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Quinn’s cuts will add to schools’ pain

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Illinois State Board of Education Superintendent Christopher Koch looks on during Ill. Gov. Pat Quinn’s State of the Budget address in the House chambers at the Illinois State Capitol on Wednesday in Springfield. Quinn’s proposed cut to education would be another blow to schools and universities that already have absorbed multimillion-dollar budget reductions, leading to larger class sizes, layoffs of more than 6,000 teachers and aides, soaring tuition rates and less money for financial aid. (AP photo)

SPRINGFIELD – Illinois schools already reeling from years of budget cuts could see even bigger class sizes, more layoffs, and less money to provide meals to low-income students under a budget Gov. Pat Quinn proposed Wednesday.

Quinn’s spending plan calls for more than $400 million in cuts to elementary, secondary and higher education. That would bring the total cut to K-12 education to more than $1 billion since 2008. Education officials say about two-thirds of districts already are in deficit spending and about 6,400 teachers and aides have lost their jobs.

“What we’re seeing now is frustration,” said Ben Schwarm, deputy executive director of the Illinois Association of School Boards. “It’s not the first time [school districts] have had to make cuts; the fat is long gone. Every cut right now is painful.”

Schwarm said many teachers already have received layoff notices for next year because by law teachers must be notified about the cuts at least 60 days before the end of the school year. Matt Vanover, spokesman for the Illinois State Board of Education, said some districts are considering shorter school days, shorter academic years and closing schools.

Quinn told lawmakers during his budget address that the cuts were difficult but the result of their failure to fix Illinois’ $97 billion pension crisis. Making the annual payments on those public employee retirement funds – close to $7 billion in the fiscal year that starts July 1 – is crowding out funding for other priorities, he said. And he warned that if they don’t find a solution, within two years Illinois will spend more on pensions than education.

“As I said to you a year ago, our state cannot continue on this path,” Quinn said.

According to a House staff analysis, Quinn’s budget would cut about $80 million from higher education, $5.3 million from free breakfast and lunch programs for low-income kids and $150 million from the minimum per-pupil spending the state is supposed to provide school districts. That would mean districts would receive only about 82 percent of the per-pupil amount that state law says is needed to adequately fund a student’s education.

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