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

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The growing budget pressure prompted the Quinn administration only weeks ago to predict that education could see a $400 million cut in the next budget. That would follow cuts the prior two years of $162 million and $209 million.

Quinn and lawmakers blame it on the rising costs of state worker pensions. But the governor who has said he was "put on Earth" to fix the pension systems so far has left that mission unaccomplished.

The most recent calculation of the total pension debt is $96.8 billion. That's more than the total amount of money that Washington is supposed to cleave from the federal budget under the sequestration that began Friday.

Exponential growth in the state's annual pension payments is expected to push the price tag in the next budget to nearly $6.1 billion — an increase of more than $900 million from the current budget. And it's much higher when counting payments made on loans used to pump money into pensions in past years.

Cost-of-living adjustments are driving some of the pension debt, and they've become the target of multiple legislative proposals to reduce retirement costs. "That's where the money is," said Senate President Cullerton, of Chicago.

Further out of Quinn's sphere of influence is the Washington battle over sequestration, the federal cuts that began when no deal was reached to avert them. The White House estimated Illinois could lose tens of millions of dollars, including money for education.

The governor hoped to save hundreds of millions of dollars by reducing the state's health care costs for both government workers and the poor.

But Quinn's lengthy showdown with labor may be costly initially. A Madigan memo told his troops the protracted negotiations have meant none of the hoped-for $350 million in health care costs would be realized immediately, meaning "further cuts to other areas of the budget." The governor now is hopeful that long-term substantial savings of hundreds of millions of dollars will be realized in the final two years of the contract — if the union ratifies it.

Another revelation came last month when the agency that oversees health care for the poor calculated about $1 billion was racked up in savings through reforms but another $400 million did not materialize for multiple reasons, including court fights and bureaucracy that prevented changes from getting in place fast enough. Quinn aides had argued as the current budget came together that the legislative estimates were too aggressive.

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