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Most of Illinois' stimulus money spent, but projects still in progress

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Schneider said that while construction on the tracks themselves was completed recently, workers still have work to do on signals and side tracks that would allow passenger and freight cars to pass one another. The $268 million to buy train cars also has not been spent yet.

IDOT also has just started construction on the $126 million Englewood Flyover project that will separate the grades of two major railroad crossings on the South Side, and the state has yet to spend most of the $177 million to make high-speed upgrades to railroad tracks between the Quad Cities and Chicago.

Between state and local stimulus projects awarded by the U.S. Department of Transportation, IDOT has administered more than $900 million in road projects.

"On the highways, I'd say we have obligated 99 percent of the funding available to us," Schneider said. "It's the high-speed rail grants that are the big ones that have affected those numbers on what has not been spent."

Schneider said all of the state's highway requests were funded. He said the state was successful because it began work in anticipation of a stimulus program four months before Obama was sworn in as president.

Another asset for Illinois: U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is a former congressman from Peoria. Federal Railroad Administrator Joseph Szabo also is an Illinois native.

"Having the secretary of transportation from Illinois and the federal rail administrator from Illinois sure may have helped," Schneider said, "but I think the bigger part of this was that we were ready."

While state transportation officials say they received virtually all of the funding they sought, it's unclear how Chicago fared.

The administration of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who was President Obama's chief of staff when the stimulus package was approved, could not produce a list of transportation infrastructure projects then-Mayor Richard M. Daley requested in 2009.

At that time, as the Tribune reported, Daley was offering few details about the city's requests. He did say he would seek $50 million for the expansion of O'Hare International Airport, but the city did not receive that money. It was granted $12 million for runway concrete work and the widening of a taxiway at O'Hare.

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