State budget has $900 million hole

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SPRINGFIELD – Gov. Pat Quinn’s office warned Wednesday that state government now faces an additional $900 million budget deficit, largely because rising unemployment has eaten away at income tax revenues.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Quinn budget director David Vaught said the new budget hole increases the pressure for officials to raise taxes early next year. Until then, he said, Quinn will cut spending further and seek legislative permission to borrow money set aside in special government funds.

“As the economy worsens, the state’s going to feel that just as local governments feel that,” said Rep. Bob Pritchard, R-Hinckley. “Yes, that situation is worsening, but I look at it on the positive side.”

Legislators have returned to Springfield for the fall session and are considering a number of issues, not the least of which is the state’s financial situation.

Pritchard explained a budgetary crisis like this can actually harbor potential good.

As shown from time to time throughout the past, “the only way our state is going to deal with these issues ... is if we have a crisis,” Pritchard said. “And we have a huge crisis. I just hope citizens continue to put pressure on the executive and legislative leaders to do the right thing.”

This year’s budget was put together with the assumption that income tax revenue would be about the same as last year, around $10.2 billion. But the latest projections now show revenues falling by $850 million, Vaught said.

“Basically, what happened is unemployment is worse than what the economists were projecting,” he said. “We’re in the same boat as the rest of the economy.”

The statewide unemployment rate for August was 10 percent, compared to 6.7 percent a year earlier.

In addition, revenues from riverboat gambling are now expected to be $50 million lower than projected because a Joliet casino was closed for several months by a fire.

The Democratic governor advocates raising income taxes to reduce the state’s stubborn budget problems. Lawmakers, however, refused to go along with that during the spring, despite a deficit that topped $11 billion.

Instead, officials patched together a budget that depended on borrowing money, delaying bills and promising unspecified spending cuts. Critics say it shortchanged many important programs that help the elderly, disabled and needy.

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