State sells remaining surplus aircraft for over $2.5 million  

$3.5 million net for taxpayers  

   

SPRINGFIELD - The State of Illinois successfully sold the State's five remaining surplus aircraft for more than $2.5 million as part of continued efforts to reduce the State's aircraft fleet, the administration of Governor Bruce Rauner announced today.

"The successful sale of the state's surplus aircraft is some much needed good news for taxpayers," Governor Bruce Rauner said. "In addition to earning $2.5 million on the sale of the aircraft, the State of Illinois achieved significant savings by avoiding more than $1 million in State resources on upcoming inspections and repairs for unneeded aircraft."

The sale comes after three previous attempts by the Department of Central Management Services to sell the aircraft failed to sell all the aircraft. In April of 2014, nine of the State of Illinois' 21 aircraft were ordered to be sold. Following three consecutive auctions, spanning six months and two weeks, 5 of the State's 9 surplus aircraft remained to be sold, including the 3 most expensive aircraft.

After consulting with internal and external aviation experts to generate ideas on the best approach to selling the aircraft, several new ideas emerged: better promotion of any future aircraft auctions, factor in costs associated with upcoming repair and inspection requirements, and re-evaluate pricing recommendations. Upcoming inspections and repairs, estimated at more than $1 million, weighed into the new recommendations.

With a new sales plan in place, the aircraft sale was launched on July 2, 2015, and ran through August 3, 2015. When the auction closed, each of the five aircraft received multiple bids, including the following high bids: 2000 Beechcraft King Air for $1,785,050.00; 1991 Sikorsky Helicopter for $515,161.00; 1979 Cessna C337H for $56,000.00; 1986 Cessna C182R for $54,161.00; and the 1985 Cessna C421C for $181,140.00. All highest bidders were requested to submit a best and final offer. As a result the bid proposal, the 1979 Cessna C337H increased by nearly $1,000. After the auction closed, the high bid for the 2000 Beechcraft King Air was withdrawn, and the aircraft was awarded to the next highest bidder for $1,700,000.00. CMS benchmarked all bid proposals against industry standard pricing references to ensure maximized returns. 

The new sales plan helped maximize the return on investment for Illinois taxpayers, pushing total revenues from the sales of the aircraft to more than 90% of the estimated average value, for a total value of more than $2.5 million. 

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner took action today on the following bills:

 

Bill No.: HB 1

An Act Concerning Health

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto Message Below

 

Bill No.: HB 1336

An Act Concerning Liquor

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3237

An Act Concerning Liquor

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3444

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3484

An Act Concerning Public Employee Benefits

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3485

An Act Concerning Finance

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3556

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3841

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3848

An Act Concerning Public Health

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 4006

An Act Concerning Burn Victims

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 100

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: September 15, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 418

An Act Concerning Public Aid

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 1800

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Veto Message for HB 1

 

To the Honorable Members of

The Illinois House of Representatives,

99th General Assembly:

 

Today I return House Bill 1, the Heroin Crisis Act, with a specific recommendation for change.

 

House Bill 1 is a comprehensive effort to address opioid abuse from all angles. The bill is a result of the recommendations of the bi-partisan Heroin Task Force. I thank the sponsors of this bill and the members of the Task Force for their hard work over the past several years in addressing the growing heroin problem in Illinois.

 

First, the bill contains a number of important changes to increase the availability of an opioid antagonist and to provide for proper training on its use. It requires private insurance coverage for at least one opioid antagonist, as well as acute treatment and clinical stabilization services, which will be valuable in providing treatment for opioid users who need help in overcoming addiction.

 

The bill allows a licensed pharmacist, after completing a training program, to dispense an opioid antagonist in accordance with the procedures established by State agencies. It requires law enforcement and first responders to possess opioid antagonists and provide training on the administration of such antagonists. It allows a school nurse to administer an opioid antagonist to a student having an opioid overdose. It provides protection from civil liability to those individuals, including family members, who administer an opioid antagonist in good faith.

 

Second, in addition to the training requirements, House Bill 1 contains a number of substance abuse and mental health education requirements: the Department of Human Services and the State Board of Education will develop a three-year heroin and opioid prevention pilot program for all schools in the State; the Department of Human Services will also develop materials to educate opioid prescription holders on the dangers of these drugs; and the Department of Insurance will convene two working groups, one to discuss treatment of substance abuse and mental illness and another to educate consumers on parity between State and federal mental health laws.

 

Third, the bill addresses safety and public information concerns. It strengthens the Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) to provide comprehensive information to physicians and pharmacists. Dispensers must report information to the PMP within one day, instead of seven days, of dispensing a controlled substance. To prevent medication shopping, the PMP may issue a report to the prescriber and dispenser when a person is identified as having three or more prescribers or pharmacies. The bill establishes a full-time Clinical Director of the PMP and an Advisory Committee to implement the PMP effectively. Physicians must now document in a patient's medical record the medical necessity of any three sequential 30-day prescriptions for Schedule II narcotics. To increase the safe disposal of medications, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency is tasked with establishing a medication take-back program and providing information on the safe disposal of unused medication. The Department of Insurance will enforce parity between State and federal mental health laws. House Bill 1 also requires sharing of overdose information among law enforcement, physicians, and state agencies to ensure we have accurate data as we continue to look for solutions to this epidemic in Illinois.

 

Finally, the bill addresses criminal justice concerns and improves access to treatment by permitting multiple entries to drug court and no longer allowing a prosecutor to unilaterally block entry to drug court. It requires mandatory education for state's attorneys and public defenders on substance abuse and addiction. As a deterrent for individuals fraudulently acquiring controlled substances through "doctor shopping", it increases penalties for attempting to acquire or obtaining possession of a controlled substance through fraudulent means.

 

I support all of the above measures and applaud the multi-faceted approach to combating this epidemic in Illinois. Unfortunately, the bill also includes provisions that will impose a very costly mandate on the State's Medicaid providers. I am returning the bill with a recommendation to address that concern.

 

House Bill 1 mandates that fee-for-service and medical assistance Medicaid programs cover all forms of medication assisted treatment of alcohol or opioid dependence, and it removes utilization controls and prior authorization requirements. These changes would limit our ability to contain rising costs at a time when the State is facing unprecedented fiscal difficulties.

 

Importantly, the State's Medicaid programs already cover multiple forms of medication necessary to treat alcohol and opioid dependence. But without adequate funding to support mandated coverage for all forms of treatment, regardless of cost, this change would add to the State's deficit.

 

In addition, removing utilization controls and prior authorization requirements could undermine doctors' ability to manage treatment. Doctors should be able to work with individuals addicted to opioids to arrive at a reasonable, comprehensive treatment plan. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services has developed a utilization control process to work with prescribing physicians to support individuals struggling with addiction, ensure appropriate utilization of medications, and prevent waste. Removing any prior authorization or utilization control would inhibit a doctor's ability to responsibly manage the overall treatment program for Medicaid patients.

 

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 1, entitled "AN ACT concerning health", with the following specific recommendation for change:

 

On page 125, by deleting lines 3-25.

 

With this change, House Bill 1 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

 

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

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Commander-in-Chief Pins Second Star on Hayes and Appoints ISP Colonel to lead Army National Guard

 

SPRINGFIELD - Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, the Commander-in-Chief of the Illinois National Guard, promoted Illinois Adjutant General, Richard J. Hayes Jr., to major general today, Aug. 24, and announced the appointment of Brig. Gen. Michael Zerbonia as the Illinois National Guard's Assistant Adjutant General - Army.

Rauner selected Hayes as the Adjutant General and for his second star in May based on Hayes' extensive military and civilian background. His eligibility for promotion was set in motion over a year ago through the Department of the Army and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate earlier this month.

"It is a great honor to serve as the Commander-in-Chief of the Illinois National Guard and to promote our state's top military officer.  Major General Hayes has the right combination of leadership and expertise to prepare the Illinois National Guard to tackle major emergencies both here in Illinois and overseas," Gov. Rauner said. "His experience commanding a battalion during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, a brigade maneuver task force with NATO in Kosovo, and with his 27 years as a leader in the civilian engineering and construction sector illustrates why Richard Hayes epitomizes the true meaning a Citizen-Soldier."

Hayes' promotion coincides with the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated the Gulf Coast of the United States, striking U.S. soil Aug. 29, 2005. Hayes led a battalion-sized relief task force in New Orleans. Many of the lessons Hayes and other leaders learned from Hurricane Katrina are being practiced this week, Aug. 24 to Aug. 28, during the simulated 7.7 magnitude earthquake Prairie Assurance exercise in Springfield. The exercise is being conducted with participation agencies from the State of Illinois, non-governmental organizations, National Guard Bureau, and US Northern Command.

"During my career I never concerned myself with becoming a general, never mind earning a second star," Hayes said. "I simply focused on excelling at every assignment I was given, sought to continually improve myself, and set a good example for my troops. I am humbled by this promotion and the opportunity to serve as the Illinois Adjutant General. I recognize the great responsibility bestowed on me and I will apply all of my talents to effectively lead the dedicated Soldiers and Airmen of the Illinois National Guard as we serve the Citizens of Illinois and our Nation."

Brig. Gen. Zerbonia will serve as the full-time Assistant Adjutant General - Army after a long and distinguished career with the Illinois State Police.

Zerbonia was serving as the Illinois National Guard's Land Forces Component Commander, a traditional National Guard position, while serving fulltime with the Illinois State Police as the Colonel of Operations. He will leave the State Police after 28 years to become the full-time Commander of the 10,000 Soldiers of the Illinois Army National Guard serving under Illinois National Guard Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Richard J. Hayes, who commands both the Illinois Army National Guard and the Illinois Air National Guard.

"For decades Mike Zerbonia has been a great leader and public servant with both the Illinois Army National Guard and the Illinois State Police," Governor Rauner said. "He has clearly demonstrated his ability to lead troops and build partnerships across state and federal agencies. He is a combat veteran of both Iraq and Afghanistan with more than 30 years of military experience who has the confidence and trust of his Soldiers. "

Governor Rauner selected Brig. Gen. Zerbonia on a recommendation from Maj. Gen. Hayes. "Brig. Gen. Zerbonia is the right officer to lead the Illinois Army National Guard as it continues to go from strong to stronger. He has proven his ability to lead and provide the strategic direction for the Illinois Army National Guard preparing for both our state and federal missions. I know that he loves serving as an Illinois State Police trooper and know it was a difficult personal and professional decision to leave the ISP to work at Illinois National Guard headquarters full-time. I am grateful to have Mike Zerbonia serve alongside me. ," Maj. Gen. Hayes said.

Brig. Gen. Zerbonia said taking off his Illinois State Police uniform is difficult, but he was honored to be asked to serve as the Illinois National Guard's Assistant Adjutant General - Army.  "Commanding the Illinois Army National Guard is both a great opportunity and challenge. The Illinois Army National Guard has a no-fail contract with the citizens of Illinois and the United States. We have met many great challenges and succeeded, but we have many more ahead. It is a great privilege and honor to lead our great men and women who have willingly committed to helping our neighbors, protecting our state and defending our nation."

Brig. Gen. Zerbonia's last military assignment was as the Illinois Army National Guard's Land Forces Component Commander, a position he was appointed to in June 2013. He enlisted as a military policeman in the Missouri Army National Guard in 1983 and later commissioned as a second lieutenant May 9, 1986 after completing the Reserve Officer Training Corps program at Northeast Missouri State University. In 1988, then Lieutenant Zerbonia transferred to the active Army as an air defense artillery officer. He later joined the Illinois National Guard in 1991 as the assistant air defense coordination officer with the 1st Battalion, 202nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment.

Brig. Gen. Zerbonia has served in many critical roles at all levels of command and staff in his career. He has served as a battery commander, commander of the 1st Battalion, 202nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment, team chief of the 244th Army Liaison Team, commander of the 108th Sustainment Brigade and commander of the Bilateral Embedded Support Team (BEST) A10.

General Zerbonia supported military operations in Poland, Turkey and Germany. He deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom from June 2005 to June 2006 and to Afghanistan from September 2012 to June 2013 in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

###

SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner took action on the following bills today:

 

Bill No.: HB 184

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 356

An Act Concerning Criminal Law

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 488

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Veto

Effective: Veto message below

 

Bill No.: HB 821

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 1424

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 1429

An Act Concerning Finance

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 1660

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 2462

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3103

An Act Concerning Business

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3194

An Act Concerning Finance

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: HB 3197

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3507

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Vetoed

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: HB 3673

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 4025

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 4044

An Act Concerning Criminal Law

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 4113

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 202

An Act Concerning Criminal Law

Action: Signed

Effective: July 1, 2015

 

Bill No.: SB 248

An Act Concerning Elections

Action: Signed

Effective: July 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 661

An Act Concerning Public Health

Action: Veto

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 1271

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Vetoed

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 1421

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Vetoed

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 1441

An Act Concerning Transportation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 1487

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 1518

An Act Concerning Safety

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: SB 1526

An Act Concerning Revenue

Action: Vetoed

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 1547

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: 90 Days After Becoming Law

 

Bill No.: SB 1679

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: SB 1793

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: SB 1833

An Act Concerning Business

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below.

 

Bill No.: SB 1866

An Act Concerning Civil Law

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 1882

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 1921

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Veto Message for HB 488

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois House of Representatives 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto House Bill 488 from the 99th General Assembly in order to protect Illinois from new legal claims that will clog the court system and drive up litigation costs.

House Bill 488 would shift attorney's fees to parties that prevail in obtaining an injunction under the Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security, Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004. Illinois and federal law generally disfavor shifting attorney's fees; fees should only be awarded to successful plaintiffs in rare and special cases, usually where attorneys identify and advance important legal rights. Attorney's fees are not appropriate in most cases, and they are not appropriate in this case: fee shifting would not advance public safety.

Public safety and enforcement are properly the responsibility of the State. This bill would effectively shift that responsibility from the State to trial lawyers, who would pursue new and costly litigation for greater potential reward. This will burden the court system and delay other proceedings.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 488, entitled "AN ACT concerning regulation," with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

Veto Message for HB 3194

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois House of Representatives, 99th General Assembly:

Today I return House Bill 3194 with specific recommendations for change.

Over the last several years, the State has awarded weatherization grants under the Urban Weatherization Initiative Act and the Energy Assistance Act, supported by federal funds. Because of the federal funding, federal prevailing wage rates applied.

The federal program ended on June 30, 2015, at which point federal prevailing wage requirements no longer apply. The proponents of the bill are concerned that Illinois prevailing wage rates will apply going forward, leading to a marked increase in wage rates, which will significantly reduce the value of the program. Among other changes, House Bill 3194 would require that employees performing weatherization work continue to be paid in accordance with (lower) federal prevailing wage rates rather than (higher) Illinois prevailing wage rates, regardless of whether the State receives federal funding.

This bill demonstrates the problems with the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act. There is no classification under the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act for "weatherization worker." Instead, contractors are required to use general classifications - in particular, carpenters - which results in inflated wage rates. When the U.S. Department of Labor conducted a survey of weatherization wage rates in Illinois in 2009-2010, it found that the prevailing wage for weatherization workers was a fraction of the wage rates applicable to carpenters.

We have an obligation to taxpayers and the beneficiaries of government services to maximize public resources. Every public program can go farther when it is not compelled to subsidize artificially-inflated wages. For that reason, we need broader reform to the Illinois Prevailing Wage Act.

I am returning House Bill 3194 to clarify the applicability of federal law. While I agree with the sponsors that Illinois prevailing wage rates should not be required, we should require payment of federal prevailing wage rates only if and when required by federal law - something that can be left to federal law itself and not repeated in Illinois statute.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 3194, entitled "AN ACT concerning finance", with the following specific recommendations for change:

On page 2, by replacing lines 13 through 16 with the following: "subdivision thereof. Works financed or funded in whole or in part with grants awarded under this Article shall not be considered public works for purposes of the Prevailing Wage Act."; and

On page 8, by replacing lines 2 through 8 with the following: "the weatherization program. Works financed or funded in whole or in part with grants awarded under this Article shall not be considered public works for purposes of the Prevailing Wage Act.".

With these changes, House Bill 3194 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for HB 3507

To the Honorable Members of  he Illinois House of Representatives 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto House Bill 3507 from the 99th General Assembly, which mandates that cases within the Department of Children and Family Services remain open until the ward reaches 21 years of age. This unfunded mandate places a significant financial burden on the Department, particularly because the Department would not be eligible for matching federal funds for all these services.

The Department currently provides numerous services for 18- to 21-year-old persons, including finding safe living arrangements, job placement, and scholarship funding. The federal funding match for these programs is only available for services to persons over the age of 18 if the person is in a work or educational setting or unable to be because of a disability. House Bill 3507 does not satisfy this requirement.

The Department suggested legislative provisions that would address the concerns raised by youth advocates while still maintaining federal funding. The Department's suggestion would have incentivized youth to develop job and educational skills necessary for independence and self-sufficiency and would have maximized federal funding. Unfortunately those ideas were rejected.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House 3507, "AN ACT concerning State government", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for HB 4113

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois House of Representatives, 99th General Assembly:

Today I return House Bill 4113 with specific recommendations for change.

First, House Bill 4113 exempts printing contracts for the student newspaper at Southern Illinois University's Carbondale campus from the Illinois Procurement Code for one year, during which time the bill requires those contracts be publicly awarded through an alternative process. Student newspapers are a vital part of vibrant and engaged student populations at all universities. The changes made by this bill - which provide more flexibility to the student newspapers while ensuring a public procurement process - should apply to all public universities and colleges during the one-year trial period.

Second, the bill increases the voting representation of students on the Southern Illinois University Board of Trustees. Current law provides the student bodies of both campuses with representation on the Board of Trustees; one of those representatives is a voting member, and the other is a non-voting member. The bill would permit both representatives to be voting members.

Student representatives are valuable additions to the Board of Trustees. But on a board of just nine or ten voting trustees (depending on whether one or both student representatives are voting members), having two student voting members is not necessary or advisable. The Board of Trustees must consider difficult budgetary issues, academic requirements, and student conduct and disciplinary issues. The long-term views of professionals must be given appropriate weight. The current make-up allows for the students' perspective to be heard without diluting the insight gained from the other trustees' years of professional experience.  As such, I recommend that no change be made to the composition of the Board of Trustees.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 4113 with the following changes:

On page 1, line 7, by deleting "Southern Illinois"; and

On page 1, by replacing line 11 with "at any public institution of higher education as defined in the Board of Higher Education Act."; and

On page 1, by replacing lines 12 and 13 with "Notice of each contract entered into by a public institution of higher education that is related to the procurement of printing"; and

On page 1, line 17, by replacing "Southern Illinois University" with "The public institution of higher education"; and

On page 2, by deleting lines 10 through 24; and

By deleting pages 3 through 5; and

On page 6, by deleting lines 1 through 7.

With these changes, House Bill 4113 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for SB 661

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois Senate, 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto Senate Bill 661 from the 99th General Assembly in order to shield Illinois from significant spending mandates and to protect our State's health care providers from unnecessary civil liability.

Senate Bill 661 creates the Hepatitis C Screening Act, which stems from the hard work of the Illinois Hepatitis C Task Force. This bill requires health care practitioners, regardless of setting, to offer a hepatitis C screening test to individuals born between 1945 and 1965, unless the health care practitioner reasonably believes that certain conditions are present. The bill also requires all insurers, public and private, to provide coverage for hepatitis C screening and confirmatory testing consistent with reasonable medical standards.

I support the General Assembly's determination to combat hepatitis C. I further applaud the members of the Illinois Hepatitis C Task Force for their efforts to raise awareness of this very serious problem.

Senate Bill 661, however, imposes significant short-term financial obligations upon the State Medicaid agency and the State health insurance plan at a time when Illinois is facing a fiscal crisis. The bill would help identify Illinoisans afflicted with hepatitis C, but it does not address the important question of how to pay for the expensive treatment necessary to defeat the disease. It is an untenable position to diagnose a disease but not account for funding for the treatment.

The bill further mandates that doctors adhere to the "Testing Recommendations for Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection." By dictating a specific standard of care to doctors, the bill sets an ill-advised precedent with respect to the State's health care industry. This bill replaces doctors' ability to provide patient-centered care with government-mandated medical care. This could expose our doctors to new and costly litigation, which will further increase medical costs.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 661, entitled "AN ACT concerning public health", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for SB 1271

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois Senate, 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto Senate Bill 1271 from the 99th General Assembly, which would reduce competitive bidding for park, forest, and conservation district contracts.

Given Illinois's history of corruption and insider dealing, government transparency is paramount. Competitive bidding ensures that units of local government are getting the best price for services and that taxpayer funds are being used effectively. Consequently, increasing the threshold for competitive bidding from $20,000 to $25,000 is a step in the wrong direction for government transparency and conserving taxpayer dollars.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1271, "AN ACT concerning local government", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for SB 1421

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois Senate, 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto Senate Bill 1421 from the 99th General Assembly to protect consumers from costs for services they do not receive.

Over the coming decades, Illinois will need to make significant investments in replacing and maintaining its water and wastewater infrastructure. Senate Bill 1421 attempts to address this need by allowing a public utility, with approval by the Illinois Commerce Commission, to recover its water service and wastewater costs from consumers, thus providing a source of consumer-funded revenue for infrastructure investment.

Whenever we permit utilities to pass on their costs to consumers, we should ensure that costs are passed to consumers who use and benefit from the particular services to the extent possible. Unfortunately, because not all consumers receive both their water and wastewater services from the same utility, Senate Bill 1421 would permit a public utility to pass on wastewater costs to consumers who do not receive wastewater services. This type of subsidy is not appropriate or necessary.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1421, entitled "AN ACT concerning regulation", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for SB 1526

To the Honorable Members of The Illinois Senate, 99th General Assembly:

Today I veto Senate Bill 1526 from the 99th General Assembly, which would amend the Property Tax Code to impose further burdens on property owners seeking to appeal their assessments.

Senate Bill 1526 precludes a property owner from seeking a change in the assessed valuation of his or her home of $100,000 or more unless that change is specifically indicated in the complaint. This places a needless burden on Illinois taxpayers who already pay the second highest property taxes in the nation and further inhibits legitimate valuation appeals. Moreover, because this bill would preclude the appeal altogether, it creates an excessive penalty for what is a technical matter.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1526 entitled "AN ACT concerning revenue", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

 

Veto Message for SB 1833

To the Honorable Members of the Illinois Senate, 99th General Assembly:

Today I return Senate Bill 1833, which amends the Personal Information Protection Act, with specific recommendations for change.

The Personal Information Protection Act was enacted in 2005 to protect consumers from the damaging consequences of a data breach. Illinois businesses and non-profit organizations must take their obligations seriously.

Senate Bill 1833 makes significant changes to the Personal Information Protection Act, many of which are intended to protect consumers and update the Act. But unfortunately, the bill goes too far, imposing duplicative and burdensome requirements that are out-of-step with other states. These unnecessary requirements will hurt our economic competitiveness without providing commensurate benefit to Illinois consumers and residents whom the bill is intending to protect.

In particular, the bill would add "consumer marketing information" and "geolocation information" to the types of protected personal information. This is significant departure from the data protection laws of other states. Compared to other types of personal information, the unauthorized release of consumer marketing and geolocation information does not pose the same risk of identity theft that justifies the extraordinary and costly security and notice requirements imposed by the Personal Information Protection Act.

The bill requires that notices be given to the Attorney General within 30 business days after the breach is discovered. While many states do not impose a specific requirement of this type, those that do more often require notice within 45 calendar days (which is approximately the same as 30 business days). To ease the burden of compliance across multiple states, I recommend that the notice be required within 45 calendar days instead of 30 business days.

The bill would also require the operator of any website to post a privacy policy. Because California law already requires this, most large businesses already comply with this requirement. Layering on an Illinois-specific requirement will only increase the cost of compliance without adding value to consumers. Moreover, for those small businesses that are not required to comply with the California law, this is a burdensome and costly mandate, particularly because no other state has imposed a similar requirement.

The changes recommended below would address these and related concerns. While I commend the sponsors for their efforts to protect consumers, Illinois does not need regulation that makes it even more difficult to do business. Illinois is suffering from the consequences of over-regulation. We need to break the cycle of taxation and regulation that has created a hostile economic environment in order to grow our economy, create new jobs, and generate more tax revenue through economic expansion.

[Message clipped]  View entire message
SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner announced today he has made appointments to the Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission, the Illinois Joining Forces Foundation and the Business Enterprise Council.

Name: Douglas S. Steffenson
Position: Arbitrator - Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Douglas S. Steffenson an arbitrator for the Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission. He brings 24 years of legal experience to the commission.

Currently, Steffenson is a partner at Nyhan, Bambrick, Kinzie & Lowry, P.C. He has been with the firm since 2000. Steffenson formerly served as an attorney at Crowley, Tamillow & Rubin from 1997-2000. He also served as an assistant state's attorney for Cook County from 1991-1997. He has extensive trial and appellate practice in workers' compensation, occupational disease and employer liability law.

Steffenson earned his bachelor's degree in journalism and political science from Iowa State University and a law degree from DePaul University. He lives in Wilmette.

 

Name: Dave Leckrone
Position: Member - Illinois Joining Forces Foundation

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Dave Leckrone to the Illinois Joining Forces Foundation. He brings more than 32 years of military and veteran work experience to the foundation.

Leckrone is a decorated combat veteran, who served as a Colonel for the U.S. Army. He is an Iraqi Freedom War Veteran and has been deployed overseas more than 20 times. He was awarded two bronze star medals for his efforts in combat operations.  He is also a former federal senior management official for the Department of Defense.

Currently, Leckrone is a small business owner and consults for Rush University and various non-governmental organizations. Utilizing his strategic resource management background, he provides critical long-range and operational level support for expansion programs focused on combat medical preparedness, warrior resiliency development and humanitarian aid for military operations.

Leckrone earned her bachelor's degree in finance and business from Western Illinois University and a master's degree in strategic studies at Army War College. He lives in Springfield.

 

Name: Emilia DiMenco
Position: Member - Business Enterprise Council

Governor Bruce Rauner has reappointed Emilia DiMenco to the Business Enterprise Council. She brings more than 35 years of business experience to the council.

DiMenco is President and CEO of the Women's Business Development Center (WBDC). She has been in this position since 2013 and previously served as the COO for three years. While with the WBDC she has launched two WBDC microloan programs, has lead an initiative to automate all economic impact monitoring and reporting, and has greatly increased fundraising totals. Prior to her time with the WBDC, DiMenco served as an executive vice president with BMO Harris N.A.

DiMenco is well-known for her contributions to leading civic and professional organizations, including the YWCA of Metropolitan Chicago. She has also advised the Chicago Area Chapter of NAWBO on strategy and has served as an adviser to participants in the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses program in Chicago. Nationally, she is a leader in Women Impacting Public Policy (WIPP), helping the organization develop policies for access to capital for women-owned businesses.

Emilia holds bachelor's degree and master's degree in finance from DePaul University. She lives in Chicago.

 

Name: Selena Gray Sizemore
Position: Member - Business Enterprise Council

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Selena Gray Sizemore to the Business Enterprise Council. She brings more than 15 years of experience to the council.

Sizemore currently serves as the Director of Entrepreneurship for the Chicago Urban League. She is responsible for the overall management of the Urban League's Entrepreneurship Center, which supports community-based investment and growth through facilitating entrepreneurship and business development. She has worked with her team to develop and launch the Midwest Regional Teaming Program (MRTP), the organization's first multi-state entrepreneurship program.  Under her leadership, the MRTP has reached more than 60 small business owners across nine states to help form 16 small business teams which have been awarded more than $90 million in federal contracts.

Sizemore began her career in the construction industry with one of the largest African American general contractors in the region. She worked with a wide range of public and private clients. She has also taught Construction Costs & Bidding at Purdue University Calumet and has mentored young people interested in the construction industry.

Sizemore is a graduate of Purdue University Calument. She lives in Chicago.

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner took action today on the following bills:

Bill No.: HB 165

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 217

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: HB 1119

An Act Concerning Criminal Law

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: HB 1121

An Act Concerning Criminal Law

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 2503

An Act Concerning Transportation

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 3270

An Act Concerning Public Aid

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 3284

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: HB 3398

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below

Bill No.: HB 3552

An Act Concerning Civil Law

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3619

An Act Concerning Employment

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: SB 23

An Act Concerning Courts

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: SB 1645

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: SB 1702

An Act Concerning Transportation

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below

Bill No.: SB 1764

An Act Concerning Insurance

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: SB 1834

An Act Concerning Transportation

Action: Amendatory Veto

Note: Veto message below

Bill No.: SB 1859

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

Bill No.: SB 1906

An Act Concerning Revenue

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

Veto Message for HB 3398

To the Honorable Members of

The Illinois House of Representatives,

99th General Assembly:

 

Today I return House Bill 3398 with a specific recommendation for change.

 

House Bill 3398 would allow the Department of Public Health to grant nursing homes a waiver to certain nurse staffing ratio requirements if the facility demonstrates that it is unable, despite diligent efforts, to employ the required number of registered nurses.

 

For nursing facilities in certain regions of our State, it is difficult to find enough qualified nurses to meet mandated staffing ratios. This results in these nursing homes facing fines and loss of funding, forcing them to cut services to their residents. House Bill 3398 is an important tool in allowing flexibility in the face of an across the board, "one size fits all" government mandate, while still ensuring that elderly Illinoisans receive safe and high quality care.

 

As drafted, however, the waiver provisions of House Bill 3398 do not comply with federal law. While federal law allows states to grant registered nurse staffing waivers to Medicaid-certified facilities, only the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has the authority to grant waivers to Medicare-certified facilities. As drafted, House Bill 3398 runs afoul of federal law by allowing the Department of Public Health to grant waivers to both Medicaid- and Medicare-certified facilities.

 

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 3398, entitled "AN ACT concerning regulation", with the following specific recommendation for change:

 

On page 2, by replacing line 15 with "(c) Upon application by a facility that is not certified to participate in the Medicare program under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act, the Director may grant".

 

With this change, House Bill 3398 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

 

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

 

 

Veto Message SB 1702

To the Honorable Members of

The Illinois Senate,

99th General Assembly:

 

 

Today I return Senate Bill 1702, which imposes new burdens on ex-offender re-entry into the job market, with a specific recommendation for change.

Senate Bill 1702 establishes licensing requirements for manufactured home dealers, which are currently licensed under other existing laws. I thank the sponsors, the Secretary of State, and interested parties for their cooperative work on this legislation.

As part of the new statutory requirements, Senate Bill 1702 would prohibit a person from obtaining a manufactured home dealer's license or from serving as an officer, director, or significant owner of a manufactured home dealer if he or she has been convicted of a "forcible felony," which is defined to include specific serious crimes as well as "any other felony which involves the use or threat of physical force or violence against any individual."

We must be careful whenever we disqualify ex-offenders from employment. While persons convicted of serious crimes may not be suitable for certain positions, disqualification is inconsistent with our goal of facilitating successful reentry of ex-offenders into society. In this case, the definition of forcible felony is potentially too broad: while it includes serious offenses like murder and rape, it also includes "any other felony which involves the use or threat of physical force or violence against any individual." Courts have examined and attempted to narrow the definition, but it remains open-ended and subject to frequent litigation, particularly over more common offenses like assault and battery.

In addition, courts have instructed us that a disqualifying offense must have a clear nexus to the position. The connection between forcible felony and manufactured home sales is not apparent.

The bill's proposed disqualification would be permanent. Proponents of the bill have advised, however, that they intended the disqualification be for a shorter duration, such as 10 years. These ongoing discussions are further reason to remove the disqualification provision from the bill.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1702, entitled "AN ACT concerning transportation", with the following specific recommendation for change:

On page 8, by replacing lines 5 through 15 with "(8) blank.".

With this change, Senate Bill 1702 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

 

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

Veto Message 1834

To the Honorable Members of

The Illinois Senate,

99th General Assembly:

 

Today I return Senate Bill 1834 with specific recommendations for change. I thank the sponsors for their work on this bill, but believe these changes are needed to ensure the bill is clear in its intent.

 

Certain contract carrier companies use recording devices in their vehicles to monitor drivers and record information about crashes and other vehicle incidents. Senate Bill 1834 would define "video event recorder" - a device that continuously records audio, video, and G-force levels of a vehicle - and requires that the contract carrier post a notice in the vehicle that a passenger's conversations may be recorded. The changes recommended below are intended to correct ambiguities in the bill.

First, the definition proposed by Senate Bill 1834 is too narrow for its intended purpose. The bill could be read to require notice only if the recorder saves video in certain limited circumstances (when triggered by unusual shaking or when operated by the driver to monitor driver performance), but does not address if and when notice is required with the use of other types of recorder, such as those that might save audio data. The changes recommended below would provide a more standard definition of "video event recorder," to ensure notice is provided no matter what type of recorder is used.

 

Second, the notice requirement is added to an existing section (Section 12-604.1), which prohibits a person from operating a vehicle that displays television or video in front of the driver. Section 12-604.1 is intended to protect the public from distracted drivers and includes appropriate enforcement provisions, while the new provisions of Senate Bill 1834 are intended to protect privacy rights of the driver and passengers. The combination of these provisions is confusing. The changes recommended below would move the new notice requirements to a separate section to avoid confusion.

 

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1834, entitled "AN ACT concerning transportation", with the following specific recommendations for change:

 

On page 1, by replacing line 5 with: "Section 12-604.1 and by adding Sections 1-218.10 and 12-604.2 as follows:"; and

 

On page 1, by replacing lines 6 through 12 with the following:

"(625 ILCS 5/1-218.10 new)

Sec. 1-218.10. Video event recorder. A video recorder placed inside a vehicle that continuously records, in a digital loop, audio, video, and G-force levels."; and

On page 3, by replacing lines 12 through 18 with the following: "installed in a contract carrier vehicle."; and

 

On page 4, immediately after line 6, by inserting the following:

"(625 ILCS 5/12-604.2 new)

Sec. 12-604.2. Video event recorders. A contract carrier vehicle carrying passengers that is equipped with a video event recorder shall have a notice posted in a visible location stating that a passenger's conversation may be recorded. Any data recorded by a video event recorder shall be the sole property of the registered owner or lessee of the contract carrier vehicle."

 

With these changes, Senate Bill 1834 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

 

Bruce Rauner

GOVERNOR

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner signed SB 2042 today, which appropriates money for the pass through of federal dollars without adding to the state's budget deficit. The clean bill allows the state to provide some services to the state's most vulnerable citizens.

"Governor Rauner supported and signed this clean pass through bill because it will help those in need without adding to the state's budget deficit," Director of Communications Lance Trover said. "While the Governor continues to work on passing a balanced budget with structural reforms to maximize how much we can invest in our schools and important social services, some of the state's most vulnerable citizens will be able receive additional support."

Bill No.: SB 2042

An Act Concerning Appropriations

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner has issued the following statement on the Senate's decision to override his veto of SB 1229:

"Every Senator who voted to overturn our veto chose special interests over the taxpayers. They made it abundantly clear that they'd rather raise taxes than stand up to the politically powerful. It is now up to House members to take the responsible, pro-taxpayer position and uphold our veto."

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SPRINGFIELD - Governor Bruce Rauner took action today on the following bills:

 

Bill No.: HB 175

An Act Concerning State Government

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 2790

An Act Concerning Health

Action: Signed

Effective: July 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: HB 3093

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3538

An Act Concerning Gaming

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3667

An Act Concerning Finance

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

Bill No.: SB 54

An Act Concerning Regulation

Action: Signed

Effective: July 1, 2016, only if certain conditions are met

 

Bill No.: SB 663

An Act Concerning Government

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2016

 

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Senate to vote on override of Governor's veto of SB 1229

 

SPRINGFIELD - Illinois Senators will have their chance today to show if they support taxpayers or special interests. The Senate is going to hold an override vote on the Governor's veto of SB 1229. Voting to override the veto will be voting for special interest over taxpayers.

SB 1229 is an unprecedented piece of legislation that will strip the Governor of his ability to negotiate with public-sector unions on behalf of the taxpayers. The bill puts the decision solely in the hands of an unelected, pro-union arbitrator, and will cost the state billions. It is a vote to pave the way for a massive tax hike. The bill is directed specifically at Govenor Rauner because it only lasts four years, only applying to this governor.

Editorial boards from newspapers across the state have urged lawmakers to sustain the Governor's veto of SB 1229.

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