Wilmette Could Face $1.2 Million Deficit Over State IOU's
Village weighs consequences as legislators discuss cutting municipalities' share of income taxes.
As the start of the fiscal year nears, Wilmette is among the municipalities gearing up to produce a budget. While the village presented a projected balanced budget in October 2010, it now faces a $1.2 million shortfall as the state seeks to manage its fiscal matters by possibly cutting remittances to cities and towns.
While the state already owes the village more than $500,000, some politicians in Springfield are discussing withholding an additional $647,000.
“The state is tardy in payments they owe the village,” Village President Christopher Canning said in an e-mail to Patch.
There are issues with state payments to municipalities across Illinois, Assistant Village Manager Kathleen Gargano said in another e-mail.
“First, the state has been delinquent in its remittances to the village as well as all other local governments and its vendors,” she said.
On April 30, the state will owe the village about $553,000, according to Gargano. While the amount is down from the nearly $1 million owed in November, the figure still presents a significant cash-flow challenge for Wilmette, she added.
However, the more significant issue at hand is discussions over reducing the Local Government Distributive Fund (LGDF), which represents Wilmette’s share of the state income tax.
Illinois deficit issue
In existence since 1969, the LGDF has provided local governments with a share of the state's income tax and is distributed based on population. Since 1995, the percentage given to municipalities has remained constant at 10 percent, Gargano said.
"When the income tax was raised from 3 to 5 percent earlier this year, local governments did not receive any of this increase," she said.
With Illinois’ looming budget deficit projected at more than $13 billion by various organizations, the state legislature is currently debating its options. Lawmakers have discussed whether funds collected by the state--such as the motor fuel tax and state sales tax, which are normally remitted to local governments--should instead be used to pay off that debt, according to Canning.
The fund is expected to receive $1.1 billion in fiscal 2012, which is about 47 percent of the total required state transfers of $2.3 billion, according to the Institute for Illinois' Fiscal Sustainability.
“If the General Assembly passes a budget that cuts these revenues, it will have an immediate impact on the village budget,” he said.
Wilmette's action plan
Canning encourages residents to contact their legislators and urge them to oppose measures that would shortchange their communities. Working with other mayors and village presidents throughout the region, he pledges to launch a similar campaign for Wilmette.
“I expect that I will be in Springfield from time to time to lobby personally against these cuts,” he said.
If the state does cut the village’s share of the tax revenues, Canning said, the board of trustees would try to determine what expenses could be cut.
“The village has made many cuts already in reaction to the Great Recession, so I am not certain there are expenses, which may be cut,” he said about the effects of the economic downturn.
The review could include an analysis of potential service reductions, fee increases and property tax increases, depending on the extent of the state’s actions, Canning said.
“While we applaud the General Assembly for attempting to get their financial house in order,” Canning said. “It should not be done at the expense of local taxpayers.”
Stay tuned for Patch's May series on how Illinois' state budget decisions will affect the Village of Wilmette.
GrossPoint
7:18 am on Thursday, April 28, 2011
Before speculating on the Ford Dealership property, perhaps the Village could have thought about our financial condition. Canning and the Trustees spent over $3 Million of our money on a vacant lot, with no clear plan as to what to do with it. The term "Trustee" seems as bit of a stretch for a group of gamblers who are rolling the dice with the village future.
Margaret Mcintyre
8:25 am on Thursday, April 28, 2011
With the objectivity that comes from moving to a solvent state that actually recognizes the financial crisis facing "all of us" on a national scale, I've concluded that the Wilmette leadership (and their enablers) continue to do "business as usual" which means over-spend and be rescued by the real estate balloon. Just because the North Shore is insulated demographically from Chicago and the rest of IL, doesn't mean the monetary circulatory system won't bring with it financial disease. The religious faith in "home values tied to unlimited school spending" has proven false as home value decline accelerates after the referendum. What good will it do to "write friends on Springfield"? The rest of the state does not feel sorry for the affluent North Shore. Anyway, voters squandered their influence--their last their chance to save Illinois with the recent Governor's race. Instead of drilling for property tax wealth in the quickly depleting home equity on the North Shore, how about drilling down into the bloated bureaucracy of Illinois public education? Time for school district consolidation. For example, neighboring districts--Avoca (a two building district) with total enrollment of 682 students employs a Superintendent @ $262,325; an Assist. Superintendent/JH Principal @ $164,625 and a Principal @ $138,976. Skokie D73 (a one school district) which enrolls a total of 524 students and employs a Superintendent @ $198,855 and a Principal @ $ 114,051.
Margaret Mcintyre
8:37 am on Thursday, April 28, 2011
By eliminating just the excess Superintendent's/Assistant Superintendents, IL (and NorthShore taxpayers) would save $625,805 per year--with NO effect on class size or the children.
Most likely, friends in Springfield will say, "Why wasn't Chris Canning talking to Ray Lechner during the recent 6.5 mm referendum Tsunami?
If North Shore residents expect Springfield to bail them out, North Shore will have to agree to School District Consolidation. Jeff Schoenberg are you listening?