STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-THIRD SESSION - 2003
_____________________
TWENTY-THIRD DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Monday, March 10, 2003
The House of Representatives convened at 3:00 p.m. and was
called to order by Steve Sviggum, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Scott Hagen, Chaplain,
United States Army Reserve and ordained minister from Our Savior's Lutheran
Church, Faribault, Minnesota.
The members of the House gave the pledge of allegiance to the
flag of the United States of America.
The roll was called and the following members were present:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Mullery
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
A quorum was present.
Huntley, Lindgren, Meslow, Murphy, Rukavina and Swenson were
excused.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the Journal of the preceding
day. Dill moved that further reading of
the Journal be suspended and that the Journal be approved as corrected by the
Chief Clerk. The motion prevailed.
REPORTS
OF CHIEF CLERK
S. F. No. 30 and H. F. No. 534,
which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison, were examined and
found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION
OF RULES
Seifert moved that the rules be so far suspended that
S. F. No. 30 be substituted for H. F. No. 534 and
that the House File be indefinitely postponed.
The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 61 and H. F. No. 64,
which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison, were examined and
found to be identical.
Seifert moved that S. F. No. 61 be substituted
for H. F. No. 64 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES
Gunther from the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development
Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 3, A bill for an act relating to economic
development; authorizing the establishing of tax-free zones; providing tax
exemptions for individuals and business entities in tax-free zones; providing
for repayment of tax benefits under certain circumstances; providing for the
payment of state aid; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
272.02, by adding a subdivision; 290.01, subdivisions 19b, 29; 290.091,
subdivision 2; 290.0921, subdivision 3; 290.0922, subdivision 3; 297A.68, by
adding a subdivision; 297B.03; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapters 469; 477A.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 272.02, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 56. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE PROPERTY.] (a) Improvements to real
property, and personal property, classified under section 273.13,
subdivision 24, and located within a job opportunity building zone are
exempt from ad valorem taxes levied under chapter 275.
(b) Improvements to real property, and tangible personal
property, of an agricultural production facility located within an
agricultural processing facility zone is exempt from ad valorem taxes
levied under chapter 275.
(c) For property to qualify for exemption under paragraph
(a), the occupant must be a qualified business, as defined in section
469.310.
(d) The exemption applies beginning for the first assessment
year after designation of the job opportunity building zone by the
commissioner of trade and economic development. The exemption applies to each assessment
year that begins during the duration of the job opportunity building
zone. This exemption does not apply
to:
(1) the levy under section 475.61
or similar levy provisions under any other law to pay general obligation
bonds, if the bonds were issued before the date of designation of the
job opportunity building zone; or
(2) a levy under section 126C.17, if the levy was approved
by the voters before the designation of the job opportunity building
zone.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective beginning for property taxes assessed in 2004,
payable in 2005.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 272.029, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7.
[EXEMPTION.] The tax imposed under this section does not apply
to electricity produced by wind energy conversion systems located in a
job opportunity building zone, designated under section 469.314, for the
period of the zone designation. The
exemption applies beginning for the first calendar year after
designation of the zone and applies to each calendar year that begins
during the designation of the zone.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 3. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.01, subdivision 19b, is amended to read:
Subd. 19b.
[SUBTRACTIONS FROM FEDERAL TAXABLE INCOME.] For individuals, estates,
and trusts, there shall be subtracted from federal taxable income:
(1) interest income on obligations of any authority, commission,
or instrumentality of the United States to the extent includable in taxable
income for federal income tax purposes but exempt from state income tax under
the laws of the United States;
(2) if included in federal taxable income, the amount of any
overpayment of income tax to Minnesota or to any other state, for any previous
taxable year, whether the amount is received as a refund or as a credit to
another taxable year's income tax liability;
(3) the amount paid to others, less the amount used to claim
the credit allowed under section 290.0674, not to exceed $1,625 for each
qualifying child in grades kindergarten to 6 and $2,500 for each qualifying
child in grades 7 to 12, for tuition, textbooks, and transportation of each
qualifying child in attending an elementary or secondary school situated in
Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, or Wisconsin, wherein a resident
of this state may legally fulfill the state's compulsory attendance laws, which
is not operated for profit, and which adheres to the provisions of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and chapter 363. For
the purposes of this clause, "tuition" includes fees or tuition as
defined in section 290.0674, subdivision 1, clause (1). As used in this clause,
"textbooks" includes books and other instructional materials and
equipment purchased or leased for use in elementary and secondary schools in
teaching only those subjects legally and commonly taught in public elementary
and secondary schools in this state.
Equipment expenses qualifying for deduction includes expenses as defined
and limited in section 290.0674, subdivision 1, clause (3). "Textbooks" does not include
instructional books and materials used in the teaching of religious tenets,
doctrines, or worship, the purpose of which is to instill such tenets,
doctrines, or worship, nor does it include books or materials for, or
transportation to, extracurricular activities including sporting events,
musical or dramatic events, speech activities, driver's education, or similar
programs. For purposes of the
subtraction provided by this clause, "qualifying child" has the
meaning given in section 32(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;
(4) income as provided under section 290.0802;
(5) to the extent included in federal adjusted gross income,
income realized on disposition of property exempt from tax under section
290.491;
(6) to the extent not deducted in
determining federal taxable income or used to claim the long-term care
insurance credit under section 290.0672, the amount paid for health insurance
of self-employed individuals as determined under section 162(l) of the Internal
Revenue Code, except that the percent limit does not apply. If the individual deducted insurance
payments under section 213 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, the subtraction
under this clause must be reduced by the lesser of:
(i) the total itemized deductions allowed under section 63(d)
of the Internal Revenue Code, less state, local, and foreign income taxes
deductible under section 164 of the Internal Revenue Code and the standard
deduction under section 63(c) of the Internal Revenue Code; or
(ii) the lesser of (A) the amount of insurance qualifying as
"medical care" under section 213(d) of the Internal Revenue Code to
the extent not deducted under section 162(1) of the Internal Revenue Code or
excluded from income or (B) the total amount deductible for medical care under
section 213(a);
(7) the exemption amount allowed under Laws 1995, chapter 255,
article 3, section 2, subdivision 3;
(8) to the extent included in federal taxable income,
postservice benefits for youth community service under section 124D.42 for
volunteer service under United States Code, title 42, sections 12601 to 12604;
(9) to the extent not deducted in determining federal taxable income
by an individual who does not itemize deductions for federal income tax
purposes for the taxable year, an amount equal to 50 percent of the excess of
charitable contributions allowable as a deduction for the taxable year under
section 170(a) of the Internal Revenue Code over $500;
(10) for taxable years beginning before January 1, 2008, the
amount of the federal small ethanol producer credit allowed under section
40(a)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code which is included in gross income under
section 87 of the Internal Revenue Code;
(11) for individuals who are allowed a federal foreign tax
credit for taxes that do not qualify for a credit under section 290.06,
subdivision 22, an amount equal to the carryover of subnational foreign taxes
for the taxable year, but not to exceed the total subnational foreign taxes
reported in claiming the foreign tax credit.
For purposes of this clause, "federal foreign tax credit"
means the credit allowed under section 27 of the Internal Revenue Code, and
"carryover of subnational foreign taxes" equals the carryover allowed
under section 904(c) of the Internal Revenue Code minus national level foreign
taxes to the extent they exceed the federal foreign tax credit; and
(12) in each of the five tax years immediately following the
tax year in which an addition is required under subdivision 19a, clause (7), an
amount equal to one-fifth of the delayed depreciation. For purposes of this clause, "delayed
depreciation" means the amount of the addition made by the taxpayer under
subdivision 19a, clause (7), minus the positive value of any net operating loss
under section 172 of the Internal Revenue Code generated for the tax year of
the addition. The resulting delayed
depreciation cannot be less than zero; and
(13) job opportunity building zone income as provided under
section 469.316.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 4. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.01, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
Subd. 29. [TAXABLE
INCOME.] The term "taxable income" means:
(1) for individuals, estates, and trusts, the same as taxable
net income;
(2) for corporations, the taxable net income less
(i)
the net operating loss deduction under section 290.095; and
(ii) the dividends received deduction under section 290.21,
subdivision 4; and
(iii) the exemption for operating in a job opportunity building
zone under section 469.317.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 5. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.06, subdivision 2c, is amended to read:
Subd. 2c. [SCHEDULES OF
RATES FOR INDIVIDUALS, ESTATES, AND TRUSTS.] (a) The income taxes imposed by
this chapter upon married individuals filing joint returns and surviving
spouses as defined in section 2(a) of the Internal Revenue Code must be
computed by applying to their taxable net income the following schedule of
rates:
(1) On the first $25,680, 5.35 percent;
(2) On all over $25,680, but not over $102,030, 7.05 percent;
(3) On all over $102,030, 7.85 percent.
Married individuals filing separate returns, estates, and
trusts must compute their income tax by applying the above rates to their
taxable income, except that the income brackets will be one-half of the above
amounts.
(b) The income taxes imposed by this chapter upon unmarried
individuals must be computed by applying to taxable net income the following
schedule of rates:
(1) On the first $17,570, 5.35 percent;
(2) On all over $17,570, but not over $57,710, 7.05 percent;
(3) On all over $57,710, 7.85 percent.
(c) The income taxes imposed by this chapter upon unmarried
individuals qualifying as a head of household as defined in section 2(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code must be computed by applying to taxable net income the
following schedule of rates:
(1) On the first $21,630, 5.35 percent;
(2) On all over $21,630, but not over $86,910, 7.05 percent;
(3) On all over $86,910, 7.85 percent.
(d) In lieu of a tax computed according to the rates set forth
in this subdivision, the tax of any individual taxpayer whose taxable net
income for the taxable year is less than an amount determined by the
commissioner must be computed in accordance with tables prepared and issued by
the commissioner of revenue based on income brackets of not more than
$100. The amount of tax for each
bracket shall be computed at the rates set forth in this subdivision, provided
that the commissioner may disregard a fractional part of a dollar unless it
amounts to 50 cents or more, in which case it may be increased to $1.
(e)
An individual who is not a Minnesota resident for the entire year must compute
the individual's Minnesota income tax as provided in this subdivision. After the application of the nonrefundable
credits provided in this chapter, the tax liability must then be multiplied by
a fraction in which:
(1) the numerator is the individual's Minnesota source federal
adjusted gross income as defined in section 62 of the Internal Revenue Code and
increased by the additions required under section 290.01, subdivision 19a,
clauses (1) and (6), and reduced by the subtraction under section 290.01,
subdivision 19b, clause (13), and the Minnesota assignable portion
of the subtraction for United States government interest under section 290.01,
subdivision 19b, clause (1), after applying the allocation and assignability
provisions of section 290.081, clause (a), or 290.17; and
(2) the denominator is the individual's federal adjusted gross
income as defined in section 62 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, increased
by the amounts specified in section 290.01, subdivision 19a, clauses (1) and
(6), and reduced by the amounts specified in section 290.01, subdivision 19b, clause
clauses (1) and (13).
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 6. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.06, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 29. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE JOB CREDIT.] A taxpayer that is a qualified
business, as defined in section 469.310, subdivision 11, is allowed a
credit as determined under section 469.318 against the tax imposed by
this chapter.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 7. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.067, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [AMOUNT
OF CREDIT.] (a) A taxpayer may take as a credit against the tax due from the
taxpayer and a spouse, if any, under this chapter an amount equal to the
dependent care credit for which the taxpayer is eligible pursuant to the
provisions of section 21 of the Internal Revenue Code subject to the
limitations provided in subdivision 2 except that in determining whether the
child qualified as a dependent, income received as a Minnesota family
investment program grant or allowance to or on behalf of the child must not be
taken into account in determining whether the child received more than half of
the child's support from the taxpayer, and the provisions of section
32(b)(1)(D) of the Internal Revenue Code do not apply.
(b) If a child who has not attained the age of six years at the
close of the taxable year is cared for at a licensed family day care home
operated by the child's parent, the taxpayer is deemed to have paid
employment-related expenses. If the
child is 16 months old or younger at the close of the taxable year, the amount
of expenses deemed to have been paid equals the maximum limit for one qualified
individual under section 21(c) and (d) of the Internal Revenue Code. If the child is older than 16 months of age
but has not attained the age of six years at the close of the taxable year, the
amount of expenses deemed to have been paid equals the amount the licensee
would charge for the care of a child of the same age for the same number of
hours of care.
(c) If a married couple:
(1) has a child who has not attained the age of one year at the
close of the taxable year;
(2) files a joint tax return for the taxable year; and
(3) does not participate in a dependent care assistance program
as defined in section 129 of the Internal Revenue Code, in lieu of the actual
employment related expenses paid for that child under paragraph (a) or the
deemed amount under paragraph (b), the lesser of (i) the combined earned income
of the couple or (ii) the amount of the maximum limit for one qualified
individual under section 21(c) and (d) of the Internal Revenue Code will be
deemed to be the employment related expense paid for that child. The earned income limitation of section
21(d) of the Internal Revenue Code shall not apply to this deemed amount. These deemed amounts apply regardless of
whether any employment-related expenses have been paid.
(d) If the taxpayer is not required and does not file a federal
individual income tax return for the tax year, no credit is allowed for any
amount paid to any person unless:
(1) the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of
the person are included on the return claiming the credit; or
(2) if the person is an organization described in section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and exempt from tax under section 501(a)
of the Internal Revenue Code, the name and address of the person are included
on the return claiming the credit.
In the case of a failure to
provide the information required under the preceding sentence, the preceding
sentence does not apply if it is shown that the taxpayer exercised due
diligence in attempting to provide the information required.
In the case of a nonresident, part-year resident, or a person
who has earned income not subject to tax under this chapter including earned
income excluded pursuant to section 290.01, subdivision 19b, clause (13),
the credit determined under section 21 of the Internal Revenue Code must be
allocated based on the ratio by which the earned income of the claimant and the
claimant's spouse from Minnesota sources bears to the total earned income of
the claimant and the claimant's spouse.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 8. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.0671, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [CREDIT
ALLOWED.] (a) An individual is allowed a credit against the tax imposed by this
chapter equal to a percentage of earned income. To receive a credit, a taxpayer must be eligible for a credit
under section 32 of the Internal Revenue Code.
(b) For individuals with no qualifying children, the credit
equals 1.9125 percent of the first $4,620 of earned income. The credit is reduced by 1.9125 percent of
earned income or modified adjusted gross income, whichever is greater, in
excess of $5,770, but in no case is the credit less than zero.
(c) For individuals with one qualifying child, the credit
equals 8.5 percent of the first $6,920 of earned income and 8.5 percent of
earned income over $12,080 but less than $13,450. The credit is reduced by 5.73 percent of earned income or
modified adjusted gross income, whichever is greater, in excess of $15,080, but
in no case is the credit less than zero.
(d) For individuals with two or more qualifying children, the
credit equals ten percent of the first $9,720 of earned income and 20 percent
of earned income over $14,860 but less than $16,800. The credit is reduced by 10.3 percent of earned income or
modified adjusted gross income, whichever is greater, in excess of $17,890, but
in no case is the credit less than zero.
(e) For a nonresident or part-year resident, the credit must be
allocated based on the percentage calculated under section 290.06, subdivision
2c, paragraph (e).
(f)
For a person who was a resident for the entire tax year and has earned income
not subject to tax under this chapter including income excluded under
section 290.01, subdivision 19b, clause (13), the credit must be
allocated based on the ratio of federal adjusted gross income reduced by the
earned income not subject to tax under this chapter over federal adjusted gross
income.
(g) For tax years beginning after December 31, 2001, and before
December 31, 2004, the $5,770 in paragraph (b) is increased to $6,770, the
$15,080 in paragraph (c) is increased to $16,080, and the $17,890 in paragraph
(d) is increased to $18,890 for married taxpayers filing joint returns.
(h) For tax years beginning after December 31, 2004, and before
December 31, 2007, the $5,770 in paragraph (b) is increased to $7,770, the
$15,080 in paragraph (c) is increased to $17,080, and the $17,890 in paragraph
(d) is increased to $19,890 for married taxpayers filing joint returns.
(i) For tax years beginning after December 31, 2007, and before
December 31, 2010, the $5,770 in paragraph (b) is increased to $8,770, the
$15,080 in paragraph (c) is increased to $18,080 and the $17,890 in paragraph
(d) is increased to $20,890 for married taxpayers filing joint returns.
(j) The commissioner shall construct tables showing the amount
of the credit at various income levels and make them available to
taxpayers. The tables shall follow the
schedule contained in this subdivision, except that the commissioner may
graduate the transition between income brackets.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 290.091, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [DEFINITIONS.]
For purposes of the tax imposed by this section, the following terms have the
meanings given:
(a) "Alternative minimum taxable income" means the
sum of the following for the taxable year:
(1) the taxpayer's federal alternative minimum taxable income
as defined in section 55(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code;
(2) the taxpayer's itemized deductions allowed in computing
federal alternative minimum taxable income, but excluding:
(i) the charitable contribution deduction under section 170 of
the Internal Revenue Code to the extent that the deduction exceeds 1.3 percent
of adjusted gross income, as defined in section 62 of the Internal Revenue
Code;
(ii) the medical expense deduction;
(iii) the casualty, theft, and disaster loss deduction; and
(iv) the impairment-related work expenses of a disabled person;
(3) for depletion allowances computed under section 613A(c) of
the Internal Revenue Code, with respect to each property (as defined in section
614 of the Internal Revenue Code), to the extent not included in federal
alternative minimum taxable income, the excess of the deduction for depletion
allowable under section 611 of the Internal Revenue Code for the taxable year
over the adjusted basis of the property at the end of the taxable year
(determined without regard to the depletion deduction for the taxable year);
(4) to the extent not included in federal alternative minimum
taxable income, the amount of the tax preference for intangible drilling cost
under section 57(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code determined without regard
to subparagraph (E);
(5)
to the extent not included in federal alternative minimum taxable income, the
amount of interest income as provided by section 290.01, subdivision 19a,
clause (1); and
(6) the amount of addition required by section 290.01,
subdivision 19a, clause (7);
less the sum of the amounts determined under the following:
(1) interest income as defined in section 290.01, subdivision
19b, clause (1);
(2) an overpayment of state income tax as provided by section
290.01, subdivision 19b, clause (2), to the extent included in federal
alternative minimum taxable income;
(3) the amount of investment interest paid or accrued within
the taxable year on indebtedness to the extent that the amount does not exceed
net investment income, as defined in section 163(d)(4) of the Internal Revenue
Code. Interest does not include amounts
deducted in computing federal adjusted gross income; and
(4) amounts subtracted from federal taxable income as provided
by section 290.01, subdivision 19b, clause clauses (12) and
(13).
In the case of an estate or trust, alternative minimum taxable
income must be computed as provided in section 59(c) of the Internal Revenue
Code.
(b) "Investment interest" means investment interest
as defined in section 163(d)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(c) "Tentative minimum tax" equals 6.4 percent of
alternative minimum taxable income after subtracting the exemption amount
determined under subdivision 3.
(d) "Regular tax" means the tax that would be imposed
under this chapter (without regard to this section and section 290.032),
reduced by the sum of the nonrefundable credits allowed under this chapter.
(e) "Net minimum tax" means the minimum tax imposed
by this section.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 10. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.0921, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [ALTERNATIVE
MINIMUM TAXABLE INCOME.] "Alternative minimum taxable income" is
Minnesota net income as defined in section 290.01, subdivision 19, and includes
the adjustments and tax preference items in sections 56, 57, 58, and 59(d),
(e), (f), and (h) of the Internal Revenue Code. If a corporation files a separate company Minnesota tax return,
the minimum tax must be computed on a separate company basis. If a corporation is part of a tax group
filing a unitary return, the minimum tax must be computed on a unitary
basis. The following adjustments must
be made.
(1) For purposes of the depreciation adjustments under section
56(a)(1) and 56(g)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code, the basis for
depreciable property placed in service in a taxable year beginning before
January 1, 1990, is the adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes,
including any modification made in a taxable year under section 290.01,
subdivision 19e, or Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.09, subdivision 7,
paragraph (c).
For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000, the amount
of any remaining modification made under section 290.01, subdivision 19e, or
Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.09, subdivision 7, paragraph (c), not previously
deducted is a depreciation allowance in the first taxable year after December
31, 2000.
(2) The portion of the depreciation deduction allowed for
federal income tax purposes under section 168(k) of the Internal Revenue Code
that is required as an addition under section 290.01, subdivision 19c, clause
(16), is disallowed in determining alternative minimum taxable income.
(3) The subtraction for depreciation
allowed under section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (19), is allowed as a
depreciation deduction in determining alternative minimum taxable income.
(4) The alternative tax net operating loss deduction under
sections 56(a)(4) and 56(d) of the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
(5) The special rule for certain dividends under section
56(g)(4)(C)(ii) of the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
(6) The special rule for dividends from section 936 companies
under section 56(g)(4)(C)(iii) does not apply.
(7) The tax preference for depletion under section 57(a)(1) of
the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
(8) The tax preference for intangible drilling costs under
section 57(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code must be calculated without regard
to subparagraph (E) and the subtraction under section 290.01, subdivision 19d,
clause (4).
(9) The tax preference for tax exempt interest under section
57(a)(5) of the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
(10) The tax preference for charitable contributions of
appreciated property under section 57(a)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code does
not apply.
(11) For purposes of calculating the tax preference for
accelerated depreciation or amortization on certain property placed in service
before January 1, 1987, under section 57(a)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code,
the deduction allowable for the taxable year is the deduction allowed under
section 290.01, subdivision 19e.
For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000, the amount
of any remaining modification made under section 290.01, subdivision 19e, not
previously deducted is a depreciation or amortization allowance in the first
taxable year after December 31, 2004.
(12) For purposes of calculating the adjustment for adjusted
current earnings in section 56(g) of the Internal Revenue Code, the term
"alternative minimum taxable income" as it is used in section 56(g)
of the Internal Revenue Code, means alternative minimum taxable income as
defined in this subdivision, determined without regard to the adjustment for
adjusted current earnings in section 56(g) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(13) For purposes of determining the amount of adjusted current
earnings under section 56(g)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, no adjustment
shall be made under section 56(g)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code with respect
to (i) the amount of foreign dividend gross-up subtracted as provided in
section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (1), (ii) the amount of refunds of
income, excise, or franchise taxes subtracted as provided in section 290.01,
subdivision 19d, clause (10), or (iii) the amount of royalties, fees or other
like income subtracted as provided in section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause
(11).
(14) Alternative minimum taxable income excludes the income
from operating in a job opportunity building zone as provided under
section 469.317.
Items of tax preference must not be reduced below zero as a
result of the modifications in this subdivision.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 11. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 290.0922, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [DEFINITIONS.]
(a) "Minnesota sales or receipts" means the total sales apportioned
to Minnesota pursuant to section 290.191, subdivision 5, the total receipts
attributed to Minnesota pursuant to section 290.191, subdivisions 6 to 8,
and/or the total sales or receipts apportioned or attributed to Minnesota
pursuant to any other apportionment formula applicable to the taxpayer.
(b) "Minnesota property"
means total Minnesota tangible property as provided in section 290.191,
subdivisions 9 to 11, and any other tangible property located in Minnesota,
but does not include property located in a job opportunity building zone
designated under section 469.314.
Intangible property shall not be included in Minnesota property for
purposes of this section. Taxpayers who do not utilize tangible property to
apportion income shall nevertheless include Minnesota property for purposes of
this section. On a return for a short
taxable year, the amount of Minnesota property owned, as determined under
section 290.191, shall be included in Minnesota property based on a fraction in
which the numerator is the number of days in the short taxable year and the
denominator is 365.
(c) "Minnesota payrolls" means total Minnesota payrolls as provided in section 290.191,
subdivision 12, but does not include job opportunity building zone
payrolls under section 468.310, subdivision 8. Taxpayers who do not utilize payrolls to
apportion income shall nevertheless include Minnesota payrolls for purposes of
this section.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 12. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 297A.68, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 37. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONES.] (a) Purchases of tangible personal
property or taxable services by a qualified business, as defined in
section 469.310, are exempt if the property or services are primarily
used or consumed in a job opportunity building zone designated under
section 469.314.
(b) Purchase and use of construction materials and supplies
for construction of improvements to real property in a job opportunity
building zone are exempt if the improvements after completion of
construction are to be used in the conduct of a qualified business, as
defined in section 469.310. This exemption
applies regardless of whether the purchases are made by the business or
a contractor.
(c) The exemptions under this subdivision apply to a local
sales and use tax regardless of whether the local sales tax is imposed
on the sales taxable as defined under this chapter.
(d) This subdivision applies to sales made during the duration
of the designation of the zone.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for sales made on or after the day following final
enactment.
Sec. 13. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 297B.03, is amended to read:
297B.03 [EXEMPTIONS.]
There is specifically exempted from the provisions of this
chapter and from computation of the amount of tax imposed by it the following:
(1) purchase or use, including use under a lease purchase
agreement or installment sales contract made pursuant to section 465.71, of any
motor vehicle by the United States and its agencies and instrumentalities and
by any person described in and subject to the conditions provided in section
297A.67, subdivision 11;
(2) purchase or use of any motor vehicle by any person who was
a resident of another state or country at the time of the purchase and who
subsequently becomes a resident of Minnesota, provided the purchase occurred
more than 60 days prior to the date such person began residing in the state of
Minnesota and the motor vehicle was registered in the person's name in the
other state or country;
(3) purchase or use of any motor vehicle by any person making a
valid election to be taxed under the provisions of section 297A.90;
(4) purchase or use of any motor
vehicle previously registered in the state of Minnesota when such transfer
constitutes a transfer within the meaning of section 118, 331, 332, 336, 337,
338, 351, 355, 368, 721, 731, 1031, 1033, or 1563(a) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended through December 31, 1999;
(5) purchase or use of any vehicle owned by a resident of
another state and leased to a Minnesota based private or for hire carrier for
regular use in the transportation of persons or property in interstate commerce
provided the vehicle is titled in the state of the owner or secured party, and
that state does not impose a sales tax or sales tax on motor vehicles used in
interstate commerce;
(6) purchase or use of a motor vehicle by a private nonprofit
or public educational institution for use as an instructional aid in automotive
training programs operated by the institution. "Automotive training programs" includes motor vehicle
body and mechanical repair courses but does not include driver education
programs;
(7) purchase of a motor vehicle for use as an ambulance by an
ambulance service licensed under section 144E.10;
(8) purchase of a motor vehicle by or for a public library, as
defined in section 134.001, subdivision 2, as a bookmobile or library delivery
vehicle;
(9) purchase of a ready-mixed concrete truck;
(10) purchase or use of a motor vehicle by a town for use
exclusively for road maintenance, including snowplows and dump trucks, but not
including automobiles, vans, or pickup trucks;
(11) purchase or use of a motor vehicle by a corporation,
society, association, foundation, or institution organized and operated
exclusively for charitable, religious, or educational purposes, except a public
school, university, or library, but only if the vehicle is:
(i) a truck, as defined in section 168.011, a bus, as defined
in section 168.011, or a passenger automobile, as defined in section 168.011,
if the automobile is designed and used for carrying more than nine persons
including the driver; and
(ii) intended to be used primarily to transport tangible
personal property or individuals, other than employees, to whom the
organization provides service in performing its charitable, religious, or
educational purpose;
(12) purchase of a motor vehicle for use by a transit provider
exclusively to provide transit service is exempt if the transit provider is
either (i) receiving financial assistance or reimbursement under section 174.24
or 473.384, or (ii) operating under section 174.29, 473.388, or 473.405;
(13) purchase or use of a motor vehicle by a qualified business,
as defined in section 469.310, located in a job opportunity building
zone, if the motor vehicle is principally garaged in the job opportunity
building zone and is primarily used as part of or in direct support of
the person's operations carried on in the job opportunity building
zone. The exemption under this
clause also applies to any local sales and use tax.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for sales made after December 31, 2003.
Sec. 14. [469.310]
[DEFINITIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[SCOPE.] For purposes of sections 469.310 to 469.320, the
following terms have the meanings given.
Subd. 2. [AGRICULTURAL PROCESSING FACILITY.] "Agricultural
processing facility" means one or more facilities or operations that
transform, package, sort, or grade livestock or livestock products,
agricultural commodities, or plants or plant products into goods that
are used for intermediate or final consumption including goods for
nonfood use, and surrounding property.
Subd. 3.
[APPLICANT.] "Applicant" means a local government unit
or units applying for designation of an area as a job opportunity
building zone or a joint powers board, established under section 471.59,
acting on behalf of two or more local government units.
Subd. 4.
[COMMISSIONER.] "Commissioner" means the commissioner
of trade and economic development.
Subd. 5.
[DEVELOPMENT PLAN.] "Development plan" means a plan
meeting the requirements of section 469.311.
Subd. 6. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE OR ZONE.] "Job opportunity building
zone" or "zone" means a zone designated by the
commissioner under section 469.314, and includes an agricultural
processing facility zone.
Subd. 7. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE PERCENTAGE OR ZONE PERCENTAGE.] "Job
opportunity building zone percentage" or "zone percentage"
means the following fraction reduced to a percentage:
(1) the numerator of the fraction is:
(i) the ratio of the taxpayer's property factor under section
290.191 located in the zone for the taxable year over the property
factor numerator determined under section 290.191, plus
(ii) the ratio of the taxpayer's job opportunity building
zone payroll factor under subdivision 8 over the payroll factor numerator
determined under section 290.191; and
(2) the denominator of the fraction is two.
When calculating the zone percentage for a business that is
part of a unitary business as defined under section 290.17, subdivision
4, the denominator of the payroll and property factors is the Minnesota
payroll and property of the unitary business as reported on the combined
report under section 290.17, subdivision 4, paragraph (j).
Subd. 8. [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE PAYROLL FACTOR.] "Job opportunity building
zone payroll factor" or "job opportunity building zone
payroll" is that portion of the payroll factor under section 290.191
that represents:
(1) wages or salaries paid to an individual for services
performed in a job opportunity building zone; or
(2) wages or salaries paid to individuals working from offices
within a job opportunity building zone if their employment requires them
to work outside the zone and the work is incidental to the work
performed by the individual within the zone.
Subd. 9. [LOCAL
GOVERNMENT UNIT.] "Local government unit" means a statutory
or home rule charter city, county, town, or school district.
Subd. 10.
[PERSON.] "Person" includes an individual, corporation,
partnership, limited liability company, association, or any other
entity.
Subd. 11. [QUALIFIED BUSINESS.] (a) "Qualified
business" means a person carrying on a trade or business at a place
of business located within a job opportunity building zone.
(b) A person that relocates a trade or business from outside
a job opportunity building zone into a zone is not a qualified business,
unless the business:
(1)(i) increases full-time employment in the first full year
of operation within the job opportunity building zone by at least 20
percent measured relative to the operations that were relocated; or
(ii) makes a capital investment in the property located within
a zone equivalent to ten percent of the gross revenues of operation that
were relocated in the immediately preceding taxable year; and
(2) enters a binding written agreement with the commissioner
that:
(i) pledges the business will meet the requirements of clause
(1);
(ii) provides for repayment of all tax benefits enumerated
under section 469.315 to the business under the procedures in section
469.319, if the requirements of clause (1) are not met; and
(iii) contains any other terms the commissioner determines
appropriate.
Subd. 12.
[RELOCATES.] (a) "Relocates" means that the trade or
business:
(1) ceases one or more operations or functions at another
location in Minnesota and begins performing substantially the same
operations or functions at a location in a job opportunity building
zone; or
(2) reduces employment at another location in Minnesota during
a period starting one year before and ending one year after it begins
operations in a job opportunity building zone and its employees in the
job opportunity building zone are engaged in the same line of business
as the employees at the location where it reduced employment.
(b) "Relocate" does not include an expansion by a
business that establishes a new facility that does not replace or supplant
an existing operation or employment, in whole or in part.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 15. [469.311]
[DEVELOPMENT PLAN.]
(a) An applicant for designation of a job opportunity building
zone must adopt a written development plan for the zone before
submitting the application to the commissioner.
(b) The development plan must contain, at least, the following:
(1) a map of the proposed zone that indicates the geographic
boundaries of the zone, the total area, and present use and conditions
generally of the land and structures within those boundaries;
(2) evidence of community support and commitment from local
government, local workforce investment boards, school districts, and
other education institutions, business groups, and the public;
(3) a description of the methods proposed to increase economic
opportunity and expansion, facilitate infrastructure improvement, reduce
the local regulatory burden, and identify job-training opportunities;
(4)
current social, economic, and demographic characteristics of the
proposed zone and anticipated improvements in education, health, human
services, and employment if the zone is created;
(5) a description of anticipated activity in the zone and
each subzone, including, but not limited to, industrial use, industrial
site reuse, commercial or retail use, and residential use; and
(6) any other information required by the commissioner.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 16. [469.312] [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONES; LIMITATIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[MAXIMUM SIZE.] A job opportunity building zone may not exceed
5,000 acres. For a zone designated as
an agricultural processing facility zone, the zone also may not exceed
the size of a site necessary for the agricultural processing facility,
including ancillary operations and space for expansion in the reasonably
foreseeable future.
Subd. 2.
[SUBZONES.] The area of a job opportunity building zone may
consist of one or more noncontiguous areas or subzones.
Subd. 3.
[OUTSIDE METROPOLITAN AREA.] The area of a job opportunity
building zone must be located outside of the metropolitan area, as
defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2.
Subd. 4. [BORDER
CITY DEVELOPMENT ZONES.] (a) The area of a job opportunity building
zone may not include the area of a border city development zone
designated under section 469.1731. The
city may remove property from a border city development zone contingent
upon the area being designated as a job opportunity building zone. Before removing a parcel of property from a
border city development zone, the city must obtain the written consent
to the removal from each recipient that is located on the parcel and
receives incentives under the border city development zone. Consent of any other property owner or taxpayer
in the border city development zone is not required.
(b) A city may not provide tax incentives under section 469.1734
to individuals or businesses for operations or activity in a job
opportunity building zone.
Subd. 5.
[DURATION LIMIT.] The maximum duration of a zone is 12
years. The applicant may request a
shorter duration. The commissioner
may specify a shorter duration, regardless of the requested duration.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 17. [469.313]
[APPLICATION FOR DESIGNATION.]
Subdivision 1.
[WHO MAY APPLY.] One or more local government units, or a
joint powers board under section 471.59, acting on behalf of two or more
units, may apply for designation of an area as a job opportunity
building zone. All or part of the
area proposed for designation as a zone must be located within the
boundaries of each of the governmental units.
A local government unit may not submit or have submitted on its
behalf more than one application for designation of a job opportunity
building zone.
Subd. 2.
[APPLICATION CONTENT.] The application must include:
(1) a development plan meeting the requirements of section
469.311;
(2)
the proposed duration of the zone, not to exceed 12 years;
(3) a resolution or ordinance adopted by each of the cities
or towns and the counties in which the zone is located, agreeing to
provide all of the local tax exemptions provided under section 469.315;
(4) if the proposed zone includes area in a border city development
zone, written consent to removal of the property from the border city
development zone to the extent required by section 469.312, subdivision
4; and
(5) supporting evidence to allow the commissioner to evaluate
the application under the criteria in section 469.314.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 18. [469.314]
[DESIGNATION OF JOB OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONES.]
Subdivision 1.
[COMMISSIONER TO DESIGNATE.] (a) The commissioner, in
consultation with the commissioner of revenue and the director of the
office of strategic and long-range planning, shall designate not more
than ten job opportunity building zones. In making the designations, the commissioner shall
consider need and likelihood of success to yield the most economic
development and revitalization of economically distressed rural areas of
Minnesota.
(b) In addition to the designations under paragraph (a),
the commissioner may, in consultation with the commissioners of agriculture
and revenue, designate up to five agricultural processing facility
zones.
(c) The commissioner may, upon designation of a zone, modify
the development plan, including the boundaries of the zone or subzones,
if in the commissioner's opinion a modified plan would better meet the
objectives of the job opportunity building zone program. The commissioner shall notify the applicant
of the modification and provide a statement of the reasons for the
modifications.
Subd. 2. [NEED
INDICATORS.] (a) In evaluating applications to determine the need for
designation of a job opportunity building zone, the commissioner shall
consider the following factors as indicators of need:
(1) the percentage of the population that is below 200 percent
of the poverty rate, compared with the state as a whole;
(2) the extent to which the area's average weekly wage is
significantly lower than the state average weekly wage;
(3) the amount of property in or near the proposed zone that
is deteriorated or underutilized;
(4) the extent to which the median sale price of housing
units in the area is below the state median;
(5) the extent to which the median household income of the
area is lower than the state median household income;
(6) the extent to which the area experienced a population
loss during the 20-year period ending the year before the application
is made;
(7) the extent to which an area has experienced sudden or
severe job loss as a result of closing of businesses or other employers;
(8)
the extent to which property in the area would remain underdeveloped or
nonperforming due to physical characteristics;
(9) the extent to which the area has substantial real property
with adequate infrastructure and energy to support new or expanded
development; and
(10) the extent to which the business startup or expansion
rates are significantly lower than the respective rate for the state.
(b) In applying the need indicators, the best available data
should be used. If reported data are
not available for the proposed zone, data for the smallest area that is
available and includes the area of the proposed zone may be used. The commissioner may require applicants
to provide data to demonstrate how the area meets one or more of the
indicators of need.
Subd. 3.
[SUCCESS INDICATORS.] In determining the likelihood of success
of a proposed zone, the commissioner shall consider:
(1) the strength and viability of the proposed development
goals, objectives, and strategies in the development plan;
(2) whether the development plan is creative and innovative
in comparison to other applications;
(3) local public and private commitment to development of
the proposed zone and the potential cooperation of surrounding communities;
(4) existing resources available to the proposed zone;
(5) how the designation of the zone would relate to other
economic and community development projects and to regional initiatives
or programs;
(6) how the regulatory burden will be eased for businesses
operating in the proposed zone;
(7) proposals to establish and link job creation and job
training; and
(8) the extent to which the development is directed at encouraging
and that designation of the zone is likely to result in the creation of
high-paying jobs.
Subd. 4.
[DESIGNATION SCHEDULE.] (a) The schedule in paragraphs (b) to
(e) applies to the designation of job opportunity building zones.
(b) The commissioner shall publish the form for applications
and any procedural, form, or content requirements for applications by no
later than August 1, 2003. The commissioner
may publish these requirements on the Internet, in the State Register,
or by any other means the commissioner determines appropriate to
disseminate the information to potential applicants for designation.
(c) Applications must be submitted by October 15, 2003.
(d) The commissioner shall designate the zones by no later
than December 31, 2003.
(e) The designation of the zones takes effect January 1,
2004.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec.
19. [469.315] [TAX INCENTIVES AVAILABLE
IN ZONES.]
Qualified businesses that operate in a job opportunity building
zone, individuals who invest in a qualified business that operates in a
job opportunity building zone, and property located in a job opportunity
building zone qualify for:
(1) exemption from individual income taxes as provided under
section 469.316;
(2) exemption from corporate franchise taxes as provided
under section 469.317;
(3) exemption from the state sales and use tax and any local
sales and use taxes on qualifying purchases as provided in section
297A.68, subdivision 37;
(4) exemption from the state sales tax on motor vehicles
and any local sales tax on motor vehicles as provided under section
297B.03;
(5) exemption from the property tax as provided in section
272.02, subdivision 56;
(6) exemption from the wind energy production tax under section
272.029, subdivision 7; and
(7) the jobs credit allowed under section 469.318.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 20. [469.316]
[INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX EXEMPTION.]
Subdivision 1.
[APPLICATION.] An individual operating a trade or business in
a job opportunity building zone, and an individual making a qualifying
investment in a qualified business operating in a job opportunity
building zone qualifies for the exemptions from taxes imposed under
chapter 290, as provided in this section. The exemptions provided under this section apply only to
the extent that the income otherwise would be taxable under chapter
290. Subtractions under this section
from federal taxable income, alternative minimum taxable income, or
any other base subject to tax are limited to the amount that otherwise
would be included in the tax base absent the exemption under this
section.
Subd. 2.
[RENTS.] An individual is exempt from the taxes imposed under
chapter 290 on net rents derived from real or tangible personal property
located in a zone for a taxable year in which the zone was designated a
job opportunity building zone.
If tangible personal property was used both within and outside of
the zone, the exemption amount for the net rental income must be
multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of days
the property was used in the zone and the denominator of which is the
total days.
Subd. 3.
[BUSINESS INCOME.] An individual is exempt from the taxes
imposed under chapter 290 on net income from the operation of a
qualified business in a job opportunity building zone. If the trade or business is carried on
within and without the zone and the individual is not a resident of
Minnesota, the exemption must be apportioned based on the zone
percentage for the taxable year.
If the trade or business is carried on within and without the
zone and the individual is a resident of Minnesota, the exemption must
be apportioned based on the zone percentage for the taxable year, except
the ratios under section 469.310, subdivision 7, clause (1), items (i)
and (ii), must use the denominators of the property and payroll factors
determined under section 290.191.
No subtraction is allowed under this section in excess of 20
percent of the sum of the job opportunity building zone payroll and the
adjusted basis of the property at the time that the property is first
used in the job opportunity building zone by the business.
Subd. 4. [CAPITAL GAINS.] (a) An individual is
exempt from the taxes imposed under chapter 290 on:
(1) net gain derived on a sale or exchange of real property
located in the zone. If the property
was held by the individual during a period when the zone was not
designated, the gain must be prorated based on the percentage of time,
measured in calendar days, that the real property was held by the
individual during the period the zone designation was in effect to the
total period of time the real property was held by the individual;
(2) net gain derived on a sale or exchange of tangible personal
property used by a qualified business in the zone. If the property was held by the individual during a period
when the zone was not designated, the gain must be prorated based on the
percentage of time, measured in calendar days, that the property was
held by the individual during the period the zone designation was in
effect to the total period of time the property was held by the
individual. If the tangible personal
property was used outside of the zone during the period of the zone's
designation, the exemption must be multiplied by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the number of days the property was used in the
zone during the time of the designation and the denominator of which is the
total days the property was held during the time of the designation; and
(3) net gain derived on a sale of an ownership interest in
a qualified business operating in the job opportunity building zone,
meeting the requirements of paragraph (b).
The exemption on the gain must be multiplied by the zone
percentage of the business for the taxable year prior to the sale.
(b) A qualified business meets the requirements of paragraph
(a), clause (3), if it is a corporation, an S corporation, or a partnership,
and for the taxable year its job opportunity building zone percentage
exceeds 25 percent. For purposes
of paragraph (a), clause (3), the zone percentage must be calculated by
modifying the ratios under section 469.310, subdivision 7, clause (1),
items (i) and (ii), to use the denominators of the property and payroll
factors determined under section 290.191. Upon the request of an individual holding an ownership
interest in the entity, the entity must certify to the owner, in
writing, the job opportunity building zone percentage needed to
determine the exemption.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 21. [469.317]
[CORPORATE FRANCHISE TAX EXEMPTION.]
(a) A qualified business is exempt from taxation under section
290.02, the alternative minimum tax under section 290.0921, and the
minimum fee under section 290.0922, on the portion of its income
attributable to operations within the zone. This exemption is determined as follows:
(1) for purposes of the tax imposed under section 290.02,
by multiplying its taxable net income by its zone percentage and subtracting
the result in determining taxable income;
(2) for purposes of the alternative minimum tax under section
290.0921, by multiplying its alternative minimum taxable income by its
zone percentage and reducing alternative minimum taxable income by this
amount; and
(3) for purposes of the minimum fee under section 290.0922,
by excluding property and payroll in the zone from the computations
of the fee.
(b) No subtraction is allowed under this section in excess
of 20 percent of the sum of the corporation's job opportunity building
zone payroll and the adjusted basis of the property at the time that the
property is first used in the job opportunity building zone by the
corporation.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31,
2003.
Sec. 22. [469.318] [JOBS CREDIT.]
Subdivision 1.
[CREDIT ALLOWED.] A qualified business is allowed a credit
against the taxes imposed under chapter 290. The credit equals seven percent of the:
(1) lesser of:
(i) zone payroll for the taxable year, less the zone payroll
for the base year; or
(ii) total Minnesota payroll for the taxable year, less total
Minnesota payroll for the base year; minus
(2) $30,000 multiplied by (the number of full-time equivalent
employee positions that the qualified business employs in the job
opportunity building zone for the taxable year, minus the number of
full-time equivalent employees the business employed in the zone in the
base year, but not less than zero).
Subd. 2.
[DEFINITIONS.] (a) For purposes of this section, the following
terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Base year" means the taxable year beginning
during the calendar year in which the commissioner designated the zone.
(c) "Full-time equivalent employee position" means
the equivalent of annualized expected hours of work equal to 2,080 hours.
(d) "Minnesota payroll" means the wages or
salaries attributed to Minnesota under section 290.191, subdivision 12,
for the qualified business or the unitary business of which the qualified
business is a part, whichever is greater.
(e) "Zone payroll" means wages or salaries used to
determine the zone payroll factor for the qualified business.
Subd. 3.
[INFLATION ADJUSTMENT.] For taxable years beginning after
December 31, 2004, the dollar amount in subdivision 1, clause (2), is
annually adjusted for inflation. The
commissioner of revenue shall adjust the amount by the percentage
determined under section 290.06, subdivision 2d, for the taxable year.
Subd. 4.
[REFUNDABLE.] If the amount of the credit exceeds the
liability for tax under chapter 290, the commissioner of revenue shall
refund the excess to the qualified business.
Subd. 5.
[APPROPRIATION.] An amount sufficient to pay the refunds
authorized by this section is appropriated to the commissioner of
revenue from the general fund.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 23. [469.319]
[REPAYMENT OF TAX BENEFITS.]
Subdivision 1.
[REPAYMENT OBLIGATION.] A business must repay the amount of
the tax reduction received during the two years immediately before it
ceased to operate in the zone, if the business:
(1) received tax reductions authorized by section 469.315;
(2) relocated into a job opportunity building zone after
designation of the zone; and
(3) ceased to operate its facility located within the job
opportunity building zone or otherwise ceases to be or is not a qualified
business.
Subd. 2. [DEFINITIONS.] (a) For purposes of this
section, the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Business" means any person who received tax
benefits enumerated in section 469.315.
(c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of
revenue.
Subd. 3.
[DISPOSITION OR REPAYMENT.] The repayment must be paid to the
state to the extent it represents a state tax reduction and to the
county to the extent it represents a property tax reduction. Any amount repaid to the state must be deposited
in the general fund. Any amount repaid
to the county for the property tax exemption must be distributed to the
local governments with authority to levy taxes in the zone in the same
manner provided for distribution of payment of delinquent property
taxes. Any repayment of local sales
taxes must be repaid to the city or county imposing the local sales tax.
Subd. 4.
[REPAYMENT PROCEDURES.] (a) For the repayment of taxes imposed
under chapter 290 or 297A or local taxes collected pursuant to section
297A.99, a business must file an amended return with the commissioner of
revenue and pay any taxes required to be repaid within 30 days after
ceasing to do business in the zone.
The amount required to be repaid is determined by calculating the
tax for the period or periods for which repayment is required without
regard to the exemptions and credits allowed under section 469.315.
(b) For the repayment of taxes imposed under chapter 297B,
a business must pay any taxes required to be repaid to the motor vehicle
registrar, as agent for the commissioner of revenue, within 30 days
after ceasing to do business in the zone.
(c) For the repayment of property taxes, the county auditor
shall prepare a tax statement for the business, applying the applicable
tax extension rates for each payable year and provide a copy to the
business. The business must pay the
taxes to the county treasurer within 30 days after receipt of the tax
statement.
(d) The provisions of chapters 270 and 289A relating to the
commissioner's authority to audit, assess, and collect the tax and to
hear appeals are applicable to the repayment required under paragraphs
(a) and (b). The commissioner may
impose civil penalties as provided in chapter 289A, and the additional
tax and penalties are subject to interest at the rate provided in section
270.75, from 30 days after ceasing to do business in the job opportunity
building zone until the date the tax is paid.
(e) If a property tax is not repaid under paragraph (c),
the county treasurer shall add the amount required to be repaid to
the property taxes assessed against the property for payment in the year
following the year in which the treasurer discovers that the business
ceased to operate in the job opportunity building zone.
(f) For determining the tax required to be repaid, a tax
reduction is deemed to have been received on the date that the tax
would have been due if the taxpayer had not been entitled to the
exemption.
(g) The commissioner may assess the repayment of taxes under
paragraph (d) any time within two years after the business ceases to
operate in the job opportunity building zone, or within any period of
limitations for the assessment of tax under section 289A.38, whichever
period is later.
Subd. 5. [WAIVER
AUTHORITY.] The commissioner may waive all or part of a repayment, if
the commissioner, in consultation with the commissioner of trade and
economic development and appropriate officials from the local government
units in which the qualified business is located, determines that
requiring repayment of the tax is not in the best interest of the state
or the local government units and the business ceased operating as a
result of circumstances beyond its control including, but not limited
to:
(1) a natural disaster;
(2) unforeseen industry trends; or
(3) loss of a major supplier or customer.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 24. [469.320]
[ZONE PERFORMANCE; REMEDIES.]
Subdivision 1.
[REPORTING REQUIREMENT.] An applicant receiving designation of
a job opportunity building zone under section 469.314 must annually
report to the commissioner on its progress in meeting the zone
performance goals under the development plan for the zone.
Subd. 2.
[PROCEDURES.] For reports required by subdivision 1, the
commissioner may prescribe:
(1) the required time or times by which the reports must be
filed;
(2) the form of the report; and
(3) the information required to be included in the report.
Subd. 3.
[REMEDIES.] If the commissioner determines, based on a report
filed under subdivision 1 or other available information, that a zone or
subzone is failing to meet its performance goals, the commissioner may
take any actions the commissioner determines appropriate, including
modification of the boundaries of the zone or a subzone or termination
of the zone or a subzone. Before
taking any action, the commissioner shall consult with the applicant and
the affected local government units, including notifying them of the
proposed actions to be taken.
The commissioner shall publish any order modifying a zone in the
State Register and on the Internet. The
applicant may appeal the commissioner's order under the contested
case procedures of chapter 14.
Subd. 4.
[EXISTING BUSINESSES.] An action to remove area from a zone or
to terminate a zone under this section does not apply to:
(1) the property tax on improvements constructed before the
first January 2 following publication of the commissioner's order;
(2) sales tax on purchases made before the first day of the
next calendar month beginning at least 30 days after publication of
the commissioner's order; and
(3) individual income tax or corporate franchise tax attributable
to a facility that was in operation before the publication of the
commissioner's order.
Sec. 25. [477A.08] [JOB
OPPORTUNITY BUILDING ZONE AID.]
Subdivision 1.
[ELIGIBILITY.] (a) For each assessment year that the exemption
for job opportunity building zone property is in effect under section
272.02, subdivision 56, the assessor shall determine the difference
between the actual net tax capacity and the net tax capacity that would
be determined for the job opportunity building zone if the exemption
were not in effect.
(b) Each city and county is
eligible for aid equal to one-half of:
(1) the amount by which the sum of the differences determined
in paragraph (a) for the corresponding assessment year exceeds three
percent of the city's or county's total taxable net tax capacity for
taxes payable in 2003, multiplied by
(2) the city's or the county's, as applicable, average local
tax rate for taxes payable in 2003.
Subd. 2.
[CERTIFICATION.] The county assessor shall notify the
commissioner of revenue of the amount determined under subdivision 1,
paragraph (b), clause (1), for any city or county that qualifies for aid
under this section by June 30 of the assessment year, in a form
prescribed by the commissioner. The
commissioner shall notify each city and county of its qualifying aid
amount by August 15 of the assessment year.
Subd. 3.
[APPROPRIATION; PAYMENT.] The commissioner shall pay each city
and county its qualifying aid amount by July 20 of the following
year. An amount sufficient to pay the
aid under this section is appropriated to the commissioner of revenue
from the general fund.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective beginning for aid based on property taxes assessed
in 2004, payable in 2005.
Sec. 26. [APPROPRIATION;
COST OF ADMINISTRATION.]
$100,000 in fiscal year 2004 and $30,000 in fiscal year 2005
are appropriated to the commissioner of trade and economic development
for the cost of designating job opportunity building zones.
$53,000 in fiscal year 2004 and $29,000 in fiscal year 2005
are appropriated to the commissioner of revenue for the cost of administering
the tax provisions of this act.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to economic development;
authorizing the establishing of job opportunity building zones; providing tax
exemptions for individuals and business entities in the zones; providing for
repayment of tax benefits under certain circumstances; providing for the
payment of state aid; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 272.02, by adding a subdivision; 272.029, by adding a subdivision;
290.01, subdivisions 19b, 29; 290.06, subdivision 2c, by adding a subdivision;
290.067, subdivision 1; 290.0671, subdivision 1; 290.091, subdivision 2;
290.0921, subdivision 3; 290.0922, subdivision 3; 297A.68, by adding a
subdivision; 297B.03; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 469; 477A."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Taxes.
The report was adopted.
Hackbarth from the Committee on Environment and Natural
Resources Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 208, A bill for an act relating to energy; providing
that renewable energy sources include mixed municipal waste; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 216B.1691, subdivision 1; 216B.2422, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, after line 20, insert:
"(c) For a generation facility that utilizes an
eligible energy technology based on the combustion of fuel, electricity
produced by the facility may only count toward an electric utility's
renewable energy objectives under subdivision 2 if the facility:
(1) was constructed in compliance with new source performance
standards promulgated under the federal Clean Air Act, United States
Code, title 42, chapter 85, for a generation facility of that type; or
(2) employs the maximum achievable or best available control
technology available for a generation facility of that type, identified
by the federal Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the Clean Air
Act.
(d) A renewable energy source listed in paragraph (a) may
be blended or co-fired with other fuels in a generation facility, but
only the percentage of electricity that is attributable to the renewable
energy source can be counted toward an electric utility's renewable
energy objectives under subdivision 2.
This percentage shall be calculated as the thermal content of the
renewable energy source as a percentage of the overall thermal content
of the blended fuel used to generate electricity."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Sykora from the Committee on Education Policy to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 218, A bill for an act relating to education;
providing for a pilot project for the independent review of parental
involvement programs; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 124D.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. [PILOT
PROJECT TO EVALUATE PARENT INVOLVEMENT POLICIES AND STRATEGIES.]
Subdivision 1.
[DISTRICT AND SCHOOL SITE POLICY EVALUATION.] A school board may
elect to participate in a two-year pilot project to evaluate parent
involvement policies and strategies in the district and in school sites,
with the goal of improving the academic achievement of all students within
the district, including at-risk students.
Participating districts and school sites must establish parent
involvement review committees consistent with subdivision 2, and may
adapt the parent involvement policy and process described in United States
Code, title 20, section 6319, for purposes consistent with this project.
Subd. 2. [PARENT
INVOLVEMENT REVIEW COMMITTEES.] A school board electing to
participate and interested school sites within that district must
establish a parent involvement review committee or expand the purview of
an existing committee composed of a majority of parents. The committees must evaluate the
effectiveness of district and school site programs and strategies
intended to provide all parents with meaningful opportunities to
participate in the process of educating students. The committees, among other things, may
evaluate the operation of the instruction and curriculum advisory
committee or building team under Minnesota Statutes, section
120B.11, or parent involvement programs developed under Minnesota
Statutes, section 124D.895. A
majority of committee members must be parents of students enrolled in
the district or school site, if applicable. The committee also must include teachers employed by the
district and who teach at a school site, if applicable. A district must
assist participating school sites at the request of the school site.
Subd. 3. [NOTICE
OF PARTICIPATION; NOTICE TO PARENTS.] (a) A school board electing to
participate under this section must notify the commissioner of children,
families, and learning of its participation and the participation of
interested school sites on a form supplied by the commissioner. The commissioner may assist
participating districts and school sites at the request of the district
or school site.
(b) Participating school districts must transmit timely effective
notice of this project to parent organizations throughout the district
and to parents of children enrolled in district schools.
Subd. 4.
[REPORT.] Participating districts and school sites must report
the findings of the evaluation and related recommendations annually by
March 1 to the school board, which shall transmit a summary of the
findings and recommendations to the commissioner. Information the commissioner receives under
this subdivision may be used to modify guidelines and model plans for
parent involvement programs under Minnesota Statutes, section 124D.895.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment and applies to
the 2003-2004 and 2004-2005 school years."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to education; providing for a
pilot project for the independent review of parental involvement policies and
strategies."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Holberg from the Committee on Civil Law to which was referred:
H. F. No. 327, A bill for an act relating to local government;
shooting ranges; defining generally accepted operation practices; providing for
relation to ordinances, closing and relocation, noise standards, public access,
and nuisance liability; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 87A.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1.
[87A.01] [DEFINITIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[APPLICABILITY.] The definitions in this section apply to
sections 87A.01 to 87A.08.
Subd. 2.
[PERSON.] "Person" means an individual, association,
proprietorship, partnership, corporation, club, political subdivision,
or other legal entity.
Subd.
3. [SHOOTING RANGE OR RANGE.] "Shooting
range" or "range" means an area or facility designated or
operated for the use of firearms, as defined in section 97A.015,
subdivision 19, or archery, and includes shooting preserves as described
in section 97A.115 or any other Minnesota law.
Subd. 4.
[GENERALLY ACCEPTED OPERATION PRACTICES.] "Generally accepted
operation practices" means those voluntary guidelines adopted by
the commissioner of natural resources under section 87A.02 for the safe
operation of shooting ranges.
Subd. 5. [UNIT
OF GOVERNMENT.] "Unit of government" means a home rule
charter or statutory city, county, town, municipal corporation, or other
political subdivision, or any of their instrumentalities.
Sec. 2. [87A.02]
[GENERALLY ACCEPTED OPERATION PRACTICES.]
The commissioner of natural resources must develop and adopt
generally accepted operation practices for shooting ranges. In developing generally accepted operation
practices, the commissioner must consult with range operators and any
consultants the range operators provide.
The practices must include the noise standards in section
87A.06. The practices must
provide for operation of shooting preserves within their boundaries
notwithstanding any discharge distance limitations provided by rule or
otherwise concerning hunting on other land. The commissioner must review the generally accepted operation
practices at least every five years and revise as the commissioner
considers necessary for safe operation of a shooting range. The commissioner must adopt initial
guidelines by July 1, 2003.
Sec. 3. [87A.03] [LOCAL
ORDINANCES; EXISTING OPERATIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[COMPLIANT RANGES MAY CONTINUE OPERATING.] A shooting range that is
in operation and is in substantial compliance with existing law at the
time of the enactment of an ordinance of a unit of government affecting,
directly or indirectly, operation or use of a shooting range must be
permitted to continue in operation even if the operation of the shooting
range at a later date does not conform to the new ordinance or an
amendment to an existing ordinance.
Subd. 2.
[COMPLIANT RANGES MAY REPAIR, REMODEL, REPLACE, EXPAND.] A shooting
range that operates in substantial compliance with generally accepted
operation practices, even if not in compliance with an ordinance of a
unit of government affecting, directly or indirectly, operation or use
of a shooting range, must be permitted to do all of the following within
its geographic boundaries if done in accordance with generally accepted
operation practices:
(1) repair, remodel, improve, replace, construct, or reinforce
any conforming or nonconforming building or structure as may be
necessary or desirable in the interest of safety or to secure the
continued use of the range, building, or structure;
(2) reconstruct, repair, restore, remodel, improve, replace,
or resume the use of any conforming or nonconforming building or
structure damaged by fire, collapse, erosion, wear and tear,
obsolescence, explosion, act of God, or act of war;
(3) expand or increase its membership or opportunities for
public participation;
(4) make those repairs or improvements necessary or desirable
under generally accepted operation practices;
(5)
expand or increase events, facilities, and activities; and
(6) conduct shooting activities and discharge firearms between
7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., which is "daytime" under Minnesota
Rules, part 7030.0200, subpart 3, in effect on March 1, 1999.
Nothing in this subdivision exempts any newly constructed
or remodeled building on a shooting range from compliance with fire
safety, handicapped accessibility, elevator safety, bleacher safety, or
other provisions of the State Building Code that have mandatory
statewide application.
Sec. 4. [87A.04]
[CLOSING OR RELOCATING SHOOTING RANGES; PAYMENT OF CERTAIN COSTS.]
Subdivision 1.
[CLOSURE OR RELOCATION CRITERIA.] A shooting range either may
be closed under subdivision 3, or relocated under subdivision 4, by a
state agency or unit of government only if, because of new, permitted
development of adjacent land, the range becomes a clear, immediate, and
proven safety hazard to the adjacent population and it cannot be brought
into compliance with generally accepted operation practices concerning
range safety with range or operation improvements.
Subd. 2.
[PROCEDURE.] The clear and immediate safety hazard must be
proven at a declaratory judgment proceeding in district court. The plaintiff must provide in the complaint
a clear and precise statement of the complete factual basis for alleging
a safety hazard. The court must make
written findings and conclusions as to the hazard alleged in the
complaint and whether range improvements are available to bring the
range into compliance with the generally accepted operation practices
concerning range safety. If the
court concludes that there is a clear and immediate safety hazard and
the operation of the shooting range can be brought into compliance with
the generally accepted operation practices concerning range safety with
range or operation improvements, the state agency or unit of government
that permitted the development must pay for the range or operation
improvements.
Subd. 3.
[CLOSURE.] If a clear and immediate safety hazard is proven as
required under subdivisions 1 and 2, a shooting range may be closed by
the state agency or the unit of government if the agency or unit of
government closing the shooting range pays the fair market value of the
range operation as a going concern to the operators and the fair market
value of the land, including improvements, to the owner of the land.
Subd. 4.
[RELOCATION.] If a clear and immediate safety hazard is proven
as required under subdivisions 1 and 2, upon request by the operator of
the shooting range, the agency or unit of government must relocate the
shooting range to a suitable new location. The agency or unit of government may use its power of
eminent domain to acquire the new location.
If a range is relocated, the state agency or unit of government
must pay the operator the fair market value of the range as a going concern
and the owner the fair market value of the land and improvements, minus
all reasonable, additional direct costs incurred by the state agency or
unit of government in acquiring the new location and moving the range to
the new site.
Subd. 5.
[TRANSFER OF TITLE.] The shooting range owner and operator
must transfer their interests in the property to the agency or unit of
government after full and final payment under subdivision 3 or after the
relocation is completed under subdivision 4.
Sec. 5. [87A.05] [NOISE
BUFFERING OR ATTENUATION.]
(a) If a shooting range is operated in substantial compliance
with generally accepted operation practices and if property located
within one mile of the exterior property boundary of the range is
rezoned or developed, the unit of government must provide for noise
buffers, attenuation devices, safety improvements, or equivalent
measures that are:
(1)
within the new development as a condition for developing the property or
as supplied by the unit of government; or
(2) supplied or funded by the unit of government for location
in the range.
(b) Property owners, developers, units of government, and
ranges may negotiate and provide for noise buffers or attenuation
devices located on or off the range.
(c) Any noise buffering or attenuation under this section
must comply with the noise standards prescribed by section 87A.06.
Sec. 6. [87A.06] [NOISE
STANDARDS.]
Subdivision 1.
[NOISE STANDARDS.] (a) A person who owns or operates or uses a
shooting range in this state is subject only to the noise standards and
procedures in Minnesota Rules, parts 7030.0010 to 7030.0080, in effect
on March 1, 1999. The noise area
classifications shall be utilized as well as the provisions for daytime
and nighttime standards within those classifications. The steady state noise L10 and L50
standards for each period of the day or night within each noise area
classification shall be replaced by a single Leq(h) standard for
impulsive noise that is two dBA lower than that of the L10 level for
steady state noise.
(b) This section and the standards in paragraph (a) shall
be applied in the same manner as a generally accepted operation practice
for all of the provisions of this chapter.
Subd. 2.
[ACTIONS BASED ON NOISE.] Any action brought against a range
on the basis of noise or disturbance by impulsive noise from a shooting
range must be dismissed unless such action is initially supported by
affidavit of a qualified or licensed noise consultant stating that noise
measurements were taken by proper instruments, which were calibrated
properly, and according to the procedures and standards in Minnesota
Rules, parts 7030.0010 to 7030.0080.
Sec. 7. [87A.07]
[NUISANCE ACTIONS; SUBSTANTIAL COMPLIANCE WITH GENERALLY ACCEPTED OPERATION
PRACTICES.]
A person who owns, operates, or uses a shooting range in
this state that is in substantial compliance with generally accepted
operation practices is not subject to any action for nuisance and no
court of this state may enjoin or restrain the use or operation of such
a range. This section does not prohibit
an action that seeks monetary damages for personal injury or tangible
property damage caused by recklessness or negligence in the operation of
the range or by a person using the range in a reckless or negligent
manner.
Sec. 8. [87A.08]
[PUBLIC ACCESS TO SHOOTING RANGES.]
Shooting ranges maintained or operated, in whole or in part,
with public funds must be reasonably available for public use. A reasonable fee in an amount not to exceed
the actual additional direct costs caused by public use may be charged.
Sec. 9. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 to 8 are effective the day following final enactment."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on
Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 361, A bill for an act relating to elections;
providing procedures and criteria for calling special elections to fill
vacancies in certain instances; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
365.52, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 367.03, subdivision 6.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line 15, strike the second comma
Page 2, line 3, delete the second comma
Page 2, line 7, after the period, insert "Where the
town board or appointment committee fails to fill a vacancy in the position
of an elected town official by appointment,"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental Operations and
Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 471, A bill for an act relating to elections;
requiring primaries in certain school district elections; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 205A.03, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 205A.03, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. [RESOLUTION
REQUIRED PRIMARY IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES.] The school board
of a school district may, by resolution adopted by June 1 of any year, decide
to choose nominees for school district elective offices by a primary as
provided in subdivisions 1 to 6. The
resolution, when adopted, is effective for all ensuing elections of board
members in that school district until it is revoked. In a school district election, if
there are more than two candidates for a specified school board position
or more than twice as many school board candidates as there are at-large
school board positions available, a school district must hold a primary.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 205A.03, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [CANDIDATES,
FILING.] The clerk shall place upon the primary ballot without partisan
designation the names of individuals whose candidacies have been filed and for
whom the proper filing fee has been paid.
When not more than twice the number of individuals to be elected to a
school district elective office as many school board candidates as there
are at-large school board positions available file for nomination
for the office or when not more than two candidates for a specified
school board position file for nomination for that office, their
names must not be placed upon the primary ballot and must be placed on the
school district general election ballot as the nominees for that office.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 205A.03, subdivision 4, is
amended to read:
Subd. 4. [RESULTS.] The
school district primary must be conducted and the returns made in the manner
provided for the state primary as far as practicable. Within two days after the primary, the school board of the school
district shall canvass the returns, and the two candidates for each office
specified school board position who receive the highest number of
votes, or a number of candidates equal to twice the number of individuals to be
elected to the office at-large school board positions who
receive the highest number of votes, are the nominees for the office
named. Their names must be certified to
the school district clerk who shall place them on the school district general
election ballot without partisan designation and without payment of an
additional fee.
Sec. 4. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 205A.06, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. [FILING
PERIOD.] In school districts nominating candidates at a school district
primary, Affidavits of candidacy may must be filed with the
school district clerk no earlier than the 70th day and no later than the 56th
day before the first Tuesday after the second Monday in September in the year
when the school district general election is held. In all other school districts, affidavits of candidacy must be
filed not more than 70 days and not less than 56 days before the school
district general election.
Sec. 5. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
(a) Sections 1 to 4 are effective the day following final
enactment for independent school district No. 742.
(b) Sections 1 to 4 are effective January 1, 2004, for all
other school districts and applies to school board elections held in
2004 and thereafter."
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 4, delete "section" and insert
"sections" and delete "subdivision 1" and insert
"subdivisions 1, 3, 4; 205A.06, subdivision 1a"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Education Policy.
The report was adopted.
Sykora from the Committee on Education Policy to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 472, A bill for an act relating to education;
providing for school districts to opt out of certain state mandates; proposing
coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 471B.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1.
[471B.01] [DEFINITIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[SCOPE.] For the purposes of this chapter, the terms defined
in this section have the meanings given them.
Subd. 2. [LOCAL GOVERNMENT INCLUDES A SCHOOL
DISTRICT.] "Local government" includes a common, independent, or
special school district and excludes charter schools.
Subd. 3. [STATE
MANDATE.] "State mandate" means a state law or rule that is
specifically directed at or related to local government structure,
operation, services, programs, or financing that:
(1) imposes a cost on a local government, whether or not
the state appropriates money for the local government to cover the
costs, or authorizes the local government to impose a tax or fee to
cover the costs;
(2) decreases revenue available to a local government without
a commensurate decrease in services and programs required by the law or
rule;
(3) establishes goals or policies a local government must
follow;
(4) makes a local government, or its officers or employees,
civilly or criminally liable for failure to follow or enforce the law
or rule;
(5) restricts the ability of a local government to establish
services, programs, policies, plans, or goals or restricts its ability
to raise revenue or finance its services, programs, policies, plans, or
goals; or
(6) implements or interprets federal law and, by its implementation
or interpretation, increases or decreases program or service levels
beyond the level required by federal law.
Sec. 2. [471B.02]
[OPT-OUT PROPOSALS AND PROCEDURES.]
Subdivision 1.
[LOCAL PROCEDURE.] (a) A school district may, by written
resolution of the school board after public notice and hearing, propose
that a state mandate imposed on school districts, except a state mandate
under section 471B.03, should not apply to it. A school board also may include in a resolution
recommendations for reforming a mandate.
A school board must adopt a separate resolution for each mandate
that it proposes should not apply to the district. The resolution must:
(1) specifically cite the state law or rule that imposes
the mandate on the school district;
(2) identify the costs of complying with the mandate and
the total amount of federal and state funds available for purposes of
the mandate;
(3) state the reasons the school district wants to opt out
of the state mandate and any recommendations for reforming the mandate
to achieve greater efficiencies; and
(4) indicate how the school district will otherwise meet
the objectives of the mandate or why the objectives do not apply to
the school district.
(b) The school board must hold at least one public hearing
on the proposed resolution and afford the public opportunity for comment. Before voting on the resolution, the school
board must give adequate public notice of the proposed resolution, including
information on whether state or federal funding for the school district
might be adversely affected. The school
board must encourage teachers and parents to participate in the hearing
in order to determine the extent of public support for the proposed
resolution.
(c) The proponent of the proposed
resolution at least must identify at the hearing:
(1) the costs of complying with the mandate that exceed the
state and federal funds allocated to the district for purposes of the
mandate and recommend reforms for achieving greater efficiencies;
(2) any potential loss of state or federal revenue that might
result from opting out of the state mandate; and
(3) other policy issues or effects that might result.
(d) A school district that adopts a resolution must file
the resolution with the state auditor.
At the time of filing, the school district must pay the state
auditor a fee of $75 per resolution to cover costs the state auditor
incurs in performing the duties under this section. The state auditor must deposit the
fees in the general fund. All fees collected
under this section are appropriated to the state auditor for the
purposes of this section. On
July 1, 2003, and each July 1 thereafter, using the powers granted under
chapter 6, the auditor must determine the actual cost of performing the
duties under this section and adjust the amount of the fee to reflect
the auditor's actual costs.
Subd. 2. [STATE
PROCEDURE.] (a) The state auditor must:
(1) list on the state auditor's Web site all state mandates
cited in a resolution filed with the state auditor, identifying for
each mandate the school districts that have adopted and filed a
resolution to opt out of a mandate, and whether the threshold under
subdivision 3 for opting out has been met;
(2) keep a running total of the number and percent of school
districts that have filed a resolution to opt out;
(3) notify the legislature and the school districts that
have filed resolutions to opt out when the threshold under subdivision
3 for opting out has been met; and
(4) each year before the Minnesota Statutes or Minnesota
Statutes Supplement is published, at a time determined by the revisor
of statutes, provide to the revisor of statutes a list of all laws and
rules that school districts may opt out, consistent with legislative
action under subdivision 3.
(b) The revisor of statutes must:
(1) publish a list of the affected laws, rules, and school
districts; and
(2) provide appropriate means, including cross-references,
for the public to use the statutes and rules in the context of the list
in clause (1).
Subd. 3.
[THRESHOLD AND CERTIFICATION FOR OPTING OUT; LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGHT.] (a)
The state auditor must notify the house and senate when the auditor
certifies that ten percent or more of the school districts in the state
have filed resolutions in accordance with the requirements of this
chapter seeking to be relieved of a state mandate. The opt-out resolutions referred to
in a notice delivered by the auditor to the legislature before the
regular session convenes in any year are considered to be accepted for
implementation under subdivision 4 when the legislature adjourns the
regular session that year, unless the legislature by law has either
forbidden implementation of the resolutions or amended the mandate to
which they refer.
(b) The house of representatives and senate must adopt rules
ensuring that bills to forbid implementation of the resolutions or to
amend the mandate to which they refer are given a priority status and
are presented to the house and senate for consideration and action by
the body in a timely manner during the regular session that year.
Subd.
4. [OPT-OUT IMPLEMENTATION AND LATER OPTING OUT.] Opt-out resolutions
accepted for implementation under subdivision 3 take effect 30 days
after the adjournment of the regular session, and the mandate referred
to in the resolutions ceases to apply to districts. After the initial opt-out resolutions
take effect, other districts may file resolutions to opt out of the same
mandate. Each of these takes effect 30
days after the auditor accepts the filing.
Sec. 3. [471B.03]
[EXCEPTIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[SCOPE.] The state laws listed in this section are not subject
to section 471B.02 and no school district may opt out of complying with
them.
Subd. 2.
[ELECTION LAW.] A school district may not opt out of Minnesota
election law, as defined in section 200.01, and any other law governing
elections.
Subd. 3.
[ADMINISTRATION OF THE PROPERTY TAX SYSTEM.] A school district
may not opt out of any laws governing administration of the property tax
system, including provisions in chapters 270, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276,
276A, 277, 278, and 473F.
Subd. 4.
[ACCOUNTING, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES; AUDIT REQUIREMENTS.] A
school district may not opt out of any law governing the accounting,
financial management, and audit requirements of school districts,
including the accounting, expenditures, and budgeting required under
sections 123B.76 and 123B.77.
However, a school district may opt out of a state-mandated
account or fund restriction, consistent with the requirements of this
section.
Subd. 5.
[NONPUBLIC STUDENTS.] A school district may not opt out of
sections 123B.40 to 123B.48 governing the rights of nonpublic school
students and other law related to nonpublic schools or students.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for the 2003-2004 school year and later."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on State Government Finance.
The report was adopted.
Sykora from the Committee on Education Policy to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 494, A bill for an act relating to education;
allowing independent school district No. 709, Duluth, to reduce the number of
at-large school board members.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Governmental Operations and
Veterans Affairs Policy.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on
Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 503, A bill for an act relating
to elections; clarifying certain duties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 204D.04, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental
Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 504, A bill for an act relating
to elections; limiting certain ballot questions; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 205.10, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental
Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 539, A bill for an act relating
to elections; campaign finance; prohibiting certain contributions and
solicitations during special legislative sessions; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 10A.273, subdivisions 1, 2; 211A.14.
Reported the same back with the following
amendments:
Page 2, after line 20, insert:
"Sec. 4. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
Sections 1 to 3 are effective the day
following final enactment."
With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental
Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 553, A bill for an act relating
to towns; providing for optional election of certain officers; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 367.30, subdivisions 2, 4; 367.31,
subdivision 4; 367.34; 367.36, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the following
amendments:
Page 2, line 27, delete everything after
"must"
Page
2, delete line 28
Page 2, line 29, delete "D." and insert "state
"option B will take effect only if option D is also approved.""
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
SECOND READING OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 208, 218, 361, 503, 504, 539 and 553 were read for
the second time.
SECOND READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. Nos. 30 and 61 were read for the second time.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Abeler introduced:
H. F. No. 774, A bill for an act relating to human services;
recodifying and reorganizing the background study provisions in the Human
Services Licensing Act; making conforming changes; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 245A.04, subdivisions 1, 3, 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d, 3e, 3f; 245A.041;
proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 245C.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Westrom; Anderson, B.; Beard; Juhnke; Gunther; Huntley;
Dempsey; Powell; Davids; McNamara; Hackbarth; Stang; Sviggum; Olson, M.;
Mahoney and Osterman introduced:
H. F. No. 775, A bill for an act relating to energy; amending
the definition of a radioactive waste management facility; specifying the
applicability of the renewable development fund; authorizing sufficient dry
cask storage capacity to allow the nuclear reactors at the Prairie Island
nuclear generation facility to operate until the end of their current licenses;
requiring a public utility that owns a nuclear generation facility to seek
commission approval for additional storage capacity for spent nuclear fuel;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 116C.71, subdivision 7; 116C.779;
216B.1645, subdivision 2; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 116C.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Regulated Industries.
Davnie
introduced:
H. F. No. 776, A bill for an act relating to retirement;
Minneapolis fire relief association; waiving surviving spouse benefit eligibility
requirements for spouse of a certain deceased firefighter.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Klinzing, Kuisle, Otto and McNamara introduced:
H. F. No. 777, A bill for an act relating to elections;
changing distribution of the voting equipment grant account; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 204B.48, subdivisions 2, 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Holberg introduced:
H. F. No. 778, A bill for an act relating to family law;
modifying provisions dealing with distribution of certain pension plan assets
or benefits; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 518.58, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Ozment introduced:
H. F. No. 779, A bill for an act relating to state government;
appropriating money for environmental and natural resources purposes;
establishing and modifying certain programs; providing for regulation of
certain activities and practices; providing for accounts, assessments, and
fees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 16A.531, subdivision 1, by
adding a subdivision; 84.085, subdivision 1; 84.415, subdivisions 4, 5, by
adding subdivisions; 84D.14; 85.052, subdivision 3; 85.053, subdivision 1;
85A.02, subdivision 17; 86B.415, subdivision 7; 97A.475, subdivisions 15, 26,
27, 28, 29, 30, 38, 39, 40, 42; 97B.645, subdivision 7; 103B.231, subdivision
3a; 103B.305, subdivision 3, by adding subdivisions; 103B.311, subdivisions 1,
2, 3, 4; 103B.315, subdivisions 4, 5, 6; 103B.321, subdivisions 1, 2; 103B.325,
subdivisions 1, 2; 103B.331, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 103B.3363, subdivision 3;
103B.3369, subdivisions 2, 4, 5, 6; 103B.355; 103D.405, subdivision 2;
103G.005, subdivision 10e; 103G.222, subdivision 1; 103G.2242, by adding
subdivisions; 103G.271, subdivisions 6, 6a; 103G.611, subdivision 1; 103G.615,
subdivision 2; 115.03, by adding subdivisions; 115.073; 115.56, subdivision 4;
115A.0716, subdivision 3; 115A.545, subdivision 2; 115A.9651, subdivision 6;
115B.17, subdivisions 6, 7, 14, 16; 115B.19; 115B.20; 115B.22, subdivision 7;
115B.25, subdivisions 1a, 4; 115B.26; 115B.30; 115B.31, subdivisions 1, 3, 4;
115B.32, subdivision 1; 115B.33, subdivision 1; 115B.34; 115B.36; 115B.40,
subdivision 4; 115B.41, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 115B.42, subdivision 2; 115B.421;
115B.445; 115B.48, subdivision 2; 115B.49, subdivisions 1, 3, 4; 115D.12,
subdivision 2; 116.03, subdivision 2; 116.07, subdivisions 4d, 4h; 116.994;
116C.834, subdivision 1; 116P.02, subdivision 1; 116P.05, subdivision 2;
116P.09, subdivisions 4, 5, 7; 116P.10; 116P.14, subdivision 2; 273.13,
subdivision 23; 297A.94; 297F.10, subdivision 1; 297H.13, subdivisions 1, 2;
325E.10, subdivision 1; 469.175, subdivision 7; 473.843, subdivision 2;
473.844, subdivision 1; 473.845, subdivisions 1, 3, 7, 8; 473.846; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 103B; 116; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 1.31; 1.32; 84.415, subdivisions 1, 3;
89.391; 93.2235; 103B.311, subdivisions 5, 6, 7; 103B.315, subdivisions 1, 2,
3, 7; 103B.321, subdivision 3; 103B.3369, subdivision 3; 103G.222, subdivision
2; 115A.908, subdivision 2; 115B.02, subdivision 1a; 115B.19; 115B.42,
subdivision 1; 116P.13; 297H.13, subdivisions 3, 4; 325E.112, subdivisions 2,
3; 325E.113; 473.845, subdivision 4; Minnesota Rules, parts 6135.0100;
6135.0200; 6135.0300; 6135.0400; 6135.0510; 6135.0610; 6135.0710;
6135.0810; 6135.1000; 6135.1100; 6135.1200; 6135.1300; 6135.1400; 6135.1500;
6135.1600; 6135.1700; 6135.1800; 9300.0010; 9300.0020; 9300.0030; 9300.0040;
9300.0050; 9300.0060; 9300.0070; 9300.0080; 9300.0090; 9300.0100; 9300.0110;
9300.0120; 9300.0130; 9300.0140; 9300.0150; 9300.0160; 9300.0170; 9300.0180;
9300.0190; 9300.0200; 9300.0210.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Finance.
Wardlow; Anderson, J.; Hausman; Heidgerken and Smith
introduced:
H. F. No. 780, A bill for an act relating to education;
permitting school districts to pay insurance premiums for teachers on an
extended leave of absence; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 122A.46,
subdivision 9; 354.094, subdivision 1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Seagren and Sykora introduced:
H. F. No. 781, A bill for an act relating to education;
families and early childhood education; kindergarten through grade 12;
providing for child care programs, early childhood programs, prevention,
self-sufficiency and lifelong learning, general education, other general
programs, nonpublic pupil programs, charter schools, desegregation programs,
American Indian programs, accountability and reform, programs for special
populations, special programs, facilities and technology, nutrition programs,
libraries, and state agencies; renaming the department of children, families,
and learning to department of education; appropriating money; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 15.01; 119A.01, subdivision 2; 119A.02,
subdivisions 2, 3; 119B.011, subdivisions 8, 10; 119B.12, subdivision 2;
119B.13, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 120A.02; 120A.05, subdivisions
4, 7; 122A.61, subdivision 1; 123B.53, subdivision 4; 123B.57, subdivisions 1,
6; 123B.59, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 5, by adding a subdivision; 123B.75,
subdivision 5; 123B.92, subdivision 9; 124D.09, subdivision 13; 124D.11,
subdivisions 1, 4, 6, 9; 124D.128, subdivisions 2, 3, 6; 124D.135, subdivisions
1, 8; 124D.16, subdivision 6; 124D.20, subdivisions 3, 5, by adding
subdivisions; 124D.52, subdivisions 1, 3; 124D.531, subdivisions 1, 2, 4, 7;
124D.59, subdivision 2; 124D.65, subdivision 5; 124D.86, subdivisions 3, 4, 5;
125A.76, subdivisions 1, 4; 125A.79, subdivisions 1, 6; 126C.05, subdivisions
8, 14, 15, 17; 126C.10, subdivisions 1, 3, 4, 7, 8, 17, 18, by adding
subdivisions; 126C.13, subdivision 4; 126C.17, subdivisions 1, 2, 5, 7, 13;
126C.40, subdivisions 1, 2, 6; 126C.43, subdivisions 2, 3; 126C.45; 127A.05,
subdivisions 1, 3; 127A.45, subdivisions 2, 3, 10, 13, 14, 14a, 16; 268.052,
subdivisions 2, 4; Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 6, article 2,
section 64; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 124D;
127A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 119A.01, subdivision 1;
119A.46; 120B.23; 122A.62; 122A.64; 122A.65; 123B.59, subdivisions 6, 7;
124D.09, subdivision 15; 124D.115; 124D.1156; 124D.118; 124D.17; 124D.21; 124D.221;
124D.54; 124D.89; 125A.79, subdivision 2; 126C.01, subdivision 9; 126C.05,
subdivision 12; 126C.10, subdivision 5; 126C.445; 126C.455; Laws 1993, chapter
224, article 8, section 20, subdivision 2, as amended; Laws 2000, chapter 489,
article 2, section 36, as amended; Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 6,
article 2, section 70.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Seagren introduced:
H. F. No. 782, A bill for an act relating to education;
providing for the department of children, families, and learning administrative
amendment and repeal of certain statutory provisions relating to kindergarten
through grade 12; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 12.21, subdivision
3; 120A.05, subdivision 9; 122A.63, subdivision 3;
123A.06, subdivision 3; 123A.18, subdivision 2; 123A.73, subdivisions 3, 4, 5;
123B.51, subdivisions 3, 4; 123B.57, subdivision 4; 123B.63, subdivisions 1, 2,
3, 4; 123B.91, subdivision 1; 123B.92, subdivisions 1, 3; 124D.09, subdivisions
9, 10, 16; 124D.11, subdivisions 1, 2; 124D.135, subdivision 8; 124D.16,
subdivision 6; 124D.19, subdivision 3; 124D.20, subdivision 5; 124D.22,
subdivision 3; 124D.454, subdivisions 2, 8, 10, by adding a subdivision;
124D.65, subdivision 5; 124D.86, subdivisions 1a, 3, 6; 125A.21, subdivision 2;
126C.10, subdivision 6; 126C.15, subdivision 1; 126C.17, subdivisions 7a, 9;
126C.21, subdivision 3; 126C.42, subdivision 1; 126C.48, subdivision 3;
126C.63, subdivisions 5, 8; 126C.69, subdivisions 2, 9; 127A.47, subdivisions
7, 8; 127A.49, subdivisions 2, 3; 128D.11, subdivision 8; 169.26, subdivision
3; 169.973, subdivision 1; 178.02, subdivision 1; 273.138, subdivision 6;
298.28, subdivision 4; 475.61, subdivision 4; Laws 1965, chapter 705, as
amended; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 123A.73, subdivisions 7,
10, 11; 123B.81, subdivision 6; 124D.65, subdivision 4; 124D.84, subdivision 2;
125A.023, subdivision 5; 125A.47; 125B.11; 126C.01, subdivision 4; 126C.14;
127A.41, subdivision 6; Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 6, article 5,
section 12, as amended; Minnesota Rules, parts 3500.0600; 3520.0400; 3520.1400;
3520.3300; 3530.1500; 3530.2700; 3530.4400; 3530.4500; 3530.4700; 3545.2100;
3545.2200; 3545.2400; 3545.2500; 3545.2600; 3545.3008; 3545.3010; 3545.3018;
3545.3020; 3550.0100.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Magnus, Peterson, Seifert, Harder and Koenen introduced:
H. F. No. 783, A bill for an act relating to appropriations;
appropriating money for floodplain management.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Finance.
Powell, Smith, Fuller and Murphy introduced:
H. F. No. 784, A bill for an act relating to crimes;
prohibiting interfering with emergency communications; prescribing penalties;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 609.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
Buesgens, Hornstein and Adolphson introduced:
H. F. No. 785, A bill for an act relating to metropolitan
government; eliminating certain reporting requirements; abolishing the
metropolitan parks and open space commission; providing for the direct charging
by the metropolitan council of industrial dischargers for certain wastewater
treatment user fees; removing an obsolete requirement for metropolitan school
districts to submit capital improvement plans to the metropolitan council for review;
making conforming changes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 352.01,
subdivision 2a; 473.121, subdivision 5a; 473.13, subdivision 1; 473.143,
subdivision 1; 473.147; 473.313, subdivision 2; 473.315, subdivision 1;
473.333; 473.351, subdivision 3; 473.517, by adding a subdivision; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 473.121, subdivision 12; 473.1623; 473.301,
subdivision 4; 473.303; 473.704, subdivision 19; 473.863.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs.
Holberg, Westerberg, Hausman,
Hornstein and Kelliher introduced:
H. F. No. 786, A bill for an act relating to utilities;
providing for liability under the one call excavation notice system; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 216D.06, subdivision 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Entenza and Davids introduced:
H. F. No. 787, A bill for an act relating to fire safety;
requiring certain places of public assembly to have automatic sprinkler systems
and prohibiting those places from conducting fireworks displays; imposing a
surcharge on fire insurance policies and appropriating money raised by the
surcharge to the state fire marshal; authorizing the state fire marshal to
impose civil penalties for fire safety violations; imposing criminal and civil
penalties; authorizing the adoption of rules; appropriating money; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 299F.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Commerce, Jobs and Economic Development.
Walker; Rukavina; Thao; Johnson, S.; Mariani; Ellison and
Jaros introduced:
H. F. No. 788, A bill for an act relating to child welfare;
eliminating certain permanency review requirements for children under age
eight; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 260C.301, subdivision 1;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 260C.201, subdivision 11a.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Hoppe, Hackbarth, Gunther, Dill, Howes, Soderstrom, Wasiluk,
Cornish, Haas, Lindgren and Simpson introduced:
H. F. No. 789, A bill for an act relating to natural resources;
modifying game and migratory waterfowl refuge provisions; providing for
suspension of game and fish license and permit privileges under certain
circumstances; modifying certain game license provisions; modifying certain
fish possession restrictions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
97A.085, subdivisions 2, 3, 4; 97A.095, subdivisions 1, 2; 97A.421, by adding a
subdivision; 97A.435, subdivision 4; 97B.721; 97C.401, subdivision 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Hoppe; Hackbarth; Dill; Peterson; Lindgren; Koenen; Cornish;
Nelson, M., and Larson introduced:
H. F. No. 790, A bill for an act relating to game and fish;
modifying shooting hours for migratory game birds; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 97B.075.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Kielkucki; Lesch; Boudreau; Thissen;
Olsen, S.; Knoblach and Samuelson introduced:
H. F. No. 791, A bill for an act relating to elections;
changing certain requirements and procedures; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 5.08; 15.0597, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; 15.0599, subdivision 4;
126C.17, subdivision 9; 201.061, subdivision 3; 201.071, subdivision 3;
201.161; 201.171; 201.221, subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision; 203B.06,
subdivision 3; 203B.085; 203B.125; 203B.13, by adding a subdivision; 204B.06,
subdivision 1; 204B.07, subdivision 2; 204B.09, subdivisions 1, 3; 204B.14,
subdivision 2; 204B.16, subdivision 3; 204B.18, subdivision 1; 204B.19,
subdivisions 1, 6; 204B.21, subdivisions 1, 2; 204B.22, by adding a
subdivision; 204B.37; 204B.41; 204C.06, by adding a subdivision; 204C.12,
subdivision 4; 204C.20, subdivision 2; 204C.24, subdivision 1; 204C.35,
subdivision 1; 204C.36, subdivisions 1, 3; 204C.361; 204D.27, subdivision 11;
205.02, subdivision 1; 205.075, by adding a subdivision; 205.16, subdivision 4,
by adding a subdivision; 205.185, subdivisions 2, 3; 205A.02; 205A.07,
subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision; 206.81; 351.01, subdivision 4; 365.51,
subdivision 3; 367.12; 414.041, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 204D.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Tingelstad and Hausman introduced:
H. F. No. 792, A bill for an act relating to assisted
reproduction; authorizing gestational surrogacy agreements; proposing coding
for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 257D.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Gerlach, by request, introduced:
H. F. No. 793, A bill for an act relating to public employees;
instituting a freeze on salaries and wage rates for government employees.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Gunther, Juhnke, Ozment, Peterson and Westerberg introduced:
H. F. No. 794, A bill for an act relating to education;
creating an education telecommunications fund; providing support for
kindergarten through grade 12 schools and public library telecommunications
networks; providing for an access fee; appropriating money; proprosing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 125B.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Hornstein, Holberg, Seagren, Thissen, Strachan, Larson and
Lenczewski introduced:
H. F. No. 795, A bill for an act relating to transportation;
requiring the department of transportation and the metropolitan council to
conduct a study of bus rapid transit on I-35W between Minneapolis and
Lakeville; requiring creation of a study advisory committee; specifying
membership; requiring a report of recommendations.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Transportation Policy.
Holberg, Beard, Wilkin and Wardlow
introduced:
H. F. No. 796, A bill for an act relating to public employees;
modifying the definition of essential employee; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 179A.03, subdivision 7.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Wilkin introduced:
H. F. No. 797, A bill for an act relating to human services;
providing for a planned closure rate adjustment for certain nursing facilities;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 256B.437, subdivision 6.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Anderson, J.; Wardlow; Sykora; Heidgerken and
Olson, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 798, A bill for an act relating to education;
regarding notification to teachers that are in contact with students with
histories of violent behavior; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section
121A.64.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Policy.
Otremba, Thao, Otto, Eken, Thissen, Wasiluk, Mullery, Peterson,
Juhnke, Murphy, Dill and Koenen introduced:
H. F. No. 799, A bill for an act relating to human services;
creating the prescription drug rebate program; appropriating money; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 8.31, subdivision 1; 256.01, subdivision 2;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 256.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Hackbarth, Davids, Gunther and Blaine introduced:
H. F. No. 800, A bill for an act relating to public safety;
regulating permitted fireworks; authorizing certain licensing fees; limiting
local regulation; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 624.20, subdivision
1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Commerce, Jobs and Economic Development.
Wasiluk and Slawik introduced:
H. F. No. 801, A bill for an act relating to public libraries;
requiring a hearing before closing a public library; proposing coding for new
law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 134.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Mullery,
Carlson, Hilstrom, Rhodes, Latz, Hornstein and Nelson, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 802, A bill for an act relating to Hennepin county;
clarifying the authority of the county housing and redevelopment authority;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 383B.77, subdivisions 1 and 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs.
Johnson, S.; Ozment; Ellison; Wagenius; Cox; Mahoney;
Mariani; Thao and Walker introduced:
H. F. No. 803, A bill for an act relating to the environment;
requiring certain coal-fired power plants to install pollution control
equipment by 2010; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter
116.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Solberg; Dill; Anderson, I., and Howes introduced:
H. F. No. 804, A bill for an act relating to traffic
regulations; regulating gross weights on vehicles and combinations hauling raw
or unfinished farm or forest products under certain circumstances; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 169.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Transportation Policy.
Severson introduced:
H. F. No. 805, A bill for an act relating to capital
improvements; authorizing the issuance of state bonds; appropriating money for
land acquisition to enable increased operations at the St. Cloud Regional
Airport.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Transportation Finance.
Kielkucki and Wilkin introduced:
H. F. No. 806, A bill for an act relating to civil actions;
providing limits on certain liability of certain nonprofit corporations
providing day training and habilitation services for adults with mental
retardation or daytime developmental achievement center services for children
with mental retardation and related conditions or securing or maintaining homes
for dependent and neglected children; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 604A.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Seifert introduced:
H. F. No. 807, A bill for an act relating to elections; fair
campaign practices; prohibiting distorted photographs of candidates in campaign
materials; providing penalties; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 211B.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Dill,
Hoppe, Juhnke, Peterson and Rukavina introduced:
H. F. No. 808, A bill for an act relating to crime prevention;
providing that in certain cases authorized representatives of entities
possessing a permit to use radio equipment capable of receiving police
emergency transmissions may use and possess the equipment without a permit;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 299C.37, subdivisions 1, 3.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
Abrams, Pugh, Knoblach, Lenczewski and Erhardt introduced:
H. F. No. 809, A bill for an act relating to taxation;
providing for exemption from sales and use taxes on certain delivery or
distribution charges for direct mail; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 297A.61, by adding a subdivision; 297A.68, subdivision 36.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Howes, Dill, Penas, Hackbarth and Ozment introduced:
H. F. No. 810, A bill for an act relating to state lands;
providing for certain state land acquisition; modifying the Mississippi
whitewater trail; modifying provisions of the outdoor recreation system;
establishing a mineral coordinating committee; adding to and deleting from
state parks, state recreation areas, state forests, and wildlife management
areas; authorizing sales of certain surplus state land in St. Louis and
Beltrami counties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 85.013,
subdivision 1; 85.0156, subdivision 1; 86A.04; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 93.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Stang, Davids, Sviggum, Lenczewski, Peterson and Kuisle introduced:
H. F. No. 811, A bill for an act relating to tax increment
financing; authorizing duration extensions to eliminate deficits caused by the
2001 property tax changes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 469.1792,
subdivision 3.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Clark, Abeler, Seagren, Entenza, Goodwin and Kelliher
introduced:
H. F. No. 812, A resolution respectfully requesting the
governor to apologize on behalf of citizens of the state to all persons with
mental illness and developmental and other disabilities who have been
wrongfully committed to state institutions.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Davnie,
Carlson, Bernardy, Goodwin and Eken introduced:
H. F. No. 813, A bill for an act relating to education finance;
appropriating money to promote professional teaching standards; amending Laws
1997, First Special Session chapter 4, article 5, section 22, subdivision 4, as
amended.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Davnie, Thissen, Sertich and Rukavina introduced:
H. F. No. 814, A bill for an act relating to insurance;
regulating nonrenewals of homeowner's insurance; prohibiting various
discriminatory practices in automobile and homeowner's insurance; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 65A.29, subdivision 8; 65B.28, subdivision 1;
72A.20, subdivisions 13, 23.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Commerce, Jobs and Economic Development.
Thissen introduced:
H. F. No. 815, A bill for an act relating to taxes; property
tax; requiring payments to compensate taxing jurisdictions for lost property
tax base when real property is acquired by a governmental entity and becomes
tax exempt; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 273.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Thissen, Pugh, Wagenius, Larson and Hornstein introduced:
H. F. No. 816, A bill for an act relating to Minneapolis-St.
Paul International Airport; providing for the impact of expansion of the
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport; authorizing airport mitigation
planning and the establishment of airport impact zones in the cities of
Bloomington, Burnsville, Eagan, Mendota Heights, Minneapolis, Richfield, and
St. Paul; creating an airport impact mitigation fund in the state treasury;
authorizing certain related activities by the department of trade and economic
development; authorizing a metropolitan area credit enhancement program
including a contingent metropolitan area property tax levy; appropriating
money.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs.
Mahoney, Gunther, Sertich and Dorman introduced:
H. F. No. 817, A bill for an act relating to occupational
safety and health; eliminating certain responsibilities of the commissioner of
health; increasing penalty limits for certain violations; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 182.65, subdivision 2; 182.656, subdivision 1; 182.66,
subdivision 2; 182.666, subdivision 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Tingelstad,
Hausman and Abeler introduced:
H. F. No. 818, A bill for an act relating to parentage;
modifying provisions regarding parentage of a child conceived through
artificial insemination; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 257.56.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Civil Law.
Bradley; Nelson, C.; Demmer and Kuisle introduced:
H. F. No. 819, A bill for an act relating to capital
improvements; appropriating money to the board of trustees of the Minnesota
state colleges and universities for capital improvements at University Center
Rochester; authorizing the sale of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Higher Education Finance.
Buesgens and Heidgerken introduced:
H. F. No. 820, A bill for an act relating to education;
allowing school districts to assign a student to an area learning center;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 121A.55; 124D.128, subdivision 3.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Policy.
Paulsen, Meslow, Murphy, Smith and Pugh introduced:
H. F. No. 821, A bill for an act relating to crime; providing
reporting procedures and venue for identity theft; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 609.527, by adding subdivisions.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
Buesgens and Juhnke introduced:
H. F. No. 822, A bill for an act relating to education;
allowing for direct judicial review of district exclusion and expulsion
decisions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 121A.50; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 121A.49.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Policy.
Cornish, Ozment, Hackbarth, Gunther, Dill, Haas, Lindgren,
Simpson, Finstad, Soderstrom and Erickson introduced:
H. F. No. 823, A bill for an act relating to natural resources;
modifying commissioner's authority relating to employees, gifts, and grants;
modifying provisions of the state parks working capital fund; modifying
application provisions for certain licenses; providing for reciprocity of
certain safety courses; modifying certain county reimbursement provisions;
modifying identification provisions for fish and dark houses; eliminating
requirement to publish pamphlet form of laws; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 84.01, subdivision 3; 84.026; 84.085, subdivision 1; 84.82,
subdivision 2; 84.862, by adding a subdivision; 85.22, by adding a subdivision;
86B.401, subdivision 1; 97A.065, subdivision 2; 97C.355, subdivisions 1, 2;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 97A.051, subdivision 1; Minnesota
Rules, part 6262.0100, subpart 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Peterson and Koenen introduced:
H. F. No. 824, A bill for an act relating to capital
improvements; authorizing the issuance of state bonds; appropriating money for
the Prairie Farm Preservation Education and Exhibit Center.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Finance.
Peterson, Koenen, Juhnke, Eken and Heidgerken introduced:
H. F. No. 825, A bill for an act relating to agriculture; restricting
sales of ethanol plants; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 41A.09, by
adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Agriculture Policy.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following message was received from the Senate:
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
Senate File, herewith transmitted:
S. F. No. 374.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. No. 374, A bill for an act relating to the city of St.
Paul; making technical changes to the civic center authority powers and duties;
amending Laws 1967, chapter 459, section 8, subdivisions 1, 3, 4, as amended.
The bill was read for the first time.
Lesch moved that S. F. No. 374 and H. F. No. 93, now on the
General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
CONSENT
CALENDAR
H. F. No. 266, A bill for an act relating to human services;
modifying the purchasing alliance stop-loss fund; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 256.956, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 9.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 126 yeas and 0
nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Mullery
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 536, A bill for an act relating to insurance;
regulating the joint underwriting association; modifying coverage; modifying
the market assistance responsibilities of the association; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 62I.02, subdivision 1; 62I.03, by adding a subdivision;
62I.04; 62I.05; 62I.08; 62I.13, subdivisions 1, 2; 62I.14; 62I.21; 62I.22,
subdivision 1; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 62I.09; 62I.10;
62I.11; 62I.13, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage
of the bill and the roll was called.
There were 128 yeas and 0 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Mullery
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
REPORT
FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES AND
LEGISLATIVE
ADMINISTRATION
Paulsen from the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration, pursuant to rule 1.21, designated the following bill to be
placed on the Calendar for the Day for Monday, March 10, 2003:
H. F. No. 480.
CALENDAR FOR THE DAY
H. F. No. 480 was reported to the House.
Sertich moved to amend H. F. No. 480, the first engrossment, as
follows:
Page 1, delete section 1
Page 3, delete lines 31 to 36
Page 4, delete lines 1 to 4
Page 4, line 5, delete "6" and insert "5"
Renumber the remaining sections in sequence and correct
internal references
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 3, delete "requiring"
Page 1, delete lines 4 to 7
Page 1, line 8, delete "16;"
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Sertich amendment and the roll
was called. There were 0 yeas and 128
nays as follows:
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Mullery
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
H. F. No. 480, A bill for an act relating to civil actions;
providing protection for disclosure of job reference information; requiring
disclosure of data between school districts and charter schools relating to
acts of violence or inappropriate sexual contact with students; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 13.43, subdivision 16; proposing coding for
new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 181.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage
of the bill and the roll was called.
There were 83 yeas and 45 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, J.
Beard
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Cox
Davids
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dorman
Eastlund
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Heidgerken
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Jacobson
Johnson, J.
Juhnke
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Marquart
McNamara
Nelson, C.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Pelowski
Penas
Powell
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Simpson
Soderstrom
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Walz
Wardlow
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, I.
Atkins
Bernardy
Biernat
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dorn
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Goodwin
Greiling
Hausman
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Jaros
Johnson, S.
Kahn
Kelliher
Koenen
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Mahoney
Mariani
Mullery
Nelson, M.
Paymar
Peterson
Pugh
Sertich
Sieben
Slawik
Smith
Solberg
Thao
Thissen
Wagenius
Walker
Wasiluk
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Sykora moved that the name of Olsen, S., be added as an author
on H. F. No. 168. The
motion prevailed.
Lipman moved that the name of Otto be added as an author on
H. F. No. 276. The
motion prevailed.
Peterson moved that the name of Westrom be added as an author
on H. F. No. 296. The
motion prevailed.
Haas moved that the name of Vandeveer be added as an author on
H. F. No. 297. The
motion prevailed.
Nelson, P., moved that the name of Kuisle be added as an author
on H. F. No. 396. The
motion prevailed.
Severson moved that the name of Otto be added as an author on
H. F. No. 434. The
motion prevailed.
Wardlow moved that the name of DeLaForest be added as an author
on H. F. No. 446. The
motion prevailed.
Olson,
M., moved that the name of Nelson, P., be added as an author on
H. F. No. 472. The
motion prevailed.
Olson, M., moved that the name of Nelson, P., be added as an
author on H. F. No. 473.
The motion prevailed.
Meslow moved that the name of Greiling be added as an author on
H. F. No. 481. The
motion prevailed.
Tingelstad moved that the name of Hoppe be added as an author
on H. F. No. 510. The
motion prevailed.
Opatz moved that the name of Severson be added as an author on
H. F. No. 584. The
motion prevailed.
Marquart moved that the name of Lenczewski be added as an
author on H. F. No. 630.
The motion prevailed.
Holberg moved that the name of Dempsey be added as an author on
H. F. No. 670. The
motion prevailed.
Erickson moved that the name of Tingelstad be added as an
author on H. F. No. 684.
The motion prevailed.
Fuller moved that the name of Abeler be added as an author on
H. F. No. 686. The
motion prevailed.
Simpson moved that the name of Severson be added as an author
on H. F. No. 687. The
motion prevailed.
Opatz moved that the name of Lenczewski be added as an author
on H. F. No. 701. The
motion prevailed.
Dempsey moved that the name of Harder be added as an author on
H. F. No. 720. The
motion prevailed.
Wilkin moved that the name of Severson be added as an author on
H. F. No. 727. The
motion prevailed.
Wilkin moved that the names of Severson and Olsen, S., be added
as authors on H. F. No. 742.
The motion prevailed.
Tingelstad moved that the name of Wardlow be added as an author
on H. F. No. 757. The
motion prevailed.
Anderson, J., moved that the name of Samuelson be added as an
author on H. F. No. 768.
The motion prevailed.
Davids moved that H. F. No. 175 be recalled from
the Committee on Ways and Means and be re-referred to the Committee on
Judiciary Policy and Finance. The
motion prevailed.
Dill moved that H. F. No. 498 be recalled from
the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Finance and be re-referred
to the Committee on Education Finance.
The motion prevailed.
Brod moved that H. F. No. 578 be recalled from
the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance and be re-referred to
the Committee on State Government Finance.
The motion prevailed.
Brod moved that H. F. No. 732 be recalled from
the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance and be re-referred to
the Committee on Commerce, Jobs and Economic Development. The motion prevailed.
Solberg moved that H. F. No. 770 be recalled
from the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy and be
re-referred to the Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs. The motion prevailed.
Hilty
and Murphy introduced:
House Resolution No. 5, A House resolution commemorating the
85th anniversary of the Fires of 1918.
The resolution was referred to the Committee on Judiciary
Policy and Finance.
Knoblach introduced:
House Resolution No. 6, A House resolution setting the maximum
limit on general fund expenditures for the biennium ending June 30, 2005.
The resolution was referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Knoblach introduced:
House Concurrent Resolution No. 2, A House concurrent
resolution relating to the adoption of revenue targets under Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 16A.102, subdivision 2.
The concurrent resolution was referred to the Committee on Ways
and Means.
PROTEST
AND DISSENT
Pursuant to Article IV, Section 11, of the Constitution of the
State of Minnesota, the following members of the Minnesota House of
Representatives file a formal Protest and Dissent regarding the remarks of
Representative Arlon Lindner on March 6th which were published in the Minneapolis
Star Tribune on March 7th, 2003.
Representative Lindner, when asked about Minnesotan's
objections to removing sexual orientation as a classification in the Minnesota
Statute regarding Holocaust survivors and victims of the Holocaust, he stated:
"I was a child during World War II, and I've read a lot about World War
II," he said. "It's just been
recently that anyone's come out with this idea that homosexuals were persecuted
to this extent. There's been a lot of
rewriting of history."
These quoted remarks by Representative Arlon Lindner show a
complete and utter disregard to the documented truth about the Holocaust and
the persecution of gays during World War II.
Year after year, Representative Lindner's public remarks and statements
about his personal beliefs demonstrate his intolerance of entire groups of
Minnesotans. Representative Lindner's
statements alienate and cause harm to scores of individuals, and he should be
repudiated by the Minnesota House of Representatives for his intolerance and
close-minded insistence that he can make any statement regardless of the effect
it will have on others.
Furthermore, we believe that Representative Lindner's comments
violate the Minnesota House of Representatives' Code of Conduct. Representative Lindner's comments fail to
treat everyone with the respect, fairness and courtesy required by our Code of
Conduct. In addition, the Code of
Conduct requires that as part of the public trust bestowed on us as state
representatives, we exemplify good citizenship, that we have high personal
integrity, and that we observe the letter and spirit of the laws and
rules. Representative Lindner's grossly
inaccurate public statements and opinions about the Holocaust call into
question his personal integrity, his ability to practice good citizenship and
his willingness to abide by the spirit of our laws, which tend to be inclusive
of others, not exclusive.
We,
as members, expect Representative Lindner to apologize for his outrageous
remarks and call upon the Leadership of the House of Representatives to join the
members signing this protest and dissent petition in repudiating Representative
Lindner's revisionist views of the Holocaust and publicly state that he is
incorrect. In addition, we request that
the Leadership of the House of Representatives remove Representative Lindner
from a position of leadership within the House, namely as Chair of the Economic
Development and Tourism Division.
Clearly Representative Lindner's comments have betrayed the public
trust, and have brought the House into dishonor and disrepute.
Signed:
Matt Entenza Nora
Slawik
Anthony Sertich Gene
Pelowski
Mindy Greiling Margaret
Anderson Kelliher
Keith Ellison David
Dill
John Dorn Cy
Thao
Tom Pugh Joe
Opatz
Mike Jaros Karen
Clark
Neva Walker Aaron
Peterson
Scott Wasiluk Irv
Anderson
Joe Atkins Bernie
Lieder
Frank Hornstein Kent
Eken
Mary Ellen
Otremba Lyle
Koenen
Michael Nelson Connie
Bernardy
Jim Davnie Len
Biernat
Jean Wagenius Michael
Paymar
Phyllis Kahn Rebecca
Otto
Tim Mahoney Sheldon
Johnson
Carlos Mariani Ron Latz
Bill Hilty John
Lesch
Joe Mullery Barbara
Goodwin
Loren A. Solberg Ann
Lenczewski
Lyndon R. Carlson Katie
Sieben
Alice Hausman Paul
Thissen
Dan Larson
ADJOURNMENT
Paulsen moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn
until 3:00 p.m., Thursday, March 13, 2003.
The motion prevailed.
Paulsen moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker declared the House stands
adjourned until 3:00 p.m., Thursday, March 13, 2003.
Edward
A. Burdick,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives