referrals and receipt of committee reports concerning proposed administrative rules
Relating to nutrient management on farms and affecting small businesses.
Submitted by Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection.
Report received from Agency, January 29, 2007.
Referred to committee on Agriculture and Higher Education, January 30, 2007.
Relating to implementing a woman-owned business certification program, and affecting small business.
Submitted by Department of Commerce.
Report received from Agency, January 26, 2007.
Referred to committee on Commerce, Utilities and Rail, January 30, 2007.
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Consideration of motions, resolutions, and joint resolutions not requiring
a third reading
Senate Joint Resolution 6
Relating to: the Professional Ambulance Association of Wisconsin.
Read.
Adopted.
Senator Robson, with unanimous consent, asked that all action be immediately messaged to the Assembly.
Messaged.
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President Risser appointed Senators Lasee and Lehman to escort his excellency, the Governor, to the Joint Convention.
Senator Robson, with unanimous consent, asked that the Senate adjourn until Thursday, February 1, upon the rising of the Joint Convention.
Senator Robson, with unanimous consent, asked that the Senate recess until 6:30 P.M.
1:14 P.M.
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RECESS
6:30 P.M.
The Senate reconvened.
The Chair, with unanimous consent, asked that the Senate recess for the purpose of awaiting the Governor's State of the State Address in Joint Convention in the Assembly Chambers at 7:00 P.M.
The Senate stood recessed.
6:35 P.M.
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RECESS
The Senate proceeded in a body to the Assembly Chamber to meet in Joint Convention to receive the State of the State Message.
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In Assembly Chamber in
Joint Convention
Senate President Risser in the Chair.
The Committee to wait upon the Governor appeared with his excellency the Governor, who delivered his message as follows:
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State of the State Address
“Speaker Huebsch, Speaker Pro Tem Gottlieb, President Risser, Majority Leader Robson, Lieutenant Governor Lawton, Constitutional Officers, Supreme Court Justices, members of the Legislature, tribal leaders, members of the Cabinet, distinguished guests, and fellow citizens of Wisconsin.
Let me begin by congratulating the new leadership in the Assembly and Senate. It's a new day in our state...and I believe we do can great things for Wisconsin.
Three months ago, we were entrusted with a sacred responsibility by the people of Wisconsin. On November 7th, they issued a mandate not for any party, but a mandate for action. They want us to end the divisiveness and partisan fighting, and focus instead on making progress for middle class families. Democrats, Republicans...let us pledge tonight: we will come together...to get things done.
In the past year, we've added tens of thousands of new jobs, made new breakthroughs in medical research, and expanded our manufacturing base while other states faced a decline. We changed the minimum wage to give working families a raise, we changed laws to keep sex predators away from our kids, and we changed lives by protecting and investing in our schools.
Today, we're safer, stronger, and ready to seize the opportunities of our time...
The opportunity to lead the nation in renewable energy - using our resources - smartly - to power our cities and power new jobs...
The opportunity to revolutionize medical science with stem cell research, pioneered right here in Wisconsin.
The opportunity to make health care affordable for every Wisconsin family...
The opportunity to fulfill a promise to the next generation - to make college affordable and available to every kid willing to do the work and make the grade.
Yes, in 2007 Wisconsin is a place where anything is possible. And over the next four years, let's make it our number one priority to expand the opportunities available to every citizen of Wisconsin.
There's one challenge we have to address head-on: the middle class squeeze. From filling up the tank to paying the health care premium, it's still too hard for many families to make ends meet.
Wisconsin must remain the state of opportunity for all. We must fight to ensure that middle class families thrive.
Two weeks from tonight, I'll present a budget designed to do just that, while putting our fiscal house in order. It will cut waste and yes, cut taxes for hardworking Wisconsin families.
Fiscal Responsibility
We must always stay true to a basic Wisconsin value: living within our means. In the 1990's, state government created a huge financial mess for us. It was a ticking time bomb of runaway commitments and excessive spending that exploded four years ago, and we are still cleaning up the wreckage.
We've cut the size and cost of government, eliminated overhead, balanced two straight budgets, and cut the so-called structural deficit in half. Yet we still have more work to do, or we'll face a growing imbalance between what we spend and what we take in. In my budget, we'll make some tough choices, and take the next steps to put our state on a permanent path of fiscal responsibility.
We'll work on behalf of middle-class families on many fronts, from producing clean and affordable energy to creating new, high paying jobs. But two priorities stand out above the rest: first, making quality health care affordable to all, and second, preparing our kids for the jobs of tomorrow.
Health Care
The simple truth is, the time has come for the wealthiest nation in the world to provide access to affordable, comprehensive health insurance for its citizens - and Wisconsin can lead the way.
The steady march of medical science has extended and improved the quality of our lives, but it has also driven up the cost so that fewer and fewer families can now afford it. Health care spending has gone up dramatically in recent years, but incomes haven't kept up. More people go without insurance, more employers can't afford to provide it, and worst of all, a growing number of our kids go without the care they need.
It is a national problem, and it is costing our nation dearly.
Families who can't afford insurance end up in emergency rooms; minor ailments that could have been treated or prevented end up as major illnesses. The cost is passed along to everyone else who has insurance.
Here in Wisconsin, the number of people with health coverage from their employer fell by 10 percent from 2001 to 2004. And unless we take action now, the situation will only get worse.
Tonight, I propose a bold effort to make Wisconsin America's health care leader. It represents a comprehensive strategy to reduce cost, improve quality and expand access to affordable health care coverage.
At the heart of this effort is BadgerCare Plus, which begins with a simple premise: in Wisconsin, no child should go without health care.
First, through BadgerCare Plus, starting next January, we'll offer every Wisconsin family - regardless of their income -- the chance to buy coverage for their kids, starting at about $10 a month. No family will be denied coverage for their child just because their income goes up.
Second, I meet working people all over this state who fit the income requirements for BadgerCare, but are denied access because they don't have children. So tonight, I am proposing a major expansion to cover these people as well ... helping more than 71,000 hardworking men and women get the health care they need.
Many of them are working two and three jobs to get by...and they deserve affordable health care.
S60 Under my plan, an individual making about $20,000 a year will have access to coverage whether or not they have a child...and pregnant mothers making up to $30,000 will be covered as well.
Third, we'll simplify and streamline the eligibility process for BadgerCare and Medical Assistance. And we'll partner with private organizations to identify eligible kids and sign them up for insurance.
Fourth, following the recommendations of my Healthy Wisconsin council, we'll create a purchasing pool to help businesses - particularly small businesses - afford catastrophic health coverage for employees. And we will provide resources to help doctors and hospitals use computer technology to greatly reduce medical errors that cost thousands of lives and billions of dollars every year.
Finally, I believe health care reform doesn't have to be complicated and bureaucratic. My plan is straightforward, and easy to navigate.
One application form. One piece of paper. No cumbersome bureaucracy.
Because of the way we are structuring the program, the federal government will pay most of the cost - bringing us an additional $60 million from Washington. The state's share will be paid for in my budget...including money we'll save by streamlining the program and taking greater advantage of managed care.
More importantly, as more of our fellow citizens have access to insurance, they'll spend more time with their family doctor and less time in the emergency room. When someone has a major illness, it will be paid for by their insurance...not yours and mine. That will reduce the cost of insurance for everyone, saving an average Wisconsin family up to $500 a year.
If - in your heart - you believe no child, no worker, no family should go without health coverage...if you believe the cost of inaction - in lives and dollars - is both immoral and unacceptable...
If - as Democrats, Republicans, Wisconsinites - you take this bold step forward...here is what you will achieve:
At least 98 percent of our people will have access to health care coverage...more than any other state in the nation. More than any other state in the nation.
We can make it happen.
Tobacco
When we're talking about health, there's one more thing we need to confront: tobacco.
I've devoted much of my public career to this fight. As Attorney General, I helped lead the national effort to take on Big Tobacco and beat them in court for the first time in forty years. We made them take down the billboards, get rid of the vending machines, and send Joe Camel into retirement.
As a result, teen smoking is down 40 percent since 2000 and sales to minors are now at their lowest level in Wisconsin history.
Despite this progress, too many of our kids are still lighting up. Too many lives are being cut short, and the cost has swelled into the billions.
In fact, Wisconsin taxpayers are forced to pay $500 million every year in Medicaid costs directly related to smoking.
And so, after consulting with public health leaders from around the state, I am proposing to raise Wisconsin's tobacco tax by $1.25 a pack...and set the money aside to pay the cost of tobacco-related illnesses.
Not only will it help fund our health care needs, it will save lives. Health groups like the American Cancer Society say that every day, 5,000 kids try their first cigarette and another 2,000 kids become regular smokers. One third of these kids will eventually die from their addiction. These health groups say that in every state where the tobacco tax has been increased, kids end up smoking less.
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