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Archive for 2012

CPS plans 60 more charters in 5 years

Thursday, May 17th, 2012

Chicago Public Schools plans to create 60 more charter schools over five years, which would increase the share of privately run charters to about a quarter of all schools in the district.

The plan for charter growth, part of a larger proposal for 100 new schools over the same five years, is laid out in an application seeking $20 million for charter schools from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Right now the district’s 675 schools include 110 charters, which get tax dollars but are privately controlled. Private organizations also operate an additional 27 schools, 19 of which are managed by the Academy for Urban School Leadership.

There is a waiting list of 10,000 students for charter schools, which have been growing for the past seven years at a rate similar to what’s planned for the next five, according to CPS.

“I’m not looking for a quota, I’m not looking for a percentage, I’m looking to respond to a need,” said CPS chief Jean-Claude Brizard. “As a whole, people are not satisfied with their neighborhood schools. Clearly, there’s a demand.”

CPS said the 40 remaining schools in the five-year plan would include some privately run turnaround schools, as well as magnets, International Baccalaureate programs and STEM schools (which specialize in science, technology, engineering and math), all run by the district.

The application to the Gates Foundation, made jointly by CPS and stakeholders in charter schools, seeks $20 million to secure $100 million in funds for construction and renovation of buildings for charter schools.

Even with 60 new schools, charters would make up a smaller proportion of all schools at CPS than they do at some other large urban districts — in New Orleans, for example, about 70 percent of schoolchildren attend charters.

But critics — prominent among them the Chicago Teachers Union — say the growth of charters signals the decline of CPS-run neighborhood schools. Additionally, state report card data released last fall suggested many charters in Chicago are performing no better than some of the same neighborhood schools. More than two dozen charters scored below district averages.

“If a new charter opens up or a charter expands, they are heavily marketed and parents are aggressively recruited,” said Sarah Hainds, a researcher with the Chicago Teachers Union. “So the neighborhood schools have had a declining enrollment, and that further facilitates the excuse of why (CPS) should close down these schools. More schools will be on the chopping block.”

In December, CPS became the latest large urban district to sign an agreement with the Gates Foundation, pledging greater cooperation and collaboration between the city’s charter and neighborhood schools. That compact brought an initial award of $100,000 but also allowed CPS to apply for money from a $40 million pool of funds.

The $40 million in funds the Gates Foundation plans to award by early fall will trigger the next stage of reform in the charter movement, said foundation spokeswoman Debbie Robinson.

“It shows a maturity of the charter sector,” Robinson said. “We’ve learned a lot in the last 20 years on which models deliver the best results. We now know where it’s best to replicate, and that’s part of the next strategy.”

Securing more money would open Chicago up to national charter operations that have shied away from the city because of a lack of facilities and what they say is insufficient public funding, said Phyllis Lockett, president and CEO of the charter advocacy group New Schools for Chicago.

Source:  The Chicago Tribune

Personal property tax diversion goes nowhere in legislature

Thursday, May 17th, 2012

A bill that could divert $1.4 billion statewide from schools, cities and other local governments went nowhere in the Illinois General Assembly Wednesday, bringing a sigh of relief from Springfield Mayor Mike Houston, who said the legislation would mean a tax increase or the layoffs of dozens of city and library employees.

House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, did not try to move his proposal to take money from corporate personal property replacement tax receipts and use it to fund the Teachers’ Retirement System. Money from that tax now goes to local governments and schools.

“It just wasn’t the time to call it,” said Madigan spokesman Steve Brown.

Houston told reporters after the hearing that the legislation would force the city to cut 50 positions, including 10 from Lincoln Library. Depending on which version is considered, the bill could cost the city up to $3 million.

“I don’t think we could cut 40 positions out of our corporate fund without having a devastating effect in terms of providing services to the city of Springfield, and I will guarantee you that the library is not in a position where it could sustain itself. … It could not afford to lose 10 employees,” Houston said.

Pete Sherman, a spokesman for the Springfield School District, which stands to lose roughly $7 million if all of the corporate personal property tax money were eliminated, said that figure funds 100 to 120 employees.

Asked why the city of Springfield and other municipalities should be responsible for paying teacher pensions, Brown said, “So they should share the same concerns that the state has. Perhaps they can help educate some other legislators on the topic.”

Madigan, along with Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, and Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, has also favored making local school districts pay the costs of teacher pensions in the future instead of having the state pay for them, as is the case today.

Houston said cost-shifting should not be part of the state’s budget solution.

“As the state of Illinois has its problems, it really needs to deal with those problems without shifting them to other units of local government across the state,” Houston said.

Source:  The State Journal Register - The Oldest Newspaper in Illinois

House approves GOP bill to renew Violence Against Women Act; Democrats say it’s too narrow

Thursday, May 17th, 2012

On a vote that fell largely along party lines, the House of Representatives has approved a GOP measure reauthorizing the expired Violence Against Women Act — the latest issue that was once the subject of broad bipartisan agreement in Washington to fall victim to election year politics.

The House bill passed on a 222 to 205 vote. Democrats opposed the Republican bill because they said it was too narrow. They said it should have included language barring discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in grant programs funded through the 18-year-old program and provisions expanding visas offered to illegal immigrants who assist in the prosecution of their abusers.

A bill approved by the Senate on a bipartisan 68 to 31 vote last month included that language, and Democrats argued the House should pass the Senate version.

But Republicans said gay rights and immigrant issues were divisive distractions unnecessary to a bill designed to streamline and consolidate grant programs that provide support for local law enforcement and social services to help women victims of domestic and sexual violence.

“As we look to reauthorize VAWA, we want to make sure that we’re not politicizing this issue but just reauthorizing it,” said Rep. Sandy Adams (R-Fla.), the measure’s chief Republican sponsor. “Look at the bill and what it is in it, you’ll see that it’s etenered around our victims.

Though Republicans had made changes to the bill to address some concerns of women’s groups, the National Organization of Women and the National Task Force to End Sexual and Domestic Violence had urged the House to reject it in favor of the Senate version.

Senate Democrats pushed reauthorization of the act, which expired in September, to highlight what they believe is Republican obstruction on issues of particular concern to women. Senate Republicans urged changes to the Democrats’ bill but ultimately 14 backed the measure.

Feeling pressured not to appear to block the broadly popular program, House Republicans unveiled their own competing version. It was pressed by Republican women, including Adams, a former law enforcement officer with a compeling personal story of surviving domestic violence.

It is not clear whether the two versions can be reconciled before the November election or if the competing legislation will now be used as a rhetorical weapon by both parties.

Source:  The Washington Post

Emanuel says new O’Hare cargo center will create thousands of jobs

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Military land at O’Hare Airport acquired by the city in 1996 for private development that never happened will finally get the international cargo center that former Mayor Richard M. Daley envisioned when he made that $104 million investment.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Monday delivered on his predecessor’s unfulfilled promise — by unveiling a $200 million project, he claims, will create 1,200 construction jobs, 1,200 permanent on-site cargo jobs and 10,000 regional jobs over the course of a decade-long development.

The 840,000-square-foot cargo center expected to open next year will be built on 65 acres of military land on the northeast quadrant of O’Hare.  Aeroterm LLC, the city’s designated developer, will contribute $130 million to the project.  Another $62 million will come from airport funds.

In March, Emanuel embraced a 10-year blueprint for revitalizing the moribund local economy that called for making Chicago a leading exporter.

Although Chicago ranks third in the nation among exporters, the city lags behind the competition in the proportion of goods exported with untapped potential among small businesses, the report concluded.

“This cargo facility will help us achieve the goal of doubling our exports over the next five years,” the mayor told reporters on the airfield.

Emanuel acknowledged that the cargo center has been talked about since the military land was acquired by the city in 1996.

Asked why it has taken forever to deliver the project, the mayor said, “You’re at the end of the road of the forever part. . . . Because we are building out a runway that will be open in 2013 that can handle the big, big air cargo [jets], this is the perfect time to make an investment in the cargo capacity.”

He added, “It’s been sitting fallow for a long time. . . . At one point, it was gonna be developed. [But], the economy went off the skids. With the economy stabilizing, with the pent up demand…in the air cargo/ import-export business, with our desire to build out this capacity — this was the time to actually take it off the shelf, freshen it up because it’s core to our economic strategy as a city.”

In 1996, Daley spent $104 million to acquire 359 acres of military land. When the Air National Guard’s 126th Air Refueling Wing moved out, there were big dreams that included hotels and a business corridor. There was even talk of extending the O’Hare people mover system to the military land to make the site more attractive for business development.

Instead, the land sat vacant 16 years after the military bid farewell to Chicago in preparation for a move to Scott Air Force Base in Downstate Belleville.

United Airlines was supposed to anchor development with an $80 million corporate headquarters on 30 of the military acres with an option to lease 50 additional acres. But, that deal fell through when the airline fell into bankruptcy. The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, had a chilling effect on the rest of the city’s plans.

Aviation Commissioner Rosemarie Andolino noted that Chicago is already one of the busiest cargo hubs in the world with more than 1.5 million tons handled last year.

O’Hare is also the No. 1 gateway for air imports from mainland China and a “dominant gateway” for air exports there, with more than 216,000 tons and 73,000 tons respectively, more than 25 percent of the U.S. total, she said.

“We continue to invest in this important component of O’Hare’s business, including adding new cargo carriers as well as making great progress on the O’Hare Modernization Program, which holds enormous benefits for both O’Hare’s air passengers and cargo business,” Andolino said, arguing that the cargo center will boost Chicago’s position as an “international air freight hub.”

Source:  The Chicago Sun-Times

Senate president champions online gambling

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

Illinois was the first state to sell lottery tickets over the internet. Now Senate President John Cullerton wants Illinois to embrace all kinds of online gambling.
 
Cullerton says he’s introducing legislation to create a “Division of Internet Gaming“ within the Illinois Lottery. It would explore creating an online poker site and making Illinois a hub for Internet gambling around the world.  

The Chicago Democrat said Tuesday it can be done in an “ethical and socially responsible manner“ while still generating hundreds of millions of dollars for the state treasury.  

Cullerton calls it imperative for Illinois to act quickly so that other states don’t get a head start.  In March, Illinois became the first state with online lottery sales.

Source:  The State Journal Register - The Oldest Newspaper in Illinois

Why we’re headed for more debt limit brinksmanship

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

House Speaker John Boehner gave the political world a dose of deja vu on Tuesday when he said Republicans would again hold their ground when the debt limit again comes to a vote in 2013.

“We shouldn’t dread the debt limit,” Boehner said at the Peter G. Peterson Fiscal Summit. “We should welcome it. It’s an action-forcing event in a town that has become infamous for inaction.”

Boehner said that he would again seek budget cuts commensurate with the debt limit increase and resist tax hikes — basically the same posture that Republicans took last time.

The comments may seem odd to some, given the backlash against Congress and politicians that resulted from the government’s near-default in 2011. They could also be geared toward the 2012 race, in which Republicans are seeking to make President Obama’s stewardship of the deficit and debt a major liability.

But there’s plenty of reason to believe that Boehner isn’t just blowing smoke and that, in fact, a similar battle could indeed play out next year (complete with the kind off brinksmanship we saw last time).

To wit:

1. The likelihood of a split government.

There is an election between now and 2013 — one in which either side could conceivably gain control of the presidency and both chambers of Congress and have control over the debt limit process. But right now, the battle for the House, Senate and White House appear as though they will all be competitive, with Democrats having a fighting chance to re-take the House (Boehner has said as much), Republicans having a pretty good shot at reclaiming the Senate, and the presidential race polling as a toss-up.

And even if somehow one party does land all three, there’s still the filibuster threat in the Senate — something Republicans have shown they are more than willing to use. In other words, if Republicans want to dig in, there’s likely the be an avenue to do just that.

2. Neither side underwent irreparable harm last time.

Yes, the federal government as a whole paid a price, with Congress’s and President Obama’s approval ratings both reaching new lows.

But neither side squandered its chances in the 2012 election; each side paid a price, and each has a fair shot at victory this year. Hence, neither side has a huge incentive to back down the next time the debt limit comes up for a vote. Politics and elections, after all, are zero sum games. And if Americans Elect’s demise has shown us anything, it’s that a third party still isn’t a viable alternative.

3. The tea party is still relevant — in a way.

Yes, the tea party as an entity isn’t as front and center as it was after the 2010 election, but its ideals live on in the Republican Party.

If the Senate primaries in Indiana and Nebraska during the last two weeks showed us anything, it’s that Republican voters will still punish their establishment candidates for being insufficiently conservative. To be clear, Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) and Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning both had other warts — the perception that Lugar had lost connection with his home state and Bruning’s personal financial issues, for example — but both also suffered from uncertainty over their conservative bona fides. And that was the starting point for the opposition in both races.

The increasing involvement from groups like the Club for Growth and Sen. Jim DeMint’s (R-S.C.) Senate Conservatives Fund in GOP primaries should serve notice to Republicans that they need to watch their right flank at all times. It may not be the tea party, per se, waiting to take them down, but someone with similar values is.

(For example: The Club on Tuesday sent a message to GOP freshmen, noting that many of them haven’t voted the tea party line enough.)

4. The “supercommittee” failed.

Washington is known for these pass-the-buck gimmicks, and it provided a convenient out for Congress last time to task a so-called “supercommittee” with completing the budget-cutting work after the impasse. But the panel eventually failed, leaving Congress with some painful automatic cuts at the Pentagon and elsewhere.

Boehner made a point in his speech Tuesday to say that it wouldn’t happen again.

“As I told the president, ‘We’re not doing those things that way any more,’” Boehner said, repeatedly using the word “gimmicks.”

Assuming Congress and the American people won’t accept a similar gimmicky compromise the next time (which might be assuming too much), it will make coming to an agreement even more difficult. That increases the likelihood that the process will devolve into the the same kind of brinksmanship as last time.

In the end, it’s not hard to see a redux of the 2011 debt limit showdown in 2013. The political realities today might make it inevitable.

Source:  The Washington Post

City to give $2 million to companies that hire City Colleges grads

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced a $2 million stipend for companies willing to hire City Colleges of Chicago graduates.

“You hire one of our community college kids, we’ll pay their stipend for the first four weeks of work,” Emanuel said Saturday during his commencement address to 3,300 graduates at the University of Illinois at Chicago Pavilion. “. . . I want the rest of the country and all the people to know we got great community colleges with great kids who are ready to go to work.”

He also told the graduates — a record number for City Colleges, which granted only half that number of associates degrees a decade ago — about the importance of battling adversity.

He recounted his own near-death experience as a teen after an accident left him with a severed finger and led to multiple infections.

And he recalled his experiences handling abrupt responsibility changes in the White House.

“The truth is what defines your success will not be this moment, this milestone, this day of recognizing all you’ve accomplished,” he said. “It’s how you handle adversity that defines who you are.  It is that sense of when you are set back, when you fall, how you get yourself up that determines how you’re going to be a success in life.”

The seven City Colleges of Chicago have more than 120,000 students enrolled each year.

Source:  The Chicago Sun-Times

Quinn: Reform plans a rescue operation

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
Gov. Pat Quinn appealed Monday to an influential group of business leaders in Chicago to add their weight to his push to reform Illinois’ debt-laden Medicaid and public pension systems, describing the plan as a tough sacrifice and an urgent “rescue operation” for future generations.
 
With barely two weeks left in the legislative session, the Democratic governor has gone on the offensive and turned to unlikely allies in the business community to pressure lawmakers to pass his proposals. On the other side, unions and advocates for the poor say the reforms will hurt the most vulnerable.  Quinn told the City Club of Chicago that the two programs are taking a 39 percent bite out of the state budget this year, putting what he called a “serious squeeze” on spending for other essential government duties: to ensure public safety, provide education and other services and invest in transportation and infrastructure.  
 
“All the other things that we want our government to do, there’s less and less money available,” Quinn said.  
 
But leaders of the state’s public universities are saying too much damage to pension benefits could drive away top faculty talent. In a letter to Quinn, presidents and chancellors of 15 schools urged him not to cut already-earned benefits, guarantee proper state funding for the systems in the future and give colleges time to adjust if they must contribute a portion of the funding.   
 
Medicaid, the health program for the poor and disabled, is currently running a $2.7 billion deficit. The state retirement systems are running a shortfall of $83 billion on the money they’ll have to pay out to state employees in the decades ahead.   
 
To rein in Medicaid costs, Quinn has proposed cutting services for the poor and disabled and cutting payments to doctors and hospitals. To keep from having to cut further, he proposes essentially doubling the tax on a pack of cigarettes.   
 
He wants to control pension costs by having government workers pay more from their paychecks into pension funds, making those employees work longer before they can retire and reducing cost-of-living increases after they leave work.   
 
He said Monday he is sticking by all of those proposals, as negotiations continue in Springfield. 
 
Quinn urged the hundreds of business leaders in the room to join his campaign.  
 
“We want you to call today, call tomorrow, call every day legislators even if you don’t know them … to let them know that the stakes are very high,” the governor said.  
Quinn’s proposals have gained support among many of the state’s business leaders.  
 
On Monday, Chicago-based energy provider Exelon Corp. and electricity utility ComEd voiced support, saying “the current structure is in dire need of change.”  
 
The letter from the universities, dated May 3, says pension reform must not hurt their “ability to retain and recruit talented faculty and staff” and “must respect constitutional protection” against reducing retirement benefits that have already been earned — a major factor in the debate.   
 
The letter lists seven “objectives” for a pension package, from pronouncing a “clear plan” to ensure the state doesn’t fall behind again to limiting new rules universities must follow that come without state funding to implement them.  
 
“We’ve been heard and I think we have a place at the table,” Governors State University President Elaine Maimon said. “I don’t know at all whether we’ll like the outcome.” 
 
Source:  The State Journal Register - The Oldest Newspaper in Illinois

Taxmageddon sparks rising anxiety

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

Defense contractors have slowed hiring. Tax advisers are warning firms not to count on favorite breaks. And hospitals are scouring their books for ways to cut costs.

Across the U.S. economy, anxiety is rising about the potential for widespread disruptions after the November election, when a lame-duck Congress will have barely two months to resolve a grinding standoff over taxes and spending.

The halls of the U.S. Capitol are already teeming with people warning of disaster if lawmakers fail to defuse a New Year’s budget bomb scheduled to raise taxes for every American taxpayer and slash spending at the Pentagon and most other federal agencies.

Last week, hospital executives came to complain about big scheduled cuts in Medicare payments. Next month, university presidents plan to raise the alarm about big scheduled cuts in federal research grants. And the chief executives of Lockheed Martin and other aerospace giants last Wednesday passed out digital countdown clocks ticking off the seconds until “over 1 million American jobs” will be lost to big scheduled cuts in defense.

“How do you plan for chaos?” Marion Blakey, president of the Aerospace Industries Association, sighed during a break between meetings with lawmakers, who could provide little assurance that the spending cuts would be averted. “It’s almost a unique moment in government because there’s so much at stake. And there’s nothing that inspires confidence that this will get done.”

The uncertainty is already prompting some firms to take action. Many more say they will be forced to contemplate layoffs and other cost-cutting measures long before the end of the year unless the Republican House and the Democratic Senate come up with an alternative path to tame deficits. But with control of the White House and both chambers of Congress in play on Nov. 6, aides say it is impossible to begin mapping a strategy for compromise until they know who wins the election, by how much and on which issues.

In the meantime, political leaders are focused less on finding solutions than on drawing lines in the sand. In a speech Tuesday, House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) plans to address the issue of national debt, which will once again be nearing its legal limit in January, just as the tax hikes and spending cuts are due to hit.

According to advance remarks provided to The Post, Boehner will insist that any increase in the debt limit be accompanied by spending “cuts and reforms greater than the debt limit increase” — the same demand that pushed the Treasury to the brink of default during last summer’s debt-limit standoff.

“This is the only avenue I see right now to force the elected leadership of this country to solve our structural fiscal imbalance,” Boehner plans to say at the Peter G. Peterson Foundation fiscal summit. “If that means we have to do a series of stop-gap measures, so be it.”

Last week, the House approved a plan to protect the Pentagon in January by reconfiguring $110 billion in across-the-board spending cuts — known as “sequestration” — so they would fall exclusively on domestic programs, such as food stamps and health care for the poor.

 

But one aerospace lobbyist glumly noted that the House bill will be “dead on arrival” in the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has vowed to block any effort to undo the defense cuts unless Republicans drop their opposition to higher taxes for the wealthy.

“The answer is very simple to our Republican colleagues who want to help with defense: Revenues,” said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.). “The way to deal with sequestration is put revenues on the table.”

As lawmakers bicker, the approaching deadline has taken on the nightmarish “aspect of a slow-motion train wreck,” said Ajay Rajadhyaksha of Barclays Capital, with onlookers helpless either to prevent the carnage or to get out of the way.

“I feel like we’re really in uncharted waters,” said Robert Greenstein, president of the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “On the one hand, you say: ‘We’re a functioning country. Somehow, we’re going to work this out.’ But then you ask: ‘What’s the scenario for a potential solution?’ And you can’t come up with anything that you can see actually passing Congress.”

The impending upheaval is the result of multiple policy changes all set to hit at the same time. The George W. Bush-era tax cuts are scheduled to expire in December, along with a temporary payroll-tax holiday sought by President Obama. Meanwhile, Congress last summer paired a debt-limit increase with $1.2 trillion in across-the-board spending cuts over the next decade that almost no one wants to see happen.

For the moment, most economic forecasters are taking a sanguine view. Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics predicts that the lame-duck Congress will make a deal to rescind half the spending cuts and raise taxes for the wealthiest 2 or 3 percent of households — but leave everyone else alone.

“There’s a lot of room for compromise,” Zandi said, noting that Boehner and Obama came close to agreement last summer.

But others are skeptical that lawmakers, fresh from the combat of the campaign trail, will be able to agree on anything. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke recently warned that the Fed would have “absolutely no . . . ability whatsoever” to cushion the shock to the economy if the nation sails over what he calls the “fiscal cliff” in January. And many analysts worry that the uncertainty will itself begin to dampen economic growth long before New Year’s Day.

Kaman Corporation chief executive Neal Keating said his firm is already scaling back hiring in Jacksonville, Fla., where the company builds cockpits for Blackhawk helicopters. He was hoping for new contracts to refit the nation’s aging fleet of A-10 Warthog attack planes.

“So many of those things are now uncertain,” Keating said, adding that plans to hire 200 workers have been put on hold. Without further clarity, Keating said, he could be forced to start ramping down purchases and cancelling shifts sometime this summer.

“One of the most frustrating things is [that] people in Washington say, ‘Well, we don’t think sequestration is going to happen,’ ” he said. “But we’re responsible for planning and running a business.”

Nicholas Wolter, chief executive of the Billings Clinic, a chain of nonprofit medical facilities in Montana, said a scheduled 2 percent cut in Medicare payments would hammer his finances. But options being circulated to replace those cuts could also hurt, he said. In addition, a formula that maintains Medicare rates for doctors is also set to expire.

“You’re not sure which of them might end up in legislation,” Wolter said. “They’re all potentially real.”

 

Tax policy is also causing heartburn. Kate Barton of Ernst & Young said she is advising clients not to count on the renewal of a slew of popular business tax breaks that expired in December. Even incentives for research and development, which are revered in both parties, could get caught in the year-end logjam.

“We’re not trying to be alarmist. But it’s a time when the telescope and the crystal ball are really foggy,” Barton said. “You talk to one person and you hear one thing; you talk to another and you hear something else.”

This month, about 120 university lobbyists gathered near Metro Center in hopes that top aides to Reid and Boehner would shed light on the fiscal end game. They didn’t. Instead, Reid’s deputy chief of staff for policy, Bill Dauster, cited a “good, if dour,” independent analysis that “many election outcomes would produce dynamics not conducive to getting a deal” at all before the new Congress takes office in January.

“You just don’t get the sense that there’s even a secret plan yet. It’s scary,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, who has been meeting with corporate leaders in an effort to build support for a comprehensive deficit-reduction plan.

During a recent dinner in Washington, Lawrence H. Summers and Robert Rubin mulled the situation. Both men led the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration, and Summers was Obama’s top economic adviser in 2009 and 2010. They concluded that, whatever happens on Election Day, exhausted lawmakers are likely to resort to a short-term deal that extends all the tax cuts, postpones the spending cuts and pushes the deadline for fiscal calamity into the spring of 2013.

But even that move would be risky, Rubin argued, potentially inviting another downgrade of the U.S. credit rating, roiling financial markets and shattering confidence that the United States will ever get its debt problem under control.

Solutions are easy to come by “when you’re sitting at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York,” said Rubin, the council’s co-chairman. “It’s a lot harder to do it when you’re sitting in Washington and it’s one minute of midnight.”

Source:  The Washington Post

Mayor takes pension reform case to rank-and-file workers

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

One day after infuriating union leaders, Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Wednesday took his case for pension reform directly to rank-and-file members whose contributions he wants to raise and whose retirement benefits he’s proposing to cut.

The mayor sent a letter to city employees to soften the blow of the bitter pill he’s asking them to swallow: a 10-year freeze in cost-of-living increases for retirees; a five-year increase in the retirement age; a five-percent increase in employee contributions and a two-tiered pension system for new and old employees.

“If we follow along the current path, we will confront two stark choices: either the city’s pension payments will squeeze its ability to offer the essential services that you provide or each of our pension funds will go bankrupt, leaving you and your families without retirement security,” the mayor wrote.

“I do not want to underestimate the difficulty of these changes, but I do know that Chicago and our public employees will face far greater difficulties if we fail to take action. … Not everyone will support what I have put forth, but I believe there are enough people who know that the moment of truth has arrived.”

The manner in which Emanuel chose to unveil his pension reforms did as much to enrage union leaders as the mayor’s specific ideas.

Instead of negotiating first with union leaders in Chicago, the mayor lowered the boom in Springfield, leaving labor leaders feeling betrayed. They accused Emanuel of breaking his promise to work with them.

At a City Hall news conference after Wednesday’s City Council meeting, the mayor defended his game plan.

“I didn’t seek this issue. … But I did seek the office and seeking the office means you have the responsibility to deal with what’s in front of you . … Therefore, I will exercise my responsibility to help resolve an issue, even when it creates — and I’m sensitive to this — anxiety among people,” he said.

“I suppose I could say, ‘Not now.’ [But] we’ve tried that strategy of ‘not now’ for 20 years — more. It hasn’t worked and it won’t resolve itself. So I laid out a framework … being honest about it. The motivation is to ensure that people have a retirement when they retire. If you don’t take those steps, you can’t ensure them that. And doing nothing makes a set of choices that are literally around the corner for the city and the taxpayers that are” unacceptable.

The mayor argued that, without suspending cost-of-living adjustments for retirees, you’re not even “treading water.”

Without mentioning former Mayor Richard M. Daley by name, Emanuel also acknowledged that “people in positions of responsibility” should not “do anything special for themselves” to sweeten their own pensions.

“Aldermen, mayor shouldn’t get anything special. That’s wrong,” he said.

The behind-the-scenes pension sweeteners that benefited Daley and retiring aldermen have been a bone of contention with the rank-and-file whose support Emanuel needs to confront the $20 billion pension crisis.

In a statement, a spokeswoman for the former mayor said Daley spent 40 years in public service and “is now receiving the pension that he is eligible for under the law. Under the law, he made all of the required payments and elections to his pension.  Under the law, he could have retired more than a decade ago and begun collecting his pension then. Instead, he remained in public service, working to make Chicago a world-class city, 15 years beyond his pension eligibility date.”

Source:  The Chicago Sun-Times