Sunday letters: Could you wait six months for a paycheck?

SHARE Sunday letters: Could you wait six months for a paycheck?
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Illinois Senate Minority Leader Christine Radogno, R-Lemont, (left) talks with Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago (right) at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. Radogno and Cullerton are leading an effort to strike a “grand bargain” on a new state budget. | Justin L. Fowler/The State Journal-Register, distributed by the Associated Press

Let’s be honest. Anyone who claims that the state of Illinois has no need for a tax increase to pay its bills is uninformed or lying. Or both.

Illinois owes $11 billion – that’s billion – in overdue bills to thousands of vendors, including mental health and drug treatment providers. Moreover, when Illinois finally pays a bill it takes three to six months for providers to receive payment. Community behavioral health care providers in Illinois are on the front line every day, 365 days a year, keeping mothers, fathers and children out of hospital emergency rooms, out of county jail and on the job.

Could you wait three, four or six months for a paycheck? Well, behavioral health providers can’t either.

Providers have laid-off employees and cut or frozen the pay of workers who are left. They have cut mental health services, impacting thousands of individuals, many of whom are your neighbors. They have created waiting lists. If a child or mother has a mental health crisis, on the waiting list they go.

Is this any way to run a railroad?

Illinois’ elected officials need to approve a budget, no matter politically painful that it may be, and include a tax increase to pay our bills. Period. Honestly, can they claim with a straight face that there is another choice?

Sara Moscato Howe, CEO

Illinois Association for Behavior Health

Springfield

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