Rauner Closing Museums, Shooting Range Amid Budget Standoff
CHICAGO (CBS/AP) — Gov. Bruce Rauner is set to close state museums and a sport-shooting complex because of Illinois' budget crisis, even though most staff will still report to work and the chairman of the museum's board says the savings will amount to "peanuts."
The Republican governor targeted the 138-year-old museum in Springfield, its four satellite locations and the World Shooting and Recreational Complex in the southern Illinois community of Sparta for closure effective Wednesday. He says it's part of his efforts to manage state finances as Illinois enters its fourth month without a budget and a deal with Democrats who control the Legislature remains elusive.
Rauner's office initially sent layoff notices to more than 100 workers at the sites earlier this year. He said closing the museums and recreational complex would save Illinois about $6.3 million.
But labor unions sued, arguing the move violated their contracts with the state. Rauner agreed to postpone the layoffs for union workers pending a court ruling but said he would go ahead with the closings.
The decision has left supporters of the facilities scratching their heads. They note workers will be collecting paychecks and the facilities still will have to be maintained, but the public — including school groups that frequent the museums — will be shut out.
Guerry Suggs, chairman of the state museum board of directors, said the move doesn't make much sense.
Researchers and scientists will continue their work, but it's unclear what staff such as tour guides and security officers will do, Suggs said.
"Maybe somebody will get a good card game going," he said.
Visiting DePaul University assistant professor Nick Kachiroubas says it really hurts social and human service providers dependent on budget money.
"I think it's irresponsible on all parties in the sense that nobody wants to give," he said.
Nobody, he says, from Governor Bruce Rauner down to the state's legislative leaders who won't be back in Springfield until October 20.
"Which frankly is I think irresponsible," said State Comptroller Leslie Munger. "We all ought to be working as hard as we can together now."
Or she warns the state's current unpaid bill tab of $6.6 billion will keep rising.
Rauner spokeswoman Lyndsey Walters said in addition to scientific research, curators will maintain collections and educators will plan future programming. Other employees will be put in "temporary roles." Workers at the Sparta complex will prepare the site for winter then be reassigned to other sites.
"Closing the Illinois State Museum and Sparta Shooting Complex will save Illinois taxpayers millions of dollars," Walters said in an emailed statement.
Suggs estimated the savings from laying off a small number of nonunion museum employees would be less than $400,000 annually — minuscule compared with the state's multibillion-dollar deficit or the tax revenue generated by tourists, he said.
The museum's branch locations are the Dickson Mounds archaeological site in Lewistown and art galleries in Chicago, Lockport and Whittington.
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