district last week proposed a $5.7 billion fiscal 2016 spending plan that relies on $500 million in pension savings from the state.

(Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Illinois governor offers revamped property tax freeze bill - Yahoo News

Judge Tobin withdraws from the Plote case

Today Judge Tobin accepted the request from Plote and withdrew from this zoning/contempt case.   This was the option which Judge Tobin gave to both the plantiff ( Boone County) and the defendant (Plote Construction) after Boone County Chairman Bob Walberg’s conversation with the judge regarding the case.  For more details on this ex-parte communication see: http://boonecountywatchdog.blogspot.com/2015/07/boone-county-prosecutor-says-county.html

The case was re-assigned to Judge Philip J. Nicolosi with a re-scheduled date of Friday, August 21, 2015,3:00PM  Boone County Courthouse.

Friday, August 21, 2015 at 4:55 PM

The Plote case was continued to Oct 26 th at 1:30 with Judge Nicolossi.

Bond Market’s $2.46 Trillion Dilemma May Not Be So Serious - Bloomberg Business

 

For bond investors worried about what might happen when the Federal Reserve starts whittling down its $2.46 trillion of Treasuries, there’s good news.

You’ll barely even notice.

The central bank plans to reduce its debt holdings sometime after it starts raising interest rates, and the concern is that the Fed’s attempt to reverse its unprecedented easy-money policies will trigger a jump in borrowing costs.

But even if the Fed doesn’t buy any bonds to replace the $216 billion in Treasuries coming due next year, yields would hardly budge, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co., which looked at how much they moved during the Fed’s debt-purchase program.

“It would not have an impact, and that’s the news here,” said Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP LLC, a research firm that specializes in analyzing Fed policy and Treasury financing. “Letting Treasuries run off is a freebie.”

It’s the latest surprise in a market that keeps confounding Wall Street’s best and brightest, who have repeatedly gotten it wrong calling for the end of the bull market in bonds.

Keeping a lid on yields is not only critical for investors, but it’s also crucial for the U.S. government as it finances a debt load that’s more than doubled to $18 trillion since the credit crisis. And the implications extend to governments, businesses and consumers around the world as Treasuries serve as the benchmark for trillions of dollars of debt globally.

Policy Risk

The Fed ended its bond-buying stimulus, popularly known as quantitative easing, or QE, in October 2014, but it’s been maintaining the size of its holdings by reinvesting money from maturing debt into more securities.

In the past five years, the central bank spent almost $200 billion on reinvestments in Treasuries alone.

With the U.S. economy on the upswing, the worry is that the Fed will upend the bond market as it starts unwinding the most aggressive stimulus measures in its history.

In addition to raising rates by year-end, a majority of forecasters expect the Fed will let some debt securities mature in the first half of 2016 without plowing the money back into the bond market. Apart from Treasuries, the central bank has also amassed $1.73 trillion of mortgage-backed securities and now holds a total of $4.2 trillion of bonds.

By pulling back, the Fed will start removing one of the biggest sources of Treasuries demand, which has suppressed borrowing costs and helped the U.S. recover from its worst recession in decades. Since the Fed dropped rates to rock-bottom levels in 2008 and embarked on QE, yields on the U.S. 10-year note have fallen from 4 percent to about 2.2 percent today.

Bond Math

“I don’t see how it can’t” push yields higher, said Thomas Simons, a government-debt economist at Jefferies Group LLC, one of 22 dealers that trade directly with the Fed.

JPMorgan’s analysis suggests the increase isn’t likely to be significant. If the Fed allowed all of its Treasuries that mature in 2016 to run off its balance sheet, 10-year yields would rise by about 0.05 percentage point.

The top-ranked firm for fixed-income research by Institutional Investor magazine based its analysis on how much Treasury yields fell when the Fed was buying bonds, which equaled about 0.2 percentage point for every $1 trillion of QE.

Using that math, the Fed’s $1.3 trillion of Treasury holdings that come due through the end of the decade may boost 10-year yields by less than 0.3 percentage point.

The Treasury Department isn’t taking any chances. It’s considering steps that would mitigate potential disruptions to U.S. funding and has signaled it will boost issuance of the shortest-dated debt to plug a potential gap of as much as $850 billion through 2018 if the Fed stops reinvesting.

‘Reasonable Level’

The move would bolster bill supply, which has fallen to multi-decade lows, at a time when regulations may cause demand to soar as much as $900 billion, according to JPMorgan.

In any case, there are plenty of reasons for the Fed to take it slow. With rates pinned near zero since 2008, the central bank may want to make sure its first rate increases don’t choke off economic growth before paring its debt holdings.

Joblessness is at a seven-year low, yet U.S. workers can’t seem to get the pay raises to allow them to spend more.

Consumer prices fell in three of the first six months of the year and traders are questioning whether inflation will reach the Fed’s 2 percent goal any time in the next 10 years.

New York Fed President William C. Dudley told reporters after a June 5 speech in Minneapolis that he’d want rates at a “reasonable level” first before ending reinvestments.

“How far that is -- you know, if it’s 1 percent or 1.5 percent -- I haven’t really reached any definitive conclusion,” Dudley said.

Cold Turkey

Futures traders don’t expect rates to reach 1 percent until at least December 2016, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The uneven housing recovery may also persuade the Fed to continue its reinvestments in mortgage securities. The central bank has been the biggest buyer of mortgage bonds guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which has supported demand since the U.S. housing bust.

“They’re not going to go cold turkey,” said George Goncalves, the head of interest-rate strategy at Nomura Holdings Inc. “I think they taper the reinvestments.”

 

Bond Market’s $2.46 Trillion Dilemma May Not Be So Serious - Bloomberg Business

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Illinois Gov. Rauner partially vetoes bipartisan pot bill, frustrating sponsor - Chicago Political Buzz | Examiner.com

 

Using an amendatory veto Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner sent a bipartisan bill (HB 218) decriminalizing marijuana possession sponsored by State Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago) on Friday that would reduce the legal amount of marijuana possession, back to the state legislature for recommended changes.

Rauner stated his explicit support for the measure, a nod to reducing the state prison population, that he has previously supported, but says that it "must be made carefully and incrementally." A move that disappointed Cassidy and other sponsors and supporters.

The Chicago Tribune noted, “Under the proposal, people caught with up to 15 grams of marijuana — about the equivalent of 25 cigarette-sized joints — would not go to court but instead receive fines ranging from $55 to $125. Rauner said those standards were too lax and the threshold should be lowered to 10 grams and fines should range from $100 to $200.”

Some proponents of marijuana reform still see Rauner’s revision to the bill as a step forward, such as Chris Lindsey, a legislative analyst for the Marijuana Policy Project, who was quoted in the Chicago Sun-Times, saying that the changes are “still a huge step forward.”

Cassidy in an emailed statement, to reporters, thinks otherwise. She says that she is frustrated by Rauner’s veto and that, “Throughout the legislative process we were diligent in gathering input from all stakeholders, including Republican leadership in both chambers as well as from members of Governor Rauner’s own administration. That is why it’s so incredibly frustrating to have him sweep the rug out from under us this afternoon with an amendatory veto asking for stricter punishments and higher fines.”

Prison population reduction has had the support of many elected officials and lawmakers, in Illinois, including Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, and in recognition of that, Cassidy remarked, “The Governor knows that our state has massive overcrowding in our prisons and jails, and has said many times since last fall that he wants to reduce our prison population by 25 percent over the next 10 years. This bill, which had broad bipartisan support, would have helped to make that shared vision a reality.”

Rauner’s veto seems to do more with limitations, some observers say, than his previous statements would suggest, but for the bill’s chief sponsor, there is also a sense of bafflement, when she told the Tribune, "This goal of reducing the prison population is one that we share, but it's not going to be easy and it's not going to be accomplished with half measures," Cassidy said. "It really comes down to with every change you make, someone gets arrested who wouldn't otherwise. And if we want to keep people out of our jail system we have to take bold moves, and does putting someone in jail for 10 grams instead of 15 grams make us safer? I would argue it doesn't."

In her own statement, she stressed that Rauner’s veto “simply put a band aid on the wound when the real problem lies deep beneath the cut. Real progress was a pen stroke away.”

The Tribune said that “The bill now returns to lawmakers, who can vote to go along with Rauner's changes or reject them. If lawmakers opt not to take up the changes, the bill dies. Cassidy said she would have to regroup with supporters to decide the next move.” What that move will be is unknown, and in summary she said, “At the end of the day, this bill could have been a major first step in our shared goal of reducing the prison population. The Governor had a chance to save our state money, and make the world a more just and civil place. We did our part; we gave him the bill he asked for."

Illinois Gov. Rauner partially vetoes bipartisan pot bill, frustrating sponsor - Chicago Political Buzz | Examiner.com