Pritzker touts higher education plan, joins call for pharmacies to state
abortion pill plans
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[March 15, 2023]
By NIKA SCHOONOVER
Capitol News Illinois
nschoonover@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – On his latest marketing tour to sell his state budget
plan, Gov. JB Pritzker visited a community college in Normal Tuesday to
highlight his proposed investments in higher education.
“With an additional $100 million directed to the (Monetary Award
Program) grant program, a student can pair our state support with a
federal Pell grant and pay for college with no loans and debt required,”
Pritzker said at the news conference at Heartland Community College.
The increase would bring total MAP funding to $701 million, a 75 percent
increase since the governor took office. According to his office, the
proposed investment would allow most community college students and 40
percent of public university students at or below median income levels
to have their tuition covered through the combined grants.
The governor added that every student this year who applied and was
eligible for a MAP grant received one.
“When I first took office, going to college in Illinois seemed less
affordable than ever before. Prior administrations had cut funding for
higher education so badly that out-of-state tuition looked better to
Illinois families,” Pritzker said. “And that’s a fundamental failure of
state government and it’s a trend we’ve been reversing for the last four
years.”
The plan would also provide additional funding for community college
programs, including $8.3 million for dual credit and noncredit workforce
grant programs, $11 million for development of technology-focused
workforce training programs, and $750,000 to expand English language
services.
“Illinois has the third largest community college system in the entire
nation,” Pritzker said. “We’re home to 48 community colleges and all
across the state they open doors to higher wages, new careers, better
jobs.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a news
conference in Normal Tuesday which he called to tout his proposed
investments in higher education. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
The governor will spend the coming days promoting the plan across the
state, similar to a tour he made in recent weeks to highlight his “Smart
Start” plan for early childhood education. He’s also promoted
investments aimed at addressing the state’s teacher shortage.
Medication abortion access
Pritzker also announced Tuesday that he joined 14 other governors in
calling for major pharmacies to clarify how they will protect access to
medication abortion such as mifepristone.
The move comes after a recent announcement by Walgreens that it would
stop distributing the medication in 21 states where Republican attorneys
general threatened action against the company.
“I’ve spoken with Walgreens executives and expressed my deep
disappointment at their announced policy, and I’ve urged them to rethink
this decision that will severely limit access to essential health care
for thousands of women,” Pritzker said in a statement. “I’m calling on
all major pharmacies to resist the political grandstanding of certain
state attorneys general and preserve this right wherever reproductive
choice is still allowed – which will always be the case in Illinois
while I am governor.”
The coalition of 14 Democratic governors sent a letter to executives at
CVS, Walmart, Rite-Aid, Safeway, Health Mart, Kroger, Costco and Target.
“The other major pharmacy companies have not announced what they’re
doing and it’s clear to me that they’re capitulating to the threat by 21
attorney’s general around the nation,” Pritzker said at the Tuesday news
conference. “That’s not acceptable and they need to answer what are they
going to do.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It
is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation.
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