Senator Duffy on YouTube
Office Information
| Springfield Office: |
| Senator 26th District |
| 105D Capitol Building |
| Springfield, IL 62706 |
| (217) 782-8010 |
| District Office: |
| 330 E. Main Street |
| Suite 301 |
| Barrington, IL 60010 |
| (847) 277-7100 |
| (847) 277-7101 FAX |
Daily Herald
| Senate Week in Review: July 6 – 10 |
|
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
July 10, 2009
In his veto message, Quinn
criticized House Bill 2145, which contained billions of dollars in revenue to
finance state operations and employee salaries. He said the legislation did not
make significant cuts in spending. However, rather than use his reduction and
line-item veto powers to make those cuts, the Governor simply outlined $1
billion in cuts through press statements and then vetoed the entire budget
measure.
Critics pointed out that the
spending levels in HB 2145 were those that the Governor himself had requested
in his budget proposal. The Governor was also criticized for the blanket veto
of the entire measure, rather than using his authority to target spending
reductions. By vetoing the entire measure, Quinn gave lawmakers the difficult
choice of either overriding his proposed cuts in their entirety or completely
rewriting the budget two weeks into the new fiscal year.
If the cuts outlined by the
Governor are approved, they would lead to approximately 2,600 state employee
lay-offs, including more than 1,000 lay-offs of Department of Corrections
personnel. Quinn is also proposing 12 furlough days for state employees and
downsizing of some correctional facilities—with possible early release for some
state inmates.
The cuts advanced by Quinn
would reduce state funding to programs and services under many state agencies.
However, Senator Duffy noted
that with no budget in place, many social service programs that rely on state
funding have already been forced to close their doors, lay off employees and
reduce services.
Lawmakers are scheduled to
return on July 14 to consider the governor’s veto of House Bill 2145 and SB
1197 – a funding measure for social service programs that was also vetoed. It
is unknown whether legislators will choose to override the governor’s veto in
order to keep state government operating and prevent the deep cuts proposed by
Quinn.
This week, the governor did
sign one budget measure. HB 2194 contains $4.7 billion in general revenue
dollars for state Medicaid obligations. Although the provisions do not fund all
state Medicaid obligations, they target those obligations which the federal
government has required be paid with 30 days in order to earn the enhanced rate
for federal matching funds associated with the federal economic stimulus
package. The stimulus provisions require a 30-day payment cycle for hospitals,
nursing homes, and practitioner services.
Although the Senate is
scheduled to be in session on July 14, a special hearing on gerrymandering
reform is, at least for the time being, still planned for the following day in
The hearing is the first of
four planned by the Committee to receive testimony on how
Other hearings are planned
for Aug. 19 in
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