Wisconsin lawmakers shoot down Gov. Evers' plan to permanently employ 38 new tax agents

Democrats countered that the move puts in jeopardy $39M in tax revenue

The Wisconsin Legislature's budget-writing committee rejected Gov. Tony Evers' plan Thursday to make permanent nearly 40 revenue agent positions that are devoted to collecting delinquent taxes.

The 2017 to 2019 state budget established 38 agent positions within the Department of Revenue to focus on collecting unpaid taxes. Under that spending plan, the positions were scheduled to expire in September 2021. The 2019 to 2021 state budget extended the positions through June 2025.

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The Department of Revenue estimates the positions help collect about $39 million in delinquent taxes annually.

The Wisconsin Legislature's budget-writing committee on Thursday rejected a proposal by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers that would have permanently employed 38 new revenue agents, whose temporary positions largely focus on collecting delinquent taxes. (Melina Mara/Pool via REUTERS)

Evers, a Democrat, included provisions in his 2023 to 2025 state budget that would make the agent positions permanent at a cost of $2.8 million annually.

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Republicans who control the budget committee voted Thursday to scrap that plan and extend the positions through September 2025. The move sets up the committee to decide the fate of the positions in the next two years.

Democrats on the committee complained that the decision throws the future of the positions into question, making it harder to recruit to fill them and putting $39 million in tax revenue in jeopardy every year.

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Republicans didn't answer the Democrats, moving directly to the vote without any debate.

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