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Ahead of 2018 election, Gov. Scott Walker attacked for spending more on corrections than colleges
The dais was crowded at a candidates’ forum attended by 12 of the Wisconsin Democrats who are running for governor in 2018.
One of them joked that "there's actually another blank name tag up here, so if anybody else wants to get in the race ..."
But much of the event, in Eau Claire on Dec. 11, 2017, was serious, of course.
Candidate Kelda Helen Roys used part of her time to attack Republican Gov. Scott Walker, who is running for a third term. Roys, a former state Assembly member from Madison, accused Walker of putting prisons ahead of the University of Wisconsin System, saying:
I think in 2011, it was Walker’s first budget, and we had the dubious distinction of spending -- for the first time in our state’s history -- more on our prison system that we did on the entire UW System.
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It’s a claim likely to be repeated during the campaign, so let’s check it out.
Journal Sentinel report
Walker was elected in 2010; his first state budget was for 2011-’13.
As the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported in 2012, that two-year budget allotted, for the first time, more money for prisons and correctional facilities -- that is, for the Department of Corrections -- than for the UW System.
The tallies, after a $250 million cut to the UW System:
$2.25 billion: Corrections
$2.1 billion: UW System
The operations of the Department of Corrections include running 36 adult prisons and correctional facilities, supervising adult offenders who are probation or parole, and managing the state’s two juvenile correctional facilities and community services for juvenile offenders.
The UW System has 13 four-year campuses, including the flagship University of Wisconsin-Madison, 13 two-year campuses (known as the UW Colleges) and a statewide extension with offices in each county.
The Journal Sentinel’s report, which reviewed more than 20 years of Wisconsin state budgets, pointed out that the eclipse in funding between the two agencies was the culmination of years of policy changes made under both Republican and Democratic governors prior to Walker. Also, nationwide, public universities were seeing cuts while prison spending, sparked by sentencing changes put in motion in the 1980s, was going up.
So, the change did occur on Walker’s watch, though it was the culmination of a shift over a period of years.
More numbers
For a little more context, we reviewed all four of the state budgets that have been adopted under Walker and the four adopted previously, all of which were under Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat. The figures are from the nonpartisan state Legislative Fiscal Bureau. (We’ve indicated in bold whether the UW System or Corrections got more in each budget.)
State budget
UW System
Corrections
2003-’05
$1.91 billion
$1.7 billion
2005-’07
$1.93 billion
$1.8 billion
2007-’09
$2.24 billion
$2.17 billion
2009-’11
$2.27 billion
$2.25 billion
2011-’13 (First Walker budget)
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$2.1 billion
$2.25 billion
2013-’15
$2.25 billion
$2.32 billion
2015-’17
$2.08 billion
$2.35 billion*
2017-’19
$2.14 billion
$2.43 billion*
The figures show that in the four budgets before Walker, the gap in funding between the UW System and Corrections got smaller in each biennium; and since Walker, Corrections has gotten more money than the UW System.
To be clear, those figures are for state tax dollars only. Corrections is essentially funded entirely with state tax dollars; in contrast, the UW System gets total funding of about $12 billion per year, much of it from federal grants and tuition payments.
One thing that has squeezed the UW System is that, although the increases in its state funding slowed under Doyle, tuition was increased. In contrast, state funding for the UW System has remained roughly the same under Walker, but he has frozen tuition.
A spokesman in the governor’s office didn’t dispute Roys’ claim directly, but said that under Walker the state is now spending more state tax dollars on higher education overall -- including the UW System, the technical college system and other funds -- than it did in 2011.
Our rating
Roys said that in 2011 under Walker, Wisconsin for the first time spent "more on our prison system than we did" on the University of Wisconsin System.
She’s correct. That occurred with Walker’s first state budget, for 2011-’13, when he directed more state taxpayer dollars to the Department of Corrections than the UW System.
But the eclipse was years in the making before Walker took office, and it’s worth noting that the UW System, with tuition and federal grants, has a much larger total budget than Corrections.
For a statement that is accurate but needs additional information, our rating is Mostly True.
Editor's note: We revised this item on Jan. 12, 2018 to indicate that the governor's office did respond to our request for information. The response had been inadvertently overlooked when this fact check was first posted.
Our Sources
Wisconsin Eye, video of candidate forum (1:06:00), Dec. 11, 2017
Email, Kelda Helen Roys, Jan. 2, 2018
Email, Gov. Scott Walker spokesman Tom Evenson, Jan. 9, 2018
PolitiFact Wisconsin, "Mary Burke says Wisconsin spends more on corrections than on higher education,"
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, "As priorities shift, corrections budget passes UW System," Aug. 16, 2012
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2017-’19 state budget (Table 10), November 2017
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2015-’17 state budget (Table 10), September 2015
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2013-’15 state budget (Table 10), August 2013
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2009-’11 state budget (Table 10), August 2009
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2007-’09 state budget (Table 10), March 2008
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, 2005-’07 state budget (Table 10), October 2005
Shepherd Express, "More Money for Prisons than Colleges?" June 27, 2017
Interview, Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau director Bob Lang, Jan. 8, 2018
Interview, Wisconsin Policy Forum (formerly Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance) research director Dale Knapp, Jan. 8, 2018
Interview, Wisconsin Budget Project analyst Tamarine Cornelius, Jan. 8, 2018
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Ahead of 2018 election, Gov. Scott Walker attacked for spending more on corrections than colleges
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