Provides $1.2 million GPR in fiscal year 2022-23 to increase hourly night and weekend differential rates for employees of state agencies that qualify for such payments, beginning in January 2023.
Provides over $1.3 million in state funds over the biennium to extend the long-term service award program for protective positions within the Department of Corrections and Department of Health Services.
Provides $1.75 million in state funds over the biennium to support a $5 hourly wage add-on for correctional officers and sergeants working within an institution with greater than a 40 percent vacancy rate.
Provides $2.7 million over the biennium for pay progression for assistant district attorneys, deputy district attorneys and assistant state public defenders.
Provides $25 million over the biennium for the NG911 system implementation and Public Safety Answering Point grants.
Requires the Department of Military Affairs to oversee the development and operation of a statewide interoperable radio network to replace WISCOM.
Requires a study in fiscal year 2022-23 to determine the feasibility of constructing an electric microgrid system at Truax Field in Madison, to include the Joint Force Headquarters, the State Emergency Operations Center and the Joint Operations Center.
Provides $7 million in fiscal year 2021-22 in the Joint Committee on Finance supplemental appropriation for discretionary grants made to each of the state’s tribes, based on the number of employees working for each tribe.
Continues funding to support the creation of the tribal youth wellness center with $350,000 of one-time funding in each year.
Provides an additional $109,300 of one-time funding in each year to University of Wisconsin Green Bay to provide summer camp programs in cooperation with the Oneida Nation.
Increases funding for Veterans Service Office grants by $152,400 over the biennium.
Provides $100,000 annually to promote suicide prevention and awareness among veterans by providing outreach, mental health services, and support to individuals who are members of a traditionally underserved population.
Nevertheless, this budget leaves much unfinished business, and there is, as always, more work to do. I will continue working to reduce our state’s tax burden for family caregivers, first-time homebuyers, low-income families, and seniors, all areas where current leaders in the Legislature dropped the ball in this budget.
I was also disheartened to see the Legislature remove long overdue initiatives I had proposed to make meaningful progress on reforming our justice system while also promoting equity both within state government and across our entire state. The people of our state have loudly and consistently demand that we – as a state and as a country – deliver on the promise of justice, fairness, and opportunity. This work is far from over, and the Legislature must be held to account for their failure to take meaningful action.
It is also disappointing the Legislature did not provide state funding for investments in the Verso Paper Mill in Wisconsin Rapids and the Park Falls Pulp and Paper Mill in Park Falls. Our state and our economy – clearly – are well-positioned to make meaningful investments in support of our paper industry. I previously called a special session that would have invested $1 billion into economic development projects and initiatives across the state, the purchase of both of these paper mills among them. Republicans in the Legislature gaveled out of that special session without consideration or debate. I then worked with the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation, legislators, local elected officials, and workers to reach a bipartisan agreement amending Assembly Bill 367 to ensure we could reach a deal without potentially jeopardizing state support for the mills. Republicans in the Legislature rejected that agreement, too. To date, these investments have been met with political games and obstruction of the worst kind. We have state resources to make these investments and they are available for expeditious legislative action. Enough partisan posturing – just get this done.
Other items this Legislature failed to meaningfully address include protecting the rights of every eligible voter and ensuring we have fair maps in this state. Across this country, we are watching as Republican politicians – including right here in Wisconsin – abuse their power, work to overturn election results, and undermine the confidence and credibility of our elections. Not only has the Legislature failed to join me in this budget by protecting the right of every eligible Wisconsinite to vote, but they have also passed and could continue to pursue legislation that would make it harder for folks to cast their ballot. So, I want to say unequivocally again today as I have said many times before: I will veto any bill that arrives to my desk that would make it easier for politicians to cheat and I will continue to protect the right of every eligible voter in this state.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, this Legislature must end its continued obstruction of expanding BadgerCare and access to quality, affordable healthcare in this state. For more than a decade now, Republicans in both the legislative and executive branches have put politics before people and refused the opportunity to ensure tens of thousands of people across Wisconsin could have access to affordable healthcare. Instead, they have worked to support litigation to dismantle the Affordable Care Act and protections for Wisconsinites who have pre‑existing conditions. Over the last decade, the Legislature’s relentless opposition to fully expanding Medicaid in Wisconsin has left billions of federal dollars on the table. This has never been more foolish than it is now as the American Rescue Plan Act provides an additional, one-time incentive for states like Wisconsin to expand Medicaid – that is $1 billion our state could invest in our continued economic recovery and support folks across our state. I don’t care what your party affiliation is, folks – this is just common sense.
I proposed expanding BadgerCare in my first budget, I proposed it again in this budget as part of our Badger Bounceback Agenda, and I proposed it once again in a special session call of the Legislature so we could take that $1 billion and invest it in economic development projects and initiatives in every corner of our state. Republicans must end their continued obstruction. I will continue working with partners at the federal and state level to explore any opportunity to expand BadgerCare in this state, and, as always, my door remains open – as it has been for two years – for any Republican legislator who wants to lead on this issue.
Healthcare should not be a privilege afforded only to the healthy and wealthy. And as long as I am governor, I will never stop fighting to ensure the people of this state can access quality, affordable healthcare. Period.
Though there is undoubtedly much more to do to move our state forward, at the end of the day, I ran for governor to get things done for the people of Wisconsin, to “move the needle” in our priorities, and to find common ground with those who may not agree with me on every issue. While this bipartisan budget – the first bipartisan budget passed in years – in many ways falls short of the budget Wisconsinites expected the Legislature to deliver, it does invest in a number of our priorities that are necessary for our state’s continued economic recovery and making Wisconsin an even better place to live, work, play and raise a family.
In the coming weeks and months, I will continue working to engage the Legislature to use the state resources available to further invest in our kids and our schools, our caregivers, our farmers, our veterans, our seniors, our small business owners and many others. I hope the Legislature will join me in this important work so we can continue our state’s economic recovery and bounce back from this pandemic better and stronger than we were before.
Let’s get to work.
Respectfully submitted,
  TONY EVERS
  Governor
_____________
TABLE OF CONTENTS
A
A.
AGRICULTURE, ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE
_Hlk76030504
1.
Dairy Industry Promotion Appropriation
2
2.
Dairy Industry Promotion Grants and Loans
3
3.
Unencumbered Rural Development Loan Funds
4
4.
Wisconsin Initiative for Agricultural Exports
5
5.
Industrial Hemp Program Staffing
6
6.
Beaver Dam Lake Restoration
7
7.
Clam Falls Dam Repair
8
8.
Dead Pike Lake Restoration
9
9.
Southeastern Wisconsin Fox River Commission
10
10.
New Berlin Road Construction
11
11.
Waterfowl Hunting Stamp Reporting Requirement
12
12.
Fire Fighting Foam Appropriation Title
13
13.
Great Lakes Remediation Lapse
14
14.
State Parks Maintenance Lapse
15
15.
Building Acquisition and Maintenance Lapse
16
16.
Motorized Stewardship
B
B.
EDUCATION AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT
17
17.
Grants to Lakeland STAR Academy
18
18.
Benchmark Assessments
19
19.
High Cost Transportation Aid
20
20.
Youth Summer Jobs
21
21.
Occupational Drug Testing
22
22.
Clearing Account Deficit
23
23.
Unemployment Insurance Study
C
C.
GENERAL GOVERNMENT, CHILDREN AND FAMILIES
24
24.
Building Program – Local Grants
25
25.
Space Rental Account Transfer
26
26.
Requirement to Submit Compensation Plan for Supplemental Pay Plans for
  Correctional Officers and Correctional Sergeants
27
27.
Offender Reentry Demonstration Project
D
D.
HEALTH SERVICES AND INSURANCE
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28.
Grant for Psychiatric Beds
29
29.
Grants for Employer Blood Drives
30
30.
FoodShare Healthy Eating Incentive Pilot Program
31
31.
Behavioral Health Bed Tracker
32
32.
Statewide Public Safety Interoperable Communication System Request for
  Proposals
33
33.
Statewide Public Safety Interoperable Communication System Request to the
  Joint Committee on Finance
34
34.
Truax Field Electrical Micro Grid System
35
35.
Department of Military Affairs Lapses to the General Fund
E
E.
TAX, LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
36
36.
Withholding Table Update
37
37.
Transfer to the Budget Stabilization Fund
38
38.
Annual Transfer from the General Fund to the Transportation Fund
39
39.
Interchange with Local Highways on I-41 in Brown County
40
40.
Lieutenant Governor Security
41
41.
Office of Innovative Program Delivery and Director
42
42.
Office of Innovative Program Delivery Position Source
43
43.
Design-Build Project Contracts, Reporting, and Project Delivery
44
44.
Design-Build Technical Review Committee Experience Requirements
45
45.
Requirements of the Technical Review Committee in Review of Prior Awarded
  Project Design-Build Bidders
46
46.
Requirements of Project Delivery for Design-Builders
47
47.
Design-Build Noticing Requirement for Request for Qualifications
48
48.
Design-Build Technical Review Committee Process for Proposals
49
49.
Design-Build Procurement Manual Committee and Reports
50
50.
Report on Unallocated Business Development Tax Credit Authority
A
A.
AGRICULTURE, ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE
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