Kooyengas's Rube Goldberg 'plan' misses the ex-snowblower factor

Brookfield GOP State Rep. and rhetorically-taxing budget wonk Dale Kooyenga gushed about his one-stop-taxation-and-transportation-omnibus-Fix-Everything 'plan' to Sunday morning show host Mike Gousha.

Kooyenga pitched it also as a way to address Wisconsin's population decline, which he attributed not to college grads leaving for all that's offered in Atlanta or Chicago or metro areas on both coasts, but to retirees headed to known low-tax havens:

“I see people in my church who are great people, who are mentors, who are people that have businesses and have done well, and what they do is they go to Florida or Arizona,” he said. “We are losing people that not only contribute to our economics by staying and living in Wisconsin, but we’re also losing mentors.”
People I know who've moved south talk about the snow blowers they don't need anymore, not tax rates in Wisconsin that don't apply.

I remember this reality-check from a news story about the decision by Caterpillar to move operations to Tuscon from South Milwaukee:
Quality of life also was one of the factors used to evaluate all of the possible locations, according to Caterpillar. Tucson says it has 350 days of sunshine a year, and a mild winter..." 
I also remember when a friend stopped by the day he moved from Milwaukee to south Florida.

He tossed me his camel hair overcoat and said with a big smile on his face, "I won't need this sucker any more."  


So unless Kooyenga is also thinking about a dome over Wisconsin, let's dial back the idea that some tax shifts might stem population movement south, and maybe focus on college student debt relief that would make it easier for young people to live here right now and perhaps resist the lure of bigger cities and better weather:


As people age out of the workforce, state job growth will depend in part on young educated professionals staying in Wisconsin. However, many young graduates are leaving, joining a trend commonly referred to as the “brain drain.”
Stevens Point native Brian Novotny has been at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for six years. He calls Madison an “amazing” city, but he wants to leave the state after he graduates and use his master’s degree in kinesiology to coach sports or work in physical therapy.
“I don't like winter, so I'm hoping to move to California or North Carolina,” he said.


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