Last year, I began to detail my Healthy Kids initiatives - encouraging a focus on fitness in our schools, launching a multimillion dollar anti-tobacco campaign, and making school breakfast available to more of our students.
Tonight, I am announcing a $10 million public-private partnership to improve fitness equipment and physical education curriculum in schools across the state. Working with the National School Fitness Foundation, we will put nearly 100 state-of-the-art fitness programs into schools that need the help the most over the next three years.
There's another issue that affects the health of our kids and their ability to learn. And that's school breakfast.
I see this in pretty basic terms. We're last in the country. We have 150,000 kids who are eligible for free and reduced breakfast, but they're not getting it. We have schools turning down millions in federal money.
And so I ask you to join me to make sure that more kids get a healthy breakfast. Because if West Virginia can do this, and Mississippi can do this, so can Wisconsin.
There is a lot that our government can and must do. But one thing it can't do is raise our kids. Only families can do that.
At the same time, government should make a parent's job easier, not harder.
We need to have quality child care, access to home visits, nutrition programs, and other support for families.
Most of all, we need a strong economy so parents can provide for their children and give them all the opportunities life has to offer.
Because when it comes right down to it, there's no better social program than a good paying job.
From balancing the budget without raising taxes to passing the single factor tax reform to streamlining regulations, we are positioning our state to start creating jobs again.
Wisconsin is a national leader in developing innovative new ideas and business models, but at the height of the economic boom, Minnesota got six times as much venture capital as we did.
The Senate has passed legislation to address this shortage, thanks to the leadership of Senators Ted Kanavas and Gwen Moore.
Tonight, I'm calling on the full Legislature to pass venture capital legislation, so we can start turning highly promising ideas into high paying jobs.
Let me give you an example.
A few years ago, UW Professor Lynn Allen-Hoffman made a remarkable discovery in her lab. She developed a skin-grafting technology that holds the potential to grow new skin cells for burn victims - relieving their intense pain and dramatically improving their chances of survival.
She has founded a small company - Statratech - in the University Research Park. What she needs now is the venture capital that will turn her discovery into high-wage jobs, and unlock its great potential for the human race.
Professor Lynn Allen Hoffman is here tonight. Let's pass this legislation and help people like her make miracles happen in Wisconsin.
One area we have to get back on track is our manufacturing industry.
We should pass the Manufacturing Competitiveness Program, introduced by Representatives Lena Taylor, Jennifer Schilling and Senator Dave Hansen. This proposal takes advantage of the great expertise we have at our universities, technical colleges and manufacturing extension partnerships to help manufacturers become more competitive.
The bill is affordable, it's a job creator, and it's time to get it done.
The main thing Wisconsin has to sell is the dedicated, well-educated and highly skilled men and women who make the products and deliver the services that fuel our economy.
Let's pass my worker training initiatives - from providing training to help workers and businesses become more competitive, to expanding the youth apprenticeship program under legislation sponsored by Representative Terry Van Akkeren.
S562 And let's not forget about those who so often work the most and earn the least. Working full time at the minimum wage of $5.15 an hour, they are paid less than $11,000 a year - not enough to live on, much less raise a family.
There's something we can do today that would help more than 130,000 Wisconsin citizens - most of them adults, most of them women, and many of them with children.
Fellow citizens, these workers haven't had a raise in seven years. It is time to increase the minimum wage.
There's another group of hardworking people in our state who are struggling - family farmers.
From encouraging the sale and production of ethanol, to promoting Wisconsin's leadership in organic foods, to launching a new online farmers market, to preserving the farmland preservation tax credit, we are helping farmers add value to their products and profits to their bottom line.
We're developing balanced, sensible livestock siting legislation, and we're leading the way in protecting consumers and producers in the event of a Mad Cow outbreak. Now, you can strengthen our efforts by passing the Premise Identification bill.
Last year you passed tax incentives for manufacturers. Now join with me and Representatives Al Ott and Bobbie Gronemus to help small and medium-sized dairy farmers afford the investments to make their farms more competitive.
Over the past two weeks, I've held town halls on the State of our State - and from Monona to Milwaukee, from Stevens Point to Superior, one of the top issues on people's minds is the rising cost of health care.
Last year, Wisconsin took a number of innovative steps to rein in health care costs for our government. For the first time, we negotiated contracts that require state employees to pay a portion of their health premiums, like workers in the private sector.
Working with a new Wisconsin company, we formed a prescription drug buying pool - BadgerRx - to bargain for lower prices for the state.
Starting in July, BadgerRx will be available to businesses, from the largest to the smallest. A small business in Oshkosh that pays to insure its 25 employees and their families will now have the market power of 600,000 people in buying prescriptions.
By joining with us, most employers could save up to 10 percent on prescription drug costs. This is a great example of government doing something that doesn't cost much, but helps lower people's health care costs.
We've also passed legislation to empower farm families to join health care co-ops that will reduce premiums, improve coverage, and expand insurance to those who can't afford it now.
Not long ago, I got a letter from a social worker in Osseo who works with a woman who can afford to buy only one roast a month because her prescription drugs cost so much. She divides into small pieces, so she can have a little meat every few days.
Our seniors should not have to choose between food and medicine.
There is one thing the federal government could do tomorrow to bring down the health care costs of every American who is taking prescription drugs - allow individuals and states to buy safe prescription drugs from Canada.
Tonight, I am announcing that we have launched a new website -- DrugSavings.wi.gov - that will give our citizens information on how to find lower price prescriptions, what the new Medicare bill means for them, and how to take advantage of SeniorCare.
I am asking the Food and Drug Administration for their approval to expand this website, giving our citizens the power to buy prescription drugs directly from Canada - from pharmacies our state verifies are reputable, reliable, and safe.
Tonight, I ask for support from the people of Wisconsin. Log onto DrugSavings.wi.gov. Register your support on our petition to the FDA.
I also seek support from the Legislature. Pass a joint resolution urging the federal government to use their existing authority to allow the reimportation of safe, U.S.-made and approved prescription drugs from Canada. Let's send a united message to the federal government as well as to the drug companies - this is an issue that won't go away, and Wisconsin's citizens need action.
I also ask for your help in another fight. The new Medicare law leaves the future of SeniorCare uncertain, and more than 90,000 Wisconsin seniors in limbo. Let's work together to save SeniorCare.
From the businesses and providers who are working together through a new effort called the Collaborative to the disease management initiatives underway at the Marshfield Clinic to the great work of Epic Systems and GE Medical, Wisconsin is a pioneer in health care quality.
But we can do even more.
Most hospitals still write out prescriptions and medical records by hand. Too frequently, poor penmanship leads to poor medicine, bad record keeping leads to bad drug interactions, and in some cases, disastrous effects on the patient's health. Every year, 98,000 people die in hospitals nationwide as a result of medical errors - more than from AIDS, car accidents, or breast cancer.
A solution can be found in technology that is being advanced right here in Wisconsin, called computerized physician order entry. It catches errors when they most commonly occur - when prescriptions are ordered -- reducing medical mistakes by up to 70 percent.
We should provide hospitals with extra Medicaid funding if they move to this system. The cost to the state is just $2 million, backed up by additional federal revenue. But the benefits will be measured in the care that is improved and the lives that are saved.
The bill is authored by Representative Sheldon Wasserman, who is also a doctor. Dr. Wasserman, thank you for your leadership, and let's get this bill passed together.
We all agree property taxes are too high. But let's be honest. Bumper sticker solutions and quick fixes won't work. They will devastate our schools, bring economic development projects all over the state to a halt, and destroy Wisconsin's tradition of local control.
Finger pointing and press releases won't lower property taxes; the only answer is to roll up our sleeves, and work together to reduce the costs of local government.
Let me give you an example of what works.
We're joined tonight by Mayor Joe Laux of Menasha who worked together with his colleague, Mayor George Scherck of Neenah, to hold down property taxes. Now, I understand that Neenah and Menasha would probably never agree to consolidate their high school football teams, but when faced with difficult economic times, they consolidated their two fire departments.
130 years ago, the two cities tried to consolidate - and it ended in a fistfight. This time, it ended up saving taxpayers $2 million.
Like most communities around the state, Neenah and Menasha held the line on property taxes. In fact -- contrary to all the dire predictions we heard - Wisconsin had the lowest increase in local property taxes in four years.
But there is more we can do.
First, we will continue to support shared revenue, keeping our commitment to local communities.
S563 Second, we will find workable financial incentives in the shared revenue formula to reward fiscal responsibility and consolidation at the local level.
Third, from health care and prescription drugs to police vehicles and information technology, we are using the resources and buying power of the state to help local governments reduce their costs.
And fifth, reforming the school finance system is the single most important thing we can do to hold down property taxes, and I hope we'll all work together to get it done.
In Wisconsin, we recognize that clean air and water are the cornerstones of a strong economy.
Tonight, I'm calling on Democrats and Republicans to pass legislation to protect our groundwater against withdrawals that significantly damage our rivers, lakes, wetlands, and springs. I applaud Representatives DuWayne Johnsrud and Louis Molepske as well as Senator Neal Kedzie for their efforts to find a bipartisan solution.
This year will mark a milestone in the long effort to clean up the Fox River, as the first PCBs are finally removed from the Fox River. It is a downpayment on what will be the largest river cleanup effort in the nation.
We also must preserve and protect the Great Lakes - the largest body of fresh water in the world. Let's fight to keep the beaches open, go after invasive species, and most of all, preserve these waters for Wisconsin citizens, instead of diverting them to Phoenix or Las Vegas.
We have in our state a great national treasure - but it is at risk. Our Ice Age Trail follows the path of the last glacier that cut its way through Wisconsin thousands of years ago. When completed, it will be Wisconsin's version of the Appalachian Trail.
Over the past 45 years, 400 miles of the trail have been protected for future generations, thanks in no small part to the Stewardship program. But unless we take aggressive action now, we will lose forever our chance to complete the trail.
And so tonight, I am setting the goal to permanently protect the next 400 miles of the Ice Age Trail within the next decade.
As a first step, I'm announcing that the Stewardship Program, with the help of the federal government and the leadership of Congressman Dave Obey, has purchased 207 acres in Chippewa County to help expand the Ice Age Trail.
There are other challenges as well.
We need to toughen our laws against sex predators.
We need to get the big money out of politics, and pass campaign finance reform. I am working with Senators Jon Erpenbach and Mike Ellis to do just that. There's one thing we all should agree on. Groups that run phony issue ads should have the same reporting and contribution requirements as everyone else.
Our state employees make outstanding contributions to our state in so many ways. One of those employees, Jim Larson, joins us tonight with his family.
Jim serves our state as a member of the State Patrol, and as a member of the Wisconsin Air National Guard. While on active duty last year in Kuwait, he suffered a financial penalty, because like many employees, his military salary is less than his civilian one.
A bipartisan bill - authored by Representative Terry Musser - would eliminate this penalty, but the bill has been stalled since September. It's time for the State of Wisconsin, as an employer, to join with companies like American Family, Miller Brewing, Schneider International, Rockwell Automation and many others, and provide a differential pay benefit to all state employees who serve our country.
I've recognized a number of outstanding individuals here tonight.
But I'd also like to honor those who couldn't be here.
Early last year, Wisconsin lost one of our own, Dr. Laurel Clark, who perished with her fellow explorers aboard the Shuttle Columbia.
Throughout the year, thousands of Wisconsin's young men and women left home to do their duty in Iraq when their country called. Nine of them never returned.
Sergeant Kirk Straseskie.
Major Mathew Schram.
Sergeant Daniel Gabrielson.
Specialist Paul Sturino.
Private Rachel Bosveld.
Sergeant Warren Hansen.
Specialist Eugene Uhl.
Lieutenant Jeremy Wolfe.
And Major Christopher Splinter.
They are a roster of heroes. They make Wisconsin proud. And we will never forget them.
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