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Headlines : Wisconsin
State budget panel OKs residency rule based on distance
Joint Finance Committee also votes on measures on streetcar, taxes, prohibition of soda bans.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Debate: School voucher issue on its own bill vs. within state budget
Does the school voucher debate belong on its own bill, or within the state budget? The Wisconsin Senate's top Democrat is demanding a stand-alone bill, but Gov. Walker calls that idea "ridiculous."
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Joint Finance: residency issue, rent-to-own, other policies remain in Walker's budget
From a repeal of residency rules for local police to softening regulation of rent-to-own stores in Wisconsin, key GOP lawmakers for now are keeping dozens of items in the state budget that don't belong there, according to their nonpartisan budget office.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
State pension fund managers get $8 million in bonuses
Wisconsin's pension fund managers were given more than $8 million in bonuses as a reward for strong investment returns, nearly double what they received last year, according to records released to The Associated Press.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Scott Walker's budget to lower income tax rates, freeze local aid
Gov. Scott Walker unveiled a two-year $68 billion budget Wednesday that would not increase state aid to local governments and provide only a modest hike to public schools
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Scott Walker: Budget returns Medicaid to 'intended purpose as a safety net'
Medicaid would return to its "intended purpose as a safety net for the neediest" by shifting some people off the program, adding others and refusing the full expansion allowed under federal law, according to Gov. Scott Walker's proposed budget for 2013-15.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Walker rejects full Medicaid expansion, says 224,000 more to be covered
The state would turn down a full expansion of the BadgerCare program under the federal health care law but 224,600 more state residents would still gain coverage through state and federal efforts, under a proposal unveiled by Gov. Scott Walker.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Cash-strapped states look to troubled pension funds to spur economy
With the economy still stagnating, a few powerful voices have begun pressuring already underfunded pension funds to help kickstart local economies, acting as venture capital investors. Fund managers are not amused.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
Wisconsin: State pension board rejects request for $200M for economic development initiatives
The board that oversees Wisconsin's pension program for public employees has rejected a request by the head of Gov. Scott Walker's semi-private economic development agency to tap $200 million from the fund to invest in risky startup businesses.
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Headlines : Wisconsin
State surplus to reach $485 million; revenues to miss projections
he state's short-term finances have brightened but a recent action by Congress and President Barack Obama means that over the next two years, it will be more difficult than previously thought for officials to cut the income tax or spend more on priorities such as school.
Budget timeframe: Biennial
Fiscal Year begins: July 1
The current state budget can be found here.
Find the legislative session calendar here.
Find the current legislative leaders here.

Gov. Scott Walker
115 East State Capitol
P.O. Box 7863
Madison, WI 53707
Phone: (608) 266-1212
Fax: (608) 267-8983
http://www.wisgov.state.wi.us/index.asp
Mike Huebsch, Secretary
Department of Administration
P.O. Box 7864
Madison, WI 53707-7864
Phone (608) 266-1736
http://www.doa.state.wi.us/debf
Want a more robust, long-term look at your state's fiscal health, beyond the budget? There are two parts: Click here for the FY2012 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) compiled by the state government, and click here for information on the state's pension liabilities.
Wisconsin is required to pass a "balanced budget." Article VII, Section 5 of the 1848 Constitution requires the legislature to "provide an annual tax sufficient to defray the estimated expenses of the State for each year." Even with this provision the State's reported budget deficits (negative net transactions) on its Budgetary Comparison Schedules for each of the three years studied. Wisconsin law allows the carrying over of a deficit from one year to the next.
The State maintains two major: General and Transportation, and several non-major governmental funds. The Wisconsin's biennial budget is prepared using a modified cash basis of accounting. Both of the two major governmental funds are budgeted, however, it is unclear how many of the total non-major funds are budgeted.
Judging from the differences between actual and budgeted figures, it is likely that few of the total non-major governmental funds are budgeted. Budgetary information within the Budgetary Comparison Schedules are not efficiently ordered and do not include the necessary "total" columns. [from the Institute for Truth in Accounting]
Find the state's bond ratings here.
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Solutions: Wisconsin
Ten Ways the Budget Could Be Better
The state government should refrain from onerous interference into the private market and limit pork, and here are 10 suggesitons for doing so.
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Solutions: Wisconsin
Benefit Reform Could Save School Districts Hundreds of Million$
Public officials can help alleviate their budget crunches by offering competitive, not exorbitant benefits.
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Wisconsin
State pension fund managers get $8 million in bonuses
Wisconsin's pension fund managers were given more than $8 million in bonuses as a reward for strong investment returns, nearly double what they received last year, according to records released to The Associated Press.
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Wisconsin
Cash-strapped states look to troubled pension funds to spur economy
With the economy still stagnating, a few powerful voices have begun pressuring already underfunded pension funds to help kickstart local economies, acting as venture capital investors. Fund managers are not amused.
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Wisconsin
Wisconsin: State pension board rejects request for $200M for economic development initiatives
The board that oversees Wisconsin's pension program for public employees has rejected a request by the head of Gov. Scott Walker's semi-private economic development agency to tap $200 million from the fund to invest in risky startup businesses.
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Wisconsin
State pension fund rides stock market gains
It was a good year for the stock market and public pension funds in general. But the question going forward is what kind of returns should retirees expect and whether fund managers can deliver.
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Illinois, Wisconsin
Wisconsin, Illinois far apart on public pension funding: report
The rankings, compiled by investment research firm Morningstar Inc, looked at the liabilities of taxpayers on a per-capita basis for the pension funds administered by 50 states, as well as the more traditional measure of how well or poorly the programs are funded.
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Wisconsin
Teachers' benefits cuts offset much of school-aid losses
Cuts to teachers' benefits championed by Gov. Scott Walker offset about two-thirds of the reductions to school revenue resulting from his budget last year, limiting but not eliminating job losses in districts able to make the best use of these savings.
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How States Underfund Public Pensions
Politicians evade balanced budget requirements and debt limits by underfunding public pensions, covertly passing the financial burden onto future taxpayers. Get the details here.
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Wisconsin
Walker plans no changes to state retirement system
The report, approved by Walker's administration secretary, recommended against allowing a 401(k)-style retirement option to compete against the existing pension system serving hundreds of thousands of public employees and retirees.
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Wisconsin
Governor willing to look at state pension system
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker said Monday that he would be willing to consider changes in the state's $77 billion pension system, with a report expected to be released this week on how the system could be improved.
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Wisconsin
Wisconsin proves the lie of Pew pension numbers
Wisconsin's public pension system demonstrates how big the public pension catastrophe really is.
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BLOG: Higher Education, Spending
Who is the highest paid state employee in your state?
Time to add a new diagram to the state budget and policy playbook--your state's highest paid employee is probably a football or basketball coach.
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BLOG: Medicaid
Medicaid expansion won't yield quality health care
The bombshell Oregon Medicaid study released this week should give all states pause as they consider plans to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. States must now ask what the point of Medicaid is in the first place.
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BLOG: Budget Processes and Systems, Budget Transparency
Non-fiscal budget issues threaten accountability, transparency
Citizens need to know where their dollars are being spent and they need to know where their elected representatives stand on a wide range of policy issues. Including dozens of policy issues that are only tangentially related to the budget, if at all, impedes both those goals.
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BLOG: Budget Gimmicks, Budget Processes and Systems, Measures to Balance Budgets, Spending, State Debt
Let's Put Privatizing Municipal Services Back on the Table
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BLOG: Unions
Airing Out the Smoke-filled Rooms: Bringing Transparency to Public Union Collective Bargaining
To help prevent union strong-arming that fleeces taxpayers, we should know precisely what public union officials are demanding and what government employers are offering in any collective negotiation about employment terms and conditions.
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BLOG: Budget Gimmicks, Budget Processes and Systems, Budget Transparency, Federal Government Impact, Federal Government Impact, Measures to Balance Budgets, Pensions, Revenue, Spending, State Debt
Yes, Your Paycheck is Smaller...And it May Get Worse
And it isn’t just individuals who must reconfigure budgets, the states are looking at smaller “paychecks” as well.
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BLOG: Revenue
U.S. Government Accountability Office tackles tax exemptions
Just as state spending should identify performance outcomes, tax preferences should as well.
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OPINION: Pensions, Revenue
States, municipalities must make pension reform top funding priority
State and local politicians may think they can relax as third quarter tax revenues showed 12 consecutive quarters of growth year over year. But that would be a mistake in light of pension investments that again failed to erase any of more than $5 trillion owed to government workers.
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BLOG: Federal Government Impact
Monday Map: Federal Aid to State Budgets
This map looks at state government budgets - specifically, how much of each state's budget comes from the federal government. Mississippi tops the list with 49% of its general revenue coming from Washington; Alaska, by contrast, gets only 24% of its general revenue from the feds.
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OPINION: Pensions
New 'issue brief' ignores government pension 'pathology'
A National Insistute on Retirement Security brief on proposals to freeze local and state defined benefit pension plans in a shift to defined contribution plans that limit taxpayer risk ignores is what protections are needed against endemic public pension corruption and offers no explanation of who is going to sacrifice to pay this massive hidden debt.
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OPINION: Pensions, Revenue, State Debt
New 'State of the States' fiscal crisis study recognizes reality
The "State of the States" report released this week puts hidden state and local debt at $7.3 trillion, stating: "States do not account to citizens in ways that are transparent, timely or accessible." If state and local governments fail to act decisively now, cities, towns and counties will go bankrupt, and states could fall beyond a fiscal event horizon into perpetual debt.
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BLOG: Revenue
Revenue crisis? Citizens should have such a revenue crisis
The U.S. Census Bureau today released its Annual Survey of State Government Finances for 2011, and it shows the "revenue crisis" politicians have been blaming on the Great Recession is false.
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BLOG: Spending, Pensions
Public employee compensation 6.2% higher than private sector
Warped accounting standards aren’t helping the public pension crisis, but it is also not the only source of the problem. Another factor contributing to the pension crisis is total compensation paid to state employees. -
OPINION: Pensions
Note to Morningstar: Municipal and state pension hemorrhage accelerating
From Fiscal Years 2007 through 2011, politicians and government pension fund managers blew all the money taxpayers and government workers contributed. All of the $611 billion that was supposed to be invested is gone. So is the $609 billion earned on investments. According to the latest U.S. Census Bureau Annual Survey of Public Pensions: State-and-Locally-Administered Defined Benefit Data, more than $1.22 trillion came in to the pension plans and more than $1.29 trillion went out instead of growing to pay guaranteed future benefits. Those promised benefits grew by about $1 trillion over the same period.
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OPINION: Pensions
Government pensions fix may take time, but time has run out
Members of a state and municipal workers organization recently got a dose of reality on pension reform at a gathering of public workers who have benefited from defined contribution plans for 40 years. A key fact from the presentations was stated by Ken Parker, city manager of Port Orange, Florida: "Note: the only way a governmental entity can truly fix its cost related to retirement is to change from a Defined Benefit Plan and adopt a Defined Contribution Plan."
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OPINION: State Debt
Hurricane Sandy, tsunami scare expose state catastrophe debts
Of all accounting frauds state leaders commit to push devastating costs onto future generations, the worst is deluding citizens about the security of so-called catastrophe insurance funds. Hurricane Sandy and a tsunami scare in Hawaii at the same time should be warning enough for governors to start paying the premiums.
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OPINION: Pensions
Milliman government pension report exposes magnitude of catastrophe
When a "premier global consulting and actuarial" firm proves in its first Public Pension Funding study that those government pensions are doomed, it is past time for action. Milliman's study showing a 33 percent increase in pension debt over official numbers from a minute change in accounting should be enough to spur reform.
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OPINION: Pensions
GASB government pension message not even false
No matter what the Government Accounting Standards Board says or how grossly state and local politicians pervert new guidelines to continue looting workers' pension funds, reality will triumph when the real reckoning comes. Just ask the National Association of Bond Lawyers, municipal bond rating agencies and actuaries who do the calculations.
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OPINION: Pensions
New book on public pensions only missing 1 thing: Reality
Anyone interested in the state and local government pension crisis - and all Americans should pay attention to this hidden $4.6 trillion hidden black hole in our economy - must read Alicia H. Munnell's new book, "State and Local Pensions: What now?" It is the best primer on this complex issue except for one missing factor: Reality.
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OPINION: Pensions
'Dysfunctional' pension plans need radical fix now
When a widely recognized world pension expert refers to current defined benefit and defined contribution plans as "dysfunctional," it is time for politicians to stop their lying and denying that this fiscal catastrophe is spiraling out of control.
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OPINION: State Debt
Public workers pay taxes with taxes paid by private workers
When State Budget Solutions started looking at real total state debt, just the staggering size of the numbers alone did not tell the whole story. So how to get a fix on the real burden taxpayers must bear in each state? Per capita is the usual way. But even that does not tell the whole story.
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OPINION: Pensions
Latest data show public pension death spiral locking in
The worst news is that earnings on investments were a negative $14.2 billion, a $66 billion decline from the same quarter last year. These pension funds paid out $53.4 billion in the second quarter, putting a year-over-year hole of at least $68 billion in capacity to pay future benefits.
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OPINION: Pensions
When it comes to cutting public pensions: Yes you can; you must!
If current state and municipal workers and retirees refuse to accept their fair share of sacrifice on retirement benefits, the looming taxpayer backlash will sweep away a century of progress. Workers must act voluntarily now because politics and law never will resolve this crisis before the money runs out, and legal protections they are counting on may be as false as politicians' promises.
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OPINION: Pensions
The only thing governors move forward is intractable debt
Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley told Democratic faithful gathered at the national convention Tuesday that "Democratic governors are balancing budgets," when he knows that is a lie, especially in the Old Line State. Twenty Democratic governors account for about 53 percent of total state debt, according to a study released last week by State Budget Solutions.
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OPINION: Pensions
Ryan, Christie should check Dutch public pension cuts
Vice presidential candidate Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie put on cheery faces for the faithful this week at the Republic National convention, but both know the catastrophe states are hurtling toward because of hidden debt.
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OPINION: Pensions
Chump public workers still feeding pension thieves
They just keep on letting politicians pick their pockets. Latest official public pension data - the most optimistic available -- compiled by Census show investments administered by states fell short more than $1.2 trillion even by their own trick accounting from Fiscal Year 2007 through 2011. Yet managers scraped off at least $45 billion in "Other Payments" to enrich a handful of insiders.
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OPINION: Pensions
State lawmakers finally hear the 'U' word on pensions
"Unsustainable" is the word state officials heard from experts for the first time at their annual National Conference of State Legislatures gathering here, where one of four sessions on the pension crisis drew a standing-room only crowd of more than 300.
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BLOG: Federal Government Impact
Sacrifice of state sovereignty on display at NCSL
When U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois tried to fire up a ballroom full of state legislators here Tuesday morning, he used the phrase "states rights." It popped up a few other times as the National Conference of State Legislatures met to its annual "Build Strong States" summit. The only problem: There is no such thing as "states rights."
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BLOG: Pensions
State lawmakers sink deeper into denial on pension catastrophe
We're going to pay enough for 2,000 "Curiosity" Mars rover missions, but the money will produce no government services or benefits of any kind. Yet, nowhere does a state legislative directive on pensions approved Tuesday mention how states are going to pay this debt.
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BLOG
State lawmakers get warning about muni bond bind
National Conference of State Legislatures members meeting here ended their first day with even more bad news about municipal bonds, debt interest that takes more than 20 cents of every dollar they spend each year and that pays for essential public works, among other things.
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OPINION: Pensions
SEC report reveals house of bonds turned into den of thieves
The word "taxpayer" appears only 14 times in 165 pages of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Report on the Municipal Securities Market released Tuesday. Only two of those mentions in the body of the report refer to looking out for our interests.
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BLOG: Pensions
Pension actuaries claim 80% does not equal 100%
Question: When does 80 percent of something equal 100 percent? Answer: Never, except in the fantasy world of public pension accounting. The American Academy of Actuaries Tuesday sent a letter to Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, puncturing that fantasy in a committee report he released six months ago.
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BLOG: Pensions
Taxpayers, workers can probe their public pensions now
Push past the spin. Most public workers covered by defined benefit pension plans - and taxpayers stuck with the tab - don't have to wait years to find out what's happening to their money. They can get quarterly reports from the Top 100 funds representing 89.4 percent of "financial activity."
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OPINION: Pensions, State Debt
Cities and states bleed out while politicians dither
If our states and municipalities were trauma victims, they would be bleeding out while doctors argued about injuries. Even as financial gurus Paul Volcker and Richard Ravitch studied the municipal and state fiscal crisis for a report released this week, public pension debt alone grew to an untreatable $4.6 trillion, according to analysis released Wednesday by economist Andrew Biggs for State Budget Solutions.
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OPINION: Pensions
Public pension infinite amortization puts taxpayers in debt forever
Anybody who doubts whether public pensions can push state and local governments beyond a fiscal event horizon into a black hole of perpetual debt should read an auditor's note in Montana's latest annual report: "The Unfunded Actuarial Accrued Liability amortization period is infinite ...."
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BLOG: Unemployment Insurance, Federal Government Impact
Will the Real Unemployment Numbers Please Stand Up?
It may be equally as worrisome to know that the Department of Labor is also engaging in the practice of publishing one set of rosier numbers, only to amend them to the real numbers days later, thereby avoiding dissemination of the worst numbers.
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OPINION: Pensions
Local, state pensions fall another $1.5 trillion short so far this year
Public pensions just keep falling further and further behind. In fact, they have fallen so far they never can get up again. The local and state pension crisis got at least $300 billion worse in the first quarter of this year compared to 2011, according to analysis of latest data released by the U.S. Census Bureau. That added at least $1.5 trillion to the shortfall -- calculated at $800 billion to more than $4 trillion as of 2010 -- future taxpayers must make up on top of all other taxes and rate hikes.
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BLOG: Budget Gimmicks, Budget Processes and Systems, Budget Transparency, Federal Government Impact, Measures to Balance Budgets, State Debt
States' Rainy Day Funds Fall Short on "Rainy Days"
Despite the obvious need for maintaining these funds, many state lawmakers deplete or insufficiently fund the reserves to cover costs elsewhere, leaving constituents to fend for themselves during bouts of extreme weather.
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OPINION: Healthcare
Supreme Court ruling - a not-so-subtle reminder to move away from a federally-run health care system
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OPINION
A Plea to Legislators and Governors Across America
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OPINION: Pensions
Public pension liars and deniers just lower their standards
Now, 70 percent equals 100 percent. The people crashing municipal and state pension plans into a bottomless fiscal abyss just released a "study" they claim finds them "solidly funded" despite irredeemable losses in the recession and lagging growth since. They did it by lowering their standards. No problem, they expect taxpayers to make up the difference.
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OPINION
COMMENTARY: Fiscal Reality wins a victory in Wisconsin
Maybe average Wisconsin voters didn't consciously know each household must pay $1,563 in extra taxes every year for the next 30 years just to fund public pension shortfalls. But they probably realized they don't have a pension anymore, even if they have jobs. And any lucky enough to have jobs know that before Scott Walker became governor, they were paying higher taxes while working harder and longer at lower pay with slashed benefits.
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BLOG: Budget Gimmicks, Budget Processes and Systems, Budget Transparency, Measures to Balance Budgets
Recall Election Anticipation Ends, But the Costs Remain
In a report released January 18, 2012, the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board studied cost estimates for the 2012 recall elections in all 72 counties, including 1,707 municipalities (92.3% responding). Although the costs may vary based on turnout rates, the G.A.B. estimates the total cost of the recall elections at $9,011,762.18.
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OPINION: Pensions
COMMENTARY Study calls for 'drastic reform' of public pension regulation
Politicians are forcing public pensions to take more risks with taxpayer money and public workers' retirements. Recent accounting reforms actually will make the crisis worse, according to a study just released by three economists. They call for "drastic reform." Congress actually has the power to impose something drastic now.
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OPINION: Pensions
Taxpayers get crushed when pensions and bonds collide
This all boils down to who gets to pick taxpayers' pockets first, public pensioners or municipal bond investors? More people are waking up to the hard reality that when it comes to state and local government, somebody has to lose money over the next few decades. The National Association of Bond Lawyers is worried enough about it to issue "Considerations" for advising clients who think they're getting safe investments.
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BLOG: Pensions
COMMENTARY: Municipal, state pension reform message gaining momentum
Despite an organized campaign to stop public pension reform, reality is beginning to break through. One recent report outlines a possible path to long-term solutions and another details the necessity of states and municipalities finding their own way because federal bailout is impossible. And Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel released a plan that could have been based on both reports.
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OPINION: Pensions
Public pension 'best practices' omit 1 thing: How do we pay benefits?
Hey, young public employees, what are you going to do when your pension checks bounce after you paid in for decades? That is what will happen in many - maybe all - states and municipalities sooner or later if they do not reform right now. If you want to see the future, just look at Illinois. One citizen there did, and came up with a real reform plan that might work.
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OPINION: Pensions
COMMENTARY Municipal, state workers should take their pension money and run, fast
Public employees should take their pension money now and run to avoid risk of getting reduced benefits - or nothing - in the future. It's the best deal for them and for taxpayers. A growing chorus of credible voices including the Government Accountability Office, a Federal Reserve bank and now the Harvard Kennedy School Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government confirm state and local government finances are "spiraling out of control" and even draconian reforms only make it "more likely" that future benefits will paid in full.
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BLOG: Pensions
COMMENTARY: This plan could save municipal, state workers' pension checks
Hey, young public employees, what are you going to do when your pension checks bounce after you paid in for decades? That is what will happen in many - maybe all - states and municipalities sooner or later if they do not reform right now. If you want to see the future, just look at Illinois. One citizen there did, and came up with a real reform plan that might work.
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BLOG: Pensions, Federal Government Impact
COMMENTARY: Fed screams softly in warning about public pension crisis
This is what it sounds like when the Federal Reserve Bank screams: "Much has been written about the various headwinds restraining economic activity over the near term. However, our economy also has other headwinds to confront over the medium- to-longer-term. ... the finances of some state and local governments are also under stress and in need of serious adjustments." - Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Sandra Pianalto
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BLOG
Rahm Emanuel's Pension Gamble
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel attempts to reform pensions for public employee unions while financially supporting the recall elections against Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker for enacting similar reforms.
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BLOG: Unions
Judge strikes down two pieces of Wisconsin's public sector union reform law
Act 10, which was signed into law last year, included provisions that require annual recertification elections and eliminate the ability of unions to automatically withdraw dues from employee paychecks.
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OPINION: Pensions
Chump state workers just keep feeding the pension thieves
Why do state and municipal workers cling to those who betray them?
Here's an answer: The few getting rich off this scam use accounting tricks to lie about how deep the public pension crisis really is. -
BLOG: Unions
Effort to recall Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker begins
Just a week after Ohio voters overturned their state's collective bargaining law, things are heating up once again in Wisconsin over that state's similar reform bill.
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OPINION: Unions
Saving State Gov't
Will the public ever appreciate the connection between taking on the unions and saving state government services for future generations? The answer may determine whether other states will be able to use Wisconsin and Indiana as models.
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BLOG: Federal Government Impact, Budget Processes and Systems
Obama Takes Aim at the Midwest
Not only will agricultural subsidies legislation disproportionately affect the budgets of Heartland states, it also may play a more influential role in the upcoming Presidential election than a cursory count of electoral votes and voting trends indicate.
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BLOG
Do the Wisconsin Elections Mark the End of the Government Bubble? Far From It
We're in the midst of a "government bubble." The Wisconsin elections may-may-signal that we're coming to an end of that mania, and a realization that fundamental reform of government is not just a matter of ideology, but of math.
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OPINION: Unions
Victory in Wisconsin Recall Elections
Republicans won 4 of the 6 seats in the Wisconsin Senate recall elections yesterday in what was a great victory for Wisconsin taxpayers and the Tea Party movement and a big defeat for labor.
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BLOG: Unions
Update on union rallies
Unions from California to Pennsylvania organized events to protest state budget cuts and rally for jobs in what was a very busy week full of union activity around the country.
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BLOG: Unions
Victory for individual worker rights in Wisconsin
The Wisconsin Assembly passed collective bargaining reform and sent the bill to the Governor. This is a major victory both for individual government employees, who are no longer are forced to join a union in order to work for the state or local government, and also for taxpayers.
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BLOG: Pensions, Unions
Bargaining for a Solution
With pension liabilities and health care benefits out of control and unions asking for more, states are finally taking action. Here's a look at some of the effort-within and beyond Wisconsin-that are underway.
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BLOG: Unions
Why Governor Walker should not negotiate with the government unions
The reasons why Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker should refuse to negotiation with unions range from their attempts to push more generous contracts through a lame-duck legislature to teachers' demands for Viagra despite 480 of the colleagues being laid off.
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BLOG: Unions
Why private-sector unions are much different than government unions
The dispute in Wisconsin is not a traditional private sector dispute between labor and management. It is in reality a question of important public policy –can states afford past unsustainable agreements for government employees salaries and benefits.
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BLOG: Unions
Showdown in Wisconsin
By reforming collective bargaining, governors and legislators would have a stronger hand in contract negotiations to demand concessions to balance budgets and save taxpayers money. Some argue that reforming collective bargaining and labor laws could be a more realistic alternative to dealing with health care and pension costs than state bankruptcy. The stakes are high for both sides. Whatever happens in Wisconsin over the next several days will have ramifications for the rest of the nation.
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OPINION: Unions
Athens in Mad Town
Unions in Wisconsin are trying to trump the will of the voters as overwhelmingly rendered in November when they elected Mr. Walker and a new legislature. As with the strikes against pension or labor reforms that routinely shut down Paris or Athens, the goal is to create enough mayhem that Republicans and voters will give up.
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BLOG: Pensions, Unions
Sharing the Load
Now, when nearly every state is tottering on the edge of a fiscal cliff as they try to balance their budgets, public sector workers are being forced to shoulder a share of the financial burden.
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BLOG: Pensions, Unions
New Sherriff in Town
Someone should tell the unions (in Wisconsin, at least) that there is a new sheriff in town. And he's not afraid to call in the National Guard to quell unrest among state employees.


