Illinois' unpaid bill backlog hits a
record $16 billion
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[September 20, 2017]
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Illinois' pile
of unpaid bills topped $16 billion for the first time as the state deals
with the fallout of an unprecedented two straight fiscal years without
complete budgets, the state comptroller's office reported on Tuesday.
The bill backlog is growing despite the enactment of a fiscal 2018
spending plan and income tax increase in July that ended a budget
impasse between Illinois' Republican governor and Democrats who control
the legislature.
"What is going to take this backlog down is the borrowing," said Abdon
Pallasch, spokesman for Democratic state Comptroller Susana Mendoza.
A provision in the budget enacted by lawmakers over the vetoes of
Governor Bruce Rauner authorized the sale of up to $6 billion of general
obligation bonds to pay bills from vendors and service providers that
are accruing late payment penalties of as much as 12 percent.
Rauner signaled earlier this month that his administration will move
forward with the bond sale, saying "it’s better to have Wall Street
carry our debt than Main Street Illinois.”
But on Monday, the governor told reporters that the bonds do not solve
any problem because lawmakers failed to set aside money to make
principal and interest payments over the 12 years the debt would be
outstanding.
"We need to come up with roughly half a billion (dollars) of cuts just
to be able to service a bond offering," he said, adding that he planned
to meet with legislative leaders for discussion.
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Bruce Rauner speaks to the media after a meeting with U.S. President
Barack Obama and other Governor-elects from seven U.S. states at the
White House in Washington December 5, 2014. REUTERS/Larry
Downing/File Photo
Pallasch said school aid and pension payments this week will lower
the bill backlog into the $15 billion range as the Dec. 31 deadline
for issuing the bonds looms.
"The ball's in their court now and we are working with them to make
this happen," he said.
Illinois, which has the lowest credit ratings among the 50 states,
evaded downgrades to junk with the budget enactment. Yields on its
debt in the U.S. municipal bond market also fell due to the action.
The state's so-called credit spread over Municipal Market Data's
benchmark triple-A yield scale for 10-year bonds has dropped to 175
basis points from a 335 basis-point high in June.
(Reporting by Karen Pierog; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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