As state government scurries to fill a projected $8 billion deficit in the 2016 fiscal year budget, it would seem to make sense to move beyond successful compromises and proven solutions already in place and instead focus on issues that truly have a significant impact on the state’s finances. At least you would think so, given the seriousness of the fiscal crisis.
But that’s not the case with some elected officials and local government lobbyists who represent the more than 7,000 taxpayer-funded units of government in Illinois. Behind-the-scenes efforts are currently taking place that would reduce their obligation of accountability and transparency to taxpayers, all under the guise of the state’s financial crisis. It’s a “smoke-and-mirrors” attempt by local governments at a time of fiscal crisis where Illinois taxpayers would end up on the losing end.
One successful compromise and proven solution that is now in its fifth year of operation is the PublicNoticeIllinois (PNI) website, or www.publicnoticeillinois.com. PNI is a centralized, aggregated website for all public notices from the state of Illinois, units of local government, and the Illinois court system. It’s a free-access website that is updated daily. It’s an example of a proven, successful public-private partnership that is already saving taxpayers money and should be supported by elected officials at all levels of government.
Public notices, or legal notices, are a fundamental component in the foundation of our democracy and of our legal system. For more than 200 years, newspapers have been paid to print public notices and to serve as the critically important independent third party between units of local government and taxpayers, and have functioned as the official notification system of our court system. Notice of publication in newspapers provides the proven and necessary verification, certification and archiving solution that ensures individual and taxpayer rights are protected.
It’s a process that has worked so well and for so long that those wanting to eliminate it or change to another process rarely consider the chaos and disruption to government bodies and to the court system that would take place without this proper verification, certification and archiving of public notices and notices of the courts.
PNI was created by state law in 2011 and was approved unanimously by both chambers of the Illinois
General Assembly. Yes, unanimously. Key components of the law called for
the creation of a centralized website for public notices that would be
managed by Illinois newspapers. It requires newspapers to upload all
notices to PNI after the notices appear in print. All of this is done at
no additional cost to government. No taxpayer money goes towards
supporting or managing the public notice website.
With
each new session of the Illinois General Assembly, local government
lobbyists – whose paychecks are funded largely by your tax dollars –
repeatedly push bills to eliminate public notices or remove them from
newspapers and PNI in favor of their own individual websites. These
bills rarely make it out of committee because, frankly, state lawmakers
understand that forcing citizens to attempt to locate notices across
7,000 websites doesn’t make sense. (Actually, it would be about 4,000
websites. Many units of local government do not yet have a website.)
Such
legislation was introduced and failed again earlier this session.
However, local government groups are now using behind-the-scenes tactics
to remove public notices from print and from PNI. This time they have a
new twist. They are claiming that having to be accountable and
transparent through the current public notice process is an “unfunded
mandate” and they want to do away with it. This issue is not about
money, it’s about reducing transparency and accountability to the
taxpayers.
Every year
Illinois citizens dutifully fulfill their obligation of paying many
types and amounts of taxes to support these thousands of local
government units throughout the state. Each of these units has an annual
operating budget that ranges from tens of thousands of dollars to
hundreds of millions and even billions of dollars. Taxpayer dollars,
that is.
It’s not at
all about “saving the taxpayers money” because that has already been
done successfully through the 2011 legislation and PNI. Local
governments will still try to sell it that way, however. Local
government officials should focus on the big-impact issues, allow the
proven public notice solution in our state to keep on working, and not
spend so much time and taxpayer dollars on how to be less accountable
and less transparent.
Dennis
DeRossett is executive director of the Illinois Press Association. The
IPA is based in Springfield and represents more than 500 newspapers
throughout Illinois. He can be reached at [email protected].