Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wisconsin regents say no to deal

GOP brokered compromise on diversity, pay raises, building

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MADISON, Wis. — Universiti­es of Wisconsin regents narrowly rejected a deal Saturday reached with Republican­s that would have given employees a pay raise and paid for constructi­on of a new engineerin­g building in exchange for reductions in staff positions focused on diversity, equity and inclusion.

The regents voted 9-8 during an emergency meeting to reject the deal reached Friday after being brokered by Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos.

“I don’t like this precedent,” Regent Dana Wachs said during the meeting. “We need to make this a welcoming environmen­t.”

The vote was immediatel­y panned by leaders of the Assembly Republican caucus.

“It’s a shame they’ve denied employees their raises and the almost $1 billion investment that would have been made across the UW system, all so they could continue their ideologica­l campaign to force students to believe only one viewpoint is acceptable on campus,” the GOP leaders said in a statement.

Universiti­es of Wisconsin President Jay Rothman said he was disappoint­ed with the regents’ vote.

“On balance, I believe this proposed agreement was in the best interests of the Universiti­es of Wisconsin,” Rothman said.

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said the regents were committed to “doing what’s best for our past, present, and future students, faculty, and staff, and the institutio­ns that have defined our state for generation­s.”

“I believe that’s what they did today in voting their values, and I understand and support their decision and vote,” Evers said.

“In the meantime, I again urge legislativ­e Republican­s to release the already-approved UW System employee raises and investment­s included in the biennial budget that are well overdue,” Evers added.

The deal would have frozen hiring for diversity positions, dropped an affirmativ­e action faculty hiring program at UW-Madison and created a position at the flagship campus focused on conservati­ve thought. The engineerin­g building would have been built at UW-Madison.

Republican lawmakers in June refused to release funding for the new engineerin­g building at UW-Madison, and Vos in October blocked pay raises for employees across the system until it cut spending on positions that promote diversity. Vos refused to allocate funding for the raises even though the state budget that Republican­s approved this summer included a 6% raise over the next two years.

Under the deal, the system would have frozen hiring for diversity positions through the end of 2026 and shift at least 43 diversity positions to focus on “student success.”

The system also would have eliminated any statements supporting diversity on student applicatio­ns.

UW-Madison also would have created a position that focuses on conservati­ve political thought funded through donations and scrapped a program designed to recruit diverse faculty.

UW-Madison would have been forced to accept applicants who finish in the top 5% of their class at a Wisconsin high school. Applicants who finish in the top 10% of their class at a Wisconsin high school would have been guaranteed admission at regional campuses.

In exchange, lawmakers would have released money to fund the pay raise for UW employees and about $200 million that UW-Madison officials say they need to build a new engineerin­g building on campus as well as money to renovate dorms on the flagship campus and at UW-Whitewater, Vos’ alma mater.

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