Politics

Wisconsin Republicans dismiss call by Evers for special legislative session to boost funding for child care, UW System

Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has been highlighting child care access and the worker shortage problem across the state ever since Republicans did not fund several proposals in the 2023-25 state budget.

Associated Press

August 8, 2023

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Tony Evers stands and speaks into a microphone mounted on a wood podium, with people standing behind him and to his side, and more people seated facing him, in a room with U.S. and Wisconsin flags, a painting, electric wall sconce lighting, and gold-colored filigree décor framing two doors.

Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers speaks at a signing ceremony for the 2023-25 state budget at the Wisconsin Capitol Building in Madison on July 5, 2023. On Aug. 8, Evers called a special legislative session for September in an attempt to force Republican lawmakers to approve funding they rejected for child care services, a family leave program, the University of Wisconsin System and other efforts targeting the state's worker shortage problem. (Credit: PBS Wisconsin)


AP News

By Scott Bauer, AP

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Democratic Gov. Tony Evers on Aug. 8 call for a special legislative session for September in a longshot attempt to approve funding rejected earlier in the year for child care services, a family leave program, the University of Wisconsin System and other efforts targeting the state’s worker shortage problem was quickly dismissed by Republicans.

Republicans who control the Legislature said they opposed his plan because it would increase government spending rather than cut taxes.

Republicans are under no obligation to debate, let alone vote, on the more than $1 billion in funding proposals Evers put forward. Republicans have routinely ignored special session calls Evers has made in the past on a wide array of issues, including legalizing abortion, cutting taxes, gun safety, updating the state’s unemployment system, addressing problems in the dairy industry and increasing funding for schools.

But calling a special session, which Evers did for Sept. 20, does bring attention to the issue. Evers has been highlighting child care access and the worker shortage problem at stops across the state ever since Republicans did not include funding for it in the state budget passed in June. Evers signed the budget, which runs through the middle of 2025, in July.

Evers said he was giving Republicans another chance to fund critical areas it rejected. He said the $1 billion in proposals could be paid for by tapping the state’s projected $4 billion budget surplus.

“These challenges that have plagued our state for generations will continue, holding our economy, our families, and our state back if Republicans in the Legislature don’t take seriously the second chance I’m giving them, and urgently,” Evers said in a statement. “We must work together in the coming weeks so we can bolster our state’s workforce, maintain our economic momentum, and most importantly, do the right thing for Wisconsin.”

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos called his proposal “nothing more than a rehash of Tony Evers’ tax and spend budget.” Vos and Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said Republicans’ priority is passing a middle class tax cut similar to the one Evers vetoed in the budget.

Evers is calling on the Legislature to spend $365 million on child care statewide, primarily to make the pandemic-era Child Care Counts Program permanent. The program is slated to run out of funding in January. The program has handed out nearly $600 million to more than 4,900 child care providers from March 2020 through March 2023, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

Child care providers and other advocates have warned that losing the program would be devastating for families that have come to rely on it, particularly the working poor who have few affordable child care options.

“Gov. Evers’ proposal to give childcare providers a one-time payment of $365 million is another 12-month patch to match what they just lost through the federal stimulus plan,” Vos said. “It is unsustainable and does nothing to address the long-term problem faced by the childcare industry.”

Evers is also urging Republicans to spend $243 million to fund a paid family medical leave program that they also voted not to include in the state budget. The governor said the program would be self-sustaining by 2026, with benefits paid for through payroll contributions from both employees and employers.

Under his proposal, workers would be eligible for up to 12 weeks of paid family leave starting in 2025.

Evers is also calling for spending more than $66 million more on the University of Wisconsin System. The news comes a week after UW-Oshkosh announced it would be laying off workers, issuing furloughs and taking other steps to deal with an $18 million budget shortfall.

Evers also wants the state to spend nearly $200 million to build a new engineering building on the UW-Madison campus. The project was the top priority for university leaders, but Republican lawmakers rejected it. They said at the time that they were open to considering funding in the future.

Evers is also calling for spending $100 million to continue a regional workforce innovation grant program, $60 million to address health care workforce shortages and $16 million targeting teacher shortages.

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