* 1:15 pm - Nobody is completely sure whether this is true or not, so the lead-in is more than a little misleading…
On the eve of the General Assemby’s special session in Springfield, two prominent Illinoisans who helped draft a 31 billion dollar capital spending plan are pleading for its passage.
WBBM’s Regine Schlesinger reports that otherwise, Illinois stands to lose 9-billion dollars in federal money.
The story (which gets the size of the capital bill wrong) appears to be based solely on a press release sent out by the governor’s office late this morning…
…[Hastert and Poshard] stressed that further delays in passage of a comprehensive capital bill could jeopardize nearly $9 billion in federal funds dedicated to infrastructure projects in the state.
Over the past two weeks, several members of Congress have warned about the accelerated depletion of the federal Highway Trust Fund, which contains matching funds for statewide infrastructure enhancements. Due to the recent decrease in federal gas tax revenues, current projections estimate that the fund will empty in 2009 with a $1-3 billion deficit.
At an April 2 Surface Transportation Hearing, Congressman John Olver, Chairman of the House Appropriations Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Subcommittee said, “…the most immediate challenge the Congress will face is the solvency of the Highway Trust Fund. The Highway Trust fund will go broke in fiscal year 2009 and the future viability of federal transportation financing is in doubt.”
The question I’ve been asking without receiving a satisfactory response lately is if the money isn’t going to be in the Highway Trust Fund anyway, how does Illinois get its share even if the General Assembly approves a funding bill tomorrow?
* 3:14 pm - From a press release…
11th Congressional District candidate Marty Ozinga announced Wednesday that his campaign had raised over $800,000 in the 2nd Quarter of 2008, his first fundraising quarter as a candidate.
As a demonstration of his commitment to the campaign, Ozinga donated $70,000 to his own cause in early April, pushing his total receipts for the quarter over $870,000. […]
Ozinga was overwhelmed by the strong showing of grassroots support. He received about 1,000 contributions, and nearly 60% of them were for $250 or less.
Well under 10% of Ozinga’s total came from PACs. By contrast, nearly half of his opponent’s total through March 2008 has come from PACs.
Ozinga is running against Democratic state Sen. Debbie Halvorson. The Dems had already penciled this one in as a win, but she looks to be in for a big rumble.