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State pension committee could finish work soon

Legislators writing an overhaul of the state's pension systems could be nearing the end of their work.  IPR’s Amanda Vinicky has the latest:
 

                                                         
Feedback's been plentiful since late last month, when a draft of a pension plan drawn up by a bipartisan legislative committee was leaked.

Unions hate it - saying it overreaches in cutting retirement benefits.

Business groups say it doesn't go far enough to save the state money.

Not to mention complaints, including from the governor, that the committee is taking too long.
Now a key member of the panel is responding.

In a statement, Democratic Sen. Daniel Biss, of Evanston, says the leaked plan is NOT the final version.
He says "our conversations remain in a state of flux" but adds he's hopeful the committee is entering "the late stages" of deliberations.

Biss encourages more feedback on the leaked plan. Under it, state employees', teachers' and public university workers' pensions would still get cost-of-living increases, but instead of going up 3-percent automatically each year, it'd be a fraction of the consumer price index. Employees would also have less taken out of every paycheck for pensions.