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Agencies To Ask For More, Rauner Says ... Without Giving An Opinion On If They Deserve It Or Not

Illinois' next governor was back in the capital city Wednesday in part to meet with his budget team. Gov.-elect Bruce Rauner has already tried to make the case that Illinois' finances are worse than he thought. Now he's adding to his list of examples.  
"What we've learned here in recent days, and I'm here to get more of the detail on, there's $760 million of  what they're calling - what I guess, I'm learning the lingo - supplemental appropriations, about to be requested."

Basically, it means that state agencies are going to be asking for an additional $760 million to get them through this budget year. Or, as Rauner put it, they want to go "over budget."

"And what we've learned is these department heads were told to submit some low number in the budget, the budget doesn't really mean anything, put in a low number, spend how you want to spend, and then we'll deal with it after the election."

Rauner did not say if he'd support that extra spending.  

Governor Pat Quinn's office says he considers the legislature’s spending plan "incomplete," and that Quinn had proposed a plan that would have allowed for a balanced budget by keeping Illinois' income tax rate constant instead of letting it rollback in 2015, midway through the fiscal year.

Amanda Vinicky moved to Chicago Tonight on WTTW-TV PBS in 2017.