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Olson: Big numbers, big problems in state finances

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One point of view says that the pensioners have done their part and it is the irresponsible legislators who have raided the pension funds who are to blame. The state needs to do its part no matter how much the working people and businesses must be taxed to do it.

The other viewpoint says we can’t afford these extravagant promises; pensions are impractical and are no longer available to anyone who works outside government. Some pensioners gamed the system to secure ridiculously outsized pensions, some collect their pensions while working at other jobs, others collect multiple pensions. We can’t allow the entire state to be bankrupted and its residents taxed into oblivion to make six-figure tax-free pension payouts that increase each and every year.

There is going to be a fight over this, both in the legislature and probably in the courts as well.

“These are going to be terrible votes,” Topinka said. “People are going to lose elections over this. People don’t like to lose elections, but it has to get done. Illinois is just in a whirlpool, and the whirlpool is just sucking us under.

“By law, we cannot declare bankruptcy. If we could, we would. Any other entity would be bankrupt by now. No one would do business with them.”

The unpopular proposals are starting to trickle in. On Wednesday, State Rep. Lou Lang, a Democrat from Skokie, proposed making the 67 percent income-tax hike passed by lame-duck legislators in 2010 permanent, and dedicating that money to pension payments. Of course, that’s where it’s already going and then some.

The tax hike was supposed to expire in 2014, but then again, the tollway system was supposed to be a temporary solution, too.

There will be more.

Until we get some kind of solution, Topinka said her office will continue to try to pay what it can, when it can on the state’s bills.

“I move the non-for-profit agencies up to the front because they have no options and they’re dealing with our most vulnerable citizens,” Topinka said. “Some of them are just hanging on by a thread, they’ve borrowed until they have no credit left.


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