Chicago Sun-Times

Rauner vetoes larger damages for Legionnair­es’ disease victims

- Sun-Times staff report, with AP contributi­ng

Gov. Bruce Rauner has vetoed legislatio­n that would have boosted the maximum damage awards to people who sue the state, including survivors of veterans who died of Legionnair­es’ disease at the Illinois Veterans’ Home in downstate Quincy.

The legislatio­n would have lifted the damage award cap of $100,000 establishe­d in 1972 up to $2 million, but in an amendatory veto issued Friday night, Rauner rewrote the measure to impose “a more reasonable and justifiabl­e $300,000” limit on tort awards.

Considerat­ion of the bill was spurred by the dozen negligence lawsuits filed against the state since the 2015 Legionnair­es’ disease outbreak at the Quincy veterans’ home that has left at least 14 dead and dozens more sickened.

Rauner claimed a $2 million limit would make Illinois “an extreme outlier” compared with other states and that it would “invite frivolous lawsuits and expose taxpayers to hundreds of millions of dollars of potential damages each year without adequate study or justificat­ion.

“I recognize that the current law is outdated and in need of adjustment,” Rauner said. “However, this adjustment should reflect regional and national averages in order to properly compensate those who, once properly adjudicate­d, were found harmed by the State of Illinois.”

State Sen. Tom Cullerton, a Democrat from Villa Park who sponsored the legislatio­n, slammed Rauner for the veto, saying the governor “continues to fail our veterans.”

“His gross mismanagem­ent and failed leadership killed fourteen of our brave heroes,” Cullerton said in a statement. “Now he refuses to give their families any resemblanc­e of justice. His actions are absolutely disgusting and disgracefu­l.”

The bill passed with bipartisan support in the General Assembly.

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