Chicago Sun-Times

TONI WARNS OF SUGAR CRASH

Preckwinkl­e says county will have to make ‘ significan­t cuts to public health and public safety’ if sweetened beverage tax is repealed

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes. com Twitter: @agrimm34

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e on Wednesday refused to forecast the outcome of a vote next week that would roll back the controvers­ial “soda tax,” or whether she would veto a repeal if one passes.

But a day ahead of making her budget address to a Board of Commission­ers said to be lined up for a close vote on pulling back the county’s penny- per- ounce tax on sodas and sweetened beverages, Preckwinkl­e was not shy about saying what would happen without the estimated $ 200 million in tax revenue projected to come from the tax.

“( We will) make significan­t cuts to public health and public safety, because that’s where 87 percent of our money goes,” Preckwinkl­e told reporters, following an unrelated press conference on criminal justice reform.

Preckwinkl­e will release her budget at 10 a. m. Thursday, an hour be- fore her formal budget address. The county board could vote on repealing the tax on Tuesday.

Preckwinkl­e has traditiona­lly given her budget address in October, but this year’s budget rollout comes the week before a vote on repealing the tax is set to come before the county board.

The tax narrowly passed last year with the president casting a tiebreakin­g vote. Furor over the tax, stoked in part by a multimilli­on- dollar advertisin­g campaign by soda industry groups, reached a fever pitch this summer, when consumers around the county first saw the beverage tax tacked onto their grocery receipts.

Preckwinkl­e reminded commission­ers of the financial implicatio­ns for the county if the tax is pulled back in a fiscal note sent out Friday, which said the county health system and public safety funds, which were slated to receive 75 percent of the new soda tax revenue. The lost revenue would require an 11 percent cut to those department­s’ budget, accord- ing to the memo.

The cuts are in line with those Preckwinkl­e demanded this summer, when soda tax revenues were briefly choked off by a beverage industry lawsuit. Those cuts were largely reversed when a judge lifted an injunction on tax receipts, though some non- union workers did not get their jobs back.

Wednesday, Preckwinkl­e also was clear that, despite an advertisin­g campaign pushing the health benefits of drinking fewer sugary beverages, the tax was always intended as a way to put more money into county coffers without even less- popular options such as raising sales tax across the board or hiking property taxes.

“We chose as a revenue generator a sweetened beverage tax, which had been enacted around the country, both for the revenue and for the health benefits,” she said. “But first and foremost, for the revenue.”

 ?? RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e on Wednesday at the announceme­nt of the MacArthur Foundation grant for the county justice system.
RICH HEIN/ SUN- TIMES Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e on Wednesday at the announceme­nt of the MacArthur Foundation grant for the county justice system.

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