Gov. Pritzker Signs Fifth Balanced Budget
FY24 Budget Makes Transformative Investments in
Education, Workforce and Economic Development, and Efforts to Fight
Poverty
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[June 08, 2023]
CHICAGO – Building on four years of fiscally responsible
leadership, Governor JB Pritzker signed the Fiscal Year 2024 budget into
law today, delivering his fifth balanced budget while making
transformative investments in early childhood, K-12 schools, higher
education, workforce and economic development and efforts to fight
violence and poverty.
The Fiscal Year 2024 budget prioritizes fiscal responsibility,
contributing an additional $200 million to the state’s pension systems
beyond what is required, continuing to pay down the state’s remaining
outstanding debts, and making ongoing contributions to the state’s
Budget Stabilization Fund, set to surpass $2 billion.
“From the beginning, I promised to work together with the General
Assembly to restore fiscal responsibility to our state government after
years of mismanagement,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Thanks to our
firmer fiscal foundation, we have been able to put billions of dollars
back into the pockets of Illinois taxpayers while investing in our
future. Our budgets have allowed thousands more students to stay in
Illinois because they can afford a college degree. Balanced budgets have
allowed us to modernize our infrastructure, build nation-leading clean
energy production, attract industries of the future like quantum
computing, and prioritize childcare for working families and our
youngest children.”
“Today is a historic day in Illinois, and I’m so proud of the work we’ve
accomplished for the Fiscal Year 2024 budget that will build on our
commitment to empower communities to be healthy and safe in Illinois.
This fiscally responsible budget is making our transformation efforts a
reality, prioritizing our children, our young people who wish to pursue
a higher education by making college affordable, all while investing in
safety in our communities,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “I thank
Governor JB Pritzker, and members of the General Assembly for their work
in our fifth budget that will uplift and invest in all our Illinois
residents.”
“Passing this budget was an exercise in trust, working together to
prioritize paying down debt, shoring up our Rainy Day Fund and ensuring
a durable, balanced budget,” said Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak
Park). “I want to thank Governor Pritzker for his commitment to
responsible budgeting. I also want to thank Speaker Welch for his
partnership and the incredible Senate budget negotiators for their hard
work. The future looks bright for Illinois.”
“With this budget we're building a stronger economy and putting our
state back on sound fiscal footing, while also making smart investments
in priorities like education, healthcare, and local communities,” said
House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch (D-Hillside). "I want to thank
Governor Pritzker and Senate President Don Harmon for their commitment
to getting this right. I also want to thank my Chief Budgeteer Jehan
Gordon-Booth, the House Appropriations Chairs, and Budget Negotiation
Team for the hard work that went into crafting a budget that expands
opportunity and creates a brighter future for Illinois.”
“The budget signed today builds upon our strong, smart spending
decisions of recent years that have led Illinois to not just one credit
upgrade – but eight. I am proud of the steps we took to continue
Illinois on the right path,” said State Senator Elgie R. Sims, Jr. – the
Senate’s Appropriations Leader (D-Chicago). “We didn’t just look at
fiscal outcomes but prioritized our most vulnerable populations,
educating our young people, keeping our communities safe, creating good
jobs, and growing our economy. Continuing our principled and disciplined
approach will keep our fiscal house in order. I am committed to doing
the work necessary to ensure that Illinois continues to enact
responsible budgets and remains on the path toward fiscal stability,
investing in and uplifting marginalized people, all while prioritizing
our communities and people who need the most assistance.”
“This state budget is balanced in every sense. It is a fiscally and
socially responsible plan that will direct needed resources to our
classrooms, public safety efforts and essential services that families
depend on,” said House Chief Budgeteer Jehan Gordon-Booth (D-Peoria).
“We’re rebuilding Illinois’ fiscal house, while responsibly saving for
the future and creating greater flexibility to address the challenges of
tomorrow. This balanced plan delivers critical funding that ensures
every student has access to a quality education, helps more people
access the health care they deserve and invests in career and technical
training to prepare our young people for high-wage jobs across Illinois.
I am appreciative of the months of negotiation and hard work from both
sides of the aisle to develop this responsible and compassionate plan,
and look forward to the strong, positive impact it will have on
uplifting families across our state.”
FISCAL YEAR 2024 BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS
OVERVIEW
The Fiscal Year 2024 General Funds budget plan reflects projected
revenues of $50.611 billion and expenditures of $50.428 billion,
resulting in a $183 million surplus.
Highlights from the budget package include:
Commitment to Fiscal Responsibility – 5th balanced budget
The Fiscal Year 2024 budget framework builds upon four years of historic
fiscal progress with a commitment to balanced budgets, eight credit
rating upgrades, a Rainy Day Fund set to surpass $2 billion, the
elimination of the bill backlog, and $1 trillion in GDP. This year’s
investments include:
$200 million additional pension payment beyond what’s required, bringing
total pension stabilization investments to $700 million
$450 million to pay off Railsplitter Authority bonded debt – saving the
state up to $60 million in interest
An enacted plan to address the long-term structural deficit in the
Community College Insurance Program (CIP), a health insurance program
for retired community college employees
$85 million in additional funding to communities through the Local
Government Distributive Fund with an increase in the state’s revenue
sharing formula.
Early Childhood Education and Childcare Funding
A highlight of the budget is $250 million to fund the first year of
Smart Start Illinois, the Governor’s early childhood initiative to
eliminate preschool deserts, stabilize the childcare workforce, and
expand the Early Intervention and Home Visiting programs.
This multi-year program provides a comprehensive approach to investments
in preparing children to be lifelong learners. Year one targeted
investments include the following:
An additional $75 million for the Early Childhood Block Grant at the
Illinois State Board of Education to increase preschool availability
while improving the quality of education. This funding is the first step
in working to eliminate “preschool deserts” by December 2027 through
adding more than 20,000 slots for preschool aged children and the
ability to serve thousands more infants and toddlers through the
Prevention Initiative. This brings funding for the Early Childhood Block
Grant program to nearly $673 million, $179 million more than when
Governor Pritzker took office.
Invests $130 million and additional federal dollars to begin funding for
Early Childhood Workforce Compensation Contracts to stabilize
operational funding and promote quality in the childcare system. The
proposed development of the contract funding model stems from
recommendations made by the Early Childhood Funding Commission.
Invests an additional $40 million for Early Intervention programs to
provide funds for an expected increase in participants and a 10 percent
rate increase for providers.
$5 million to expand DHS’ Home Visiting Program.
Additional early childhood investments to support the plan include
the following:
$70 million to cover an expected increase in Childcare Assistance
Program (CCAP) participation and annualize rate increases from Fiscal
Year 2023.
$20 million to begin upgrading the child care payment management system.
Federal funding for Early Childhood Access Consortium for Equity (ECACE)
Scholarships for tuition, fees and other costs of attendance.
$1.6 million to launch Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library statewide, an
initiative that allows families to register their children to receive
free, high-quality books in the mail from birth to age five no matter
the family’s income.
K-12 Education
$350 million increase for K-12 evidence-based funding (EBF) formula.
ISBE uses the tiered formula to distribute state funding based on need.
This investment brings the total annual EBF program to $8.279 billion,
or a $1.443 billion increase in annual base funding during the Pritzker
administration. In total, schools will have received an additional $4.0
billion in EBF funds over five years.
$45 million for the first year of a three-year pilot to fill teacher
vacancies, plus additional investments in scholarships for future
teachers. The funding will be allocated to the State’s school districts
which experience some of the most significant hurdles to attract and
retain teachers.
$3 million for computer science education investments to expand grants
to school districts and professional development opportunities for
teachers while promoting equitable access to coursework.
Higher Education
The Fiscal Year 2024 budget continues to make college more affordable
with historic increases in funding for public universities, community
colleges and financial aid.
$100 million increase to $701 million for Monetary Assistance Program
(MAP) grant funding, so that virtually everyone at or below the median
income can go to community college for free. This funding is the latest
step in a 75 percent increase for MAP since 2019.
$100 million increase in operating funds for public universities ($80.5
million) and community colleges ($19.4 million) – the highest increases
in more than two decades
Increases funding for AIM HIGH merit-based scholarships by $15 million
to a total of $50 million. HB301 will make the program permanent.
Includes new funding to support community college investments,
including:
$8.3 million for dual-credit and non-credit workforce grant programs;
$11 million for curriculum development related to advanced
manufacturing, electric vehicle and data center workforce training
programs;
$2 million for technology upgrades for digital instruction in WIOA Title
II Adult Education programs; and
$750,000 to expand English language services to non-English speaking
communities.
An additional $3.8 million for the Minority Teacher Scholarship program
Continues funding of $25 million for the Pipeline for the Advancement of
the Healthcare (PATH) Workforce Program, to train new nurses, medical
assistants, medical laboratory technicians, emergency medical
technicians and other high-demand positions.
Additional funds for the Diversifying Higher Education Faculty in
Illinois (DFI) program to provide holistic supports for fellows, beyond
their stipend. This would include a new orientation program, conference
attendance, and a graduate symposium to help them prepare for and find
employment in Illinois.
Includes $3 million for the Department of Public Health (DPH) to
implement the Equity and Representation in Health Care Workforce
Repayment Program and Scholarship Program per PA 102-0942.
Health and Human Services
Nearly $75 million increase for DCFS to hire 192 staff, expand training
and protection, increase scholarships for youth in care, and improve
facilities
More than $500 million in new state and federal funds to support the
state’s healthcare system
Approximately $240 million increase to better serve Illinoisans with
developmental disabilities
$42.5 million for grants to counties and cities for their costs
associated with asylum seekers
$22.8 million in funding to begin implementing the new Children’s
Behavioral Health Transformation Initiative
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$18 million increase to support reproductive health initiatives
$24 million for a rate increase for home workers who assist the
elderly, increased outreach to the elderly, and an increase for
Adult Day Services
$10 million for a state-based health insurance marketplace to help
expand healthcare access
$1.2 million for a division of healthcare access at the Department
of Insurance
$53.5 million to overhaul IDPH’s disease monitoring IT systems and
prepare for future public health emergencies
$35 million increase for TANF to address an increase in caseload,
make inflation adjustments and increase eligibility from 30 percent
to 35 percent of the federal poverty level $41 million for youth
employment and summer job programs
Addressing Homelessness
Home Illinois is a multi-agency effort to support homeless
prevention, provide affordable housing, support crisis response,
expand housing support and increase the number of staff focused on
assisting people experiencing homelessness. Housed at the Illinois
Department of Human Services, Home Illinois involves many state
agencies and partners including the Illinois Housing Development
Authority, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the
Illinois Department of Corrections, and the Illinois Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity. The budget includes an $85
million increase, bringing state funding to over $350 million, to
support homelessness prevention.
The funds in support of this work include:
More than $118 million to support unhoused populations seeking
shelter and services, including $40.7 million in the Emergency and
Transitional Housing Program.
$50 million in Rapid ReHousing services for 2,000 households,
including short-term rental assistance and targeted support for up
to two years.
$40 million in Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) Capital funds to
develop more than 90 new PSH units providing long term rental
assistance and case management.
$37 million in Emergency Shelter capital funds to create more than
460 non-congregate shelter units.
More than $35 million for supportive housing services homeless youth
services, street outreach, medical respite, re-entry services,
access to counsel and other shelter diversion supports
$30 million for court-based rental assistance.
$21.8 million to provide homelessness prevention services to 6,000
more families.
$15 million to fund Home Illinois Innovations Pilots
$12.5 million to create 500 new scattered site PSH units.
Public Safety and Violence Prevention
Continues the multi-year commitment of $250 million for the
Reimagine Public Safety Act to prevent gun violence and expanded
funding for youth employment programs
Includes $200 million for the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew (R3)
grant program, a $75 million increase
Includes $40 million -- $20 million each -- in funding for the
Office of the State Appellate Defender and the Office of the State’s
Attorney Appellate Prosecutor to carry out responsibilities under
the new Pre-trial Services Act.
Provides $16.1 million to support two cadet classes to hire and
train 200 additional sworn troopers to address the rising need for
officers throughout the State, bringing the total number of officers
to 1,800.
Includes operational and administrative support funding for the new
seven-member Firearm Owner’s Identification Card Review Board,
created by PA 102-0237, which reviews appeals from card applicants.
Includes more than $2.1 million for Safe2Help Illinois, a 24/7
program where students can share information on safety issues in a
confidential environment.
Provides an additional $18 million funding round for the Illinois
Nonprofit Security Grant Program per PA 100-0508, which will provide
grants and support to organizations throughout the State for
security improvements that assist in preventing, preparing for or
responding to acts of terrorism
Includes $30 million for the Law Enforcement Camera Grant Program to
provide reimbursement to local law enforcement agencies for in-car
cameras, body cameras and data storage.
Includes $10 million for the Law Enforcement Recruitment and
Retention Fund to provide resources to local law enforcement
agencies for recruitment of new officers, retention plans, mental
health care for officers, safety equipment and training, and
improvement in local jails.
Includes $2.5 million for the Illinois Terrorism Task Force Gaps
Report to establish a baseline for public safety response
capabilities
Continues the Department of Juvenile Justice’s 21st Century
Transformation Plan that includes operational costs for its new
facility in Lincoln, scheduled for opening in late Fiscal Year 2024.
Includes $13 million in funding for the Adult Redeploy Program, an
increase of $1 million to allow for continued program expansion.
Government Services
$16.5 million for a multi-year initiative to modernize the state’s
professional licensing system at the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation and additional funds for a call center to
assist in the transition.
$32.5 million to the Secretary of State to implement the REAL ID
program
Over $75 million for the Secretary of State to begin to modernize
the office’s computer systems
Economic and Community Development
$400 million to close major economic development deals and attract
businesses and jobs to the state
Expanded workforce development programs to build a pipeline in the
industries of the future, like data center, electric vehicles, and
clean energy
$20 million to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO)
for Rebuild Illinois Downtowns and Main Streets Capital Program to
provide additional community revitalization funding
$40 million for forgivable loans to launch more social equity
cannabis businesses
$10 million to fund a “one-stop business portal” to foster
entrepreneurship
$2 million for a new Office of Rural Economic Development intended
to connect communities and improve access to state and federal aid
through outreach or technical assistance from rural navigators.
$2.5 million to establish an Office of Outdoor Recreation to promote
tourism at destinations around the State and grow the outdoor
recreation economy of Illinois
$10 million for a Clean Energy Career and Technical Education Pilot
Program for high schools
$20 million to address food insecurity in urban and rural
communities through incentivizing the opening of grocery stores and
providing grants for equipment upgrades to existing small grocers
through the Illinois Grocery Initiative
Includes $30 million for agriculture programs that improve the
availability and accessibility of nutritious, locally sourced foods
for Illinoisans in need, including $28 million for a new federally
funded Local Food Purchase Cooperative Agreement which will support
local, regional and socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers
through the purchase of local foods for distribution to food banks,
schools and organizations that reach underserved communities, and $2
million for middle supply-chain infrastructure grants through the
federal Resilient Food Systems program.
$20 million for a Fast-Track Workforce Program intended to provide
resources and support to major relocating or expanding employers for
employee screening and recruitment, and customized job training
development.
$20 million to provide a state commitment and in-kind contribution
to support Illinois entities seeking competitive federal awards that
align with the State’s economic development plan
$19 million in additional funding for advertising and promotion of
tourism throughout Illinois, nearly doubling the State’s investment
in domestic and international tourism promotion
$30 million for new one-time tourism promotion grants at DCEO to
support the State’s tourism industry
$90 million in new capital funding for DCEO’s Enterprise Fund Grant
Program, which provides competitive funding to attract and retain
businesses in Illinois, creating new jobs and capital investment in
the State
$55 million in new capital funding for Prime Sites Program
investments, providing grants for large-scale projects making
substantial capital investment and job creation commitments
Takes another step towards phasing out the corporate franchise tax
Creates the Hydrogen Fuel Replacement Tax Credit Act, providing tax
incentives for zero-carbon hydrogen fuel.
Expands the Angel Investment credit from 25% to 35% if the
investment is made in a business venture that is owned by women,
people of color, a person with a disability, or in a county with a
population of less than 250,000.
Environmental Initiatives
Funds $12 million in electric vehicle consumer rebates at the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA)
Includes new authority for federal Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)
programming for energy efficiency rebates at IEPA totaling $267.8
million
Reappropriates $70 million from Rebuild Illinois at IEPA for
transportation electrification and charging infrastructure statewide
Continues funding for unsewered communities planning and
construction grants for communities around the state
Includes funding for new Open Space Lands Acquisition and
Development grants at Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) at $56
million, providing the largest and most accessible opportunity in
the state’s history for distressed communities for the second year
in a row
Includes funding through DNR’s Office of Water Resources to
implement projects such as providing the State’s $50 million share
for the Brandon Road Ecosystem Project to block invasive carp
species from entering the Great Lakes ecosystem, and programs such
as a $10 million expansion of the Flood Hazard Mitigation program
for new buyouts
Capital and Transportation Funding
The Fiscal Year 2024 capital budget represents a continuation of the
historic Rebuild Illinois program and other ongoing capital
initiatives. Continued use of federal funds will expedite delivery
of critical initiatives. Illinois anticipates receiving billions of
dollars from the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA)
to invest in transportation, water, broadband, clean energy and
more.
Includes funding to support IIJA programming, as the State
anticipates receiving at least $18.0 billion over five years through
federal formula funding; over $7.2 billion in infrastructure funding
has been announced for Illinois investments since IIJA’s passage
Features $4.6 billion for the FY24 Road Program. This includes
approximately $3.4 billion in pay-as-you-go revenue and $1.2 billion
in bond funds.
Includes $300 million in new funding for the I-290 Blue Line
Modernization Project
Reappropriates $100 million at DCEO for community-driven broadband
expansion to help close the digital divide.
Supports the IIJA lead service line replacement loans at $230.2
million, as well as $10 million in new IEPA funding to provide lead
service line inventory and planning grants to communities around the
state.
Reappropriates $86 million in funding for orphaned well plugging
from Rebuild Illinois and IIJA
Provides an increase to RTA Operating Assistance Grants $18 million
Provides an additional $1.5 million for RTA reduced fares
Provides an additional $5 million for Amtrak operating assistance
for state-supported routes
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