May 16, 2012

Keeping drug dealers away from day care

A state lawmaker says more needs to be done to keep drug dealers away from child care centers. State Representative Mark Gundrum (R-New Berlin) wants to require state-and-local inspectors of child care providers to report suspected drug activity. This comes after the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel uncovered more than a dozen child care providers, receiving tax dollars, were linked to drug operations.

Rep. Gundrum (:25)

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The state Department of Children and Families recently announced reform measures for the tax-funded Wisconsin Shares program for the working poor, after cases of fraud and sex offenders living at day care centers were brought to light by the press.

Gundrum is pleased at the steps DCF has taken but believes the agency need to be more proactive.

“They have a massive state agency, millions and millions of tax payer dollars are going there; and we need to have a single Journal Sentinel reporter be the person who actually uncovers this and forces the changes to be made,” says the New Berlin Republican.

Gundrum also introduced a bill in October that mandates anyone convicted of felony drug offense, to wait 10 years before being able to participate in Wisconsin Shares or get a child care license.

The legislature in November approved a Democratic measure that reduced the waiting period to five years. Gundrum says he’ll try to make the waiting period longer again.

The Democrats bill, signed by the Governor, also bars anyone convicted of a serious crime such as crimes against children or violent activity, from being involved in the Shares program. The new law also requires child care center inspectors to report suspected fraud in the subsidized program.

DNR’s day of reckoning

Thursday will be a day of reckoning, for Department of Natural Resources deer managers. DNR officials will be grilled about a November gun-deer season which left many hunters unsatisfied, and it’s likely the event will draw a packed crowd of irate sportsmen and women. Assembly and Senate committees have scheduled a public hearing at the state Capitol. This year’s harvest of 195,000 deer was down almost 30% from last year. [Read more...]

Madison council shoots down hotel redevelopment

Madison’s mayor found himself on the short end of a city council vote early this morning. A proposal to redevelop Madison’s historic Edgewater Hotel was been voted down by the city council. Mayor Dave Cieslewicz says it appears the debate is over. “I assume this is probabley the end of the road,” said Cieslewicz. “We don’t for a fact, that’s up to (developer Robert) Dunn, but for the Edgwater, I’m assuming right now that it is dead.”  [Read more...]

Billion dollar cut from BadgerCare Plus

Wisconsin might have to cut over a billion-dollars from Badger-Care Plus and its other health programs for the poor-and-disabled. A shortage of tax revenues has created a huge deficit for Medicaid, at a time when more people are turning to government coverage as they lose their jobs and private insurance.

Over the last eight months, state health officials have identified over 600-million dollars in cost savings. And the Legislative Fiscal Bureau says another 450-million may have to be cut to balance the Medicaid budget by July of 2011. Medicaid administrator Jason Helgerson says every state faces these problems and the federal government has been picking up a bigger share of the tab with stimulus dollars. Other states have made across-the-board cuts in their Medicaid programs.

But health services secretary Karen Timberlake says Wisconsin has tried to find specific cost savings to preserve as much as possible and they’ve gotten help from care providers, advocacy groups, and others. They’ve taken 66 steps to cut costs including the use of generic drugs, rewriting contracts, delaying payments when possible, and cutting reimbursements to hospitals. They’ve even stopped giving full reimbursements to 59 rural hospitals for which the payments are “critical” for staying open. Helgerson says the state just couldn’t afford it anymore.

Legislature to approve tougher drunk driving penalties

Wisconsin’s drunk driving laws are about to get tougher, as lawmakers meet in a special session today. “It looks like a really solid piece of legislation,” says state Senator Jon Erpenbach, a Waunakee Democrat who applauds efforts by sponsors of an OWI crackdown bill. “We haven’t taken these kinds of steps crack down on drunk driving, certainly since I’ve been in the legislature. We’ve always dealt with this issue. Pretty much every session there’s been something, but nothing this big. I think it’s a pretty good compromise.” [Read more...]