Skip to main content

Category: State news

Economic study results â??troublingâ??

Badger Herald

Low-income students continue to face increasing difficulties with getting into college and having the resources to complete a degree, according to new research conducted at the University of Wisconsin.

Patrizio Piraino and Matthew Steinberg, researchers from the Wisconsin Center for the Advancement of Postsecondary Education, have been dissecting the factors contributing to the decline in enrollment of lower-income students.

Kenneth E. Hitzke: Athletic Board not living in real world

Capital Times

Dear Editor: It has been reported the UW football coach has been given a $550,000 increase in salary after his first year at Wisconsin. That amounts to a 73 percent addition for winning 12 football games and losing one. This record was very commendable even though it was a relatively easy schedule.

It would be interesting to compare this increase to the proposed raise of 3 percent for thousands of citizens in the Wisconsin Retirement System or the 2-3 percent raise in Social Security benefits for millions of people.

Attorney general responds to letter

Badger Herald

The Department of Justice received a letter Thursday requesting the legal opinion of Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen regarding the University of Wisconsin Systemâ??s new admissions policy.

The letter, signed by state Rep. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, and 18 other state legislators, questions the Board of Regentsâ?? decision to use race and ethnicity in evaluating applicants to all 26 UW System campuses. It is set to go into effect this fall.

High court takes gay rights case (AP)

Capital Times

The state Supreme Court said Wednesday it will take up a politically charged and complicated gay rights case.

The court said it will decide whether the city of Green Bay and other Wisconsin municipalities, including the town of Cottage Grove, can intervene in a lawsuit in which gay and lesbian state employees are seeking health insurance benefits for their partners.

Refugee calls for Wisconsin to divest funds from Sudan

Daily Cardinal

Lawmakers and activists encouraged the Wisconsin State Investment Board to divest from companies that facilitate genocide at the Capitol Wednesday.

A bipartisan bill spear-headed by state Sen. Shelia Harsdorf, R-River Falls, and state Rep. Fredrick Kessler, D-Milwaukee, stipulates that state money be invested in companies that donâ??t indirectly fund genocide in Sudan.

Minnesotan: Tuition pact unfair (AP)

Capital Times

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) – Minnesota lawmakers might insert themselves into a dispute over a tuition reciprocity agreement that has some Wisconsin students paying less to attend Minnesota universities than their home-state classmates.

A House higher education panel heard testimony Wednesday on a proposal to raise Wisconsin students’ tuition rates to Minnesota levels by fall 2008. Under the reciprocity pact, a Wisconsin student pays about $2,000 less a year to attend the University of Minnesota’s Twin Cities campus.

17 pols urge AG to rule on UW admissions policy (AP)

Capital Times

Seventeen legislators want the state attorney general to offer a legal opinion on whether a new University of Wisconsin admissions policy violates a 1973 law that says race and certain other factors can’t be used as a test for admission of students.

UW regents recently voted to adopt a new freshman admissions policy that requires officials to consider nonacademic factors such as race and income to increase diversity, although they first must consider academic factors.

State OKs new regent

Badger Herald

For the first time in four years, the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents will be made up of a governing body fully confirmed by the state Legislature.

Nass: GOP will reject domestic partner benefits plan (Wisconsin Radio Network)

Wisconsin Radio Network

A Republican legislator says Governor Doyle’s plan to extend domestic partner benefits to state employees “flies in the face” of a decision by Wisconsin voters. State Representative Steve Nass (R-Whitewater) predicts majority Republicans in the Assembly will kill the Governor’s plan. Nass says people of the state spoke clearly on the issue when they voted in favor of last November’s Constitutional ban on gay marriage.

Nass says extending the benefits to partners of state employees is too expensive when the state is facing a large budget deficit. It’s estimated the plan could cost the state up to $15 million a year, just for the university system.

We’re No. 1 – in other things, too

Capital Times

With Wisconsin ascending to the top of the heap in men’s college basketball, it’s time to look at other No. 1 rankings attained by the Badger State.

….Beyond boosting the state with its basketball program, the University of Wisconsin has its own list of superlatives. For starters, it has more CEOs of Standard & Poor 500 companies than anywhere else.

The UW is also the school that “parties the heartiest,” according to Playboy magazine.

And, making sure no category is too specialized to brag about, the Financial Times says that Wisconsin has the best food and accommodations for executive education facilities in the country.

University of Wisconsin Defends Admissions Policy That Considers Applicant’s Race (Diverse Issues in Higher Education)

Although the University of Wisconsin’s new admissions policy that considers the race of the applicant has been widely panned, a spokesman for the system said the policy is more holistic than race-based.

David F. Giroux says the new policy was no more a race-based policy than it was a veterans-based or a football player-based policy.

Millard Susman: Research advances can keep rural life sustainable

Capital Times

It’s been just over 50 years since I first laid eyes on – and fell in love with – Wisconsin.

After the dull ride through bleak Illinois, my college buddy, Marty, and I entered the green, rolling, exuberant countryside of Wisconsin in its late spring glory and thought we had suddenly entered paradise. The prosperous-looking farms with their gleaming white houses, bulging Holsteins, just-emerging corn and carpets of new alfalfa quickly erased the gloom of Illinois.

Even the University of Wisconsin was a sort of bucolic haven.

Tuition hikes in Doyle’s budget and more (AP)

La Crosse Tribune

MADISON â?? Some illegal immigrants would get reduced tuition, gay partners of university employees would get health insurance and professors would be able to form unions under Gov. Jim Doyleâ??s budget plan.

Doyle has touted his proposed funding for the University of Wisconsin System as allowing campuses to add students, expand research and increase financial aid. But the fine print reveals far more plans for the 13 four-year universities and 13 two-year colleges.Tuition would go up at the flagship UW-Madison campus by nearly $500 over two years. Similar annual increases of

Nuclear comeback heats UW classroom

Capital Times

The prospect of new nuclear power plants rising on the Wisconsin horizon sent sparks flying on the UW-Madison campus Friday.

UW engineering physics professor Michael Corradini irked many in the audience at Grainger Hall with his call for expanding nuclear energy, saying that concerns over safety and waste disposal have been overblown.

….”This is an industry that built two bombs that killed a lot of people and since then they have been trying to make something good out of it,” said Jim Pawley, a UW professor of zoology.

Nass wants ruling on race

Badger Herald

Two prominent Republican state legislators announced Thursday they are seeking a formal opinion from the stateâ??s top cop regarding the University of Wisconsin Systemâ??s new admissions policy.

Editorial: Let state insure domestic partners

Wisconsin State Journal

Covering the domestic partners of state employees under the state’s family health insurance benefit is an inexpensive proposal that will produce good value for taxpayers.

The Legislature should approve it.

Gov. Jim Doyle proposed in his state budget to extend health insurance to the domestic partners of gay, lesbian and heterosexual employees, including those in the University of Wisconsin System. Currently, family health insurance offered to state employees is restricted to spouses and dependents (generally meaning children). Domestic partners do not qualify under those terms.

UWâ??s collateral damage

Badger Herald

In his budget address Tuesday, Gov. Jim Doyle promised a large monetary commitment to higher education in Wisconsin.

Doyle specifically targeted the University of Wisconsin System in his speech, proposing the allocation of $21 million to the UW Board of Regents, $44 million to student financial aid and an additional $10 million to the Madison campus specifically.

Ed Garvey: Outsourcing succeeds only in defying logic

Capital Times

…public education must be our highest priority, and somehow we must find the money to fund schools properly; the UW and civil servants could develop a computer system to overhaul Workforce Development, create voter rolls and figure out who is eligible to vote.

We need strong civil service and confidence in our university. Not more outsourcing or privatization.

Budget plan brings state jobs to square one

Wisconsin State Journal

After four years of job cuts across state government, the budget introduced Wednesday by Gov. Jim Doyle proposes a change in course, increasing the number of positions for the first time in his tenure and essentially bringing the state full circle.

The budget proposes that by June 2009, there would be 68,085 jobs in state government including the UW System and UW Hospital and Clinics in Madison – seven fewer than when Doyle took office in January 2003.

Opportunity budget: Show us the money

Daily Cardinal

Touting tax cuts and increased funding for education, Gov. Jim Doyle claimed Tuesday night that his two-year opportunity budget would take the squeeze off middle-class families and college-bound Wisconsinites. Doyle did not, however, mention where he intended to plant the money trees that will fund the tax cuts and university aid.

Critics blast Doyle’s budget as unbalanced

Daily Cardinal

Gov. Jim Doyle unveiled his �fiscally responsible� budget Tuesday at the Capitol, promising to cut taxes, invest in schools and jobs and create a $130 million surplus by 2009. However, critics questioned whether Doyle�s controversial measures of obtaining revenue are at all possible.

State budget battle looms

Capital Times

Republican leaders are gearing up for a fight over more than $1 billion in proposed tax and fee increases in Gov. Jim Doyle’s budget for the next two years

.But some acknowledge that because of how Doyle has targeted the tax increases – taking aim at oil companies, hospitals and smokers while offering tax breaks and other help for middle-class families – his proposals may be hard to beat back.

Judicial icon dies at 94

Capital Times

Tom Fairchild, one of the state’s top judicial minds, spent 70 years in public service, right up until his death Monday in Madison at age 94.

(A group of Fairchild’s former clerks set up the Fairchild lecture series at the UW Law School, where every April or May they bring in important legal speakers.)

Debating policyâ??s legality

Badger Herald

After the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents passed a revised admissions policy last Friday, UW professors and state lawmakers have begun to discuss the legality of using race as a factor in admissions decisions.

Editorial: Doyle takes us forward

Capital Times

Wisconsin’s motto is “Forward.” And, despite the wrongheaded efforts of conservative legislators to turn their petty bigotry into public policy, Gov. Jim Doyle has chosen to keep Wisconsin in step with forward-thinking states on the question of how to treat same-sex couples.

As part of his budget proposal, Doyle is calling on members of the Assembly and Senate to extend domestic partner health insurance to all state employees.

Editorial: Beyond the numbers

http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=565381
Contrary to what critics say, the University of Wisconsin campuses will not start taking race into account as a result of a new admissions policy the Board of Regents adopted the other day. The campuses started doing that about 35 years ago.

The new policy merely means that admission officers will take a closer personal look at each student who applies. In the past, outside of UW-Madison, admission was basically by the numbers: scores on the college entrance exam, high school grades, class rank, etc. In other words, a simple computer program could select the students.

The holistic approach treats the applicant as a person, not just a set of numbers. Human judgment beats a computer program for choosing a freshman class.

College students request more aid (Appleton Post-Crescent)

Appleton Post-Crescent

WASHINGTON â?? Matt Guidry wants Congress to make college less costly so new graduates who choose modest paying jobs such as teaching won’t be burdened with expensive student loans.

Guidry, a junior at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, joined other college students Tuesday at the U.S. Capitol to express support for legislation that would increase federal funding for Pell grants to low-income college students.

Doyle’s 2007 budget initiatives

Wisconsin State Journal

In his budget address Tuesday, Gov. Jim Doyle prescribed more than $1.7 billion in new state and federal money into Medicaid and health programs to make medical coverage available to nearly every state resident without it.
The Democratic governor’s two-year budget, which also calls for new money for public schools and universities, would include some $1.2 billion in new taxes on cigarettes, oil companies and hospitals.

Admissions policy has many pluses

La Crosse Tribune

The University of Wisconsin System has taken hits about a controversial new admissions policy. Rep. Stephen Nass, chairman of the Assembly Committee on Colleges and Universities, has promised that â??this is only the beginning of the fight.â?What does it all mean? If you want to understand what the UW System is trying to do, you have to ask this question: Do we want UW enrollment to resemble the state as a whole?

Editorial: Beyond the numbers

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Contrary to what critics say, the University of Wisconsin campuses will not start taking race into account as a result of a new admissions policy the Board of Regents adopted the other day. The campuses started doing that about 35 years ago.

WiCell teams up with U.K. scientists researchers meeting

Daily Cardinal

Gov. Jim Doyle met with a British politician and world-renowned stem cell researchers Monday to discuss research collaboration possibilities between the two countries, closing the gap between Abbey Road and State Street.

British Honorary Consul Michael Bright, the self-described â??eyes and ears of the British government in Wisconsin,â? said the meeting witnessed the first talks between two top stem cell research facilities, the U.K. Stem Cell Bank and the UW-Madison based-WiCell Research Institute.

Doyle’s Budget Proposal To Contain Tax, Fee Increases

WISC-TV 3

MADISON, Wis. — Gov. Jim Doyle campaigned last fall on the promise of not raising general sales or income taxes, but he has proposed a number of targeted tax and fee hike that are drawing fire from state Republicans in advance of the budget’s release on Tuesday.

Some Republican lawmakers said that they’re skeptical of how the governor is going to pay for all the ideas he’s laid out in the last month. They said that they think he’s trying to fix the budget with higher taxes. The governor’s aide, however, counters that Doyle’s plans are fiscally responsible.

Gov seeks partner benefits

Capital Times

Gov. Jim Doyle will propose offering group health insurance benefits to domestic partners of all state employees – including University of Wisconsin faculty and staff – when he presents his 2007-09 state budget to lawmakers next week.

The move broadens Doyle’s attempt two years ago to offer domestic partner coverage to employees of the University of Wisconsin, which was rejected by Republican lawmakers.

This time, Doyle faces a slightly friendlier reception in the Legislature.

Doyle to seek benefits for domestic partners (AP)

MADISON (AP) â?? Gov. Jim Doyle says heâ??ll propose offering group health insurance benefits to domestic partners of all state employees when he presents his state budget proposals to lawmakers during the coming week.That is broader than his proposal rejected by legislators two years ago to offer domestic partner coverage to University of Wisconsin employees.

Republicans controlled both houses of the Wisconsin Legislature then, but Democrats now control the Senate and the Republican majority in the Assembly has been narrowed.

Grothman: ”Why in the world would we give preferences to Hispanics?

WKOW-TV 27

State Senate Education Committee member Glenn Grothman (R-West Bend)is determined to fight the inclusion of race as a factor as part of freshman admissions policy on UW campuses.

The policy, which has been used at the UW System’s flagship institution, UW-Madison, will now be applied at other UW System campuses as well.

“We could try to do the constitutional amendment route, as they did in the state of Michigan,” Grothman said. “We could try to amend the state budget. Or we could try to hopefully reach consensus on a half way point.”

U. of Wisconsin Regents Adopt Systemwide Admissions Policy Calling for Consideration of Race

Chronicle of Higher Education

The University of Wisconsin’s Board of Regents voted unanimously on Friday to adopt a new admissions policy requiring every campus in the state system to consider applicants’ race and ethnicity.

The board approved the policy despite warnings from various critics of affirmative action, including some state legislators, that the 26-campus system’s use of a race-conscious admissions policy may violate Wisconsin laws and is likely to trigger a political backlash.

In urging his fellow regents to support the policy, David G. Walsh, the board’s president, said it was “truly about having a better educational experience for our students.”

Considering Race in Admissions (Inside Higher Ed)

Inside Higher Education

At a time when many colleges are distancing themselves from race-conscious admissions plans, the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents is moving in the other direction, unanimously approving a systemwide policy on Friday that allows institutions to consider race, ethnicity and family income among a range of factors in freshman admissions.

Regents say the â??holisticâ? plan, which calls for each campus to consider a studentâ??s academic achievements before looking to nonacademic factors, will allow colleges to enroll more racially and socioeconomically diverse classes.