{{CFirstName}}, you are receiving this e-newsletter because you have shown interest in public policy issues. Contact us if you don't want to receive future issues.

Volume 7, Issue 50, Apr 28, 2025
 Eau Claire Area Chamber of Commerce, Eau Claire, Wis.
 
Published the first business day of each week
Business Advocate Past Issues
Public Meetings Calendar
Chamber Events Calendar
The Chamber's Advocacy Principles
The Chamber's Business Issues Agenda
"Talking Po!nt" Podcast
How to become a Chamber investor
Contact: Scott Rogers, VP Governmental Affairs
rogers@eauclairechamber.org
Chamber Business Hours: Mon-Thu 7:30a-5:00p, Friday 7:30a-1:30p

 

In this issue:
 • Final ZPAC meeting May 5 for EC Zoning Code draft
 
• Record attendance for 31st Annual Chippewa Valley Rally
 • JFC budget hearings continue this week in Hayward, Wausau
 • Evers, legislative leaders discuss tax cuts
 • Consumer sentiment falls amid tariff concerns
 • Food for thought
 • Mark your calendar
Note on article links: A subscription is required for those marked with "$"
Publications known to have article limits or other access restrictions for non-subscribers are marked with "+"

 

Eggs & Issues: State Budget Update
   With a Democratic Governor and a Legislature controlled by Republicans, the challenging process is underway to enact a biennial state budget. At this edition of Eggs & Issues, we'll take a look at the political state of play as the legislature's Joint Committee on Finance continues its deliberations. Among those who will provide insights into the forces at work will be Bill McCoshen, partner at Michael Best Strategies, and John Jacobson, Director of Public Affairs, Ruder Ware. We'll also get perspectives from Republican State Senator Romaine Quinn (R-Birchwood), a member of the Joint Finance Committee, and Democratic Representative Jodi Emerson (D-Eau Claire), a member of the Assembly Minority Leadership.
• Friday, May 9, CVTC Business Education Center

   Click here for details and to register  

Also for your calendar...
Morning Momentum - Wednesday, May 7
 Chamber Royale - Thursday, May 15

 
 

Final ZPAC meeting May 5 for EC Zoning Code draft
Home Builders, Housing Opportunities Commission comment on
housing affordability concerns
   The final meeting of the City of Eau Claire's Zoning Policy Advisory Committee (ZPAC) will be next Monday, May 5, 4:00-6:30 p.m. at the LE Phillips Senior Center, followed by a public open house 6:30-7:30 p.m.

   The ZPAC consists of members of the Eau Claire City Council and the Eau Claire Plan Commission. It has served as the policy committee for the complete rewrite of the City of Eau Claire's zoning code, which has been underway since 2023. The process has been dubbed the "Century Code Update," commemorating the 100th anniversary of the City's first zoning ordinance. The process has been led by City Planning Manager Ned Noel with the assistance of a consultant.
   As the ZPAC moves towards finalizing the proposed code, it is expected to be taken up by the Plan Commission for a formal recommendation in late June, and then the City Council for approval in early summer. The initiative's website also lists a "Pre-Adoption Open House" on Tuesday, June 17, 11:30-1:30 p.m. at the public library.
Purposes of zoning rewrite
   Since the City's latest significant overhaul occurred over 33 years ago, there was a consensus among City leadership and local industry that it was time to review and update the code based upon current housing and economic needs, as well as incorporating best practices. A project overview presentation from February 2024 enumerated 12 primary purposes of the initiative (click here and see pages 7-8 for the complete list), including such goals as "Produce more housing supply, diversity of choices, and affordability," "Improve development process certainties," "Lessen pressure on sprawl and environmental and habitat degradation," "Produce more complete streets and neighborhoods with housing choices, commercial and jobs within walking distance," "Reduce exclusionary zoning practices," and "Educate with evidence-based literature/data on the need for zoning reforms and associated co-benefits."

Home builders weigh in with support, concerns
   On April 14, the Chippewa Valley Home Builders Association (CVHBA) distributed a four-page document to members of ZPAC supporting several key aspects of the proposed code, but raising concerns about provisions "that could have a negative impact on housing affordability."

   "There have been a lot of great additions to the code that will improve the development process and could help reduce housing costs. By increasing density, less overall land is developed and the cost of housing can be lowered with smaller lots. However, it’s important to ensure that we don’t overcome the benefits with a lot of added costs," states the document.
   CVHBA praised the inclusion of changes that provide for smaller lot sizes and setbacks, revised zoning districts to allow for more housing types, and streamlined administrative approvals. However, CVHBA also raised questions about portions of the proposed code which could add significant costs to new homes or apartment rental rates, including those related to landscaping, tree preservation standards, expensive cosmetic requirements in building design, park impact fees, and amenity requirements for multi-family developments.
Housing Opportunities Commission: Affordability must
be "paramount consideration"
   At its April 9 meeting, the City's Housing Opportunities Commission (HOC) voted to send a letter to ZPAC, endorsing the goals of the initiative, but also asserting that the code update's goal for producing more supply, diversity of choices, and affordability is "the most critical purpose and should be a paramount consideration against which all sections of the code should be measured."

   HOC was created by the City Council in 2020 to “Recommend and review ordinances and other policies of general application that best ensure the availability of affordable housing in the city of Eau Claire.” It has 11 members representing a variety of housing-related interests and meets monthly to work on housing affordability issues.
   The HOC letter, signed by Commission Chair Jennifer Chaput, noted that "A significant number of the proposed new standards have the potential to advance these goals though changes in minimum lot sizes, allowing gentle density increases, incentivizing compact and sustainable development, improving development process certainties, reducing exclusionary zoning practices, and lessening pressure on sprawl," but that "It is important for ZPAC to carefully consider the impact on supply and affordability as it reviews proposed content related to building design standards, parking requirements, aesthetics, anti-monotony mandates, tree preservation, park impact fees, and other sections. If not done in a carefully balanced way, they could produce unintended consequences that could inhibit improvements to supply and affordability."
Chamber supports efforts to enhance housing supply, affordability
   The Chamber has been closely watching and involved in the code update process. Its Business Issues Agenda supports the process to "Update zoning codes and policies to eliminate outdated and arbitrary standards in order to encourage infill development, creation of missing middle housing types, a greater diversity of housing choices, compact growth, efficiency of public resources, and the ability to build the types of housing demanded by the marketplace. It is also important to reduce uncertainty in the development process, develop objective standards that can be adhered to without subjective approval processes, and respect property rights."

Code revisions posted on Friday, April 25
   Late this past Friday, the City Planning Department posted an updated version of the 425-page document. According to an accompanying email from Planning Manager Ned Noel, the May 5 ZPAC meeting will include "A full presentation will be provided that details remaining policy questions."

More information:
Zoning Policy Advisory Committee
 • Monday, May 5, 4:00-7:30 p.m. LE Phillips Senior Center, 1616 Bellinger St.
    Agenda: 4:00-4:30 p.m. Public comment (up to 3 minutes/speaker)
                 4:30-6:30 p.m. Presentation and ZPAC discussion
                 6:30-7:30 p.m. Community Open House with staff/consultants
Latest full draft of codes (see “Newest Documents,” City of Eau Claire)
Century Code Update full website (City of Eau Claire)
Comments and Recommendations about the Proposed Zoning Code (Chippewa Valley Home Builders Association)
Letter from Housing Opportunities Commission (City of Eau Claire, Housing Opportunities Commission)

 
 
Meeting this week...
Full public meetings schedule

Altoona Board of Education
• Monday, Apr 28, 6:30 p.m. Meeting information

Chippewa-St. Croix Rail Commission
• Wednesday, Apr 30, 8:30 a.m. Agenda
   Hybrid: Dunn County Government Center & Microsoft Teams

"Meet Your Street Ambassadors" event Wed, May 7
   The City of Eau Claire and Block by Block have scheduled a "Meet Your Street Ambassadors" opportunity on Wednesday, May 7, at 6:30 p.m. at Shift Coffee Bar, 615 Graham Ave., in downtown Eau Claire.
   According to the event announcement, downtown business owners, residents, and Eau Claire citizens are invited to meet the individuals working as part of the City's new program and learn more about the benefits of the initiative.  

More local stories...
City of Eau Claire News Updates (including weekly City Manager's Update)
Thousands attend the Eau Claire Marathon (WEAU 13 News)
Downtown Eau Claire transit center update & local business impact (WEAU 13 News)
City considers allowing bi-weekly trash pickup (Leader-Telegram $)
City starts exterior surveys of homes in Putnam Heights (Leader-Telegram $)
Area Orgs Seek Federal Funding From City of Eau Claire For Low-Income Focused Programs (Volume One)
Number of students experiencing homelessness climbs in Eau Claire Area School District (WQOW News 18)
County closes 2024 books with about $3.9 million Human Services deficit (Leader-Telegram $)
Eau Claire City Council President Emily Berge Launches Congressional Campaign (Volume One)
Laura Benjamin announces candidacy for Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressional District (WEAU 13 News)
Food truck vendors hit Eau Claire's 'The Spot' for business (WQOW News 18)
Food Truck-Only Venue Hits 'The Spot' in Eau Claire (Volume One)
Feed My People celebrates new recycling hub with help from Royal Credit Union (WQOW News 18)
Clean Shirt Co. Settles Into Downtown Eau Claire, Keeps Mission Close to Heart (Volume One)
Justin Vernon Tells ‘Midwest Living’ About His Favorite E.C. Hangs (Volume One)
CF school board to consider eliminating multiple teaching positions (Leader-Telegram $)
City council seeks applicants for District 7 vacancy in Chippewa Falls (Chippewa Herald $)
 
 
Record registration for the 31st Annual Chippewa Valley Rally
   The region's legislative day in Madison, the 31st Annual Chippewa Valley Rally, saw record registration of over 130 business and community leaders for the 2025 event last Tuesday, April 22, in Madison.
   Organized by the Chippewa Falls, Eau Claire, and Menomonie Chambers of Commerce, this year's key economic issues discussed with state policymakers included healthcare, education, talent attraction & retention, childcare, the state's role in addressing homelessness, economic development & tax reform, transportation & infrastructure, and energy. Attendees were part of small group teams that had 111 total scheduled visits with legislative offices, heard an address from Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers, and participated in briefings with members of our regional legislative delegation and from political experts John Jacobson, Shawn Pfaff, and Bill McCoshen. 
   The Governor and legislature are currently in the midst of deliberations for the 2025-27 biennial state budget for the fiscal year beginning on July 1.
Click here to see the 2025 Chippewa Valley Rally Issues Book

For more on state budget deliberations and Chippewa Valley priorities
, join us on May 9 for our next Eggs & Issues: State Budget update. Click here for details.

More state and regional stories...
Statewide Budget Listening Sessions (Remaining hearings Apr 28 in Hayward, Apr 29 in Wausau, Joint Committee on Finance)
Joint Finance Committee Continues State Budget Hearings Across Wisconsin (Hamilton Consulting)
Tony Evers, Republicans in Wisconsin Legislature say tax cut negotiations are ‘productive’ (WPR)
Gov. Tony Evers, Republican leaders holding 'productive' talks on a tax package (Journal-Sentinel +)
Republicans scour for options to sidestep Tony Evers vetoes, including not using digits in the budget (Journal-Sentinel +)
Wisconsin Senate passes bipartisan measure to extend postpartum Medicaid coverage (WPR)
Senate passes postpartum Medicaid expansion in a rare showing of broad bipartisanship (Journal-Sentinel +)
‘The nuclear renaissance’: Wisconsin lawmakers discuss pro-nuclear energy bills (WPR)
Bills limiting competition in electric line buildout create GOP gridlock (Journal-Sentinel +)
Assembly Republicans approve changes to Wisconsin’s unemployment system (WPR)
Child Care Groups Hold Advocacy Day (Hamilton Consulting)
Wisconsin legislators talk about climate bill seeking legislative accountability (Leader-Telegram $)
FBI arrests Milwaukee County judge (Wisconsin Examiner)
Protesters chant after arrest of judge accused of helping man evade immigration authorities (AP)
Wisconsin Democrats denounce arrest of Milwaukee judge in ICE case as some Republicans cheer (Journal-Sentinel +)
An attack on judicial independence or a sign no one is above the law? (WPR)
NFL draft: Football fans from across the country descend on Green Bay (WPR)
Two Wisconsin breweries are among the 25 largest craft beer companies in the U.S. (Wisconsin State Journal +)
 
 

National and economic stories...
Consumer sentiment plunges in April, inflation expectations at 1980s high (Axios)

US consumer sentiment remains weak in April on tariffs concerns (Reuters)
American Consumers Serve Up Bleak Outlook on Economy (Wall Street Journal +)
Trump softens tariff tone amid empty shelves warning, market slump (Axios)
Trump administration reverses abrupt terminations of foreign students’ US visa registrations (Politico)
Takeaways from Trump's first 100 days (AP)
States Are Trying to Get Rural Health Workers to Stick Around (Governing)
Pope Francis laid to rest at Rome’s St. Mary Major Basilica after Vatican ceremony (NBC News)
Trump meets Zelenskyy during visit to Pope Francis' funeral (NPR)

Food for thought...
What a tariff recession might look like (Felix Salmon, Axios)

How to Remember Pope Francis (Patrick Gilger, The Dispatch)

COVID-19 Resources:
Eau Claire County COVID-19 Information Hub (Eau Claire City-County Health Department)

Mark your calendar:
Morning Momentum - Wed, May 7
Eggs & Issues: State Budget Update - Friday, May 9
 Chamber Royale - Thursday, May 15
• Golf Day in Eau Claire - Monday, Aug 4
• 2025 "Bravo to Business" Awards - Wednesday, Nov 5

Public Meetings Calendar
Click the link above for the our regularly updated schedule of public meetings.

Thanks for reading this issue of Business Advocate.
If you have comments or questions, contact Scott Rogers, Vice President G
overnmental Affairs, at 715-858-0616 or rogers@eauclairechamber.org
 

 
 
 
 
This email was sent on behalf of {{TCDisplayName}} located at {{TCADDRAddress1}}{{TCADDRAddress2}}{{TCADDRCity}}{{TCADDRStateProvince}} {{TCADDRPostalCode}}To unsubscribe click here. If you have questions or comments concerning this email contact {{TCDisplayName}} at {{TCEmailAddress}}.