UW President Rothman Visiting UW-W for Talk on Budget 

Jay Rothman


Universities of Wisconsin President Jay Rothman will discuss his 2025-27 budget request and its impact on UW-Whitewater.

Event details: 2 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 27, in Timmerman Auditorium, Hyland Hall. 

Rothman has emphasized that Wisconsin ranks 43rd out of 50 states in public support for four-year universities; the budget request is designed to get the state “Up to the Middle” in national rankings.

The budget request:

  • Emphasizes talent development through student success services.
  • Extends the Wisconsin Tuition Promise to students from families earning up to $71,000 in adjusted gross income.
  • Proposes 5 percent and 3 percent general wage increases for staff and faculty, and requests the state fully fund the increases while adding a merit and market pool.
  • Invests in innovation, including creation of a new Artificial Intelligence (AI) Hub.
  • Preserves accessibility while covering inflationary cost increases.

Please join us for this important discussion.

Editor’s note: The following press release on the budget proposal was received last week.

Universities of Wisconsin President Jay Rothman introduces budget request to get Wisconsin “Up to the Middle”

MADISON, Wis.—Universities of Wisconsin President Jay Rothman today proposed a 2025-27 budget request that would allow the state’s public universities to shed its ranking of 43rd of 50 states in public funding and reach the national median.

The two-year request will be presented to the Board of Regents on Thursday. If approved, the request will go to Gov. Tony Evers for consideration in his 2025-27 budget proposal. Editor’s note: The Board of Regents unanimously approved the budget request on August 22.

“It’s time Wisconsin escapes the Bottom 10 in public funding and gets Up to the Middle,” Rothman said. “This budget request will spur innovation in research and teaching, make a degree more affordable for our students most in need, develop talent by focusing on student success, preserve accessibility, and ensure quality.”

Rothman added that under this proposal, he would not recommend tuition increases over the period covered by the biennial budget. Additionally, the funding increase would help preserve branch campus access points for students throughout the state.

Wisconsin ranks 43rd of 50 states in public funding of four-year higher education, according to the latest State Higher Education Finance report by the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association (SHEEO). The figure includes state funding and tuition.

By comparison, surrounding states rank 1 (Illinois), 3 (Michigan), 9 (Iowa), and 10 (Minnesota).

“We won’t win the War for Talent if we don’t get Up to the Middle,” Rothman said. “We’re falling behind after years of neglect, and this budget seeks to address that trend.”

Rothman said it would take an additional $457 million annually to reach the median of states, under the SHEEO report. Among the key features of the proposed budget:

  • Emphasizes talent development through student success services.
  • Extends the Wisconsin Tuition Promise to students from families earning up to $71,000 in adjusted gross income.
  • Proposes 5 percent and 3 percent general wage increases for staff and faculty, and requests the state fully fund the increases while adding a merit and market pool.
  • Invests in innovation, including creation of a new Artificial Intelligence (AI) Hub.
  • Preserves accessibility while covering inflationary cost increases.

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