State of the States
State of the States
ILLINOIS
GOV. PAT QUINN (D) • March 18
The newly installed governor, in his first budget address to the Illinois legislature, vowed to close his state’s $11.6 billion deficit through tax hikes and spending cuts, though he vowed to spare K-12 education from those reductions.
Mr. Quinn, the state’s former lieutenant governor, took office as the Illinois chief executive in January, after former Gov. Rod Blagojevich was impeached by the Illinois House of Representatives and removed from office by the state Senate. Mr. Quinn inherited a budget gap of $4.3 billion for the current year, fiscal 2009, and an expected $7.3 billion deficit for fiscal 2010, out of a total state budget of $53 billion.
He pledged to trim $800 million from next year’s budget, but said he would not cut education or health care.
For complete coverage of the governors' addresses, see 2009 State of the States
The governor said he wants to increase funding for prekindergarten through high school by $174 million in fiscal 2010, out of a total budget of $7.6 billion for schools. Per-pupil K-12 spending would rise by $130, to $6,089, from $5,959.
The state is expected to receive $2.8 billion in federal money over the next 2½ years to support K-12 education, according to budget documents.
"Jobs follow brainpower," Mr. Quinn told lawmakers. "The best way to attract and keep businesses in Illinois is to offer employers a smart, well-trained workforce."
Vol. 28, Issue 28, Page 18
Access selected articles, e-newsletters and more!
Viewed
Emailed
Recommended
Commented
Sponsored Whitepapers
• Best Practices in Information Management, Reporting and Analytics for Education
- Instructional Leadership Director
- ALBANY CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, Albany, NY
- Learning Specialists & RTI Coordinator & HS English Teacher
- New Heights Academy Charter School, New York, NY
- Train Brilliant Math Students
- Art of Problem Solving, San Diego, CA
- Principal - Chicago Metro Area West
- The Menta Group, Hillside, IL
- Chief Innovation Officer
- The International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE®), Washington, DC



We encourage lively debate, but please be respectful of others. Profanity and personal attacks are prohibited. By commenting, you are agreeing to abide by our user agreement.
All comments are public.