About this meeting
- Government Body
- Judiciary & Legislation Committee
- Meeting Type
- Judiciary & Legislation Committee
- Location
- Milwaukee, WI
- Meeting Date
- May 4, 2026
Transcript
877 sections (from 959 segments)
We're informing people at the same time of why these buildings deserve the designation that they receive. We are a group that does look, in fact, at other things than simply the the historic nature of places. We look at the economics of things. We look at a number of things that
Those of us who have lived here a long time don't always appreciate the many architectural styles that are prevalent here. Milwaukee is a treasure of historic homes with several dozen architectural styles. Some are designated landmarks. Others simply outstanding examples of popular styles from another time and place.
The common council realized that designating things as historic encourages people to reinvest in, like, residential areas in older parts of the city, and that's been one of the real successes of the historic preservation commission. So the city has been very much support in support of historic preservation because it encourages the revitalization of old neighborhoods and and is good for property values and because they view it as a way to market the city to businesses and individuals who want to move in based on the fact that we're a unique old city with wonderful old buildings and neighborhoods.
In virtually every neighborhood, you'll find the duplex, the most popular housing type in the eighteen nineties. The middle class Milwaukee bungalow showed up around nineteen o five, and there's that distinctive Polish flat, apparently a response to narrow urban lots and population densities and working class neighborhoods around the turn of the century. The city wants you to know about all of them.
One of the things we've done is we've written these three little brochures that you just alluded to that highlight the old world architecture, the old German and Polish architecture that in The United States can only be found in Milwaukee and that really sets the city apart from every other city in the country.
One of the other
things we've done is is we realized that visitors to the city as well as city residents, don't have or haven't had any way of really finding out about the city's historic buildings or knowing what they're looking at when they're walking around. So the city did a series of nine walking driving tours of historic neighborhoods in the city and we're going to be expanding that number by doing a few more this year. Of course, the other thing we've done is we've published a book called As Good is New, which is a guide to how to rehab your old Milwaukee house. It's an illustrated guide that sort of leads you through the various steps involved with rehabbing the exterior of an old house.
Historic architectural character is a marketable asset in Milwaukee's older neighborhoods these days. Historic preservation commissioners hope the old world craftsmanship that remains will not be lost in the name of modernization.
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So there's this guy I heard about, Michael.
He's just a kid. He thought he was pretty cool, though.
He liked to act tough, steal cars, stuff like that.
And Michael just tend to get in trouble a lot. One time, he picked his friends up for a free ride in a stolen
He wants to impress the girls in the back seat, and they kept telling them, come on, faster, faster.
So he floored it and smashed into another driver doing 80.
And then he ran. He ran away without checking to see if other people were okay. They weren't. They were dead.
They're dead.
They were dead. Bernie and Tina were just a block away from their house when Michael killed them.
That's somebody's mom and dad, and he just ran away.
But he didn't get far. There's no such thing as a free ride.
After he was arrested, Michael had to face the families of the people he had killed. Now, he's serving thirty years for vehicular homicide.
That's what happens when you steal cars. This ain't no video game.
Hashtag no free rides.
Morning. Welcome to judiciary legislation committee, Monday, 05/04/2025. I am vice chair alderman Lamont Westmoreland, joined to my right by alderman Robert Baumann. Online, alderwoman Andrea Pratt, and to my far left, alderman president Jose Perez. Also, to my left, staff assistant Joanna Ortiz.
We'll start with item one, two five one five one three, resolution relating to the claim of Shelton King Junior. Is Shelton King Junior present? Doesn't look like it.
First time. First time?
Oh, here's the
first time.
It's the first time. One. Wait. Wait. This might be the second time. Hold on. Yes. This is the second time. Okay. Week.
With denial. What? Motion on the motion by Alderman Baumann is denial. Hearing objection is so ordered. Item two, two five one nine five six, resolution relating to the claim of Julius Adway. Is Julius Adway present?
First time.
We'll be holding.
Motion by alderman Bowman is hold. Hearing no objections, so ordered. Item three, two five one three eight four. Resolution relating to the claim of Meg Delia sure Bhatti. Is Meg Dalia present? Meg Dalia. Meg Dalia. Thank you.
Did I
say the last name right?
No. That that that That's on your own.
Alright. Second
time. Second
time, mister chair.
Motion by alder Men Perez is denial. Hearing objections.
Could someone else be on the record for that?
Yes. Motion by alderwoman Pratt is denial. Hearing objection, so ordered. Item four. Item two five one six three one resolution relating to the claim of Julian Woodruff. Is Julian Woodruff present? Doesn't seem like it. First time.
First time?
Yeah. Move to hold. Motion by item involvement is hold. Hearing objection. So ordered. Item five, two five one six two seven, resolution relating to the claim of Steven Brandenburg. Is Steven Brandenburg present?
First time. Right?
First time. Kevin?
Yes.
Motion by other woman Pratt is hold. Hearing objections. So order item six two five one six two nine resolution relating to the claim of Peyton Resner. Is Peyton Resner presence. Very good.
To defer a front when we're here.
Is there any
Anywhere, Good
morning. The floor is yours.
Good morning. I'll go to the city attorney first.
City attorney?
Yeah. Yes.
So miss Resner alleges that her vehicle was damaged by a manhole to cover on 08/10/2025 at or around 2829 South Howell Avenue. This was And
And
road. Then
little
is to landed on her vehicle. A DPW field investigator was did respond to a missing lid complaint and secured the lid. There are no prior calls regarding this or any other manhole covers in the area. And as I said, on that date, the city, had a rainfall of 14 and a half inches, and the city's attorney's office has recommended Nile, because the city had no notice of the defect and was not negligent in its response.
Good morning.
Before we Good
morning. Claimant that I see the claimant.
So I wanna go to public works. How is this possible? What's the dynamics in play that would push a
Good morning. Here. Jason Sanders, sewer services manager, DBW Sewers. So the on August 10, that was the weekend we had the storm where you see 14 inches of rain. The sewers were filled over capacity. So the pressure, the back pressure knocked the lid off and blew it. And I guess it's possible that it did damage the car that was parked there.
So it can go into it can actually propel the lid into
the The back pressure from everything that backed up and went into the air, I can't say how far it went into the air. As far as, historically, as far as I've seen, was maybe four feet at the most. I can't attest to it actually damaging the top of the lid, but I mean, I'm sorry, the roof of the car. But the lid was, at the time covered with asphalt because it was located in the bike lane and being, you from the freezing, the thaw of the man, the street, the lid may have sunk down a little bit so someone patched over it to make it, you know, safe for cyclists to travel in the back lane. So at that time, it was probably asphalt.
It may have blown up. It may have blew up and went as far as the roof of the car, but the pressure from the back pressure basically knocked the lid off. And it's a very big lid. It's very big. I
don't That's satisfactory. Thank you.
Good morning.
Good morning.
Could you
start with your name and address, please?
Thank you. Peyton Resner, 2435 East Sharon Drive, Oak Creek, Wisconsin.
Yeah. Then you can go. Yeah.
But I was visiting at 200829 South Howell Avenue where my car was parked. So, the manhole from what I saw that morning, the manhole, I have some photos. It was located on, like, on the street on the inside corner of my car.
We have and we have those same photos.
Perfect. Yeah.
And then there was another photo on the opposite side of my car where you can see where the manhole ended up. It looked as though it and my neighbor also saw it happen. He it looked as though it blew, hit the top of my car, rolled over the other side, and landed in the ground. And then from when I discovered it, it had it had been moved back to its cup where it cover the manhole.
But I'm sorry. That happened in the entire time you were in?
It was it happened while I was asleep. I discovered it the next morning. I'd seen the damage and it's taken the photos and wasn't sure what happened until I talked to my neighbor who told who had seen it and told me what he saw.
Mister chair?
Alderman Press.
Yeah. I'll just ask DPW. So someone from DPW took the manhole cover, put it back?
Yes. We responded. It was about 04:00 in the morning. We received a missing lid, we went out and we put the lid back on the manhole.
And then do you guys leave a note for someone Mhmm. Realizing the damage? I mean, what's the procedure you guys do?
No. They may not have noticed the damage to the vehicle wherever they picked the lead up from. It was usually a missing lead complaint. I'm not sure if the complaint said that there was damage to a car or anything like that. I'd have to check and see if the report said that. But as far as I know, was just another missing lid.
Where they replaced it was right next to the car. So I don't know how they wouldn't have noticed the damage to the car.
It was on the other side of the car.
Right. Exactly. And I I mean, the I'm her mother. And I think for us, thinking we were never notified, what if, you know, I mean, yes, she saw it the next morning but what if this would have went on for days. I mean the car was totaled and she had only had it for a month and a half. So I guess the communication piece and then shortly after the next week they were worked there was you know there were we sent a picture of the work being done on that exact lid, seemed a little ironic that right after this happened that there was being repairs done to that area of of the road specifically to that manhole cover.
This car was totaled?
Yes. That car was totaled.
Yeah. The Jeep was totaled?
Yes. The Jeep was totaled.
From the damage on the roof?
Yes. And you can see the crack because the water It's
a hybrid. It was the electrical damage.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
And the insurance our insurance claim is on here, but it was completely totaled.
And did the insurance pay pay this out?
Not the full amount
that was paid for the Jeep. There was a difference of like $5,435 between what was paid for the Jeep and what the insurance covered.
What was your deductible on that?
$500, I believe. Yes. $500.
And what's your theory of negligence? How was the city negligent?
Just the notification. Just How would that have affected the damage?
It wouldn't have, but just knowing next how it proceeds, I had to file my insurance claim not really knowing what necessarily the damage was. I just had done weather damage, but it was kind of weather induced damage because it wasn't really direct directly from weather but because of, I guess, a side effect of the weather.
And I think just because then shortly thereafter, it was being worked on. So obviously, there was probably something wrong with it. Maybe the weather just made it worse, but it just seemed to be ironic that then all of a sudden there was work being done in that specific area of all the areas of the city. I'm sure
there's, you know, that it was that it
was right in that spot. Well,
there's there's really no evidence of actual negligence here. I mean, damage,
nature induced mishap, yes. And frankly, we start settling all these claims. We'll be There'll be a lot of money involved. So I'll move denial.
Motion is for denial by Alderman Baumann. Any objections? Hearing none so. One objection noted Alderman Perez. So order. City attorney.
So this is the first step. What happens next is that the recommendation of this committee will go to the full common council, which next meets on 05/12/2026. If the full council adopts this committee's recommendation, then you'll receive a formal notice of denial by mail. And then once you have that notice of denial, you can file suit in circuit court if you wish to pursue this matter. Thank
you.
Thank you.
Like to make everybody aware that you're holding. Item 12, yeah. Okay. Item 12 if anybody's here for item 12, that item will be held. And I'd also like to make everybody aware that we've been joined by Alderman Russell Stamper. Welcome. Hey, man. Thank you. Item 7241692, communication from the intergovernmental relations division and legislative affairs division related to legislative updates. Good morning.
Good morning.
Good morning.
Thanks for having us. Jordan Primico, agovernment relations division director. We did add Kenny Yeager and I in the government relations division along with the Ladd division. Now that the legislative session has wrapped for the year, We wanted to just quickly run through legislation that the city had advocated for or against and talk about the impacts. There was a PowerPoint presentation included in the file but we can just quickly run through that now. Katie, you want to take it away?
Sure. Jordan said I'm sorry, Katie Yeager, Intergovernmental Relations. Like Jordan said, we did put together a slide show. So if you have that and can follow along, We broke it down into categories and included things that all of the bills that either well, all of the bills that did pass that we had registered in support of. To highlight for you all, a lot of them were discussed before this committee throughout session.
So we'll begin with bills pertaining to housing and development. Last meeting, I touched on it a little bit, but the truth in planning bill was passed. The governor signed that one. We were registered as sideways on it because there were aspects that we did support, including the TIT extension, but then other aspects that we weren't fully in support of. But it will have a large impact on the city because it will increase our pot of affordable housing funds in the millions.
There was also Wisconsin Act two thirty seven. This is a WIDA program fixes. These broadened the scope of allowable uses for developmental or project loans in the WIDA fund. There was about $05,000,000,000 in the WIDA fund to allow coupling with both TIF funding and historic preservation tax credits that should loosen restrictions on those WIDA funds to help move along housing development projects in our community. Another one was Wisconsin Act two thirty eight, Historic Reservation Tax Credit Program. This broadens the use of the historic preservation tax credit program, again with the hope this would help move projects along in our community.
And similarly Act two thirty nine, similar to the WIDA program, it made some changes to the state housing tax credit program which will expand access to financing for various workforce housing and increase mixed income and middle income housing development. Next, under the environment category, Wisconsin Act, acts one seventy and one seventy one. These established a battery stewardship program. This will help with fire safety, shift some of the recycling costs to the producers, taking some of the burden off of local governments who offer those types of services and allow better access to recycling options for batteries.
There was also Wisconsin Act 15 increasing the bonding authority for the environmental improvement fund. This legislation approved 7 and $32,000,000 in bonding authority with the state for water infrastructure projects. This is not a fund that the city has traditionally tapped into but being that federal funding may be running out for lead lateral replacements, it would give the city another option to potentially tap into the state's bonding authority to continue to do water infrastructure projects including lead lateral replacements for the city of Milwaukee. There's also a number of public safety bills that we worked on this session. The impoundment of reckless driving vehicles, I know the LAD division worked hard on this one as well as inter government relations, Wisconsin Act 46, Alderman Westmoreland, we're all well aware of that bill and the impact the positive impact it's had on our community to continue to attract reckless driving in our community.
There was Wisconsin Act 36 reimbursements for EMS services. This broadens services from our emergency services of which the fire department conducts a lot of those services that it will increase the financial sustainability of local EMS services and it will also provide training programs for EMS services to increase the pipeline of individuals trained for EMS coming into our system. So it should have positive impacts to both Milwaukee Fire Department and EMS services as well as the private ambulance providers in our community.
And then some really monumental bills that passed on the very last days of session that will have really positive impacts for health for Milwaukee residents, one of those being the postpartum Medicaid extension. So this is the bill that extends postpartum Medicaid coverage from the current sixty days to one year and bringing us up to speed with the rest of the country except for one other state at this point. And then another one, Wisconsin Act 103, providing breast cancer screenings under the medical assistance program which again will increase access to great preventative care for Milwaukee residents.
Next category is we kind of called economy and jobs. There was Wisconsin Act 15, creation of a state film office, something that there was a large coalition pushing forward to create a new incentive program for filmmakers to come make their films in the state of Wisconsin. We are already seeing the impact of films being shot in the city of Milwaukee and these also lead to the creation of jobs. So we're excited to we're happy to have supported and excited to see that program. I know I believe last month the governor announced the hire of the new director of that office.
So that is up and running and successful already. And then Wisconsin Act 175 opportunity and attraction program. This is a new set of state funds to help attract large scale events to the state of Wisconsin, things like the NFL draft, the RNC, other large events that we might host. I know we've talked in the past about potentially WWE events. This would create a state pot of money that would allow the state or local governments to apply to tap into those funds to draw a major event into the community. So that was another piece of legislation we supported.
We talked about Wisconsin Act two forty the last hearing, but, that was the occupational credentials for DACA recipients. Again, expanding local workforce options for, dreamers in our community. There was Wisconsin Act one seventy six in relation to the Transform Milwaukee Jobs Program, a state and local partnership. This just slightly updated some of the eligibility requirements for residents to participate in this program. And by participating in the program, it expands their access to workforce training, some transitional employment opportunities, helping to strengthen pathways into full time long term employment.
I also just wanted to note that the governor did veto the restriction on local government programs. That was Assembly Bill 165 that the city had registered in opposition to because it would have directly disallowed us from offering various city programs that are currently offered. And then just an overview, there were several bills introduced to this session that would have changed election administration procedures and impacted voting access in Wisconsin. The city opposed several of these bills. You know, I want to highlight one of them, Assembly Bill five sixty, which would have completely prohibited the use of absentee drop boxes, which our elections commission has worked really hard to have those stationed throughout the city in in convenient locations for voters to be able to safely drop off their absentee ballots so that they can securely be processed and counted by eliminating or prohibiting the use of these, of a way of returning ballots.
It could have definitely impacted the ballots that are getting back to the elections commission and thus counted. There were bills creating different regulations for election observers. Again, not considering the city of Milwaukee, which is really unique and having in central account locations. And logistically, these bills just would not have been feasible for an operation of our size. So there was a lot of educational a lot of education going on behind the scenes to make sure that these legislative offices that were introducing these types of bills kind of understand that the city of Milwaukee is extremely unique in our size and the scope of elections here.
So I think that these were really great learning experiences. None of them passed, thankfully. And I think in a future meeting, we'll have Polina Gutierrez here to and available to discuss some of these things in greater detail.
So that's a wrap up. I do want to give an opportunity for Ladd Division to add anything. But before I do that, many of you saw on Friday, Katie Yeager is leaving the City Of Milwaukee. I just wanted to take a moment to thank Katie for all of her hard work. We've been tremendously lucky to have her on our lobbying team. She many of the things that we just went over would not have happened without her hard work out in Madison. She is, believe it or not, headed off to bigger and better things. As we like to think maybe nothing is better than the city, but a tremendous opportunity for Katie. So I just wanted to take a moment to thank her for all of her hard work.
Thank you, Katie.
Thank you. You.
And I I so appreciate the opportunity to get to represent the interests of, like I said, in in my note to you all, the the greatest state city in the state of Wisconsin. So thank you for allowing me to do this great work.
Are you happy or sad? Mhmm.
It's bittersweet. It's bittersweet. Absolutely.
Thank you. Thank you.
Well, that's hard to follow. However Sure.
Oh. Yeah. Go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you. Before we get to ours, I'd like to talk with Jordan. Hey, Jordan. Did we on the bond authority?
Yeah.
What will be our when will we know this? The ability to use it.
Well, it really depends. So, now, you know, primarily from my understanding discussions with what Milwaukee Water Works, we've been tapping into the funds that have been made available, the bipartisan infrastructure law under the previous presidential administration to replace lead laterals in our community. And this council along with the administration worked very hard to prioritize equitable distribution of removal of those lead laterals, communities of need, places where work is already happening. And we've been able to at this point in time tap into those substantial federal funds to do that work without additional cost to the rate payer or many times the homeowners. If that line of funding were to dry up and again it is uncertain if that will be renewed by the current Congress administration.
There are we are advocating for it to continue, but if it doesn't, this 700,000,000 plus from the state government in bonding authority could be another avenue for us to pursue to do these projects as well as another avenue of against state bonding authority for any other major water infrastructure project we might look to entertain.
How much money is left? Do you know?
So I think that money was just set aside this session. I believe applications are ongoing to tap into it. So my I think the whole $700 and some million are still there. But again, as we're all well aware, water issues, water infrastructure issues, PFAS, things of that nature are an issue around the state. So yes, to your point, money could go quickly. But I think this set a new standard for the state. What we're hoping is that budget after budget, the state will continue to put this. I mean, part of mine, do you remember, Katie?
It went from I
think it was the number that's in my mind, was 56,000,000. And, you know, that had historically been enough for the applications that they were receiving. But a lot of the water infrastructure was created in the 1970s for a lot of local governments, of course, as a result of the federal Clean Water Act. Now that infrastructure is kind of nearing its end of life and is needing replacement, of course, the smaller communities in Wisconsin are also growing, which is putting greater strain on this aging infrastructure. So that money became, a lot more coveted.
And, in the last round, I believe that MMSD or the city was going to be putting in an application and they were told this is already so competitive. A city of our size does have the ability to go kind of private market to get bonding authority or to get to do bonding and smaller municipalities did not. So those smaller communities were prioritized for the $56,000,000 So now with this huge expansion of bonding authority, we would be able to apply for
it once
That's good. So do they take in consideration the aging of our infrastructure in the last four floods that we just experienced?
You know, I don't know. That's a good question. I think Pat Polly or someone from Water Works would have to answer that or MMSD. And certainly, since this legislation was passed, I mean, I believe if memory serves, this was passed before last August. So we've had two major floods in our community directly impacting water infrastructure. So even when this was passed, we've had major incidents. I mean, I think the good news is that the state was able to recognize we are vastly under bonded in this program. They added $700,000,000 in new bonding. I could see this continuing to be discussion with the state moving forward so that they can make sure to continue to renew that money in bonding authority or increase it if necessary.
Excellent. Okay. And then who was the author of this large event fund?
I don't remember offhand. I know Visit Milwaukee was a tremendous advocate for You know, that's something, you know, Peggy Williams Smith, Claire Hannan and the team, they pushed very strongly for because they are our leaders when it comes to pursuing these major events. So I don't remember the authors offhand, but visit was very prominent.
Yeah. How much is available?
I believe it was I think they put like 20,000,000 in the fund.
Yeah. 20,000,000. Yeah. And I believe senator Bradley was one of the the key sponsors on the senate side. I'm not sure off the top of my head who is leading in the assembly.
Okay. Then last, on 04/30/2026, the US Supreme Court in a 63 decision in Louisiana versus Cutter significantly weakened section two of the Voters Right Act of 1965. Where are we as a state in our opposition to this strike down? And do you think it'll reach up north or the Midwest anytime soon?
That was a Supreme Court decision. Louisiana versus Callis. Calvin Lee with the legislative affairs Alderman to your question, there was an analysis that I prepared and sent out last week for you. Okay. So please check your email or I can report that to you.
I'll check it.
Obviously, Kitty had brought up some of the election materials, some of the bills. We will be working closely with the election commissioner and protecting everything that we can do here. But depending upon who you speak to, many are looking at this as as being a resurrection of Jim Crow laws, in my opinion.
Well, obviously. But what I'm saying is that we Yeah. I could In your email, did you put something in opposition to this as a city?
It was an email to inform you about that decision.
Okay. Yeah.
Yeah. I think we'd wait for this body, particularly, you know, I'd like to to put a file forward.
As soon as possible.
I'll put an email
for And I can I can say what, you know, what we're seeing in an immediate response to that Supreme Court decision are redistricting efforts like you had said particularly in Southern states? Sure. Right now, our state legislative maps were agreed upon between the governor and the republic state legislature. So our maps
should be How long do they last?
They would these maps would go until 2030 when the next census is done and redistricting will be done at that point in time. So so right now these maps should be in place until 2030. There have there has been litigation around our congressional map. Recently two, three judge appellate court panels have denied a redrawing of that map. That has not yet made it to the state supreme court if it does.
But you know, we are not seeing the efforts of mid decade redistricting like they are in many other states with going on what's on federally. I think we can I think it certainly does behoove us as a community to speak up and say we oppose the Supreme Court decision? I think for the four of us up here, divisions, we're going have to be diligent in making sure that these sorts of efforts, if they happen in our state, our community, particularly our vulnerable communities are protected. But I do not see anything immediate or nor have I heard anything immediately on the horizon from this Supreme Court decision coming to Wisconsin.
Okay. But An orderman? Twenty third. Okay.
That's if they
governor and and the the legislature legislature would would have have to to determine determine and and set set what what those those maps maps are are based based on on the the census and now that race or demographics cannot play into how those are mapped out, it will be structured population wise which could have an impact on how these particularly inner city districts look.
Right. Okay.
And I will just point out just rumor mill that there is quite a bit of attention to the county maps that were agreed upon. So I would not be surprised if there might be some sort of challenge in the future on the county maps. Speaking with Jim O, he's fairly confident that we're in a very good spot as far as the city maps go, all the man and boards, things of that nature that that won't be impacted and things should be in place at least through 2030.
Those issues you mentioned
Mhmm.
Be in direct correlation with the changes of this law if it comes forth?
So fortunately Yeah. For Wisconsin, a lot of the provisions, I mean the Voter Rights Act federally had various provisions in addition to redistricting. And we have state laws that reinforce a lot of those federal provisions. So it would actually take some undoing of state laws well to increase vulnerability of certain voters other than throughout the redistricting process. And we have been in conversations with Paulina to
be a little
bit more specific and add items in the legislative package to account for these attacks that were noted in the PowerPoint. And then of course, I'm sure Paulina has some ideas to protect us against the impacts of that Supreme Court decision as well.
Alright. Thank you. Now I'll get to you. Me. I haven't read the email, but I'll get right on it and get back
to The only
thing that
I wanted to advise you of as well is in that, you will see towards the bottom of the email, a part of that analysis was a decision from 2023 versus the most recent decision here in 2026.
Okay. Alright? Cool.
And if
you have any questions yeah.
If you
have any questions about interim.
I'll sure sure. I'll reach out. Yeah.
Alright. Thanks, mister chair.
Oh, yeah.
But the reality is is that they really don't pay attention to the local maps as much as they do the state and the federal to congressional seats.
Yeah.
So do you guys have any assessment that those are gonna challenge before 2030? Or does it just depend on what the state legislature supreme court the governor looks like.
Twice had assigned a body of judges that would look at redistricting the congressional maps. Twice, they've said that they don't have the authority now to do that. So it's very unlikely that we'll see anything before this election. I would not be surprised if we see continued efforts to restructure those going forward. There's also some conversation that the legislature might come back in the near future certainly to discuss what to do with the surplus that they have on hand but also maybe coming to some sort of agreement on congressional maps simply because the Republicans perspective is a worry that Supreme Court or Democratic control legislature will change those significantly to benefit them.
So they might get ahead of that and cut some sort of grand bargain on those maps. It's hard to say exactly what it's going to be but there is conversation and part
of what I was going
to say in my update as well is that they have scheduled to come back next week on a special session to meet on the floor. I believe they have agreement of some sort or at least one in place regarding the surplus. I'm not sure where they're at with the maps quite yet.
And I will say to your question, know, Supreme Court a new case law. Yeah. And that case law now carries throughout The United States Of America. So there's always the opportunity that a law firm or a concerned citizen could bring a lawsuit against the city of Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, the state of Wisconsin, and under the new case laws and the changes to the Voting Rights Act. We are certainly that could happen in our community. I'm sure city Attorney Goyke and his team are on top of it. But there is always the case that a new suit could be brought under this case law to challenge what we've done here.
All right. Thank you guys. Keep us Yeah.
And I
just wanna point out one other thing as legislation or the session wraps up in the legislature for the year is I think it's really important to understand the landscape there. One of the interesting facts that have come out recently is Democrats have authored more than 500 and introduced 500 bills of which only five had received even a committee hearing. So 1% of Democrats' efforts have gone through the actual political process that we all know and understand. So
Justin, 500 in how long?
Just not the last two years in the this last session.
Bills and four only got to?
Five got to a a committee hearing and were heard. That doesn't even mean that they made it to full enactment of law and that the government signed them into law.
So is that process similar to ours? They need someone to sponsor?
Well, they need someone to sponsor, and bills that were authored or sponsored by a Democrat had only seen five of them receive a committee hearing. So it just goes To
the committee hearing, how does it get there?
It's a side
Yeah.
The committee chair chooses what bills are heard of
their committee.
So they they just don't? Yeah.
If it's a republic the the the all the committees are chaired by Republicans. Gotcha. And so the Republicans can choose what bills do and don't
come in front
of their
committee. Okay. What about do they have the same processes on the floor?
No. No. Different.
So you can't even bring it on the floor?
No. So there there are some, you know, operational strategies that can help at times such as what we saw with the DACA bill and some of our democrat allies helping to negotiate. But there is a tremendous amount of power in committee leadership and certainly majority leader and speaker to control where Okay.
Some of those are ours?
No. They were I mean, they're I'll have to go back and see exactly what
the five.
I'll have to go
back and double check that that that information just came out last week to what specifically they they were.
I think what we need to pay attention to is that there was a lot of bipartisan support. This team had worked diligently and hard on Good. Those bills that had passed through this legislative session. Good. It was tough. However, we were able to move quite a few things forward.
Thank you. Thank you. Are we making progress on the red light cameras?
Certainly not this session, but speaking with the the senate author last week at the MMAC night, He's optimistic that depending how things look next year that they would more than likely be willing to introduce it or reintroduce it.
Excellent. Thank you, guys. Thank you, mister chair. Thank you. Any other questions? Or comments? No.
Now, just quickly too, just on behalf
of lab, we would like
to thank Katie and all her efforts, you know, on the record that we we certainly appreciate working with her and and wish her all the best.
Thank you. Good luck.
Thank you.
Yes, So you
guys updates are you guys similar updates or did you own update or that was the same update?
Yes. It's a collaborative city. So they covered a good summary of everything that.
Yes, sir.
Yeah. Over the weekend at Cicco de Mayo event that Conquistador did, they honored the city for their work on the DACA. So, I wanted to thank everyone involved for the state level licenses that was approved which is basically around we have about 5,100 dreamers in the state of Wisconsin that now have an ability to apply for licenses from plumbers to nurses which is huge for them not only for us to retain them there. I think we can recruit other DACA folks to come to the to the state and work. So they honor the city and so I just wanted to say thanks to the all the team that had anything to do with working on that and it is a big deal.
It's probably the most important piece of legislation for Latinos in the
state of Wisconsin.
It's good news.
Thank you.
Thank you, sir. Motion by president Perez. Hold to the call of the chair. Any objections? Hearing none so ordered. Thank you. Item eight.
Right. Just
stay for a second.
Two five two two two zero. Substitute resolution amending the city of Milwaukee state legislative package to express support for legislation requiring the installation of speed limiting devices on vehicles owned by those repeatedly convicted of reckless driving sponsored by Alderman Stamper. Alderman Stamper.
Thank you, mister chair. Yes, I read that in Maryland, they passed a bill repeat or extreme speeding offenders to install intelligence speed assistance, which is a device that will prevent you from speeding. So thought it would be a proposal to bring it to the city of Milwaukee. And the pros of this legislation is that it directly stops dangerous behavior, not just punish it, it stops you. It targets the highest risk drivers.
It has proven technology and is an alternative to license suspension. So being that Milwaukee has a speeding problem, reckless driving problem, this becomes a public safety issue, and I like to add this to the legislative legislative back package along with the red lights and then everything else we're doing to the curb reckless driving.
In that book
oh, yeah. Go ahead.
Oh, I was gonna say,
Alderman Samper Yes. As we discussed weeks before, this bill there was this bill was introduced in the legislature this session. Okay. AB six fifty five, senate bill six fifty nine. Both representative Goodwin and Senator Larson. It did not advance. I appreciate you wanting to reintroduce this. I think this adds on to the work over the last two years with like the reckless driving bill that Alderman Westmoreland wanted us to pursue. With this, we are in the process also of putting together the ledge package as well. So this will definitely be added when we get ready to run, start running, and get ready for next session.
Sure. You mentioned Maryland and so forth. To the best of my knowledge, I think there are 10 states and I can provide that to you later after the meeting that have introduced or moved forward with this type of legislation in the nation. Yeah. Thank you very much.
Alderman, I appreciate you asking about the red light camera bill. So we were working on that one as a way to deter the reckless driving from occurring in the first place. When somebody comes up to an intersection, they see that there's that it is camera enforced. They slow down. They stop at the red light actually.
So that was our more so preventative effort to decrease reckless driving in the community. This bill that Calvin just mentioned was introduced by a senator who actually is very, very opposed to the red light camera district. So we tried to do some educational work there to help to get him to a place where he maybe wasn't in such opposition to a preventative solution and then we would, you know, like to support the, you know, kind of last ditch effort of literally slowing speeders cars down.
Yes.
We weren't able to get there unfortunately. We do hope. I I hope this team can can work on that senator and get him to a different place next session because it would be great to have a Milwaukee senator in support of of a bill that would be huge impact to the massive issue of reckless driving in Milwaukee.
Well, can you continue to help us in your new capacity? Alright. Well, thank you so much. Just one
last thing. To your point, Alderman Samper Yes, sir. So that the public understands what this building is. It states you stated what it is, but it's actually the installation of a speed device that would prohibit you from going over a certain miles per hour over the speed limit or whatever the registered speed limit is. Yeah.
And then one note on that if and maybe you'd like this to be specific in the ledge package, but there were a lot of questions and concerns about the burden of cost and who actually pays for that technology to be installed in the cars and then what happens if the owner of the vehicle can't afford that expensive technology. So, maybe consider adding a specific provision to account for that.
Yeah. Okay. Unfortunately, this is one of the 500 bills that did not get a committee hearing so that wasn't fully flushed out in the negotiation Alright.
Do you do you know
if this one because I'm I like and I like this.
Thank you.
I'm curious if if all goes well and and we can do this, if we would have the ability as a city to have these installed prior to an impounded vehicle being released. Like, at one point are they installed?
I mean, the the yeah. The legislation that it's completely open to being reconstructed. So that's something that we can have discussions Do you
know what
it currently?
How it currently?
I I believe that it would be something similar to an ignition device if you were to get a drunk driving arrest Yeah. Whereas you have to You have a certain amount of time to to put it in your vehicle before you can drive it again.
First offense.
And I think, I mean, this is the sort of thing that priority of inter government relations division is always to craft legislation the best we can in Madison to give you all the opportunity to design it. You know, what I'd love to have the state say is that these devices are permissible. Local municipalities can require these, you know, these devices. And then local governmental bodies can say, in our community, if you get impounded, we're not releasing your car until the device is installed. For sure.
So I think, you know, again legislative package wise, it's always good to look broadly of give us permission state and then let us design how that works for because it may we may want to do something in Milwaukee than they want to do in Green Bay or Madison and it's our we have to the state needs to start recognizing better. Municipalities are different. We have similarities, but we're different across
the state.
Right. So allow the local governmental body that is closest to its residents determine what's best for their community.
Yeah. Particularly because not every city has enacted the impoundment bill for reckless driving. So the right there, there'd be some serious he
has? Half?
I don't. Not at the top of my head. I mean, we could probably check with LRB and see if they hit their Okay.
I'd like to be added as a co sponsor Excellent. To that. Any other questions or comments?
No. Thank you, guys.
Alderman Baumann moves for adoption. Hearing objections, so Item nine two five one six nine six, communication from the office of the assessor relating to twenty twenty six assessments sponsored by alderwoman Cox.
Alderwoman Cox is requesting I'm here. I'm here. I'm I'm here. Okay. I'm on the board. I do just oh, back into the assessor. I know we had this on last month's agenda a little prematurely. But now that folks have received their assessments, I try to do this every year, or we kinda have the assessor present and go through the assessments, what the city average is, but also where the highest spikes are or the declines and all of that kind of thing and to answer some of the questions that some of us may have been getting from some of our residents. And with that, I think we can go ahead with the assessment.
Thank you.
Good morning, everybody. I'm Ryan Ranker, the deputy commissioner of the assessor's office. And today, we're going to talk a little bit about the 2026 revaluation we've done for city property assessments. I'm going to start with some broader themes talking about what a revaluation is, some of the statutes within which we have to operate, where assessment and public policy might kind of cross paths and how assessments are determined. I'll finish then with where we're in right now, the open book period and how property owners can discuss or appeal their assessments.
And also to my left here I have the assessor's office real estate modeler, Mr. Colin Williams. He'll present a little bit later into more of some of the specific sales and activity within neighborhoods.
Mr. Chair? Yes sir.
Yes. What is a real estate modeler?
So basically I'm the main math guy in the office. So I collect all the data, process it, do statistics, develop the citywide models for real estate values. And what do you use? What do I use? We use a combination of Excel and an open source statistical package called R. It's a common statistics and modeling software for the assessment industry.
Is citywide is countrywide?
Offices across the country use this. Some use proprietary software, either Microsoft product or there are various other ones that vendors charge for but this is a free open source software that I'm able to use.
And you manually insert the data?
We get not manually. We're not hand typing but I'm manually manipulating all of the data once we get it from our various sources and I'll get into kind of how all of the what data we have and how all of that works in the presentation as well.
Okay. And what kind of software is that again?
It's called r. Just the letter Okay.
Alright. And where's the commissioner today? She and I have been having some discussions. I was expecting her today.
She had a family event over the weekend so she's probably not going to be in our office all week.
Sure. Okay. Well, we wish her the best.
Thank you.
Alright. Thanks guys. Okay.
So I'll just start here and I'll kind of talk, you know, what is a revaluation. So that refers to the reassessment of all parcels within a municipality and this is necessary because economic conditions are constantly changing. So properties are revalued to reflect those changes in the market and also at specific properties if there are raisings, kitchen or bath updates, things of that nature.
The
two most prominent statutes that kind of define how we are to value real estate are 7,005 Wisconsin State Statute which basically says that we need to value all classes property within 10% of full value. So that's 10% of the market value. And that's for all classes, so residential, commercial, agricultural, undeveloped. And then the other stat ute that we kind of lean on is seventythirty 2 which it's how we are to value it and it's either from actual view getting into a property which is up to a property owner if they want to let us in or not or the best information available. So that's an could be an exterior inspection, that could be information we've gleaned online and other information that's available publicly to us.
And what we're trying to do in the end is figure assessments are what we anticipate a property would sell for based on that data.
Excuse me, Mr. Chair. Yes, sir.
On evaluating what a property would sell for, Is that pure subjective or do you have a formula?
That's where the modeling comes in.
I would say yes, that is where the modeling. We have based we have the city broken into neighborhoods based on the style of property. So we're not valuing commercial with residential and we're not looking at triplexes to value a ranch. So we try to get, you know, down to the level of detail that makes sense so that we can see patterns and trends and identify that ranches in this neighborhood are selling for $150 a square foot. So that's kind of how we try to break up the data and make the most sense of it. We're not comparing North Side to South Side or anything like that. It's very compartmentalized when we're looking at the data.
Oh, so it's not blanket throughout the city. You go district by district?
Yes. We have the city broken up into numerous residential neighborhoods and commercial neighborhoods.
Different formulas or the same formula?
The same methods are applied to all of them. I mean, the formula is more based on the data that is available. You know if there's not sales available and it's a newer development, the cost might be the most pertinent way to value those properties. So it kind of goes hand in hand with the location of the property and then the data available to make a value or an assessment on that property.
Okay. But the data that you receive and the numbers you put together to evaluate a property, standard or is that the same?
No. It's standard procedures and it's all dictated by either statute case law or the Wisconsin Property Assessment Manual which is put out by the Department of Revenue. By district though? Yes. It would be the same process district to district, neighborhood to neighborhood. We go through So the same the
4th District wouldn't seem the same evaluation number wise and equation wise as a fifteenth district?
It would depend on what the sales are in. So we don't consider Aldermanic District when coming up with values, we purely look at neighborhoods. But it depends on what the sales look like in each individual neighborhood. And for context, there are approximately 140 residential neighborhoods that we have the city broken up in two. So if you have two identical houses in different neighborhoods and we have sales of those identical houses and one is for 100,000 and one's for $150,000 Our modeling process and valuation process would put an assessed value of $100,000 on the one that sold for 100,000 and anything like it in that neighborhood and 150 property and any similar properties in that neighborhood.
Right. That's understandable. But where you do that, is it the same?
Yes. It's a yes.
And each throughout the city?
All of the neighborhoods are treated identically throughout the city. We're not looking one by one at them. When I get the data in, the same procedure is applied to all 140 neighborhoods.
And is that separate than the R software?
No. I apply the methodology using the R software and our other IT.
How does R software relate to the state statute that you referenced?
So I look at the state statute for the prescribed methods for valuation. I basically convert what the state statute and the manual say into code that takes the day that we have what the state law says and it outputs assessed values and then those go into our system and then there's levels of checks that are applied by other real estate professionals in our office. So it's not just what I say or any one person says, there's some level of checks in there between appraisers and managers and then as Ryan indicated, we're currently in the open book period. So if a mistake gets through all of those levels and a property owner notices that, then they're able to discuss that with our office as well and appeal if they, after the discussion, feel that we are not at market value for their property.
Okay. Yeah. I'll wait till the presentation to continue the conversation, but thank you very much.
Thank you.
Real real quick. I because I need to know as I think about this presentation. You use sales, right? Yes. Only sales?
For residential properties, yes.
Okay. And how many do you use to evaluate the property?
It depends on so we've used this year for all residential properties. There were over 5,000 usable sales. I'll get into what makes a sale usable in a moment. Okay. And in each individual neighborhood, it just depends on how many properties sold in that area.
The current assessment of properties Mhmm. Will outweigh Okay. Good. The amount of sales. Is that calculated?
If you have a block, if you have you sell one whatever radius you use, but at the most three or four or five, but the amount of homes that are much, much less than 10% or less than that, are they used as an evaluation of the properties? Let's say I have three blocks and five foreclosures or or a burnt up house or dilapidated house Sure. Or just negligent landlords. But you a house on that block is sold and rehabbed and fixed up and sold for 250,000. But these houses aren't worth nothing but 100,000 or less. Right. Do you consider that?
Yes. We do. So we have property records for every property in the city. Mhmm. And so we have a ton of property data size, condition, number of kitchens, number of bathrooms, any sort of issues like that.
We get data from permits, observation when our team is in the field and so we'll update that and we make sure to validate what data is on sales. So in the case that you described where there's a house that was flipped, that would be in above average condition, it might be good or even very good and the surrounding properties would be average fair or even lower ratings. And so that's then taken into account when we're developing the value. So we're not saying that that flipped house is the same as all of its neighbors.
Got you. And if you can't find a house that has given you enough proximity to a neighborhood, do you continue to go out further?
Essentially you
stay within the district or you go out further?
We will go out further as appropriate so if we won't just indiscriminately expand a circle until we find something because neighborhood markets can change very rapidly as you go block to block. So that's where our appraisers when they're reviewing the values if there weren't any sales of a particular property type they will find the most comparable nearby neighborhood or area. And
the sales, that includes sales that are sold with the subsidies attached to it?
Part of the sales validation process that I'll describe evaluates the whole range of things including the relationship between buyer and seller and the financing involved.
I'm just talking about a house that received significant government subsidy and now they're selling it.
Yes. So if the previous owner had received subsidies to fix up the house and then it sold on the open market, we would consider that sale because if a house hadn't received subsidies and was in the same condition and was sold on the open market that would reflect what the market is for that type of property.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Okay. So I'll just consider like and I think we've kind of talked to our discussions here a little bit but so what is it that we're considering when we're trying to figure out assessments and it's sales. It's what properties are transacting for by class and within certain boundaries or neighborhoods. And we're specifically looking at arms linked transactions which are the buyer and seller acting independently. There's no coercion, no special interests and this will usually ensure that it's a fair market price.
When both parties, the buyer and the seller are acting in their own self interest, this usually results in what's known as market value. Some of the items or sales that we generally don't include in our analysis are auction, foreclosure or properties that are sold under duress.
What about city sales?
We generally wouldn't include those. You wouldn't include? Wouldn't include city sales. No.
Mister chair?
Yeah. Go ahead.
For arm's length, though, geographically,
how close?
Or arm's length sales that you're considering when you do the assessments, geographically, close?
The closer the better. Generally, we like to stay within what is defined with our neighborhoods that we have defined as far as residential properties. But again, there can be properties that we can't find a good comparable right in that neighborhood. So we might expand to an adjacent neighborhood that we find similar. So that's part of a sales comparison approach where you can make adjustments for the slight differences between one neighborhood and another. But the best sales are going to be as close to January 1 as we can get and as close to a certain subject property that we can get. We like to stay within the neighborhood with the sales.
Part of the reason that I asked is because in some of our neighborhoods, block to block is a world of difference.
For sure.
For what a buyer would actually pay. So, yeah, a house two blocks away may have sold for 150,000, but my house with the similar amount of bathrooms, similar amount of bedrooms, in this direction, two blocks would never sell for that. Mhmm. So if that's what you're using for the assessments, it puts it puts my house at a disadvantage from what it would should actually be.
That's correct. Yeah. And generally, we would avoid that and that's one of the things we're looking at. So if we use an adjacent sale but we know that that sales are typically 20% higher, we're going to make that adjustment and reflect it in that neighborhood. We're not just going to we don't reach out far and wide and just apply anything to any neighborhood. That's why I say we try to kind of make it an apples to apples comparison in our review of the sales and the data.
And if a resident felt like y'all didn't do that properly, that's what the appeals process is for?
Correct. That's that's the appeals open book period that we have.
Thank you.
Mister chair.
But but but all of them did ask, like, what what was the distance? Like, do you go a mile out, two miles out, three miles out? What do you do?
It depends on the neighborhood and the data.
So what's the furthest you've ever done?
Well, in commercial, I've gone out of state. For residential, generally, jeez, I I'm a mile. One mile? Probably would be, you know, like One
mile is good.
I mean, with it, you know, typically, if we're when we have to defend stuff at the border review, I like to have sales within a few blocks of, you know, somebody that might be
For the in process of the mile?
It it and again, it will depend on the neighborhoods because some neighborhoods are much tighter and smaller. There's not even a mile across. Yeah. It just depends, you know, we have to go by what the best sales tell us. So if I have a good sale but I think that the subdivision or the neighborhood is very similar to the house I'm looking at, I'm going to use that sale. But if I know that subdivision generally sells twice as much, I'm going to ignore that sale and not consider it as something that would reflect the value of a home that I'm looking at.
Okay.
Mr. Chair? Yes, sir. Go ahead.
You guys take into account, like, the natural boundaries of districts? I look at the freeway dividing my district and night and day east and west of it.
Yes. Those were general generally, it's either a river, a commercial strip, a highway, that does usually kind of demarcate different neighborhoods and different kind of investment patterns or sales prices. So we do reflect that. That's one of the things that kind of helps us determine where neighborhood boundaries are.
So with that case, like, told the woman with Cox's Point, you have a house. You go up two blocks in one direction from a busy street. Mhmm. It's much higher. You have a house two blocks to the east. It's lower. What decision do you make at that point? It's same neighborhood, whether it's even two blocks or three blocks of a difference, they're still within the range of someone might say, why aren't you taking the low one?
Yeah. And again, that would come down to the apples to apples again. What is most comparable? If I'm looking at a property and I've got a couple of sales that I think are really comparable and they're at one price point, if I go to this better area or higher district that's two blocks away and it's a much larger price point, to me that's they're not competitive properties and that's a sale that I wouldn't use to value that property.
And that's personally saying, no, I'm not going to evaluate that property, you?
Not that we're not gonna evaluate. That it's the fact that I don't know that it's a good comparable to determine the market value in that scenario.
In that instance instance, it's the deputy director, not the machine.
No. Because we're and Colin will get into how we list these properties. It gets into size, condition, location, all of those neighbors. And within neighborhoods, you can have sub neighborhood factors because just as in one in a residential district, there could be that one block that historically always sells a lot higher than the other blocks. So there's a lot of different factors and variables that we can adjust for to try to catch instances like that where two blocks over on this neighborhood, it always outsells the rest of the neighborhood. So we have to have some type of economic adjustment for that.
Okay. Can I give you a scenario? You have January 1 is the date that you collect the data.
Right? Correct.
On January 15, the house sold for a $100,000. Uh-huh. Okay? Now this you you it's just a sale, so you have to evaluate that. Right? Yes. Okay. Now they fix it up. They flip it the next year or the same date. They put in whatever amount of money. Now it sells for 250,000. Will the entire area change? Is that just like it change? Or would it change both times?
Well, the property record obviously would change. So that's going to be updates to kitchens, bath, overall condition. So that alone the capital improvements to the property, you know, that That
changed because it's better. But the neighborhood changed.
And that's it's going to obviously the neighborhood change then is dependent on all sales in that neighborhood. But we're not generally going to look at a completely updated or brand new property to value, let's say, a distressed property. I mean, it's
It almost was it was distressed. Are you known to value a distressed property that sell?
According to other distressed properties. I mean, if I was if I was looking at a property that was in, say, fair condition, I wouldn't look to the completely remodeled property to try to come up with a value for it. I would look for
thing. The market is
not thing.
As sales when you do your assessments for that year? We consider would that all sales in a neighborhood. But again, they each kind of operate within a specific market.
The generality is fine. I'm just talking about this particular situation or these situations. When houses sell for less and then the following year they sell double, does that affect assessments in the neighborhood both times?
Yes, it would. But the first time it would affect so you can think of maybe three tiers of properties. You've got distressed properties, your average properties, and your high end remodeled flipped properties. The first time it would affect the properties in the neighborhood that are in that same tier. So if it's an average property that's sold to a flipper, would that sale price would affect average properties.
The properties that are not updated but not in bad shape, just kind of your typical property in the neighborhood. The second time it sold after it had been remodeled and flipped, it would affect the prices for that higher tier because our staff is reviewing the sales of both seeing it's an average property the first time, it's an above average property the second time and so they're not claiming that on average about 60% to 70% of properties in the neighborhood are in about average. There's maybe 10% that are in that high end tier and it depends on the neighborhood exactly what those breakdowns are. But that second sale wouldn't heavily affect the rest of the properties in the neighborhood because we identify it as atypical for the neighborhood. Both times?
The first the second time it wouldn't affect rest of the neighborhood because it's now atypical. The first time it's more of a typical property and we look at that first sale price.
Okay. But as far as evaluating the area and other houses Mhmm. Does that change?
Yes. So if we have a property on record that's and it's on record as being very similar to the house before it was flipped. It's just the average house.
Right.
If it's sold for $100,000 then what we're looking at is, okay, there's a very similar property next door. We think that that property would then probably sell for about $100,000 It sells a year later for $2.50 and it's flipped, well it's no longer like the next door neighbor. So we don't say the next door neighbor is worth $2.50. We might say it's worth a little bit more because there's other sales in the neighborhood and the average properties have gone up in price, but we're not looking at that $2.50 and saying the next door neighbor is the same.
Okay. When you're saying wait, you're talking about the formula.
It's a combination of both the mass appraisal process that I lead and our assessments. Both parts of the process are looking at it. It's a, yeah, you could say the machine the
first Are gonna give the process?
Yes.
Like who does what?
Yes. Okay. Thank you. Okay.
So next I just want to continue on kind of talking about where like assessment and public policy meet and kind of the objectives and maybe some different departments and kind of how the assessor's office can be impactful or you know what we can do for other departments. So assessments are data points amongst other market and social indicators. The real estate market is an investment or asset market. So whether we're thinking of real estate as office buildings or restaurants, other commercial properties or we're looking at homes such as bungalows or duplexes, these are markets with buyers and sellers creating or indicating the market for those properties. And at the assessor's office we try to capture that market value as of January 1 each year.
But assessment data, our sales, assessment values, that's available for policymakers for decisions for their departments and their offices. Excuse me. What is? Our data and our our assessed values, our sales values, all that's available on our website.
No, I'm talking about what policymakers can change. You just said something about it's at the hands of policymakers.
Yeah. So whether it's the common counsel or the mayor or
No, no. I'm not community I'm talking about we have the ability to change the policy for the assessment's office?
No. No. No. No. No. I'm saying people can use our data to apply in their endeavors, you know, as they see fit, as it might be helpful to
them. Gotcha.
So and again, so the real estate market data reflects and informs tax policy, development policy and budgets. Where this is most applicable to the assessor's office is probably tax policy. And I had mentioned some stats earlier in chapter 70 of Wisconsin state statutes which get at the valuation of and how to value real estate. But we also have in the Wisconsin constitution the Article eight uniformity clause which basically says that we must value all classes uniformly at market value. So those are some of the prime directives under which I would say the parameters under which the assessor's office really has authority or jurisdiction to operate.
And the levy that is created is set by the budgets of the city, the county, MPS, MATC and the sewage district. As far as development policy is concerned, this is not something that the assessor's office is specifically involved in or really has any control over. This is something either set by the common council or the mayor acting through different departments or agencies and this might involve planning, zoning, tax incremental districts or policies that are aimed at providing affordable housing or lead abatement, things of that nature. And then another realm that people might try to influence is social policy which is aimed at making society better in some way or another through department, through some act and this might involve libraries or the health department. Some of the more recent things are violence prevention program or traffic calming that we've tried to put through different roads within the city.
So although the assessor's office doesn't make development or social property, we can aid and support other departments in those endeavors and we do this through discussions with elected officials, city departments, community partners. We work with them. We provide data or reports that we have available based on our assessment data and what we know of the neighborhoods and the markets that is occurring. And we also have had in the past we discussed this with some researchers at universities or community advocates that are looking to us to find information on property data or sales data that might have some influence or connection to whatever project it is that they're working on. So how are assessed values determined?
And I think we've gone back a little bit on this, but our appraisers are reviewing roughly 13,500 sales every year and they do this by looking at real estate transfer returns that have to be filed with each sale. They look at property listings that are available for sales. We send out questionnaires to buyers to try to find out what they were thinking when they purchased it and or then we do internal or external inspections of the properties to make sure that we have the correct record to match the sale record. The other thing that would influence a property value is the actual property record, what's going on at the property which is why we review all permits associated with properties. And over the last three years, annual permits that we've had to review in the office have ranged from 17,500 to over 22,000 permits.
And again, a similar process happens where we send inspection letters, we try to get in and look at these properties and or we do external inspections to try to review these permits that are occurring at the properties to make sure we have the most updated information on our property records. Another way that we try to get data is that we review online listings. I'm sure everybody is familiar with Zillow or Trulia. We do look at those. We look at apartments.com.
One of the biggest as far as residential is the multiple listing service or MLS. We review that data. We also look to what local real estate broker brokerages are reporting as far as quarterly reports or listings that they might have available. We take all of that information and kind of try to distill it within our mass appraisal process and with also using that to update any property records that we might have incorrect. So now I think it's the time I'm going to pass it over to Colin.
He's going
to get into mass appraisal, sales data, market value, some of those things. He'll get into some more details on that and then I'll kind of close with you know, where we're at right now and how owners can talk to their local appraisers and possibly appeal if they feel that's necessary.
Madam chair I mean, mister president.
Yes, sir. Damn. I'm not a madam or or a president, but go ahead.
Mister chair.
Yes, sir.
Thank you. Hey. In the budget process, when is your number determined? We got fees. We got share revenue. Now we have property tax. And then we have property tax to make up our budget. When is yours determined?
When do we finalize our assessed values each
year?
When does the city or the direct budget director know how much money is gonna come in from taxes?
That's part of the budgeting process. So the common counsel and the various committees set the
No. I know that. Yeah.
You got what is your do you give a number?
We we tell them what the total we provide both to the council and the state are statement of assessment. So the total amount of assessed value in the city, I believe it's the second Monday in October. October. And so once the budgeting process is done for all of the jurisdictions that have levying power, then we work with the treasurer's office office to uniformly divide up the levies based on assessed value of the properties.
Yeah. But when is that done? And the city knows the number that we can operate off of.
The we provide the the final assessed values for tax billing the second Monday in October.
Second Monday in October. Okay. All right. Thank you.
Mr.
Chair?
Yes,
sir. The appraisal of multi unit apartment buildings. I want to read you an an excerpt from our report out of the Marquette Law School involving the Verada properties. We own some 10,000 units. Now quote and listen carefully please.
All this scale, accumulation of wealth is enormous. The 2025 assessed value of all these properties together was around $625,000,000 but this substantially understates their market value. I matched 26 individual mortgages obtained by Barata Companies with City of Milwaukee parcel records. Each mortgage covered between 67 to 168 apartments and altogether the 24 mortgages refinanced 2,629 units over a quarter of Verado's total. That data came from prospectuses filed in 2024 and 2025.
The city assessed value of these properties the city assessed the value of these properties at $116,300,000 in 2025. However, the appraisals of these properties shown to investors totaled 471,400,000 In other words, these properties were assessed by the city at just 34% of the value at which they were appraised by the market. Some of the appraisals came after the assessment window ended but some did not. Applying this ratio of assessed to appraised value to the rest of Baratta's properties would suggest a total value in excess of $1,700,000,000 What do got to say about that? I think you just went through giving us all this chapter and verse about market value and 100 of market value in state law. What do you say about that?
Sure. And I actually have tried to connect with the author of that and he actually has sent me some data that I plan on reviewing to see if we might have a property record wrong as far as those apartments are concerned. But I started looking into all of the mortgage mortgages concerning that property owner and many of the ones that I saw contained ten, fifteen properties with a mortgage amount. Now we haven't been provided any of these appraisals.
How did he get them? Have He got the prospectuses.
I don't know.
They're public record.
That's why I say I'm in contact with them. I'm following up on that to
So all this modeling and expertise and following state law and Barada who's a very problematic landlord assessed at 34% of his market value?
Well, according to that article, his calculations, again, that's what we want to look
Well, I'm Paul Barker living in Stamford's district with their old bungal. They've been in for fifty years and now all of a sudden worth $200,000 when
You guys, it's obviously a flawed system. Do you guys because those numbers right there don't even match.
Well, again, we have to be able to look at all that data.
But you have
Do you have comment on.
You have your own data. Right?
Yeah. That's why we have apartments uniformly assessed based on the information we have. If this article unearths more information regarding these specific properties, we'll gladly apply it and update those records.
In other words, you rely on a Marquette Law School to drive the appraisal of commercial properties in Milwaukee?
No. I'm saying on those specific properties. We rely on any available data whether it's property owner, a neighbor, a brokerage firm. We use
all of that.
Do you assess the broader property that's $650,000,000? What is your how did you assess their that entire portfolio for $650,000,000? Process? Rent records, rent rules, do you estimate, guesstimate, do you model what a typical one bedroom apartment goes for, what the income do you use an income approach or replacement approach for those properties?
We use an income approach to model what we're seeing in sales.
Sales of the property building?
Of apartments, yes. So we look at apartment sales and then we look at rents, what they're reported to be for cap rates according to those sales and that's how we develop our models.
You got that in here too. John Johnson. Yes. Author. And he shows the effective gross income per month is $12.22 dollars across Baratas entire properties which puts his net in gross income at $149,000,000 a year.
Okay.
Is that useful information to appraise this portfolio?
Well Baratas properties all over the city too so.
Well actually not. They're concentrated in Balloon Cox's District my district all in Stanford's District they're actually not all over the city
well I meant they're they're they're in different neighborhoods sorry.
He had a lot in Northwest Side though
yes yes that's true.
I do have a question because this.
ahead. These are good questions, I think. Mister chair, if it's okay. These are the questions I think Audeman Bowman is asking, and it it makes me think about a couple of years ago when the state let us know that we weren't properly assessing not residential properties, but corporate properties or whatever, commercial
Mhmm.
Properties. And we had to adjust some things to fit within the parameters of what the state felt that the number should be, or else they will come in and start doing it as well. So I guess this is sounding kinda similar to me. So I guess and and we were told by the assessor that you all have done whatever corrective stuff you needed to do, and you are in line with what the state had wanted now. So I guess what I'm my question is, do you guys ever get, like, audited, or do you do self audits or some like, samples or something to, like, let you know if the the computer system you're using, the discretion of the assessors, if the way that you're doing it is is right, is is as fair and as accurate as you could possibly get
Yeah.
Even beyond challenges from residents or or commercial owners. Do you all get audited or do you self audit or anything like that to try to capture? Because, for example, if so what to me, what the state was accusing of of us with the commercial thing, it that was a huge it was a huge enough gap to me and that to me ended up for those years that that we did that, it put pressure on the residential side for whatever. To me, I felt like it made residents have to pay a little more than they probably would have if we would have accurately assessed the commercial. With this, if you examine a Marquesda, what if the guy is right, and we're not properly assessing by potentially hundreds of million, this one owner, what additional pressures is the lack of us doing that putting on the other Correct.
Taxpayers or whatever. So I guess yeah. What systems do you have in place that try to, you know, capture those mistakes or those inconsistencies?
So so because our state definition of accuracy is market value based on sales, what we do is we look at the previous year sales or previous year's assessments, so they're set as of 01/01/2026 in this case. If any property residential or commercial sells in 2026 after the assessments are set, that's a measurement of how accurate were we for that year. And so then when we're working on 2027, then we update our values, our models for that property class. One of the big challenges with valuing commercial property, there's a number of them. One, we don't have as many sales, so it's hard to know exactly which is why we rely on an income approach.
When we do receive income and expense data, we get some from third party sources but the largest batch we would get I'd estimate is from appeals. So these are property owners who believe they're over assessed and are then providing their income and expense information. We and then on top of all of that commercial property owners are the most savvy and have the most resources to appeal and have their values lowered and there's financial implications for the city when we do that after the once tax bills are sent out. So all of this leads to us kind of constantly fighting to capture as much apartment value or commercial value as possible without putting the city at risk financially by needing to pay remissions and going through costly litigation. So when we get new sources of information such as private mortgage documents, when we get income and expense information, we'd love it for every property.
We'd love honest documents from every property owner and that would allow us to be as accurate as possible. Unfortunately, they have strong incentives not to provide that to us And so there's only so far we can go on our side to obtain comparable information.
Well, I do hope as you seek the information from the particular author of this study that in your dialogue, which I hope he does allow himself to have with you all, that you also try to seek sources. Mhmm. They like, he's not the only source, but he could let you know what his sources are or whatever he's comfortable with sharing so that in future years, it doesn't take a report to to get you the information you need, that you could go to those sources as well.
Yeah, Mr. Chair, I just want to emphasize this is all public information to the Security Exchange Commission. I mean, John Johnson is not rummaging through Barada's garbage cans to find the documents accidentally thrown out. It's public record. Why aren't we looking at those public records especially for these massive landlords? I mean right. The man paw guy that owns two duplexes I don't know you got to go to the SEC for him he's probably not there. But the guy who has 10,000 units Yeah. The quick check. What does the SEC have to save?
And sure, this guy could dig it out. I mean, I think we need a subcontract with John Johnson to run the assessor's office because obviously we're missing as as all one cut potentially hundreds of millions of dollars at a certain value which transfers the burden to the homeowners. And that's the real issue here because they're the easy ones. You can you can beat up on them. They can't push back. They can't hire lawyers. They can't hire appraisals. It's easy to load up on the homeowners because they're defenseless. We try to load up on a big 10,000 portfolio guy who's with a net worth of a billion dollars. Yeah, he will push back.
He will litigate. Guaranteed. So we don't want to go there because the homeowners are easy. I think it's what I read in that article is that our assessment process is arguably fundamentally unfair to homeowners in the city Milwaukee? Well,
again, like I say, I would have to look at more of the data. I don't have all the appraisals and like you're saying, some of it is available publicly. But also too, we have 20 appraisers in the office to search through 160,000 parcels and try to dig into those every year. So part of this is also time and how much are we involved. We have tons of sales too of apartments and income information. So if we were to just say pull out Baratas properties and suddenly increase them, you know, 300% that wouldn't be fair and uniform either because
It wouldn't be but if it's yes, it would be fair and uniform if it was market value. If it actually You're you just made the argument in essence that because all of our commercial properties are under assess it would be unfair to assess somebody at market value. That would be a violation of uniformity clause in reverse. Everybody's under assessed in commercial properties. If we assess one to market that would be a violation of uniformity clause because we uniformly under assess. You understand the logic of that?
I'm not saying that we can't raise him. There's under no circumstances could we raise his values. I'm just saying I can't pick him out and say I've got this one data point
on you. Of course you can. He has 10,000 units.
But we've also got a lot of other Two units in
out of three tenants live in a broader building.
Again, I'm happy to look at that data, look at those rents and check them against our models and make any changes that are necessary.
Which won't be until January 2027?
Yes, it would be the next round.
Okay.
Any other questions or comments?
What? We went on this presentation. I'm good on. Oh, you got more? Yeah.
Well, hey. Yeah. I'll know it.
Go ahead.
Yes, we do. So this, the presentation, this process describes the residential revaluation process where we do have an abundance of sales information. The commercial process is different. We can answer questions about that. But it all starts with collecting sales data as Ryan just said earlier.
We get every property conveyance record from the state and the county in two different formats. We validate whether or not that sale was arm's length. And then based on our appraisers work, they will conduct file maintenance. So that means they'll look at listings, they'll do inspections if the owner allows it, they'll look at permit data for sold and unsold properties and they'll update property records based on that. Then what we do is Alder Woman Cogs' question, we do evaluate the previous models.
So we'll look at by neighborhood, look at by building type, grade condition, age of properties. We'll see how accurate we are within those groups and across those groups to see where the model needs to be updated for the next year. Then this is where I get involved with the statistical software. So we will update the model parameters. So for example, the price per square foot of a ranch on average citywide will get then we'll update update we'll we'll new model model and against and the sales to make sure that we're at 100% of market value and uniform across price points and different property types and neighborhoods.
Once I provide that information to appraisers then the individual neighborhood appraiser who is responsible for doing inspections, doing appeal reviews, customer service with property owners in each neighborhood will review that that neighborhood's new assessments. They will make changes if they notice say one block is over or under assessed based on market forces. They will update the factor on that block to say if it's the residential property on a high traffic street, they'll make sure we're valuing that uniformly. One thing that we evaluate is proximity to college campus. I work with appraisers every year to make sure that we're capturing the value added by being close to Marquette and UWM and then seeing where that value goes away as you depart from campus.
Once the appraisers are done and their supervisors have reviewed their work, we publish the new assessments. So that's what happened on April 17. We published the data online and sent out notices of assessed value. That leads us right now to open book. This is where property owners are able to call us, tell us they think that our opinion of market value is wrong, the assessment is wrong.
Sometimes they bring to light inaccurate property record cards which will fix for them and change their assessments. And after all the conversation and work we do with property owners without an appeal, if we're still at an impasse, we've looked at our data and we feel the assessment's accurate and the property owner disagrees, they can then submit an appeal to us. At which point we will put in additional work to review whatever data the property owner provides. We'll do our own secondary inspection if we haven't been on-site in four or more years or if we have evidence that something on the property changed such as a permit record. And then once all of this is done then the appraiser will submit their recommendation to the Board of Assessors and then defend their opinion and value to the Board of Assessors and then later stages of appeal, the Board of Review and Circuit Court if it reaches that point.
So I've just got a quick example for how this translates into the top line numbers you might see on the reports we published.
Thank you. Officer Sampley.
Oh, sorry. Say this is a neighborhood with three properties. We have a smaller home, a ranch with 1.5 baths, 1,200 square feet. We have one Colonial 1,500 square feet, two bathrooms and an 1,800 square foot duplex with three. So let's say the market was relatively weak on the smaller home based on the sales, we'll raise that assessment 5%.
House B had a stronger market based on the sales. So we raised that 110 and then the duplex, we find that duplexes are booming in the neighborhood. All the sales show an increase in price of 20%. So that's how we increase the assessments for that. When you see the top line numbers that Commissioner Larson shared in April and are on our website, that all translates to say neighborhood change of 13% with us adding up all those disparate changes dividing by the total previous value and that gets us our total change from 25% to 26%.
We included these slides just because we get a lot of questions from taxpayers on while I saw that my neighborhood went up 5%, but my assessment went up 7%, what happened? So we just want to be public about how there can be different changes within one neighborhood versus the top line. So then our actual changes for this year, the citywide increase between all classes of property was a total increase of 6%. That was 6.43 for residential properties and 5.31 for commercial properties. The district with the lowest total residential change which is a 1.4% decrease in the 4th District and the highest total residential change was 13.1% in the 7th District.
Our internal projections, so the sales and our initial communications with the Department of Revenue indicates that both the residential and commercial classes will be determined by the state to be at or near 100% of full value within least 5%. I'd estimate about 98% for
both.
Mister chair?
Go ahead.
What, neighborhood or census track or however you're able to break it down has the single highest increase?
If you give me one moment, I have all the neighborhoods listed here. Like I said, we have a 140 residential neighborhoods. We do not value value residential neighborhoods on census tract. So I don't have that data offhand. Just looking at our charts and this data is published online as well in case I'm misreading the line, I believe it is what we have labeled as neighbor 2960.
It's a central near north side and that is let me find it on my map right here. That is in Aldermanic District 7. So it's looks like just north of Center Street, about 35th and Center.
And ask what percentage?
That was a 26% increase.
Thank you.
End instead of Sounds good. Alright.
So then this is just a chart of the median property prices by residential split between residential and commercial property types. You can see after commercial property values flattened slightly last year. They're increasing again. Residential has been on a steady increase really since 2019, 2020 in the residential real estate boom happened across the country. Milwaukee was certainly part of that.
So then again speaking to our accuracy and equity in assessments, there's we measure equity. The industry standard for measuring equity in assessments is called uniformity. That's our industry jargon for it. There's two types of uniformity. There's horizontal uniformity and vertical equity.
Horizontal uniformity means that inside of a group of similar properties we treat everyone the same. And then vertical equity means that as the price point of the property changes, the level of assessment doesn't change. Meaning if I've got a $100,000 house or a $1,000,000 house, I'm valuing both of those at 100% of market value. So we compared our 2026 assessed values that we just published to 2025 sale prices. All 15 Aldermanic districts meets IAAO which is our professional organization, the International Association of Assessing Officers meets their standards for both vertical and horizontal equity.
Okay.
So I'll just kind of finish up here with a few of our last slides here and so why are values increasing? And our assessments again as we've kind of discussed here in detail, they reflect what's happening in the market and right now we've got a combination of high demand, limited supply and lack of new construction which also helps lead to increasing prices. But in this instance, how can we assist property owners? Well, like we had mentioned, right now is what we consider our open book period, which lasts four weeks. It began on April 20.
It goes to the third Monday in May every year, which this year is May 18. And we have a number (414) 286-6565 that anyone can call and speak with their neighborhood appraiser to discuss their assessments, property values, listings, anything that they any information that they would like to get, they can call us to find that information. We also have the latest property information and sales data on our webpage which is available for anybody to look at. And further, we use this information as we kind of discussed a little earlier to work with other departments, to, you know, we attend a lot of community meetings with other persons. We take part in community meetings with some advocacy groups, neighborhood groups.
So whether it's in person or virtual, we, you know, we try to be available to, you know, explain the information we have in the assessment process to anyone that might be interested. We are also obviously we take a request from the media, information request from them and try to explain the process to them as needed. So right now what can properties property owners do regarding the 2026 assessment? I would say if you have questions, call that number and ask to speak with your neighborhood appraiser. You know, have a discussion with them and based on how you feel then you can go right online and file an objection.
You can come into our office to file an objection or you can have a form mailed to you to be completed and then returned to our office. And again the deadline is Monday, May 3 or the third Monday of May, May 18. The deadline where at least it has to be postmarked by is 04:45 on that date. And owners would want to include anything that supports their opinion of value. If they have knowledge of sales, if they've had a recent appraisal, if they have quotes for issues or repairs that they
have with their property, all
of that's good information to make your neighborhood appraiser aware of and provide to them. So once an objection is filed, basically the neighborhood appraiser then discusses with the homeowner, they might do an inspection, they do a review of sales, they try to look at whether the assessed value seems fair, is it within a market value, is it low, is it high and they'll make the changes that they see necessary according to their review. They make that recommendation then to what's known as the Board of Assessors which that begins meeting on May eleventh this year and the Board of Assessors is basically the managers in the office. They review appraiser's recommendations regarding appeals. So they look at, you know, what information have they gathered, what's their explanation, are they recommending it be lowered, are they recommending it be sustained, but we review the information that they've provided and then based on that we send out a notice of determination to the property owner.
The property owner can either accept whatever determination we made or the next step past that is appealing to what's known as the Board of Review. And the Board of Review will begin considering twenty twenty six appeals on May 29 and the Board consists of five to nine city residents, none of whom can hold public office or be publicly employed. They are appointed by the mayor and approved by the common council for five year terms and the current board has six members. And the board of review is basically a quasi judicial entity that looks at the evidence provided by property owner and the appraiser to determine whether the assessed value is fair and should be sustained or not.
Mr. Chair. That's done?
Yes, sir. That's it. Yes.
All right.
Let's
go to Alderman Stamper first. What
percentage of appeals by one and two family homeowners see an adjustment?
I don't have that number off the top of my head Alderman.
Know
Yes, 1%, 10%, 30%.
I would say 30% is a decent number to start.
Okay. So 30% of people who appeal their assessments formal appeal now not just the open book process but formal appeal 30% get an adjustment on their assessment?
That's typically because we don't have accurate property information because we haven't inspected their property and it hasn't sold in the last five, ten years.
Okay. Well Well that's pretty good odds then.
Yes. So I would
want you to confirm that because I don't believe that number but that's fine if that's what the number you think it is that that that's pretty strong motivation to file an appeal.
Yes we and can you give us the accuracy on that?
I will I will confirm the accuracy on that for you and yes we certainly encourage property owners either now or at any time throughout the year if to reach out to our office ask to look up their property records and we will happily come out and confirm them for them. We like I said more information is better so we're always happy to schedule an appointment with property owners.
Does the property owner run the risk of being reassessed upward after you come out and inspect?
If, yes.
If they've done work without the benefit of permit is the primary situation where that would happen if they remodeled and they didn't file a permit.
What percentage of appeals resulted in an increase in the assessment?
Very few. It's not our policy to raise property values on appeal. We'll change the ratings for the next year but there are a handful of properties that actually do want their assessments increased so we don't generally understand the logic behind it but
Okay. Fair enough.
We'll consider those appeals. Alderman Stamper.
Yes. Back to that question regarding the city budget. Okay. Property taxes and what is produced from the assessments. When do you know that number? What I'm trying to figure out is which number is first when you determine the city's budget. Is it the fees? Is it the shit revenue? Is it the sales tax, or is it the property taxes?
Well, for our office, we're just developing the total assessed value of all properties. Fees are a separate item that get added on to the bills and stuff.
Taxes, whatever the system We is producing
are not involved with We don't do that. It. We our office doesn't set tax rates. We don't set special charges for anything besides the fees we charge on exempt properties for handling their applications.
Do you guys produce the amount of tax each property owes?
We do not that number? We do not
Would you have that number?
The number of we we said
Like, my house, I'm I owe $8,000. Would you would you do that?
No. We don't do that. We we do not do that. We provide the total assessed values to the treasurer's office and once levies are set, they split up the the total levy amongst all 151,000 taxable properties in the city.
Okay. So do you have a goal for the year?
Goal of I'm sorry. For what?
Tax do you have a tax assessment? When your office looks at the assessment for the do you have a goal?
Our goal is to be at a 100% of market value. We don't if we were to lower everyone if we were to slash everyone's assessment in half, that wouldn't across the board, that wouldn't affect their property taxes. It would just double the mill rate.
Okay.
If the levy stayed the same.
Yeah. Okay. Mister chairman, are you allowing public comment?
No. Alright.
Let's see here.
Just the communication, right?
Mhmm.
Well, I do expect to follow-up. So in organizing a community meeting to instruct individuals how to conduct an appeal, who comes out from my district?
It would depend on the specific neighborhood, but most has the most neighborhoods neighborhoods in in your your district. District, They they would would come out, and then you could also request either mister Ranker or commissioner Larson if she's available.
I know Could you give
me that information, then the information on that software, and then the steps on how you equate the evaluations, please. I like to use that for my community meetings. Okay? One last question on the 30%. Is there an error of Is there a margin of error.
Is there a margin of error.
When you calculate through your different systems, is there a margin of error?
There there's not one margin of error that I can recite to you because the individual appraisers are making edits as part of their final review. The goal is to have every property plus or minus 10% of market value. We in some neighborhoods where there's a lot of uniformity between property types, we're well within that. When there's a lot of disparate ones, we might be closer to the boundaries on that but there's not one margin of
error. Okay.
Alright. And we have the appeal process. And what's the best way to win an appeal?
An appraiser or? Show that we have your property assessment or property record wrong in some fashion. We've got too many bathrooms, too much square footage or provide really comparable sales that the assessor didn't previously wasn't aware of.
Okay. What about the fact that you we can we wouldn't be able to sell a house for for example other 250,000 my house is only worth $100,000 you went up 30% on my house?
That's definitely something we would consider. If you have a listing out there and our assessment is above your listing, we consider that in an appeal in reevaluating the assessment.
Sure. And you said it's a it's a committee that does the decision making?
The it's the board of assessors that reviews the neighborhood appraiser's recommendations regarding the appeals.
Are they local people? Are they from Milwaukee?
Yeah. They're all the managers in the assessor's office.
Okay. Okay. Alright. Thank you very much, mister chairman.
You're welcome. Any other questions or comments? Motion by Alderman Perez is to receive and place on file. Any objections? So ordered. Thank you.
Thank you. Item
10. 251. Go ahead. 433. Substitute resolution directing the chief court administrator to report program metrics to the common council sponsored by alderwoman Dimitriavich.
Alright.
Motion by alderman. The court people are here. Well, she may wanna be here, Marina.
Okay.
You wanna hold that? You wanna make the motion?
Fine. Make a motion to hold the caller Motion
to hold by Alderman Bowman. Hearing no objections so ordered. Item eleven, two five two two three seven, resolution approving the revised municipal court non traffic deposit schedule. Good morning.
Good morning.
Three down to one.
Right? Yeah. Yeah.
What odds? Okay. Is it still morning? Yes. Good morning, chair and committee members. This is an annual file. It is the non traffic deposit schedule. There are two main changes in this year's file. One is that the state recently passed a law to increase the clerk fees by an additional additional $10 from previously $38 to $48 So every ordinance on here has been updated with that new clerk fee. And the second is to address the discontinuation of the penny.
So any total that was in here that had an odd number at the end of it, I readjusted to the nearest even $05 amount.
They're going to get rid of the nickel too.
Good grief. I'll to do it again.
Any questions or What is this exactly?
Thank you for asking. So the non traffic deposit schedule sets the dollar amount that ends up on a citation. So any given non traffic violation of a city ordinance would end up having, if you look at the final column, there's the adult total and there's the juvenile total so it depends on you know whether you were 18 or not when you violated it and then were adjudicated as guilty. That would be the dollar amount that you would pay for violating that ordinance.
So this is so I am given a let's just use housing court housing code violations. If I am prosecuted in Muni Court by the Department of Neighborhood Services for PICO violation on grass.
Yeah. So the How does
this play into that process?
I'm glad that you asked because I know that I had a conversation with you previously and at that time there was one piece of information that I did not know and I have actually looked into it further. But in this schedule there are building and zoning violations. I'm going to see if I can find them. The ones okay. It'll be on page 12.
So the violations that are listed here are the violations that would receive a citation. And if there's a dollar amount, it would be that dollar amount that appears on the ticket. However, there are also building violations that receive a summons and complaint and those are assessed by DNS they have a formulation for how they end up determining those dollar amounts. So those don't appear on the schedule.
Okay so that so so there is a sum of the complaint and that complaint will contain a judgment amount that they're seeking from the court.
Right.
This is if I'm given a loitering ticket.
Yeah. Or
that's what this or dog bite or
So this really should say non traffic and non housing court. Yes. Right?
It should.
Would I mean literally that would clear up the confusion. This is irrelevant to the file we talked about regarding penalty enhancers. Yes. Very good. Well that's actually a big clarification. Okay. So then in housing court the court is only bound by the statutory or the ordinance Find a fine schedule the minimum maximum.
In for. For a building violation or for the.
Building
yeah that I think so I don't know how DNS. Assesses all of those so that's another conversation that I need to have with the commissioner.
Okay yeah because tomorrow we have a file involving penalty enhancers.
Okay.
For housing violations. Okay. In muni court so judges can go significantly above what is the current range for chronic offenders basically.
Okay.
That's what we discussed. Yeah. A week ago. Right. Okay. Very good. Thank you. Then I will move approval of this now that we've clarified.
Okay. Motion by Alderman Bowman is approval. Hearing no objections, so ordered.
Thank you.
Thank you. As I mentioned earlier, item twelve two five two two three zero is being held at the at the request of Alderman Baumann. Item thirteen, two five two two zero eight, resolution reserving and appropriating up to a $150,000,000 in the 2026 damages and claims fund, special purpose purpose account and authorizing the settlement of the lawsuit entitled Berry Beverly versus City of Milwaukee.
Deputy city attorney Naomi Sanders, this is just this actual this file was passed, I think, two committees ago or maybe last one, but it had a a clerical error. It said that 2025 contingent fund instead of the 2026. So we just made that that change. Okay. That's the only difference.
Any questions or comments? Alderman Baumann.
We don't have they need to come back in.
There's There's
Oh, okay. They got it. Okay.
Sorry.
Alderman Baumann moves what is this? Adoption. Here, no objections to order. Thank you. Thank you. The judiciary and legislation committee may convene at the closed session on Monday, 05/04/2020 in Room 301 B City Hall 200 East Wells Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin pursuant to s dot 19.851 g Wisconsin statute for the purpose of conferring with the city attorney who will render oral or written advice with the respect to litigation in which the city is or likely to become involved and then may go into open session for the regular agenda.
Alderman Perez? Alderman Pratt? Aye. Alderman Bowman? Aye. Mister chair, Alderman Wassmoreland.
Aye.
It takes less than one minute to find out if you may have prediabetes. You can do it here. But you probably won't. You're busy, kids, work, show coming back in forty eight seconds. So let's do this now. Hold up one finger if you're a man. Women, zero. Three more fingers if you're 60. Two over 50. One over 40.
If you're not sure, keep in mind you're sitting on a couch right now. So one more finger if you're not very active. One finger if yes, zero if no. One yes, zero no. Next, find the body type that looks most like you and hold up that many fingers while I look around awkwardly. And that's it. If you're holding up five fingers or more, you probably have prediabetes. Sorry to be so blunt, but, hey, you're busy. Just go to the site.
Public Works for the city of Milwaukee has an opportunity for you. We are currently looking for operation driver workers to provide professional driving and critical manual laboring functions, including municipal solid waste and recycling collection, snow and ice control removal, and safe operation of various seasonal equipment for the Department of Public Works. This position is critical to provide cleanliness, health and safety to the city, its residents, and visitors. We offer on the job paid training by our DOT certified instructors. We offer a great starting wage, competitive benefits package, paid time off, defined pension, and a deferred compensation option.
The city of Milwaukee is proud to employ a diverse workforce that is committed to providing dedicated service to the city's residents. If you have a passion for being a part of an exclusive team of public servants, please consider this opportunity and go to milwaukee.gov/jobs for more information. We hope to see you soon.
I saw a gun inside my brother's room, and I stopped what I was doing. When I took out the trash, I saw a gun, and I didn't touch it. I was walking in the park. I saw a gun, and then I left the area. When I found a gun, I told an adult.
If you find a gun, stop what you're doing, don't touch it, leave the area, and tell an adult.
This is a reminder to all adults, parents, and family members. It is a crime to leave a firearm unsecured around children.
Multiple children have been shot and killed in the city of Milwaukee due to unsecured firearms. As adults, let's all do our part to keep our kids safe by securing our guns.
When a business applies for a new license or renews its license from the City Milwaukee License Division its agent may have to appear before the Licenses Committee. In these cases the License Division will send a notice of public hearing to the following persons: Residents within two fifty feet of the business or the nearest 100 single family residences Residents who have requested to receive notice about the business's hearing Residents who have submitted an objection to the business application The notice of public hearing includes information about: the business that is scheduled to appear before the licenses committee, the license types that the licenses committee is considering at the hearing, the date, time, and location of the hearing, how to attend the meeting in person or virtually. The letter also includes information on how to provide testimony at the hearing. Review this information to ensure your testimony is relevant and permissible if you plan to testify at the hearing. Some key points to remember: Your testimony should only include your first hand experience.
The licenses committee cannot consider hearsay in its recommendations to the common counsel. Keep your testimony concise and relevant to the license applications listed on the notice. The Licenses Committee limits testimony to three minutes. It may be helpful to write down your testimony and rehearse it before the hearing to ensure you adhere to the time limit. Be prepared to answer questions about your testimony.
After you testify, the licensee, committee members and the local alder person can ask you questions about your testimony. Please note that while the licenses committee does its best to stay on schedule you may have to wait past the scheduled hearing time to provide testimony if other hearings run longer. If you have any questions about the Notice of Public Hearing or Licenses Committee hearings, contact the License Division at licensemilwaukee dot gov or call us at (414) 286-2238.
I did not even see myself get hit. I didn't see the car coming. It was just a complete surprise. I was t boned. I couldn't hear anything. Couldn't see. I was completely stunned because I had such a bad concussion. It was literally like a hellscape. I'm very lucky that I could walk away from that, but a lot of people aren't. Speeding. We can live without it.
When a business applies for a new license or renews its license from the City Milwaukee License Division its agent may have to appear before the Licenses Committee. In these cases the license division will send a notice of public hearing to the following persons: Residents within two fifty feet of the business or the nearest 100 single family residences, whichever is greater residents who have requested to receive notice about the business's hearing, residents who have submitted an objection to the business application. The notice of public hearing includes information about: the business that is scheduled to appear before the licenses committee, the license types that the licenses committee is considering at the hearing, the date, time, and location of the hearing, how to attend the meeting in person or virtually. The letter also includes information on how to provide testimony at the hearing. Review this information to ensure your testimony is relevant and permissible if you plan to testify at the hearing.
Some key points to remember: Your testimony should only include your first hand experience. The licenses committee cannot consider hearsay in its recommendations to the common counsel. Keep your testimony concise and relevant to the license applications listed on the notice. The licenses committee limits testimony to three minutes. It may be helpful to write down your testimony and rehearse it.
My daughter Sierra and her friend Michelle were killed in a car accident. They were coming from a party. They both had been drinking and she drove way too fast. My girlfriend and I
were coming from Madison and we were hit by a drunk driver. She died, and so did the guy that hit us.
He died of massive head trauma. And had to get wearing a seat belt at the time, probability that he survived would have been great.
He left her there. He didn't call 911. He didn't use his cell phone. He didn't go to see what was if she was okay or not. He left. And he stopped on his way home and washed the blood off his car. I heard the voice
screaming, and I kinda covered my head, and I could hear the window shattering, the voice screaming, and then all of a
sudden everything was quiet. You know, you you don't want somebody getting killed and and ruining your whole life because somebody had to have a drink or two before they went home.
When you as an individual or you put somebody else or a family in this position or you kill them, it's forever.
As my only sister was killed in an automobile accident in the wintertime due to the driver driving too fast for conditions. A one year old cannot take the shock of going from highway speed to nothing like that because that's what kills you. Stop the heart.
I found out at at the crash scene that a woman had died. She was a single mom and had two young children and she died instantly because of me, a drunk driver.
Me and a couple friends were out drinking and partying and we decided to get in the car and drive that night. And, you know, I buckled my seat belt right away because it's just something I've always done and my parents have taught me to do. We're going around the corner and we were probably going about 70 miles an hour. You know, I knew it was coming. They knew it was coming too. A couple cuss words came out and as we take the corner, we started to roll and I'm sitting upright in the car. And, you know, I started screaming, you know, what happened? Where are you guys? And screaming, Matt, Jeremy, Kyle, where are you guys? And kinda look around.
Nobody's in the car. I'm all alone. So I unbuckle my seat belt. Car smashing all around me. I can't get any doors open.
But I crawled out a window and I seen my boyfriend Matt lying there right away and he was lying on his back like he was sleeping. So I actually knelt beside his head and I lifted it up and there was a hole the size of probably a baseball. Lots of blood. You know he's dead but you don't wanna believe it kind of thing. I was the only one wearing a seat belt and you know the boys they were just they were having a good time they were all laughing and I even said you know we're going kind of fast you guys put your seat belt on or they just didn't think it could happen to them, you know.
With the alcohol impairing their judgment, they just didn't think, I guess.
My 27 year old son was a teacher, was returning from a reception actually on his birthday and was involved in a car accident and died. And unfortunately, he wasn't wearing a seat belt at the time. Yeah. According to the physicians, it was the cause of death was head trauma. So in all likelihood, he would have survived had he been wearing a seat belt. You know, for a long time, I didn't wear a seat belt, and it's unfortunate that tragedy has to impact on you before you see the importance of this very, very simple task. It takes two seconds to buckle up. You're putting your life in jeopardy, and you're putting children's lives in jeopardy when you don't buckle up. Take that two seconds just to buckle up.
My friend was killed by the drunk driver, and she was a sergeant here in Wassa, an army recruiter. The drunk driver was passing a vehicle, and we were going 65 miles an hour. And he was too. Due to the accident, you know, getting hit by a drunk driver and the fact that I was not wearing a seat belt and I was not a seat belt wearer before that accident, I ended up having injuries that I had to deal with, ending up in the hospital for two months, having glass in my forehead because of hitting a windshield, and I'm still getting working on getting that glass out.
My ex wife and I were driving back from taking a load of boxes or whatever to a new home we were moving into. And we had to make a stop at truck stop because one of my daughters had to go to the bathroom. And we were in separate cars. At the same time, a young man was celebrating his eighteenth birthday with a bunch of his friends. And he was coming back from the celebration, traveling at a high rate of speed without his headlights on.
And just as I was getting ready to cross the highway, this young kid hit me broadside, and his car exploded, went up in the air, bounced off a parked car in a truck stop parking lot, and threw him out of the car, and then eventually his car landed on top of him. They literally had to scrape him off the ground. That's and he died in the, accident. My car went up into the air, flipped three times in the air without even touching the ground. When I finally landed in my car, slid, like, about 300 feet down the, highway.
The condition that I've been left in, is I'm a C45 quad. I'm paralyzed from about the middle of my chest down. I feel nothing from that down. The splints on my wrist help to stabilize my wrist, keep them straight so I can drive my wheelchair and do other things. I have no use to my fingers. There's no dexterity in my fingers at all. If I hadn't been hit by this speedy young drunk driver,
would have been able to do a lot of the same things everybody else does every day or when they go on vacations or so on and so forth. I wouldn't be limited to just this life in a wheelchair. Well, the things I used to love to do prior to my accident, I played guitar for about eighteen years. And I used to love swimming. I used to love playing football.
As odd as it sounds, I used to love to mow lawn. It was especially frustrating when my young grandson came up to me one day when he wanted to give me a kiss goodbye. And he put his arms up to me and he said, you know, papa, to give me a kiss. And I couldn't reach out and pick him up. For people that say that it's okay to drink and drive, I tell them to more or less take a roll or a step in my shoes for six months. And they find that the urge to drink and drive would go away really fast.
My daughter, Amy Sam Kubler, was hit by a drunk driver while she was jogging along the road. And she was struck so hard that she went 500 feet into a deep ditch. Amy was married, and her husband had come home that night and found not home. So he had he looked around, he saw that she had some of her jogging clothes was gone, so she thought he thought maybe she was still out running, but it was 10:30 at night by that time. And so he called my son, lived about three, four miles away, and he came over really quickly, saw a shoe on the highway near where their house is, and they called 911, and my son went down into the ditch where the shoe was and found her there.
And neither one had ever seen anybody die before. They loved her so much. If this hadn't happened to our family, to my daughter, I think we'd be happy. We're not happy. We're never really totally happy.
I think more than anything, we would have her here, and we'd be able to laugh and hug her and have her children be raised while we're around. It's like the worst thing a parent could ever imagine, losing a child. One thing I would say to anyone who gets in the car after they've been drinking, or using anything that would impair them, is don't take anybody's life in their hands. You could hurt an innocent child, an innocent person. People go off the road all the time, and they think, oh, I didn't hit anybody. But that man that hit my daughter went off the side of the road, and he hit somebody.
My husband Walter, our 14 old son Matthew, and I went up to we're going up to Three Lakes. It was on a Saturday evening, and we were going up to visit my husband's parents. We were on Highway 45, about seven miles north of New London, when my husband noticed a pickup truck coming down going south on 45. And he also noticed that this pickup truck was crossing over the center line into our lane. Well, my husband tried to steer the car out of the way.
He couldn't get it far enough out of the way, though, and we were hit head on more toward my front part of the car. My husband, seconds after the crash, I'm sure, could tell that both Matthew and I were unconscious. They came and got us and took us to the New London Hospital where Matthew was pronounced dead on arrival. What happens when you drive drunk? How it affects families?
How would that it's not just a headline in the paper, a blurb on the news, that it's real, that it affects people their whole life, and that it's wrong. And I don't know how they live with it because I know how we've adjusted to lose him, but how they adjust to the fact that their whole life they've got to know and remember that they actually killed someone. I don't know how they can deal with that.
I was on my way up north to go fishing at our cabin. And and on the way up north, I drank in the car. I had driven, drank, and drove before. Just north of Wasaki, I drifted across the center line of the road and I hit another car head on. I found out at at the crash scene that a woman had died. She was a single mom. I didn't give her a chance. You read the autopsy report. The injuries were massive internal injuries. She died instantly.
I didn't give her a chance. I heard those words going to my brain. I understood them. I registered. I knew what that meant, but I don't know what the words are to explain the feeling you have when you're responsible for killing someone through a drunk driving crash. Many people take drinking and driving for granted. Sometimes it seems to be a culture in Wisconsin, and and it's something that just people do without another thought. I had drink and drove many times. This was the first time anything has ever happened to me. I've never had a drunk driving, although I should have had many.
I've never been involved in a crash, and my first crash from a drunk driving incident cost the life of another human being. And I had to deal with that. It has not been an easy road to deal with. It's been a tremendously hard road to deal with that, But it doesn't compare anything to what that woman's family has had to go through. They lost a mom. They lost a sister. They they lost a daughter, and they've gotta live with that for the rest of their life. There's there's nothing I can do to bring her back. You think that it's not gonna happen to you? I'm here today to tell you that it can happen to you.
It happened to me. I didn't think it was gonna be me, but it is. So the dangers of drinking and driving are tremendous. The the the ramifications are huge, and we don't think about that. And I think the reason we don't think about it is because we're selfish, we're doing what we wanna do, and we don't think it's going to hurt anybody else, but it does. It hurts far more people than we can begin to imagine. And if every individual will just take a little step forward and make a change and not get behind the wheel, we can start to take the culture Wisconsin and turn it. We can start to get to the zero in Wisconsin. We can make this work if we all try together.
The relationship between my sister and I was more than just sisters. Considering my sister was twelve years younger than me, it was almost like she was not just a sister but almost a child to me. And we were very close. She had many things going for her. She was gonna graduate from high school that year.
She was killed three months before graduation. I would say anyone who thinks that they are an experienced enough driver or have been driving for, I don't care how many number of years, and thinks that they can drive as fast as they want, and winter road conditions that are dangerous are absolutely wrong. Even going 10 under the speed limit most of the time is not slow enough. You can't control a vehicle when you hit ice. You can't control a vehicle that's coming towards you and hope that they're gonna stop.
I was affected by my husband being hit by a drunk driver. We were coming home from the Madison Mallards baseball team game. It should not have happened. My husband was crossing the street in a crosswalk, a lighted crosswalk when this lady hit him. You know, it's just a very very terrible thing that happened to our life. In one minute you have this wonderful life that you have a husband that's always there and you're always doing something with, and the next minute you don't have anything at all. Your life is just gone.
My daughter, Sierra, and her friend, Michelle, were at a party. Sierra had been trying to get somebody, had been calling friends trying to get somebody to come and pick her up because she knew she had been drinking. She shouldn't be driving. Subsequently when they fled the party they were operating way too fast, failed to negotiate a curve and their car went sideways into a tree at a high rate of speed and and it they both died instantly from the from the impact.
These teens think they're invincible. My daughter told me two weeks before she died, if I can't have fun, I don't wanna live. And I said to, you know, Sierra, those consequences sometimes are deadly. And then she proved it. Since Sierra's died, our whole life has changed. Our daughter, she didn't graduate from high school. She'll never get married. She'll never go to college. She'll never have children. Every day, every minute of each day, I live with my daughters. My daughter's death. The the choice that she made that night affected so many people. Not only did she take herself, she took her best friend with her.
Rose is right. There isn't there isn't a day goes by. You look at everything much differently. All we can do is do whatever we can so that somebody else doesn't go through the same experience that we have.
If someone thinks that they're okay to drive after they've been drinking alcohol, I would like to take them by the hand and walk one block up from my house and go visit my daughter's grave and her friend Michelle's just right down the way. I go see my daughter every morning and every night before I go to bed. That's how I see my daughter. So if you think you're okay to drink and then drive, you you have a you have a rude awakening, a very rude awakening. I love this side every single day. That's how I get to see my daughter.
Zero in Wisconsin. Zero in Wisconsin. Zero Wisconsin. Zero Wisconsin. Wisconsin. Zero in Wisconsin. A vision we can all live with.
A vision we can all live with.
My partner and I are postal inspectors, which means we investigate any crime that involves the male. Today, that means doing a stakeout on a low life accountant. Accountant. He works for an investment firm that's really just a front for a complicated fraud scam. They've been ripping people off to the tune of thousands of dollars. He's got no clue what that kind of financial loss means to his victims. He never gets to see that side of the story, but I do.
Do you
have any luck flipping this guy?
No. He dummied up on me.
So they kept him in the dark about how business operated. Certainly living the high life for a CPA.
Not anymore.
Goddard.
Inspector Goddard.
This is Andrea Bashears with News twelve. Did I catch you at a bad time?
Actually, Andrea, I got nothing but time. What's up?
Well, we're doing a special on fraud for sweeps, and we need some first person perspective on the crimes. You know, talk to victims and hear their stories. Do you think
you could help us out?
Yeah, sounds good to me. We could stop a lot of this stuff if more people are aware of it. Hey, you know Carla Horan, our victim witness coordinator? She might have some leads for us. Let me run this past her and I'll get back to you later this week.
Financial crime attacks its victims at their core. Whenever someone loses control of their money or their identity, they often also lose their critical sense of security. They doubt their own judgment and many suffer depressive episodes after the crime. My job is to help people rebuild not only their financial security, but their lives. Trust. It's so
hard. Yeah. It's moving.
I don't
know. Mister and miss Patterson, hi. So much for coming in. Listen, please don't be nervous. If you stumble or you're not happy with what you say, we can always shoot it again. Okay? Okay. You ready to get started? Shoot them. Have a seat.
Tonight on News 12, we continue our special series on mail fraud, return to sender. Three years ago, Matt and Lisa Patterson were the victims of identity theft. Along with hundreds of other victims in the area, they had their lives turned upside down by two young criminals. Lisa, how did you find out that there was a problem?
We were trying to buy a new house, and our real estate agent called and said our loan would not be approved, that we had outstanding bills on our credit cards, and we even had a loan that we had defaulted on.
Matt, do you remember how you felt that morning?
Oh, it was awful. Yeah. Your first response is that it's it's a mistake. It's it's just an error, and it sinks in, and and you feel angry, powerless.
We didn't get the house?
We we were actually lucky. The postal inspectors had a specialist to work with the victims, and she explained what steps we needed to take to repair our credit report. She she helped us with letters and affidavits and and really walked us through the whole process. She she called my boss to explain why I'd have to miss work to appear at the trial. She she even helped us with the the victim impact statement for the for the judge to read before sentencing those two men. You think you could handle things for a while?
Sure. What's up? I think I
know someone who needs to hear these stories. I do not wanna wait for him to catch the news. I won't be long. Okay? Okay.
Who is it? It's Postal Inspector Alan Goddard. Open up, Harrison.
Inspector. What can I do for you? Well, you could
ask me in for starters.
Thought we'd have a little chat.
I told you I don't know anything about this case. I don't know what good it can do to keep talking to me about it.
Can I come in or do I need to get a warrant? Hold on.
Pardon the mess.
She asked you to leave, didn't she? Well, what'd you expect after she found out what kind of man you
really are? Didn't have anything to do with these allegations against the company.
Right.
Okay, if I sit.
Can I offer you a shot, Inspector? I guess not on duty and all. You didn't come here to talk to me about my marriage, did you?
I came here to ask you a question, Mark. Do you believe in fairy tales?
What talk is that?
Fairy tales? Yeah.
You know, Little Red Riding Hood, Humpty Dumpty, fairy tales. Do you believe in them?
Of course not.
Me either. That's why I'm not believing any of this crap about you not knowing anything about the scams that your company is pulling. You see what I'm saying?
Buy what you want. Believe what you want. I told you already. I mean, what what we don't wanna do?
I want you to take a ride with me.
Are you arresting me?
No. You're not under arrest.
There are
some people I want you to meet. I just want you to listen to what they have to say.
Can you do that for me?
I lost nearly $30,000 in that investment fraud. The worst part about it was that I thought that I had it it it was a good investment. I really thought it was good, and I encouraged my family and friends to invest also. And because my background is in banking, my friends, they listened to me. When I found out, though, that that I had been conned, I felt personally responsible for the money that they had lost. You know, I felt like I I lost my credibility. Can you imagine having to go home to your wife and tell her that you've lost a large chunk of your savings? Or calling my best friend to let him know that, you know, hey, the stocks that I I told you were good were actually a scam. You know, I felt responsible for that, you know, and and
it made me look like a fool.
Mandy Richards served a six month sentence in Alderson Federal Prison for Women for her part in helping provide lists of potential victims that were used in an identity theft scam by her boyfriend. She joins us by Satellite Now. Mandy, I know you have been through a lot over the past year. How did your boyfriend get you involved in all of this?
Well, he fooled me. He told me that he really needed some help to meet a quota at work. And he said, you know, how about getting me some of those applications that people turn in, the people that you guys don't hire?
What was he doing with those applications?
He was stealing people's identity. No, I didn't know that. He told me he was trying to do a good job at work. So naturally I wanted to help him out, but it's not what he was doing.
How did you find out what he was using the applications for?
Well, when they came to my job and interrogated me, and then eventually I was arrested, and they took my little girl away.
Well, that's one person who has suffered a lot is your daughter. Tell us about that.
Well, I mean like I said, they put her in foster care. I went to jail. They supervised my visit with her.
You have kids, don't you?
She would
cry when I would leave.
Yeah. Horrible. Two girls.
I didn't think I would ever get
her back, but I found People never think about the kids they get left behind when their parents go to jail.
I know that your boyfriend has threatened to kill you in the past. Mhmm. What happens when he gets out of jail?
Well, I don't know, but there's a way I can find out when he gets out. It's a website, and it's called VNS, and everybody should know about it. It's a victim notification system, and it lets me know when he gets out of prison so I don't have to be afraid all the time.
Miss Horan, you're up next, so we need to get you into makeup. Yeah. Great. Thanks.
Think your girls would be proud of what you're doing?
I lost everything. My wife wouldn't forgive me for I had borrowed money from our son's college fund. I wanted to send him to a better school. I thought I could double my money, but but I can barely afford the community college tuition that he goes to now. And a few months after the trial, my wife left me. These crooks got eight years from mail fraud, and the cells they live in, they're bigger than my apartment. My ex wife has to take a second job, so do I. It seems like my family went to prison too, except they didn't do anything wrong. I did.
That reaction isn't uncommon. People often blame themselves for things that happen to them, even though they're really no fault of their own. Oftentimes, are so embarrassed that they won't even tell their own family. We see all kinds of very intelligent, educated people who fall into these scams. Well, is Mr. Matson's story unusual? I wish that it were. I've seen victims lose their homes, suffer job losses, have problems in relationships, even divorce.
Ready to?
Take two.
Well, the
good news is is
that you're there to help them rebuild their lives.
We're out. Made flat.
Alright. Let's get out of here.
Inspector, I'd like to talk to you about the company now. I think maybe I can help put some of the pieces in place. Alright. You want to bring your lawyer in? That would be best, wouldn't Do you think maybe the US attorney would make me a deal?
Well, I can't speak for him, Mark, but I'm sure I'll take your cooperation into consideration.
Randall's people we're watching today, ones that lost from our
No. No. No. Those are those are all from older cases.
I always thought the banks or the credit card companies will cover their losses. I never No.
It's just like the fairy tale. All the king's horses and all the king's men just couldn't put things back together again. Let's go take that statement.
Need that paperwork by Tuesday. You got it, boss. Alright. Thanks. Mark Harrison's remorse about his crime proved to be short lived. After agreeing to testify against the leaders of the fraud ring, he was arrested again less than a year later for helping to operate an Internet auction scam. These types of criminals rarely have any regard for their victims or the damage that they've done to their lives. If you or someone you know has been a crime victim, it's important that you know about victims' rights and the services available to you. In 2004, the Justice for All Act was passed, strengthening rights for federal crime victims. Most states have similar protections for cases handled in the local criminal justice system.
All of these victims' bills of rights were created to give victims a proper place in the criminal justice system. They provide an opportunity to participate and be heard and offer practical assistance to minimize the inconvenience and frustrations that crime victims suffer. You can find out more about your rights as a federal crime victim by visiting this website, www.crimevictims.gov. The US Postal Inspection Service investigates many different types of financial crimes. Most are handled in the federal justice system.
In addition to providing educational material about crime victims' rights and services, the Inspection Service continually strives to inform the public about fraud scams and how to avoid becoming a victim. Education is your best defense. Keep up to date on the latest scams by visiting our websites, www.usps.com/postalinspectors and www.lookstoogoodtobetrue.com. Remember, being the victim of a crime is nothing to be ashamed of, neither is seeking help to recover from it.
When we think about this promise of higher education in part, the promise of economic mobility, what we've really done at Strata is to try to answer the question, what are the things that can change or that can be more consistently delivered to ensure that everyone has a pathway to opportunity no matter where they're starting from.
A pathway to opportunity isn't just a phrase at Strata. So many individuals, people of color, those from low income backgrounds,
proud
team itself. This is not about a lack of will or commitment from talented and aspiring individuals. It is a calling for our collective action and our collective will to build a post secondary education system that truly works for everyone.
The state opportunity index provides a quantifiable framework for measuring each state's progress in delivering an education system after high school that aligns with employer needs and provides pathways to economic opportunity that are available to everyone. These measures will help states evaluate progress against the goal of ensuring that education after high school prepares all students for a lifetime of career opportunities and success.
My hope is that it is a catalyst for change, that it helps states and institutions see where they can improve, where they can truly change for the better.
Estrada Education Foundation, works to strengthen the link between education and opportunity. We're here today for a very special announcement. We're releasing publicly for the very first time the state opportunity index, a research backed analysis of how states and institution leaders can strengthen the link between education and opportunity in every state across the country. What we found is that while states are doing a lot of great work in helping people get access to college education, helping them complete college education. There really needs to be more energy around helping make sure that people that do complete are able to successfully secure a good job and have economic mobility in their career.
We're really encouraging states and institution leaders to focus on five key areas. The first is clear outcomes, making sure that all learners have access to clear information about the outcomes of the programs that they're considering so that they can make well informed choices. We've also encouraged institutions to provide quality coaching, personalized education and career coaching to help people make a plan and to overcome obstacles that they face along the way, to ensure that programs are affordable. That's a huge part that obviously all Americans are interested in. Also, provide work based learning opportunities like paid internships, and finally, work to better align what they're producing with the needs of the labor market.
To the extent that we're limiting access to high wage, high demand programs, not only are students not able to have good outcomes, but in many cases, struggle to meet their talent needs as well. So if you really think about this at a high level, we're talking about practical things that every state can do to help improve outcomes for individuals, but also to help employers to meet better meet their talent needs for high wage, high demand jobs. What we basically said is that everyone that goes to college with a goal of securing a good job and a good career should be able to earn enough after they finish to pay back the cost of that education. So for every state in the country, we've assessed the approximate percentage of graduates who are able to get a positive return on their investment within a ten year period. Student debt's one of the big issues today in the country.
But as it turns out, for those students who have good economic outcomes, most of the time, they're able to pay back that debt without too much difficulty. So while there's a lot of attention on the student debt issue today, and that's a very important topic, we need to be putting at least as much effort and energy on helping make sure that people are able to get good first jobs and launch into successful careers. Because if they had good economic outcomes, they're very likely to be able to afford the debt that they take on.
The debt crisis begins with the affordability crisis. So we've gotta tackle the debt that is really an albatross around the necks of so many students, and certainly, the Biden administration is focused on that. But long term, we've gotta make sure the college is affordable. That really requires a partnership between the federal government and state governments to invest, in making, ideally community college tuition free, and then saying for our four year institutions, how do we ensure that students graduate debt free? That's an investment in our students.
It's an investment in supports, supports around addressing housing insecurity, food insecurity, and it's an investment in economic opportunity for students. Things like internships that give students a path so that when they graduate, they're really getting the return on investment.
We need to make sure that when people invest their time, their energy, and their money into a training program, a higher education, college, university, that they are going to be better off and have more mobility and economic opportunity than they did before they took that time to invest time, energy, money. And what we're doing and seeing in this report is that there is a road map to be able to do that. So, again, thanks to Strata for putting us on this, providing this road map and helping state policymakers understand what best
in class looks like. The tenure is the magic mark. Right? If there when we calculate and say, is this is this post secondary education, whether it's a degree or a credential, is there an ROI? Can I, at the wage I'm being paid, have a reasonable standard of living and repay the debt? I think that it's incumbent on all of us at the state level, particularly in publics, to understand how we best make use of those funds so that it is an affordable education for students.
And what can be done to reduce that amount of student debt?
To reduce the amount of debt, I think it's the input piece for students to understand what pathways are available to the jobs that they'd like to have.
I want
to provide some context for why Strata developed the State Opportunity Index, why we felt like this was an important moment in time to do so. One of the greatest aspirations of The United States has long been the idea that with hard work and determination, there are pathways to opportunity for everyone, no matter how humble one's starting place may be. For a long time, we called this idea the American dream. And a cornerstone of that dream has been education. Cornerstone.
Right now, our country appears deeply divided over many things. You know, people increasingly have recognized that the American dream has not, and in many cases has never been accessible to everyone. But one thing that nearly everyone agrees on is that a quality education can and should enable any hardworking person to pursue their own unique pathway to opportunity. To define and achieve their own unique version of the American dream. Although individuals pursue a college education for many different reasons, their motivations and expectations usually stem from a common belief that further education will make their lives better, both economically and otherwise.
Unfortunately, while equality education after high school is the best and most reliable pathway to opportunity, that pathway has not always been equitable. Much progress has occurred over the last two decades thanks to the hard work of policymakers, institutions, and many other stakeholders, many of whom are in the room today, Americans enjoy greater access to education after high school than ever before. Completion rates have also increased significantly. But even with those accomplishments, the pathway to opportunity is still too challenging for far too many students across the country. Despite a growing array of post high school education opportunities, including degrees as well as certificates and other credentials, education to career pathways are often difficult and harder to navigate, especially for low income students, students of color, and those who are the first in their family to attend college.
Employers at the same time are also facing challenges. Even with millions of Americans completing some form of post high school education, many employers are still struggling to fill high wage, high skill jobs. The good news is that we're here today to talk about solutions. Solutions. Ways to make things better.
To talk about the things that can change to ensure that everyone in this country has a pathway to opportunity, no matter where they're starting from. The first ever State Opportunity Index was developed to give states and institutions a quantifiable set of measures, a roadmap, that supports a stronger connection between education and opportunity. And when that connection is strong, everyone wins. Students will have the information and support they need to direct and pursue their career goals, and employers will have the talent they need to fill high demand jobs. The index looks at five priority areas: clear outcomes, quality coaching, affordability, work based learning, and employer alignment.
A large body of research by Strata and many others shows that learners are more likely to successfully connect their education to opportunity when these five things are in place: A clear and accessible understanding of educational and career pathways is informed by data. Second, access to personalized education to career coaching. Third, affordable education options. Fourth, quality work based learning opportunities like paid internships and apprenticeships. And finally, fifth, access to education programs that connect high wage, in demand jobs.
Taken together, these five priorities provide policymakers and institution leaders a holistic framework for improving both policy and practice in supporting more equitable pathways to opportunity. States that address these five priorities in the index will see substantial improvements in employment outcomes for students, while also better meeting the talent needs of their employers a win win outcome. The index also provides valuable information about the percentage of college graduates in each state who are getting a positive return on their educational investment. One of the things that we really embrace at Strata is that education after high school has many valuable purposes. Preparation for career is just one of them.
But for the vast majority of people who pursue a college education, it's absolutely essential. And we believe 100% of those students who attend and complete should have at least a positive return on investment, should earn at least enough that within ten years they could pay back the cost of that college education. I also want to reinforce that one of the reasons that we call this the state opportunity index is because state policy makers have an important role to play in enabling better outcomes for learners. You know, often think about here's all the things that university presidents and community college leaders should do, and there are a lot of important things for them to do. But some of the most important changes that need to happen to expand and strengthen that link between education and opportunity are things that policymakers need to do.
So, there's an absolutely critical role for governors and legislative leaders across America in driving this work forward. Today's report is just the first step in what we hope will be an ongoing effort of accelerating progress over the years to come. Our goal is that working together with policymakers, education leaders, and employers across the country, we can improve and enhance the State Opportunity Index with more data, better data, and more support from the many stakeholders who will benefit from this work. We hope that all of you will become a part of this effort as well. Most of you actually already are in one way or another.
We see the State Opportunity Index as a shared endeavor, something we'll all benefit from. Working together, we can strengthen the link between education and opportunity across The United States. Together, we can bring to life a post secondary education ecosystem that provides equitable pathways to opportunity for all. Thank you.
First thing, as Steven said, we are looking at a twist on kind of an old question, which is, Is education after high school worth it? And the thing to know about these numbers is they should be 100 in every state because that would mean that for every single student, they are experiencing that positive financial benefit from higher education. As you can see, that's not where we are right now. So what this represents is two things: people, graduates experiencing higher wages as a result of graduating from postsecondary education and that those wages are high enough to pay off the cost of what they invested in higher education. So we know that on average higher education pays off.
That's been very clear. There's been a lot of great research on that on average or for the median student, but that's not enough, right? Because we still know that there are students, and unfortunately not just a small number of students, for whom that's not the reality. And so as we see, our mission is how to make that connection between education and opportunity stronger for all students so that every state can get to 100 on these metrics. The other thing so this represents all bachelor's and associate degree holders together.
If you take a look at separating them out Okay, so what you'll see here for the bachelor's degree, it looks a little bit stronger. We're still not all the way there yet, and you can see there's a lot of variation across states. But this is a little bit stronger. What happens when we look at associate degrees? Here, you'll notice a big difference.
And this is a little puzzling because we know that associate degrees are less expensive than bachelor's degrees, but yet we see fewer students who are achieving that financial benefit, that positive ROI. And so what this is telling us is it's not just about the cost of education. Right? Cost is important, and we're gonna speak to affordability, is absolutely essential to make sure that financial barriers are not an insurmountable obstacle for students. But this tells us that this is a problem that higher ed can't solve all by itself, that this has to be a partnership.
This is about the kinds of job opportunities that are available for students and how the education that they receive is really aligning and preparing them for good jobs in their state. So how can the business community come together, how can policymakers come together, and how can higher ed come together to all make sure that we're strengthening these links between education and opportunity? Alright. So we don't want to stay focused just on the problem. Right?
This report really is about what can we do and what are the solutions that all of these stakeholders can come together and try to improve these outcomes for students. So we're gonna go through these five priority areas that Steven mentioned and see how states are doing on on each of these metrics. This is not about ranking states. This is not about punishing. This is about encouraging progress across all states.
And so you'll see it's in a developmental framework with categories as to how each state is doing across each of these. We spoke a little bit to what these areas are. So clear outcomes is the data that enables us to understand the outcomes of graduates. Quality coaching and guidance is about connecting students to that education or to that information and support that they need to make good decisions. Affordability about removing those upfront financial obstacles, work based learning about not waiting until someone graduates to launch their career.
How can you start that transition early in order to make sure they're already on the road to success? And then finally, how do we understand the fit between the job opportunities that are available and the kinds of education that students are getting? So I'm gonna hand it over to my colleague, Dave Clayton.
Where do we find the intersection between education, employment, and the places people live and work and seek to raise their families, strengthen their communities, and be a part of people thrive when we have more intersection between education and high quality opportunities. How do we get there? First of all, do we have the data that will allow us to even see that? One frontier that is absent in this report is our understanding of information about non degree credentials. You think of our data systems and their relative maturation.
So this is not meant to be uniquely about higher education per se, two and four year institutions in its future incarnations. But this is where we are today, and we hope that with all of us together, we're in a different place with more data and more insights going forward. Over the last eighteen months, a group of state experts and national leaders have worked together to identify 10 criteria of an ideal state education to employment data system. And you see these elements, each state completed surveys, was interviewed, research was done to evaluate their standing on each of these. This is our commitment to sustainability that we didn't print this appendix, But, those detailed responses are in the digital appendices, where you can see each state's progress on each of these 10 elements, so that when Colorado wants to learn from Alabama and when North Dakota wants to share how they're going about number nine of sharing their records with learners about their own validated learning and education records, people can see where that is and what that is and how to connect and learn together.
So, again, in the spirit of these are new frontiers for states. We've gone on a journey from access to completion and now to successful employment and equitable pathways to opportunity afterwards. And how do we get there? This is a means by which we can see one another and see ourselves in others and see our aspirations, and learn from our peers. And so that's our desire to provide to states.
Now, when you average these 10 altogether, you can look and see the variety across states. And there is variety, but no one state is a four on everything, and no one state is a one on everything in these categories that they go across. Everybody has relative strengths and relative weaknesses, and so our effort has been to say, Here are the things that will help you understand and identify those clear pathways to opportunity and how equitably they're being extended and delivered to individuals in your state through your public education institutions.
All right. Great. So next we're going to talk about quality coaching and guidance. And the reason we believe that this is so important is just having the data is not going to be enough unless you can actually connect it to students and make sure students have that information that they need and have the guidance and support that they need when they're choosing pathways and overcoming obstacles. So for this, unfortunately, there are not large scale data sets telling us who has access to these kinds of coaching and guidance.
And so what we did in this first iteration of the report was conducted a nationally representative survey to ask students actually, recent graduates about their experiences with coaching and guidance. So there were three criteria that you can see here. The first is simply, did students experience that personalized coaching and guidance to help them connect the education pathway that they're choosing with their chosen career? Next is a series of questions about the kinds of information they received and when they received it, because we know it's not adequate to have students receiving this information when they're a senior. If you never visit career services, never think about that until you're about to graduate, it's far too late, that's a missed opportunity.
So did they receive this information within their first year or before so they could make good choices? And finally, it's not just about making sure people have information, but did they actually have the support to create a plan and to overcome barriers and challenges?
What we found
is really we're at the foundational stage, both as a nation and then in the four largest states where we were able to get a large enough sample to display these state results. So as you can see, it's really about one in five students who say that they're experiencing all of these aspects of coaching and guidance. And this is particularly critical for students who may be the first in their families to go to college and who don't have the awareness of what the possibilities even are for them. So this is something where we really hope, you know, as we continue to track progress, that we can move these numbers up. And we'll be coming out with more information and data on this specifically in the coming months.
But this is something where everyone has some room to improve. Oh, sorry. Also, how do we know that this matters? So since these were recent graduates, we were able to ask them about their outcomes after they complete. And what we found was indeed students who did report that they had that information and that support were much more likely to say that they were in a job that required a college degree and that they were satisfied with their job and they're satisfied with the progress they're making towards their long term career goals. So we think that this is a promising sign that as we increase this access for more and more students, that will have positive outcomes on their other outcomes after completion.
Much has been examined and done and made great efforts around affordability. We wanted to ask one question to make this student centered is, what is a reasonable expectation for an individual to be able to work their way through college? So, we looked at this construct in the sense of taking that net price that institutions report independently to the U. S. Department of Education, and then we looked at, through the census data, the American Community Survey, allows you to calculate the median wage of a part the median wage hourly wage of part time work for someone who's currently enrolled in school.
So you can divide those two, and you get the number of hours somebody would need to work while enrolled full time in the summer, and how many hours would you need to work while you're in school to break even on that net price? What you see here, this is again the average of the two year and the four year net prices for each state. Right? But you can see that variation in what it would take to pay for that in state resident public institution tuition, net price, cost of living, transportation, books, fees, all of that rolled in together. Interestingly, tuition is only I mean, the costs other than tuition are 50 to 70% of that net price, depending upon the state.
So that factors in tremendously. It's not just tuition alone that higher ed can control. Also, state policies on need based aid and merit aid, and those different approaches have an impact, as well as the labor markets. This is rolled up to the state level, but you earn $5 an hour more in Massachusetts than you do in Montana if you're a student working part time. Now, several state leaders, as we've started to preview this, have said, well, we could look at that wage in this region of our state, and it's different in the rural Southwest than it is in the urban Northeast part of our state.
And so all of that opens up to institutions to be able to understand, at least somewhere, what that relative ask is between our price and could a student reasonably work their way through school. Again, we know that working more than twenty hours a week has some negative impact on people's academic progress and success. So what are we expecting of our learners and students as they look to finance their education? You see that breakout for the four year public institutions across each state. Again, back to Nicole's point about the ROI, that break even threshold at ten years, more likely, even with the higher expectation and cost of a four year institution, more likely to get the ROI.
When you look at the two year institutions, much more affordable, fewer hours to work per week to work your way through school, but that payoff not as strong across the average of all associate degrees.
All right. So work based learning. Again, this is the idea that in order to make that strong connection between education and opportunity, you can't wait until after a student graduates. How do you already get them the kinds of experiences while they're learning to be able to jump start their career before they even graduate? So the strongest evidence base for work based learning is for apprenticeships and paid internships.
We were not able to include apprenticeships this year. We hope to continue to be able to collect better data on that in the future. So for this first year, we are really focused on paid internships. The reason why we specify pay, there's two reasons. One is the evidence is just stronger that paid internships are linked to better outcomes after completion.
So compared to unpaid internships, students who complete paid internships are more likely to be earning more and to have jobs that actually require their degree, and it's a matter of access. Right? So students who need to earn money while they're in school don't have the option to take an unpaid internship. So this is from our nationally representative survey data again, and what you'll see is slightly better than where we were for that quality coaching and guidance, but still only about one in four students report that they've participated in a paid internship. That's true nationally and for those four largest states.
At the two year level, it's lower. It's about one in 10 students who say that they've participated in a paid internship. Now, there's a lot of other new emerging models of work based learning that are coming out that we'd also be interested in understanding the evidence base for to see are there other options that are shorter term or ways to transform student employment that could also fulfill some of these same needs. But right now, we know that for too many students, and particularly students of color and women and first generation students, they're not actually having access to these opportunities. And, again, here we see the difference that students report that this makes.
So you can see even here the difference between having no internship, having an unpaid internship, and having a paid internship when it comes to having that job that requires your college degree and being satisfied with your job and being satisfied with your career progress. So we see this as an opportunity. If we can move, you know, that needle for more students, then these outcomes should improve.
Steven talked about frontiers and how do we measure this employer alignment metric is a frontier for us and for the field as you look around even internationally and across the nation. How do we best understand the supply demand gaps between education and workforce for skilled labor? And so we are grateful to the team at Burning Glass Institute and their leadership and our partnership with them to help develop this analysis that you'll see in this report. This is one we hope to continue to iterate on and improve. We hope to do it in a way that actually each state is empowered.
There's enough transparency and documentation, but that each state could build those data systems we talked about at the beginning and look at this for their specific priorities and their workforce and their alignment. And so one of those areas in the clear outcomes data infrastructure was actually dedicating the resources within a state and assigning responsibility to to make sense of and gain insights from and deliver those actionable insights from these data systems. And certainly, this employer alignment is a powerful frontier at that intersection of education and employment. How do we understand their connection? We have two scores that we average together to create this measure or indicator for each state.
One is, as Steven talked about, this classic supplydemand paradox. You have an oversupply of graduates, meaning there are more graduates with degrees who are not employed in college level jobs, and at the same time, you have an undersupply of employers reporting that they're unable to fill their talent needs for high skilled jobs. We looked at a subset of jobs across every state, knowing that each state's economy is not the same, but we looked at these nine, fields of work that constitute a third of skilled kind of entry level opportunity jobs, high wage, high demand jobs nationwide. You see they include nursing and finance and accounting and software engineering and development and manufacturing technicians, but across multiple fields, those jobs that are in high demand. When you look at this and you see the percentage of individuals in each state that have a college level job, the percentage of recent graduates ages 26 to 30 in each state who are working in a college level job, You see that two thirds of the states are really between 5357%.
There's not a lot of variation in that number. The place where you do get the variation is in the fit between the graduates that are coming out of their institutions and the kind of less than three years experience job postings and openings that they have in The States. And you see a lot more variation in that across different states with this. When you put those together, what you end up seeing is a real variety in this employer alignment. You have places where there's both high demand and doing a fairly good job of filling that demand, and other places where college level employment is high.
And so when you have that combination of fit, those are the states that are strongest. There are places that and you can see individual state profiles and variation. West Virginia does well in supplying the demand that they have for jobs, but overall lower levels of college employment. Utah has high demand as a native of the state. I'll highlight them. They have high demand. They do a good job of filling that demand for those entry level, high opportunity jobs. They also have high levels of college employment. So that you need both of those to be at the front on this one in that regard. We thank you for being here today.
We thank you for being a part of this for tomorrow. Not our tomorrow collectively, but for the tomorrow of the individuals who do look to education for as their path equitable path to opportunity going forward. Thank you.
You're welcome. And to get the opportunity to lead a conversation among four very distinguished leaders at both state and national levels. What an opportunity for us. I want to also say, Dave, Nicole, thank you for being the catalyst for such a lively vibrant opportunity for us to think together about the opportunity before us at the level of states, at the level of institutions, at the level of our country. What a what a great privilege for us.
So I'd love to ask each of you to just sort of quickly respond. Steven provided sort of his why, why the State Opportunity Index. Dave and Nicole also both commented on that. I think for each of you to tell us a bit about your why, this seems relevant and timely to you now. Will, let's with you and we'll come this direction.
Well, thank you very much for the that's really loud. For the opportunity. I I think that it's important because as we think about like the the conditions to create the context and states where students can succeed, we really have to think about the necessary ingredients. And so I think more than just providing states with a ranking which I'll be happy to do that in my work, it provides states with the different activities or the different policy areas that are necessary to really create opportunities for students. So I think about, you know, quality coaching affordability, I think about clear outcomes. Those are things that we could be working on in states to ensure that we're providing students with the necessary conditions so that they can be successful.
Love that focus on the solutions, Will. Thank you. Amy, what about you?
So I think Steven did a magnificent job of reminding us all of this moment that sometimes we're questioning, which is education is the heart to unlocking opportunity and to unlocking the American dream. And we're at a point, I think a crisis point in this country, where over half of Americans for the first time ever don't think there's value in pursuing a higher education and four year degree in particular. And there's a moment where it feels like we've lost our way and that there is a lot of questioning of, is it worth it? Why not just go into work? And I'll give you a statistic from Virginia.
10% of our first year, four year public students do not persist into second year of study. Of those ten percent, forty percent have debt when they leave college of $10,000 or more. Take that statistic with what we also know in terms of the underemployed after they get a degree. And we're in a crisis that people are wandering. And we have told everyone for the last two decades, just go to college.
Everyone just go. And there's a moment right now in why this state opportunity index is so important. It's a focusing moment of let's remind ourselves that when people put in the time, energy, money, and the opportunity cost of taking two years, one year, six months, four years, eighteen years, whatever to get a PhD, to get that education, there needs to be investment. And so I really applaud Strata for reminding all of us that we need to focus. And in Virginia, when we talk about the purpose of an education, we say it's threefold.
One is to prepare people to be productive members of the economy, which is what this report is about, getting a job. Are you able to actually be more economically mobile and have greater opportunities in the workplace because you took the time, energy, and money to invest in your education or training? Second of all, it's to also prepare you to be an engaged and informed member of our democracy, which I would argue is equally important at this crisis moment. And third of all, it's to ensure that we're preparing people to be responsible neighbors and citizens and members of communities. And so those are three, in my mind, equal purposes of education. But this report gets really real and provides that roadmap for why and how we need to focus on that first piece of preparing people for economic success.
Thank you so much, Amy. This is a room of people that stands on common ground on all of those issues. So thank you. John?
Well, first, thrilled to be here. Great to see so many old friends in the room. Would say amen to everything that that Will and Amy said. The two things I would add, it is very difficult to improve something that you are not actively measuring. And so I'm very grateful to have this sort of baseline data from which we can build.
The second observation I'd make is I think Strata is doing something really important by focusing national attention on state level policy. What governors can do, what legislatures can do, what system level leaders and trustees can do. There's I think not enough conversation about the strong levers that states have, and it's nice to have the comparison between states. You know, for us in New York, we like to be number one, we like to be best. So, whenever we see that we're not, we want to learn what other folks are doing that puts them ahead
of us so that we can try to catch up.
Very helpful, John, to hear that perspective from a leader in a state that that is a helpful thing for you to have those measures and that baseline. And that is the catalyst for change. Hardeen?
I'm going to build on the moment, John, that you said which is if you can't measure it, you can't fix it. And Stephen did a phenomenal job talking about the cornerstone of the American dream. That's the output. And what this plan does is identifies five inputs. It's a multimodal problem, it's complex and it's really easy to become overwhelmed. But when you have those five inputs, you can take a step back and say, where am I going to focus? Am I going to look at work based learning? And you don't have to fix everything. We know now that if we put solutions and measure the output, the results of those, that those pillars can in fact improve
outcomes. Awesome. Thank you so much, Ardene. So we'll do another round of rapid fire this direction and have you each do a quick response on of the entire state opportunity index. What surprised you most? What really stood out to
you?
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.