La Crosse Talk PM WIZM

Adiós John Havlicek, after 31 years teaching at Central High

35 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Adiós John Havlicek, after 31 years teaching at Central High

Descripción

John Havlicek stopped in studio just days after saying adiós to the teaching profession after 31 years — 28 of those at Central High School. So, of course, we had to tell a couple of retirement stories, but also got into some of the politics surrounding education and beyond with Havlicek, who is a political activist.  Beyond education, we also discussed what he’d like to see as priorities in those running for statewide office — like governor and the Legislature. That included a public option for healthcare, the ability for anyone to participate in the state run pension retirement plan and his idea of government working for the bottom 80%. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de La Crosse Talk PM WIZM!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

300 episodios

episode Pushing for a data center ban in La Crosse County with Manock and Mader artwork

Pushing for a data center ban in La Crosse County with Manock and Mader

An 18-month data center ban in La Crosse is on the docket for the county board.  The moratorium legislation comes as a county study committee has its first meeting Wednesday [https://www.lacrossecounty.org/Minutes%20and%20Agendas/Attachments/2026/Standing/Jun/DCSC061026A.pdf]. Dillon Mader and Lia Manock stopped in studio to break down their reasonings for a moratorium, discuss the work the study committee will be doing, and why they feel a ban on data centers is necessary. While there are multiple angles to consider when pausing data center development, Mader and Manock explain why they based their resolution's thresholds on energy usage (two megawatts) and storage (one petabyte). They also discussed why an 18-month moratorium is necessary to give the study committee a full year to conduct its work, report back and possibly craft other legislation. Manock is one of five county board members on the study committee, which also includes a representative from each of the 18 municipalities in La Crosse County. The county board's executive committee will take up the moratorium resolution at 8 a.m. Thursday, before a full vote next week (agenda here [https://www.lacrossecounty.org/Minutes%20and%20Agendas/Attachments/2026/Standing/Jun/Exec061126A.pdf]). We began the show on how this Thursday meeting is the only change the public has to address the issue during a board meeting. Otherwise, it will depend on contacting your county board rep [https://www.lacrossecounty.org/countyboard/members] or emailing the entire board here [countyboardsupervisors@lacrossecounty.org]. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

Ayer34 min
episode La Crosse's green bubblers, demolishing Kmart and selling the north library with city council president Dickinson artwork

La Crosse's green bubblers, demolishing Kmart and selling the north library with city council president Dickinson

Bringing down La Crosse’s Kmart, what ever happened to the green bubbler talk from last year and the potential selling of the north side library. Those were some of the big topics we discussed with city council president Tamra Dickinson ahead of their monthly Thursday meeting. We started with the north library, which is scheduled to close for good June 15. Dickinson walks us through the process of declaring it a surplus property and how they get proposals from different groups about what they’d want to do with the building. After that, we hit on the Kmart proposal from Three-Sixty Real Estate Solutions. The council could approve Phase 1 of Three-Sixty’s plans Thursday, which might mean the Kmart comes down yet this year. Dickinson is the chair of the Aviation Board, and we spent some time discussing the turnaround the airport has seen over the past year, adding flights, and what could happen next over there. Lastly, those green bubblers. It was all the talk last summer, but that attention has significantly died down. Dickinson, though, says there are plans in motion. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

8 de jun de 202634 min
episode Adiós John Havlicek, after 31 years teaching at Central High artwork

Adiós John Havlicek, after 31 years teaching at Central High

John Havlicek stopped in studio just days after saying adiós to the teaching profession after 31 years — 28 of those at Central High School. So, of course, we had to tell a couple of retirement stories, but also got into some of the politics surrounding education and beyond with Havlicek, who is a political activist.  Beyond education, we also discussed what he’d like to see as priorities in those running for statewide office — like governor and the Legislature. That included a public option for healthcare, the ability for anyone to participate in the state run pension retirement plan and his idea of government working for the bottom 80%. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

5 de jun de 202635 min
episode State Rep. Steve Doyle on data center moratoriums, Tank Creek Bridge and a surplus deal before elections artwork

State Rep. Steve Doyle on data center moratoriums, Tank Creek Bridge and a surplus deal before elections

Wisconsin state Assembly Rep. Steve Doyle in studio discussing whether the state might get that $2 billion in budget surplus back to taxpayers before the election. We also discussed a data center moratorium, his opponent in November, one governor candidate being $30,000 in credit card debt and an update on rebuilding the Tank Creek Bridge. Earlier in the day, a news release went out from Keith Purnell, who will be Doyle’s Republican opponent in the 94th Assembly District. We got Doyle’s early take on Purnell and whether there might be a debate. In regards to the Tank Creek Bridget that sits along the Great River State Trail, and was burned by an arsonist last year, Doyle discussed when construction might happen and a potential grant coming from the federal government to cover what might be a couple million in cost. Two stories about the governor’s race involved Francesca Hong over the past few days. One, that Capital One is suing her for $30,000 in credit card debt, presumably from her restaurant going out of business during COVID. The other was from a Democratic governor candidate forum where Hong was the only member to support a one-year moratorium on data centers. Doyle also updated us on the La Crosse County Board creating a data center committee, which he will be a part of, and whether he’s heard from anyone that’s pro data center. Lastly, sticking with that topic, we talked quickly about recent comments from the Dairyland Power CEO  saying data centers are a “path to prosperity” in small communities. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

3 de jun de 202636 min
episode From Trump's ballroom to the deal behind Wisconsin's budget surplus with Citizen Action's Robert Kraig artwork

From Trump's ballroom to the deal behind Wisconsin's budget surplus with Citizen Action's Robert Kraig

We honed in on a couple of President Donald Trump's pet projects and rehashed the state's failed budget surplus deal with Citizen Action of Wisconsin's Robert Kraig.  It's hard to pick any one thing when it comes to the Trump administration, but we narrowed it down to these things: * Trump's $1.778 billion (what we call) "slush fund" * The $1 billion in taxpayer dollars for a ballroom  * The MMA fight on the White House lawn * The Iran war and prices The second half of the show consisted of the failed deal between Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and the top two Republicans in the Legislature to spend the state's $2 billion budget surplus, and all the factors that have come since. That includes the flaws in a Marquette Law School poll showing 80% agreeing with the deal, the analysis since showing it would have put the state in a budget deficit and how Republican Robin Vos wants Evers to call another special session to get it done. Roughly, the deal consisted of one year of special education funding and property tax relief, plus $300 checks and no taxes on tips/overtime. See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.

3 de jun de 202632 min