Chicago Sun-Times

WAREHOUSE OF QUESTIONS ABOUT WASTEFUL STATE SPENDING

- | SUN- TIMES FILES

At a time when Illinois is sitting on $ 14.3 billion in unpaid bills, it’s dismaying to learn that the state rented a warehouse for $ 2.4 million that it could have bought outright for $ 750,000.

Yes, $ 2.4 million is a drop in the bucket when it comes to state spending, but such wastefulne­ss begs the question of how well — or, rather, how poorly — the rest of our tax money is being spent. And it’s a miserable sales pitch for an income tax hike that both Democrats and Republics know is coming sooner or later.

Two suburban Chicago legislator­s — state Sen. Tom Cullerton, D- Villa Park, and state Rep. David McSweeney, R- Barrington Hills — have called for an Illinois Legislativ­e Audit Commission investigat­ion into the warehouse’ five- year lease.

This being Illinois, home to sweetheart deals, the leasing arrangemen­t involves a secretive newly formed corporatio­n with links to a onetime political powerhouse, William Cellini. According to WCIA- TV in Downstate Champaign, three business people in the single- bid lease had ties to Cellini, who was the onetime “king of clout” and friend of many governors before he was convicted in 2011 of trying to shake down a movie producer for Rod Blagojevic­h campaign cash. Those with ties to Cellini include the leasing agent, one of the three warehouse owners and the chairman of the Procuremen­t Policy Board, which signed off on the deal.

The warehouse was leased to store Department of Human Services records that had been kept at a leaky former prison in Dwight. Cullerton and McSweeney ask why the state didn’t try to save money by repairing the Dwight facility, or moving the records to another unused state- owned space, or digitizing the records.

All excellent questions. None have been answered.

Since Cullerton and McSweeney raised their concerns, Illinois Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza has suspended rent payments for the warehouse.

Mike Hoffman, director of the Illinois Department of Central Management Services, told the Springfiel­d Journal- Register the lease was in accordance with the state’s standard approval process.

Which just means the state’s standard approval process is a joke.

 ??  ?? The state rented a warehouse for $ 2.4 million that it could have bought for $ 750,000, and the leasing arrangemen­t involves a secretive corporatio­n with links to onetime ‘‘ king of clout’’ William Cellini.
The state rented a warehouse for $ 2.4 million that it could have bought for $ 750,000, and the leasing arrangemen­t involves a secretive corporatio­n with links to onetime ‘‘ king of clout’’ William Cellini.

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