Andrea Kaminski is director of League of Women Voters of Wisconsin, another group that has challenged the voter ID law in court. Kaminski said lawmakers should act quickly, before the close of the 2015-2016 legislative session, to set aside funds for voter ID ads on radio and TV.

“If our lawmakers want people to vote — and they should — then they should be willing to budget money to help people do that,” Kaminski said.

The offices of Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald and Senate President Mary Lazich, as well as the leaders of the Assembly and Senate elections committees — Rep. Kathy Bernier and Sen. Devin LeMahieu — didn’t respond to inquiries this week about the matter.

For now, Magney said the board’s educational strategy on voter ID revolves around the website, the PSAs and “earned media” — or persuading journalists to report on it. The board plans a Monday press conference to call attention to voter ID.

The GAB could not have asked lawmakers to fund voter ID education in its funding request for the current state budget. Magney said that’s because, at the time state agencies filed their budget requests in late 2014, the voter ID requirement still was on hold due to a court order.