Thursday, May 27, 2010

General Assembly overrides Quinn veto on convention reform, blocks Teamster pay-to-play bid

A reform bill designed to stop the exodus of conventions from Chicago received an amendatory veto by Governor Pat Quinn today, which was trumped by an almost immediate General Assembly override.

Quinn used his amendatory power to merge the smaller decorators and riggers unions in into the carpenters and Teamsters unions. At first glance that seems reasonable. For instance, when I was a convention service manager when I worked in the hotel business, carpenters built booths. Except for the sign--a decorator had to do that--even if the sign. It was labor's way, to use President Obama's phrase, of spreading the wealth around.

But Crain's Chicago Business' Greg Hinz gets to the real reason Quinn married off the unions. The Teamsters have been quite generous to his campaign.

Quinn campaign aides confirm that the Teamsters on April 23 sent him checks for $50,000 and $25,000. And buzz is that local Teamsters chief John Coli has sent or is about to send another $100,000.

Mr. Coli failed to return phone calls seeking comment. Team Quinn notes that the Teamsters has been an early and regular financial contributor, and the guv's spokesman says his "only" intent in the veto is to "improve" McPier, the nickname for the agency that runs McCormick Place.
As I did last week in an SEIU post, Hinz notes the irony that back in the day, self-appointed reformer Quinn would have blown the whistle with anger over such a blatant pay-to-play ploy.

Twice Quinn was Rod Blagojevich's running mate--he was a beneficicary of Blago's dirty money, which is something the mainstream media always seems to overlook.

Related posts:

Public-sector unions not on the side of the "little guy"
Trade show industry to Chicago: Change--or we leave
Reputed mobster charged with rigging bids at Chicago convention center
Daley looking at partial McCormick Place privatization
Chicago's convention authority: Losing trade shows, padding the payrolls
Union work rules driving trade shows from Chicago
Mayor Daley denounces price gouging at city's convention center
Electrical services costs at Chicago trade show "four to eight times" what they were in Orlando
Dallas wins out over Chicago for new trade show
Chicago's mounting trade show woes
Chicago Tribune: A third major trade show may bail on Chicago
Union "tyranny of the few" drives Plastics Show from Chicago
Marathon Pundit on CBS 2 Chicago
Agency that runs Chicago's convention centers "in deep financial hole"
Union extortionists may drive another trade show from Chicago

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