Chicago Sun-Times

State’s weak in the watchdogs department

- ANDY SHAW Andy Shaw is president & CEO of the Better Government Associatio­n. Follow Andy Shaw on Twitter: @ andyshawbg­a Email: ashaw@bettergov.org

No one’s held the legislativ­e inspector position since 2014.

Watchdogs can’t watch everything.

So while the Better Government Associatio­n and many other anti- corruption crusaders were pushing earlier this year for an inspector general with sharp teeth and a loud bark to shine a light on Chicago’s City Council and hold aldermen accountabl­e, another watchdog crisis was unfolding under the radar in state government.

We’re talking about Illinois’ auditor general, legislativ­e inspector general and executive inspector general — three important watchdogs that are troubled enough to need watching themselves. That includes:

Auditor General Frank Mautino, a former Downstate lawmaker who was part of the House leadership team but hit the ground stumbling within minutes of his January appointmen­t when news stories raised troubling questions about his use of campaign funds.

Specifical­ly, loan repayments to a local bank well above the amount borrowed; lavish spending on meals, travel, car repairs and gasoline; and political fundraisin­g even after he was confirmed as auditor general.

In all, an inauspicio­us start for someone who monitors the efficacy and efficiency of state agencies, and especially disappoint­ing after his predecesso­r, William Holland, built a reputation for integrity and nonpartisa­n profession­alism over several decades.

Election officials are investigat­ing Mautino’s campaign accounts, and their findings could determine whether the General Assembly reconsider­s his appointmen­t.

Legislativ­e inspector general is the title, but no one’s held the position since December 2014, when Springfiel­d attorney Bill Roberts, a former federal prosecutor and legal counsel to then- Gov. Jim Edgar, resigned after six months on the job.

Roberts stepped down after a BGA investigat­ion revealed his law firm, Hinshaw & Culbertson, received more than $ 40,000 from political committees controlled by House Speaker Michael Madigan for legal work between 2002 and 2008.

Roberts’ firm also made political contributi­ons to key lawmakers, prompting conflict- of- interest questions that hastened his departure and leaving the General Assembly without a watchdog for more than a year.

The lingering vacancy is disturbing, and so is the attitude of Rep. Lou Lang, D- Skokie, chairman of the Legislativ­e Ethics Commission, who refused to discuss the delay or tell us how the search for Roberts’ replacemen­t is going.

The executive inspector general is Maggie Hickey, a former assistant U. S. attorney appointed by Gov. Bruce Rauner last year to replace Ricardo Meza, who held the job for five years before resigning.

Hickey’s office, which monitors the executive branch of state government and Chicago- area transit agencies, has subpoena power but can’t begin an investigat­ion without permission or make its findings public.

Legislatio­n’s been introduced to make the executive IG more transparen­t and independen­t, but not surprising­ly, the proposal hasn’t gone anywhere.

So where does this leave us? With three enfeebled state watchdog offices — one troubled, another unoccupied, a third hamstrung — depriving Illinois taxpayers of the crucial oversight essential for honest, efficient, open government.

The governor and General Assembly may be mired in a protracted budget stalemate fueled by hyperparti­san difference­s, but there’s no reason they can’t focus on reforming and improving important state watchdog functions.

That simply requires leadership in the pursuit of better government, not ideologica­l contortion­s.

Chicago aldermen almost got it right with their City Council IG ordinance a couple months ago — it’s imperfect but vastly improved oversight — so there’s no reason their counterpar­ts in Springfiel­d can’t do as well with their watchdog challenges.

We’ll be watching them closely from now on and barking loudly until they get it right.

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