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This has been a very exciting
year for The Hamilton Consulting Group. We recently announced a
joint enterprise (hamilton.gsp)
with GSP Consulting, Pittsburgh, PA. (See
Press Release). Today we are pleased
and honored to announce the addition of Henry Sanders to the Hamilton team. Henry brings an varied
background and policy perspectives on economic development, a focus of Hamilton Consulting for over 25 years.
The addition of Henry to our firm will enhance services to our existing
clients and contribute to our new hamilton.gsp venture.
Sanders
to Join Hamilton Consulting Group: Press Release, Nov. 30,
2006. Public
policy, economic development leader will focus on hamilton.gsp
services.
Sanders
to head venture to attract funding: Wisconsin State Journal, Dec. 1,
2006.Henry
Sanders Jr. will lead hamilton.gsp, a joint venture that says it will
bring more government dollars to Wisconsin's bioscience and technology
companies.
During the past week, leaders
in both houses of the Legislature announced the members who will serve on
the budget-writing Joint Committee on Finance (JFC). Thought to be the
most powerful state legislative committee in the country, the newly
designated members have begun reviewing agency “requests” which are now in
the hands of the Department of Administration and Governor, who will
review those requests and submit the next biennial budget proposal to the
Legislature in February 2007.
Wisconsin’s Joint Finance
Committee’s power ranking is based on the fact that its budget writing
authority includes revenue raising and spending (appropriations), “powers”
that are split between two committees in other legislatures, including
Congress. The ultimate power of final adoption of the budget, of course,
resides in the full Legislature - Assembly and Senate.
While development of a state
budget is never easy, JFC will face additional challenges this year since
the make-up of the committee is split evenly (8 and 8) between the two
political parties. Also, as noted below, there is an estimated $1.6
million gap between state agency requests and estimated revenues,
something that the Governor will get first crack at.
| In this Issue |
 |
Budget Challenge Faces
the Governor and the New Joint Finance Committee
DOT Budget Deficit to
Result in Project Delays
Report: Wisconsin Expected to Show
Moderate Growth in Next Biennium
Insurance Commissioner
Resigns
Erpenbach Proposes
Elimination of Sales Tax Exemptions
Joint Finance Members
Appointed
Representative Rhoades
Profile
Ray Taffora Named Deputy Attorney
General
Doyle Names Transition
Team
Van Hollen Names
Transition Team
Lawmakers to
Re-introduce Campaign Finance Reform Legislation
Doyle Announces
Inauguration Team
Falk/Voight Formally
Concede – Recounts Confirm Seats in Assembly Races |
| Policy Developments |
 |
Budget Challenge Faces
the Governor and the New Joint Finance Committee
A report issued by the
Wisconsin Dept. of Administration (DOA) shows a projected
1.6 billion deficit at the end of FY 09 based on state agency budget
requests and anticipated tax collections for the next
biennium.
The major GPR spending
increases requested by agencies include the following:
-
DPI - $662 million
GPR; including $422 million in general equalization aids to fund
approximately 2/3 of school funding.
-
DHFS - $343 million
GPR over the biennium for increasing costs of Medicaid ($305
million) BadgerCare ($16.6 million) and SeniorCare ($21.3
million).
-
UW System - $85
million GPR to go along with an additional $35 million in tuition
fee increases for a total GPR/Fee request of $120 million.
-
Corrections - $247
million GPR (13.2% increase) to meet current operations and
commitments; including the addition of 311 positions by the end of
the biennium.
In total, these four
agency requests alone represent a GPR increase of $1.337 billion
over the current budget.
On the revenue side,
growth in tax collection over the next biennium is projected to
increase by $450 million in FY 08 (3.6%) and by $522 million in FY
09 (4.0%). Revenue growth has been heavily relied upon in past
budgets to address structural imbalances and use of one-time funding
fixes. The balancing impact of revenue growth is tempered this
coming biennium by the ongoing implementation of phased-in tax cuts
enacted over the last four years. The growth estimates above reflect
over $600 million in such tax reductions in the next
biennium.
The use of transfers
from segregated funds, such as the transportation fund, to help
balance the general fund will also be constrained this coming
budget. Over the course of the last two budgets more than $1.1
billion has been shifted from the transportation fund to the general
fund. Reliance upon such transfers in the upcoming budget should be
discouraged given the current condition of the transportation fund,
which is showing a projected $88 million deficit by the end of the
current fiscal year. (See related Tidbits article on DOT
Budget Deficit, below).
Governor Doyle and the
incoming Speaker of the Assembly, Rep. Mike Huebsch, have made it
clear that they do not support tax increases to balance the next
budget. What is presently not clear, and what will evolve over the
course of the next several months, is precisely how the Governor and
the new budget-writing committee propose to meet the considerable
budget challenges they now face.
DOT Budget Deficit to
Result in Project Delays
A report
by the Legislative Fiscal Bureau regarding transportation issues
has confirmed earlier projections of a Department of Transportation
(DOT) budget deficit of $88.6 million at the end of 2005-07
biennium. Due primarily to a reduction in the consumption of motor
fuel, this review projects a transportation fund deficit of $34.3
million at the end of 2005-06 and an additional imbalance of $54.3
million in 2006-07, resulting in a cumulative deficit of $88.6
million at the end of 2005-07 biennium.
The DOT has indicated
that highway program expenditures will be reduced by $50 million in
2006-07. The remaining required savings would have to be generated
from lapses from annual and biennial appropriations. The total
reduction in the state highway rehabilitation program is $25.5
million.
Gov. Jim Doyle and most
lawmakers oppose raising the 32.9-cent-a-gallon gas tax, one of the
highest in the nation. A recent proposal by the Department of
Transportation to raise the vehicle registration fee from $55 to $80
a year has also been met with disapproval. Doyle has said he would
support a fee increase of about $10 but that $25 was too
much.
The Committee on
Transportation Needs and Financing, also known as the Road to the
Future Committee, was formed this year to find ways to save money on
highways and transit projects and come up with new ways to fund
them. The Committee has scheduled a public hearing on Phase Three,
financing of roads, for 1 pm, Tuesday, December 5.
Report: Wisconsin Expected to Show
Moderate Growth in
Next Biennium
The Wisconsin
Economic Outlook report [Full
Report, pdf doc, 33 pgs] [Wisconsin
Report] released recently by the Wisconsin Department of Revenue
suggests that Wisconsin will follow national
trends and experience moderate growth through 2007.
According to the report,
the Wisconsin economy is expected to maintain relatively strong
income and employment growth, contributing to expected revenue
increases of 3.6 percent in Fiscal Year 2008 (FY08) and 4.0 percent
in FY09. Total personal income is expected to grow 5.4 percent in
2006, followed by slower but healthy growth in 2007 of 4.8 percent
and 4.7 percent in 2008.
Employment growth is
projected to be 1.0 percent in 2006, slowing to 0.6 percent in 2007.
The return to more normal growth trends should produce employment
growth of 1.1 percent in 2008 and 1.2 percent in 2009. A downturn in
the housing market and a more cautious consumer has contributed to
the national slowdown. However, business capital spending and
exports are expected to support further growth.
“The Wisconsin Economy
is feeling the impact of a slower national housing market, but our
economy is well-positioned to reverse that trend and continue to
show solid growth in the next biennium, “said Revenue Secretary
Michael L. Morgan.
Insurance Commissioner
Resigns
The state Insurance
Commissioner, Jorge Gomez, has resigned from the position to return
to the private sector. Governor Doyle’s office as said he will be
leaving in mid-December and that a replacement will be named
soon.
Gov. Doyle appointed
Jorge Gomez in 2003. The Office of the Commissioner of Insurance is
responsible for examining industry financial practices and market
conduct, licensing agents, reviewing policy forms for compliance
with state legislation, investigating consumer complaints and
providing consumer information.
Gomez is a 1979 graduate
of Pitzer College and received a law
degree from the UW Law School in 1986.
Erpenbach Proposes
Elimination of Sales Tax Exemptions
Sen. Jon Erpenbach
(D-Middleton) announced plans to introduce a measure in the next
session that would cancel many sales tax exemptions while continuing
to exempt “necessities of life,” such as food, drugs and health care
services, shelter and agricultural products.
Although it would still
cause consumers to pay more for some goods and services that are now
exempt, Erpenbach said that he hopes it would raise enough new money
to remove the financing of public schools from the property tax - a
tax shift of more than $3 billion.
The Wisconsin Counties
Association announced its support for a modified version of the
elimination of sales tax exemptions on services.
Rep. Michael Huebsch
(R-West Salem), Speaker-elect of the Assembly, stated that he and
the Assembly Republicans are more than willing to work on fixing the
deficit, but not by raising taxes, which the Erpenbach proposal
would do. Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce (WMC) said
it would fight moves to repeal sales tax exemptions.
Governor Doyle’s
reaction was also unenthusiastic, noting that consumers ultimately
pay for sales tax exemptions that are lifted. He stated that he is
open to proposals that will relieve the burden on property taxpayers
but he would like to see a guarantee of direct property tax
relief.
For more
information on legislation of interest to CTCW members, go to the CTCW
Tracking Report. |
| Wisconsin Politics |
 |
Joint Finance Members
Appointed
Assembly
Speaker-elect Mike Huebsch (R-West Salem) has named Rep. Kitty
Rhoades (R-Hudson) to co-chair the Joint Committee on Finance.
Rhoades is the first Assembly Republican woman to chair the powerful
budget writing committee. Huebsch named Rep. Dan Meyer (R-Eagle River) as
vice-chair.
Additional Assembly
Republicans named to the committee are Reps. Jeff Stone
(R-Greendale), Steve Kestell (R-Elkhart Lake), Scott Suder
(R-Abbotsford) and Robin Vos (R-Caledonia).
Incoming State Senate Majority Leader
Judy Robson named five Democratic Senators as members of the Joint
Finance Committee. Robson appointed State Sens. Dave Hansen (D-Green Bay), Bob Jauch
(D-Poplar), Mark Miller (D-Monona), Lena Taylor (D-Milwaukee), and
Senator-elect John Lehman (D-Racine). Senator Russ Decker
(D-Schofiel) was previously selected to serve as the Senate
Co-Chair.
In addition to handling
the budget every two years, the Joint Committee on Finance works on
all legislation that deals with state income and spending. By law,
any bill introduced in the legislature that appropriates money,
provides for revenue or relates to taxation must be referred to the
joint committee. Eight members from the State Senate and eight
members from the State Assembly make up the committee.
Representative Rhoades
Profile
(The last
issue of Tidbits contained leadership profiles,
including the Senate co-chair of Joint Finance. Rep. Rhoades was
just appointed Assembly co-chair this week. Her profile
follows.)
As noted, Speaker-elect Mike
Huebsch selected Kitty Rhoades (R-Hudson) to serve as the Assembly Co-Chair of the powerful Joint Committee on Finance for the 2007-08 legislative session. Rep. Rhoades, who is
currently serving as a member of Joint Finance, was first elected to
the Assembly in 1998.
Among other legislative
assignments, Rhoades is a member of the Board of Forward Wisconsin.
Kitty has a Bachelor’s degree from UW-River Falls and a
Master’s degree from Illinois State University. She has served
professionally as a consultant, educator, small business owner and
Chamber of Commerce president.
Ray Taffora Named Deputy Attorney
General
On Nov. 21, Attorney
General-Elect J.B. Van Hollen named Michael, Best and Friedrich
attorney, Raymond P. Taffora, to serve as his Deputy Attorney
General. Taffora, who has been in private practice since 1991,
served four years as Legal Counsel to Gov. Tommy Thompson. Among his
duties as legal counsel, Ray served as the Governor’s liaison to the
Department of Justice.
Taffora has an
undergraduate degree from UW-Madison and a J.D. from the University
of Wisconsin Law School where he is currently a member of the Board
of Visitors. His private practice has had an emphasis on government
and public policy and his government experience included chairing
the Pardon Advisory Board and work with the Judicial Selection
Advisory Council.
Doyle Names Transition
Team
Gov.
Jim Doyle has
announced the transition team for his second term and appointed
Michael Morgan, Secretary of the Department of Revenue, chairman of
the team. Morgan also served as co-chair of Doyle's transition team
in 2003 where he helped form the current Cabinet.
In
addition to Morgan, the transition team includes:
-
Jennifer
Donnelly, Division Administrator at the Department of
Administration. In addition to 16 years of private sector
experience, Jenny previously served as executive assistant in the
Department of Health and Social Services and chief of staff to the
Senate Majority Leader.
-
Jason
Helgerson, Executive Assistant at the Department of Health and
Family Services. Helgerson has held the same position at Revenue
and worked for the mayors of Milwaukee and San Jose,
California.
-
Aaron
Olver, Senior
Advisor for the Office of the Governor. Aaron most recently served
on Governor Doyle’s re-election campaign and previously served as
executive assistant at Commerce. He is a senior advisor to the
Governor.
The
transition team will assess agency challenges and opportunities as
well as find and recruit individuals to fill vacancies within the
administration.
Van Hollen Names
Transition Team
Wisconsin Attorney
General-Elect J.B. Van Hollen has named his own transition team as
he prepares to assume the office of Attorney General in January
2007.
Co-chairing the
transition team will be former DOJ Special Prosecutor Doug Haag and
DeWitt Ross & Stevens attorney and former Governor Thompson
cabinet official and Legal Counsel Don Bach.
Doug Haag is a career
special prosecutor who has been with the AG’s office since 1972. His
concentration has been in criminal law, including the entire
spectrum of criminal law cases, from drugs to business executives to
terrorists.
Don Bach has significant
private practice and government experience, both in the Governor’s
office and the Administration.
Joining Haag and Bach
are the following transition team members:
-
Ave M. Bie - attorney,
Quarles and Brady and former Chair of the Public service
Commission.
-
Gary Hamblin - Dane County Sheriff.
-
Carrie Schneider -
Outagamie County District Attorney.
The committee will be
assisted by Deputy-Designate, Ray Taffora.
Lawmakers to
Re-introduce Campaign Finance Reform Legislation
Rep. Mark Pocan
(D-Madison) and Sen. Fred Risser (D-Madison) have announced they
will introduce a bill that will provide for full public funding of
elections.
Patterned after laws in Maine and Arizona, the Clean
Elections Fund would provide 100 percent public financing for state
political campaigns for the State Assembly, Senate, and other state
elections including the governor’s office. Under the bill, a
candidate would have to gather a certain amount of $5 donations from
residents in their districts and then be approved. Different
positions would have spending limits.
Doyle Announces
Inauguration Team
Gov.
Jim Doyle recently announced his inauguration 2007 team, and
appointed Katie Boyce as director of the Inaugural Committee.
Governor Doyle’s inauguration is set for Jan. 3,
2007 in
Madison.
Following
the tradition set four years ago by Gov. Doyle, the Boys & Girls
Club of Kenosha is sponsoring this year’s inaugural events. The
Inaugural Committee will once again raise money to help cover
expenses of the events and will donate all remaining money to the
Boys & Girls Clubs of Wisconsin for statewide distribution to
all their clubs.
In
addition to Boyce, the Inaugural Committee includes:
-
Teresa
Clegg
-
Melanie
Fonder
-
Katie
Genereux
-
Ben
Nuckels
-
Shannon
Loredo
-
Molly
Walsh
Falk/Voight Formally
Concede – Recounts Confirm Seats in Assembly Races
Attorney General
candidate Kathleen Falk and State Treasurer candidate Jack Voight,
who each trailed their opponents by relatively small margins in
initial election counts, have conceded and have chosen not to seek
recounts.
Recounts were ordered in
the 43rd, 47th, 88th, and 96th Assembly District races. The
preliminary results in these districts were:
-
43rd: Kim
Hixson (D) 10,287 v. Debra Towns (R) (Incumbent) 10,278
(revised)
-
47th:
Eugene Hahn (R) (Incumbent) 12,088 v. Meagan Yost (D)
11,934
-
88th: James
Soletski (D) 8,927 v. Judy Krawczyk (R) (Incumbent) 8,840
-
96th: Lee
Nerison (R) (Incumbent) 9,782 v. Gail Frie (D) 9,352
Rep. Krawczyk has since
conceded.
On Monday, Nov. 27,
Democratic candidate Meagan Yost of Poynette called off the recount.
District wide, Hahn earned 12,104 votes to Yost's 11,938, a
difference of 166 votes. Before the recount, the two had been
separated by 154 votes.
After a day-long recount
on Nov. 20, Kim Hixson picked up eight additional votes for a total
of 496 ballots and Debra Towns garnered two more to earn 359
total.
The recount in the
96th District has confirmed that Lee Nerison will retain
his seat.
If one of the candidates
is not satisfied after the recount, an appeal can be made to the
circuit court. On December 1, the State Elections Board will certify
the election results and make them available on their Web
site. |
| In the News |
 |
Elections
Board moves toward more disclosure: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
Nov. 30, 2006.
Doyle
wants to keep sick leave perk: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Nov.
30, 2006.
A
plum pick for Lehman: Racine Journal Times, Nov. 28,
2006.
Jauch
appointed to Joint Finance Committee: Ashland Daily Press, Nov.
28, 2006.
Let's
close political No Call loophole (opinion): Green Bay
Press-Gazette Nov. 28, 2006.
Let’s
identify problem before treating symptom (opinion): Ashland
Daily Press, Nov. 27, 2006.
Hraychuck
eyes Madison: Burnett County Sentinel, Nov. 27, 2006.
State
lawmakers accrue sick leave instead of claiming it: Janesville
Gazette, Nov. 27, 2006.
State
formula for roads needs repairs (opinion): Wisconsin Rapids
Tribune, Nov 27, 2006.
Fund
reaches out to firms run by women: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,
Nov. 27, 2006.
Sales tax
exemptions come under scrutiny: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Nov.
27, 2006.
Legislator
calls for eliminating many sales tax exemptions: Janesville
Gazette, Nov. 27, 2006.
Mr.
Speaker: Huebsch has new responsibilities: La Crosse Tribune,
Nov. 26, 2006.
For more Wisconsin News,
go to Hamilton
Consulting News Clips. |
| Upcoming Fundraisers |
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Dec.
8
Dec.
13
For details, go to Hamilton
Consulting Fundraiser Calendar. |
CTCW Political Tidbits is a weekly
newsletter on Wisconsin political and policy developments prepared for
CTCW members by The Hamilton
Consulting Group. Employees of CTCW member organizations can subscribe
at: http://www.ctcw.org/form-subscribe-tidbits.html.
To unsubscribe, go to: http://www.ctcw.org/form-unsubscribe-tidbits.html.
© 2006 The Hamilton Consulting Group |
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