Deal reached to repeal Cook County sweetened beverage tax, commissioner says

Sarah Schulte Image
Saturday, October 7, 2017
Deal reached to repeal Cook County soda tax
Cook County commissioners have reached a deal to repeal the controversial sweetened beverage tax.

CHICAGO (WLS) -- Cook County commissioners have reached a deal to repeal the controversial sweetened beverage tax.

Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison announced Friday that he and 11 colleagues have reached an agreement to end the tax, giving them enough to override a veto by Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle. They say a vote on the deal will be held on Tuesday and if it is passed, the tax will end on December 1.

The news of the repeal comes a day after Commissioner John Daley said he no longer supports the tax. Others followed suit, including Commissioner Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, another close ally of Preckwinkle.

"It became clear the repeal is imminent. What I requested is we do it responsibly and phase it out over the year," Garcia said.

The tax will end on December 1, giving the Cook County Board more time to fill a $200 million gap - the amount of money Preckwinkle said the sugar tax would have produced.

While Preckwinkle did not have a comment Friday, in her budget address she warned commissioners of 11 percent across-the-board cuts if they chose to repeal the tax.

"Those sort of reductions could substantially impact the services provided by the public defender's office and the state's attorney," Preckwinkle said Thursday.

"That is bologna, quite frankly. There are a lot of ways we could cut," Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison countered.

Morrison doesn't buy Preckwinkle's doomsday scenario. As the lead sponsor of the repeal, Morrison believes revenue can be generated by temporarily freezing infrastructure projects and cutting government waste.

While Garcia signed on to Morrison's repeal ordinance, he agrees with Preckwinkle that cuts could be severe.

"I think people will lose their jobs if we don't come up with the revenues that are needed," Garcia said.

Even though he flipped his position, Garcia still thinks the tax is a good way to generate revenue. He believes the beverage industry used its financial power to shape public opinion before supporters of the tax were able to craft their own message for a public debate. Either way, this a big defeat for Preckwinkle.