Robert Cowles
Serving Wisconsin's 2nd Senate District
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Quick Fact |
We are in the midst of the annual Lake Sturgeon spawning
season on the Wolf River.
Did you know that a 66 pound female sturgeon can produce
up to 400,000 eggs?
Learn more about Lake Sturgeon and where to view the
upstream run on the DNR’s website at
this link.
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Donate Life Month |
Do you have your orange dot? April is Donate Life Month,
which is a good reminder to get an organ donor sticker
on your driver’s license or state ID if you don’t
already have one. Registering is quick and simple, and
you could just save a life. Learn more at
this link.
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Helpful Links |
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Transportation Accountability and Ten More Bills Become
Law |
One of the key initiatives I worked on this year was
recently signed into law.
In early 2017, the Audit Bureau released a devastating
evaluation of the DOT’s State Highway Program. The audit
revealed an unacceptable trend of under-estimating the
initial cost of major highway projects.
2017 Senate Bill 85,
authored by the Joint Legislative Audit Committee which
I Co-Chair, provided a roadmap to ensure this
recklessness doesn’t happen again. With the signing of
Senate Bill 85 into law, we have now paved the way to
enhanced oversight and transparency in our major highway
project design, construction, and costs.
SB 85 was just one of four key initiatives and eleven
total bills I’ve authored that were recently signed into
law. A second initiative,
2017 Assembly Bill 422, which I authored with
Representative Cody Horlacher (R-Mukwonago) and
Representative Daniel Riemer (D-Milwaukee), creates the
Hire Heroes program which makes all veterans eligible
for transitional job assistance. The Hire Heroes program
closes gaps in the former transitional jobs program to
make the path to employment simpler for all veterans. By
giving veterans a chance to get their foot in the door
with a potential employer, we can ensure that employers
see the value that veterans bring to a workplace.
In the shadow of Earth Day, it’s important to know that
hundreds of thousands of tons of non-recycled plastics
go to landfills each year in Wisconsin.
2017 Assembly Bill 789,
which I authored with Representative Paul Tittl
(R-Manitowoc), opens Wisconsin’s doors to an innovative
process that has the potential to divert tens or even
hundreds of thousands of tons of non-recycled plastic
each year from landfills and transform that plastic into
valuable commodities like gasoline, waxes, and
lubricants. Pyrolysis and gasification not only
represent an exciting opportunity for businesses,
consumers, and local governments, but this process also
presents a more responsible reuse of our natural
resources.
It’s fitting that in April, which is Child Abuse and
Neglect Prevention Month, another initiative that I
authored with Representative Cody Horlacher
(R-Mukwonago) with the help of Attorney General Brad
Schimel, was signed into law.
2017 Assembly Bill 355
combats the growing problem of child neglect and
subjection of children to drug endangered environments
by adding substance and providing clarity in Wisconsin’s
child neglect statutes for law enforcement, prosecutors,
social workers, community leaders, and caretakers. AB
355 does not interfere with Child Protective Services
ability to intervene and improve the situation, but
instead it serves as a barrier that better protects
children in these troubling situations.
Learn more about these initiatives by visiting the
‘News’ section of my website at
this link.
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Seven
Other Bills Signed into Law
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Seven other bills I’ve authored were signed into law
since the circulation of the last e-newsletter. Learn
about these efforts below:
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AB 381, which I authored with Representative
David
Steffen
(R-Green Bay), allows the Law Enforcement Memorial
Fund to collect voluntary payments on their
specialized license plates. Funds collected will
help to provide support to the families and
colleagues of fallen officers and commemorate a
fallen officer’s service.
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AB 442, which I authored with Representative
André Jacque (R-DePere), creates uniformity in the
placement of signs designating ATV routes that are
posted within a municipality. This change eliminates
uncertainty and eases the burden on local
governments of having to post an unnecessary amount
of ATV route signs.
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AB 617, which is authored by the Joint
Legislative Audit Committee which I Co-Chair,
removes an unnecessary mandate on the Wisconsin
Department of Workforce Development following an
audit of the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation.
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AB 618, also authored by the Audit Committee,
will cleanup some of the unnecessary but statutorily
required audits the Audit Bureau must perform. This
change will free up more Audit Bureau resources to
allow evaluations for other programs that are often
overlooked.
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Public notices are important to ensure government
transparency.
AB 731, which I authored with Representative
Joel Kitchens (R-Sturgeon Bay), will help to
increase these essential notices in some small-town
and rural newspapers by allowing compensation for
publishing notices in certain free circulations.
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Constantly fluctuating water levels on the Great
Lakes often leaves homeowners with a messy
shoreline.
AB 926, authored with Representative John Nygren
(R-Marinette), removes a burden on homeowners
looking to maintain their shoreline through simple
upkeep activities like raking sand or removing dead
vegetation.
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AB 946,
which I authored with Representative Joel Kitchens
(R-Sturgeon Bay) and Governor Scott Walker,
recognizes that no one knows the land better than
the farmers who cultivate it. This bill increases
the amount available for producer-led conservation
by $500,000 from the Environmental Fund (a
user-based account to fund non-point source
pollution projects) to encourage more coalitions of
farmers to coordinate to protect the watershed.
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Recognizing NE Wisconsin's Law Enforcement
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Some members of law enforcement and first responders in
Northeast Wisconsin have gone above and beyond recently
and have been recognized for their efforts. These
acknowledgements are just a few examples of how our
local law enforcement officers work to protect and serve
our communities every day. Learn more below:
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The quick response and actions by three law
enforcement officials to save a gunshot victim in
Oconto County have earned them the Department of
Justice Top Cop Recognition. Learn more about their
actions on WFRV’s website at
this link.
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Another Northeast Wisconsin law enforcement officer
was named as a DOJ Top Cop earlier this month. Green
Bay Police Department’s Officer Craig Brey earned
this recognition thanks to his brave actions on the
scene of a dangerous incident at Lambeau Field.
Learn more about his actions on Green Bay Press
Gazette’s website at
this link.
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According to Sheriff Bieber, deputies,
firefighters and EMTs in Shawano County responded to
455 calls over the weekend of Winter Storm Evelyn,
including 104 crashes and 165 disabled vehicles.
THANK YOU to all first responders in Shawano County
and throughout Northeast Wisconsin who endured the
punishing weather from the historic snow storm to
keep us safe. Additionally, thank you to all the
snow plow drivers who worked long hours to get
Northeast Wisconsin back to normal so quickly.
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Questioning the Closure of Another Iconic Tower
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Earlier this month, the Department of Natural Resources
announced the permanent closure and dismantling of the
observation tower at
Potawatomi
State Park (view from tower seen in picture to the left)
in Sturgeon Bay without any plan to replace the tower.
Combined with the closure of Eagle Tower in Peninsula
State Park, this decision marks the second Door County
observation tower that has been closed in recent years.
Our state parks are not only critical in showcasing the
best of our state’s natural beauty, but they provide
hundreds of millions of dollars in economic activity
while generating thousands of jobs in the tourism and
service industries. I believe the absence of these
iconic towers will be greatly missed by park visitors
and that and this decision could leave a chilling effect
on tourism in the park and throughout the community.
I was recently on Wisconsin Public Radio’s Central Time
to discuss the issue of degrading infrastructure in our
State Parks and the potential effects on tourism. Listen
to that interview at
this link
or read more about this story on Wisconsin Public
Radio’s website at
this link.
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Thanks for Reading! |
Feel free to contact my office with any questions or
concerns you may have, and be sure to
visit
my website and connect with me on
Facebook,
Twitter and
Instagram.
Senator Robert Cowles
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