STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-THIRD SESSION - 2003
_____________________
FORTY-SECOND DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Thursday, April 24,
2003
The House of Representatives convened at 10:30 a.m. and was
called to order by Steve Sviggum, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend John Snider, Saint Stephen's
Lutheran Church, West St. Paul, Minnesota.
The members of the House gave the pledge of allegiance to the
flag of the United States of America.
The roll was called and the following members were present:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
A quorum was present.
The Speaker called Olson, M., to the Chair.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the Journal of the preceding
day. Hoppe 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
Abrams from the Committee on Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 627, A bill for an act relating to appropriations;
appropriating money for transportation and other purposes; authorizing issuance
of state bonds; modifying provisions relating to reverse auctions, wetland
replacement, land appraisal, archaeological or historic sites, high-occupancy
vehicle lanes, town line roads and easements, major transportation projects
commission, advertisements for bids, city transit capital improvement projects
in metropolitan area, bus rapid transit and other transit, local government
permits, and other transportation-related activities; providing for fees,
accounts, transfers, fund allocations, and expenditures; modifying provisions
regulating speed limits, vehicle insurance requirements, essential employee
status, the capitol complex security oversight committee, and other activities
related to public safety; authorizing administrative powers, penalties, and
remedies for public safety purposes; requiring studies and reports; making
technical and clarifying changes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
13.44, subdivision 3; 16C.10, subdivision 7; 103G.222, subdivisions 1, 3;
138.40, subdivisions 2, 3; 160.28, by adding a subdivision; 161.08; 161.20,
subdivision 3; 164.12; 168.12, subdivision 5; 168.54, subdivision 4; 168A.29,
subdivision 1; 169.14, by adding a subdivision; 169.791, subdivision 1;
169.796, by adding a subdivision; 169.797, subdivision 4a; 169.798, subdivision
1, by adding a subdivision; 171.20, subdivision 4; 171.29, subdivision 2;
174.55, subdivision 2; 179A.03, subdivision 7; 179A.10, subdivision 2; 297B.09,
subdivision 1; 299A.465, subdivision 4; 299E.03, subdivision 3; 471.345,
subdivision 14; Laws 1999, chapter 238, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2;
Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 8, article 1, section 2, subdivision
2; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 117; 160; 299A;
331A; 373; 414; 473; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 16A.88,
subdivision 3; 169.794; 169.799; Minnesota Rules, parts 7403.1300; 7413.0400;
7413.0500.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 13, after line 22, insert:
"Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16A.88, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [GREATER
MINNESOTA TRANSIT FUND.] The greater Minnesota transit fund is established
within the state treasury. Money in the
fund is annually appropriated to the commissioner of transportation for
assistance to transit systems outside the metropolitan area under section
174.24. Beginning in fiscal year 2003,
the commissioner may use up to $400,000 each year for administration of the
transit program. The commissioner
shall use the fund for transit operations as provided in section 174.24
and related program administration."
Page 34, after line 21, insert:
"Sec. 25.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 174.24, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1.
[ESTABLISHMENT; PURPOSE.] A public transit participation program is
established to carry out the objectives stated in section 174.21 by providing
financial assistance from the state, including the greater Minnesota transit
fund established in section 16A.88, to eligible recipients outside
of the metropolitan area.
Sec. 26. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 174.24, subdivision 3b, is amended to read:
Subd. 3b. [OPERATING
ASSISTANCE.] (a) The commissioner shall determine the total operating cost of
any public transit system receiving or applying for assistance in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles.
To be eligible for financial assistance, an applicant or recipient shall
provide to the commissioner all financial records and other information and
shall permit any inspection reasonably necessary to determine total operating
cost and correspondingly the amount of assistance which that may
be paid to the applicant or recipient. Where more than one county or
municipality contributes assistance to the operation of a public transit
system, the commissioner shall identify one as lead agency for the purpose of
receiving money under this section.
(b) Prior to distributing operating assistance to eligible
recipients for any contract period, the commissioner shall place all recipients
into one of the following classifications: urbanized area service, small urban
area service, rural area service, and elderly and handicapped service. The commissioner shall distribute funds
under this section so that the percentage of total operating cost paid by any
recipient from local sources will not exceed the percentage for that
recipient's classification, except as provided in an undue hardship case. The
percentages must be: for urbanized area
service and small urban area service, 40 20 percent; for rural
area service, 35 15 percent; and for elderly and handicapped
service, 35 15 percent. The remainder of the total operating cost
will be paid from state funds less any assistance received by the recipient
from any federal source. For purposes
of this subdivision "local sources" means payments under section
174.242 plus all local sources of funds and includes all operating revenue,
tax levies, and contributions from public funds, except that the commissioner
may exclude from the total assistance contract revenues derived from operations
the cost of which is excluded from the computation of total operating cost. Total operating costs of the Duluth transit
authority or a successor agency shall does not include costs
related to the Superior, Wisconsin service contract and the independent school
district No. 709 service contract. For
calendar years 2004 and 2005, to enable public transit systems to meet
the provisions of this section the commissioner may adjust payments
of financial assistance to recipients that were under a contract with
the department on January 1, 2003.
(c) If a recipient informs the commissioner in writing after
the establishment of these percentages but prior to the distribution of
financial assistance for any year that paying its designated percentage of
total operating cost from local sources will cause undue hardship, the
commissioner may reduce the percentage to be paid from local sources by the
recipient and increase the percentage to be paid from local sources by one or
more other recipients inside or outside the classification, provided that no
recipient shall have its.
However, the commissioner may not reduce or increase any
recipient's percentage thus reduced or increased under this
paragraph for more than two years successively. If for any year the funds appropriated to the commissioner to
carry out the purposes of this section are insufficient to allow the commissioner
to pay the state share of total operating cost as provided in this paragraph,
the commissioner shall reduce the state share in each classification to the
extent necessary."
Page 36, after line 21, insert:
"Sec. 30.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 275.71, subdivision 5, is amended to
read:
Subd. 5. [PROPERTY TAX
LEVY LIMIT.] Notwithstanding any other provision of a municipal charter which
limits ad valorem taxes to a lesser amount, or which would require a separate
voter approval for any increase, for taxes levied in 2001 and 2002, the
property tax levy limit for a local governmental unit is equal to its adjusted
levy limit base determined under subdivision 4 plus any additional levy
authorized under section 275.73, which is levied against net tax capacity,
reduced by the sum of (i) the total amount of aids and reimbursements that the
local governmental unit is certified to receive under sections 477A.011 to
477A.014, except for the increases in city aid bases in calendar year 2002
under section 477A.011, subdivision 36, paragraphs (n), (p), and (q), (ii)
homestead and agricultural aids it is certified to receive under section
273.1398, (iii) taconite aids under sections 298.28 and 298.282 including any
aid which was required to be placed in a special fund for expenditure in the
next succeeding year, and (iv) low-income housing aid under sections
477A.06 and 477A.065, and (v) property tax replacement aids under section
174.242."
Page 47, after line 27, insert:
"Sec. 42.
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, 2003.
(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, 2003."
Page 57, after line 21, insert:
"(d) Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 174.242, is
repealed."
Page 57, line 22, delete "(d)" and insert
"(e)"
Page 57, line 23, delete "(e)" and insert
"(f)"
Page 57, line 24, delete "(f)" and insert
"(g)"
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 2, after the semicolon, insert "changing
transit funding, aid, and tax levy provisions;"
Page 1, line 22, after "3;" insert "16A.88,
subdivision 1;"
Page 1, line 30, after "2;" insert "174.24,
subdivisions 1, 3b;"
Page 1, line 32, after "2;" insert "275.71,
subdivision 5;"
Page 1, line 34, after "14;" insert "473.446,
subdivision 1;"
Page 1, line 40, before "Minnesota" insert
"174.242;"
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.
Rhodes from the Committee on Governmental Operations and
Veterans Affairs Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 656, A bill for an act relating to retirement;
modifying the Hennepin county supplemental retirement plan to allow the county
administrator to approve certain participant requests; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 383B.49; 383B.493.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE
1
STATE
BOARD OF INVESTMENT
CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 11A.17, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [ASSETS.] The
assets of the supplemental investment fund shall consist of the money certified
and transmitted to the state board from the participating public retirement
plans and funds or from the board of the Minnesota state colleges and
universities under section 136F.45. The
assets must be used to purchase investment shares in the investment accounts
specified by the plan or fund. These
accounts must be valued at least on a monthly basis, but may be valued
more frequently as determined by the state board of investment.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 352.96, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [PURCHASE OF
SHARES.] The amount of compensation so deferred may be used to purchase:
(1) shares in the Minnesota supplemental investment fund
established in section 11A.17 that are selected to be offered under
the plan by the state board of investment;
(2) saving accounts in federally insured financial
institutions;
(3) life insurance contracts, fixed annuity and variable
annuity contracts from companies that are subject to regulation by the
commissioner of commerce;
(4) investment options from open-end investment companies
registered under the federal Investment Company Act of 1940, United States
Code, title 15, sections 80a-1 to 80a-64;
(5) investment options from a firm that is a registered
investment advisor under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, United States
Code, title 15, section 80b-1 to 80b-21;
(6) investment options of a bank as defined in United States
Code, title 15, section 80b-2, subsection (a), paragraph (2), or a bank holding
company as defined in the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, United States Code,
title 12, section 1841, subsection (a), paragraph (1); or
(7) a combination of clause (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), or (6), as
provided by the plan as specified by the participant.
All amounts contributed to the deferred compensation plan and
all earnings on those amounts will be held for the exclusive benefit of the
plan participants and beneficiaries.
These amounts will be held in trust, in custodial accounts, or in
qualifying annuity contracts as required by federal law and in accordance with
section 356A.06, subdivision 1. This subdivision does not authorize an
employer contribution, except as authorized in section 356.24, subdivision 1,
paragraph (a), clause (5). The state,
political subdivision, or other employing unit is not responsible for any loss
that may result from investment of the deferred compensation.
Sec. 3. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 and 2 are effective July 1, 2003.
ARTICLE
2
EARLY
RETIREMENT INCENTIVE PROGRAMS
Section 1.
[APPLICATION.]
Unless otherwise specified, this article applies to governmental
subdivisions as specified in Minnesota Statutes, section 353.01,
subdivision 6, and public employees providing service to the applicable
employer and covered by the public employees retirement association
general plan or police and fire plan under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
353, or the public employees retirement association local government
correctional service retirement plan under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
353E.
Sec. 2. [EMPLOYEE
EXCLUSION.]
This article does not apply to any employee who provides
service to more than one governmental subdivision, or who earns service
credit during the time period covered by this article in any Minnesota
public employee plan other than a volunteer fire plan.
Sec. 3. [PHASED RETIREMENT.]
(a) This section applies to a public employee who:
(1) on the effective date of this section is regularly scheduled
to work 1,040 or more hours a year in a position covered by an
applicable retirement plan;
(2) enters into an agreement with the governmental subdivision
to work a reduced schedule that is both:
(i) a reduction of at least 25 percent from the number of
regularly scheduled work hours; and
(ii) 1,040 hours or less in the covered position; and
(3) at the time of entering into the agreement under clause
(2), meets the age and service requirements necessary to receive a
retirement benefit from the applicable plan.
(b) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for service
under an agreement entered into under paragraph (a), an employee agrees
to terminate public employment meeting requirements of Minnesota
Statutes, section 353.01, subdivision 11a, except that the minimum
30-day break-in-service requirement under that subdivision shall not
apply, and agrees to reemployment with the applicable governmental
subdivision under terms and conditions specified in this section. If an eligible public employee commences
receipt of an annuity from a plan specified in paragraph (a), the
provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 353.37, governing annuities of
reemployed annuitants shall not apply for the duration of the agreement.
(c) The number of hours worked, the work schedule, and the
duration of the phased retirement employment must be mutually agreed
to by the employee and the governmental subdivision. The governmental subdivision may not require a person to
waive any rights under a collective bargaining agreement as a condition
of participation in this section.
The governmental subdivision has sole discretion to determine if
and the extent to which phased retirement under this section is
available to an employee.
(d) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a person may
not earn service credit in the public employees retirement association
for employment covered under this section, and employer contributions
and payroll deductions for the retirement fund must not be made based on
earnings of a person working under this section. No change shall be made to a monthly annuity
or retirement allowance based on employment under this section.
(e) A person who works under this section and meets the definition
of public employee under Minnesota Statutes, section 179A.03,
subdivision 14, is a member of the appropriate bargaining unit, is
covered by the appropriate collective bargaining contract or personnel
policy, and is eligible for health care coverage as provided in the
collective bargaining contract or personnel policy.
(f) An agreement under this section may apply only to work
through June 30, 2005.
Sec. 4. [VOLUNTARY HOUR
REDUCTION PLAN.]
(a) This section applies to a public employee who:
(1) on the effective date of this section is regularly scheduled
to work 1,040 or more hours a year in a position covered by a pension
plan administered by the public employees retirement association; and
(2) enters into an agreement with a governmental subdivision
to work a reduced schedule of 1,040 or less hours in the covered
position.
(b) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for service
under an agreement entered into under paragraph (a), contributions
may be made to the applicable plan of the public employees retirement
association as if the employee had not reduced hours. The employee must pay the employee
contributions and the employer must pay employer and additional employer
contributions necessary to bring the service credit and salary up to
the level prior to the voluntary reduction in hours. Contributions must
be made in a time and manner prescribed by the executive director of the
public employees retirement association.
(c) The number of hours worked, the work schedule, and the
duration of the voluntary hour reduction must be mutually agreed to
by the employee and the governmental subdivision. The governmental subdivision may not require a person to
waive any rights under a collective bargaining agreement as a condition
of participation under this section.
The governmental subdivision has sole discretion to determine if
and the extent to which voluntary hour reduction under this section is
available to an employee.
(d) A person who works under this section and meets the definition
of public employee under Minnesota Statutes, section 179A.03,
subdivision 14, is a member of an appropriate bargaining unit, is
covered by an appropriate collective bargaining contract or personnel
policy, and is eligible for health care coverage as provided in a
collective bargaining contract or personnel policy.
(e) An agreement under this section may apply only to work
through June 30, 2005.
Sec. 5.
[VOLUNTARY UNPAID LEAVE OF ABSENCE.]
(a) Governmental subdivisions may allow employees to take
unpaid leaves of absence between June 1, 2003, and June 30, 2005. Each governmental subdivision approving a
leave shall allow the employee to continue accruing vacation and sick leave,
be eligible for paid holidays and insurance benefits, accrue seniority,
and accrue service credit and credited salary in the public employees
retirement association as if the employee had actually been employed
during the time of leave. If the leave
of absence is for one full pay period or longer, any holiday pay shall
be included in the first payroll warrant after return from the leave of
absence. The governmental subdivision
shall attempt to grant requests for the unpaid leaves of absence consistent
with the need to continue efficient operation of the governmental
subdivision. However, each governmental
subdivision shall retain discretion to grant or refuse to grant requests
for leaves of absence and to schedule and cancel leaves, subject to the
applicable provisions of collective bargaining agreements and personnel
policy.
(b) To receive eligible service credit, the member shall
pay an amount equal to the applicable employee contribution rates. If an employee pays the employee
contribution for the period of the leave under this section, the
governmental subdivision must pay the employer contribution and the additional
employer contribution. The governmental
subdivision may, at its discretion, pay employee, employer, and
additional employer contributions to the public employees retirement
association for the period of leave under this section. Contributions
must be made in a time and manner prescribed by the executive director
of the public employees retirement association.
Sec. 6. [DESIGNATION OF
POSITIONS; EMPLOYER DISCRETION.]
Before agreeing to an option under this article, a governmental
subdivision must designate the job classifications or positions within
job classifications that qualify for each option. The governmental subdivision may modify this
designation at any time. Designation
of positions eligible for the options and participation of individual
employees under this article are at the sole discretion of the
governmental subdivision.
Implementation of this article by the employer is not an unfair
labor practice under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 179A, or an unfair
discriminatory practice under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 363.
Sec. 7. [PROGRAM
APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS.]
(a) No agreement between an eligible public employee and a
governmental subdivision under this article is effective unless the
employee acknowledges acceptance of the terms of the agreement in
writing on a form prescribed by the public employees retirement
association executive director.
(b) A copy of the signed agreement must be transmitted to
the public employees retirement association executive director within
30 days after the agreement is executed.
Sec. 8. [RELATIONSHIP
OF SECTIONS.]
(a) An employee covered by a phased retirement agreement
under section 3 may not be covered by the voluntary hour reduction
provisions of section 4 or by a voluntary unpaid leave of absence
agreement under section 5 during the same time period or any later time
period.
(b) An employee covered by the voluntary hour reduction provisions
of section 4:
(1) may not be covered by a phased retirement agreement under
section 3 during the same time period, but may be covered by a phased
retirement agreement under section 3 during a later time period; and
(2) may be covered by the voluntary leave of absence provision
of section 5 during an earlier or later time period.
Sec. 9.
[GOVERNMENTAL SUBDIVISION LIMITATION.]
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 353.01, subdivision
6, paragraph (b), to the contrary, for purposes of this article the
public employees retirement association is not a governmental
subdivision.
Sec. 10. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 to 9 are effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE
3
PUBLIC
EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT
ASSOCIATION
CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 353.01, subdivision 2d, is amended to read:
Subd. 2d. [OPTIONAL
MEMBERSHIP.] (a) Membership in the association is optional by action of the
individual employee for the following public employees who meet the conditions
set forth in subdivision 2a:
(1) members of the coordinated plan who are also employees of
labor organizations as defined in section 353.017, subdivision 1, for their
employment by the labor organization only if they elect to have membership
under section 353.017, subdivision 2;
(2) persons who are elected or persons who are appointed to
elected positions other than local governing body elected positions who elect
to participate by filing a written election for membership;
(3) members of the association who are appointed by the
governor to be a state department head and who elect not to be covered by the
general state employees retirement plan of the Minnesota state retirement
system under section 352.021; and
(4) city managers as defined in section 353.028, subdivision 1,
who do not elect to be excluded from membership in the association under
section 353.028, subdivision 2; and
(5) employees of the port authority of the city of St. Paul
who were at least age 45 on January 1, 2003, and who elect to participate
by filing a written election for membership.
(b) Membership in the association is optional by action of the
governmental subdivision for the employees of the following governmental
subdivisions under the conditions specified:
(1) the Minnesota association of townships if the board of the
association, at its option, certifies to the executive director that its
employees are to be included for purposes of retirement coverage, in which case
the status of the association as a participating employer is permanent; and
(2) a county historical society if the county in which the
historical society is located, at its option, certifies to the executive
director that the employees of the historical society are to be county
employees for purposes of retirement coverage under this chapter. The status as a county employee must be
accorded to all similarly situated county historical society employees and,
once established, must continue as long as a person is an employee of the
county historical society.
(c) For employees who are covered by
paragraph (a), clause (1), (2), or (3), or covered by paragraph (b), if the
necessary membership election is not made, the employee is excluded from
retirement coverage under this chapter.
For employees who are covered by paragraph (a), clause (4), if the
necessary election is not made, the employee must become a member and have
retirement coverage under this chapter.
The option to become a member, once exercised under this subdivision,
may not be withdrawn until termination of public service as defined under
subdivision 11a.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 353.01, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. [GOVERNMENTAL
SUBDIVISION.] (a) "Governmental subdivision" means a county, city,
town, school district within this state, or a department or unit of state
government, or any public body whose revenues are derived from taxation, fees,
assessments or from other sources.
(b) Governmental subdivision also means the public employees
retirement association, the league of Minnesota cities, the association of
metropolitan municipalities, public hospitals owned or operated by, or an
integral part of, a governmental subdivision or governmental subdivisions, the
association of Minnesota counties, the metropolitan intercounty association,
the Minnesota municipal utilities association, the metropolitan airports
commission, the Minneapolis employees retirement fund for employment initially
commenced after June 30, 1979, the range association of municipalities and
schools, soil and water conservation districts, economic development
authorities created or operating under sections 469.090 to 469.108, the port
authority of the city of St. Paul, the Spring Lake Park fire department,
incorporated, the Red Wing environmental learning center, and the
Dakota county agricultural society.
(c) Governmental subdivision does not mean any municipal
housing and redevelopment authority organized under the provisions of sections
469.001 to 469.047; or any port authority organized under sections 469.048 to
469.089 other than the port authority of the city of St. Paul; or
any hospital district organized or reorganized prior to July 1, 1975, under
sections 447.31 to 447.37 or the successor of the district, nor the Minneapolis
community development agency.
Sec. 3. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 353D.01, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [ELIGIBILITY.]
(a) Eligibility to participate in the defined contribution plan is available
to:
(1) elected local government officials of a governmental
subdivision who elect to participate in the plan under section 353D.02,
subdivision 1, and who, for the elected service rendered to a governmental
subdivision, are not members of the public employees retirement association
within the meaning of section 353.01, subdivision 7;
(2) physicians who, if they did not elect to participate in the
plan under section 353D.02, subdivision 2, would meet the definition of member
under section 353.01, subdivision 7;
(3) basic and advanced life support emergency medical service
personnel employed by or providing services for any public ambulance service or
privately operated ambulance service that receives an operating subsidy from a
governmental entity that elects to participate under section 353D.02,
subdivision 3; and
(4) members of a municipal rescue squad associated with
Litchfield in Meeker county, or of a county rescue squad associated with
Kandiyohi county, if an independent nonprofit rescue squad corporation,
incorporated under chapter 317A, performing emergency management services, and
if not affiliated with a fire department or ambulance service and if its
members are not eligible for membership in that fire department's or ambulance
service's relief association or comparable pension plan; and
(5) employees of the port authority of
the city of St. Paul who elect to participate in the plan under section
353D.02, subdivision 5, and who are not members of the public employees
retirement association under section 353.01, subdivision 7.
(b) For purposes of this chapter, an elected local government
official includes a person appointed to fill a vacancy in an elective
office. Service as an elected local
government official only includes service for the governmental subdivision for
which the official was elected by the public-at-large. Service as an elected local government
official ceases and eligibility to participate terminates when the person
ceases to be an elected official. An
elected local government official does not include an elected county sheriff.
(c) Elected local government officials, physicians, first
response personnel and emergency medical service personnel, and rescue squad
personnel Individuals otherwise eligible to participate in the
plan under this subdivision who are currently covered by a public or
private pension plan because of their employment or provision of services are
not eligible to participate in the public employees defined contribution plan.
(d) A former participant is a person who has terminated
eligible employment or service and has not withdrawn the value of the person's
individual account.
Sec. 4. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 353D.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5. [ST.
PAUL PORT AUTHORITY PERSONNEL.] Employees of the port authority of
the city of St. Paul who do not elect to participate in the general
employees retirement plan may elect to participate in the plan by filing
a membership application on a form prescribed by the executive director
of the association authorizing contributions to be deducted from the
employee's salary. Participation
begins on the first day of the pay period for which the contributions
were deducted or, if pay period coverage dates are not provided, the
date on which the membership application or the contributions are
received in the office of the association, whichever is received first,
if the membership application is received by the association within 60
days of the receipt of the contributions.
An election to participate in the plan is irrevocable.
Sec. 5. [RED WING
ENVIRONMENTAL LEARNING CENTER.]
(a) The legislature finds that the Red Wing environmental
learning center has a long and very close relationship with independent
school district No. 256, Red Wing, that Red Wing environmental learning
center employees have been treated as independent school district No.
256, Red Wing, employees for retirement coverage purposes for 33 years,
and that the current learning center employees would suffer a
significant loss in their pension benefit coverage if their membership
in the general employees retirement plan of the public employees retirement
association was disrupted.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law to the
contrary, independent school district No. 256, Red Wing, may certify
to the executive director of the public employees retirement association
that employees of the Red Wing environmental learning center are
considered school district employees solely for purposes of retirement
coverage by the general employees retirement plan under Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 353. This
status must be accorded to all similarly situated Red Wing environmental
learning center employees.
Sec. 6. [PERA-GENERAL;
PRIOR ST. PAUL PORT AUTHORITY SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE.]
Subdivision 1.
[ELIGIBILITY.] A full-time salaried employee or a permanent
part-time salaried employee of the port authority of the city of St.
Paul who was employed by the port authority during all or part of the period
from July 1, 1993, to July 1, 2003, and who is a member of the general
employees retirement plan of the public employees retirement association
may purchase allowable service credit from the general employees retirement
plan.
Subd. 2.
[PURCHASABLE SERVICE; MAXIMUM.] (a) The service credit that is
purchasable under subdivision 1 is a period or periods of employment by
the port authority of the city of St. Paul that would have been eligible
service for coverage by the general employees retirement plan of the
public employees retirement association if the service had been rendered
after July 1, 2003.
(b) The maximum period of allowable service credit in the
general employees retirement plan of the public employees retirement
association for purchase under this section is ten years.
Subd. 3.
[PURCHASE PAYMENT REQUIREMENT.] (a) To purchase the service
credit, the payment amount must be calculated under Minnesota Statutes,
section 356.55.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of Minnesota Statutes,
section 356.55, to the contrary, the prior service credit purchase
payment may be made in whole or in part on an institution-to-institution
basis from a plan qualified under the federal Internal Revenue Code,
sections 401(a), 401(k), or 414(h), or from an annuity qualified under
the federal Internal Revenue Code, section 403, or from a deferred
compensation plan under the federal Internal Revenue Code, section 457,
to the extent permitted by the applicable federal law. In no event may a prior service
credit purchase transfer be paid directly to the person purchasing the
service.
Subd. 4.
[DOCUMENTATION; SERVICE CREDIT GRANT.] (a) An eligible person
described in subdivision 1 must provide any documentation related to
eligibility to make this service credit purchase required by the
executive director of the public employees retirement association.
(b) Allowable service credit for the purchase period or periods
must be granted by the general employees retirement plan of the public
employees retirement association on behalf of the eligible person upon
receipt of the prior service credit purchase payment amount.
Subd. 5.
[SUNSET.] Authority to purchase service credit under this
section expires on December 31, 2004.
Sec. 7. [PRIOR SERVICE;
VESTING.]
For purposes of vesting under section 353.29, subdivision
1, only, a full-time salaried employee or a permanent part-time salaried
employee of the port authority of the city of St. Paul who was employed
by the port authority on July 1, 2003, and who is a member of the
general employees retirement plan of the public employees retirement
association may use months of employment with the port authority before
that date. This service may not
be used to calculate a retirement annuity or a disability benefit provided
for under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 353.
Sec. 8. [DEFINED
CONTRIBUTION PLAN; ONETIME ELECTION.]
Employees of the port authority of the city of St. Paul who
do not exercise the right to become members of the general employees
retirement plan of the public employees retirement association under
section 1 may, by onetime election, choose to participate in the public
employees retirement association's defined contribution plan under
Minnesota Statutes, sections 353D.01 to 353D.12. The election is irrevocable.
Sec. 9. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
(a) Section 2 with respect to the Red Wing environmental
learning center, and section 5 are effective the day after the school
board of independent school district No. 256, Red Wing, and its chief
clerical officer timely complete their compliance with Minnesota
Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3, and certification to
the executive director of the public employees retirement association.
(b) Section 2, with respect to the port authority of the
city of St. Paul, is effective the day following final enactment.
(c) Sections 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8 are effective the day following
final enactment.
(d) Coverage by the general employees retirement plan of
the public employees retirement association under sections 1 and 2
commences July 1, 2003.
ARTICLE
4
PRIOR
SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE
PROVISIONS
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 356.55, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. [EXPIRATION OF
PURCHASE PAYMENT DETERMINATION PROCEDURE.] (a) This section expires and is
repealed on July 1, 2003 2004.
(b) Authority for any public pension plan to accept a prior
service credit payment that is calculated in a timely fashion under this
section expires on October 1, 2003 2004.
Sec. 2. Laws 1999,
chapter 222, article 16, section 16, as amended by Laws 2002, chapter 392,
article 7, section 1, is amended to read:
Sec. 16. [REPEALER.]
Sections 1 to 13 are repealed on May 16, 2003 2004.
Sec. 3. Laws 2000,
chapter 461, article 4, section 4, is amended to read:
Sec. 4. [EFFECTIVE
DATE; SUNSET REPEALER.]
(a) Sections 1, 2, and 3 are effective on the day following
final enactment.
(b) Sections 1, 2, and 3 are repealed on May 16, 2003 2004.
Sec. 4. Laws 2000,
chapter 461, article 12, section 20, as amended by Laws 2002, chapter 392,
article 7, section 2, is amended to read:
Sec. 20. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
(a) Sections 4, 5, and 11 to 20 are effective on the day
following final enactment.
(b) Sections 1, 2, 3, and 6 to 10 are effective on the day
following final enactment and apply retroactively to a faculty member of the
Lake Superior College who was granted an extended leave of absence under
article 19, section 4, of the united technical college educators master agreement
for the 1999-2000 academic year prior to March 20, 2000.
(c) Sections 5, 11, and 14, paragraph (c), expire on May 16, 2003
2004.
Sec. 5. Laws 2001,
First Special Session chapter 10, article 6, section 21, as amended by Laws
2002, chapter 392, article 7, section 3, is amended to read:
Sec. 21. [EXPIRATION
DATE.]
(a) The amendments in sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 12, 16, 17, 18,
19, and 20 expire May 16, 2003 2004.
(b) Sections 9 and 15 expire May 16, 2003 2004.
Sec. 6. [PERA-GENERAL;
SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE AUTHORIZED.]
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
an eligible person described in paragraph (b), (c), or (d) is authorized
to purchase allowable service credit from the general employees
retirement plan of the public employees retirement association under
Minnesota Statutes, section 356.55 or 356.551, for the applicable period
of prior employment as a council member of the city of St. Louis Park
which was not credited by the general employees retirement plan of the
public employees retirement association as indicated in paragraph (e).
(b) An eligible person is a person who:
(1) is a current member of the St. Louis Park city council
and is a current member of the general employees retirement plan of
the public employees retirement association;
(2) was born on September 26, 1941;
(3) became a St. Louis Park city council member on January
1, 1996; and
(4) was not a member of the general employees retirement
plan of the public employees retirement association for the period
January 1, 1996, to January 29, 2000.
(c) An eligible person is a person who:
(1) is a current member of the St. Louis Park city council
and is a current member of the general employees retirement plan of
the public employees retirement association;
(2) was born on October 8, 1949;
(3) became a St. Louis Park city council member on June 8,
1999; and
(4) was not a member of the general employees retirement
plan of the public employees retirement association for the period
June 8, 1999, to January 12, 2002.
(d) An eligible person is a person who:
(1) is a current member of the St. Louis Park city council
and is a current member of the general employees retirement plan of
the public employees retirement association;
(2) was born on June 4, 1964;
(3) became a St. Louis Park city council member on November
18, 1997; and
(4) was not a member of the general employees retirement
plan of the public employees retirement association for the period
November 18, 1997, to March 9, 2002.
(e) The allowable service credit purchase period is limited
to the period of St. Louis Park city council service that was not
covered by the general employees retirement plan of the public employees
retirement association.
(f) The eligible person must provide all relevant documentation
of the applicability of the requirements set forth in paragraph (b),
(c), or (d) and any other applicable information that the executive
director of the public employees retirement association may request.
(g) Allowable service credit for the purchase period must
be granted by the general employees retirement plan of the public
employees retirement association to the eligible person upon receipt of
the prior service credit purchase payment amount.
(h) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 356.55, subdivision
5, or 356.551, subdivision 2, whichever applies, the city of St. Louis
Park is not permitted to pay any portion of the service credit purchase
payment amount.
(i) The prior service credit purchase authority expires on
July 1, 2004, or on the date of the termination of active St. Louis
Park city council service by the eligible person, whichever occurs
earlier.
Sec. 7. [REPEALER.]
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 354.541 and 354A.109, are
repealed May 16, 2004.
Sec. 8. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 to 7 are effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE
5
GENERAL
RETIREMENT CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 356B.05, is amended to read:
356B.05 [PUBLIC PENSION ADMINISTRATION LEGISLATION.]
(a) Proposed administrative legislation recommended by or on
behalf of the Minnesota state retirement system, the public employees
retirement association, the teachers retirement association, the Minneapolis
employees retirement fund, or a first class city teachers retirement
fund association, or the Minnesota state colleges and universities
system must be presented to the legislative commission on pensions and
retirement, the state and local governmental operations committee of the
senate, and the governmental operations and veterans affairs policy committee
of the house of representatives on or before October 1 of each year in order
for the proposed administrative legislation to be acted upon during the upcoming
legislative session. The executive
director or the deputy executive director of the legislative commission on
pensions and retirement shall provide written comments on the proposed
administrative provisions to the public pension plans by November 15 of each
year.
(b) Proposed administrative legislation recommended by or on
behalf of a public employee pension plan or system under paragraph (a) must
address provisions:
(1) authorizing allowable service credit for leaves of absence
and related circumstances;
(2) governing offsets or deductions from the amount of
disability benefits;
(3) authorizing the purchase of allowable service credit for
prior uncredited periods;
(4) governing subsequent employment earnings by reemployed
annuitants; and
(5) authorizing retroactive effect for retirement annuity or
benefit applications.
(c) Where possible and desirable, taking into account the
differences among the public pension plans in existing law and the unique
characteristics of the individual public pension fund memberships, uniform
provisions relating to paragraph (b) for all applicable public pension plans
must be presented for consideration during the legislative session. Supporting documentation setting forth the
policy rationale for each set of uniform provisions must accompany the proposed
administrative legislation.
Sec. 2. [ACTUARIAL
STUDY OF COSTS TO RESTRUCTURE TEACHER PLANS.]
Subdivision 1.
[STUDY MANDATED.] The actuary retained by the legislative
commission on pensions and retirement shall prepare an additional
actuarial valuation report, using the results of the 2003 actuarial
valuation reports prepared under Minnesota Statutes, section 356.215,
that considers the feasibility of restructuring the Minnesota teachers
retirement association, the Minneapolis teachers retirement fund association,
the St. Paul teachers retirement fund association, and the Duluth
teachers retirement plan and fund association into a new restructured
fund.
Subd. 2.
[CONTENTS OF STUDY.] The actuarial valuation report must be
based on the proposals put forth in the report mandated by the
legislature in Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 10, article 11,
section 20, and filed February 15, 2002, including changes to the
postretirement adjustment, benefits, and restructuring administrative
costs and including asset transfers.
Subd. 3.
[INFORMATION PROVIDED.] The executive director of the teachers
retirement association, the executive secretary of the Duluth teachers
retirement fund association, the executive director of the St. Paul
teachers retirement fund association, and the executive director of the
Minneapolis teachers retirement fund association must consult with the
task force established under Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 10,
article 11, section 20, and must provide the commission-retained actuary
with all necessary information requested for the preparation of this
report.
Subd. 4.
[COSTS.] The cost of the actuarial valuation report mandated
in this section will be paid by the pension funds named in this
legislation. The cost must be allocated
equally between the four pension funds.
The executive director of the Minneapolis teachers retirement
fund association shall serve as the fiscal agent for this study, shall
pay its cost, and shall be reimbursed by the other three retirement
funds for their appropriate share.
Subd. 5. [FILING
DATE.] The report must be filed by January 15, 2004, with the chair
of the legislative commission on pensions and retirement, the chair of the
senate committee on state and local government operations, and the chair
of the house committee on government operations and veterans affairs
policy.
Sec. 3. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 and 2 are effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE
6
MINNEAPOLIS
FIREFIGHTERS RELIEF
ASSOCIATION
CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 423C.08, is amended to read:
423C.08 [MEMBER CONTRIBUTION REFUND TO BENEFICIARY UPON DEATH.]
If an active, deferred, or retired member of the association
dies and no survivor benefit is payable, the designated beneficiary of the
decedent or, if none, the legal representative of the estate of the decedent is
entitled, upon application, to a refund.
The refund shall be an amount equal to the member contributions to the
credit of the decedent, plus interest on those contributions at an annual
compounded rate of five percent from the first day of the month following the
date of the contribution to the first day of the month following the
date of death of the decedent, reduced by the sum of any service pension or
disability benefit previously paid by the fund to the decedent.
Sec. 2. [INTENT.]
Section 1 is intended to bring the Minneapolis firefighters
relief association's statutory provision which provides for a refund
of member contributions where the decedent does not leave a surviving
spouse or children in conformance with Minnesota Statutes 2002, section
423A.18.
Sec. 3. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Section 1 is effective retroactively from September 25, 2001. Section 2 is effective the day following
final enactment.
ARTICLE
7
PLYMOUTH
VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTER RELIEF
ASSOCIATION
CHANGES
Section 1. Laws 1978,
chapter 685, section 1, as amended by Laws 1979, chapter 201, section 41, is amended
to read:
Section 1. [PLYMOUTH
VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS' RELIEF ASSOCIATION.]
The bylaws of the Plymouth firefighter's relief association may
be amended to provide for payment of a disability pension in an amount equal
to $8.50 per month per year of service, to a maximum of $255 per month consistent
with the ancillary benefit requirements specified in Minnesota Statutes,
section 424A.02, subdivision 9, to a firefighter qualified
pursuant to determined to be disabled, as defined in the
bylaws of the association and under procedures specified in those
bylaws. No member shall be entitled
to draw both a disability pension and a service pension.
Sec. 2. Laws 1978,
chapter 685, section 2, is amended to read:
Sec. 2. The Plymouth
firefighter's relief association may provide for a benefit to the surviving
spouse of a volunteer firefighter who died, providing that the surviving
spouse qualifies under the terms of the bylaws, such benefit to be paid
as the bylaws of the association may provide, except that the bylaws may not
provide for a spouse's benefit of more than $127.50 per month, and provided the
benefit shall cease as of the date of the spouse's remarriage and the
benefit is consistent with ancillary benefit requirements specified in
Minnesota Statutes, section 424A.02, subdivision 9.
Sec. 3.
Laws 1978, chapter 685, section 3, is amended to read:
Sec. 3. The Plymouth
firefighter's relief association may pay a pension for the children of deceased
members, as the association's bylaws may provide, consistent with ancillary
benefit requirements specified in Minnesota Statutes, section 424A.02,
subdivision 9.
Sec. 4. Laws 1978,
chapter 685, section 6, is amended to read:
Sec. 6. (a) The
bylaws of the Plymouth firefighter's relief association may
further provide that when any active or deferred member of the
association or any pensioner who is a former member disabilitant or
service pension recipient dies, there may be paid a death or funeral
benefit to defray or assist the family of the deceased with funeral expenses.
(b) A benefit paid under this section due to the death of
an active or deferred member must conform to Minnesota Statutes, section
424A.02, subdivision 9.
(c) A death or funeral benefit may be paid under this section
to the family of a deceased disabilitant or service pensioner
notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 424A.02, subdivision 9,
providing that liabilities relating to this benefit are recognized in
determinations of actuarial condition and funding costs, as determined
under section 69.772 or 69.773, whichever is applicable. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary,
the association is authorized to use a load factor or factors to
recognize liabilities relating to funeral or death benefits paid to the
family of a deceased disabilitant or service pensioner. Benefits are not payable under this paragraph
if the city council does not approve the load factor or factors used in
determinations of actuarial conditions and funding costs.
Sec. 5. [REPEALER.]
Laws 1978, chapter 685, section 5, is repealed.
Sec. 6. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 to 5 are effective on the day after the date on
which the Plymouth city council and the chief clerical officer of the
city of Plymouth complete in a timely manner their compliance with
Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.
ARTICLE
8
VOLUNTEER
FIREFIGHTER RELIEF
ASSOCIATION
CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 424A.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [FLEXIBLE
SERVICE PENSION MAXIMUMS.] (a) Annually on or before August 1 of each
year as part of the certification of the financial requirements and minimum
municipal obligation made pursuant to determined under section
69.772, subdivision 4, or 69.773, subdivision 5, as applicable, the
secretary or some other official of the relief association designated in the
bylaws of each relief association shall calculate and certify to the governing
body of the applicable qualified municipality the average amount of available
financing per active covered firefighter for the most recent three-year
period. The amount of available
financing shall include any amounts of fire state aid received or receivable by
the relief association, any amounts of municipal contributions to the relief
association raised from levies on real estate or from other available revenue
sources exclusive of fire state aid, and one-tenth of the amount of assets in
excess of the accrued liabilities of the relief association calculated pursuant
to sections under section 69.772, subdivision 2; 69.773,
subdivisions 2 and 4; or 69.774, subdivision 2, if any.
(b) The maximum service pension which the
relief association has authority to provide for in its bylaws for payment to a
member retiring after the calculation date when the minimum age and service
requirements specified in subdivision 1 are met must be determined using the
table in paragraph (c) or (d), whichever applies.
(c) For a relief association where the governing bylaws provide
for a monthly service pension to a retiring member, the maximum monthly service
pension amount per month for each year of service credited that may be provided
for in the bylaws is the maximum service pension figure corresponding to the
average amount of available financing per active covered firefighter:
Minimum Average Amount of Maximum Service Pension
Available Financing
per Amount Payable per
Month
Firefighter
for Each Year of Service
$...
$.25
42
.50
84
1.00
126
1.50
168
2.00
209
2.50
252
3.00
294
3.50
335
4.00
378
4.50
420
5.00
503
6.00
587
7.00
672
8.00
755
9.00
839
10.00
923
11.00
1007
12.00
1090
13.00
1175 14.00
1259
15.00
1342
16.00
1427
17.00
1510
18.00
1594
19.00
1677
20.00
1762
21.00
1845
22.00
1888
22.50
1929
23.00
2014
24.00
2098
25.00
2183
26.00
2267
27.00
2351
28.00
2436
29.00
2520
30.00
2604
31.00
2689
32.00
2773
33.00
2857
34.00
2942
35.00
3026
36.00
3110
37.00
3963
3194
38.00
4047
3278
39.00
4137
3362
40.00
Effective beginning December 31, 2000:
4227
3446
41.00
4317
3530
42.00
4407
3614
43.00
4497
3698
44.00
Effective beginning December 31, 2001:
4587
3782
45.00
4677
3866
46.00
4767
3950
47.00
4857
4034
48.00
Effective beginning December 31, 2002:
4947
4118
49.00
5037
4202
50.00
5127
4286
51.00
5217
4370
52.00
Effective beginning December 31, 2003:
5307
4454
53.00
5397
4538
54.00
5487
4622
55.00
5577
4706
56.00
(d) For a relief association in which the governing bylaws
provide for a lump sum service pension to a retiring member, the maximum lump
sum service pension amount for each year of service credited that may be
provided for in the bylaws is the maximum service pension figure corresponding
to the average amount of available financing per active covered firefighter for
the applicable specified period:
Minimum Average Amount of Maximum Lump Sum Service
Available Financing
per Pension Amount
Payable
Firefighter for
Each Year of Service
$..
$10
11
20
16 30
23
40
27
50
32
60
43
80
54
100
65
120
77
140
86
160
97
180
108
200
131
240
151
280
173
320
194
360
216
400
239
440
259
480
281
520
302
560
324
600
347
640
367
680
389
720
410
760
432
800
486
900
540
1000
594 1100
648
1200
702
1300
756
1400
810
1500
864
1600
918
1700
972
1800
1026
1900
1080
2000
1134
2100
1188
2200
1242
2300
1296
2400
1350
2500
1404
2600
1458
2700
1512
2800
1566
2900
1620
3000
1672
3100
1726
3200
1753
3250
1780
3300
1820
3375
1834
3400
1888
3500
1942
3600
1996 3700
2023
3750
2050
3800
2104
3900
2158
4000
2212
4100
2265
4200
2319
4300
2373
4400
2427
4500
2481
4600
2535
4700
2589
4800
2643
4900
2697
5000
2751
5100
2805
5200
2859
5300
2913
5400
2967
5500
Effective beginning December 31, 2000:
3021
5600
3075
5700
3129
5800
3183
5900
3237
6000
Effective beginning December 31, 2001:
3291
6100
3345
6200
3399
6300
3453
6400
3507
6500
Effective beginning December 31, 2002:
3561
6600
3615
6700
3669
6800
3723
6900
3777
7000
Effective beginning December 31, 2003:
3831
7100
3885
7200
3939
7300
3993
7400
4047
7500
(e) For a relief association in which the governing bylaws
provide for a monthly benefit service pension as an alternative form of service
pension payment to a lump sum service pension, the maximum service pension
amount for each pension payment type must be determined using the applicable
table contained in this subdivision.
(f) If a relief association establishes a service pension in
compliance with the applicable maximum contained in paragraph (c) or (d) and the
minimum average amount of available financing per active covered firefighter is
subsequently reduced because of a reduction in fire state aid or because of an
increase in the number of active firefighters, the relief association may
continue to provide the prior service pension amount specified in its bylaws,
but may not increase the service pension amount until the minimum average
amount of available financing per firefighter under the table in paragraph (c)
or (d), whichever applies, permits.
(g) No relief association is authorized to provide a service
pension in an amount greater than the largest applicable flexible service
pension maximum amount even if the amount of available financing per
firefighter is greater than the financing amount associated with the largest
applicable flexible service pension maximum.
Sec. 2.
[BENEFIT RATIFICATION; WHITE BEAR LAKE.]
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 424A.02, subdivisions
3 and 3a, to the contrary, the service pension amounts specified in the
bylaws of the White Bear Lake fire department relief association
following bylaw amendments in January 1999 and prior to the effective
date of this section are ratified.
Sec. 3. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
Sections 1 and 2 are effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE
9
LOCAL
RETIREMENT CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 383B.49, is amended to read:
383B.49 [SUPPLEMENTAL RETIREMENT BENEFITS; REDEMPTION OF
SHARES.]
When requested to do so, in writing, on forms provided by the
county, by a participant, surviving spouse, a guardian of a surviving child or
a personal representative, whichever is applicable, the county of Hennepin
shall redeem shares in the accounts of the Minnesota supplemental investment
fund standing in a participant's share account record under the following
circumstances and in accordance with the laws and regulations governing the
Minnesota supplemental investment fund:
(1) A participant who is no longer employed by the county of
Hennepin is entitled to receive the cash realized on the redemption of the
shares to the credit of the participant's share account record of the
person. The participant may request the
redemption of all or a portion of the shares in the participant's share account
record of the person, but may not request more than one redemption in any one
calendar year. If only a portion of the
shares in the participant's share account record is requested to be redeemed
the person may request to redeem not less than 20 percent of the shares in any
one calendar year and the redemption must be completed in no more than five
years. An election is irrevocable
except that a participant may request an amendment of the election to redeem
all of the person's remaining shares.
All requests under this paragraph are subject to application to and
approval of the Hennepin county board administrator, in its
the sole discretion of the administrator.
(2) In the event of the death of a participant leaving a
surviving spouse, the surviving spouse is entitled to receive the cash realized
on the redemption of all or a portion of the shares in the participant's share
account record of the deceased spouse, but in no event may the spouse request
more than one redemption in each calendar year. If only a portion of the shares in the participant's share
account record is requested to be redeemed, the surviving spouse may request
the redemption of not less than 20 percent of the shares in any one calendar
year. Redemption must be completed in
no more than five years. An election is irrevocable except that the surviving
spouse may request an amendment of the election to redeem all of the
participant's remaining shares. All
requests under this paragraph are subject to application to and approval of the
Hennepin county board administrator, in its the
sole discretion of the administrator.
Upon the death of the surviving spouse, any shares remaining in the
participant's share account record must be redeemed by the county of Hennepin
and the cash realized from the redemption distributed to the estate of the
surviving spouse.
(3) In the event of the death of a participant leaving no
surviving spouse, but leaving a minor surviving child or minor surviving
children, the guardianship estate of the minor child is, or the guardianship
estates of the minor children are, entitled to receive the cash realized on the
redemption of all shares to the credit of the participant's share account
record of the deceased participant. In
the event of minor surviving children, the cash realized must be paid in equal
shares to the guardianship estates of the minor surviving children.
(4) In the event of the death of a
participant leaving no surviving spouse and no minor surviving children, the
estate of the deceased participant is entitled to receive the cash realized on
the redemption of all shares to the credit of the participant's share account
record of the deceased participant.
Sec. 2. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 383B.493, is amended to read:
383B.493 [WITHDRAWAL FROM PARTICIPATION.]
Notwithstanding Laws 1982, chapter 450, or any other law to the
contrary, a Hennepin county employee participating in the Hennepin county
supplemental retirement program pursuant to Laws 1982, chapter 450 may, in the
event of an unforeseeable emergency, apply to the county to discontinue
participation in the program. Employees
who are no longer participating in the program may apply for the redemption of
all shares credited to their share account record. Applications are subject to approval of the Hennepin county board
of commissioners administrator in its the sole
discretion of the administrator. For the purposes of this section, the
term "unforeseeable emergency" shall mean a severe financial hardship
to the participant resulting from a sudden and unexpected illness or accident
of the participant or a person dependent upon the participant, loss of
participant's property due to casualty, or other similar extraordinary and
unforeseeable circumstances arising as a result of events beyond the control of
the participant. Applications based on
foreseeable expenditures normally budgetable shall not be approved. A participant exercising the option provided
by this section shall be ineligible for further participation in the
supplemental retirement program.
Sec. 3. [EVELETH
RETIRED POLICE AND FIRE TRUST FUND; AD HOC POSTRETIREMENT ADJUSTMENT.]
In addition to the current pensions and other retirement
benefits payable, the pensions and retirement benefits payable to
retired police officers and firefighters and their surviving spouses by
the Eveleth police and fire trust fund are increased by $100 per
month. Increases are retroactive from
January 1, 2003.
Sec. 4. [MARSHALL
VOLUNTEER FIRE.]
Notwithstanding any provision of Minnesota Statutes, section
424A.02, subdivision 7, or other law to the contrary, as a pilot
project, the Marshall volunteer firefighter relief association may amend
its bylaws to pay interest on deferred lump sum payment pensions based
on a rate determined annually by the board of trustees based on the
actual time weighted total rate of return investment performance of the
special fund as reported by the office of the state auditor under
Minnesota Statutes, section 356.219, up to five percent, and applied
consistently for all deferred service pensioners.
Sec. 5. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
(a) Sections 1 and 2 are effective upon approval by the Hennepin
county board of commissioners and compliance with Minnesota Statutes,
section 645.021.
(b) Section 3 is effective the day after the date on which
the Eveleth city council and the chief clerical officer of the city
of Eveleth comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions
2 and 3.
(c) Section 4 is effective the day after the date on which
the Marshall city council and the chief clerical officer of the city
of Marshall comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021,
subdivisions 2 and 3.
ARTICLE
10
PRIOR
SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE PROVISIONS
Section 1. Laws 2000,
chapter 461, article 19, section 6, is amended to read:
Sec. 6. [MTRFA; PRIOR SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE FOR UNCREDITED
TEACHING SERVICE PERIODS.]
(a) An eligible person described in paragraph (b) is entitled
to purchase allowable service credit from the Minneapolis teachers retirement
fund association basic program for the periods of teaching employment specified
in paragraph (c) by making the payment required under Minnesota Statutes,
section 356.55.
(b) An eligible person is a person who:
(1) was employed by special school district No. 1 (Minneapolis)
as a long call reserve teacher from October 1972 to June 1973 and was covered
by the Minneapolis employees retirement fund;
(2) was employed by special school district No. 1 (Minneapolis)
as a school social worker at Franklin junior high school from August 28, 1973,
through June 12, 1974, and from August 29, 1974, through June 11, 1975, without
retirement coverage;
(3) was employed by special school district No. 1 (Minneapolis)
as a school social worker at North high school from August 29, 1975, through
December 19, 1975, covered by the Minneapolis teachers retirement fund
association;
(4) was retained by special school district No. 1 (Minneapolis)
in the capacity of a school social worker at North high school as an hourly
wage social worker from August 1976 through June 1983 without retirement
coverage; and
(5) is currently employed by Hennepin county covered by the
public employees retirement association.
(c) The periods for allowable service credit purchase are
August 28, 1973, through June 12, 1974; and August 29, 1974, through June 11,
1975.
(d) An eligible person must provide any relevant documentation
related to eligibility to make this service credit purchase required by the
executive director of the Minneapolis teachers retirement fund association.
(e) Allowable service credit for the purchase periods must be
granted by the Minneapolis teachers retirement fund association to the account
of the eligible person upon receipt of the prior service credit purchase payment
amount. Authority provided by
this section is voided if payment is not made before December 31, 2003,
or before commencing receipt of an annuity from the Minneapolis teachers
retirement fund association, whichever is earlier.
(f) The prior service credit purchase payment amount shall
be computed by the actuary retained by the legislative commission on pensions
and retirement. That computation must give recognition, in applying
the process stated in Minnesota Statutes, section 356.55, give recognition
to the liabilities that would be created in the Minneapolis teachers retirement
fund association and other Minnesota public pension funds due to the service
credit purchase.
(g) Following receipt of that purchase payment amount, the
executive director of the Minneapolis teachers retirement fund association
shall allocate and transmit that amount to the applicable pension
administrations, as determined under paragraph (f).
Sec. 2.
[TEACHERS RETIREMENT ASSOCIATION; SERVICE CREDIT PURCHASE FOR SABBATICAL
LEAVES.]
(a) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 354.092, or
any other law to the contrary, an eligible person described in paragraph
(b) is entitled to purchase not more than three years of allowable
service credit from the teachers retirement association for sabbatical
leave as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 122A.49.
(b) An eligible person is a person who:
(1) worked as a teacher for independent school district No.
191, Burnsville-Eagan-Savage;
(2) was on sabbatical leave at some time between January 1,
1982, and December 31, 1989; and
(3) did not receive service credit for time on sabbatical
leave because the leave was not properly reported to the teachers
retirement association.
(c) An eligible person described in paragraph (b) must apply
with the executive director of the teachers retirement association to
make a service credit purchase under this section. The application must be in writing and must
include all necessary documentation of the applicability of this section
and any other relevant information that the executive director may
require.
(d) Allowable service credit for the purchase periods must
be granted by the teachers retirement association to the account of
an eligible person upon receipt of the portion of the prior service
credit purchase payment amount payable under paragraph (e) in a lump sum
by the applicable eligible person.
(e) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 356.55 or
356.551, whichever is applicable, an eligible person may pay before
September 1, 2003, or the date of termination from service, whichever is
earlier, an amount equal to the employee contribution rate or rates in
effect during the applicable sabbatical leave period or periods
specified in paragraph (b) applied to the actual salary rate or rates in
effect during that period or periods, plus annual compound interest at
the rate of 8.5 percent from the midpoint of each applicable sabbatical
leave period, to the date on which the payment is actually made. Independent school district No. 191 must pay
the remaining balance of the prior service credit purchase payment amount
calculated under Minnesota Statutes, section 356.55 or 356.551,
whichever is applicable, within 30 days of the payment by an eligible
person. The executive director of the
teachers retirement association must notify the superintendent of independent
school district No. 191 of its payment amount and payment due date if an
eligible person makes the required payment.
(f) If independent school district No. 191 fails to pay its
portion of the required prior service credit purchase payment amount,
the executive director of the teachers retirement association must
notify the commissioner of finance of that fact and the commissioner of
finance must order that the required employer payment be deducted from
the next subsequent payment or payments of state education aid to the
school district and be transmitted to the teachers retirement
association.
Sec. 3. [EFFECTIVE
DATE.]
This article is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to retirement; modifying
provisions relating to the state board of investment; providing for early
retirement incentives and certain voluntary employee reductions; making certain
changes to the public employees retirement association; providing for prior
service credit purchase; making general retirement changes; providing
for volunteer firefighter relief association changes; providing for certain
teachers retirement changes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 11A.17,
subdivision 2; 352.96, subdivision 2; 353.01, subdivisions 2d, 6; 353D.01,
subdivision 2; 353D.02, by adding a subdivision; 356.55, subdivision 7;
356B.05; 383B.49; 383B.493; 423C.08; 424A.02, subdivision 3; Laws 1978, chapter
685, sections 1, as amended, 2, 3, 6; Laws 1999, chapter 222, article 16,
section 16, as amended; Laws 2000, chapter 461, article 4, section 4; Laws
2000, chapter 461, article 12, section 20, as amended; Laws 2000, chapter 461,
article 19, section 6; Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 10, article 6,
section 21, as amended; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 354.541;
354A.109; Laws 1978, chapter 685, section 5."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration.
The report was adopted.
Abrams from the Committee on Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 749, A bill for an act relating to state government;
appropriating money for the general legislative and administrative expenses of
state government; modifying provisions related to state government operations;
requiring certain contractor bonding; requiring licensure of certain gambling
equipment salespersons; modifying fee provisions and providing for disposition
of various fees and other revenue; modifying provisions of various state boards
and commissions; authorizing rulemaking; providing for a license fee for
fireworks retailers; requiring studies; modifying lawful gambling provisions;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 3.099, subdivision 3; 3.885,
subdivision 1; 3.971, subdivision 2; 6.48; 6.49; 6.54; 6.55; 6.64; 6.65; 6.66;
6.67; 6.68, subdivision 1; 6.70; 6.71; 6.74; 8.06; 10A.02, by adding
subdivisions; 10A.04, subdivisions 2, 4, by adding a subdivision; 10A.09,
subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 10A.31, subdivisions 1, 3, 4; 14.48, by
adding a subdivision; 15.50, subdivision 1; 16A.11, subdivision 3; 16A.17, by
adding a subdivision; 16A.40; 16A.501; 16A.642, subdivision 1; 16B.24,
subdivision 5; 16B.35, subdivision 1; 16B.465, subdivisions 1a, 7; 16B.47;
16B.48, subdivision 2; 16B.49; 16B.58, by adding a subdivision; 16C.05,
subdivision 2; 16C.08, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, by adding a subdivision; 16C.09;
16C.10, subdivision 7; 16E.01, subdivision 3; 16E.07, subdivision 9; 16E.09,
subdivision 1; 69.772, subdivision 2; 115A.929; 116J.8771; 136F.77, subdivision
3; 179A.03, subdivision 7; 192.501, subdivision 2; 197.608; 240.03; 240.10;
240.15, subdivision 6; 240.155, subdivision 1; 240A.03, subdivisions 10, 15;
240A.04; 240A.06, subdivision 1; 256B.435, subdivision 2a; 268.186; 270.052;
270.44; 270A.07, subdivision 1; 289A.08, subdivision 16; 306.95; 349.12,
subdivisions 4, 18, 25, 34, by adding subdivisions; 349.151, subdivisions 4,
4b, by adding a subdivision; 349.153; 349.155, subdivision 3; 349.16,
subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 349.161, subdivisions 1, 4, 5; 349.162,
subdivision 1; 349.163, subdivisions 2, 3, 6; 349.164, subdivision 4; 349.165,
subdivision 3; 349.166, subdivisions 1, 2; 349.167, subdivision 6; 349.17,
subdivisions 3, 6, 7, by adding a subdivision; 349.1711, subdivision 2; 349.18,
subdivision 1; 349.19, by adding a subdivision; 349.191, subdivisions 1, 1a;
349.211, subdivision 1, by adding subdivisions; 349A.08, subdivision 5;
352D.04, by adding a subdivision; 356.611, subdivision 1; 458D.17, subdivision
5; 471.696; 471.999; 474A.21; 477A.014, subdivision 4; 624.20, subdivision 1;
Laws 1998, chapter 366, section 80, as amended; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapters 3A; 6; 10A; 15A; 16C; 43A; 326; 349; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 3.305, subdivision 5; 3.9222; 3.971,
subdivision 8; 3A.11; 4A.055; 6.77; 12.221, subdivision 5; 16A.151, subdivision
5; 16A.87; 16B.50; 16C.07; 43A.04, subdivision 10; 43A.047; 43A.17, subdivision
9; 149A.97, subdivision 8; 163.10; 240A.08; 306.97; 349.2127, subdivision 9;
Minnesota Rules, part 1950.1070.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Pages 28 and 29, delete sections 29 and 30
Page 48, after line 12, insert:
"Sec. 54.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 16D.08, subdivision 2, is amended to
read:
Subd. 2. [POWERS.] (a)
In addition to the collection remedies available to private collection agencies
in this state, the commissioner, with legal assistance from the attorney
general, may utilize any statutory authority granted to a referring agency for
purposes of collecting debt owed to that referring agency. The commissioner may also delegate to the
enterprise the tax collection remedies in sections 270.06, clauses (7) and
(17), excluding the power to subpoena witnesses; 270.66; 270.69, excluding
subdivisions 7 and 13; 270.70, excluding subdivision 14; 270.7001 to 270.72;
and 290.92, subdivision 23, except that a continuous wage levy under section
290.92, subdivision 23, is only effective for 70 days, unless no competing wage
garnishments, executions, or levies are served within the 70-day period, in
which case a wage levy is continuous until a competing garnishment, execution,
or levy is served in the second or a succeeding 70-day period, in which case a
continuous wage levy is effective for the remainder of that period. A debtor who qualifies for cancellation of
collection costs under section 16D.11, subdivision 3, clause (1), can apply to
the commissioner for reduction or release of a continuous wage levy, if the
debtor establishes that the debtor needs all or a portion of the wages being
levied upon to pay for essential living expenses, such as food, clothing,
shelter, medical care, or expenses necessary for maintaining employment. The
commissioner's determination not to reduce or release a continuous wage levy is
appealable to district court. The word
"tax" or "taxes" when used in the tax collection statutes
listed in this subdivision also means debts referred under this chapter.
(b) For debts other than state taxes, and child
support, or student loans, before any of the tax collection remedies listed
in this subdivision can be used, except for the remedies in section 270.06,
clauses (7) and (17), if the referring agency has not already obtained a
judgment or filed a lien, the commissioner must first obtain a judgment
against the debtor. For student loans when the referring agency has not
obtained a judgment or filed a lien, before using the tax collection
remedies listed in this subdivision, except for the remedies in section 270.06,
clauses (7) and (17), the commissioner shall give the debtor 30 90
days' notice in writing, which may shall be served in any
manner permitted in section 270.68 for service of a summons and complaint by
both first class mail and certified mail to the debtor's address as
provided by the referring agency.
The notice must advise the debtor of the debtor's right to request that
the commissioner commence a court action, and that if no such request is made
within 30 90 days after service of the notice, the commissioner
may use these tax collection remedies.
If a timely request is made, the commissioner shall obtain a judgment
before using these tax collection remedies.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment for all debts
referred, whether referred prior to or on or after the day following
final enactment.
Sec. 55. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 16D.10, is amended to read:
16D.10 [CASE REVIEWER.]
Subdivision 1.
[DUTIES.] The commissioner shall make a case reviewer available to
debtors. The reviewer must be available
to answer a debtor's questions concerning the collection process and to review
the collection activity taken. If the reviewer reasonably believes that the
particular action being taken is unreasonable or unfair, the reviewer may make
recommendations to the commissioner in regard to the collection action.
Subd. 2.
[AUTHORITY TO ISSUE DEBTOR ASSISTANCE ORDER.] On application
filed by a debtor with the case reviewer, in the form, manner, and in
the time prescribed by the commissioner, and after thorough
investigation, the case reviewer may issue a debtor assistance order if,
in the determination of the case reviewer, the manner in which the state
debt collection laws are being administered is creating or will create
an unjust and inequitable result for the debtor. Debtor assistance orders shall be
governed by the provisions relating to taxpayer assistance orders under
section 270.273.
Subd. 3.
[TRANSFER OF DUTIES TO TAXPAYER RIGHTS ADVOCATE.] All duties and
authority of the case reviewer under subdivisions 1 and 2 are
transferred to the taxpayer rights advocate.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment."
Pages 67 and 68, delete section 80
Page 78, delete section 89
Page 88, line 18, delete "commissioner" and
insert "state auditor"
Page 90, line 30, after "paragraph" insert
"or a tax imposed under section 297A.99"
Page 93, line 26, delete "113" and insert
"111"
Pages 111 and 112, delete article 4
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 10, after the semicolon, insert "modifying
provisions relating to state debt collection;"
Page 1, line 20, delete "subdivisions 1, 3," and
insert "subdivision"
Page 1, line 28, after "7;" insert "16D.08,
subdivision 2; 16D.10;"
Page 1, line 36, delete "289A.08, subdivision 16;"
Page 1, line 37, delete "34,"
Page 1, lines 38 and 39, delete ", by adding a
subdivision"
Page 1, line 40, delete ", by adding a subdivision"
Page 1, line 45, delete "349.1711, subdivision 2;"
Page 2, line 2, delete "subdivisions" and insert
"a subdivision"
Page 2, line 14, delete "349.2127, subdivision 9;"
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.
Knoblach from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 752, A bill for an act relating to state government;
appropriating money for agricultural and rural development purposes;
establishing and modifying certain programs; providing for regulation of certain
activities and practices; providing for accounts, assessments, and fees;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 17.451; 17.452, subdivisions 8, 10,
11, 12, 13, by adding subdivisions; 18.525; 18.78; 18.79, subdivisions 2, 3, 5,
6, 9, 10; 18.81, subdivisions 2, 3; 18.84, subdivision 3; 18.86; 18B.26,
subdivision 3; 21.89, subdivision 2; 21.90, subdivision 2; 21.901; 28A.08,
subdivision 3; 28A.085, subdivision 1; 28A.09, subdivision 1; 32.394,
subdivisions 8, 8b, 8d; 35.155; 41A.09, subdivisions 1, 2a, 3a, by adding
subdivisions; 116.07, subdivision 7a; 116D.04, subdivisions 2a, 10, 11, 13;
116O.09, subdivisions 1, 1a, 2, 3, 9, 12, 13, by adding subdivisions; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 18; 21; repealing Minnesota
Statutes 2002, sections 17.110; 18.51; 18.52; 18.53; 18.54; 18.79, subdivisions
1, 7, 11; 18.85; 41A.09, subdivisions 1a, 5a, 6, 7, 8; Minnesota Rules, part
1510.0281.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 3, after line 11, insert:
"Beginning
in fiscal year 2004, all aid payments to county and district agricultural
societies and associations under Minnesota Statutes, section 38.02, subdivision
1, shall be disbursed not later than July 15. These payments are the amount of
aid owed by the state for an annual fair held in the previous calendar
year."
Page 3, line 16, after "private" insert "sector
or the public"
Page 7, line 12, after the period, insert "On or before
January 1 of each year, an owner of cervidae must pay an annual inspection
fee of $10 per animal owned but not to exceed $100 per herd. The number of animals owned must be
determined by the most recent inventory submitted by the owner to the
board of animal health."
Page 7, after line 21, insert:
"Sec. 11. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 17.452, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 13a.
[CERVIDAE INSPECTION ACCOUNT.] A cervidae inspection account
is established in the state treasury.
The fees collected under subdivision 13 and interest attributable
to money in the account must be deposited in the state treasury and credited
to the cervidae inspection account in the special revenue fund. Money in the account is appropriated to the
board of animal health for the administration and enforcement of this
section."
Page 15, line 27, strike "EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS" and
insert "INITIAL TRAINING"
Page 15, line 28, reinstate the stricken "The commissioner
shall conduct"
Page 15, line 29, after the stricken "programs"
insert "initial training" and reinstate the stricken
"considered necessary for weed inspectors in the"
Page 15, line 30, reinstate the stricken language
Page 24, line 9, after "is" insert "appropriated
and"
Page 24, line 10, delete "fund" and insert
"account"
Page 33, after line 7, insert:
"Sec. 42.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 38.02, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1. [PRO
RATA DISTRIBUTION; CONDITIONS.] (1) (a) Money appropriated to aid
county and district agricultural societies and associations shall be
distributed among all county and district agricultural societies or
associations in the state pro rata, upon condition that each of them has
complied with the conditions specified in clause (2) paragraph (b).
(2) (b) To be eligible to participate in such
the distribution of aid, each such agricultural society or
association (a) shall have:
(1) held an annual fair for each of the three years last
past, unless prevented from doing so because of a calamity or an epidemic
declared by the board of health as defined in section 145A.02, subdivision 2,
or the state commissioner of health to exist; (b) shall have
(2) an annual membership of 25 or more; (c) shall
have
(3) paid out to exhibitors for premiums awarded at the
last fair held a sum not less than the amount to be received from the state; (d)
shall have
(4) published and distributed not less than three weeks
before the opening day of the fair a premium list, listing all items or
articles on which premiums are offered and the amounts of such premiums and
shall have paid premiums pursuant to the amount shown for each article or item
to be exhibited; provided that premiums for school exhibits may be advertised
in the published premium list by reference to a school premium list prepared
and circulated during the preceding school year; and shall have collected all
fees charged for entering an exhibit at the time the entry was made and in
accordance with schedule of entry fees to be charged as published in the
premium list; (e) shall have
(5) paid not more than one premium on each article or
item exhibited, excluding championship or sweepstake awards, and excluding the
payment of open class premium awards to 4H Club exhibits which at this same
fair had won a first prize award in regular 4H Club competition; (f) shall
have and
(6) submitted its records and annual report to the
commissioner of agriculture on a form provided by the commissioner of
agriculture, on or before the first day of November of the current year in
which the fair was held.
which
it is entitled under the provisions of this chapter(3) (c) All payments authorized under the
provisions of this chapter shall be made only upon the presentation by the
commissioner of agriculture with the commissioner of finance of a statement of
premium allocations. As used herein the
term premium shall mean the cash award paid to an exhibitor for the merit of an
exhibit of livestock, livestock products, grains, fruits, flowers, vegetables,
articles of domestic science, handicrafts, hobbies, fine arts, and articles
made by school pupils, or the cash award paid to the merit winner of events
such as 4H Club or Future Farmer Contest, Youth Group Contests, school spelling
contests and school current events contests, the award corresponding to the
amount offered in the advertised premium list referred to in schedule 2. Payments of awards for horse races, ball
games, musical contests, talent contests, parades, and for amusement features
for which admission is charged, are specifically excluded from consideration as
premiums within the meaning of that term as used herein. Upon receipt of the statement by the
commissioner of agriculture, it shall be the duty of the commissioner of
finance to shall draw a voucher in favor of the agricultural
society or association for the amount to , which. The amount shall be computed as
follows: On the first $750 premiums
paid by each society or association at the last fair held, such
the society or association shall receive 100 percent reimbursement; on
the second $750 premiums paid, 80 percent; on the third $750 premiums paid, 60
percent; and on any sum in excess of $2,250, 40 percent. The commissioner of finance shall
make payments not later than July 15 of the year following the calendar
year in which the annual fair was held.
(4) (d) If the total amount of state aid to which
the agricultural societies and associations are entitled under the provisions
of this chapter exceeds the amount of the appropriation therefor, the amounts
to which the societies or associations are entitled shall be prorated so that
the total payments by the state will not exceed the appropriation."
Page 33, lines 10 and 11, reinstate the stricken language and
delete the new language
Page 35, line 23, delete everything after the period
Page 35, delete lines 24 to 36
Page 36, delete line 1
Page 36, lines 9 to 29, delete the new language and strike the
old language
Page 36, line 30, strike everything before "Total"
and insert "(d)"
Page 36, line 33, reinstate the stricken language and delete
the new language
Page 37, line 6, strike "A producer"
Page 37, strike line 7
Page 37, line 8, strike "paragraph" and delete the
new language and strike the period
Page 37, line 11, strike "or amounts of electricity"
Page 37, line 12, strike "generated using closed-loop
biomass"
Page 37, line 16, reinstate the stricken language and delete
the new language
Page 37, line 18, strike "Except as provided in paragraph
(j),"
Page 37, line 19, strike the comma
Page 37, line 20, delete the new language and strike everything
before "may"
Page 37, strike lines 27 to 36
Page 38, strike line 1
Page 38, line 2, strike "(i)" and insert "(g)"
Page 38, lines 7 to 20, delete the new language and strike the
old language
Page 38, line 21, strike "(k)" and insert "(h)"
Page 46, line 2, delete "with
priority to continued use of facilities at Crookston"
Page 46, line 3, delete "and Marshall"
Page 46, line 13, after "designee" insert
"who shall be nonvoting members of the board"
Page 46, line 28, after the period, insert "Board
members appointed by the commissioner serve at the pleasure of the governor."
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 14, after the third semicolon, insert "38.02,
subdivision 1;"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration.
The report was adopted.
Knoblach from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 779, A bill for an act relating to state government;
appropriating money for environmental and natural resources purposes;
establishing and modifying certain programs; providing for regulation of
certain activities and practices; providing for accounts, assessments, and
fees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 16A.531, subdivision 1, by
adding a subdivision; 17.4988; 84.027, subdivision 13; 84.029, subdivision 1;
84.085, subdivision 1; 84.091, subdivisions 2, 3; 84.0911; 84.415, subdivisions
4, 5, by adding subdivisions; 84.788, subdivisions 2, 3; 84.794, subdivision 2;
84.803, subdivision 2; 84.92, subdivision 8; 84.927, subdivision 2; 84A.02;
84A.21; 84A.32, subdivision 1; 84A.55, subdivision 8; 84D.14; 85.04; 85.052, subdivision
3; 85.053, subdivision 1; 85.055, subdivision 1; 85A.02, subdivision 17; 88.17,
subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 97A.015, subdivisions 24, 52; 97A.045,
subdivision 7, by adding a subdivision; 97A.071, subdivision 2; 97A.075,
subdivisions 1, 2, 4, by adding a subdivision; 97A.105, subdivision 1; 97A.401,
subdivision 3; 97A.411, subdivision 2; 97A.441, subdivision 7, by adding a
subdivision; 97A.475, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 38,
39, 40, 42, by adding a subdivision; 97A.505, by adding subdivisions; 97B.311;
103B.231, subdivision 3a; 103B.305, subdivision 3, by adding subdivisions;
103B.311, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4; 103B.315, subdivisions 4, 5, 6; 103B.321,
subdivisions 1, 2; 103B.325, subdivisions 1, 2; 103B.331, subdivisions 1, 2, 3;
103B.3363, subdivision 3; 103B.3369, subdivisions 2, 4, 5, 6; 103B.355;
103D.341, subdivision 2; 103D.345, by adding a subdivision; 103D.405,
subdivision 2; 103D.537; 103G.005, subdivision 10e; 103G.222, subdivision 1;
103G.2242, by adding subdivisions; 103G.271, subdivisions 6, 6a, by adding a
subdivision; 103G.611, subdivision 1; 103G.615, subdivision 2; 115.03, by
adding subdivisions; 115.073; 115.56, subdivision 4; 115A.0716, subdivision 3;
115A.54, by adding a subdivision; 115A.545, subdivision 2; 115A.908,
subdivision 2; 115A.9651, subdivision 6; 115B.17, subdivisions 6, 7, 14, 16;
115B.19; 115B.20; 115B.22, subdivision 7; 115B.25, subdivisions 1a, 4; 115B.26;
115B.30; 115B.31, subdivisions 1, 3, 4; 115B.32, subdivision 1; 115B.33,
subdivision 1; 115B.34; 115B.36; 115B.40, subdivision 4; 115B.41, subdivisions
1, 2, 3; 115B.42, subdivision 2; 115B.421; 115B.445; 115B.48, subdivision 2;
115B.49, subdivisions 1, 3; 115C.02, subdivision 14; 115C.08, subdivision 4;
115C.09, subdivision 3, by adding subdivisions; 115C.11, subdivision 1;
115C.13; 115D.12, subdivision 2; 116.03, subdivision 2; 116.07, subdivisions
4d, 4h; 116.073, subdivisions 1, 2; 116.46, by adding subdivisions; 116.49, by
adding subdivisions; 116.50; 116.994; 116C.834, subdivision 1; 116P.02,
subdivision 1; 116P.05, subdivision 2; 116P.09, subdivisions 4, 5, 7; 116P.10;
116P.14, subdivisions 1, 2; 297A.94; 297F.10, subdivision 1; 297H.13,
subdivisions 1, 2; 325E.10, subdivision 1; 469.175, subdivision
7; 473.843, subdivision 2; 473.844, subdivision 1; 473.845, subdivisions 1, 3,
7, 8; 473.846; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 84;
84B; 97B; 103B; 115C; 116; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 1.31;
1.32; 84.0887; 84.415, subdivisions 1, 3; 84.98; 84.99; 93.2235; 97A.105,
subdivisions 3a, 3b; 97A.485, subdivision 12; 97B.731, subdivision 2; 103B.311,
subdivisions 5, 6, 7; 103B.315, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 7; 103B.321, 3;
103B.3369, subdivision 3; 115B.02, subdivision 1a; 115B.42, subdivision 1;
297H.13, subdivisions 3, 4; 325E.112, subdivisions 2, 3; 325E.113; 473.845,
subdivision 4; Minnesota Rules, parts 6135.0100; 6135.0200; 6135.0300;
6135.0400; 6135.0510; 6135.0610; 6135.0710; 6135.0810; 6135.1000; 6135.1100;
6135.1200; 6135.1300; 6135.1400; 6135.1500; 6135.1600; 6135.1700; 6135.1800;
9300.0010; 9300.0020; 9300.0030; 9300.0040; 9300.0050; 9300.0060; 9300.0070;
9300.0080; 9300.0090; 9300.0100; 9300.0110; 9300.0120; 9300.0130; 9300.0140;
9300.0150; 9300.0160; 9300.0170; 9300.0180; 9300.0190; 9300.0200; and
9300.0210.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 9, after line 47, insert:
"$625,000
the first year is a onetime appropriation from the general fund for grants to
local units of government in the area included in DR-1419 for the state share
of flood hazard mitigation grants for flood damage reduction studies, planning,
engineering, and publicly owned capital improvements to prevent or alleviate
flood damage under Minnesota Statutes, section 103F.161. This appropriation is
available until expended.
$1,000,000
is to buy out property substantially damaged by flooding in the area included
in DR-1419. This is a onetime
appropriation from the general fund and is available until expended."
Page 11, line 1, before "$3,060,000" insert
"$1,435,000 the first year and" and delete "in each" and
insert "the second" and delete "is" and insert
"are"
Page 12, delete lines 12 to 27
Page 12, after line 65, insert:
"$700,000
the first year is from the water recreation account in the natural resources
fund to be split equally for the development of public access sites and for the
development of fishing piers. Any
unexpended balance in the first year does not cancel and is available for the
second year."
Page 13, line 46, delete "24,180,000" and insert
"24,540,000"
Page 13, line 49, delete "22,764,000" and insert
"23,124,000"
Page 14, after line 43, insert:
"$324,000
the first year and $324,000 the second year are from the mourning dove habitat
improvement account for only the purposes specified in Minnesota Statutes,
section 97A.075, subdivision 6."
Page 17, delete lines 15 to 19 and
insert:
"The
commissioner may allow payments to be made by credit or debit cards, at the
customer's discretion, with a charge of a reasonable fee. Money received from the fees is appropriated
to the commissioner to cover the costs of processing payments from credit and
debit cards."
Page 17, line 31, delete "15,362,000" and insert
"18,062,000"
Page 17, delete lines 36 to 42 and insert:
"The
board shall not reduce the amount of the natural resources block grant to a
county by an amount equal to any reduction in the county's general services
allocation to a soil and water conservation district from the county's previous
year allocation unless the board determines that the reduction was
disproportionate.
$2,700,000
the first year is for wetland mitigation for local government roads. The unencumbered balance in the first year
does not cancel and is available for the second year."
Pages 38 to 41, delete sections 17 to 21
Page 46, line 36, after the comma, insert "employees
who are in the employ of the Minnesota conservation corps on or before
June 30, 2003,"
Page 47, line 1, after "may" insert "continue
to"
Page 52, line 27, delete everything after the period
Page 52, delete line 28 and insert "The council expires
June 30, 2007."
Page 97, after line 23, insert:
"Sec. 115.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 103I.235, subdivision 1, is amended to
read:
Subdivision 1.
[DISCLOSURE OF WELLS TO BUYER.] (a)(1) Before signing an
agreement to sell or transfer real property, the seller must disclose in
writing to the buyer information about the status and location of all known
wells on the property, by delivering to the buyer either a statement by the
seller that the seller does not know of any wells on the property, or a
disclosure statement indicating the legal description and county, and a map
drawn from available information showing the location of each well to the
extent practicable. In the disclosure
statement, the seller must indicate, for each well, whether the well is in use,
not in use, or sealed.
(2) Before signing an agreement to sell or transfer real
property in Washington county that is not served by a municipal water
system, the seller must state in writing to the buyer whether, to the
seller's knowledge, the property is located within a special well
construction area designated by the commissioner of health under
Minnesota Rules, part 4725.3650. If the disclosure under clause (1)
states that there is an unsealed well on the property, the disclosure
required under this clause must be made regardless of whether the
property is served by a municipal water system.
(b) At the time of closing of the sale,
the disclosure statement information required under paragraph (a), clause
(1), name and mailing address of the buyer, and the quartile, section,
township, and range in which each well is located must be provided on a well
disclosure certificate signed by the seller or a person authorized to act on
behalf of the seller.
(c) A well disclosure certificate need not be provided if the
seller does not know of any wells on the property and the deed or other
instrument of conveyance contains the statement: "The Seller certifies
that the Seller does not know of any wells on the described real
property."
(d) If a deed is given pursuant to a contract for deed, the
well disclosure certificate required by this subdivision shall be signed by the
buyer or a person authorized to act on behalf of the buyer. If the buyer knows of no wells on the
property, a well disclosure certificate is not required if the following
statement appears on the deed followed by the signature of the grantee or, if
there is more than one grantee, the signature of at least one of the
grantees: "The Grantee certifies
that the Grantee does not know of any wells on the described real
property." The statement and
signature of the grantee may be on the front or back of the deed or on an
attached sheet and an acknowledgment of the statement by the grantee is not
required for the deed to be recordable.
(e) This subdivision does not apply to the sale, exchange, or
transfer of real property:
(1) that consists solely of a sale or transfer of severed
mineral interests; or
(2) that consists of an individual condominium unit as
described in chapters 515 and 515B.
(f) For an area owned in common under chapter 515 or 515B the
association or other responsible person must report to the commissioner by July
1, 1992, the location and status of all wells in the common area. The association or other responsible person
must notify the commissioner within 30 days of any change in the reported
status of wells.
(g) For real property sold by the state under section 92.67,
the lessee at the time of the sale is responsible for compliance with this
subdivision.
(h) If the seller fails to provide a required well disclosure
certificate, the buyer, or a person authorized to act on behalf of the buyer,
may sign a well disclosure certificate based on the information provided on the
disclosure statement required by this section or based on other available
information.
(i) A county recorder or registrar of titles may not record a
deed or other instrument of conveyance dated after October 31, 1990, for which
a certificate of value is required under section 272.115, or any deed or other
instrument of conveyance dated after October 31, 1990, from a governmental body
exempt from the payment of state deed tax, unless the deed or other instrument
of conveyance contains the statement made in accordance with paragraph (c) or
(d) or is accompanied by the well disclosure certificate containing all the
information required by paragraph (b) or (d).
The county recorder or registrar of titles must not accept a certificate
unless it contains all the required information. The county recorder or registrar of titles shall note on each
deed or other instrument of conveyance accompanied by a well disclosure
certificate that the well disclosure certificate was received. The notation must include the statement
"No wells on property" if the disclosure certificate states there are
no wells on the property. The well
disclosure certificate shall not be filed or recorded in the records maintained
by the county recorder or registrar of titles.
After noting "No wells on property" on the deed or other
instrument of conveyance, the county recorder or registrar of titles shall
destroy or return to the buyer the well disclosure certificate. The county
recorder or registrar of titles shall collect from the buyer or the person
seeking to record a deed or other instrument of conveyance, a fee of $30 for
receipt of a completed well disclosure certificate. By the tenth day of each month, the county recorder or registrar of
titles shall transmit the well disclosure certificates to the commissioner of
health. By the tenth day after the end of each calendar quarter, the county
recorder or registrar of titles shall transmit to the commissioner of health
$27.50 of the fee for each well disclosure certificate received during the
quarter. The commissioner shall
maintain the well disclosure certificate for at least six years. The commissioner may store the certificate
as an electronic image. A copy of that
image shall be as valid as the original.
(j) No new well disclosure certificate is required under this
subdivision if the buyer or seller, or a person authorized to act on behalf of
the buyer or seller, certifies on the deed or other instrument of conveyance
that the status and number of wells on the property have not changed since the
last previously filed well disclosure certificate. The following statement, if followed by the signature of the
person making the statement, is sufficient to comply with the certification
requirement of this paragraph: "I
am familiar with the property described in this instrument and I certify that
the status and number of wells on the described real property have not changed
since the last previously filed well disclosure certificate." The certification and signature may be on
the front or back of the deed or on an attached sheet and an acknowledgment of
the statement is not required for the deed or other instrument of conveyance to
be recordable.
(k) The commissioner in consultation with county recorders
shall prescribe the form for a well disclosure certificate and provide well
disclosure certificate forms to county recorders and registrars of titles and
other interested persons.
(l) Failure to comply with a requirement of this subdivision
does not impair:
(1) the validity of a deed or other instrument of conveyance as
between the parties to the deed or instrument or as to any other person who
otherwise would be bound by the deed or instrument; or
(2) the record, as notice, of any deed or other instrument of
conveyance accepted for filing or recording contrary to the provisions of this
subdivision.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective January 1, 2004, and applies to transactions for
which purchase agreements are entered into on or after that date."
Page 99, strike lines 22 to 24
Page 99, line 25, strike "(c)"
Page 99, line 33, strike "(d)" and insert "(c)"
Page 99, line 36, strike "(e)" and before
"Money" insert "(d)"
Page 114, after line 31, insert:
"Sec. 137.
Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 116D.04, is amended by adding a
subdivision to read:
Subd. 14. The
alternative urban areawide review procedure under Minnesota Rules, part
4410.3610, must not be used in lieu of an environmental impact statement
or an environmental assessment worksheet where groundwater is at issue.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective retroactively from January 1, 2003, for a draft
environmental analysis document distributed and noticed after that date."
Page 121, after line 5, insert:
"Sec. 148. [WATER
QUALITY ASSESSMENT PROCESS; RULEMAKING.]
(a) By January 1, 2006, the pollution control agency shall
adopt rules under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 14, relating to water
quality assessment for the waters of the state. The adopted rules must, at a minimum, satisfy paragraphs
(b) to (h).
(b) The rules must apply to the determination of impaired
waters as required by Section 303(d) of the Clean Waters Act of 1977,
United States Code, title 33, chapter 26, section 1313(d).
(c) The rules must define the terms "altered
materially," "material increase," "material
manner," "seriously impaired," and "significant
increase," contained in Minnesota Rules, part 7050.0150, subpart 3.
(d) The rules must define the terms "normal
fishery" and "normally present," contained in Minnesota
Rules, part 7050.0150, subpart 3.
(e) The rules must specify that for purposes of the determination
of impaired waters, the agency will only make an impairment determination
based on pollution of waters of the state which has resulted in
degradation of the physical, chemical, or biological qualities of the
water body, such that attainable or previously existing beneficial uses
are actually or potentially lost.
(f) The rules must provide that when a person presents information
adequately demonstrating that a beneficial use for the water body does
not exist and is not attainable due to the natural condition of the
water body, the agency shall initiate an administrative process for
reclassification of the water to remove the beneficial use.
(g) The rules must provide that the agency, in considering
impairment due to nutrients and application of nutrient objectives
and effluent limitations related to riverine systems or riverine
impoundments, must consider temperatures and detention time effects on
algal populations and impose reduction requirements only when the
discharge of nutrients is expected to cause or contribute to algal
growth that impairs existing or attainable uses.
(h) The agency will apply Minnesota Rules, part 7050.0150,
consistently with paragraphs (e) and (g).
(i) By February 1, 2004, and by February 1, 2005, the commissioner
shall report to the environment and natural resources finance committees
of the house and senate on the status of discussions with stakeholders
and the development of the rules required under this section."
Page 122, delete lines 2 to 6 and insert:
"(a) The fees in Minnesota Rules, parts 6135.0400 to
6135.0810, adopted pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, section 84.415,
are to be amended as follows:
(1) effective July 1, 2003, the application fee for a license
to construct a utility crossing over or under public lands or over or
under public waters is $500; and
(2) effective July 1, 2004, the fee schedules of Minnesota
Rules, parts 6135.0510 to 6135.0810, are increased to an amount equal
to the current schedules plus escalation due to inflation from 1990
through 2002. The basis of escalation
shall be the producer price index for all commodities, not seasonally
adjusted, and the index value used shall be the annual average as
revised four months after publication.
(b) The commissioner of natural resources shall amend Minnesota
Rules, parts 6135.0400 to 6135.0810, according to this section and
according to Minnesota Statutes, section 14.388, clause (3). Except as provided in Minnesota Statutes,
section 14.388, Minnesota Statutes, section 14.386 does not apply.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective the day following final enactment."
Page 124, line 17, after "compliance" insert
"of failing systems as defined in Minnesota Rules, part
7080.0020, subpart 16b,"
Page 125, after line 5, insert:
"Sec. 157. [NORTH
OTTAWA FLOOD REVIEW.]
(a) Before any more state funds are allocated and expended
for the North Ottawa water impoundment project under Minnesota Statutes,
section 103F.161, a local task force in Grant county must assess the
costs and benefits to affected landowners and report back to the house
and senate environment and agriculture committees.
(b) The local task force in Grant county shall consist of a
Grant county commissioner representing the Bois de Sioux watershed
area, a township officer in each of the towns of North Ottawa, Elbow
Lake, and Gorton, three affected landowners in the watershed who are
residents in Grant county, with at least one of those members living in
the North Ottawa Township, one each appointed by the Grant county
commissioner, the North Ottawa township officer, and the official of the
Bois de Sioux watershed district, an official from the local soil and
water conservation district, an official of the Bois de Sioux watershed
district, and a local official from the department of natural
resources. Starting by August 1, 2003,
and after review of the project, the local task force must attempt to
offer as many as possible lower cost options, but at least one, for
flood control in the watershed.
(c) The Grant county soil and water conservation district
must present the identified options in paragraph (b) to the legislative
committees in paragraph (a) by February 15, 2004. The legislative
committees shall review the options and make a project recommendation
for funding to the house and senate capitol investment committees by March
15, 2004."
Page 125, line 20, delete "84.415, subdivisions 1 and
3;"
Page 125, line 23, delete "6135.0100;"
Page 125, delete lines 24 to 26
Page 125, line 27, delete "6135.1800;"
Adjust amounts accordingly
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, delete line 11
Page 1, line 38, after "2;" insert "103I.235,
subdivision 1;"
Page 2, line 10, after "1;" insert "116D.04, by
adding a subdivision;"
Page 2, line 19, delete "84.415,"
Page 2, line 20, delete "subdivisions 1, 3;"
Page 2, line 28, delete everything after "parts"
Page 2, delete lines 29 and 30
Page 2, line 31, delete everything before
"9300.0010;"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and
be re-referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration.
The report was adopted.
Krinkie from the Committee on Capital Investment to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 1048, 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.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. [FLOOD
RELIEF APPROPRIATIONS.]
The sums shown in the column under "APPROPRIATIONS"
are appropriated from the general fund, or another named fund, for fiscal year
2004 to the agencies or officials indicated and for the purposes specified in
this act. Unless otherwise specified,
each appropriation is available until the project for which it is made is
completed or abandoned. The term
"the area included in DR-1419," when used in this act, means the area
designated under Presidential Declaration of Major Disaster, DR-1419, whether
included in the original declaration or added later by federal government
action.
SUMMARY 2004
TRADE AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT $4,125,000
HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
3,000,000
NATURAL RESOURCES
3,125,000
TOTAL $10,250,000
General Fund
9,500,000
Petroleum Tank Release
Cleanup Fund
750,000
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30, 2004
Sec. 2. TRADE AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of trade and
economic development for the purposes specified in this section
$4,125,000
Subd. 2. Minnesota
Investment Fund
3,375,000
For transfer to the Minnesota investment fund to
make grants to local units of government for locally administered grants or
loan programs, including buyouts, for businesses directly and adversely
affected by flooding in the area included in DR-1419. Criteria and requirements must be locally established with the
approval of the commissioner. For the
purposes of this appropriation, Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.8731,
subdivisions 3, 4, 5, and 7; 116J.993; 116J.994; and 116J.995, are waived.
Businesses that receive grants or loans from this appropriation must set goals
for jobs retained and wages paid within the area included in DR-1419.
This is a onetime appropriation from the general
fund and is available until expended.
Subd. 3. Petroleum
Cleanup
750,000
Notwithstanding Minnesota
Statutes, section 115C.08, subdivision 4, this appropriation is for grants to local units of
government in the area included in DR-1419 to safely rehabilitate buildings if
a portion of the rehabilitation costs is attributable to petroleum
contamination or to buy out property substantially damaged by a petroleum tank release.
This is a onetime appropriation from the petroleum
tank release cleanup fund.
Sec. 3. HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
Subdivision
1. For transfer to the housing
development fund for the programs specified in this section
3,000,000
Subd. 2. Economic
Development and Housing Challenge
3,000,000
For the economic development and housing challenge
program under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.33, for housing assistance in
the area included in DR-1419. For
assistance under this subdivision, the requirements of Minnesota Statutes,
section 462A.33, subdivisions 3 and 5, and Minnesota Rules, part 4900.3632, are
waived.
This is a onetime appropriation from the general
fund.
APPROPRIATIONS
Available for the Year
Ending June 30, 2004
Sec. 4. NATURAL
RESOURCES
Subdivision
1. To the commissioner of natural
resources for the purposes specified in this section
3,125,000
Subd. 2. Flood Hazard
Mitigation Grants 3,125,000
$1,625,000 is a onetime appropriation from
the general fund for grants to local units of government in the area included
in DR-1419 for the state share of flood hazard mitigation grants for flood
damage reduction studies, planning, engineering, and publicly owned capital
improvements to prevent or alleviate flood damage under Minnesota Statutes,
section 103F.161. This appropriation is available until expended.
$1,000,000 is to buy out property
substantially damaged by flooding in the area included in DR-1419. This is a onetime appropriation from the
general fund and is available until expended.
$500,000 is for grants to local units of
government in the area included in DR-1419 to construct ring dikes to mitigate
flood damage. This is a onetime
appropriation from the general fund and is available until expended."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to flood relief; appropriating
money for flood relief for the area included in Presidential Declaration
DR-1419."
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.
Gunther from the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development
Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1115, A bill for an act relating to public utilities;
making changes to the telephone assistance plan; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 237.70, subdivisions 2, 3, 4a, 5, 6, 7; 237.701, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that 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. 1201, A bill for an act relating to human services;
providing for medical assistance asset recovery; providing for recovery of
expenditures for alternative care for nonmedical assistance recipients;
establishing an alternative care lien; changing the funding source for
activities under the health care access fund to the general fund; changing the
funding for MinnesotaCare to the general fund; mandating a children's mental
health screening in certain circumstances; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
sections 16A.724; 256B.15, subdivisions 1, 1a, 2, 3, 4, by adding subdivisions;
256L.02, by adding a subdivision; 260B.157, subdivision 1; 260B.176,
subdivision 2; 260B.178, subdivision 1; 260B.193, subdivision 2; 260B.235,
subdivision 6; 261.063; 295.58; 514.981, subdivision 6; 524.3-805; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 514.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
The report was adopted.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Clark; Nelson, M.; Wardlow; Beard; Pugh and Otremba introduced:
H. F. No. 1571, A resolution memorializing Congress to protect
the health of military personnel serving in Iraq.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations and Veterans Affairs Policy.
Olson, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 1572, A bill for an act relating to education;
limiting liability of carrier contracting with a school district to provide
school bus transportation; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 123B.88,
by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Education Finance.
Nelson, P., introduced:
H. F. No. 1573, A bill for an act relating to property taxes;
providing for an appeals and equalization course for local boards of review;
imposing local boards of review meeting requirements; requiring proof of
compliance; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 274.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Sviggum and Abrams introduced:
H. F. No. 1574, A bill for an act relating to taxation;
changing the rate and distribution of the taconite production tax; providing
for the transfer or disposition of funds and accounts; providing for two tax
payments; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 298.22, subdivisions 1, 7;
298.223, subdivision 3; 298.24, subdivision 1; 298.27; 298.28, subdivisions 1,
2, 4, 5, 15; 298.292, subdivision 2; 298.293; 298.296, subdivision 2; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 273.135; 273.136; 298.225; 298.227; 298.24,
subdivision 3; 298.28, subdivisions 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9a, 9b, 10, 11, 11a, 13;
298.282; 298.283; 298.285; 298.2961; 298.297; Laws 2002, chapter 377, article
8, section 17.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee
on Taxes.
Urdahl introduced:
H. F. No. 1575, A bill for an act relating to capital
improvements; authorizing the issuance of state bonds; appropriating money for
a grant to the city of Cokato for its mandated water treatment facility.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Krinkie introduced:
H. F. No. 1576, A bill for an act relating to the city of
Circle Pines; authorizing an extension of a tax increment financing district.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Koenen, Rhodes, Rukavina, Cox, Kelliher, Mahoney, Huntley,
Wagenius and Solberg introduced:
H. F. No. 1577, A bill for an act relating to taxation;
eliminating payment of market value homestead credit reimbursements to cities;
reinstating authorization to levy for transit purposes; providing for
additional means of financing transit; reducing local government aid payable to
cities; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 273.1384, subdivision 4;
473.388, subdivisions 4, 7; 473.446, subdivision 1, by adding subdivisions;
477A.03, subdivision 2; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 174.242;
477A.03, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Thissen, Abrams, Davids and Lenczewski introduced:
H. F. No. 1578, A bill for an act relating to taxation;
regulating tax preparers; establishing consumer protections; providing
enforcement authority; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 270.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
Lesch, Hausman, Mahoney and Sieben
introduced:
H. F. No. 1579, A bill for an act relating to taxation; sales
and use; exempting the purchase of certain property used in constructing a St.
Paul and Ramsey county collocated police and sheriff facility.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Taxes.
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, as amended by the Senate, in which amendments
the concurrence of the House is respectfully requested:
H. F. No. 850, A bill for an act relating to natural resources;
providing for a land conveyance in Sibley county.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
CONCURRENCE
AND REPASSAGE
Brod moved that the House concur in the Senate amendments to
H. F. No. 850 and that the bill be repassed as amended by the
Senate. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 850, A bill for an act relating to natural resources;
deleting from the Minnesota Valley state recreation area; conveying land in
Sibley county to a local unit of government for the use of the general public.
The bill was read for the third time, as amended by the Senate,
and placed upon its repassage.
The question was taken on the repassage of the bill 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
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was repassed, as amended by the Senate, and its title
agreed to.
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
House File, herewith returned, as amended by the Senate, in which amendments
the concurrence of the House is respectfully requested:
H. F. No. 1112, A bill for an act relating to veterans affairs;
providing authority to the Department of Veterans Affairs to access certain
state databases to verify eligibility; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 13.461, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 197.
Patrick E. Flahaven, Secretary of the Senate
CONCURRENCE
AND REPASSAGE
Adolphson moved that the House concur in the Senate amendments
to H. F. No. 1112 and that the bill be repassed as amended by
the Senate. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 1112, A bill for an act relating to veterans affairs;
providing authority to the Department of Veterans Affairs to access certain
state databases to verify eligibility; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 13.461, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 197.
The bill was read for the third time, as amended by the Senate,
and placed upon its repassage.
The question was taken on the repassage of the bill and the
roll was called. There were 131 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
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was
repassed, as amended by the Senate, and its title agreed to.
MOTION TO FIX TIME TO
CONVENE
Seifert moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn
until 10:30 a.m., Friday, April 25, 2003.
The motion prevailed.
CONSENT CALENDAR
S. F. No. 1064, A bill for an act relating to child labor;
exempting certain minors from minimum age restrictions for work as soccer
assistant referees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 181A.07, by
adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
REPORT
FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES AND
LEGISLATIVE
ADMINISTRATION
Paulsen from the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration, pursuant to rule 1.21, designated the following additional
bills to be placed on the Calendar for the Day for Thursday, April 24, 2003:
H. F. Nos. 1119, 317, 1145, 1155, 1080, 1167,
1025, 818, 307, 361 and 503.
CALENDAR FOR THE DAY
H. F. No. 1214 was reported to the House.
Nelson, P., moved to amend H. F. No. 1214 as follows:
Page 5, line 21, delete "8910.0100;"
Page 5, line 22, delete "8910.0200; 8910.0300;
8910.0400;"
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
H. F. No. 1214, A bill for an act relating to transportation;
modifying or abolishing certain provisions related to joint county state-aid
highway and municipal state-aid street status; deleting requirement for
department of transportation to send copies of certain rules to county
auditors; abolishing requirement that department of transportation maintain a
list of highway engineers; repealing prohibition on establishing new divisions
in department of transportation; abolishing obsolete statute related to highway
jurisdiction studies; abolishing provision for collective ratemaking by motor
carriers; repealing authority of commissioner of transportation over pipeline
carriers; repealing certain rules governing design standards of driveways next
to highways, motor carriers, aeronautics, and the right of first refusal to certain
railroad land; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 162.02, subdivisions
1, 2, 4; 162.09, subdivision 1; 163.07, subdivision 2; 174.64, subdivision 4;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 162.09, subdivision 5; 174.025;
174.031; 221.165; 221.54; 221.55; Minnesota Rules, parts 7800.0100, subparts 1,
3, 5; 7800.0500; 7800.0700; 7800.1400; 7800.1500; 7800.1600; 7800.1700;
7800.3100; 7800.3900; 7800.4810; 7805.0800; 8800.0100, subparts 7, 36;
8800.1200, subpart 3; 8800.3500; 8800.3700; 8800.4000; 8810.4200; 8810.4500;
8810.4600; 8810.4700; 8810.4800; 8810.4900; 8810.5000; 8810.5100; 8810.5500;
8810.9920; 8810.9921; 8850.6900, subparts 4, 6, 11, 12, 17; 8850.7000;
8850.7025; 8850.7040; 8850.7100;
8850.7900; 8850.8200; 8850.8900; 8850.9000; 8850.9050, subparts 1, 2;
8900.0100; 8900.0200; 8900.0300; 8900.0400; 8900.0500; 8900.0600; 8900.0700;
8900.0800; 8900.0900; 8900.1000; 8900.1100; 8910.1000; 8910.2000; 8910.2100;
8910.3000; 8910.3100.
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 134 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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed, as amended, and its title agreed to.
S. F. No. 907, A bill for an act relating to corrections;
authorizing Department of Corrections forensic pathologists to issue death
certificates; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 390.23.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 134 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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill
was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 428, A bill for an act relating to cities; specifying
and clarifying the authority of cities to exercise certain town powers and to
impose service charges for emergency services; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, section 415.01.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1426 was reported to the House.
Dorman moved to amend H. F. No. 1426 as follows:
Page 2, after line 12, insert:
"Sec. 3. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 176.011, subdivision 16, is amended to read:
Subd. 16. [PERSONAL
INJURY.] "Personal injury" means injury arising out of and in the
course of employment and includes personal injury caused by occupational
disease; but does not cover an employee except while engaged in, on, or about
the premises where the employee's services require the employee's presence as a
part of that service at the time of the injury and during the hours of that
service. Where the employer regularly
furnished transportation to employees to and from the place of employment,
those employees are subject to this chapter while being so transported. Personal injury does not include an injury
caused by the act of a third person or fellow employee intended to injure the
employee because of personal reasons, and not directed against the employee as
an employee, or because of the employment.
An injury or disease resulting from a vaccine in response to a
declaration by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health
and Human Services under the Public Health Service Act to address an
actual or potential health risk related to the employee's employment is
an injury or disease arising out of and in the course of employment.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective January 24, 2003."
Pages 9 and 10, delete section 8
Page 11, after line 11, insert:
"Sec. 11.
[RELATIVE VALUE FEE SCHEDULE; CONVERSION FACTOR ADJUSTMENT OMISSION.]
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 176.136, subdivision
1a, the conversion factor for the workers' compensation relative value
fee schedule in effect on October 1, 2002, shall remain in effect until
October 1, 2004, and shall not be adjusted on October 1, 2003. The adjustment on October 1, 2004,
shall not make up for the lack of adjustment on October 1, 2003, and
shall be calculated as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 176.136,
subdivision 1a."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Rukavina and Sertich moved to amend H. F.
No. 1426, as amended, as follows:
Page 5, after line 28, insert:
"Sec. 5. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 176.101, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1.
[TEMPORARY TOTAL DISABILITY.] (a) For injury producing temporary total
disability, the compensation is 66-2/3 percent of the weekly wage at the time
of injury.
(b)(1) Commencing on October 1, 2000, the maximum weekly compensation
payable is $750 per week.
(2) The workers' compensation advisory council may consider
adjustment increases and make recommendations to the legislature.
(c) The minimum weekly compensation payable is $130 per week or
the injured employee's actual weekly wage, whichever is less.
(d) Temporary total compensation shall be paid during the
period of disability subject to the cessation and recommencement conditions in
paragraphs (e) to (l).
(e) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease when
the employee returns to work. Except as
otherwise provided in section 176.102, subdivision 11, temporary total
disability compensation may only be recommenced following cessation under this
paragraph, paragraph (h), or paragraph (j) prior to payment of 104 208
weeks of temporary total disability compensation and only as follows:
(1) if temporary total disability compensation ceased because
the employee returned to work, it may be recommenced if the employee is laid
off or terminated for reasons other than misconduct if the layoff or
termination occurs prior to 90 days after the employee has reached maximum
medical improvement. Recommenced temporary total disability compensation under
this clause ceases when any of the cessation events in paragraphs (e) to (l)
occurs; or
(2) if temporary total disability compensation ceased because
the employee returned to work or ceased under paragraph (h) or (j), it may be
recommenced if the employee is medically unable to continue at a job due to the
injury. Where the employee is medically
unable to continue working due to the injury, temporary total disability
compensation may continue until any of the cessation events in paragraphs (e)
to (l) occurs following recommencement.
If an employee who has not yet received temporary total disability
compensation becomes medically unable to continue working due to the injury
after reaching maximum medical improvement, temporary total disability
compensation shall commence and shall continue until any of the events in
paragraphs (e) to (l) occurs following commencement. For purposes of
commencement or recommencement under this clause only, a new period of maximum
medical improvement under paragraph (j) begins when the employee becomes
medically unable to continue working due to the injury. Temporary total disability compensation may
not be recommenced under this clause and a new period of maximum medical
improvement does not begin if the employee is not actively employed when the
employee becomes medically unable to work.
All periods of initial and recommenced temporary total disability
compensation are included in the 104-week 208-week limitation
specified in paragraph (k).
(f) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease if the
employee withdraws from the labor market.
Temporary total disability compensation may be recommenced following
cessation under this paragraph only if the employee reenters the labor market
prior to 90 days after the employee reached maximum medical improvement and
prior to payment of 104 208 weeks of temporary total disability
compensation. Once recommenced,
temporary total disability ceases when any of the cessation events in
paragraphs (e) to (l) occurs.
(g) Temporary total disability
compensation shall cease if the total disability ends and the employee fails to
diligently search for appropriate work within the employee's physical
restrictions. Temporary total
disability compensation may be recommenced following cessation under this paragraph
only if the employee begins diligently searching for appropriate work within
the employee's physical restrictions prior to 90 days after maximum medical
improvement and prior to payment of 104 208 weeks of temporary
total disability compensation. Once
recommenced, temporary total disability compensation ceases when any of the
cessation events in paragraphs (e) to (l) occurs.
(h) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease if the
employee has been released to work without any physical restrictions caused by
the work injury.
(i) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease if the
employee refuses an offer of work that is consistent with a plan of
rehabilitation filed with the commissioner which meets the requirements of
section 176.102, subdivision 4, or, if no plan has been filed, the employee
refuses an offer of gainful employment that the employee can do in the
employee's physical condition. Once
temporary total disability compensation has ceased under this paragraph, it may
not be recommenced.
(j) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease 90 days
after the employee has reached maximum medical improvement, except as provided
in section 176.102, subdivision 11, paragraph (b). For purposes of this subdivision, the 90-day period after maximum
medical improvement commences on the earlier of: (1) the date that the employee receives a written medical report
indicating that the employee has reached maximum medical improvement; or (2)
the date that the employer or insurer serves the report on the employee and the
employee's attorney, if any. Once temporary total disability compensation has
ceased under this paragraph, it may not be recommenced except if the employee
returns to work and is subsequently medically unable to continue working as
provided in paragraph (e), clause (2).
(k) Temporary total disability compensation shall cease
entirely when 104 208 weeks of temporary total disability
compensation have been paid, except as provided in section 176.102, subdivision
11, paragraph (b). Notwithstanding
anything in this section to the contrary, initial and recommenced temporary
total disability compensation combined shall not be paid for more than 104
208 weeks, regardless of the number of weeks that have elapsed since the
injury, except that if the employee is in a retraining plan approved under
section 176.102, subdivision 11, the 104 208 week limitation
shall not apply during the retraining, but is subject to the limitation before
the plan begins and after the plan ends.
(l) Paragraphs (e) to (k) do not limit other grounds under law
to suspend or discontinue temporary total disability compensation provided
under this chapter.
(m) Once an employee has been paid 52 weeks of temporary total
compensation, the employer or insurer must notify the employee in writing of
the 104-week 208-week limitation on payment of temporary total
compensation. A copy of this notice
must also be filed with the department.
Sec. 6. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 176.101, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [TEMPORARY
PARTIAL DISABILITY.] (a) In all cases of temporary partial disability the
compensation shall be 66-2/3 percent of the difference between the weekly wage
of the employee at the time of injury and the wage the employee is able to earn
in the employee's partially disabled condition. This compensation shall be paid during the period of disability
except as provided in this section, payment to be made at the intervals when
the wage was payable, as nearly as may be, and subject to the maximum rate for
temporary total compensation.
(b) Temporary partial compensation may be
paid only while the employee is employed, earning less than the employee's
weekly wage at the time of the injury, and the reduced wage the employee is
able to earn in the employee's partially disabled condition is due to the
injury. Except as provided in section
176.102, subdivision 11, paragraphs (b) and (c), temporary partial compensation
may not be paid for more than 225 350 weeks , or after 450
weeks after the date of injury, whichever occurs first.
(c) Temporary partial compensation must be reduced to the
extent that the wage the employee is able to earn in the employee's partially
disabled condition plus the temporary partial disability payment otherwise
payable under this subdivision exceeds 500 percent of the statewide average
weekly wage.
Sec. 7. Minnesota
Statutes 2002, section 176.102, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
Subd. 11. [RETRAINING;
COMPENSATION.] (a) Retraining is limited to 156 weeks. An employee who has been approved for
retraining may petition the commissioner or compensation judge for additional
compensation not to exceed 25 percent of the compensation otherwise
payable. If the commissioner or
compensation judge determines that this additional compensation is warranted
due to unusual or unique circumstances of the employee's retraining plan, the
commissioner may award additional compensation in an amount not to exceed the
employee's request. This additional
compensation shall cease at any time the commissioner or compensation judge
determines the special circumstances are no longer present.
(b) If the employee is not employed during a retraining plan
that has been specifically approved under this section, temporary total
compensation is payable for up to 90 days after the end of the retraining plan;
except that, payment during the 90-day period is subject to cessation in
accordance with section 176.101. If the
employee is employed during the retraining plan but earning less than at the
time of injury, temporary partial compensation is payable at the rate of 66-2/3
percent of the difference between the employee's weekly wage at the time of
injury and the weekly wage the employee is able to earn in the employee's
partially disabled condition, subject to the maximum rate for temporary total
compensation. Temporary partial
compensation is not subject to the 225-week or 450-week limitations 350-week
limitation provided by section 176.101, subdivision 2, during the
retraining plan, but is subject to those limitations before and after the plan.
(c) Any request for retraining shall be filed with the
commissioner before 156 weeks of any combination of temporary total or
temporary partial compensation have been paid. Retraining shall not be
available after 156 weeks of any combination of temporary total or temporary
partial compensation benefits have been paid unless the request for the
retraining has been filed with the commissioner prior to the time the 156 weeks
of compensation have been paid.
(d) The employer or insurer must notify the employee in writing
of the 156-week limitation for filing a request for retraining with the
commissioner. This notice must be given
before 80 weeks of temporary total disability or temporary partial disability
compensation have been paid, regardless of the number of weeks that have
elapsed since the date of injury. If the notice is not given before the 80
weeks, the period of time within which to file a request for retraining is
extended by the number of days the notice is late, but in no event may a
request be filed later than 225 350 weeks after any combination
of temporary total disability or temporary partial disability compensation have
been paid. The commissioner may assess
a penalty of $25 per day that the notice is late, up to a maximum penalty of
$2,000, against an employer or insurer for failure to provide the notice. The penalty is payable to the commissioner
for deposit in the assigned risk safety account."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The Speaker resumed the Chair.
Dorman moved that
H. F. No. 1426, as amended, be continued on the Calendar for the
Day. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 923 was reported to the House.
Westrom moved to amend H. F. No. 923, the first engrossment, as
follows:
Page 1, after line 19, insert:
"[EFFECTIVE DATE.]
This section is effective the day following final enactment."
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
H. F. No. 923, A bill for an act relating to local government;
providing an exception to the conflict of interest law for township officers;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 471.88, by adding a subdivision.
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 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed, as amended, and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 321, A bill for an act relating to the city of
Northfield; authorizing the city to establish and operate related medical
facilities in conjunction with its municipal hospital at a site outside the
city limits; authorizing Northfield to acquire real or personal property for
the related medical facilities.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 134 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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 719 was reported to the House.
Jaros moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first engrossment, as
follows:
Page 3, after line 21, insert:
"Sec. 4. [CITY OF
DULUTH; LIQUOR LICENSE.]
Notwithstanding any law, ordinance, or charter provision to
the contrary, the city of Duluth may issue an on-sale liquor license for
use at the premises known as the St. Louis County Heritage and Arts
Center in addition to the number of licenses authorized by law. All provisions of Minnesota Statutes, chapter
340A, and applicable ordinances and charter provisions of the city of
Duluth, not inconsistent with this section, apply to the license
authorized under this section. The
license shall not be transferable to any other premises."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Lipman moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first engrossment, as
amended, as follows:
Page 5, after line 18, insert:
"Sec. 13. [CITY OF
STILLWATER; LIQUOR LICENSES.]
The city of Stillwater may issue two on-sale intoxicating
liquor licenses in addition to the number authorized by law. All
provisions of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 340A, not inconsistent with
this section, apply to the licenses authorized under this section.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective on approval by the Stillwater city council and
compliance with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Mariani and Beard moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first
engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 5, after line 18, insert:
"Sec. 13. [LICENSE
AUTHORIZED.]
The city of St. Paul may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor
license for the Minnesota Centennial Showboat, moored at 110 Yacht Club
Road, Harriet Island, notwithstanding any law, local ordinance, or
charter provision. The license must be
issued to a holder of a river tour boat license under Minnesota Statutes,
section 340A.404, subdivision 8. The
license authorizes sales on all days of the week."
Page 5, line 20, delete "12" and insert "13"
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Stang moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first engrossment, as
amended, as follows:
Page 4, after line 15, insert:
"Sec. 8. [CITY OF
ST. JOSEPH; ON-SALE LICENSES.]
The city of St. Joseph may issue three on-sale intoxicating
liquor licenses in addition to the number authorized by law. All
provisions of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 340A, not inconsistent with
this section, apply to the licenses authorized by this section."
Renumber the sections in sequence
Correct internal references
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 4, after "Sartell," insert "St.
Joseph,"
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
Otto moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first engrossment, as
amended, as follows:
Page 1, line 6 of the Lipman amendment, before the period,
insert "if placed on the ballot and approved by the voters at
the next general election"
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Otto amendment and the roll was
called. There were 53 yeas and 81 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abrams
Anderson, I.
Atkins
Bernardy
Biernat
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dorn
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Goodwin
Greiling
Hausman
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Huntley
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Koenen
Larson
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Opatz
Otremba
Otto
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson
Pugh
Sertich
Sieben
Slawik
Smith
Solberg
Thao
Thissen
Wagenius
Walker
Wasiluk
Those who
voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Adolphson
Anderson, B.
Anderson, J.
Beard
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Cox
Davids
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dorman
Eastlund
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Gunther
Haas
Hackbarth
Harder
Heidgerken
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Latz
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
McNamara
Meslow
Nelson, C.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Olson, M.
Osterman
Ozment
Paulsen
Penas
Powell
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Severson
Simpson
Soderstrom
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Walz
Wardlow
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
Clark was excused for the remainder of today's session.
The Speaker called Abrams to the Chair.
Lenczewski moved to amend H. F. No. 719, the first engrossment,
as amended, as follows:
Page 1, delete everything after line 18, and insert:
"Sec. 2. [LOCAL
LICENSE APPROVAL.]
Notwithstanding the limits provided under Minnesota
Statutes, section 340A.413, a city may issue intoxicating liquor
licenses as approved by its city council without authorization by the
legislature. All other provisions of
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 340A, apply to licenses issued by cities under this
section.
[EFFECTIVE DATE.] This
section is effective July 1, 2003."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Amend the title accordingly
The motion prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
H. F. No. 719, A bill for an act relating to liquor; modifying
a posting provision; authorizing cities to issue licenses in addition to the
number allowed by law; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002,
section 340A.318, subdivision 3.
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 112 yeas and 18
nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Beard
Biernat
Blaine
Borrell
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Cox
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Greiling
Haas
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Kuisle
Lanning
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Bernardy
Carlson
Davids
Eastlund
Gunther
Hackbarth
Holberg
Huntley
Krinkie
Larson
Lindner
Marquart
Nelson, P.
Olson, M.
Otto
Swenson
The bill was passed, as amended, and its title agreed to.
The Speaker resumed the Chair.
H. F. No. 307, A bill for an act relating to elections;
providing an exemption for noncommercial signs from ordinances that limit the
number of noncommercial signs; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section
211B.045.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 132 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
Cornish
Cox
Davids
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dempsey
Dill
Dorman
Dorn
Eastlund
Eken
Ellison
Entenza
Erhardt
Erickson
Finstad
Fuller
Gerlach
Goodwin
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Harder
Hausman
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1145, A bill for an act relating to education;
coordinating crisis services with removal of certain students; providing for
district student removal reports to department of children, families, and
learning; increasing graduation rates of students with emotional or behavioral
disturbance; requiring warning signs of mental illness to be included in
continuing education requirements for teachers; providing for rulemaking;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 120B.35, by adding a subdivision; 121A.55;
121A.61, subdivision 3; 122A.09, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 120 yeas and 10
nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Abrams
Adolphson
Anderson, I.
Anderson, J.
Atkins
Bernardy
Biernat
Blaine
Boudreau
Bradley
Brod
Buesgens
Carlson
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
Hornstein
Howes
Huntley
Jacobson
Jaros
Johnson, J.
Johnson, S.
Juhnke
Kahn
Kelliher
Kielkucki
Knoblach
Koenen
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
Nornes
Olsen, S.
Opatz
Osterman
Otremba
Otto
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Penas
Peterson
Powell
Pugh
Rhodes
Rukavina
Ruth
Samuelson
Seagren
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Sieben
Simpson
Slawik
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
Those who voted in the negative were:
Borrell
DeLaForest
Hoppe
Klinzing
Kohls
Krinkie
Olson, M.
Smith
Vandeveer
Wilkin
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1155, A bill for an act
relating to human services; allowing a licensing change in Goodhue county to an
existing ICF/MR.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill
was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1080, A bill for an act relating to the military;
extending certain tuition reimbursement; deleting a reporting requirement;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 192.501, subdivision 2.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1167, A bill for an act relating to victims;
increasing parental liability owed to a victim for acts of certain juvenile offenders;
amending certain laws to enhance victim rights; amending Minnesota Statutes
2002, sections 260B.163, subdivision 1; 260B.171, subdivision 4; 611A.01.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 132 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 1025 was reported to the House.
Lenczewski moved that H. F. No. 1025 be
re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 317, A bill for an act relating to counties; allowing
use of certain county facilities for commercial wireless service providers and
allowing the lease of sites for public safety communications equipment;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 375.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 361, A bill for an act relating to elections;
providing procedures and criteria for calling special elections to fill
vacancies in certain instances; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections
365.52, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 367.03, subdivision 6.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill
was passed and its title agreed to.
H. F. No. 503, A bill for an act relating to elections;
clarifying certain duties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 204D.04,
subdivision 2.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 133 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
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
Kielkucki
Klinzing
Knoblach
Koenen
Kohls
Krinkie
Kuisle
Lanning
Larson
Latz
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lindgren
Lindner
Lipman
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
McNamara
Meslow
Mullery
Murphy
Nelson, C.
Nelson, M.
Nelson, P.
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
Slawik
Smith
Soderstrom
Solberg
Stang
Strachan
Swenson
Sykora
Thao
Thissen
Tingelstad
Urdahl
Vandeveer
Wagenius
Walker
Walz
Wardlow
Wasiluk
Westerberg
Westrom
Wilkin
Zellers
Spk. Sviggum
The bill
was passed and its title agreed to.
Paulsen
moved that the remaining bills on the Calendar for the Day be continued. The motion prevailed.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Howes moved that the name of Walz be added as an author on
H. F. No. 1340. The
motion prevailed.
Nornes moved that the name of Clark be added as an author on
H. F. No. 1521. The
motion prevailed.
Abrams moved that the names of Latz and Nelson, P., be added as
authors on H. F. No. 1570.
The motion prevailed.
ADJOURNMENT
Paulsen moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker declared the House stands
adjourned until 10:30 a.m., Friday, April 25, 2003.
Edward
A. Burdick,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives