If Wisconsin policymakers want to reform the state’s criminal justice system in a way that achieves better outcomes for taxpayers, communities and offenders, they will need detailed, accurate and robust data.
TRENDING:
- Claims of data center water use are laughably wrong
- Bill would use tax credit to lower cost barrier to new nuclear in Wisconsin
- Fixing regulatory rampage will require amendment, say observers
- Fight over Obamacare is fight worth having
- Post-Kirk assassination, Wisconsin needs to teach difference between words and bullets, says prof
- School-bus Wi-Fi finally gets reined in while pandemic-era home internet subsidies only now dribble out
- Village’s hostility chases out restaurateur who bought derelict Door County resort
- Overwhelming demand for choice schools in Milwaukee drives massive philanthropy and big builds