Wisconsin
Wisconsin playmaking linebacker joins Bison Class of 2025
FARGO — Gavin Sell has been on the North Dakota State football radar for the last year.
Sell decided to make Fargo his home, committing to the Bison after spending the weekend at their annual individual camp.
“I had zero offers coming into this weekend but managed to pick up two from NDSU and Augustana.” Sell said. “This camp is like no other in the whole country, you get to get coached by the best coaches in the midwest and you get to for three days straight and you really create a bond with them.”
Sell hails from Baldwin, Wisconsin. He’s 6-foot-3, 200 pounds and was a two-way playmaker for the Blackhawks. He had 49 receptions for 982 yards and 11 touchdowns as a wide receiver this past season. Sell was an honorable mention all-state selection at wide receiver.
He starred on defense as well, racking up 66 tackles and two interceptions from the linebacker spot. It’s there where the Bison see Sell at the next level.
“Ever since i was younger, I’ve always seen myself as a playmaker but it just so happens to be the Bison like a playmaker on defense and I love it.”
“The position is like no other in sports, you get to hit, you get to cover, you get to do it all, and that’s what I love in football.”
Baldwin sits about 45 minutes east from Minneapolis. The Blackhawks posted a 10-3 record last season, falling in the state semifinals.
Sell becomes the second known commitment out of Wisconsin for the Class of 2025. Grafton offensive lineman James Nellis committed to the Bison back in May.
Sell’s commitment brings NDSU to a total of eight commitments for the incoming class.
“My commitment meant everything to me, I’ve dreamed of an offer like this since I was a little kid. I knew once they offered me that I was going to commit to the Bison.”
They have such a great coaching staff and especially Coach (Grant) Olson really stood out to me. Our connection felt like no other and I can’t wait to play for him.”
Dom Izzo is the Sports Director at WDAY-TV. He began working for WDAY in 2006 as the weekend sports anchor and was promoted to Sports Director in 2010.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin sees largest drop in teacher union strength nationally
MPS staff protest budget cuts, layoffs and for cost-of-living raises
Milwaukee Public School staff protest budget cuts, layoffs and for cost-of-living raises
Wisconsin teacher unions have seen the nation’s largest drop in strength since 2012, according to a new study from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute.
The Fordham Institute, a conservative-leaning education think tank, ranked Wisconsin 36th among 50 states and the District of Columbia for teacher union strength, falling 18 spots from its previous 2012 study. The rankings factored in union resources and membership, involvement in politics, the state’s labor and bargaining policies, policy wins and losses, and the perceived influence of teacher unions in the state.
The report said teacher unions across the nation are weaker than they were over a decade ago, with the percentage of teachers who are union members declining in all but four states.
In Wisconsin, membership declined from 98% in 2012 to 45% in 2025, a nearly 54 percentage point decrease and the largest drop in membership nationwide. The state ranked 43rd overall for union resources and membership compared to 13th in 2012.
The report attributed the decline in membership to Act 10, the state’s 2011 law signed by then-Gov. Scott Walker that essentially ended collective bargaining rights for public employee unions in Wisconsin.
In an email, Fordham Institute researcher Meredith Coffey said most of the data in the 2012 study predated the law, and it’s unlikely the initial report fully captured the effects of Act 10. She said the change in Wisconsin’s overall rank understates the impact of the law.
“In other words, the estimated change in rank between 2012 and today is arguably conservative,” Coffey said.
The study also found Wisconsin teacher unions’ financial resources are limited compared with unions in other states. After adjusting for cost-of-living differences, Wisconsin unions have the seventh-lowest annual revenues per teacher.
Wisconsin also ranked 44th for its labor and bargaining policies. Public-sector unions are limited to negotiating for raises capped at the rate of inflation under Act 10.
The report said just five states – Idaho, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma and Virginia – have enhanced collective bargaining rights since 2012.
Wisconsin teacher unions ranked 25th for their political involvement, specifically in elections and campaigns. In 2020 and 2022, the Fordham Institute found, the state’s teacher unions sponsored the second-highest number of state and local political ads in the nation.
About 70% of Wisconsin candidates endorsed by state-level teachers unions won their elections in 2024, according to the data.
The state’s teacher unions additionally ranked 26th in policy wins and losses, which the Fordham Institute measured by analyzing the extent to which Wisconsin policies align with union priorities.
In perceived influence, the organization ranked Wisconsin’s teacher unions 24th. Researchers said they measured this through a survey of people with knowledge of education policymaking in each state, including lawmakers, journalists, state education administrators and members of teacher unions, among others.
Overall, the study found the strongest unions are concentrated in Democrat-led, more affluent states, while the weakest are concentrated in Republican-led, poorer states.
The report said the strongest teacher unions are in Vermont, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Hawaii. The weakest teacher unions are in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, North Carolina and Mississippi.
Kayla Huynh covers K-12 education, teachers and solutions for the Journal Sentinel. Contact: khuynh@gannett.com. Follow her on X: @_kaylahuynh.
Kayla Huynh‘s reporting is supported by Herb Kohl Philanthropies and reader contributions to the Journal Sentinel Community-Funded Journalism Project. Journal Sentinel editors maintain full editorial control over all content. To support this work, visit jsonline.com/support. Checks can be addressed to Local Media Foundation (memo: “JS Community Journalism”) and mailed to P.O. Box 85015, Chicago, IL 60689.
The JS Community-Funded Journalism Project is administered by Local Media Foundation, tax ID #36-4427750, a Section 501(c)(3) charitable trust affiliated with Local Media Association.
Wisconsin
New Wisconsin initiative launches to help students prepare for life after graduation
MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) – State Superintendent Dr. Jill Underly announced Tuesday the launch of a new statewide project focusing on shaping the future of education and student success.
Portrait of a Graduate was created by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction to help prepare high school students for life after high school, including college, careers and community leadership.
With students having to navigate new challenges involving technology, the cost of living and evolving career paths, the project was created to give students the knowledge, skills and experiences they need, no matter what post-graduate path they take.
“We want to broaden Wisconsin’s vision for student success,” Dr. Underly said. “The world our students are preparing to enter is changing quickly, and it is critical that we hear directly from the people who know our communities best. Academic rigor is always a top priority and will not change, but we also need to ensure students leave our schools prepared to think critically, adapt, communicate, solve problems, and thrive.”
A committee of educators, students, higher education partners, statewide education organizers, employers and representatives from industries across Wisconsin is helping guide the project.
The Department of Public Instruction will be holding virtual listening sessions scheduled for May 27 from noon to 1 p.m. and June 3 from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Registration for the session or more information can be found on the Department of Public Instruction’s website.
Click here to download the WMTV15 News app or our WMTV15 First Alert weather app.
Copyright 2026 WMTV. All rights reserved.
Wisconsin
Did a Wisconsin tax rebate proposal exclude about 30% of filers?
Yes
A deal between Democratic Gov. Tony Evers and Republican legislative leaders to give Wisconsin income tax filers a rebate would have excluded about 30% of filers.
That’s because the deal provided rebates up to $300 for individuals and $600 for married joint filers only to residents who paid state income taxes for 2024.
The deal, which failed to pass in the state Senate, also reduced property taxes, increased funding for schools and ended taxes on tips and some overtime pay.
According to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau, about 2.1 million residents would have received the rebates. Based on that and the U.S. Census estimates, 55% of adults would not be eligible for tax rebates based on not having owed taxes or because they did not file a return. Of those who filed, about 26% were not eligible for a rebate, LFB estimated.
This fact brief responds to conversations like this one.
Sources
Wisconsin Legislative Fiscal Bureau, Estimated Distribution of Individual Income Tax Rebate under May 2026 Special Session LRB-6707 and LRB-6710 (“the bill”),
U.S. Census, Age and Sex
Wisconsin Department of Revenue, Individual Income Tax – Filing Requirements
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel collaborated with Wisconsin Watch to develop this fact brief. Wisconsin Watch is a member of the Gigafact program, newsrooms across the U.S. that deliver bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read more about our methodology at jsonline.com/FactBriefMethods.
-
Florida2 minutes agoCharges dismissed for woman without right hand cited for holding phone while driving
-
Georgia8 minutes agoGeorgia native brings ‘Beast’ to life on Fox Theatre stage
-
Hawaii14 minutes agoTourist accused of hurling rock at endangered Hawaiian monk seal was trying to protect sea turtles, lawyer says
-
Idaho20 minutes agoSongwriter Josh Ritter to headline Idaho America250 celebration in Boise
-
Illinois26 minutes agoIllinois General Assembly to honor retiring U.S. Senator Dick Durbin
-
Indiana32 minutes agoIndiana State Fair hiring for the summer season
-
Iowa38 minutes agoWhy Milan Momcilovic Should Pick Iowa State Basketball Over Kentucky and Arizona
-
Kansas44 minutes agoPolice chase ends in injury crash early Wednesday in southeast Kansas