fitness

Dallman pushes back on UW funding narrative

(The Center Square) – At least one Wisconsin Republican says the University of Wisconsin isn’t telling the whole story when it comes to what the state pays.
UW President Jay Rothman last week announced the UW System slipped once again in the national ranking on state funding.
“Wisconsin is now 44th out of 50 states in public funding of four-year universities – a drop of one spot – according to the latest national study of higher education funding,” the university said.
“Wisconsin is renowned for its affordable and accessible public universities. Yet we can’t languish at the bottom anymore without seriously jeopardizing Wisconsin’s economic vibrancy,” Rothman added.
He is asing state lawmakers for $856 million in the next state budget.
Rep. Alex Dallman, R-Markesan, however said taxpayers need to know the truth about the UW’s funding.
“President Rothman and many others have boasted about how the 13 universities across Wisconsin are the best in the country and world, yet are quick to say that the taxpayers aren’t funding higher education enough.,” Dallman said. “The UW System is more worried about their national ranking than taking accountability for their lack of transparency here in Wisconsin.”
The University of Wisconsin’s total budget in the current state spending plan is just under $14 billion for the two years of the state budget. And spending between the 2023-2024 school year, and the 2024-2025 school year grew by almost 6%.
State funding is the smallest of the major pieces of university funding,at 18%, or about $2.5 billion. Federal funds make-up about 24% of the UW’s budget, with a lot of that going toward research.
Tuition is the largest single source of funding for the UW. The school says 58% of its money comes from students.
Dallman those are just rough numbers. He said the UW doesn’t provide specifics.
“When I asked the UW System exactly how taxpayer dollars are distributed to each campus, their answer was not surprising. They don’t have any specifics, just that ‘the process is complex’ and is based on a ‘base plus’ model,” Dallman added. “This means that millions of hard-earned taxpayer dollars are determined by what UW System feels each campus deserves, not using any standard metric or formula.”
Dallman also said there are unanswered questions about what the UW is spending money on.
“The UW System continues to invest millions of dollars in DEI and administrative bloat across our campuses. This is a complete waste of critical funding that should be going directly into our classrooms and labs,” he said. “I know my constituents and many other taxpayers across the state are deeply concerned about the UW System’s lack of transparency and accountability. It’s time for the UW System to get serious.”

Schoemann leads early Wisconsin GOP straw poll for governor

Schoemann leads early Wisconsin GOP straw poll for governor

(The Center Square) – Washington County Executive Josh Schoemann was the leader in a WisPolitics straw poll to be Wisconsin’s Republican Party candidate for governor in 2026.
The poll was taken at the Republican Party of Wisconsin convention with 38% of those responding with 110 votes. Schoemann announced his candidacy in early May.
Second in the voting was U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany, WI-7th Congressional, with 103 votes.
“I am grateful for the support of Wisconsin’s grassroots activists, which are so critical to winning Wisconsin,” Schoemann said in a statement to The Center Square. “We are so proud of the support from activists across the state who have joined our team in the first two weeks and we are excited about how many people joined our team this weekend.
Schoemann has said he wants to keep young people in the state and stop retirees from moving out. He wants to flatten the state’s income tax on a path to remove it.
“As I have traveled all over Wisconsin, so many of the people I have met believe that fresh ideas and energy are what we need to make Wisconsin a great place to be, not just be from,” Schoemann said.
Gov. Tony Evers has not said yet if he will run for a third term, saying he will wait until budget negotiations are complete before making an announcement.
Republicans are currently waiting on an in-person meeting with Evers to discuss the budget and a tax-cut plan in the state.

Opposition mounts against Line 5 reroute blockage

Opposition mounts against Line 5 reroute blockage

(The Center Square) – The Wisconsin Jobs and Energy Coalition, along with several other employer groups in Wisconsin, have been working to fight against an attempted block of a Line 5 reroute of the Bad River Reservation.
The director of the Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association, for example, recently wrote with concerns that the arguments against approving the reroute could be used to block the timber industry on private land.
“These claims could delay or deny logging, road building, forest thinning, and replanting efforts—basic practices essential to both forest health and economic vitality,” Henry Schienebeck recently wrote in an op-ed published in the Ashland Daily Press. “The logic being advanced could be used to shut down operations across privately owned forests, tribal lands, and public working lands alike.”
Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa is concerned about water contamination on the reservation, in Lake Superior and in the wetlands that serve as the Band’s wild rice beds and as a critical migratory bird habitat.
Enbridge applied for permits and proposed to reroute the line in 2020 by replacing 20 miles of existing pipeline – including the 12 miles currently within the reservation – with a 41-mile-long stretch of pipe around the reservation in northern Wisconsin.
Line 5 transports 23 million gallons of crude oil and natural gas liquids daily from Superior, Wisconsin, through Michigan to refineries in Sarnia, Ontario for 645 miles through a 30-inch diameter pipe.
Two days of testimony recently occurred on the Bad River Band’s arguments to block the reroute. Hearings will continue on Aug. 12 at Northwood Technical College in Ashland, where the public can testify related to permits from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
During the recent hearing, Tera Fong, Water Division Director for Region 5 with the Environmental Protection Agency, was quoted as testifying that the “materials EPA reviewed did not provide data, studies or modeling analysis that showed and quantified impacts of distance from any given discharge point to water quality on the reservation, the likelihood of discharges, including discharges of pollutants traveling from groundwater to surface waters and then to the reservation boundary.”
Several union leaders also testified at the hearings, arguing that the objections are inconsistent and are regarding standard timber and construction practices approved across the country.
“These claims not only do not match up with the Bad River Band’s own previous construction approvals, but they are practices the Band has been fine with for dozens of projects in the same area,” said Teamsters Local 346 and pipeline representative for the Teamsters Chad Ward. “This leaves the impression that these concerns are more based on their political views of the project than the construction methods themself. And while they are entitled to their political views, it is the job of the permitting process to determine if laws and regulations are being followed, not weigh the political arguments.”

Middleton TIF exception created for Thermo Fisher Scientific

Middleton TIF exception created for Thermo Fisher Scientific

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin lawmakers approved allowing an extension of tax breaks in Middleton along with up to $2.15 million in state business tax credits for Thermo Fisher Scientific.
Senate Bill 24 passed the Wisconsin Assembly unanimously with a 97-0 vote before being signed into law by Gov. Tony Evers.
The state has a limit of allowing no more than 12% of taxable property in a municipality to be placed into a tax increment financing district, where the additional taxes that would have been paid when a business builds new facilities or renovates are allowed to be kept by the business and spent on improvements.
SB 24 waives the 12% limit in Middleton for Thermo Fisher, which lawmakers say will keep the employer in Middleton along with the 1,800 jobs at the facility. Then $2.15 million in additional tax credit incentives through September 2026 are tied to additional jobs at the facility.
Thermo Fisher has announced a $58 million expansion that it promised would involve 350 new jobs and a 72,500-square-foot building at the company’s Good Manufacturing Practices lab.
“Wisconsin is world-renowned for our booming bio-health industry, and I am pleased that, as a state, we could take swift, bipartisan action to support a major employer like Thermo Fisher Scientific and continue to provide family-supporting jobs here in Wisconsin,” Evers said in a statement. “Now more than ever, our work together to ensure companies and communities can remain competitive is critically important for Wisconsin’s continued success, and I’m glad to be signing this bill into law today.”
Middleton was already above the 12% limit with its two current TIF districts with more than $1 billion of property in its two previous TIF districts of the $5.6 billion in taxable property in Middleton.
Act 6 allows for the creation of a third TIF district for Thermo Fisher.
“Middleton is currently over the 12 percent limit at 16.63 percent,” the bill’s fiscal estimate says. “Under current law, Middleton cannot create TID number 6 without terminating a current TID, subtracting territory, or waiting until the values fall below the 12 percent limit.”
The overall value of the new law can’t be determined until it is known the value of improvements at Thermo Fisher that can be capture by the TIF.

New Weekend Farmers Market Planned for Brookfield

New Weekend Farmers Market Planned for Brookfield

The Brookfield Plan Commission has approved plans for a new farmer's market coming to Brookfield. The owners and operate of Famers Market To Go, LLC have decided to start a new outdoor farmer's market that will begin operating on June 1. The market will be held in the...

Wimberger: Evers hoarding illegal $170M ‘slush-fund’

Wimberger: Evers hoarding illegal $170M ‘slush-fund’

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers is under fire after a recent bill alleges he has illegally kept more than $170 million in taxpayer dollars from interest earned on unspent funds since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The bill, introduced by Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Oconto, would require Evers and Department of Administration Secretary-designee Kathy Blumenfeld to hand over $170 million in earned interest on the funds to the state’s General Fund.
The state of Wisconsin received $3 billion from the federal government during the pandemic.
In 2023 the Legislative Audit Bureau discovered the interest earned from these funds during an annual audit of the state’s finances, according to Wimberger.
That interest has now ballooned to more than $170 million.
“Gov. Evers exploited federal programs, turning interest payments on relief funds into his own $170 million slush fund,” Wimberger said in a statement. “State law is clear: the governor needs to return this slush fund to the people of Wisconsin. Every week he fails or refuses to do this, the governor is violating state law.”
State law requires all money with no specified purposes to be credited to the General Fund weekly unless otherwise provided by law, according to Wimberger.
A memo from Wimberger and Rep. Robert Wittke, R-Caledonia claims the administration misclassified the interest earnings as funds from the federal government. The memo argued the interest itself was not received from the federal government, and no federal restrictions may apply to its use.
Wimberger argues Evers has kept the $170 million illegally for every week he has failed to give the interest earnings to the General Fund.
This bill would force Evers to return the money to the people of Wisconsin, Wimberger said.
An email to Evers’ office seeking comment was not answered at the time of publication.
“Taxpayer money, including the interest it earns, should never be at the sole discretion of one individual,” IRG executive vice president Chris Reader said in a statement. “Lawmakers have a duty to ensure every public dollar – including the $170 million in interest from federal COVID funds – is spent responsibly, transparently, and with oversight.”
The bill isn’t just about money, but about maintaining the checks and balances that protect Wisconsin’s taxpayers and uphold the integrity of the state government, Reader said.

Republicans say latest budget numbers show need for caution

Republicans say latest budget numbers show need for caution

(The Center Square) – The Republican lawmakers who will write Wisconsin’s next state budget say they need to hold the line on spending as much as they can.
Sen. Howard Marklein, R-Spring Green, and Rep. Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam, said the latest revenue estimates for the state show a need for “cautious budgeting.”
“The cost-to-continue remains high and our [tax] collections are down slightly compared to January estimates, therefore we must continue the success of Republican budgets of the past in order to ensure that we can meet our ongoing obligations,” the two said in a statement.
Marklein and Born, and their budget-writing Joint Committee on Finance, have already held several budget hearings, and they even stripped non-budgetary policy issues from Gov. Tony Evers’ budget proposal.
But they have not made any spending decisions yet.
The two said they were waiting for the May revenue estimates from the Legislative Finance Bureau. The LFB released those numbers Thursday.
“Based on our review of collections data and the economic forecast, general fund taxes will be higher than previous estimates by $22 million in 2024-25, and lower than the previous estimates by $321 million in 2025-26 and $36 million in 2026-27,” the LFB wrote. “The three-year decrease is $335 million.”
The LFB report shows Wisconsin will not lose money. The state expects to bring in more money for each year of the new, two-year state budget. The estimates, however, say there will be less new money than previously expected.
“While we are not surprised by these new estimates, we remain cautious as we work to craft a budget that invests in our priorities, funds our obligations, and puts the State of Wisconsin in a strong fiscal position for the future,” Born and Marklein said. “We are calling on Gov. Evers to take these revenue re-estimates seriously. Come to the table with legislative leaders and work with us to craft a reasonable budget that works for Wisconsin.”
Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu on Thursday said Evers needs to meet with top Republicans by the end of next week if he wants to see a new state budget on time.

Wisconsin Senate approves bill requiring court, attorney costs for open records

Wisconsin Senate approves bill requiring court, attorney costs for open records

(The Center Square) – The Wisconsin Senate approved a measure that will require public agencies that release public records only when they are sued to pay for attorney’s fees and court costs for the filing.
Sen. Van Wanggaard, R-Racine, sponsored Senate Bill 194 in an attempt to encourage public entities to follow open records law and release records in a timely manner.
“Secretary of State Sarah Godlewski had to settle a court case for records,” Wanggaard said in a statement. “Superintendent Jill Underly withheld records for 8 months and was threatened with a lawsuit before complying with a request. The Madison School District has been sued repeatedly for failing to respond to open records requests. Everyone, regardless of party, should agree that these actions were wrong.”
Current law allows the records requester to receive court costs and attorney’s fees if they prevail in a lawsuit, but entities that release the records before a court order is issued are not subject to paying the fees.
The bill would change that, allowing the requester to receive fees once a lawsuit is filed and the records are then released.
Van Wanggaard said he believes there has been an increase in officials not complying with open records law since the 2022 Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling requiring a court order before the fees must be paid for not disclosing public records.

Wisconsin Senate approves of $2.25M nuclear energy plan

Wisconsin Senate approves of $2.25M nuclear energy plan

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s Senate approved a deal to spend $2.25 million on both a nuclear siting study and holding a nuclear power summit.
The Senate voted 28-5 to approve Senate Bill 146, which includes spending $1 million on a nuclear power siting study, more than $140,000 while adding a full-time employee focusing on nuclear power and $250,000 to organize a Nuclear Power Summit in Madison at a new University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Engineering building.
Nuclear power represents 45% of the United States’ carbon-free electricity from just 94 reactors and Wisconsin is in need of additional electrical capacity with the potential for several new large-scale data centers to go online in coming years, according to Sen. Julian Bradley, R-New Berlin.
“This is huge for our state,” Bradley said. “This is great for economic development. It is great for all of our ratepayers. It’s got great bipartisan support.”
During a committee meeting on the bill, Rep.. David Steffen, R-Howard, said that a planned Microsoft data center in Pleasant Prairie would use as much power as the entire city of Madison and a potential Cloverleaf data center in Port Washington would as much power as the entire city of Los Angeles.
A Meta data center is also reportedly in planning for Beaver Dam.
Sen. Robert Wirch, D-Pleasant Prairie, said that he was concerned about the costs and risks related to nuclear energy.
“Chernobyl and Fukashima,” Wirch said. “Two of the greatest disasters we have ever seen happened because something went wrong with nuclear power.”
Bradley said the state already was receiving positive nuclear energy news with EnergySolutions announcing it was beginning planning and looking for a permit to reopen Kewaunee Power Station in Kewaunee County while working with WEC Energy Group.
With rising energy demand driven by data centers, artificial intelligence and industrial growth, the need for reliable, carbon-free power has never been greater,” President and CEO of EnergySolutions Ken Robuck said in a statement. “ By bringing our nuclear licensing and project development expertise to the table, we look forward to supporting WEC in the early planning stages for new nuclear generation in Wisconsin.”

Evers, Lutnick clash over high-speed internet plan for rural Wisconsin

Evers, Lutnick clash over high-speed internet plan for rural Wisconsin

(The Center Square) – A years-long plan to provide reliable, affordable high-speed internet access to people in rural Wisconsin now faces delays in funding and administration.
The Broadband, Equity, Access and Development Program, created by Congress in 2021 to provide high-speed internet to rural and unserved communities, is in trouble in Wisconsin after the state legislature declined to provide state funding in the last biennial budget process and the Trump administration initiated a review of the program.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick disagree on how the $42.4 billion program should move forward.
In a letter to Lutnick, Evers said the Trump administration and National Telecommunications and Information Administration should continue to support Wisconsin’s BEAD Program in a timely fashion so thousands of Wisconsin homes and businesses in need of high-speed internet access can get online soon.
“Our state has already spent tremendous time and effort to achieve the shared goals of the BEAD Program,” Evers said. “I urge NTIA not to delay our states’ efforts at this final, critical stage, but to use the program review to create efficiencies that will accelerate broadband deployment to unserved Wisconsin residents.”
The lack of reliable funding and Lutnick’s recent initiative to review the program are an obstacle to the Evers administration, which has allocated more than $345 million in state and federal funds toward high-speed internet access since 2019.
The legislature rejected Evers’ proposed $750 million state investment, citing federal investments into the BEAD Program Wisconsin already expected to receive.
According to Evers, if those investments never come, the legislature’s rejection of his proposal would be futile.
“Wisconsinites are counting on these investments,” Evers said. “Internet Service Providers have planned their projects and are ready to put shovels in the ground. NTIA must not require any program changes that will delay Wisconsin’s plans–Wisconsinites in rural and unserved areas have waited long enough.”
The Public Service Commission of Wisconsin estimates more than 450,000 homes and businesses in rural areas alone are unserved, underserved or have no service at all.
However, Lutnick asserted the BEAD Program needs to change course.
One reason for this is that the program prioritizes DEI favoritism over equal access to high-speed internet for all communities.
“Because of the prior Administration’s woke mandates, favoritism towards certain technologies, and burdensome regulations, the program has not connected a single person to the internet and is in dire need of a readjustment,” Lutnick said in a statement.
The new administration seeks to deliver high-speed internet access at the lowest cost for states by removing delays, waste and diversity preferences before getting homes and businesses connected, according to Lutnick.
Additionally, the Evers administration and PSC imposed DEI policies requiring the BEAD program to give preference to race or other minority statuses, such as mandating subgrantees to dole out preferences to woman-owned and minority-owned businesses, according to Daniel Lennington, an attorney for the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty.
“Wisconsin’s BEAD plan is filled with racial preferences, treating some groups better than others, which is unconstitutional race discrimination,” Lennington wrote on X. “The Admin should mandate race-neutrality from @GovEvers, & withhold money until he certifies compliance w/ federal law.”
Despite pushback from the Trump administration, Evers and Wisconsin Democrats are adamant that the BEAD Program harbors no discrimination and seeks to equally serve all Wisconsin communities.
“This is about equity, not race,” Sen. Melissa Ratcliff, D-Cottage Grove, said in a statement. “This is about making sure that every resident, regardless of ZIP code, no matter where one lives, has a shot in today’s economy.”

Tips for Making the Most of Paddle Board Season

Tips for Making the Most of Paddle Board Season

The end of May and beginning of June is usually when paddle boards get pulled out for summertime use. Although some brave souls are willing to wear wetsuits and paddle board as soon as the lakes thaw, many patiently wait until the weather gets warmer. The past few...

Steil: Good progress on ‘big, beautiful bill’

Steil: Good progress on ‘big, beautiful bill’

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin Congressman Bryan Steil is not far off from the state’s senior U.S. senator on President Donald Trump’s so-called big, beautiful bill.
Steil was on News Talk 1130 WISN on Thursday, and said he shares Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson’s worries that the federal reconciliation package doesn’t do enough to trim federal spending. But he said there is plenty in the package to like.
“When we are looking at a long-term structural deficit, where we are spending $2 trillion more than we’re bringing in every year, rough math, we need dramatic and transformational change,” Steil said. “The bill in the House takes us a step in the right direction. So, it’s progress. It’s not as much progress as, overall, I think we need to do to fully get the country back on track.”
Johnson has said he can’t vote for the plan as it’s written now.
Steil wouldn’t go that far, saying with a slim Republican majority “every vote counts.”
Steil said the bill does get some things right in his opinion.
“It extends President Trump’s tax cuts that really brought economic growth going into the recession. And makes real and substantive reforms, everything from canceling out electric vehicle subsidies, so that people can purchase a car or a bus that they want, or that the market tells you should, to making sure we have work requirements in our welfare programs for able-bodied childless adults,” Steil explained.
Democrats on Capitol Hill, and in Wisconsin, are portraying those work requirements at Medicaid cuts.
“Wisconsin Republicans like Bryan Steil and Derrick Van Orden have tried to save face by claiming that Wisconsinites’ Medicaid benefits ‘will not be cut by a nickel.’ Yet, the budget blueprint they voted for – calling for $2 trillion in cuts, including as much as $880 billion from Medicaid – makes it impossible for Medicaid to go untouched,” the Democratic Party of Wisconsin said in a statement.
Steil said Democrats are focused on the wrong thing when looking at Medicaid.
“And so what the Democrats want to focus on is how much money is going into the program. That’s the Democrats play card time and again,” Steil added. “Instead us as Republicans, what we are looking at this, is saying ‘Let’s look at the outputs.’ Let’s, in particular, make sure if you have able-bodied childless adult of working age that they’re working at a minimum of 20 hours a week.”

Wisconsin unemployment rises to 3.3% in April, remains below federal 4.2%

Wisconsin unemployment rises to 3.3% in April, remains below federal 4.2%

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s labor market remains at positive levels while the unemployment rate went up to 3.3% in April, Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Chief Economist Dennis Winters said.
Winters said that Wisconsin numbers haven’t shown an impact from federal policy or tariff policy at this point. Winters said that the ongoing and initial unemployment rates have not risen or spiked in any way.
“As far as we know, that is going to continue until we see effects of what federal policies may have on the labor markets in the weeks and months to come,” Winters said.
Wisconsin’s unemployment rate remains below the 4.2% national rate while the state labor force participation rate was 65.5% in April compared to a 62.6% national rate.
The overall number of those unemployed in the state is higher than in 2024.
“That’s about 10,000 above year ago levels but still in a round number that we are very comfortable with,” Winters said.
Wisconsin’s unemployment rate was 3.2% in March.
Winters added that an impact could still be seen as federal trade policies and personnel policies become rules.

Wisconsin Senate Republicans want Evers budget meeting by next week

Wisconsin Senate Republicans want Evers budget meeting by next week

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s Republican Senate leaders say they need to meet with Gov. Tony Evers by next week to keep the state on schedule to pass a budget before the end of the fiscal year.
At the same time, Senate Democratic leadership said Republicans haven’t done anything but gut Evers’ proposals in the 87 days since his budget was introduced.
An essential part of the budget process for Republicans is a tax cut measure that will exempt some retirement income from taxes while also lowering the tax rate for the state’s second from the bottom tax bracket, a proposal Republicans made last year that Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said would be less than what was proposed a year ago.
“It’s imperative that we meet by the end of next week at the latest to stay on schedule to pass a budget by the end of the fiscal year,” LeMahieu said at a Thursday press conference. “It’s as simple as that. Time’s ticking. End of the fiscal year is coming and, if we’re going to work through finance to get a budget passed, we need to meet with the governor next week.”
Senate Minority Leader Diane Hesselbein, D-Middleton, said that the state’s Joint Finance Committee made “irresponsible actions” when it removed 612 items from Evers’ budget proposal. She said that Republican leaders have not met with her about a proposal.
“Our doors are open,” Hesselbein said. “We want this budget process done on time at the end of June. We believe we can get it done. And my door is open so hopefully we can get it done and get enough people in the state Senate to a yes on this budget and we can continue to work for the people in the state of Wisconsin.”
But Republican leaders want to meet with Evers. Hesselbein was asked if she would be part of those conversations.
“Sometimes it’s hard to get all of us in the same room because of timing and schedules and stuff like that,” Hesselbein said.
LeMahieu said that he expected to receive updated revenue estimates for the next two fiscal years later Thursday and those would be key to discussions. The state’s April revenue numbers showed a 6.3% decline in year over year April tax collections, a trend that continued from a March drop in the numbers.
LeMahieu said that he and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos sent a list of available times to meet with Evers through next week.
“The governor and his staff have had our plan that we worked out with the Assembly to provide meaningful tax relief to hard-working families since March,” LeMahieu said. “In response, we have asked for specific items he would need to see in his budget to agree to cutting taxes.
“His staff has not been able to provide any of those details over the last six or seven weeks.”