Pensions: Vexing Illinois Politicians Since 1917
Via WUIS.com
It was Gov. Pat Quinn who signed the law that reduces state workers’ and most public school teachers’ pensions — a controversial plan that’s at the center of a lawsuit.
It’s meant to shore up the state’s long-term pension debt — which ballooned over time, mostly because lawmakers for years didn’t properly fund the systems. That’s caused Illinois a lot of pain: credit rating downgrades, cuts to other programs as the state tries to play catch-up, workers and retirees upset about broken promises.
But maybe it all could have been different, had Frank Lowden taken notice of a legislative report that came out when he became Illinois’ governor, back in 1917.
“And that report basically said that the pension systems were on the verge of insolvency, and it was one of crisis,” says Eric Madiar, Senate Democratic President John Cullerton’s chief legal counsel.
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