Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Panel backs $10 million for WisconsinE­ye

Money is contingent on matching fundraisin­g

- Molly Beck

MADISON – Wisconsin lawmakers on the Legislatur­e’s budget-writing committee voted Thursday to provide $10 million in state tax dollars to the statewide network that provides gavelto-gavel coverage of the state Legislatur­e and state Supreme Court as long as it raises private donations in the same amount.

The matching funds would go toward operations of Wisconsin’s version of CSPAN known as WisconsinE­ye, which provides video footage of hearings and floor sessions in the state Capitol, public events hosted by the governor, lawmakers, or stakeholde­rs, court proceeding­s, political rallies and other civic-related events.

The state funding and donations could sustain the network for decades, according to the organizati­on’s recent spending. In 2021, WisconsinE­ye had a budget of about $1.1 million, according to Jon Henkes, the network’s president.

For the fiscal year that ended in September 2019, WisconsinE­ye spent about $1.4 million, about $87,000 more than it took in that year, according to a filing with the Internal Revenue Service.

The proposal, supported by Democrats and Republican­s on the Legislatur­e’s Joint Committee on Finance, would create an endowment fund for WisconsinE­ye within the state Department of Administra­tion. WisconsinE­ye officials must request funds from the endowment no later than 2025.

Funds would be released on a dollarby-dollar basis, and WisconsinE­ye could no longer require a paid subscripti­on to access recorded content of public meetings. WisconsinE­ye provides its live coverage for free, but subscripti­ons have been required to watch events that are more than 24 hours old. Access to all content costs $9.99 a month.

The WisconsinE­ye Public Affairs Network created a paid subscripti­on model in 2021 after struggling financially during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I think they provide a valuable service to the people of Wisconsin, to allow them access from their homes to their government,” said committee co-chairman Rep. Mark Born, R-Beaver Dam.

“They’ve had several different financial models and ways of trying to manage their finances over the years, and none of them seem to be working real well. We felt that this was an opportunit­y to create a public private partnershi­p for the endowment to hopefully help them be more financially stable so they can provide that essential service that allows anyone throughout Wisconsin to access, online or on their TV, what’s happening in their own state government.”

Henkes, in a statement, said the organizati­on is “extremely grateful.”

“Since our first broadcast in 2007, we have worked to provide open, unfiltered access to state government for the citizens of Wisconsin,” he said. “This endowment fund will allow WisconsinE­ye to have a solid foundation upon which we will greatly expand that mission.”

Henkes told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel he expects potential donors to be motivated by the prospect of doubling their contributi­on with the matching grant from taxpayers.

“WisconsinE­ye is a small nonprofit swimming in a sea of large organizati­ons with tremendous influence, resources and administra­tive staffing,” he said. “WisconsinE­ye will have to continue raising funds to support annual operations while at the same time raising funds to build the endowment. So, it’s an incredible opportunit­y wrapped in an incredible challenge.”

He said reaching the $20 million mark of donations and public funds will secure the future of the network and expects to expand their services and replace outdated technology.

On the air since 2007, the privately funded nonprofit network also features news programs and interviews with nearly all candidates for the state Legislatur­e at election time. It’s available on cable TV and at

In 2020, WisconsinE­ye furloughed some of its employees and took other cost-cutting measures as donations dried up during the pandemic. The network was able to stay afloat because of the stimulus package passed by Congress known as the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, or CARES.

CARES created the Paycheck Protection Program, which WisconsinE­ye used to receive a $112,000 forgivable loan. Separately, CARES gave Gov. Tony Evers control of nearly $2 billion in aid, and he used that help to provide WisconsinE­ye with $100,000.

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