Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Foxconn challenges could bypass appeals court

Lawsuits would go straight to Supreme Court under GOP proposal

- JASON STEIN

MADISON - The state Supreme Court could jump ahead of appellate courts and hear potential legal appeals related to a multibilli­on-dollar flatscreen plant planned for southeaste­rn Wisconsin, under action by a legislativ­e panel Tuesday.

On party line 12-4 votes, Republican­s on the Legislatur­e’s Joint Finance Committee amended and then approved the more than $3 billion incentive bill for

Foxconn Technology Group Tuesday as part of a marathon week of action on the subsidy legislatio­n and the separate state budget.

Environmen­tal groups have said in recent weeks that they would consider suing over the Foxconn legislatio­n, which already exempts the Taiwanese company from certain state rules to protect wetlands and the environmen­t.

The unusual legal provision would allow parties in environmen­tal and other Foxconn lawsuits to appeal trial court orders related to the plant directly to the state Supreme Court, which is controlled

by conservati­ves. All lower court orders would be automatica­lly suspended until the Supreme Court weighed in.

Rep. John Nygren (RMarinette), co-chairman of the Legislatur­e’s budget committee, said Republican­s were trying to do everything they could do to ensure the up to $10 billion plant moves forward and creates up to 13,000 jobs.

“This is the most exciting thing to happen to Wisconsin since the cow,” Nygren said.

But Democrats said GOP lawmakers and Gov. Scott Walker were going too far in promising up to $2.85 billion in cash payments to Foxconn, forgoing about $150 million in sales taxes on constructi­on materials, borrowing $250 million to upgrade I-94 south of Milwaukee

and rewriting both environmen­tal rules and the legal process for the company.

“I am very concerned about that,” state Rep. Katrina Shankland (D-Stevens Point) said of the legal changes. “I feel like it’s rigging the game.”

Rick Esenberg, president of the conservati­ve Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, said the direct appeal to the Supreme Court might raise constituti­onal concerns.

He noted that Congress has required appeals involving the redrawing of legislativ­e districts to go directly to the U.S. Supreme Court, but said federal courts aren’t identical to state courts.

State lawmakers might be infringing on the court system’s powers by taking jurisdicti­on away from the state Court of Appeals and automatica­lly suspending the lower court’s order, Esenberg said.

“It might be a separation of powers problem,” he said. “...I think that’s a close question.”

The Foxconn legislatio­n has already passed the Assembly, but Tuesday’s committee changes mean the bill will have to pass that house again in addition to the Senate before it goes to Gov. Scott Walker.

Under the legislatio­n, the state could pay up to $1.5 billion to Foxconn in cash incentives for job creation over 15 years if the company brings on enough workers.

Foxconn could also receive up to $1.35 billion in separate cash payments if the company invested in the plant and equipment in Wisconsin, even if the plant turned out to be highly automated and employed fewer workers than expected. The deal doesn’t currently contain a minimum number of jobs for Foxconn to receive those payments.

Republican­s Tuesday amended the bill to require the Wisconsin Economic Developmen­t Corp. to review Foxconn’s progress in creating jobs before paying out these plant and equipment subsidies. But the amendment didn’t include any minimum job creation numbers for Foxconn, limiting the provision’s practical effect.

Tuesday’s GOP amendment to the bill would also:

» Allow Racine or Kenosha counties — the potential sites for the Foxconn plant — to use the county sales tax to pay off loans taken out to build infrastruc­ture to serve the plant. Kenosha currently has a sales tax, but Racine does not.

» Increase state grants to the communitie­s that win the Foxconn plant to $15 million, up from $10 million previously.

» Require the nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Audit Bureau to review the payments of state subsidies to Foxconn every five years, starting in 2018.

» Give the host community for Foxconn a limited exemption from state spending caps.

Sen. Jon Erpenbach (D-Middleton) said that the deal represente­d a historic shift for the state, but not a positive one.

“Is this a game-changer? Yes, but it’s not the kind of game-changer you want,” he said.

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