A look at Illinois’ budget disaster as impasse hits 3rd year
While a spending plan got early approval in the House on Friday, the chamber later adjourned for the day, with House Speaker
Lawmakers are trying to end an impasse between Republican Gov.
Comptroller
HOW BAD IS IT?
No other state has come close to the mess that
Some states have gone months without a budget —
Some homeless and domestic violence shelters have been forced to close or reduce services, and some medical offices are no longer seeing patients on state insurance unless they pay cash up front. Universities have laid off thousands of employees.
WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES?
S&P Global Ratings said earlier this month it would likely downgrade
A downgrade would make
The
"We're going into very dangerous territory," Dunn said.
HOW DID IT HAPPEN?
Rauner, a former private equity investor, won election in 2014 on an anti-tax, pro-business agenda. He promised to shake things up, once even suggesting it might require a government shutdown.
As he was inaugurated, a temporary, four-year Democratic income tax increase that had provided up to
Rauner has demanded cost-cutting changes to workers' compensation laws, which he says are needed to lure businesses to
HOW HAS
In nearly two dozen states, failure to pass a budget leads to a government shutdown. Other states have consequences to deter late spending plans. In
People who rely on government for assistance have felt the pain. But for others, the impasse so far has barely been noticeable: Roughly 63,000 state workers are still getting paychecks, schools have remained open and some road construction projects have continued.
But the days of being able to get by are coming to an end.
WHERE DOES THE DEFICIT STAND NOW?
Because lawmakers never passed a budget accounting for the rollback of the income tax increase,
And as more groups go to court to get paid, and judges order more spending, the deficit has grown.
Mendoza, the state comptroller, warned this week that without a budget, the state by August will have
She said that would make "the unthinkable" — such as delaying pension payments or not paying state workers — very likely.
"Illinoisans must brace for maximum impact," she said.
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