Pritzker Signs Legislation to
Strengthen Critical Access Hospitals
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[March 09, 2019]
During a visit to Ferrell Hospital in Saline County, Governor JB
Pritzker signed SB 1469 to strengthen critical access hospitals in
rural communities.
The following are the governor's remarks as prepared for delivery:
Today, we are taking a step to cement my
commitment to ensure that families across Illinois have access to
quality, affordable health care by strengthening critical access
hospitals.
Health care is a right, not a privilege. Your income or your zip
code should never dictate your access to that right.
Critical access hospitals are on the frontlines of our work to
provide quality health care in all of our communities.
They contend with unique challenges and barriers to provide care in
zip codes where there are no other options.
Every day, hospitals like Ferrell give patients the care they
deserve close to home.
And they are employers. Critical Access Hospitals are often some of
the largest employers in their local areas, providing jobs to
hundreds of hardworking people who are caring for their neighbors
and providing an absolutely essential service.
Ferrell Hospital, like its peers around the state, provides health
care and an economic anchor for the community, in the community, and
I assure you this administration will always support that value.
In a few moments, I will sign legislation to help these critical
institutions.
SB 1469 will bring significant resources back to our critical access
hospitals, where they were always intended to be.
When all is said and done, the bill I’m about to sign will mean $55
million in funding for critical access hospitals throughout the
state.
That’s going to have a profound impact on centers of health care and
community in regions across our state.
It will allow them to hire more doctors and nurses, expand
treatments and services, and provide even more Illinoisans the care
they deserve.
I’m grateful to the Illinois Hospital
Association, advocates, and members of the General Assembly for
passing this important legislation and I’m proud to sign it into
law.
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I also want to take a moment to underscore my
commitment to a Downstate Revitalization Plan. I’ve visited southern Illinois
several times in my first 52 days in office – most recently last week, when I
toured areas that were facing serious flooding threats.
I want you to know that southern Illinois matters to my administration, and I
want families who live here and raise their kids here to be able to stay here
and have the opportunity to succeed here.
To do that, we have to make our tax system more fair and yesterday, I announced
that my administration has begun negotiations to change our system from one that
is regressive and taxes everyone at the same rate to one that will make people
like me pay more and middle class families pay less. I call that the fair income
tax. Our proposal will put Illinois on a course toward firm fiscal footing and
make our system more fair everyone.
Under this plan, everyone who earns up to $250,000 will pay the same or less
than what they’re paying today. That’s 97% of Illinoisans.
We’ll provide property tax relief for homeowners, child tax credits for
families, and stability for our small businesses.
Most importantly, this plan addresses the most pressing challenge facing our
state, a multi-billion budget deficit and a $15 billion debt from unpaid bills.
In our current fiscal situation, there are only very few alternatives. If we
don’t pass a fair tax, we can make a drastic 15% cut to education, public
safety, economic development and other critical services. Or we can raise income
taxes by 20% on the middle class and everyone in Illinois, which would hurt
communities like those of you here in Eldorado. That’s why I choose to implement
a fair tax, asking the wealthiest 3% of Illinoisans to pay more, allowing us to
eliminate the budget deficit, pay down the bill backlog, balance future budgets
and reduce the pension liability.
I choose fairness – because it’s the best way to keep communities like yours
strong.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |