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Senate Members


Co-Chair: Sen. Mark Miller, D-Monona

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Assembly Members


Co-Chair: Mark Pocan, D-Madison

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Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Doyle calls special legislative session on budget; Will include compromise bill

This release is fresh from the governor's office:

MADISON - Governor Jim Doyle today announced he will call the full Legislature into Special Session on a compromise budget bill on Monday, October 15. The Wisconsin Legislature is the only Legislature in the country that has failed to pass a budget.

"Whenever both sides are close to an agreement, extreme voices in the Republican caucus let out a howl and the leaders shy away." Governor Doyle said. "If the Legislature has not come to an agreement by Monday, then I expect both houses to pass this compromise bill - because Wisconsin families cannot afford to wait any longer. Every additional day that the Republican leaders play politics and ignore their responsibility, real people suffer. It is time Speaker Huebsch and extreme Republicans put partisan interests aside and do what's best for Wisconsin."

As part of the Special Session, the Governor will introduce a new compromise budget bill that will reflect exactly where negotiations were before Republican leaders made clear they never really wanted a budget. The bill will cut spending by $430 million and eliminate $300 million of new revenue.

The compromise bill will remove all the non-fiscal policy items in both the Assembly and the Senate versions that were not agreed to by both sides. It will fund Wisconsin's priorities and cut taxes for middle class families. It will ensure quality education for our schools, provide a new investment in our universities, and ensure health care access to 98 percent of Wisconsin citizens.

After weeks of give and take, there was progress on both sides as they moved toward an agreement. Senate Democrats were willing to give up their health plan, cut $430 million in spending, and take the real estate transfer fee and combined reporting off the table. The Assembly Republicans were willing to accept the $1.25 tobacco tax, back away from their massive cuts to public schools, and drop some of their other draconian cuts as well. We thought they were making progress.

Yet whenever negotiations got to a point where an agreement could easily be reached, extreme voices in the Republican caucus let out a howl and the leaders shy away. Now they've backed away even farther. They are no longer willing to accept a $1.25 cigarette tax and are reviving their extreme cuts to Wisconsin's priorities.

Extreme Republicans still want to cut the university by $60 million, slash financial aid by $20 million, cut aid to veterans by another $6.5 million, and eliminate our new efforts to reduce smoking in Wisconsin. The Governor wants to put this state on a permanent path of fiscal stability, but extreme Republicans are playing politics with our children's future.

For months the Republicans made no movement. Finally, after coming out publicly in support of a $1.25 cigarette, Speaker Huebsch has now sided with the big tobacco companies, and backed away from that position.

Extreme Republicans insist on cutting the university by $60 million, slash financial aid by $20 million, cut aid to veterans by another $6.5 million, and eliminate our new efforts to reduce smoking in Wisconsin. We need to put this state on a permanent path of fiscal stability, but extreme Republicans are playing politics with our children's future. These are the wrong priorities.

The state has operated without a new budget since July 1. The Legislature's failure to pass a budget is affecting tax payers, students, and residents across the state. Currently, 5,544 university students are on waiting lists for financial aid. The expansion of the Sand Ridge Secure Treatment Center for sex offenders may be delayed without a budget, and dozens of important road projects may be postponed or cancelled.

Without a budget, university students could face a tuition surcharge of over $800. If the Department of Public Instruction cannot use a new budget to determine aid levels by next Monday, local schools will be forced to either lay off teachers or raise property taxes.

At the Department of Corrections, a $370 million shortfall will create dangerous conditions for security officers and citizens by forcing modified lockdowns and preventing the state from using GPS technology to monitor child sex offenders. These and many other state programs are threatened by the lack of a new budget, and Wisconsin residents and families will suffer as a result. For these reasons, not passing a budget is not an option.

Greg Bump

Contact: bump@wispolitics.com

Updates on Joint Finance Committee action on the 2007-09 Wisconsin state budget, from the first JFC meetings through the governor's final vetoes.

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