Milwaukee County War Memorial Center, 750 N. Lincoln Memorial Drive, Milwaukee. Guest speaker is Craig Gilbert, Washington bureau chief of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Rotary meetings are open to members, invited guests and media. For more information: http://milwaukeerotary.com/
Park Hotel, Madison. Guest speaker is Assistant State Superintendent Kurt Kiefer, who is to present, “Rural Broadband 2: Closing the Digital Gap for Schools & Libraries.” Rotary meetings are open to members, invited guests and media.
On this week’s episode, WisPolitics.com’s JR Ross and guest host Jessica VanEgeren discuss the latest political fundraising numbers, Gov. Tony Evers’ move to direct $130 million in federal COVID-19 aid into workforce development, legislation to provide loans to reopen two Wisconsin paper mills and more.
U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson pulled in $1.2 million during the second quarter, topping each of his potential Dem rivals in the 2022 Senate race, FEC filings show. The Oshkosh Republican, who has yet to say whether he will seek reelection
The WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, debate Speaker Robin Vos’ 2020 election investigation.
The Child Tax Cut is a win for everyone.
Through his budget vetoes, Gov. Evers gave the legislature an opportunity to make good on a common and popular promise legislators across the state made to support their local public schools. There are plenty of needs right now, and now we have a second chance to fund those needs.
No amount of money is ever enough for the insatiable trough feeders in the public education establishment.
The budget was a missed opportunity in many ways and didn’t go nearly as far as we could with the surplus we have.
Our democracy is in real trouble.
States around the country are gearing up for projects that could pair engineering schools and industry, but the dean of UW-Madison’s College of Engineering warned this week the state will be at a disadvantage unless there’s more investment in infrastructure needed to compete.
But being a native of Green County I’d be remiss if I didn’t view with alarm this proposal to give a cheese that isn’t even among the most popular in the state a place among the other state designees: the robin, the badger, the sugar maple tree, the white-tailed deer and the musky, for instance.
Unlike in some cities Milwaukee’s urban forestry program is not in decline.
Milwaukee County War Memorial Center, 750 N. Lincoln Memorial Drive, Milwaukee. Guest speaker is Craig Gilbert, Washington bureau chief of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Rotary meetings are open to members, invited guests and media. For more information: http://milwaukeerotary.com/
Park Hotel, Madison. Guest speaker is Assistant State Superintendent Kurt Kiefer, who is to present, “Rural Broadband 2: Closing the Digital Gap for Schools & Libraries.” Rotary meetings are open to members, invited guests and media.
On this week’s episode, WisPolitics.com’s JR Ross and guest host Jessica VanEgeren discuss the latest political fundraising numbers, Gov. Tony Evers’ move to direct $130 million in federal COVID-19 aid into workforce development, legislation to provide loans to reopen two Wisconsin paper mills and more.
U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson pulled in $1.2 million during the second quarter, topping each of his potential Dem rivals in the 2022 Senate race, FEC filings show. The Oshkosh Republican, who has yet to say whether he will seek reelection next year, reported $498,265 in expenses and $1.7 million cash
The WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, debate Speaker Robin Vos’ 2020 election investigation.
The Child Tax Cut is a win for everyone.
Through his budget vetoes, Gov. Evers gave the legislature an opportunity to make good on a common and popular promise legislators across the state made to support their local public schools. There are plenty of needs right now, and now we have a second chance to fund those needs.
No amount of money is ever enough for the insatiable trough feeders in the public education establishment.
The budget was a missed opportunity in many ways and didn’t go nearly as far as we could with the surplus we have.
Our democracy is in real trouble.
States around the country are gearing up for projects that could pair engineering schools and industry, but the dean of UW-Madison’s College of Engineering warned this week the state will be at a disadvantage unless there’s more investment in infrastructure needed to compete.
But being a native of Green County I’d be remiss if I didn’t view with alarm this proposal to give a cheese that isn’t even among the most popular in the state a place among the other state designees: the robin, the badger, the sugar maple tree, the white-tailed deer and the musky, for instance.
Unlike in some cities Milwaukee’s urban forestry program is not in decline.