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Without city help, Pritzker and Preckwinkle to ask for $250 million more to help fund migrant crisis

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle say they will ask for more funds to help aid the city’s migrant crisis.
Chicago Sun Times
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle say they will ask for more funds to help aid the city’s migrant crisis. 

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle on Thursday announced they will seek an additional $250 million from the state and county to continue to respond to Chicago's migrant crisis.

It's an agreement noticeably missing a key partner: the city of Chicago.

And it comes after Pritzker, Preckwinkle and Mayor Brandon Johnson met in January and this month to discuss how to fund the crisis.

According to a source briefed on the discussions, Johnson initially agreed to ask the City Council for more funds, but ultimately backed off.

Pritzker and Preckwinkle say they will commit more than $250 million to ensure shelter, wraparound services and healthcare for asylum seekers being sent to Chicago from the Texas border.

More than 35,000 migrants have been sent to Chicago since the crisis began in August 2022.

“With thousands of asylum seekers continuing to come to Chicago in desperate need of support and with Congress continuing to refuse to act — it is clear the state, county, and
city will have to do more to keep people safe,” Pritzker said in a statement.

The Democratic governor will ask the Illinois General Assembly for an additional $182 million — and that will be part of an ask in his budget address in Springfield next week.

The state has already spent $478 million since the beginning of the migrant influx in 2022. And in November, the state committed $160 million to help with a welcome center, among other areas. Lawmakers must still fund that amount through a supplemental bill, which is not expected until after the March 19 primary.

Cook County has already committed more than $100 million in its current fiscal budget for new arrival-related costs, primarily for healthcare, and Preckwinkle will ask the Cook County Board of Commissioners for an additional $70 million.

“We cannot wait for additional resources and Cook County is proud to stand alongside Governor Pritzker in this joint funding plan, ensuring that shelter capacity, healthcare and wraparound services remain accessible to those in need," Preckwinkle said in a statement.

The new funding plan will help maintain shelter capacity and continue wraparound and healthcare services, both offices said in a joint release.

Johnson’s $16.7 billion budget included only $150 million for a migrant crisis now costing the city $40 million a month.

The mayor last year said he budgeted the $150 million to keep political heat on the state and federal governments to do more to help Chicago with a crisis he asserted no major city is equipped to handle.

Tina Sfondeles is the chief political reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times