o UW will expand the medical school's Wisconsin Academy for Rural Medicine (WARM) and Training in Urban Medicine and Public Health (TRIUMPH) programs using $1.5 million of program revenue.
Funds additional students at the Marquette Dental School to provide more dental care in Wisconsin.
Provides $3.75 million to fund increased access to the UW Carbone Cancer Center's cutting-edge molecular imaging.
In addition, provides grants to rural hospitals to create residency slots and help fund the continuation of those residency positions in high-need medical specialties.
Transforming Education
Provides $380 million in new state funds for public education and quality educational opportunities for students, including nearly $300 million for K-12 public schools.
Provides an additional $250,000 over the biennium for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) grants.
Provides $2.8 million over the biennium to continue and expand the PALS reading screener to ensure teachers can measure basic reading skills for all students from four-year-old kindergarten through 2nd grade.
Provides $13.6 million for a new Educator Effectiveness system for evaluating teachers.
Provides $1 million to expand Teach for America's presence in Milwaukee.
Implements a cap on tuition at the UW System, the first two-year tuition freeze in the history of the UW system.
The University of Wisconsin will fund $2 million to support the start-up of a UW Flexible Option – an on-line learning and degree option that will transform higher education.
Transforming Education through School Choice
Expands school choice options statewide to allow low-income families to choose the appropriate educational environment for their children: 500 students in the first year and 1,000 students in the second year for families below 185 percent of the federal poverty level will be allowed to participate.
Creates a new tuition tax deduction of up to $4,000 a year for K-8 students and $10,000 a year for parents with high school students. This will cost $30 million a year.
Reforming Government
Keeps property tax increases under control. The median value home is expected to have an increase of just less than 1 percent on both the December 2013 and December 2014 tax bills.
Continues to protect property taxpayers by maintaining levy limits on counties, municipalities and technical college districts, limiting levy increases to the rate of growth due to new construction.
Provides $29.7 million over the biennium in added funding for property tax credits.
Encourages local government cooperation by removing a disincentive for contracted services between municipalities under the expenditure restraint program.
Maintains the state's commitment to counties and municipalities by funding shared revenue at current law levels.
Creates an electronic benefit card, which will initially be used for Wisconsin Works benefits, and then to support the child care parent pay initiative.
Creates a program, funded at $200,000 GPR annually, to reimburse local governments for consulting services provided by private businesses to establish efficiency initiatives, or "lean programs."
Provides additional flexibility and staffing for the state building program at the Department of Administration to improve oversight of the building program.
Designates single prime contracting, which streamlines relationships between the state, general contractors, and mechanical, electrical, plumbing and fire protection contractors, as the default project delivery method for large state building projects.
Allows the Department of Administration and Building Commission to sell state-owned real property, with legislative approval, in situations where it makes sense to do so for taxpayers, as well as the State.
Reduces executive branch agency positions by 450 FTE positions during the 2013-15 biennium, in an effort to further streamline state government.
Increases expenditure authority at the Department of Employee Trust Funds to fund the modernization and technology integration project, which will streamline and provide additional services to participants in the Wisconsin Retirement System.
Increases the required break in service after retirement from 30 to 75 days for new rehires. Requires new rehires, who are working more than two-thirds of full time, to stop annuity payments, rejoin the Wisconsin Retirement System and earn additional years of service.
Promotes a wellness program to improve the health of state employees.
Requires that the Group Insurance Board offer a health care coverage option that consists of a high-deductible health plan coupled with a health savings account to help employees become cost-conscious consumers of their own health care.
Creates an Office of the Inspector General in the Department of Children and Families to conduct fraud prevention, program integrity and audit activities for all department-administered programs, including the Bureau of Milwaukee Child Welfare.
Investing in Infrastructure
Invests a total of $6.4 billion in Wisconsin's transportation infrastructure.
Provides a total of $517 million for continued construction of the Zoo Interchange and I-94 North-South Corridor. Of this amount, $486 million will go to keep the Zoo Interchange reconstruction project on time.
Invests $226 million in the Hoan Bridge and $15.9 million in the state's harbor system.
Provides $67 million above base amounts for state highway rehabilitation.
Provides an increase of $52 million for routine maintenance agreements with counties.
Provides $52 million for Freight Rail Preservation over the biennium.
Uses a one-time transfer of $4.3 million of program revenue for a broadband grant program, administered by the Public Service Commission, to increase broadband access and capacity and expand high-speed Internet service access.
Medicaid Entitlement Reform
Protects the state's most vulnerable citizens by investing $751 million of new GPR to preserve the health care safety net provided by Medicaid, BadgerCare Plus and SeniorCare while implementing additional program reforms to ensure these programs remain sustainable and strong into the future.
Reduces the number of uninsured individuals by over 224,000 or nearly 50 percent by providing Medicaid coverage to children and adults living in poverty, while protecting taxpayers by rejecting the unsustainable federal expansion mandated by the Affordable Care Act. The budget provides $54 million all-funds to county income maintenance consortia to assist residents in obtaining health care coverage.
Strengthens the Office of the Inspector General in the Department of Health Services by establishing a permanent administrative structure. To date, the work of the office saves taxpayers $23 on average for every dollar of administrative cost.
Investing in Wisconsin's Veterans
Extends the Veterans and Surviving Spouse Property Tax Credit to un-remarried surviving spouses, whose spouse died of a service-connected disability.
Adds more than 100 new full-time direct-care staff at veterans' facilities.
Increases funding to veterans organizations providing assistance to veterans and their families.
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