׉?ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://B_FmupRYDIJml0uUV25D2x3LKioRPsBdQ_UgGeWOxHU k`׉	 7cassandra://pY_2unxtzi3p9TVsDY1Yg74BsLobIlRWun5ZHzApbGÄ́`s׉	 7cassandra://IZ6RS0_lsj9-xgoj_DKKETkpANjL_SOFrhOB_87eMIY)` ׉	 7cassandra://eS810U8nC4Aicc8x3TBssuiI-8avqKpNlqNI-5kvqLY 5͠]`ݽ$>&Dט   (u׈   CNSvu  נ`ݽ#>&C ̲9׉H Mhttp://hbrmea.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Showcase-Home-RFP-with-plans.pdfGׁׁr׈E`ݽ#>&׉EJULY 2021
NEWSLETTER
To promote, educate and advocate for the Residential Building & Remodeling Industry; providing
resources that benefit industry professionals and consumers in the communities we serve.
Fulford Home Remodeling & Pella STL are the reining 2021
Champion Team with a score of 187! The competition was a
bullseye away for many teams to take the lead and others were
just there for the fun.
Over 70 members competed throwing axes while having some
food and drinks at the PWB annual event. Not to mention the
abundance of smiles and fellowship shared by all…...we hope
you enjoy the pictorial on the following pages.
WHATS INSIDE
Backfill,
Waterproofing,
Garage & Basement
Floor, Plumbing roughin
and Framing done
July has a lot going on with trade partners and
updates scheduled to have the mechanicals to
exterior completion by month end
PWB Scholarship Recipient Announcement
John Snapat, Ken Heidbreder & Bobby Robinson with
their awesome trophies. Brian Gaskill with Pella STL
(not pictured) had left before the announcement.
EVENT SPONSOR
Upcoming Events
 July 16 - Herschel E. Johnson Golf Classic
 Sep 17 - All Aboard with the Board
 Feb 25, 26, 27 2022 Home Show
Bury the Hatchet pictorial
Remodeling Excellence Awards Application
Membership Renewal Updates
NAHB Eye on the Economy News:
Most Popular Kitchen Features Study
Sawmill Output update
New Home Starts
Drone Refueling Station in the Metro East
Illinois Policy Institute: IL Unemployment Fund
Page 1
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׉	 7cassandra://51eQwzfqHnBwWn174xsZt-LmEKbJ_-sP8miNdF8SKFU/` `ݽ#>&׉EFRIDAY JULY 16, 2021
EVENT SPONSOR
___ $125 each Golfer
___ $ 20 p/team Mulligans
___ $ 20 p/team Skins
___ Cart Sponsor
___ Give-A-Way Sponsor
___ Stationary Beverage Sponsor
___ Course Contest Sponsor
___ $100 each Hole Sponsor Company name on course.
PARTICIPATION LEVELS
SOLD OUT
SOLD OUT
SOLD OUT
SOLD OUT
SOLD OUT
METHOD OF PAYMENT:
___ Check ___ Invoice (Members ONLY) ___ Charge to Visa/Mastercard*
Total Amount Due
$__________
Card# _______________________________________________
Exp Date ______ CVC# ________ Zip Code _______________
Signature_____________________________________________
•1st, 2nd & 3rd place Prizes for A & B flights
•Appropriate attire required: Soft Spike facility.
Men collared shirts, Ladies golf sleeveless shirts
permitted.
•Personal coolers are strictly prohibited!
No refunds or credits will be given for cancellations or no-shows after 6/29/2020
Home Builders & Remodelers Metro East Association
6100 West Main St., Maryville, IL 62062
Page 3
Please complete & Return Registration no later than July 9
____________________________________________________
Primary Contact
____________________________________________________
Company Name
____________________________________________________
Golfer Name(s)
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
_______________________________________
10am Registration · 11am Shotgun Start
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NAHB Study Finds Double Sinks & Pantries the
Most Popular Kitchen Features
BY PAUL EMRATH
In the recent NAHB study, What Home Buyers Really
Want, 2021 Edition, side-by-side double sinks and
walk-in pantries ranked as the most popular of 30
listed kitchen features. This result is based on a
comprehensive, nationwide survey of 3,247 recent
and prospective home buyers conducted in the
summer of 2020.
Among other things, the survey asked recent and
prospective buyers to rate over 200 home and
community features using the following, four-tier scale
(which emphasizes how a particular feature
influences the buyer’s purchase decision):
Topping the list of kitchen features, the side-by-side
double sink and walk-in pantry are rated essential or
desirable by 81 percent of buyers. More than four of
every 10 buyers think the double sink is so essential
they would be unlikely to buy a home without it, the
highest essential share of all kitchen features listed.
After the top two, four features are wanted by more
than 70 percent of buyers: table space for eating (78
percent), a central island (77 percent), drinking water
filtration (76 percent), and granite or other natural
stone countertop (73 percent). Not far behind, three
features are essential/desirable to more than twothirds
of all buyers: recessed lighting (69 percent),
customized backsplash (69 percent), and pull-out
shelves (68 percent). Overall, more than half of home
buyers rated 20 of the 30 kitchen features either
essential or desirable.
Millennial (born 1980 to 1996) and Gen X (born 1965
to 1979) buyers are more likely to want certain
kitchen features than their Boomer (born 1946 to
1964) counterparts, by a margin of 25 percentage
points in some cases. For example, a steam oven is
desirable or essential to 51 percent of Millennials and
to 47 percent of Gen X buyers, but only to 19 percent
of Boomers – a 32 point difference between the
youngest and oldest buyers. Likewise, considerable
shares (>50 percent) of the younger two generations
would be positively influenced to purchase a home if
the kitchen included a trash compactor, a wine
cooler, a central island with range, and a double
island. In contrast, the share of Boomers who want
those features only ranges from 25 to 37 percent. All
these generational differences are statistically
significant, and remain significant after controlling for
the income, race, geography and household
composition of the buyer.
To see home buyer preferences for other features (including all results broken down by Census division, age,
generation, race/ethnicity, income, priced expected to pay for the home, household composition, and firsttime
vs. repeat buyer) and a complete description of the survey design and sampling methodology,
please consult the full study.
Page 4
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the process of Building the HBR Showcase Home
FOUNDATION
WATERPROOFING
BACKFILL
CONCRETE
FLAT WORK
Page 6
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׉	 7cassandra://ZwM3MRvLtkAufl3TQ1WtKZXE1dQMaSgR9_snmHZik0A)]` `ݽ#>&`ݽ#>&(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://F8knp4gmYNt8K41W6-IC1ICacLOzK5oTyyXQQ7X8TNI `׉	 7cassandra://nCI_Cj2V0DUUmqHM6dszVOUBmGfRRcwPPPefGxxLcQgͨ@`s׉	 7cassandra://O8x59duTnQQIamD0qie27ofZaMo-_WMdCKnvD0lCCxw.` ׉	 7cassandra://3rVSHmvCQp0SeVYhee5FBLMnkOQ2Vu3vrRG-o5BWrxcͮj,͠]`ݽ%>&dט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://goQvKbxO6ZRp10ZP4z0cYypHdmehDdwTJmYc9f0YVbM h`׉	 7cassandra://G56osVQJdeFeQEpBuwDx2gRKqbfoNP331JE3eZ0Bel4͒`s׉	 7cassandra://tQku5dlmbg_C046dR-T9gm1vEbyIpiFHevtueLrlHvU0k` ׉	 7cassandra://kTPcAOSuR6vfmA6gzWxjQZ45JwpOvg5D_hz-kRbdfuw *L͠]`ݽ%>&eנ`ݽ$>&_ ̍Ӂc9׉H Xhttps://eyeonhousing.org/2021/05/building-materials-prices-continue-to-set-record-highs/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ$>&` j49׉H Dhttps://eyeonhousing.org/2020/09/how-many-homes-are-concrete-framed/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ$>&a ̠9׉H Dhttps://eyeonhousing.org/2020/09/how-many-homes-are-concrete-framed/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ$>&b l̅9׉H Whttps://www.cmegroup.com/trading/agricultural/lumber-and-pulp/random-length-lumber.htmlGׁׁrנ`ݽ$>&c 2̓9׉H *https://eyeonhousing.org/author/rdietz479/Gׁׁr׉EPost-Winter Storm Uptick for
Sawmill Output in March
The historic climb for lumber prices, combined with
delays and higher costs for other building materials,
is a significant limiting factor for home building in
2021.
Despite a historically diminished level of overall
housing inventory and solid demand due to low
mortgage interest rates and demographics, new
construction has been limited in its ability to add
needed supply to the market, resulting in
unsustainable gains for home prices.
Fortunately, real-time data indicate that lumber
prices are now falling with an expectation that prices
will decline below $1000 per thousand board feet in
the coming weeks.
Data indicate that domestic production did not kept
pace with the gains for home construction during an
extraordinary 2020. A cited reason for the lack of
lumber production in the U.S. has been challenges
with labor, a limiting factor for the overall economy
in both the manufacturing and construction sectors.
Bureau of Labor Statistics data indicate that, indeed,
sawmill industry employment is lower than a year
ago. As of March 2021, the most recent data
available, sawmill employment was 88,900.
This is an 0.8% decline from March 2020, or a net
loss of 700 jobs. In contrast, residential construction
employment was up 2.8% or 82,000 net jobs over
the same period.
Despite the decline in workers, sawmill output was
flat over the course of 2020, albeit along a choppy
trend. Revised data from the Federal Reserve
demonstrate that the seasonally adjusted rate of
sawmill output in March 2021 (the most recent
available) was 4% higher than that recorded in
March 2020, when the spring decline for production
began last year. March 2021 saw a 4.4% gain over
February 2021, due in part to a post-Winter Storm
Uri rebound.
Looking back, total 2020 sawmill output was up just
0.1% higher compared to 2019. This was due to an
upswing in production in November and December,
which followed a decline in the third quarter.
Its worth noting that on a seasonally adjusted basis,
the high point for U.S. sawmill output was May 2018.
Output is down 8% since that time despite
substantial price gains.
The 2020 output levels were insufficient to keep up
with the demand from residential construction. The
preceding graph presents single-family starts and
sawmill output indexed so that 2012 housing starts /
2017 sawmill output levels equal 100. The growing
gap between the two measures, particularly in 2020
when single-family starts expanded by 12%, is a
reason for the dramatic increase in lumber prices.
This impact on price can be seen above by adding
an indexed measure of the BLS Producer Price
Index for softwood lumber. These data indicate that
the rise in price was due, in part, to the inability of
lumber production to keep pace with residential
construction expansion. This gap, and the material
cost impact, can only be closed via a significant
increase in domestic production, more U.S. imports
of lumber, or a significant substitution to other
building materials.
Fortunately, lumber prices are now expected to
decline in the weeks ahead, as
indicated by recent activity in future markets.
Eye on Housing
BY ROBERT DIETZ
Page 8
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9׉H uhttps://www.defensenews.com/naval/2021/06/07/us-navy-boeing-conduct-first-ever-aerial-refueling-with-unmanned-tanker/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&p 30̌9׉H 1https://www.defensenews.com/author/megan-ecksteinGׁׁr׉E*By: Megan Eckstein
The Boeing MQ-25 T1 test asset transfers fuel to a U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet on June 4, marking the first time in history that an unmanned
aircraft has refueled another aircraft. The MQ-25 Stingray will assume the carrier-based tanking role currently performed by F/A18s,
allowing for better use of the combat strike fighters and helping extend the range of the carrier air wing. (Boeing)
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Navy conducted its firstever
aerial refueling between a manned aircraft and
an unmanned tanker on June 4, with a Boeingowned
MQ-25 Stingray test vehicle performing its
first midair tanking mission with a Navy F/A-18E-F
Super Hornet.
The test mission out of MidAmerica Airport in
Mascoutah, Illinois, proved the unmanned tanker
could successfully use the Navy’s standard probeand-drogue
aerial refueling method.
Once fielded, the MQ-25 will operate from aircraft
carriers, refueling the air wing operating at sea and
relieving the Super Hornet fleet of the tanking
mission, which the Navy has said can at times
account for more than one-third of Super Hornet
flight hours during carrier air wing operations.
The two F-18 aviators from Air Test and Evaluation
Squadron 23 were in radio contact with the MQ-25
operator, who was controlling the unmanned aerial
vehicle from a ground control station. Once the
operator deployed the hose and drogue from the
UAV, the Super Hornet came in for an even closer
look, Bujold said, before backing up and connecting
for the first time with the UAV.
The Super Hornet first did a “dry connect,” where all
the aerial refueling gear between the two aircraft
attached but no fuel was passed from the tanker to
the fighter.
On the second connection, 300 pounds of fuel was
passed from the MQ-25′s Aerial Refueling Store
pod to the Super Hornet. Bujold said this happened
while the aircraft were flying at operationally relevant
speeds at about 10,000 feet altitude.
Another smaller refueling was made at 16,000 feet,
passing 25 pounds of fuel to the Super Hornet.
Several additional dry connects were made as well,
ensuring that the procedures were good for
connecting and disconnecting the gear during a
flight.
In total, Bujold said, the mission lasted about four
and a half hours, and the two aircraft were
connected for dry or wet connects for more than 10
minutes total of that time. A total of 325 pounds of
fuel was passed from the MQ-25 to the Super
Hornet.
“Really the big deal on Friday was building this trust
and confidence and understanding of how it’s going
to be. But the really next step … is to get to the point
where we are a trusted partner in the combat
mission,” Bujold continued, saying that meant being
able to handle any flight profile the receiving aircraft
needed to fly, and ensuring the MQ-25 could
operate with other aircraft in the carrier air wing, too,
including the E-2D Advanced Hawkeye.
HBR has been told that this news
comes along with a large facility that
will be built near Mid America
Airport that will employee thousands!
We will continue to share updates as
they become available.
Page 14
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Belle-Clair
Fairgrounds
$800 per booth
HBR MEMBERS will
be offered first
look at the floor
plan and to
reserve booths
space
Page 15
׉	 7cassandra://YEl-T-KCT5SImTT7W9kv09n56z-hvQPicDrlY1PiIZs*` `ݽ#>&'`ݽ#>&&(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1kX3d9gHb0pCq5xhMUrlMLp5wq4ly1MjdPZwNbhWhcA `׉	 7cassandra://Ww3jluy6FMDn-Xzamx5tIMeRe60d9v_9EL6uUHbExMgz!`s׉	 7cassandra://JWUvdQok9cQ0VLhEp7M4iqqrinbB8mUqDAk3bwK95Ss)5` ׉	 7cassandra://Qy_ILKHEUtI3KQrjdWs3ey_Bnym-SJTTFJfSNJrAxMc ͠]`ݽ%>&uט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://frlCpFJQ4fbbiOuVUjdUCnCzy6d_KvcLxEu-gu-ixQc `׉	 7cassandra://MuxAIEeBZbs-nbZNh3LIMCFP1agXTMnvWfuwEfCvIRI͈`s׉	 7cassandra://94YL8GH4Ky6vF1NaZQ-igkTUT_wMekuvb9M5NKpb0qA+` ׉	 7cassandra://04XPtMgyUuW0vCPjen6XLN1cepZWJBO2eutu8OC3RVY j/͠]`ݽ%>&vנ`ݽ%>&t X9׉Hhttps://haengr.com/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& a+9ׁH !http://www.preferred-flooring.comׁׁЈנ`ݽ%>& A>9ׁH %mailto:preferredflooring618@gmail.comׁׁЈנ`ݽ%>& RTc9ׁH )http://www.glorifyingdesignandstaging.comׁׁЈנ`ݽ%>& -79ׁH  mailto:tiffanynimmons3@gmail.comׁׁЈנ`ݽ%>& A9ׁH !mailto:flawlessfoundation@att.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 16
׉	 7cassandra://JWUvdQok9cQ0VLhEp7M4iqqrinbB8mUqDAk3bwK95Ss)5` `ݽ#>&)׉E-RENEWING MEMBERS
1st National Bank of Waterloo - 13 years
Schmitt’s Troy Garage Door - 1 year
REMODELERS COUNCIL RENEWALS
AUTCO Home Appliances
Srogus Construction
NEW MEMBERS
Chris Hackman
5938 Countryside Lane
Freeburg, IL 62243
P: 618.410.4607
E: flawlessfoundation@att.net
Tiffany Nimmons
1 Timberwood Drive
Maryville, IL 62062
P: 618.530.6427
E: tiffanynimmons3@gmail.com
Web: www.glorifyingdesignandstaging.com
Brandi Oliver
636 N 4th Street
Breese, IL 62230
P: 618.526.9393
E: preferredflooring618@gmail.com
Web: www.preferred-flooring.com
Page 17
׉	 7cassandra://94YL8GH4Ky6vF1NaZQ-igkTUT_wMekuvb9M5NKpb0qA+` `ݽ#>&*`ݽ#>&)(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://OuZDD32fqVWfvGKlLKqQcdZOQnnLwKudydyc6q_PVGo ` ׉	 7cassandra://FQZIGltYhUNeMbr4DlMri_kHVGiHo_L1XbYyA44w86o͏`s׉	 7cassandra://hbjteFsWiCtvyKE-S3CNd0TpeSLGPtvpvw_M-RwUQFE%` ׉	 7cassandra://sB3kR3yBBe2zLfxtdIuozZEmlZhpJF9tWCatXMBB5Ms͖͠]`ݽ&>&ט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://g-ia8F-SVWmVy6Psl9lZrpUd6hU7JausNao_sKUIO5I #`׉	 7cassandra://vEiGEOvHhm2X9Cudl6PfsrgpRULnZ6HOW6pmuaUNbO0͓`s׉	 7cassandra://1QH2HWJFUO290ZS5upKCG1eoYam6_yXvTW8LQk9Y7Nk/` ׉	 7cassandra://lbHg61p3dhvBdBT_XmI7u8auihOFIYos2qDz6jQ5um8 #͠]`ݽ&>& נ`ݽ%>&x ̦̄9׉H mhttps://illinoispolicy.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=7fe208d3c85ffa1d03aeaade4&id=42ecbb0a57&e=d47d9f03aeGׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&y ̯9׉H \https://www.illinoispolicy.org/illinois-unemployment-fund-faces-potential-8-billion-deficit/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&z ,ȁ9׉H \https://www.illinoispolicy.org/illinois-unemployment-fund-faces-potential-8-billion-deficit/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&{ k9׉H \https://www.illinoispolicy.org/illinois-unemployment-fund-faces-potential-8-billion-deficit/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&| ̪RR9׉H Hhttps://www.theillinoize.com/articles/unemployment-insurance-fund-much-8Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&} ̿O9׉H Bhttps://spn.org/blog/replenish-state-unemployment-insurance-funds/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>&~ :n9׉H nhttps://www.illinoispolicy.org/552k-illinoisans-getting-or-seeking-unemployment-benefits-a-year-into-covid-19/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& X9׉H nhttps://www.illinoispolicy.org/552k-illinoisans-getting-or-seeking-unemployment-benefits-a-year-into-covid-19/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& .9׉H ohttps://www.bettergov.org/news/fact-check-pritzker-s-mostly-correct-about-illinois-historic-unemployment-spike/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& I9׉H ohttps://www.bettergov.org/news/fact-check-pritzker-s-mostly-correct-about-illinois-historic-unemployment-spike/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& /9׉H Khttps://www2.illinois.gov/ides/SitePages/NewsArticleDisplay.aspx?NewsID=541Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& h
̟9׉H Bhttps://spn.org/blog/replenish-state-unemployment-insurance-funds/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& dRk9׉H Ohttps://www.illinoispolicy.org/last-minute-illinois-budget-riddled-with-errors/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& ہ̈9׉H |https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=2643&GAID=15&GA=101&DocTypeID=HB&LegID=118807&SessionID=108&SpecSess=Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& O9׉H https://www.thecentersquare.com/illinois/business-groups-give-mixed-reaction-to-42-billion-illinois-budget/article_a5acb0a4-c302-11eb-af7d-df69742df795.htmlGׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& dX9׉H ghttps://www.illinoispolicy.org/illinois-sheds-7900-jobs-in-may-despite-national-recovery-from-covid-19/Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& 9I9׉H /https://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htmGׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& S}9׉H shttps://www2.illinois.gov/ides/LMI/Local%20Area%20Unemployment%20Statistics%20LAUS/PressRelease/State/state_may.pdfGׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& Uik9׉H nhttps://ilga.gov/legislation/billstatus.asp?DocNum=2800&GAID=16&GA=102&DocTypeID=SB&LegID=135528&SessionID=110Gׁׁrנ`ݽ%>& [`9׉H ehttps://www.illinoispolicy.org/tax-hikes-fail-to-balance-illinois-budget-but-lawmakers-raise-own-pay/Gׁׁr׉E'ILLINOIS UNEMPLOYMENT FUND FACES
POTENTIAL $8 BILLION
Patrick Andriesen
Jobs & Growth
Historic unemployment payouts related to the COVID-19 shutdowns left Illinois’ fund billions in
the hole. State leaders did nothing to fix it, meaning there could be reduced benefits for the
unemployed or higher taxes on employers trying to recover.
Illinois business leaders are worried after Springfield
lawmakers twice passed a state budget, but neither time
addresses the state’s Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund
that is as much as $8 billion underwater.
Illinois’ unemployment insurance program, designed to
offer partial wage relief to out-of-work Illinoisans, was $5.2
billion in the hole in mid-May, according to an analysis by
the State Policy Network. But the deficit could now be as
large as $8 billion, said Illinois Retail Merchants
Association President and CEO Rob Karr.
Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of
residents filing unemployment claims has soared to historic
highs.
Claims peaked in April 2020, when over 202,000
Illinoisans in a week filed for unemployment. That’s more
12 times the number of claims the Illinois Department of
Employment Security received in same period during the
Great Recession.
The Illinois’ unemployment insurance program, which pays
out claims through the state’s trust fund, spent $1 billion
from the trust and borrowed an additional $4.2 billion from
the federal government to address the surge in claims. The
state continues to pay out those benefits.
While Illinois’ unemployment rate remained at 7.1% in
May, Karr says employers who pay into the fund through
payroll taxes are concerned about how the state intends to
fill a hole that is at least $5.2 billion deep.
Illinois is federally mandated to assure the solvency of the
trust fund. When the balance dips too low, the state must
choose to either reduce unemployment benefits, increase
premiums on employers, reappropriate funds from other
state revenue sources or some combination of those fixes.
State lawmakers have expressed similar concerns over how
to maintain the solvency of the fund, including Illinois
House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, who warned the
unemployment fund “might be the most important social
safety net program we have in this state.”
Legislators pushed to reallocate a portion of state’s $8.1
billion share of federal American Rescue Plan Act funds to
fill the deficit in Illinois’ 2022 state budget. However, the
budget was passed twice without adding any such
appropriations.
The fiscal year 2022 budget, which takes effect July 1, does
include $100 million to provide unemployment funding for
non-education employees in schools, such as janitors and
cooks, through House Bill 2643. The bill also forgives
payment made to people who did not qualify as long as it
was no fault of their own.
Karr said these additional costs are expected to eat up the
increased funding from the legislature.
The Illinois Chamber of Commerce and Illinois
Manufacturers Association also criticized the state budget
for failing to address the shortfall.
Manufacturers President Mark Denzler questioned the
priorities in the budget, such as using $1 billion in federal
funds and spending “it on projects back in home districts
instead of taking on critical issues like helping replenish the
unemployment insurance trust fund that provided a lot of
benefits for workers over the last year.”
Karr said without an influx of money, lawmakers will be
forced to cut benefits for unemployed Illinoisans or
increase payroll taxes on employers trying to rehire
displaced workers.
Illinois lost 7,900 jobs in May. The dismal jobs report
leaves Illinois’ unemployment rate unchanged at 7.1%,
while the national unemployment rate declined to 5.8%.
Unfortunately for the nearly 440,000 Illinoisans still out of
work, the $42.3 billion budget Illinois lawmakers passed
might not replenish the unemployment trust fund but it does
contains a $655 million tax hike, while still
remaining unbalanced. Those taxes specifically strike at job
creation in a state already lagging the national recovery.
Page 18
׉	 7cassandra://hbjteFsWiCtvyKE-S3CNd0TpeSLGPtvpvw_M-RwUQFE%` `ݽ#>&?׉E=OFFICERS
P
L
A
T
I
N
U
M
President, Ryan Butler
Remington Properties
1st Vice President, Mike Lippert
Liese Lumber
2nd Vice President, Mike Needles
C.A. Jones, Inc.
Associate Vice President, Mindy Shafer
Wells Fargo Home Mortgage
Treasurer, Scott Gruber
First Mid Bank & Trust
Secretary, Jerry Yaekel
Yaekel & Associates, Inc.
Immediate Past President, Aaron Klemme
Klemme Construction
DIRECTORS
G
O
L
D
S
I
L
V
E
R
Allen
Roofing
& Siding
B
R
O
N
Z
Page 19
Jason Klein - Ameren Illinois
Barry Buchman - Arrowhead Building Supply
Matt Warren - Carrollton Bank
Coy Mullenix - CMI Construction
Michelle Rauk - Eagle Flooring
Mark Fulford - Fulford Construction
John Snapat - Fulford Home Remodeling
Steve Macaluso - Halloran Construction
Jon Edler - Henges Interiors
Robert Dee, Jr. - Homes by Deesign, Inc.
Scott Blumberg - Huntington Chase
Ken Diel - Kerber, Eck & Braeckel
Mike Lippert - Liese Lumber
Josh McDermott - J.T. McDermott Remodeling Contractors
Derek Brandmeyer - Light Brite
Jason Huelsmann - New Tradition Homes
David Padgett - Padgett Building & Remodeling
Ron Padgett - Padgett Building & Remodeling
Scot Lehr - Quality Installation & Home Improvement
Jeff Schmidt - RLP Development
Sue Schultz - Sandberg Phoenix & von Gontard P.C.
Mike Rathgeb - Spencer Homes
Mark Vogt - Vogt Builders, Inc.
Jim Vernier - Village of Shiloh
׉	 7cassandra://1QH2HWJFUO290ZS5upKCG1eoYam6_yXvTW8LQk9Y7Nk/` `ݽ#>&@`ݽ#>&?(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://EbDs1Bioh9wvMgcNrlICUXFvKgWmoNu-UT_KeW-cLE8 ;`׉	 7cassandra://hkPbTg6rEHg6MuYeUaNHvOLhmjRkiQFFPivM9Aq4pCQ?`s׉	 7cassandra://ndt7UERhUkHi9T4CvAoyrQdW8Rg0tJiLh5-3UmPLkfM#` ׉	 7cassandra://CouqiNo73YYnKLHohsIPWDhMtOm4RQtCmySRzM5A3hkX͠]`ݽ&>&נ`ݽ&>& ORw9ׁHhttp://www.hbrmea.orgׁׁЈנ`ݽ&>& Y<̍9ׁHmailto:tbutler@hbrmea.orgׁׁЈ׉E u6100 West Main Street
Maryville, IL 62062
Phone: 618-343-6331
E-mail: tbutler@hbrmea.org
Web: www.hbrmea.org
Page 20
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