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Most of Illinois' stimulus money spent, but projects still in progress

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(MCT) — Before Barack Obama even had lifted his hand off the Bible at his presidential inauguration four years ago, government officials across Illinois had started to compile their dream lists.

City planners and state transportation officials scrambled to identify virtually every "shovel ready" project they could think of, in hopes of bringing their blueprints to life through the federal stimulus package that the new home-state commander in chief soon would steer through Congress.

Four years and $840 billion later, much of the stimulus provided by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act has been spent, but some projects — like the nation's economy — remain a work in progress.

As Obama embarks on his second term, more than one-quarter of the stimulus money awarded to Illinois for specific projects has yet to be spent, according to the most recent federal figures.

Illinois ranked fourth among states in receiving nearly $12 billion in grants, contracts and loans for projects ranging from new roads and repaved runways to research grants and faster rail lines. Billions more were funneled to Illinois through entitlement benefits and tax credits.

In Springfield, state transportation officials say they were granted all of the shovel-ready projects they sought, and enough of them came in under estimated prices that more were added.

But the story at most Illinois village and city halls was a different one: Many projects were sought, but only a few were funded and not always at the requested price.

Will County, for example, asked for $20 million for sewer and water upgrades, new roads and sidewalks, and street lighting for the Ridgewood community near Joliet. For decades, the area had been plagued with raw sewage running down roads and bubbling up in the parking lot of a local grade school, County Executive Larry Walsh said.

U.S. Department of Transportation officials charged with doling out the stimulus cash for such infrastructure projects ultimately sent Will County $6.5 million — enough to fix the water and sewer problems but far short of the county's full vision.

"We had Cadillac plans and settled for Chevrolet results," Walsh said. "If we could have gotten the money, we would have done all that, but at the end of the day, we have ... fresh water and good sewer lines and the environmental problems have been taken care of."

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