Chicago Sun-Times

Gov gives in, borrows $ 6B to pay bill backlog

- BY TINA SFONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@suntimes.com Twitter: @TinaSfon

After months of pressure, Gov. Bruce Rauner announced Thursday that he’ll sell $ 6 billion in bonds to help pay off Illinois’ staggering bill backlog — a debt that dragged the state down with interest penalties reaching $ 2 million a day.

Illinois Comptrolle­r Susana Mendoza has been pushing for the bond sales for more than a month, as has state Treasurer Michael Frerichs, both Democrats. The state’s bill backlog remained at $ 15.1 billion as of Thursday, according to the comptrolle­r’s ledger.

Per the budget agreement reached in July, Rauner was authorized to offer up to $ 6 billion in general obligation bonds, which would allow the state to lower the interest rate it pays on its debt. The rate — up to 12 percent a year — was costing Illinois taxpayers $ 2 million a day in late payment interest penalties, according to the comptrolle­r’s office.

The governor directed staff to initiate a bond issuance to refinance “high- cost debt” by borrowing from banks at a lower interest rate. The bonds must be used to pay for general funds or state employees’ group health insurance costs that racked up before the impasse ended, according to the governor’s office.

“We’re choosing to exercise borrowing authority because it’s better to have Wall Street carry our debt than Main Street Illinois,” Rauner said in a statement announcing the decision.

The governor blamed “deficit spending for many years” for the unpaid bill backlog: “The state has been, in effect, borrowing from local service providers, including nonprofits and small businesses, because it takes months for them to get paid,” Rauner said in a statement.

The governor’s office said the budget didn’t account for an increase in debt service costs to cover the bill backlog — and Rauner’s office said he will find “several hundred million dollars in possible spending reductions to address this budgetary shortfall.” Those cuts were not specified.

Mendoza, in a statement, said the decision marked a “good day for taxpayers.”

Frerichs, too, applauded the decision but called it “long overdue.”

Business groups lauded the bond issuance, as well. Chicagolan­d Chamber of Commerce Acting CEO Michael Reever called it a “responsibl­e first step toward a stronger Illinois.”

 ??  ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner
Gov. Bruce Rauner

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