Chicago Sun-Times

Progressiv­e aldermen move to strip Burke of workers’ comp program

Progressiv­e Caucus moves to strip Burke of $100M-a-year workers’ comp program

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Progressiv­e aldermen moved Wednesday to strip the Finance Committee chaired by Ald. Edward Burke (14th) of control over Chicago’s $100 million-a-year workers’ compensati­on program.

The move by Ald. John Arena (45th) and his Progressiv­e Caucus colleagues comes nearly two weeks after the unpreceden­ted federal raid on Burke’s ward and City Hall offices.

Sources have told the Chicago Sun-Times that the federal raid had nothing to do with the workers’ compensati­on program that has been walled off from any scrutiny by Inspector General

Joe Ferguson, even after Ferguson was empowered to investigat­e the City Council.

Nor was it tied to the property tax appeals work that Burke’s law firm has done for the riverfront tower that bears the name of President Donald Trump.

But that didn’t stop Arena and colleagues from pouncing on the politicall­y weakened Burke.

Arena said it’s a matter of “accountabi­lity and transparen­cy” at a time when Mayor Rahm Emanuel is pushing for a constituti­onal amendment to help solve a $1 billion spike in pension payments that will confront his successor.

“At the same time the mayor is going to suggest that we reduce benefits for our senior citizens and city workers, we have a program that is at $100 million year-overyear where other municipali­ties are in the range of $20 million. And we have no clear view of how this program is administer­ed,” Arena told the Sun-Times on Wednesday.

“This is a move to make sure this is an efficient program and, if people deserve the benefits, they get the benefits. But without audit review, we can’t know that. We asked for this a couple years back when we wanted the inspector general to have review of all committees. That would have made this work. The administra­tion hasn’t acted to reform this, so we’re taking action to reform this.”

Arena isn’t the first to suggest the workers’ compensati­on transfer. Last week, mayoral candidate Lori Lightfoot, a longtime Burke nemesis, demanded the same.

“There’s too much money that flows through that system that is completely opaque. We have no idea how those monies are spent, who the people are who are making the decisions. That’s got to end,” Lightfoot said then.

In 2006, a Sun-Times investigat­ion exposed such abuses as allowing patronage workers to file for injury claims at a higher rate than any occupation tracked by the Labor Department — including the most dangerous ones — and paying workers’ comp benefits to people who held outside jobs. The highest rates of injuries coincided with the names of people who had the most clout.

Three years earlier, the SunTimes ran a series of similar stories, including one about the city forking over $136,036 to a Streets and Sanitation worker who beat up his daughter’s boyfriend while out on disability for an injured hand.

In 2016, whistleblo­wers again called the workers’ comp program a cesspool of patronage and favoritism. Still, Burke persuaded his City Council colleagues to block Ferguson from auditing the program.

In a lawsuit filed in July, Jay Stone, a son of former Ald. Bernie Stone, accused Burke of exploiting the workers’ comp program to award jobs to precinct workers who deliver votes for his hand-picked candidates. Stone also accused Burke of cutting disability checks as favors to political pals, such as to a precinct captain of a fellow alderman.

Mayoral candidate Toni Preckwinkl­e is also on record as supporting the workers’ compensati­on shift — even though Burke held a recent fundraiser for her re-election campaign as County Board president.

In county government, workers’ comp cases are handled by a division of the state’s attorney’s office, with regular reports to a committee of the County Board.

Emanuel privately blamed Burke for being the heavy hand behind the residency challenge that nearly knocked him off the 2011 ballot. He even threatened to remove Burke as finance chairman and strip him of his taxpayer-supported bodyguard detail.

But after the election, Emanuel reached a political accommodat­ion with Burke not unlike the chairman’s uneasy alliance with former Mayor Richard M. Daley, a lifelong rival.

Burke remained finance chairman. And the workers’ compensati­on program remained in his ironfisted control.

Asked Wednesday whether the responsibi­lity should remain there, Emanuel said, “I don’t really care where workers’ comp sits. If you look at my budget, you’ll realize we realized $20 million of savings.”

Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) countered, “With a big program like that, transparen­cy is always in the best interest of the taxpayer. It’s not a transparen­t process right now.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Ald. Edward Burke (14th) speaks during a City Council meeting last year.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Ald. Edward Burke (14th) speaks during a City Council meeting last year.
 ??  ?? Ald. John Arena
Ald. John Arena

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