Excerpts from the ChicagoSun-Times.com:
After 10 months, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s closest ally in Springfield has sent to Gov. Bruce Rauner legislation giving Chicago 15 more years to ramp up to a 90 percent funding level for police and fire pensions.
Illinois Senate President John Cullerton has been holding the bill — approved by the Illinois House and Senate last spring — amid concern that Rauner would veto the legislation to squeeze cash-strapped Chicago and strengthen his own hand in the budget stalemate over the governor’s demand for pro-business, anti-union reforms.
The delay has already been costly to Chicago taxpayers. Two weeks ago, Emanuel used $220 million in short-term bridge financing to make a state-mandated payment to police and fire pension funds that’s higher than his tax-laden 2016 budget anticipated because the police and fire pension reform bill has not been signed into law.
On March 31, Cullerton quietly sent the legislation to the governor’s desk. The governor has 60 days to act on the bill. If he vetoes the bill, there would still be time to attempt an override before the spring session ends.
In a statement, the governor’s office said: “The governor has been clear he will consider this legislation as part of a broader package of structural reforms that help taxpayers across the state. He welcomes dialogue and negotiation with all stakeholders as the process moves forward.”
A mayoral confidante, who asked to remain anonymous, said: “It’s important for the city. It needs to get done. If he signs it, great. If he does nothing, that’s good for us as well. If he vetoes it, it would go back to the Senate. It passed the first time with 38 votes. We need 36 votes to override. All we’re asking for is the same funding arc that downstate police and fire already have. There’s no reason for [Rauner] not to sign it.”
In a statement issued Tuesday, Emanuel said “Current state law requires that Chicago taxpayers close a $550 million gap in one year, even though it was created by decades of underfunding. That’s why I worked with members of the General Assembly to pass . . . a reasonable and responsible funding plan that has the support of police and fire union leaders, passed both the House and Senate, and was included in Gov. Rauner’s own pension reform plan. If this bill becomes law, we will ensure that our
first responder[police and fire] pensions are secured and fully-funded, while reducing the impact on Chicago’s taxpayers.”After authorizing the $220 million short-term borrowing, Emanuel emphatically rejected the suggestion that he made a mistake by trusting his old friend Rauner to sign the police and fire pension reforms.
“I am not going to go to the property taxpayers of Chicago, who just stepped up in a big way, and say, ‘You should pay $250 million more because Springfield’s politics are dysfunctional. I’m not going to ask taxpayers to pay more to make up for Springfield’s failures,” the mayor said.
On March 16, trustees of the firefighters pension fund demanded that the city release $47.1 million on deposit with the treasurer within 31 days, so that it can be invested by the pension fund. But sources said Tuesday that demand has since cooled off.
“As long as the pension fund gets the money they are owed by law, the city has fulfilled their end of the bargain . . . The way the law reads, they have to account for the money. The money has been set aside. Their hope is there’s some movement with legislation down in Springfield. If that does not happen, that money set aside will be given, I guess, at the end of the year. As of right now, they haven’t done anything wrong, ” Tom Ryan, president of the Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2 said.