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The Peoria Journal-Star has seen enough. Today's Editorial is entitled: "Don't come home 'til done". They say "It really is pitchforks and torches time in Springfield".
leatherneckcountry wrote: Sun Jul 02, 2017 9:12 pmCan the budget pass without the tax hike, or are they linked together.
They are linked, but were voted on separately.
The income tax hike received 72 votes with 15 of those coming from Republicans--including Norine Hammond of Macomb.
The Senate will vote on those today. If the Senate concurs, it will go to Rauner who has promised a veto. That will necessitate veto-override votes in both houses.
This proposed budget contains a 10% reduction in higher education funding. Apparently that is a 10% cut from July 1, 2014 (the last year that we had a budget). Whether that will be enough to appease the Accreditation Council remains to be seen. But the damage is already underway. Families of current high school students may now be looking at out-of-state options. Many will not want to risk spending thousands of dollars on an Illinois state university that may lose accreditation before their child graduates.
If enrollment is down 10% from 2014 (for most of the universities I am sure it is), I don't see how the accreditation body could find fault with a 10% budget cut. The remaining students should be getting the same or even better level of attention, in theory at least. I am sure they look at a lot more than just the appropriated dollars in making their decision.
These are the areas of concern that the Higher Learning Commission listed in their June 22 letter to the Governor and the members of the General Assembly:
• Increased tuition and fees for students and loss of MAP money for needy students;
• Significantly declining student enrollments;
• Loss of faculty and staff and elimination of academic programs and services;
• Canceled capital projects and cuts to plant operations, further diminishing jobs; and,
• Depleted or diminished cash reserves and loss of grant and charitable donation income.