Lightfoot’s Election-Year Budget For Chicago Is No ‘True Path’ To Recovery and Stability – Wirepoints

By: Mark Glennon*

“Chicago is on the true path to financial recovery and financial stability,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot says in the city’s new 2023 Budget Forecast. “We have cleared the city’s budget of decades of deferred liabilities. We are now living within our means,” she said during a related keynote luncheon address to municipal bond investors at a conference last week.

Sorry, Mayor, but Joe Cahill at Crain’s put it succinctly: “A more accurate description would call the forecast a mixture of helpful short-term factors and election-year hopium,” he wrote.

Here are the major reasons why Cahill’s right, as we see it:

First, Chicago’s true financial picture is smoked over by extraordinary amounts of cash from the federal government dispensed under the guise of pandemic relief, as is true for the State of Illinois and most every government unit in America. Chicago alone was allocated $1.9 billion of direct assistance under the American Rescue Plan, much of which went directly or indirectly to debt reduction, taking the burner out from under near term problems. Still to be spent is $152 million that will be counted as revenue in 2023. The state as a whole, including the private sector, has received nearly $200 billion of federal assistance, helping swell state and local tax rolls. None of that will be repeated.

Second, nothing whatsoever has been done about the city’s primary structural fiscal problem — pensions.

Consider this: Two years ago, at the very same investor conference as last week’s, Lightfoot said she intended to “force a solution” to the pension problem, which she correctly said was “the biggest problem” facing city finances. The pension system was “unsustainable in its current form,” she said

Nothing happened but now, somehow, she’d have us believe the city is on a true path to stability and is living within its means.

Chicago’s four pensions will cost the city $2.4 billion in 2023. (That’s total city contributions from beyond just its Corporate Fund). That number will continue to grow because the city is now on a supposedly “actuarially based” funding schedule that’s supposed to get the pensions to 90% of what they should have by 2055. Chicago has the worst pension funding situation of the 20 largest cities in America, according to S&P Global Ratings. Its four pensions are each next-from-worst among 61 other cities, according to a different report from Equable Institute.

That liability is an anchor around Chicago’s neck, making it an outlier among other cities, indefinitely strangling taxpayers and dragging down the quality of the city’s services.

Third, crime has now become an overriding fiscal issue for the city, aside from the human tragedy. It’s difficult to see how it will be brought under control without far more money going to the police, who are already overburdened and struggling to maintain manpower. A serious budget would include that funding.

Fourth, work-from-home remains a grave threat to the viability of downtown, as in other cities. The true, daily occupancy rate of downtown offices in Chicago hovers around 41% according to Kastle Systems’ barometer, which measures true occupancy by security card swipes. Unless true occupancy returns to something approaching historical norms, many of the city’s revenue sources will not, either.

Fifth, despite the federal help, the new projected budget nevertheless shows expenses exceeding revenues by $128 million for next year. And it will get much worse. That deficit will rise to $473 million in 2024 and $554 million in 2025, the projections says.

Overall, the new budget would total about $5.2 billion, reflecting a spending increase of 5.8% over 2022. That’s for the city’s Corporate Fund, on which the projection is focused. It covers most core city services but excludes special revenue sources and separate city entities like the airports.

Interestingly, bond investors and analysts at last week’s conference reportedly had a more cheery outlook about the city. They “gave Chicago high marks for its use of federal COVID-19 relief and noted concrete signs of fiscal progress,” says their trade publication, The Bond Buyer, though crime, long-term return-to-work trends, and debt pose headwinds to the upward momentum.

I get why they’d be happy that federal “pandemic relief” went largely to debt reduction, but I’m at a loss for what concrete signs of fiscal progress they see. Still, it’s probably true that Chicago bonds remain safe from default for a few years, which is probably their main concern, regardless of the reasons. If the city put on a convincing show for them, good for the city.

*Mark Glennon is founder of Wirepoints.

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Old Joe
3 years ago

Folks, the day the federal money spigot gets turned off is the day the chickens come home to Roost.

Think a Republican land slide in November followed by a Republican president taking office in January 2025.

Lori, on the bright side you’ll be gone when it hits the fan.

nixit
3 years ago

Pre-pandemic, I was able to get my usual lunch sandwich from Potbelly’s for less than $7 including tax. That same sandwich purchase is now $10.50. 50% increase…and now they prompt me for a tip. Not including the value of not having to wait for 15 minutes for my CTA train during rush hour, WFH saves me $15/day. For folks who purchase their coffee and aren’t as cheap as me, it’s probably $25-30/day. And yet Chicago still feels it’s OK to gouge my fellow cubicle workers with a usurious 11.5% sales tax rate while begging us to come back to the… Read more »

ToughLove
3 years ago
Reply to  nixit

Your comments are better than most and you obviously understand the gravity of the situation. Respectfully, why are you still in Illinois and do you have plans to get out?

nixit
3 years ago
Reply to  ToughLove

Same as most: Jobs, kids in school, elderly parents. It would take an fantastic job opportunity to move the family. While I don’t plan to live in Illinois until death, I don’t foresee a move in the near future.

Last edited 3 years ago by nixit
debtsor
3 years ago
Reply to  nixit

I had to travel through the northwest side today on my way to a business meeting. It’s been a while but it’s apparent that even formerly middle class areas are turning into dumps. Vacant store fronts everywhere, homeless people, bums, not much vehicle traffic suprisingly, the few businesses around are now the ubiquitous taquerias. I don’t remember it being quite so crappy in the past.

Freddy
3 years ago
Reply to  debtsor

In Rockford we have panhandlers on most every major intersection sometimes two on opposite corners. Do you have any in your area?

debtsor
3 years ago
Reply to  Freddy

Lately I’ve seen obviously illegal immigrants, some with children, on street corners and highway off ramps, holding up signs in broken English begging for money. The 3,000,000 or so illegals who’ve come over the border in the past 18 months end up somewhere. Somewhere is now suburban Chicago. I’ve seen it off highway 53 and 355 in the past few weeks at palatine road and by Woodfield Mall.

Last edited 3 years ago by debtsor
Freddy
3 years ago
Reply to  debtsor

None of the panhandlers I’ve seen here are of Hispanic origins just locals.

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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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