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Posts Tagged ‘Gov. Pat Quinn’

Governor to sign school athletes concussions measure

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

Student athletes from elementary to high school will get better safeguards against concussion injuries under a law Gov. Pat Quinn is set to enact.

A 10 a.m. signing ceremony was set for Thursday at Chicago’s Soldier Field.

The law requires student athletes with concussions to get medical approval before resuming play. It also requires education for coaches, parents, referees and players about concussion symptoms.

Several other states have enacted similar laws.

Repeat concussions and returning to play too soon raises risks for permanent brain damage.

Many athletic directors in the state support the law because it will put schools all on the same page. But some worry about lack of funds to pay for trained staff to monitor athletes and make sure they’re removed from play after a suspected concussion.

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

Republicans sue over Illinois legislative remap

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Taking aim squarely at the new Decatur-Springfield Illinois House District, Republicans sued in federal court on Wednesday to block the new state legislative map.

A key part of the lawsuit, filed by House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego, and Senate Minority Leader Christine Radogno, R-Lemont, in Chicago, alleges that the new 96th Illinois House District was illegally drawn to benefit blacks.

That contrasts with one of the lawsuit’s other major claims – that when legislative Democrats drew the map, they did not create enough districts designed to elect black and Hispanic lawmakers.

Asked to explain the seeming contradiction, Cross spokeswoman Sara Wojcicki said, “The U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that while race is an important factor to consider, it may not be the predominant factor over all other traditional redistricting principles, such as compactness, communities of interest and political fairness.”

One of the people who helped craft the 96th District said the attack on it is simply political.

“The district in question does meet all of the requirements set forth in the constitution,” said Springfield Ward 3 Ald. Doris Turner, who is weighing a run for the seat. “This appears to be sour grapes on part of the Republicans who are seeking to hold on to districts they currently occupy.

“They can’t on the one hand say there should be more minority representation in certain areas but then speak against it when it does not suit their legislative needs.”

 25 percent minority

The 96th District stretches from Springfield’s east side south to Kincaid and includes most of Decatur. It contains a black voting-age population of roughly 25 percent. It would be impossible to draw a majority-black district in the area.

However, the 96th might be considered a “crossover” or “influence” district, one in which enough minority voters, in combination with some white voters, have a chance to elect a preferred candidate or at least influence the outcome of elections.  Such districts have limited protection under Illinois law, but not federal

The lawmaker who lives in the 96th District, Rep. Adam Brown, R-Decatur, is named as a plaintiff in the case. Brown did not return a phone call seeking comment. He has said he will run in the more Republican friendly 102nd House District.

The lawsuit says there should be 18 House districts with majority-black representation but that Democrats drew only 16. They also argue there should be more Hispanic majority, crossover and influence districts, but don’t say how many.

“We believe the court will determine the number” of Latino districts, said Radogno spokeswoman Patty Schuh. “We do not believe that the Democrat map provides a fair opportunity.”

Democrats say map fair

Democratic legislative leaders and Gov. Pat Quinn have said the map is fair.

“We are taking time to review the complaint and we intend to confer with the attorney general’s office,” said Rikeesha Phelon, a spokeswoman for Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago.

Republicans also asked that the court strike down the map because citizens didn’t get enough time to review it and because it unfairly dilutes Republican voting strength throughout the state. Twenty-five Republican incumbents were put in districts with other lawmakers, compared to eight Democrats, the lawsuit says.

“The U.S. Supreme Court has found that mapmakers may not penalize voters because of their First Amendment right to associate with a political party or express their political views,” Wojcicki said.

But the court has never overruled a politically gerrymandered map on those grounds.

“In a series of cases over the past two decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has declined to overturn redistricting schemes even when they are clearly designed to boost one party over the other,” according to “A Media Guide to Redistricting,” by Erika Wood and Myrna Perez, redistricting experts at the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law.

Uphill legal battle

Kent Redfield, emeritus professor of political science, said it’s unlikely the Republicans will blaze new legal ground.

“You’d have to have to have a situation where you’re wiping out the Republican Party,” he said. “The chances of a court accepting that argument are not very great.”

Absent as plaintiffs in the lawsuit was any group representing minorities. The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, or MALDEF, said it was still studying the map and the Republicans’ lawsuit. The group, which has successfully sued to overturn previous maps, opposed the map during the legislative session.

“We continue to have discussions with MALDEF and other groups,” Schuh said.

State Sen. Martin Sandoval, D-Cicero, said he supports the new map and was critical of the Republicans’ lawsuit.

“They’re Johnny-come-latelies in supporting the Latino community in Illinois,” he said.

The lawsuit will be paid for out of state funds allocated to the four legislative caucuses for redistricting, although Wojcicki did not provide an estimate of how much has been spent on the suit so far.

Background

New election districts for the General Assembly were approved in the closing days of the legislative session by party-line votes in both chambers. Lawmakers must redraw state legislative and U.S. congressional districts every 10 years following the U.S. Census.

 The congressional map

The lawsuit filed Wednesday does not deal with U.S. House districts drawn by Democrats. A lawsuit addressing those districts is expected to be filed later.

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

Illinois Governor Is Told to Pay Raises

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

Gov. Pat Quinn violated a union contract with nearly 30,000 state workers by refusing to give them raises on July 1, an arbitrator said Tuesday. Edwin Benn, the arbitrator, ordered Mr. Quinn to start paying a 2 percent increase and provide back pay within 30 days. The administration says the governor will appeal in state court. Mr. Quinn, a Democrat, says he does not have to pay the raises because lawmakers did not include them in the budget.

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Source:  The New York Times

Illinois Cares Rx participants being notified of cutbacks

Friday, July 15th, 2011

The state is notifying all 211,000 participants in the Illinois Cares Rx program that they either will be paying more for their drugs beginning Sept. 1 or are being terminated from the program.

However, about 5,700 recipients have mistakenly been sent letters telling them they no longer qualify for the drug assistance program because they no longer meet income eligibility limits.

The Department of Healthcare and Family Services is in the process of sending that group new letters stating that they do, in fact, still qualify for the program.

“Based on their income data we had on file from their last application, they were over (the limit),” said DHFS spokesman Mike Claffey.  “Subsequently, we got updated information.  There is a group whose income has dropped and they remain eligible.”

The changes are the result of the new state budget, which cut funding for Illinois Cares Rx about in half, from $107 million to $53.7 million.  Because of the reduction, the income maximum for participants was lowered, and co-payments for those who still qualify were increased.

Before the change, a single-person household could have income of up to $27,610 to qualify for the program. The maximum has dropped to $21,780.  For a two-person household, the limit was lowered from $36,635 to $29,420.

“This is a voluntary, optional state program,” Claffey said.  “Due to the nature of the state’s fiscal problems, we had to look across the board where we can to trim programs where we can.  We are able to maintain significant help for more than 75 percent of the people in the program.”

DHFS expects 40,000 and 45,000 participants to lose their Illinois Cares Rx aid.

David Vinkler, associate director of AARP Illinois, said reduced funding is better than Gov. Pat Quinn’s original proposal to do away with the program entirely.

“We definitely wanted to see full funding (but) in the end we’re much gladder to see 160,000 people with the service than seeing them all gone,” Vinkler said.

Still, he said, “This definitely will cause major problems for seniors.

“This basically could drive people toward a nursing home placement,” Vinkler said.  “If they go into a nursing home, then the state is paying $3,000 a month once they get onto Medicaid.”

Illinois Cares Rx is geared toward lower-income seniors, so Vinkler said it is likely that many of them will be Medicaid clients if they go into nursing homes.

“A lot of these programs were put in the budget to save the state money,” he said.  “Cutting back on them now, you may see an immediate savings, but in the long run it may cost the state more money.”

Coburn said his agency is recommending that people who are terminated from Illinois Cares Rx should make sure the state has accurate income information for them.  Second, since Illinois Cares Rx pays for Medicare Part D premiums, people losing their state coverage should check to see if less expensive Part D plans are available, he said. 

He also recommended that people obtain 90-day supplies of medication before their coverage runs out and speak with their doctors about using less expensive generic drugs.

The agency also sent a fact sheet to counseling agencies on how to advise seniors who have questions about the changes.

Beth Monnat, a pharmaceutical assistance specialist for Senior Services of Central Illinois, said the agency has received only about 10 calls so far, but the letters went out only this week.

“We think there’s going to be a lot of people calling,” she said.  “I think next week will be more of an indicator of what things will be.”

Monnat said the agency will make appointments for people to review their options.

“It’s going to be hard for some people,” she said.

Teri Johnson, benefits specialist for the Area Agency on Aging Lincolnland, said that agency also has received some calls from people wondering “how are they going to pay their prescriptions.”

She said that agency also is making appointments with people who want to discuss their options and can refer them to other places for help.

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Four versions of letter

Four versions of the Illinois Cares Rx letter are being mailed, each tailored to the specific circumstances of the recipient.  One version, for example, is being mailed to people still eligible for the program who have Medicare, while another goes to those who do not have Medicare. 

Letters for those still eligible contain new co-payment amounts.

The letters also provide phone numbers for agencies and help lines where people can get information about the changes.

“People are going to be confused by these letters,” predicted John Coburn, senior attorney at Chicago-based Health and Disability Advocates.  “One neighbor is going to get one that says they are terminated, another is going to get one that says their co-pays are going up.”

In fact, it is possible two people in the same household could get different letters, depending on whether they are on different prescription-drug payment plans. 

Some retirees can continue to obtain drugs through their employers’ health plans.  If they still qualify for Illinois Cares Rx, they receive $25 a month rebate checks through the program.  That rebate is ending Sept. 1.

Income eligibility for Illinois Cares Rx

                             Current limit                    New limit

One person               $27,610                      $21,780          

Two people              $36,635                      $29,420

Three or more           $45,657                      $37,060

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

Quinn signs bill boosting coal-to-gas plant in Chicago

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation Wednesday that could lead to the construction of a new plant in Chicago that converts coal to natural gas.

Quinn signed the legislation at a former steel mill site on Chicago’s southeast side where New York-based Leucadia National Corp. wants to build the $3 billion plant.

“This project protects Illinois consumers, while continuing our position as a leader in clean energy technology by utilizing home grown resources to create the jobs of today and tomorrow,” Quinn said in a statement.

Quinn vetoed earlier versions of the bill to avoid huge price increases for consumers. The new legislation limits natural gas bill increases to 2 percent per year.

The Sierra Club wasn’t happy with Quinn’s decision to sign the law.

“Creating synthetic natural gas is a very dirty way of getting our natural gas,” Becki Clayborn, a representative for the Sierra Club’s Midwest Clean Energy Campaign. “It’s dirty, it’s dangerous and it’s unnecessary.”

Clayborn said the law will saddle consumers with expensive natural gas for decades to come.

There are other hurdles before the new plant can open. Leucadia still has to get permission to add pollution to the crowded industrial area of Chicago where it wants to build. And, the company needs a buyer for its carbon dioxide emissions.

“We are committed to working closely with local leaders and community members to make this project a tangible benefit to Chicago and the entire state of Illinois,” said Tom Mara, executive vice president of Leucadia in a statement.

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

State ends Catholic Charities adoption contracts

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

The state of Illinois has notified Catholic Charities in Springfield and three other cities that it will not renew foster care and adoption contracts with those agencies.

Attorneys for three of the agencies will be in court in Springfield this afternoon seeking an immediate order to continue the contracts.

The Department of Children and Family Services notified Catholic Charities in Springfield, Peoria, Joliet and Belleville on Friday that it will not offer contracts to provide foster care and adoption services for the new fiscal year.

“Your agency has made it clear that it does not intend to comply with the Illinois Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act,” DCFS said in the notice. “That law applies to foster care and adoption services.  Thus, there is no meeting of the minds as to the FY12 Foster Care and Adoption Contracts.”

The Springfield, Peoria and Joliet agencies sued the state last month seeking a court order that they do not have to place foster children with unmarried couples, including those in civil unions.  Steven Roach, executive director of Catholic Charities for the Springfield Diocese, said at the time that such placements would require the charities to violate their religious principles.

Roach could not be reached for comment Monday.

Quinn: ‘Not going back’

During a bill-signing ceremony in Chicago Monday, Gov. Pat Quinn said the charities sparked the state action.

“We have a law in Illinois. We’re not going back,” Quinn said. “

The charities said they are willing to continue their current practice of referring unmarried couples to other agencies, but the state said that isn’t enough.

“We cannot enter into a contract for services with anyone who has publicly, affirmatively stated that they will not follow the law when they deliver these services,” said DCFS spokesman Kendall Marlowe.  “We must now plan to transition these services with the least interruption possible.”

Marlowe said just under 2,000 children are receiving Catholic Charities services. The Springfield Diocese had 267 children in foster care in early June.

An attorney representing Catholic Charities said the state should have allowed the lawsuit to be heard before making its decision.

“If we are going to do this process, then, for heaven sake, don’t disrupt the children’s lives,” said Peter Breen of the Thomas More Society.  “We’re not aware of a single entity that could take all of these kids.  The difficulty is when you change caseworkers on a child in midstream, it greatly increases the chance the child will not have a positive long-term outcome.”

Minimal disruption

Marlowe said DCFS is confident it can place the children with other agencies with minimal disruption.

Earlier this year, Catholic Charities in Rockford bowed out of foster services rather than have to place children in the homes of same-sex or unmarried couples. All 300 children in the Rockford agency’s care were placed with Youth Services Bureau of Illinois Valley by the end of June. Also, DCFS placed 1,000 children who were with Catholic Charities of Chicago with other agencies after ending contracts with it.

“Illinois has a strong non-profit child-welfare community that stands to reach to take these cases if necessary,” Marlowe said.

Breen said it is clear the General Assembly did not intend to force religious institutions to recognize civil unions if it conflicted with their beliefs.

“We think we have a strong legal position and a reasonable interpretation of the law,” Breen said.

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

Cost of state workers goes up as numbers fall

Monday, July 11th, 2011

The state of Illinois had slightly fewer employees last year, but it cost a bit more to pay them, analysis of state data showed Sunday. 

Officials attributed the increased cost mainly to raises required by union contracts and higher overtime costs created by a shortage of employees. 

The state delivered paychecks to 78,567 people in 2010 — 369 fewer than in the previous year, according to an analysis by the Moline Dispatch and Rock Island Argus.  

Despite that slight reduction, total payroll costs climbed $95 million to $4.45 billion, an increase of about 2.3 percent. 

“Because there are fewer employees, there’s more overtime being paid,” said Kathy Cutler of Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka’s office. “That may account for the growth in the dollars being spent as opposed to the employee numbers going down. … Most of us regular employees aren’t getting salary increases.” 

The secretary of state’s office had the biggest drop in the number of people paid. The department shrank by 385 people, to 4,522, because the agency didn’t hire summer workers and left vacancies unfilled, spokesman Henry Haupt said. Still, payroll climbed by more than $6 million to a total of $197.1 million last year. 

“Sometimes employees will get a payout for retirement,” Haupt said. “But the biggest reason for the increase is union raises. The contract for union workers calls for a raise each year.”

The trend was similar in 2009, when the number of employees fell 4.5 percent but payroll climbed nearly 1.2 percent.

The newspapers found an increase in higher-paid employees in 2010.

The number making between $100,000 and $150,000 reached 3,147, a jump of nearly one-quarter.

Gov. Pat Quinn announced recently that he is canceling raises for thousands of employees at 14 state agencies because lawmakers didn’t provide enough new money. Unions are taking that decision to court and to an arbitrator.

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

Gov. Quinn signs 3 education bills

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Gov. Pat Quinn has signed three education bills aimed at preventing violence and encouraging reading and math. Quinn signed the trio of legislation Friday at a Chicago high school.

One bill requires Illinois school districts to teach all children about preventing violence and resolving conflicts. While fourth through 12th graders get that instruction now, the new bill includes youngsters in the kindergarten through third grades.

The governor’s office says another bill Quinn signed requires districts to put an emphasis on math and reading during summer school if students are two grade levels behind for two consecutive years.

The third bill promotes 60 minutes of reading in the kindergarten through third grades if students are one or more grade levels behind.

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

Quinn signs bill requiring universal transit fare cards for Chicago area

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

A universal fare card for mass transit in the Chicago area is getting closer to reality.

Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation Thursday that requires the Chicago Transit Authority, the Metra commuter rail and the Pace suburban bus system to implement a universal fare card by 2015.

Officials say a universal fare card would make it easier for commuters to change between the three transit systems.

They say it’s a way to increase ridership and improve tourism by making traveling between the city and suburbs seamless.

The bill also requires the transit agencies to provide web-based arrival information by July 1, 2012.

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

Gov. Quinn OKs new budget with extra cuts

Friday, July 1st, 2011

Gov. Pat Quinn cut $376 million Thursday from the already austere state budget lawmakers sent him, reducing spending for Medicaid, school buses and regional school superintendents.

However, Quinn signed the rest of the budget without further changes, despite his previous complaints that the budget shortchanges education and human services and is “incomplete.”

Thursday was the last day of the state’s old fiscal year. Fiscal year 2012 begins Friday.

“We have a final budget, and it is signed,” said Quinn budget director David Vaught. “There’s a lot of work to do to implement the budget. There are a lot of reductions in there and a lot of things that are going to have to change.”

Quinn’s largest reduction was a $276 million cut in Medicaid spending, which provides medical services to the poor. Vaught said the cost of Medicaid is rising “faster than we can afford to pay for it.”

Medicaid talks

The budget sent to Quinn essentially pushed more than $1 billion in Medicaid costs off to future budgets. Medical providers have said payment delays are preferable to a cut in rates to save money. However, Vaught said Quinn wants medical providers and state officials to work out additional ways to save money.

“The governor believes the interested parties need to come to the table and have negotiations,” Vaught said.

Quinn also cut about $11.3 million in state support for regional school superintendents. Quinn proposed the cut in his original budget speech, but lawmakers rejected the idea when they crafted the budget.

“They are local elected officials, and they should be paid locally,” Vaught said. “He’s not calling for elimination of the offices, he’s calling for them to be paid with local sources.”

School transportation

Quinn also eliminated $89 million from funds used to reimburse school districts for their student transportation expenses.

“Getting kids to school is a local responsibility,” Vaught said. “The governor … thinks the priority should be in the classroom.”

Pete Sherman, spokesman for the Springfield School District, said the governor’s action will hurt the district’s budget.

“It requires us to find money elsewhere,” Sherman said. “We’re a large urban district, so transportation is a necessity.”

Vaught said the governor’s action means the state will provide the same amount for transportation assistance as last year.

Changes possible

Quinn thinks a fairer way to distribute state assistance to schools is through the general state aid formula. Money from that can be used to cover transportation expenses. However, lawmakers reduced general state aid by $150 million in the budget signed by Quinn.

Legislators could vote to restore Quinn’s reductions when they return for the veto session in October.

With the latest round of cuts, Quinn approved a $32.9 billion budget.

“It takes spending below the most conservative revenue estimate,” Vaught said. “That’s a good thing. It hasn’t happened in a while.”

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