Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Plan shifts oversight of complaints against lawmakers to GOP leaders

- Molly Beck

MADISON - State officials who conduct investigat­ions into allegation­s of sexual harassment and discrimina­tion against lawmakers would report directly to a Republican-controlled panel of lawmakers under a new proposal.

The legislativ­e committee is voting this week to elevate the Legislatur­e’s human resources office to report directly to Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Senate President Roger Roth, including with complaints of misconduct against lawmakers.

The move would give the Legislatur­e’s human resources director, Amanda Jorgenson, more control over such complaints by giving her office oversight of all reviews and investigat­ions of formal complaints of harassment, discrimina­tion, retaliatio­n, violence and bullying. But it also would require the director to report directly to Republican leaders instead of nonpartisa­n officials who currently oversee such investigat­ions.

Those lawmakers already have the authority to hire and fire the clerks and the officials who conduct the investigat­ions, however, which has drawn criticism from employment attorneys and government transparen­cy advocates.

Kit Beyer, spokeswoma­n for Vos, said the goal is to standardiz­e human resources duties within the Legislatur­e.

“This change will allow for better HR services to the agencies within the Legislatur­e and create opportunit­ies to find efficiencies within the HR processes,” Beyer said.

The move comes three years after legislativ­e leaders sought to improve its system for reporting harassment to deter it amid a wave of sexual harassment allegation­s against powerful men, including lawmakers, known as the Me Too movement.

In the Legislatur­e, fear of retaliatio­n is underscore­d by the fact that staff work on an at-will basis for lawmakers and can be fired for any reason and because lawmakers have a say in the employment of legislativ­e staff in charge of receiving complaints.

Under the proposed reorganiza­tion, the Legislatur­e’s nonpartisa­n human resources office would oversee payroll and employment benefits for all employees of the Legislatur­e including its agencies like the Legislativ­e Fiscal Bureau.

Currently, complaints of harassment and discrimina­tion against lawmakers are kept by the chief clerks, who unlike lawmakers are subject to a state law requiring the office to keep such records. Beyer said the human resources office would keep those records if the changes are approved.

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