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I have more than 40 years in the news business and have successfully evolved into an electronic journalist. Comings & Goings and Southland Savvy track news about businesses in Chicago's Southland.

State Rep. Zalewski named to Illinois pension reform conference committee

Zalewski
From Staff Reports
Desplaines Valley News

State Rep. Michael Zalewski, a staunch supporter of the Madigan proposal to solve the state's pension crisis, was one of the House members named to the conference committee charged with forging a compromise solution to the pension mess.

“I thought it was a good bill,” Zalewski (D-23rd), of Riverside, said earlier this year. “I spoke for it on the House floor."

Zalewski was one of three lawmakers named to the 10-person conference committee by House Speaker Michael Madigan, who sponsored a draconian House pension reform bill that easily passed that chamber before being shot down in the state Senate.

“The state is on the brink of fiscal collapse," Zalewski said. "We have to right the ship."

Zalewski said the Madigan plan was more painful than the one offered by Democratic Senate President John Cullerton and was tough on retired state employees.

“There were things in the bill that I wish we could have softened,” he said. “But the bill was necessary.”

Gov. Pat Quinn hopes the rarely used legislative conference committee can help both sides reach a compromise solution to resolve the state's daunting pension crisis.

The committee was the result of a special session last week called by Quinn to address the pension problem.

That session, just like the recently concluded regular session, failed to deliver a plan to rectify the state's $100 billion unfunded pension liability.

The problem has been and continues to be the inability or unwillingness of Madigan and Cullerton to budge on their competing measures.

The conference committee, made up of five members each from the House and Senate, is designed to "bridge the differences and forge agreement on a comprehensive pension reform plan," a statement from Quinn's office said. 

Legislators used last Wednesday's session to vote to create the committee, and Quinn plans to call another session on July 9 to pass legislation, the statement added.
Legislative leaders said that was probably too soon for a deal to have been hammered out, if one can be reached at all.

Political paralysis over fixing the worst-funded state retirement system has led to a series of credit downgrades for Illinois, which now has the lowest ratings among U.S. states.

Quinn has expressed frustration over the inaction and its impact on the state's ratings and borrowing costs. Illinois is in the midst of a $31 billion capital improvement program, partly funded by the sale of bonds, and it is set for a planned sale of $1.3 billion of general obligation bonds this week.

The Illinois General Assembly last turned to a conference committee to hash out a compromise on legislation in December 2005.

Madigan has favored unilateral cuts to retirement benefits to reap savings of up to 30 percent over 30 years,  an approach labor unions have said violates the Illinois Constitution. Cullerton has advocated a plan, backed by labor unions and passed by the Senate, that gives workers and retirees choices between reduced benefits and continued access to state-sponsored healthcare in retirement. Actuaries says the Cullerton plan achieves just one third as much savings as the Madigan plan does.

A third plan that addresses only the State Universities Retirement System is being pushed by the heads of universities as a way to save as much as Madigan's approach, while having a better chance of withstanding a constitutional challenge in court, its backers allege.

That plan calls for higher worker pension contributions, gradually shifts pension payments currently made by the state onto the universities and community colleges, and ties pension payment increases to inflation. 

Both of the original authors of the toughest bill that's passed either the Senate or the House — Sen. Dan Biss (D-Evanston), and Rep. Elaine Nekritz (D-Northbrook) — are included on the 10-member panel.

Biss was named along with Sen. Kwame Raoul (D-Chicago) and Sen. Linda Holmes (D-Aurora), by Cullerton. Raoul will be the committee chairman. 

Madigan named Nekritz, Zalewski and another ally state Rep. Art Turner (D-Chicago).

Senate GOP Leader Christine Radogno, of Lemont, selected Sen. Matt Murphy (R-Palatine), her point person on budget matters, and Sen. Bill Brady (R-Bloomington), who ran for governor against Quinn in 2010.

Getty appoints Marine to fill trustee vacancy in Lyons

U.S. Marine Sgt. Jason Thomas is sworn in by Village of Lyon s Clerk Dawn Campos.
From Staff Reports
Desplaines Valley News

Lyons Mayor Christopher Getty and the Village Board last week named U.S. Marine Sgt. Jason Thomas, an Afghan veteran, to fill a trustee vacancy created by the resignation of Trustee Ryan Grace.

Thomas, a Brookfield native, enlisted in the Marines in 2005 and spent eight months in Afghanistan in 2010.

He moved to Lyons in 2012 with his wife, Nicki, and two sons Nicholas, 2, and Ethan, 1. Thomas, 28, has been an active participant in the Lyons community and is a Marine Corps recruiter in Lake County.

He was appointed trustee on June 19 to replace Grace, who resigned last week because of increased work responsibilities. Grace recently took on a new role with his employer and now oversees a multistate territory and does an extensive amount of traveling.

"I am honored to represent the residents of the Village of Lyons," Thomas said. "I vow to share the same unwavering pride, dedication, and loyalty to serving our village as I have our country."

"I thank Mayor Getty and my fellow board members for their trust and support, and I look forward to working with them as a team to keep improving our already improving community," he added.

Grace said he was humbly honored to have been able to serve the people of Lyons and will continue to be an active supporter of the village, Mayor Getty and the United Citizens Party.

Getty thanked Grace for his hard work and dedication over the years.

"It has been a privilege to work with Ryan throughout the years and I wish him nothing but the best on all his future endeavors," the mayor said.

Thomas will finish out Grace’s term, which runs through April 2015.

Getty said he was looking forward to working with Thomas for the next two years and was certain that Thomas's diligent work ethic and fresh perspective would make a great addition to the board and to the Village of Lyons.

Justice Tobacco Mart to open July 1

Justice Tobacco Mart owner Moe Zeidn helps put up the sign on his new store.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

Trustees in Justice voted this week to approve a new convenience store for 8400 S. Roberts Road.
 
Justice Tobacco Mart was granted a business license though its owners can't use the building's marquee sign until it's brought up to code.

Owner Moe Zeidn said the store would open on July 1.

Trustees earlier this year turned down plans for the same business.

"It was approved this time because they changed their business plan," said Village Clerk Kathy Svoboda. "They are now going to be more of a convenience store with a section for tobacco products instead of being only a tobacco store."

Svoboda said part of the delay in granting the license was the amount of work needed for the building.
"It took some time readying the property for occupancy," she said.

Trustees also approved a deal with Classic Truck & Trailer to accept a piece of the company's property at 8650 W. 82nd Place that was part of a local detention area.

"That way they don't have to pay taxes on a piece of property that they can't use," she said.

Qdoba to close Southland locations

The Qdoba Mexican Grill chain is closing both of its locations in the Southland on Friday as part of a 67-store closing the company is planning to help grow the brand and improve customer satisfaction.

The store at 5141 W. 95th St. in Oak Lawn and in a LaGrange Road outlot at Orland Square Mall in Orland Park will both close by 3 p.m. The chain will also close 16 more stores in the Chicago area on Friday.

The chain, which is owned by Jack in the Box, will keep four Chicago-area locations open, at least for now, in Wheaton, Schaumburg, Lincoln Park and the Loop.

For a complete list of closing locations, visit Qdoba Closings.

The company said in a news release that despite the 67 closings it plans to open 70-75 new locations this year and 60-70 more next year.

Applebee’s shuts down complete

AppleIllinois LLC, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in April, this week completed the sale of 15 of its 33 Illinois Applebee’s restaurants and closed 18 others, including locations in Homewood, Mokena, Matteson and Tinley Park.

AppleIllinois sold the restaurants for $2.4 million to RMH Illinois LLC as part of an auction supervised by the U.S. bankruptcy court. 

Remaining open in the Chicago area are Applebee’s in Calumet City, Country Club Hills, Crestwood, Hodgkins, Evergreen Park, in Chicago at 7519 S. Cicero Ave. and 6656 Grand Ave., in Joliet at 2795 Plainfield Road and 2400 W. Jefferson. 

Other locations remaining open are in Bradley, DeKalb, Elgin, McHenry, Peru and Zion.
Applebee’s has 2,000 U.S. restaurants, of which all but two dozen are owned by independent business owners.

If you see a new business in town or wonder what happened to an old favorite, drop me a line at bobbong@hotmail.com.

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