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Nettlesome
issues will test the new
legislature and the new governor
by
Charles N. Wheeler III
With
the New Year comes a New Era in Illinois state government. When
the 93rd General Assembly takes office on January 8, Democrats will
control the Senate for the first time in a decade. Five days later,
Rod Blagojevich will be inaugurated as the first Democratic governor
in 26 years, bringing a commitment to change the way things are
done in Springfield.
If
the new legislature and the new governor really want to make their
mark, a daunting trio of nettlesome issues will test their ingenuity
and weigh their mettle. The long-standing challenges to policymakers
include education finance, the criminal justice system and Illinois
tax structure. Heres a look at each:
School funding. Revamping the way Illinois pays for elementary and
secondary education has been on the to-do list for decades. The
problem is well-known: Because local school districts rely so heavily
on property taxes, resources vary dramatically among districts,
making it difficult for some to provide an adequate education for
their students. The solution also seems obvious: Replace some local
property taxes with state dollars, thus increasing the states
share of the costs and narrowing the resource gap between property-rich
and property-poor districts.
What
has been lacking for decades, however, has been the political will
to enact the swap. Governors and legislators alike generally have
been too timid to endorse the state tax increase that would be needed
to pay for the swap.
Reform
proponents came close in 1997, when Gov. Jim Edgar proposed a 25
percent hike in income tax rates to replace $900 million in school
property taxes and provide $600 million to boost spending levels
for poor districts. The legislation cleared the Democratic-controlled
House despite opposition from House Minority Leader Lee Daniels,
an Elmhurst Republican, but Senate President James Pate
Philip, a Republican from Wood Dale, refused to allow senators to
vote on the measure, which Edgar and others were sure would have
passed.
Could
2003 be the year for school funding reform? To be sure, significant
obstacles exist. The states fiscal condition is some $1 billion
worse, and Blagojevich has vowed not to raise taxes.
But
Daniels and Philip, the chief roadblocks in 1997, will be gone from
GOP leadership. The Educational Funding Advisory Board and its chair,
former state schools superintendent Robert Leininger, are determined
to push for property tax cuts and a $1,000-plus boost in the guaranteed
per-pupil funding level. Their ideas are endorsed by Network 21,
a coalition of business, labor, education and civic groups that
wants to improve educational quality in the states lowest
performing schools, which generally have fewer resources than schools
that do better in standardized testing.
Perhaps
most importantly, though, four out of every five school districts
expect to operate in the red this year, including some in relatively
affluent suburban areas. Such widespread distress could help convince
lawmakers that the time for temporizing is over.
The Criminal Code. Since Gov. George Ryan declared a moratorium
on executions in January 2000, the spotlight has been on the states
deeply flawed system of capital punishment. The death penalty debate
has over- shadowed broader concerns about the states criminal
justice system, from the laws themselves through police and courtroom
procedures to sentencing and prison operations.
In
May 2000, the governor named Deputy Gov. Matthew Bettenhausen to
head a commission to update the Criminal Code of 1961 to make the
law more fair for victims and defendants and easier to understand.
The panels efforts languished after the September 2001 terrorist
attacks and Bettenhausens appointment as the states
homeland security director, but problems with the Criminal Code
have not gone away.
In
recent weeks, for example, the Illinois Supreme Court tossed out
a law that required party hosts to keep drunken minors from leaving
the premises, because the provision conflicted with another law
forbidding unlawful restraint. The court also held that a mandatory
life sentence required for multiple murders was particularly
harsh and unconstitutionally disproportionate in the case
of a 15-year-old boy who was the lookout for a double murder in
Chicago. Imposing the same sentence on the lookout and the shooter
violated the constitutional requirement that the punishment fit
the severity of the offense, the court said.
Tax structure. Last February, a national research organization con-cluded
that the states tax system relies too heavily on local property
taxes and regressive sales and excise taxes that place a higher
burden on low-income residents as a percentage of income than on
better-off citizens.
Moreover,
both the income and the sales tax have relatively narrow bases and
costly loopholes that restrict the states ability to fund
important government services, researchers said.
Illinois
perilous fiscal condition with a projected budget deficit
nearing $3 billion for next fiscal year could be the catalyst
for a major overhaul of the state revenue structure. Much of the
current mix of taxes, rates and bases rests on 19th century or Depression-era
economic conditions, rather than 21st century realities. The sales
tax, for example, applies only to sales of tangible property, which
made sense when it was enacted in 1933. Now, services make up almost
two-thirds of the states economic activity, but few are subject
to the sales tax. Adding services such as haircuts, club dues and
repairs could generate some $330 million, according to researchers.
Tackling
any of these issues is not for the faint-hearted, but an outbreak
of political courage would be one change that would be most welcome
in Springfield.
Charles
N. Wheeler III is director of the Public Affairs Reporting program
at the University of Illinois at Springfield.
Illinois
Issues, January 2003
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