States face partial shutdowns as July 4 holiday looms

NJ, Maine and Illinois face at least partial government shutdowns this week.

— -- New Jersey, Illinois and Maine are facing at least partial government shutdowns during the heart of the summer holiday season, which will adversely affect residents’ travel and holiday plans, as well as the payments towards some government employees, if the states don’t take action.

New Jersey

Other parks and state beaches across the state are also likely to be affected, according to the Associated Press.

Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop posted on Facebook that Fourth of July festivities that were previously set to take place at the park will be moved to Exchange Place, a financial district that also overlooks parts of New York City.

"I'm not willing to risk waiting around for the state government to act," Fulop wrote in his post.

Illinois

Illinois, the U.S.'s fifth largest state by population, has entered its third straight fiscal year without a budget, according to a report by the AP.

School funding, state payroll, and pension payments could also be affected if the shutdown persists into August, Comptroller Susana Mendoza, a Democrat, told Bloomberg.

"If the legislature fails to send a balanced budget package to my desk by Friday, we will have no choice but to keep them in session until they get the job done," Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner wrote in a Facebook post dated Friday.

Maine

Maine, a popular summer holiday destination, is also in the middle of a prolonged fight over its state budget.

"I submitted a budget more than six months ago -- six months ago -- yet Democrat politicians in Augusta are attempting to blame the governor’s office for a shutdown," LePage wrote in a Facebook post published Friday.

House Republicans blocked the passage of a budget compromise on Friday night, and LePage attempted to introduce a new spending plan just three and a half hours before the end of the fiscal year, according to reporting by the Portland Press Herald.