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Lt. Gov.: Disclosure may help public trust

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Sen. Dan Kotowski, D-Park Ridge, listens to lawmakers while on the Senate floor during session at the Illinois State Capitol on Thursday in Springfield. Kotowski is sponsoring legislation that would overhaul a 40-year-old financial disclosure system that critics have long scoffed at as meaningless. (AP photo)

SPRINGFIELD – Elected officials will be forced to disclose more information about their financial interests under legislation introduced Thursday that Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon said is needed to help restore faith among Illinois residents who’ve seen their past two governors sent to prison for corruption.

Simon and state Sen. Dan Kotowski, D-Park Ridge, said their proposal would overhaul a 40-year-old financial disclosure system that critics have long scoffed at as meaningless. They say it would allow more scrutiny of whether conflicts of interest exist, in part by requiring politicians to fill out more specific forms about their assets and finances.

Simon also said the changes would show residents that most politicians are in their jobs for public service, not “to line their pockets.”

“It’s better for those who file it, and it’s better for those who use it as a source of information,” she said during a Thursday press conference.

Kotowski, the bill’s sponsor, said he is optimistic that the legislation will pass because Illinois residents want ethics reforms.

But he acknowledged that the proposal may meet resistance from some lawmakers, and it will be competing with other matters in the busy final days of the legislative session, which ends Jan. 9.

Thousands of elected officials, high-ranking government employees and candidates are required to file financial disclosure forms each year. The forms are officially known as a statement of economic interest. But they often are referred to as “none sheets” because people typically answer the eight questions about conflicts with “none” or “not applicable.”

According to Simon’s office, that was the answer on 75 percent of questions on state forms and 85 percent of forms in Cook County.

The proposal introduced Thursday would create a new form that would for the first time ask about outside employment and relationships with lobbyists.

It also would require disclosure of any so-called “sweetheart” loans, or loans received under terms not available to other members of the public.

Simon and Kotowski said the new forms also would be easier to understand and include definitions of key terms, making it more difficult for people to say they inaccurately filled it out because the form was vague.

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