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Gov. Pat Quinn to unveil $30 billion-plus Illinois budget

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A reminder of who is in charge of how much spending eventually will be approved came last month at a low-profile legislative hearing. The governor's financial team suggested the Democratic chairman of the House Revenue & Finance Committee would have to wait for Quinn's budget address to get the administration's best estimate of how much money Illinois would take in during the next budget cycle.

"Well, it may be too late then," said Rep. John Bradley, the Marion Democrat who chairs the panel.

For the last two years, the House Democrats and Republicans have stuck with their own revenue projections and refused to go above the amount when constructing a budget. A similar game plan is taking shape again this year. Bradley didn't raise his voice, but he made it clear in his committee that the Legislature's decisions on spending will be made whether or not the governor wants to weigh in.

"My advice — my humble advice — to you all would be to get us the information," Bradley said to the governor's aides at the budget hearing.

As he presents his fifth budget Wednesday, Quinn finds himself leading a state where lawmakers are showing a growing frustration and impatience with the string of financial woes.

"All of these things add up and in a significant way," said Rep. Tom Cross, the House Republican leader from Oswego.

Anderson defended the governor, saying he looks at the "big picture" and pushes for solutions aimed a stabilizing state finances, creating jobs and strengthening the economy "in the long run."

Even so, the Illinois economy is lurching forward rather than trending upward smoothly. Unemployment was at 8.7 percent in December, nearly a percentage point higher than the national rate. Businesses still are complaining about the financial pinch of what was billed as a temporary, four-year income tax hike that Democrats championed in 2011.

Preliminary figures show Illinois is expecting only about $600 million to $800 million in new money from economic growth during the budget year that begins July 1, a mediocre performance.

But that's nowhere near enough to cover the state's $9.7 billion backlog of old bills, a comptroller's estimate that factors in bills the administration has in the pipeline. Walgreens, for instance, is due $118 million — the largest amount that Illinois owes any business. The state also owed $707 million to elementary and high schools as of midmonth. The University of Illinois alone is owed $526 million — marking the furthest behind the state has been on payments to its flagship school.

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