Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix

Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix

Spread the love

If Illinois were a family, it would have 1,313 siblings – its cities, towns and villages.

One of them is a trainwreck, repeatedly in crisis, addicted and constantly asking the rest of the family for help.

Not hard to guess: the black sheep is Chicago.

The city’s schools think they are entitled to $1.6 billion from the rest of the family. Chicago’s regional transit systems faces a deficit of at least $760 million, but the Regional Transportation Authority wants $1.5 billion to get itself straight and avoid 40% service cuts and 3,000 layoffs.

Chicago bumps from one crisis to the next, never taking responsibility for its own problems or really wanting to change.

So, what’s the expert advice when there’s a family member who won’t go to rehab?

Set clear and consistent boundaries, prioritize your own well-being through self-care, limit interactions if necessary and seek support for yourself. In other words, don’t keep helping someone who won’t help themselves.

Specifically on the latest ask, the Chicago mass transit system is seeking taxes from everyone else to avoid a fiscal cliff. While the RTA may have delayed the day of reckoning by handing $74 million to the Chicago Transit Authority, this problem was years in the making and the solution is not to repeat the behaviors with no accountability.

Simply blaming the pandemic is to ignore the behaviors. RTA says people en masse worked from home, so they stopped using mass transit from the burbs to downtown. Yes, that was a trigger, but the spending is out of control – up about one-third, or over $1 billion, in just five years.

Commuters are returning, but slowly. Over 20% of the Chicago Transit Authority bus riders remain absent, as well as about 40% of the train and commuter bus riders.

But what about that big check Uncle Sam wrote? It was for $3.54 billion – a significant chunk for a system spending $4.37 billion in 2025. Pandemic money will be gone by the end of this year, so attention turns to the state.

First, state lawmakers were asked to pass a statewide sales tax on services – haircuts, lawn mowing, plumbing repair, etc. That $2.7 billion plan died at the end of the legislative session but could return like a horror movie monster.

Then, there was the $1 billion idea to charge $1.50 per delivery – Amazon, UPS, etc.

And a plan to boost taxes on real estate sales in five suburban Chicago counties – a small fix generating less than 10% of that $1.5 billion ask.

Usually tucked into these proposals is some small amount the rest of the state can share. State Sen. Ram Villlivalam, D-Chicago, offered $200 million of the $1.5 billion for “downstate” transit.

And Chicago area politicians wonder why folks south of Interstate 80 think of themselves as “Forgottonia,” woo Indiana to help them secede or put “Pritzker (Stinks)” signs in their front yards? Chicago gets a free ride, the rest of Illinois gets the smog.

And the exhaust is spreading outside of Chicagoland. Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, a proud son of Peoria, is playing the kindly uncle in favor of helping our beleaguered sibling one more time.

“We come here. We take advantage of the public transportation system. Chicago is very important to Illinois. It’s an economic engine for Illinois, and it’s a part of Illinois,” LaHood told The Center Square.

All due respect to the guy trying to fix gerrymandering in Illinois by pushing a ballot initiative for an independent legislative mapping commission, but this will not be Chicago’s last crisis.

Back to recovery: You can’t help someone who won’t help themselves.

A system in trouble has no business moving ahead with a 5.5-mile extension of the CTA’s Red Line. In 2009, the cost was estimated at $1.09 billion, then after it got $1.9 billion from the feds, the estimate rose to $3.6 billion and now magically has hit $5.75 billion – before any cost overruns, which are pretty much synonymous with “Chicago.” A Metra station recently was 15 years behind schedule and $10 million over budget.

A system in trouble has no business paying 10 workers over $300,000 to work from home at jobs that cannot be performed from their homes. What? Transit employees didn’t want to make the commute?

And a system in trouble has no business hiring a DJ for $37,800 to entertain commuters.

In other words, there is a lot the mass transit systems in the Chicago area should do before coming to the rest of Illinois with thin arguments about their value to the statewide economy and convenience when visiting. The city’s economic value is largely a result of all that corn, wheat and soybeans the rest of the state is growing, so please spare the rest of the family from any “breadwinner” entitlement.

Time for some tough love. Chicago transit needs to fix its own problems by making better decisions and breaking its spending habit.

Events

No events

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

mokena fire protection district logo graphic.1

Fire District Inks New Banking Agreement with Old Plank Trail

The Mokena Fire Protection District Board of Trustees has approved a new two-year banking agreement with Old Plank Trail, a move aimed at securing favorable rates amid a volatile market....
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Mokena Fire Protection District for June 10, 2025

The Mokena Fire Protection District Board of Trustees formally adopted its budget and appropriation ordinance for the 2025-2026 fiscal year following a public hearing. With no members of the public...
Will-County-Executive-Committee-Meeting-June-12-2025

Mental Health Board Awards $5 Million in Grants to Will County Organizations

The Will County Community Mental Health Board has distributed over $5 million in grants to 39 local organizations, marking the completion of its inaugural funding cycle since voters approved the...
frankfort-square-park-district.2

Frankfort Square Park District Adopts Budget and Appropriation Ordinance, Updates Financial Policy

The Frankfort Square Park District Board of Commissioners formally adopted its Budget and Appropriation Ordinance for the 2025-2026 fiscal year on Thursday, finalizing the district's legal spending authority for the...
Will-County-Executive-Committee-Meeting-June-12-2025

County Board Approves Major Code Updates, Discusses Employee Benefits

The Will County Board Executive Committee approved several ordinance updates Wednesday while engaging in detailed discussions about employee compensation and benefits. The committee passed ordinances updating three chapters of the...
frankfort-square-park-district.1

Major Park District Projects Advance as Hunter Prairie Park Gets Green Light

Work on the Frankfort Square Park District's three major capital projects is hitting key milestones, with the long-awaited redevelopment of Hunter Prairie Park now officially underway. Executive Director Audrey Marcquenski...
Meeting-Briefs

Executive Committee June 12 Meeting Briefs

Property Purchase Approved: The county authorized purchase of two parcels along Governor's Highway in Monee for $545,000 to establish a roadway maintenance facility for the eastern end of the county....
frankfort-square-park-district.2

Developer to Donate Land, Playground for New Park in Tinley Park

A new park is coming to a Tinley Park development thanks to a land and equipment donation from a local home builder. Frank Bradley, owner of Crana Homes, is donating...
Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Briefs: Frankfort Square Park District for June 12, 2025

The Frankfort Square Park District Board of Commissioners formally adopted its annual Budget and Appropriation Ordinance on June 12, a key legal step that sets the district’s spending authority for...
frankfort-school-district-161.2-e1754272831494

Summit Hill Board Approves School Resource Officer for Two Schools in Contentious Vote

The Summit Hill School District 161 Board of Education voted to hire a School Resource Officer (SRO) to serve two of its schools, approving an annual expenditure of up to...
frankfort-school-district-161.1

Summit Hill School Board Reverses Controversial Principal Non-Renewal Decision

In a significant reversal, the Summit Hill School District 161 Board of Education voted to repeal previous resolutions that aimed to not renew the contract of an unnamed principal, effectively...
frankfort-school-district-161.2-e1754272831494

Meeting Briefs: Summit Hill School District 161 for June 11, 2025

The Summit Hill School District 161 Board of Education made several major decisions at its June 11 meeting, including the hiring of a School Resource Officer for two schools after...
Will-County-Ad-Hoc-Ordinance-Review-Committee-Meeting-June-10-2025

Will County to Draft New Harassment Policy Amid Debate Over Board Authority

The Will County Ad-Hoc Ordinance Review Committee will draft a new, county-wide general harassment policy after a lengthy debate on Tuesday revealed the complexities of the county’s legal obligations and...
Will-County-Ad-Hoc-Ordinance-Review-Committee-Meeting-June-10-2025

Committee Uncovers Gaps in County Asset Tracking, Calls for Better System

A review of Will County’s fiscal policies on Tuesday highlighted significant gaps in how the county tracks its physical assets, from office furniture to squad cars, prompting calls from the...
frankfort-park-district

Frankfort Park District in Dispute with Five Oaks HOA Over Park Development Rules

The Frankfort Park District is taking legal steps to untangle itself from the development rules of the Five Oaks homeowners association, asserting that as a public body, it "cannot be...