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Increase school funding by $1.4 billion over two years in first budget

Compromise

The Promise

Made on: January 21, 2019
Promise Group: Evers-O-Meter
Promiser: Tony Evers
Ruling: Compromise

“As governor, Tony will: Increase school funding by $1.4 billion over two years in his first state budget.”

Promiser:

Tony Evers

Promise Group:

Evers-O-Meter

Current Status

Last updated: July 5, 2019
Compromise
The Obama Administration had to cut a deal to get something substantially less than promised done.

Updates

2 updates
July 5, 2019

The level is much lower than pledged, but final budget shows more than $500 million increase

In the midst of the 2018 campaign, Gov. Tony Evers -- then state schools superintendent -- submitted a budget seeking a $1.4 billion increase in K-12 education in Wisconsin. 

Evers pledged he would increase spending by that amount and achieve it within his first two-year budget.

His 2019-21 budget included the $1.4 billion, an increase of 10%. But the Republican-controlled state Legislature balked at that level, putting only an additional $505 million into K-12 education. 

Using his extensive veto powers, Evers was able to craft his way to adding an additional $65 million for schools. That brought the total increase to $570 million over two years. 

But that's still well short of the promised $1.4 billion.

We rate this promise Compromise.

April 17, 2019

First budget includes that amount. It’s now the Legislature’s turn

Increase school funding by $1.4B over two years in first budget

While still serving as the state schools superintendent in September 2018, Tony Evers submitted a budget that sought a $1.4 billion increase in school funding. On the gubernatorial campaign trail he pledged to make that a reality when he became governor.

Evers' first budget stuck with that number. He seeks to increase K-12 spending by $1.4 billion in the 2019-'21 budget — a 10 percent increase in funding for the state Department of Public Instruction.

But the budget battle is just beginning, with Republicans vowing to throw out the governor's budget and write their own.

For now, we rate this promise In the Works.