Created: Friday, July 3, 2009 3:22 a.m. CST
Updated: Friday, July 3, 2009 11:18 a.m. CST
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Quinn talks budget: Governor will outline $1B in cuts next week

By Associated Press Writer DEANNA BELLANDI (The Associated Press)
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn speaks to reporters after he vetoed the Illinois budget at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, Ill. ((AP Photo/Seth Perlman) )

CHICAGO (AP) – Gov. Pat Quinn said Thursday he would outline about $1 billion in cuts to state government operations next week as he continued talking with lawmakers about passing a balanced state budget.

The state’s new fiscal year started Wednesday without a spending plan in place because the Democratic governor and lawmakers have yet to agree on how to wipe out an $11.6 billion deficit Quinn says has been trimmed to $9.2 billion.

Quinn, who met Thursday with more than two dozen women lawmakers, didn’t detail the cuts he would announce but said they would be “very deep.”

Nobody in state government would be immune, even people who are “some of the mightiest of our mighty in Illinois,” Quinn said.

“They are not going to stand on the sidelines and cut the budgets of very vulnerable human beings while they don’t participate in the shared sacrifice,” he said.

Quinn didn’t indicate whom he was talking about and spokeswoman Katie Ridgway said only that he meant state government in general. Still, he has been critical of lawmakers for sending him a makeshift budget, which he later vetoed, that would have forced deep cuts in social service programs.

“I don’t want to see some in state government who have two loaves of bread under each arm, they are well taken care of, while our neighbors who are doing good work ... their budget is cut to next to nothing,” he said.

The governor wants to temporarily raise state income taxes to lessen Illinois’ money crunch but many lawmakers have so far balked at the idea.

State government will continue to operate even without a budget, at least for now.

Lawmakers who met Thursday with Quinn said they were there to get more information because different numbers for the size of the deficit have been thrown around.

“We’re trying to get, as legislators, the numbers so that we can make sure ... that we’re all working off the same page,” Democratic state Rep. Lisa Dugan said.

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