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

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Emanuel's administration did release a list of stimulus projects the city ultimately received, including 76 awards totaling $513 million. Those projects ranged from neighborhood stabilization grants and homelessness prevention to the resurfacing of arterial roads throughout the city and the reconstruction of Congress Parkway.

While it's unclear how many of Chicago's stimulus requests were fulfilled, a survey of several suburban communities found that most did not receive funding for many projects they sought.

Schaumburg, for example, requested funding for a westbound exit ramp from the Jane Addams Tollway (Interstate 90) to Meacham Road. That request was denied, but village officials are considering constructing the ramp through funding from a special tax district in the area and splitting the cost with the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.

Schaumburg did, however, receive three stimulus grants totaling $1 million, money that helped pay for repairs to Wright Boulevard and Rodenburg Road and various energy efficiency projects, Village Manager Ken Fritz said.

Hoffman Estates had most of its $11 million wish list rejected, including a $4 million water tower that the village ultimately built after issuing a bond. The northwest suburb did receive about $700,000 for various energy efficiency projects, including a new roof for Village Hall and energy audits for homeowners.

In Niles, a denied stimulus request left the village suffering through extensive flooding in 2010 and 2011, said Steven Vinezeano, the village's acting manager.

The northwestern Cook County suburb requested $15 million in flood mitigation funding but didn't get a penny of it. Instead it got $100,000 in energy efficiency grants.

Last year, village officials raised the sales tax by a quarter of a percent to help pay for the needed upgrades to prevent flooding.

"For some reason, they focus on what you can see, like roads and bridges, and not enough on what you can't see, like water and sewer systems," Vinezeano said of the stimulus grants. "There's a lot of business going on below."

In some cases, even though a city or village did not receive funding for a major project, it got completed anyway.

Naperville did not land the $126 million in stimulus money it needed to widen State Route 59 from four to six lanes and to improve an overpass over the Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway, but those projects since have been taken up by IDOT, city officials said.

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