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The garbage truck Donald Trump rode while in Green Bay will be present for Inauguration Day
Rashad Alexander
That moment went viral, and it will now be revisited again on Monday, for Inauguration Day.
Three Trump-decaled trucks are expected to make an appearance Monday near the U.S. Capitol when Trump is sworn into office. One truck will be driven during the Inauguration's parade, while the other two will be on display.
The trucks are being provided by Loadmaster, a truck manufacturing company in Norway, Michigan, which is about 100 miles north of Green Bay.
Ethan Brisson, the sales and marketing manager for Loadmaster, confirmed the accommodations with the Press-Gazette, and recounted the day they were contacted to get a truck for the now elected president who he was headed to a campaign event at the Resch Center in Ashwaubenon.
"A guy that worked for a large waste hauler in Wisconsin contacted our office. He's very involved with the Wisconsin GOP," Brisson told the Press-Gazette. "My brother took the phone call and basically just brought a truck down there."
Days earlier at a Trump rally in New York, one speaker referred to Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage." President Joe Biden responded to that comment by appearing to refer to Trump supporters as "garbage."
The garbage truck was Trump's response.
The original truck, which will be in D.C., was then displayed in Indianapolis, because that was the location of the dealer who owned the truck. All three trucks are already in D.C. for the inauguration.
Brisson said his brother, Andrew, who is the vice president of Loadmaster, will drive the truck during the inauguration parade.
"It's a big thing for us. We're kind of a smaller company and it's a lot of press for us," Ethan Brisson said. "We're just trying to get our name out there."
During the speech, Trump wore an orange safety vest that was provided by Andrew Brison, who bought it from a local Fleet Farm. They had wanted the vest back as a memento, but Trump wore it on the plane leaving the Green Bay area that night.
Rashad Alexander can be reached at ralexander@gannett.com and 920-431-8214.
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Wisconsin marijuana legalization faces familiar headwinds in new legislative session
Molly Beck
MADISON - Republican leaders of the state Legislature and the Democratic governor are again tackling the issue of marijuana legalization in the new legislative session but familiar divisions persist over an issue that has broad support in Wisconsin but not in the state Capitol.
Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said in a Sunday interview his caucus would be open to considering legislation this session from the state Assembly to create a medical marijuana program in Wisconsin if Assembly leaders removed their previously proposed idea of establishing state-run dispensaries. But as of December, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said he still preferred the proposal.
The Senate leader's position is a starting point for renewed negotiations on the issue of legalizing marijuana use for medicinal purposes that has run into roadblocks in previous sessions largely due to Senate Republicans' opposition to the idea.
"There are members of our caucus who are supportive of medical marijuana. The challenge of the bill that the assembly introduced last (session) was state-run dispensaries," LeMahieu, R-Oostburg, said in an appearance on WISN's "UpFront" politics talk show. "Growing the size of government doesn't seem to be the best way to do it."
Wisconsin is among a shrinking minority of states that do not have a recreational or medical-use marijuana program. About half of states have legalized small amounts of marijuana for recreational use, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, including neighboring Minnesota, Illinois and Michigan.
"I really hope that we see some real interest from our Republican colleagues in working on this issue," Assembly Minority Leader Greta Neubauer, a Democrat from Racine, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in December. "We know that both medical and recreational marijuana legalization are very popular."
The Marquette University Law School poll most recently asked about the subject in January last year and found 63% of respondents support legalizing marijuana. That level of support is similar to 2022 when Marquette asked the same question, but support reached as low as 42% in a 2014 poll.
In the January poll, 86% of those surveyed said medical marijuana should be legal in Wisconsin with a doctor's prescription. That's only the second time the question has been asked in the poll's history. In 2019, support for medical marijuana was at 83%.
A 2023 state analysis estimated Illinois collected $36 million in tax revenue from Wisconsin residents purchasing marijuana in the Land of Lincoln where cannabis is legal.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has included in three state budget proposals plans to legalize marijuana in Wisconsin, but Republican lawmakers who control the state Legislature have rejected the idea during the budget-writing process. LeMahieu said Sunday lawmakers would do the same while crafting the 2025-27 state budget by removing "all policy" from the budget proposal Evers gives them.
Vos said in December that he still prefers a medicinal marijuana model with state-run instead of private dispensaries — an idea that many Republicans dismissed last year — in order to avoid recreational legalization in Wisconsin.
"A red line for us is that we do not want, like it has in almost every other state, medical marijuana to lead to recreational marijuana," Vos said. "I think there is a legitimate, compassionate purpose for medicinal, I don't really see any reason for recreational."
A spokeswoman for Vos did not immediately react to LeMahieu's recent comments on the idea.
In December, Senate President Mary Felzkowski said there's "really one person that has seemed to be an obstacle to the medical marijuana bill passing" who "has some pretty strict ideas on how that bill should be drafted," referring to Vos.
Felzkowski, who has repeatedly proposed measures to legalize marijuana use for medicinal purposes, said "there were a lot of really good things" in the proposal from Vos and Assembly Republicans, but creating state-run dispensaries was a sticking point for Republicans in both chambers.
"We're hoping to have a conversation in early January to see if there isn't a way that we can come to a consensus between Assembly Republicans and Senate Republicans to negotiate a compromise, and maybe move a medical marijuana bill this session," Felzkowski said at the time.
But Vos told the Journal Sentinel he would "probably not" be willing to remove the state-run dispensaries idea from a future bill but is "open to listening" to other proposals that would still prevent opening the door to recreational marijuana.
Vos also told WISN-TV in December he may consider proposing legislation to an age restriction on legal THC products, including delta-8, that have similar effects as marijuana. In May, he told the Journal Sentinel he would support banning it altogether but did not expect Democrats to be on board.
Two Democrats told the Journal Sentinel they oppose banning delta-8 but raised concerns about the lack of oversight of the fast-growing industry. They noted hemp producers and processors are looking for the government to step up with regulations.
"(It's) not a very regulated industry. We don't really know what's in it, and that's not a good thing. So I hope that we are able to have a really rigorous conversation," Neubauer told the Journal Sentinel.
In his December interview with the Journal Sentinel, Vos said he hopes lawmakers can "at least try to find a consensus."
"This idea that you would have cannabis-infused drinks for sale in every convenience store and grocery stores across the state, I don't think that's right. But I certainly don't think it's right for kids," Vos said.
Hope Karnopp of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel contributed to this report.
Molly Beck can be reached at molly.beck@jrn.com.
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Microsoft data center will be the state's largest electricity user. Power needs equal 300,000 homes
Rick Barrett
450 megawatts would power more than 300,000 homes.
Put into context, the City of Milwaukee has around 262,000 housing units, 61% of which are single-family homes or in duplex buildings, according to a 2023 city estimate.
The data center will, by far, be the largest individual user of electricity in the state, surpassing other major users such as steel mills and manufacturing plants, according to the Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin, a nonprofit advocate for public utility customers.
Moreover, when phase one is completed by the end of 2026, the $3.3 billion facility will rank in size among the top five data centers that Microsoft operates, with the other four largest in Washington, Virginia, Arizona, and Georgia. The company has more than 300 data centers worldwide.
Data centers house thousands of computers, in one or more buildings, linked to the outside world by fiber optic cables. They enable most everyday online activities, including social media, streaming video, banking, AI-based applications like ChatGPT, and much more.
Microsoft's data center investment in Wisconsin is one of the largest in the world, according to the company.
“We are following through on the promises we’ve made to Wisconsin – to invest, build, create jobs, and support broader innovation and worker training, especially for the state’s manufacturing sector," said Microsoft President Brad Smith in an email to the Journal Sentinel.
"We appreciate that this growth also requires a lot of electricity, and we’re committed to paying our own way to add more electricity to the grid, with a priority on carbon-free energy," Smith said.
Microsoft's pledge to spend billions on the Mount Pleasant data center spelled a comeback story for a business park where tech giant Foxconn had once said it would create 13,000 jobs but fell far short of that goal.
Last May, President Joe Biden joined Microsoft President Brad Smith and Gov. Tony Evers at Gateway Technical College to announce an expansion of the data center and Microsoft’s plans to add about 2,000 permanent jobs over time.
Where will this additional electricity come from?
When phase one of the Mount Pleasant project is complete, it will require the equivalent of approximately 450 megawatts of electric utility capacity, according to Microsoft.
Comparing data center and residential electricity usage requires rough calculations, but energy experts say 450 megawatts could meet the needs of more than 300,000 homes.
"It is not unusual to see new data centers being built with capacities from 100 to 1000 megawatts—roughly equivalent to the load from 80,000 to 800,000 homes," the Electric Power Research Institute, an independent nonprofit in Palo Alto, Calif., said in an email to the Journal Sentinel.
Microsoft says it's working with We Energies to bring to the power grid new sources of electricity equal to the amount the Mount Pleasant data center will use without putting a burden on other rate payers.
"We are committed to ensuring that the electricity needs and costs for our Mount Pleasant data center don't lead to an increase in the price of electricity for our neighbors," Microsoft said.
The company said it did not currently have power usage estimates for beyond the first phase of the data center but said its goal is to develop solar and other clean energy sources as quickly as possible.
"This is critical to support our climate sustainability goals because it is not currently possible to deliver to Mount Pleasant all the electricity we need directly from carbon-free sources," Microsoft said.
As one solution, the company says it's partnering with Minnesota-based National Grid Renewables to build a solar plant in Portage that's expected to produce the equivalent power for more than 3 million homes, although solar typically produces less energy than a conventional power plant because its fuel source is intermittent.
This could be one step forward, two steps backward
We Energies says it's investing more than $9 billion in renewable energy by 2029 including new solar, wind and battery storage projects.
"We will more than quadruple our carbon-free energy in the next five years," the company said in an email to the Journal Sentinel.
The Paris Solar Park, in the town of Paris in Kenosha County, officially went into service in December.
Nearly 500,000 solar panels in the park are capable of providing enough energy to power about 60,000 homes.
The panels move and track the sun throughout the day, maximizing power generation. The panels also capture solar energy on both sides, an especially useful feature in winter when sun reflects off the snow and onto the panels.
The solar park will have 110 megawatts of battery storage. That portion of the project is expected to be in service this year, according to We Energies, the majority owner of the project.
The utility has also sought permission from the state Public Service Commission to build gas-fired power plants for the area which includes Mount Pleasant and has seen strong industrial growth.
"Our proposed natural gas generating facilities are an important step to ensure reliability for all of our customers during the transition to a cleaner energy future in Wisconsin," We Energies said.
"Now more than ever, it is critical for us to have quick-start gas plants available and running in our state to support economic growth and reliability when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine," the utility said.
Environmental groups say climate change is going to worsen while utilities continue to rely on carbon-based fuels like natural gas, which presents little or no improvement over coal when it comes to climate impacts.
"We are facing a critical moment of change in Wisconsin. We all know that our state must rapidly move away from burning expensive, harmful coal and methane gas and transition to safer clean energy sources like wind and solar," said Ciaran Gallagher, energy and air manager for the nonprofit Clean Wisconsin.
The transition is underway, according to Gallagher.
"But at the same time, we have a huge new energy user (Microsoft) setting up shop here, and it appears that more large AI data centers are poised to follow. We must demand that when companies like Microsoft come to Wisconsin, they are good neighbors, bringing benefits to our communities without derailing our state’s clean energy transition and contributing to air pollution," she said.
Environmental groups say new gas plants could remain part of the power grid for years, causing air pollution and health problems in communities already affected by coal power plants.
"This is the moment where we need to figure out these issues, because there is no question the decisions that are made around this data center will have long term impacts in our state," Gallagher said.
"We Energies is attempting to rush billions of dollars in new gas plants and pipelines through the approval process, but the public deserves more time, real transparency, and a chance to understand the impacts of what’s happening and weigh in on solutions," she added.
Pairing battery storage with solar and wind could go a long way toward meeting Microsoft's climate goals, according to Clean Wisconsin.
"Solar is great, but we know that on its own, it will be unable to serve Microsoft's nighttime demand," Gallagher said.
Even as new solar and wind projects come online, major investments in gas plants would delay the transition to clean energy, according to the nonprofit RENEW Wisconsin.
That strategy is like "one step forward and two steps backwards," said Sam Dunaiski executive director of RENEW Wisconsin.
"We are aware that the sun does not shine all the time, and the wind does not blow all the time. But as these technologies improve, and as we add more battery storage, we are going to be able to transition to the clean energy economy that we want," Dunaiski said.
Natural gas plants aren't a good stopgap measure to meet clean-energy goals, according to Sierra Club Wisconsin.
"We Energies has been looking for any excuse to double down on false solutions like methane gas, including blaming the energy demand projected from data centers," said Cassie Steiner, Sierra Club Wisconsin's senior campaign coordinator.
Nuclear power could be part of the solution
Data centers are among the world's fastest growing industries, largely driven by demand for artificial intelligence (AI) that allows computers to perform tasks typically requiring human intelligence.
AI is typically much more energy intensive than data retrieval and communications applications which drove data center growth in previous years.
"At 2.9 watt-hours per ChatGPT request, AI queries are estimated to require 10 times the electricity of traditional Google queries," the Electric Power Research Institute says.
Emerging computation-intensive capabilities such as image, audio, and video generation have no precedent, according to EPRI.
Some technology companies have turned to nuclear power as an option to meet their data-center energy needs.
Last fall, Microsoft announced a 20-year power purchasing agreement in which one of the reactors at Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island nuclear plant would be brought back online to serve data center power needs.
Three Mile Island, located near Harrisburg, is best known as the site of the most serious nuclear accident in U.S. history. In 1979, a mechanical failure caused the partial meltdown of its Unit 2 reactor, which has remained shut down ever since.
Restoring the Unit 1 reactor at Three Mile Island, which was shut down in 2019, would require approval of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. If granted, the power plant could return to operation in 2028.
Wisconsin has a working nuclear power plant, Point Beach, nine miles north of Two Rivers. Another plant, Kewaunee Power Station, was shut down and decommissioned years ago.
However, Wisconsin could triple its nuclear-powered electric output by adding reactors at the two sites, according to the Badger Institute, a Milwaukee based nonprofit policy research organization which supports free markets and limited government.
AI will drive a sharp increase in electric needs
By 2030, AI is poised to drive a 160% increase in data-center power demand, according to Goldman Sachs, an investment banking and financial services firm.
It's significant that 80% of the national data center load is currently concentrated in 15 states, and that in 2023, data centers comprised an estimated 25% of Virginia's electric usage, according to the Electric Power Research Institute.
Data centers have become one of the top economic priorities in Wisconsin.
Since last May, the Town of Port Washington, in Ozaukee County, has been eager for information about a potential data center. Now, a development company called Cloverleaf Infrastructure says it’s pursuing plans for a center on about 2,000 acres within the town that may soon be annexed by the City of Port Washington.
Anywhere the centers are built, it's going to be a balancing act between benefits and concerns.
"The devil's always in the details," said Tom Content, executive director of the Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin.
"It underscores the importance of having a commitment to transparency and accountability," Content said.
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Gov. Tony Evers calls it a 'mistake' to change state test score benchmarks
Molly Beck
MADISON - Gov. Tony Evers, a former state superintendent and public educator, said it was a "mistake" for the state Department of Public Instruction to change how school children are measured on state academic tests without gathering input from educators and parents.
The Democratic governor's comments put him at odds with his successor at the state's education agency, who has defended the changes as providing a more accurate picture of student achievement.
But the category changes have been met with criticism and mean the test is no longer aligned with the National Assessment of Educational Progress.
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jill Underly said in October that the benchmarks created an "extremely high standard to meet, beyond grade-level knowledge."
Evers, who in 2012 as state superintendent adopted the previous standards that were recently changed by Underly, said Friday he was surprised by the changes.
"I hate to even talk about things that aren't my purview anymore in the Department of Public Instruction but I just think there should have been some information and dialog happening with all sorts of people before that decision," Evers told reporters in a press conference. "It's hard to compare year to year if one year you're doing something completely different ... I think it could have been handled better."
Evers said he believes there were school officials who didn't know the changes were coming.
"The mistake was there wasn’t enough conversation with stakeholders, parents ahead of time," he said.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, told CBS58 that the new testing standards were "preposterous" and expects to introduce legislation to address the changes during the upcoming legislative session beginning this month.
"We want to pass legislation to guarantee the standards are the same and you don't get to jigger then every time you want to run for reelection," Vos told CBS58.
Underly is seeking a second term as DPI superintendent this spring. She faces Sauk Prairie School District Superintendent Jeff Wright and Brittany Kinser, an education consultant in a Feb. 18 primary election. The two candidates who receive the most votes will move to the April 1 spring election.
Laura Schulte of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel contributed to this report.
Molly Beck can be reached at molly.beck@jrn.com.
The dumbing-down of the USA continues. If the students can't hit the mark in testing, then just lower the standards. This is not only an insult to the students and their parents, it's also an insult to future generations that have to adjust and tolerate more ignorance and more stupidity.
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Foxconn acquires 20 acres near its Mount Pleasant complex. No plans have surfaced yet for the lots
Tom Daykin
A Foxconn Technology Group affiliate has acquired 20 acres of undeveloped land near its Mount Pleasant complex.
The parcels, at 4529 U.S. Highway 41, 13027 Braun Road and 10640 W. Prairie View Drive, were recently transferred from the Village of Mount Pleasant to Fewi Development Corp., according to a deed posted online by the Wisconsin Department of Revenue.
The transaction is valued at just under $4.9 million.
The lots were acquired by the village as it was assembling the site for Foxconn. Their transfer to the company's ownership was made under the development agreement between the village and Foxconn, said Sean Ryan, village communications director.
"The company recently requested title to these properties that were owned by the Village, and the Village transferred the properties to the company," Ryan said, in a statement.
There are no pending development proposals under village review for the properties, Ryan said.
Foxconn declined to comment on its plans for the parcels.
Then-Gov. Scott Walker and Taiwan-based Foxconn in 2017 agreed to a $2.85 billion tax incentive package ― including state and local funds ― if the company met annual hiring and capital investment goals.
Foxconn promised to bring 13,000 high-tech jobs to Wisconsin and create a massive large-screen LCD manufacturing facility in Mount Pleasant.
But those plans failed to materialize, and Foxconn instead shifted to contract manufacturing.
A 2021 renegotiated agreement under Gov. Tony Evers' administration allows the company to receive up to $80 million in state tax credits through 2025.
In return, the job target was reduced from 13,000 to 1,454, and Foxconn's estimated capital investment was cut from $10 billion to $672 million.
The company so far has received tax credits totaling $52.5 million since 2000, according to the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., a state agency.
Meanwhile, much of the land planned for Foxconn has since been sold to Microsoft Corp. for its data center campus.
Tom Daykin can be emailed at tdaykin@jrn.com and followed on Instagram,Bluesky, X and Facebook.