SPRINGFIELD – With a multi-billion dollar bag of unpaid bills and a $13 billion operating budget deficit, one of Illinois’ largest fiscal watchdogs has released its latest pork report. But there is a lot of opposition to what the group is calling wasteful spending.
The Illinois Policy Institute has released the 2010 Piglet Book which details what the group calls millions of dollars in wasteful spending.
The Institute’s Christina Rasmussen said funding for parks, parking lots, theaters and even Amtrak makes the pork list. Those projects are in Illinois’ $31 billion capital bill, which pays for everything from new roads, bridges and schools to long-neglected or newly planned local projects.
Rasmussen said it’s a matter of priorities, and thinks Illinois can ill afford some of the priorities in the massive building plan.
Rasmussen said lawmakers need to look for private dollars before they rely on public dollars. David Williams with Citizens Against Government Waste said lawmakers need to be more responsible with tax money.
But lawmakers and local leaders argue that the local spending in the capital bill is responsible, and often brings back much more than the original investment.
State Rep. Dan Brady, R-Bloomington, takes issue with the IPI’s report which classifies $175,000 for the village of Normal for the Connie Link Amphitheater as pork.
Tim Dimke, executive director at the Rockford Park District, said his local improvement, which is in-line for state dollars, will make money. Dimke said the Sportscore I and Sportscore II facilities are slated to receive $275,000 but will return $21 million to Rockford.
Dimke added that with Rockford’s jobless troubles, more people may end up out of work. State Sen. Tim Bivins, R-Dixon, said that’s why he’s happy to see the city of Galena receive money for a new city park. The Piglet book labeled the $67,000 to the city of Galena for Gateway Park land acquisition as a waste.
Bivins said it’s an investment in Galena’s life blood, tourism.
Rasmussen and the Institute said the book is not a hit list against specific projects or lawmakers, but rather a tool to highlight the state’s fiscal situation.
Originally reported by Illinois Statehouse News. Read the original article here.
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