Rep. Donovan’s Public Safety Bills Pass Assembly
Madison – Representative Bob Donovan (R-Greenfield) gave the following statement after the Assembly passed three public safety bills authored by Rep. Donovan—Assembly Bill 91, 78, and 75. These bills prioritize student protection, roadway safety, and judicial transparency.
Assembly Bill 91 addresses the disregard for state law by the City of Milwaukee and Milwaukee Public School District (MPS) regarding the lack of student resource officers (SROs) in schools. 2023 Wisconsin Act 12 included a provision that required MPS to maintain at least 25 SROs in their school system.
In September of 2023, the Milwaukee Common Council unanimously passed a resolution urging the State Legislature to eliminate requirements to tow reckless drivers. Assembly Bill 78 responds directly to Milwaukee’s call by eliminating the requirements that a vehicle’s driver own it or have unpaid fines, thus allowing towing on a first offense.
“I believe this legislation is the result of thousands of constituent pleas for more action to protect our streets,” said Rep. Donovan. “The Milwaukee Common Council told us what they need and the Legislature is directly responding by giving them the tools.”
Assembly Bill 75 requires the director of state courts to gather 13 data points on criminal cases and share them with the Department of Justice. The data would be reported annually to the Legislature and published on an accessible, interactive website for the public.
“All branches of government must be equally accountable, starting with an open judiciary,” said Rep. Donovan. “Our courts currently lack the same level of direct public access, and this bill ensures they meet the same standards set in our legislative and executive branches.”
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
More about the MPS School Resource Office Debate
- Assembly Passes Bill That Adds Penalties, Definitions to Police-in-MPS Policy - Anya van Wagtendonk - Mar 14th, 2025
- Rep. Donovan’s Public Safety Bills Pass Assembly - State Rep. Bob Donovan - Mar 13th, 2025
- Council Approves MPS Police Officer Agreement, But Money Still An Issue - Jeramey Jannene - Mar 4th, 2025
- Judge Fines City For Failing To Comply With MPD in Schools Requirement - Jeramey Jannene - Feb 27th, 2025
- City Requests Delay for Police in Schools - Jeramey Jannene - Feb 26th, 2025
- Judge Rules MPS, City Must Split School Police Costs 50/50 - Graham Kilmer - Feb 17th, 2025
- Murphy’s Law: MPS, City Feud Over Paying School Resource Officers - Bruce Murphy - Feb 12th, 2025
- Judge Rules MPS Must Bring Police Officers Into Schools - Jeramey Jannene - Jan 23rd, 2025
- K-12 Education: Studies Show Police in Schools Don’t Make Them Safer - Terry Falk - Jan 20th, 2025
- Mayor Wants MPS To Pay For Police in Schools - Jeramey Jannene - Jan 14th, 2025
Read more about MPS School Resource Office Debate here