Explore our content

All types | All dates | All authors
Barbara Flynn Currie
PI Original
by Matthew Blake
10:29am
Fri Nov 11, 2011

Unfinished Business: A Veto Session Roundup

The Illinois General Assembly’s 2011 veto session was supposed to end Thursday, but an extra day – November 29 – was tacked on after an impasse on big tax break legislation for financial exchanges.

Quick Hit
by Aaron Krager
1:58pm
Wed Oct 26, 2011

Illinoisans Say No To Corporate Tax Breaks

Robin Hood and a group of rallyers made a special appearance outside of the mayor's office Tuesday to protest Rahm Emanuel's support of Senate Bill 405, aimed at giving the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Exchange large tax breaks.  The proposed bill comes in the wake of the monthlong Occupy Chicago protests in front of the Board of Trade building.

In the past two weeks, at least 305 people were arrested while protesting a political climate that they say favors the richest one percent.

Read more »

PI Original
by Micah Maidenberg
4:31pm
Wed Jan 5, 2011

Redistricting Changes Afoot In Springfield

Illinois House members passed SB 3976 yesterday, a bill that sets up something of a framework for Illinois' redistricting process. The bill, which now heads to Gov. Quinn, still has some organizations calling for additional measures as lawmakers start redrawing the state's political districts.

Quick Hit
by Micah Maidenberg
4:36pm
Wed Sep 15, 2010

TIF Reform Bills Unlikely To Go Away

In late August, State Rep. John Fritchey (D-Chicago) introduced a trifecta of bills (HB 6902, 6903, and 6904) that, if signed into law, would revolutionize how the City of Chicago's controversial tax increment financing (TIF) program operates. Fritchey, however, is running for Comm. Forrest Claypool's seat on the Cook County Board of Commissioners and is slated to leave the General Assembly. Will his bills die?

Not necessarily. Earlier this week, State Sen. Heather Steans (D-Chicago) told Progress Illinois that she is "very interested" in carrying the torch on some version of Fritchey's package. The precise wording of the legislation could change, but Steans said she would look at pushing a Auditor General investigation; examining the definition of blight in the current state TIF law; increasing transparency in "porting" TIF dollars; and excluding certain taxing bodies from the program going forward. "With the mayoral election coming up, the timing is good," Steans said.

What's less clear is how, legislatively, this may play out. It's unlikely the bills will get a hearing during the fall veto session, according to Steans. And state representatives may want to sponsors the bills, as well. "What I don't know is if someone is going to pick this up on the House side," Steans said. State. Rep Greg Harris (D-Chicago) did tell PI he's talked with Fritchey about the bills and Fritchey himself said he's canvassing his colleagues for support. A call to State. Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie (D-Chicago), a leader in the Democratic caucus, wasn't immediately returned.

In other TIF news, State Rep. David Miller (D-Lynwood), who is the Democratic nominee for State Comptroller, has proposed an online database to help the public understand how each of Illinois' 1,000 TIF districts are operating if he's elected in November. “There are millions of dollars at stake," he said in a press release, "and taxpayers deserve to know whether or not these TIFs are benefiting their community."

Quick Hit
by Angela Caputo
11:06am
Thu Mar 25, 2010

An Affront To Reproductive Care

As regular readers may recall, a conservative backlash against the Reproductive Health and Access Act scuttled an attempt last year to remove barriers to reproductive care and require that Illinois schools teach sex ed. Undeterred, the measure's chief sponsor -- State Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie (D-Chicago) -- revived the bill in February. Despite ongoing (and intense) lobbying by conservative groups, the measure (HB 6205) passed out of the House Human Services Committee earlier this month. Now it faces a critical third-reading deadline on Friday that will determine whether the bill advances to the Senate or stalls once more. To that end, the Campaign for Reproductive Health and Access --  a coalition of womens' and health advocates -- has issued an action alert, urging supporters to lobby House lawmakers to vote in favor of the bill. Find out how here.