Chicago Sun-Times

Rahm downgrades Moody’s over threat to drop city’s bond rating

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Monday sloughed off a threat by Moody’s Investors Service to drop Chicago’s bond rating even further into junk territory because of the mayor’s commitment to do whatever it takes to ensure an on- time opening of the Chicago Public Schools.

“Standard & Poor’s and Fitch have upgraded the city of Chicago,” Emanuel said. “So I don’t really put much stock in Moody’s.”

Last week, Moody’s delivered a doublewham­my to Chicago taxpayers that could drive up already exorbitant borrowing costs for the city and its public schools.

The Wall Street rating agency that stands alone in its junk- bond rating of Chicago’s debt placed both CPS and the city under review for another possible downgrade— even after Illinois lawmakers overrode Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto of a budget balanced, in part, by a state income- tax increase.

For CPS, the reason for Moody’s review was the state’s “ongoing failure” to help finance school operations and Rauner’s threat to veto a revamped school financial aid formula that would add close to $ 300 million in additional state funding for CPS and potentiall­y more in subsequent years.

For city government, the reason for Moody’s review was Emanuel’s promise to bridge whatever funding gap still exists to make certain that Chicago Public Schools open on time and remain open.

On Monday, Emanuel continued to play poker with his plan to tax downtown businesses and high- networth individual­s to put the broke Chicago Public Schools on solid financial footing.

Emanuel said he would wait until Rauner vetoes the school funding bill — and the General Assembly votes on whether to override that veto— before identifyin­g a local source of revenue to generate the annual revenue that CPS desperatel­y needs.

In other words, the mayor doesn’t want to show his hand now and let Springfiel­d off the hook.

Emanuel was asked repeatedly how he plans to bridge the gap between what CPS gets from the state and the $ 400 million to $ 600 million the broke system needs to be put on solid financial footing.

“What I’m gonna do is make sure that . . . the rewrite of the funding formula which benefits school districts with poor children and children of color becomes the law,” he said.

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Rahm Emanuel

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