Agriculture Related Bills
Wisconsin has a long and rich agriculture tradition, but low dairy prices, a record number of dairy shutdowns, and unpredictable growing seasons have burdened agricultural producers throughout the state. The Governor and the Legislature have separately introduced bills to address the ongoing issues Wisconsin farmers are facing.
AB 6/AB 7
AB 6 provides $1 million to DATCP to develop a Wisconsin Initiative for Dairy Exports. AB 7 awards grants to dairy processing plants, prioritizing small dairy processing plants to be the recipients of these grants. AB 6 and AB 7 are two of the eight agricultural special session bills presented by Governor Evers. AB 6 and AB 7 will have a public hearing and executive session in the Senate Agriculture, Revenue and Financial Institutions Committee this week.
AB 873 (AB 874, AB 876)
Assembly Bill 873 is an agriculture bill that would create an income tax credit for property taxes paid on agricultural buildings. This bill is aimed at reducing the tax burden on Wisconsin farmers, but the tax credit could help larger farms more than smaller family farms.
Assembly Bill 873 is part of a three bill package on agriculture from Assembly Speaker Robin Vos. AB 873 will have a public hearing and executive session in the Senate Agriculture, Revenue and Financial Institutions Committee this week.
Affordable Housing
We support efforts to develop affordable and workforce housing initiatives, but locations of these housing projects are important. To be the most effective, affordable and workforce housing should be transit-oriented developments that are prioritized to be near existing services and developments to prevent sprawl.
AB 544
Assembly Bill 544 creates a workforce housing tax credit program that directs WHEDA to deliver grants, loans, and loan guarantees for projects eligible for workforce housing.
AB 859
Assembly Bill 859 authorizes workforce housing initiatives and increases the timeline for a city to use a TID to improve its affordable and workforce housing.
Transportation
The 2019-20 Legislative session has lacked any movement on transportation initiatives. We had high hopes for a Regional Transit Authority enabling bill but it didn’t get a public hearing. Although the Legislature hasn’t been focused on transportation, 1000 Friends is still advocating for accessible and equitable transportation policies that also encourage smart growth development. Gregg May, our Transportation Policy Analyst, has been busy sharing our message at state meetings. In February, Gregg participated in an initial meeting of the WI DOT Transportation Stakeholder Task Force for the 2020-21 budget biennium. Gregg also gave a presentation at the Governor’s Climate Change Task Force meeting on walking, biking, transit and commuter rail and the need for more multi-modal options in Wisconsin.