Chicago Sun-Times

Illinois Senate clears pension combinatio­n plan, landing Pritzker a big win

- BY TINA SFONDELES, POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

SPRINGFIEL­D — Gov. J.B Pritzker notched a big veto session win Thursday when the Illinois Senate cleared his touted pension consolidat­ion plan that will combine roughly 650 suburban and downstate police and fire pension funds to try to increase efficiency and lower costs.

The governor unveiled the plan in October after a task force — led by Deputy Gov. Dan Hynes — recommende­d consolidat­ing the pension plans under two new statewide funds: one for police and one for fire.

It’s one major piece of the puzzle to fix a statewide pension mess, which includes $134 billion in unfunded liabilitie­s from five statewide public pension funds and Chicago’s $28 billion in four of the city’s own funds.

Pritzker said the consolidat­ion could result in greater returns of $820 million to $2.5 billion over the next five years, and billions over the next 20 years.

“What we celebrate here is truly monumental,” Pritzker said after Senate passage. “One of the most critical long-term challenges that we face in Illinois is our underfunde­d pension liabilitie­s and the surging property tax burdens that they create. This consolidat­ion marks a vital step forward for our fiscal future.”

The consolidat­ion plan was Pritzker’s number one priority during the fall veto session. And he credited bipartisan­ship as a reason lawmakers finally got it done after decades of others trying to do the same.

The measure hit a small bump this week when the Illinois Municipal League announced its opposition. But the very technical issue was removed and the Illinois House on Wednesday approved it on a 96-14 vote.

The Illinois Senate cleared the plan 42-12, and it will now head to Pritzker’s desk.

In forming the task force in February, the governor’s office argued that the $355 billion in accrued liabilitie­s from the state’s pension funds are placing increased pressure on local government­s and the state, driving up property taxes and crowding out funding for public services. Of the state’s 667 separate public pension funds, 656 are suburban and downstate police and fire pension funds regulated by the Illinois Pension Code.

The goal is to have the newly consolidat­ed funds operationa­l by July 1, 2023.

Cook County and Chicago pension plans, which number nine, have an average actuarial value of $3.5 billion per fund, but the 649 suburban and downstate plans only average $22 million, the task forced found in October.

Critics of the consolidat­ion plan said it would be a cash cow for the first investment adviser who will be able to place $14 billion in funds. They also worry that the increase in benefits for the funds — mostly a higher pensionabl­e salary — will offset any savings in investment­s. Others have argued there should be more local control and fewer restrictio­ns on how the small pension funds invest.

Database, ethics bills pass

And as Republican­s talked about a big cloud covering the Capitol amid a widespread corruption investigat­ion, lawmakers passed a measure that creates a database that would link lobbyist registrati­ons, campaign donations and economic interest statements. The bill, however, doesn’t strengthen the requiremen­ts for the economic interest statement as it was originally intended.

Lawmakers also passed a bill that creates a commission that will study ethics and give recommenda­tions on what the Legislatur­e should do. Most Republican­s were on board with both issues but argued they didn’t go far enough. They also believed the commission would have a partisan shift, with more Democrats than Republican­s on it.

 ?? AMR ALFIKY/AP ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker says the consolidat­ion of pension plans could result in greater returns of $820 million to $2.5 billion over the next five years.
AMR ALFIKY/AP Gov. J.B. Pritzker says the consolidat­ion of pension plans could result in greater returns of $820 million to $2.5 billion over the next five years.

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