Pritzker now says budget can include added $350 million for K-12 schools
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[May 07, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI and TIM KIRSININKAS
Capitol News Illinois
Jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
tkirsininkas@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Citing an “improved” economic
outlook, Gov. JB Pritzker announced Thursday his support to increase
evidence-based education funding in the state by $350 million in fiscal
year 2022 which begins July 1.
In his February budget proposal, Pritzker originally proposed flat
spending for education, citing “financial uncertainty” amid the COVID-19
pandemic.
It would have been the second consecutive year in which the state failed
to add $350 million to the funding formula – a number written into state
statute as a goal aimed at driving new money to the districts that are
furthest from funding “adequacy.”
Adequacy is based on a number of factors, including class size and local
capacity to fund a school district.
“Parents, students and educators can breathe a sigh of relief,” Pritzker
said in an unrelated news conference Thursday. “As an education advocate
myself, I am really all too happy that our improved economic and fiscal
condition allows us to increase educational funding.”
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The announcement comes following the latest report from the Commission
on Government Forecasting and Accountability, which cited improved
revenue numbers for the current fiscal year as the state works toward a
full economic recovery from the pandemic.
Per that report, after revenues fell by $2.74 billion last April, base
general fund revenues in April 2021 grew $1.779 billion, in part because
April income tax payments were delayed one year ago.
“While the full story of FY 2021 revenues has yet to be written, given
the onset of the pandemic, receipts clearly have performed much better
than any prognosticator could have foretold one year earlier,” the COGFA
report stated.
“Despite periodic upward revisions in the revenue projections throughout
the course of the fiscal year, each time those updated expectations have
been met and exceeded,” the report continued.
The Illinois State Board of Education, in appropriations hearings in the
House and Senate earlier this year, pushed back on the governor’s
initial proposal to keep funding flat. Leaders in the General Assembly
from both parties have done the same.
ISBE requested a 4.6 percent funding increase for FY 2022, including
asking for an added $362.1 million to the evidence-based funding formula
and $50 million in added early childhood education grants.
Their request would put their state general revenue funding – which is
the state’s main discretionary spending account – at about $9.3 billion.
Pritzker did not give details on the proposed ISBE budget, aside from
giving his support to the $350 million in added funding.
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Illinois House Democrats speak at a news conference
at the Illinois State Capitol Thursday. House Democratic Majority
Leader Greg Harris, left, gave an update on budget negotiations as
Gov. JB Pritzker spoke at a separate news conference in Chicago,
giving his support to increasing K-12 education funding by $350
million this year. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Grace Barbic)
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Per the budgeting process, both Houses of the General
Assembly must approve a spending plan, then Pritzker would have the
opportunity to sign or veto it.
House Majority Leader Greg Harris, D-Chicago, in a
news conference that occurred in Springfield at the same time
Pritzker’s was going on in Chicago, said lawmakers are well into the
process of planning a budget for the upcoming fiscal year. He said
he was optimistic about the latest COGFA report, but the state’s
financial picture is still somewhat bleak.
“Revenue has continued to perform very, very well,” Harris said.
“The economy of the state of Illinois has been performing better
than we had expected. And to be honest, we initially planned for
this year very conservatively, not knowing what COVID would bring.”
Federal stimulus packages, including the recent American Rescue Plan
signed by President Joe Biden, have aided the state’s recovery,
Harris said.
“It's given families some disposable income, that has allowed them
to go out and spend, you know, to support their families,” he said.
“And that has in turn, raised our income taxes and our sales taxes
in the state.”
Lawmakers will have to project whether the rosy revenue projections
for the end of this fiscal year will carry on into the next fiscal
year.
“We're seeing some very good numbers in the state,” he said. “That
being said, we still are looking at next year, a budget deficit of
about $1.4 billion that we'll have to solve for, and some new
revenue could certainly help that. But it's not going to solve the
entire problem.”
One key part of the governor’s proposal to balance the budget is to
make several changes to the corporate tax structure – changes he
calls closing corporate tax “loopholes,” which Republicans call
important business “incentives.”
While Pritzker signed off on a number of those corporate tax cuts or
credits in his first year, Harris said budgets are “dynamic things,”
and changing revenue pictures mean cutting expenditures.
“But the most important thing is we've got to protect the state
budget, we’ve got to protect our core functions,” he said. “We're
happy to sit down and negotiate with the Republicans and the
Democrats in the Senate, and if it's a will of folks to keep those
in, I think that's what all of us would be willing to do.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |