Faced with fiscal fiasco, City of Chicago asks vendors for 3% discount – WGNTV (Chicago)

“Dear Valued Partner,” the message from Chicago’s chief procurement officer Sharla Roberts begins.  “In light of the difficult economic times, the City of Chicago faces news challenges to reduces its costs.”  One sentence later the email gets to the point:  “Therefore, the City requests a price reduction of minimally 3% off all invoices sent to the City for the next twelve months off any contracts you currently hold as a prime contract with the City.”
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Hatingchicago
1 year ago

Unfortunately all those generations of children who couldn’t read or do math are now adult Chicagoans. One of them became mayor and the others elected him. You can’t cure stupid

ProzacPlease
1 year ago

It sure doesn’t sound like a letter you would want to issue as you are trying to lure suckers into buying your $830 mil in bonds, on which you want to pay only interest for 20 years. Oops, I mean as you are offering investors a great opportunity to profit on Chicago’s amazing success.

Jesse James
1 year ago

Uhm, er, how about a hard NO? You signed the contracts for services and now you have to abide by them.

Where's Mine ???
1 year ago

I wonder if cities ‘sister agencies’, i.e. CPS (CTU), are asking vendors to take a 3% haircut as CTU is shooting for 9-12% raises, zero layoffs, already highest paid in nation, carpetbagger Stacy’s $300gs+ salary, etc, etc? Beyond ridiculous. What can anyone say anymore, other than CTU/Brando & crew are a complete disaster.

Leaving Soon, just not soon enough
1 year ago

Send the same letter to all current employees and pensioners.

PPF
1 year ago

Sure, send the letter. You’ll spend more money on the labor to send the letter than you’ll ever receive in savings. The time to have employees cut their salary is during contract negotiations. The time to reduce pension contracts is before they are hired.

Leaving Soon, just not soon enough
1 year ago
Reply to  PPF

The city should just file bankruptcy and let the courts settle it.

PPF
1 year ago

They can’t without state approval and there is no desire by Springfield to jump in this mess any time soon.

Jesse James
1 year ago
Reply to  PPF

Not one single government entity in Illinois has either reduced or eliminated altogether their offerings of a pension in their information sheets that are handed to potential new hires for employment. The first rule when you are in a hole? STOP DIGGING!

Old Spartan
1 year ago

In the private sector, this is a tactic used by a company trying to stave off bankruptcy. You beg for price reductions from your vendors so you scare them into thinking their customer might be gone soon. And it rarely saves the day, only prolongs the inevitable, and bankruptcy is usually the case. Any vendor who has much of a receivable backlog from City work better start planning on getting stiffed in the next twelve months.

Jesse James
1 year ago
Reply to  Old Spartan

Don’t worry. Mayor Conehead is on the case! Bwahahahaha!

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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