Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Quinn Proposals Find Allies
in the Business Community

Author: David Merce, The Associated Press
Title: Quinn proposals find allies in the business community
Publication: stltoday.com
Link: http://tinyurl.com/7rnjdys
Date Published: May 14, 2012


















In this March 26, 2012, file photo, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn speaks to reporters in Springfield, Ill. On Friday, April 20, 2012, Quinn announced that wanted to raise the retirement age for Illinois public employees and require them to contribute more money to their retirement funds. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. • Gov. Pat Quinn built his career on populism and consumer advocacy. But, in the middle of what might be his defining political moment, he finds himself in an unlikely alliance with major Illinois business groups in a battle against unions and advocates for the poor.

Quinn has proposed sharp cuts in both Medicaid and pensions for government workers to save billions in expenses the state can't afford to pay. In that, he for the most part has the support of the state's business community.

Business leaders say it's a surprise the ideas are coming from Quinn — a surprise they welcome.

"I have been more comfortable with Gov. Quinn since he got elected, and his actions, if you will, than I was for the past 30 years of his political life," said Doug Whitley, president of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce. "He's coming across as being a solid guy who's interested in getting the state's problems fixed."

Whitley noted that the problems are ones that Quinn inherited.

Quinn addressed an Illinois Retail Merchants Association meeting May 2 in Springfield, and he sounded almost surprised the group wanted to hear from him. But that did not stop him from appealing for their help.

"I was so happy when I got the invitation," he told the audience. "This is a moment we cannot miss. Like never before, we need you to talk to your legislators."

The state's tough financial situation has been a sore point for business executives, some of whom complain that the state's climate hampers investment. Quinn signed off last year on an income-tax increase that angered many business leaders. The state continues struggling to pay companies it uses as vendors. The state's credit rating has been downgraded. And other states are trying to lure Illinois companies away.

Quinn, 63, spent most of his career building a populist résumé. As a Cook County politician in the early 1980s, he helped create the Citizens Utility Board, a consumer watchdog group whose mission is to look out for the interests of residential utility customers. His speeches are liberally sprinkled with references to the everyman president, Abraham Lincoln, and the working men and women of Illinois.

Unions are his biggest campaign contributors, though he angered them by moving to cancel a pay increase promised to state workers.

The state's mounting fiscal problems — the state government owes $9 billion in unpaid bills — led Quinn to announce plans that so far business leaders support as realistic efforts to get the state's ledgers under control.

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, a measure that is not as popular with the chamber.

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.

"The IMA supports both pension and Medicaid reform and we commend Governor Quinn for laying out bold proposals," said Mark Denzler, vice president of the Illinois Manufacturers Association, though he noted the group wants to see more details.

Business leaders say reining in the rapidly increasing Medicaid and pension systems will have a long-term impact like few other things the governor could do. Medicaid is currently running a $2.7 billion deficit, while 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.

"It's clear that these are things that are eating more and more and more of the budget each year," said David F. Vite, the Retail Merchants Association president.

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