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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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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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July 5, 2019 at 12:15PM

Yednock supports bill to let employees keep their tips

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A bill to let tipped employees keep their tips is awaiting a decision by Gov. Pritzker. St. Rep. Lance Yednock says the bill would prohibit employers from forcing employees to pool their tips. The Ottawa Democrat says employers couldn’t deduct tip amounts from the regular wages an employee makes either. Employees could still decide on their own to pool their tips, but the boss wouldn’t be allowed to influence the decision. All of this area’s lawmakers voted for the bill.

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July 4, 2019 at 12:22PM

Rockford’s freshman lawmaker not resting on party laurels

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This article is part of Next Up, a special section published June 30 about the future leaders of the Rock River Valley

ROCKFORD — State Rep. Maurice West II was pleased to vote for a balanced budget that includes plenty of perks for the Forest City, including a new casino, $275 million earmarked for passenger rail service, money for maintenance of roads and bridges, and the promise of hundreds of construction jobs to bring each project to fruition.

Now comes the hard part.

"We’ve got to make sure everyone delivers," he said.

"When they start building this I plan on driving by and making sure that there are women, black folks, brown folks — people from the 67th (District) are all there to help build this casino. I want people from the 67th to get as much out of this as possible."

West, a former director of career development at Rockford University, is a freshman lawmaker who credits his first and second ventures into politics — a failed 2012 run for a seat on the City Council and a failed 2014 run for Rock Valley College trustee — as building blocks.

"Those two losses got me ready for this," he said, seated in his third-floor office in the E.J. Zeke Giorgi Center overlooking the Rock River. "Those two losses helped me stay grounded. Because when you go to Springfield, your mindset has to change. Here in Rockford, it’s ‘What can I do for you?’ When I go to Springfield, it’s like, ‘What can you do for me so that I can do for my district?’"

West, D-Rockford, already is party to the largest capital program in the state’s history, but he said there is still much to do such as addressing the food desert on the city’s west side and a lack of well-paying jobs throughout the county. 

"Remember back in the day when Illinois 173 was nothing but cornfields? Springfield Avenue is similar to what 173 used to be," he said. "Why can’t Springfield Avenue be the next Illinois 173?

"I’ve talked to RMAP (Rockford Metropolitan Agency For Planning) and they say we need more rooftops to justify a Walmart or a grocery store going way out there. It’s a conversation that I am willing to have."

West also said he wants to help make the workforce in the region more marketable to attract more employers.

"We have a skills gap of 44,000 people without a GED or high school diploma," he said. "We need to decrease that skills gap and make way for more short-term training programs like apprenticeships. Not everyone is built for college, but anyone and everyone can get a license for certification.

"We need to get people certified and marketable to get a job, and then businesses will start coming."

Chris Green: 815-987-1241; cgreen@rrstar.com; @chrisfgreen

 

 

 

 

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July 1, 2019 at 05:03PM

Reitz evaluates first session

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State Rep. Nathan Reitz (D-Steeleville) was only in Springfield for the final 16 days of the legislative session, but he still passed several bills and voted on numerous critical proposals. 

“I enjoyed my time,” Reitz said. “It was quick. I got in there when there was a lot of legislation that had to be finished.”

Reitz was appointed on May 9 to replace former state representative Jerry Costello II after Costello got a job at the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. 

His first day in the Legislature was May 14. 

With the state moving on measures like legalizing recreational marijuana, a capital plan and a budget,  Reitz pointed to that final item as a highlight. 

“The best thing about the session, in my opinion, was that we passed a balanced budget,” he said. “It took a lot to get to that point.” 

Reitz said the speed with which bills moved surprised him, singling out one proposal in particular. 

“I was most surprised by how fast the capital bill ended up coming together when it looked like things weren’t quite going to get there,” Reitz said. 

That legislation was introduced with about 12 hours to go in the General Assembly’s scheduled session.

All the activity may have helped Reitz, as he said he learned much about how the process works in Springfield.

“It takes a lot to make things happen,” he explained. “You don’t just write a bill and then voilà. I had been up there over the years, but I’d never sat on committee hearings and stuff like that to see how that process works. There’s a lot of give and take to make a good bill and end up creating something that everybody can vote for.” 

The first-time lawmaker had some firsthand experience with that, as he sponsored or co-sponsored several bills that passed…

For more on this story pick up a copy of this week’s issue, or click here to subscribe

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June 25, 2019 at 07:27PM

Yednock: Funding for local roads to come from gas tax

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A tax increase is a difficult thing to vote for, but the 19-cent gas tax hike will do good for roads and bridges, said state Rep. Lance Yednock (D-Ottawa).

Recently, Illinois legislators passed Capital Bill, HB62, to fund local infrastructure projects. The bill was sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Friday but hadn’t been signed as of Wednesday morning.

GRANVILLE — Granville’s mayor was happy to report news this morning.

Yenock said the money for the projects will come from the 19-cent-per-gallon gas tax hike that starts July 1, and that collected money will continue to provide for road and bridge projects.

He anticipates some communities will start to see their funding this summer and said it’s important to help smaller communities with funding like this.

Local projects listed in the capital bill range from upgrading sewer plants to street reconstruction and replacing fire hydrants.

Yednock encourages municipalities and constituents to contact him if they are interested in receiving funding like this in the future. His Springfield office can be contacted at (217) 782-0140 and Ottawa office at (815) 324-5055. His email is StateRepYednock@gmail.com.

Ali Braboy can be reached at (815) 220-6931 and countyreporter@newstrib.com. Follow her on Twitter @NT_PutnamCo.

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June 18, 2019 at 02:08PM

Legislators’ report card: Local lawmakers review highs, lows of spring session – Quad-Cities Online

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SPRINGFIELD — The Illinois General Assembly wrapped up its legislative session May 31, ending it with passage of an impressive amount of legislation that included legalizing sports betting and recreational marijuana, increasing the minimum wage, creating a balanced budget, and advancing a graduated income tax.  

Severl local lawmakers — Rep. Tony McCombie, R-Savanna; Rep. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island; Rep. Dan Swanson, R-Alpha; and Sen. Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia — offered the following assessment of the session. They talked about what they are most proud of, what disappointed them, and their view of the work that is yet to be done. 

Sen. Chuck Weaver, R-Peoria, who represents voters in Mercer and Henry counties, did not respond to phone calls and emails requesting comment.

Tony McCombie

McCombie said her biggest accomplishment this year was passage of a law in the House that would would increase penalties for an attack on a Department of Children and Family Services worker.

The bill was introduced in memory of Pam Knight, a DCFS worker who was brutally beaten while trying to take a 2-year-old child into protective custody in Dixon. Knight died from her injuries in February 2018 after being in a coma for months. 

The legislation, Senate Bill 2272, failed in the Senate in January despite being co-sponsored by Anderson.

“We will fight for it again next year. I will look for a DCFS advocate in the Senate,” McCombie said.

She said the bill could still be passed during the fall veto session. 

In terms of disappointments, McCombie said watching her bill to protect DCFS workers die in the Senate was disheartening.  

“Even though it was the best thing in the House, it was the worst thing in the Senate,” she said.

Another defeat was HB1634, failed legislation co-sponsored by McCombie that would have expunged any DUI (driving under the influence) charge that happened 10 or more years ago that caused no property or personal damages. 

“It was a case of when you might have been a kid and you had that one mistake you couldn’t get rid of,” McCombie said. “It would have helped people trying to get a commercial driver’s license like a truck driver or school bus driver. It was a criminal justice reform bill that was a missed opportunity. That was a huge disappointment.”

McCombie’s goals for next session include tackling the state’s backlog of unpaid bills, and addressing workers’ compensation reform and pension reform.  

“We still have so much work to do that could be easily tackled,” she said. “We’re going to have to work really hard now that all this spending has passed.

“A capital bill is a long time coming, I just don’t know if we can afford a $40 billion bill,” McCombie said. “It’s like having your credit cards maxed out, and you go out and buy a new car. I know everybody was for it, but at whose cost?”

Mike Halpin

Halpin said approving a balanced budget is high on his list of accomplishments this session. 

“When it comes to big-picture accomplishments, it would have to be passing a bipartisan budget in each of my three years as a representative,” Halpin said. “When I got to Springfield, the state had gone almost three years without a budget. I’m proud to have been a part of reversing that trend, and getting Illinois back to passing regular budgets, with bipartisan cooperation, which has earned us some level of stability for people and companies looking to do business with the state of Illinois.”

Locally, Halpin said he is most proud of legislation he introduced this year that would permit schools to maintain a supply of glucagon, a rescue medication for students with diabetes.

“The idea was brought to me by a local school nurse, Jennifer Jacobs, who worked tirelessly to help support the legislation as it worked its way through the process,” Halpin said. “It has the ability to save lives.”

In terms of disappointments, Halpin said he was frustrated to see legislators continue to put “insufficient resources into the Property Tax Relief Grant, which is part of the evidence-based K-12 school funding formula.

“This fund is designed to encourage local school districts to tap into state funds in exchange for lowering their local property tax levy,” Halpin said. “High property taxes are the complaint I receive most often, and although the state of Illinois does not receive any money from property taxes, its failure to meet its obligations to schools and municipalities has forced these governments to hike property tax rates.

Halpin said the Property Tax Relief Grant is an investment the state needs to fund in order to lighten the burden on property owners.

“Unfortunately, we have not assigned enough funds to the program to allow all eligible school districts to participate, and some of our local schools have been affected,” he said. 

When the next legislative session resumes in the fall, Halpin said, his primary goals will be to pass a budget for the state, address workers’ compensation reform, and make sure the recently passed capital bill includes local road projects.

He said he was pleased with an increase in the minimum wage and the legalization of marijuana and sports betting, saying both have the potential to bring development to the area. 

“I supported a capital bill that will bring millions of dollars of investment to our community, including funding for passenger rail from Chicago to the Quad-Cities,” Halpin said. “These are the type of accomplishments that can happen when we have a governor (J.B. Pritzker) that is willing to sit and negotiate with all sides.

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“Many of these accomplishments were done with Republican input and support. This type of cooperation was lacking during the (Bruce) Rauner administration, and I am glad to see that bipartisanship can once again be achieved in Springfield,” Halpin said. 

Dan Swanson

Swanson said his biggest accomplishments for the session were three bills he sponsored that passed. They included legislation that allows veterans of the Cold War to purchase special license plates indicating their service.

“Too many times when I’ve talked with elderly veterans, they say, ‘I served, but not in a war,'” Swanson said. “Well, most likely they did serve, and they served in the Cold War between Aug. 15, 1945, and Jan. 1, 1992.”

Swanson also is proud of passing legislation that requires private-pay insurance companies to cover physician care and testing for anyone with Lyme disease. The bill was sponsored by Anderson in the Senate. 

Swanson also worked to expand teaching opportunities for substitute teachers.

“I passed legislation which allows substitute teachers to register for the Illinois license and substitute teach at any Illinois public school,” Swanson said. 

Swanson said his biggest disappointment with the General Assembly is the glut of legislation that is considered in the last week of the session. 

“The hurried rush of legislation at the end of each spring session, with little time to read and analyze what legislators are to be voting on, is no way to run a taxpayer-funded organization,” he said. “There should be enough time to read, review, and solicit public input on the initiatives that are passed in Springfield. Legislative proposals always improve with bipartisan input as well as public input.

“I strongly believe we need to improve this process in the Illinois House,” Swanson said. “I would like to see us move toward two-year budgets, with more time for public input and some requirements that cannot be waived about the time between when major budgetary legislation is filed and when it can be voted on.”

Swanson’s goals for the next session include spending cuts, improvements to public safety, “and a strong focus on bringing jobs and people back to Illinois.

“It’s an uphill battle,” he said. 

Neil Anderson

Anderson said approval of a capital bill was a big accomplishment during the legislative session. It will have a huge impact on area communities, he said. 

“It includes nearly $125 million for construction and capital improvement projects for Western Illinois University, and $225 million for the Quad-Cities high-speed rail project, as well as many road projects across we’re going to be seeing across the district,” Anderson said. 

“I hope people have peace of mind knowing when they fill up their gas tank, that money is going back into the roads,” he said. “Thanks to the lockbox amendment, which I was proud to sponsor, Springfield can’t sweep those funds for other purposes.”

That constitutional amendment, approved by voters in November 2016, prohibits lawmakers from using transportation funds for anything other than their stated purpose.

Anderson also is proud that Senate Bill 1966 — also called “Fix the FOID” bill — didn’t pass. The gun-licensing legislation would have added restrictions on gun owners, including requiring anyone with a FOID (firearm owners identification) card to be fingerprinted. 

Anderson called its defeat a “major win for Illinoisans.” He said the bill would have “radically impeded on our Second Amendment rights.

“Not only would it have mandated fingerprinting, it would have increased FOID card fees, cut the time a FOID card is valid in half, and banned private sales and transfers of firearms,” Anderson said. “This measure received a lot of public opposition. I’d say it’s a huge victory that it didn’t pass.”

Anderson said his biggest disappointment during the session was passage of the Reproductive Health Act, which makes abortion a fundamental right for women in the state. 

“When we look back years from now on what took place this legislative session, I think people will remember how extreme that measure was,” he said. “Proponents sold it as a move to keep abortions legal if Roe v. Wade were to be overturned, but it went a lot further than that. It was a radical move to expand legal abortion.”

Anderson said the gradual minimum wage increase to $15 an hour also was frustrating. He suggested a regional approach instead, allowing different wage levels according to region, which would have addressed the state’s economic diversity. 

“Chicago and the Quad-City region are vastly different when it comes to cost of living,” he said. “For our area, this is even harder because businesses here can just hop over into Iowa, where the minimum wage is $7.25.”

Anderson said his goals for the fall session will be to bring in jobs and lower taxes. 

“I will continue to advocate for smart policies that grow our economy, bring jobs to Illinois, and ease the burden on taxpayers,” he said. “Illinois still faces a lot of challenges, and it is my hope that we can begin to focus our attention on issues like high property taxes.”

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June 16, 2019 at 01:28PM

Gordon-Booth: 2019 Legislative Session Was “Historic”

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SPRINGFIELD — Governor J.B. Pritzker and the Democrats who control the General Assembly passed a flurry of major legislation in the closing days of this year’s legislative session.

State Rep. Jehan-Gordon Booth (D-Peoria) said lawmakers were highly productive this year.

 

“This legislative session was historic. The Illinois General Assembly, in over a hundred years, have never worked on this many groundbreaking issues successfully – in one year,” she said. “This year was absolutely historic. We’ve never had a year this significant, at least in my tenure being in the legislature.”

Some of the major legislation passed includes raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025, passing a $45 billion capital bill for infrastructure improvements and offering the voters a chance to amend the Illinois Constitution to shift the state to a graduated income tax.

 

She says that many of the progressive ideas passed this session are nothing new, but ultimately required needed votes in the legislature and the governor’s signature to become law.

 

“For years, you’ve had folks talking about the need to put a progressive income tax on the ballot. Let the people choose what they think is the right way to be funding the very functionality of our government. A balanced budget, what a novel idea. Fifteen dollar an hour minimum wage,” she said.

 

 

After the 2018 midterms, Democrats now hold supermajorities in both houses of the legislature, and Democrat J.B. Pritzker defeated Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner in his bid for re-election to the governor’s office.

Gordon-Booth also spearheaded recreational cannabis legalization. She called Illinois’ proposed legislation the “most equitable” in the nation.

 

She said she “could not be more proud” of what legislators achieved in the closing days of the session.

 

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June 13, 2019 at 04:39PM

Freshman rep says open mind key to his first year

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Completing his first go-round in Springfield, state Rep. Lance Yednock said he voted many times to reflect the majority of his district, sometimes going against his initial belief or the party line.

One example was his vote in favor of the legalization of recreational marijuana.

"It was a difficult (vote) for me to make, I was back and forth on it," the Ottawa Democrat said in an interview Monday at The Times. "Knocking on doors, I came across many people who were using marijuana anyways."

Yednock said regulating and safeguarding it is better than people buying it from the black market. He said money generated from marijuana revenue will go into community revitalization.

"There’s still a personal responsibility to it," said Yednock, whose district includes La Salle, Bureau, Putnam and Livingston counties. "You can still be tested at work for it, and if you fail that, that’s your problem. Not ours."

When it came to the Reproductive Health Act, which replaces the state’s current law with one backers and detractors agree will be the most liberal reproductive health statute in the nation, he sided with his district.

"In the last five months of taking phone calls and polling, it was 20 to 1 against the Reproductive Health Act," Yednock said of the district.

The representative said he met many people who identified as pro-choice who were not in favor of the bill.

He said he also sided with the district when it came to the proposed FOID overhaul. He believed the bill was too restrictive on law-abiding citizens, such as hunters, but he understood why some lawmakers supported it.

Yednock identifies himself as open-minded. He said he was visited frequently by fellow lawmakers and lobbyists from both sides of the aisle on a number of bills, trying to persuade him one way or the other.

"I’d tell them I’m 50/50 and take the opposite view they had, and make them get me to a ‘yes’ on their view," Yednock said of his approach.

He said that strategy helped him understand the full perspective of what he was voting on.

Yednock said it was easy enough for people to get upset about the doubling of the state’s gas tax to 38 cents per gallon and an increase to driver’s license fees, but he said many of those people also told him the roads and bridges are in bad shape.

The revenue from the gas tax will go to the "horizontal" capital plan for transportation projects. He said many of these projects will benefit the district at the township, city and county levels.

"It’s better than the alternative of raising property taxes to borrow for emergency road repairs," Yednock said.

Passing a balanced budget was the biggest accomplishment of both the House and Senate, according to Yednock.

"Everyone wanted something to be done, and it will benefit business and labor to have consistency," Yednock said. "The chaos of the last four years left a sour taste."

In the budget, lawmakers’ base salaries of $67,836 will rise by more than $1,600 on July 1 once statutory cost of living increases are applied. They also receive per diem reimbursements and some receive added pay ranging from $10,326 to $27,477 per year for committee chairperson and leadership positions.

The state rep said he was unaware of the pay raise for lawmakers put into the budget until the day after he got home from the House’s adjournment, but he said even if he knew of them prior to voting, it was unlikely he would undo all the work that went into the balanced budget.

Yednock voted in support of the gambling expansion bill, which is expected to produce $660 million in its first year due to licensing fees and taxes. It adds six casinos, expands video gambling and allows sports betting. �The money will fund the construction of college and community college buildings.

Again, he said most of his district was in favor of sports gambling, fielding calls from residents who said they wanted to see it pass, and even expand more into tip boards and other sports gambling.

He was happy to see his anti right-to-work zone bill pass, one he said was a big part of his campaign.

He said residents will get the opportunity to vote on the proposed graduated income tax in November. The House approved a rate structure that would lower the tax rate on any individual or joint-filing couple making less than $250,000, while raising the rates on those above that threshold.

He said middle- to lower-class residents pay a higher percentage of income tax than the richest people in the state. He believes the tax will balance that in an effort to fix the state’s structural deficit.

"If it doesn’t pass, we’ll have to look at cuts of 10 to 15 percent across the board," Yednock said.

Yednock was most surprised by the bipartisanship spirit in Springfield. He said he expected it to be a little more polarized, and he didn’t find that to be the case.

Reflecting on the progressive agenda that was passed under the guidance of new Gov. JB Pritzker and a Democratic supermajority, Yednock said Democrats outside of Chicago and the larger cities are sensitive to it.

"We have a middle-of-the-road district, the last three elections have gone different ways," Yednock said. "Will there be a backlash on Democrats downstate? It could, but if things get better, it may just change people’s minds."

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June 11, 2019 at 06:59AM

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