Briefs

When it comes to Evers allocating federal dollars, GOP leaders call for transparency

By: - March 5, 2021 5:16 pm

Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos join other GOP leaders in giving a budget response. WisEye 2/16/21

Days after announcing they would throw out Gov. Tony Evers’ budget and start over from scratch, Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu and Assembly Speaker Robin Vos put out a bill aimed at taking away some of the control from the Evers administration over $5.5 billion Wisconsin is slated to receive from the federal COVID relief bill being debated in Congress. 

This follows other attempts by Republicans — such as measures included in past COVID-response bills that did not pass and lame duck bills — to insert the Joint Finance Committee into executive branch decision making.

“Billions of taxpayer dollars should not be in the hands of a single person,” said Vos in a statement Friday afternoon. “We’re simply asking that the governor include others in the decision-making process.”

The GOP leaders say that many other states have models that include the legislative branch in the decision making over how federal funds are spent. And JFC had a say in 2009, they mention, when recession recovery dollars were allocated and spent by states.

“Oversight of tax dollars is an essential function of the Legislative Branch,” said LeMahieu. “Without it, we risk losing important considerations that come from elected representatives and residents from around the state.”

Devin LeMahieu, Tony Evers, Robin Vos
Devin LeMahieu, Tony Evers, Robin Vos

Wisconsin’s allotment from the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan of 2021 would be almost double the $2.9 billion the state received under 2020’s Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act. The Evers administration had sole discretion on how it distributed those CARES Act funds over the course of last year.

Calling the Republicans’ draft bill the ‘Truth in Spending Act,’ Vos says letting legislators have a say would give the public a say and put spending decisions closer to the people. However, Wisconsin’s legislative districts are among the most gerrymandered in the country by Republicans who have the majority of the seats in the Legislature despite not receiving the majority of the votes cast statewide for either the Assembly or the Senate, most recently in 2020.

“This bill is not usual or unprecedented; it’s common sense legislation,” LeMahieu and Vos stated in their release. “We look forward to having a transparent approach to the pandemic recovery in Wisconsin.”

Meanwhile, the Republican leaders have not publicly responded to a letter from 105 organizations asking, in the name of transparency and public participation, that their representatives be permitted to testify virtually on the state budget, and they have not indicated whether they will require masks at budget hearings. The requests for virtual testimony and a mask requirement were made to enable input from groups and individuals who are concerned about the spread of COVID. 

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Melanie Conklin
Melanie Conklin

Melanie Conklin was the Wisconsin Examiner's founding Deputy Editor, serving from its launch July 1, 2019, until Feb. 1, 2022. She is proud to be a native of the state of Wisconsin, which gave humankind the typewriter, progressivism and deep-fried cheese curds. Her several decades in journalism include political beats and columns at Isthmus newspaper, the Wisconsin State Journal and other publications. When not an ink-stained wretch, she served time inside state, local and federal government in communications before returning to journalism at the Examiner. It’s what she’s loved ever since getting her master’s degree in journalism from the UW-Madison. Her family includes one husband, two kids, four dogs and five (or more) chinchillas.

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