Pritzker calls $55.2B budget ‘responsible and balanced’ – but warns
Trump policies could upend it
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[February 20, 2025]
By Ben Szalinski, Peter Hancock & Jerry Nowicki
SPRINGFIELD — An improved revenue forecast is helping ease pressure on
state finances as Gov. JB Pritzker calls for tightened spending to
balance the budget without tax increases on everyday Illinoisans.
During his annual state of the state and budget address on Wednesday,
Pritzker called for a roughly 3% spending increase to $55.2 billion in
fiscal year 2026 that will be supported by a similar increase in state
revenue to $55.5 billion.
The plan factors in a better-than-expected economic outlook for the
coming fiscal year after the governor’s office originally projected a
multi-billion-dollar shortfall in November. Pritzker also proposed a
significant spending reduction compared to the November estimate while
still increasing spending over current-year levels.
But administration officials also warned that the state is in large part
at the whim of President Donald Trump’s onslaught of federal policy
changes.
The governor’s plan assumes a $173 million increase in federal funding,
though Pritzker named several enacted or feared Trump policies that
could alter estimates, including tariffs, food safety deregulation and
potential health care cuts.
The governor called his proposal “responsible and balanced,” pointing
out that it doesn’t raise taxes on Illinoisans, though he did propose a
tax hike on certain casino profits.
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“If there’s one thing I’ve learned as governor, there are no magic bean
fixes,” Pritzker said. “And each year there’s some difficulty that
requires us to work hard to overcome it.”
Part of the spending plan includes significant changes to immigrant
health care programs, including eliminating a program for low-income
noncitizens living in the U.S. without legal permission between ages 42
and 64.
Ultimately, lawmakers and the governor will have to come to an agreement
on a spending plan by the end of May. But the governor’s opening salvo
could meet opposition from Democratic lawmakers in the General Assembly
– especially members of the Illinois Legislative Latino Caucus – due to
what it doesn’t fund.
“All of us have been hearing that it was going to be a tough budget
year. I think that we expected there to be some things in the budget
that we weren’t going to be happy with,” Sen. Karina Villa, D-West
Chicago, said. “But I think completely removing a program is not
anything that we were expecting.”
Tightened spending
Despite the roughly 3% spending increase, most areas of the state budget
would see little growth under Pritzker’s plan. About 75% of the spending
increase comes from increased funding for education, pensions and
growing health care costs.
Outside those areas, spending is up just 1% across the board.
The most notable spending change is the elimination of the Health
Benefits for Immigrant Adults program that provides Medicaid-style
benefits to certain low-income noncitizens ages 42 to 64. Pritzker
proposed leaving the Health Benefits for Immigrant Seniors program
intact to serve certain low-income noncitizens age 65 and older, which
will cost the state $132 million.
The programs unexpectedly stretched the state budget in spring 2023 when
costs were projected to potentially reach $1 billion. Lawmakers gave the
governor authority to control costs by pausing enrollment and enacting
copays, and projected program costs are now at $558 million in the
current fiscal year. Enrollment in the programs, meanwhile, has remained
paused.
Eliminating the program for middle-aged adults is projected to save the
general revenue fund about $330 million, according to the governor’s
office. Pritzker told reporters later Wednesday he expects the federal
government will stop reimbursing states for costs associated with
programs providing services to noncitizens.
While Pritzker signified he’s open to working with lawmakers on what
programs will ultimately be funded, he said his overarching goal is a
balanced budget.
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One of the priorities Pritzker put on hold is an increase in spending on
the state’s Early Childhood Block Grant program. In the past two years,
the state has helped more than 11,000 children access child care as part
of a multi-year plan. But the governor did not request another $75
million increase this year that would have helped add more.
Pritzker also proposed redirecting funds previously appropriated for
asylum seekers to other services. That includes reducing funding to $40
million from $139 million for “welcoming centers” that helped the state
handle migrants bused here from Texas and other states.
Pritzker proposed allocating $282.7 million for Home Illinois, a program
that provides services for the homeless and also provided assistance to
new arrivals, keeping the program relatively flat from a year ago
despite advocates’ calls for $100 million in new funding. The governor’s
office said funds that were previously directed toward asylum seekers in
Home Illinois would be redirected to homeless shelters and other
services for Illinois’ homeless populations.
Pritzker’s proposal calls for allocating $2 million toward maintenance
in the Department of Corrections, the minimum amount recommended. The
move comes a year after the state allocated $900 million to rebuild the
Stateville and Logan prisons after years of deterioration and
behind-schedule repairs.
Pritzker also proposed increasing the “rainy day” fund by $154 million,
bringing its balance to $2.5 billion at the end of FY26.
Notably absent from the proposal, however, was any new funding for
public transportation. Chicago-area transit agencies face a more than
$700 million shortfall in the coming year. Pritzker told reporters there
still needs to be negotiations with the agencies about reforms before
the state commits to new funding.
Education and human services
One of the few areas of the budget targeted for a substantial increase
is PreK-12 education.
Pritzker’s plan includes the statutory minimum increase of $350 million
for the Evidence-Based Funding formula, a plan lawmakers enacted in 2017
to focus new education spending on the neediest districts.
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Gov. JB Pritzker delivers his State of the State and budget address
before the General Assembly at the Illinois State Capitol,
Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/pool)
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That would bring the total funding under the EBF formula to $8.9
billion, a $2.1 billion cumulative increase since the program began.
Pritzker credited that funding for helping raise student test scores and
improving graduation rates.
His plan also calls for adding $1.3 million for career and technical
education and maintaining spending of $3 million next year to implement
the state literacy plan.
But it also calls for flat funding of $748 million for Early Childhood
Block Grants, which help subsidize the cost of preschool for at-risk and
low-income children.
All told, Pritzker’s plan would bring total general revenue fund
spending on PreK-12 education to just under $11.2 billion, or about $200
million less than the Illinois State Board of Education had requested.
State Rep. Will Davis, D-Homewood, who chairs the House appropriations
committee that deals with public schools, said after the speech that he
thought Pritzker’s plan was insufficient, “for the simple fact that I
think we can be better at EBF.”
“Last year, I wanted to argue for $450 million,” he said in an interview
of the standard yearly increase in EBF funding. “I think that’s doable.
I mean, if we’re ever going to have a real conversation about getting to
full funding in K-12, we’re going to have to increase the EBF allocation
more than what it is right now.”
The governor is also continuing his effort to increase the number of
employees at the Department of Children and Family Services. Pritzker
proposed adding 100 new employees to increase staffing to 4,100 at the
department, the most since 2002. Under his proposal, overall funding for
DCFS will have increased by 100% since Pritzker took office.
The Department of Human Services would receive $7.9 billion, including
$20 million to fund 50-cent-per-hour wage increases for direct service
providers.
With most of the state’s federal pandemic relief funds now spent,
Pritzker proposed allocating some state funding to keep up affected
programs. That includes appropriating $40 million from the state’s
general fund to implement the Reimagine Public Safety Act, a program
designed to reduce gun violence.
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Revenue changes
The governor’s budget office typically makes conservative estimates
about revenue. The November forecast from the Governor’s Office of
Management and Budget had projected revenues to remain flat, driving a
deficit of $3.2 billion.
But it relied on a September economic forecast from the financial
services company S&P Global. The governor’s office says S&P has since
revised its forecasts, leading the GOMB to increase its estimate by $1.6
billion. Pritzker’s office also now expects strong personal and
corporate income tax growth next year in addition to limited sales tax
growth.
The revenue outlook for the current FY25 budget was also revised upwards
by $421 million thanks to personal income growth, consumer spending and
a stable job market. The governor’s office plans to use the extra
revenue to introduce $550 million in additional spending for the current
fiscal year.
But Pritzker also proposed spending about $1.2 billion less than what
the GOMB projected in its November estimate.
Another $469 million in revenue would be raised through other changes to
law, including adjusting tax rates on electronic gambling and table
games at casinos to generate $100 million in revenue. The plan also
calls for pausing the transfer of $171 million in sales tax collected on
motor fuel to the road fund and raising $198 million by providing
temporary amnesty for individuals making delinquent tax payments.
But much uncertainty still surrounds how much federal funding Illinois
will receiving going forward as the Trump administration pledges to cut
federal spending. “Only an idiot” would think cutting off critical
federal funding is a good idea, Pritzker said.
His proposal still anticipates roughly the same level of federal support
in FY26 as the state currently receives. Pritzker’s office stressed it’s
impossible to predict what Trump’s administration will do, but they
believe the federal government must honor longstanding agreements.
State government efficiencies
Pritzker also emphasized making state government more efficient to save
costs during his speech.
The governor announced new site readiness and surplus property programs
that are designed to spark economic development, which ultimately could
also amount to savings for the state. Pritzker proposed allocating $300
million to the Illinois Department of Central Management to repurpose
five shuttered state prisons and developmental centers to ultimately
attract new private economic development at the sites.
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“This proposed budget enacts cost-saving operational efficiencies,
improves productivity, curtails new hiring at agencies, consolidates
unnecessary segregated funds, eliminates dormant boards and commissions,
and overhauls state purchasing to save taxpayers money,” Pritzker said.
This includes studies of CMS and the Department of Transportation to
identify better hiring and contracting practices, merging the mental
health and substance abuse divisions at the Department of Public Health
and reviewing potentially overlapping responsibilities between townships
and other units of government.
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