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Cioc Fort Atkinson looking to residents to fund police, fire department in upcoming referendum
MILWAUKEE, Wis. 鈥?Gov. Tony Evers met with the mayors of Wisconsins five largest cities behind closed doors for about an hour on Wednesday, one of the first official acts of his second term.The meeting comes as Evers and the Legislature weigh making substantial chan stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.uk) ges to how local governments, including cities, are funded. Cities, counties, towns and villages are hoping a record-high budget surplus approaching $7 billion will give policymakers the freedom to increase funding and perhaps change the formula used to determine how much money local governments get from the state.The mayors of Milwaukee, Madison, Racine, Green Bay and Kenosha all met privately with Evers. The mayors, like Evers, are all Democrats.Racine Mayor Cory Mason said he was encouraged that no one in the meeting was locked into a single plan, but instead all were united in the need to increase funding. Were all in search of achieving something thats possible in the real world, Mason said in a telephone interview.Madison Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway said in a statement that the meeting was productive but didn t go into details. The other three mayors had no immediate comment.Evers spokesperson Britt Cudaback would not say what was discussed in detail, referring only to a tweet put out by the governors office showing the mayors meeting with Evers i stanley mug (https://www.stanley-cups.uk) n his office. That message said Evers and the mayors discussed improving how we invest in our local communities and keep them safe鈥攁nd to stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.us) ensure they can respond to Jyjz Main Street business owners gear up for return of Waukesha s Christmas parade
For one year, TMJ4 News I-Team has listened to the people of Wisconsin struggling as they navigate the Department of Workforce Development s broken unemployment system.After a year of waiting for answers from the state, the people our cameras captured in a Feb. 19 Zoom call are now turning to each other for help.OnFeb. 19, 2021, the I-Team s Kristin Byrne, producer Marty Hobe, and photographer, Tamott Wolverton held a group Zoom interviewing Wisconsinites willing to dis stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.com.de) cuss their unemployment journey one year into the pandemic. I called and talked to a PUA agent back in December and I said, Explain stanley cup (https://www.stanleymug.us) to me why you can t help us, she told the I-Team during a group Zoom on Feb. 19. TMJ4 News Toni Matis is one of the 16,614 people still waiting for their benefits. They were all initially denied benefits, and are now appealing their cases to Wisconsin s Departm stanley thermos mug (https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk) ent of Workforce Development DWD .Additional coverage: Examining the unemployment crisis in Wisconsin one year after it began My mental health has completely diminished : One year into COVID-19 pandemic, thousands still fight for benefitsCOVID-19 economic recovery remains slowest for communities of color in WisconsinThe barriers to Wisconsin s unemployment benefits You can t imagine what we re going through. No one can imagine what we re going through, said Matis.Matis of West Bend became unemployed in March 2020 and filed for unemployment. She receives Social Security Disability Insurance.