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View Full Version : Illinois' Reckless $45 Billion Capital Spending Binge Exposed




Swordsmyth
06-03-2019, 06:28 PM
“Here’s one conclusion — the Illinois Legislature either has no real grasp of the financial situation in this state or simply doesn’t care. It is our suspicion that too many legislators simply don’t understand the financial reality the state and city face.”
– “Champaign News Gazette Editorial (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwievvvtrMviAhUL1qwKHRnpDW8QFjABegQIARAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.news-gazette.com%2Fopinion%2Feditorials%2F2019-06-02%2Feditorial-conflicting-views-state-coffers.html&usg=AOvVaw0whNOccAu5Sun-Otj-6a2K), June 2, 2019
When Governor Pritzker announced a $41.5 billion capital spending plan a couple weeks ago we thought it was surely just a pie-in-the-sky first offer – that economic realities and unpopular tax hikes needed to fund so massive a plan would chop it down to something reasonable.
https://zh-prod-1cc738ca-7d3b-4a72-b792-20bd8d8fa069.storage.googleapis.com/s3fs-public/inline-images/construction-300x225.jpg
Silly us. The plan has now increased to $45 billion.
To get a sense of the enormity of that number, consider that it’s over twice the state’s combined annual revenue from personal and corporate income taxes. It dwarfs all recent capital spending programs. The Illinois Jobs Now capital plan under Governor Pat Quinn was for $18.0 billion in new projects and $11 billion of reappropriations from previous years. Governor George Ryan’s Illinois FIRST was for $12 billion. The Build Illinois program under Governor Jim Thompson was $2.3 billion.
We understand the case for a capital program of some kind, but this is madness. A spending binge so massive, prepared by proven incompetents and dumped on the General Assembly along with thousands of pages of other budget and spending matters inevitably will be loaded with pork and waste.
Even on sensible projects, spending will be excessive thanks to the absurd “prevailing wage” rules that govern all of it. They drive costs far beyond what the private sector pays, which we’ve documented often (https://wirepoints.org/why-the-union-guys-rebuttal-to-my-crains-article-on-prevailing-wages-is-bunk-wirepoints-original/). The average, total, full-time-equivalent compensation under our prevailing wage laws, including benefits, for all job categories over all counties is $119,000. Public unions effectively set those numbers. Their power is unchallenged in Springfield, which largely accounts for this capital bill.
How will Illinois pay for this? That’s not entirely clear since nobody has had a chance to fully digest the legislation and disclosures so far have been horrible – cherry-picked numbers given to reporters. The only good news is that the federal government apparently (http://www.news-gazette.com/news/local/2019-06-01/budget-spending-plan-released-illinois-house-goes-overtime.html) will reimburse Illinois for about $10 billion of the $45 billion (though Illinoisans pay part of that, too).
According to a Chicago Sun-Times (https://chicago.suntimes.com/2019/6/1/18648903/house-clears-gambling-measure-that-includes-adding-chicago-casino) summary, Illinoisans will see the state’s tax on gasoline doubled; higher vehicle registration fees; an increase in video gaming terminal taxes; charges on sports wagering revenue; license fees from casino and sports betting; a tax on parking garages and lots; removal of the sales tax exemption on traded-in property valued above $10,000; and an increase on the cigarette tax by $1 per pack. Cook County municipalities would be allowed to add a 3-cent tax on top of the state-issued motor fuel tax. However, the latest version of the bill apparently eliminated (https://www.apnews.com/d1d20276edbf4738aef360e49965775d) a real-estate transfer tax increase, a $1-a-ride fee for ride-sharing services and a tax on cable and streaming video services, which were in the initial proposal.
Much of it will also come out of the state’s general fund, putting more pressure the already desperate situation there. And, no, that won’t be fixed by a new progressive income tax. Revenue from that has already been spoken for elsewhere (https://wirepoints.org/loaves-fishes-and-the-illinois-graduated-income-tax-quicktake/) several times over.
One way or another, though the tax increases may not yet be clear, the bill will have to be paid.
Where will the money be spent? According to a Capitol Illinois News (http://www.newspressnow.com/news/national/state-lawmakers-are-going-into-overtime-billion-budget-billion-infrastructure/article_26c424e2-eb16-598f-bf32-c2d591812fa5.html) summary, the plan would allocate $33.2 billion for transportation projects including roads and bridges, $3.5 billion for education infrastructure projects, $4.3 billion for state facilities, $1.2 billion for environmental conservation projects, and $420 million for broadband expansion and $465 million for health care and human services facilities.
We will have much more to say on this, the budget and the rest of this legislative session as facts become available. It will take time for much of what was done to be exposed.


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-06-03/illinois-reckless-45-billion-capital-spending-binge-exposed

Anti Globalist
06-03-2019, 06:42 PM
Not surprising one bit.

oyarde
06-03-2019, 07:26 PM
Those people are fucked up and they cannot be rehabilitated .

oyarde
06-03-2019, 07:59 PM
I have even been known to drive out of my way just to avoid that state all together and not pay any taxes there .

Pauls' Revere
06-03-2019, 09:15 PM
Add to this the pension disaster.

https://www.chicagobusiness.com/static/section/pensions.html

In fact, reliable calculations weren't completed for two months. Democrats in the Legislature, eager to pass a budget before their summer began, muzzled debate with a stopwatch, ignored the incomplete calculations and jammed the pension bill through anyway.

In retrospect, Senate Bill 27 was no cure-all. It also was no exception.

For more than a quarter-century, governors and state legislators, Republicans and Democrats alike, made a series of financially toxic moves in the pension systems for state employees and public school teachers. Proposals to fix the perennially underfunded pensions were based on botched calculations—or no calculations at all—and were driven by misguided rationales that weren't fully vetted. Everyone was to blame, yet few accepted responsibility. Even the public-sector unions that stood to lose the most sometimes embraced those choices.

shakey1
06-03-2019, 10:07 PM
Gov’t = reckless

Swordsmyth
06-03-2019, 10:12 PM
When they go bankrupt we need to reduce them to a territory, we can let the red counties back in as a state later.

XNavyNuke
08-26-2019, 08:12 AM
The governor is the gift that keeps on giving. Four coal plants to close resulting in a loss of 2 Gigawatts of generating capacity to the state. Soon they will be like California - the Saudi Arabia of coal will be a net power importer.

Vistra May Close 2 GW of Illinois Coal Power By Year’s End
https://www.powermag.com/vistra-may-close-2-gw-of-illinois-coal-power-by-years-end/


The announcement had been largely expected since the Illinois Pollution Control Board (IPCB) moved to impose stricter pollution caps in March. The MPS was originally enacted in 2007 to regulate sulfur dioxides and nitrogen oxides from Illinois’s downstate power plants, but in 2017 and 2018, under then-Governor Bruce Rauner, the board moved to replace two sets of annual emission rate limits with a single set of specific annual tonnage limits. Dynegy strongly backed the measure because, it said at the time, it provided “regulatory clarity, consistency and create a single MPS operating group.” The proposal was modified in October. But in January, under new Governor J.B. Pritzker, the IPCB requested an opportunity to re-evaluate the board’s modified proposal, and in March, the board filed a new proposal with lower pollution caps.

XNN