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In June of
every odd-numbered year, the primary focus in the State Capitol is
the fate of the State Budget. This year is no exception. Capitol
observers believe that the State Assembly, with its 60-39
Republican majority, has been prepared to pass the version
forwarded by the Joint Committee on Finance (JFC) without any
substantive amendments. The task in the Senate, controlled by the
Republicans 19-14, is not quite so simple. The majority party,
barring some Democrat votes for the budget—which is
unlikely—cannot have more than two defections and still pass a
Republican budget bill.
As of this
writing, the speculation is that the 17 votes needed have not been
secured. Those members of the Senate Republican caucus who have
expressed concerns or reservations are not coalescing with the
Democrats on contentious issues. Quite the contrary. The two votes
that need to be secured need to come from a group (four?) of
“fiscal conservatives” who would apparently like to see less
spending and less potential for deficit spending. Nonetheless,
most people around the process remain optimistic that a resolution
will be realized by July 1.
The Senate has
indicated its intention to have one regular floor session day next
week. The Assembly has not formally announced its intentions, but
is expected to begin floor debate on the budget sometime next
week.
We invite
readers to review
last week’s Tidbits
for a summary of JFC action on the budget bill.
| In
This Issue |
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Fiscal Bureau Compares JFC/Doyle’s Budget
Senate Session
Day/Recent Activity
School Choice
Focus of News Report
Amtrak Hiawatha
Service Ridership "On Track" for Record Year
Dane Co. DA--No
Log Rolling in Minimum Wage "Deal"
Governor Doyle
Names Randy Romanski Deputy Chief of Staff
Falk/Feingold
Winners in WisPolitics Straw Poll |
| Policy
Developments |
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Fiscal Bureau Compares JFC/Doyle’s Budget
A
Legislative Fiscal Bureau Paper provides a preliminary comparison of
Joint Finance and the Governor’s Budget proposals. The report shows that the
committee (JFC) reduced more than $600 million in GO and revenue bonding
from the Governor’s proposal. The Governor proposed all funds spending of
$53.2 billion for the 2005-07 biennium, compared to $52.9 billion in total
spending under the JFC version.
The
Governor’s proposed budget included $25.9 billion worth of a general purpose
revenue (GPR) while JFC’s number is $26 billion. The Governor and the JFC
have approximately the same number of full-time employee cuts. The
Governor’s budget included roughly $1.7 billion in segregated fund (SEG)
transfers and program revenue (PR) lapses. Under the JFC version, lapses and
transfers totaled roughly $900 million or $800 million less than the
Governor proposed.
Senate Session Day/Recent Activity
The Senate will be in session on Thursday, June 23. It will be the only
session day for the Senate next week. The Assembly could begin budget floor
debate as early as Tuesday, June 21.
[Except where indicated by a link to a roll call vote, all other bills
passed on a voice vote.]
Bills passed by the Senate:
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SB 42: Voter ID Passed
21-12 (All Republicans plus Democrats Carpenter and Plale).
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AB 107: relating to: the cutoff time for receipt of documents for
filing and recording with a register of deeds, federal tax lien forms, and
maintenance of county highway registers;
Bills passed by the Assembly:
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AB 437: Passed the Assembly
61-35; this bill would make it easier for utilities to use land owned
by local governments for transmission lines. (The bill, which was held up
procedurally, will automatically be sent to the Senate next week.)
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AB 441: Applications for certificates of public convenience and
necessity for certain electric generating facilities. Passed the Assembly
76-24;
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AB 116: Changing the definition of industrial development project,
and limiting the scope of certain projects, under the Industrial
Development Law;
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AB 299: County shoreland zoning ordinances in territories annexed by
cities, villages, or towns;
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SB 55: Removes limits on designation of enterprise development zones.
(This bill has passed both houses and will be presented to the Governor
who had proposed basically the same changes as embodied in SB 55 which JFC
included in its budget proposal with some modifications. The basic
provisions of SB 55 are expected to be signed into law as a stand alone
bill or as part of the budget.);
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AB 259: Provider organizations subject to health care liability
requirements;
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AB 207: The “conscience clause”
bill, which would allow health care
providers to refuse to provide care based on moral objections,
passed 63-36. (Gov. Jim Doyle has promised to veto the bill if it
reaches his desk, as he did two years ago with a similar proposal.)
School Choice Focus of News Report
In 1990, Milwaukee began what has been characterized as a revolutionary
experiment in school choice for low-income students. Over the past five
months, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporters visited 106 schools to
examine how the program is faring. Their research was focused not on
politics and court battles, but on the classrooms themselves and the
experiences of the nearly 14,000 students now served by choice schools at a
cost this year to taxpayers of $83 million.
An
in-depth report on their findings has been featured in a seven-part series
in the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Amtrak Hiawatha Service Ridership "On Track" for Record Year
The Wisconsin Department of Transportation
recently announced another record year for ridership on Amtrak. The
43,598 passengers who traveled between Milwaukee and Chicago aboard Amtrak's
Hiawatha Service trains last month is an 18 percent increase over the 36,871
passengers who utilized the service in May of 2004. It is the sixth
straight month that a monthly ridership record has been set. If the robust
ridership trend continues, annual Hiawatha ridership will likely top the
500,000 mark this year for the first time ever.
Hiawatha Service trains currently provide seven daily round trips (six on
Sundays) between Milwaukee and Chicago while posting the best on-time
performance of any Amtrak route in the nation.
For more information on legislation of interest to WMBA
members, go to The Hamilton Consulting Group's
WMBA
Tracking Report.
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| Wisconsin
Politics |
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Dane Co. DA--No Log Rolling in
Minimum Wage "Deal"
Dane County District Attorney Brian Blanchard won't take
action on a complaint by Madison Alderman Austin King, who accused
Gov. Doyle and legislative leaders of logrolling in order to get a
state minimum wage and local minimum wage pre-emption package
through the Legislature.
As stated in a letter from Blanchard:
“The Governor and members of the legislature engaged in
negotiations, the terms of which were publicly discussed,
regarding issues related to minimum wage laws. The public nature
of these negotiations supports the view that this was not private
interest logrolling, namely covert agreements by public officials
on matters of narrow or private interest made at public expense.
Criminal prosecution in this area
could have chilling effects on necessary discussions between and
among legislators and with a governor, as well as chilling effects
on the decisions of public officials to share information about
these communications with the public.”
Governor Doyle Names Randy Romanski
Deputy Chief of Staff
Governor Doyle
has appointed Randy Romanski as his Deputy Chief of Staff.
Romanski is currently the Executive Assistant for the Wisconsin
Dept. of Transportation (DOT). Prior to his stint at DOT, Randy
was a spokesman and policy analyst for the Justice Department
while Doyle was Attorney General.
The Governor also announced that Chris
Klein will replace Romanski as Executive Assistant at the Dept. of
Transportation. Klein is now the Executive Assistant in the Dept.
of Regulation and Licensing. Larry Martin, Chief of Staff for Lt.
Governor Lawton, will replace Klein at Regulation and Licensing.
Falk/Feingold Winners in
WisPolitics Straw Poll
Kathleen Falk and Russ Feingold both emerged as winners in a
WisPolitics straw poll of activists at the Wisconsin
Democratic Party convention last weekend.
Of the 299 ballots submitted for
attorney general, Falk, the Dane County Executive who
unsuccessfully ran for Governor in the 2002 Dem gubernatorial
primary, edged incumbent AG Peg Lautenschlager. Falk tallied 152
total votes, or 50.8 percent, to AG Lautenschlager's 144, or 48.2
percent. Feingold was preferred by 38.8 % of the delegates voting
from a long list of potential Democrat presidential candidates for
2008.
Republican gubernatorial candidate
Mark Green was the other “winner” in that a majority (56 %) of
delegates preferred Scott Walker as the Republican opponent to
Governor Jim Doyle in 2006, presumably indicating that Democrats
casting those votes believe that Green would be the more
formidable opponent to the incumbent Governor. |
| Upcoming Fundraisers |
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|
Monday, June 20
-
Gov. Jim Doyle, Verona
-
Scott Walker (R) gubernatorial
candidate, Milwaukee
-
Rep. Mike Huebsch (R-West Salem),
Wisconsin Dells
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Rep. John Gard (R-Peshtigo), Appleton
Tuesday, June 21
Wednesday, June 22
-
Scott Walker (R) gubernatorial
candidate, Elkhorn
-
Jamie Wall (D) 8th CD Candidate,
Madison
Thursday, June 23
Sunday, June 26
For
details, go to
Hamilton Consulting Fundraiser Calendar. |
|
WMBA Political Tidbits is a newsletter on
Wisconsin political and policy developments prepared for WMBA members by
The Hamilton
Consulting Group. Employees of WMBA member organizations can subscribe
at:
http://www.hamilton-consulting.com/wmba/form-subscribe-tidbits.html.
To unsubscribe, go to: |
© 2005 The Hamilton Consulting Group
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Tidbits Archives
Current
Edition
WMBA
Legislative Tracking Report
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For Further Information
For further information on these initiatives, contact Jim
Hough at The Hamilton Consulting Group.
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In the News |
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Pill ban
at UW moves ahead: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 17,2005.
Bill may decide power line's fate: Duluth News Tribune, June 17,
2005.
Senate
tries again on photo ID bill: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June
16,2005.
Doyle
praises health care effort: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June
16,2005.
State
Assembly OKs moral opt-out bill: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June
15, 2005.
Bill allows health care refusals: Appleton Post-Crescent, June 15,
2005.
Voter ID
bill could unfairly target some: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June
14, 2005.
Schools, kids will suffer (opinion): Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
June 15, 2005.
Gard set to take on Doyle in budget fight: Green Bay Press-Gazette,
June 15, 2005.
Power bill
speeds through process: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 15, 2005.
DNR targets funds for brownfield cleanup: Green Bay Press-Gazette,
June 15, 2005.
Doyle: GOP budget plan hurts schools: La Crosse Tribune, June 15,
2005.
Overreaction on pill (opinion): Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 15,
2005.
Bill's goal to eliminate Shaken Baby Syndrome: Marshfield News
herald, June 15, 2005.
Doyle urged to
veto entire GOP budget plan: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 13, 2005.
Tough choices may hurt Doyle bid: Appleton Post-Crescent, June 12, 2005.
Meth law goes into effect early: Appleton Post-Crescent, June 12, 2005.
Mercury emission rules leave plenty to jeer about: Racine Journal
Times, June 12, 2005.
Tax-limiting
budget advances: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 11, 2005.
Democrats look toward ’06 wins: Appleton Post-Crescent, June 11, 2005.
GOP offer targets several taxes: Appleton Post-Crescent, June 11, 2005.
Doyle Could Veto School Spending Limit, But ... : Wisconsin State Journal,
June 11, 2005.
Finance Committee Oks Budget: Wisconsin State Journal, June 11, 2005.
Cord blood bill gets a boost: Madison Capital Times, June 10, 2005.
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Updates |
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2005-07 Budget -
Air Permit Fees
Wisconsin Product Liability Law -
A Summary of Proposed Changes
The Wisconsin State Budget 2005-2007- Budget Overview
Wisconsin Elections - An
Overview
DNR Mercury Emissions Rule
Jobs Creation Act of 2003
More...
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