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Lawmaker optimistic on pensions deal for Ill.

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SPRINGFIELD – A scaled-back overhaul addressing Illinois’ worst-in-the-nation pension problem is ready for its first test, key House lawmakers said Sunday as they entered the final stretch of the lame-duck session.

The amended measure – which would mean employees chip in more and would freeze cost-of-living increases for retirees, among other provisions – was scheduled to get a committee hearing today, said Rep. Elaine Nekritz, a Northbrook Democrat who has been at the heart of pension talks.

“We think the bill will get out of committee,” she told reporters Sunday. “It’s been my goal throughout this entire process to not to place blame, whether it’s blame as to how we got here, blame as to why this isn’t getting done.”

But Nekritz and other backers were coy about the chances on the floor for the measure during the final days of the current General Assembly, which features lame-duck lawmakers who are not returning and can vote without fearing voter backlash.

Nonetheless, Nekritz said the issue has “consensus among the leaders of the House.”

“We’re taking this one step at a time,” she said. “The bill will get out of committee, and then we’ll work to get votes on the floor.”

Key to the agreement is House Minority Leader Tom Cross, R-Oswego, who has blocked action on closing the monstrous pension deficit because he opposed a provision to shift some teacher-benefit costs to local school districts.

A spokeswoman for Cross said he supported the agreement. The opening to a new agreement emerged over the weekend when House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, agreed to set the matter aside for now.

Gov. Pat Quinn – who had set a Wednesday deadline for pension legislation – had been working with Nekritz on the bill, said Quinn’s spokeswoman, Brooke Anderson.

“We’re encouraged by the momentum to fix a problem that urgently needs to be fixed,” she said.

Word of the tentative agreement emerged Sunday when the House reconvened for the final days of the current General Assembly, but made little headway on other issues.

A House committee declined to discuss an assault weapons ban, citing inaction by the Senate, which abruptly adjourned last week without sending the House a gun-control bill or gay marriage legalization, which supporters were counting on.

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