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Pat Quinn's Budget Plan: Gov Says Tax Hike Would Save Education, But Not In Formal Proposal

Quinn

First Posted: 5/10/10 Updated: 5/25/11

As predicted, Gov. Pat Quinn did not include a tax hike in his formal budget proposal Wednesday, but after listing the massive cuts to education that would be "necessary" without additional revenues, the governor stressed the need for a 1 percent income tax surcharge.

Quinn's plan, dubbed "Fighting for Illinois," aims to combat the $13 billion fiscal deficit "while still meeting its most critical needs for the people," according to a release from his office. The plan he spoke of Wednesday involved creating jobs, cutting costs, "strategic borrowing," federal assistance and increased state revenues--but most of his proposal seemed to be setting state lawmakers up for incredibly tough choices.

"I'm not going to try to sugarcoat the situation," Quinn said, calling the state budget a "crisis of epic proportions."

As Quinn's chief of staff Jerome Stermer outlined Tuesday, the governor's plan includes borrowing nearly $4.7 billion to cover the state's operating budget, cut $2 billion in spending and pass the buck -- or more precisely $6 billion bucks worth of bills -- to next year's legislature.

Quinn blamed the partisanship in Springfield for the cuts, which would hammer state schools. Quinn said the choice to cut $1.3 billion from schools--which would be a 17 percent cut in state funding to grammar schools and high schools across the state--was "unavoidable."

After explaining the education cuts, he brought up the tax surcharge, saying the 1 percent income tax increase would be "for education" and keep funding for schools where it is currently. He called school cuts (that he proposed) "short sighted" and said a "wise and responsible" alternative would be the tax hike.

"1 percent makes sense," Quinn said. "The people of Illinois will understand. We must invest in the future, even in tough economic times. We don't have six months, we don't have six weeks...[we need] immediate action."

The Chicago Tribune breaks it down:

Quinn wants to increase the personal income tax rate from 3 percent to 4 percent --- a 33 percent increase --- with the corporate tax rate rising from 4.8 percent to 5.8 percent. The tax hike would bring in $2.8 billion a year.
Quinn said is lawmakers fail to pass an income tax hike, roughly 13,000 teachers could start seeing layoff notices soon.

"I think that what you see the governor doing is calling the bluff of those who say you can do this without a tax increase," Ralph Martire, executive director of the Chicago-based Center for Tax and Budget Accountability told NBC Chicago.

Whether Quinn's plan will get lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to compromise remains to be seen.

"I'd not be comfortable saying it's dead on arrival," Rikeesha Phelon, a spokeswoman for Senate President John Cullerton (D-Chicago) told the Sun-Times. "But if I was simply assessing how I thought it would fare in the Senate, we'd have to assume we'd have to get Republicans on board to the idea of borrowing . . . and I do not see that happening."

"I don't think he intends to cut a billion dollars out of education... He's doing it to get the education community upset and to call lawmakers and say, 'Vote for a tax increase so we don't have this cut,'" House GOP Leader Tom Cross told Chicago Public Radio.

On Monday, Quinn budget director David Vaught told the AP about more proposed cuts, including:

* State police would lose about $32 million, meaning a 15 percent drop in overall headcount.

* Local governments will see about $300 million less in terms of state support--"that and the education cuts are likely to increase pressure for cities and school boards to raise property taxes." (Mayor Daley is not so thrilled about this proposal.)

Quinn also intends to propose a $2,500 tax credit for each full-time job small businesses add, the Sun-Times reports.

"Anything meaningful (in terms of fixing the budget) is going to be publicly unpopular," former governor Jim Edgar said Tuesday. "I just don't think that's going to happen during an election year."


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As predicted, Gov. Pat Quinn did not include a tax hike in his formal budget proposal Wednesday, but after listing the massive cuts to education that would be "necessary" without additional revenues, ...
As predicted, Gov. Pat Quinn did not include a tax hike in his formal budget proposal Wednesday, but after listing the massive cuts to education that would be "necessary" without additional revenues, ...
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09:49 AM on 03/11/2010
I think we need to start with the Rich Politician­s! Stopping take a pay check and actually serve the people. Unload those ridiculous staffs of buddies collecting massive checks. Then lets cut things that do not effect children and elderly. Again, like your paycheck Mr. Governor!
08:08 AM on 03/11/2010
More scare tactics. It's pathetic really. Is he a governor or a producer for local televison (scare em into watching) news?

Just remember: $60 MILLION allocated to pay Chicago parents to walk thier kids to Fenger area schools. $60 MILLION DOLLARS.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack 5150
01:10 AM on 03/11/2010
Increase income tax from 3% to 4%, That's a 33% increase..­. I'm up for it, as long as Quinn takes a 33% cut in his annual salary!

Signed,
One Pissed Off Illinois Resident!
09:18 AM on 03/11/2010
I am not up for it. Quinn would have to work for a salary of $30,000 and cut half the state workers for me to be OK with a tax increase. The property taxes in this state have gone through the roof while values have plummeted.

Signed,
One Conservati­ve Who Despises Liberals
07:16 PM on 03/10/2010
The first poll has Brady up 10. Good. The Quinn - Blago team needs to be put out to pasture.

Quinn is giving the citizens of Illinois the Walter Mondale plan; he is saying he is going to raise taxes. FOR WHAT. Because Blago - Quinn are bad leaders and aim to plunder the people.
07:56 PM on 03/10/2010
It is pretty obvious that with this tax increase proposal Quinn will not be a governor after the next election. State employee pension reform is required - reduce benefits, increase insurance premiums for health insurance beneficiar­ies, increase retirement age, switch to employee-o­nly contributi­on for all state employees (401k-styl­e) and eliminate all defined benefit plans. Only then consider cuts in education, police and increase borrowing.
09:11 AM on 03/11/2010
The 401K is a must. Otherwise half of the state workers should be fired.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ravi Abunijad
01:02 AM on 03/11/2010
No credible poll has Brady up by 10. Honestly, Republican­s did have a good shot with Dillard, but all Brady has to do is open his mouth and the election is over. I think Quinn will win even if he pushes the tax hike: Our taxes will still be comparable to the national average, I don't think it's enough to upset people as much as you think it is.
09:15 AM on 03/11/2010
You may be right about Quinn getting reelected.

Yes, I have heard a poll (I will post it as soon as I hear who it is) that has Brady up 10. It's the only one I have heard so far.

There is a cycle starting in Illinois that doesn't look good. Think New Jersey in the 1960s. It was a state were people flocked too because of low taxes and the job creation that followed. Then, Libs like yourself started voted for tax increases. Soon, more and more people started leaving.

The exodus from Illinois has already started as the state has the 5th highest net people loss in the country over the last few years. The question is whether we stop the bleeding or it continues.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
07:06 PM on 03/10/2010
Wow. Almost every other comment here is about the pensions. But Quinn's not getting the message. Maybe folks should start writing him.
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johnnygoodwud
05:04 PM on 03/10/2010
cut the teachers pensions first. that cut the administra­tors that do nothing but push papers and have meaningles­s meetings. while you're at it cut tenure,,,,­,,,,THAN come back to me about a tax hike. take a look at your property taxes,,,,,­,,,,,,,,ab­out 70% is for education. know why this won't happen, strong union, and politician­s are afraid of not getting reelected.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
06:54 PM on 03/10/2010
This is what voters want, but they're not listening.
07:58 PM on 03/10/2010
Should have been C[r]ook County Illinois.
Yes, the pension fund for state employees is $62 bln underfunde­d. serious work is needed on that. that is the legacy of Blagojevic­h (and Quinn being the lieutenant governor at the time).
04:01 PM on 03/10/2010
Thanks PROGRESSIV­ES! Look at what they do to our country!


http://mon­ey.cnn.com­/2010/01/1­4/news/eco­nomy/state­s.woes.for­tune/?sect­ion=magazi­nes_fortun­e
02:03 AM on 03/11/2010
If you Esaus hadn't sold Americas' birthright to the corps and banks and crooks and their cronies, and if you had the sense and b*lls to stand up to the 21st century Mafioso and take back their ill gotten gains all this would be a moot point.

"...a great nation is not saved by wars...it is saved by acts without external picturesqu­eness; by speaking, writing, voting resonably; by smiting corruption swiftly; by good temper between parties; by people knowing true men when they see them, and preferring them as leaders to rabid partisans or empty quacks."



William James, 1897
02:12 PM on 03/11/2010
"When the people fear their government­, there is tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is Liberty." Thomas Jefferson
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rchsod
02:33 PM on 03/10/2010
what we should do is privatize all public sector jobs. that alone would save the taxpayers 100`s of millions each year. instead of elections set up a board of directors to decide on the contracts that will be awarded to run the state,coun­ty,and local contractor­s .there`s no need to fund the pensions because that contracts will be voided. there`s other examples of the savings that we can gain by contractin­g out our government to the lowest bidders.
03:29 PM on 03/10/2010
A better way would be to implement a voucher system and remove most the red tape to start new private schools.
03:30 PM on 03/10/2010
What's in the interest of the Tobacco Industry is not what is in the interest of the children in school . The LAST thing you want is a ' privatized " Police force , owned by Enron or a " privatized " public transporta­tion owned by GM . Public Transporta­tion is diametrica­lly opposite the interests of GM .It's Corporate Libertaria­nism that created this mess in the first place . The solution is to abolish the Federal Reserve Note and create a debt free , non-intere­st bearing currency issued by the People through Congress as mandated by the Constituti­on , and distribute­d through interest free loans to the people of the various communitie­s . Essentiall­y , exactly what Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin did BEFORE the Central Banks usurped the power of issuance of currency .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
06:57 PM on 03/10/2010
Right. But I don't want a public force, where every employee is the member of a special interest group that makes donations to candidates for all statewide offices either.

The problem in Illinois is that the taxpayer never gets any real representa­tion; hence, the pensions never get a second look and public salaries never get readjusted downward to account for the fact that taxpayers, specifical­ly property tax payers, have nothing left to give.

My property taxes went up 50% last year, and I may have to foreclose where I'd otherwise keep my house. Why? Because the divide between what they're spending and what we can afford is too steep. Even if I were able to live without food and utilities, I still couldn't afford the taxes.
02:11 PM on 03/10/2010
Quinn needs to expand his consultant­s. Try Ralph Martire's (Center for Tax & Budget Accountabi­lity) wife Mary Kay at Foley & Lardner. She's got experience with a wide variety of tax matters, including income taxes, apportionm­ent formulas, sales and use taxes, and premium and retaliator­y taxes. CTBA also has friends in high places. Barack Obama was on the CTBA's board in 2002. With Copley Press and Sun-times behind all this, I can't understand why they haven't gotten their message across. Goodbye pensions for Quinn's sake!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
06:59 PM on 03/10/2010
You forgot the Illinois Policy Institute. They've already posted a comprehens­ive analysis of the state budget, and made recomendat­ions that would bring the budget to reconcilia­tion.
01:37 PM on 03/10/2010
I wonder if free education to illegal aliens will continue?
Or medical benefits?
Or housing subsidies?

All those programs that swallow our hard earned tax dollars to fund illegals.
Suspect they will continue as that voting block is too important to the Democratic machine.
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rchsod
02:37 PM on 03/10/2010
under my plan blackwater could bid on a contract to take care of that problem.
02:16 AM on 03/11/2010
Yeah and back in the 60's when Democrats displeased the racists by supporting issues of EQUALITY and Human Rights the Republican­s fell all over themselves and forgot any morality they had left to cater to the anachronis­m of the conservati­ve south -
you sold your birthright for a "mess of pottidge"
You sold your souls to the devil....
01:31 PM on 03/10/2010
One of the weatlhties­t states in the nation.
With a versatile economy. Agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, tourism, distributi­on.

And the politician­s and unions have destroyed it.
Just like so many other states.
Add to it the concept of providing everything for everyone all the time is a recipe for disaster.
Eventually those tax dollars will slow down if only a few are targeted.
And the results are.......­..........­..........­..........­..........­..........­..........­.....today we are seeing it.
02:35 PM on 03/10/2010
State unions will break the state just like they did to GM. But don't blame the unions for asking for something and getting it from management­. Good management would have said we cannot afford or do that.

As a state that encourages illegal alien employment we are getting what the politician­s have sown.
03:30 PM on 03/10/2010
Too bad "managemen­t" is a gang of demented career politician­s.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
07:04 PM on 03/10/2010
I don't think they've destroyed the state. They can cut their way out of this, and let us have our liberty back. They just have to understand that "no" means "no"; and that it's the politician­s' problem now.

Each House Representa­tive gets $65k a year plus a leadership bonus of $10k. The pay is similar for State Senators. I say we cut this $75k salary in half to $37,500 a year with no pension. As far as I know, no one is homeless on $37,500 a year.
12:58 PM on 03/10/2010
Break for all UNIONS and that would save our state and our country!!!­!!!!!!!!!!­!!

That is why my company does not do any more trade show at McCormick!­! Way too expensive when you have those slow lazy union work putting stuff together at a snail's pace before their hour lunch and 8 hour day. Get rid of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crookedcountyillinois
Professional Illinois Government "Watchdog" and No
07:05 PM on 03/10/2010
The fact that someone actually wrote a law to make it that way is positive proof that our officials have been bought.
12:56 PM on 03/10/2010
It is time to cut the teachers pay and pension! Look at the top 100 salaires in our state:

http://www­.championn­ews.net/ar­ticle.php?­sid=2290

4 of the top 10 are GYM Teachers making 189K to 174!!! GIVE ME A BREAK.
01:01 PM on 03/10/2010
I forgot to mentin Driver's Ed and Music teachers on that list!! GIVE ME A BREAK!

There are many unemployed teachers that would do that job for max cap of 50K!!!

Once the teachers get their tenure they become lazy!!!!!!­!!
08:01 PM on 03/10/2010
$184k for a physical education teacher. Wow!
11:53 AM on 03/10/2010
It's time to reform the public sector's pension fund. Just like everybody else, public sector employees should have personaliz­ed 401(k) plans.
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Aldyth
Advocating for those who cannot defend themselves.
01:36 PM on 03/10/2010
And it should start with the elected public officials!
01:41 PM on 03/10/2010
That would be symbolical only, since they just represent a tiny fraction of the public sector monster.