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Quinn, state workers union firmly at odds in contract dispute

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Still, Quinn finds himself in a bit of an odd political position: Democrats have historically been closely aligned with employee unions, which in turn provide key get-out-the-vote efforts during campaign season. Ex-Gov. Rod Blagojevich struck one of the more generous contract packages with the union, and even Republican governors before him tried to keep employees happy at the bargaining table.

This time around, Quinn is getting backing from powerful House Speaker Michael Madigan, who pushed a resolution that calls for a freeze in the amount of money the state sets aside for salaries. Madigan argued that lawmakers should have a bigger say in contract negotiations because they are the ones who vote on how much state government spends.

"It's a message to the governor's office, and it's a message to the unions representing workers in this bargaining," Madigan said late last month after the measure passed the House.

Numbers game

As is typical for labor talks, both sides are using numbers to try to spin the argument in their favor.

Quinn's office distributes a chart that attempts to paint Illinois union workers as higher paid than their counterparts in other states. But the document features just nine other states, and the administration won't explain its methodology, so it's unclear whether it is making an apples-to-apples comparison.

Meanwhile, union spokesman Anders Lindall tried to frame the debate by suggesting that increasing wages to keep pace with the cost of living would cost less than $1 a month per person in Illinois. But that math doesn't take into account that not everyone in the state pays taxes.

The union also makes a point that might not necessarily cut in its favor, pointing to U.S. census figures that rank pay for Illinois state and local government employee ninth out of 50 states. That's closer to the top than the bottom, which isn't something that can be said for state government on education funding.

When it comes to health care premiums, Illinois workers pay about the national average for state employees but far less than private sector workers.

The administration says an individual worker pays $564 to $1,014 a year in premiums, with copays as low as $15. The cheapest plan is in line with other states, with the national average for an individual state worker policy coming to about $563, according to a study released this year by the National Conference of State Legislatures.

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