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		Illinois school funding battle looms amid 
		budget progress 
		
		 
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		 [June 28, 2016] 
		CHICAGO (Reuters) - Illinois 
		Governor Bruce Rauner expressed optimism on Monday that the financially 
		struggling state could begin fiscal year 2017 on Friday with a temporary 
		budget in place to fund essential services. 
           However, a battle is brewing over a full-year spending plan for 
			K-12 schools with Senate Democrats seeking a nearly $400 million 
			boost for the cash-starved Chicago Public Schools (CPS)despite the 
			governor's opposition. 
			 
			The nation's fifth-largest state has limped through the current 
			fiscal year without a complete budget, relying on court-ordered 
			spending and ongoing stopgap appropriations to operate in the wake 
			of an impasse between the Republican governor and Democrats who 
			control the legislature. 
			 
			Lawmakers ended their spring session on May 31 without passing a new 
			budget, raising questions over Illinois' ability to operate for a 
			second straight fiscal year without a spending plan. 
			 
			The legislature is back in session on Wednesday for the first time 
			this month. 
			 
			Rauner is pushing legislation that would fund state services until 
			January and provide a $240 million increase for schools over the 
			entire fiscal year. 
		
		  "I think the good news is it looks like we pretty well have an 
			agreement on the stopgap budget itself," Rauner told reporters at an 
			Illinois State Capitol news conference, characterizing remaining 
			differences with Democrats on spending levels as minor. 
			 
			The governor warned the school funding bill remains imperiled by 
			Democratic demands for a CPS "bailout" that he refuses to support. 
			 
			"CPS has been financially mismanaged for decades. It's not the fault 
			of the people of Illinois," Rauner said, adding that bankruptcy was 
			a better option for the district. 
			 
			The third-largest U.S. public school system had been seeking $480 
			million from Illinois for teacher pensions and a revamping of the 
			state school funding formula to ensure more money flows to poor 
			students. 
			 
			
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			Republican Bruce Rauner smiles after winning the midterm elections 
			in Chicago, Illinois, 
			November 4, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Young 
            
              
			A bill Senate Democrats plan to introduce on Tuesday would hike 
			general state aid to schools by $760 million, with nearly $287 
			million of that earmarked for CPS, which would get another $112 
			million for pensions. 
			 
			Senate President John Cullerton is hopeful that a bipartisan budget 
			plan and school funding bill will come up for votes when the 
			legislature meets on Wednesday, according to a statement from his 
			office. Steve Brown, a spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan, 
			said the House will "vote on measures that reflect the progress that 
			has been made by the stopgap budget working group." 
			 
			(Reporting by Karen Pierog; Additional reporting by Dave McKinney; 
			Editing by Matthew Lewis and Bill Rigby) 
			
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