Mendoza urges automatic payments into ‘rainy day fund’
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[March 11, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois Comptroller Susana
Mendoza is pushing legislation that would require the state to make
automatic deposits into its so-called “rainy day fund” whenever certain
financial conditions are met.
Officially known as the Budget Stabilization Fund, it was created in
2001 as a reserve so the state could pay its bills in a timely manner,
especially during regular months of the year when revenues are lower
than other months. The goal was to maintain a reserve fund equal to 5
percent of the state’s annual revenues.
Current law, however, requires deposits into the fund only when the
state’s general revenue estimates increase by 4 percent or more over the
prior year, something Mendoza said has not happened since the fund was
created.
Instead, transfers into the fund have been made only when the General
Assembly makes a one-time appropriation in the budget.
In 2002, lawmakers committed $225 million to the fund with money from
the state’s share of a national tobacco lawsuit settlement. Another
one-time deposit of $50 million was made in 2004, Mendoza said.
The fund balance then remained unchanged until it was depleted in 2017
during the two-year budget impasse under former Republican Gov. Bruce
Rauner.
“Ironically, the prior administration was emptying Illinois’ rainy day
fund at the very time that the greatest bull market in our lifetimes was
allowing other states to replenish their rainy day funds,” Mendoza told
the House Revenue and Finance Committee on Thursday.
“Now fast forward to when the world was hit by the catastrophic COVID-19
pandemic. Our state's rainy day fund stood at just $60,000 and our
backlog of bills stood at around $6 billion,” she said. “Now, $60,000 is
not enough to cover even 30 seconds worth of state government
operations.”
House Bill 4118, filed by Rep. Michael Halpin, D-Rock Island, would
change the funding formula, starting in June 2023, to require automatic
payments of $200 million at the end of a fiscal year or however much is
needed to reach a 5 percent balance, whenever the state’s backlog of
bills payable at the end of the year falls below $3 billion.
It would also require transferring another $200 million into the Pension
Stabilization Fund, but those payments would be spread out in equal
monthly installments.
The Pension Stabilization Fund, Mendoza said, was established in 2000 as
a way the state could make additional contributions into its pension
funds, above the statutorily required amount. But no money has been
deposited into it since it was created.
The bill also would allow for the transfer of money out of the rainy day
fund back into the general fund whenever the bill backlog rises above $4
billion, to enable the comptroller to address outstanding vouchers.
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Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Rep. Michael Halpin,
D-Rock Island, testify Thursday before a House committee in favor of
a bill that would require automatic payments into the state's budget
stabilization fund, which was depleted during the two-year budget
impasse from 2015 to 2017. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter
Hancock)
As of Thursday, according to the comptroller’s website, the state’s
backlog of bills stood at just over $4.4 billion, but it was as low as
$3.1 billion as recently as Feb. 1.
According to the most recent revenue estimates released Tuesday from the
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, the state’s
General Revenue Fund is expected to take in $48.5 billion in the current
fiscal year, which ends June 30.
That’s a $4.1 billion increase over earlier estimates that lawmakers
used when they passed this year’s budget, meaning the state will likely
end the year with a substantial surplus.
“Because we have this improved fiscal condition, I think it's necessary
that we harness that momentum and try to use the moment to prop up our
reserves for the future,” Halpin said during the hearing.
Mendoza said keeping a healthy balance in the rainy day fund would help
ensure the state is able to pay its bills on time. That’s because
revenues do not flow into state coffers at the same rate each month even
though bills come due on a daily basis.
That’s important to many state contractors, including small social
service agencies that administer programs for youths, families, the
elderly and disabled.
Andrea Durbin, executive director of the Illinois Collaboration on
Youth, which represents more than 100 community-based providers of
children’s services, said payment delays during the budget impasse and
in other difficult times have taken a toll on those organizations.
“Payment delays such as these are unfair and harmful to community-based
organizations, tying up their capital, forcing them to take out costly
loans and lines of credit, and preventing them from pursuing new
opportunities or innovations,” she said. “All of the time and energy
that boards and executives spend figuring out how to manage their
unwilling role as banker to the state of Illinois is time that they are
not investing in building capacity meeting needs and helping families
and communities to thrive.”
The committee took no action on the bill but lawmakers could incorporate
something similar to it as part of the overall budget package they are
expected to vote on in April.
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Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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