Illinois Cover.Pub

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Illinois Cover.Pub Report of the State Budget Crisis Task Force ILLINOIS REPORT This is a report of the State Budget Crisis Task Force prepared in collaboration with Richard Dye of the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois. Task Force member Donald Boyd oversaw the production of this report. More information is available at www.statebudgetcrisis.org State Budget Crisis Task Force, October 2012 Table of Contents A Statement from the Task Force Co-Chairs ........................................................................................ 3 Foreword ............................................................................................................................................... 6 Summary............................................................................................................................................... 7 Introduction .......................................................................................................................................... 9 The Fiscal State of the State of Illinois ............................................................................................... 11 Fiscal Year 2011 .................................................................................................................................................... 11 Fiscal Year 2012 .................................................................................................................................................... 12 Fiscal Year 2013: Encouraging Budget Actions, But Much to be Done ............................................................. 12 Economic Forces Affecting Illinois’ Budget ........................................................................................ 14 Politics and the Budget Process in Illinois ......................................................................................... 16 The Politics of Spend, but Don’t Tax ..................................................................................................................... 16 The Budget Process ............................................................................................................................................... 17 Illinois’ Squishy Balanced Budget Requirement .................................................................................................. 17 The Run-Up to the Current Fiscal Crisis ................................................................................................................ 18 Big Strides, But a Long Way to Go ........................................................................................................................ 18 Underfunded Retirement Promises Are Crowding Out Other Needs ................................................. 19 The Way Pension Cost Are Reported Can Obscure the Problem ........................................................................ 20 Background and History ........................................................................................................................................ 20 Recognizing the Problem but Putting Off the Painful Solution for Years ............................................................ 21 Changing Pensions in Illinois: Small Strides ........................................................................................................ 21 Serious Problems Remain ..................................................................................................................................... 22 Medicaid Spending Growth is Crowding Out Other Needs ................................................................. 24 Illinois Medicaid: High Coverage and Costs, Low Expenditures per Enrollee ..................................................... 24 Budget Presentation Makes Medicaid Hard to See ............................................................................................. 25 Big Strides: 2012 Medicaid Changes ................................................................................................................... 26 The Affordable Care Act and Future Medicaid Spending in Illinois ..................................................................... 26 Illinois Budget Laws and Practices Hinder Fiscal Stability and Mask Imbalances ............................ 28 Time-Shift Budgeting: Pension Obligation Borrowing and Nonrecurring Resources ......................................... 28 Time-Shift Budgeting: Payment Delays ................................................................................................................. 28 Fund-Shift Budgeting: Narrow Focus on General Funds Budget Obscures True Picture .................................. 29 Fund Sweeps and Related Special Fund Transfers ............................................................................................. 30 Threat to Fiscal Stability: Illinois Has No Real Rainy Day Fund ........................................................................... 30 2 Uses and Misuses of State Borrowing ................................................................................................ 32 Special Obligation Debt: Hard to See .................................................................................................................... 33 Downgrades: Illinois is the Worst State in the Nation .......................................................................................... 33 Growth of State Debt .............................................................................................................................................. 34 Reliance on Short-Term Cash Borrowing .............................................................................................................. 35 Educating Illinois for the Future in a Time of Fiscal Stress ................................................................ 37 Background and History: PreK-12 Education ....................................................................................................... 37 Higher Education .................................................................................................................................................... 39 Underinvestment in Infrastructure ..................................................................................................... 41 Condition of Illinois’ Infrastructure ........................................................................................................................ 41 Capital Financing .................................................................................................................................................... 42 Consequences of Underinvestment in Infrastructure .......................................................................................... 43 Narrow, Eroding Tax Bases and Volatile Revenues Undermine Illinois’ Finances ............................. 44 General Sales Tax ................................................................................................................................................... 44 Personal Income Tax .............................................................................................................................................. 45 Corporate Income Tax ............................................................................................................................................ 45 Selective Sales Taxes: Cigarette, Motor Fuel, Telecommunications ................................................................... 46 Federal Deficit Reduction Threatens State Budget and Economy ..................................................... 48 Federal Funds in Illinois ......................................................................................................................................... 48 Local Government Fiscal Stress Poses Challenges for Illinois and Vice Versa .................................. 49 Conclusions and Recommendations .................................................................................................. 51 Make the Tough Choices Sooner Rather than Later ............................................................................................ 51 Revamp the State’s Fiscal Toolkit ......................................................................................................................... 51 Other Issues ............................................................................................................................................................ 52 Endnotes ............................................................................................................................................. 54 Reports of the State Budget Crisis Task Force Illinois Report 3 Paul A. Volcker and Richard Ravitch introduced the July 2012 Full Report of the State Budget Crisis Task Force with the following statement: Reports of the State Budget Crisis Task Force Illinois Report 4 Reports of the State Budget Crisis Task Force Illinois Report 5 Reports of the State Budget Crisis Task Force Illinois Report 6 Foreword Former New York Lieutenant Governor Richard Ravitch and former Federal Reserve Board Chair Paul Volcker created the State Budget Crisis Task Force because of their growing concern about the long-term fiscal sustainability of the states and the persistent structural imbalance in state budgets, which was accelerated by the financial collapse of 2008. After extensive planning and fundraising in 2010 and early 2011, Messrs.
Recommended publications
  • 2010 Illinois Piglet Book
    CITIZENS AGAINST GOVERNMENT WASTE 2010 Illinois Piglet Book THE BOOK SPRINGFIELD DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ! 2010 Illinois Piglet Book THE ILLINOIS POLICY INSTITUTE The Illinois Policy Institute is a nonpartisan research organization dedicated to supporting free market principles and liberty-based public policy initiatives for a better Illinois. As a leading voice for economic liberty and government accountability, we engage policy makers, opinion leaders, and citizens on the state and local level. Please visit our website at www.illinoispolicy.org. Chicago Office Springfield Office 190 S. LaSalle Street 802 South 2nd Street Suite 2130 2nd Floor Chicago, IL 60603 Springfield, IL 62704 Phone: 312-346-5700 Phone: 217.528.8800 Fax: 312-346-5755 Fax: 217.528.8808 CITIZENS AGAINST GOVERNMENT WASTE Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to educating the American public about waste, mismanagement, and inefficiency in government. CAGW was founded in 1984 by the late industrialist J. Peter Grace and nationally-syndicated columnist Jack Anderson to build support for implementation of the Grace Commission recommendations and other waste-cutting proposals. Since its inception, CAGW has been at the forefront of the fight for efficiency, economy, and accountability in government. CAGW has more than one million members and supporters nationwide. In a little over two decades, has helped save taxpayers $1.08 trillion through the implementation of Grace Commission findings and other recommendations. CAGW’s official newsletter is Government WasteWatch, and the group produces special reports and monographs examining government waste and what citizens can do to stop it. CAGW is classified as a Section 501(c)(3) organization under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and is recognized as a publicly-supported organization described in Section 509(a)(1) and 170(b)(A)(vi) of the code.
    [Show full text]
  • Sangamon County Elected Officials Directory
    Primary Elections (Held on the 1st Tuesday in February of even years) SANGAMON COUNTY Offices to be nominated: Federal, State, Judicial and County ELECTED OFFICIALS Offices to be elected: Precinct Committeemen DIRECTORY Delegates & Alternate Delegates State Central Committeemen Including Federal, State & Local Officials General Elections (Held on the 1st Tuesday after the 1st Monday in November of even years) Offices to be elected: Federal, State, Judicial and County Consolidated Primary Elections (Held on the last Tuesday in February of odd years) Offices to be nominated: Municipal Compiled by: Consolidated General Elections (Held on the 1st Tuesday in April of odd years) Joe Aiello Offices to be elected: Sangamon County Clerk Municipal, Township, Park, Library, School Community College, SMEAA, Fire and Water District Compiled by Joe Aiello Sangamon County Clerk Election Office 200 South Ninth Street, Room 105 Springfield, Illinois 62701 Phone:(217) 753-6740 / Fax:(217) 753-6739 Revised July,2009 Web: www.co.sangamon.il.us\election / Email: [email protected] 44 TABLE OF CONTENTS Federal and State Offices Village of Berlin-------------------22 Regional Board of School Seventh Judicial Circuit Judges Trustees President ------------------------ 3 Village of Buffalo -----------------22 Sangamon County Sangamon--------------------------35 Vice-President------------------ 3 Village of Cantrall ----------------22 The Sangamon County Courthouse is located at 200 South Ninth Street, Springfield, Illinois 62701 Brown, Cass, Morgan & Scott-36
    [Show full text]
  • BARACK OBAMA and the 2004 ILLINOIS SENATE RACE by John S. Jackson Visiting Professor an Occasional Pape
    THE MAKING OF A SENATOR: BARACK OBAMA AND THE 2004 ILLINOIS SENATE RACE By John S. Jackson Visiting Professor An Occasional Paper Of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Illinois August, 2006 The Making of a Senator: Barack Obama And the 2004 Illinois Senate Race by John S. Jackson Introduction The 2004 U.S. Senate race in Illinois may prove to be one of the most significant in American history. Perhaps not since the Senate election of 1858, when Stephen Douglas defeated Abraham Lincoln, has one Senate election had such an impact on the national leadership cadre. Although Lincoln lost the election, his speeches and debates with Douglas over slavery and the future of the Union ensured his place as a national leader of the young Republican Party and then as a leading contender for the Republican nomination in 1860 (Goodman, 2005). Although Barack Obama is one of one hundred Senators, and a freshman at that, he has quickly become a much sought after speaker, and his influence has spread far beyond the usual parameters for a first-term Senator. Obama is the first African-American male Senator to be elected since Edward Brooke of Massachusetts. He is the second African- American elected to the Senate from Illinois following former Senator Carol Moseley Braun, who was elected in 1992 and then defeated in 1998 (Kenney and Hartley, 2003, 203-209). With the exception of the post Civil War Reconstruction Era, Brooke, Braun, and now Obama are the only three popularly elected African-American Senators in American history.
    [Show full text]
  • March 12, 1998 Eastern Illinois University
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep March 1998 3-12-1998 Daily Eastern News: March 12, 1998 Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1998_mar Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Daily Eastern News: March 12, 1998" (1998). March. 9. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1998_mar/9 This is brought to you for free and open access by the 1998 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in March by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SUNNY Spring a high of 35º The INSIDE Daily break Eastern Panther softball team Primary travel south for spring THURSDAY Eastern Illinois University Charleston, Ill. 61920 break March 12, 1998 decision Vol. 83, No. 118 tournament A full round-up of who’s 12 pages running in this year’s PAGE political races News PAGE 9 “Tell the truth and don’t be afraid” 12 Subpar pipes soak Carman Charleston water, pipes’ age factors in latest bust By HEATHER CYGAN “It sucks,” Angellotti said. “I Campus editor didn’t even know (hot water) was out until I tried to brush my Carman Hall flooded teeth.” Wednesday morning after water Bill Schnackel, the director of pipes broke and left residents university housing/dining ser- without hot water. vices, said “there is a project on Ted Weidner, the director of board” to fix the hot water facilities planning and piping. management, said the pipes Charleston water as well as broke because they were installed the age of the pipes also are 30 years ago.
    [Show full text]
  • Black Candidates and Black Voters:Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates
    Black Candidates and Black Voters:Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates Michael C. Herron Dartmouth College Jasjeet S. Sekhon Harvard University Numerous studies show that the rate at which African-Americans cast ballots with missing or invalid votes, i.e., the African-American residual vote rate, is higher than the corresponding white rate. While existing literature argues that the plethora of African-American residual votes is caused by adminis- trative problems or socioeconomic factors, we show using precinct-level data from two recent elec- tions in Cook County, Illinois, that the African-American residual vote rate in electoral contests with black candidates is less than half the rate in contests without black candidates. African Americans, therefore, are able to reduce their residual vote rate when they wish to do so. We present comple- mentary findings for white voters, whose residual vote rate often substantially increases in contests which feature dominant black candidates. Recent research on voting and elections demonstrates that African Americans produce disproportionately more residual votes than whites. That is, the rate at which ballots cast by blacks do not contain valid votes is higher than the corre- sponding white rate (Brady et al. 2001; Herron and Sekhon 2003; Tomz and van Houweling 2003; United States Commission on Civil Rights 2001). The white- black residual vote rate gap is large, often greater than 10%; it is present regard- less of voting technology, and it affects election outcomes. The case of Florida during the 2000 Presidential Election is a prime example: if the black residual vote rate there had been as low as the white rate, Albert Gore would now almost certainly be president (Herron and Sekhon 2003).
    [Show full text]
  • Government Programming on CAN TV CAN TV
    Government Programming on CAN TV CAN TV CITY OF CHICAGO Local programs on CAN TV: • Eight Chicago aldermen (Burnett, Flores, Lyle, Solis, Preckwinkle, Colon, Reboyras and Smith) produce programs on ward activities. • In the 2008 local and national elections, CAN TV aired over 250 hours of election programming representing 89 candidates. • "The City Club of Chicago presents: Inside Chicago" has for eight Chicago Dept. of Public Health brings years featured over 35 programs annually with city officials, civic HIV/AIDS information to Chicago and community leaders. viewers. City Officials and Agencies • The Chicago Board of Elections has educated voters on the on CAN TV: election process for the past eight years prior to major elections. Mayor Richard M. Daley • Viewers learn about HIV/AIDS prevention, risk reduction and ALDERMEN | Manuel Flores (1) • Robert treatment on "AIDS Call-In Live", now in its 16th year, featuring Fioretti (2) • Pat Dowell (3) • Toni the Chicago Department of Public Health and nine other local Preckwinkle (4) • Leslie Hairston (5) Freddrenna Lyle (6) • Sandi Jackson (7) health organizations. Michelle Harris (8) • Anthony Beale (9) John Pope (10) • George A. Cardenas (12) • Ed Burke (14) • Latasha Thomas (17) • Willie Cochran (20) • Howard Brookins Jr. (21) • Ricardo Muñoz (22) • Sharon Dixon (24) • Daniel Solis (25) • Walter Burnett, Jr. (27) • Ed Smith (28) • Isaac S. Carothers (29) • Ariel E. Reboyras (30) • Ray Suarez (31) • Scott Waguespack (32) • Carrie Austin (34) • Rey Colon (35) • Emma Mitts (37) •Thomas R. Allen (38) • Margaret Laurino (39) • Brendan Reilly (42) • Vi Daley (43) • Thomas M. Tunney (44) • Helen Shiller (46) • Joseph A.
    [Show full text]
  • The Daley Show
    Letter from CHicagO THE Daley Show Dynastic rule in Obama’s political birthplace. by evan osnos efore Barack Obama considered run- secretary, Jacquelyn Heard, warns him ning for the U.S. Senate or the Presi- when he might get a question about a story. dency,B he wanted to be the mayor of Chi- One morning last summer, Heard was sit- cago, a city so riven by race that the Wall ting in the front seat of Daley’s town car Street Journal called it Beirut on the Lake. when she turned to capture his attention. Obama left for Harvard Law School, where “Mayor, one of the things in the paper he confided to friends his desire to occupy today is about the C.T.A.”—the Chicago City Hall, but by the time he returned Transit Authority—“voting to extend the from Cambridge, in 1991, something im- red, orange, yellow, and blue lines. The portant had happened: Richard M. Daley question is, Why are we doing that?” had been elected mayor of Chicago. “Well, you need vision,” Daley said, but Despite a famous name, Daley was he was more interested in peering out his not an obvious political powerhouse. In window to scan for run-down buildings his first run for mayor, in 1983, his cam- and dirty lots. He held a manila folder in paign hired Irving J. Rein, a communica- his lap, and whenever he saw something tions professor at Northwestern Univer- he didn’t like he noted the location in large sity, to hone the candidate’s delivery.
    [Show full text]
  • The Simon Review
    The Simon Review The Climate of Opinion in Southern Illinois Continuity and Change By: John S. Jackson and Charles W. Leonard Paper #25 April, 2011 A Publication of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute Southern Illinois University Carbondale The Climate of Opinion in Southern Illinois: Continuity and Change John S. Jackson and Charles W. Leonard Introduction Southern Illinois is a land rich in history, culture and friendly people. Its topography was originally shaped by the great glaciers of the Ice Age, which pushed this far south, leaving a hilly and rough terrain that is much different from the rich and flat farmland of central and northern Illinois. There are advantages to this physical terrain in terms of natural beauty; however, those advantages are also mitigated by the impact on farming, as most of southern Illinois supports only smaller and more marginal farms. Southern Illinois after prehistoric times was originally settled by a great wave of southern migrants who came up out of Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, North and South Carolina (Kenney and Brown, 1992). These people were predominantly from the Scotch-Irish ethnic group that so heavily populated Appalachia and the rest of the South in that early era (Webb, 2004). They were soon joined by another wave of immigrants from Italy, Poland, and Eastern Europe who came to work in the coal mines. In addition, in some communities there were enclaves of German immigrants in places like Jacob and Neunert in Jackson County, Columbia and Collinsville in the Metro-east area, and Hardin County in Southeast Illinois (Rush, March 13, 2011).
    [Show full text]
  • Alcohol, Gambling, Tobacco Contributors
    A T A X I N G D I L E M M A A L C O H O L , G A M B L I N G , T O B A C C O C O N T R I B U T O R S F I G H T P R O P O S E D I N C R E A S E S By P A U L R I C H A R D S T H E I N S T I T U T E O N M O N E Y I N S T A T E P O L I T I C S JAN. 21, 2004 833 NORTH MAIN, SECOND FLOOR • HELENA, MT • 59601 PHONE 406-449-2480 • FAX 406-457-2091 • E-MAIL [email protected] www.followthemoney.org T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S Introduction: Troubled Times for State Budgets .......................................3 Summary of Findings: Sin Taxes Enter the Spotlight................................4 Tobacco Tax Increases .............................................................................6 Case Illustration — Georgia..........................................................7 Tobacco Contributions in Georgia ................................................8 Contributions by Political Party .................................................. 10 Benefits of Incumbency .............................................................. 10 Backing the Winners................................................................... 10 Alcohol Tax Increases............................................................................ 11 Case Illustration — Illinois......................................................... 11 Alcohol Contributions in Illinois................................................. 13 Contributions by Political Party .................................................. 15 Benefits of Incumbency .............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Eastern News: February 03, 2010 Eastern Illinois University
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep February 2010 2-3-2010 Daily Eastern News: February 03, 2010 Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_2010_feb Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Daily Eastern News: February 03, 2010" (2010). February. 3. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_2010_feb/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the 2010 at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in February by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “Tell the truth and don’t be afraid.” Wednesday THE DAILY FEBRUARY 3, 2010 VOLUME 94 | No. 91 EASTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY CHARLESTON, ILL. Ea s t E r n n E w s DENNEWS.COM Students shoud be careful Baker brings women’s how much to carry basketball together Page 3 Page 12 PRIMARY ELECTIONS 2010 AMIR PRELLBERG | THE DAILY EASTERN NEWS Elections judges watch the polling booths as voters make their choices for the primary elections Tuesday afternoon in the Newman Catholic Center. County tax swap proposition fails Staff Report Coles County primary County Treasurer: Bill Brady 31.8 percent The 2010 primary elections ended in defeat for the Coles coun- election Republican- George Edward Green- Rich Whitney 100 ty schools when the proposed tax swap failed. results: 100 percent percent The close vote failed with 56.2 percent voting against and 43.8 percent voting in approval. Sheriff Coles County primary Lt. Governor: The school districts within Coles County were requesting a 1 Democrat- Ed Johnson 2082 election state results: Democrat- Mike Boland percent increase in the county sales tax in exchange for a promised votes 27.4 percent decrease in property taxes for area residents.
    [Show full text]
  • Maldef Ar20082009.Pdf
    2008-2009 MALDEF ANNUAL REPORT ABOUT MALDEF: AN ORGANIZATION TO ADVANCE THE CIVIL RIGHTS OF THE LATINO COMMUNITY 2008-2009 MALDEF ANNUAL REPORT TABLE OF CONTENTS PG. In 1968, out of a national and multi-racial civil rights movement, attorneys Pete Tijerina, Albert Pena, Roy Padilla, Mario Obledo, I N RECOGNITION OF M A L D E F ’ S FORMER PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL JO H N TRASV I Ñ A 1 and James De Anda created an organization to protect the constitutional rights of the Latino community. With the support of M ESSAGE FROM T H E CH AIR OF T H E M A L D E F B OARD OF DIRECTORS 2 the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, they founded the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF). With a M A L D E F L ITIGATION H IGH LIG H TS 3 generous start-up grant from the Ford Foundation, MALDEF quickly gained recognition as the “law firm of the Latino community.” M A L D E F C OMMUNITY EDUCATION PROGRAMS AND POLIC Y ANAL Y SIS AND AD V OCACY H IGH LIG H TS 9 Throughout our 41 year history, MALDEF has promoted social change through advocacy, communications, community education, M A L D E F L A W SC H OOL SC H OLARS H IP PROGRAM 13 and litigation in the areas of education, equal opportunity employment, immigrant rights, and political access. M A L D E F C OMMUNITY H ONOREES 14 MALDEF celebrated our 40th Anniversary in 2008.
    [Show full text]
  • Black Candidates and Black Voters: Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates∗
    Black Candidates and Black Voters: Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates∗ Michael C. Herron† Jasjeet S. Sekhon‡ Department of Government Department of Government Dartmouth College Harvard University October 26, 2003 ∗Authors are listed in alphabetical order. Supplementary material is available at http://journalofpolitics.org. Replication material is available from the authors. Ear- lier versions of this article were presented at the 2002 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association and the 2002 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association. The authors thank Rui de Figueiredo, Jr., Melissa Herman, James Kuklinski, Walter R. Mebane, Jr., John Sides, Suzanne M. Smith, Jonathan Wand, and seminar participants at Dartmouth College, Northwestern University, and the University of California, Berkeley, for comments on earlier drafts, Gary King and Ori Rosen for providing code, Jonathan Smith for GIS consulting, Richard Bill for research assistance, and Thomas Leach of the Chicago Board of Elections and Geetha Lingham of the Cook County Clerk’s Office for providing precinct canvasses. The authors are responsible for all errors. †HB 6108, 223 Silsby Hall, Hanover NH 03755 ([email protected]). ‡34 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 (jasjeet [email protected]). Abstract Black Candidates and Black Voters: Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates Numerous studies show that the rate at which African-Americans cast ballots with missing or invalid votes, i.e., the African-American residual vote rate, is higher than the corresponding white rate. While existing literature argues that the plethora of African-American residual votes is caused by administrative problems or socioeconomic factors, we show using precinct-level data from two recent elections in Cook County, Illinois, that the African-American residual vote rate in elec- toral contests with black candidates is less than half the rate in contests without black candidates.
    [Show full text]