Sen. Dave Syverson | File photo
Sen. Dave Syverson | File photo
Republican state Sen. Dave Syverson (R-Rockford) is blasting the numbers highlighted in Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s $112.5 billion spending plan as a case deception.
“The governor is talking about this massive increase in revenue that the state saw like he had something to do with it,” Syverson said in the wake of the governor’s 2023 fiscal year budget proposal. “As we know, most of this is one-time federal money that is coming into the businesses and to taxpayers but that's all ending, yet the governor's budget proposes a $2.5 billion increase in spending based on that money continuing forever. That's just not going to work.”
Syverson warns it won't end well.
“We're going to end up with a massive cliff after the election that unfortunately taxpayers are going to get stuck with,” he said. “We need the government to live within their means just like you and I as taxpayers have to.”
Of the $112.5 billion spending plan Pritzker laid out for fiscal year 2023, $45.5 billion would come from the state’s general revenue fund with the rest being federal passthrough funds. The plan also calls for providing up to $1 billion in tax relief, paying more than what's required into public sector pensions and storing away millions of dollars in a state rainy day fund that Pritzker administration officials contend has known little investment over the last two decades.
For fiscal year 2022, the governor laid out a budget plan totaling $95.5 billion, with $41.6 billion from state funds.
As part of the administration’s Illinois Family Relief Plan, almost $1 billion in tax relief is also being proposed, including a temporary freeze of the annual gas tax increase and the grocery tax, totaling nearly $500 million.
Another proposal calls for offering up as much as $300 in property tax rebates for a total of $475 million.