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				Illinois state Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, wonders when state 
				lawmakers will get out of their own way when it comes to 
				fiscally steering the state in the right direction. 
 “We've been clearing out our own tax base and we aren't growing 
				as an economy,” Ugaste told The Center Square. “We aren't 
				growing our business base as we should. If there's any growth at 
				all, we're lagging the rest of the nation. We should be well 
				ahead of where we are. We'd have more revenue coming in that way 
				with less taxation on each individual and each business.”
 
 As it is, data shows Illinois barely has just two weeks of 
				reserves in its rainy-day fund and the state also has less 
				funding to pay its own bills than any other at just 28 days of 
				reserves. With the state’s total fund balances also ranking last 
				and the state being the only one in the country with less than 
				30 days’ worth of total reserve balances on hand, Ugaste warned 
				Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s 2026 budget plan, with all its proposed 
				spending increases, stands to do little to help the situation.
 
 “We lower taxation, pull back on business regulation and lower 
				our litigation costs, business and people are back flocking to 
				Illinois,” he added. “If we don't do those things, we're just 
				going to keep heading down this terrible path and we'll probably 
				have to use up that small rainy day fund just to meet the 
				expenses that the supermajority Democrats keep putting on us.”
 
 Ugaste said he’s still not sure Democrats have finally gotten 
				the message, at least in the same way he’s come to view it.
 
 “I heard one say the other day that we haven't tapped all the 
				tax base we could yet, that there's still more money out there 
				that we could bring in through taxes on people and businesses,” 
				he said. “That mentality just doesn't work. That's why we're not 
				getting businesses. That's why we've declined.”
 
 Illinois’ rainy-day fund currently has a balance of $2.2 
				billion. Officials from the Government Finance Officers 
				Association recommend the state in 2026 have at least $9.2 
				billion in reserve to be able to cover a minimum of 60 days.
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