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Of course it’s a crisis, but what’s the hard deadline?

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* For weeks now, I’ve tried without success to convince the comptroller’s office to provide a timeline of when everything blows up. At what point does Illinois not have the cash to pay crucial statutory-mandated bills? They know about how much revenue to expect every week and what the huge scheduled payments are (like pensions, school aid, bond payments, etc.), so that shouldn’t be too difficult. Yes, the Medicaid lawsuit throws a major wrench into the calculations, but, still, let’s see the numbers

During the 2-and-a-half years Illinois has gone without a state budget, the previously little-known office of comptroller has had the unenviable job of essentially sitting at the kitchen table trying to figure out how to pay the bills.

Like any household, there are some items that must be paid first. A mix of state law, court orders and pressure from credit rating agencies requires Illinois to make its debt and pension payments, for example, and issue state worker paychecks and some money for schools.

Now Comptroller Susana Mendoza is warning that new court orders in lawsuits filed by state suppliers that are owed money mean her office is required to pay out more than Illinois receives in revenue each month. That means there would be no money left for so-called “discretionary” spending – a category that in Illinois includes school buses, domestic violence shelters and some ambulance services.

“I don’t know what part of ‘We are in massive crisis mode’ the General Assembly and the governor don’t understand. This is not a false alarm,” said Mendoza, a Chicago Democrat. “The magic tricks run out after a while, and that’s where we’re at.”

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Jun 19, 17 @ 10:30 am

Comments

  1. My guess is there really isn’t a hard date … because they will just defer the monthly pension fund payments, planning to pay them later in the Fiscal Year. That’s what they did last year when they were cash short.

    I would then say the deadline is 4QFY 18, but the State should have enough income tax cash to catch up the pension fund payments.

    So I understand their reluctance to identify a specific date, as long as they retain the ability to slide the pension fund payments around. That is, literally, their Ace in the Hole … and why the State will never bond out the pension debt.

    Comment by RNUG Monday, Jun 19, 17 @ 11:17 am

  2. A 3rd year without a budget borders on criminal conduct as an abdication of their elected responsibilities. If schools do not open, children are put at risk without adult supervision and/or parents must choose between safeguarding their children or losing a paycheck, thereby reducing revenue to the state and their families. Political calculus and gotcha for the next election is not important - doing the peoples’ business is. Just do it!

    Comment by Phil Pritzker Tuesday, Jun 20, 17 @ 6:30 am

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