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Today โ€” 21 April 2026Main stream

Wisconsin cleaning up after week of storms, 14 tornadoes and extensive flooding

20 April 2026 at 23:47

The National Weather Service says at least 14 confirmed tornados hit Wisconsin during last week's spate of severe storms that caused widespread flood damage in areas around Milwaukee and Green Bay.

The post Wisconsin cleaning up after week of storms, 14 tornadoes and extensive flooding appeared first on WPR.

Yesterday โ€” 20 April 2026Main stream

Wisconsin Supreme Court looks into campaign-related recusal rules

20 April 2026 at 10:03

Following a string of multimillion dollar judicial elections, a group of retired judges wants the Wisconsin Supreme Court to tighten recusal rules in cases where judges or justices receive campaign donations from litigants.

The post Wisconsin Supreme Court looks into campaign-related recusal rules appeared first on WPR.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Rebecca Cooke again outraises US Rep. Derrick Van Orden in pivotal Wisconsin House race

16 April 2026 at 21:47

For the second consecutive time, Democrat Rebecca Cooke has outraised Republican U.S. Rep. Derrick Van Orden in western Wisconsin's highly contested 3rd Congressional District race.

The post Rebecca Cooke again outraises US Rep. Derrick Van Orden in pivotal Wisconsin House race appeared first on WPR.

Democrats vying for Wisconsin governor sound off on data centers, climate accountability during forum

15 April 2026 at 03:21

During a forum framed as vetting Wisconsin's next governor who will "blunt the authoritarian thrust of the Trump regime," the seven Democrats vying for their party's nomination called for more state regulations on AI data centers and a pivot to 100 percent renewable energy.

The post Democrats vying for Wisconsin governor sound off on data centers, climate accountability during forum appeared first on WPR.

Republican Sen. Jesse James to retire from Wisconsin Legislature

14 April 2026 at 19:12

In another setback for Wisconsin Republicans hoping to hold their slim state Senate majority, Sen. Jesse James of Thorp announced Tuesday he's dropping his campaign against Democratic Sen. Jeff Smith of Brunswick.

The post Republican Sen. Jesse James to retire from Wisconsin Legislature appeared first on WPR.

After 20-point Supreme Court loss, Wisconsin Republicans look for whoโ€™s to blame

13 April 2026 at 10:02

Staggered by a 20-point loss in the April Supreme Court election, Wisconsin conservatives are arguing about who's to blame, and behind the scenes, members of the state Republican Party are split on whether Chair Brian Schimming should be fired.ย 

The post After 20-point Supreme Court loss, Wisconsin Republicans look for whoโ€™s to blame appeared first on WPR.

Early vote down by more than half compared to 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court race

6 April 2026 at 21:31

The tally of early votes in this year's Supreme Court race is less than half what it was at the same point in last year's record-breaking contest.ย 

The post Early vote down by more than half compared to 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court race appeared first on WPR.

Chris Taylor and Maria Lazar make closing arguments in Wisconsin Supreme Court race

3 April 2026 at 21:56

In the waning days of a relatively understated race for a 10-year term on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, candidates Maria Lazar and Chris Taylor vowed to be independent justices, even as they made their pitches from local political party headquarters.

The post Chris Taylor and Maria Lazar make closing arguments in Wisconsin Supreme Court race appeared first on WPR.

Chris Taylor, Maria Lazar face off in only Wisconsin Supreme Court debate

3 April 2026 at 04:14

Wisconsin Supreme Court candidates Maria Lazar and Chris Taylor staked their claims to independence and accused one another of being too extreme for a 10-year term on the state's highest bench during their first, and only debate of the campaign.

The post Chris Taylor, Maria Lazar face off in only Wisconsin Supreme Court debate appeared first on WPR.

Evers calls Trumpโ€™s order restricting mail-in voting โ€˜bullsโ€“โ€“โ€“โ€™

1 April 2026 at 21:53

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers says President Donald Trump's order to restrict absentee ballots from going to people not vetted by his administration is "bulls---," and he looks forward to seeing the president in court.

The post Evers calls Trumpโ€™s order restricting mail-in voting โ€˜bullsโ€“โ€“โ€“โ€™ appeared first on WPR.

Judicial panel dismisses lawsuit challenging Wisconsin congressional districts

31 March 2026 at 21:28

A three-judge panel in Wisconsin dismissed a lawsuit aimed at redrawing Wisconsin's congressional districts before the November election, saying they don't have authority to strike down the current map that was enacted by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

The post Judicial panel dismisses lawsuit challenging Wisconsin congressional districts appeared first on WPR.

Chris Taylor again outraises Maria Lazar in Wisconsin Supreme Court race

31 March 2026 at 20:00

One week ahead of Wisconsin's Supreme Court election, liberal Judge Chris Taylor is continuing her fundraising dominance over conservative Judge Maria Lazar.

The post Chris Taylor again outraises Maria Lazar in Wisconsin Supreme Court race appeared first on WPR.

Early voting in Wisconsin Supreme Court race way behind 2025 pace

30 March 2026 at 22:39

In another sign this year's Supreme Court race is flying under the radar for many Wisconsinites, the number of absentee ballots cast so far is around 112,000 behind the pace set in 2025.

The post Early voting in Wisconsin Supreme Court race way behind 2025 pace appeared first on WPR.

Maria Lazar leaning on judicial experience in run for Wisconsin Supreme Court

23 March 2026 at 10:00

Conservative Wisconsin Supreme Court candidate Maria Lazar has described herself as an underdog in an era that's seen liberals run the tables in elections for the state's highest court, but says she's beaten the odds before. Supreme Court races have become highly partisan, but she says what people really need is someone "geeky and law nerdy enough" like her to "live and breathe the law" during their 10 year term on the state's highest bench.

The post Maria Lazar leaning on judicial experience in run for Wisconsin Supreme Court appeared first on WPR.

Data center boom follows decades of declining electricity and water use in Wisconsin

13 January 2026 at 12:00
A large yellow crane's lifting line is attached to a large concrete wall panel at a construction site with rollers, dirt piles, traffic barrels, and vertical posts behind a fence.
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Anticipated spikes in demand for energy to supply Wisconsinโ€™s data center building boom come on the heels of decades of declining power and water use, according to a new report.

Aย Wisconsin Policy Forum analysisย shows there are more than 40 data centers operating in Wisconsin with another four planned. The sprawling facilities host computer servers, which store data and support a global surge in the use of artificial intelligence.

The data center building boom has been met by local opposition groups concerned about the facilitiesโ€™ resource needs. But the Policy Forum report shows itโ€™s all happening after years of declines in demand for electricity and water.

Using projections submitted to the Wisconsin Public Service Commission by utility companies, the Policy Forum estimates the stateโ€™s peak electrical demand is expected to increase to around 17 gigawatts by 2030, driven largely by data centers. In 2024, Wisconsinโ€™s peak demand was rated at 14.6 gigawatts. Over the past 20 years, total electricity sales have fallen by 9% over the past 20 years.

Wisconsin Policy Forum Senior Research Associate Tyler Byrnes told WPR a big part of the decline since 2005 is due to fewer commercial customers paired with more energy efficiency measures. He said during that span, utilities have pulled aging, coal-fired power plants offline and shifted toward more renewable energy.ย 

โ€œInto that landscape, now weโ€™re seeing these really big data centers come online,โ€ said Byrnes.

Some utilities in Wisconsin are expected to seek state permission to build new power plants or expand existing ones to meet the data center demand. Byrnes said that will bring a need for more transmission lines, though local impacts will vary depending on where the data centers are located.

The Policy Forumโ€™s analysis shows most existing facilities are in south central and southeastern Wisconsin. With other large-scale data centers planned for more rural areas like Beaver Dam and DeForest, he said utility companies may need to build out more infrastructure.

Wisconsin water demand has fallen for decades. Will data centers impact rates?ย 

Another major concern raised during the data center debate is the facilitiesโ€™ hefty water demands.

Opponents have complained that developers havenโ€™t been transparent about how much water theyโ€™ll need to cool computer servers. In September, environmental advocates sued the city of Racineย to force the release of projected water needsย of a $3.3 billion data center campus located at the former Foxconn site in Mount Pleasant. The city released figures showingย the project will need more than 8 million gallonsย of water per year.ย 

To put that into context, the Policy Forum looked at historical water sales reported by the Racine Water Works, which will supply the Mount Pleasant data center project. Between 1997 and 2022, the utility saw water sales decline by 2.1 billion gallons annually. Byrnes said that taken as a whole, the demand for water from data centers is โ€œa drop in the bucketโ€ in a lot of cases.

Blue water flows through circular tanks with metal, pipes and rusted edges.
Water flows in a tank April 8, 2025, at West Des Moines Water Works in West Des Moines, Iowa. (Angela Major / WPR)

As with electrical demand, Byrnes said water demand has decreased due to fewer industrial customers and increased efficiency efforts. Because cities like Racine still need to maintain the same level of infrastructure, which is more expensive due to inflation, the revenue from each gallon of water sold has to be spread further. That means potential rate increases.

Byrnes said data centers have been turning to closed-loop cooling systems, which use less water, but cities like Racine would still be selling more water, which would help cover fixed infrastructure costs.ย 

โ€œPotentially, it could maybe blunt some of the (water rate) increases,โ€ Byrnes said.ย 

DeForest, other local governments grapple with data center proposals

With the rise in data center developments in Wisconsin, local governments and state lawmakers are working to figure out how to regulate them.

The DeForest Village Board recentlyย took no actionย on a citizen petition calling for referendum votes before any data center project could be approved.

In Menomonie, the city council votedย to restrict where and how data centers can be builtย months after the mayorย halted a $1.6 billion proposal. A similar zoning ordinance is being considered in the city of Jefferson.
ย 
At the same time, Republican and Democratic state lawmakers have proposed different ways to regulate data centers. Oneย GOP billย is aimed at ensuring data centers and not other customers would pay for any required improvements to the stateโ€™s power grid. Theย Democratic billย is aimed at requiring data centers to get the bulk of their power from renewable sources.

This story wasย originally published by WPR.

Data center boom follows decades of declining electricity and water use in Wisconsin is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

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