Answers wanted to ‘pathetic’ state procurement issues
(The Center Square) – Lawmakers say Illinois-based businesses are getting work in other states but struggling to get business in their home state.
The state’s chief procurement officers appeared before the Illinois Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday.
State Sen. Elgie Sims Jr, D-Chicago, said Illinois-based companies get work in Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Texas, Florida and Georgia.
“We are hearing it across the board, ‘I can get business elsewhere and I can’t get business from my own home state.’ That’s a problem,” Sims said.
Sims said he is not hearing an effective procurement plan from any of the CPOs to help Illinois businesses succeed.
State Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, said she would not be as gentle as Sims.
“I’m very frustrated. Actually, I’m just going to say it. I’m very furious. I see no fire under any of you all to try to address this situation,” Villanueva said.
Villanueva asked the CPOs to provide a timeline for solutions.
Capital Development Board CPO Kenneth Morris said he would present a timeline within a week, but the other three CPOs did not provide specific dates.
General services CPS Ellen Daley said she formed a working group to come up with recommendations.
State Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, asked why Illinois can’t adopt the federal procurement code like other states.
“It flies in the face of efficiency. If it’s good enough for the federal government taxpayers, then it should be good enough for Illinois taxpayers,” Rose said.
In response, state Sen. Rachel Ventura, D-Joliet, asked Daley to discuss her working group’s efforts.
“I believe it was a really good group. We came up with some good recommendations, which we unfortunately did not get to finish prior to the filing date that was required,” Daley said.
Ventura told Rose conversations would continue and she hoped to soon have a better answer soon.
Rose said he appreciated her efforts, but he would believe it when he sees it.
State Sen. Don DeWitte, R-St. Charles, said it’s “pathetic” that Illinois businesses encounter the same procurement issues every year.
Latest News Stories
Robots and AI dominate major trade show in Las Vegas
Mike Tyson, Ric Flair accuse ex-CBD products partners of $50M+ fraud
WATCH: Newsom says he’s an alternate to White House ‘chaos’ in his final State of the State
Prosecutor calls Newsom ‘king of fraud’ for oversight failures
Seattle’s new mayor has no plans to look into possible local daycare fraud
Litchfield Council Rejects One-Way Street Proposal for Post Office
Foreign national charged with having gun near ICE agents in Chicago
Tariffs sink Canadian couples’ long-running e-commerce operation
Attorneys file request to Supreme Court over gender secrecy
Pritzker signs energy omnibus with new charge for ratepayers in 2030
Illinois quick hits: Primary election ballot certified; indictments increased in 2025
Trump orders $200 billion mortgage bond buy to lower rates