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Category: State budget

Cuts to UW disproportionate, unfair

Badger Herald

Today, the Joint Committee on Finance will hold a hearing regarding the disproportionate budget lapse to the University of Wisconsin System. It is proposed that the UW System take a $65.6 million cut, 38 percent of the total lapse. This, after the System received a $250 million cut in the current biennial budget, bringing UW funding down to 7 percent of the total state budget.

Unions want repeal pledge from Dem candidates

Wisconsin State Journal

State union leaders are asking Democratic candidates for governor to pledge they will veto the next state budget if it doesn?t restore collective bargaining rights for public workers. The limitation of those rights is largely what motivated the petition drive to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

Legislative Affairs talks Mifflin, Responsible Action Policy

Daily Cardinal

Associated Students of Madison Chair Allie Gardner told the student government?s Legislative Affairs Committee Monday that members of the state?s committee dedicated to studying the restructuring of the UW System have been unresponsive to students? requests to speak at its upcoming meeting, where the task force will discuss tuition. Gardner is asking students to attend the Task Force on UW Restructuring?s meeting Wednesday.

Give UW the freedom to manage its own affairs

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The furor that erupted a year ago over who should control the state?s flagship University of Wisconsin campus has given way to sober realism about how best to fund and manage the state?s universities. That discussion resumes this week in Madison, and this time, with any luck, a reasonable solution will emerge that gives the state?s two largest campuses more freedom to run their own affairs as state funding dwindles.

The shame of last year?s implosion of a plan advanced secretly by former UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin was not that the plan was scotched. It deserved to be scotched. The shame was that cuts to the university system were put in place without giving the campuses the degree of flexibility they needed to manage those cuts.

For Biddy Martin, a New Test of Leadership

Chronicle of Higher Education

There are more than 1,000 miles between this idyllic college town and Madison, Wis., but that distance must seem even greater in Carolyn A. (Biddy) Martin?s rearview mirror.

The nearly yearlong roar of protesters in Madison, where Ms. Martin had a relatively short and rocky tenure as head of the state?s flagship campus, has been replaced with the calm that whispers through Amherst College like one of Emily Dickinson?s tamer verses.

Campus Connection: UW-Madison gym classes latest victim of state budget cuts

Capital Times

UW-Madison?s School of Education is phasing out many of its popular one-credit physical education classes and suspending a master?s program for those who want to become school counselors in an effort to deal with state budget cuts. “There is this perception that the state can continue to make cuts and everything at the university will run just exactly like it was,” says UW-Madison Professor Bruce Wampold, who recently concluded his term as chair of the counseling psychology department, which houses the master?s program that?s being cut. “Well, it doesn?t work that way.”

Q&A with Kevin Reilly: ‘We’re going to do the best we can’

Wisconsin State Journal

This story appeared first in the Sunday edition of the Wisconsin State Journal. UW System President Kevin Reilly said the state?s universities may need to cap enrollment if budget cuts continue, possibly jeopardizing a long-term plan to increase the number of UW graduates 30 percent by 2025.

“We don?t want to send a signal we?re going to do that and push students away from considering the university,” Reilly said. “On the other hand, if we feel we have to do that at some point to maintain the quality in the System, then I think we have to consider it.”

Campus Connection: UW-Madison’s 2011 year in review

Capital Times

It was generally not a good year for public higher education in Wisconsin. In particular, 2011 was an especially frustrating period for many associated with UW-Madison. Wisconsin?s flagship institution of higher education lost its once-popular chancellor, Biddy Martin, to a highly regarded but small liberal arts college in Massachusetts following a political defeat at the state Capitol. The university, like all UW System institutions, is absorbing record-setting budget cuts as state leaders try to dig out of a budget hole without raising taxes. And UW-Madison?s highly regarded faculty and staff — again, like their counterparts across the state — not only learned they?d go another biennium without raises, but were forced to take a cut in take-home pay. Although few seem overly optimistic entering 2012, it can?t get any worse than this past year. Right?

Campus Connection: Walker’s lapse plan another big blow to UW System

Capital Times

Efforts by the University of Wisconsin System to have its disproportionate hit in state aid reconsidered have failed. On Friday, Gov. Scott Walker?s administration released its plan for cutting $123 million across state government by July, the Associated Press reports. This lapse — or one-time budget cut — was called for under the 2011-13 biennial budget passed earlier this year. And the UW System is absorbing the biggest hit, a whopping $46.1 million.

Walker releases details of budget cuts; UW System to take biggest hit

Wisconsin State Journal

The University of Wisconsin System will have to cut another $46.1 million over six months, on top of a previously approved $250 million two-year reduction, under a detailed budget-balancing plan Gov. Scott Walker?s administration released Friday. The new cut to UW was part of $213.2 million in additional reductions ordered to be made across state government. The amount in cuts was approved under the budget passed in June but not specified until Friday. Walker?s Department of Administration ordered agencies to make the cuts without layoffs, if possible.

Biz Beat: Walker’s budget cuts are costing state private jobs, report warns

Capital Times

A liberal-leaning Milwaukee think tank is out with a new report blaming state budget program cuts and public worker paycheck reductions for exacerbating Wisconsin?s job struggles. The report from the Institute for Wisconsin?s Future says the reduction in take-home pay for tens of thousands of public employees is now hurting the private sector, as are the drastic state budget cuts for K-12 education. Steve Deller, an economics professor at UW-Madison, says that reducing spending during a deep recession can often make things worse, as this blog chart suggests.

“Economic modeling shows that the extreme cuts to state and local programs cost thousands of jobs and put Wisconsin in a weak position to create jobs,” says Deller, who appeared at the Capitol on Tuesday with Norman and Rep. Brett Hulsey, D-Madison, to introduce the IWF report.

On Campus: Fewer instructors and courses because of budget cuts, UW official says

Wisconsin State Journal

University of Wisconsin System campuses may have fewer instructors and course offerings under a proposed one-time state budget cut of $65.8 million over two years, according to UW System President Kevin Reilly. Reilly wrote a letter last week to Brian Hayes, state budget director, outlining how the University of Wisconsin System would manage the cuts that Gov. Scott Walker?s administration unveiled in October.

Mary Lybeck: Too soon to know if budget is balanced

Wisconsin State Journal

I am a retired UW-Madison academic department manager, having worked for 36 years with the state and managed budgets for over 20 years. This is not an opinion regarding Gov. Scott Walker, but information on how the state budget works. People who say Walker has balanced the budget are stating an untruth.

Brad Basten: Walker spends $4 million on nothing

Wisconsin State Journal

I am confused about Gov. Scott Walker?s inspiration for taking money from UW-Madison, one of the premier educational institutions in the world working on advancing human knowledge in breakthrough subjects you can?t even pronounce, then letting Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation give $4 million to a group of overpaid “experts” at Spectrum Brands who can?t make batteries or waffle irons without going bankrupt and losing the stockholders? money.

On Campus: UW-Madison chancellor looks for ‘educational innovation’

Wisconsin State Journal

The social compact of the last century that promised students a high quality education at a low cost is gone, said UW-Madison Interim Chancellor David Ward in a presentation before the UW Board of Regents Thursday.He said university leaders need to be “extremely prudent” about raising tuition to offset declining state funds.

UW System grant programs threatened

Daily Cardinal

In the face of more budget cuts, leaders of the UW System sent a report detailing the benefits of $1.4 million in-state funding for research grants to a legislative committee Wednesday. Facing a $65.7 million budget lapse that has left the UW System with less money to fund grant programs, University representatives from around the state have stressed the connection between higher education and a prosperous economy.

UW-Madison looks to cover cuts

Daily Cardinal

In light of recent budget cuts to the university, campus officials announced Tuesday they plan to use flexibility granted to UW-Madison in the state?s 2011-13 budget to restructure human resources at the university. UW-Madison director of human resources Bob Lavigna said the project aims to better incorporate and manage talent at the university.

Officials speak against lapses

Daily Cardinal

UW System leaders spoke against additional system-wide funding cuts at a Senate committee meeting Tuesday. The one-time cuts, meant to address lapses in the current state budget, will increase existing gaps in higher education funding by an additional $65.8 million over the next two years, cutting $18 million from UW-Madison alone.

Academic Staff Assembly: monetary state cuts to UW unfair, too large

Daily Cardinal

The UW-Madison Academic Staff Assembly passed a resolution Monday calling recent budget cuts to the UW System too large. In October state legislators announced $65.7 million in cuts to the UW System to make up for a lapse of expected state revenue. The UW System accounts for 38 percent of total cuts included in the state?s lapse. About $25 million of these cuts will go to UW-Madison over the next two years.

Faculty call for smaller cuts to UW System (The Daily Cardinal)

Daily Cardinal

The UW-Madison Faculty Senate passed a resolution officially addressing recent budget cuts to the UW System Monday. The legislation asks the governor and the Wisconsin State Legislature to reduce the UW System?s portion of budget cuts to a more proportional level and ?renew the state?s investment in education.?

Jeff Kleiman: Why are lawmakers attacking the university that helped them?

Capital Times

Dear Editor: Why are the GOP politicians so set on destroying the University of Wisconsin when they benefited so much from it? The current plan imposes a 38 percent cut on a state asset that consumes only 7 percent of resources. Nobody seriously disputes that the UW System should share the impacts in revenue shortfalls for the coming biennium. Yet why impose so grotesque a burden? The UW System has been attacked by the governor and other GOP stalwarts with the attempt to strip away the flagship campus.

Madison 360: Our horrible year at the Capitol had roots in 1990s

Capital Times

The year-in-review stories are nearly two months away, but I think we can already recap state politics in 2011 as Wisconsin?s “annus horribilis,” which translates to “horrible year.” The Latin isn’t mine. Todd Berry, president of the Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance, used “Wisconsin’s annus horribilis” as his title to put the state budget in context in a recent lecture to retired UW-Madison employees.

….And Walker has taken a meat cleaver to the University of Wisconsin System, most recently by imposing, without explanation, a disproportionate share of “lapse” budget reductions to the campuses. He also socked it to cities on shared-revenue payments and has proposed major reductions in health care coverage.

Plain Talk: Cheap shots at UW show Nass and his mouthpiece?s true colors

Capital Times

There is no end to the mean spiritedness of the people in charge of Wisconsin government these days. Late last week when the University of Wisconsin System got the news that it was going to suffer another nearly $66 million cut on top of the already $250 million taken away by the GOP?s budget last summer, the Democratic members of the Assembly Colleges and Universities Committee asked that a meeting be convened to examine the cut.

Sen. Bob Jauch: UW-System Cuts Don’t Make Sense (Ashland Current)

For over 100 years the Wisconsin promise has been guided by the Wisconsin Idea. The recent announcement of $66 million in additional cuts to the University of Wisconsin System will have a devastating impact on higher education and replace the Wisconsin Idea with the Walker nightmare. The University makes up 7 percent of the state budget yet will be required to take 38 percent of the cuts. These cuts will reduce Wisconsin UW budget to the level we spent in 1999 and are irrational, unfair and harmful to our next generation. It is apparent that the Walker Administration simply does not understand the importance of higher education to Wisconsin?s economy and future.

WPR Headline Story – UW campuses plan for large cuts

Wisconsin Public Radio

UW System chancellors say they?re dismayed by what they call a disproportionate amount of budget lapse cuts called for by the Walker Administration. UW schools have till November 7 to figure out how to cut millions from their budgets. In a memo, Department of Administration Secretary Mike Huebsch states agencies were told to plan for $174 million in cuts from a lapse in the current state budget. Of that, $65 million or around 38-percent of that would come from the University of Wisconsin System.

On Campus: Rep. Nass said he won’t hold hearing on University of Wisconsin budget cuts

Wisconsin State Journal

The Republican chairman of the Assembly Colleges and Universities Committee said he doesn?t plan to hold a hearing on a $65.8 million cut to the UW System, despite a request from Democratic members of the committee. A spokesman for Rep. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, said he “doesn?t see a need for a hearing” because the state budget included the potential for one-time cuts.

Campus Connection: UW System absorbing additional $65.7M budget hit

Capital Times

University of Wisconsin System leaders appear to be scrambling after learning their cut in state taxpayer support over the 2011-13 biennium will be significantly deeper than anticipated. Gov. Scott Walker?s 2011-13 biennial budget, which was signed into law over the summer, reduces state support for the UW System by $250 million. While that blow was significant ? tying the record cut of $250 million to the UW System by former Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle over the 2003-05 biennium ? it now appears the hit will jump by at least another $65.7 million over the next two years.

Madison360: In Scott Walker recall, focus on his failures and his deceit

Capital Times

“The question will be for the average person in Wisconsin?s hinterlands, did the things that Scott Walker did offer more good than bad?” asks Barry Burden, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of political science and an expert in campaigns and elections. “Nobody will like everything that happened, but are you happier that your taxes didn?t go up and that we managed to balance the budget than you are unhappy about cuts to K through 12 education, the UW System and health care, and changes to collective bargaining?” Burden says “I think that is going to be the litmus test for the recall.”

David Ward says UW ‘can’t be shy about competitive salaries’

Capital Times

In his first State of the University address in more than a decade, David Ward sounded the alarm about the funding crisis in public higher education. It?s a safe bet no one in Bascom Hall listening to UW-Madison?s interim chancellor speak to the Faculty Senate on Oct. 3 was surprised to hear the university is facing some significant budgetary challenges. Most are keenly aware the university is being asked to absorb $94 million in state cuts over the next two years. What might have caught some off guard was Ward?s message that the university can no longer afford to simply hunker down and attempt to weather the economic storm until better days return.

On Campus: UW governance structure committee nearly set

Wisconsin State Journal

* State leaders have named all but one of a 17-member committee charged with reviewing the University of Wisconsin System’s governance structure. Gov. Scott Walker on Monday announced his two appointments: Dave Olien, senior vice president emeritus of the UW System, and Darrell Bazzell, vice chancellor for administration at UW-Madison.

* UW-Madison is rising through the ranks of higher education social media influence, according to Klout.com.The website recently ranked UW-Madison as the second most influential behind Texas A&M. That?s up from fourth in January. Marquette University ranks 10th, making Wisconsin the only state with two universities in the top 10.

Campus Connection: Special task force to study UW System finalized

Capital Times

The roster for the state-appointed “Special Task Force on UW Restructuring and Operational Flexibilities” is finally set. Gov. Scott Walker announced his two appointments on Monday, completing the 17-member panel. One of Walker?s selections was Darrell Bazzell, UW-Madison?s vice chancellor for administration. Bazzell is the only person currently working on the UW-Madison campus on the panel. Walker?s other appointment went to Dave Olien, senior vice president emeritus of the UW System.

The hit for state workers

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Six months after Gov. Scott Walker and Republican legislators required state workers to pay more for health care and pensions, what are those changes costing those workers?Depending on their pay, between $2,828 and $8,428 more a year, according to a recent Legislative Fiscal Bureau report requested by three Madison-area legislators who each represent thousands of state workers.

UW president urges state to reinvest in universities

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The state must reinvest in its universities to meet ambitious goals of boosting its number of college graduates, University of Wisconsin System President Kevin Reilly said Thursday.

Just last year, the UW System set its sights on increasing the number of college-degree holders in the state by 30% over the next 15 years – a cumulative increase of 80,000 degree holders by 2025 – in an effort to lure companies and boost Wisconsin?s economy. But then state funding for the UW System was cut $250 million for the 2011-?13 fiscal years.

Email shows Walker considered pay cut for all public workers

Wisconsin State Journal

Gov. Scott Walker considered cutting the pay of all public workers at the same time he was crafting his budget proposal that forced them to contribute more for their pension and health care benefits, an email obtained by The Associated Press under the state?s open records law shows. The email, sent Dec. 8 by policy director Ryan Murray, also asks the budget director how much could be saved through the maximum allowable eligibility and benefit cuts to Medicaid.U ltimately, Walker didn?t call for a pay cut as part of his budget that required public workers to pay 12.4 percent of their health care benefits and 5.8 percent of their pensions. In fact, when rolling out his plan, Walker attempted to sell it by noting that he wasn?t cutting salaries, imposing any furlough days or calling for layoffs.

Catching Up: Just one appointment so far to special UW System task force

Wisconsin State Journal

Although the state Legislature axed a plan to split UW-Madison from the University of Wisconsin System from the state budget, it called for the creation of a “Special Task Force” to study the UW System. Only one public appointment has been made to the 17-member task force. A bill has been introduced to delay the due date of the task force?s findings from Jan. 1, 2012, to Jan. 7, 2013.

UW Regents approve sweeping changes to UW System (AP)

Madison.com

The University of Wisconsin regents agreed Thursday to shift certain powers from the UW System to its 26 campuses, a move made necessary by budget cuts and staff layoffs. The Board of Regents passed a pair of proposals by unanimous voice vote. The first allowed the campuses to take on some of the oversight authority currently provided by the UW System. The other offered a plan for staff downsizing in response to a $2.46 million budget cut for the UW System Administration.

Report recommends changes to UW System structure (AP)

Madison.com

The University of Wisconsin System can help absorb millions of dollars in budget cuts by transferring some of its authority to its 26 campuses and chancellors, according to a recent report commissioned by the UW System president. The UW System must reduce its operating budget by $2.4 million per year and cut 51 full-time positions under Gov. Scott Walker?s two-year state budget. In response, UW System President Kevin Reilly asked a committee to advise him on how to deal with the cuts. The report?s authors responded by suggesting a fundamental shift _ distributing power from the UW System out to the campuses, according to a Wisconsin State Journal report.

Report: UW System should give more power to campuses to compensate for budget cuts

Wisconsin State Journal

UW System administration should relax its grip on the 26 University of Wisconsin campuses and give individual chancellors more authority, according to a new report. The recommendations are in large part motivated by necessity: UW System must reduce its operating budget by $2.4 million a year and eliminate 51 full-time positions under Gov. Scott Walker?s two-year state budget. The report is the result of a committee that UW System President Kevin Reilly convened to evaluate the role of UW System and advise him on how to make those cuts. The committee included campus representatives and members of the UW Board of Regents. The report?s authors describe the need for a fundamental shift from a centralized model to one that distributes more power to the campuses.

Wisconsin teacher retirements double

Wisconsin State Journal

When students return Thursday for the first day of school across Wisconsin, many familiar faces will be gone, as teachers chose retirement over coming back in the wake of a new law that forces them to pay more for benefits while taking away most of their collective bargaining rights. Documents obtained by The Associated Press under the state?s open records law show that about twice as many public school teachers decided to hang it up in the first half of this year as in each of the past two full years, part of a mass exit of public employees. Teachers weren?t the only ones heading for the exits. State agency retirements were particularly dramatic, nearly tripling from 747 in all of 2010 to 1,966 through June. Retirements from the University of Wisconsin System more than doubled, up from 480 last year to 1,091 this year. All told, 9,933 public workers had retired by the end of June, a 93 percent increase from 5,133 in 2010. The year before, there were 4,876 retirements.