Some top Wisconsin university officials fear that if UW-Madison splits from the rest of the University of Wisconsin System it will result in unnecessary duplications, competition for limited resources and skyrocketing tuition. Those were some of the circumstances that led state university campuses to merge 40 years ago, creating the UW System. Now, with a proposal to separate the flagship university from the rest of the fleet, some leaders are concerned Wisconsin will return to what they see as the bad old days.
Category: State budget
GOP presidential hopefuls rally behind Wis. Gov. Scott Walker – On Politics: Covering the US Congress, Governors, and the 2012 Election
As the protests over Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker?s labor proposals continue, the newly elected Republican is finding some support from the politicians who want to replace President Obama.
Campus Connection: Any excuse for doctors’ reported actions?
Media outlets from across the country are jumping on this Associated Press report, which notes local doctors handed out medical excuse notes to protesters around the Capitol Square this weekend.
The Maclver Institute, “a free market think tank in Wisconsin,” has posted a video showing as much. To put things mildly, most are generally outraged.
Rights of workers important to everyone, including students (Bellingham, Wash. Herald)
Students in my class at the University of Wisconsin-Madison voted unanimously not to have class this week. They did so to support and participate in the protests that are happening a few blocks down the street at the state Capitol.
The protests come in reaction to Gov. Scott Walker?s proposal to fix the state budget by increasing the amount of money that public employees contribute toward their pension and health-care premiums. The bill would also strip those employees – including nurses, bus drivers and teachers – of their collective bargaining rights. The bill is an outright attack on unions and the public sector. [A column by UW-Madison English and American Studies professor Russ Castronovo].
And don’t take the name with you, Bucky
Perhaps it?s the most trivial issue to consider in the matter of separating the University of Wisconsin-Madison from all the rest of the University of Wisconsin system, but, just curious, who gets to keep the UW name?
Gov. Scott Walker?s apparently going to propose the split-up, but it?s clear he?s simply granting what UW-Madison has been asking for. Madison feels its constrained by state rules and appears not to want to be tied to the rest of the system.
Proposal could spin off UW-Madison (FOX11, Green Bay)
Governor Scott Walker?s two-year budget proposal has not even come out yet, but some are already voicing concerns about a plan concerning the state?s universities. Specifically, one that could spin off the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Officials: State funding cuts could dwarf possible savings on benefits (Wausau Daily Herald)
Quoted: Howard Schweber, an associate professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Protests at Capitol keep growing
One by one, the groups marched their way to the state Capitol on Friday. Here were the teachers from the Milwaukee Public Schools, setting out from the Madison Children?s Museum. There were the students from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, dressed in red, walking shoulder to shoulder along State St.
Faculty, alumni group divide on splitting UW
The faculty and an alumni group of the University of Wisconsin-Madison have different takes on discussions that would split UW-Madison from the rest of the UW System.
Elected leaders of the UW-Madison faculty Friday questioned their support for the plan that would free their campus from following some rules covering other state workers because of a separate plan by Gov. Scott Walker that reduces the power of state workers? unions.
Two-tier, two-caste systems
The Madison campus apparently wants to secede from the University of Wisconsin System, becoming a more privatized hybrid – still sucking up tax dollars, just fewer.
Let?s be clear what we?re talking about here: UW-Madison essentially as an independent, elite school, even if this would be done under “public authority status.” Everyone else – continuing with the Civil War analogy – becoming, well, Alabama (apologies to Alabamans).
UW-Madison needs a new deal
Now is the time for the University of Wisconsin-Madison to forge a new partnership with the state to strengthen its position as an educator, job-creator and a pre-eminent research institution. To ensure its vitality in the 21st century, the university needs more flexibility to be effective so that it will remain an economic engine that can help lead our state out of its economic dilemma. [A column by Milwaukee business executives and UW-Madison graduates Jon Hammes and Sheldon Lubar].
University model for UW autonomy
Virginia is often cited as the example to examine a state?s top universities seeking more autonomy from lawmakers, but a move in 2005 that gave those schools more freedom gets different grades from those who have studied it.
A recent Wisconsin Policy Research Institute report says Virginians praise the changes and argues they are a model that could help the University of Wisconsin-Madison. A former University of Virginia president says Wisconsin?s system works better. And Virginia lawmakers voted to tweak the state?s relationship with the universities because of a sharp jump in tuition since the last revision six years ago.
Union-busting in Wisconsin prompts mass protest (AFP)
A bill aimed at busting public workers unions in the US state of Wisconsin prompted mass protests and a statewide police hunt for Democratic lawmakers who fled to block the measure?s passage Thursday.
Howard Schweber: Governor Walker, Welcome to the Show
In the past two weeks, we have gotten used to hearing the phrase “Day of Rage” applied to cities across the Arab Middle East. Today, it was hard not to draw an analogy between those cities and Madison, WI. Not that anyone resisted the metaphor particularly: Congressman Ryan said, “it?s like Cairo has moved to Madison” while protesters carried sign reading “Walker like an Egyptian.” 30,000 protesters, that is, who filled all the floors of the Capitol building and the entire city square that surrounds it. Glenn Beck says the Madison protests are part of the same “spread of evil” that has gripped the Middle East. Uh huh.
Police preparing for possible Capitol clashes Saturday
Madison police said Friday they are worried about clashes between opposing political groups when supporters of Gov. Scott Walker descend on the Capitol on Saturday, when a sixth day of protests against the governor?s collective bargaining proposal is planned.
Walker Delays Delivery Of State Budget By 1 Week
MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is pushing back the release of the state?s two-year budget by a week. Walker had planned to release it on Tuesday. Instead, he will still deliver a budget speech on Tuesday, but he won?t actually release the budget itself for another week.
Campus Connection: 260 UW faculty ink petition backing unions
Some 260 faculty members at UW-Madison have signed a letter expressing concern about Gov. Scott Walker?s proposal to deprive public workers in Wisconsin of the right to collectively bargain.
The letter reads, in part: “Collective bargaining has been critical to providing decent standards of living to millions of Americans, playing a central role in the creation of this nation?s large middle class. Unions have also been crucial vehicles for democracy, giving workers a voice in their places of employment and in society as a whole. Curtailing workers? ability to form unions and to bargain collectively can only diminish the economic and political benefits that the practice has brought to our state.”
Public Worker Protests Spread From Wisconsin to Ohio
Yesterday, University of Wisconsin-Madison students walked out of classes at the urging of student government and campus newspapers and marched to the Capitol, about a mile away. There, they joined protesters who filled the rotunda to chant, bang drums and sing, and spilled outside.
Aping Virginia (Milwaukee News Buzz)
Wisconsin is looking to Virginia as a model for restructuring its university system, and UW officials have approached Gov. Scott Walker about becoming a more entrepreneurial and independent university with more authority to raise tuition. But ironically, Virginia itself is effectively putting its own restructuring plan on a two-year hiatus to reevaluate it. A commission appointed by Virginia?s Republican governor is recommending reversing some of the plan?s most significant changes.
UW-Madison Chancellor: No privatization
Madison – University of Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin said Thursday that “the status quo is not an option” and pressed for the school to gain greater administrative flexibility to deal with looming budget cuts.
It’s time to get back to class
Area teachers are setting a bad example for our children by skipping class. So many Madison teachers called in ?sick? for work that school officials canceled classes for a third straight day Friday…Those teachers who have ditched on their classes for one, two or in the case of the Madison district, three days should learn from another educator: UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin. Martin has kept UW-Madison open for educating young people despite this week?s dramatic demonstrations and politicking just blocks from her campus. Martin wrote on her Twitter account Wednesday night: The ?political process is very important, but this should not come at the cost of instruction.
UW-Madison teaching assistants call for ‘teach-out’ on Friday
The UW-Madison Teaching Assistants? Association is calling for a teach-out today ? for all action on campus to cease for a second day. “We are doing it as an act of solidarity with our Democratic senators who have left the state of Wisconsin in order to protect public workers in the state,” said TAA member Magda Konieczna.
Protesters come from near and far for ‘civics lesson in the flesh’
The fourth day of protests against Walker?s budget repair bill attracted more people from outside of the Madison area than those earlier in the week. As word spread mid-morning that Democratic senators had fled the state to prevent quorum and delay a vote on Walker?s bill, protesters continued to pile in via school buses, with student groups parading around Capitol Square. Students got creative, with one UW-Madison teaching assistant holding a “Teaching Assistants are Sexier With Benefits” sign. A group of high-school cross-country runners from Madison held a “Runners Against Walker” sign.
UW-Madison could see hefty tuition increase because of budget cuts
UW-Madison could be forced to raise tuition by 20 percent over the next two years if the state cuts $50 million from the university?s budget ? one scenario laid out in a memo from UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin to Gov. Scott Walker?s administration. The memo outlines how UW-Madison could separate from the rest of the University of Wisconsin System, giving the state?s flagship university more freedom from state oversight to set tuition, make personnel decisions, purchase goods and construct buildings. Martin and other System leaders have long sought such flexibility in exchange for something that has become a grim reality for them ? declining state aid.
100s of Wis. protesters spend night in Capitol
Dozens of protesters who camped out in the Wisconsin Capitol overnight said Friday they?re prepared to stay as long as necessary while an anti-union bill remains under consideration. As many as 25,000 protesters descended on the Capitol on Thursday for a full day of raucous chanting and peaceful demonstration. Several hundred, including UW-Madison students, spent the night, some bundling up in pajamas under blankets and in sleeping bags while others simply used their jackets as pillows and slept in street clothes.
Other UW campuses, besides Madison, want autonomy
Chancellors at state universities around Wisconsin say they want the same autonomy under consideration for the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Union-busting in Wisconsin prompts mass protest
A bill aimed at busting public workers unions in the US state of Wisconsin prompted mass protests and a statewide police hunt for Democratic lawmakers who fled to block the measure?s passage Thursday.
Union battle echoes beyond Wisconsin: ‘We?re fighting for our very existence’
?Unions won?t go away?But if the bill is eventually passed, what then for unions? ?Public working environments are likely to become more tense than they ever have been? in past decades, says Dennis Dresang, a political scientist at the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Strikes, campaigns to sack senators who supported the bill, and ?sick-ins? from work are likely to resurface.
Wisconsin standoff: Gov. Scott Walker faces a bunch of Democratic senators who refuse to show up for a vote.
Wisconsin State Sen. Mark Miller talked to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel on Thursday, dishing about how his fellow Democrats would stop Republican Gov. Scott Walker?s “budget repair plan.” There was only one thing he wouldn?t talk about: where he was calling from. He and 13 other Democratic state senators had fled the scene for pastures unknown, denying Republicans a vote on the bill by denying them quorum.
Senate Dems flee Madison, delay bill
On the most turbulent day yet of demonstrations against Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill, Democratic state senators successfully delayed the controversial legislation by walking out of the Capitol Thursday and setting up camp across state lines.
Madison buses could lose $7.1M in federal grants
The city of Madison stands to lose more than one-sixth of its transit budget from federal funding if the governor?s budget repair bill becomes law, according to a state bureau memo.
Dems flee state
In a move lawmakers said they had never seen before, Democrats left the Capitol Thursday morning, which prevented Senate Republicans from voting on the governor?s controversial budget repair bill.
Wisconsin is ‘ground zero’ for battle over unions
Wisconsin?s effort to cut public workers? benefits and bargaining rights has quickly turned into a high-stakes national issue involving President Obama, congressional Republicans and other states.
Wis. Democrats stymie vote on anti-union bill
An estimated 25,000 teachers and others flooded the Wisconsin Capitol on Thursday as Democratic lawmakers left the state to stymie a vote on the governor?s proposal to reduce collective bargaining rights and benefits for public workers
Gov. Walker?s Pretext
In a year when governors across the country are competing to show who?s toughest, no matter what the consequences, Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin stands out as the first to bring his State Capitol to a halt.
Gov. Calls Democrat Boycott ‘Stunt’
Wisconsin?s Republican governor said he?s confident Democrats who left the state to avoid voting on a bill removing union rights will return within a day or two, calling the boycott a “stunt.”
Nine Arrested As Capitol Protests Continue
Nine people have been arrested in the third day of widespread protests at the state Capitol.
Governor’s Budget Plan Could Spin Off UW-Madison
University of Wisconsin System leaders fear that Gov. Scott Walker will spin off the flagship UW-Madison campus from the rest of the UW System.
UW Remains Open, TAA Calls For ‘Teach Out’
University of Wisconsin officials have told students to expect classes on Thursday even though teacher assistants are calling for a “teach out” on campus.
UW-Madison Chancellor speaks out about rumors
UW-Madison chancellor Biddy Martin is speaking out about what she calls misleading headlines about the UW?s hope for a new partnership with the state.
Martin hopeful UW-Madison split from System included in Walker’s budget (WisPolitics.com)
UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin said today she?s hopeful that the campus will be split into a new public authority in Gov. Scott Walker?s budget bill, arguing that questions of administrative structure aren?t as important as the strength of the state?s research university.
Martin clarifies confusion over new model
A January memo containing explicit details on the University of Wisconsin?s plan for increased flexibility was a hypothetical response to hypothetical questions, Chancellor Biddy Martin said Thursday.
After more than 400 students walk out, TAs call ?teach out?
With continued uncertainty over the fate of the budget repair bill reigning over the Capitol, University of Wisconsin students organized a mass walkout from classes Thursday morning, and teaching assistants called for all activity on campus to halt.
Chancellor defends talks with state
After being accused of misleading students regarding the proposed split from the UW System, UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin held a press conference Thursday in hopes of dispelling what she deems inaccurate rumors.
Senate Dems hit the road to delay vote
Democrats in the Wisconsin state Senate did not show up for work Thursday, and law enforcement is looking for them
Governor calls on Democrats to do their job
Senate Democrats left Wisconsin on Thursday morning, preventing a vote on the budget repair bill. Governor Walker says those lawmakers are ignoring their duty.
Miller says Dems will talk this weekend
The leader of state Senate Democrats explains why they skipped town on Thursday. They haven?t talked yet, but Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller said Democrats will be in contact with majority Republicans and the governor?s office over the weekend. T
Campus Connection: Key Republican will fight Walker’s UW plan
If UW-Madison is granted the authority to set its own tuition rates, a key Republican legislator won?t be backing Gov. Scott Walker?s apparent plans to break Wisconsin?s flagship institution away from the UW System.
Fight Over Union Rights in Wisconsin Signals a National Trend
More than a half-century after Wisconsin became the first state to grant government workers collective-bargaining rights, this city has emerged as a key battleground in a movement to dismantle faculty and other public unions.
Teachers, TAA protest over bargaining rights
UW-Madison Teaching Assistants and Madison teachers and students joined protesters in and around the Capitol rotunda throughout the day Wednesday.
Rallies in opposition to budget repair bill enter 3rd day
The third day of mass protesting against the budget repair bill on the Capitol steps on Wednesday was marked by another day without arrests or any major disturbances and an emphasis on the importance of the state?s educators and student life.
TAs will stage ?teach-out? as UW administration urges students to attend classes
In their most extreme display of student opposition to Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill so far, teaching assistants at the University of Wisconsin announced they will hold an off-campus ?teach-out? to continue protests against the legislation.
Senate Dems leaving city to avoid participating in budget vote
Senate Democrats were leaving Madison to avoid participating in the vote on Gov. Scott Walker?s controversial budget repair bill, which has sparked four days of protests at the Capitol, an aide confirmed Thursday morning.
John Nichols: Never prouder of my state, its workers and unions
?I have never been prouder of our movement than I am at this moment,? shouted Wisconsin AFL-CIO President Phil Neuenfeldt as he surveyed the crowds of union members and their supporters that surged around the state Capitol and into the streets of Madison Wednesday, literally closing the downtown as tens of thousands of Wisconsinites protested their Republican governor?s attempt to strip public employee unions of their collective bargaining rights.
Neuenfeldt is not alone. As a seventh-generation Wisconsinite, I have never been prouder of my state.
Campus Connection: Biddy tells UW System leaders not to oppose split
UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin sent an e-mail Wednesday night to the UW System?s Board of Regents, and to other chancellors across the system, asking them not to oppose Wisconsin?s flagship university breaking away from the system.
Do right by Madison public employees
The city of Madison has great public employees ? great firefighters, great police officers, great streets and sanitation workers, great planners, great workers of every craft and skill. And Madison has great public employee unions. They work with the city?s elected leaders and managers to deliver services, not grudgingly but with delight.
Madison gets its right when it comes to labor-management relations. And we should not let Gov. Scott Walker mess with those relationships.
Wisconsin Senate to vote on anti-union bill
Wisconsin lawmakers are prepared to pass a momentous bill that would strip government workers of nearly all collective bargaining rights over the loud objections of thousands of teachers, students and prison guards who packed the Capitol for two days of protests.
Obama argues with GOP governor over unions
In an interview Wednesday with WTMJ-TV of Milwaukee, Obama said Walker?s efforts to eliminate collective bargaining rights for state employees “seems like more of an assault on unions.”
On Campus: UW-Madison chancellor calls for a delay on budget repair vote
UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin is calling on the Joint Committee on Finance to delay its vote on Gov. Scott Walker?s budget repair bill, asking for more opportunity for negotiation. Referencing Abraham Lincoln, she asked that lawmakers take time to review the proposed changes.
Legislature could act Thursday on budget plan
Gov. Scott Walker?s bill to strip almost all union rights for public workers advanced out of committee Wednesday just before midnight, setting up a pivotal floor vote in the Senate that is expected for Thursday amid massive demonstrations.