How Secretive Moves By Wisconsin Lawmakers In The Eleventh Hour Conceal Big Policy Shifts
It was 10:30 p.m. on June 3, 2011, the last day of deliberations on Wisconsin's state budget. Members of the Joint Finance Committee, some with deep circles under their eyes after days of fighting over budget items, perked up when two Republicans, Sen. Glenn Grothman and Rep. Robin Vos, unveiled a surprise: a massive tax cut worth hundreds of millions of dollars for manufacturers and agricultural businesses.
The official estimate projected that when fully phased in, the measure would cut revenue to the state — which had already made large cuts to education and other programs to balance the budget — by $128.7 million a year.
Rep. Tamara Grigsby, D-Milwaukee, appeared stunned by the size of the tax cut, asking the Legislative Fiscal Bureau representative to add up the total cost over its four-year phase-in.
"This is nauseating," said Grigsby, who left the Legislature in 2013 and died in 2016. “Really? $320 million to start, and then $128.7 million after that per year? Really? Wow. Wow."
Vos, then co-chairman of the committee, and Grothman, now a U.S. representative, argued it would bring jobs to Wisconsin, which at the time had a 7.6 percent unemployment rate — although the measure itself had no requirement that jobs be added, or even retained, to qualify for the credit.
After a brief and sometimes heated debate, the tax cut, now known as the Manufacturing and Agriculture Credit, passed on a 12-4 party-line vote.
Within 30 minutes, without any public hearings or public notice, lawmakers had endorsed one of the biggest tax breaks enacted under Gov. Scott Walker. Within 13 days, the Republican-led Assembly and Senate had approved the 2011-13 spending plan, including the tax cut, which Walker signed into law.
Since 2010, when voters swept Republicans into power, Wisconsin legislators have increasingly used such secretive maneuvers to keep the public in the dark about major spending and policy changes, interviews and records show.
An investigation by the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism found the Legislature systematically diminishes the voices of the public by:
- Introducing budget amendments at the end of the approval process with no public notice or debate.
- Approving anonymous, last-minute budget motions containing a grab bag of changes, including major policy items that have nothing to do with state spending.
- Changing the scope and impact of a bill after its public hearing has been held, which excludes regular citizens from having meaningful influence on legislation before it is enacted.
Secretive techniques are not unique to Republicans — or even to Wisconsin. When they controlled the Legislature and governor's office before the 2010 elections, Democrats played that game, too — notably with their own end-of-the-session wrap-up budget bills of anonymously authored items.
Estimates now show the tax break slipped into the 2011-13 budget will end up costing the state $334 million in revenue this budget year — more than double originally projected. The tax break virtually wipes out tax bills for some of the businesses and individuals who apply for it.
"The fact that the tax cut was passed at the last minute with no public input was not good," said Tamarine Cornelius, an analyst with the left-leaning Wisconsin Budget Project. "But it's not that unusual. A lot of things get slipped into budget amendments, it's just that they don't usually wind up costing upwards of $300 million a year."
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tony Evers has called for the tax credit to be severely curtailed, noting that nearly 80 percent of the money goes to people and businesses earning at least $1 million a year. Walker has said eliminating the credit would harm Wisconsin's economy.
Studies disagree about whether the credit has spurred job growth. Noah Williams, an economics professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, credited it with creating 20,000 manufacturing jobs, while the Wisconsin Budget Project cited federal statistics showing state manufacturing job and wage growth continue to be slower here than the national average.
But one thing is indisputable: The public and many lawmakers never had the chance to hear the merits and risks of the plan before it was passed.
Anonymous budget proposals grow
One secretive mechanism used by the Legislature is the final omnibus budget motion, sometimes known as motion 999, although it could bear any number. The motion compiles a vast array of anonymously introduced items as a package, then the Joint Finance Committee votes on the changes. The public has little chance to comment.
Former state Sen. Tim Cullen, a Democrat who served between 1975 and 1987 and again from 2011 to 2015, said use of these omnibus motions has changed significantly since his first time in the Senate.
Cullen, who served as Senate majority leader, said in the 1970s and '80s, 999 motions had an informal limit of $25,000 per item and were prohibited from having broad or statewide impact. Typical items were money for the local historical society, a liquor license for a township or a gymnasium, he said.
However, in recent years, these budget fixes have included sweeping measures such as the attempt to dismantle the Wisconsin Open Records Law — a proposal that was so unpopular that Walker and GOP leaders agreed to remove it from the 2015-17 budget.
Former long-time state Sen. Dale Schultz, a Republican who also served as majority leader, said in the past, this wrap-up budget motion allowed each side to make minor changes to keep the budget passage moving along. Schultz, of Richland Center, served from 1983 to 2015.
According to Schultz, it used to be "pretty obvious" who was backing these small-scale budget amendments. But this has changed.
"When you decide to thwart Wisconsin's Open Records Law, and nobody ‘fesses up as to who did it, well, how does the public have a right to know?" Schultz said of the 2015 Republican-authored 999 motion.
That motion sparked a statewide public backlash that crossed ideological lines. It was the moment that conservative activist Orville Seymer parted ways with conservatives in the Legislature whom he has supported.
"They tried to destroy the Open Records Law and open meetings. That was the most atrocious thing I've seen in years and years and years," said Seymer, founder of Citizens for Responsible Government, a government accountability group founded during the Milwaukee County pension scandal in the early 2000s.
State Sen. Kathleen Vinehout, D-Alma, has noticed in her 11 years in the Legislature an increase in the number of "different pieces of policy that have been added to the budget at the last minute."
"This policy, most of it, would not ever pass if it had its own bill and its own public hearing because it would be so unpopular," added Vinehout, who ran unsuccessfully in the Democratic gubernatorial primary.
A comparison of these end-of-the-session budget motions showed both parties have used the mechanism "as a hiding spot for pet projects," but the size and impact of the items has ballooned under Walker, according to Larry Gallup, a senior editor at USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin.
"In the five budget bills before 2011, the 999 motion averaged five pages and 15 motions," Gallup wrote in a 2017 column for the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council. "But with the 2011-13 bill, the bill expanded to 11 pages and 54 proposals. By 2015-17, it had ballooned to 24 pages and 81 proposals."
Most legislative candidates who answered a recent poll on government openness agree that anonymous motions should be a thing of the past. In fact, all but one of the 75 legislative candidates in the upcoming election who answered the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council poll agreed that all bills, motions and amendments considered by the Legislature should include sponsor names.
Rep. Ron Tusler, R-Menasha, who is running for re-election to Assembly District 3, commented in the poll: "If you can't even stand by your own bill, you shouldn't ask me to stand by it." His opponent, Democrat Scott Gavin of Little Chute, agreed, saying, "Accountability is key."
999 hides special interest goodies
The 2015-17 final wrap-up budget motion included the quiet repeal of the State False Claims Act, which a Center investigation found has cost Wisconsin taxpayers millions in lost settlements from companies that cheat the state Medicaid program.
Another measure allowed out-of-state risk retention groups to sell medical liability insurance to doctors without meeting Wisconsin regulations designed to protect patients from malpractice.
Risk retention groups are corporations that collect and distribute risk among policyholders engaged in the same or similar practices, such as anesthesiologists and ophthalmologists. The idea of allowing sales of such policies in Wisconsin was introduced as a bill (AB 808) in 2014 but died in committee.
The proposal was so unpopular that despite the fact that it was introduced by fellow Republicans, top officials in the Walker administration testified against it. During the committee hearings, Julie Walsh, then a senior attorney in the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance, said Congress has prohibited states from requiring such risk retention groups to comply with state regulations, such as those aimed at making sure patients and doctors are protected if companies become insolvent.
One year after the bill was killed, it quietly re-appeared in a 999 motion. The drafting files at the Legislative Reference Bureau for the original 2013 bill reveal one possible reason it was resurrected from the dead.
The records show the co-chairman of the Joint Finance Committee, Rep. John Nygren, R-Marinette, had requested the bill be drafted after being contacted by Eric Jensen, a lobbyist for the private, out-of-state risk retention groups Ophthalmic Mutual Insurance Co. and Preferred Physicians Medical Risk Retention Group Inc. The co-chairwoman, Sen. Alberta Darling, R-River Hills, authored the companion bill in the Senate.
According to an email from Walsh in the drafting file, out-of-state companies had been given options for becoming licensed in Wisconsin but sought to avoid the state's patient-protection regulations.
Records show the official co-sponsors of the motion 999, Darling and Nygren, who works in the insurance industry, together received donations from representatives of Ophthalmic Mutual Insurance totaling $1,250 during the 2015 budget season.
According to a Wisconsin Democracy Campaign database, Ophthalmic Mutual has not recorded donations to any other Wisconsin legislator before or since.
Nygren said he included the item in the 2015 budget after it had gotten a public hearing the session before as a standalone bill, a process he said is "fairly common."
He defended allowing out-of-state risk retention groups to sell policies in Wisconsin. Such companies "help manage liability costs for health care providers which, in turn, helps control costs for patients," Nygren said.
He told the Center in an email that the budget bill is "the most publicly debated and scrutinized bill the Legislature passes during the session," adding, "I believe the public plays a vital role in lawmaking and democracy."
In 2017, Nygren and Darling said they were working to prevent the use of the controversial motion. But when the 2017-19 budget was passed in September 2017, the two again authorized the final motion to make last-minute changes without public input — including items that had nothing to do with state spending. They included loosening standards for setting up charter schools and requiring state universities to track how many hours each instructor teaches.
State budget full of non-fiscal items
Barry Burden, professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and director of the Elections Research Center, said budget bills are a favorite hiding place for unpopular legislation.
"We know [budget bills] have to be passed," Burden said. "That's when members try to slide in all of the things they thought might not pass on their own or might not be part of some other piece of legislation."
He added that the anonymity of the 999 motion is politically enticing because it avoids public scrutiny. The majority party can "bury" unpopular items in bigger motions.
"Everyone can say they were against that little thing that was added in the 999, but the bill — they voted for the larger bill. We'll never know exactly what their stance was on those items," Burden said.
This kind of opacity is not unique to Wisconsin.
In November 2017, the Kansas City Star published a months-long investigation documenting corruption, secrecy and suppression of public input in state government. The newspaper found that more than 90 percent of Kansas laws over the past decade began as anonymously submitted bills, meaning the people of Kansas typically did not know who introduced the legislation or why.
Tim Cullen, the former senator and current co-chair of the Fair Elections Project, which works to stop partisan gerrymandering. He echoed Burden's concerns about accountability. "If you do a 999 motion and do all this terrible public policy stuff and it blows up and the public is mad at you, why do you [the politician] care?"
Kathleen Vinehout said many interests, such as the rent-to-own industry, have begun to exert more influence over Wisconsin's budget-making process because of this secretive technique.
"The problem the Legislature faces now is that the groups, these shadow groups, have much more power to be able to get pieces of policy that they want into the budget, and that is a way to obscure what actually has happened," she said.
'Body Snatcher' bills
Another stealth move is reminiscent of the 1978 film, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, in which aliens inhabit the bodies of people while keeping their outside appearance the same — but in these cases, it is legislation that is secretly transformed.
These are bills introduced with one purpose, but later amended to do something entirely different — often after public hearings have ended. UW political scientist Barry Burden said Congress is notorious for adding last-minute, unrelated items to the budget — a bill that must pass for the government to operate.
Members try "to stick things in about immigration, about abortion, about guns, about a train tunnel in New York that all are worthwhile things to debate, but they just see that this is the vehicle that could pass them," he said.
The same thing happens in Wisconsin. One such bill, SB 54, was introduced in February 2017. The bill as originally introduced would require the Department of Corrections to recommend revoking extended supervision, parole or probation if a person is charged with a new crime.
One year later, in February 2018, SB 54 was amended by a group of Republican legislators led by Rep. Joe Sanfelippo, R-New Berlin. The amendment added construction of a $350 million prison. It would have been the first new state prison built in Wisconsin in at least 17 years.
Despite a year of deliberation on the original bill, the measure was amended and voted on the same day in the Assembly — with no chance for public input.
The prison amendment was "grafted" onto the bill during a "packed three-day Assembly session where many bills were discussed and voted on, and a lot of people missed that it happened," said Molly Collins, advocacy director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin.
In the end, the ACLU and more than 50 other groups mobilized a campaign and transported protesters to Madison to lobby against the bill in the Senate. It failed to pass when the Senate declined to take it up.
Said Collins: "Building a new prison had not been discussed, let alone borrowing $350 million to fund it."
This story was produced as part of an investigative reporting class in the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication under the direction of Dee J. Hall, managing editor of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism.
These stories examine the state of Wisconsin's democracy in an era of gerrymandering, secret campaign money, restrictive voting laws and legislative maneuvers that weaken the power of regular citizens to influence government. The series was reported by University of Wisconsin-Madison journalism students Cathleen Draper, Nicole Ki, Pawan Naidu, Cameron Smith, Teodor Teofilov and CV Vitolo-Haddad as part of an investigative reporting class led by Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism Managing Editor Dee J. Hall with assistance from Coburn Dukehart, the Center's digital and multimedia director. The Center's collaborations with journalism students are funded in part by the Ira and Ineva Reilly Baldwin Wisconsin Idea Endowment at UW-Madison. The Center's coverage of democracy issues is supported by The Joyce Foundation.
The public is invited to help with this investigation of the state of democracy in Wisconsin. Have you been harmed by a lack of democracy? Send ideas for coverage to [email protected], or WCIJ, 5006 Vilas Hall, 821 University Ave., Madison, Wis., 53706. The best tips clearly describe the issue and include documentation or other evidence.
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