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Wisconsin Assembly to pass bills helping businesses

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Thursday, March 4, 2010 - 2:34 p.m.
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By SCOTT BAUER

Associated Press Writer

MADISON, Wis. (AP) – Democrats in the Wisconsin state Assembly said bills slated to pass today will help bolster the state’s struggling economy.

“Wisconsin is open for business,” Assembly Speaker Mike Sheridan, D-Janesville, said at a news conference before votes were scheduled to be taken on the proposals. “This is a business-friendly state.”

Democrats have been trying to tout their efforts to create jobs and improve the economy as the state struggles under 8.7 percent unemployment, up from 5.9 percent a year ago. As of December, the state lost more than 137,000 jobs over the past year.

None of the bills brought forward by Democratic leaders were particularly controversial. All of them had bipartisan support in the Assembly and Senate as well as from the business community.

One bill would require state agencies to work more closely with small businesses to help them to comply with regulations to avoid unnecessary penalties.

Rep. Kristen Dexter, D-Eau Claire, said the proposal was in response to complaints she heard from dozens of small businesses who said the state was being rigid and slow in addressing regulatory reform.

The Wisconsin chapter of the National Federation of Independent Business supported the plan, which would streamline the regulatory review process and restore duties of an office to help small businesses within the state Department of Commerce.

Bill Smith, state director of the small business group, said the changes will make the regulatory process less costly, complex and confusing.

Anything the state can do to make dealing with regulations less time-consuming and expensive is appreciated, said Jeff Machut, general manager of an AmericInn hotel in Monona.

Another bill would protect businesses from hidden automatic renewal clauses in equipment and service contracts by requiring notice to be given. It previously passed the Senate.

Businesses often get trapped into paying higher fees, or suffering with declining service, due to renewal clauses that are hidden in long-term agreements, said Steve Robik of SDR Transmissions in Kenosha.

A third proposal before the Senate would make it easier for local communities to join together to issue tax-exempt bonds to pay for projects determined to be in the public good.

Bill co-sponsor Rep. Donna Seidel, D-Wausau, said a similar program in California has been operating successfully for the past 20 years.




reader COMMENTS
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(15)
jv92
Mar 4, 2010 at 11:29 p.m.
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And posting this bond is free I assume? All this does is add to cost. All the regulation, permitting, licensing and such adds cost to you the consumer. All the while the state is collecting fees from the business for each application, permit, inspection and such. Pretty soon you wonder why things cost so much. Why, so the government can protect me? Seriously enough with their "help and protection." I love this article because it exemplifies exactly why businesses do not want to come to WI.

Roadmaster
Mar 4, 2010 at 9:28 p.m.
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The way regulation would help is that any business which issues gift certificates or sells prepaid services should have to post a bond so that customers can be refunded.

jv92
Mar 4, 2010 at 7:58 p.m.
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No, that is not a good example. How is government regulation going to protect against that? Your consumer protection in WI does nothing right now. Just recently Channel 27 did a lengthy story showing time and again how complaints fell on deaf ears. They really took them to the woodshed. So we should just dump more money down a hole into an agency that really does nothing to protect consumers? In the end it is buyer beware or take them to civil court. All regulation does is ruin things for good well meaning folks that want to have a business and god forbid make profit.

Roadmaster
Mar 4, 2010 at 7:25 p.m.
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Take a look at the story about the Whitewater tanning salon, that suddenly shut down and ran out of town with students money. A good example why regulations are needed.

jv92
Mar 4, 2010 at 6:56 p.m.
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Is this not the center of the debate today? Whether it be health care, jobs, or the economy...the crux of the issue remains the same.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x59wNGHe6...

jv92
Mar 4, 2010 at 6:53 p.m.
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Officerfriendly, Because they will never admit that "government is not a solution to the problem, government IS the problem." It was right then and is right today.

nemesis
Mar 4, 2010 at 4:17 p.m.
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The very fact that changes had to be made in the first place tells me that the regulatory process IS costly, complex and confusing and not a business-friendly state.

fasteddie
Mar 4, 2010 at 4:01 p.m.
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So where's all those people who complain constantly about the Democrats raising taxes on businesses and driving those same businesses out of Wisconsin? Hello....anyone there? Guess not.

Rawhide
Mar 4, 2010 at 3:20 p.m.
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Good job Mike!

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