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Frustrated lawmakers pitch pension fix

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Illinois Rep. Daniel Biss (left), D-Skokie, looks on as Illinois Rep. Elaine Nekritz, D-Northbrook, speaks with reporters Wednesday while at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. A group of lawmakers offered new legislation to fix the state’s crippling pension crisis and end bitter fighting over a multibillion-dollar issue that gets more expensive by the day. (AP photo)

SPRINGFIELD – Rank-and-file lawmakers frustrated by slow progress and finger-pointing offered their own solution to Illinois’ multibillion-dollar pension crisis Wednesday, saying legislators need to take a new approach before the state is sent into “financial oblivion.”

But legislative leaders questioned whether the idea is constitutional or saves the necessary billions of dollars, which might put lawmakers right back where they started with just weeks to go in the legislative session.

More than 20 House members – including a handful of Republicans – joined Rep. Elaine Nekritz, chairwoman of the House pension committee, in a debut of the proposal designed to put a jolt into stalled talks on the final day of the fall veto session.

The Northbrook Democrat said the idea doesn’t answer everyone’s concerns but has more momentum than any previous pension pitch.

“We must continue to push this issue forward and not let excuses get in the way of progress,” Nekritz said.

Nekritz dismissed any question that lawmakers were bucking legislative leaders. She discussed her plan with House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, and predicted it would get a House vote if the savings calculations that are under way work out to lawmakers’ satisfaction.

House Republican leader Tom Cross, of Oswego, said the plan has “a lot of merit” and key components he supports, and he has other ideas that should be in the mix.

But early indications were for an unwelcome Senate reception. Senate President John Cullerton said the proposal appears to be unconstitutional, while Senate Republican leader Christine Radogno said she won’t back a deal that shifts some costs to local school districts. Their reluctance could stymie the plan even if it gets House approval.

The state’s pensions are currently $95 billion underfunded – the worst shortfall of any state in the nation, largely because Illinois has failed to make sufficient payments to the plans over the years.

But there has been no deal despite years of negotiations and a failed special session called by Gov. Pat Quinn. Quinn says a solution is his top priority because as the unfunded liability continues to grow, efforts to catch up on state payments eat up more and more money each year, forcing cuts to schools, public safety, health care and other areas.

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