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Olson: Big numbers, big problems in state finances

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Illinois’ fiscal crisis can be tough to wrap your head around. It involves numbers that are unfathomably large, a problem dizzying in its scope.

It’s not as sensational as a giant meteor crashing to Earth, the latest nuclear test in North Korea, or the Academy Awards coming up this weekend.

Seriously, how did Quentin Tarantino and Ben Affleck not draw best director nominations, anyway?

State Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka isn’t as easily distracted from the state’s financial crisis. Her office is knee-deep in it. Topinka says it stands to have a tremendous effect on the everyday lives of people – and sooner rather than later.

When I spoke to her Monday, her office had almost 170,000 unpaid bills totaling about $6.3 billion, going back to September.

“That’s strictly the day-to-day, what we owe, and we go back to September of last year, so I haven’t made Christmas yet,” Topinka said. “I celebrate holidays at different times than other people.”

Topinka, a Republican has held elected office in Illinois since 1980, spending four years as a state representative, 10 years in the state senate, and then three terms as state treasurer. She also mounted a failed run for governor against Rod Blagojevich in 2006. Too bad she didn’t win that race.

Since 2011, she’s been in charge of paying the state’s bills at a time when there’s not money enough to pay them. Not that the state isn’t taking in any money. In fact, the state has seen huge increases in the revenue it collects per person in the past two years.

But the state’s pension funds are gobbling up all the money. And no matter how much money is diverted their way, it’s still not enough to fulfill the promises to retired government workers. Depending on how you account for it, the state is $96 billion or $200 billion behind.

Either way, they’re big, ugly numbers.

Our state’s lawmakers don’t like the story either. They’ve been putting off this reckoning for years now, but they can’t put it off much longer. A solution is going to affect all of us.

“It will affect how much they have to live on in the future, it will probably affect what their taxes will be,” Topinka said. “There is a major hook here on a number of fronts which could really hurt our people pretty severely. “

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