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Illinois House committee OKs pension overhaul plan

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Illinois House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego (front), prepares to testify during a House committee hearing Monday at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. The long-awaited plan to address the state's $96 billion pension problem cleared an early hurdle as the Illinois House committee approved a proposal that freezes cost-of-living increases and calls for higher employee contributions. (AP photo)

SPRINGFIELD – A breakthrough measure to address Illinois' $96 billion pension crisis progressed Monday in the Illinois House, but odds of a final deal before this week's deadline grew slimmer as lawmakers left the Capitol for the day without taking a floor vote.

The House Personnel and Pensions Committee voted 6-3 to give the go-ahead to the plan, which freezes cost-of-living increases and calls for higher employee contributions to help solve a worst-in-the-nation pension shortfall.

The sponsor of the bill, Democratic Rep. Elaine Nekritz, said both Democrats and Republicans were assessing how many House lawmakers support the measure before deciding whether to call for a floor vote.

"When we have the votes, we'll call it," Nekritz said. "We have a much stronger bipartisan bill here than we've ever had in the past. We have a much greater likelihood of success than we've ever had in the past."

The House is scheduled to return Tuesday for its final full day before the session ends just before noon Wednesday. But if the plan gets through the House it still would need to pass the Senate, which is not currently meeting. Democratic Senate President John Cullerton has said he will call lawmakers back to Springfield for a Tuesday session if the House is able to pass a pension bill, though he prefers a proposal that passed the Senate last year.

Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn and House Republican Leader Tom Cross back the plan, and Cross said he would work with his Republican caucus to get the measure passed on the floor. Two Republicans joined four Democrats in voting yes in the pensions committee

"We've got to quit talking and we've got to pass something," Cross said. "This is something that has to happen. Its time has come."

A Quinn spokesman said the governor and his staff also were pressing lawmakers for their support.

Opponents said the bill is unfair and unconstitutional and won't solve the problem. They said lawmakers must consider other revenue sources, such as closing tax loopholes, and they asked legislators to attend a pension summit to try to work out a plan that they say will pass constitutional muster.

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