Illinois governor looks to income tax change to boost
Fiscal Year 2021 revenue
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[February 20, 2020] CHICAGO
(Reuters) - Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker proposed a $42 billion
fiscal 2021 general funds budget on Wednesday that includes $1.4 billion
in new revenue from a change in the state's income tax rate structure
that may or may not be approved by voters in November.
The Democratic governor's second budget since taking office in January
2019 would put that revenue in reserve pending the outcome of the vote
on a constitutional amendment to replace the state's current flat income
tax rate with graduated rates starting Jan. 1.
Pritzker has championed the move as a way to raise $3.6 billion a year
for the financially challenged state by taxing high earners more.
"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," he said in his budget address.
Illinois has the lowest credit ratings among states at a notch or two
above junk due to its $137.3 billion unfunded pension liability and
chronic structural budget deficit.
Its backlog of unpaid bills stood at $7.3 billion on Wednesday. Pritzker
is recommending the Democrat-controlled legislature lower the maximum
12% late payment penalty on overdue bills.
The spending plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1 includes $8.6
billion for pensions and an additional $100 million contribution if the
income tax amendment passes. Senior administration officials said there
were no plans to sell pension bonds or lengthen the pension funding
schedule. Meanwhile, a report from a task force exploring boosting
pension funding through state asset transfers is expected soon.
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lllinois Governor J.B.
Pritzker delivers remarks at the North America's Building Trades
Unions (NABTU) 2019 legislative conference in Washington, U.S.,
April 9, 2019. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
The governor proposed allocating as much as $100 million to the state's budget
stabilization fund, which contained just $3.6 million at the end of fiscal 2019,
although $50 million is contingent on the constitutional amendment's passage.
While Democratic legislative leaders were generally positive about Pritzker's
budget, Republicans were wary about the potential $1.4 billion revenue gain.
"This budget is trying to sell a tax increase," Senate Republican Leader Bill
Brady said in a public television interview.
Some of the governor's proposed increases in education spending, including $150
million of a $350 million boost for the state's elementary and secondary school
funding formula, would depend on adoption of a new tax structure.
(Reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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