Illinois House Lawmakers Put Final Touches on Illinois Budget; Most Programs Face Cuts

(Springfield, IL) – Illinois lawmakers are rushing to find the magic fiscal number with some legislators expecting final figures by next week.

Illinois budget plans in the Illinois House for higher education, public safety and general services are headed for full debate this week, while agreements on elementary and high school education and human services are close to a resolution.

“The House will have the budget done by next week,” state Rep. Luis Arroyo, D-Chicago, said.

Unlike previous years, the Illinois House has delegated a larger role for its budget committees in determining next fiscal year’s budget.

State Rep. Kenneth Dunkin, D-Chicago, who heads the budget committee on higher education, said his group made it under the House’s higher education budget goal of $2.1 billion by targeting for-profit schools through the state’s monetary award program, or MAP.

“We had to make cuts, and the committee decided that cuts towards for-profit schools were far easier than cuts to the opposite (not-for-profit schools),” said Dunkin, who hoped the funds might be brought back on the Senate side, which is dealing with a larger $34.3 billion total budget plan.

MAP funds were reduced by $17 million.

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Illinois Budget: Labor Union Rolls Out TV, Radio Ad Campaign; House, Senate Budget Lawmakers Divided

(Springfield, IL) — May 5, 2011. Services Employees International Union for Healthcare in Illinois and Indiana has been placing television and radio advertisements throughout the state, hoping to deter lawmakers from cutting dollars for child care and home care services for the elderly.

“These ads are really about educating the public and educating lawmakers about the importance of these programs and the critical role that they play in providing family support and care for tens of thousands of Illinois families,” said Brynn Seibert, spokeswoman for SEIU Healthcare.

David Morrison, deputy director of the Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, said advocacy groups typically create media campaigns to encourage the public to lobby their lawmakers.

“(But) because it’s so removed from the outcomes, groups are usually reluctant to take that kind of effort, to put those resources in that kind of effort, when it’s much more direct for them to send their lobbyists over to talk to a public official,” Morrison said.

These messages also sometimes lose focus on the bigger picture.

“Advocacy groups are often times providing information in a way that is advantageous to their organization and loses the broader context,” said Philip Habel, a professor at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, who noted that the effectiveness of advertisements are hard to gauge.

SEIU Healthcare is advocating specifically that the state’s Community Care Program, Childcare Assistance Program and the Home Service Program be fully funded. And the advertisement campaign will play a part in getting that done, Seibert said.

“We feel that given the new budget process, it’s critical the public understands the human consequences of cutting home care and child care,” Seibert said.Under the Illinois Department on Aging, the Community Care Program each month helps keep about 71,000 elderly residents in their own homes by providing in-home services, such as laundry, grocery shopping, social activities and emergency response services.

The Department on Aging estimates it will need $701.4 million to maintain the program. The Childcare Assistance Program and Home receive $285 million and $787 million, respectively.

State Rep. Sara Feigenholtz, D-Chicago, who heads the House budget committee on human services, hadn’t seen all of the commercials, but anticipates “breathtaking” cuts all around.

“We cannot spend more money than we have in revenue,” Feigenholtz said. “We need to see data. We need to know that the money that we’re spending is money well spent and that there’s an established goal and those goals are being met.”

However, a lead Senate member charged with crafting the human services budget paints a vastly different picture.

State Sen. Heather Steans, D-Chicago, said that chamber most likely will be increasing funds for community care programs and keeping child care funding level.

“I like everything that helps keep pressure on us to maintain these critical services. I think they’re helpful,” Steans said. “I’m hoping we can continue to keep services that are critical to low- and working-income families and … for our elderly.”

Governor Pat Quinn and Legislature have until midnight on May 31 to sign off on a state budget before the required votes for passage increases.

Rep. Patricia Bellock, R-Westmont, said she appreciates the message behind the advertisements, but said advocacy groups shouldn’t be surprised if they see cuts.

“Remember lots of times when they go into the new budget, there are increases in there. You may just be cutting them from what they appropriated above the last year’s line item. Can they exist on what they had last year?” Bellock said.

Melissa Leu, Illinois Statehouse News

Illinois Senate Democrats Seek Budget Details from GOP as Votes Near

(Springfield, IL) – As Illinois’ budget deadline approaches, the Illinois Senate could be the next fiscal battleground.

Fresh off of a two-week break, Illinois state senators on Monday returned to the Capitol to iron out the final details of a $30-billion-plus state spending plan.

“We’re going to pass a budget, and it will be a balanced budget,” said state Sen. William Haine, D-Alton, who added that he is confident the Senate would be done by the end of next week.

Exactly how to divide the state’s dollars, however, is in dispute.

State Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Rockford, wants to see an agreement between the House and Senate that sets a price tag before lawmakers start spending.

“It is unfair to human service providers, state employees, universities to have both chambers pass a budget that is totally different and have each of them thinking that one or the other is going to be the realistic number,” Syverson said.

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Senate President John Cullerton, GOP Leader Christine Radogno Divided over Budget

(Springfield, IL) — Illinois Senate Republicans and Democrats agree that cuts are a must to balance next year’s Illinois budget, but they argue over exactly how to do it.

After the Senate on Friday passed several measures to make payments to state pension funds, Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, said they would have to slash about $1.2 billion from Gov. Pat Quinn’s $35.4 billion budget to balance the checkbook for the next fiscal year.

Cullerton said he wants to see lawmakers in the coming weeks suggest changes to the approximately 40 different pieces of legislation that make up Quinn’s proposed budget, a move Cullerton said would make the process more “open and transparent.”

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Illinois House Putting Programs on the “Chopping Block”, Says Rep. William Davis

(Springfield, IL) — There are going to be some tough decisions made in Springfield.  And not everyone is going to be happy with the outcomes.

The Illinois House’s appropriations committees will be outlining in the coming weeks specific spending amounts for next year’s Illinois budget, a power they haven’t exercised in many years, said State Rep. William Davis, D-East Hazel Crest, who heads the committee that will divvy up funds for elementary and high school education.

In recent years, the General Assembly has typically deferred a lump sum to the governor, allowing him to take control over the specific details in the budget.

Davis said he’s “excited” about the House’s decision to take a more hands-on approach.

“Here’s an opportunity to really get into what these programs do. How (are) they helping people? Are they helping people? Is the amount of money they receive worthy of that?” Davis said.

House committees have held hearings since January to learn more about specific programs and agencies vying for spots in the budget.

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