Wisconsin
Airguns for big game hunting are among six outdoors-related bills signed into Wisconsin law
Increased aid for snowmobile trails and a change in state parks stamps among other measures signed by Gov. Tony Evers
Gov. Tony Evers on Thursday signed 15 bills into law, including six related to hunting, fishing or outdoor recreation.
Arguably the most notable was Senate Bill 586, now Wisconsin Act 115, which will allow hunters in the state to use airguns during any season open to firearms.
Since state rules for many years allowed airguns for hunting small game such as gray squirrels and cottontail rabbits, the major impact of Act 115 is to expand the use of airguns to include big game hunting in Wisconsin, including white-tailed deer, black bear and elk.
More: Outdoors calendar
The law defines an airgun as “a weapon originally manufactured to expel one or more metal projectiles by the expansion of compressed air.”
The legislation received lots of support and essentially no opposition. Wisconsin now is among at least 29 states that allow airguns for big game hunting, according to Mitch King, president of the Airgun Sporting Association, a trade group promoting expanded use of airguns across the nation.
Proponents tout the quiet, clean operation and lack of recoil of airguns. Most models are designed for hunting big game at ranges of less than 100 yards; centerfire rifles have much longer effective ranges.
In the Midwest, states that allow airguns for deer hunting include Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. Act 115 passed easily because it was restricted to use of airguns during Wisconsin’s firearm hunting seasons; versions of the proposal introduced in previous years would have allowed “airbows” to be used during archery seasons and were opposed by several groups, including the Wisconsin Bowhunters Association.
Among other bills signed by Evers, SB 34, now 2023 Wisconsin Act 109, establishes the full weekend prior to the third Monday in January as “free fishing weekend” so it lands just before Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a federal holiday.
The governor also signed SB 136 (Act 110) to increase the cap on county supplemental snowmobile trail maintenance aid from the current limit of no more than three times the per mile maximum to no more than five times the per mile maximum. It is expected to increase the supplemental aid limit from the current rate of $900 per mile to $1,500 per mile.
Evers also signed SB 411 (Act 112) which allows a person to transport a dressed or filleted game fish from inland or outlying waters if they provide a physical or digital photograph upon request that proves the time and date of the photograph and physical evidence of the fish’s length prior to the head and tail being removed.
In addition, the governor inked SB 415 (Act 113) to make DNR annual vehicle admission receipts such as state park stamps good for 12 months from the date of issue, rather than the calendar year. The change will go into effect Jan. 1, 2025.
And Evers signed SB 587 (Act 116) to statutorily define a muzzle-loading firearm as a firearm that shoots a projectile loaded exclusively from the muzzle.
For more details, visit legis.wisconsin.gov.
Leftover turkey tag sales begin this week
The DNR this week will begin selling bonus harvest authorizations for the 2024 spring turkey season. As in past years, the tags will be offered first with a designated sale date for each zone, then all remaining authorizations will be available for purchase.
Sale dates are Monday for Zone 1, Tuesday for Zone 2, Wednesday for Zone 3, Thursday for Zone 4 and Friday for Zone 5 and Zone 7. No permits are available for Zone 6. All remaining tags will go on sale Saturday.
Sales are offered through the Go Wild license portal and at all license sales agents. Sales begin at 10 a.m. and run through midnight each day. Bonus harvest authorizations are $10 for residents and $15 for non-residents.
Visit dnr.wi.gov for more information.
Wisconsin
Stepmom from hell accused of starving 35-pound teen daughter enters plea — could spend the rest of her life behind bars
The Wisconsin stepmother from hell accused of abusing her 35-pound 14-year-old daughter by depriving her of food and water has entered a no-contest plea in the twisted case.
Melissa Goodman, 52, now faces up to 46 years in prison if she’s handed the maximum sentence for charges of chronic neglect causing great bodily harm, chronic neglect causing emotional damage and false imprisonment.
She’s set to be sentenced on July 1.
Goodman, along with husband Walter Goodman, has been accused of starving her autistic stepdaughter.
Goodman’s daughter Savanna Goodman and her girlfriend Kayla Stemler were also charged over the alleged abuse, People reported.
The family is accused of locking the teen in a bedroom without a mattress, restricting her to only her room for years and depriving her of food and water, according to Wisconsin prosecutors.
The mobile home they lived in became a house of horrors for the teenager, who was mistaken for a 6-year-old when she was found by cops in August 2025 and rushed to the hospital.
Walter Goodman, the victim’s father, called 911 to report that his daughter was lethargic and ill.
Responding officers found her weighing just 35 pounds; she was hospitalized with multi-organ dysfunction, including respiratory failure and pancreatitis.

From 2020 until August 2025, the victim, whose name is not disclosed because she is a minor, was allegedly isolated in a trailer on Hattie Lane, in Oneida, Wisconsin.
Extended family members were told she was away on vacation or with other relatives to explain her absence.
Wisconsin
‘Song Sung Blue’ subject Claire Sardina playing Wisconsin State Fair
When “Song Sung Blue” – the biopic about Milwaukee Neil Diamond tribute act Lightning & Thunder – had a premiere at the Oriental Theatre in Milwaukee last December, star Hugh Jackman gave Claire Sardina (played in the film by Kate Hudson) an engraved bench honoring Lighting & Thunder to be installed at Wisconsin State Fair Park.
In August, Sardina will get to have a seat on that bench – and sing again on a State Fair stage.
Sardina will perform with tribute act So Good: The Neil Diamond Experience Aug. 9 at the Bank Five Nine Amphitheater, the largest stage at the fair featuring free concerts with admission.
For Sardina, it will be a return to a place central to Lighting & Thunder. The band performed in the Milwaukee area from 1989 until Mike Sardina, aka Lightning, passed away in 2006. The State Fair was one of their favorite places to play, and the couple got married there in 1994.
The couple’s wild story – from a performance at a Pearl Jam Summerfest concert to major health issues – was the subject of the documentary “Song Sung Blue” that inspired the biopic, and earned Hudson an Oscar nomination for portraying Claire Sardina.
Fair officials May 8 revealed the full headliner lineup for the stage, which includes:
- Aug. 6: Sixteen Candles
- Aug. 7 and 8: Here Come The Mummies
- Aug. 10 and 11: Herman’s Hermits starring Peter Noone
- Aug. 12: Hairbangers Ball
- Aug. 13: Too Hype Crew
- Aug. 14: The Gufs
- Aug. 15: Let’s Sing Taylor – An Unofficial Live Tribute Show
- Aug. 16: Pat McCurdy
All Bank Five Nine Amphitheater concerts are included with fair admission.
The lineup is also nearly complete for the Bank Five Nine Main Stage, with just a show on Aug. 11 to be announced.
Tickets are on sale for these shows at wistatefair.com and include same-day fair admission:
- Aug. 6: Hairball
- Aug. 7: Nelly
- Aug. 8: Bailey Zimmerman with Chandler Walters
- Aug. 9: Wynonna Judd and Melissa Etheridge
- Aug. 10: For King + Country with Rachel Lampa
- Aug. 12: John Mulaney
- Aug. 13: The All-American Rejects with Joyce Manor
- Aug. 14: Lindsey Stirling with PVRIS
- Aug. 15: AJR with Em Beihold
- Aug. 16: The Beach Boys
Wisconsin
Wisconsin universities and schools impacted by Canvas data breach
WAUSAU, Wis. (WSAW/GRAY NEWS) – A ransomware group has claimed to have breached the learning management system Canvas, possibly exposing the personal information of students, teachers and staff across the country.
According to a statement from the Universities of Wisconsin website, they were notified of a nationwide security breach experienced by Instructure, the provider of Canvas. Universities of Wisconsin schools use the cloud-based management system.
UW-Stevens Point tells NewsChannel 7 they have not confirmed UWSP was involved in the breach, but did send communication that Canvas was down and students should not perform any asked actions if prompted, as it may not be legitimate while Canvas is down.
Instructure, the parent company of Canvas, posted on May 1 about a cybersecurity incident that had been reported and was under investigation.
The next day, Chief Information Security Officer Steve Proud wrote that the information involved in the attack included names, student ID numbers, messages between users and email addresses.
“At this time, we have found no evidence that passwords, dates of birth, government identifiers, or financial information were involved. If that changes, we will notify any impacted institutions,” he wrote.
The Wausau School District sent a letter to parents Wednesday regarding the cybersecurity incident. They said there is no evidence that passwords, single-sign-on credentials, financial information or social security numbers were impacted. They stressed that type of information is not stored in Canvas.
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