Quinn vetoes budget plan

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — Gov. Pat Quinn's veto of a makeshift budget Wednesday marks yet another round of uncertainty and frustration for Illinois taxpayers, from state workers who might not get a paycheck to poor families wondering if they'll lose daycare and health services.

For the third straight time, Illinois government has entered a new budget year without having a new budget in place. State officials, despite some new faces, still rely more on confrontation than cooperation, even amid the worst fiscal crisis in Illinois history.

Things have gotten so twisted in Springfield that Quinn wound up opposing his own borrowing plan and legislative leaders are likely to fight to revive a budget they didn't want in the first place.

For now, government will operate more or less normally.

State employees are supposed to show up for work. A federal court ruling will keep welfare checks flowing and child-welfare operations in place. The state can use credit to buy gas for state troopers and office supplies for bureaucrats.

But Quinn noted there are no guarantees for the many local organizations that provide services on behalf of the state, such as drug counseling, day care and home assistance for the elderly.

Without a budget in place, any group that depends on state grants can keep delivering services as usual but they "do so at the risk of not being paid," Quinn said in a statement.

Quinn denied he was encouraging organizations to halt services in a bid to increase pressure on legislators to come up with a better budget. Still, Comptroller Daniel Hynes, a fellow Democrat, accused Quinn of creating hysteria with a message that "borders on the irresponsible."

Some organizations warned that they can't risk spending money and simply hoping that the state will reimburse them someday.

"We've been forced to issue notices of potential layoffs to over 700 employees throughout Illinois," said Nancy Ronquillo, head of Children's Home and Aid, which provides adoption and counseling services. "We have nearly 800 abused and neglected children that we have to worry about and workers who deserve 30 days notice before they are laid off."

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