Illinois Governor Budget Address:
Building on Steady Progress, Pritzker Delivers Second Balanced
Budget Proposal to Continue to Make Our State Stronger
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[February 20, 2020]
Building
on the steady progress made since he took office, Governor JB
Pritzker proposed his second balanced budget that takes a
disciplined approach to managing the state’s limited resources while
also making crucial investments that will make our state stronger.
Click here
to read the Budget
in Brief and
the complete FY21 Budget
Book.
GOV.
PRITZKER'S FY21 BUDGET ADDRESS
Speaker
Madigan, President Harmon, Leader Durkin, Leader Brady, Lieutenant
Governor Stratton, my fellow Constitutional Officers, Honorable
Members of the General Assembly, the incomparable First Lady MK,
distinguished guests and people of Illinois —
My
friends, not long ago I shared with you news of our state’s progress
over the last year and my genuine confidence that our future is
bright and that Illinois is growing stronger each day.
I know I
have a reputation for being a bit of an irrepressible optimist –
something somewhat unusual among those who have held this job
recently – but I believe that the cynics had their years in power
and that the people of Illinois suffered because of them.
Being a
cynic is easy.
Cynicism,
after all, demands only that you believe in the worst and do nothing
to stop it from happening.
It’s
optimism that’s hard. Because optimism demands hope, and patience,
and faith...and most importantly, action.
Last year
we began turning our ship of state in the right direction. Today we
have the lowest unemployment rate in our history. We gave pay raises
to working people. And once again we began attracting more students
who want to go to college here, because we made college more
affordable.
Our
resurgence has been fueled by the very source of our historic
resilience: the fundamental strength and goodness of our people, who
demonstrate time and again that they can overcome any challenge that
comes their way.
Never bet
against that.
Before I
took office, we had two long years without a state budget, longer
than any other state in U.S. history. It nearly destroyed the lives
of the most vulnerable children and families in Illinois, and it
left all of us with billions of dollars in unpaid bills. It forced
us to figure out how we would rebuild mental health care and schools
and universities and how we would attract job creators and give
working families a fighting chance.
And we did
start to figure it out. Last year Republicans and Democrats alike
rolled up our sleeves, worked out our differences and produced a
bipartisan, balanced budget that has begun to put our state back on
a sound fiscal path.
FINANCIAL
IMPROVEMENTS
We’ve
taken enormous strides forward to undo years of financial
mismanagement.
For
example, the state entered 2019 with almost $8 billion in unpaid
bills. But a year later, responsible fiscal management has reduced
that bill backlog by nearly $1 billion. Our late payment penalties,
which had reached $950 million before I became governor, will fall
to just over $100 million this fiscal year. In this regard I want to
praise the tremendous efforts of our Comptroller Susana Mendoza and
our Treasurer Michael Frerichs – who have been tireless advocates on
behalf of getting our fiscal house in order.
From 2015
to 2017, credit rating agencies downgraded our state’s credit 8
times, which means Illinois taxpayers were paying higher interest
rates. But this year, rating agencies and analysts have noted a
“distinct improvement” in our fiscal stability, and interest rates
on our bonds have tumbled to their lowest rate since 2013. That will
save tens of millions of dollars for taxpayers.
Greater
fiscal stability, fewer unpaid bills, lower interest payments —
these are all monumental achievements in light of our state’s fiscal
condition just 13 months ago. How are we doing it? Most of these
advances are attributable to a disciplined approach to managing our
state’s limited resources responsibly, and it’s important that we
continue that hard work in the years ahead. The budget I propose to
you today will build on the steady progress we’ve been making over
the last year.
Our
choices remain hard; our financial situation challenging.
In the
context of the past devastation wreaked upon our state, the proposal
I share today takes a disciplined approach to managing our limited
resources while also investing in the very efforts that will make
our state stronger: better schools, greater public safety, more job
creating businesses, improved care for our most vulnerable children
and seniors.
After
years of poor fiscal management, of past leaders lying about how we
got here, of scapegoating the wrong people and problems – our
constituents deserve some honesty.
No amount
of wishful thinking will wave away our structural deficit or our
pension obligations. No amount of lip service will balance the
budget or fund our schools or improve public safety.
I want to
give you one stark example of why a change in approach was so
desperately needed. Bruce Rauner went to war with labor unions, and
one consequence of that was millions of dollars in costs for the
state due to litigation and back pay. In contrast, when I came into
office I negotiated substantial health care savings and finalized
fair contracts with state workers. As a result, the upcoming fiscal
year’s budget will spend $175 million less, and we will save $650
million over 4 years.
Lowering
the wages of workers, trying to bankrupt the state and seeking to
destroy government … didn’t work.
Also,
trying to separate Chicago from the rest of Illinois, whether
rhetorically or literally, will not solve the economic challenges of
downstate Illinois. Quite the opposite. Some of you need to stop
pretending that one part of Illinois can exist without all the
others. We are … one Illinois.
There are
realities about running a state and caring for our people that we
have to face with more clear-eyed resolve, with a focus on unity and
far less partisanship. Our future genuinely does depend on it.
EFFICIENCIES
Once again
this year, I approached this budget looking to use taxpayer dollars
as efficiently as possible. I’m pleased to say that this proposed
budget saves taxpayers more than $225 million annually and more than
$750 million over three years through operational efficiencies,
possible agency consolidations, and the elimination of excess boards
and commissions. And there is potentially $100 million more in
additional structural savings in fiscal year 2022 and beyond through
long term initiatives.
I believe
that we are sent here to effectively manage the resources necessary
to deliver what Illinois families need: good schools and healthcare,
clean water and clean air, paved roads and sturdy bridges, a growing
economy.
Let’s all
agree that effective government demands efficient government.
BUDGET
STABILIZATION
As we
continue to make progress repairing the financial damage of the
past, we must begin restoring safeguards for our future. It starts
by building up reserves in our Budget Stabilization Fund, more
commonly referred to as the Rainy Day Fund. It’s been more than a
decade since the last contribution was made to the Rainy Day Fund,
and it was almost entirely wiped out in 2017 under my predecessor.
The budget
I am introducing today begins to restore it, dedicating $100 million
to the Rainy Day Fund over the next 16 months. In addition, in
concert with Senator Heather Steans, who is one of the General
Assembly’s most responsible budgeteers, Comptroller Susana Mendoza
recently proposed legislation that will create mandatory annual
contributions to the Rainy Day Fund – a great step to improve fiscal
protection for Illinois’ future.
CREATING
JOBS AND REVENUE
Here’s
another responsible step we’re taking together: Last year we worked
on a bipartisan basis to pass a new source of general funds revenue
and create tens of thousands of jobs with the legalization of
adult-use cannabis. Our first focus was on making this law the most
socially equitable in the nation. That’s why 25 percent of revenues
are earmarked to reinvest directly in the communities most severely
impacted by the war on cannabis.
Licensing
fees from the first round of medical dispensaries have already
provided a $30 million loan fund so that social equity applicants
have access to capital to start new cannabis related businesses – a
program that doesn’t exist in any other state at this scale. And I
pardoned more than 11,000 individuals with low-level cannabis
convictions. That’s just the beginning of our effort to remove
barriers to housing, employment and education for hundreds of
thousands of people.
With a
successful first month of sales under our belt, I can conservatively
project that adult-use cannabis sales will generate at least $46
million in revenue for our general fund in the coming fiscal year,
of which $10 million will go directly to pay down our bill backlog.
A second
new source of revenue we passed last year is from expanded gaming –
including sports betting, which appears on track to be up and
running in time for March Madness. As you know, gaming revenue
directly funds our bipartisan, historic Rebuild Illinois capital
plan which provides critical relief to state and local budgets for
badly needed maintenance and construction work at our universities,
community colleges and state facilities.
My office
is working with the City of Chicago and the General Assembly to make
a much needed adjustment in the legislation passed last spring to
help make sure the Chicago casino is a success that will help fund
projects throughout our state. I hope you all will join me in
supporting these legislative efforts when they come before the
General Assembly this session.
A BRIDGE
TO FAIRNESS FOR ALL ILLINOISANS
Most
importantly, this budget represents a bridge to the future, where I
believe we have an opportunity to change our tax structure so
working families are treated more fairly.
For at
least the last 50 years, the burden of shoring up our state finances
has fallen hardest on the 97 percent of Illinoisans who make
$250,000 a year or less. You’ve been paying a higher portion of your
income, when you include income taxes, property taxes and sales
taxes, than those who make a million dollars a year or more! That’s
not fair, and I’ve made it very clear that I believe it’s time for a
change.
Last year,
this General Assembly took an important step forward, and passed
income tax rates so that working class and middle-class families
will pay a lower rate and wealthy people will pay a higher rate. I
believe this is far more fair than the flat tax rate we have today.
These rates would go into effect only if Illinois removes the
constitutional prohibition on a graduated tax, a decision that will
be made by voters in November. If the constitutional amendment is
passed, those rates will go into effect Jan. 1, 2021 – midway
through our budget year.
As your
governor, I take seriously my constitutional duty to offer a
balanced budget that lives within our means as a state, whatever may
transpire. To address the uncertainty in our revenues, this budget
responsibly holds roughly $1.4 billion in reserve until we know the
outcome in November. Because this reserve is so large, it inevitably
cuts into some of the things that we all hold most dear: increased
funding for K-12 education, universities and community colleges,
public safety and other key investments – but as important as these
investments are, we cannot responsibly spend for these priorities
until we know with certainty what the state’s revenue picture will
be.
Even if
the graduated income tax does not take effect, our budget
nevertheless continues our progress, although at a much slower pace
than I think we require to get ourselves out of the hole previous
administrations have dug for us. And if the graduated tax rates do
take effect, this budget proposal takes major steps to stabilize our
fiscal condition and build on the historic investments and
improvements we’ve made across the board to better serve the people
of our state.
PENSIONS
One of
Illinois’ most intractable problems is the underfunding of our
pension systems.
We must
keep our promises to the retirees who earned their pension benefits
and forge a realistic path forward to meet those obligations.
The
fantasy of a constitutional amendment to cut retirees’ benefits is
just that – a fantasy. The idea that all of this can be fixed with a
single silver bullet ignores the protracted legal battle that will
ultimately run headlong into the Contracts Clause of the U.S.
Constitution. You will spend years in that protracted legal battle,
and when you’re done, you will have simply kicked the can down the
road, made another broken promise to taxpayers, and left them with
higher tax bills.
This is
not a political football. This is a financial issue that is complex
and requires consistency and persistence to manage, with the goal of
paying the pensions that are owed.
That’s why
my budget delivers on our full pension payment and then some, with
$100 million from the proceeds of the graduated income tax dedicated
directly to paying down our pension debt more quickly. We should
double that number in subsequent years. Next year would be the first
year in state history that we will make a pension payment over and
above what is required in statute. It begins to allow us to bend the
cost curve and reduce our net pension liability faster.
At the
same time, without breaking our promises, we must relentlessly
pursue pension initiatives that reduce the burden on taxpayers. This
year, the State’s required payment to the State Employees Retirement
System alone will be $32 million less than it would’ve been without
the optional pension buyout program. We extended that program last
year – because it’s good for taxpayers. That’s why I’ve asked all of
the state’s retirement systems to fully implement buyout programs
across all our systems.
What we do
to reduce future net pension liabilities for our state and local
pension plans has enormously positive benefits for taxpayers. Last
year, working with members of this General Assembly, we did what no
one had been able to do after more than 70 years of trying:
consolidate the investments of the 650 local police and firefighters
funds into two statewide systems. Because of their collective size,
these funds are projected to see billions of dollars of improved
returns over the next 20 years. That means lower property tax
pressure on families and businesses across the state.
This is a
great example of how both sides of the aisle can come together with
reasonable solutions to address intractable problems. Let’s continue
on that path.
EDUCATION
Over the
past year we have made great strides to improve our schools and
build back our higher education system, and this budget continues
those investments.
Higher Ed
For more
than a decade, our state universities saw significant declines in
enrollment. But today, because of the important investments we made
in MAP grants and school funding, for the first time in many years,
applications are up at our public universities — and some schools,
including UIUC and Illinois State, are seeing an increase in
applications not just from in-state students, but out-of-state too.
Investments in our universities are giving people and companies from
all over America, and the world, new reasons to choose Illinois.
Just last week, I announced that with the support of businesses and
philanthropists, the state will invest in University of Illinois’
new technology hub called Discovery Partners Institute. With it,
we’re supporting nearly 50,000 new economy jobs in the next ten
years, with an economic impact of $19 billion. Integral to DPI’s
success is the Illinois Innovation Network, which will radiate
across the state to 15 other university campus hubs from Chicago to
Rockford to Peoria to Edwardsville. We’re investing in workforce
development, innovation and R&D all across our state.
DPI is
already succeeding. Azriel Alvarado was born here in Illinois, and
then moved to Panama with his parents when he was very young. He
never lost his Illinois roots though, and dreamed of attending the
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign to study computer
science.
[to top of second column] |
Azriel set
his sights on their world-renowned engineering program, moving home
to Illinois to attend Oakton Community College and settle back into
his life in the United States. After two years, he was accepted as a
transfer student into the U of I engineering school and hasn’t
looked back. Azriel says most people don’t imagine community college
as the path to academic success. But he learned that the most
popular way to do things isn’t always the best way to do things.
He’s now studying as a DPI City Scholar and intends to set down
roots and become a computer scientist here in Illinois.
Azriel is
just one example of how investing in our state can attract and
retain invaluable talent. Azriel is here today, and I’d ask him to
stand so we can recognize your terrific achievements.
Making
college more affordable for in-state high school students ought to
be among our state’s highest priorities. My budget proposal for next
year aims to make community college tuition free to all MAP-eligible
students whose families make under $45,000 a year.
Today we
have two students here whose families and communities will be
stronger thanks to their hard work and our investments in MAP
grants. They personify exactly why we need to set aside MAP funding
especially for community college students. Lincoln Land Community
College here in Springfield is lucky to count them among their
student body.
When
Lauren Hernandez was 12, her 6-year-old sister was diagnosed with
cancer. After watching how hard the nurses worked to help her sister
every day, she felt drawn to the healthcare profession. When her
sister passed away a few years later, it cemented Lauren’s
conviction to become a nurse. Today, Lauren is married and the
mother of a beautiful baby boy – and MAP grants are covering the
portion of her tuition that she couldn’t afford. She’s the first
person in her family to attend college. She’s working overnight
shifts at St. Francis Hospital. And she’s why our future as a state
is so bright. Please give Lauren a round of applause for her hard
work and commitment.
I also
want to introduce you all to Brandon Ihlenfeldt, who earned his GED
at Lincoln Land and is in the final semester of his H-VAC program.
He’ll graduate this spring with a degree and the ability to do work
that he loves. Brandon is also a husband and a father, and after a
full day at work at Illinois National Bank and a full evening at
school, he finds time to spend with his family. But he knows that an
education is the key to being able to get a good job to support
them. Without MAP grants, he would’ve had to take on loans and debt,
with two young children. For Brandon, this is an opportunity he
wouldn’t have had otherwise; and it’s an opportunity you all made
possible by expanding the MAP grant program. Please give a round of
applause to a great family man and a hard worker, Brandon Ihlenfeldt.
There is
no more critical investment we can make in the future of our state
than in our bright and ambitious young people, like Azriel, Lauren
and Brandon.
So my
budget proposal adds another 20,000 new scholarship students
overall, on top of the 10,000 additional MAP grant and AIM High
scholars you funded this year. And we will continue rebuilding our
universities and community colleges with a 5 percent funding
increase which, among other things, allows the University of
Illinois to provide free tuition for students whose families make
less than $67,000 per year.
K-12
Another
way to make college more affordable is to help our students earn
college credit before they even graduate high school, potentially
savings thousands of dollars in tuition down the road.
Administrators and teachers across the state are engaged in this
work — and it’s making a difference at places like Fenton High
School, a majority-minority high school in Chicago’s western suburbs
where most students qualify as low-income.
A few
years ago, a snapshot of an Advanced Placement classroom at Fenton
didn’t look much like the actual student body. So Fenton’s
leadership began expanding their Advanced Placement program, and
they now reach a third of the entire student body. Even more
impressively: AP scores have gone up across all racial and ethnic
groups.
In March,
the College Board named Fenton “Advanced Placement District of the
Year.”
Fenton
provided the opportunity for their students to achieve extraordinary
success and to save thousands of dollars on their first year’s
tuition. We should follow Fenton’s lead and make it easier for more
students to earn college credit in high school. My budget proposal
last year requested $2 million to defray the cost of AP test fees
for low income students, and you approved it. I’m making a request
for FY21 of $2.5 million. It’s an innovative and cost-effective way
to make college more affordable.
Speaking
of removing financial barriers to college: 23 years ago our state
launched an investment program that lured tens of thousands of
Illinois families to invest early in their children’s educations
through the College Illinois program. The program’s creators didn’t
forecast that tuition increases would outstrip market returns, and
we find ourselves in a place today where the program will be
insolvent in six years. We didn’t create this problem – but we are
charged with fixing it and rather than wait until the last minute,
my budget puts a $27 million down payment on solvency for College
Illinois in FY21. It’s time to make good on the existing contracts
families signed up for and reassure them that their children's
college tuition will be paid.
We all
want our children to go to college prepared to succeed, and that
means investing in public schools that serve all our students from
their earliest days. This budget makes a historic investment in K-12
schools, with a new $350 million of equitable funding, as Illinois
continues down the path of ending our ignominious distinction as the
worst state in the nation for state funding of public education.
This is
not nearly enough to fund our schools properly and allow us to
alleviate spiraling local property tax burdens throughout our state.
But in a year dominated by limited resources and guided by prudent
decisions about our state budget, this is the strongest investment
we can afford to make today.
Funding
isn’t the only determinant of a healthy school. Great teachers make
great schools. But we have thousands of unfilled teaching positions
throughout Illinois. This budget invests in strengthening our future
teacher pipeline with increased funding for the Illinois Golden
Apple teacher preparation program and scholarships. I’m also
proposing support for accelerator programs that help people who are
seeking a second career in teaching to transition into the
profession faster.
In
addition, this budget seeks to address the mental health concerns
that schools face with their students every day. I’ve directed our
Emergency Management Agency, Board of Education and State Police to
apply for federal grants to launch a statewide school violence
prevention tip line, a highly effective concept pioneered in
Colorado after the Columbine tragedy. And I’ve proposed state
funding to supplement the federal grants and develop curriculum to
change the culture of stigma and silence around mental health.
Students, parents, teachers, friends, will be able to call in with
real concerns about a child’s wellbeing — possibly even about their
survival. And a professional can check in on them. Here in Illinois,
our tip line will be called Safe2Help Illinois, a confidential
reporting program intended to be available via text, phone call,
app, and social media platforms.
Early
Childhood
Prioritizing our youngest Illinoisans offers the strongest return on
investment for our future. Kindergarten is nearly too late to begin
educating a child – social emotional development begins at birth,
and a child’s earliest interactions are the most important ones.
That’s why I’m determined to make Illinois the best state in the
nation to raise young children.
When our
families lack access to quality early childhood education and
childcare, we all lose. I propose expanding our early childhood
block grant funding by an additional $50 million – not as much as I
would like – but responsibly moving our state another step toward
universal preschool for every low-income child.
This
budget also allows us to move forward on my pledge to offer
evidence-based home visiting services to all of our most at-risk
families with very young children, a service that is proven to pay
dividends in supporting parents.
For too
many families, quality childcare has become prohibitively expensive.
Low and middle income parents are those hit the hardest by a rise in
child care costs that has not kept pace with wages. I’m proud to
propose a continued expansion of the Child Care Assistance Program
so that we can maximize federal funding to offer reduced co-pays for
families of the children we serve and improve the quality of the
care they receive. This will result in eligible families paying no
more than 7 percent of their income for childcare.
HEALTH
CARE AND HUMAN SERVICES
Since I
took office, it’s been a priority to provide health care that is
accessible, preventative and equitable. For the second year in a
row, I am proposing a substantial increase in mental health and
addiction treatment services. This 2021 budget includes a $40
million increase, funded in large part by revenues from the
successful roll out of adult use cannabis, which dedicates 22
percent of cannabis taxes to these programs.
When I
took office a year ago, we were handed an enormous Medicaid backlog
of more than 140,000 people who had applied for health care coverage
but whose applications were simply never reviewed. This includes
newborns, families with young children and seniors entering nursing
care at the end of their lives. People got sick and couldn’t see a
doctor. Some of the people on the list waited for more than a year.
That’s
unconscionable.
So my
teams at HFS, DHS, and DoIT worked in a concerted, collaborative
effort and have reduced the backlog by 70,000 people. That’s
healthcare coverage for a population the size of Decatur. There’s
more to do, and we are committed to doing it. That’s why this budget
adds employees at the Department of Human Services, allowing them to
help finish the job.
We also
budgeted $4.5 million to restore the vital health care navigator
program that the Trump administration eliminated, leaving hundreds
of thousands of families and employers without any assistance. This
program helps small businesses and their employees and families
lower their healthcare costs as they look for coverage options
through the federal insurance marketplace.
Last year,
we began restoring funding to the Home Delivered Meals program to
reduce the existing waitlist and deliver proper nutrition to
thousands more senior citizens. It’s a program that improves quality
of life and saves money in the long run through a reduction in
chronic health problems. For the coming year, I’ve once again
proposed an increase of $2 million for the program. As Donald Trump
continues to attack the safety net for seniors, my administration is
doing everything we can to fight back.
Our
Department of Public Health has been hard at work over the last
year, restoring the federal immunization program that my predecessor
closed down, which allowed us to beat back a potential outbreak of
measles and other diseases across Illinois. And once again DPH has
done outstanding work coordinating with Chicago health officials and
the CDC in fighting coronavirus. Thanks to their collective good
work, the risk to the public remains low.
I’m also
particularly proud that this budget supports the necessary
additional funding for DPH to maintain our current service levels
for family planning and related health services—without caving to
the Trump Administration’s outrageous gag rule on women’s
reproductive rights.
Child
Welfare (DCFS)
There’s
nowhere in state government that needs more attention and resources
than the Department of Children and Family Services.
There are
no overnight fixes for DCFS, no easy promises that can be made, no
simple solutions for an agency that deals with some of our most
complex societal problems.
There is
an old saying that the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago.
And the second best time to plant a tree is today.
So we
began planting trees last year by bringing in new DCFS leadership
and outside expert advisors and monitors. Every staff person, from
top to bottom is being retrained. New policies and procedures have
been enacted, the hotline has deployed new technology and added
staff.
We’re
moving forward with new ideas from experts that will transform the
agency. Many of the most important reforms of DCFS that are being
enacted were recommended by respected experts like Chapin Hall at
the University of Chicago and Casey Family Programs. Outside
contractors are also working with DCFS and DoIT to bring better
technology to improve how cases are tracked and more prolific use of
mobile technology for caseworkers to keep better records. After I
heard from frontline workers a year ago that their jobs were harder
because they couldn’t test parents on-site for substance abuse, we
started rolling out on-site drug testing again.
We have a
nationally acclaimed simulation program with a training lab in
Springfield and newer one in Chicago, both of which provide
real-life scenario training for frontline workers. Case workers and
investigators are being retrained in these simulations labs so they
can learn new techniques to manage difficult cases and
investigations. Some of you have already visited these simulation
labs, and I invite all of you to do so if you haven’t – and you will
see why I insisted that our FY21 budget allow DCFS to open a third
simulation lab in southern Illinois.
Overall,
this budget proposal for DCFS increases funding by 20% compared to
what the state was spending in FY19. We will increase personnel
numbers by nearly 150 new staff — that’s on top of the 300 workers
we added over the last year. This would represent an 11 percent
staffing increase over the past two years. For the contracted
agencies who carry out much of the work helping children and who
struggle to retain staff because of the state’s poor funding and
payment delays, we are increasing funding by nearly 4 percent – only
the third increase in 19 years.
One of the
moral tests of government is how we treat our most vulnerable. The
funding needs of DCFS should transcend party and partisanship and be
a cause we can all rally around.
CLOSING
It’s
become something of a political sport in this state over the last
several years to present our fiscal issues as insurmountable. I’m
here to tell you, they are not.
Our budget
challenges are hard, no doubt about it – but it’s a myth to think
they were ever easy. Our state has grown and changed so much over
the years and the complexities of running our government have
evolved with it. Our future will not be built on the shaky
rhetorical foundation of those who keep rooting for us to fail.
Every
decision we make about how we spend the money our citizens trust to
our keeping is, at its root, a deeply moral undertaking.
These
lines on a budget spreadsheet – they give peace to sleepless nights
worrying about medical bills, they are delivery on a deferred dream,
they stand between poverty and prosperity. A road that is properly
repaired and maintained is a car accident than never happens. A
strong education system is the slingshot to success allowing a child
to thrive. Fully funding public safety means a life saved, a crime
solved and a justice system that is more equitable and fair.
Every
worry that we erase, every dream that we fund, every obstacle we
remove is a small bit of happiness that we give back to our
citizens. Sometimes we forget that in 2020.
We can add
happiness back into people’s lives. The pursuit of happiness is the
real rhetorical and moral foundation of our government. The founders
were optimists too, it turns out.
With that
singular focus at the heart of all that we do, with an eye to our
future and with prudence and responsibility as our guiding lights, I
submit this budget proposal, and I urge the General Assembly to work
with me in the pursuit of happiness for all Illinoisans.
Thank you.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |