STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-THIRD SESSION - 2004
_____________________
NINETY-SIXTH DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Friday, April 23, 2004
The House of Representatives convened at 8:00 a.m. and was
called to order by Steve Sviggum, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by Senator Gary W. Kubly, District 20,
Granite Falls, 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
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
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
A quorum was present.
Mahoney and Walker were excused.
DeLaForest was excused
until 9:05 a.m. Slawik was excused
until 9:20 a.m. Strachan was excused
until 11:05 a.m.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the Journal of the
preceding day. Kohls 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 STANDING COMMITTEES
Knoblach from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 1798, A bill for an act relating to state government;
the Office of the Secretary of State; simplifying filing procedures;
eliminating certain filing requirements; requiring electronic registration
after December 31, 2004; regulating notary appointments and commissions;
appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 184.30;
302A.821, subdivisions 1, 2, 4; 308A.995, subdivision 5; 317A.823, subdivision
1, by adding a subdivision; 322B.960, subdivisions 1, 2, 5; 325A.06,
subdivision 1; 326.40, subdivision 2; 326.48, subdivision 3; 330.01,
subdivision 1; 330.08; 330.09; 336.9-525; 340A.416, subdivision 4; 359.01;
359.071; 398.10; Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 308B.121,
subdivision 5.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 2, line 6, before "Each" insert "(a) The
secretary of state must send annually to each corporation at the registered
office of the corporation a postcard notice announcing the need to file the
annual registration and informing the corporation that the annual registration
may be filed on-line and that paper filings may also be made, and informing the
corporation that failing to file the annual registration will result in an
administrative dissolution of the corporation.
(b)"
Page 2, line 20, delete "(a)"
Page 2, delete lines 33 and 34
Page 3, line 5, reinstate the stricken language
Page 3, delete line 6 and insert "three two
consecutive calendar years, the secretary of"
Page 3, line 15, after the period, insert "The notice must
be given by United States mail unless the company has indicated to the
secretary of state that they are willing to receive notice by electronic
notification, in which case the secretary of state may give notice by mail or
the indicated means."
Page 5, line 5, after "(a)" insert "The
secretary of state must send annually to each corporation at the registered
office of the corporation a postcard notice announcing the need to file the
annual registration and informing the corporation that the annual registration
may be filed on-line and that paper filings may also be made, and informing the
corporation that failing to file the annual registration will result in an
administrative dissolution of the corporation.
(b)"
Page 5, line 6, strike "(c)" and insert "(d)"
Page 5, line 18, delete "(b)" and insert
"(c)"
Page 5, line 19, strike "(b)"
Page 5, line 20, before "The" insert "(c)"
Page 5, line 28, strike "(c)" and insert "(d)"
Page 6, delete section 8
Page 6, line 16, before "Each" insert "(a)
The secretary of state must send annually to each limited liability company at
the registered office of the corporation a postcard notice announcing the need
to file the annual registration and informing the limited liability company
that the annual registration may be filed on-line and that paper filings may
also be made, and informing the limited liability company that failing to file
the annual registration will result in an administrative termination of the
limited liability company.
(b)"
Page 6, line 32, delete "(a)"
Page 7, delete lines 13 and 14
Page 15, line 4, delete "11" and insert "10"
Page 15, line 5, delete "20 and 21" and insert
"19 and 20"
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 4, delete "requiring"
Page 1, delete line 5
Page 1, line 9, delete ", by"
Page 1, line 10, delete "adding a subdivision"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Krinkie from the Committee on Capital Investment to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 2991, A bill for an act relating to capital
improvements; authorizing spending to acquire and better public land and
buildings and other public improvements of a capital nature with certain
conditions; authorizing sale of state bonds; appropriating money; amending Laws
2003, First Special Session chapter 20, article 1, section 15.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE
1
APPROPRIATIONS
AND RELATED LANGUAGE
Section 1. [CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT APPROPRIATIONS.]
The sums in the column under "APPROPRIATIONS" are
appropriated from the bond proceeds fund, or another named fund, to the state
agencies or officials indicated, to be spent for public purposes. Appropriations of bond proceeds must be
spent as authorized by the Minnesota Constitution, article XI, section 5,
paragraph (a), to acquire and better public land and buildings and other public
improvements of a capital nature, or as authorized by the Minnesota
Constitution, article XI, section 5, paragraphs (b) to (j), or article
XIV. Unless otherwise specified, the
appropriations in this act are available until the project is completed or
abandoned subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.642.
SUMMARY
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
$90,480,000
MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND
UNIVERSITIES
145,817,000
PERPICH CENTER FOR ARTS
EDUCATION
1,100,000
EDUCATION
1,054,000
MINNESOTA STATE ACADEMIES
4,255,000
NATURAL RESOURCES
49,400,000
POLLUTION CONTROL AGENCY
14,000,000
OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL
ASSISTANCE
4,000,000
BOARD OF WATER AND SOIL
RESOURCES
24,500,000
AGRICULTURE
18,570,000
ZOOLOGICAL GARDEN
2,000,000
ADMINISTRATION
1,000,000
CAPITOL AREA ARCHITECTURAL
AND PLANNING BOARD
2,735,000
AMATEUR SPORTS COMMISSION
18,100,000
MILITARY AFFAIRS
5,000,000
VETERANS AFFAIRS
500,000
TRANSPORTATION
101,300,000
METROPOLITAN
COUNCIL
17,000,000
HUMAN SERVICES 9,014,000
VETERANS HOMES BOARD
7,077,000
CORRECTIONS
65,433,000
EMPLOYMENT AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
61,480,000
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
4,000,000
GRANTS TO POLITICAL
SUBDIVISIONS
34,248,000
BOND SALE EXPENSES
667,000
CANCELLATIONS
(20,000,000)
TOTAL
$662,730,000
Bond Proceeds Fund
(General Fund Debt Service)
590,125,000
Bond Proceeds Fund
(User Financed Debt Service)
56,240,000
State Transportation Fund
Bond Proceeds Account
30,000,000
General Fund
2,565,000
Bond Proceeds Cancellations
(20,000,000)
Trunk Highway Fund
3,800,000
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Sec. 2. UNIVERSITY OF
MINNESOTA
Subdivision
1. To the Board of Regents of the
University of Minnesota for the purposes specified in this section 90,480,000
Subd. 2.
Higher Education Asset Preservation and Replacement (HEAPR) 38,000,000
To be spent in accordance with Minnesota
Statutes, section 135A.046.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 3. Academic
Health Center, Minneapolis
9,600,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip
classrooms in the academic health care facility to provide flexible space,
including computer-based testing facilities, computer labs, and simulation
facilities for health professional education.
Subd. 4. Duluth Life
Science Building
9,300,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip the
Life Science Building for the pharmacy program and other academic programs on
the Duluth campus. The renovation may
include, but is not limited to, improvements to correct air quality problems,
life safety and accessibility code deficiencies, asbestos, and fireproofing of
the facility.
Subd. 5. Education
Sciences - Minneapolis
13,300,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip the
Education Sciences Building.
Subd. 6. Kolthoff Hall
- Minneapolis
16,000,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip
Kolthoff Hall to correct air quality problems in the facility that may include,
but is not limited to, repair or replacement of the mechanical, electrical, and
HVAC systems.
Subd. 7. Morris
District Facilities
2,890,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip an
addition to the heating plant to provide the capacity to generate steam by
burning biomass.
Subd. 8. Business School
and Utility Infrastructure - Duluth
1,000,000
To design a new building, including
classrooms, offices, teaching laboratories, student services, and
administrative support for the Labovitz School of Business and Economics and to
design upgrades for the central utility distribution system to accommodate
increased demand.
Subd. 9. North Central
Research and Outreach Center
390,000
To construct a building at the North Central
Outreach Center at Grand Rapids to accommodate the farm machinery repair,
maintenance, and carpentry shops.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 10. University
Bonds
The Board of Regents shall issue bonds for
remaining costs associated with projects authorized by subdivisions 3 to 9.
Sec.
3. MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND
UNIVERSITIES
Subdivision
1. To the Board of Trustees of the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities for the purposes specified in this
section
145,817,000
Subd. 2.
Higher Education Asset Preservation
and Replacement
49,000,000
This appropriation is for the purposes
specified in Minnesota Statutes, section 135A.046, including safety and
statutory compliance, envelope integrity, mechanical systems, and space
restoration.
Subd. 3. Winona State
University
10,235,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip
Pasteur Hall for classrooms, science laboratories, and related offices.
Subd. 4. Minnesota
State University - Moorhead
9,645,000
To renovate, furnish, and equip Hagen Hall
for classrooms, science laboratories, and related offices.
Subd. 5. Century
Community and Technical College
4,500,000
To remodel, furnish, and equip recently
purchased space into a computer center, offices, and smart classrooms.
Subd. 6. St. Cloud
State University
2,900,000
To remodel, furnish, and equip Centennial
Hall to convert it from a library to classroom and office space. This appropriation is added to the
appropriation in Laws 2003, First Special Session chapter 20, article 1,
section 3, subdivision 16.
Subd. 7. Lake Superior
Community and Technical College
8,300,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip an
academic addition for smart classrooms and open laboratories.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd.
8. St. Cloud Technical College
12,960,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip a
building addition and to renovate, furnish, and equip classroom space into
science space for allied health programs and the co-location of a workforce
center.
Subd. 9. South Central
Technical College
4,747,000
To remodel, furnish, and equip teaching
laboratories at the North Mankato campus and for asset preservation at the
Faribault campus.
Subd. 10. Inver Hills
Community College
4,500,000
To construct, furnish, and equip an addition
to and remodel space in the College Center Building.
Subd.
11. Bemidji State University, Northwest
Technical College, Bemidji-Phase 2 10,000,000
To remodel, furnish, and equip Bridgeman Hall
for the emerging technologies addition project and to construct, furnish, and
equip a technical college addition for shared-use of health care programs and
industrial technology programs of Bemidji State University and Northwest
Technical College.
Subd. 12. Systemwide
Science Lab Renovations
8,900,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip science
laboratories at campuses statewide.
Subd. 13. Riverland
Community and Technical College
4,100,000
To design, remodel, furnish, and equip
existing space into labs and classrooms at the Austin campus.
Subd. 14. Rochester
Community and Technical College
10,945,000
To design, renovate, furnish, and equip the
vacant Rockenbach gymnasium, part of the Heintz center, and part of the main
campus buildings into a health science center to co-locate nursing programs,
expand the dental clinic, and create a community primary care clinic.
Subd. 15. Systemwide
Demolition Initiative
1,625,000
To demolish obsolete buildings on ten
campuses.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 16. Minnesota
State University - Mankato
2,560,000
To design, through construction documents, an
addition to and partial remodeling of Trafton Science Center to provide
additional science labs and remodel existing science labs.
Subd. 17. St. Cloud
State University
900,000
To design, through construction documents,
renovation of Brown Hall for science and health care instruction.
Subd.
18. Debt Service
(a) The board shall pay the debt service on
one-third of the principal amount of state bonds sold to finance projects
authorized by this section, except for higher education asset preservation and
replacement in subdivision 2. After
each sale of general obligation bonds, the commissioner of finance shall notify
the board of the amounts assessed for each year for the life of the bonds.
(b) The commissioner shall reduce the board's
assessment each year by one-third of the net income from investment of general
obligation bond proceeds in proportion to the amount of principal and interest
otherwise required to be paid by the board.
The board shall pay its resulting net assessment to the commissioner of
finance by December 1 each year. If the
board fails to make a payment when due, the commissioner of finance shall
reduce allotments for appropriations from the general fund otherwise available
to the board and apply the amount of the reduction to cover the missed debt
service payment. The commissioner of
finance shall credit the payments received from the board to the bond debt
service account in the state bond fund each December 1 before money is
transferred from the general fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.641,
subdivision 10.
Sec. 4. PERPICH CENTER
FOR ARTS EDUCATION
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of
administration for the purposes specified in this section 1,100,000
Subd. 2. Campus Asset
Preservation
600,000
For asset preservation capital improvements
on the campus including, but not limited to, construction or repair of
perimeter fencing, sidewalks, roads, sewers, the addition of an air
conditioning chiller, and mold abatement.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 3. Beta Building
Demolition
500,000
To demolish the Beta Building on the Perpich
Center Campus, dispose of any hazardous materials, and fill the site.
Sec. 5. EDUCATION
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of education for
the purposes specified in this section 1,054,000
Subd.
2. East Metro Magnet School -
Crosswinds Middle School 1,054,000
For a grant to East Metro Integration
District No. 6067, to complete land acquisition of the current site for the
Crosswinds Arts and Science Middle School.
Sec. 6. MINNESOTA STATE
ACADEMIES
4,255,000
To the commissioner of administration for
asset preservation capital improvements on both campuses of the Minnesota State
Academies for the Deaf and the Blind.
Sec. 7. NATURAL
RESOURCES
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of natural
resources for the purposes specified in this section
49,400,000
Subd. 2. Flood Hazard
Mitigation Grants
20,000,000
For the state share of flood hazard mitigation
grants for publicly owned capital improvements to prevent or alleviate flood
damage under Minnesota Statutes, section 103F.161.
$175,000 of this amount is for the state
share of a grant to the city of Cannon Falls.
$3,400,000 of this amount is for the state
share of flood hazard mitigation grants for the Roseau River Wildlife
Management Area, Palmville, Malung, and the Grand Marais Creek Flood Reduction
Project in the Red Lake Watershed District.
For grants for the Roseau River Wildlife
Management Area, Palmville, and Malung, the state share must be $3 for each $1
of nonstate contribution.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
To the extent that the cost of the projects
in Montevideo, Breckenridge, East Grand Forks, Ada, Roseau, Oakport Township,
Granite Falls, Warren, and Dawson exceed two percent of the median household
income in the municipality multiplied by the number of households in the
municipality, this appropriation is also for the local share of the project.
Subd. 3. Dam Renovation
and Removal
1,200,000
To renovate or remove publicly owned
dams. The commissioner shall determine
project priorities as appropriate under Minnesota Statutes, sections 103G.511
and 103G.515.
$200,000 of this amount is to remove the dam
on Rush Creek in Chisago County, restore the river channel and floodplain, and
construct off-channel ponds for storm water retention and recreation.
Subd. 4. RIM - Critical
Habitat Match
2,000,000
To provide the state match for the critical
habitat private sector matching account under Minnesota Statutes, section
84.943, for the acquisition or improvements of a capital nature for critical
fish, wildlife, and native plant habitats.
Subd. 5. RIM - Wildlife
Area Land Acquisition
6,000,000
To acquire land for wildlife management area
purposes under Minnesota Statutes, section 86A.05, subdivision 8.
Subd. 6. Fisheries
Acquisition and Improvement
1,000,000
To acquire land and interests in land for
aquatic management areas and to make public improvements and betterments of a
capital nature to aquatic management areas established under Minnesota
Statutes, section 86A.05, subdivision 14.
Subd.
7. Water Access Acquisition,
Betterment, and Fishing Piers 3,000,000
For public water access acquisition, construction,
and renovation to capital projects on lakes and rivers, including water access
through the provision of fishing piers and shoreline access under Minnesota
Statutes, section 86A.05, subdivision 9.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 8. Reforestation
3,000,000
To increase reforestation activities to meet the
reforestation requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 89.002, subdivision
2, including planting, seeding, site preparation, and purchasing tree seeds and
seedlings.
Subd.
9. Scientific and Natural Area
Acquisition and Development 300,000
To acquire land for scientific and natural areas and
for development, protection, or improvements of a capital nature to scientific
and natural areas under Minnesota Statutes, sections 84.033 and 86A.05,
subdivision 5.
Subd. 10. State and
Local Trail Development and Acquisition
5,500,000
(a) $5,000,000 is for accelerated state trail
development. Of this amount: (1)
$200,000 is for acquisition and development of the Goodhue Pioneer Trail; (2)
$450,000 is for design, acquisition, and construction of the segment of the
Shooting Star Trail from Leroy to Rose Creek; (3) $1,500,000 is for extension
across Excelsior Road to connect with the Oberstar Tunnel on the Paul Bunyan
Trail; (4) $450,000 is for development of the Forestville segment of the
Blufflands Trail system; (5) $900,000 is for acquisition and preliminary
development of the undeveloped portion of the Paul Bunyan State Trail in the
city of Bemidji; (6) $1,000,000 is for acquisition and development of the Mill
Towns State Trail between the existing Cannon Valley Trail and the Sakatah
Singing Hills State Trail; and (7) $300,000 is for land acquisition,
engineering, and construction of the Lake Koronis State Trail.
(b) $500,000 is for a grant to the city of St. Louis
Park to design and construct a grade-separated pedestrian and trail crossing
over Hennepin County State-Aid Highway (CSAH) 25 near Belt Line Boulevard in
St. Louis Park. The grant is under the
program in Minnesota Statutes, section 85.019, subdivision 4c.
(c) $200,000 is for a grant under Minnesota
Statutes, section 85.019, subdivision 4c, to the city of Bloomington to remove
the old Cedar Avenue bridge in preparation for a hiking and bicycling trail
connection.
Subd. 11. State Forest
Land Acquisition 1,000,000
To acquire, in fee and easement, private lands from
willing sellers within established boundaries of state forests established
under Minnesota Statutes, section 89.021, and within forest legacy areas.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 12. State Park
and Recreation Area Acquisition
2,000,000
For acquisition of land under Minnesota
Statutes, section 86A.05, subdivisions 2 and 3, from willing sellers of private
lands within state park and recreation area boundaries established by law.
Subd. 13. Lake Superior
Zoo
400,000
For a grant to the city of Duluth to design
and construct facility improvements at the Lake Superior Zoo. This appropriation is available when matched
by $1 of money secured or provided by the city of Duluth for each $1 of state
money.
Subd. 14. Local Parks
Grants
1,000,000
For local parks grants under Minnesota
Statutes, section 85.019, subdivision 2.
$500,000 of this amount is for a grant to the
city of South St. Paul for the closure, capping, and remediation of
approximately 80 acres of the Port Crosby construction and demolition debris
landfill in South St. Paul, as the fourth phase of converting the land into
parkland, and to restore approximately 80 acres of riverfront land along the
Mississippi River.
$250,000 of this amount is for a grant to the
Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board to develop a plan to complete the Grand
Rounds National Scenic Byway by providing a link between northeast Minneapolis
on Stinson Avenue and southeast Minneapolis at East River Road.
Subd. 15. Regional
Parks: Greater Minnesota
3,000,000
For grants to counties and public regional
parks organizations located outside the metropolitan area as defined in
Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2, to acquire land, design,
and construct and redevelop regional parks and trails, open space, and
recreational facilities. The
improvements must be of a capital nature.
Each $3 of state grants must be matched by $2 of nonstate funds.
Sec. 8. POLLUTION
CONTROL AGENCY
14,000,000
To the Pollution Control Agency to design and
construct remedial systems and acquire land at landfills throughout the state
in accordance with the closed landfill program under Minnesota Statutes, section
115B.39.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Sec. 9. OFFICE OF
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSISTANCE
4,000,000
To the Office of Environmental Assistance for
the solid waste capital assistance grants program under Minnesota Statutes,
section 115A.54. Grants from this
appropriation must be awarded to applicants whose applications were on file
with the office before September 13, 2003.
Sec. 10. BOARD OF WATER
AND SOIL RESOURCES
Subdivision
1. To the Board of Water and Soil
Resources for the purposes specified in this section 24,500,000
Subd. 2. RIM and CREP
Conservation Easements
21,500,000
This appropriation is to acquire conservation
easements from landowners on marginal lands to protect soil and water quality
and to support fish and wildlife habitat as provided in Minnesota Statutes,
section 103F.515.
$1,500,000 of this amount is appropriated
from the general fund to implement the program.
Subd. 3. Wetland
Replacement Due to Public Road Projects
3,000,000
To acquire land for wetlands or restore
wetlands to be used to replace wetlands drained or filled as a result of the
repair, maintenance, or rehabilitation of existing public roads as required by
Minnesota Statutes, section 103G.222, subdivision 1, paragraphs (k) and (l).
The purchase price paid for acquisition of
land, fee, or perpetual easement must be the fair market value as determined by
the board. The board may enter into
agreements with the federal government, other state agencies, political
subdivisions, and nonprofit organizations or fee owners to acquire land and
restore and create wetlands and to acquire existing wetland banking credits
with money provided by this appropriation.
Acquisition of or the conveyance of land may be in the name of the
political subdivision.
Sec. 11. AGRICULTURE
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of agriculture
or other named agencies for the purposes specified in this section
18,570,000
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 2. Rural Finance
Authority Loan Participation
18,000,000
For purposes as set forth in the Minnesota
Constitution, article XI, section 5, clause (h). To the rural finance authority to purchase participation
interests in or to make direct agricultural loans to farmers under Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 41B. This appropriation
is for the beginning farmer program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.039,
the loan restructuring program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.04, the
seller-sponsored program under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.042, the
agricultural improvement loan program under Minnesota Statutes, section
41B.043, and the livestock expansion loan program under Minnesota Statutes,
section 41B.045. All debt service on
bond proceeds used to finance this appropriation must be repaid by the rural
finance authority under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.643. Loan participations must be priced to
provide full interest and principal coverage and a reserve for potential
losses.
Subd.
3. Agriculture Water Management
Research Partnership
570,000
To the Board of Regents of the University of
Minnesota to establish or expand agricultural water management projects at the
Crookston, Morris, Lamberton, and Waseca Research and Outreach Centers in
partnership with the Department of Agriculture.
Sec. 12. MINNESOTA ZOOLOGICAL
GARDEN
2,000,000
To the Minnesota Zoological Garden for
capital asset preservation improvements and betterments to roofs, mechanical
and utility systems, roads and pathways, building envelopes, storm water
systems, exhibits, and safety and code compliance upgrades.
Sec. 13. ADMINISTRATION
1,000,000
To the commissioner of administration for the
Capital Asset Preservation and Replacement Account (CAPRA), to be spent in
accordance with Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.632.
Sec.
14. CAPITOL AREA ARCHITECTURAL AND
PLANNING BOARD 2,735,000
To the commissioner of administration, for
repair and restoration of the public corridors, walls, and ceilings of the
third floor and the dome of the Capitol Building in St. Paul. Of this amount, $865,000 is from the general
fund for painting and plastering in the Capitol Building.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Sec. 15. AMATEUR SPORTS
COMMISSION
Subdivision
1. To the Amateur Sports Commission for
the purposes specified in this section
18,100,000
Subd. 2. Bemidji Hockey
Arena
18,000,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip a hockey
arena on the campus of Bemidji State University. The Amateur Sports Commission must consult with Bemidji State
University on the design. The hockey arena
is to be owned by the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges and
Universities and operated by Bemidji State University.
The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities shall pay the debt service according to section 3,
subdivision 18, on one-third of the principal amount of state bonds sold to
finance the project under this section.
Subd. 3. Bloomington
Ski Jump
100,000
To pay for costs for unforeseen site conditions in
Phase I and for Phase II construction, primarily, of the summer surface on the
Hyland K70 ski jump in Bloomington.
Sec. 16. MILITARY
AFFAIRS
Subdivision
1. To the adjutant general for the
purposes specified in this section 5,000,000
Subd. 2. Asset
Preservation
4,000,000
For asset preservation improvements, Americans With
Disabilities Act upgrades, and betterments of a capital nature at military
affairs facilities statewide.
Subd. 3. Facility Life
Safety Improvements
1,000,000
For life/safety improvements, Americans With
Disabilities Act upgrades, and betterments of a capital nature at military
affairs facilities statewide.
Sec. 17. VETERANS
AFFAIRS
500,000
To the commissioner of administration to complete
construction of the World War II veterans' memorial on the Capitol mall. This is the final state appropriation for
the project and is contingent on sufficient nonstate funds being received and
deposited into a segregated account for perpetual maintenance of the memorial.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Sec. 18. TRANSPORTATION
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of
transportation for the purposes specified in this section
101,300,000
Subd. 2. Local Bridge
Replacement and Rehabilitation
30,000,000
This appropriation is from the bond proceeds account
in the state transportation fund.
The commissioner shall spend this appropriation as
grants to political subdivisions for the replacement, rehabilitation, and
repair of key bridges on the state transportation system. The commissioner shall make these grants in
accordance with and for the purposes of Minnesota Statutes, section 174.50.
Subd. 3. Local Road
Improvement Program
22,000,000
The commissioner shall deposit this amount in the
local road improvement fund for allocation as follows:
(1) $15,000,000 is for deposit in the local road
account for routes of regional significance to be spent as grants for the
purposes of Minnesota Statutes, section 174.52, subdivision 4; and
(2) $7,000,000 is for deposit in the trunk highway
corridor projects account to be spent as grants for the purposes of Minnesota
Statutes, section 174.52, subdivision 2.
Subd. 4. Port
Development Assistance
4,000,000
For the purposes of the port development program
under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 457A.
Subd. 5. Small Capital
Projects
3,800,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip statewide
building projects, consisting of truck stations, salt storage facilities, cold
storage facilities, and Mankato headquarters site work.
This appropriation is from the trunk highway fund.
Subd. 6. Northstar
Commuter Rail
37,500,000
For final design and project management of a
commuter rail line serving Big Lake to downtown Minneapolis; to acquire land
for stations, maintenance facilities, and park and ride lots; and for final design and
project management of an extension of the Hiawatha
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Light Rail Transit line from its terminus in
downtown Minneapolis to a new terminus near Fifth Avenue North adjacent to the
proposed downtown Minneapolis commuter rail station.
This appropriation is not available until
$37,500,000 has been committed by local governments and approval to proceed to
final design has been authorized by the Federal Transit Administration.
Up to $10,000,000 of this appropriation may
be used for final design and project management.
After a full-funding grant agreement has been
executed with the Federal Transit Administration for the Northstar Commuter
Rail project, the remaining balance of this appropriation not committed for
final design and project management or committed to acquire land shall be
available to construct, furnish, and equip the Northstar Commuter Rail line and
to construct, furnish, and equip the extension of the Light Rail Transit line.
Subd. 7. Personal Rapid
Transit
4,000,000
(a) For a grant to a statutory or home rule
charter city, a public postsecondary educational institution, or a public
transit authority with the power to issue general obligation bonds, if the
grantee is a signatory to an agreement to implement the project funded in this
subdivision entered into by at least one statutory or home rule charter city,
public postsecondary educational institution, and public transit authority with
the power to issue general obligation bonds.
(b) This appropriation is to design, acquire,
construct, furnish, and equip a personal rapid transit safety certification and
training facility, in order to (1) confirm the safety of the patented personal
rapid transit technology for sustainable public transit service, (2) provide an
opportunity for engineers to be trained in its design and use, and (3)
establish a new and economically self-sustaining, viable technology in
Minnesota so that the University of Minnesota may realize royalty benefits from
an existing agreement. The grantee may
enter into an agreement for operation of the facility, subject to Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.695.
(c) The facility, at a minimum, must consist
of a 2,200-foot oval guideway, one off-line station, and a maintenance and
control center. The facility must be
developed in accord with plans for a future personal rapid transit system
serving the area within the jurisdiction of the signatories to the agreement
required in paragraph (a).
APPROPRIATIONS
$
(d) This appropriation is contingent on (1) a
contribution of at least $8,000,000 in private resources from an entity with
the licensing and technological capacity to provide at least three personal
rapid transit vehicles, training services for engineers, engineering work, and
six months of operational testing to confirm the technology's safety for public
use, (2) a contribution of at least $12,000,000 from other nonstate sources to
meet the total project cost of $24,000,000, and (3) an agreement by a postsecondary
educational institution to provide technical support and training for planning,
design, operation, and maintenance of personal rapid transit systems.
Sec. 19. METROPOLITAN
COUNCIL
Subdivision
1. To the Metropolitan Council for the
purposes specified in this section 17,000,000
Subd. 2. Cedar Avenue
Bus Rapid Transit (BRT)
10,000,000
For environmental studies, preliminary
engineering, bus lane improvements, and transit station construction and
improvements for Cedar Avenue bus rapid transit between the Mall of America in
Bloomington and the cities of Eagan, Apple Valley, and Lakeville.
Subd. 3. Metropolitan
Regional Parks Capital Improvements
7,000,000
This appropriation must be used to pay the
cost of improvements and betterments of a capital nature and acquisition by the
council and local government units of regional recreational open-space lands in
accordance with the council's policy plan as provided in Minnesota Statutes,
section 473.147. Priority should be
given to park rehabilitation and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 20. HUMAN SERVICES
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of
administration for the purposes specified in this section
9,014,000
Subd.
2. St. Peter Regional Treatment Center
Sex Offender Facility 3,000,000
To design new facilities for up to 150 beds
for the treatment of sex offenders in the Minnesota Sexual Offender Program at
the St. Peter Regional Treatment Center.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 3.
Systemwide-Campus Redevelopment/Reuse/ Demolition
5,000,000
To demolish or improve surplus,
nonfunctional, or deteriorated facilities and infrastructure at Department of
Human Services campuses statewide.
Subd. 4. Systemwide
Roof Renovation and Replacement
1,014,000
For renovation and replacement of roofs at
Department of Human Services facilities statewide.
Sec. 21. VETERANS HOMES
BOARD
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of
administration for the purposes specified in this section
7,077,000
Subd.
2. Minneapolis Veterans Home-Waste
Piping Replacement 1,077,000
For design, renovation, and related costs of
replacing the sanitary waste piping in Building 17 at the Minneapolis Veterans
Home.
Subd. 3. Asset
Preservation
6,000,000
For asset preservation improvements and
betterments of a capital nature at veterans homes statewide.
Sec. 22. CORRECTIONS
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of
administration for the purposes specified in this section
65,433,000
Subd.
2. Minnesota Correctional Facility -
Faribault Asset Preservation 34,891,000
For asset preservation of existing facilities
at the Minnesota Correctional Facility - Faribault.
Subd. 3. Minnesota
Correctional Facility - Stillwater
19,192,000
To design, construct, furnish, and equip a
new 150-bed high security segregation unit to improve staff safety and
accommodate increased inmate population, including the remodeling of the
discipline and psychology/psychiatry unit, the demolition of the former health
services building, and the removal of walls dividing Cell Hall A/West and Cell
Hall A/Segregation.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 4. Asset
Preservation
11,000,000
For improvements and betterments of a capital nature
at Minnesota correctional facilities statewide, including, but not limited to,
emergency lighting projects, roof and window replacement, tuckpointing, and
asbestos abatement.
Subd. 5. Minnesota
Correctional Facility - Willow River
350,000
To purchase, furnish, equip, and prepare foundation
and utilities for a new 24-bed prefabricated building.
Sec. 23. EMPLOYMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of employment
and economic development or other named agency for the purposes specified in
this section
61,480,000
Subd. 2. State Match
for Federal Grants
16,280,000
(a) To the public facilities authority:
(1) to match federal grants to the water pollution
control revolving fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 446A.07; and
(2) to match federal grants to the drinking water
revolving fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 446A.081.
(b) The expenditure and allocation of state matching
money between funds described in paragraph (a), clauses (1) and (2), must be
based on the amount of federal money appropriated to the funds.
(c) This appropriation must be used for qualified
capital projects.
Subd. 3. Minnesota
Development Account
15,000,000
For transfer to the Minnesota development account
created in Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.571. This appropriation may be used for grants for eligible
biotechnology and health sciences industry facilities designated under
Minnesota Statutes, section 469.330.
Subd. 4. Wastewater
Infrastructure Funding Program
10,200,000
To the Public Facilities Authority for the purposes
specified in this subdivision.
$10,000,000 of this appropriation is for grants to eligible
municipalities under the wastewater infrastructure program established in
Minnesota Statutes, section 446A.072.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
To the greatest practical extent, the
authority must use the funds for projects on the 2004 project priority list in
priority order to qualified applicants that submit plans and specifications to
the Pollution Control Agency or receive a funding commitment from USDA rural
development before December 1, 2005.
$200,000 of this appropriation is from the
general fund for administration of the wastewater infrastructure program.
Subd. 5.
University of Minnesota - Mayo Clinic Biotechnology Research
Facility 20,000,000
To the Board of Regents of the University of
Minnesota to purchase three floors in the Stabile Building on the Mayo Clinic
campus in Rochester. The floors are to
be used for scientific research beneficial to collaborative research efforts
between the University of Minnesota and the Mayo Clinic. The three floors will be owned by the
University of Minnesota and operated by the Mayo Clinic through a use agreement
approved by the commissioner of finance subject to Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.695.
Sec. 24. MINNESOTA
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Subdivision
1. To the Minnesota Historical Society
for the purposes specified in this section
4,000,000
Subd. 2. Historic Sites
Asset Preservation
2,000,000
For capital improvements and betterments at state
historic sites, buildings, landscaping at historic buildings, exhibits,
markers, and monuments. The society
shall determine project priorities as appropriate based on need.
Subd. 3. County and
Local Preservation Grants
2,000,000
To be allocated to county and local
jurisdictions as matching money for historic preservation projects of a capital
nature. Grant recipients must be public
entities and must match state funds on at least an equal basis. The facilities must be publicly owned.
Sec. 25. GRANTS TO
POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of employment
and economic development or other named agency for the purposes specified in
this section
34,248,000
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 2. Buffalo Lake
Maintenance Garage and Street Repair
635,000
For a grant to the city of Buffalo Lake to
design, construct, furnish, and equip a municipal maintenance garage and
reconstruct city streets damaged by a tornado.
Subd. 3. Roseau
Infrastructure Repair and Improvements
10,000,000
For a grant to the city of Roseau for the
following capital expenditures:
(1) to predesign, design, construct, and
replace municipal infrastructure damaged by the 2002 flood in the city,
including, but not limited to, water mains, sewer mains, streets, sidewalks,
curbs, and gutters;
(2) to predesign, design, construct, furnish,
and equip new municipal buildings that may include a city hall, auditorium,
police department, library, and museum; and
(3) to predesign, design, and construct
water, sewer, and street improvements to the Roseau Industrial Park.
This appropriation is not available until all
funds necessary to complete the project are committed from nonstate sources.
Subd. 4. North Central
Regional Correctional Facility
6,000,000
For a grant to Cass County to construct,
furnish, and equip a publicly owned and operated regional jail on surplus land
of the state-operated nursing home, Ah Gwah Ching, in the city of Walker.
The state shall own 75 percent of the beds and
Cass County shall own 25 percent of the beds.
The state must contract with Cass County to operate the facility.
The appropriation is not available until the
commissioner determines that at least $6,000,000 has been committed to the
project from nonstate sources.
Subd. 5. Rochester
Regional Public Safety Training Center
627,000
To the commissioner of administration for
Phase I of the Rochester Regional Public Safety Training Center to develop a
live burn training simulator adjacent to the existing National Guard facility
in Rochester.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
The appropriation is not available until the
commissioner determines that an equal amount has been committed to the project
from nonstate sources.
Subd.
6. Middle St. Croix River Watershed
Management Organization 1,550,000
For a grant to the city of Bayport for the
Middle St. Croix River Watershed Management Organization to complete the sewer
system extending from Minnesota department of natural resources pond 82-310P
(the prison pond) in Bayport through the Stillwater prison grounds to the St.
Croix River.
Subd. 7. City of
Rushford
600,000
For a grant, subject to Minnesota Statutes,
section 16A.695, to the city of Rushford for construction, renovation,
remodeling, and infrastructure for capital improvements to and for the facility
to be used by the Rushford Institute for Nanotechnology, Inc.
Subd. 8. City of St.
Paul
2,000,000
For a grant to the city of St. Paul to
acquire land for right-of-way and to complete contamination remediation and
construct Phalen Boulevard between Interstate Highway I-35E and Johnson
Parkway.
Subd. 9. Hennepin
County
1,200,000
For a grant to Hennepin County for Phase I
capital improvements to the Lowry Avenue corridor from Girard Avenue North to
the I‑94 bridge in Minneapolis.
Subd. 10. City of Two
Harbors
1,071,000
To the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency for
a grant to the city of Two Harbors to acquire land for, design, construct,
furnish, and equip a 2,500,000 gallon equalization basin and a chlorine-contact
tank of at least 100,000 gallon capacity, adjacent to the city's wastewater
treatment plant. The equalization basin
is required under the city's National Pollution Discharge Elimination System
permit. This appropriation is not
available until the commissioner of finance determines that at least an equal
amount has been committed to the project from nonstate sources.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 11. City of
Crookston
2,000,000
To the public facilities authority to make a
grant to the city of Crookston to predesign, design, and construct emergency
riverbank protection and erosion control measures in the vicinity of U.S.
Highway 2. For the purposes of this appropriation,
the criteria, limitations, and repayment requirements in Minnesota Statutes,
sections 446A.07, 446A.072, and 446A.081, are waived.
Subd. 12. City of Askov
1,215,000
To the public facilities authority to make a
grant to the city of Askov to construct a new wastewater treatment plant and
sewer and water main extensions. This
appropriation is not available until the commissioner of finance has determined
that at least an equal amount is committed to the project from nonstate
sources.
Subd. 13. City of
Duluth
4,950,000
To the commissioner of the Minnesota
Pollution Control Agency for a grant to the city of Duluth for design and
construction of sanitary sewer overflow storage facilities at selected
locations in the city of Duluth. This
appropriation is available when matched by $1 of money secured or provided by
the city of Duluth for each $1 of state money.
Subd. 14. Bruentrup
Farm Restoration
100,000
For a grant to the city of Maplewood to
complete restoration of the Bruentrup farm in Maplewood.
This appropriation is not available until the
commissioner of finance has determined that at least an equal amount has been
committed to the project from nonstate sources.
Subd. 15. Burnsville
Water Treatment
2,000,000
To the public facilities authority for a
grant to the city of Burnsville to design, construct, furnish, and equip a
water treatment facility that will provide an additional potable water source
for the city of Burnsville using water from the Burnsville quarry. This appropriation is not available until
the commissioner of finance has determined that at least $6,000,000 is
available in matching funds from nonstate sources. Amounts spent since January 1, 2002, to plan, design, and
construct this project may be counted as part of the nonstate match.
APPROPRIATIONS
$
Subd. 16. Como Park Zoo
300,000
For a grant to the city of St. Paul for the
predesign and design for renovation to the Como Park Zoo.
Sec. 26. BOND SALE
EXPENSES
667,000
To the commissioner of finance for bond sale
expenses under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.641, subdivision 8.
Sec. 27. Laws 2003,
First Special Session chapter 20, article 1, section 15, is amended to read:
Sec. 15. BOND SALE
SCHEDULE
The commissioner of finance shall schedule
the sale of state general obligation bonds so that, during the biennium ending
June 30, 2005, no more than $673,625,000 $653,179,000 will need
to be transferred from the general fund to the state bond fund to pay principal
and interest due and to become due on outstanding state general obligation
bonds. During the biennium, before each
sale of state general obligation bonds, the commissioner of finance shall
calculate the amount of debt service payments needed on bonds previously issued
and shall estimate the amount of debt service payments that will be needed on
the bonds scheduled to be sold. The
commissioner shall adjust the amount of bonds scheduled to be sold so as to
remain within the limit set by this section.
The amount needed to make the debt service payments is appropriated from
the general fund as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.641.
Sec. 28. [BOND SALE
AUTHORIZATION.]
Subdivision 1.
[BOND PROCEEDS FUND.] To provide the money appropriated in this act
from the bond proceeds fund, the commissioner of finance shall sell and issue
bonds of the state in an amount up to $646,865,000 in the manner, upon the
terms, and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota Statutes, sections 16A.631
to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota Constitution, article XI, sections 4 to 7.
Subd. 2.
[TRANSPORTATION FUND BOND PROCEEDS ACCOUNT.] To provide the money
appropriated in this act from the state transportation fund, the commissioner
of finance shall sell and issue bonds of the state in an amount up to $30,000,000
in the manner, upon the terms, and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota
Statutes, sections 16A.631 to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota Constitution,
article XI, sections 4 to 7. The
proceeds of the bonds, except accrued interest and any premium received on the
sale of the bonds, must be credited to a bond proceeds account in the state
transportation fund.
Sec. 29.
[CANCELLATION.]
The $20,000,000 appropriation in Laws 2002, chapter 393,
section 19, subdivision 2, for the Northwest Busway, is canceled. The bond sale authorization in Laws 2002,
chapter 393, section 30, subdivision 1, is reduced by $20,000,000.
Sec. 30. [16A.502]
[NONSTATE COMMITMENTS TO CAPITAL PROJECTS.]
(a) A state appropriation or grant for a capital project may
require a commitment from nonstate sources.
(1) The commitment must be in the amount that when added to
the appropriation or grant is sufficient to complete the project;
(2) the appropriation or grant is not available until the
commitment is determined to be sufficient; and
(3) the commissioner must determine the sufficiency of the
commitment.
(b) In making the determination, the commissioner must apply
generally accepted governmental accounting standards and principles, including
those that are particularly applicable to capital projects.
Sec. 31. [16A.503]
[REFERENDUM REQUIRED FOR LOCAL MATCH OVER $1,000,000.]
(a) A local government must not impose a local tax or issue
general obligation bonds to provide $1,000,000 or more of a required nonstate
match for an appropriation of state general obligation or revenue bond proceeds
unless approved by the voters in an election on the issue.
(b) If more than one local government is responsible for
contributing to the nonstate match of $1,000,000 or more from local taxes or
local general obligation bond proceeds, each local government must hold an
election on whether to approve imposition and use of local taxes or the
issuance of the bonds. Unless the local
tax or issuance of bonds is approved in each participating jurisdiction, none
of the local governments may impose the tax or issue bonds.
(c) Any entity, except a state agency as defined in
Minnesota Statutes, section 13.02, subdivision 17, that is required to
contribute nonstate money to a project funded in this act, must certify to the
commissioner of finance that at least 80 percent of the required amount of
nonstate money has been spent before the commissioner of finance may release
state funds appropriated to the project.
Sec. 32. [16A.504] [COMMISSIONER,
ARCHITECT ASSURANCES.]
Before releasing state bond proceeds or entering into a
grant agreement for construction grants for projects funded with general
obligation bonds, the commissioner of finance must work with the state
architect to be assured that the project can be delivered for the lowest cost
possible and that the project will follow applicable state or local laws.
Sec. 33. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16A.671, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [DEFINITIONS.]
As used in this section, the terms defined in this subdivision have the
meanings given them:
(a) "General fund" means all cash and investments
from time to time received and held in the treasury, except proceeds of state
bonds and amounts received and held in special or dedicated funds created by
the Constitution, or by or pursuant to federal laws or regulations, or by bond
or trust instruments, pension contracts, or other agreements of the state or
its agencies with private persons, entered into under state law.
(b) "Maximum current cash flow requirement"
means the commissioner's written estimate of the largest of the amounts by
which, on a particular designated date in each month of the term for which
certificates are to be issued, the sum of (1) the warrants then outstanding
against the general fund plus (2) those that must be drawn on the fund
before the same date in the following month, in payment of claims due for
expenditure under all appropriations and allotments, will exceed the amount of
cash or cash equivalent assets held in the general fund on the first of these
dates an amount equal to five percent of the actual working capital
expenditures from the general fund in the fiscal year immediately preceding the
date of the largest of such amounts, will exceed the amount of cash or cash
equivalent assets held in the general fund, excluding the proceeds of the
certificates to be issued.
Sec. 34. [16A.693]
[ATTENDANCE, SERVICE DATA POSTED.]
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b), a state-bond financed
project that receives any public funds for operations and is open to or used by
the public must post attendance or use data on its Web site each week. Attendance or use data must include the
total number of persons, and the fare or entrance fees paid. This paragraph applies to commuter rail,
light rail transit, museums, state or county historical sites, zoos, parks and
recreation lands and facilities, conservatories, aquariums, civic centers,
convention centers, and sports or entertainment facilities.
(b) Paragraph (a) does not apply to state bond financed
facilities that provide general government services or education, including
offices, laboratories, school buildings, city halls, county courthouses, or the
State Capitol.
Sec. 35. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16A.695, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a.
[NONPROFIT OPERATOR OF STATE BOND FINANCED FACILITY; BUDGET DATA TO BE
POSTED ON WEB.] An entity that has entered into an agreement under this
section to manage or operate a state-bond financed facility must provide
complete financial information to the governmental entity with which it has
contracted. Financial information
includes annual budget and financial data related to the project, and operating
and capital revenue, expenditures, and debt of the entity and the project. The governmental entity must make the
information available on the governmental entity's Web site. The governmental entity must develop and
maintain a Web site for this purpose if it does not otherwise have a Web site.
Sec. 36. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16A.695, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [SALE OF
PROPERTY.] A public officer or agency shall not sell any state bond financed
property unless the public officer or agency determines by official action that
the property is no longer usable or needed by the public officer or agency to
carry out the governmental program for which it was acquired or constructed,
the sale is made as authorized by law, the sale is made for fair market value,
and the sale is approved by the commissioner.
If any state bonds issued to purchase or better the state bond financed
property that is sold remain outstanding on the date of sale, the net proceeds
of sale must be applied as follows:
(1) if the state bond financed property was acquired and
bettered solely with state bond proceeds, the net proceeds of sale must be paid
to the commissioner, deposited in the state bond fund, and used to pay or
redeem or defease the outstanding state bonds in accordance with the
commissioner's order authorizing their issuance, and the proceeds are
appropriated for this purpose; or
(2) if the state bond financed property was acquired or
bettered partly with state bond proceeds and partly with other money, the net
proceeds of sale must be used: first,
to pay to the state the amount of state bond proceeds used to acquire or better
the property; second, to pay in full any outstanding public or private debt
incurred to acquire or better the property; and third, any excess over the
amount needed for those purposes must be divided in proportion to the shares contributed to
the acquisition or betterment of the property and paid to the interested public
and private entities, other than any private lender already paid in full, and
the proceeds are appropriated for this purpose. In calculating the share contributed by each entity, the
amount to be attributed to the owner of the property shall be the fair market
value of the property that was bettered by state bond proceeds at the time the
betterment began.
When all of the net proceeds of sale have been applied as
provided in this subdivision, this section no longer applies to the property.
Sec. 37. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.03, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [ELIGIBILITY
FOR BEGINNING FARMER LOANS.] (a) In addition to the requirements under
subdivision 1, a prospective borrower for a beginning farm loan in which the
authority holds an interest, must:
(1) have sufficient education, training, or experience in the
type of farming for which the loan is desired;
(2) have a total net worth, including assets and liabilities of
the borrower's spouse and dependents, of less than $200,000 in 1991 $350,000
in 2004 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted for inflation
by multiplying $200,000 that amount by the cumulative inflation
rate as determined by the United States All-Items Consumer Price Index;
(3) demonstrate a need for the loan;
(4) demonstrate an ability to repay the loan;
(5) certify that the agricultural land to be purchased will be
used by the borrower for agricultural purposes;
(6) certify that farming will be the principal occupation of
the borrower;
(7) agree to participate in a farm management program approved
by the commissioner of agriculture for at least the first three years of the
loan, if an approved program is available within 45 miles from the borrower's
residence. The commissioner may waive
this requirement for any of the programs administered by the authority if the
participant requests a waiver and has either a four-year degree in an
agricultural program or certification as an adult farm management instructor;
and
(8) agree to file an approved soil and water conservation plan
with the Soil Conservation Service office in the county where the land is
located.
(b) If a borrower fails to participate under paragraph (a),
clause (7), the borrower is subject to penalty as determined by the authority.
Sec. 38. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.039, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [STATE
PARTICIPATION.] The state may participate in a new real estate loan with an
eligible lender to a beginning farmer to the extent of 45 percent of the
principal amount of the loan or $125,000 $200,000, whichever is
less. The interest rates and repayment
terms of the authority's participation interest may be different than the
interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the
loan.
Sec. 39. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.04, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. [STATE'S
PARTICIPATION.] With respect to loans that are eligible for restructuring under
sections 41B.01 to 41B.23 and upon acceptance by the authority, the authority
shall enter into a participation agreement or other financial arrangement
whereby it shall participate in a restructured loan to the extent of 45 percent
of the primary principal or $150,000
$225,000, whichever is less. The
authority's portion of the loan must be protected during the authority's
participation by the first mortgage held by the eligible lender to the extent
of its participation in the loan.
Sec. 40. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.042, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [PARTICIPATION
LIMIT; INTEREST.] The authority may participate in new seller-sponsored loans
to the extent of 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $125,000
$200,000, whichever is less. The
interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest
may be different than the interest rates and repayment terms of the seller's
retained portion of the loan.
Sec. 41. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.043, subdivision 1b, is amended to read:
Subd. 1b. [LOAN
PARTICIPATION.] The authority may participate in an agricultural improvement
loan with an eligible lender to a farmer who meets the requirements of section
41B.03, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), and who is actively engaged in
farming. Participation is limited to 45
percent of the principal amount of the loan or $125,000 $200,000,
whichever is less. The interest rates
and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may be different
than the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of
the loan.
Sec. 42. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.043, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5. [TOTAL
NET WORTH LIMIT.] A prospective borrower for an agricultural improvement
loan in which the authority holds an interest must have a total net worth,
including assets and liabilities of the borrower's spouse and dependents, of
less than $350,000 in 2004 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted
for inflation by multiplying that amount by the cumulative inflation rate as
determined by the United States All-Items Consumer Price Index.
Sec. 43. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.045, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [LOAN
PARTICIPATION.] The authority may participate in a livestock expansion loan
with an eligible lender to a livestock farmer who meets the requirements of
section 41B.03, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), and who are actively
engaged in a livestock operation. A
prospective borrower must have a total net worth, including assets and
liabilities of the borrower's spouse and dependents, of less than $400,000 in
1999 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted for inflation by
multiplying $400,000 by the cumulative inflation rate as determined by the
United States All-Items Consumer Price Index.
Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount
of the loan or $250,000 $275,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of
the authority's participation interest may be different from the interest rates
and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan.
Sec. 44. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41B.046, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. [LOANS.] (a)
The authority may participate in a stock loan with an eligible lender to a
farmer who is eligible under subdivision 4.
Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the
loan or $24,000 $40,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of
the authority's participation interest may differ from the interest rates and
repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan, but the
authority's interest rate must not exceed 50 percent of the lender's interest
rate.
(b) No more than 95 percent of the purchase price of the stock
may be financed under this program.
(c) Security for stock loans must be the stock
purchased, a personal note executed by the borrower, and whatever other
security is required by the eligible lender or the authority.
(d) The authority may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application
fee for each application for a stock loan.
The authority may review the fee annually and make adjustments as
necessary. The application fee is
initially $50. Application fees
received by the authority must be deposited in the value-added agricultural
product revolving fund.
(e) Stock loans under this program will be made using money in
the value-added agricultural product revolving fund established under
subdivision 3.
(f) The authority may not grant stock loans in a cumulative
amount exceeding $2,000,000 for the financing of stock purchases in any one
cooperative.
Sec. 45. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 41C.02, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
Subd. 12. [LOW OR
MODERATE NET WORTH.] "Low or moderate net worth" means:
(1) for an individual, an aggregate net worth of the individual
and the individual's spouse and minor children of less than $200,000 in 1991
$350,000 in 2004 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted for
inflation by multiplying $200,000 that amount by the cumulative
inflation rate as determined by the United States All-Items Consumer Price
Index; or
(2) for a partnership, an aggregate net worth of all partners,
including each partner's net capital in the partnership, and each partner's
spouse and minor children of less than $400,000 in 1991 and an amount in
subsequent years which is adjusted for inflation by multiplying $400,000 by the
cumulative inflation rate as determined by the United States All-Items Consumer
Price Index twice the amount set for an individual in clause (1). However, the aggregate net worth of each
partner and that partner's spouse and minor children may not exceed $200,000
in 1991 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted for inflation by
multiplying $200,000 by the cumulative inflation rate as determined by the
United States All-Items Consumer Price Index the amount set for an
individual in clause (1).
Sec. 46. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.571, is amended to read:
116J.571 [CREATION OF ACCOUNTS.]
Two greater Minnesota redevelopment development
accounts are created, one in the general fund and one in the bond proceeds
fund. Money in the accounts may be used
to make grants as provided in section 116J.575. Money in the bond proceeds fund may only be used for eligible
costs for publicly owned property.
Money in the general fund may be used to pay for the commissioner's
costs in reviewing the applications.
Sec. 47. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.572, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [DEVELOPMENT
AUTHORITY.] "Development authority" includes a statutory or home rule
charter city, county, housing and redevelopment authority, economic development
authority, or port authority located outside the seven-county metropolitan
area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2.
Sec. 48. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.572, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [REDEVELOPMENT
DEVELOPMENT.] "Redevelopment Development" means
recycling obsolete, abandoned, or underutilized properties for new industrial,
commercial, or residential uses.
Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 116J.573, subdivision 1, is
amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[ACCOUNTS.] Criteria for use of the accounts created in section 116J.571
must be consistent with and promote the purposes of sections 116J.571 to
116J.575. They include, but are not
limited to:
(1) creating and preserving living wage jobs in greater
Minnesota;
(2) creating incentives for communities to include a full range
of housing opportunities;
(3) creating incentives for all communities to implement
compact, efficient, and mixed-use development; and
(4) creating incentives to assist communities in maintaining a
unique sense of place by preserving local, cultural assets.
Sec. 50. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.573, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [PROJECTS.] To
be eligible for funding by the greater Minnesota redevelopment development
account, a project must:
(1) interrelate redevelopment development with
other public investments in transportation, housing, schools, energy, utilities
information infrastructure, and other public services;
(2) interrelate affordable housing and employment growth areas;
(3) intensify land use that leads to more compact redevelopment
development;
(4) involve redevelopment development that mixes
incomes of residents in housing, including introducing or reintroducing higher
value housing in lower income areas to achieve a mix of housing opportunities;
(5) involve participation from citizens and the business
community in the planning and development of the proposed redevelopment development
plan;
(6) encourage public infrastructure investments which attract
private sector redevelopment development investment in
commercial, industrial, and residential properties adjacent to public
improvements, and provide project area residents with expanded opportunities
for private sector employment; or
(7) be sustainable at the local level and reduce the
probability of future requests for state development, maintenance, or
replacement assistance.
Sec. 51. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.573, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4.
[PARTNERSHIPS.] The commissioner shall give priority to proposals using
innovative financial partnerships between government, private for-profit, and
nonprofit sectors as well as to proposals that meet current tax increment
financing requirements for a redevelopment development district
and contribute tax increment financing towards the project.
Sec. 52. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.573, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. [ANNUAL
REPORT.] The commissioner shall prepare and submit to the legislature an annual
report on the greater Minnesota redevelopment development
account. The report must include
information on the amount of money in the account, the amount distributed, to
whom the grants were distributed and for what purposes, and an evaluation of
the effectiveness of the projects funded in meeting the policies and goals of
the program.
Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 116J.574, subdivision 2, is
amended to read:
Subd. 2. [REQUIRED
CONTENT.] The commissioner shall prescribe and provide the application
form. The application must include at
least the following information:
(1) identification of the site;
(2) a detailed budget, including necessary supporting evidence,
of the total costs for the site including the total eligible redevelopment
development costs;
(3) a complete redevelopment development plan,
including any specific commitments from third parties to construct improvements
on the site;
(4) a complete financing plan, including the manner in which
the development authority uses innovative financial partnerships between government,
private for-profit, and nonprofit sectors; and
(5) any additional information or material that the
commissioner prescribes.
Sec. 54. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116J.575, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[COMMISSIONER DISCRETION.] The commissioner may make a grant for up to
50 percent of the eligible costs of a project.
The determination of whether to make a grant for a site is within the
discretion of the commissioner, subject to this section and sections 116J.571
to 116J.574 and available unencumbered money in the greater Minnesota redevelopment
development account. The
commissioner's decisions and application of the priorities under this section
are not subject to judicial review, except for abuse of discretion.
Sec. 55. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 116P.08, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [EXCEPTIONS.]
Money from the trust fund may not be spent for:
(1) purposes of environmental compensation and liability under
chapter 115B and response actions under chapter 115C;
(2) purposes of municipal water pollution control under the
authority of chapters 115 and 116;
(3) costs associated with the decommissioning of nuclear
power plants;
(4) (3) hazardous waste disposal facilities;
(5) (4) solid waste disposal facilities; or
(6) (5) projects or purposes inconsistent with
the strategic plan.
Sec. 56. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 124D.10, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [SPONSOR.] (a)
A school board; intermediate school district school board; education district
organized under sections 123A.15 to 123A.19; charitable organization under
section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 that is a member of the
Minnesota Council of Nonprofits or the Minnesota Council on Foundations,
registered with the attorney general's office, and reports an end-of-year fund
balance of at least $2,000,000; Minnesota private college that grants two- or
four-year degrees and is registered with the Higher Education
Services Office under chapter 136A; community college, state university, or
technical college, governed by the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities; the board of the Perpich Center for Arts
Education under chapter 129C; or the University of Minnesota may sponsor
one or more charter schools.
(b) A nonprofit corporation subject to chapter 317A, described
in section 317A.905, and exempt from federal income tax under section 501(c)(6)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, may sponsor one or more charter schools
if the charter school has operated for at least three years under a different
sponsor and if the nonprofit corporation has existed for at least 25 years.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for the 2004-2005 school year and later.
Sec. 57. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 136F.60, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5.
[DISPOSITION OF SURPLUS PROPERTY.] (a) The board may declare state
lands under its control that are no longer needed by the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities system to be surplus and may offer for public sale or
otherwise dispose of such lands in a manner consistent with the procedures set
forth in sections 94.10 to 94.14 for disposition of state lands by the
commissioner of administration.
(b) Proceeds from the sale or disposition of land under this
subdivision, after paying all expenses incurred in selling or disposing of the
land and then paying any amounts due under section 16A.695, shall be
appropriated to the board for use for capital projects at the institution which
was responsible for management of the land.
Sec. 58. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 446A.12, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [BONDING
AUTHORITY.] The authority may issue negotiable bonds in a principal amount that
the authority determines necessary to provide sufficient funds for achieving
its purposes, including the making of loans and purchase of securities, the
payment of interest on bonds of the authority, the establishment of reserves to
secure its bonds, the payment of fees to a third party providing credit
enhancement, and the payment of all other expenditures of the authority
incident to and necessary or convenient to carry out its corporate purposes and
powers, but not including the making of grants. Bonds of the authority may be issued as bonds or notes or in any
other form authorized by law. The
principal amount of bonds issued and outstanding under this section at any time
may not exceed $1,000,000,000 $1,250,000,000, excluding bonds for
which refunding bonds or crossover refunding bonds have been issued.
Sec. 59. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 446A.14, is amended to read:
446A.14 [INTEREST EXCHANGES RATE SWAPS AND OTHER
AGREEMENTS.]
with respect to which the swap agreement was made
from any other available source of the authority. Subdivision
1. [AGREEMENTS.] (a) The authority may enter into interest
rate exchange or swap agreements, hedges, forward purchase or sale agreements,
loan sale or pooling agreements or trusts, or other similar agreements in
connection with: The authority may enter into an agreement with a third party
for an exchange of interest rates under this subdivision. With respect to outstanding obligations
bearing interest at a variable rate, the authority may agree to pay sums equal
to interest at a fixed rate or at a different variable rate determined in
accordance with a formula set out in the agreement on an amount not exceeding
the outstanding principal amount of the obligations, in exchange for an
agreement by the third party to pay sums equal to interest on a similar amount
at a variable rate determined according to a formula set out in the
agreement. With respect to outstanding
obligations bearing interest at a fixed rate or rates, the authority may agree
to pay sums equal to interest at a variable rate determined according to a
formula set out in the agreement on an amount not exceeding the outstanding
principal amount of the obligations in exchange for an agreement by the third
party to pay sums equal to interest on a similar amount at a fixed rate or
rates set out in the agreement. Subject
to any applicable bonds covenants, payments required to be made by the
municipality under the swap agreement may be made from amounts secured to pay
debt service on the obligations
(1) the issuance or proposed issuance of bonds;
(2) the making, proposed making, or sale of loans or other
financial assistance or investments;
(3) outstanding bonds, loans, or other financial assistance;
or
(4) existing similar agreements.
(b) The agreements authorized by this subdivision include,
without limitation, master agreements, options or contracts to enter into such
agreements in the future and related agreements, including, without limitation,
agreements to provide credit enhancement, liquidity, or remarketing; valuation;
monitoring; or administrative services currently or in the future. However, the term of an option to enter into
an interest rate swap, exchange, hedge, or other similar agreement and the term
of a contract to sell, buy, or refund bonds in the future must not exceed five
years and the authorization of the authority to enter into option agreements
with respect to interest rate swap agreements expires on December 31, 2008; provided
that such option agreements entered into prior to that date remain valid
agreements of the authority after that date.
(c) The agreements authorized by this subdivision or
supplements to master agreements may be entered into on the basis of negotiation
with a qualified third party or through a competitive proposal process on terms
and conditions and with covenants and provisions approved by the authority and
may include, without limitation:
(1) provisions establishing reserves;
(2) pledging assets or revenues of the authority for current
or other payments or termination payments;
(3) contracting with the other parties to such agreements as
to the custody, collection, securing, investment, and payment of money of the
authority or money held in trust; or
(4) requiring the issuance of bonds or entering into loans
or other agreements authorized by this subdivision in the future.
(d) Subject to the terms of the agreement and other
agreements of the authority with bondholders or other third parties, the
agreements authorized by this subdivision may be general or limited obligations
of the authority payable from all available or certain specified funds
appropriated to the authority. The
agreements authorized by this subdivision do not constitute debt of the
authority for the purposes of the limits on bonds or notes of the authority set
forth in section 446A.12, subdivision 1.
(e) The authority may issue bonds to provide funds to make
payments, including, without limitation, termination payments pursuant to an
agreement authorized by this subdivision.
(f) The aggregate notional amount of interest rate swap or
exchange agreements in effect at any time must not exceed an amount equal to
ten percent of the aggregate principal amount of bonds the authority is
authorized to have outstanding pursuant to section 446A.12, subdivision 1,
including the notional amount of interest rate swap or exchange agreements with
respect to which a reversing agreement has been entered into, the effect of
which is to terminate the original agreement or a portion thereof, and
reversing agreements with respect to all or a portion of existing agreements.
(g) For the purposes of this
section, the following terms have the following meanings unless the context
clearly requires otherwise:
(1) "agreement to provide remarketing" means an
agreement with a third party to provide the service, as agent of for the
authority, of marketing bonds or other outstanding obligations where the bonds
are subject to tender to the authority for purchase by the authority;
(2) "credit enhancement" means additional
third-party security or sources of repayment for obligations of another party,
and may include, without limitation, guaranties, insurance, letters of credit,
lines of credit, standby bond purchase agreements, or agreements pledging
collateral;
(3) "hedge" means an agreement entered into with a
third party for the purpose of trying to limit, offset, or compensate for
possible losses, expenses, or outcomes, in whole or in part, from particular
actions, agreements, or obligations;
(4) "interest rate swap agreement" or
"interest rate exchange agreement" means an agreement between two or
more parties where two or more parties agree to pay to each other, for a stated
period of time, interest on a stated amount at different rates, or rates
calculated on a different basis, which agreement does not include the borrowing
of money or the obligation to pay the stated amount, and may include, without
limitation, agreements where one party agrees to pay a fixed rate and the other
agrees to pay a variable rate, or where one party agrees to pay a variable rate
determined in one manner and the other party agrees to pay a variable rate
determined in another manner;
(5) "liquidity" means a form of credit enhancement
entered into for the purpose of providing money on demand or within a specified
period of time to meet obligations which may arise and be payable, for which a
party determines that it is not desirable, practicable, or possible to keep
funds or readily saleable short-term investments available at all times such
obligations to pay may arise or in the full amount of the potential obligation;
and
(6) "master agreement" means any agreement
pursuant to which one or more separate interest rate swaps, transactions, or
other agreements may be entered into from time to time or pursuant to which
separately stated terms and conditions intended to cover multiple transactions
or agreements are set forth.
Subd. 2. [POWERS
OF AUTHORITY.] For the purposes of this section, the authority may exercise
all powers provided in this chapter.
The authority may consent, whenever it considers it necessary or
desirable in connection with agreements entered into under this subdivision, to
modifications, amendments, or waivers of the terms of such agreements. The proceeds of any agreements entered into
pursuant to this subdivision are appropriated to the authority pursuant to
section 446A.11, subdivision 13. The
agreements entered into pursuant to this subdivision are not subject to
sections 16C.03, subdivision 4, and 16C.05.
Sec. 60. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 446A.17, is amended to read:
446A.17 [NONLIABILITY.]
Subdivision 1.
[NONLIABILITY OF INDIVIDUALS.] No member of the authority or other
person executing the bonds, loans, interest rate swaps, or other agreements
or contracts of the authority is liable personally on the bonds such
bonds, loans, interest rate swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the
authority or is subject to any personal liability or accountability by
reason of their issuance, execution, delivery, or performance.
Subd. 2. [NONLIABILITY
OF STATE.] The state is not liable on bonds, loans, interest rate swaps, or
other agreements or contracts of the authority issued or entered into
under this chapter and those bonds such bonds, loans, interest rate
swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the authority are not a debt of
the state. The bonds Such
bonds, loans, interest rate swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the
authority must contain on their face a statement to that effect.
Sec. 61.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 446A.19, is amended to read:
446A.19 [STATE PLEDGE AGAINST IMPAIRMENT OF CONTRACTS.]
The state pledges and agrees with the holders of bonds issued
under sections 446A.051, and 446A.12 to 446A.20 or other parties to any
loans, interest rate swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the authority
that the state will not limit or alter the rights vested in the authority to
fulfill the terms of any agreements made with the bondholders or parties to
any loans, interest rate swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the
authority or in any way impair the rights and remedies of the holders until
the bonds, together with interest on them, with interest on any unpaid
installments of interest, and all costs and expenses in connection with any
action or proceeding by or on behalf of the bondholders, are fully met and
discharged or, with respect to any loans, interest rate swaps, or other
agreements or contracts of the authority, such agreements have been fully
performed by the authority or otherwise terminated or discharged. The authority may include this pledge and
agreement of the state in any agreement with the holders of bonds issued under
sections 446A.051, and 446A.12 to 446A.20 or in any loans, interest rate
swaps, or other agreements or contracts of the authority.
Sec. 62. Laws 1998,
chapter 404, section 23, subdivision 17, as amended by Laws 1999, chapter 20,
section 1, is amended to read:
Subd. 17. Paramount
Arts District Regional Arts Center
750,000
(a) To the commissioner of administration for a grant
to the city of St. Cloud Housing and Redevelopment Authority to
construct, furnish, and equip the Paramount Arts District Regional Arts Center,
subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.695. This appropriation is not available until the commissioner has
determined that the necessary additional financing to complete at least a
$5,400,000 project has been committed by nonstate sources.
(b) The Housing and Redevelopment Authority
must effect the transfer as otherwise required or permitted by law. Once the transfer is effected, the city is
the successor to the Housing and Redevelopment Authority for the purposes of
the grant and Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.695.
Sec. 63. [MAXIMUM
EFFORT CAPITAL LOAN FORGIVEN; EAST CENTRAL.]
Subdivision 1.
[SALE REQUIREMENTS.] Independent School District No. 2580, East
Central, may sell its middle school building in accordance with Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.695. The net
proceeds from the sale of the property must be paid to the commissioner of
finance and deposited in the state bond fund.
Subd. 2.
[OUTSTANDING LOAN BALANCE FORGIVEN.] Any remaining outstanding
balance on the maximum effort capital loan issued in January 1982 to former
Independent School District No. 566, Askov, after the application of the
sale proceeds according to subdivision 1, is forgiven.
Sec. 64. [DNR; PLAN FOR
LAND MANAGEMENT.]
The commissioner of natural resources must prepare a plan
for development of a comprehensive land management plan by January 15, 2005,
and submit it to the chairs of the committees in the house and senate with
jurisdiction over environmental policy and finance, and capital improvements.
Sec. 65.
[STILLWATER LEVEE FLOOD CONTROL PROJECT.]
Notwithstanding the grant expiration date of June 30, 2002,
the commissioner of natural resources shall extend until June 30, 2006, the
expiration date of a grant made to the city of Stillwater under Minnesota
Statutes, section 103F.161, and matching certain federal appropriations for
flood hazard mitigation.
Sec. 66. [RELEASE FUNDS
FOR RICE STREET BRIDGE OVER I-694.]
The commissioner of transportation must release by December
31, 2004, the $7,500,000 for the Rice Street bridge over I-694 in Ramsey
County, committed by the Department of Transportation in a memorandum of
understanding between the department and Ramsey County.
Sec. 67. [OUTDOOR
LIGHTING PURCHASE.]
All purchasing of outdoor lighting fixtures using funds
appropriated under this act must give consideration to maximizing energy
conservation and savings, reducing glare, minimizing light pollution, and
preserving the natural night environment.
Sec. 68. [ZOO DEBT
SERVICE REPORT.]
The Minnesota Zoological Board must study and report to the
legislature by January 15, 2005, on the impact and appropriateness of debt
service costs paid from dedicated receipts of the Minnesota Zoological
Garden. The board may contract with the
Management Analysis Division of the Department of Administration, or another
vendor of the board's choosing, for the study.
The study must consider commitments made by the zoo, the level of debt
service costs paid by other zoos in this state and other states, and by other
state agencies and political subdivisions in this state, from their dedicated
receipts. The study must also consider
the impact of the debt service on the operating budget and the historical
levels of state support for the Minnesota Zoological Garden.
Sec. 69. [UNIVERSITY OF
MINNESOTA; DULUTH PARKING.]
The Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota is
encouraged to expand the parking facilities at the University of Minnesota,
Duluth campus through the purchase of land and property from willing sellers.
Sec. 70. [REPEALER.]
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 16B.325, is repealed.
Sec. 71. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Except as otherwise provided, this article is effective the
day following final enactment.
ARTICLE
2
ADJUSTMENT
OF GENERAL OBLIGATION BOND AUTHORIZATIONS
Section 1. [TABLE OF
ORIGINAL AND ADJUSTED AUTHORIZATIONS.]
Column A lists the citation to each law authorizing general
obligation bonds since Laws 1983, chapter 323, section 6, to which a further
adjustment is being made in this section.
The original authorization amount in each law is
shown in column B opposite the citation of the law it appears in.
The original authorization amount in column B is hereby
adjusted to the amount shown in column C.
The adjustments resulting in the column C amount reflect specific
changes to an authorization in law, executive vetoes sustained or not
challenged, administrative action reflecting cancellation and abandonment of
all or the unused balance from specific projects for which the proceeds of
authorized bonds were intended to be used, and other action pursuant to law
resulting in the adjusted authorizations shown in column C. The amounts shown in column C are validated
as the lawful adjusted authorization for the cited law as of April 1, 2004, for
all purposes for which the authorization is required or used.
Column A
Column B
Column C
L 1983, c 323, s 6
$30,000,000
$29,935,000
L 1987, c 400, s 25, subd 1 370,972,200 369,560,500
L 1987, c 400, s 25, subd 5 66,747,000 66,740,000
L 1989, c 300, art 1, s 23, subd 1 142,585,000 135,060,000
L 1991, c 354, art 11, s 2, subd 1 12,000,000 11,360,000
L 1992, c 558, s 28, subd 1 231,695,000 219,085,000
L 1992, c 558, s 28, subd 3 17,500,000 17,368,000
L 1993, c 373, s 19, subd 1 54,640,000 53,355,000
L 1993, c 373, s 19, subd 2 9,900,000 9,480,000
L 1994, c 643, s 31, subd 1 573,385,000 564,650,524
L 1994, c 643, s 31, subd 2 45,000,000 34,820,000
L 1995, 1SS c 2, s 14, subd 1 5,630,000 5,590,000
L 1996, c 463, s 27, subd 1
597,110,000
549,215,089
L 1997, c 246, s 10, subd 1 86,625,000 86,191,283
L 1997, 2SS c 2, s 12
55,305,000
38,308,055
L 1998, c 404, s 27, subd 1 463,795,000 104,478,675
L 1999, c 240, art 1, s 13, subd 1 139,510,000 111,905,000
L 1999, c 240, art 1, s 13, subd 2 10,440,000 -0-
L 1999, c 240, art 1, s 16, subd 1 372,400,000 367,418,000
L 2000, c 492, art 1, s 26, subd 1 426,870,000 487,730,000
L 2001, 1SS c 12, s 11, subd 1 99,205,000 98,205,000
L 2002, c 393, s 30, subd 1 920,235,000 567,312,000
Sec. 2.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.]
This article is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to capital improvements;
authorizing spending to acquire and better public land and buildings and other
public improvements of a capital nature with certain conditions; making
adjustments to previous bond authorizations; authorizing sale of state bonds;
canceling an earlier appropriation and appropriating money; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 16A.671, subdivision 3; 16A.695, subdivision 3, by
adding a subdivision; 41B.03, subdivision 3; 41B.039, subdivision 2; 41B.04,
subdivision 8; 41B.042, subdivision 4; 41B.043, subdivision 1b, by adding a
subdivision; 41B.045, subdivision 2; 41B.046, subdivision 5; 41C.02,
subdivision 12; 116J.571; 116J.572, subdivisions 2, 4; 116J.573, subdivisions
1, 2, 4, 5; 116J.574, subdivision 2; 116J.575, subdivision 1; 116P.08,
subdivision 2; 136F.60, by adding a subdivision; 446A.12, subdivision 1;
446A.14; 446A.17; 446A.19; Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 124D.10,
subdivision 3; Laws 1998, chapter 404, section 23, subdivision 17, as amended;
Laws 2003, First Special Session chapter 20, article 1, section 15; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 16A; repealing Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16B.325."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be
re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The report was adopted.
Abrams from the Committee on Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 3081, A bill for an act relating to public finance;
modifying the authority of cities and counties to finance purchases of
computers and related items; clarifying the financing of conservation
easements; extending sunsets on establishment of special service districts and
housing improvement areas; extending the maximum maturity of bonds for
qualified housing development projects; revising time for certain notices of
issues; modifying the authority to finance street reconstruction; modifying
limits on city capital improvement bonds; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 428A.101; 428A.21; 469.034, subdivision 2; 474A.131, subdivision 1;
475.52, subdivisions 1, 3, 4; Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, sections
373.01, subdivision 3; 373.40, subdivision 1; 410.32; 412.301; 475.521,
subdivision 4; 475.58, subdivision 3b.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 343.11, is amended to read:
343.11 [ACQUISITION OF PROPERTY, APPROPRIATIONS.]
Every county and district society for the prevention of cruelty
to animals may acquire, by purchase, gift, grant, or devise, and hold, use, or
convey, real estate and personal property, and lease, mortgage, sell, or use
the same in any manner conducive to its interest, to the same extent as natural
persons. The county board of any
county, or the council of any city, in which such societies exist, may, in its
discretion, appropriate for the maintenance and support of such societies in
the transaction of the work for which they are organized, any sums of money not
otherwise appropriated,
not to exceed in any one year the sum of $4,800 or the sum of 50 75
cents per capita based upon the county's or city's population as of the most
recent federal census, whichever is greater; provided, that no part of
the appropriation shall be expended for the payment of the salary of any
officer of the society.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective January 1, 2005.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 373.01, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [CAPITAL
NOTES.] (a) A county board may, by resolution and without referendum,
issue capital notes subject to the county debt limit to purchase capital
equipment useful for county purposes that has an expected useful life at least
equal to the term of the notes. The
notes shall be payable in not more than five years and shall be issued on terms
and in a manner the board determines. A
tax levy shall be made for payment of the principal and interest on the notes,
in accordance with section 475.61, as in the case of bonds.
(b) For purposes of this subdivision, "capital
equipment" means:
(1) public safety, ambulance, road construction or
maintenance, and medical equipment,; and
(2) computer hardware and original operating system
software, whether bundled with machinery or equipment or unbundled, but
excluding an upgrade or later version of software already owned by the county.
(c) The authority to issue capital notes for original
operating systems software expires on July 1, 2005.
Sec. 3. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 373.40, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[DEFINITIONS.] For purposes of this section, the following terms have
the meanings given.
(a) "Bonds" means an obligation as defined under
section 475.51.
(b) "Capital improvement" means acquisition or
betterment of public lands, development rights in the form of conservation
easements under chapter 84C, buildings, or other improvements within the
county for the purpose of a county courthouse, administrative building, health
or social service facility, correctional facility, jail, law enforcement
center, hospital, morgue, library, park, qualified indoor ice arena, and roads
and bridges, and the acquisition of development rights in the form of
conservation easements under chapter 84C.
An improvement must have an expected useful life of five years or more
to qualify. "Capital
improvement" does not include light rail transit or any activity related
to it or a recreation or sports facility building (such as, but not limited to,
a gymnasium, ice arena, racquet sports facility, swimming pool, exercise room
or health spa), unless the building is part of an outdoor park facility and is
incidental to the primary purpose of outdoor recreation.
(c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of
employment and economic development.
(d) "Metropolitan county" means a county located in
the seven-county metropolitan area as defined in section 473.121 or a county
with a population of 90,000 or more.
(e) "Population" means the population established by
the most recent of the following (determined as of the date the resolution
authorizing the bonds was adopted):
(1) the federal decennial census,
(2) a special census conducted under contract by the United
States Bureau of the Census, or
(3) a population estimate made
either by the metropolitan council or by the state demographer under section
4A.02.
(f) "Qualified indoor ice arena" means a facility
that meets the requirements of section 373.43.
(g) "Tax capacity" means total taxable market value,
but does not include captured market value.
Sec. 4. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 403.21, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. [SUBSYSTEMS.]
"Subsystems" or "public safety radio subsystems" means
systems identified in the plan or a plan developed under section 403.36
as subsystems interconnected by the first and third phase backbone in
subsequent phases and operated by local government units for their own
internal operations.
Sec. 5. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 403.27, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[AUTHORIZATION.] After consulting with the commissioner of finance, the
council, if requested by a vote of at least two-thirds of all of the members of
the Public Safety Radio Communication System Planning Committee established
under section 403.36, may, by resolution, authorize the issuance of its revenue
bonds for any of the following purposes to:
(1) provide funds for regionwide mutual aid and emergency
medical services communications;
(2) provide funds for the elements of the first phase of the
regionwide public safety radio communications system that the board determines
are of regionwide benefit and support mutual aid and emergency medical services
communication including, but not limited to, costs of master controllers of the
backbone;
(3) provide money for the second phase of the public safety
radio communication system;
(4) provide money for the third phase of the public safety
radio communication system;
(5) to the extent money is available after meeting the needs
described in clauses (1) to (3), provide money to reimburse local units of
government for amounts expended for capital improvements to the first phase
system previously paid for by the local government units; or
(6) provide money for assistance to a local government unit
for up to 50 percent of the cost of building a subsystem in the southeast
district or in the counties of Benton, Sherburne, Stearns, or Wright in the
central district of the State Patrol; or
(7) refund bonds issued under this section.
Sec. 6. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 403.27, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [LIMITATIONS.]
(a) The principal amount of the bonds issued pursuant to subdivision 1,
exclusive of any original issue discount, shall not exceed the amount of
$10,000,000 plus the amount the council determines necessary to pay the costs
of issuance, fund reserves, debt service, and pay for any bond insurance or
other credit enhancement.
(b) In addition to the amount authorized under paragraph (a),
the council may issue bonds under subdivision 1 in a principal amount of
$3,306,300, plus the amount the council determines necessary to pay the cost of
issuance, fund reserves, debt service, and any bond insurance or other credit
enhancement. The proceeds of bonds
issued under this paragraph may not be used to finance portable or subscriber
radio sets.
(c) In addition to the amount
authorized under paragraphs (a) and (b), the council may issue bonds under
subdivision 1 in a principal amount of $18,000,000, plus the amount the council
determines necessary to pay the costs of issuance, fund reserves, debt service,
and any bond insurance or other credit enhancement. The proceeds of bonds issued under this paragraph must be used to
pay up to 50 percent of the cost to a local government unit of building a
subsystem identified in the plan adopted under section 403.23, subdivision
2, and may not be used to finance portable or subscriber radio sets. The bond proceeds may be used to make
improvements to an existing 800 MHz radio system that will interoperate with
the regionwide public safety radio communication system, provided that the
improvements conform to the board's plan and technical standards. The council must time the sale and issuance
of the bonds so that the debt service on the bonds can be covered by the
additional revenue that will become available in the fiscal year ending June
30, 2005, generated under section 403.11 and appropriated under section 403.30.
(d) In addition to the amount authorized under paragraphs (a)
to (c), the council may issue bonds under subdivision 1 in a principal amount
of up to $27,000,000, plus the amount the council determines necessary to pay
the costs of issuance, fund reserves, debt service, and any bond insurance or
other credit enhancement. The proceeds
of bonds issued under this paragraph are appropriated to the commissioner of
public safety for phase three of the public safety radio communication
system. In anticipation of the receipt
by the commissioner of public safety of the bond proceeds, the Metropolitan
Radio Board may advance money from its operating appropriation to the
commissioner of public safety to pay for design and preliminary engineering for
phase three. The commissioner of public
safety must return these amounts to the Metropolitan Radio Board when the bond
proceeds are received.
(e) In addition to the amount authorized under paragraphs
(a) to (d), the council may issue bonds under subdivision 1 in a principal
amount of up to $9,557,000, plus the amount the council determines necessary to
pay the costs of issuance, fund reserves, debt service, and any bond insurance
or other credit enhancement. The
proceeds of bonds issued under this paragraph are appropriated to the
commissioner of public safety for the purpose of subdivision 1, clause (6),
provided that the proceeds may not be used to finance portable or subscriber
radio sets.
Sec. 7. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 410.32, is amended to read:
410.32 [CITIES MAY ISSUE CAPITAL NOTES FOR CAPITAL EQUIPMENT.]
(a) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of other law
or charter, a home rule charter city may, by resolution and without public
referendum, issue capital notes subject to the city debt limit to purchase capital
equipment.
(b) For purposes of this section, "capital
equipment" means:
(1) public safety equipment, ambulance and other medical
equipment, road construction and maintenance equipment, and other capital
equipment; and
(2) computer hardware and original operating system
software, provided whether bundled with machinery or equipment or
unbundled, but excluding an upgrade or later version of software already owned
by the city.
(c) The equipment or software has must have
an expected useful life at least as long as the term of the notes.
(d) The authority to issue capital notes for original
operating system software expires on July 1, 2005.
(e) The notes shall be payable in not more than five
years and be issued on terms and in the manner the city determines. The total principal amount of the capital
notes issued in a fiscal year shall not exceed 0.03 percent of the market value
of taxable property in the city for that year.
(f) A tax levy shall be
made for the payment of the principal and interest on the notes, in accordance
with section 475.61, as in the case of bonds.
(g) Notes issued under this section shall require an
affirmative vote of two-thirds of the governing body of the city.
(h) Notwithstanding a contrary provision of other law or
charter, a home rule charter city may also issue capital notes subject to its
debt limit in the manner and subject to the limitations applicable to statutory
cities pursuant to section 412.301.
Sec. 8. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 412.301, is amended to read:
412.301 [FINANCING PURCHASE OF CERTAIN EQUIPMENT.]
(a) The council may issue certificates of indebtedness
or capital notes subject to the city debt limits to purchase capital
equipment.
(b) For purposes of this section, "capital
equipment" means:
(1) public safety equipment, ambulance and other
medical equipment, road construction or and maintenance
equipment, and other capital equipment; and
(2) computer hardware and original operating system
software, provided whether bundled with machinery or equipment or
unbundled, but excluding an upgrade or later version of software already owned
by the city.
(c) The equipment or software has must have
an expected useful life at least as long as the terms of the certificates or
notes.
(d) The authority to issue capital notes for original
operating system software expires on July 1, 2005.
(e) Such certificates or notes shall be payable in not
more than five years and shall be issued on such terms and in such manner as
the council may determine.
(f) If the amount of the certificates or notes to be
issued to finance any such purchase exceeds 0.25 percent of the market value of
taxable property in the city, they shall not be issued for at least ten days
after publication in the official newspaper of a council resolution determining
to issue them; and if before the end of that time, a petition asking for an
election on the proposition signed by voters equal to ten percent of the number
of voters at the last regular municipal election is filed with the clerk, such
certificates or notes shall not be issued until the proposition of their
issuance has been approved by a majority of the votes cast on the question at a
regular or special election.
(g) A tax levy shall be made for the payment of the
principal and interest on such certificates or notes, in accordance with
section 475.61, as in the case of bonds.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 428A.02, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[ORDINANCE.] The governing body of a city may adopt an ordinance
establishing a special service district.
Only property that is classified under section 273.13 and used for
commercial, industrial, or public utility purposes, or is vacant land zoned or
designated on a land use plan for commercial or industrial use and located in
the special service district, may be subject to the charges imposed by the city
on the special service district. Other
types of property may be included within the boundaries of the special service
district but are not subject to the levies or charges imposed by the city on
the special service district. If 50
percent or more of the market
value of a parcel of property is classified under section 273.13 as commercial,
industrial, or vacant land zoned or designated on a land use plan for
commercial or industrial use, or public utility for the current assessment
year, then the entire market value of the property is subject to a service
charge based on net tax capacity for purposes of sections 428A.01 to
428A.10. The ordinance shall describe
with particularity the area within the city to be included in the district and
the special services to be furnished in the district. For a city located outside of the metropolitan area, as
defined in section 473.121, the ordinance may also provide that the activities
of the special service district may be managed by a nonprofit corporation
created to assist and act on behalf of the city in implementing and providing
services as authorized by this section.
The ordinance may not be adopted until after a public hearing has been
held on the question. Notice of the
hearing shall include the time and place of hearing, a map showing the
boundaries of the proposed district, and a statement that all persons owning
property in the proposed district that would be subject to a service charge
will be given opportunity to be heard at the hearing. Within 30 days after adoption of the ordinance under this
subdivision, the governing body shall send a copy of the ordinance to the
commissioner of revenue.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for ordinances on which public hearings are conducted
after June 30, 2004.
Sec. 10. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 428A.03, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[HEARING.] Service charges may be imposed by the city within the special
service district at a rate or amount sufficient to produce the revenues
required to provide special services in the district. To determine the appropriate rate for a service charge based on
net tax capacity, taxable property or net tax capacity must be determined
without regard to captured or original net tax capacity under section 469.177
or to the distribution or contribution value under section 473F.08. Service charges may not be imposed to
finance a special service if the service is ordinarily provided by the city
from its general fund revenues unless the service is provided in the district
at an increased level. In that case, a
service charge may be imposed only in the amount needed to pay for the
increased level of service. A service
charge may not be imposed on the receipts from the sale of intoxicating liquor,
food, or lodging. Before the imposition
of service charges in a district, for each calendar year, a hearing must be
held under section 428A.02 and notice must be given and must be mailed to any
individual or business organization subject to a service charge. For purposes of this section, the notice
shall also include:
(1) a statement that all interested persons will be given an
opportunity to be heard at the hearing regarding a proposed service charge;
(2) the estimated cost of improvements to be paid for in whole or
in part by service charges imposed under this section, the estimated cost of
operating and maintaining the improvements during the first year and upon
completion of the improvements, the proposed method and source of financing the
improvements, and the annual cost of operating and maintaining the
improvements;
(3) the proposed rate or amount of the proposed service charge
to be imposed in the district during the calendar year and the nature and
character of special services to be rendered in the district during the
calendar year in which the service charge is to be collected; and
(4) a statement that the petition requirements of section
428A.08 have either been met or do not apply to the proposed service charge;
and
(5) if the city intends to contract with a nonprofit
corporation created to assist and act on behalf of the city in implementing and
providing services as authorized by ordinance and resolution, a statement of
that intent.
Within six months of the public hearing, the city may adopt a
resolution imposing a service charge within the district not exceeding the
amount or rate expressed in the notice issued under this section.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for notices of public hearings conducted after June 30,
2004.
Sec. 11.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 428A.101, is amended to read:
428A.101 [SPECIAL SERVICE DISTRICT; SUNSET OF SELF-EXECUTING
PROVISIONS.]
The establishment of a new special service district after June
30, 2005 2007, requires enactment of a special law authorizing
the establishment.
Sec. 12. [428A.102]
[NOTIFICATION.]
By the last day of the calendar year in which a special
service district is established, the city shall file a copy of the ordinance
establishing the district with the Office of State Auditor. Cities establishing districts before the
effective date of this section must file a copy of the ordinance by December
31, 2004.
Sec. 13. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 428A.21, is amended to read:
428A.21 [SUNSET.]
No new housing improvement areas may be established under
sections 428A.11 to 428A.20 after June 30, 2005 2007. After June 30, 2005 2007, a
city may establish a housing improvement area, provided that it receives
enabling legislation authorizing the establishment of the area.
Sec. 14. [428A.22]
[NOTIFICATION.]
By the last day of the calendar year in which a housing
improvement district is established, the city shall file a copy of the
ordinance establishing the district with the Office of State Auditor. Cities establishing districts before the
effective date of this section must file a copy of the ordinance by December
31, 2004.
Sec. 15. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 469.034, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [GENERAL
OBLIGATION REVENUE BONDS.] (a) An authority may pledge the general obligation
of the general jurisdiction governmental unit as additional security for bonds
payable from income or revenues of the project or the authority. The authority must find that the pledged
revenues will equal or exceed 110 percent of the principal and interest due on
the bonds for each year. The proceeds
of the bonds must be used for a qualified housing development project or
projects. The obligations must be
issued and sold in the manner and following the procedures provided by chapter
475, except the obligations are not subject to approval by the electors and the
maturities may extend to not more than 30 40 years from the
estimated date of completion of the project. The authority is the municipality for purposes of chapter 475.
(b) The principal amount of the issue must be approved by the
governing body of the general jurisdiction governmental unit whose general
obligation is pledged. Public hearings
must be held on issuance of the obligations by both the authority and the
general jurisdiction governmental unit.
The hearings must be held at least 15 days, but not more than 120 days,
before the sale of the obligations.
(c) The maximum amount of general obligation bonds that may be
issued and outstanding under this section equals the greater of (1) one-half of
one percent of the taxable market value of the general jurisdiction
governmental unit whose general obligation which includes a tax on property is
pledged, or (2) $3,000,000. In the case
of county or multicounty general obligation bonds, the outstanding general
obligation bonds of all cities in the county or counties issued under this
subdivision must be added in calculating the limit under clause (1).
(d) "General jurisdiction governmental unit"
means the city in which the housing development project is located. In the case of a county or multicounty
authority, the county or counties may act as the general jurisdiction
governmental unit. In the case of a
multicounty authority, the pledge of the general obligation is a pledge of a
tax on the taxable property in each of the counties.
(e) "Qualified housing development project" means a
housing development project providing housing either for the elderly or for
individuals and families with incomes not greater than 80 percent of the median
family income as estimated by the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development for the standard metropolitan statistical area or the
nonmetropolitan county in which the project is located, and will. The project must be owned for the
term of the bonds either by the authority for the term of the bonds or
by a limited partnership or other entity in which the authority or another
entity under the sole control of the authority is the sole general partner and
the partnership or other entity must receive (i) an allocation from the
Department of Finance or an entitlement issuer of tax-exempt bonding authority
for the project and a preliminary determination by the Minnesota Housing
Finance Agency or the applicable suballocator of tax credits that the project
will qualify for four percent low-income housing tax credits or (ii) a
reservation of nine percent low-income housing tax credits from the Minnesota
Housing Financing Agency or a suballocator of tax credits for the project. A qualified housing development project may
admit nonelderly individuals and families with higher incomes if:
(1) three years have passed since initial occupancy;
(2) the authority finds the project is experiencing unanticipated
vacancies resulting in insufficient revenues, because of changes in population
or other unforeseen circumstances that occurred after the initial finding of
adequate revenues; and
(3) the authority finds a tax levy or payment from general
assets of the general jurisdiction governmental unit will be necessary to pay
debt service on the bonds if higher income individuals or families are not
admitted.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for bonds issued after the day following final enactment.
Sec. 16. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 469.1813, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[AUTHORITY.] The governing body of a political subdivision may grant an
abatement of the taxes imposed by the political subdivision on a parcel of
property, or defer the payments of the taxes and abate the interest and penalty
that otherwise would apply, if:
(a) it expects the benefits to the political subdivision of the
proposed abatement agreement to at least equal the costs to the political
subdivision of the proposed agreement or intends the abatement to phase in a
property tax increase, as provided in clause (b)(7); and
(b) it finds that doing so is in the public interest because it
will:
(1) increase or preserve tax base;
(2) provide employment opportunities in the political
subdivision;
(3) provide or help acquire or construct public facilities;
(4) help redevelop or renew blighted areas;
(5) help provide access to services for residents of the
political subdivision;
(6) finance or provide public infrastructure; or
(7) phase in a property tax increase on the parcel resulting
from an increase of 50 percent or more in one year on the estimated market
value of the parcel, other than increase attributable to improvement of the
parcel; or
(8) finance historic or heritage preservation.
Sec. 17. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 469.1813, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. [DURATION
LIMIT.] (a) A political subdivision may grant an abatement for a period no
longer than ten 15 years, except as provided under paragraph
(b). The subdivision may specify in the
abatement resolution a shorter duration.
If the resolution does not specify a period of time, the abatement is
for eight years. If an abatement has been
granted to a parcel of property and the period of the abatement has expired,
the political subdivision that granted the abatement may not grant another
abatement for eight years after the expiration of the first abatement. This prohibition does not apply to
improvements added after and not subject to the first abatement.
(b) A political subdivision proposing to abate taxes for a
parcel may request, in writing, that the other political subdivisions in which
the parcel is located grant an abatement for the property. If one of the other political subdivisions
declines, in writing, to grant an abatement or if 90 days pass after receipt of
the request to grant an abatement without a written response from one of the
political subdivisions, the duration limit for an abatement for the parcel by
the requesting political subdivision and any other participating political
subdivision is increased to 15 20 years. If the political subdivision which declined
to grant an abatement later grants an abatement for the parcel, the 15-year
20-year duration limit is reduced by one year for each year that the
declining political subdivision grants an abatement for the parcel during the
period of the abatement granted by the requesting political subdivision. The duration limit may not be reduced below
the limit under paragraph (a).
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for abatement resolutions approved after the day following
final enactment.
Sec. 18. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 473.39, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1k.
[OBLIGATIONS.] After July 1, 2004, in addition to the authority in
subdivisions 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, 1e, 1g, 1h, 1i, and 1j, the council may issue
certificates of indebtedness, bonds, or other obligations under this section in
an amount not exceeding $32,000,000 for capital expenditures as prescribed in
the council's regional transit master plan and transit capital improvement
program and for related costs, including the costs of issuance and sale of the
obligations.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment and applies in the
counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 19. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 473.446, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[METROPOLITAN AREA TRANSIT TAX.] (a) For the purposes of sections
473.405 to 473.449 and the metropolitan transit system, except as otherwise
provided in this subdivision, the council shall levy each year upon all taxable
property within the metropolitan area, defined in section 473.121, subdivision
2, a transit tax consisting of:
(1) an amount necessary to provide full and timely payment of
certificates of indebtedness, bonds, including refunding bonds or other
obligations issued or to be issued under section 473.39 by the council for
purposes of acquisition and betterment of property and other improvements of a
capital nature and to which the council has specifically pledged tax levies
under this clause; and
(2) an additional amount necessary to provide full and
timely payment of certificates of indebtedness issued by the council, after
consultation with the commissioner of finance, if revenues to the metropolitan
area transit fund in the fiscal year in which the indebtedness is issued
increase over those revenues in the previous fiscal year by a percentage less
than the percentage increase for the same period in the revised Consumer Price
Index for all urban consumers for the St. Paul-Minneapolis metropolitan area
prepared by the United States Department of Labor. The authority to levy a tax under this clause applies only to
certificates issued before July 1, 2004.
(b) Indebtedness to which property taxes have been pledged
under paragraph (a), clause (2), that is incurred in any fiscal year may not
exceed the amount necessary to make up the difference between (1) the amount
that the council received or expects to receive in that fiscal year from the
metropolitan area transit fund and (2) the amount the council received from that
fund in the previous fiscal year multiplied by the percentage increase for the
same period in the revised Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers for the
St. Paul-Minneapolis metropolitan area prepared by the United States Department
of Labor.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective July 1, 2004.
Sec. 20. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 474A.131, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [NOTICE
OF ISSUE.] Each issuer that issues bonds with an allocation received under this
chapter shall provide a notice of issue to the department on forms provided by
the department stating:
(1) the date of issuance of the bonds;
(2) the title of the issue;
(3) the principal amount of the bonds;
(4) the type of qualified bonds under federal tax law;
(5) the dollar amount of the bonds issued that were subject to
the annual volume cap; and
(6) for entitlement issuers, whether the allocation is from
current year entitlement authority or is from carryforward authority.
For obligations that are issued as a part of a series of
obligations, a notice must be provided for each series. A penalty of one-half of the amount of the
application deposit not to exceed $5,000 shall apply to any issue of
obligations for which a notice of issue is not provided to the department
within five business days after issuance or before the last Monday 4:30
p.m. on the last business day in December, whichever occurs first. Within 30 days after receipt of a notice of
issue the department shall refund a portion of the application deposit equal to
one percent of the amount of the bonding authority actually issued if a one
percent application deposit was made, or equal to two percent of the amount of
the bonding authority actually issued if a two percent application deposit was
made, less any penalty amount.
Sec. 21. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 475.52, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[STATUTORY CITIES.] Any statutory city may issue bonds or other
obligations for the acquisition or betterment of public buildings, means of
garbage disposal, hospitals, nursing homes, homes for the aged, schools,
libraries, museums, art galleries, parks, playgrounds, stadia, sewers, sewage
disposal plants, subways, streets, sidewalks, warning systems; for any utility
or other public convenience from which a revenue is or may be derived; for a
permanent improvement revolving fund; for changing, controlling or bridging
streams and other waterways; for the acquisition and betterment of bridges and
roads within two miles of the corporate limits; for the acquisition of development
rights in the form of conservation easements under chapter 84C; and for
acquisition of equipment for snow removal, street construction and maintenance,
or fire fighting. Without limitation by
the foregoing the city may issue bonds to provide money for any authorized
corporate purpose except current expenses.
Sec. 22. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 475.52, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [COUNTIES.]
Any county may issue bonds for the acquisition or betterment of courthouses,
county administrative buildings, health or social service facilities,
correctional facilities, law enforcement centers, jails, morgues, libraries,
parks, and hospitals, for roads and bridges within the county or bordering
thereon and for road equipment and machinery and for ambulances and related
equipment, for the acquisition of development rights in the form of
conservation easements under chapter 84C, and for capital equipment for the administration
and conduct of elections providing the equipment is uniform countywide, except
that the power of counties to issue bonds in connection with a library shall
not exist in Hennepin County.
Sec. 23. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 475.52, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [TOWNS.] Any
town may issue bonds for the acquisition and betterment of town halls, town
roads and bridges, nursing homes and homes for the aged, and for acquisition of
equipment for snow removal, road construction or maintenance, and fire fighting,
for the acquisition of development rights in the form of conservation easements
under chapter 84C, and for the acquisition and betterment of any
buildings to house and maintain town equipment.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes
2003 Supplement, section 475.521, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [LIMITATIONS
ON AMOUNT.] A city may not issue bonds under this section if the maximum amount
of principal and interest to become due in any year on all the outstanding
bonds issued under this section, including the bonds to be issued, will equal
or exceed 0.05367 0.1 percent of taxable market value of property
in the county city.
Calculation of the limit must be made using the taxable market value for
the taxes payable year in which the obligations are issued and sold. This section does not limit the authority to
issue bonds under any other special or general law.
Sec. 25. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 475.58, subdivision 3b, is amended to read:
Subd. 3b. [STREET
RECONSTRUCTION.] (a) A municipality may, without regard to the election
requirement under subdivision 1, issue and sell obligations for street
reconstruction, if the following conditions are met:
(1) the streets are reconstructed under a street reconstruction
plan that describes the streets to be reconstructed, the estimated costs, and
any planned reconstruction of other streets in the municipality over the next
five years, and the plan and issuance of the obligations has been approved by a
vote of all of the members of the governing body following a public hearing for
which notice has been published in the official newspaper at least ten days but
not more than 28 days prior to the hearing; and
(2) if a petition requesting a vote on the issuance is signed
by voters equal to five percent of the votes cast in the last municipal general
election and is filed with the municipal clerk within 30 days of the public
hearing, the municipality may issue the bonds only after obtaining the approval
of a majority of the voters voting on the question of the issuance of the
obligations.
(b) Obligations issued under this subdivision are subject to
the debt limit of the municipality and are not excluded from net debt under
section 475.51, subdivision 4.
(c) For purposes of this
subdivision, street reconstruction includes utility replacement and relocation
and other activities incidental to the street reconstruction, but turn
lanes, other improvements having a substantial public safety function and realignments,
and other modifications to intersect with state and county roads.
(d) Except in the case of turn lanes, safety improvements,
and intersection modifications, street reconstruction does not include the
portion of project cost allocable to widening a street or adding curbs and
gutters where none previously existed.
Sec. 26. Laws 2003,
chapter 127, article 12, section 38, is amended to read:
Sec. 38. [MEMBERS
MUST AUTHORITY TO LEVY TAXES FOR AUTHORITY.]
(a) A member shall, at the request of the authority, levy a
tax in any year for the benefit of the authority. The authority is a special taxing district as defined in
Minnesota Statutes, section 275.066, clause (13), with the power to adopt and
certify a property tax levy to the county auditor. The authority may levy a tax in any year for the benefit of the
authority. The tax is, for each
member, a pro rata portion of the total amount of tax requested by the
authority based on the taxable market value within a member's jurisdiction, but
in no event may the tax in any year not exceed in any year
0.01813 percent of the total taxable market value of the authority. For purposes of this section, "taxable
market value" has the meaning as given in Minnesota Statutes, section
273.032. The tax levied under this
section shall be separately stated on the property tax statement under
Minnesota Statutes, section 276.04, subdivision 2.
(b) The treasurer of each member city or town shall, within
15 days after receiving the property tax settlements from the county treasurer,
pay to the treasurer of the authority the amount collected for this
purpose. The money must be used by the
authority for the purposes provided by sections 35 to 41.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxes levied in 2004, payable in 2005, and thereafter.
Sec. 27. [AITKIN
DRAINAGE AND CONSERVANCY DISTRICT.]
Notwithstanding Laws 1987, chapter 239, sections 139 and
140, the Aitkin Drainage and Conservancy District is reestablished pursuant to
Minnesota Statutes 1986, chapter 111, for the purpose of maintaining the
Mississippi River diversion channel.
This district expires December 31, 2008.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment and expires
December 31, 2008.
Sec. 28. [DEFINITIONS.]
Subdivision 1.
[APPLICATION.] For the purposes of sections 28 to 31, the terms
defined in this section have the meanings given them.
Subd. 2. [CITY.]
"City" means the city of St. Paul, its mayor, city council, and
any other board, authority, commission, or officer authorized by law, charter,
or ordinance to exercise city powers of the nature referred to in sections 28
to 31.
Subd. 3.
[RIVERCENTRE COMPLEX.] "RiverCentre complex" means
collectively the auditorium, convention, conference and education center,
arena, and parking ramp facilities presently and commonly known as the Roy
Wilkins Auditorium, St. Paul RiverCentre, Xcel Energy Center, and RiverCentre
Parking Ramp, including all property, real or personal, tangible or intangible,
located in the city, intended to be used as part of the RiverCentre complex or
additions to or extensions of it.
Sec. 29. [ST. PAUL; CREATION OF NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION.]
Subdivision 1.
[AUTHORITY TO CREATE A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION.] As required under
Minnesota Statutes, section 465.717, and notwithstanding any other law, city
charter provision, or ordinance to the contrary, the city of St. Paul may
participate in the creation of a nonprofit organization for the purposes
provided in sections 28 to 31.
Subd. 2.
[GOVERNING BOARD; APPOINTMENT PROCESS.] (a) The mayor of the city,
subject to approval by the city council, shall appoint a majority of the
members of the governing board of the nonprofit organization performing all or
a part of the activities necessary to carry out the purposes specified in
sections 28 to 31. The mayor of the
city may designate any officer or employee of the city to serve as a member of
the governing board of any nonprofit organization.
(b) In addition to the appointments made by the mayor under
paragraph (a), the mayor of the city shall designate two members of the city
council to serve on the governing board of the nonprofit organization.
(c) Notwithstanding any provision contained in the articles
of incorporation and bylaws of the nonprofit organization, any member of the
governing board appointed by the mayor may be removed only by the mayor of the
city.
Subd. 3.
[PRESIDENT.] The governing board of the nonprofit organization shall
select, subject to the approval of the mayor of the city, a president to serve
as chief executive officer and general manager of the nonprofit organization.
Subd. 4.
[CONFLICTS OF INTEREST.] The procedures in Minnesota Statutes,
section 317A.255, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), relating to director conflicts
of interest, are not required if the contract or other transaction is between
the city and the nonprofit organization.
Sec. 30. [RIVERCENTRE
MANAGEMENT; OPERATIONS CONTRACT.]
Subdivision 1.
[AUTHORITY TO CONTRACT WITH NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION.] The city may
enter into an agreement with the nonprofit organization created in section 29
to equip, maintain, manage, and operate all or a portion of the RiverCentre
complex and to manage and operate a convention bureau to market and promote the
city as a tourist or convention center.
Except as otherwise provided in sections 28 to 31, the nonprofit
organization may only contract and utilize and expend funds for these purposes
under the direction of its governing board, subject to the accounting,
financial reporting, and other conditions that the city may prescribe in a
contract made under sections 28 to 31 between the city and the nonprofit
organization. The nonprofit
organization may use the services of the office of the city attorney and the
city's purchasing department. All
activities performed to carry out these purposes are deemed to be for a public
purpose.
Subd. 2.
[BONDHOLDERS' RIGHTS AND RIVERCENTRE COMPLEX TAX EXEMPTIONS PRESERVED.] (a)
The city must protect the rights of holders of bonds issued for the RiverCentre
complex, including preserving the tax-exempt status of the bonds.
(b) The use and operation of the RiverCentre complex by the
nonprofit organization with which the city contracts under sections 28 to 31 is
a use, lease, or occupancy for public, governmental, and municipal purposes,
and the complex is exempt from taxation by the state or any political
subdivision of the state during such use, to the extent it would be exempt if
the complex was equipped, maintained, managed, and operated by the city.
(c) Gross receipts of tickets
and admissions to events at the RiverCentre complex sponsored by the nonprofit
organization created in section 29 do not qualify for the sales tax exemption
under Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.70, subdivision 10.
Subd. 3.
[APPLICABLE GENERAL LAWS.] The following statutes apply to the
nonprofit organization with which the city contracts under sections 28 to 31
the same as they apply to the city, to the extent practicable:
(a) Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13D, the Minnesota Open
Meeting Law; and
(b) Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13, the Government Data
Practices Act.
Subd. 4.
[SUCCESSION.] The nonprofit organization with which the city
contracts under sections 28 to 31 is the successor to all powers, rights,
assets, privileges, and interests held and enjoyed by the RiverCentre authority
on the effective date of sections 28 to 31, and established by the provisions
of Laws 1967, chapter 459, sections 1, 2, 4, and 8, subdivisions 2 and 3,
clause (3), as amended; Laws 1982, chapter 523, article 25, sections 4 and 5,
as amended; Laws 1998, chapter 404, sections 81 and 82; and Minnesota Statutes,
section 297A.98. On the effective date
of the contract between the city and the nonprofit organization authorized by
sections 28 to 31, the RiverCentre authority ceases to exist for only so long
as the contract is in effect, and all other laws or provisions specifically
relating to the RiverCentre authority and the RiverCentre complex that are not
otherwise referenced in sections 28 to 31 do not apply to the nonprofit
organization.
Sec. 31. [LIABILITY.]
The nonprofit organization with which the city contracts
under sections 28 to 31 is a "municipality," and the officers, directors,
employees, and agents of the nonprofit organization are "employees,
officers, or agents," under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 466, relating to
tort liability. The city must defend,
save harmless, and indemnify the nonprofit organization, including the nonprofit's
officers, directors, employees, and agents, against any claim or demand arising
out of the nonprofit organization's performance under the contract.
Sec. 32. [FAIRMONT;
ABATEMENT AUTHORITY.]
The city of Fairmont, Martin County, and Independent School
District No. 2752, Fairmont Area Schools, may each grant an abatement under
Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.1812 to 469.1815, for property located in tax
increment financing district No. 20 in the city of Fairmont, notwithstanding
any law to the contrary. The total
amount of the abatement for each political subdivision may not exceed the taxes
paid by the original tax capacity of the district No. 20 for each year of its
existence.
Sec. 33. [TRANSFER OF
BOND ALLOCATION AUTHORITY.]
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 474A.03,
subdivision 2a, paragraph (b), the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency may enter
into an agreement with the Higher Education Services Office whereby the Higher
Education Services Office issues qualified student loan bonds, up to
$50,000,000 of which are issued pursuant to bonding authority allocated to the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency in 2004 under Minnesota Statutes, section
474A.03, subdivision 2a, paragraph (a).
This amount is in addition to the bonding authority otherwise allocated
to the Higher Education Services Office under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
474A. Notwithstanding Minnesota
Statutes, section 474A.04, subdivision 1a; 474A.061; or 474A.091, subdivision 2,
bonding authority carried forward by the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency from
its allocation in 2004 under Minnesota Statutes, section 474A.03, subdivision
2a, paragraph (b), is exempt from the requirement that the bonding authority be
permanently issued by December 31 of the next succeeding calendar year.
Sec. 34. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
(a) Except as otherwise specifically provided, this act is
effective the day following final enactment.
(b) Sections 28 to 31 are effective the day after the city
council and the chief clerical officer of the city of St. Paul have timely
completed their compliance with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.023,
subdivisions 2 and 3."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to public finance; modifying
the authority of cities and counties to finance purchases of computers and
related items; clarifying the financing of conservation easements; extending
sunsets on establishment of special service districts and housing improvement
areas; extending the maximum maturity of bonds for qualified housing
development projects; revising time for certain notices of issues; modifying
the authority to finance street reconstruction; modifying limits on city
capital improvement bonds; changing the limits on city or county support of
prevention of cruelty to animal societies; changing the definition of
subsystems for purposes of the metropolitan area public safety radio system law
and authorizing assistance to local government units for building subsystems in
the State Patrol central district; authorizing certain nonprofit corporations
for certain limited purposes; requiring housing improvement district ordinances
to be filed with the state auditor; redefining housing development improvement
project; authorizing property tax abatements to finance historic or heritage
preservation; extending the authorized maximum length of some abatements;
authorizing additional authority to issue obligations by the Metropolitan
Council for bus transit and limiting some of its tax authority; changing
punctuation; making technical corrections; making the Lakes Area Economic
Development Authority a special taxing district; reestablishing the Aitkin
Drainage and Conservancy District; permitting abatements in a tax increment
financing district in the city of Fairmont; authorizing the transfer of certain
bond allocation authority; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 343.11;
428A.02, subdivision 1; 428A.03, subdivision 1; 428A.101; 428A.21; 469.034,
subdivision 2; 469.1813, subdivisions 1, 6; 473.39, by adding a subdivision;
473.446, subdivision 1; 474A.131, subdivision 1; 475.52, subdivisions 1, 3, 4;
Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, sections 373.01, subdivision 3; 373.40,
subdivision 1; 403.21, subdivision 8; 403.27, subdivisions 1, 3; 410.32;
412.301; 475.521, subdivision 4; 475.58, subdivision 3b; Laws 2003, chapter
127, article 12, section 38; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 428A."
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 reported on the following appointment which had been
referred to the committee by the Speaker:
CAMPAIGN
FINANCE AND PUBLIC DISCLOSURE BOARD
A.
HILDA BETTERMANN
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the
appointment be confirmed.
Rhodes moved that the report of the Committee on Governmental
Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy relating to the appointment of A. Hilda
Bettermann to the Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board be adopted. The motion prevailed and the report was
adopted.
CONFIRMATION
Rhodes moved that the House, having advised, do now consent to
and confirm the appointment of A. Hilda Bettermann, 8435 Sara Road Northwest,
Brandon, Minnesota 56315, in the county of Douglas, Congressional District
Seven, effective April 7, 2004, for a term expiring January 7, 2008. The motion prevailed and the appointment of
A. Hilda Bettermann was confirmed by the House.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans
Affairs Policy reported on the following appointment which had been referred to
the committee by the Speaker:
CAMPAIGN
FINANCE AND PUBLIC DISCLOSURE BOARD
FELICIA
J. BOYD
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the
appointment be confirmed.
Pursuant to rule 2.05, the Speaker excused Thissen from voting
on the confirmation vote on Felicia J. Boyd to the Campaign Finance and Public
Disclosure Board.
Rhodes moved that the report of the Committee on Governmental
Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy relating to the appointment of Felicia
J. Boyd to the Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board be adopted. The motion prevailed and the report was
adopted.
CONFIRMATION
Rhodes moved that the House, having advised, do now consent to
and confirm the appointment of Felicia J. Boyd, 22399 Wagonwheel Trail,
Lakeville, Minnesota 55044, in the county of Scott, Congressional District Two,
effective April 7, 2004, for a term expiring January 7, 2008. The motion prevailed and the appointment of
Felicia J. Boyd was confirmed by the House.
SECOND READING OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 1798 and 3081 were read for the second time.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Eken, Huntley and Lieder introduced:
H. F. No. 3186, A bill for an act relating to human services;
authorizing a negotiated blended, budget neutral nursing facility rate in a
certain county; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 256B.431, by adding a
subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
Sertich, Gunther, Dorman, Davids and Dorn introduced:
H. F. No. 3187, A bill for an act relating to economic
development; authorizing certain investments; creating a program; appropriating
money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 116J.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following messages were received from the Senate:
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
House File, herewith returned:
H. F. No. 1861, A bill for an act relating to civil actions;
regulating liability on land used for recreational purposes; modifying the
definition of recreational purpose; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section
604A.21, subdivision 5.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
House File, herewith returned:
H. F. No. 1978, A bill for an act relating to motor carriers;
making technical corrections to conform state law to amended federal
regulations relating to truck driver hours; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 221.011, subdivision 6; 221.0314, subdivision 9.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce that the Senate refuses to concur in the
House amendments to the following Senate File:
S. F. No. 1753, A bill for an act relating to utilities;
modifying low-income electric rate discount program; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 216B.16, subdivision 14.
The Senate respectfully requests that a Conference Committee be
appointed thereon. The Senate has
appointed as such committee:
Senators Anderson, Kubly and Gaither.
Said Senate File is herewith transmitted to the House with the
request that the House appoint a like committee.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
Westrom moved that the House accede to the request of
the Senate and that the Speaker appoint a Conference Committee of 3 members of
the House to meet with a like committee appointed by the Senate on the
disagreeing votes of the two houses on S. F. No. 1753. The motion prevailed.
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
Senate Files, herewith transmitted:
S. F. Nos. 1758, 1875, 1782, 2265 and 2593.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. No. 1758, A bill for an act relating to paternity;
changing certain presumptions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
257.55, subdivision 1; 257.57, subdivision 2; 257.62, subdivision 5.
The bill was read for the first time.
Meslow moved that S. F. No. 1758 and H. F. No. 1857, now on the
General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1875, A bill for an act relating to child protection;
modifying requirements for a relative search; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 260C.212, subdivision 5.
The bill was read for the first time.
Walker moved that S. F. No. 1875 and H. F. No. 2020, now on the
General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1782, A bill for an act relating to local government;
removing restrictions and eliminating a moratorium on equitable compensation
reporting requirements for political subdivisions; amending Minnesota Statutes
2003 Supplement, section 471.999.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs.
S. F. No. 2265, A bill for an act relating to financial
institutions; clarifying the status of industrial loan and thrift companies that
accept deposits; regulating the liability of certain individuals on credit card
accounts; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 53.01; proposing coding for
new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325G.
The bill was read for the first time.
Stang moved that S. F. No. 2265 and H. F. No. 2216, now on the
General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 2593, A bill for an act relating to real
estate; prohibiting restrictions on real estate use that restrict display of
flags and noncommercial signs; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 500.
The bill was read for the first time.
Mullery moved that S. F. No. 2593 and H. F. No. 2410, now on
the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
FISCAL CALENDAR
Pursuant to rule 1.22, Abrams requested immediate consideration
of H. F. No. 2540.
H. F. No. 2540 was reported to the House.
Abrams moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment,
as follows:
Page 18, line 11, delete "0.2" and insert
"0.25"
Page 18, line 12, after the second comma, insert "and
before January 1, 2006, to the extent the deduction exceeds 0.1 percent of
adjusted gross income;
(D) for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2005,"
Page 21, line 34, delete "all" and after
"years" insert "beginning after December 31, 2003"
Pages 124 to 127, delete sections 11 and 12
Page 136, after line 24, insert:
"(c) Prior to a final site designation, a
transportation impact study based on the regional model and utilizing traffic
forecasting and assignments must be conducted.
The results must be used to evaluate the effects of the proposed use on
the transportation system and identify any needed improvements. If the site is in the metropolitan area the
study must also evaluate the effect of the transportation impacts on the
Metropolitan Transportation System plan as well as the comprehensive plans of
the municipalities that would be affected."
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Mariani was excused between the hours of 9:05 a.m. and 11:10
a.m.
Rukavina; Mariani; Davnie; Lenczewski; Hilstrom; Dorn; Carlson;
Kelliher; Sertich; Thissen; Anderson, I.; Otto; Sieben; Biernat; Eken;
Pelowski; Atkins; Ellison; Opatz; Lesch; Lieder; Juhnke; Bernardy; Johnson, S.;
Hilty; Marquart; Hornstein; Nelson, M.; Greiling; Entenza; Mullery; Jaros;
Otremba; Murphy; Larson; Dill and Thao moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the
second engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 66, after line 15, insert:
"Sec. 11.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 272.02, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 73.
[HOMESTEAD OF DISABLED VETERAN OR SURVIVING SPOUSE.] (a) Property
otherwise qualifying for homestead classification under section 273.13 is
exempt from taxation if it serves as the homestead of a military veteran, as
defined in section 197.447, who has a total and permanent service-connected
disability. To qualify for exemption
under this subdivision, the veteran must have been honorably discharged from
the United States armed forces, as indicated by United States Government Form
DD214 or other official military discharge papers, and must be certified by the
United States Veterans Administration as having a total (100 percent) and
permanent service-connected disability.
(b) If a disabled veteran qualifying for exemption under
paragraph (a) predeceases the veteran's spouse, and if upon the death of the
veteran the spouse holds the legal or beneficial title to the homestead and
permanently resides there, the exemption from taxation shall carry over to the
benefit of the veteran's spouse until such time as the spouse remarries or
sells or otherwise disposes of the property.
(c) In the case of an agricultural homestead, only the
portion of the property consisting of the house and garage and immediately
surrounding one acre of land qualifies for exemption under this subdivision.
(d) A property owner attempting to first qualify for
exemption under this section must apply to the assessor by July 1 of the
assessment year, except that for assessment year 2004 application may be made
until October 1, 2004. The application
must be accompanied by supporting documentation as required by the assessor. Once a property has been accepted for
exemption under this section, the property continues to qualify until there is
a change in ownership of the property.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for assessment year 2004 and thereafter, for taxes payable
in 2005 and thereafter."
Page 71, after line 33, insert:
"Sec. 20.
Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 273.13, subdivision 22, is
amended to read:
Subd. 22. [CLASS 1.]
(a) Except as provided in subdivision 23 and in paragraphs (b) and (c), real
estate which is residential and used for homestead purposes is class 1a. In the case of a duplex or triplex in which
one of the units is used for homestead purposes, the entire property is deemed
to be used for homestead purposes. The market
value of class 1a property must be determined based upon the value of the
house, garage, and land.
The first $500,000 of market value of class 1a property has a
net class rate of one percent of its market value; and the market value of
class 1a property that exceeds $500,000 has a class rate of 1.25 percent of its
market value.
(b) Class 1b property includes homestead real estate or
homestead manufactured homes used for the purposes of a homestead by
(1) any person who is blind as defined in section 256D.35, or
the blind person and the blind person's spouse; or
(2) any person, hereinafter referred to as
"veteran," who:
(i) served in the active military or naval service of the
United States; and
(ii) is entitled to
compensation under the laws and regulations of the United States for permanent
and total service-connected disability due to the loss, or loss of use, by
reason of amputation, ankylosis, progressive muscular dystrophies, or
paralysis, of both lower extremities, such as to preclude motion without the
aid of braces, crutches, canes, or a wheelchair; and
(iii) has acquired a special housing unit with special
fixtures or movable facilities made necessary by the nature of the veteran's
disability, or the surviving spouse of the deceased veteran for as long as the
surviving spouse retains the special housing unit as a homestead; or
(3) any person who is permanently and totally disabled.
Property is classified and assessed under clause (3) (2)
only if the government agency or income-providing source certifies, upon the
request of the homestead occupant, that the homestead occupant satisfies the
disability requirements of this paragraph.
Property is classified and assessed pursuant to clause (1) only
if the commissioner of revenue certifies to the assessor that the homestead
occupant satisfies the requirements of this paragraph.
Permanently and totally disabled for the purpose of this
subdivision means a condition which is permanent in nature and totally
incapacitates the person from working at an occupation which brings the person
an income. The first $32,000 market
value of class 1b property has a net class rate of .45 percent of its market
value. The remaining market value of
class 1b property has a class rate using the rates for class 1a or class 2a
property, whichever is appropriate, of similar market value.
(c) Class 1c property is commercial use real property that
abuts a lakeshore line and is devoted to temporary and seasonal residential
occupancy for recreational purposes but not devoted to commercial purposes for
more than 250 days in the year preceding the year of assessment, and that
includes a portion used as a homestead by the owner, which includes a dwelling
occupied as a homestead by a shareholder of a corporation that owns the resort,
a partner in a partnership that owns the resort, or a member of a limited
liability company that owns the resort even if the title to the homestead is
held by the corporation, partnership, or limited liability company. For purposes of this clause, property is
devoted to a commercial purpose on a specific day if any portion of the
property, excluding the portion used exclusively as a homestead, is used for
residential occupancy and a fee is charged for residential occupancy. The first $500,000 of market value of class
1c property has a class rate of one percent, and the remaining market value of
class 1c property has a class rate of one percent, with the following
limitation: the area of the property
must not exceed 100 feet of lakeshore footage for each cabin or campsite
located on the property up to a total of 800 feet and 500 feet in depth,
measured away from the lakeshore. If
any portion of the class 1c resort property is classified as class 4c under
subdivision 25, the entire property must meet the requirements of subdivision
25, paragraph (d), clause (1), to qualify for class 1c treatment under this
paragraph.
(d) Class 1d property includes structures that meet all of the
following criteria:
(1) the structure is located on property that is classified as
agricultural property under section 273.13, subdivision 23;
(2) the structure is occupied exclusively by seasonal farm
workers during the time when they work on that farm, and the occupants are not
charged rent for the privilege of occupying the property, provided that use of
the structure for storage of farm equipment and produce does not disqualify the
property from classification under this paragraph;
(3) the structure meets all applicable health and safety requirements
for the appropriate season; and
(4) the structure is not salable
as residential property because it does not comply with local ordinances
relating to location in relation to streets or roads.
The market value of class 1d property has the same class rates
as class 1a property under paragraph (a).
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for assessment year 2004 and thereafter, for taxes payable
in 2005 and thereafter."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Rukavina et al amendment and the
roll was called. There were 129 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
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Eken moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment, as
amended, as follows:
Page 177, after line 14, insert:
"Sec. 22.
[DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE REPORT.] By July 1, 2005, the commissioner of
revenue shall report to the legislature and to the chairs of the house and
senate tax committees on the effects of corporate franchise and
individual income tax credits and tax loopholes on the economy of Minnesota and
on the well-being of its families. In
preparing the report the commissioner must utilize the most recent studies and
reports available."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
Eken offered an amendment to the Eken amendment to
H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment, as amended.
POINT
OF ORDER
Abrams raised a point of order pursuant to rule 3.21 that the
Eken amendment to the Eken amendment was not in order. The Speaker ruled the
point of order well taken and the Eken amendment to the Eken amendment out of
order.
Eken withdrew his original amendment to H. F. No. 2540, the
second engrossment, as amended.
There being no objection, the order of business advanced to
Motions and Resolutions.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
House Resolution No. 22 was reported to the House.
HOUSE RESOLUTION NO. 22
A House resolution remembering Molly Cade.
Whereas, Molly Cade, president of the Minnesota Ovarian
Cancer Alliance, MOCA, passed away Wednesday, December 3, 2003; and
Whereas, Molly's passion that no woman should have to be
alone while enduring ovarian cancer led her to found MOCA in 1999; and
Whereas, MOCA raised over $700,000 in its first four
years to fund Minnesota researchers in ovarian cancer, making MOCA one of the
largest sponsors of ovarian cancer research in the United States; and
Whereas, Molly epitomized what it means to
"thrive" with cancer; and
Whereas, Molly's tireless energy inspired hundreds of
ovarian cancer survivors, their families, and friends; and
Whereas, Molly was recognized for her work by Blue
Cross/Blue Shield, Minneapolis-St. Paul magazine, and the Minnesota Oncology
Hematology Foundation; and
Whereas, Molly touched countless lives as a teacher,
business leader, advocate, and woman of faith; and
Whereas, Molly Cade was
instrumental in creating MOCA's annual walk/run event which was attended by
Governor Pawlenty in September 2003 and MOCA will hold its 5th annual event in
2004; Now, Therefore,
Be It Resolved by the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration of the House of Representatives of the State of Minnesota that
it honors Molly Cade for her inspiring lifework as a pioneer and advocate for
ovarian cancer research, her commitment to early identification and prevention
of this life-threatening disease, and her work in saving the lives of countless
women in Minnesota.
Clark moved that House Resolution No. 22 be now adopted. The motion prevailed and House Resolution
No. 22 was adopted.
FISCAL CALENDAR, Continued
H. F. No. 2540, as amended, was again reported to the House.
Kahn moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment, as
amended, as follows:
Page 71, after line 1, insert:
"Sec. 18.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 273.11, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 21.
[VALUATION EXCLUSION FOR LEAD HAZARD REDUCTION.] Owners of property
classified as class 1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 4b, or 4bb under section 273.13 may apply
for a valuation exclusion for lead hazard reduction, provided that the property
is located in a city which has authorized valuation exclusions under this
subdivision. A city which authorizes
valuation exclusions under this subdivision must establish guidelines for qualifying
lead hazard reduction projects and must designate an agency within the city to
issue certificates of completion of qualifying projects. For purposes of this subdivision, "lead
hazard reduction" has the same meaning as in section 144.9501, subdivision
17.
The property owner must obtain a certificate from the city
stating that the project has been completed and stating the cost incurred by
the owner in completing the project.
Only projects originating after April 1, 2004, may qualify for exclusion
under this subdivision. The property
owner shall apply for a valuation exclusion to the assessor on a form
prescribed by the assessor.
A qualifying property is eligible for a valuation exclusion
equal to 50 percent of the actual costs incurred, to a maximum exclusion of
$15,000, for a period of five years.
The valuation exclusion shall terminate upon the sale of the
property. If a property owner applies
for exclusion under this subdivision between January 1 and June 30 of any year,
the exclusion shall first apply for taxes payable in the following year. If a property owner applies for exclusion
under this subdivision between July 1 and December 31 of any year, the
exclusion shall first apply for taxes payable in the second following year.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxes payable in 2005 and subsequent years."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
Pugh moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second
engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 14, line 7, strike "80" and insert "68"
Page 20, line 5, delete "$41,000" and insert
"$46,000"
Page 20, line 6, delete "$20,500" and insert
"$23,000"
Page 20, line 7, delete "$30,750" and insert
"$34,500"
Page 20, line 10, delete "$42,000" and insert
"$48,000"
Page 20, line 11, delete "$21,000" and insert
"$24,000"
Page 20, line 12, delete "$31,500" and insert
"$36,000"
Page 20, line 15, delete "$44,000" and insert
"$50,000" and delete "$22,000" and insert
"$25,000"
Page 20, line 17, delete "$33,000" and insert
"$37,500"
Page 20, after line 35, insert:
"Sec. 11.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 290.17, subdivision 4, is amended to
read:
Subd. 4. [UNITARY
BUSINESS PRINCIPLE.] (a) If a trade or business conducted wholly within this
state or partly within and partly without this state is part of a unitary
business, the entire income of the unitary business is subject to apportionment
pursuant to section 290.191.
Notwithstanding subdivision 2, paragraph (c), none of the income of a
unitary business is considered to be derived from any particular source and
none may be allocated to a particular place except as provided by the
applicable apportionment formula. The
provisions of this subdivision do not apply to business income subject to
subdivision 5, income of an insurance company, or income of an investment
company determined under section 290.36.
(b) The term "unitary business" means business
activities or operations which result in a flow of value between them. The term may be applied within a single
legal entity or between multiple entities and without regard to whether each
entity is a sole proprietorship, a corporation, a partnership or a trust.
(c) Unity is presumed whenever there is unity of ownership,
operation, and use, evidenced by centralized management or executive force,
centralized purchasing, advertising, accounting, or other controlled
interaction, but the absence of these centralized activities will not necessarily
evidence a nonunitary business. Unity
is also presumed when business activities or operations are of mutual benefit,
dependent upon or contributory to one another, either individually or as a
group.
(d) Where a business operation conducted in Minnesota is owned
by a business entity that carries on business activity outside the state
different in kind from that conducted within this state, and the other business
is conducted entirely outside the state, it is presumed that the two business
operations are unitary in nature, interrelated, connected, and interdependent
unless it can be shown to the contrary.
(e) Unity of ownership is not deemed to exist when a
corporation is involved unless that corporation is a member of a group of two
or more business entities and more than 50 percent of the voting stock of each
member of the group is directly or indirectly owned by a common owner or by
common owners, either corporate or noncorporate, or by one or more of the
member corporations of the group. For this
purpose, the term "voting stock" shall include membership interests
of mutual insurance holding companies formed under section 60A.077.
(f) The net income and apportionment factors under
section 290.191 or 290.20 of foreign corporations and other foreign entities
which are part of a unitary business shall not be included in the net income or
the apportionment factors of the unitary business. A foreign corporation or other foreign entity which is required
to file a return under this chapter shall file on a separate return basis. The net income and apportionment factors
under section 290.191 or 290.20 of foreign operating corporations shall not be
included in the net income or the apportionment factors of the unitary business
except as provided in paragraph (g).
(g) The adjusted net income of a foreign operating corporation
shall be deemed to be paid as a dividend on the last day of its taxable year to
each shareholder thereof, in proportion to each shareholder's ownership, with
which such corporation is engaged in a unitary business. Such deemed dividend shall be treated as a
dividend under section 290.21, subdivision 4.
The dividend received deduction is not allowed on 15 percent of
dividends, interest, royalties, or capital gains received by a foreign
operating corporation included in the deemed dividend.
Dividends actually paid by a foreign operating corporation to a
corporate shareholder which is a member of the same unitary business as the
foreign operating corporation shall be eliminated from the net income of the
unitary business in preparing a combined report for the unitary business. The adjusted net income of a foreign
operating corporation shall be its net income adjusted as follows:
(1) any taxes paid or accrued to a foreign country, the
commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a United States possession or political
subdivision of any of the foregoing shall be a deduction; and
(2) the subtraction from federal taxable income for payments
received from foreign corporations or foreign operating corporations under
section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (10), shall not be allowed.
If a foreign operating corporation incurs a net loss, neither
income nor deduction from that corporation shall be included in determining the
net income of the unitary business.
(h) For purposes of determining the net income of a unitary
business and the factors to be used in the apportionment of net income pursuant
to section 290.191 or 290.20, there must be included only the income and
apportionment factors of domestic corporations or other domestic entities other
than foreign operating corporations that are determined to be part of the
unitary business pursuant to this subdivision, notwithstanding that foreign
corporations or other foreign entities might be included in the unitary
business.
(i) Deductions for expenses, interest, or taxes otherwise
allowable under this chapter that are connected with or allocable against
dividends, deemed dividends described in paragraph (g), or royalties, fees, or
other like income described in section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (10),
shall not be disallowed.
(j) Each corporation or other entity, except a sole
proprietorship, that is part of a unitary business must file combined reports
as the commissioner determines. On the
reports, all intercompany transactions between entities included pursuant to
paragraph (h) must be eliminated and the entire net income of the unitary
business determined in accordance with this subdivision is apportioned among
the entities by using each entity's Minnesota factors for apportionment
purposes in the numerators of the apportionment formula and the total factors
for apportionment purposes of all entities included pursuant to paragraph (h)
in the denominators of the apportionment formula.
(k) If a corporation has been divested from a unitary business
and is included in a combined report for a fractional part of the common
accounting period of the combined report:
(1) its income includable in the combined report is its income
incurred for that part of the year determined by proration or separate
accounting; and
(2) its sales, property, and payroll included in the
apportionment formula must be prorated or accounted for separately.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2003."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Pugh
amendment and the roll was called.
There were 54 yeas and 76 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson,
I.
Atkins
Bernardy
Biernat
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Goodwin
Greiling
Hausman
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson,
S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Koenen
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Marquart
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson,
M.
Olson,
M.
Opatz
Otremba
Otto
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Sertich
Sieben
Slawik
Smith
Solberg
Thao
Thissen
Wagenius
Wasiluk
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson,
B.
Anderson,
J.
Beard
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Cox
Davids
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Eastlund
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Heidgerken
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Jacobson
Johnson,
J.
Klinzing
Knoblach
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
McNamara
Meslow
Nelson,
C.
Nelson,
P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen,
S.
Osterman
Ozment
Paulsen
Penas
Powell
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Simpson
Soderstrom
Stang
Swenson
Sykora
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Walz
Wardlow
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk.
Sviggum
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
Bradley and Boudreau moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second
engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 106, line 16, before the comma, insert "and
collect the tax"
The motion prevailed and the amendment was
adopted.
Olson, M.; Abrams; Kuisle and Lenczewski moved to amend
H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 102, after line 11, insert:
"(c) This subdivision expires three years after
completion of a public safety certification and training facility."
The motion prevailed and the amendment was
adopted.
Rukavina; Hilty; Dill; Anderson, I.; Solberg; Sertich; Juhnke
and Howes moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment, as amended, as
follows:
Page 60, after line 9, insert:
"Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 126C.01, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [REFERENDUM
MARKET VALUE.] "Referendum market value" means the market value of
all taxable property, excluding property classified as class 2,
noncommercial 4c(1), or 4c(4) under section 273.13. The portion of class 2a property consisting
of the house, garage, and surrounding one acre of land of an agricultural
homestead is included in referendum market value. Any class of property, or any portion of a class of property,
that is included in the definition of referendum market value and that has a
class rate of less than one percent under section 273.13 shall have a
referendum market value equal to its net tax capacity multiplied by 100.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxes payable in 2005 and subsequent years.
Sec. 3. Minnesota
Statutes 2003 Supplement, section 126C.17, subdivision 7a, is amended to read:
Subd. 7a. [REFERENDUM
TAX BASE REPLACEMENT AID.] (a) For each school district that had a
referendum allowance for fiscal year 2002 exceeding $415, for each separately
authorized referendum levy, the commissioner of revenue, in consultation with
the commissioner of education, shall certify the amount of the referendum levy
in taxes payable year 2001 attributable to the portion of the referendum
allowance exceeding $415 levied against property classified as class 2,
noncommercial 4c(1), or 4c(4), under section 273.13, excluding the portion of
the tax paid by the portion of class 2a property consisting of the house, garage,
and surrounding one acre of land. The
resulting amount must be used to reduce the district's referendum levy amount
otherwise determined, and must be paid to the district each year that the
referendum authority remains in effect, is renewed, or new referendum authority
is approved. The aid payable under this
subdivision must be subtracted from the district's referendum equalization aid
under subdivision 7. The referendum equalization
aid after the subtraction must not be less than zero.
(b) For fiscal year 2006 and subsequent years, the amount
determined under paragraph (a) is reduced by the ratio of (i) the assessment
year 2002 taxable market value of noncommercial class 4c(1) property to (ii)
the assessment year 2002 total amount of excluded referendum market value under
class 2 and noncommercial class 4c(1) and 4c(4).
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxes payable in 2005 and subsequent years."
Page 74, after line 22, insert:
"Sec. 23.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 275.025, as amended by Laws 2003,
chapter 127, article 5, sections 24, 25, and 26; and Laws 2003, First Special
Session chapter 21, article 4, section 5; is amended to read:
275.025 [STATE GENERAL TAX.]
Subdivision 1. [LEVY
AMOUNT.] The state general levy is levied against commercial-industrial
property and seasonal residential recreational property, as defined in
this section. The state general levy
base amount is $592,000,000 for taxes payable in 2002. For taxes payable in subsequent years, the
levy base amount is increased each year by multiplying the levy base amount for
the prior year by the sum of one plus the rate of increase, if any, in the
implicit price deflator for government consumption expenditures and gross
investment for state and local governments prepared by the Bureau of Economic
Analysts of the United States Department of Commerce for the 12-month period
ending March 31 of the year prior to the year the taxes are payable. The tax under this section is not treated as
a local tax rate under section 469.177 and is not the levy of a governmental
unit under chapters 276A and 473F.
The commissioner shall increase or decrease the preliminary or
final rate for a year as necessary to account for errors and tax base changes
that affected a preliminary or final rate for either of the two preceding
years. Adjustments are allowed to the
extent that the necessary information is available to the commissioner at the
time the rates for a year must be certified, and for the following reasons:
(1) an erroneous report of taxable value by a local official;
(2) an erroneous calculation by the commissioner; and
(3) an increase or decrease in taxable value for
commercial-industrial or seasonal residential recreational property
reported on the abstracts of tax lists submitted under section 275.29 that was
not reported on the abstracts of assessment submitted under section 270.11,
subdivision 2, for the same year.
The commissioner may, but
need not, make adjustments if the total difference in the tax levied for the
year would be less than $100,000.
Subd. 2.
[COMMERCIAL-INDUSTRIAL TAX CAPACITY.] For the purposes of this section,
"commercial-industrial tax capacity" means the tax capacity of all
taxable property classified as class 3, commercial class 4c(1), or class
5(1) under section 273.13, except for electric generation attached machinery
under class 3 and property described in section 473.625. County commercial-industrial tax capacity
amounts are not adjusted for the captured net tax capacity of a tax increment
financing district under section 469.177, subdivision 2, the net tax capacity
of transmission lines deducted from a local government's total net tax capacity
under section 273.425, or fiscal disparities contribution and distribution net
tax capacities under chapter 276A or 473F.
Subd. 3. [SEASONAL
RESIDENTIAL RECREATIONAL TAX CAPACITY.] For the purposes of this section,
"seasonal residential recreational tax capacity" means the tax
capacity of all class 4c(1) property under section 273.13, subdivision 25,
except that the first $76,000 of market value of each noncommercial class 4c(1)
property has a tax capacity for this purpose equal to 40 percent of its tax
capacity under section 273.13.
On
or before October 1 each year, the commissioner of revenue shall certify a
preliminary state general levy rate to each county auditor that must be used to
prepare the notices of proposed property taxes for taxes payable in the
following year. By January 1 of each
year, the commissioner shall certify the final state general levy rate to each
county auditor that shall be used in spreading taxes. Subd. 4.
[APPORTIONMENT AND LEVY OF STATE GENERAL TAX.] The state general tax
must be distributed among the counties levied by applying a
uniform rate to each county's all commercial-industrial tax
capacity and its seasonal residential recreational tax capacity. Within each county, the tax must be levied
by applying a uniform rate against commercial-industrial tax capacity and
seasonal residential recreational tax capacity.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for taxes payable in 2005 and subsequent years."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Rukavina et
al amendment and the roll was called.
There were 21 yeas and 107 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson,
I.
Bernardy
Biernat
Carlson
Dill
Ellison
Fuller
Heidgerken
Hilty
Jaros
Johnson,
S.
Juhnke
Lesch
Lindgren
Osterman
Rukavina
Sertich
Simpson
Solberg
Thao
Urdahl
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson,
B.
Anderson,
J.
Atkins
Beard
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Hilstrom
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Johnson,
J.
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lieder
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson,
C.
Nelson,
M.
Nelson,
P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen,
S.
Olson,
M.
Opatz
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Sieben
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Stang
Swenson
Sykora
Thissen
Tingelstad
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk.
Sviggum
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
The Speaker called Stang to the Chair.
Rukavina moved to amend H. F. No.
2540, the second engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 238, line 4, delete "200" and insert
"400"
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
Dorman moved to amend H. F. No. 2540, the second engrossment,
as amended, as follows:
Page 83, after line 1, insert:
"Sec. 29.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 477A.016, is amended to read:
477A.016 [NEW TAXES PROHIBITED.]
No county, city, town or other taxing authority shall increase
a present tax or impose a new tax on sales or income, except as provided in
section 297A.99, subdivision 1a.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective July 1, 2004."
Page 104, after line 9, insert:
"Sec 15. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 297A.99, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[AUTHORIZATION; SCOPE.] (a) A political subdivision of this state may
impose a general sales tax if permitted by special law or, if the
political subdivision enacted and imposed the tax before the effective date of
section 477A.016 and its predecessor provision, or if the tax is allowed
under subdivision 1a.
(b) This section governs the imposition of a general sales tax
by the political subdivision. The
provisions of this section preempt the provisions of any special law:
(1) enacted before June 2, 1997, or
(2) enacted on or after June 2, 1997, that does not explicitly
exempt the special law provision from this section's rules by reference.
(c) This section does not apply to or preempt a sales tax on
motor vehicles or a special excise tax on motor vehicles.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for local sales taxes for which the authorizing referendum
is held after July 1, 2004.
Sec. 16. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 297A.99, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a.
[GENERAL AUTHORITY; CERTAIN CITIES.] (a) A home rule charter or
statutory city that is located outside of the metropolitan area, as defined in
section 473.121, subdivision 2, or a home rule charter or statutory city of the
first class may impose, if approved by the voters pursuant to subdivision 3,
paragraph (a), a local sales tax of up to one-half of one percent without
authorization under a special law, provided that all the conditions for
adoption, use, and termination of the tax contained in this subdivision and
subdivisions 3 through 12 are met. The
authority under this subdivision does not apply during a period in which the
city imposes a general sales tax under a special law.
(b) The proceeds of a tax
imposed under this subdivision must be dedicated exclusively to payment of the
cost plus interest of a specific capital improvement project that provides
benefit to the city and to the county, region, or territory beyond the city
boundaries, and the project must be construction or improvement of one of the
following:
(1) regional convention or civic center;
(2) regional airport;
(3) public library;
(4) overpasses, arterial and collector roads, or bridges,
on, adjacent to, or connecting to a Minnesota state highway;
(5) transportation projects of regional significance or
needed to improve pedestrian safety;
(6) railroad overpasses or crossing safety improvements;
(7) flood control or protection;
(8) lake improvement or water quality projects included in a
watershed district plan;
(9) parks and trails; or
(10) establish, repair, or extend sewer and water lines.
(c) If the voters approve imposition of the tax, the city
must provide to the commissioner a copy of the question approved at referendum
and a resolution approved by the city that shows that the tax will fund a
project that meets the requirements of paragraph (b), and either the estimated
length of time that the tax will be imposed or the amount of money that will be
raised by the tax for the specific project.
The commissioner shall verify that the requirements under this section
are met and that the estimated time for imposition of the tax and the amount of
revenue raised for the project are reasonable.
The commissioner's determination is final. If the commissioner certifies that the local sales tax meets the
requirements of this subdivision, the commissioner shall forward his determination
to the chairs of both the senate and the house committees with jurisdiction
over taxes. Unless both chairs notify
the commissioner in writing that they disagree with the commissioner's
determination within 30 days of receiving the notification, the city may impose
the tax. If both chairs indicate
disagreement with the determination, the city may not impose the tax until the
July 1 following the next time that the legislature meets in regular session.
(d) The tax, if enacted, expires when the specified revenue
has been raised or the estimated length of time in which the tax is in effect
under the resolution is reached, whichever is sooner. The governing board of the city may, by ordinance, terminate the
tax at an earlier date.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective for local sales taxes for which the authorizing referendum
is held after June 30, 2004."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The Speaker resumed the Chair.
The Speaker called Boudreau to the Chair.
The question was taken on the Dorman amendment and the roll was
called. There were 34 yeas and 97 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Biernat
Boudreau
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Fuller
Greiling
Hausman
Hilty
Jaros
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Koenen
Larson
Lenczewski
Lieder
Mariani
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Opatz
Pelowski
Peterson
Rukavina
Ruth
Sertich
Slawik
Solberg
Thao
Thissen
Wasiluk
Those who
voted in the negative were:
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Beard
Bernardy
Blaine
Borrell
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Gerlach
Goodwin
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Johnson, J.
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Latz
Lesch
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Penas
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Smith
Soderstrom
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walz
Wardlow
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
The Speaker resumed the Chair.
H. F. No. 2540, A bill for an act relating to financing and
operation of state and local government; making policy, technical,
administrative, enforcement, collection, refund, and other changes to income,
franchise, property, sales and use, estate, vehicle registration, health care
provider, cigarette and tobacco products, insurance premiums, aggregate
removal, petroleum, gambling, mortgage registry, occupation, net proceeds, and
production taxes, and other taxes and tax-related provisions; changing
provisions relating to fiscal disparities, tax-forfeited lands, state debt
collection procedures, sustainable forest incentives programs, and tax data
provisions; conforming provisions to certain changes in federal law; changing
powers and duties of certain local governments and state departments or
agencies; changing tax increment financing provisions; authorizing
establishment of an International Economic Development Zone and providing for
tax incentives; imposing a franchise fee for operation of card clubs;
regulating tax preparers; imposing
requirement on vendors that contract with state to collect sales taxes;
changing provisions relating to certificates of title of vehicles held by motor
vehicle dealers; changing or providing for studies and reports; providing for
task force on electronic filing and recording of real estate documents; changing
and providing penalties; providing for allocation and transfers of funds;
clarifying appropriations; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 16C.03, by adding a subdivision; 16D.10; 97A.061, subdivision 1;
144F.01, subdivision 10; 168A.02, subdivision 2; 168A.11, subdivisions 1, 2, by
adding a subdivision; 240.30, by adding a subdivision; 270.02, subdivision 3;
270.65; 270.69, subdivision 4; 270B.01, subdivision 8; 270B.12, subdivision 9;
272.01, subdivision 2; 272.02, subdivisions 1a, 7, 22, by adding subdivisions;
272.0212, subdivisions 1, 2; 272.029, subdivisions 4, 6; 273.11, by adding a
subdivision; 273.111, subdivision 6; 273.124, subdivision 8, by adding a
subdivision; 273.1384, subdivision 1; 273.19, subdivision 1a; 274.14; 275.065,
subdivision 1a; 275.07, subdivisions 1, 4; 276.04, subdivision 2; 282.016;
282.21; 282.224; 282.301; 287.04; 289A.08, subdivision 1; 289A.12, subdivision
3; 289A.31, subdivision 2; 289A.37, subdivision 5; 289A.38, subdivision 6;
289A.56, by adding a subdivision; 289A.60, subdivision 6; 290.06, subdivision
22, by adding a subdivision; 290.0674, subdivision 2; 290.091, subdivision 3;
290.17, by adding a subdivision; 290.191, subdivisions 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, by
adding a subdivision; 290.92, subdivisions 1, 4b; 290.9705, subdivision 1;
290A.03, subdivision 13; 290A.07, by adding a subdivision; 290C.05; 295.50,
subdivision 4; 295.582; 296A.22, by adding a subdivision; 297A.61, subdivision
4, by adding subdivisions; 297A.62, by adding a subdivision; 297A.67, by adding
a subdivision; 297A.68, by adding subdivisions; 297A.70, by adding a
subdivision; 297A.71, by adding a subdivision; 297A.87, subdivisions 2, 3;
297A.995, subdivision 6; 297E.01, subdivisions 5, 7, by adding subdivisions;
297E.07; 297F.01, by adding a subdivision; 297F.09, by adding a subdivision;
297I.01, by adding subdivisions; 297I.05, subdivisions 4, 5, by adding a
subdivision; 298.01, subdivisions 3, 4; 298.24, subdivision 1; 325D.33,
subdivision 6; 365.43, subdivision 1; 365.431; 469.1734, subdivision 6;
469.174, subdivision 11; 469.175, subdivision 4a; 469.176, subdivision 4d;
469.1761, subdivisions 1, 3; 469.1771, subdivision 5; 469.178, subdivision 1;
469.1831, subdivision 6; 473.843, subdivision 5; 473F.02, subdivisions 2, 7;
477A.11, subdivision 4, by adding a subdivision; 477A.12, subdivisions 1, 2;
477A.14, subdivision 1; Minnesota Statutes 2003 Supplement, sections 4A.02;
16A.152, subdivision 2; 116J.556; 168A.05, subdivision 1a; 270.06; 270.30,
subdivisions 1, 5, 8; 270B.12, subdivision 13; 272.02, subdivisions 47, 56, 65;
273.11, subdivision 1a; 273.13, subdivisions 22, 23; 274.014, subdivision 3;
275.065, subdivision 3; 276.112; 289A.02, subdivision 7; 289A.08, subdivision
16; 289A.19, subdivision 4; 289A.40, subdivision 2; 290.01, subdivisions 7, 19,
19a, 19b, 19c, 19d, 31; 290.06, subdivision 2c; 290.0674, subdivision 1;
290.091, subdivision 2; 290.0921, subdivision 3; 290A.03, subdivision 15;
290C.10; 291.005, subdivision 1; 291.03, subdivision 1; 297A.668, subdivisions
1, 3, 5; 297A.669, subdivision 16; 297A.68, subdivisions 2, 5, 39; 297A.70,
subdivision 8; 297F.08, subdivision 12; 297F.09, subdivisions 1, 2; 298.75,
subdivision 1; 469.174, subdivision 25; 469.177, subdivision 1; 469.310,
subdivision 11; 469.330, subdivision 11; 469.335; 469.337; 477A.011,
subdivision 36; 477A.03, subdivision 2b; Laws 1990, chapter 604, article 7,
section 29, subdivision 1, as amended; Laws 1998, chapter 389, article 3,
section 41; Laws 1998, chapter 389, article 3, section 42, subdivision 2, as
amended; Laws 1998, chapter 389, article 8, section 43, subdivision 3; Laws
1998, chapter 389, article 11, section 24, subdivisions 1, 2; Laws 2000,
chapter 391, section 1, subdivisions 1, 2, as amended; Laws 2001, First Special
Session chapter 10, article 2, section 77, as amended; Laws 2002, chapter 365,
section 9; Laws 2002, chapter 377, article 3, section 4; Laws 2003, First
Special Session chapter 1, article 2, section 123; Laws 2003, First Special
Session chapter 21, article 5, section 13; Laws 2003, First Special Session
chapter 21, article 6, section 9; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapters 270; 272; 273; 290; 290C; 297F; 325F; 469; 473; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 273.19, subdivision 5; 274.05; 275.15; 283.07;
297E.12, subdivision 10; 469.176, subdivision 1a; 469.1766; Laws 1975, chapter
287, section 5; Laws 2003, chapter 127, article 9, section 9, subdivision 4;
Minnesota Rules, parts 8093.2000; 8093.3000; 8130.0110, subpart 4; 8130.0200,
subparts 5, 6; 8130.0400, subpart 9; 8130.1200, subparts 5, 6; 8130.2900;
8130.3100, subpart 1; 8130.4000, subparts 1, 2; 8130.4200, subpart 1;
8130.4400, subpart 3; 8130.5200; 8130.5600, subpart 3; 8130.5800, subpart 5;
8130.7300, subpart 5; 8130.8800, subpart 4.
The Speaker called Abrams to the Chair.
The bill was read for the third time, as amended, and
placed upon its final passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 107 yeas and 25
nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Johnson, J.
Juhnke
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Newman
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Pelowski
Penas
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, I.
Bernardy
Biernat
Clark
Dill
Dorman
Ellison
Entenza
Goodwin
Hilty
Hornstein
Jaros
Johnson, S.
Kahn
Kelliher
Lesch
Mariani
Marquart
Paymar
Peterson
Rukavina
Sertich
Solberg
Thao
Wagenius
The bill was passed, as amended, and its title agreed to.
CALENDAR FOR THE DAY
Paulsen moved that the Calendar for the Day be continued. The motion prevailed.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Ellison moved that his name be stricken as an author on
H. F. No. 97. The motion
prevailed.
Abeler moved that the name of Tingelstad be added as an author
on H. F. No. 2724. The
motion prevailed.
Boudreau, Marquart, Newman, Cornish and Blaine
introduced:
House Resolution No. 24, A House resolution recognizing May 6,
2004, as a Day of Prayer in Minnesota.
The
resolution was referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration.
ANNOUNCEMENT BY THE SPEAKER
The Speaker announced the appointment of the following members
of the House to a Conference Committee on S. F. No. 1753:
Westrom, Cox and Larson.
ADJOURNMENT
Seifert moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn
until 3:00 p.m., Monday, April 26, 2004.
The motion prevailed.
Paulsen moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and Speaker pro tempore Abrams declared the
House stands adjourned until 3:00 p.m., Monday, April 26, 2004.
Edward
A. Burdick,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives