Pritzker touts new budget’s higher education spending
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[June 01, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker began a tour of the state to tout the new
state budget that lawmakers passed last week, stopping at two university
campuses Wednesday to highlight the spending plan’s increased funding
for higher education.
“With this new budget, we're making it possible for nearly every student
from a low-, moderate- or middle-income family to go to community
college tuition free,” Pritzker said at the University of Illinois
Springfield. “Getting a college or university degree shouldn't strap you
in debt for the rest of your life.”
The $50.6 billion budget, which has not yet arrived on Pritzker’s desk,
includes a $100 million increase in funding for the state’s needs-based
Monetary Award Program, or MAP grants, bringing the total level of
funding for that program to $701 million – a 75 percent increase since
2019, when Pritzker first in office.
Pritzker noted that most undergraduate students at UIS start working on
their degree at a two-year community college. He said the increase in
MAP grant funding will mean that virtually all community college
students from households at or below median income levels will have
their tuition and fees fully covered between MAP and federal Pell
grants.
The higher education budget also includes a $15 million increase in the
state’s AIM HIGH merit-based scholarship program and an overall 7
percent increase in the base operating budgets of universities and
community colleges.
Pritzker said the increase in base funding was especially important to
help schools recruit and retain the best faculty and staff.
“Look what happened in other states, and what happened in Illinois
during those bad years five, seven years ago,” he said, referring to the
state’s budget impasse of 2015-2017. “Universities had to either lay off
faculty or faculty saw how uncertain funding was and they left. ... Now,
because we're funding universities properly, university professors,
faculty, the people who work at universities have less to fear and more
to be optimistic about it.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker is pictured at the
University of Illinois Springfield Wednesday during a news
conference called to tout the state budget's higher education
spending. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
In addition to increases in higher education funding, the budget also
includes the statutorily required annual $350 million increase in the
Evidence Based Funding formula for K-12 schools and $250 million to
launch a four-year initiative called Smart Start Illinois that seeks to
make early childhood day care and preschool available to every family in
Illinois that wants it.
The budget passed through the General Assembly in the final days of
their spring session with only Democratic support. Some Republicans,
including House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, of Savanna, said they
were concerned about whether all the new spending in the budget –
including K-12 education and early childhood programs – would be
sustainable in future years.
“There's nothing worse than starting a new program and then having it
not be sustainable,” she said during House floor debate early Saturday
morning.
Pritzker, however, said his administration used conservative revenue
estimates when building his budget proposal, and he said he was
confident the new spending could be sustained.
“The baseline revenues of the state have risen,” he said. “There are a
variety of reasons for that but one is the economy grew. The Illinois
economy used to be $800 billion when I took office, it's now above a $1
trillion. That gives you at least some idea of why our tax revenues are
going up in the state of Illinois, because people are making more money,
the economy is doing better.”
After speaking on the UIS campus, Pritzker traveled to the U of I’s
Urbana-Champaign campus for a similar event.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of
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with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and
Southern Illinois Editorial Association. |