Tuesday, March 01, 2011

Proposed Budget Cuts Shared Revenue, School Aids, UW System, Maintenance of Effort for Public Libraries

Governor Walker introduced the 2011-13 Executive State Budget (AB 40) in an address to a joint legislative session Tuesday at 4 p.m. He outlined cuts to shared revenue totaling $96 million in fiscal year 2012, and capped local levy increases at the greater of 0 percent or the gain in value due to net new construction, while also extending levy limits for two years.

K-12 school aids will be cut $749.4 million over the biennium. Revenue caps will be reduced 5.5 percent below those in place during fiscal year 2010-11.

In addition, the UW-Madison and the UW System will share cuts totaling $250 million. The budget also calls for UW-Madison to become an "independent public authority with greater flexibility to manage compensation, human resources, tuition and capital projects." The UW System would also be required to expend $250,000 to develop a plan to convert UW-Milwaukee to a public authority.

Budget documents also reveal elimination of maintenance of effort (MOE) funding for public libraries.  The budget document reads, "The Governor recommends eliminating the requirement that municipalities and counties maintain annual local expenditures for public libraries at the average of the prior three years as a condition for being a member of a public library system."

The move to eliminate MOE was expected as Walker had promised to provide local governments with "tools" and "flexibility" to help balance their budgets. In addition, the League of Wisconsin Municipalities had listed repeal of library MOE funding as a priority on their legislative agenda, and maintenance of effort had been targeted for elimination by Republican lawmakers in previous legislative sessions. The City of Milwaukee had also recently sought relief from MOE requirements.

The proposed budget appears to decrease by 10 percent funding for public library systems, BadgerLink and statewide contracts in the first year of the biennium, with flat funding in the second. DPI is continuing to analyze the budget to determine the detailed ramifications of the budget bill.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Can someone explain page 426 of the DPI budget, "ITEMS NOT APPROVED"??

DPI Budget

Unknown said...

Yes, those amounts represent the additional funding over base from the prior fiscal year that DPI had requested. The governor is choosing not to include those additional amounts in his budget bill, but base funding, less a cut of 10 percent in the first year of the new biennium, appears to be included. He proposes flat funding in the second year of the biennium. DPI is still analyzing the budget, and these are preliminary figures.

Colfax Readers said...

Thanks for posting Lisa, it's all gloom and doom in my eyes! All eyes are on Madison waiting for the next move to happen.

Lisa Ludwig

Anonymous said...

System funding cut 10% and flexibility in funding levels for local public libraries - this hardly seems like doom and gloom. I work PT in Illinois their system funding was slashed by 60%.