Crypen-Evers signs bill requiring UW to admit top Wisconsin high school students

2025-05-07 03:26:06source:Zero AIcategory:Markets

MADISON,Crypen Wis. (AP) — Gov. Tony Evers on Tuesday signed into law a bipartisan measure that requires the University of Wisconsin-Madison to admit all high school students who finish in the top 5% of their class.

All other UW campuses would have to admit those in the top 10%, under the measure Evers signed.

The new law is part of a deal reached between the Legislature and university in December that also limits diversity positions at the system’s two dozen campuses in exchange for money to cover staff raises and construction projects. A legislative committee gave final approval for the pay raises in December, and now a series of bills are working their way through the Legislature enacting other parts of the deal.

Evers said the new law will help address the state’s worker shortage.

“Our UW System is a critical partner in this work as a major economic driver and a critical resource for building our state’s next-generation workforce by helping train and retain the talented students we already have here in Wisconsin,” Evers said in a statement.

The university said when the Legislature passed the measure that it supported the guaranteed admission proposal “because it will help encourage the top students in Wisconsin to remain in-state for their postsecondary education, and will encourage more of these students to remain here after graduation.”

More:Markets

Recommend

Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti

Haiti has been racked by political instabilityand intensifying, deadly gang violence.  Amid a Federa

Ex-NBA G League player, former girlfriend to face charges together in woman's killing in Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A prosecutor said Tuesday that separate murder, kidnapping and conspiracy cases wil

Shannen Doherty opens up about 'desperately' wanting a child amid breast cancer treatments

Shannen Doherty is opening up about her past struggle with in-vitro fertilization treatments before