The Dairy Crisis, cont’d
Sometimes you can’t shovel everything into a story.
I found myself in that position when I profiled investigative farm journalist Pete Hardin for Isthmus. He’s an invaluable chronicler of the crisis in dairy farming. I just didn’t have the room to discuss his reporting on the cost overruns and construction delays in UW-Madison’s much-needed expansion of its Center for Dairy Research.
But as luck had it, I wrote what amounts to Part II of the Hardin story for the newly launched Wisconsin Examiner, an online news bureau focused on covering state politics and government. Friends and former colleagues are running it.
I wrote a commentary on how Wisconsin politicians (as well as UW-Madison) have failed dairy farmers.
Imagine if Gov. Evers, Speaker Robin Vos and state Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald had gathered at the onset of the January legislative session to say that Job One would be working out a rescue plan for Wisconsin dairy farmers before turning to the new state budget.
Not everything has to be draped in extreme partisanship. Our leaders could have rallied around family farmers. Right?
Chances are the pols would have found a common ground. Goodwill would have followed. The budget deliberations would have been less smash-face. Can’t you imagine a rousing chorus of “Kumbaya” breaking out as Evers signed the budget bill surrounded by the beaming Vos and Fitzgerald?
Okay, I am a fool.
These people have warring agendas and a preference for disingenuous arguments. That’s what they do. A few years ago, Republicans gave manufacturers a huge and costly income tax cut under the cover it would also help farmers. Democrats, meanwhile, are intensely committed to issues that appeal to Milwaukee County and Dane County activists. Yes, expanding Medicaid will help struggling Wisconsin farm families, but citing it as a cornerstone to the Democrats’ farm policy is such a clumsy sleight of hand.
Wisconsin farmers need more than lip service from the pols. They need smart policies broadly supported. Otherwise we ought to change the tagline on our license plates. “America’s Dairyland”? Not anymore.
To read more, please go here.
Explore posts in the same categories: Development, Wisconsin ExaminerTags: Brad Pfaff, Center for Dairy Research, Pete Hardin, UW-Madison
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