| 
		Building on Efforts to Protect Illinois Families, Gov. Pritzker Delivers 
		Third Balanced Budget Proposal Proposed Budget Does Not Increase Income Taxes, Closes 
		Nearly $1 Billion in Corporate Tax Loopholes, Invests in Human Services 
		to Strengthen Safety Net During Pandemic Crisis
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [February 18, 2021] 
		With the COVID-19 pandemic continuing to hurt families across Illinois, 
		Governor JB Pritzker proposed his third balanced budget, closing nearly 
		$1 billion in corporate tax loopholes and holding overall state spending 
		flat, while strengthening the social safety net. 
 The proposed budget does not increase income taxes for hardworking 
		Illinois families. The administration proposes significant government 
		efficiencies, as well as strategically maximizing federal dollars and 
		bending the cost curve of government through flat spending.
 
 The proposed budget:
 
 ends $1 billion in giveaways to corporations;
 
 strengthens safety net services for all Illinois residents in need;
 
 protects education funding as the federal government directs billions to 
		schools;
 
 continues investments in economic development, infrastructure and the 
		environment;
 
 and creates a more equitable Illinois through criminal justice reforms.
 
 The Governor and the administration will continue to advance long-term 
		structural budget improvements that continue the stronger fiscal 
		trajectory Illinois was on before the pandemic while focusing on 
		economic recovery for the hardest hit.
 
 Click here to review the
		
		Budget in Brief and the complete
		FY22 
		Budget Book.
 
 GOVERNOR PRITZKER’S STATE OF THE STATE AND BUDGET ADDRESS
 
 Good afternoon to the esteemed lawmakers who are joining us remotely, 
		and to all the people of Illinois, who have endured so much this past 
		year. Joining me today are two people essential to my work as governor: 
		the incomparable lieutenant governor, Juliana Stratton, and my 
		remarkable wife, First Lady MK Pritzker.
 
 As you’ve probably noticed, this State of the State speech looks a lot 
		different than it has in the past. Standing inside a crowded room to 
		deliver a formal address is not possible right now – nor would it be 
		appropriate. But the people of Illinois need to hear from their Governor 
		about where we are and where we’re headed – regardless of how 
		unprecedented the times.
 
		
		 
		
 Nearly no one alive today has lived through anything that could have 
		prepared them for the past year. To gain perspective on these last 12 
		months, I looked for an anchoring moment in our history – a moment that 
		can remind us of what we can endure and survive together.
 
 So today I’m coming to you from the Illinois State fairgrounds in 
		Springfield. You see, over one hundred years ago, in October of 1918, a 
		100-bed emergency make-shift hospital was constructed here to care for 
		Illinoisans afflicted with what became known as the Spanish Flu – 
		because there was no more room at the hospitals. Doctors and nurses at 
		St. John’s Springfield hospital, and those here at the fairgrounds alike 
		were desperate. It seemed that as quickly as patients came in, they were 
		dying even faster. And everything was made all the more dire because so 
		many healthcare professionals were overseas on the fighting fields of 
		World War One even as this microscopic enemy raged on the home front.
 
 One of the young nurses was a native of Loami, Illinois – a woman by the 
		name of Hallie Staley Kinter. Many years later, when she was in her 
		80’s, Hallie recounted to oral historians at the University of Illinois 
		how she and another nurse had worked together and about their pandemic 
		experience.
 
 Hallie said, “In 1918 we had the flu epidemic. Which was a very 
		difficult time. The doctors hardly knew what it was when it first came. 
		And you’d have to have the windows open and the rooms were so awfully 
		cold at night and, well, it was hard. Of course the other nurse, she 
		went down with the flu, and then I followed shortly after. I made it 
		through, but she died. And I always felt bad about that – she didn’t 
		make it, but I did.”
 
 Last September, I hosted Memorial Services for those who’ve lost loved 
		ones and friends in this current COVID pandemic. It was attended in 
		person by a few of the family members of Illinoisans who had died of 
		Covid so far and tens of thousands tuned in to attend remotely. I knew 
		that the pandemic was far from over. But I also knew that people had not 
		had a chance to collectively grieve. Indeed, so many Illinoisans who 
		have lost family and friends to this terrible disease were not even able 
		to have the full funeral services they might normally have had to 
		celebrate the lives and mourn the loss of their loved ones.
 
		 
		
 So on a beautiful early September night, in the Cathedral at the 
		University of Chicago, Lieutenant Governor Stratton and I bore witness 
		to the grief of several Illinois families – who came to speak to the 
		memories of those who were loved and lost – and to represent our 
		collective sorrow.
 
 One of the last individuals to give testimony that night was Lawrence 
		LeBlanc, whose wife of 23 years, Joyce Pacubas-LeBlanc was an ICU nurse 
		at the University of Illinois Hospital in Chicago. Much like Hallie 
		Kinter a hundred years earlier, Joyce rushed in where others feared to 
		tread. Her husband said, “When the pandemic started, I asked her to 
		please stay home. But she said no. That was her calling, that’s why she 
		joined the nursing profession.”
 
 Joyce, a nurse for more than 30 years, passed away from COVID-19 on 
		April 23rd, 2020.
 
 About 23,500 Illinoisans died from the Spanish Flu. As of today, we have 
		lost more than 20,000 Illinoisans to COVID-19.
 
 The man who preceded me in this job by a century, Governor Lowden, 
		issued a proclamation in October of 1918 telling residents, “It is 
		advisable to prevent all unnecessary social gatherings for the present.” 
		The Illinois Director of Public Health at the time, Dr. St. Clair Drake, 
		warned citizens that “every community in Illinois will be affected by 
		influenza before the epidemic subsides.”
 
 Everything old always seems to become new again, and despite all we’ve 
		learned and discovered about medicine and science in a hundred years, 
		fighting a raging pandemic successfully continues to rely on the 
		selflessness and sacrifice of our citizens. Just as our predecessors did 
		a century ago, we’ve had to shutter businesses, cancel public 
		gatherings, close schools and theaters and restaurants and ask our 
		citizens to wear masks and limit human contact.
 
 All of this was in the pursuit of one goal and one goal only – saving as 
		many lives as possible.
 
 And we have done that. Because of all of you and what you’ve been 
		willing to sacrifice, Illinois never ran out of hospital beds or 
		ventilators or doctors to care for patients, even when our peer states 
		did. Despite being one of the largest states in the country, we have one 
		of the lowest transmission rates of COVID-19. Ours is among the most 
		accessible testing infrastructures in the nation, even deploying mobile 
		sites to over 450 communities around Illinois.
 
 But the price we’ve paid to save lives has been enormous, and we do not 
		honor sacrifice when we do not recognize it. We’ve had to go an entire 
		year separated from people that we love. In order to preserve our lives, 
		for a time we’ve had to forgo our way of life. Babies have been born 
		that grandparents have never been able to hold. Couples have married 
		without lifelong friends beside them. Students have had to graduate 
		without a handshake or a hug. Grief, an emotion that thrives on 
		loneliness, has been able to escape the salve of community.
 
 Businesses built painstakingly over generations have had to shutter 
		their doors. Communities that had already suffered greatly because of 
		disinvestment and discrimination have seen their challenges multiply.
 
 And the tiny joys that fill the cracks in our lives have been taken from 
		us – the songs of a choir, a full Thanksgiving table, a high five after 
		a workout, a prom dress, a hotdog at a Cubs game, a bucket list trip, a 
		smile not hidden by a mask, a long night of laughter with good friends 
		at a favorite restaurant. As a result, we are all struggling together 
		right now.
 
 It’s ok to admit to feeling overwhelmed.
 
 It’s ok to admit that we have a new appreciation for the true fullness 
		of life, and that we ache to return to the way the world was just a year 
		ago.
 
 But our grief needs to help us embrace the most important lesson of the 
		past year – that the best way to make our way in this world is together.
 
 With 2021, comes new hope. We have a vaccine that works and that 
		starting today, is being distributed right here on the Illinois State 
		Fairgrounds. With the patience of Job, we continue awaiting our supply 
		of vaccine that will meet our demand. As that happens, when it’s your 
		turn – I implore you to step up and get vaccinated.
 
 Illinois is a state of over 12 and a half million people. Although it’s 
		not enough to meet demand, this week the federal government is providing 
		us with 405,000 vaccine doses, and we’re administering all of them. 
		Local health departments, led by nurses and frontline workers, are our 
		healthcare heroes, from Jackson County to Winnebago County, across all 
		102 of our counties, and they’re running on all cylinders. As a result, 
		for the month of February, Illinois has been the vaccination leader 
		among the 10 most populous states in the country.
 
 Under the incomparable leadership of Dr. Ngozi Ezike, supported by 
		doctors and nurses across the state, Illinois has vaccinated over 11 
		percent of its residents. We are working every day to reach people of 
		color, where historical disinvestment makes them both more vulnerable to 
		the disease and more skeptical of the vaccine. Of course, there is still 
		much work to be done – especially as the federal supply of vaccine 
		remains lower than demand.
 
 But with a new President who is willing to push all the levers of 
		government to increase vaccination supply, we will get closer and closer 
		to getting enough immunity among our population so we can keep our 
		families healthy, return to normalcy, once again prosper and thrive.
 
 I have always believed that our economic recovery both as a nation and 
		as a state goes hand in hand with our recovery from the virus. I 
		certainly had no expectation when I became Governor, that we would spend 
		all of this time battling an invisible enemy together.
 
 I had bolder plans for our state budget than what I am going to present 
		to you today. It would be a lie to suggest otherwise. But as all our 
		families have had to make hard choices over the last year, so too does 
		state government. And right now, we need to pass a balanced budget that 
		finds the right equilibrium between tightening our belts and preventing 
		more hardships for Illinoisans already carrying a heavy load.
 
 To my colleagues in the General Assembly: our choices have never been 
		easy. But more than ever, the decisions we make together in the coming 
		months must protect our working families and those most in need, so many 
		of whom feel like they’re at the end of their rope right now.
 
 If there is anything the last year should have taught us, it is that we 
		need a reliably well-funded government. Many on the far right have made 
		their name in politics by touting cuts to unemployment programs and 
		health insurance coverage. They called anyone who sought unemployment 
		benefits “takers.” They demonize state employees. And they fought 
		unrelentingly to eliminate any state or federal funds designed to make 
		healthcare more accessible, equitable and fair.
 
 Throughout the pandemic, they have encouraged businesses to defy health 
		guidelines, spread conspiracy theories about covid deaths, and fought 
		mask guidelines tooth and nail.
 
 Amidst the tragedy of this pandemic, they have lobbied against the 
		federal government providing relief to Illinoisans, ignoring the 
		life-changing economic pain of real working families.
 
 In essence, they eliminated the fire department, burnt down the house, 
		and poured gas on the flames — and now they’re asking why we’re not 
		doing more to prevent fires.
 
 In a normal year, I might have more patience for their hypocrisy. But 
		this is not a normal year.
 
 There’s room for honest and well-meaning debate about where and how cuts 
		and new investments should be made, but anyone who calls themselves a 
		public servant must acknowledge the truth: the role of the government in 
		a crisis is to end the crisis as quickly as possible, and limit the pain 
		the crisis inflicts on the people we serve.
 
 To that end, I began working on next year’s budget by taking executive 
		action to make cuts this year that will have the least impact on 
		services while preventing the need for additional revenue from 
		hardworking families, eliminating $700 million in spending in fiscal 
		year 2021 alone. Two months ago I asked Republicans in the General 
		Assembly for their proposals to close this year’s budget deficit. I was 
		met with silence. Apparently their idea of bipartisanship ends when hard 
		choices must be made.
 
 I won’t pretend that these tough decisions don’t have a human impact, 
		because we are operating within one of the most bare-bones government 
		infrastructures in the country. While the right-wing carnival barkers 
		have used our state as a laboratory to undermine essential public 
		investments, the fact of the matter is Illinois state government spends 
		less money per person than the majority of states in this nation.
 
 Twenty years ago Illinois had about 30% more employees than it does 
		today. We had 40% more Illinois State Police to protect the 58,000 
		square miles of our state. Our Environmental Protection Agency had 
		nearly 60% more people protecting our air and water. And state 
		government’s share of spending on education has steadily dropped to the 
		lowest in the nation – leading your cities and your counties and your 
		school districts to impose suffocatingly high property taxes in order to 
		maintain quality public education. Government cannot be bloated, but it 
		must have the resources to provide for the needs of our state’s 
		residents.
 
 We live in a challenging moment in so many ways, not the least of which 
		are the choices that must be made to balance our state budget in the 
		midst of economic hardship for everyday Illinoisans.
 
 The general funds budget I present today for Fiscal Year 2022 spends 
		$1.8 billion less than FY2021. It reflects $400 million in additional 
		cuts to appropriations, a hiring freeze, flat operational spending, full 
		required pension payments, and the closure of unaffordable corporate 
		loopholes. All in all, it reduces spending to meet projected revenues.
 
 I’d like to discuss some of the major principles and pillars of this 
		budget with you.
 
 I started with the premise that hardworking families should not have to 
		pay more when they’re stretched the most thin. I want middle class 
		Illinoisans to pay lower income taxes, not higher. So this budget does 
		not propose an across-the-board tax increases.
 
 In this unprecedented time, I believe we must fully support the agencies 
		on the frontlines of the COVID-19 response — agencies that have been 
		hollowed out deeply over the past two decades: the Departments of Public 
		Health, Human Services, Veterans’ Affairs, and Employment Security. 
		Saving lives and livelihoods as this pandemic rages on is front and 
		center.
 
 With that in mind, I’m asking the General Assembly to pass a standalone 
		bill THIS YEAR to immediately direct $60 million of funding to the 
		Department of Employment Security to help meet the unprecedented demand. 
		It builds upon work we have already done this year, and will support new 
		call center positions throughout the state, help run the newly created 
		federal unemployment programs, and upgrade the technology to more 
		efficiently get this critical work done. And in the coming year, I ask 
		that you support an additional $73 million for the unemployment system.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
		Support for small businesses must also be a priority. So many 
		individuals lost their livelihoods because of the pandemic. Small 
		businesses like restaurants and bars had to make enormous sacrifices to 
		keep us all safe. Those sacrifices did not go unnoticed or 
		unappreciated. But when the federal PPP program offered a lifeline with 
		forgivable loans, large corporations gobbled up most of that money 
		first, leaving small businesses with nearly nothing. That’s why Illinois 
		did something most states didn’t do: we used a big portion of federal 
		CARES Act dollars to deliver the nation’s largest small business 
		assistance program.  
		We invested $275 million toward Business Interruption Grants, 
		distributing it to over 9,000 small businesses in over 600 cities and 
		towns statewide – that’s money for rent, for payroll, for PPE that 
		doesn’t have to be paid back.  
		
		 
		
 It’s money that allowed Michael McDonald and Okema Battle, the 
		brother-sister co-owners of Wood N’ Hog Barbecue, in Champaign, to keep 
		every team member on payroll who wanted to stay there – to keep their 
		doors open and their dream alive. And friends in Champaign will tell you 
		thank the heavens, because that barbecue is excellent.
 
 Illinois’ Business Interruption Grant program also allowed Brew Brew 
		Coffee and Tea, a family owned business in Chicago, to bring back staff 
		and re-open its Pilsen location, closed in the early days of the 
		pandemic. And another grant has helped Deborah Fell from Urbana keep her 
		quilting business afloat.
 
		In a moment when one third of small businesses across the nation are 
		temporarily or permanently closed, Illinois’ BIG program doesn’t replace 
		the need for more federal assistance. But it has given thousands of 
		Illinois businesses a fighting chance. More than 80 percent of BIG 
		program funds went to our smallest businesses, 40 percent went to 
		minority-owned businesses, and nearly half went to restaurants, bars and 
		taverns – an industry that along with travel and tourism has had to 
		sacrifice the most in this crisis. I particularly want to thank Leaders 
		Gordon-Booth and Lightford and Rep. Lisa Hernandez and Sen. Aquino for 
		their tireless efforts to help make sure that these funds reached the 
		small businesses that needed them most. 
 That’s why we propose setting aside a share of new federal dollars for 
		those grants to small businesses. Entrepreneurs are the folks who create 
		most of the jobs in our state. Their businesses are key to our economic 
		revitalization, and they’re the most immediate way for us to help those 
		that are shouldering the heaviest burden from COVID-19. While the 
		federal government writes billion-dollar checks to big businesses, here 
		in Illinois we’re standing up for small businesses — or as I like to say 
		— the big businesses of the future.
 
 The safety net must also be protected. In May, I worked with members of 
		the General Assembly like Senator Robert Peters and Representative Delia 
		Ramirez to deliver the nation’s largest housing assistance program, 
		providing $324 million in emergency housing assistance to more than 
		55,600 renters and homeowners across the state, keeping people in their 
		homes and stabilizing the market for landlords. We dedicated a record 
		$275 million to help pay utility bills for those suffering COVID-related 
		income loss. Homelessness is never acceptable, but in a pandemic it’s 
		downright barbaric.
 
		
		 
		
 And when the pandemic interrupted schools and senior care, we put food 
		on the tables of those who needed a helping hand, delivering over 10 
		million meals to our seniors at home and over 113 million meals to 
		school-aged children and their families. No senior citizen and no child 
		should ever go hungry in this country. Indeed nobody should.
 
 This budget also preserves my increased investments in education, which 
		is foundational to a strong economy and a vibrant future. And I fully 
		incorporated the work of Senator Lightford and Representative Ammons to 
		make education in Illinois more equitable.
 
 In March of 2020, I promised schools that they wouldn’t lose funding 
		because of the pandemic, and this budget keeps that promise. The federal 
		government has made extraordinary efforts to support schools during this 
		time, with $2.8 billion allocated to schools thus far – and more is 
		expected. Thanks to this funding, we can protect our K-12 investments at 
		current spending levels. No schools will have to reduce spending, and 
		they can instead focus on meeting the needs of students who have tried 
		to learn in a chaotic and trying time. The increased funding from the 
		federal government will help us overcome the learning loss so many 
		children experienced during this pandemic. I call on school districts 
		across the state to use those additional funds to follow the Biden plan 
		for restoring safe in-person learning and to address COVID learning loss 
		not only this Spring but into the Summer too.
 
 Higher education – which was cut deeply by my predecessor and his 
		General Assembly allies during their self-inflicted budget impasse – is 
		fully protected in this budget proposal. Our colleges and universities 
		are facing so many other challenges that we should not ask them to take 
		on more. Federal COVID relief funding will provide $740 million to 
		post-secondary institutions in Illinois, so the most important place to 
		invest in higher education is in expanding college access for those 
		smart kids who can least afford it, which is why I propose a $28 million 
		increase to MAP grants – to be sure, less than the $50 million I 
		proposed last year, but enough to allow thousands more Illinois students 
		to get a scholarship.
 
 And for our youngest children, Illinois is the best in the nation during 
		this pandemic in supporting childcare providers and the children who 
		attend them. Illinois has created the nation’s largest childcare grant 
		program, with $290 million going directly to 5,000 childcare centers and 
		homes in 95 counties, allowing them to stay afloat over this challenging 
		year – places like Marcy Mendenhall’s Skip-A-Long Child Development 
		Services.
 
 Skip-A-Long has three childcare centers on the Illinois side of the 
		Mississippi, and one center across the river in Iowa. When the pandemic 
		hit, only one of those states offered consistent, science-based guidance 
		on how to best protect children, families and staff. Soon after, that 
		same state started paying Skip-A-Long for all the kids enrolled in its 
		centers, not just who showed up every day, so they could keep their 
		staff in the most turbulent time. And that very same state made it 
		possible for all essential workers to enroll in its Child Care 
		Assistance Program so that their kids had a safe place to go when they 
		couldn’t stay home – and reduced parental co-pays for the program to 
		just $1 a month. What Illinois has done to preserve childcare and reduce 
		the burden on working families has been rightly held up as a model for 
		the nation. And it has meant that even with all the terrible tolls of 
		this pandemic, more than 100,000 of Illinois’ youngest families had one 
		less thing to worry about every day.
 
 In short: even absent necessary federal action, Illinois gave our all to 
		keeping an entire industry alive – an industry that has the power to 
		make or break women’s participation in the workforce – in a way that 
		other states failed to do.
 
 And as we gain national attention for our leading efforts to support 
		childcare – and support working parents – this budget will make 
		additional investments by protecting our early childhood block grant, 
		expanding early intervention programs, and directing $350 million in 
		federal funds directly to childcare providers. And, thanks to the 
		insights and hard work of my Early Childhood Funding Commission, we’ll 
		use some of the recent federal funding to build community-level supports 
		for connecting young families to the services they need as we emerge 
		from this pandemic.
 
 Telecommuting, telehealth, remote learning, videoconferencing — this 
		pandemic laid bare the need for reliable broadband across the state. 
		Fortunately, in 2019, working with the General Assembly, I prioritized 
		broadband with the most aggressive vision for high speed internet in the 
		nation. Through our public-private Connect Illinois program, we’re 
		connecting over 26,000 residents who had been left out of the digital 
		revolution, and it’s redefined the healthcare, education, and economic 
		opportunities for their communities. At least $50 million in additional 
		state matching grants will be awarded this year, making substantial 
		progress on our goal of universal access in 2024.
 
 Right now it’s more important than ever to invest in, create, and 
		support good-paying jobs, which is why we amped up the rebuilding and 
		renewal of our transportation infrastructure. In the last fiscal year, 
		FY2020, alone, we improved 1,700 miles of highway, completed 600 highway 
		projects and over 120 bridges in every corner of the state. Modernizing 
		our infrastructure has continued into FY2021 with the completion of the 
		Chicago Veterans’ Home and the launch of one of the largest job creating 
		projects in Southern Illinois in a generation, the Alexander Cairo Port 
		district.
 
 At its core, our pandemic response is focused on saving lives and 
		protecting working families. We’ve helped keep tens of thousands 
		families from losing their homes, kept them fed, and ensured their 
		children had a safe place to go each day. This pandemic isn’t over yet, 
		so that remains our guiding light for this fiscal 2022 budget proposal.
 
 As the General Assembly takes up this proposal, brings its own ideas to 
		the table, and debates our collective approach, I want to take a moment 
		to discuss the federal government’s role in all of this.
 
 Every Illinoisan should hear this. For decades, Illinois has been forced 
		to send billions more tax dollars every year to the federal government 
		than we receive back from them in support of our citizens. Federal 
		spending is rigged against Illinois. We’ve been subsidizing public 
		services for other states, like Iowa, Kentucky, Indiana, and Missouri.
 
 You deserve better. I’m fighting for better. Congress must act 
		decisively, and I urge every Illinoisan to add their voice to this 
		demand. So far, not a single Republican Congressman from Illinois has 
		supported you getting back what you paid for. If not in a national 
		crisis, when will they stand up for us? Now is the time.
 
 Let’s be clear. Congressional action will help us today, but it won’t 
		solve Illinois’ remaining fiscal challenges. That’s why any money we 
		receive from the federal government needs to be spent wisely, by paying 
		down borrowing and our bill backlog. Anything remaining must be used to 
		invest in expanding jobs and economic growth. More jobs, more 
		businesses, more economic activity – means a higher standard of living 
		for our citizens, a healthier budget and a healthier state government.
 
 This will be one of the most challenging budgets this government has 
		ever had to craft, but I know there are willing partners in the General 
		Assembly. In addition to the budget committee, I’ve spoken with members 
		and committee chairs of the General Assembly, and incorporated their 
		ideas, like cutting corporate loopholes that force the middle class to 
		pay more.
 
 Compromise, hard work, and a willingness to make tough decisions is 
		going to be required of all of us. I enter the process of negotiation 
		with an open mind. I have only one hard and fast rule – we aren’t going 
		to treat people who have been decimated by this pandemic as roadkill. 
		Those most in need in our most desperate times deserve our help, and we 
		cannot fail them.
 
 I want to briefly touch on a few other priorities the General Assembly 
		must address as in-person sessions begin again.
 
 It’s a new era in state government, with a new generation at the helm, 
		and the first black Speaker of the House. The Black Caucus just last 
		month passed landmark legislation dealing with education, criminal 
		justice, economic opportunity and healthcare. There is much to 
		celebrate, and we have a new moment to advance important legislation 
		that the people of Illinois have asked for.
 
		A year ago, I outlined my vision for real, lasting ethics reform. It’s 
		time to pass ethics legislation this year. Nobody should hold the title 
		of both legislator and lobbyist at the same time. We need meaningful 
		disclosure of conflicts of interest. We must end the General Assembly’s 
		revolving door allowing legislators to get paid as lobbyists the day 
		after they leave office. Restoring the public’s trust is of paramount 
		importance. There is too much that needs to be done. If not for the 
		pandemic, this would have happened last year. With a real legislative 
		session and remote or in person hearings, we need to get this done. 
 The to-do list is long, but it includes key priorities like finally 
		authorizing the overdue second cannabis licensing lottery, and passing 
		an energy bill that protects our nuclear fleet and builds up our wind 
		and solar industries, protects the environment, puts consumers first and 
		supports jobs.
 
 There is so much to do, and it’s time to get to work.
 
 I’d like to close by speaking directly to our citizenry who have endured 
		and persevered through this pandemic.
 
 Almost a year ago, on March 9, 2020, as we were all just becoming fully 
		aware of the danger that COVID-19 would pose, I appeared before you in 
		the first of the spring’s 80 daily press conferences. I said something 
		that day that I didn’t want to have to tell you: that this pandemic was 
		going to affect your daily life.
 
 I knew you needed me to be honest with you. I knew that moments like 
		these lurk in our history books, times when leaders are judged by how 
		willing they are to lay a crisis on the table and ask for help 
		containing it.
 
 I admit, I wish the last year had been about all the normal problems of 
		government – lowering taxes and fixing roads and making college more 
		affordable – instead of once-in-a-lifetime problems like hunting for N95 
		masks, and building covid testing from scratch, and constructing a fair 
		and science-based strategy for mitigating a new and deadly disease. This 
		budget proposal reflects that struggle.
 
 But we don’t get to choose the times we live in – we only get to decide 
		if we are willing to meet the moment that chooses us.
 
 Every single day of the last year I’ve felt the weight of what I’ve 
		asked you to sacrifice as COVID threatened your lives and livelihoods. I 
		want you to know that. I wish our paths had crossed in easier times, 
		Illinois, but I don’t need the times to be easy to fight for you.
 
 I know it’s hard right now. I know you and your family, no matter what 
		your circumstances, are struggling. And I know that, just as a year ago, 
		when you needed me to be honest and tell you that this pandemic was 
		going to affect your daily lives – right now you need someone to 
		honestly tell you that it’s going to end.
 
 Well, it IS going to end. The marathon has been long, and I believe 
		there is one more leg left to run. It requires patience and perseverance 
		and courage to battle the last attacks of an invisible enemy.
 
 But it is going to end. That is something I promise you.
 
 In 1918 these state fairgrounds were used to save our citizens. One 
		hundred years later, they are saving us once again, serving as one of 
		the largest vaccination sites in Illinois.
 
 Every year in August, these grounds have a much more joyful purpose as 
		they host the Illinois State Fair. This place changes to meet the times 
		– it can be a hospital or a testing center or a vaccination site or a 
		showcase for award-winning livestock or a concert venue. It can be all 
		of those things and not lose its fundamental character.
 
 We all had to change to fit the world we’ve had to live in for the last 
		12 months. We had to give up some of the best things about living our 
		lives in order to save our lives. But we didn’t forget how to hug old 
		friends, toast at weddings, dance at concerts, cheer at baseball games, 
		and share popcorn at a movie theater. We didn’t forget how to be human. 
		We didn’t lose our fundamental character.
 
 What is old always becomes new again. And Illinois’s oldest treasure is 
		the character of its people – it runs rich with a strain of generosity, 
		empathy and steely minded fortitude that stretches from Hallie Staley 
		Kinter to Joyce Pacubas-LeBlanc. As long as there is hardship to face, 
		we will face it. As long as we need heroes, here in Illinois they will 
		appear.
 
 As long as we need to be strong, we will be. Because that is the State 
		of our State – generous, heroic, and strong, always.
 
 God bless you, and God bless the great state of Illinois.
 
			[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |