
Howard Marklein: More investment in rural roads, state parks, law enforcement
The Joint Finance Committee invested $100 million for local, rural roads and increased General Transportation Aids in both years of the biennium.
Submit columns for consideration to wisopinion@wispolitics.com
The Joint Finance Committee invested $100 million for local, rural roads and increased General Transportation Aids in both years of the biennium.
Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson denounced Biden’s Tulsa speech as “awful and so incredibly divisive.”
The powerful video-sharing company removed a video of a speech given by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and banned him from uploading new videos for at least seven days.
Biden should couple increased police funding with all kinds of reform requirements, so that departments could only get the money if they met a set of standards and got certified by the Justice Department.
In 2017, one of the city’s oldest manufacturing firms, Hufcor, was taken over by OpenGate Capital, a Los Angeles-based private equity firm that has a record of dismembering factories with heartless disregard for workers and communities.
The WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, comment on Gov. Tony Evers’ announcement to seek a second term amid a $4.4 billion budget windfall.
Each embraces a no-drama, commonsense approach to the pandemic and the economy, which is spot-on both on policy and politics.
The rationale behind laws to limit learning about racism.
Gov. Tony Evers has more than $5 billion at his disposal to spend on any number of COVID-19-related relief efforts, yet he can’t seem to find a fraction of that windfall to re-open the storied historical sites his administration ordered shut down last fall.
Two very different COVID-19 responses produce different economic outcomes in Hudson, Wis., and Stillwater, Minn.
Former Wisconsin governors Jim Doyle, a Democrat, and Scott Walker, a Republican have come together for the better health of our state. They have joined efforts to enlist their fellow citizens to get vaccinated so to stem the spread of COVID.
It’s breathtaking the amount of money Republicans are determined to turn away on behalf of the people of Wisconsin.
That’s how much federal pandemic aid city is getting. A participatory budget process is needed.
Milwaukee will invariably continue to throw money into the streetcar in a vain attempt at making Mayor Barrett’s vanity project finally work.
Yet the difference is smaller in Wisconsin. Why?
Given the state’s revenue forecast, it makes sense to consider options for returning some of the excess revenue to taxpayers in a structurally sound manner while making Wisconsin more economically competitive in the process.
With an additional $4.4 billion in tax revenue, the legislature and the governor have the opportunity to accomplish priorities that were often thought to be unrealistic: reduce taxes, implement a learning loss recovery program for students who have been left behind from school closures, or expand strategic investments like broadband to ensure all Wisconsinites have access to high-speed internet.
While Gov. Tony Evers and President Joe Biden spend your tax dollars like drunken sailors on leave, consumers are taking it in the shorts.
The bills presented by Wisconsin legislators seek to ignore historical truths, under the guise that teaching history and current events accurately would upset students and assault the sensibilities of Caucasian students.
With more than an estimated 207,000 members of the LGBTQ+ community calling Wisconsin home, LGBTQ+ individuals are our friends, our neighbors and members of our family.
The Joint Finance Committee invested $100 million for local, rural roads and increased General Transportation Aids in both years of the biennium.
Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson denounced Biden’s Tulsa speech as “awful and so incredibly divisive.”
The powerful video-sharing company removed a video of a speech given by Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and banned him from uploading new videos for at least seven days.
Biden should couple increased police funding with all kinds of reform requirements, so that departments could only get the money if they met a set of standards and got certified by the Justice Department.
In 2017, one of the city’s oldest manufacturing firms, Hufcor, was taken over by OpenGate Capital, a Los Angeles-based private equity firm that has a record of dismembering factories with heartless disregard for workers and communities.
The WisOpinion Insiders, Chvala and Jensen, comment on Gov. Tony Evers’ announcement to seek a second term amid a $4.4 billion budget windfall.
Each embraces a no-drama, commonsense approach to the pandemic and the economy, which is spot-on both on policy and politics.
The rationale behind laws to limit learning about racism.
Gov. Tony Evers has more than $5 billion at his disposal to spend on any number of COVID-19-related relief efforts, yet he can’t seem to find a fraction of that windfall to re-open the storied historical sites his administration ordered shut down last fall.
Two very different COVID-19 responses produce different economic outcomes in Hudson, Wis., and Stillwater, Minn.
Former Wisconsin governors Jim Doyle, a Democrat, and Scott Walker, a Republican have come together for the better health of our state. They have joined efforts to enlist their fellow citizens to get vaccinated so to stem the spread of COVID.
It’s breathtaking the amount of money Republicans are determined to turn away on behalf of the people of Wisconsin.
That’s how much federal pandemic aid city is getting. A participatory budget process is needed.
Milwaukee will invariably continue to throw money into the streetcar in a vain attempt at making Mayor Barrett’s vanity project finally work.
Yet the difference is smaller in Wisconsin. Why?
Given the state’s revenue forecast, it makes sense to consider options for returning some of the excess revenue to taxpayers in a structurally sound manner while making Wisconsin more economically competitive in the process.
With an additional $4.4 billion in tax revenue, the legislature and the governor have the opportunity to accomplish priorities that were often thought to be unrealistic: reduce taxes, implement a learning loss recovery program for students who have been left behind from school closures, or expand strategic investments like broadband to ensure all Wisconsinites have access to high-speed internet.
While Gov. Tony Evers and President Joe Biden spend your tax dollars like drunken sailors on leave, consumers are taking it in the shorts.
The bills presented by Wisconsin legislators seek to ignore historical truths, under the guise that teaching history and current events accurately would upset students and assault the sensibilities of Caucasian students.
With more than an estimated 207,000 members of the LGBTQ+ community calling Wisconsin home, LGBTQ+ individuals are our friends, our neighbors and members of our family.