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Published - Saturday, May 17, 2008

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Governor says more cuts are needed to fix budget shortfall


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MADISON — The “Frankenstein” veto has risen from its grave.

Showing his veto pen remains the most powerful in the nation, Gov. Jim Doyle on Friday carved up a bill to cover a $527 million shortfall in the state’s two-year budget, taking $103 million from the state’s road fund and blocking legislators’ attempt to delay payments to schools.
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle

The vetoes came just weeks after an April 1 referendum in which voters approved a constitutional amendment to limit the governor’s veto authority, and less than 48 hours after the budget repair bill cleared the Legislature.

“The governor is demonstrating how extensive his remaining powers are. His wings have only been clipped by a feather,” said Mordecai Lee, a professor of governmental affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a former Democratic state senator.

The recently passed constitutional amendment prohibits Wisconsin governors from crossing out words and numbers over two or more sentences and stitching the remnants together into one new sentence, which critics have likened to Frankenstein’s monster.

But within the confines of a single sentence, Doyle showed he still could work magic.

For example, the bill sent to Doyle called for spending cuts and transfers from state funds equal to “$69,000,000 during the 2007-09 fiscal biennium and $69,000,000 during the 2009-11 fiscal biennium.” By deleting words and individual characters within that phrase, Doyle reduced it to a single figure — “$270,000,000” — the amount by which he ordered state spending be reduced.

The governor said Friday he would take $103 million of that money from the state’s road fund, thwarting lawmakers who had sought to rule out further raids on that fund to balance a budget threatened by a failing economy.

In another veto, Doyle struck a single digit in a provision diverting money set aside to comply with a federal mandate requiring stricter state guidelines on issuing driver’s licenses. The veto reduced the raid from $22 million to $2 million.

Doyle defended his actions, saying spending on highway programs increased about $350 million under the original budget passed in October. Even after his vetoes, he said, the budget repair bill raises spending on road programs beyond that amount.

Those increases included $24.8 million to compensate counties for high road maintenance costs brought on by this year’s severe winter.

“A responsible budget repair must rely on meaningful reductions in spending and certainly not (on) big spending increases,” Doyle said at a news conference unveiling the vetoes.

Madison attorney Fred Wade, who long has crusaded against the strong veto power of the state’s governors, said Doyle’s actions show a need for a “further constitutional amendment” to restrain the authority.

“In a nutshell, these vetoes demonstrate that the Frankenstein veto is alive,” Wade said. “There is still a potential for tremendous abuse here in a manner that is undemocratic.”

Doyle spokesman Lee Sensenbrenner stressed Doyle’s vetoes were legal and served to reduce state spending.

“We feel very comfortable that these are good vetoes,” he said.

Reaction from the lawmakers whose bill had been reworked was muted Friday. Assembly Speaker Mike Huebsch, R-West Salem, said he still was studying the effects of the vetoes. In a statement, Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker, D-Weston, said the state should have used an additional $77 million in recently awarded federal money to increase spending on “our crumbling roads and bridges.”

Doyle’s other partial vetoes and budget actions included:

  • Cutting a provision that would have delayed $125 million in payments to schools until the next budget.

  • Scaling back a plan to borrow against promised future payments by tobacco companies to the state. Doyle and aides said he would seek to borrow $150 million instead of the $209 million outlined in the bill. The change was accomplished through how his administration will refinance the bonds involved, not through a veto.

  • Scaling back a plan to dip into the state’s budget reserves. Doyle would leave the reserves at $106 million, up from the $25 million that would have been left under the bill.

  • nNegotiating lower salary increases in contracts with state worker unions. Those have come in about $25 million less than what had been budgeted, Doyle said.

  • Cutting a controversial last-minute budget provision that would not have affected state finances but would have provided local property tax exemptions for low-income housing projects.

    In a statement, Senate Minority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau, criticized Doyle’s transfer from the road fund and called for a Senate vote to override that veto.

    Any potential override of Doyle’s vetoes by lawmakers would face big challenges, requiring a two-thirds vote in both houses of the Legislature. An override vote would have to start in the GOP-controlled Assembly, where it would require support by 66 of the 98 members currently able to vote.

    But Wednesday, the Assembly passed the budget 51-46 — only one vote more than a bare majority. The vote was even closer in the Senate, passing 17-16.

    Jason Stein is a reporter for the Wisconsin State Journal in Madison.
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     Comments »

    Blue State Bruce wrote on May 19, 2008 10:28 AM:

    " Bumper, I mean CN, ask how many of your neighbors have a college degree as well. Not everyone can be paid as well as a roofer! "

    dmm wrote on May 19, 2008 8:42 AM:

    " The arrogance of Jim Doyle is incredible showig us the Frankenstein Veto vote means nothing to him. Unfortunately, voters must further curtail the governor's veto power to protect us from this crook or any future governor of either party who is intent on thumbing his nose at taxpayers to take care of his pet constituencies. Make the governor cross out an entire line if he wants to reduce spending, but stop the abuse of picking individual digits and words to make up his own spending items and transfers. "

    Bumper wrote on May 18, 2008 11:29 AM:

    " You are in denial. Run the numbers. Cut the WRS contribution back to the intended employer/employee split, and curtail the early 55 post retirement health coverage. Plan like the rest of us have to if retiring at 55! Even though the bloated 11.7% allows you to. Then there would be plenty of money to spend in our system. "

    Bumper wrote on May 18, 2008 11:26 AM:

    " jeremy- Your wife has the right to pull stakes and place an application in Milwaukee, or Dane County where the average per capita income is $60k plus rather than Lacrosse at $32k. Give me a break! She is receiving better and less expensive health care than the DOCs at Gund/Luth, 11.7% matching contribution to retirement, and is poised to receive post early retirement health coverage from 55-65 based on 80% of her last premiums paid worth at least $150k on up? Go outside, talk to your neighbors, ask them what they are making, and ask them what their benefit packages consist of. No fair asking City employees, they are over benefited as well. Oh, yeah it is not just the 'teachers' over there either, you just cry the loudest. "

    jeremy wrote on May 17, 2008 10:10 PM:

    " You're right, my wife who is a teacher makes a combined $48,000 with her salary and benefits.

    I can't believe they pay a teacher who has 7 years of experience that much money.

    You guys need to wake up, it's the ever expanding social programs that are killing us. "

    Common-cents wrote on May 17, 2008 9:37 PM:

    " Teachers unions are killing us. "

    The Real World wrote on May 17, 2008 5:30 PM:

    " Hey Bumper,

    Roads don't vote but those selfish WEAC members do. "

    Bumper wrote on May 17, 2008 11:25 AM:

    " He takes money from roads, to shore up teachers and their bloated benefits, to buy votes for him and his party, and then he points his finger to be more frugal? This guy is good. "

    HonestAbe wrote on May 17, 2008 10:54 AM:

    " MS, have an alternate plan? I have no favorite when it comes to politicians.

    I totally agree with you, if the illegals were a thing of the past, we'd be doing better. BUT ... where will the money come from to fight them?

    I feel food rations coming ,,, this is the worst I've ever seen America and too many are just shrugging it off. Please don't vote McSame. "

    MS wrote on May 17, 2008 10:45 AM:

    " How many millions could be saved by cutting off the gravy train that all the illegal aliens
    are sucking off of? They are leaving OK in droves once the benefits are gone. Wisconsin citizens it is your money their stealing, get angry and let your favorite politician have an ear full. "

    HonestAbe wrote on May 17, 2008 10:28 AM:

    " How do we go about vetoing Doyle?

    Doesn't look like he's hurtin' ... he could use a few less buffet dinners a day.

    For the people my a**. "

    rprp wrote on May 17, 2008 7:48 AM:

    " I agree with Doyle that more cuts are needed. He can start by ending all subsidies, loans and all GRANTS to farmers. He should revisit tax 18 and all other taxes the farmers don't pay and make it fair for all people. Budget problems are solved if Doyle has the courage to take on the biggest lobby group in Wisconsin. "

    The Real World wrote on May 17, 2008 7:23 AM:

    " One more example of not in the Real world, if you and I had this budget problem with our personal finances, we would have to make something happen today. Doyle has been in government to long! "


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