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Monday, December 23, 2024

Wisconsin's Evers on education funding: 'Budget will invest in getting our kids, educators, and schools the support and resources they need to succeed'

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Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers | Tony Evers/Facebook

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers | Tony Evers/Facebook

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers is wasting little time in reestablishing his position regarding the new state budget.

“Budgets are about priorities, and that's why building our next biennial budget begins—as it always does for me—with doing what’s best for our kids,” Evers recently posted on Twitter. “Our next budget will invest in getting our kids, educators, and schools the support and resources they need to succeed.”

The governor recently gathered with approximately 150 people at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay's STEM Innovation Center as part of his “Doing the Right Thing” listening tour. Many in attendance pushed for greater investment from the State in the area of education.

With the outing representing the tour’s third overall session, the issue of how the funds included in the new two-year budget should best be spent was at the top of the agenda.

Evers also spent considerable time addressing issues that ranged from health care to the economy and environment, a recent report from the Green Bay Press Gazette said.

Those who wanted greater investment from the State in the areas of early education, K-12 and college held firm in pushing their agenda, the report said. Budget suggestions intended to smooth the path for the funding ranged from tax revenue limits for public schools to funding early child care and more funding for special needs programs, including special education reimbursements.

Attendees pushing for change also made it clear they want the free statewide school meals that were introduced during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic to become a permanent staple after the program expired earlier this year.

As the session progressed, Evers made it known that he was open to much of what was laid out on the education front.

“We don't expect our school districts to have to go to referendum every two years and roll the dice as to whether they have enough money,” he said during the listening session, quoted by the Gazette.

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