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Lawmakers push to spend $900 million

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(MCT) — State lawmakers are looking at spending more than $900 million to build roads, protect patients from bad doctors and investigate child abuse under legislation that started making its way through the General Assembly on Monday.

The state's financial situation remains poor, but the additional spending is viewed as a way to tweak the budget approved last May. A few million dollars would come from higher fees on doctors to cover the costs of the agency that disciplines wayward physicians, a program just recently beefed up following years of lax oversight. Another $53 million would cover the costs of child welfare programs and other state agency operations from money freed up largely because Gov. Pat Quinn closed some prisons and other state sites.

The bulk of the money — $713 million in road construction and capital projects — is available from a series of sources, including new infusions from the federal government and better-than-expected tax revenue going into the state's road fund.

The legislation cleared the House Executive Committee as part of a package Quinn and lawmakers want to approve quickly. A separate bill would officially schedule the governor's budget address on March 6, two weeks later than the time set by law.

The plan to raise the amount doctors pay to fund state oversight and discipline in their profession would increase fees charged every three years from $300 to $750 under legislation sponsored by House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie, D-Chicago.

State funds to pay for routine matters of licensing, as well as the broader oversight and discipline of doctors, have run dry, causing the staff to drop from 26 to eight and creating a huge backlog of cases that Currie said is "continuing to grow." The last time the fee was raised was 1987, she said.

The Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, under fire in the past for not doing enough to protect patients from bad doctors, said the cutbacks caused by a multimillion-dollar shortfall would push the time it takes to issue or renew physician licenses from 12 to 18 months, officials said. "The problem is dire," said Manny Flores, the agency's director.

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