For more information:
Anneliese M. Dickman
Senior Researcher
Public Policy Forum
414-276-8240
adickman@publicpolicyforum.org
For immediate release
Alternatives to shared revenue provide
“golden opportunity” for regional growth
MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin – November 19, 2004 – The decline and likely demise of shared revenue between Wisconsin and local governments provide an opportunity for municipalities and counties to strengthen their regions by working together to find new revenue sources, according to a Milwaukee-based Public Policy Forum study released today.
“There is a golden opportunity in the 2005-2007 biennial budget for the state to make forward-looking policy changes that will encourage regional cooperation and strengthen regional economies,” says Anneliese M. Dickman, the Forum’s senior researcher. “The openness of local governments to new, creative solutions means it’s also time for them to redefine regional cooperation.”
“Shared revenue, as municipalities
and counties have known it, appears over,” says the report, “State Shared
Revenue and the Future of Regional Cooperation.” Before the end of the program causes crises,
The Forum report looks at property
tax-base sharing models in eastern
Dickman says that state incentives for developing inter-jurisdictional agreements will spark regional discussions, but she says such discussions shouldn’t be limited to small, service-specific partnerships. “Broad coalitions of both municipal and county governments have a better chance of securing new revenue sources and allowing growth to benefit the entire region,” she says.
The full report is available on the Forum’s Web site at www.publicpolicyforum.org.
The Public Policy Forum is
facilitating creation of a shared vision action plan for regional cooperation
in southeastern
The Public Policy Forum – which was
established in 1913 as a local government watchdog – is a nonpartisan,
nonprofit organization dedicated to enhancing the effectiveness of government
and the development of southeastern
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