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16-Econ

Ottawa Representative Says Progressive Income Tax Needs Public Relations Push

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State Rep. Lance Yednock of Ottawa says getting a progressive income tax in Illinois will require a big public relations job so voters approve it next year.

 

 

Yednock says Illinois has to do something to get the revenue it needs and balance the budget. Currently, the Illinois Constitution of 1970 allows only a flat income tax rate, because that was viewed as taxpayer protection in a state that didn’t have an income tax before.

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Feeds,Local,Region: Lincoln,Region: Central

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August 6, 2019 at 07:09AM

Bristow selected for property tax panel

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ALTON — State Rep. Monica Bristow, D-Alton, has been appointed to the newly created Property Tax Relief Task Force which will address property taxes in Illinois.

“This spring I worked on legislation to make cost-saving exemptions more accessible for local seniors and to provide tax credits to local businesses that invest in our communities,” Bristow said. “In order to grow our local economies and ensure businesses invest in Illinois jobs, we must address the systemic property tax crisis facing our state and our homeowners.”

Bristow joined the Illinois General Assembly in December 2017. She voted for Senate Bill 1932 which created the Illinois Property Tax Relief Task Force and, this spring, introduced legislation to make the Senior Citizens Assessment Freeze Homestead Exemption more accessible to local residents, as well as to provide tax credits to local business that invest in Illinois jobs. She also voted for Senate Bill 39 which created the Property Tax Relief Fund.

“Our families and local businesses cannot wait any longer; they need real comprehensive solutions that help address the problem of growing property taxes,” Bristow said.

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Region: Metro East,City: Alton,News

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August 5, 2019 at 11:43AM

Connor-backed bill promoting apprenticeships signed into law

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State Sen. John Connor, D-Lockport

Geoff Stellfox for Shaw Media

Caption

State Sen. John Connor, D-Lockport

Last week, Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill backed by State Rep. John Connor, D-Lockport, to expand access to apprenticeship programs and ensure workers have a pathway to high-paying careers.

The law, S.B. 534, creates the Bureau on Apprenticeship Programs within the Department of Labor, which will be responsible for increasing minority participation in apprenticeship programs by identifying and eliminating potential barriers to entry, according to a news release.

“Illinois has a shortage of skilled workers,” Connors said in the release. “This makes us less competitive as a state to those businesses requiring skilled workers, and I want to strengthen Illinois by training Illinoisans for the skilled jobs that lay the foundation for good careers.”

Connor said the program will increase the percentage of state contracts required to go to businesses owned by people of color. He said legislators need to do more to nurture economic growth in communities of color to address inequality.

“The cycle of poverty can be broken through education and training, and the opportunity to work a good-paying, practical job should not be a privilege some communities are excluded from,” Connor said. “Right now, some Illinoisans have limited access to the training required for skilled jobs, just because of the color of their skin or their gender.”

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News,City: Joliet,Region: Joliet,Region: South Suburbs

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August 5, 2019 at 11:59AM

St. Rep. Yednock on minimum wage: many more families need more for survival

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St. Rep. Lance Yednock says raising the minimum wage incrementally to $15 by 2025 lets everyone see how it’s affecting things. While Illinois and a few other states have responded to the call for $15 per hour, there are some people calling for higher amounts. Yednock says it’s been a long time since minimum wage went up and families depend on it more than they used to.

Illinois has had a minimum wage of $8.25 per hour since 2010.

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Region: Northern,Feeds,News,Region: La Salle

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August 2, 2019 at 10:57AM

New law will bar Illinois employers from asking job applicants for pay history

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New law will bar Illinois employers from asking job applicants for pay history

State Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, shown in 2017, sponsored legislation barring Illinois employers from asking job applicants for pay history. (Mike Danahey / The Courier-News)

Illinois companies will no longer be allowed to ask job applicants or their previous employers about salary history under a measure Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law Wednesday.

Advocates say asking applicants about their salaries at previous jobs helps perpetuate a wage gap between men and women doing the same jobs. Illinois lawmakers passed two previous versions of the legislation, but Pritzker’s predecessor, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner, vetoed both.

“We are declaring that one’s history should not dictate one’s future, that no person should be held back from earning their true value because of how much money they were paid in a previous job,” Pritzker said during a bill-signing event at Chicago Women’s Park and Gardens in the Prairie District neighborhood on the Near South Side. “It’s no longer acceptable to wring quality work out of capable women at a discounted rate.”

The measure Pritzker signed, which takes effect in 60 days, passed with bipartisan support this spring in the House and Senate. Workers will be able to seek up to $10,000 in damages if employers violate the law, and it also protects the right of employees to discuss their salaries and benefits with co-workers.

State Rep. Anna Moeller, an Elgin Democrat who sponsored the legislation in each of the past three years, praised Pritzker for finally making it law.

“It illustrates yet again how … compassionate, inclusive and effective leadership can change lives and improve our state,” Moeller said.

The measure is one step toward ensuring a more certain economic future for women in Illinois, she said.

“We need to do more to eliminate the barriers that keep women from reaching their full economic potential,” Moeller said, listing paid parental leave, predictable scheduling and affordable, accessible child care as future priorities.

In vetoing the previous legislation, Rauner argued that there were more business-friendly ways to address the issue. He pointed to a law that took effect in Massachusetts last year that is similar but allows employers to ask for wage history after making a job and salary offer.

Moeller’s bills also faced opposition from business groups, including the Illinois Chamber of Commerce.

“I am dumbstruck by those who say they support equal pay but then do everything in their power to work against it,” said Wendy Pollack, director of the Women’s Law and Policy Initiative at the Chicago-based Shriver Center on Poverty Law. “But this year is different. Thanks to Gov. Pritzker, we have a very different outcome.”

Pollack said the new law is “an affirmative step toward closing the wage gap.” Women in Illinois, on average, earn 79 cents for every dollar white men earn, she said.

Pritzker noted that he was signing the bill a short distance from the headquarters of the U.S. Soccer Federation, which has come under fire for allegedly paying the World Cup champion women’s national team less than the men’s team “despite the women’s substantially higher success rate,” he said.

Chicago-based U.S. Soccer this week released a letter saying it pays the women more, though it included their salaries for playing on professional teams in the National Women’s Soccer League in addition to their pay for playing on the national team. The union representing the men’s team released a statement criticizing U.S. Soccer’s position.

In one of his first acts upon taking office in January, Pritzker signed an executive order prohibiting state agencies from asking job applicants about their pay at previous jobs. Then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel last year signed a similar executive order for city workers last year.

dpetrella@chicagotribune.com

Dan Petrella


A Lombard native, Dan Petrella has written for newspapers from Chicago to Carbondale. Before joining the Tribune in 2017, he was Springfield bureau chief for Lee Enterprises newspapers. He’s also been an editor and reporter at The State Journal-Register in Springfield. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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July 31, 2019 at 04:28PM

Illinois lawmaker files bill to let legislators refuse pay raises

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An Illinois lawmaker has filed legislation that would allow legislators to turn down any new salary increases after he saw the backlash over the raise they voted themselves in June coinciding with a number of tax hikes, including a doubling of the state’s gas tax. 

Rep. Maurice West, a Democrat from Rockford, says accepting a raise while taking more money from constituents sends the wrong message. 

“This is the time that we should focus on ensuring that funds spent are for the benefit of the people that we represent, not ourselves,” he said. “Now is the wrong time and timing is everything.”

His legislation would allow lawmakers to opt-out of their annual cost-of-living increase, sending it to pay down the state’s pension debt instead. State law currently says lawmakers have to accept those pay hikes.

Turning away the pay hike is all the more important, West said, since his district consists of blue-collar workers who are going to feel the effects of things like the doubling of the state’s motor fuel tax to 38 cents a gallon, which he voted for.

It’s unclear if the legislation would provide an avenue for lawmakers to turn down money that they may receive from a lawsuit that seeks to reinstate years of frozen cost-of-living increases sought via a lawsuit by two former lawmakers.

State Rep. David McSweeney spent days working with Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza to return the amount that he was to receive from the pay raise that lawmakers passed in one of the budget bills. So far, he’s the only lawmaker to return his pay increase.

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Politics

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July 26, 2019 at 06:02AM

Stuart says SIU funding not fair

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Stuart says SIU funding not fair

EDWARDSVILLE – State Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, says more fair state funding is needed within the Southern Illinois University System.

“I am really disappointed with the results of the funding distribution study from AGB Consulting,” Stuart said. “The results were inconclusive and did little to solve the funding disparity that exists between the two SIU campuses.

“Instead of finding a fair funding formula, the firm passed responsibility back to the Southern Illinois University Board of Trustees,” she said. “I hope the board chooses to act responsibly and fund the Edwardsville campus fairly.”

Stuart said one of the reasons she ran for state representative was seeing firsthand the negative impacts of the defunding of SIUE.

“During my first term, I introduced legislation that would ensure that state funding for the SIU system would be split evenly between the Edwardsville and Carbondale campuses,” she said. “After this failed attempt to study the funding distribution between the two SIU campuses, I think it is clear now that the Illinois Board of Higher Education must conduct an unbiased study in order to reach a solution that is fair for SIUE, which I will continue to advocate for in Springfield.

“While we have seen growth and expansion here on the Edwardsville campus, we have not seen the funding from the SIU board to accompany the success of the campus,” Stuart said. “I have made fair funding for SIUE a priority each year when I go to Springfield, and I will continue to fight to ensure the Edwardsville campus gets their fair share of funding.”

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July 24, 2019 at 09:50PM

Employees Can Collect Money Owed To Them Under Proposed Legislation

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A local lawmaker helped pass legislation that would ensure employees collect money owed to them.

State Rep. Lance Yednock passed House Bill 3405, which would allow employees to receive the tips they earn in full, stopping their employers from withholding those earned wages.

The bill says employees could continue to pool their tips together if they choose; however, employers would have no authority to influence that decision.

An amendment to the measure provides that gratuities are the property of employees and those employers shall not keep them.

It also requires gratuities to be paid to employees within 13 days after the end of the pay period during which the gratuities were earned.

Yednock, in a statement, said his legislation protects workers by ensuring that every penny they earn is given to them. He also added the money will be spent at local businesses which creates more local jobs down the road.

HB 3405 was sent to Gov. Pritzker’s desk last month and now awaits his signature. 

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Region: Northern,City: Morris,Local,Region: Morris

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July 6, 2019 at 06:53AM

State Rep. Katie Stuart discusses gaming expansion

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Illinois State Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, discusses the gaming expansion, which was recently signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker. The expansion allowed for casino type games at Fairmount Park, and sports betting. … Click to Continue »

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Region: Metro East,Feeds,News,City: Belleville

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July 5, 2019 at 12:15PM

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