Rauner vetoes MAP grants legislation
February 20, 2016
Governor Bruce Rauner vetoed legislation that would have appropriated $721 million for the Monetary Award Program (MAP) on Friday.
In a press release, Rauner said the bill would, “would explode the State’s budget deficit, exacerbate the State’s cash flow crisis, and place further strain on social service providers and recipients who are already suffering from the State’s deficit spending.”
Currently, the state has no budget, leaving colleges and universities across Illinois without state funding.
The lack of funding has led to schools such as Chicago State University to consider closure. In addition, the state budget impasse has caused the around 130,000 students in Illinois who receive MAP grants to face more uncertainty.
In November, Interim Chancellor Barbara Wilson sent an email to MAP-eligible students notifying them that if the state fails to allocate money for MAP grants, students will need to pay back the money credited to their accounts for the spring semester.
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On Wednesday, University students traveled to the capitol building in Springfield to protest the state’s inaction on MAP grant funding, coinciding with an address by Rauner about the state budget.
“Despite its constitutional obligation to balance the budget, the General Assembly has not put forward a plan to pay for these programs, whether through spending reductions, revenue, or cost-saving reforms,” Rauner said in the release, blaming the General Assembly for the lack of a state budget.
Rauner’s veto and press release come a little over a week after President Barack Obama delivered an address to the state legislature stressing the need for bipartisan cooperation and an end to the “poisonous political climate.”