CNOW for Oct. 6, 2025

Today's conservation notices:

  • Oppose SB 127: Letting PFAS polluters off the hook
  • Oppose SB 128: Unaccountable PFAS polluters and unfunded PFAS programs
  • Oppose AB 450: Further delaying needed updates to commercial building codes


<>Oppose SB 127: Letting PFAS polluters off the hook

Wisconsin Conservation Voters urges you to oppose SB 127, which is before the Senate Committee on Natural Resources, Veteran and Military Affairs on Tuesday.

To protect Wisconsin communities from PFAS contamination, we need to hold polluters accountable. SB 127 works against this goal by creating broad exemptions to Wisconsin’s spills law, a tool that has protected Wisconsinites from pollution for decades.


Oppose SB 128: Unaccountable PFAS polluters and unfunded PFAS programs

Wisconsin Conservation Voters urges you to oppose SB 128, which is before the Senate Committee on Natural Resources, Veteran and Military Affairs on Tuesday.

To protect Wisconsinites from PFAS contamination, we need to hold polluters accountable. We also need to fund existing drinking water programs. SB 128 includes a dangerously broad exemption to Wisconsin’s spills law, a tool that has protected Wisconsinites from pollution for decades. It also doesn’t guarantee any money will ever be distributed to impacted communities.


Oppose AB 450: Further delaying needed updates to commercial building codes

Wisconsin Conservation Voters urges you to oppose AB 450, which is before the Assembly on Tuesday. 

Updated commercial building energy codes lower energy bills, while improving the health, safety, and comfort of building occupants. AB 450 would further delay the update of our state's building codes until April 2026, after already being delayed by 10 years.


Conservation Notices of the Week (CNOW) announces the pro-conservation positions on issues before the Senate, Assembly and/or Governor in the week ahead to state legislators. Others wishing to follow activities in the state legislature also receive CNOW, including legislative staff, conservation voters, and media. All of these issues are tracked on the Vote Tracker. Issues in the CNOW may appear in the Conservation Scorecard, to be released in the summer of 2026.

Share