As WI, GOP change the rules for Foxconn, one reminder

It was just a few years ago that a former Wisconsin State Senator complained strongly on the Internet that state government officials played favorites and shafted the public in favor of special insider merest with maneuvers called "Change The Rules To Fit The Players."

The aggrieved ex-legislator capitalized the words, such was the exasperation, anger and sense of unfair betrayal  behind the broadside.

And how true is that today.

*  Residents of the small Lake Michigan shoreline Town of Wilson south of Sheboygan are fighting against wholesale changes in what had been decades of rule-driven normalcy as the State Department of Administration quickly approved a slippery annexation of a big chunk of the town to the City of Sheboygan so a Scott Walker donor could more easily level and fill a wetland-rich, wooded-and-rare dune nature preserve into a high-end golf course.

Also spending along: the approval sought by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, led by Walker's hand-picked 'chamber of commerce mentality' DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp, of proposed changes to the rules governing the use and management of the DNR-run state park that adjoins the golf course site which would transfer between five-and-twenty acres of state park land for the golf course road approach and entrance, patrons' parking lot and a 24,000 sq. ft. maintenance building.

Think about all the rule changes for the benefit of a single private sector player - - moving part of a town into another community, with public consequences on budgets, tax revenues, taxpayer-paid services, park land usage, groundwater, wildlife habitat, traffic counts, air quality and more - - being enabled by a raft of public officials including the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources.

*  And, of course, the potential, dare we say probable  $3 billion state giveaway for the Foxconn mega-factory in Southeastern Wisconsin includes precedent-setting changes to Wisconsin rules everywhere - - including current environmental project review requirements to wetland-filling and stream diversion prohibitions to guaranteeing basic water-quality and hard-won basic rights - - again all made more likely already given DNR Secretary Stepp's enthusiastic backing even though the many rule changes will further downgrade the effectiveness and reputation of the agency she directs and its public health and safety mission she is supposed to implement.
The Foxconn bill will allow the company to move streams, fill wetlands and discharge waste into waterways. Streams are sensitive to changes in the environments they serve and connect with: the Little Plover River can run dry in central Wisconsin when too much groundwater is removed for nearby Big Ag irrigation, for example.
So Wisconsin under Walker and his key environmental shape-shifter Cathy Stepp have no problem changing the rules to fit the players when the players are their partisan backers, campaign enablers and ideological brethren.

Stepp should amend that complaint aimed at those who "Change the Rules to Fit the Players," as  she is the one who made it, living out the "HYPOCRISY" barb she threw at her original, now richly ironic targets.


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