Brian Dake

Dane County Orders All Classes Online for Grades 3-12

Dane County health officials abruptly ordered all public and private schools in the county Friday to teach grades 3-12 online only this fall in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Wisconsin State Journal reports Public Health Madison and Dane County issued the order shortly after 5 p.m.

According to the order, the county must sustain a 14-day average of no more than 39 cases per day for four straight weeks to reopen grades 3-5 and no more than 19 cases per day for four straight weeks to reopen grades 6-12. As of Friday, the county was averaging 42 new cases daily.

Most Dane County schools had already decided to start the year online, although some private schools had planned to open as early as next week.

“The fact that a number of private schools were opening early next week, and to come down with this order just a few days before, puts an unbelievable burden on the families who planned to have their students in-person at school,” said Jim Bender, president of School Choice Wisconsin.

“Unless you’re testing the exact same number of people every day, the number of cases is completely arbitrary” to reopening schools safely, he said.

Wisconsin Unemployment Rate Drops in July

Wisconsin’s unemployment rate dropped from 8.6% in June to 7% in July, far below the national rate of 10.2%.

Wisconsin added 25,000 private-sector jobs in July, the state Department of Workforce Development reported Thursday.

Wisconsin’s unemployment rate typically trends closely with the national rate. But there’s a bigger gap in recent months because the state has less of a concentration of jobs in sectors that were hardest hit by the pandemic, the state’s chief economist, Dennis Winters, said last month. For example, manufacturing and construction jobs in Wisconsin were less affected, helping to reduce the number of unemployed, he said.

Here’s How Wisconsin Health Officials Say Schools Should Respond to a COVID-19 Outbreak

Wisconsin schools now have uniform instructions for when and how to shut down in the event of a COVID-19 outbreak as part of new guidelines from the state health department to help districts manage infections during the school year.

The document — which is not a mandate — builds on the limited guidance Wisconsin schools have received from the state since the threat of the coronavirus pandemic became elevated in the spring, leading public health officials in March to shut down all public and private K-12 schools.

Here’s what closures could look like in your child’s classroom, school or district:

School administrators could shut down a classroom or cohort if …

  • Classrooms need to be cleaned and no additional rooms are available for students
  • Contact tracing is being done, especially when multiple cases are being traced at once
  • Other mitigation strategies were tried and were unsuccessful at stopping spread between classmates
  • A teacher is absent and no substitute teacher is available
  • More students in the class or cohort are absent than present

School administrators could shut down a school if …

  • The number of staff absences are impeding instruction or the ability to provide lunch or other vital activities
  • More student cohorts are absent than present
  • Schoolwide disinfecting needs to be conducted
  • Other mitigation strategies were unsuccessful at halting an outbreak

District administrators could shut down a school district if …

  • The local, county, state or federal government recommends closure
  • The number of staff absences in the district are impeding vital district functions
  • Contact tracing is occurring for cases in multiple schools (for example, in response to an outbreak traced to a multi-school sporting event)
  • Other mitigation strategies were unsuccessful at halting an outbreak

Governor’s Task Force on Student Debt Releases Final Report

Yesterday, the Governor’s Task Force on Student Debt announced the release of its final report on student debt prepared at the request of Governor Tony Evers.

The report outlines eight recommendations for how Wisconsin can provide relief, education, and protection to its student debtholders now and in the future. They are:

1) create a Borrower Bill of Rights and Student Loan Ombudsman;

2) enhance proprietary school regulations and reinstate the Educational Approval Board;

3) improve financial literacy education;

4) increase need-based, targeted aid for postsecondary education and create a statewide promise program;

5) strengthen student loan counseling;

6) consider targeted loan forgiveness programs;

7) promote refinancing opportunities with other states; and

8) create a state student debt relief tax credit.

These recommendations are the result of expansive dialogue between experts from government, industry, academia, and student loan borrowers.

The Governor’s Task Force on Student Debt was created by Executive Order #67 to address the growing student debt crisis in Wisconsin. The 32-member task force included borrowers, industry leaders, legislators, financial aid experts, and lenders to share a broad spectrum of ideas and experiences to inform the work of the task force.

Record July Home Sales Push Prices Up

Wisconsin’s existing home sales hit a new record for the month of July, which increased prices by double digits, according to the most recent monthly analysis of the state housing market by the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association (WRA).

Sales of existing homes rose 7.6% in July relative to that same month in 2019, and the median price rose to $226,400, which is 10.4% higher than July 2019. On a year-to-date basis, sales are now only slightly lower than this time last year, with sales in the first seven months of 2020 just 1.9% below the same period of 2019, and prices are up 8.4% to $213,000.

“July was a remarkably robust month for home sales, given what we’ve been through the past four months,” said WRA Chairman Steve Beers. A total of 9,649 homes were sold in July, the most homes sold during a July since the WRA re-benchmarked its data-collection methods in 2005. The previous record was July 2019, when 8,969 home sales closed.

Over the last 12 months, home sales were up 18.6% in the North region, and they rose 11.1% and 11.7% in the Central and West regions, respectively. “This makes sense because rural areas have higher inventory levels,” said Beers. Statewide, rural counties had 6.4 months of available supply in July, compared to just 3.4 months of supply in the metropolitan counties.

“We had record home sales because we had record-low mortgage rates,” said WRA President & CEO Michael Theo. This was the fourth straight month where the 30-year fixed mortgage rate dipped into record-low territory, falling to 3.02% in July. By comparison, mortgage rates were at 3.77% just a year ago, so they have fallen three quarters of a percent.

 

Equalized Values Report Shows Healthy Increase in Property Values in 2019

On Friday, the Wisconsin Department of Revenue released its annual Equalized Values Report. The report shows Wisconsin’s total statewide equalized property value as of January 1, 2020, was $613 billion, a 6 percent increase over the prior year; growth occurred in all property classifications. Equalized values are based on data from January 1, 2019 to January 1, 2020.

Report highlights:
• Change in Equalized Value = $32.2 Billion, a 6 percent increase from 2019
o $22.9 Billion due to market value increases (4 percent)
o $9.6 Billion due to new construction (2 percent)

Equalized Values are calculated annually and used to ensure statewide fairness and equity in property tax distribution. The Equalized Value represents an estimate of a taxation district’s total taxable value and provides for the fair apportionment of school district and county levies to each municipality. Changes in Equalized Value do not necessarily translate into a change in property taxes.

 

U.S. Retail Sales Increased in July

Americans kept shopping in July with retail sales rising 1.2 percent from June, reflecting a rare bright spot in the battered economy.

The jump in sales reported on Friday by the Commerce Department, though smaller than the increases in the previous two months, showed that the bounce back in spending to pre-pandemic levels was not a fluke. Sales are now back at the level they were in February. It was instead a sign that consumerism, buoyed by government support, remains resilient even as many other facets of American life are increasingly bleak.

“It shows there is a willingness and a desire to spend,” said Michelle Meyer, chief U.S. economist at Bank of America. “There is no doubt the recovery in consumer spending has been robust.”

Retail sales in June rose 8.4 percent. That followed a May jump, 18.2 percent, which was the largest monthly surge on record. But that had followed two months of record declines.

Jobless Claims Fall to 963,000, Ending 20-week Streak of Claims Above a Million

The number of new applications for unemployment benefits last week was 963,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday, as jobless claims for the first time dropped below a million after 20 consecutive weeks of being above that figure.

Economists had projected that claims would total 1.1 million.

The total number of people claiming jobless benefits in all programs for the week ending July 25 was 28.3 million, a decrease of over 3 million from the previous week. For comparison, there were 1.7 million people claiming benefits for all programs in the same week in 2019.

After jobless claims skyrocketed in March, with 6.9 million filing for benefits for the week ending March 28, the number of workers claiming unemployment benefits dropped precipitously through the end of May but had yet to fall below a million until this week.

Consumer Prices Jump Again in July, Rebounding from Pandemic Lows

The cost of many goods and services such as gas, autos, clothing and airfare rose in July and rebounded from pandemic lows, but inflation is still barely visible in the wake of a coronavirus-induced recession that sapped demand throughout the economy.

The consumer price index rose 0.6% for the second month in a row, the government said Wednesday. Economists polled by MarketWatch had forecast a 0.3% advance.

The cost of living had declined from March through May during the height of the crisis.

The increase in consumer prices over the past 12 months, meanwhile, rose to 1% from 0.6% in June.

Just seven months ago, at the start of 2020, the yearly pace of inflation has climbed to as high as 2.5%.

Small Business Confidence Rebounds from All-Time Low

Small business confidence ticked up in the third quarter of the year, to 53 from a record low of 49 in Q2, according to the CNBC|SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey. Even with the rebound, the confidence reading is the second-lowest score in the survey’s history and eight points off where confidence stood to start the year.

Just 36% of businesses say that current operating conditions are “good” in this quarter’s survey, which is a major improvement from last quarter’s 18%. But nearly one-fourth say conditions are bad — three times the number who said conditions were poor to kick off the year.

The survey was conducted from July 20-27 among more than 2,000 small business owners nationwide.

“I think that small business owners see that economics are opening and we are not going to be moving backwards,” said Karen Kerrigan, president and CEO of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, a Main Street advocacy group. “They see a light at the end of the tunnel.”