With potential mass transit service cuts looming, IL legislators seek reforms
(The Center Square) – Illinois taxpayers may be put on the hook to pay for a more than three-quarters of a billion dollar fiscal cliff for mass transit in the Chicago region.
Regional Transportation Authority officials point to a combined $771 million budget shortfall in annual spending. Authorities warn if the fiscal cliff isn’t addressed, changes the system’s more than one million daily riders could face are cuts that limit now 24-hour daily bus and rail service to operating only between the hours of 6 a.m. and 9 p.m.
With officials also warning cuts could eventually add up to millions of lost hours for riders suddenly forced to rely on less frequent service, state Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, is looking for a solution.
“We could not collect enough fares to have the most safe, efficient transit system,” Ford told The Center Square. “The answer has to be a combination of fares, public and private support. I think what we are missing out of the whole equation is bringing in the business community that needs public transit as much as the individuals.”
With RTA officials seeking up to $1.5 billion in new state funding, Ford said he sees little chance of that happening without a complete overall aimed at making the system more efficient.
“I think that the way we operate will change and we’re going to have to get it right because it’s clearly a big change that’s about to take place and we cannot afford to fumble this ball,” he said. “This is not a quick fix. This is a fix for future generations, the restructuring of how we’re going to have a seamless system for all our transit deliveries.”
House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, said legislators already attempted to increase taxes on all Illinoisans to address the fiscal cliff, but the measure didn’t advance out of the Illinois House in May.
“I don’t believe it’s fair to put a tax on the entire state to bail out Chicago,” McCombie told The Center Square.
McCombie said there needs to be an overhaul.
“We just can’t continue to throw money at a problem and expect it to be fixed. We’ve seen that time and time again, but that’s the way of the government. But it’s not fair to taxpayers,” she said.
Lawmakers are set to meet again in Springfield in October for veto session.
Greg Bishop contributed to this report.
Latest News Stories
Residents Clash on School Funding, Citing Low Tax Rate vs. “Wasteful” Spending at Committee Meeting
JJC Receives Surprise $1.9 Million from IRS Employee Retention Credit
JJC Advances ERP Modernization with New Vendor and Two-Year Budget
Will County Committee Shapes 2026 Legislative Agendas on Housing, Energy, and Health
JJC Authorizes Land Buy for Grundy County Expansion, Secures Site in Morris
Commission Grants Green Garden Solar Farm Project Variance Extension
Peotone School Committee: Issue $4.85M Bond to Cover Deficit, Maxing Out Debt Capacity
Will County Committee Advances Phased Takeover of Central Will Dial-A-Ride Service
Everyday Economics: Rate cut debate: Reading mixed signals in a fragile economy
Arizona looks to legal immigration with Trump’s border security
Ranchers decry beef imports from Argentina, expert says good start
Lawmakers introduce bills to slash their own pay during government shutdowns