By Adam Korbitz, Government Relations Coordinator, State Bar of Wisconsin
June 24, 2009 – With a June 30 budget deadline looming along with the potential loss of millions in federal funding, Governor James Doyle called the Legislature into special session this week to consider legislation intended to capture additional federal Medicaid dollars. The bill or similar legislation must be signed into law by June 29 to avoid the loss of federal funds.
Doyle’s action comes as pressure builds on Senate and Assembly leaders to negotiate and pass a state budget compromise by the end of this week. To date, both houses have passed separate versions of the proposed state budget. Legislative leaders are expected to establish a conference committee in the near future to negotiate a compromise budget. Because last week’s Senate budget differs significantly from the Assembly budget passed on June 13, a conference committee must reconcile the differing versions of the budget prior to final legislative approval and review by the governor.
Legislative leaders and the governor have said repeatedly they want to complete action on the budget by June 30, although work on past budgets has often extended beyond that date.
On Wednesday, June 17, the Senate passed its version of the biennial state budget by a 17-16 vote largely along party lines. Seventeen Democrats voted for the bill and all 15 Republicans voted against it, joined by one Democrat.
Fortunately, like the Assembly version of the budget, the Senate version also contains a number of initiatives supported by the State Bar of Wisconsin, including expanded financial eligibility for State Public Defender representation and a significant boost in state funding for indigent civil legal services. These initiatives were first added to the budget by the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee, which completed action on the proposed state budget, Assembly Bill 75, on May 29, and now have not been modified by either house.
As with the Assembly, among the budget changes adopted by the Senate were amendments completely removing provisions that would have modified rules governing contributory negligence and joint and several liability, thereby retaining current law. However, the Senate – like the Assembly – kept budget provisions allowing the stacking of auto insurance policies and requiring increased coverage minimums. In addition, the Senate added a controversial provision requiring drivers in Wisconsin to purchase auto liability insurance.
Unfortunately, unlike the Assembly, the Senate did not restore $5.4 million in cuts that Joint Finance had made to the Department of Justice budget. However, in failing to restore the cuts, the Senate left intact a provision Joint Finance had added to create a $1 million annual appropriation in the Department of Justice to provide $1,700 raises each year to approximately 600 assistant district attorneys and assistant state public defenders. The Assembly had made the creation of that appropriation discretionary, not mandatory, but the Senate budget retains the appropriation’s mandatory nature.
Because Senate leadership chose to work from the Joint Finance version of the budget rather than last week’s Assembly version, changes made by the Assembly are not included in the Senate budget unless the Senate affirmatively included them.
The Legislative Fiscal Bureau’s comparison of the changes made by each house can be found online, and a summary of the changes by the Joint Finance Committee can be found here. A complete history of the legislation can be found on the Wisconsin Legislature’s Web site.
Continue to monitor WisBar.org and visit the State Bar’s Government Relations page for updated budget information.
Related articles:
Senate
passes state budget; conference committee expected to resolve
differences – June 18, 2009
Assembly
passes state budget; Senate action expected this week –
June 15, 2009
Assembly
plans to take up state budget Thursday – June 10, 2009
Joint
Finance completes budget: the good, the bad and the ugly –
June 1, 2009
Joint
Finance expands SPD eligibility, boosts indigent civil legal
services – May 27, 2009
Governor
and legislative leaders outline new deficit reduction
plan – May 22, 2009
State
budget crisis deepens – May 13, 2009
Joint
Finance Committee Approves Budget for Courts, Related
Agencies – April 22, 2009
State
Bar update on 2009-11 state budget – April 8, 2009
State
agency briefings address Governor’s budget
proposal – March 25, 2009
Joint
Finance Co-Chairs announce public hearing schedule for budget
bill – March 10, 2009
State
Bar of Wisconsin responds to Governor Doyle’s
budget – February 25, 2009
State
Bar President praises initiatives in Governor’s budget
proposal – February 17, 2009

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