U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin and La Crosse Mayor Mitch Reynolds greeted President Biden at the La Crosse airport. He's on his way here now, according to pool.
Per pool: Biden is in a photo line with La Crosse Municipal Transit Utility transit manager Adam Lorentz, Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, Attorney General Josh Kaul, La Crosse County Board chairwoman Monica Kruse, state Sen. Brad Pfaff, and state Democratic Party chairman Ben Wikler
.@GovEvers addresses crowd, says President Biden's infrastructure plan supports Evers' campaign promise to fix roads. Awful roads is a big issue here in the La Crosse area. From 2018: madison.com/wsj/news/local…
Republican lawmakers writing the next state budget release some details of their K-12 spending plan:
On this: Schools will receive $150M and special education reimbursements increase by 1.8 percentage points to 30% (not 10%).
Here's some news: Republicans writing the state budget are not proposing in their motion to extend the tuition freeze for in-state UW students that has been in place since 2013.
1 in 14 migrant workers at a northern WI green bean plant died of COVID after company officials and gov regulators failed to take critical measures to protect employees during one of the deadliest outbreaks in the US food processing industry jsonline.com/in-depth/news/… via @mariajpsl
@mariajpsl Journal Sentinel investigation shows that neither Seneca Foods nor local health officials tested all workers—even those living in company barracks — or interviewed them to do contact tracing. The company also didn’t monitor for obvious symptoms or isolate all those who became ill
@mariajpsl The Journal Sentinel tracked down 22 workers, talked with 21 family members and reviewed hundreds of pages of public records to document what happened to workers of one of America’s largest packaged vegetable companies, which produces Green Valley and Libby's brand green beans.
Assembly and Senate leaders @jimsteineke and @SenatorKapenga on special session: “This is a thinly-veiled political maneuver by the Governor. We intend to gavel out this unserious stunt.”
@jimsteineke@SenatorKapenga "If the Governor were serious about the proposals he packed into this bill, he could fund each one of them today with the mountain of federal funds at his direct disposal," they said in a statement.
@jimsteineke@SenatorKapenga Finance committee co-chairs @SenMarklein and @repborn: "The Governor says this special session is about BadgerCare, but this bill is nothing more than a mini budget advanced by the Governor because he didn’t get his way through the normal budget process."
.@GovEvers is calling a special session re: a bill that expands BadgerCare Plus and includes other items like grants to address PFAS, funding for the Wisconsin Black Historical Society and Museum, transferring $151M to the budget stabilization fund: content.govdelivery.com/attachments/WI…
@GovEvers Bill also would authorize the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation to award a loan of up to $50M to the Consolidated Cooperative for the purchase
of the Verso Paper Mill in the city of Wisconsin Rapids.
@GovEvers Bill also appropriates $100M from the general fund to cover not more than 50 percent of the cost to replace lead service lines.
Wisconsin has failed to send food assistance to tens of thousands of poor children who are supposed to be getting extra help because they have been learning at home during the coronavirus pandemic.
Under a federal program created last spring, the families of students who qualify for subsidized meals in Wisconsin schools are supposed to receive $6.82 to cover food for every day their children are not in school buildings and are instead learning virtually.
A Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation has found that 1 in 3 Wisconsin nursing homes violated coronavirus protocols, including by asking COVID-positive staff to keep working, not screening visitors for symptoms and not isolating infected residents jsonline.com/in-depth/news/…
Even when inspectors were present, employees at several facilities didn't always wear face masks. Two homes substituted flannel shirts or plastic aprons for gowns, despite having an ample supply. At least 5 didn’t tell residents or families about covid cases for days or weeks.
According to the Journal Sentinel review of hundreds of state and federal inspection reports from March 2020 to January 2021, officials cited 133 of Wisconsin’s 360 nursing homes for coronavirus-related violations, with some of them incurring multiple violations.