『Wisconsin Digs Out From Historic Blizzard Elsa as Legislature Advances Infrastructure and Education Bills』のカバーアート

Wisconsin Digs Out From Historic Blizzard Elsa as Legislature Advances Infrastructure and Education Bills

Wisconsin Digs Out From Historic Blizzard Elsa as Legislature Advances Infrastructure and Education Bills

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

概要

Wisconsin listeners are digging out from the historic Blizzard Elsa, which dumped 26.1 inches of snow on Green Bay, the most in 138 years, according to WLUK FOX 11. The storm from March 14 to 16 stranded dozens of vehicles on highways like I-94, with 50 mph winds complicating travel, as reported by Storm Chaser Aaron Rigsby. Gusty conditions persist under a winter weather advisory until evening, while cleanup begins amid travel not advised warnings across northeast areas. Compounding challenges, a major business fire in Green Bay saw heavy black smoke and roof collapses, with snow hampering firefighting efforts and sending employees home, WLUK FOX 11 notes.

In politics, Senate GOP leaders proposed a calendar for March 18 featuring contentious bills on online gaming via AB 601, limited to tribal servers, and NIL funding for UW athletes totaling $14.6 million annually for Madison plus grants for Green Bay and Milwaukee campuses, WisPolitics reports. The caucus is split, with threats to Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu's position. Governor Tony Evers signed nine bills, including Safe Haven law updates and science teacher professional development via AB 237, now 2025 Wisconsin Act 94. A PFAS package with $132 million in funding cleared the Assembly unanimously.

Economically, infrastructure advances with top bids like $7.4 million to Market & Johnson for Woodville's WWTP improvements and $4.7 million for Wausau's lead service line replacements, per The Daily Reporter. The DATCP awarded grants to 18 projects under the 2026 Commercial Nitrogen Optimization Pilot Program to enhance farming conservation, funded by the state budget Evers signed.

Education sees progress, as WTCS approved technical college expansions like $1.9 million remodeling at Fox Valley Technical College in Appleton and $5.5 million new facilities at Waukesha County Technical College. UW-Platteville students built a greenhouse for Southwestern Wisconsin High School, Royal Purple News states.

Looking Ahead: The legislative session ends March 19, with a special session on gerrymandering bans set for April 14, per MultiState. Broadband BEAD implementation and Commercial Real Estate Conference in November loom large.

Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
まだレビューはありません