The University of Wisconsin System is a source of pride, a pathway to opportunity and an engine of economic growth for all of Wisconsin. We must work together to preserve those strengths, so that every campus can help our state thrive in challenging times.
Category: State budget
Faculty uneasy over plan to split UW
JANESVILLE ? UW-Madison leaders insist transfer agreements with other universities won?t change if the flagship campus splits from the statewide system, but local educators remain skeptical.
The Vague Badger Partnership (The UWM Post)
Last Friday the UW Board of Regents held a meeting to discuss the possibility of Madison separating from the UW System.
Chancellor, Regents Meet About Proposed Badger Partnership
MADISON, Wis. — What would it be like if the University of Wisconsin-Madison separated itself from the rest of the University of Wisconsin System? It?s a real possibility, and it was the topic of discussion at the UW Board of Regents meeting on Friday.
U. of Wisconsin-Madison’s Chancellor Defends Proposed Separation From System
The chancellor of the University of Wisconsin?s flagship campus is sticking to her guns.
In what many had predicted would be a contentious meeting of the system?s Board of Regents, Carolyn A. (Biddy) Martin defended her support for a plan that would break the Madison campus away from the rest of the Wisconsin system, creating a new governing board and granting the flagship unique flexibility. The plan is expected to be part of a budget proposal Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, is set to unveil next week.
News: Flexibility — But for (and From) Whom?
Every few years, especially when the economy turns down, public universities — especially flagship and other research universities — crank up campaigns for more autonomy from their states.
Political Science professor discusses Wisconsin’s budget battle
Saturday is set to be the biggest rally at the state Capitol in Madison. Wake Up Wisconsin hosted UW-Madison Political Science professor Charles Franklin Saturday morning. (Video.)
UW Regents discuss possible split
UW?s Board of Regents met to discuss spinning off the Madison campus from the rest of the system.
UW-Madison Chancellor defends campus ?split?
UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin defends a plan to allow her campus to no longer operate under the UW-System. The so-called split is part of the New Badger Partnership and Governor Walker?s next two year budget.
TAA Urges ?Slow Down? for NBP Decision Making (The Campus First)
Last night, after 24 hours of hearing criticism over their first email, the TAA at Madison issues a second email, recanting some of their statements and more clearly outlining their concerns.
The Badger Herald: Regents confront Martin on Badger Partnership, system split
The University of Wisconsin Board of Regents voiced frustrations over a lack of timely details about the New Badger Partnership and the chancellor?s talks with state officials which some regents said lacked transparency at a Friday meeting.
Biddy?s fight worth praise, discussion
When Biddy Martin began her chancellorship at this university, a group of legislators circulated a blog post accusing the flagship?s new steward of being ?an obscure, self-indulged, theory-laden, post-modern scholar.?
Board of Regents debate potential separation of UW-Madison
Students and faculty at UW-Madison are cautiously optimistic about a plan to separate the Madison campus from the rest of the statewide UW System. The Board of Regents discussed the plan at a special meeting in Madison today.
Johnson: Partnership is vital to UW’s success
The New Badger Partnership can be a scary thing when first discussed. There are mountains of misinformation being disseminated about the New Badger Partnership ranging from rising tuition to dismantling the UW System. Corporatization and power grabs are participating in frightening (and frighteningly false) conversation pieces that could lead one to oppose the New Badger Partnership based on nothing but false concepts; unless, of course, you know your facts.
UW-La Crosse Faculty OKs Union Representation
LA CROSSE, Wis. — Faculty members at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse have voted overwhelmingly to join a union. Thursday?s vote was 249-37 in favor of union representation through AFT-Wisconsin, a statewide labor federation affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers. The UW-La Crosse unit numbers 328.
Police union official urges officers to sleep among protesters, keep Capitol open
Ever since massive demonstrations began breaking out at the Capitol last week, police and protesters have maintained a convivial relationship. Now it?s about to get downright cozy. On Friday, the head of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association called on the governor to keep the Capitol open to overnight campers, and even urged members to join them.
On Campus: UW-Madison chancellor defends split from UW System to Regents
In nearly two hours in front of the UW Board of Regents, UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin made the case for splitting UW-Madison from the rest of the University of Wisconsin System, arguing it gives the university tools for maintaining quality amid deep budget cuts.
“I believe the biggest risk to UW-Madison is a 15 percent cut, a tuition cap, and no new tools,” Martin said. “I don?t know how you deal with that without being devastated.”
Letter of support from the School of Library and Information Studies
To the Governor and Legislature:We, the undersigned faculty and staff of the University of Wisconsin-Madison?s School of Library and Information Studies, oppose the abolition of most collective bargaining rights by the budget repair bill now being pushed through the Wisconsin Legislature by Governor Scott Walker. We believe this will grievously harm the University of Wisconsin, its undergraduates, graduate students, employees, and, not least, all of the people of the state.
Campus Connection: UW Regents, Martin enjoy civil debate
There were no fireworks and only a handful of tense moments Friday morning during a special meeting of the UW System?s Board of Regents to discuss UW-Madison?s possible split from the system.
“We want and need an open and frank discussion about a big new idea and one that has the potential to significantly change higher education in Wisconsin,” Charles Pruitt, the president of the Board of Regents, said in opening remarks.
Number of rallies across state grow as attendees in Madison dwindle
As rallies at the Capitol enter their 12th day, unions are increasing efforts to coordinate acts of protest around the state, though numbers of protesters present have been in decline.
Police restrict access to some areas of Capitol after security threats
Prompted by security concerns forwarded to law enforcement by Republican leadership, a joint committee approved a rule restricting access to certain areas of the Capitol building Wednesday, which could remove some organizations from its headquarters.
Assembly approves budget repair bill
Republicans resorted to a surprise vote at 1:09 a.m. Friday morning to pass the governor?s controversial budget repair bill as Democrats leapt out of their chairs shouting ?Shame! Shame!? at the exiting representatives.
UW System officials gear up to meet on Madison?s separation
In the wake of the University of Wisconsin chancellor detailing the separation of the Madison campus from the UW System, Board of Regents members have voiced concerns about how the split could negatively affect the other campuses.
How Did the Wisconsin Capitol Occupation Begin, Anyway? (The Atlantic)
On the Tuesday after Valentine’s Day, the Wisconsin state legislature found itself listening to public testimony that dragged well into the night on Gov. Scott Walker’s proposed budget repair bill. Having learned that the joint finance committee would hear a list of speakers in its entirety — no matter how many people signed up — the Teaching Assistants Association, a labor union that represents teaching assistants and project assistants at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, had recruited thousands to testify that day.
Protests continuing Friday and Saturday, thousands rallied across the state on Thursday
Protesters are not giving up the fight against Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill, with marches and rallies scheduled to continue Friday and Saturday at the State Capitol and on the Capitol Square in Madison. The protests reached a zenith on Thursday, as thousands of people went to 26 rallies and marches in 18 communities across Wisconsin, in what the state AFL-CIO labor organization called the biggest day of demonstrations outside of Madison in the state?s history.
Hundreds protest outside of Koch lobby office
While hundreds of people protested on the sidewalk, a maintenance worker with Urban Land Interests stood Thursday outside the building housing the lobbying offices of Koch Industries, Inc. A security guard stood inside.
“We?re watching out for our tenants,” said the maintenance worker, who declined to be identified. “He is hired by us to keep people out of our building and to protect the privacy of our tenants – not necessarily for Koch, but our tenants in general,” he added, of the security guard. “We can?t have people walking through who don?t belong there.”
Biz Beat: Will Walker moves hurt or help business?
Economists continue to sift through Gov. Walker?s budget repair bill, wondering what impact a pay cut for thousands of public workers might have on the local business community. If workers have less disposable income in their pockets, the thinking goes, they?ll have less to spend on furniture, eating out or a new car.
One analysis released Wednesday by a UW-Madison Extension economist suggests that laying off 1,500 state employees, as Walker has threatened, would actually have less negative impact on the economy than subjecting some 350,000 public employees in Wisconsin to a 7.7 percent cut in take-home pay. That pay cut figure is based on employees contributing to their pensions and more to their health insurance.
Quoted: Steven Deller of Extension’s Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
Bill?s union vote provision could bust state agency?s budget
Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill would bust the budget of the state agency required to administer part of it, while creating a strange and difficult standard for unions to meet in order to continue to exist, said Peter Davis, general counsel for the Wisconsin Employment Relations Commission.
Walker?s bill would require the commission?s 20-person staff to conduct votes in up to 2,000 state and local government unions each April, Davis said Thursday.
?We would try, but there?s no way we could do it,? Davis said.
Madison360: Some pre-emptive UW public relations
You have to admire the public relations savvy. The UW System?s Board of Regents meets Friday and is expected to aggressively question UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin about not telling the regents about a plan to split the Madison campus from the UW System that she had worked on with Gov. Scott Walker.
….Martin and her team must be concerned, because they brought out the biggest possible gun today with former UW chancellor Donna Shalala opining strong support for the breakup in a guest column in the State Journal.
Campus Connection: For once, Nass and UW’s Reilly on same page
Rep. Steve Nass, a perpetual critic of public higher education in Wisconsin, sent a letter to UW System President Kevin Reilly stating he will oppose Gov. Scott Walker?s plan to separate UW-Madison away from the rest of the system. The Republican from the town of La Grange is chairman of the Assembly Colleges and Universities Committee.
Biz Beat: Walker eyes raid on employee insurance fund
Gov. Scott Walker has always dismissed the idea of using segregated funds to help balance the state budget. But buried on page 125 of the budget repair bill is a proposal to take $28 million in reserves from the state?s health insurance/pharmacy fund and spend it in the second half of this year.
Officials will cut off Wis. Capitol office access
Protesters will have to end sleepovers in offices and hearing rooms of the Wisconsin Capitol by Saturday night. Members of the University of Wisconsin Teaching Assistants Association, who have taken up third floor office space, say the move is intended to end “democratic occupation” of the Capitol.
UW-La Crosse faculty OKs union representation
Faculty members at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse have voted overwhelmingly to join a union. Thursday?s vote was 249-37 in favor of union representation through AFT-Wisconsin, a statewide labor federation affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers. The vote comes amid daily protests at the Wisconsin Capitol over legislation to strip most public employees of their collective bargaining rights.
Walker stands pat on bargaining curbs, warns of massive layoffs
Gov. Scott Walker stood firm late Thursday on his insistence on curbs on collective bargaining for public employees, saying massive layoffs of state and local workers hung in the balance.
The governor recalibrated his message only at the margins, repeatedly calling himself an optimist and reminding public workers he shared their fears about changes in store.
“I?d do almost anything to avoid laying people off,” a poised Walker said. “We need to avoid those layoffs for the good of those workers.”
Budget-repair bill approved in early-morning vote
After a bitter, 61-hour debate that was the longest in living memory, the sleep-starved state Assembly voted in just seconds early Friday to approve a watershed proposal repealing most union bargaining rights held by public workers.
Just after 1 a.m., Republicans cut off debate on Gov. Scott Walker?s bill and in pell-mell fashion the body voted 51-17 to pass it. In the confusion, nearly one-third of the body – 28 lawmakers including 25 Democrats, two Republicans and the body?s lone independent – did not vote on the bill at all.
UW-Madison could pull out of UW System (Fox 11 Milwaukee)
A special meeting of the UW Board of Regents Friday will consider whether it would be wise for the UW-Madison to separate from the UW System.
Administrators answer New Badger Partnership questions in web chat
Chancellor Biddy Martin, Vice Chancellor of Administration Darrell Bazzell, Dean of Students Lori Berquam and the Director of the Office of Human Resources Bob Lavigna held a live web chat for students and community members to have questions about the New Badger Partnership Thursday.
Campus Connection: Prof urges regents not to ?dress down’ Martin
UW-Madison professor Bill Cronon fears that emotions are running high and that significant and lasting damage could be done to Wisconsin?s flagship institution during a special meeting of the Board of Regents on Friday to discuss the university?s possible split from the UW System.
On Campus: Some UW-Madison faculty and students fear Regents meeting could turn ugly
Some members of the UW-Madison community are expressing concern that a UW Board of Regents meeting tomorrow could turn ugly.
Tempers flare as Assembly passes controversial budget repair bill (AP)
Republicans in the Wisconsin Assembly took the first significant action on their plan to strip collective bargaining rights from most public workers, abruptly passing the measure early Friday morning before sleep-deprived Democrats realized what was happening.
Assembly Passes Budget Repair Bill
Representatives in the state Assembly have voted to pass a controversial budget repair bill that would strip public sector workers of nearly all their collective bargaining rights.
Assembly Republicans pass vote on budget bill quickly
Republicans in the Wisconsin State Assembly abruptly cut off debate and voted Governor Scott Walker?s budget repair bill in before many legislators could figure out what was happening.
Alvarez comments on New Badger Partnership
UW-Madison athletics director Barry Alvarez expressed his support Thursday night for the New Badger Partnership.
Past TAA strikes show compromise necessary for progress
The past week has been a fantastic display of the democratic process: It is great to see people caring and exercising their rights. However, this is hardly the first time something like this has happened in Madison.
Marathon Assembly session ends abruptly
It was chaos in the state Capitol early Friday morning, as Republicans in the Assembly abruptly cut off debate on the Governor?s budget repair bill and forced a vote on the measure.
UW System officials gear up to meet on Madison?s separation
In the wake of the University of Wisconsin chancellor detailing the separation of the Madison campus from the UW System, Board of Regents members have voiced concerns about how the split could negatively affect the other campuses.
Sifting and Winnowing (The Campus First)
Two days ago I, like every other person who?s enrolled in or works at UW-Madison, received an email from Chancellor Martin. In this message, she forwarded a memo from UW System President Kevin Reilly, Regent President Chuck Pruitt, and Regent Vice President Michael Spector. If you haven?t read it, the full message can be found here.
New Badger Partnership: Lies and Deception (The Campus First)
I?ll preface this by saying that I have no problems with differences of opinion. I work on Council and if you can?t deal with many opinions there, you?ve picked the wrong business. Being a student leader necessitates that I listen, and try to understand as many perspectives as possible before any sort of decision. However, opinions do not equal lies.
New Badger Partnership: TAA is lying through their teeth (The Campus First)
I applaud the TAA for the effort put into the Budget Repair Bill work; it was truly inspiring and I?m glad I could help and be a part of it.
Frequent UW System critic opposes UW-Madison autonomy plan
Rep. Steve Nass (R-Whitewater), chairman of the state Assembly Colleges and Universities committee, sent a letter to UW System President Kevin Reilly Thursday that says he opposes a plan to split UW-Madison from the system.
UW-Madison current, former heads defend split from UW System
UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin said Gov. Scott Walker?s plan to split UW-Madison from the UW System is the only one with political traction that would give the state?s flagship campus the freedom it needs to compete with other top research universities.
The Governor?s appointees to the proposed UW-Madison Board of Trustees (North Park Street)
In the live chat that just concluded on the New Badger Partnership with Biddy Martin, Lori Berquam, Darrell Bazzell and others, many people brought up concern that Governor Walker would be able to appoint 11 of the 21 members of the proposed UW-Madison Board of Trustees. In addition the answer that Vice Chancellor Bazzell gave:
Krugman: Shock Doctrine, U.S.A.
Here?s a thought: maybe Madison, Wis., isn?t Cairo after all. Maybe it?s Baghdad ? specifically, Baghdad in 2003, when the Bush administration put Iraq under the rule of officials chosen for loyalty and political reliability rather than experience and competence.
Assembly Democrats Meet With Walker Official
MADISON, Wis. — A group of Democratic Assembly members have presented to a top aide of Gov. Scott Walker an alternative plan that would keep collective bargaining rights in place for public workers. The Democrats met Thursday afternoon with Mike Huebsch, secretary of Walker?s Department of Administration. Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie said the governor did not meet with the lawmakers.
Madison police chief asks Walker to explain ‘troubling’ statements
Madison Police Chief Noble Wray Thursday asked Gov. Scott Walker to explain his “troubling” and “unsettling” statements captured in a secretly recorded phone conversation that he “thought about” planting troublemakers among the thousands of peaceful demonstrators at the Capitol.
UW releases more details of Madison split from System
Amid confusion regarding the proposed split of UW-Madison from the UW System, a summary of the proposal to be included in Gov. Scott Walker?s budget was posted to the New Badger Partnership website Wednesday.
Anthropology professor to retire in response to budget repair bill
UW-Madison Anthropology Professor Sharon Hutchinson sent in her letter of retirement to the university Feb. 20 in response to Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill.
Doctors? notes inexcusable
While we never attended medical school, we know enough about the human condition to say confidently there are better cures for illness than to drive across the state and mill around in the frigid air for hours or days.The doctors who handed out work excuses to protesters in Madison have some explaining to do.
Grad student dives into local battle against Citizens United ruling
Kaja Rebane, a UW-Madison graduate student in environmental studies, is one of the leaders of the South Central Wisconsin Move to Amend chapter. The group is dedicated to fighting the U.S. Supreme Court?s January 2010 Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision, which says corporations have free speech rights just like people do and that money spent on political campaigns counts as speech.
….Rebane is also an active member of the Teaching Assistants Association union and protested at the state Capitol for much of last week against Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill, which would strip public employee unions of almost all their bargaining power as well as increase worker contributions for health and retirement benefits.
Protesting with class in Madison
The crowds and their demeanor on the Capitol Square these past several days have been an inspiration to those who witnessed them. That was evidenced this week by Madison?s city attorney, Mike May.
….?For those with some history with this fair city, as I have, the demonstrations this week were the largest since the Vietnam War. I?d like somebody to recognize that the issues are as important to the populace as they were during that era.
?Today, like all days, but more so than all days, I?m proud to be a Madisonian, and proud to be a public servant.?
Couldn?t have been more well said.