Monthly Archives: November 2023

Brookfield native joins TMJ4 Weather Team

Meteorologist Tyler Moore, a native of Brookfield, is joining WTMJ-TV in Milwaukee. He will joining Storm Team 4 and will be part of the TMJ4 News Today team, weekday mornings from 5-7 a.m.

After graduating from Brookfield Central High School, Moore received his degree in Atmospheric Science from North Carolina Asheville. He was a division 1 NCAA men’s soccer player during his time in college and interned at WKRN in Nashville and CNN in Atlanta.

Moore started his meteorology career at WJFW-TV in Rhinelander before working in Fayetteville and, most recently, WTSP in Tampa Bay. His forecasting experience includes everything from Wisconsin blizzards, Arkansas tornadoes, and tropical weather in Florida. He recently covered Hurricane Ian.

As a Wisconsin native, Tyler said he excited to return to his hometown with his fiancée. “This is truly a full circle and dream come true moment for me,” Moore said. “My passion to be a meteorologist started in Milwaukee. Ever since first grade I’ve only wanted to be a meteorologist, in fact I grew up watching TMJ4 because of their history of great meteorologists. Now I can’t believe that I will be joining this legacy weather team. I am looking forward to living close to my family and having the opportunity to be your morning meteorologist!”

Like Moore, TMJ4 Chief Meteorologist Brian Niznansky grew up in southeast Wisconsin and recognizes the value of Moore’s experience. “Tyler’s career has exposed him to severe weather forecasting of all kinds, including big Wisconsin snowstorms. We’re excited to have him on the team,” Niznansky said.

Moore joins the station on Dec. 4 and will start on the air shortly after that.

La Crosse reporter moving to Milwaukee

WKBT-TV reporter Duaa Israr is leaving La Crosse to take a job in Milwaukee.

She will join CBS58 (WDJT-TV) as a journalist.

“I am so lucky to have learned from some of the best journalists in this industry. I am even more fortunate to call them my friends,” She wrote. “They pushed me day in and day out. They saw the best in me, even on days when I couldn’t. Without them, I wouldn’t be where I am today.”

Israr made the announcement Thursday.

Meekins to retire from TMJ4 News

Carole Meekins will retire from TMJ4 (WTMJ-TV) on Nov. 30 after 32 years at the station and more than 40 years in television.

Meekins is an award-winning journalist and the most veteran anchor in the Milwaukee market. She is well known for the station’s Positively Milwaukee franchise and helped launch the annual Positively Milwaukee Awards and the weekly Positively Milwaukee show on TMJ4.

“It’s time to focus on more than work. I want to spend more time with my family,” said Meekins. “I look forward to still contributing to the Milwaukee area – but I will focus on other passions including music, teaching, and writing.”

Meekins received an Emmy at the Chicago/Midwest Emmy ceremonies in 2020. Her Positively Milwaukee specials have won three first place awards from the Wisconsin Broadcasters Association as well as recognition from the Milwaukee Press Club. Meekins was inducted into the Wisconsin Silver Circle by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 2014. She is a member of the Milwaukee Press Club Hall of Fame and received an Award of Excellence from the Wisconsin Black Media Association. She was also inducted into the Mascoutah High School Hall of Fame, the Illinois school where she graduated.

Meekins has also received numerous awards for her community service. Some of her other honors include a Sisters of Mercy Spirit award by St. Catherine Residence; a Living Legend award by the founders of the Milwaukee Black Inventors Gallery; a Women on the Move award by the Top Ladies of Distinction, Inc; a Leadership Award by the Girl Scouts of Wisconsin Southeast; a Media Award of Excellence from the St. Vincent de Paul Society; a Milwaukee Community Journal Lifetime Service Award; and a Milwaukee Streets of Peace Award. Meekins also received a leadership award from Delta Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, a sorority for educators.

Meekins was selected to carry the Olympic torch in conjunction with NBC’s coverage of the 2000 Olympics during her tenure at TMJ4. She has served as honorary chairwoman of the AIDS Walk Wisconsin and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Race for the Cure and has helped raise money to fight childhood cancer for the Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer (MACC) Fund.

Her first television job was as co-host of “God’s Musical World” on KTVI-TV in St. Louis – a fitting entry into the television world for Meekins, a former music teacher. Her first television news job was at KPLR-TV in St. Louis. She also worked at WAKA-TV (CBS) in Montgomery, Alabama, WRIC-TV (NBC) in Richmond, Virginia and WEWS-TV (ABC) in Cleveland, Ohio. Throughout her career, Meekins has conducted several memorable interviews. They include President George W. Bush, President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, and Oprah Winfrey.

“The Milwaukee area is better and richer for Carole’s years of dedication, loyalty, and hard work to uplift others. We will miss her presence and her contribution in the newsroom,” said TMJ4 News Director Tim Vetscher. “We wish Carole all the best on her next chapter and thank her for all she has done for TMJ4 and for our community.”

Gutiérrez named 10 p.m. co-anchor on WISN-TV

Diana Gutiérrez is the new co-anchor of “WISN 12 News at 10:00 p.m.,” effective Nov. 20. On weeknights, she will work alongside co-anchor Patrick Paolantonio, meteorologist Mark Baden, and Sports Director Dario Melendez. Gutiérrez will also serve in an enhanced reporting role on “WISN 12 News at 6:00 p.m.”

“Diana has made many meaningful connections with viewers all across our community,” said Jan Wade, president and general manager of WISN 12. “She’s also known for her gifted storytelling, thorough reporting, and infectious energy. Diana’ has done an incredible job on “12 News This Morning” plus our midday newscast and will be a great addition to our late evening team, as well!”

Since January 2021, Gutiérrez has served as co-anchor of “WISN 12 News This Morning,” as well as the anchor of “WISN 12 News at 11:00 a.m.,” on weekdays. The move for Gutiérrez follows the September decision by Joyce Garbaciak – the previous co-anchor of the 10:00 p.m. weekday newscast – to co-anchor “WISN 12 News at 6:00 p.m.” exclusively.

“I am truly honored to step into the role of 10 p.m. news anchor, following the footsteps of my respected colleague, Joyce Garbaciak, who’s dedicated numerous years to WISN 12 News. I’m excited for this new chapter and I look forward to continuing our commitment of delivering quality news to our viewers,” Gutiérrez said.

Gutiérrez is an award-winning journalist, having received numerous honors from a variety of prestigious organizations. The Wisconsin Broadcasters Association recognized WISN 12 News This Morning, with Gutiérrez as co-anchor, as the ‘Best Morning Newscast’ in 2021 and 2022. In addition, she is the recipient of both an Emmy Award and a regional Edward R. Murrow Award for her contributions to WISN’s coverage of the Waukesha Parade Tragedy.

Through various leadership roles, Gutiérrez also stands out as a prominent member of the community. She was recently recognized as one of ‘Wisconsin’s 40 Most Influential Latino Leaders’ by Madison 365, a statewide online news outlet. Gutiérrez is also a regional director of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists (NAHJ) and serves as an executive board member of the Daisie Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides support for inner city families.

Prior to WISN 12 News, Gutiérrez worked in a variety of anchor and reporter positions at WCIU-TV in Illinois and WBND-TV in Indiana. Gutiérrez is a Mexican-American Chicago native who is bilingual and speaks fluent Spanish, having developed a passion for journalism after studying abroad in Madrid, Spain.

WISN 12 will be conducting a search to replace Gutiérrez as a weekday co-anchor of “WISN 12 News This Morning” and anchor of “WISN 12 News at 11:00 a.m.” That journalist will join the existing team on “WISN 12 News This Morning,” including co-anchor Gerron Jordan, live desk anchor Mallory Anderson, meteorologist Lindsey Slater, and Matt Salemme in News Chopper 12.

From Nov. 20, through Nov. 22, Gutiérrez will co-anchor both “WISN 12 News at 10:00 p.m.” and “WISN 12 News This Morning” to assist with the transition. She will be full-time on “WISN 12 News at 10:00 p.m.” starting on Nov. 29.

Column: Reopening court discussions was a good idea

Christa Westerberg

On Oct. 9, 2023, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held a lively, 35-minute on whether to allow the deletion of certain eviction records from Wisconsin’s online court records system. I’ll get to that topic in a moment; what’s remarkable is that we were able to witness this discussion at all.

In 2012, a divided Wisconsin Supreme Court voted to close its administrative conferences.  These are conferences where the court considers changes to rules that affect the court system, procedures used in civil and criminal matters, and ethics rules for attorneys and judges.  

Arguing in favor of closing the conferences, then-Justice Patience Roggensack opined that to “sit out here in public and philosophize … is really not the best use of our time,” as by Wisconsin Watch.

The late Justice Patrick Crooks countered, “I think it’s vitally important that the public be able to see what we do and how we do it. . . . This would be a major mistake, to close what has been open.”

In the end, the justices voted to close the court’s administrative conferences on a vote of 4-3.  But this August, on another 4-3 , the court’s newly constituted majority decided to again make these conferences open to the public. (Administrative conferences do not include deliberations on cases, which are not and have not been open.)

This was a welcome change. As intimated by Justice Crooks, open administrative conferences give the public insight into the work of the court and the basis for its decisions on rules petitions. 

That was apparent during the court’s open discussion of the rule change by tenants rights advocates to shorten the record retention period for court records of evictions where no money judgment is entered from 20 years to one year. (Not only was the meeting in open session, but it was streamed on WisconsinEye and is for viewing.)

The advocates the change was needed to make rental housing more available, because landlords frequently rely on online court systems when deciding whether to lease an apartment or other housing. They also noted that the impact of the current retention rule disproportionately affected Black and Latino households.

The court also opponents of the change, including the Apartment Association of Southeastern Wisconsin. In their discussion, court members considered the administrative burden to clerks and the court system that the change would cause, citing their own experiences, as well as the impacts to transparency and access to records in general.

Reasonable minds can disagree on the impacts of the change to the eviction record rule. But it was refreshing to see the court’s members consider the competing issues and interact with one another on a matter of substance. 

Open administrative conferences may also result in better decision-making. Chief Justice Annette Ziegler joked at the beginning of the meeting that if the group were in closed conference, the meeting may “take about five minutes,” which was apparently the norm. In the open session on the eviction record change, the court’s members had a much longer and more thoughtful discussion.    

Another open conference on an administrative petition is for December 11, 2023.  This time, the issue under discussion is the proper standard for when appellate courts can stay a lower court decision pending appeal.

For just the second time in more than ten years, the public will be welcome to sit in.

Your Right to Know is a monthly column distributed by the Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council (), a nonprofit, nonpartisan group dedicated to open government. Christa Westerberg is the council’s vice president and a partner at the Pines Bach law firm in Madison, Wisconsin.