Springfield,
IL – This week, Senate
Republican lawmakers called on the Governor to release a report on staffing
levels at Illinois prisons, proposed a special legislative session to repeal the
state sales tax on motor fuel, and urged the Governor to make his appointments
to the Wooded Land Assessment Task Force, according to State Senator Dan
Rutherford (R-Pontiac).
A Senate
Republican legislator has sent the Governor’s office a formal Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) request for a much heralded report on staffing levels at
Illinois
prisons. In addition, a copy of the letter was sent to the Attorney General’s
office.
The request
involves a report the Harvey M. Rose Accountancy Corp., a California-based
company, was supposed to release on Dec.16, 2005. The study cost taxpayers
$443,000, and the bill was paid in full last January. According to the Illinois
Department of Corrections, the report had to be revised, but the revised report
has yet to surface.
The FOIA request
was delivered last Wednesday, which means the Governor’s office has until the
end of business today to respond.
The
under-staffing at prisons has led to an outbreak of violence. Last March, a
Big Muddy Correctional Center inmate picked up another inmate and
body slammed him to the ground. The 64-year-old victim did not die instantly,
but the brutal blow to his head was fatal. In February, an inmate assaulted a
female food worker at the Jacksonville Correctional Center. Then, just last May, an inmate at
Dixon
Correctional Center took a prison worker hostage for 24
hours, holding a homemade knife to her throat and sexually assaulting her
multiple times. Rutherford said these are just a few examples of the
violence correctional officers continue to face at Illinois
prisons.
In other news, a
Senate Republican legislator unveiled a three-pronged approach to tackling
rising gasoline prices, including requesting a special legislative session to
repeal the state sales tax on motor fuels, reinvesting excess revenues into the
alternative fuels market and railroad transportation, and calling on Congress to
crack down on non-compliant oil companies and improve
industry standards.
Rutherford said the most logical starting point for
helping Illinois’ consumers begins with
suspending the state’s 5 percent sales tax on motor fuels, noting that
Illinois is
higher than every bordering state. As a result, those states often benefit from
motorists who cross the state border to fill up on cheaper gasoline. Illinois sales tax on
motor fuel sales is assessed on top of the other taxes on gasoline. Suspending
the sales tax on motor fuel is nothing new as lawmakers passed a temporary
suspension of the tax in 2000
Finally, Senate
Republicans called on the Governor to make his appointments to a task force
charged with finding a permanent solution to the timberland assessment
controversy so that the legislative panel can begin its
work.
The Wooded Land
Assessment Task Force was created by House Joint Resolution 95, which also asked
the Illinois Department of Revenue to freeze timberland assessments for two
years at the 2005 level. The two-year freeze is to give the Task Force members
time to hold hearings, make recommendations and allow the legislature to pass
any appropriate legislation based on their findings. The report is due on
Dec. 31,
2006.
But before the
12-member task force can even begin its work, the panel needs to at least have a
quorum. So far, the task force only has six members: three legislators and the
Directors of the Department of Natural Resources, Department of Revenue and the
Department of Agriculture.
The Governor has
three appointments to make, but he has yet to make them. Representatives of
Southern Illinois University, the University of Illinois and the House Democrats comprise
the other three members of the task force.