* This is exactly the sort of thing taxpayers can easily get their minds around…
The Illinois Department on Aging plans to move from two state-owned locations in Springfield where it pays no rent into a private office building where it will lease space for more than $530,000 a year.
The department said the move was in the works before the state’s financial problems hit and that it will enable all department employees to be in one location.
OK, hold it right there. “Before the state’s financial problems hit”? When was that? August of 2001?
Let’s continue…
Beginning July 1, Aging will lease space in the Jefferson Terrace office building in the 300 block of West Jefferson Street in Springfield. Information posted on the state’s procurement Web site said the state will lease 49,214 square feet of space for five years at a total cost of $3.3 million. That comes to about $662,000 a year, or $13.45 a square foot.
$13 billion budget deficit? Difficult, if not impossible to conjure by your average voter. But this goofy plan? Real easy to digest. Well, not so easy to digest, but you get the picture.
Isn’t there a lot of open space in IDOT’s building out by I-55? And is it really so all-important that the department be put in one building while the state is literally scrounging around for every dime to pay vendors, universities and schools?
Stupid. Just stupid. They richly deserve whatever ridicule is coming their way.
* But this isn’t as bad as it might look…
Created in an effort to keep the cost of electricity as low as possible, the Illinois Power Agency has only one employee and no one to handle its finances, a recent audit found.
Mark Pruitt was tapped to run the agency almost two years ago, and he’s remained its only employee ever since.
Here’s why…
Pruitt’s agency was created in 2007 after a months-long controversy over a spike in some Ameren and ComEd power bills. Some of the money from a $1 billion settlement with Ameren, Exelon and others, pays for the Illinois Power Agency’s operation.
David Kolata, director of the utility-watchdog Citizen’s Utility Board, said he thinks Pruitt’s doing a good job helping keep costs down. The fact that Pruitt remains alone in the agency is just a matter of bad timing, he said.
“The creation of the IPA coincided with the fiscal crisis of the state,” Kolata said.
* In other budget news, mayors are gearing up to fight the governor’s budget idea to slash local government revenue sharing by $300 million…
Normal Mayor Chris Koos said the town could lose up to $400,000 at a time when officials already have cut workers, halted new programs and increased the local sales tax to cope with current budget shortfalls.
Lincoln Mayor Keith Snyder suggested his community would face additional belt-tightening.
“Any loss of additional revenue would require further cuts,” Snyder said.
While some mayors wouldn’t speculate on how exactly they would deal with cuts in state aid, Pana Mayor Steven Sipes said his town may need to look into some kind of tax or fee increase to plug such a shortfall.
And the State Journal-Register has a pretty decent editorial today which tries to give the governor some advice…
It was amateur hour when Quinn delivered his state-of-the-state speech, a stream-of-consciousness stemwinder based off of notes jotted down on a yellow legal pad. Everyone knows Quinn fancies himself a man of the people. But he’s also chief executive of the fifth-largest state in the union. He has a responsibility to present a coherent set of well-thought out, specific ideas.
* Related…
* Quinn has five in mind to take driver’s seat at tollway
* Key issues await governor in budget speech
* Quinn’s Budget Cuts Education, More
* Quinn staff to outline tax, spending proposal
* Eliminate unfunded mandates
* Death by sweetener
* UIC students, faculty push gov. for more funding
* UIC Students, Faculty Want Their $487 Million
* Sweeny: Legislators say pension reform may be possible
* And a legislative roundup…
* Activists praise Senate bill on wage theft
* Lawmakers lining up to keep more public information secret
* Daley’s gun control legislation proposes ‘micro-stamping‘ pistols, harsher penalties
* Daley calls for new state laws on guns: This time, the mayor also is asking the General Assembly to make it a Class 1 felony to knowingly sell a gun to a known gang member, stiffen penalties for unlawfully using a weapon and require “micro-stamping” of guns that make it easier to match weapons used in crimes.
* Chicago mayor continues gun control push