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Governor’s Vetoes Restore State’s Promise to Great Schools, Johnson says

Governor Jim Doyle signs the two-year, $53 billion state budget bill into law on July 25.

Governor Jim Doyle used his veto pen Monday (July 25, 2005) to create a state budget that fulfills the state's promise to fund two-thirds of the cost of education while providing relief to property taxpayers, WEAC President Stan Johnson said.

Attention WEAC members

WEAC President Stan Johnson is urging members to visit the Cyberlobby on the Members Only site to thank Governor Doyle for protecting Wisconsin's great schools in the 2005-07 state budget.

"The governor's priorities reflect Wisconsin's values and put the state back on solid ground for the future," Johnson said. "The people of this state believe in public education, families and communities, they understand that great schools benefit everyone, and they want a state government that puts those values before politics and special interests."

The governor signed the two-year spending plan into law during a press conference at the executive residence in Madison. The budget boosts school funding by $861 million, which is $404 million more than the Legislature provided for public education in its version of the budget bill.

The Legislature's budget would have resulted in disastrous cuts to education by limiting school funding increases to 1% and rolling back the per pupil adjustment under revenue controls to $120 in 2005-06 and $100 in 2006-07, Johnson said. Governor Doyle restored with a line-item veto the per pupil adjustment to $248 in 2005-06 and $252 in 2006-07.

"Schools were told they would have to live with only a 1% increase, which would have resulted in more than 4,000 teachers losing their jobs, larger class sizes, and cuts to programs ranging from math to music," Doyle said.

The budget provides property tax relief by increasing the general fund balance by $360 million and vetoing pork barrel projects and other special interest spending, Doyle said. As a result, the average homeowner's tax bill will not increase in 2005, and will decrease by $5 in 2006. Between 2000-2004, the average property tax increase was $119 per year.

Doyle said the Legislature's tax freeze called for a $350 million cut to school funding and prevented local governments from increasing their levies if they experienced growth or to keep pace with inflation. "My property tax freeze is responsible while the Legislature's freeze is really a freeze on our kids' education that would force devastating cuts to our schools," Doyle said.

The Legislature's tax freeze also included the Wisconsin Technical College System, which would have resulted in increasing tuition and program cuts. Doyle vetoed the provision and exempted the WTCS from the levy caps.

The governor also vetoed the Legislature's proposal to cripple the Student Achievement Guarantee in Education (SAGE) class-size reduction program by making it optional in grades 2 and 3. "These proposals, under the guise of 'flexibility,' could have cut the program essentially in half and increased class sizes in Milwaukee by as much as 60%," Doyle said. "They contradict everything academic researchers tell us and what parents and teachers know: There’s nothing better to help kids learn math and reading in the early grades than a quality teacher and a small class size."

The governor's other education-related actions include:

  • Increasing state aid for special education by $15 million.

  • Increasing the pupil transportation reimbursement rates and adding $12.7 million in funding.

  • Increasing aid for bilingual education by $2.4 million.

  • Allowing school counselors and nurse services to be reimbursable under special education categorical aids. Currently, only school social worker services are eligible.

  • Vetoing the $100 tax credit for families who do not send their children to public schools. The State Senate passed the proposal as part of a last-minute deal to gain the votes of hold-out legislators on July 1.

  • Vetoing the Legislature's proposal to increase the teacher license fee by $100 to pay for mentoring programs. Doyle added to his budget $1.3 million to support mentoring programs for new teachers.

Johnson applauded Governor Doyle for his commitment to great schools. "The governor vetoed many anti-education policies that would have harmed our schools and jeopardized our future," he said. "This budget is in step with Wisconsin's values; it protects both children and taxpayers."

Resource page on the 2005-07 state budget

Posted July 25, 2005

At the Capitol News Archives