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Thursday, November 21, 2024

McCombie: 'Thank you to the voters of the 89th District. I am humbled by your support and I look forward to working hard for you all!'

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State Rep. Tony McCombie (R-Savanna) | facebook.com/mccombieforilli

State Rep. Tony McCombie (R-Savanna) | facebook.com/mccombieforilli

State Rep. Tony McCombie, R- Savanna, took to Facebook on Nov. 8 to thank her constituents for her re-election to the state general assembly in Springfield.

First elected to represent the 71st District in 2016, according to her legislative biography, McCombie previously served as a member of city council and as mayor of Savanna.

“During my time in the House, I have challenged leaders in both parties to ensure Illinois taxpayers are protected and hard-working families in Illinois have safe neighborhoods, strong schools, economic opportunities and more freedom,” she wrote in a news release cited by the Journal-Standard. “Still, there is more work to do to drive success for our region and achieve the ethics and state government reforms needed to promote growth and get Illinois back on track."

A lifelong Savanna resident, McCombie also is a Western Illinois University graduate, earning a bachelor’s degree, according to her legislative bio, and she also is the owner of Blue Appraisals and works as a real estate broker with Mel Foster Company.

While serving in Springfield, McCombie picked up on several hot-button issues as a legislator, including the misuse of public benefits. She pointed out in a July Facebook post cited by Rock Island Today a personal experience she had with the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

“Many years ago, I was questioned by a new clerk (while) using my mother's SNAP card to buy her Ensure,” she wrote in the Facebook post. “She was only able to eat through a feeding tube at that point. Luckily I shopped local and the owner knew me and quickly remedied the situation but today there is little to question and grocery clerks around the district do talk to me about fraud.”

McCombie noted that many clerks tell her that they often harbor feelings of guilt about raising issues.

“They (clerks) feel guilty doing so because they want people to be helped but know this program has gotten too big to avoid the misuse,” she wrote on in the post on social media. “Misuse that will hurt those that need it the most.”

The article also noted that the Congressional Budget Office forecasts that SNAP will cost about $531 billion between 2024 and fiscal year 2028, the period covered by the next farm bill.

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