Illinois State Lawmakers Approve $42 Billion Budget Plan, Gov. JB Pritzker Plans To Sign It
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (CBS/AP) — The Illinois Legislature worked past its midnight deadline to approve a $42 billion state budget early Tuesday, and Gov. JB Pritzker said he'll sign the spending plan when it reaches his desk.
After both the Illinois House and Illinois Senate approved the spending plan, largely along party lines, Senate President Don Harmon, a Chicago Democrat, filed a motion to reconsider the vote, which prevented the legislation from immediately going to the governor's desk, but he withdrew that motion by Tuesday afternoon. It's unclear how soon lawmakers will officially send the budget to the governor for his signature.
The budget plan approved by majority Democrats is based on tax revenue sources that rebounded much faster from the global pandemic than expected and including $2.5 billion in spending from a multiyear federal relief package.
The plan assembled on the final scheduled day of the Legislature's spring session incorporated just a portion of the $8 billion Illinois expects in COVID-19 relief money that Congress approved last winter — but that pot includes $1.5 billion in additional construction projects.
House Majority Leader Greg Harris had pronounced a balanced budget that also reinstates the $350 million extra for public schools that was promised annually in a 2017 school-funding overhaul, but which Gov. J.B. Pritzker initially said would need to be skipped for a second year in a row.
"We're very lucky our revenues came up," said Harris, a Chicago Democrat.
The budget offers a far rosier picture than the "pain" — deep budget cuts — Pritzker predicted were inevitable after voters soundly rejected his proposed constitutional amendment in November to allow a graduated income tax system that hit the wealthier harder and would generate $3 billion extra a year.
Republicans denounced the ballot initiative as a blank check for free-spending Democrats, who control both houses of the General Assembly as well as the governor's office. As revenues continued to outpace predictions, they persisted in saying that Pritzker had more than enough money.
Their reward came in the form of a Pritzker concession to cut fewer of the business and job-producing incentives they negotiated in 2019 with the Democrat, tax breaks the governor touted then but now calls unaffordable "loopholes." Democrats crafting the budget were planning to cut three programs to generate $636 million in additional revenue. In February, Pritzker proposed eliminating eight incentive programs to save $1 billion.
Pandemic-battered sectors of the state would get $1.5 billion from Illinois' allotment of American Rescue Plan Act. Hundreds of millions of dollars would be reserved for the Department of Human Services for programs to help the homeless, prevent suicide, counsel schoolchildren through the last year's trauma, and provide services "for our first responders who have gone through a year of hell and deserve all the support we can give them," Harris said. The ailing tourism and hospitality industries would receive $578 million.
Illinois borrowed $5 billion from the federal government to pay unemployment benefits for those the pandemic displaced. ARPA would provide $100 million to pay interest on that loan, but principal retirement would wait.
But another huge pandemic-relief debt is off the books. The state owed $1.2 billion — payable by December 2023 — on a $3.2 billion federal loan. Pritzker and legislative leaders announced 10 days ago that they'd pay that loan off early, saving $100 million in interest.
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