By Ashley Badgley Illinois Statehouse News
SPRINGFIELD — Don’t expect Gov. Pat Quinn’s 2011 budget to play well in Peoria – or any other Illinois town.
State officials on Tuesday outlined a preview of Quinn’s proposal to plug the nearly $13 billion deficit with $2 billion in cuts and $11 million in short-term borrowing. No income tax increase is included in the spending plan.
However, the governor is asking municipalities across the state to give up $300 million in income tax revenue to help balance the budget.
Quinn’s chief-of-staff Jerry Stermer said the shared sacrifice is necessary during these tight financial times. He would not comment when asked if an income tax increase would surface later.
“Because of the fiscal crisis, we’re calling for a suspension of the current rate of 10 percent of income tax going to local governments to change to 7 percent,” Stermer said. “That would yield about $300 million in budget savings.”
But a sampling of mayors across the state shows opposition to the proposal.
Mayor Robert Butler from the downstate community of Marion said local governments across Illinois are suffering with their own fiscal problems. Residents expect services from their communities, and the loss of revenue would practically cripple those services.
Butler said Marion is “limping along” financially and that the state needs to look somewhere else for revenue. He said he supports a temporary tax increase for the state to regain its financial balance – and to save Marion from taking drastic steps.
Moline Mayor Don Welvaert said he just heard of the state’s plan Monday and said his community would lose $1.1 million.
Losing that much revenue would be the last blow to the city that last year laid off 23 employees and increased both food and liquor taxes, he said. Additionally, city employees have to take four unpaid furlough days in 2010 through the beginning of 2011.
Welvaert said the state should eliminate programs such as free rides for seniors and legislative tuition waivers to help bridge the budget deficit gap and avoid already struggling communities.
He said the most effective way to garner revenue focuses on pension reform across the state.
And it’s not just state-funded public employee pensions, he said. Welvaert said that 38 percent of Moline’s payroll goes toward pension payments for city employees.
However, downstate Sen. Gary Forby, D-Benton, said he hopes municipalities will understand the state’s budget problems and make the necessary cuts to help solve the nearly $13 billion deficit.
Quinn will formally announce his budget, titled “Fighting for Illinois,” on Wednesday.




Both the Dems/Reps are to blame, all they do is expand government and over spend the publics tax dollars year after year. They have underfunded the Public Pensions for 40 years, spending those BILLIONS on their pet projects and expanding state programs and handing out political jobs. If you and I used(stole) public money in this way we would be in jail. Remember just last session they all went home with a half a BILLION in pet project earmarks, isn’t that great, what crisis?? Now we can raise taxes and sut some spending??? No wait, we will raise No STATE TAXes, that means everyone below the state will need to raise local taxes and make local cuts, while the no state taxers wave the bloody flag of no taxation, what a bunch of bull, is there no end to this short of the guillotine.