February
19, 2016
To
the Honorable Members of
The
Illinois Senate,
99th
General Assembly:
Today I
veto Senate Bill 2043 from the 99th General Assembly, which would explode the
State’s budget deficit, exacerbate the State’s cash flow crisis, and place
further strain on social service providers and recipients who are already
suffering from the State’s deficit spending.
SB
2043 Would Exacerbate Our Budget and Cash Flow Deficits
Senate
Bill 2043 would appropriate $721 million for the Monetary Award Program (MAP)
and community colleges programs. Senate Bill 2043 proposes the same funding
levels for these programs as were included in the unconstitutional, unbalanced
budget passed by the General Assembly last year, which was opposed by many
legislators, including Democrats, and which I vetoed.
Despite
its constitutional obligation to balance the budget, the General Assembly has
not put forward a plan to pay for these programs, whether through spending
reductions, revenue, or cost-saving reforms. The Governor’s Office of
Management and Budget concluded that Senate Bill 2043 would add $721 million to
the State’s budget deficit.
Today,
the Comptroller reports 48,000 vendor vouchers waiting to be paid, a $7.2
billion backlog of bills, and a grand total balance of $145 million in the
general funds. This bill would spend money the State does not have.
Moreover,
Senate Bill 2043’s unfunded spending would significantly exacerbate the State’s
current cash flow challenges. To protect and prioritize General State Aid
payments, the Comptroller would be forced to further delay payments for other
goods and services across State government, putting social services further at
risk. We have already seen that the State’s deficit spending is harshest to
social service providers and our State’s most vulnerable residents. Senate Bill
2043 would further delay those payments at a time when those recipients are
already under fiscal stress.
A Better, Constitutional Way to Fund Higher Education
The
Constitution and our obligation to taxpayers require a balanced budget.
Recognizing this, legislators in both the House of Representatives and the
Senate put forward a plan to pay for higher education spending – not just those
programs included in Senate Bill 2043, but also funding for our public
universities. I thank them for their leadership.
House
Bill 4539 and Senate Bill 2349 would appropriate $1.6 billion for higher
education programs, while Senate Bill 2789 would authorize the Governor,
Comptroller, and Treasurer to identify and implement funding by reallocating
funds and reducing spending in other areas. Together these bills would fund
MAP, community college programs, and our public universities, without exploding
the deficit or exacerbating the State’s cash flow crisis. This is a far more
fiscally responsible – and constitutional – plan for funding higher education.
Therefore,
pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I
hereby return Senate Bill 2043, entitled “AN ACT concerning appropriations”, with
the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.
Sincerely,
Bruce
Rauner
GOVERNOR