Chicago Sun-Times

Why is Rauner giving caregivers a 48- cent runaround?

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Give Virginia Grant her 48 cents.

The Illinois Legislatur­e last summer granted this modest hourly pay raise to Grant and other profession­al caregivers, who now earn a measly $ 13 an hour, yet Gov. Bruce Rauner is still grasping for a credible legal excuse to withhold it. We’re not sure there was ever a moral excuse.

For the life of us, we don’t understand why this one’s so hard, unless the governor honestly believes that a 61- year- old woman who spends her days helping people with disabiliti­es bathe, go to the grocery store and balance their checkbooks is not worthy of that extra 48 cents.

The pay raise was approved by the Legislatur­e as part of a bipartisan state budget compromise, and it was supposed to go into effect on Aug. 5. The governor’s argument for refusing to pay the 48 cents— that any such raise should be decided during an ongoing contract negotiatio­n with the workers’ union— has been rejected by Cook County Judge David Atkins, who in effect ordered Rauner to pay up last month. Instead of calling it quits, Rauner decided to appeal.

“The circuit court’s ruling could allow unions to pick and choose when to collective­ly bargain over wages, which is not consistent with current law and could cost taxpayers millions of dollars,” Rauner spokeswoma­n Rachel Bold said. “We will be appealing this decision. In the meantime, we have worked with the union to hold this increase in escrow pending the outcome of the case.”

Judge Atkins has since granted Rauner a temporary stay on the payment until an April 16 hearing, where the governor will request to stay the payment throughout the entire appeals process.

About 28,000 caregivers are eligible for the pay hike, and most of them have not seen a raise since December 2014, according to their union, the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union. Full disclosure: SEIU is among the investors in the Chicago Sun- Times.

Pay the 48 cents, governor. And cough up the back pay to Aug. 5, about $ 10 million. The Legislatur­e set a new minimum wage for profession­al caregivers, and the administra­tion’s current contract negotiatio­ns with SEIU can involve only possible pay increases above that minimum.

Stiffing the lowest- paid working people in Illinois is not about to solve our state’s larger financial problems.

 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Virginia Grant
PROVIDED PHOTO Virginia Grant

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