Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Gov.-elect Pritzker to pump own money into aides’ pay

Transition team says billionair­e to bolster salaries without taxpayer money

- By Mike Riopell

Billionair­e Democratic Gov.- elect J.B. Pritzker, who pumped more than $171 million of his own wealth into his campaign to defeat Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner inNovember, will use his own money to bolster his top government aides’ salaries, his transition team reported Friday.

Pritzker’s incoming chief of staff, Anne Caprara, will be paid a salary of $298,000 — $148,000 in state money and $150,000 more from East Jackson StreetLLC, an organizati­on Pritzker setup to “enable the governorel­ect to personally compensate some staff in addition to their government salary,” a spokeswoma­n said in a statement.

Rauner’s chief, by comparison, made $180,000 in 2018, according to state records.

The Pritzker camp announced the unusual arrangemen­t days beforehe is inaugurate­d Monday. Lawmakers also this week approved legislatio­n that would allow the incoming governor topaynewag­ency heads 15 percent more.

Supporters contend Illinois trails other big states in the salaries it offers for big jobs. The heads of the state Department of Correction­s and Department of Transporta­tion, for example, make about $150,000 per year.

Pritzker’s transition team pointed to fellow billionair­e and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg supplement­ing his staff’s pay with his own money.

The transition team says Pritzker’s move means some aides will have lower taxpayer-funded salaries than Rauner’s, and they’ll have to report the supplement­al income on ethics forms.

“This process will take place in a transparen­t manner with requiremen­ts that informatio­n be reported publicly,” Pritzker spokeswoma­n Jordan Abudayyeh said in a statement.

According to a transition document, deputy governors such as former state Comptrolle­r Dan Hynes will make a salary of $278,000 — $139,000 from the state and $139,000more from Pritzker’s LLC. The same numbers go for the senior adviser role.

Only their state salaries will count toward calculatin­g their eventual pension benefits, the transition team said.

The LLC’s creation is the latest developmen­t showing how the Hyatt hotels heir will manage the intersecti­on of his substantia­l personal wealth and his job running state government. On Thursday, Pritzker promised to shift some of his immense wealth into a blind trust to avoid conflicts of interest, but it’s unclear whether he will be able to fully wall off his fortune from his official duties.

Pritzker said he has appointed Chicago- based NorthernTr­ustCo. to act as an independen­t trustee and make all investment decisions about his personal assets.

Those same rules won’t apply to the extended Pritzker family fortune that’s held in secretive onshore and offshore trusts. Pritzker said the terms governing the family trusts do not allowfor the assets to be moved into the blind trust.

In addition, Pritzker is divesting “his personally held direct interests in companies that have contracts” with the state, his campaign said.

Pritzker, whoonMonda­y will become the nation’s richest governor, declined to identify those companies or the dollar amount of those state contracts. Nor would Pritzker disclose the dollar amount of his personal assets going into the blind trust or reveal how muchhe benefits fromvariou­s family trusts.

The complex and vast nature of Pritzker’s wealth and a lack of transparen­cy illustrate how difficult it can be to learn when a wealthy politician’s financial interests might butt up against what’s in taxpayers’ best interests.

Pritzker said his efforts to avoid conflicts go further than what was done by Rauner, a wealthy private equity investor who stopped short of setting up a blind trust.

When he took office in 2015, Rauner set up a power of attorney to handle much of his wealth to try to avoid conflicts between his personal investment­s and his public duties. Rauner gave that power to Roundtable Investment­Partners, aNew York firm he’s intertwine­d with both financiall­y and politicall­y. Rauner is an investor in the private equity firm and several of its funds. And Roundtable employees donated to his campaign fund.

What Pritzker promises to set up is not a true blind trust, however, since he will not be totally “blind.” He will need to know the names of the companies andfunds he’s invested into do his taxes and to comply with the state’s ethics laws.

As was the case with Rauner, Pritzker will be required to annually file a statement of economic interest — required by law and released publicly — that list entities he has a financial interest in but not the dollar amount invested.

 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Gov.-elect J.B. Pritzker will use his own money to bolster the salaries of his top government aides, his transition team reported Friday. The Pritzker camp announced the unusual arrangemen­t days before he is inaugurate­d Monday.
JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Gov.-elect J.B. Pritzker will use his own money to bolster the salaries of his top government aides, his transition team reported Friday. The Pritzker camp announced the unusual arrangemen­t days before he is inaugurate­d Monday.

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