Wisconsin Republicans ask voters to take away governor’s power to spend federal money

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Wisconsin Republicans are asking voters to take away the governor’s power to unilaterally spend federal money, a reaction to the billions of dollars that flowed into the state during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers was free to spend most of that money as he pleased, directing most of it toward small businesses and economic development, angering Republicans who argued the Legislature should have oversight.

That’s what would happen under a pair of related constitutional amendments up for voter approval in the Aug. 13 primary election. The changes would apply to Evers and all future governors and cover any federal money to the state that comes without specific spending requirements, often in response to disasters or other emergencies.

Democrats and other opponents are mobilizing against the amendments, calling them a legislative power grab that would hamstring governors’ ability to quickly respond to a future natural disaster, economic crisis or health emergency.

If the amendments pass, Wisconsin’s government “will become even more dysfunctional,” said Julie Keown-Bomar, executive director of Wisconsin Farmers Union.

“Wisconsinites are so weary of riding the partisan crazy train, but it is crucial that we show up at the polls and vote ‘no’ on these changes as they will only make us go further off the rails,” she said in a statement.

But Republicans and other backers say it’s a necessary check on the governor’s current power, which they say is too broad.

The changes increase “accountability, efficiency, and transparency,” Republican state Sen. Howard Marklein, a co-sponsor of the initiative, said at a legislative hearing.

The two questions, which were proposed as a single amendment and then separated on the ballot, passed the GOP-controlled Legislature twice as required by law. Voter approval is needed before they would be added to the state constitution. The governor has no veto power over constitutional amendments.

Early, in-person absentee voting for the Aug. 13 election begins Tuesday across the state and goes through Aug. 11. Locations and times for early voting vary.

Wisconsin Republicans have increasingly turned to voters to approve constitutional amendments as a way to get around Evers’ vetoes. Midway through his second term, Evers has vetoed more bills than any governor in Wisconsin history.

In April, voters approved amendments to bar the use of private money to run elections and reaffirm that only election officials can work the polls. In November, an amendment on the ballot seeks to clarify that only U.S. citizens can vote in local elections.

Republicans put this question on the August primary ballot, the first time a constitutional amendment has been placed in that election where turnout is much lower than in November.

The effort to curb the governor’s spending power also comes amid ongoing fights between Republicans and Evers over the extent of legislative authority. Evers in July won a case in the Wisconsin Supreme Court that challenged the power the GOP-controlled Legislature’s budget committee had over conservation program spending.

Wisconsin governors were given the power to decide how to spend federal money by the Legislature in 1931, during the Great Depression, according to a report from the Legislative Reference Bureau.

“Times have changed and the influx of federal dollars calls for a different approach,” Republican Rep. Robert Wittke, who sponsored the amendment, said at a public hearing.

It was a power that was questioned during the Great Recession in 2008, another time when the state received a large influx of federal aid.

But calls for change intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic when the federal government handed Wisconsin $5.7 billion in aid between March 2020 and June 2022 in federal coronavirus relief. Only $1.1 billion came with restrictions on how it could be spent.

Most of the money was used for small business and local government recovery grants, buying emergency health supplies and paying health care providers to offset the costs of the pandemic.

Republicans pushed for more oversight, but Evers vetoed a GOP bill in 2021 that would have required the governor to submit a plan to the Legislature’s budget committee for approval.

Republican increased the pressure for change following the release of a nonpartisan audit in 2022 that found Evers wasn’t transparent about how he decided where to direct the money.

One amendment specifies the Legislature can’t delegate its power to decide how money is spent. The second prohibits the governor from spending federal money without legislative approval.

If approved, the Legislature could pass rules governing how federal money would be handled. That would give them the ability to change the rules based on who is serving as governor or the purpose of the federal money.

For example, the Legislature could allow governors to spend disaster relief money with no approval, but require that other money go before lawmakers first.

Opposing the measures are voting rights groups, the Wisconsin Democratic Party and a host of other liberal organizations, including those who fought to overturn Republican-drawn legislative maps, the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin and Wisconsin Faith Voices for Justice.

Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce, the state’s largest business lobbying group, and the Badger Institute, a conservative think tank, were the only groups that registered in support in the Legislature.

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National bill proposes turning Apostle Islands into National Park

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A bill introduced by U.S. Rep. Tom Tiffany seeks to turn the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore into a national park, a move that would ban hunting on all but one island.

While hunting and trapping are allowed throughout most of the national lakeshore’s 21 islands in Lake Superior and 12 miles of mainland Bayfield Peninsula coastline, the bill introduced last week by the Republican representing Northwestern Wisconsin explicitly bans hunting if the area were to become a national park.

Unlike national lakeshores and other National Park Service-administered land, hunting is rarely allowed in national parks. Instead, the bill would remove Sand Island from its national lakeshore designation and designate it the Sand Island National Preserve instead of including it in the proposed national park. Therefore, hunting would be allowed on the approximately 3,000-acre island.

Fishing would be unaffected by the bill.

“The Apostle Islands are one of Wisconsin’s true crown jewels and deserve to be recognized as the state’s first National Park,” Tiffany said in a July 24 news release. “This prestigious designation would not only strengthen conservation efforts, bolster the local economy, and create new job opportunities, but would also ensure lasting environmental and economic security to our region for generations to come.”

Two issues

Frank Lands, the National Park Service’s deputy director for operations, testified during a July 24 hearing of the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Federal Lands that the bill was not introduced in time for the department to take a position.

Lands said two issues need to be addressed. The first is to clarify the relationship between the proposed Apostle Islands National Park and Sand Island National Preserve.

The other, Lands said, “is the need for reinforcement of the treaty rights of the Ojibwe tribes. Part of the Lakeshore is within the (Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa) tribal reservation and the remaining land are areas ceded by the treaty with the reservations to hunt, trap and gather.”

Charlie Rasmussen, a spokesperson for the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission, said Ojibwe tribes were tracking the proposal.

“The Apostle Islands are an important hunting and fishing region for Ojibwe tribes,” Rasmussen said. “Any action that may infringe on treaty rights and harvesting is a concern.”

The Red Cliff Band did not respond to request for comment.

Sailboats rest at anchor at sunset on a Aug. evening, just off the shore of Stockton Island in the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore near Bayfield. (Sam Cook / Duluth News Tribune)

Lakeshore designation selected to allow hunting

Tia Nelson is the daughter of the late U.S. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, a Democrat from Wisconsin who is credited with establishing the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore in 1970 and Earth Day. Nelson said her father spent years consulting with people in and around the Apostle Islands, and access to hunting was part of the reason it became a national lakeshore instead of a national park.

“That surprised me considering Tiffany’s long commitment to public access for hunting,” Nelson said of the proposal. “This will clearly disenfranchise the sportsmen and women.”

Caroline Briscoe, a spokesperson for Tiffany’s office, said only three deer were harvested from the Apostle Islands between 2015 and 2022 and that existing treaty rights would remain.

Tourism concerns

State Sen. Romaine Quinn, R-Rice Lake, whose district includes Bayfield and the Apostle Islands, said a national park would benefit the area.

“Increased tourism will create new job opportunities, stimulate economic growth and support the livelihoods of many in the Bayfield area and beyond,” Quinn testified in the subcommittee hearing Wednesday.

But Madelaine Rekemeyer, a member of the Bayfield County Board of Supervisors, said the area isn’t hurting for more tourists.

“I’m not against economic development,” Rekemeyer said. “We will be increasing tourism based on current economic development towards a model that currently has many unintended consequences.”

For example, Rekemeyer said, there’s a shortage of housing, driven in part by more short-term rentals for tourists, and area workers can’t find places to live.

The Sand Island Lighthouse is located at the northern tip of Sand Island on Lake Superior in Bayfield County, Wisconsin. The light was first lit in 1881. (Dan Williamson / Duluth News Tribune)

Several Bayfield tourism and chamber officials expressed those concerns in a Wisconsin Public Radio article Thursday.

There’s still more to learn, Rekemeyer said. After all, the board only became aware of the proposal last week, she said.

“Everyone agrees this was just kind of sprung up on us,” Rekemeyer said. “Listening to the hearing yesterday in Washington, D.C., it does look like a conversation will continue, and for that we’re grateful.”

U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber, a Republican from Hermantown representing Minnesota’s 8th Congressional District, and the other four members of Wisconsin’s delegation in the U.S. House co-sponsored the bill.

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Fatal police shooting at Sioux Falls Get-N-Go was justified, officials rule

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The fatal shooting of a suspect during a hostage situation at a Sioux Falls gas station was a justified use of force by local law enforcement officers, officials ruled.

Less than a month after a marksman with the Minnehaha County Sheriff’s Office shot and killed 26-year-old Sioux Falls resident Daniel Augustine, the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) has cleared the deputy and a Sioux Falls police officer from any wrongdoing.

“The suspect had already fired a gun in the direction of a law enforcement officer, was holding the firearm near the hostage clerk and was behaving in an erratic manner,” South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley said in a statement. “The two officers involved were justified in using lethal force in this tense and uncertain situation.”

According to investigators, Augustine entered the Get-N-Go gas station at the corner of 14th Street and Minnesota Avenue — on the southwest side of downtown Sioux Falls — at approximately 3 a.m. July 3, and immediately fired shots into the ceiling.

Augustine then jumped behind the counter, pointed his firearm at the station’s attendant and demanded the man call 911. Still images from surveillance video pictures the employee held in a corner with a gun pointed at his head or torso while he dials the phone.

At the same time, a Sioux Falls police officer happened to be arriving at the store to make a purchase, unaware of the hostage situation unfolding inside.

The DCI said that as the officer approached the door, Augustine fired a shot through the window in the officer’s direction. The officer made eye contact with Augustine through the window and observed the gun in Augustine’s hand, pointing toward the clerk and then toward the officer.

The officer fired one shot through a window toward Augustine, which missed. After retreating to his patrol vehicle, multiple other law enforcement officers arrived, both from the Sioux Falls Police Department and the Minnehaha County Sheriff’s Office.

As negotiations ensued, the DCI said Augustine was using the store clerk as cover, wrapping his left arm around the clerk and waving the gun around, pointing it at or near the clerk and officers.

Thirty-six minutes after Augustine arrived in the store, a marksman with the sheriff’s office fired a single shot from a sniper rifle, which struck Augustine in the face, killing him. The store clerk and all other officers suffered no injuries.

An autopsy determined that Augustine’s blood contained a “toxic level” of methamphetamine at the time of the shooting and was also under the influence of benzodiazepines.

A look at his criminal history shows multiple felony and misdemeanor arrests dating back to 2016, including for robbery, aggravated assault and obstructing law enforcement. Investigators also say he had a history of mental illness reports with law enforcement, and had previously made suicidal comments.

After reviewing all aspects of the the scene, surveillance footage and Augustine’s history, as well as interviews with officers, deputies and witnesses, the DCI ruled that the tense, uncertain and rapidly evolving nature of the situation — as well as the threat posed to both the clerk and officers — justified the use of deadly force.

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3M Open: Vegas wins for first PGA Tour victory since 2017

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Call the 3M Open the career resurrector.

TPC Twin Cities is quickly becoming notorious for being a site where struggling golfers can pick themselves off the mat.

In 2020, Michael Thompson picked up his first PGA Tour victory in seven years when he emerged victorious in Blaine. In 2021, Cameron Champ won after missing the cut or withdrawing in 10 of his previous 15 events.

And now, Jhonattan Vegas — who entered the tournament playing on a medical exemption — is back in the winner’s circle for the first time since 2017.

The Venezuelan birdied his 72nd-and-final hole of the week on Sunday to get to 17-under for the tournament, one shot clear of tour rookie Max Greyserman.

After belting a drive on No. 18 down the center of the fairway, Vegas’ second on the Par-5 finishing hole found the left side of the green, 96 feet from the cup. Vegas had two putts to win the tournament. His first was a beauty, peeking at the cup as it rolled a comfortable 3 feet past, leaving a straightforward short putt he drilled to hoist the trophy in front of his family — including his children, who were also in attendance — on the 18th green.

With the win comes a $1.458 million check, a full-time exemption through the 2026 PGA Tour campaign and 500 FedExCup points that move the 39 year old — who entered the week 149th in the standings and on the verge of losing his tour status — into 66th, likely meaning he’ll qualify for this year’s playoffs.

What a difference four days make.

“Wow, yes, seven years. In my head it doesn’t really seem that it’s been that long,” Vegas said. “You know, it hasn’t been easy, that’s for sure. It’s been a lot of grinding, a lot of dealing with injuries, a lot of headaches, but these are the moments that you get up every day and you work hard, you do all the right things because nothing feels better than this.”

Vegas — who spent the last two-plus years battling an elbow injury and then a shoulder issue, which required multiple surgeries to resolve — once again has a secure future in professional golf.

It didn’t come easy. Vegas started the day with a bogey. For as good as he felt Saturday in moving to the top of the leaderboard, Sunday was a struggle. The shoulder was again in pain.

“Today, I wasn’t 100% and I felt it right away on the first hole,” said Vegas, who finished in a tie for second in Blaine in 2021. “It was a nightmare, but luckily stayed calm and I was able to play pretty solid and not make huge mistakes.”

Every time he had a slip up, he’d find a way to respond.

At one point in the round, Vegas’ lead was three strokes. But then he found the water on No. 9 and had to get up and down for bogey, didn’t birdie the par-5 12th and bogeyed No. 13.

At that point, four men were tied for the lead at 15-under and Vegas appeared to be heading in the wrong direction.

But Vegas recovered. A 9-foot birdie putt on No. 15 moved him to 16-under.

That’s the score posted by Greyserman, who shot his round of the season — an 8-under 63 — on Sunday, which included a 30 on the back nine.That was punctuated by an impressive birdie on No. 18 in which Greyserman hit his tee shot into the sea of concession stands under the trees left of the fairway. He had only a small window between the trunks to hit the ball through. He took it on, hammering a wood that slipped through the trees and traveled 260 yards to the putting surface.

Greyserman two-putted from 79 feet to take the clubhouse lead at 16-under. He provided the stiffest test, as Vegas’ playing partners — Matt Kuchar and Maverick McNealy — failed to generate enough quality shots and putts over the final few holes to make a serious move. They both finished in a tie for third at 15-under.

Kuchar — who entered the week at No. 155 in the FedExCup standings — is the only player to have reached the playoffs in every year since the format was created in 2007. And while this weekend’s performance moved him up to No. 111 — greatly improving his chances of maintaining full status next season — a win would’ve likely pushed him into the playoffs.

Now, he’ll probably need a victory at the Wyndham Championship in two weeks to move into the top 70.

“Certainly making the playoffs, keeping my job for next year, they’re all checkmarks. I normally like to check these off a lot earlier in the year than right now, but tis the bed I made. Certainly helpful,” Kuchar said. “It is on my mind, it is something that I know is kind of back there. I don’t want to miss the Playoffs, don’t want to miss Top-125, all those things you tend to try to check off somewhere on the west coast, but here I am late in the year, trying to still check them off.”

Vegas likely entered the week with similar concerns, and went out and alleviated them with a victory.

“That’s the beauty of golf, that’s the beauty of the PGA Tour,” Vegas said. “No other tour in the world provides that. Any week can change your life forever, so just thankful the win came this week.”

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