STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-FIFTH SESSION - 2008
_____________________
NINETY-THIRD DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Wednesday, March 19,
2008
The House of Representatives convened at 12:00 noon and was
called to order by Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by Representative
Phyllis Kahn, District 59B and Representative Frank Hornstein, District 60B.
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
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Buesgens
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Davnie
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Faust
Finstad
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
Olin
Otremba
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Simpson
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Wardlow
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Wollschlager
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
A quorum was present.
Erhardt, Kohls, Olson and Peterson, N., were excused.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the Journal of the preceding
day. Abeler moved that further reading
of the Journal be suspended and that the Journal be approved as corrected by
the Chief Clerk. The motion prevailed.
REPORTS
OF CHIEF CLERK
S. F. No. 457 and H. F. No. 1394,
which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison, were examined and
found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION
OF RULES
Lenczewski moved that the rules be so far suspended that
S. F. No. 457 be substituted for H. F. No. 1394
and that the House File be indefinitely postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 2861 and
H. F. No. 3408, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION
OF RULES
Mullery moved that the rules be so far suspended that
S. F. No. 2861 be substituted for H. F. No. 3408
and that the House File be indefinitely postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 2881 and
H. F. No. 3236, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION
OF RULES
Davnie moved that the rules be so far suspended that
S. F. No. 2881 be substituted for H. F. No. 3236
and that the House File be indefinitely postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 3084 and
H. F. No. 3454, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical.
Jaros moved that S. F. No. 3084 be substituted
for H. F. No. 3454 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
PETITIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS
The following communication was received:
STATE
OF MINNESOTA
OFFICE
OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE
ST.
PAUL 55155
The Honorable Margaret
Anderson Kelliher
Speaker of the House of
Representatives
The Honorable James P.
Metzen
President of the Senate
I have the honor to inform you that the following enrolled Act
of the 2008 Session of the State Legislature has been received from the Office
of the Governor and is deposited in the Office of the Secretary of State for
preservation, pursuant to the State Constitution, Article IV, Section 23:
S. F. No. |
H. F. No. |
Session Laws Chapter No. |
Time and Date Approved 2008 |
Date Filed 2008 |
2471 157 11:09
a.m. March 18 March
18
Sincerely,
Mark
Ritchie
Secretary
of State
REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES AND DIVISIONS
Atkins
from the Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 635, A bill for an act relating to telecommunications; enacting the
Minnesota Wireless Telephone Consumer Protection Act; changing certain existing
requirements; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325F;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 325F.695.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. [325F.696]
MINNESOTA WIRELESS TELEPHONE CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT.
Subdivision
1. Definitions. (a) The definitions in this subdivision
apply to this section.
(b)
"Customer" means an individual consumer purchasing wireless
telecommunications service, or a business or corporate entity making a bulk
purchase of wireless telecommunications service for use by its employees.
(c)
"Government-mandated charges and taxes" means any taxes, fees, and
other charges that a wireless carrier is legally required to collect directly
from consumers and to remit to federal, state, or local governments, or to
third parties authorized by such governments, for the administration of
government programs. "Government-mandated charges and taxes" does not
include discretionary charges authorized, but not required by, government
action.
(d)
"Wireless carrier" means a provider of wireless telecommunications
service.
(e)
"Wireless telecommunications service" means commercial mobile radio
service as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 47, part 20, but does
not include "information services" as defined in United States Code,
title 47, section 153m, paragraph (20).
(f)
"Prepaid wireless service" means a wireless telecommunications
service that is activated in advance by payment for a finite dollar amount of
service or for a finite number of minutes that terminates either upon use by a
customer of that amount of service or within a specified period of time
following the initial purchase or activation, unless additional payments are
made.
Subd.
2. Required
disclosures. Wireless carriers
providing wireless telecommunications service in the state must:
(1)
provide the customer, at the time of sale, with a coverage map showing where
service is generally available and that identifies areas where any domestic
roaming or additional charges would apply to the customer's service;
(2)
make coverage maps showing where service is generally available to prospective
and existing customers at any location where the wireless carrier's wireless
telecommunications service is offered for sale and make those maps available
electronically at the carrier's Web site;
(3)
clearly and conspicuously disclose at the time of sale the price for the
service being purchased by the customer, including the monthly access fee or
base charge, the amount of any activation or initiation fee, any charges for
domestic roaming, any charge for domestic long distance, any charge for
exceeding the number of minutes or usage included in any allowance, number of
peak and off-peak minutes, hours when peak and off-peak minutes apply, material
terms of cancellation, return policy and any applicable charges, and any other
charges collected and retained by the carrier, and disclose a good faith
estimate of the amount or range of all applicable government-mandated or
authorized charges and taxes;
(4)
clearly and conspicuously disclose to the customer at the time of sale in
written materials: (i) that the price
is not guaranteed to remain the same for the minimum term of the contract if a
contract provision allows the wireless carrier to change the price of the
service during the minimum term, and (ii) any early termination fee that
applies if service is terminated during the minimum term;
(5)
prior to the execution of a contract for wireless telephone service, provide
the customer the terms of the contract, and after execution of the contract
provide the customer with a copy of the writing or writings constituting the
contract, at the time of sale and thereafter upon the customer's request; and
(6)
obtain a specific acknowledgment from the customer that the customer has read
and understands the provisions of any early termination fee or provisions
allowing the wireless carrier to change the price of the service during the
minimum contract term.
Subd.
3. Billing;
listing of government taxes and fees.
All bills for wireless telecommunications services must list
government-mandated charges and taxes in a section of the bill separate from
the section or sections listing the price and any other charges for the
wireless telecommunications service.
The wireless carrier must include a brief, easy-to-understand
description of each charge included in the bill. The wireless carrier must not represent, expressly or by
implication, that discretionary cost recovery fees or charges are government-mandated
charges and taxes.
Subd.
4. Billing
for third-party goods and services.
(a) A wireless carrier must not include on a customer's bill a charge
for goods or services that the carrier bills on behalf of a third party unless
the wireless carrier has obtained the customer's prior express authorization to
include those charges on the customer's bill issued by the wireless carrier.
(b)
If a customer of a wireless carrier disputes any third-party charge appearing
on that customer's wireless bill, the customer shall not be obligated to pay
the disputed charge until the wireless carrier provides evidence of the
customer's prior express authorization to include such charge. Evidence of the customer's prior express
authorization must be produced to the customer within 60 calendar days after
the customer notifies the wireless carrier that the charge is disputed. A customer shall be permitted to dispute any
charges that a wireless carrier bills on behalf of a third party for up to six
months after the charge appears on the customer's wireless bill. If the wireless carrier cannot produce
evidence that the customer authorized the third-party charge, the wireless
carrier must remove the charge from the customer's wireless bill and credit the
customer for the unauthorized third-party charges incurred during the previous
six months.
(c)
A wireless carrier meets the prior express authorization requirements of this
subdivision only if it obtains or receives authorization from the customer
containing clear, unambiguous, and separate authorizations for each third-party
good or service to be included on the customer's bill.
(d)
Nothing in this subdivision restricts the right of a wireless carrier to seek
to recover from a third party unauthorized charges credited to the customer by
the wireless carrier.
Subd.
5. Extensions
in contract length. (a) If a
customer is offered, accepts, or requests a good, service, or promotion or
changes the customer's wireless service plan in any manner, and this good,
service, promotion, or change will result in the extension of the minimum
contract term or create a new contract with a minimum term, the wireless
carrier must disclose to the customer at the point of sale or acceptance that
the requested good, service, promotion, or change will result in a contract
extension or creation of a new contract with a minimum term, and must further
disclose the length of the extension or new term.
(b)
If the customer and a representative of the carrier are personally present at
the point of sale or acceptance, the wireless provider must also in connection
with the new good, service, promotion, or change obtain the customer's signed
consent in an independent document. The
independent document must only include the terms set forth in clauses (1) to
(3) and must clearly and conspicuously disclose:
(1)
that the new good, service, promotion, or change will result in an extension or
renewal of the customer's contract;
(2)
the new contract start and end dates; and
(3)
that failure to complete the new contract term may result in early termination
fees and, if so, the amount of the fees.
(c)
If the customer's consent is obtained via the Internet, the wireless provider
must disclose the terms listed in paragraph (b), clauses (1) to (3). The customer must provide a valid electronic
signature showing that the wireless provider has disclosed and the customer has
agreed to the extension or renewal of the contract. An electronic record must be available upon request to the
customer until the new contract term expires.
(d)
If the customer's consent is obtained orally, the wireless provider must
clearly disclose the terms listed in paragraph (b), clauses (1) to (3), and the
customer's consent to each term must be recorded and retained by the provider
and be made available upon request to the customer until the new contract term
expires.
(e)
Within ten days after a customer's contract has been extended or renewed, the
wireless service provider must notify the customer in an independent writing
that the contract has been extended or renewed. The independent writing must only include the terms set forth in
clauses (1) to (3) and must clearly and conspicuously disclose:
(1)
that the new good, service, promotion, or change will result in an extension or
renewal of the customer's contract;
(2)
the new contract start and end dates; and
(3)
that failure to complete the new contract term may result in early termination
fees and, if so, the amount of the fees.
(f)
Failure of the provider to make any of the disclosures or to obtain any of the
consents required in this subdivision voids any contract extension covered by
this subdivision.
Subd.
6. Severability. Each of the provisions of this section,
and each application of a provision to particular circumstances, is
severable. If a provision or
application is found to be contrary to law and unenforceable, it is the
intention of the legislature that the remaining provisions and applications of
this section remain valid and enforceable to the full extent possible under
section 645.20.
Sec.
2. REPEALER.
Minnesota
Statutes 2006, section 325F.695, is repealed.
Sec.
3. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Section
1 is effective August 1, 2008, except that subdivision 4 is effective March 1,
2009."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to telecommunications; enacting the Minnesota Wireless
Telephone Consumer Protection Act; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 325F; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
325F.695."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 699, A bill for an act relating to public safety; lowering the age of adult
certification for juveniles; defining a violent juvenile offense; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 260B.007, by adding a subdivision; 260B.125,
subdivision 1; 260B.130, subdivision 1; 260B.141, subdivision 4; 609.055.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, line 19, delete "2007" and insert "2008"
Page
2, line 4, delete "2007" and insert "2008"
Page
2, line 26, delete "2007" and insert "2008"
Page
3, line 6, delete "2007" and insert "2008"
Page
3, after line 7, insert:
"Sec.
5. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
260B.198, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd.
6. Expungement. Except when legal custody is transferred
under the provisions of subdivision 1, clause (d), or a child is adjudicated
delinquent for committing a violent juvenile offense as defined in section
260B.007, subdivision 21, the court may expunge the adjudication of
delinquency at any time that it deems advisable.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective August 1, 2008, and applies to
offenses committed on or after that date."
Page
3, line 29, delete "2007" and insert "2008"
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Finance.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 1625, A bill for an act relating to public safety; extending the duration
of orders for protection and restraining orders after multiple violations or
continued threats; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 518B.01,
subdivisions 6, 6a, 11, 18; 609.748, subdivisions 3, 5, 8.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Hilstrom
from the Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs to which was
referred:
H. F.
No. 1813, A bill for an act relating to planning and zoning; requiring counties
to consider natural heritage data in adopting or amending comprehensive plans;
requiring comprehensive plans in greater Minnesota to limit development on
agricultural, forest, wildlife, and open space land; requiring priority
provisions in certain county and city comprehensive plans; requiring certain
development to occur in designated priorities; providing a bill title; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 394.23; 394.232, subdivision 6; 394.24, by
adding a subdivision; 394.25, subdivision 2; 462.355, subdivision 1; 462.357,
by adding subdivisions; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 394.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement,
section 394.23, is amended to read:
394.23 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN.
The
board has the power and authority to prepare and adopt by ordinance, a
comprehensive plan. A comprehensive
plan or plans when adopted by ordinance must be the basis for official controls
adopted under the provisions of sections 394.21 to 394.37. The commissioner of natural resources must
provide the natural heritage data from the county biological survey, if
available, to each county for use in the comprehensive plan. When adopting or updating the comprehensive
plan, the board must, if the data is available to the county, consider natural
heritage data resulting from the county biological survey. The board must consider adopting goals and
objectives that will protect open space and the environment.
Sec.
2. [394.231]
COMPREHENSIVE PLANS IN GREATER MINNESOTA; OPEN SPACE.
A
county adopting or updating a comprehensive plan in a county outside the
metropolitan area as defined by section 473.121, subdivision 2, shall consider
adopting goals and objectives for the preservation of agricultural, forest,
wildlife, and open space land, and minimizing development in sensitive
shoreland areas. Within three years of
updating the comprehensive plan, the county shall consider adopting ordinances
as part of the county's official controls that encourage the implementation of
the goals and objectives. The county
shall consider the following goals and objectives:
(1)
minimizing the fragmentation and development of agricultural, forest, wildlife,
and open space lands, including consideration of appropriate minimum lot sizes;
(2)
minimizing further development in sensitive shoreland areas;
(3)
minimizing development near wildlife management areas, scientific and natural
areas, and nature centers;
(4)
identification of areas of preference for higher density, including
consideration of existing and necessary water and wastewater services,
infrastructure, other services, and to the extent feasible, encouraging full
development of areas previously zoned for nonagricultural uses;
(5)
encouraging development close to places of employment, shopping centers,
schools, mass transit, and other public and private service centers;
(6)
identification of areas where other developments are appropriate; and
(7)
other goals and objectives a county may identify.
Sec.
3. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
394.232, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd.
6. Plan
update. The county board, or the
board of the joint planning district, shall review and update the
community-based comprehensive plan periodically, but at least every ten years,
and submit the updated plan to the office of strategic and long-range planning
for review and comment. When
updating the plan, the county board or the board of the joint planning district
must consider natural heritage data resulting from the county biological
survey. The board must consider
adopting goals and objectives that will protect open space and the environment.
Sec.
4. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
462.355, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision
1. Preparation
and review. The planning agency
shall prepare the comprehensive municipal plan. In discharging this duty the planning agency shall consult with
and coordinate the planning activities of other departments and agencies of the
municipality to insure conformity with and to assist in the development of the
comprehensive municipal plan. In its
planning activities the planning agency shall take due cognizance of the
planning activities of adjacent units of government and other affected public
agencies. The planning agency shall
periodically review the plan and recommend amendments whenever necessary. When preparing or recommending amendments
to the comprehensive plan, the planning agency must consider adopting goals and
objectives that will protect open space and the environment.
Sec.
5. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
462.357, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
1h. Comprehensive
plans in greater Minnesota; open spaces. When adopting or updating a comprehensive plan in a
municipality outside the metropolitan area, as defined by section 473.121,
subdivision 2, the municipality shall consider adopting goals and objectives
for the preservation of agricultural, forest, wildlife, and
open
space land and the minimization of development in sensitive shoreland
areas. Within three years of updating
the comprehensive plan, the municipality shall consider adopting ordinances as
part of the municipality's official controls that encourage the implementation
of the goals and objectives.
Sec.
6. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
462.357, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
9. Development
goals and objectives. In
adopting official controls after July 1, 2008, in a municipality outside the
metropolitan area, as defined by section 473.121, subdivision 2, the
municipality shall consider restricting new residential, commercial, and
industrial development so that the new development takes place in areas subject
to the following goals and objectives:
(1)
minimizing the fragmentation and development of agricultural, forest, wildlife,
and open space lands, including consideration of appropriate minimum lot sizes;
(2)
minimizing further development in sensitive shoreland areas;
(3)
minimizing development near wildlife management areas, scientific and natural
areas, and nature centers;
(4)
identification of areas of preference for higher density, including
consideration of existing and necessary water and wastewater services,
infrastructure, other services, and to the extent feasible, encouraging full
development of areas previously zoned for nonagricultural uses;
(5)
encouraging development close to places of employment, shopping centers,
schools, mass transit, and other public and private service centers;
(6)
identification of areas where other developments are appropriate; and
(7)
other goals and objectives a municipality may identify.
Sec.
7. TITLE.
Sections
1 to 6 shall be known as the President Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Act to Preserve
Agricultural, Forest, Wildlife, and Open Space Land.
Sec.
8. AGRICULTURAL
AND OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION TASK FORCE.
An
agricultural and open space preservation task force is created to study state
and local policies and incentives related to encouraging farms, privately owned
forest lands, and other privately owned open spaces to be preserved. The task force shall consist of one member
of the majority party of the senate appointed by the majority leader and one
member of the minority party of the senate appointed by the minority leader;
one member of the majority party in the house of representatives, appointed by
the speaker of the house of representatives, and one member of the minority
party in the house of representatives appointed by the minority leader; and one
representative each from the Association of Minnesota Counties, the League of
Minnesota Cities, and the Minnesota Association of Townships. The task force shall consult with
representatives of agricultural groups such as Farm Bureau and Farmer's Union
and may consult with other interested parties, including appropriate state
agencies, as needed. No public member
of the task force shall be entitled to compensation or reimbursements for
expenses. Appointments shall be made by
July 1, 2008, and the first meeting shall be convened by agreement of the
senate members no later than August 1, 2008.
The task force shall elect a chair from among its members at the first
meeting. The task force must report its
findings with recommendations for proposed legislation to the chairs and
ranking minority members of the committees in the house of representatives and
senate with jurisdiction over land use planning no later than January 30,
2009. The task force shall expire on
June 30, 2009.
Sec.
9. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Sections
1 to 7 are effective July 1, 2008.
Section 8 is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to planning and zoning; requiring certain local
governments to consider certain natural heritage data and consider adopting
goals to protect open space and the environment when adopting or updating
comprehensive plans or ordinances; requiring certain local governments in
greater Minnesota to consider adopting certain goals to preserve agriculture,
forest, wildlife, and open space and minimize certain shoreland development
when adopting or updating comprehensive plans or ordinances; establishing an
agricultural and open space preservation task force; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, sections 394.232, subdivision 6; 462.355, subdivision 1;
462.357, by adding subdivisions; Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement, section
394.23; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 394."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2460, A bill for an act relating to drivers' licenses; imposing additional
eligibility requirements to operate motor vehicle pursuant to provisional
driver's license; imposing a penalty; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
171.055.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, line 18, delete "40" and insert "30" and
delete "ten" and insert "six"
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2628, A bill for an act relating to drivers' licenses; modifying
requirements for holder of provisional driver's license; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, section 171.055, subdivision 2.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
2, line 17, delete "the day following final enactment" and
insert "August 1, 2008"
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2783, A bill for an act relating to education; establishing a P-20
education partnership; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 127A.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. [127A.70]
MINNESOTA P-20 EDUCATION PARTNERSHIP.
Subdivision
1. Establishment;
membership. (a) A P-20
education partnership is established to create a seamless education system that
maximizes achievements of all students, from early childhood through
elementary, secondary, and postsecondary education, while promoting the
effective and efficient use of financial and human resources. The partnership shall consist of major
statewide educational groups or constituencies or noneducational statewide
organizations with a stated interest in P-20 education. Upon enactment of this legislation, the
partnership members shall be those currently serving on the Minnesota P-16
Education Partnership plus four legislators as follows:
(1)
one senator from the majority party and one senator from the minority party,
appointed by the Subcommittee on Committees of the Committee on Rules and
Administration; and
(2)
one member of the house of representatives appointed by the speaker of the house
and one member of the house of representatives appointed by the minority leader
of the house.
Prospective
members may be nominated by any partnership member and new members must be
added with the approval of a two-thirds majority of the partnership members.
The
partnership must seek input from nonmember organizations having expertise to
help inform the partnership's work.
(b)
Each partnership member must be represented by its formally designated leader
or the leader's designee. The
partnership must meet at least three times each calendar year.
Subd.
2. Powers
and duties; report. (a) The
partnership must develop and submit to the governor and the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over education policy and finance recommendations
for maximizing the achievement of all P-20 students while promoting the
effective and efficient use of state resources, and maximizing the value of the
state's educational investment.
Partnership recommendations must at least include a focus on strategies,
policies, and actions that:
(1)
improve the quality of and access to education for all students from preschool
through graduate education;
(2)
improve preparation for and transitions to postsecondary education and work;
and
(3)
ensure educator quality by creating rigorous standards for teacher recruitment,
teacher preparation, induction and mentoring of beginning teachers, and
continuous professional development for career teachers.
(b)
Annually, by January 15, the partnership must submit a report to the governor
and the legislative committees with jurisdiction over education policy and
finance summarizing the partnership's progress in meeting its goals and
recommending any legislation needed to further partnership goals related to
maximizing student achievement and promoting effective and efficient use of
resources.
Subd.
3. Expiration. The partnership expires on June 30, 2019.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2877, A bill for an act relating to public safety; establishing crime of
disarming a peace officer; providing criminal penalties; amending Minnesota Statutes
2006, section 609.50, subdivision 2; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 609.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2906, A bill for an act relating to animals; changing provisions regulating
dangerous dogs; imposing penalties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections
347.50, by adding a subdivision; 347.51, subdivisions 2, 2a, 3, 4, 7, 9; 347.52;
347.53; 347.54, subdivisions 1, 3; 347.55; 347.56; proposing coding for new law
in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 347.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.50, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
8. Provocation. "Provocation" means an act that
an adult could reasonably expect may cause a dog to attack or bite.
Sec.
2. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.51, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd.
2. Registration. An animal control authority shall issue a
certificate of registration to the owner of a dangerous dog if the owner
presents sufficient evidence that:
(1) a
proper enclosure exists for the dangerous dog and a posting on the premises
with a clearly visible warning sign, including a warning symbol to inform
children, that there is a dangerous dog on the property;
(2) a
surety bond issued by a surety company authorized to conduct business in this
state in a form acceptable to the animal control authority in the sum of at
least $50,000 $300,000, payable to any person injured by the
dangerous dog, or a policy of liability insurance issued by an insurance
company authorized to conduct business in this state in the amount of at least $50,000
$300,000, insuring the owner for any personal injuries inflicted by the
dangerous dog;
(3)
the owner has paid an annual fee of not more than $500, in addition to any
regular dog licensing fees, to obtain a certificate of registration for a
dangerous dog under this section; and
(4)
the owner has had microchip identification implanted in the dangerous dog as
required under section 347.515.
Sec.
3. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.51, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd.
2a. Warning symbol. If a
county an animal control authority issues a certificate of
registration to the owner of a dangerous dog pursuant to subdivision 2, the county
animal control authority must provide, for posting on the owner's property,
a copy of a warning symbol to inform children that there is a dangerous dog on
the property. The design of the
warning symbol must be the uniform and specified symbol
provided by the commissioner of public safety, after consultation with
animal control professionals. The
commissioner shall provide the number of copies of the warning symbol requested
by each county the animal control authority and shall charge the county
animal control authority the actual cost of the warning symbols
received. The county animal
control authority may charge the registrant a reasonable fee to cover its
administrative costs and the cost of the warning symbol.
Sec.
4. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.51, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd.
3. Fee. The county animal control
authority may charge the owner an annual fee, in addition to any regular
dog licensing fees, to obtain a certificate of registration for a dangerous dog
under this section.
Sec.
5. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.51, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd.
7. Tag. A dangerous dog registered under this
section must have a standardized, easily identifiable tag identifying the dog
as dangerous and containing the uniform dangerous dog symbol, affixed to the
dog's collar at all times. The commissioner
of public safety, after consultation with animal control professionals, shall
provide by rule for the design of the tag.
Sec.
6. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.51, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd.
9. Contracted
services. A county An
animal control authority may contract with another political subdivision or
other person to provide the services required under sections 347.50 to 347.54
347.565. Notwithstanding any
contract entered into under this subdivision, all fees collected under sections
347.50 to 347.54 shall be paid to the county animal control authority
and all certificates of registration must be issued in the name of the county
animal control authority.
Sec.
7. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.52, is amended to read:
347.52 DANGEROUS DOGS; REQUIREMENTS.
(a) An
owner of a dangerous dog shall keep the dog, while on the owner's property, in
a proper enclosure. If the dog is
outside the proper enclosure, the dog must be muzzled and restrained by a
substantial chain or leash and under the physical restraint of a responsible
person. The muzzle must be made in a
manner that will prevent the dog from biting any person or animal but that will
not cause injury to the dog or interfere with its vision or respiration.
(b) An
owner of a dangerous dog must renew the registration of the dog annually until
the dog is deceased. If the dog is
removed from the jurisdiction, it must be registered as a dangerous dog in its
new jurisdiction.
(c) An
owner of a dangerous dog must notify the animal control authority in writing of
the death of the dog or its transfer to a new jurisdiction location
where the dog will reside within 30 days of the death or transfer, and
must, if requested by the animal control authority, execute an affidavit under
oath setting forth either the circumstances of the dog's death and disposition
or the complete name, address, and telephone number of the person to whom the
dog has been transferred or the address where the dog has been relocated.
(d) An
animal control authority may shall require a dangerous dog to be
sterilized at the owner's expense. If
the owner does not have the animal sterilized within 30 days, the animal
control authority may shall seize the dog and have the animal
it sterilized at the owner's expense.
(e) A
person who owns a dangerous dog and who rents property from another where the
dog will reside must disclose to the property owner prior to entering the lease
agreement and at the time of any lease renewal that the person owns a dangerous
dog that will reside at the property.
(f) A
person who sells transfers ownership of a dangerous dog must
notify the purchaser new owner that the animal control authority
has identified the dog as dangerous.
The seller current owner must also notify the animal
control authority in writing of the sale transfer of ownership
and provide the animal control authority with the new owner's name, address,
and telephone number.
Sec.
8. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.53, is amended to read:
347.53 POTENTIALLY DANGEROUS AND DANGEROUS
DOGS.
Any
statutory or home rule charter city, or any county, may regulate potentially
dangerous and dangerous dogs.
Except as provided in section 347.51, subdivision 8, nothing in sections
347.50 to 347.54 347.565 limits any restrictions that the
local jurisdictions may place on owners of potentially dangerous or
dangerous dogs.
Sec.
9. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.54, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision
1. Seizure. (a) The animal control authority having
jurisdiction shall immediately seize any dangerous dog if:
(1)
after 14 days after the owner has notice that the dog is dangerous, the dog is
not validly registered under section 347.51;
(2)
after 14 days after the owner has notice that the dog is dangerous, the owner
does not secure the proper liability insurance or surety coverage as required
under section 347.51, subdivision 2;
(3)
the dog is not maintained in the proper enclosure; or
(4)
the dog is outside the proper enclosure and not under physical restraint of a
responsible person as required under section 347.52.; or
(5)
the dog is not sterilized within 30 days, pursuant to section 347.52, paragraph
(d).
(b) If
an owner of a dog is convicted of a crime for which the dog was originally seized,
the court may order that the dog be confiscated and destroyed in a proper and
humane manner, and that the owner pay the costs incurred in confiscating,
confining, and destroying the dog.
Sec.
10. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.54, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd.
3. Subsequent
offenses; seizure. If a person has
been convicted of a misdemeanor for violating a provision of section 347.51,
347.515, or 347.52, and the person is charged with a subsequent violation
relating to the same dog, the dog must be seized by the animal control
authority having jurisdiction. If the
owner is convicted of the crime for which the dog was seized, the court shall
order that the dog be destroyed in a proper and humane manner and the owner pay
the cost of confining and destroying the animal. If the person is not convicted of the crime for which the dog
was seized, the owner may reclaim the dog upon payment to the animal control
authority of a fee for the care and boarding of the dog. If the owner is found not guilty and
the dog is not reclaimed by the owner within seven days after the owner has
been notified that the dog may be reclaimed, the dog may be disposed of as
provided under section 35.71, subdivision 3, and the owner is liable to the
animal control authority for the costs incurred in confining, impounding, and
disposing of the dog.
Sec.
11. [347.541] DISPOSITION OF SEIZED ANIMALS.
Subdivision
1. Hearing. The owner of any dog declared dangerous
has the right to a hearing by an impartial hearing officer.
Subd.
2. Security. A person claiming an interest in a seized
dog may prevent disposition of the dog by posting security in an amount
sufficient to provide for the dog's actual cost of care and keeping. The security must be posted within 14 days
of the seizure inclusive of the date of the seizure.
Subd.
3. Notice. (a) The authority declaring the dog
dangerous shall give notice of this section by delivering or mailing it to the
owner of the dog, or by posting a copy of it at the place where the dog is
kept, or by delivering it to a person residing on the property, and
telephoning, if possible. The notice
must include:
(1)
a description of the seized dog; the authority for and purpose of the dangerous
dog declaration and seizure; the time, place, and circumstances under which the
dog was declared dangerous; and the telephone number and contact person where
the dog is kept;
(2)
a statement that the owner of the dog may request a hearing concerning the
dangerous dog declaration and, if applicable, prior potentially dangerous dog
declarations for the dog, and that failure to do so within 14 days of the date
of the notice will terminate the owner's right to a hearing under this section;
(3)
a statement that if an appeal request is made within 14 days of the notice, the
owner must immediately comply with the requirements of section 347.52,
paragraphs (a) and (c), and until such time as the hearing officer issues an
opinion;
(4)
a statement that if the hearing officer affirms the dangerous dog declaration,
the owner will have 14 days from receipt of that decision to comply with all
other requirements of sections 347.51, 347.515, and 347.52;
(5)
a form that can be used by the owner of the dog that was seized for requesting
a hearing under this subdivision; and
(6)
a statement that all actual costs of the care, keeping, and disposition of the
dog are the responsibility of the person claiming an interest in the dog,
except to the extent that a court or hearing officer finds that the seizure or
impoundment was not substantially justified by law.
Subd.
4. Right
to hearing. Any hearing must
be held within 30 days of the request to determine the validity of the
dangerous dog declaration. The hearing
officer must be an impartial employee of the local government or an impartial
person retained by the local government to conduct the hearing. In the event that the dangerous dog
declaration
is upheld by the hearing officer, actual expenses of the hearing up to a
maximum of $1,000 will be the responsibility of the dog's owner. The hearing officer shall issue a decision
on the matter within ten days after the hearing. The decision must be delivered to the dog's owner by hand delivery
or registered mail as soon as practical and a copy must be provided to the
animal control authority.
Sec.
12. [347.542] RESTRICTIONS.
Subdivision
1. Dog
ownership prohibited. Except
as provided in subdivision 3, no person may own a dog if the person has:
(1)
been convicted of a third or subsequent violation of section 347.51, 347.515,
or 347.52;
(2)
been convicted of a violation under section 609.205, clause (4);
(3)
been convicted of a gross misdemeanor under section 609.226, subdivision 1;
(4)
been convicted of a violation under section 609.226, subdivision 2; or
(5)
had a dog ordered destroyed under section 347.56 and been convicted of one or
more violations of section 347.51, 346.515, 347.52, or 609.226, subdivision 2.
Subd.
2. Household
members. No member of a
household may own a dog where a person resides who is prohibited from dog
ownership under subdivision 1.
Subd.
3. Dog
ownership prohibition review. Beginning
three years after a conviction under subdivision 1 that prohibits a person from
owning a dog, and annually thereafter, the person may request that the animal
control authority review the prohibition.
The animal control authority may consider such facts as the seriousness
of the violation or violations that led to the prohibition, any criminal
convictions, or other facts that the animal control authority deems
appropriate. The animal control
authority may rescind the prohibition entirely or rescind it with
limitations. The animal control
authority also may establish conditions a person must meet before the
prohibition is rescinded, including, but not limited to, successfully
completing dog training or dog handling courses. If the animal control authority rescinds a person's prohibition
and the person subsequently fails to comply with any limitations imposed by the
animal control authority or the person is convicted of any animal violation
involving unprovoked bites or dog attacks, the animal control authority may
permanently prohibit the person from owning a dog in this state.
Sec.
13. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.55, is amended to read:
347.55 PENALTY.
(a) Any
A person who violates any a provision of section 347.51,
347.515, or 347.52 is guilty of a misdemeanor.
(b) It
is a misdemeanor to remove a microchip from a dangerous or potentially
dangerous dog, to fail to renew the registration of a dangerous dog, to fail to
account for a dangerous dog's death or removal from the jurisdiction
change of location where the dog will reside, to sign a false affidavit
with respect to a dangerous dog's death or removal from the jurisdiction
change of location where the dog will reside, or to fail to disclose
ownership of a dangerous dog to a property owner from whom the person rents
property.
(c)
A person who is convicted of a second or subsequent violation of paragraph (a)
or (b) is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
(d)
An owner who violates section 347.542, subdivision 1, is guilty of a gross
misdemeanor.
(e)
Any household member who knowingly violates section 347.542, subdivision 2, is
guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
Sec.
14. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
347.56, is amended to read:
347.56 DESTRUCTION OF DOG IN CERTAIN
CIRCUMSTANCES.
Subdivision
1. Circumstances. Notwithstanding sections 347.51 to 347.55, a
dog that inflicted substantial or great bodily harm on a human being on
public or private property without provocation may be destroyed in a proper and
humane manner by the animal control authority.
The animal control authority may not destroy the dog until the dog owner
has had the opportunity for a hearing before an impartial decision maker.
may be destroyed in a proper and humane manner by the animal control authority
if the dog:
(1)
inflicted substantial or great bodily harm on a human on public or private
property without provocation;
(2)
inflicted multiple bites on a human on public or private property without
provocation;
(3)
bit multiple human victims on public or private property in the same attack
without provocation; or
(4)
bit a human on public or private property without provocation in an attack
where more than one dog participated in the attack.
Subd.
2. Hearing. The animal control authority may not
destroy the dog until the dog owner has had the opportunity for a hearing
before an impartial decision maker. The
definitions in section 347.50 and the exemptions under section 347.51,
subdivision 5, apply to this section.
Sec.
15. [347.565] APPLICABILITY.
Sections
347.50 to 347.56 must be enforced by animal control authorities or law
enforcement agencies, whether or not these sections have been adopted into
local ordinance."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to animals; changing provisions regulating dangerous
dogs; imposing penalties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 347.50, by
adding a subdivision; 347.51, subdivisions 2, 2a, 3, 7, 9; 347.52; 347.53;
347.54, subdivisions 1, 3; 347.55; 347.56; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 347."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2941, A bill for an act relating to capital improvements; appropriating
money for asset preservation at the University of Minnesota; authorizing the
sale and issuance of state bonds.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, line 6, delete "$80,000,000" and insert "$40,000,000"
Page
1, line 8, delete everything after the period
Page
1, delete line 9
Page
1, before line 10, insert:
"Sec.
2. APPROPRIATION;
BOARD OF TRUSTEES.
$60,000,000
is appropriated from the bond proceeds fund to the Board of Trustees of the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities for higher education asset
preservation and replacement to be spent in accordance with Minnesota Statutes,
section 135A.046."
Page
1, line 11, delete "section 1" and insert "sections 1
and 2"
Page
1, line 13, delete "$80,000,000" and insert "$100,000,000"
Page
1, line 17, delete "and 2" and insert "to 3"
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 3, after "Minnesota" insert "and the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities"
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.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2955, A bill for an act relating to education; amending school background
check requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 123B.03,
subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, after line 5, insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
123B.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd.
2. Conditional
hiring; discharge Effect of background check. (a) A school hiring authority may
hire an individual pending completion of a background check under subdivision 1
but shall notify the individual that the individual's employment may be
terminated based on the result of the background check. A school hiring authority is not liable for
failing to hire or for terminating an individual's employment based on the
result of a background check under this section.
(b)
An individual must be informed by the school hiring authority if the
individual's application to be an employee or volunteer in the district has
been denied as a result of a background check conducted under this
section. The school hiring authority
must also inform an individual who is a current employee or volunteer if the
individual's employment or volunteer status in the district is being terminated
as a result of a background check conducted under this section."
Page
2, lines 16 and 20, delete "by a third-party contractor"
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 2970, A bill for an act relating to traffic regulations; requiring
motorists to move to far left of roadway before passing road maintenance
workers; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 169.18, subdivision 1, by
adding a subdivision.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, line 19, after "a" insert "freeway service patrol or"
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 3, delete "road maintenance workers" and insert "certain
vehicles parked on the roadway"
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3090, A bill for an act relating to transportation; modifying provisions
relating to certain positions in Department of Transportation; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 174.02, subdivision 2.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, line 10, after "three" insert "other" and
reinstate the stricken "deputy and"
Page
1, lines 11 and 12, reinstate the stricken language
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3161, A bill for an act relating to veterans; providing for a current
listing of deceased Minnesota military personnel; proposing coding for new law
in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 197.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
13.785, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
4. Deceased
veterans data. Data relating
to veterans deceased as a result of service-connected causes are classified
under section 197.225.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec.
2. [197.225]
LIST OF DECEASED MILITARY PERSONNEL.
(a)
The commissioner of veterans affairs shall collect and maintain data about
Minnesota residents who have died of service-connected causes while serving in
the United States armed forces. The
data may include deceased service members who are the immediate family members
of Minnesota residents, but who themselves were not Minnesota residents at the
time of death. The commissioner shall
collect the following data: the
individual's full name, military rank, branch of service, age at the time of
death, and Minnesota hometown or if not a Minnesota resident at the time of
death, the service member's home state.
(b)
Data collected pursuant to this section are nonpublic data, but may be
disseminated to the individual's next of kin, and for ceremonial or honorary
purposes to veterans' organizations, civic organizations, the news media, and
researchers. No other use or
dissemination of the data is permitted.
(c)
The next of kin of a veteran whose data is collected may request that the data
not be disseminated for any purpose.
Upon receiving such a request, the Department of Veterans Affairs must
exclude the deceased veteran's data from any data disseminated for ceremonial
or honorary purposes as permitted by paragraph (b).
(d)
Data collected pursuant to this section shall not be indicative of any person's
status with regard to qualification for veterans benefits or other benefits.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3281, A bill for an act relating to natural resources; modifying snowmobile
training provisions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 84.862, by
adding a subdivision.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3302, A bill for an act relating to data practices; providing for the
protection of written materials prepared for a closed meeting; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 13D.05, subdivision 3.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. [13.356]
CLOSED MEETINGS DATA.
Government
data relating to the agenda of a meeting closed under section 13D.05,
subdivision 3, paragraph (c), clause (3), prepared or distributed by or at the
direction of the governing board or its employees, must be preserved for eight
years after the date of the meeting and be made available to the public after
all real or personal property discussed at the meeting has been purchased or
sold or the governing body has abandoned the purchase or sale. Until made available to the public under
this section, the government data is classified as nonpublic.
Sec.
2. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
13D.05, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd.
3. What
meetings may be closed. (a) A
public body may close a meeting to evaluate the performance of an individual
who is subject to its authority. The
public body shall identify the individual to be evaluated prior to closing a
meeting. At its next open meeting, the
public body shall summarize its conclusions regarding the evaluation. A meeting must be open at the request of the
individual who is the subject of the meeting.
(b)
Meetings may be closed if the closure is expressly authorized by statute or
permitted by the attorney-client privilege.
(c) A
public body may close a meeting:
(1) to
determine the asking price for real or personal property to be sold by the
government entity;
(2) to
review confidential or nonpublic appraisal data under section 13.44,
subdivision 3; and
(3) to
develop or consider offers or counteroffers for the purchase or sale of real or
personal property. Government data
relating to a meeting closed under this clause is classified under section
13.356.
Before
holding a closed meeting under this paragraph, the public body must identify on
the record the particular real or personal property that is the subject of the
closed meeting. The proceedings of a
meeting closed under this paragraph must be tape recorded at the expense of the
public body. The recording must be
preserved for eight years after the date of the meeting and made available to
the public after all real or personal property discussed at the meeting has
been purchased or sold or the governing body has abandoned the purchase or
sale. The real or personal property
that is the subject of the closed meeting must be specifically identified on
the tape. A list of members and all
other persons present at the closed meeting must be made available to the
public after the closed meeting. If an
action is brought claiming that public business other than discussions allowed
under this paragraph was transacted at a closed meeting held under this
paragraph during the time when the tape is not available to the public, section
13D.03, subdivision 3, applies.
An agreement reached that is
based on an offer considered at a closed meeting is contingent on approval of
the public body at an open meeting. The
actual purchase or sale must be approved at an open meeting after the notice
period required by statute or the governing body's internal procedures, and the
purchase price or sale price is public data.
(d)
Meetings may be closed to receive security briefings and reports, to discuss issues
related to security systems, to discuss emergency response procedures and to
discuss security deficiencies in or recommendations regarding public services,
infrastructure and facilities, if disclosure of the information discussed would
pose a danger to public safety or compromise security procedures or
responses. Financial issues related to
security matters must be discussed and all related financial decisions must be
made at an open meeting. Before closing
a meeting under this paragraph, the public body, in describing the subject to
be discussed, must refer to the facilities, systems, procedures, services, or
infrastructures to be considered during the closed meeting. A closed meeting must be tape recorded at
the expense of the governing body, and the recording must be preserved for at
least four years."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to data practices; preserving data; classifying data;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 13D.05, subdivision 3; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3312, A bill for an act relating to natural resources; modifying the
maximum amount allowed in a drainage system repair fund; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, section 103E.735, subdivision 1.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Pelowski
from the Committee on Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections
to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3316, A bill for an act relating to education; providing for
prekindergarten through grade 12 education, including general education,
education excellence, special programs, libraries, state agencies, and
self-sufficiency and lifelong learning; authorizing rulemaking; appropriating
money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 120A.22, subdivisions 5, 6;
120A.24, subdivisions 1, 2; 120B.02; 120B.023, subdivision 2; 120B.131,
subdivision 2; 120B.31, as amended; 120B.35, as amended; 120B.36, as amended;
120B.362; 121A.55; 122A.07, subdivisions 2, 3; 122A.09, subdivision 4; 122A.14,
by adding subdivisions; 122A.18, by adding a subdivision; 122A.60; 122A.61,
subdivision 1; 122A.75, subdivision 1; 123B.03, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding a
subdivision; 123B.14, subdivision 7; 123B.51, by adding a subdivision; 123B.77,
subdivision 3; 123B.81, subdivisions 3, 5; 123B.83, subdivision 3; 124D.10,
subdivisions 2a, 4a, 6, 6a, 7, 8, 23; 124D.19, subdivision 14; 124D.522;
124D.55; 124D.60, subdivision 1; 124D.86, subdivision 1; 125A.15; 125A.51;
125A.65, subdivision 4, by adding a subdivision; 125A.744, subdivision 3;
126C.40, subdivision 6; 134.31, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 471.88,
by adding a subdivision; Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement, sections 120B.021,
subdivision 1; 120B.15; 120B.30; 123B.143, subdivision 1; 123B.81, subdivision
4; 124D.095, subdivision 4; 124D.10, subdivisions 4, 23a; 124D.13, subdivision
11; 124D.531, subdivision 1; 125A.14; 126C.10, subdivision 34; 127A.49,
subdivisions 2, 3; 134.31, subdivision 4a; Laws 2007, chapter 146, article 2,
section 46, subdivision 13; article 3, section 23, subdivision 2; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 120B; 124D; 125B; repealing
Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 121A.67; 125A.16; 125A.19; 125A.20; 125A.57;
Laws 2006, chapter 263, article 3, section 16.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Pages
8 and 9, delete sections 1 and 2 and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
13.32, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
11. Data
to improve instruction. The
Minnesota Department of Education and the Minnesota Office of Higher Education
may each share educational data with the other agency for the purpose of
analyzing and improving school district instruction, consistent with Code of
Federal Regulations, title 34, section 99.31(a)(6). The educational data that may be shared between the two agencies
under this subdivision must be limited to:
(1)
student attendance data that include the name of the school or institution,
school district, the year or term of attendance, and term type;
(2)
student demographic and enrollment data;
(3)
student academic performance and testing data; and
(4)
any special academic services provided to a student.
Any
analysis of or report on these data must contain only summary data.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Page
14, line 18, delete "shall" and insert "must"
and delete "with the revised" and insert "when
revising" and after "standards" insert "under
section 120B.023, subdivision 2"
Page
20, line 2, strike "regional,"
Page
22, line 10, after "effects" insert "that teacher
teams within a grade, teacher teams across an entire grade, the school, and the
school district have" and delete "at"
Page
22, line 11, delete everything before the period
Page
22, line 19, after "growth" insert ", including
accelerated growth"
Page
23, line 33, delete "(c)" and insert "(d)"
Page
23, line 34, delete "(d)" and insert "(e)"
Page
24, line 11, delete "(d)" and insert "(e)"
and delete "(c)" and insert "(d)"
Page
25, delete lines 13 to 16
Page
25, line 17, delete everything before "The" and insert "Membership
terms and removal of members are governed by section 15.059, except that the
terms are three years. The commissioner
may reimburse members for expenses under section 15.059 only if federal funding
is available for this purpose."
Page
28, line 2, after "matters" insert ", consistent with
the due process provisions of the Pupil Fair Dismissal Act"
Page
28, line 4, delete "to the school administrator that" and
insert "that the school administrator reasonably believes"
Page
28, line 5, after the period, insert "Notwithstanding section 13.05,
subdivision 4, educators may use the private and confidential data on students
they collect under this paragraph, consistent with the requirements governing
educational data under section 13.32."
Page
34, line 10, reinstate the stricken language
Page
34, line 11, reinstate the stricken "development and programs," and
reinstate the stricken "teachers' workshops, teacher"
Page
34, line 12, reinstate the stricken language
Page
34, line 26, reinstate the stricken ", or for the costs of curriculum
development and programs,"
Page
34, line 27, reinstate the stricken "teachers' workshops, teacher
conferences, substitute teachers for"
Page
34, lines 28 and 29, reinstate the stricken language
Page
42, line 3, delete "abilities, capacities, and expertise in fulfilling"
and insert "ability to fulfill"
Page
42, line 31, delete "and" and insert "or"
Page
43, line 29, delete "violations" and insert "a
violation"
Page
44, line 5, delete "violations" and insert "a
violation"
Page
45, line 26, before "board" insert "school"
and before "district" insert "school"
Page
47, line 14, delete "termination" and after "date"
insert "the sponsor terminates the contract" and delete "of"
and insert "date specified in"
Page
47, line 30, before "The" insert "Both parties jointly
must submit to the commissioner their written intent to terminate the contract."
Page
47, line 33, delete "Both"
Page
47, delete line 34
Page
47, line 35, delete "contract."
Page
49, line 15, delete "The committee may be reimbursed for expenses
according to"
Page
49, line 16, delete "section 15.059, subdivision 6" and insert
"Members serve without compensation"
Page
50, line 5, delete "enter into a technology partnership" and
insert "work together"
Page
50, lines 7 and 11, delete "The partnership" and insert "These
entities"
Page
50, line 14, delete "in collaboration with the other members of the
technology"
Page
50, line 15, delete "partnership" and insert "the
Minnesota Education Technology Task Force, representatives of school districts,"
Page
50, line 16, delete "June 1, 2012," and insert "December
1, 2008,"
Page
50, line 18, after "section" insert "and section
120B.023, subdivision 2, paragraph (a)"
Page
50, line 31, delete "include" and insert "includes"
Page
52, delete section 43
Page
52, line 30, after the period, insert "The group convened under this
section expires on June 30, 2009."
Page
53, line 11, delete "The" and insert "These"
Page
53, line 17, after the period, insert "The group convened under this
section expires June 30, 2011."
Page
54, line 5, after the period, insert "The group convened under this
section expires June 30, 2009."
Page
54, line 12, delete the period and before "The" insert "developed
in partnership with the Minnesota Department of Education."
Page
54, line 16, delete ", and developed in partnership with the Department
of Education"
Page
55, lines 6 and 25, delete "49" and insert "47"
Page
55, line 32, delete "48" and insert "46"
Page
57, delete line 35 and insert "(c) Members of the task force serve
without compensation."
Page
57, delete line 36
Page
58, delete line 1
Page
58, line 2, delete "members for task force activities."
Page
58, line 27, delete "Task force members' terms and other task force"
Page
58, delete lines 28 and 29
Page
58, line 30, delete everything before the period and insert "Members of
the task force serve without compensation"
Page
59, delete section 54
Page
69, line 6, after the semicolon, insert "and"
Page
69, line 8, delete "; and" and insert a period
Page
69, delete lines 9 and 10
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3367, A bill for an act relating to data practices; modifying provisions of
the open meeting law; providing for attorney fees; amending Minnesota Statutes
2006, sections 13D.05, subdivision 1; 13D.06, subdivision 4; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13D.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
2, line 5, reinstate the stricken language
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3456, A bill for an act relating to emergency management; authorizing
interstate assistance by local governments; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 192.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3564, A bill for an act relating to human services; amending child welfare
provisions; changing a standard of evidence; changing the treatment of certain
data; adopting a new Interstate Compact for the Placement of Children and
repealing the old compact; regulating child and adult adoptions; directing the
commissioner to adopt rules; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 13.02,
subdivision 3a; 13.46, by adding subdivisions; 13.82, subdivision 1; 245C.24,
subdivision 2; 245C.29, subdivision 2; 246.13, subdivision 2; 256.045,
subdivisions 3, 3b; 259.20, subdivision 1; 259.21, by adding a subdivision;
259.22, subdivision 2; 259.23, subdivision 2; 259.43; 259.52, subdivision 2;
259.53, subdivision 3; 259.59, subdivisions 1, 2; 259.67, subdivisions 2, 3, by
adding a subdivision; 259.75, subdivision 5; 259.89, subdivisions 1, 2, 4, by
adding a subdivision; 260.795, subdivision 3; 260C.001, subdivision 2;
260C.007, subdivisions 5, 6, 13; 260C.171, subdivision 2; 260C.178, subdivision
1; 260C.212, subdivision 7, by adding a subdivision; 260C.325, subdivisions 1,
3; 524.2-114; 626.556, subdivision 7; Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement,
sections 245C.14, subdivision 1; 245C.15, subdivisions 2, 3, 4; 245C.24,
subdivision 3; 245C.27, subdivision 1; 256.01, subdivision 2; 259.41,
subdivision 1; 259.57, subdivision 1; 259.67, subdivision 4; 260C.163,
subdivision 1; 260C.209, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding a subdivision; 260C.212,
subdivision 4; 626.556, subdivision 10a; Laws 2007, chapter 147, article 2,
section 56; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 259;
260; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 260.851; 260B.241; 260C.207;
Minnesota Rules, part 9560.0092.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, delete lines 25 and 26
Page
2, lines 9 to 11, delete the new language
Page
10, line 17, delete the new language
Page
21, line 12, delete everything after the period
Page
21, line 13, delete everything before "Adoption"
Page
24, delete section 32
Page
28, after line 4, insert:
"1. The interstate placement of a child in a
custody proceeding in which a public child placing agency is not a party,
provided, the placement is not intended to effectuate an adoption."
Page
28, line 5, delete "1." and insert "2."
Page
28, line 10, delete "2." and insert "3."
Page
28, line 18, delete "3." and insert "4."
Page
29, line 23, after the comma, insert "and in interstate placements in
which the public child placing agency is not a party to a custody proceeding"
Page
30, line 30, after "and" insert "immediate"
Page
30, line 31, delete the first "in" and insert "to
accompany"
Page
30, after line 35, insert:
"2. The appropriate consents or relinquishments
signed by the birth parents in accordance with the laws of the sending state,
or where permitted by the laws of the state where the adoption will be
finalized; and"
Page
31, line 1, delete "2." and insert "3." and
after "agent" insert "of a private adoption agency"
Page
31, line 4, delete "3." and insert "4."
Page
31, line 5, delete "4." and insert "5."
Page
44, line 31, strike everything after "care"
Page
44, line 32, strike everything before the semicolon
Page
45, line 15, strike "in placement according to" and insert "who
entered foster care under a"
Page
45, line 16, strike "release by" and insert "placement
agreement between" and after "parent" insert "and
the responsible social services agency"
Page
46, after line 7, insert:
"Sec.
37. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
260C.101, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd.
2. Jurisdiction
over other matters relating to children.
Except as provided in clause (d), the juvenile court has original and
exclusive jurisdiction in proceedings concerning:
(a)
The termination of parental rights to a child in accordance with the provisions
of sections 260C.301 to 260C.328.
(b)
The appointment and removal of a juvenile court guardian for a child, where
parental rights have been terminated under the provisions of sections 260C.301
to 260C.328.
(c)
Judicial consent to the marriage of a child when required by law.
(d)
The juvenile court in those counties in which the judge of the probate-juvenile
court has been admitted to the practice of law in this state shall proceed
under the laws relating to adoptions in all adoption matters. In those counties in which the judge of the
probate-juvenile court has not been admitted to the practice of law in this
state the district court shall proceed under the laws relating to adoptions in
all adoption matters.
(e) The review of the foster care status placement
of a child who has been placed is in a residential facility,
as defined in section 260C.212, subdivision 1, foster care pursuant
to a voluntary release by placement agreement between the child's
parent or parents and the responsible social services agency under section
260C.212, subdivision 8.
(f)
The review of voluntary foster care placement of a child for treatment under
chapter 260D according to the review requirements of that chapter.
Sec.
38. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 260C.141,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd.
2. Review
of foster care status. Except
for a child in foster care due solely to the child's developmental disability
or emotional disturbance, When a child continues in voluntary placement
foster care according to section 260C.212, subdivision 8, a petition
shall be filed alleging the child to be in need of protection or services or
seeking termination of parental rights or other permanent placement of the
child away from the parent within 90 days of the date of the voluntary
placement agreement. The petition shall
state the reasons why the child is in placement foster care, the
progress on the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212,
subdivision 1, and the statutory basis for the petition under section 260C.007,
subdivision 6, 260C.201, subdivision 11, or 260C.301.
(1) In
the case of a petition alleging the child to be in need of protection or
services filed under this paragraph, if all parties agree and the court finds
it is in the best interests of the child, the court may find the petition
states a prima facie case that:
(i)
the child's needs are being met;
(ii)
the placement of the child in foster care is in the best interests of the
child;
(iii)
reasonable efforts to reunify the child and the parent or guardian are being
made; and
(iv)
the child will be returned home in the next three months.
(2) If
the court makes findings under paragraph (1), the court shall approve the
voluntary arrangement and continue the matter for up to three more months to
ensure the child returns to the parents' home.
The responsible social services agency shall:
(i)
report to the court when the child returns home and the progress made by the
parent on the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212, in
which case the court shall dismiss jurisdiction;
(ii)
report to the court that the child has not returned home, in which case the
matter shall be returned to the court for further proceedings under section
260C.163; or
(iii)
if any party does not agree to continue the matter under this paragraph and
paragraph (1), the matter shall proceed under section 260C.163."
Page
51, after line 23, insert:
"Sec.
42. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
260C.205, is amended to read:
260C.205 DISPOSITIONS; VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE PLACEMENTS
FOR TREATMENT.
Unless
the court disposes of the petition under section 260C.141, subdivision 2, Upon a petition for
review of the foster care status of a by a parent or guardian under
section 260C.141, subdivision 1b, regarding a child in voluntary foster
care for treatment under chapter 260D, the court may:
(a) find that the child's needs
are not being met, in which case the court shall order the social services
agency or the parents to take whatever action is necessary and feasible to meet
the child's needs, including, when appropriate, the provision by the social
services agency of services to the parents which would enable the child to live
at home, and order a disposition under section 260C.201.
(b)
Find that the child has been abandoned by parents financially or emotionally,
or that the developmentally disabled child does not require out-of-home care
because of the disabling condition, in which case the court shall order the
social services agency to file an appropriate petition pursuant to section
260C.141, subdivision 1, or 260C.307.
(c)
When a child is in placement due solely to the child's developmental disability
or emotional disturbance and the court finds that there are compelling reasons
which permit the court to approve the continued voluntary placement of the
child and retain jurisdiction to conduct reviews as required under section
260C.141, subdivision 2, the court shall give the parent notice by registered
United States mail of the review requirements of section 260C.141, subdivision
2, in the event the child continues in placement 12 months or longer.
Nothing
in this section shall be construed to prohibit bringing a petition pursuant to
section 260C.141, subdivision 1 or 4, sooner than required by court order
pursuant to this section."
Page
53, after line 15, insert:
"Sec.
46. Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement,
section 260C.212, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision
1. Out-of-home
placement; plan. (a) An out-of-home
placement plan shall be prepared within 30 days after any child is placed in a
residential facility foster care by court order or by the a
voluntary release of the child by placement agreement between the
responsible social services agency and the child's parent or
parents pursuant to subdivision 8 or chapter 260D.
For
purposes of this section, a residential facility means any group home, family
foster home or other publicly supported out-of-home residential facility,
including any out-of-home residential facility under contract with the state,
county or other political subdivision, or any agency thereof, to provide those
services or foster care as defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 18.
(b) An
out-of-home placement plan means a written document which is prepared by the
responsible social services agency jointly with the parent or parents or
guardian of the child and in consultation with the child's guardian ad litem,
the child's tribe, if the child is an Indian child, the child's foster parent
or representative of the residential facility, and, where appropriate, the
child. For a child in placement due
solely or in part to the child's emotional disturbance voluntary foster
care for treatment under chapter 260D, preparation of the out-of-home
placement plan shall additionally include the child's mental health treatment
provider. As appropriate, the plan
shall be:
(1)
submitted to the court for approval under section 260C.178, subdivision 7;
(2)
ordered by the court, either as presented or modified after hearing, under
section 260C.178, subdivision 7, or 260C.201, subdivision 6; and
(3)
signed by the parent or parents or guardian of the child, the child's guardian
ad litem, a representative of the child's tribe, the responsible social
services agency, and, if possible, the child.
(c)
The out-of-home placement plan shall be explained to all persons involved in
its implementation, including the child who has signed the plan, and shall set
forth:
(1) a
description of the residential facility including how the out-of-home placement
plan is designed to achieve a safe placement for the child in the least
restrictive, most family-like, setting available which is in close proximity to
the home of the parent or parents or guardian of the child when the case plan
goal is reunification, and how the placement is consistent with the best
interests and special needs of the child according to the factors under
subdivision 2, paragraph (b);
(2)
the specific reasons for the placement of the child in a residential facility,
and when reunification is the plan, a description of the problems or conditions
in the home of the parent or parents which necessitated removal of the child
from home and the changes the parent or parents must make in order for the
child to safely return home;
(3) a
description of the services offered and provided to prevent removal of the
child from the home and to reunify the family including:
(i)
the specific actions to be taken by the parent or parents of the child to
eliminate or correct the problems or conditions identified in clause (2), and
the time period during which the actions are to be taken; and
(ii)
the reasonable efforts, or in the case of an Indian child, active efforts to be
made to achieve a safe and stable home for the child including social and other
supportive services to be provided or offered to the parent or parents or
guardian of the child, the child, and the residential facility during the
period the child is in the residential facility;
(4) a
description of any services or resources that were requested by the child or
the child's parent, guardian, foster parent, or custodian since the date of the
child's placement in the residential facility, and whether those services or
resources were provided and if not, the basis for the denial of the services or
resources;
(5)
the visitation plan for the parent or parents or guardian, other relatives as
defined in section 260C.007, subdivision 27, and siblings of the child if the
siblings are not placed together in the residential foster care
facility, and whether visitation is consistent with the best interest of the
child, during the period the child is in the residential facility
foster care;
(6)
documentation of steps to finalize the adoption or legal guardianship of the
child if the court has issued an order terminating the rights of both parents
of the child or of the only known, living parent of the child. At a minimum, the documentation must include
child-specific recruitment efforts such as relative search and the use of
state, regional, and national adoption exchanges to facilitate orderly and
timely placements in and outside of the state.
A copy of this documentation shall be provided to the court in the
review required under section 260C.317, subdivision 3, paragraph (b);
(7)
the health and educational records of the child including the most recent
information available regarding:
(i)
the names and addresses of the child's health and educational providers;
(ii)
the child's grade level performance;
(iii)
the child's school record;
(iv) assurances
that the child's placement in foster care takes into account proximity to the
school in which the child is enrolled at the time of placement;
(v) a
record of the child's immunizations;
(vi)
the child's known medical problems, including any known communicable diseases,
as defined in section 144.4172, subdivision 2;
(vii)
the child's medications; and
(viii)
any other relevant health and education information;
(8) an
independent living plan for a child age 16 or older who is in placement as a result
of a permanency disposition. The plan
should include, but not be limited to, the following objectives:
(i)
educational, vocational, or employment planning;
(ii)
health care planning and medical coverage;
(iii)
transportation including, where appropriate, assisting the child in obtaining a
driver's license;
(iv)
money management;
(v)
planning for housing;
(vi)
social and recreational skills; and
(vii)
establishing and maintaining connections with the child's family and community;
and
(9)
for a child in placement due solely or in part to the child's emotional
disturbance voluntary foster care for treatment under chapter 260D,
diagnostic and assessment information, specific services relating to meeting
the mental health care needs of the child, and treatment outcomes.
(d)
The parent or parents or guardian and the child each shall have the right to
legal counsel in the preparation of the case plan and shall be informed of the
right at the time of placement of the child.
The child shall also have the right to a guardian ad litem. If unable to employ counsel from their own
resources, the court shall appoint counsel upon the request of the parent or
parents or the child or the child's legal guardian. The parent or parents may also receive assistance from any person
or social services agency in preparation of the case plan.
After
the plan has been agreed upon by the parties involved or approved or ordered by
the court, the foster parents shall be fully informed of the provisions of the
case plan and shall be provided a copy of the plan.
Upon
discharge from foster care, the parent, adoptive parent, or permanent legal and
physical custodian, as appropriate, and the child, if appropriate, must be
provided with a current copy of the child's health and education record."
Page
53, line 19, strike "placement" and insert "foster care"
Page
54, line 19, strike "or parents"
Page
54, line 20, strike "a residential facility" and insert "foster
care" and strike "placement due"
Page
54, line 21, strike everything before the comma and insert "voluntary
foster care for treatment under chapter 260D"
Page
54, line 23, strike "residential care of" and strike
"child" and insert "child's placement in foster care"
Page
54, line 34, strike "residential" and insert "foster"
Page
55, line 5, strike "residential facility" and insert "foster
care"
Page
55, line 7, strike "who is not developmentally disabled or
emotionally"
Page
55, line 8, strike "disturbed" and insert "under subdivision
8"
Page
58, after line 36, insert:
"Sec.
50. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
260C.212, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd.
8. Review
of Voluntary placements foster care; required court review. Except for a child in placement due solely to the child's developmental
disability or emotional disturbance, if When the responsible social
services agency and the child's parent or guardian agree that the
child's safety, health, and best interests require that the child be in foster
care, the agency and the parent or guardian may enter into a voluntary
agreement for the placement of the child in foster care. The voluntary agreement must be in writing
and in a form approved by the commissioner.
When the child has been placed in a residential facility foster
care pursuant to a voluntary release by foster care agreement
between the agency and the parent or parents, under this
subdivision and the child is not returned home within 90 days after
initial placement in the residential facility foster care, the social
services agency responsible for the child's placement in foster
care shall:
(1)
return the child to the home of the parent or parents; or
(2)
file a petition according to section 260C.141, subdivision 1 or 2, which may:
(i)
ask the court to review the child's placement in foster care and
approve it as continued voluntary foster care for up to an additional 90
days;
(ii)
ask the court to order continued out-of-home placement foster care according
to sections 260C.178 and 260C.201; or
(iii)
ask the court to terminate parental rights under section 260C.301.
The
out-of-home placement plan must be updated and filed along with the petition.
If the
court approves continued out-of-home placement continuing the child
in foster care for up to 90 more days on a voluntary basis, at the end
of the court-approved 90-day period, the child must be returned to the parent's
home. If the child is not returned
home, the responsible social services agency must proceed on the petition filed
alleging the child in need of protection or services or the petition for
termination of parental rights or other permanent placement of the child away
from the parent. The court must find a
statutory basis to order the placement of the child under section 260C.178;
260C.201; or 260C.317."
Page
59, after line 28, insert:
"Sec.
53. [260D.001] CHILD IN VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE FOR TREATMENT.
(a)
Sections 260D.001 to 260D.301 may be cited as the "child in voluntary
foster care for treatment" provisions of the Juvenile Court Act.
(b)
The juvenile court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over a child in
voluntary foster care for treatment upon the filing of a report or petition
required under this chapter. All
obligations of the agency to a child and family in foster care contained in
chapter 260C not inconsistent with this chapter are also obligations of the
agency with regard to a child in foster care for treatment under this chapter.
(c)
This chapter shall be construed consistently with the mission of the children's
mental health service system as set out in section 245.487, subdivision 3, and
the duties of an agency under section 256B.092 and Minnesota Rules, parts
9525.0004 to 9525.0016, to meet the needs of a child with a developmental
disability or related condition. This
chapter:
(1)
establishes voluntary foster care through a voluntary foster care agreement as
the means for an agency and a parent to provide needed treatment when the child
must be in foster care to receive necessary treatment for an emotional
disturbance or developmental disability or related condition;
(2)
establishes court review requirements for a child in voluntary foster care for
treatment due to emotional disturbance or developmental disability or a related
condition;
(3)
establishes the ongoing responsibility of the parent as legal custodian to
visit the child, to plan together with the agency for the child's treatment
needs, to be available and accessible to the agency to make treatment
decisions, and to obtain necessary medical, dental, and other care for the
child; and
(4)
applies to voluntary foster care when the child's parent and the agency agree
that the child's treatment needs require foster care either:
(i)
due to a level of care determination by the agency's screening team informed by
the diagnostic and functional assessment under section 245.4885; or
(ii)
due to a determination regarding the level of services needed by the
responsible social services' screening team under section 256B.092 and
Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0016.
(d)
This chapter does not apply when there is a current determination under section
626.556 that the child requires child protective services or when the child is
in foster care for any reason other than treatment for the child's emotional
disturbance or developmental disability or related condition. When there is a determination under section
626.556 that the child requires child protective services based on an
assessment that there are safety and risk issues for the child that have not
been mitigated through the parent's engagement in services or otherwise, or
when the child is in foster care for any reason other than the child's
emotional disturbance or developmental disability or related condition, the
provisions of chapter 260C apply.
(e)
The paramount consideration in all proceedings concerning a child in voluntary
foster care for treatment is the safety, health, and best interests of the
child. The purpose of this chapter is:
(1)
to ensure a child with a disability is provided the services necessary to treat
or ameliorate the symptoms of the child's disability;
(2)
to preserve and strengthen the child's family ties whenever possible and in the
child's best interests, approving the child's placement away from the child's
parents only when the child's need for care or treatment requires it, and the
child cannot be maintained in the home of the parent; and
(3)
to ensure the child's parent retains legal custody of the child and associated
decision-making authority unless the child's parent willfully fails or is
unable to make decisions that meet the child's safety, health, and best
interests. The court may not find the
parent willfully fails or is unable to make decisions that meet the child's
needs solely because the parent disagrees with the agency's choice of foster
care facility, unless the agency files a petition under chapter 260C, and
establishes by clear and convincing evidence that the child is in need of
protection or services.
(f)
The legal parent-child relationship shall be supported under this chapter by
maintaining the parent's legal authority and responsibility for ongoing
planning for the child and by the agency's assisting the parent, where
necessary, to exercise the parent's ongoing right and obligation to visit or to
have reasonable contact with the child.
Ongoing planning means:
(1)
actively participating in the planning and provision of educational services,
medical care, and dental care for the child;
(2)
actively planning and participating with the agency and the foster care
facility for the child's treatment needs; and
(3)
planning to meet the child's need for safety, stability, and permanency, and
the child's need to stay connected to the child's family and community.
(g)
The provisions of section 260.012 to ensure placement prevention, family
reunification, and all active and reasonable effort requirements of that
section apply. This chapter shall be
construed consistently with the requirements of the Indian Child Welfare Act of
1978, United States Code, title 25, section 1901, et al, and the provisions of
the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act, sections 260.071 to 260.835.
Sec.
54. [260D.005] DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision
1. Definitions. The definitions in this section
supplement the definitions in section 260C.007. The definitions in section 260C.007 apply to this chapter and
have the same meaning for purposes of this chapter as for chapter 260C.
Subd.
2. Agency. "Agency" means the responsible
social services agency or a licensed child-placing agency.
Subd.
3. Case
plan. "Case plan"
means any plan for the delivery of services to a child and parent, or when
reunification is not required, the child alone, that is developed according to
the requirements of sections 245.4871, subdivision 19 or 21; 245.492,
subdivision 16; 256B.092; 260C.212, subdivision 1; 626.556, subdivision 10; and
Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0016.
Subd.
4. Child. "Child" means an individual
under 18 years of age.
Subd.
5. Child
in voluntary foster care for treatment. "Child in voluntary foster care for treatment" means
a child who is emotionally disturbed or developmentally disabled or has a
related condition and is in foster care under a voluntary foster care agreement
between the child's parent and the agency due to concurrence between the agency
and the parent that the child's level of care requires placement in foster care
either:
(1)
due to a determination by the agency's screening team based on its review of
the diagnostic and functional assessment under section 245.4885; or
(2)
due to a determination by the agency's screening team under section 256B.092
and Minnesota Rules, parts 9525.0004 to 9525.0016.
A
child is not in voluntary foster care for treatment under this chapter when
there is a current determination under section 626.556 that the child requires
child protective services or when the child is in foster care for any reason
other than the child's emotional or developmental disability or related
condition.
Subd.
6. Compelling
reasons. "Compelling
reasons" has the same meaning given in section 260C.007, subdivision
8. The agency may determine compelling
reasons when the child is in foster care for treatment and no grounds to
terminate parental rights exist because the child must be in placement to access
treatment, the child's individual treatment needs cannot be met in the childs'
home or through community-based care, and the parent continues to be
responsible for planning together with the agency for the child's needs and
maintains appropriate contact with the child.
Subd.
7. Court. "Court" means juvenile court
unless otherwise specified in this section.
Subd.
8. Development
disability. "Developmental
disability" means developmental disability as defined in United States
Code, title 42, section 6001(8).
Subd.
9. Emotionally
disturbed or emotional disturbance.
"Emotionally disturbed" or "emotional
disturbance" means emotional disturbance as described in section 245.4871,
subdivision 15.
Subd.
10. Foster
care. "Foster
care" means 24-hour substitute care for children placed away from their
parents and for whom an agency has placement and care responsibility. Foster care includes, but is not limited to,
placement in foster family homes, foster homes of relatives, group homes,
emergency shelters, residential facilities not
excluded in this subdivision, child care institutions, and preadoptive
homes. A child is in foster care under
this definition, regardless of whether the facility is licensed and payments
are made for the cost of care. Nothing
in this
definition creates any authority to place a child in a
home or facility that is required to be licensed that is not licensed. Foster care does not include placement in
any of the following facilities: hospitals,
inpatient chemical dependency treatment facilities, facilities that are
primarily for delinquent children, any corrections facility or program within a
particular corrections facility not meeting requirements for Title IV-E
facilities as determined by the commissioner, facilities to which a child is
committed under the provision of chapter 253B, forestry camps, or jails.
Subd.
11. Legal
authority to place the child. "Legal
authority to place the child" means the agency has legal responsibility
for the care and control of the child while the child is in foster care. The agency may acquire legal authority to
place a child through a voluntary placement agreement between the agency and
the child's parent under this chapter.
Legal authority to place the child does not mean the agency has
authority to make major life decisions regarding the child, including major
medical decisions. A parent with legal
custody of the child continues to have legal authority to make major life
decisions regarding the child, including major medical decisions.
Subd.
12. Minor. "Minor" means an individual
under 18 years of age.
Subd.
13. Parent. "Parent" means the birth or
adoptive parent of a minor. Parent also
means the child's legal guardian or any individual who has legal authority to
make decisions and plans for the child.
For an Indian child, parent includes any Indian person who has adopted a
child by tribal law or custom, as provided in section 260.755, subdivision 14.
Subd. 14. Reasonable efforts to
finalize a permanent plan for the child. "Reasonable efforts to finalize a permanent plan for the
child" has the same meaning under this chapter as provided in section
260.012, paragraph (e).
Sec.
55. [260D.101] VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE.
Subdivision
1. Voluntary
foster care. When the
agency's screening team, based upon the diagnostic and functional assessment
under section 245.4885 or 256B.092, subdivision 7, determines the child's need
for treatment due to emotional disturbance or developmental disability or
related condition requires foster care placement of the child, a voluntary foster
care agreement between the child's parent and the agency gives the agency legal
authority to place the child in foster care.
Subd.
2. Voluntary
foster care agreement. A
voluntary foster care agreement shall be used to provide the agency the legal
authority to place a child in foster care for treatment due to the child's
disability. The agreement must be in
writing and signed by both the child's parent and the agency. The agreement must be in a form approved by
the commissioner of human services, and shall contain notice to parents of the
consequences to the parent and to the child of being in voluntary foster care.
Sec.
56. [260D.102] REQUIRED INFORMATION FOR CHILD IN VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE
FOR TREATMENT.
An
agency with authority to place a child in voluntary foster care for treatment
due to emotional disturbance or developmental disability or related condition
shall inform the child age 12 or older of the following:
(a)
The child has the right to be consulted in the preparation of the out-of-home
placement plan required under section 260C.212, subdivision 1, and the
administrative review required under section 260C.212, subdivision 7.
(b)
The child has the right to visit the parent and the right to visit the child's
siblings as determined safe and appropriate by the parent and the agency.
(c)
If the child disagrees with the foster care facility or services provided under
the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212, subdivision 1,
the agency shall include information about the nature of the child's
disagreement and, to the extent possible, the agency's understanding of the
basis of the child's disagreement in the information provided to the court in
the report required under section 260D.105.
(d)
The child has the rights established under Minnesota Rules, part 2960.0050, as
a resident of a facility licensed by the state.
Sec.
57. [260D.103] ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW OF CHILD IN VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE
FOR TREATMENT.
The
administrative reviews required under section 260C.212, subdivision 7, must be
conducted for a child in voluntary foster care for treatment, except that the
initial administrative review must take place prior to the submission of the
report to the court required under section 260D.105, subdivision 2.
Sec.
58. [260D.105] AGENCY REPORT TO THE COURT AND COURT REVIEW OF CHILD IN
VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE FOR TREATMENT DUE TO DISABILITY.
Subdivision
1. Judicial
review. In the case of a
child in voluntary foster care for treatment due to disability under section
260D.101, the agency shall obtain judicial review of the child's voluntary
foster care placement within 165 days of the placement.
Subd.
2. Agency
report to court; court review. The
agency shall obtain judicial review by reporting to the court according to the
following procedures:
(a)
A written report shall be forwarded to the court within 165 days of the date of
the voluntary placement agreement. The
written report shall contain or have attached:
(1)
a statement of facts that necessitate the child's foster care placement;
(2)
the child's name, date of birth, race, gender, and current address;
(3)
the names, race, date of birth, residence, and post office addresses of the
child's parents or legal custodian;
(4)
a statement regarding the child's eligibility for membership or enrollment in
an Indian tribe and the agency's compliance with applicable provisions of
sections 260.751 to 260.835;
(5)
the names and addresses of the foster parents or chief administrator of the
facility in which the child is placed, if the child is not in a family foster
home or group home;
(6)
a copy of the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212,
subdivision 1;
(7)
a written summary of the proceedings of any administrative review required
under section 260C.212, subdivision 7; and
(8)
any other information the agency, parent or legal custodian, child or foster
parent, or other residential facility wants the court to consider.
(b)
In the case of a child in placement due to emotional disturbance, the written
report shall include as an attachment the child's individual treatment plan
developed by the child's treatment professional, as provided in section
245.4871, subdivision 21, or the child's individual interagency intervention
plan, as provided in section 125A.023, subdivision 3, paragraph (c).
(c)
In the case of a child in placement due to developmental disability or a
related condition, the written report shall include as an attachment the
child's individual service plan, as provided in section 256B.092, subdivision
1b; the child's individual program plan, as provided in Minnesota Rules, part
9525.0004, subpart 11; the child's waiver care plan; or the child's individual
interagency intervention plan, as provided in section 125A.023, subdivision 3,
paragraph (c).
(d)
The agency must inform the child age 12 or older, the child's parent, and the
foster parent or foster care facility of the reporting and court review
requirements of this section and of their right to submit information to the
court:
(1)
if the child or the child's parent or the foster care provider wants to send
information to the court, the agency shall advise those persons of the
reporting date and the date by which the agency must receive the information
they want forwarded to the court so the agency is timely able to submit it with
the agency's report required under this subdivision;
(2)
the agency must also inform the child age 12 or older, the child's parent, and
the foster care facility that they have the right to be heard in person by the court
and how to exercise that right;
(3)
the agency must also inform the child age 12 or older, the child's parent, and
the foster care provider that an in-court hearing will be held if requested by
the child, the parent, or the foster care provider; and
(4)
if, at the time required for the report under this section, a child age 12 or
older disagrees about the foster care facility or services provided under the
out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212, subdivision 1, the
agency shall include information regarding the child's disagreement, and to the
extent possible, the basis for the child's disagreement in the report required
under this section.
(e)
After receiving the required report, the court has jurisdiction to make the
following determinations and must do so within ten days of receiving the
forwarded report, whether a hearing is requested:
(1)
whether the voluntary foster care arrangement is in the child's best interests;
(2)
whether the parent and agency are appropriately planning for the child; and
(3)
in the case of a child age 12 or older who disagrees with the foster care
facility or services provided under the out-of-home placement plan, whether it
is appropriate to appoint counsel and a guardian ad litem for the child using
standards and procedures under section 260C.163.
(f)
Unless requested by a parent, representative of the foster care facility, or
the child, no in-court hearing is required in order for the court to make
findings and issue an order as required in paragraph (e).
(g)
If the court finds that the voluntary foster care arrangement is in the child's
best interests and that the agency and parent are appropriately planning for
the child, the court shall issue an order containing explicit, individualized
findings to support its determination.
The individualized findings shall be based on the agency's written
report and other materials submitted to the court. The court may make this determination notwithstanding the child's
disagreement, if any, reported under paragraph (d).
(h)
The court shall send a copy of the order to the county attorney, agency,
parent, child age 12 or older, and foster parent or foster care facility.
(i)
The court shall also send the parent, child age 12 or older, foster parent, or
representative of the foster care facility notice of the permanency review
hearing required under section 260D.107, paragraph (e).
(j)
If the court finds continuing the voluntary foster care arrangement is not in
the child's best interests or that the agency or the parent are not
appropriately planning for the child, the court shall notify the agency,
parent, foster parent or foster care facility, child age 12 or older, and
county attorney of the court's determinations and the basis for the court's
determinations. In this case, the court
shall set the matter for hearing and appoint a guardian ad litem for the child
under section 260C.163, subdivision 5.
Sec.
59. [260D.107] REQUIRED PERMANENCY REVIEW HEARING.
(a)
When the court has found that the voluntary arrangement is in the child's best
interests and that the agency and parent are appropriately planning for the
child pursuant to the report submitted under section 260D.105, and the child
continues in voluntary foster care as defined in section 260D.007, subdivision
10, for 13 months from the date of the voluntary foster care agreement, or has
been in placement for 15 of the last 22 months, the agency must:
(1)
terminate the voluntary foster care agreement and return the child home;
(2)
determine whether there are compelling reasons to continue the voluntary foster
care arrangement and, if the agency determines there are compelling reasons,
seek judicial approval if its determination; or
(3)
file a petition for the termination of parental rights.
(b)
When the agency is asking for the court's approval of its determination that
there are compelling reasons to continue the child in the voluntary foster care
arrangement, the agency shall file a "Petition for Permanency Review
Regarding a Child in Voluntary Foster Care for Treatment" and ask the
court to proceed under this section.
(c)
The "Petition for Permanency Review Regarding a Child in Voluntary Foster
Care for Treatment" shall be drafted or approved by the county attorney
and be under oath. The petition shall
include:
(1)
the date of the voluntary placement agreement;
(2)
whether the petition is due to the child's developmental disability or
emotional disturbance;
(3)
the plan for the ongoing care of the child and the parent's participation in
the plan;
(4)
a description of the parent's visitation and contact with the child;
(5)
the date of the court finding that the foster care placement was in the best
interests of the child, if required under section 260D.105, or the date the
agency filed the motion under section 260D.201, paragraph (b);
(6)
the agency's reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child,
including returning the child to the care of the child's family; and
(7)
a citation to this chapter as the basis for the petition.
(d)
An updated copy of the out-of-home placement plan required under section
260C.212, subdivision 1, shall be filed with the petition.
(e)
The court shall set the date for the permanency review hearing no later than 14
months after the child has been in placement or within 30 days of the petition
filing date when the child has been in placement 15 of the last 22 months. The court shall serve the petition together
with a notice of hearing by United States mail on the parent; the child age 12
or older; the child's guardian ad litem, if one has been appointed; the agency;
the county attorney; and counsel for any party.
(f)
The court shall conduct the permanency review hearing on the petition no later
than 14 months after the date of the voluntary placement agreement, within 30
days of the filing of the petition when the child has been in placement 15 of
the last 22 months, or within 15 days of a motion to terminate jurisdiction and
to dismiss an order for foster care under chapter 260C, as provided in section
260D.201, paragraph (b).
(g)
At the permanency review hearing, the court shall:
(1)
inquire of the parent if the parent has reviewed the "Petition for
Permanency Review Regarding a Child in Voluntary Foster Care for
Treatment," whether the petition is accurate, and whether the parent
agrees to the continued voluntary foster care arrangement as being in the
child's best interests;
(2)
inquire of the parent if the parent is satisfied with the agency's reasonable
efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child, including whether there
are services available and accessible to the parent that might allow the child
to safely be with the child's family;
(3)
inquire of the parent if the parent consents to the court entering an order
that:
(i)
approves the responsible agency's reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent
plan for the child, which includes ongoing future planning for the safety,
health, and best interests of the child; and
(ii)
approves the responsible agency's determination that there are compelling
reasons why the continued voluntary foster care arrangement is in the child's
best interests;
(4)
inquire of the child's guardian ad litem and any other party whether the
guardian or the party agrees that:
(i)
the court should approve the responsible agency's reasonable efforts to
finalize the permanent plan for the child, which includes ongoing and future
planning for the safety, health, and best interests of the child; and
(ii)
the court should approve of the responsible agency's determination that there
are compelling reasons why the continued voluntary foster care arrangement is
in the child's best interests.
(h)
At a permanency review hearing under this section, the court may take the
following actions based on the contents of the sworn petition and the consent
of the parent:
(1)
approve the agency's compelling reasons that the voluntary foster care
arrangement is in the best interests of the child; and
(2)
find that the agency has made reasonable efforts to finalize the permanent plan
for the child.
(i)
A child age 12 or older may object to the agency's request that the court
approve its compelling reasons for the continued voluntary arrangement and may
be heard on the reasons for the objection.
Notwithstanding the child's objection, the court may approve the
agency's compelling reasons and the voluntary arrangement.
(j)
If the court does not approve the voluntary arrangement after hearing from the
child or the child's guardian ad litem, the court shall dismiss the
petition. In this case, either:
(1)
the child must be returned to the care of the parent; or
(2)
the agency must file a petition under section 260C.141 asking for appropriate
relief under section 260C.201, subdivision 11, or 260C.301.
(k)
When the court approves the agency's compelling reasons for the child to
continue in voluntary foster care for treatment, and finds that the agency has
made reasonable efforts to finalize a permanent plan for the child, the court
shall approve the continued voluntary foster care arrangement, and continue the
matter under the court's jurisdiction for the purposes of reviewing the child's
placement every 12 months while the child is in foster care.
(l)
A finding that the court approves the continued voluntary placement means the
agency has continued legal authority to place the child while a voluntary
placement agreement remains in effect.
The parent or the agency may terminate a voluntary agreement as provided
in section 260D.301. Termination of a
voluntary foster care placement of an Indian child is governed by section
260.765, subdivision 4.
Sec.
60. [260D.109] ANNUAL REVIEW.
(a)
After the court conducts a permanency review hearing under section 260D.107,
the matter must be returned to the court for further review of the child's foster
care placement at least every 12 months while the child is in foster care. The court shall give notice to the parent
and child age 12 or older and the foster parents of the continued review
requirements under this section at the permanency review hearing.
(b)
Every 12 months, the court shall determine whether the agency made reasonable
efforts to finalize the permanent plan for the child, which means the exercise
of due diligence by the agency to:
(1)
ensure that the agreement for voluntary foster care is the most appropriate
legal arrangement to meet the child's safety, health, and best interests;
(2)
engage and support the parent in continued involvement in planning and decision
making for the needs of the child;
(3)
strengthen the child's ties to the parent, relatives, and community;
(4)
implement the out-of-home placement plan required under section 260C.212,
subdivision 1, and ensure that the plan requires the provision of appropriate
services to address the physical health, mental health, and educational needs
of the child; and
(5)
ensure appropriate planning for the child's safe, permanent, and independent
living arrangement after the child's 18th birthday.
Sec.
61. [260D.201] PERMANENCY REVIEW AFTER ADJUDICATION UNDER CHAPTER 260C.
(a)
If a child has been ordered into foster care under section 260C.178 or
260C.201, subdivision 1, and the conditions that led to the court's order have
been corrected so that the child could safely return home, except for the
child's need to continue in foster care for treatment due to the child's
disability, the child's parent and the agency may enter into a voluntary foster
care agreement under this chapter using the procedure described in paragraph
(b).
(b)
When the agency and the parent agree to enter into a voluntary foster care
agreement under this chapter, the agency must file a motion to terminate
jurisdiction under section 260C.193, subdivision 6, and to dismiss the order
for foster care under section 260C.178 or 260C.201, subdivision 1, together with
the petition required under section 260D.107, paragraph (b), for permanency
review and the court's approval of the voluntary arrangement.
(c)
The court shall send the motion and the petition filed under subdivision 2
together with a notice of hearing by mail as required in section 260D.107,
paragraph (e).
(d)
The petition and motion under this section must be filed no later than the time
the agency is required to file a petition for permanent placement under section
260C.201, subdivision 11, but may be filed as soon as the agency and the parent
agree that the child should remain in foster care under a voluntary foster care
agreement, because the child needs treatment and voluntary foster care is in
the child's best interests.
(e)
In order for the agency to have continuous legal authority to place the child,
the parent and the agency must execute a voluntary foster care agreement for
the child's continuation in foster care for treatment prior to the termination
of the order for foster care under section 260C.178 or 260C.201, subdivision
1. The parent and agency may execute
the voluntary foster care agreement at or before the permanency review hearing
required under this section. The
voluntary foster care agreement shall not be effective until the court
terminates jurisdiction under section 260C.193, subdivision 6, and dismisses
the order for foster care under section 260C.178 or 260C.201, subdivision
1. Unless the agency and the parent
execute a voluntary placement agreement for the child to continue in voluntary
foster care for treatment, the agency shall not have legal authority to place
the child after the court terminates jurisdiction under chapter 260C.
Sec.
62. [260D.301] TERMINATION OF VOLUNTARY PLACEMENT AGREEMENT.
(a)
The child's parent may terminate a voluntary placement agreement under this
chapter upon written notice to the agency of the termination of the
agreement. The termination of a
voluntary foster care agreement regarding an Indian child shall be governed by
section 260.765, subdivision 4.
(b)
The agency may terminate a voluntary placement agreement under this section
upon written notice of the termination of the agreement to the parent. Prior to sending notice of termination of
the voluntary foster care placement agreement, the agency shall contact the
parent regarding transition planning under paragraph (e). Written notice by the agency shall be
considered received by the parent three business days after mailing by the
agency.
(c)
Upon receipt of notice of the termination of the voluntary foster care
agreement, the agency, the parent, and the facility may agree to a time that
the child shall return home. The
scheduled time to return home shall meet the child's need for safety and reasonable
transition. Unless otherwise agreed to
by the parent and the agency, the child's return home shall not occur sooner
than 72 hours and not later than 30 days after written notice of termination is
received or sent by the agency.
(d)
A parent who disagrees with the termination of a voluntary foster care
agreement by the agency under this chapter has the right to a fair hearing
under section 256.045 to appeal the termination of the voluntary foster care
agreement. When the agency gives
written notice to the parent of the termination of the agreement, the agency
must also give the parent notice of the parent's right to a fair hearing under
section 256.045 to appeal the agency's decision to terminate the voluntary
foster care agreement.
(e)
The agency and the child's parents shall engage in transition planning for the
child's return home, including establishing a scheduled time for the child to
return home, an increased visitation plan between the parent and child, and a
plan for what services will be provided and in place upon the child's return
home.
(f)
Notice of termination of voluntary foster care agreement does not terminate the
agreement. The voluntary foster care
agreement and the agency's legal authority to place the child are terminated by
the child's return home or by court order."
Page
62, delete article 2
Renumber
the sections in sequence and correct the internal references
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 3, delete everything after the first semicolon and insert
"adopting a"
Page
1, line 5, delete everything after the second semicolon
Page
1, line 6, delete "adopt rules;" and insert "regulating
voluntary foster care for treatment;"
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3569, A bill for an act relating to workers' health; directing the
University of Minnesota to study workers' health including lung health;
appropriating money.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. APPROPRIATION;
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA WORKERS' HEALTH STUDY.
(a)
$4,900,000 in fiscal year 2008 is appropriated from the workers' compensation
special fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 176.129, to the Board of Regents
of the University of Minnesota for the purposes of this section. Notwithstanding section 176.129, subdivision
6, the appropriation must be used for a study of workers' health. The study must include a comprehensive
science and evidence-based study of workers' lung health. The university, as the lead agency, must
develop, conduct and coordinate the study in partnership with the Department of
Health, the Department of Natural Resources, the Pollution Control Agency,
business and industry, local health providers and organizations, other affected
groups, and other state, federal, and local agencies. This is a onetime appropriation that does not cancel and is
available until expended.
(b)
At a minimum, the study funded under this section must include
industry-specific worker mortality and morbidity studies, clinical disease
studies, exposure assessments, case-control screening of current and former
workers, and environmental studies that assess health impacts on workers and
communities. The university must begin
the studies in 2008 and complete them no later than 2013. The university, in conjunction with its
partners in the workers' health study, must report annually to the committees
of the legislature with responsibility for health and workers' safety until the
study is completed. Each annual report
must present the preliminary findings of the workers' health studies and
recommendations based on those findings."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to workers' health; directing the University of
Minnesota to study workers' health including lung health; appropriating
money."
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.
Atkins
from the Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3610, A bill for an act relating to health; regulating medical debt
information; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325E.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. [325E.45]
MINNESOTA MEDICAL PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT.
Subdivision
1. Citation. This section may be cited as the
"Minnesota Medical Privacy Protection Act."
Subd.
2. Findings. The legislature finds and declares that
the protection of financial and medical debt information of patients, and the
provision of health care services, products, or devices to patients, is an
important objective of the government of this state. The legislature also finds and declares that medical debt
incurred by patients should not prevent patients from receiving health care
services, products, or devices from health care providers that accept medical
assistance. Therefore, the legislature
finds and declares that it is in the public interest to ensure that health care
providers that accept medical assistance do not unnecessarily disclose an
individual patient's financial or medical debt information to another entity,
and that such health care providers do not obtain or use information from any
entity that gathers, maintains, evaluates, or distributes individual patient
financial or debt information until after health care services, products, or
devices have been provided by the health care provider to the patient.
Subd.
3. Purpose. The legislature declares it to be the
purpose of this section to protect a patient's financial and medical debt
information and to ensure the provision of health care services, products, or
devices despite a patient's medical debt.
Subd.
4. Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the
terms defined in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(a)
"Health care provider" has the meaning given in section 62J.03,
subdivision 8, but does not include a "housing with services
establishment," as defined in section 144D.01, subdivision 4; an entity
providing assisted living services, as described in section 144G.01; or an
entity licensed as a boarding care home under sections 144.50 to 144.56.
(b)
"Medical debt information" means any information relating to the
payment history or indebtedness of a patient regarding health care services,
products, or devices provided by a health care provider to a patient.
Subd.
5. Prohibited
conduct. A health care
provider shall not disclose an individual patient's financial or medical debt
information to another entity.
A
health care provider shall not obtain or use information from any entity that
gathers, maintains, evaluates, or distributes individual patient financial or
debt information until after health care services, products, or devices have
been provided by the health care provider to the patient.
Subd.
6. General
exclusions. Nothing in this
section prevents a health care provider from sharing an individual patient's
financial or medical debt information with the patient; the patient's insurer;
the patient's authorized third-party debt management services provider as
defined in section 332A.02; a third-party debt collector as defined in section
332.31, that the health care provider has contracted to collect the patient's
medical debt; an attorney, accountant, or auditor employed by or acting on
behalf of the health care provider; or the local, county, state, or federal
government as required by law. Nothing
in this section prevents a health care provider from disclosing a court
judgment obtained by the provider.
Nothing in this section prevents a health care provider from discussing
payment options or insurance coverage with a patient. This section only applies to medically necessary health care
services, products, or devices and not to cosmetic procedures without any
medical necessity.
Subd.
7. Severability
clause. Each provision of
this section is severable. Application
of any provision in this section to a particular circumstance is
severable. If any provision of this
section or application of a provision of this section is found to be contrary
to law and unenforceable, the remaining provisions and applications of this
section shall remain valid and enforceable under section 645.20.
Subd.
8. Enforcement. This section may be enforced pursuant to
section 8.31.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to health; regulating medical debt information;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325E."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3670, A bill for an act relating to public safety; requiring screening of
certain defendants in criminal cases for posttraumatic stress disorder;
authorizing mitigated dispositions for certain offenders suffering from
posttraumatic stress disorder who receive treatment; requiring legislative
reports and the collection of summary data; requiring the preparation and
distribution of an informational pamphlet; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 609.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
609.115, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
10. Veterans;
mental health status. (a)
When a defendant is convicted of a crime, the court shall inquire whether the
defendant is a veteran of the armed forces of the United States.
(b)
If the defendant is a veteran and has been diagnosed with a mental illness by a
qualified psychiatrist or clinical psychologist or physician, the court may:
(1)
order that the officer preparing the report under subdivision 1 consult with
the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Minnesota Department of
Veterans Affairs, or another agency or person with suitable knowledge or
experience, for the purpose of providing the court with information regarding
treatment options available to the defendant as a veteran including federal,
state, and local programming; and
(2)
consider the treatment recommendations of any diagnosing or treating mental
health professionals together with the treatment options available to the
defendant as a veteran in imposing sentence."
Delete
the title and insert:
"A
bill for an act relating to public safety; requiring the court to inquire as to
whether a convicted defendant is a veteran; authorizing consultation with
federal and state veterans affairs regarding mental health treatment options
during presentence investigations; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
609.115, by adding a subdivision."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Atkins
from the Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3774, A bill for an act relating to commerce; clarifying the application of
the Minnesota Residential Mortgage Originator and Servicer Licensing Act;
clarifying the investment authority of certain insurers; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, sections 58.02, subdivisions 18, 21; 60A.11, subdivision 9.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, after line 18, insert:
"Sec.
3. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
58.14, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd.
3. Documentation
and resolution of complaints. A
licensee or exempt person must investigate and attempt to resolve complaints
made regarding acts or practices subject to the provisions of this
chapter. If a complaint is received in
writing, the licensee or exempt person must maintain a file containing all
materials relating to the complaint and subsequent investigation for a period
of 26 60 months.
Sec.
4. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
58.14, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd.
4. Trust
account records for mortgage originators.
A residential mortgage originator shall keep and maintain for 26
60 months a record of all trust funds, sufficient to identify the
transaction, date and source of receipt, and date and identification of
disbursement.
Sec.
5. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
58.14, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd.
5. Record
retention. A licensee or exempt
person must keep and maintain for 26 60 months the business
records, including advertisements, regarding residential mortgage loans applied
for, originated, or serviced in the course of its business."
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 3, before the semicolon, insert "and modifying records retention
periods"
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Hilstrom
from the Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs to which was
referred:
H. F.
No. 3792, A bill for an act relating to commuter rail; clarifying the
commissioner of transportation's authority; providing for the operation and
maintenance of commuter rail lines located in whole or in part within the
metropolitan area; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters
174; 473.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, delete section 1 and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
174.82, is amended to read:
174.82 COMMUTER RAIL; COMMISSIONER'S DUTIES; CONTRACTS;
LIABILITIES, RIGHTS, AND FINANCIAL CONSIDERATIONS.
(a)
The
planning, development, construction, operation, and maintenance of commuter
rail track, facilities, and services are governmental functions, serve a public
purpose, and are a matter of public necessity.
The commissioner shall be responsible for all aspects of planning,
developing, constructing, operating, and maintaining commuter rail, including
system planning, advanced corridor planning, preliminary engineering, final
design, construction, negotiating with railroads, and developing financial and
operating plans. The commissioner
may exercise the powers granted in this chapter, as necessary, to plan, design,
acquire, construct, and equip commuter rail facilities. The commissioner may enter into a
memorandum of understanding or agreement with a public or private entity,
including a regional railroad authority, a joint powers board, and a railroad,
to carry out these activities.
(b)
The
commissioner, or a public entity contracting with the
commissioner, or the Metropolitan Council under section 473.4057, may
contract with a railroad that is a Class I railroad under federal law for the
joint or shared use of the railroad's right-of-way or the construction,
operation, or maintenance of rail track, facilities, or services for commuter
rail purposes. Notwithstanding section
3.732, subdivision 1, clause (2), or section 466.01, subdivision 6, sections
466.04 and 466.06 govern the liability of the Class I railroad and its
employees arising from the joint or shared use of the railroad right-of-way or
the provision of commuter rail construction, operation, or maintenance services
pursuant to the contract.
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a contract with the Class I
railroad for any commuter rail service, or joint or shared use of the
railroad's right-of-way, may also provide for the allocation of financial
responsibility, indemnification, and the procurement of insurance for the
parties for all types of claims or damages.
A contract entered into under this section does not affect rights of
employees under the Federal Employers Liability Act or the federal Railway
Labor Act."
Page
2, line 9, delete "describes a result intended in the" and
insert "has the meaning given in section 16C.02, subdivisions 4 and 4a."
Page
2, delete lines 10 to 12
Page
2, line 13, delete "performance."
Page
3, line 1, delete "Except for those provisions that provide"
Page
3, delete line 2
Page
3, line 3, delete "commuter rail," and after "174.82"
insert ", paragraph (b),"
Page
3, after line 7, insert:
"Subd.
9. Rights of employees.
A contract entered into under subdivisions 1 to 9 does not affect the
rights of employees under the Federal Employers Liability Act or the Railway
Labor Act."
Page
3, line 8, before the period, insert "and applies in the counties of
Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington"
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Finance.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3793, A bill for an act relating to education; clarifying a student policy
on cooperating and providing educators with information about school matters;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 121A.55.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
2, line 4, after "matters" insert ", consistent with
the due process provisions of the Pupil Fair Dismissal Act"
Page
2, line 6, delete "to the school administrator that" and
insert "that the school administrator reasonably believes"
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Hilstrom
from the Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs to which was
referred:
H. F.
No. 3812, A bill for an act relating to health; requiring public pools and spas
to be equipped with anti-entrapment devices or systems; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, sections 144.1222, subdivision 1a, by adding subdivisions;
157.16, as amended.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
3, delete lines 9 to 11 and insert:
"(b)
If at any time an outlet cover or grate is missing, broken, or loose, the pool
must be closed immediately. The pool
may not open until the missing or broken cover or grate has been replaced
according to the manufacturer's specifications, or the loose cover or grate has
been reattached according to the manufacturer's specifications."
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Finance.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3850, A bill for an act relating to courts; limiting testimony of domestic
abuse advocates without consent of victims; amending Minnesota Statutes 2007
Supplement, section 595.02, subdivision 1.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
4, line 10, before the period, insert "unless ordered by the court"
Page
4, line 20, after the first "by" insert "or under the
direct supervision of"
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Carlson
from the Committee on Finance to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3868, A bill for an act relating to transportation finance; correcting
transitional rate of special fuel excise tax on compressed natural gas;
amending Laws 2008, chapter 152, article 3, section 6.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, after line 5, insert:
"Section
1. Laws 2008, chapter 152, article 2,
section 1, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd.
4. Surcharge
administration. The audit,
assessment, appeal, collection, enforcement, penalty, interest, refund, and
administrative provisions that apply to the taxes in chapter 296A apply to the
surcharge imposed by this section.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Page
1, line 6, delete "Section 1." and insert "Sec. 2."
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 2, after the semicolon, insert "providing for administration of
motor fuel surcharge;"
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Hilstrom
from the Committee on Local Government and Metropolitan Affairs to which was
referred:
H. F.
No. 3904, A bill for an act relating to statutory cities; providing for
discharge of a charter commission; providing for compensation of charter
commissions; authorizing charter amendments by ordinance; providing for water
and sewer charges; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 410.05,
subdivision 5; 410.06; 410.12, subdivision 7; 444.075, subdivision 3.
Reported
the same back with the following amendments:
Page
1, delete sections 1 and 2
Renumber
the sections in sequence
Amend
the title as follows:
Page
1, line 2, delete everything after the first semicolon
Page
1, line 3, delete everything before "authorizing"
Correct
the title numbers accordingly
With
the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
Mullery
from the Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice to which was referred:
H. F.
No. 3995, A bill for an act relating to public safety; creating a gross
misdemeanor for assaulting a utility employee or contractor; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2006, section 609.2231, by adding a subdivision.
Reported
the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The report was adopted.
SECOND READING OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 1625, 2460, 2628, 2783, 2877, 2906, 2955, 2970,
3090, 3161, 3281, 3302, 3312, 3316, 3367, 3456, 3564, 3670, 3774, 3793, 3850,
3868, 3904 and 3995 were read for the second time.
SECOND READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. Nos. 457, 2861, 2881 and 3084 were read for the second
time.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Rukavina, Dill and Howes introduced:
H. F. No. 4108, A bill for an act relating to natural resources;
modifying management plan requirements of certain recreation area;
appropriating money for recreational underpass; amending Laws 1999, chapter
231, section 99, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Environment and Natural Resources.
Murphy, M., by request, introduced:
H. F. No. 4109, A bill for an act relating to retirement; the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system individual retirement account
plan; permitting a revision in prior retirement benefit coverage elections;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 354B.21, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Governmental Operations, Reform, Technology and Elections.
Bunn, Abeler, Paulsen, Thissen, Norton and Dean introduced:
H. F. No. 4110, A bill for an act relating to insurance;
providing an evaluation of proposed and enacted mandated health benefits;
appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 62J.26.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Health and Human Services.
Benson introduced:
H. F. No. 4111, A bill for an act relating to public safety;
designating a specified law as the "Teri Lee Law"; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2007 Supplement, section 299C.46, subdivision 6.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the
Committee on Public Safety and Civil Justice.
Murphy, E., and Lenczewski introduced:
H. F. No. 4112, A bill for an act relating to local government;
extending the authority of Ramsey County to impose a mortgage registry and deed
tax; extending the authority of Hennepin County to impose a mortgage registry
and deed tax; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 383A.80, subdivision
4; 383B.80, subdivision 4.
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:
Madam 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. 2816, A bill for an act relating to Nicollet County;
providing a process for making certain offices appointive in Nicollet County.
Patrice Dworak, First Assistant Secretary of the Senate
CONCURRENCE
AND REPASSAGE
Morrow moved that the House concur in the Senate amendments to
H. F. No. 2816 and that the bill be repassed as amended by the
Senate.
Buesgens moved that the House refuse to concur in the Senate
amendments to H. F. No. 2816, that the Speaker appoint a
Conference Committee of 3 members of the House, and that the House requests
that a like committee be appointed by the Senate to confer on the disagreeing
votes of the two houses.
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Buesgens motion and the roll was
called. There were 44 yeas and 86 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Berns
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Finstad
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Heidgerken
Holberg
Hoppe
Lanning
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Murphy, M.
Nornes
Otremba
Paulsen
Peppin
Ruth
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Simpson
Smith
Tingelstad
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Anzelc
Atkins
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Nelson
Norton
Olin
Ozment
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail.
The question recurred on the Morrow motion that the House
concur in the Senate amendments to H. F. No. 2816 and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Senate.
The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 2816, A bill for an act relating to Nicollet County;
providing a process for making certain offices appointive in Nicollet County.
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 88 yeas and
41 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Gunther
Hamilton
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Johnson
Kahn
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Nelson
Norton
Olin
Ozment
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Simpson
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Bly
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Dean
Dettmer
Doty
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Faust
Finstad
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Hansen
Hilty
Holberg
Jaros
Juhnke
Kalin
Kranz
Marquart
Murphy, M.
Nornes
Otremba
Paulsen
Paymar
Peppin
Rukavina
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Ward
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
The bill was repassed, as amended by the Senate, and its title
agreed to.
Madam 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. 2907, A bill for an act relating to Yellow Medicine
County; providing a process for making certain offices appointive in Yellow
Medicine County.
Patrice Dworak, First Assistant Secretary of the Senate
CONCURRENCE
AND REPASSAGE
Peterson, A., moved that the House concur in the Senate
amendments to H. F. No. 2907 and that the bill be repassed as
amended by the Senate.
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
Buesgens moved that the House refuse to concur in the Senate
amendments to H. F. No. 2907, that the Speaker appoint a
Conference Committee of 3 members of the House, and that the House requests
that a like committee be appointed by the Senate to confer on the disagreeing
votes of the two houses.
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Buesgens motion and the roll was
called. There were 43 yeas and 87 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Berns
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Emmer
Erickson
Finstad
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Holberg
Hoppe
Jaros
Kranz
Lanning
McFarlane
McNamara
Murphy, M.
Nornes
Otremba
Paulsen
Peppin
Ruth
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Simpson
Smith
Ward
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Anzelc
Atkins
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Eken
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Nelson
Norton
Olin
Ozment
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail.
The question recurred on the Peterson, A., motion that the
House concur in the Senate amendments to H. F. No. 2907 and that the bill
be repassed, as amended by the Senate and the roll was called. There were 92 yeas and 38 nays as
follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anzelc
Atkins
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
Demmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
Olin
Ozment
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Dean
DeLaForest
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Finstad
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hilty
Holberg
Kalin
Kranz
Marquart
Murphy, M.
Otremba
Paulsen
Paymar
Peppin
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Simpson
Smith
Ward
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 2907, A bill for an act relating to Yellow Medicine
County; providing a process for making certain offices appointive in Yellow
Medicine County.
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 85 yeas and
45 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Davnie
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Gardner
Greiling
Hamilton
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Johnson
Kahn
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Nelson
Norton
Olin
Ozment
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Simpson
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Bly
Brod
Buesgens
Cornish
Dean
Dettmer
Doty
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Faust
Finstad
Fritz
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hansen
Hilty
Holberg
Jaros
Juhnke
Kalin
Kranz
Marquart
Murphy, M.
Nornes
Otremba
Paulsen
Paymar
Peppin
Rukavina
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Walker
Ward
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
The bill was repassed, as amended by the Senate, and its title
agreed to.
Madam 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. 3368, A bill for an act relating to utilities;
setting filing deadline for certain reports; regulating customer payment
arrangements during cold weather period; regulating payment agreements for
certain utility services; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 216B.098,
subdivision 3; Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement, sections 216B.091; 216B.096,
subdivisions 5, 10.
Patrice Dworak, First Assistant Secretary of the Senate
CONCURRENCE
AND REPASSAGE
Slocum moved that the House concur in the Senate amendments to
H. F. No. 3368 and that the bill be repassed as amended by the
Senate. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 3368, A bill for an act relating to utilities;
setting filing deadline for certain reports; regulating customer payment
arrangements during cold weather period; regulating payment agreements for
certain utility services; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 216B.098,
subdivision 3; Minnesota Statutes 2007 Supplement, sections 216B.091; 216B.096,
subdivisions 5, 10.
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 130 yeas
and 0 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Buesgens
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Davnie
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Faust
Finstad
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
Olin
Otremba
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Simpson
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Wardlow
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Wollschlager
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
The bill was repassed, as amended by the Senate, and its title
agreed to.
Madam Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following
Senate File, herewith transmitted:
S. F. No. 2822.
Patrice Dworak, First Assistant Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F.
No. 2822, A bill for an act relating to insurance; providing for penalties and
attorney fees for certain insurance claims practices; proposing coding for new
law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 604.
The
bill was read for the first time.
Atkins
moved that S. F. No. 2822 and H. F. No. 3115, now on the Calendar for the Day,
be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison.
The motion prevailed.
CONSENT CALENDAR
Sertich moved that the Consent Calendar be continued. The motion prevailed.
REPORT
FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES AND
LEGISLATIVE
ADMINISTRATION
Sertich from the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration, pursuant to rule 1.21, designated the following bills to be
placed on the Calendar for the Day for Wednesday, March 19, 2008:
H. F. Nos. 3357, 3662 and 3115;
S. F. No. 2262; H. F. Nos. 3138, 2785, 1499 and
2837; S. F. No. 3084; and H. F. Nos. 3577 and
3831.
Anzelc, Benson, Bly, Brown, Dominguez, Greiling, Morgan, Morrow
and Swails were excused between the hours of 1:25 p.m. and 1:45 p.m.
Dittrich and Mariani were excused between the hours of 1:25
p.m. and 1:55 p.m.
Faust and Slawik were excused between the hours of 1:40 p.m.
and 1:45 p.m.
CALENDAR FOR THE DAY
H. F. No. 3138 was reported to the House.
Emmer moved to amend H. F. No.
3138, the first engrossment, as follows:
Page 3, after line 31,
insert:
"Sec. 3. HIRING
FREEZE.
An executive branch state
agency may not fill a vacant position with a person who is not already a state
employee unless the commissioner of finance certifies that filling the position
is necessary to allow the agency to perform essential government services. This section does not apply to
constitutional offices or the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities."
Page 3, line 33, delete
"and 2" and insert "to 3"
Renumber the sections in
sequence and correct the internal references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Emmer amendment and the roll was
called. There were 43 yeas and 72 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Berns
Brod
Buesgens
Bunn
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Emmer
Erickson
Finstad
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Heidgerken
Holberg
Hoppe
Lanning
Liebling
Magnus
McFarlane
Nornes
Norton
Otremba
Paulsen
Peppin
Ruth
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Simpson
Urdahl
Wardlow
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Atkins
Bigham
Brynaert
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Doty
Eken
Fritz
Gardner
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Mahoney
Marquart
Masin
McNamara
Moe
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Olin
Ozment
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Welti
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
Emmer moved to amend H. F.
No. 3138, the first engrossment, as follows:
Page 1, after line 4,
insert:
"Section 1. [43A.175]
MERIT COMPENSATION.
The commissioner may
establish a program of providing additional compensation, within the limits of
available appropriations, to executive branch employees who perform exceptional
work in carrying out the mission of their agency in an efficient manner, and in
preventing unnecessary spending of public money. The commissioner is not required to meet and negotiate with an
exclusive representative concerning the design and implementation of the
program created under this section."
Renumber the sections in
sequence and correct the internal references
Amend the title accordingly
A roll call was requested and properly seconded.
The question was taken on the Emmer amendment and the roll was
called. There were 33 yeas and 95 nays
as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Anderson, B.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Berns
Brod
Buesgens
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Emmer
Erickson
Finstad
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Holberg
Hoppe
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Paulsen
Peppin
Ruth
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Simpson
Wardlow
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anzelc
Atkins
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Davnie
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Eken
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Mahoney
Marquart
Masin
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
Olin
Otremba
Ozment
Paymar
Pelowski
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Wollschlager
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
H. F. No. 3138, A bill for an act relating to state government;
ratifying state labor contracts; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, section
85A.02, subdivision 5a.
The bill was read for the third time and placed upon its final
passage.
The question was taken on the passage of the bill and the roll
was called. There were 128 yeas and 1
nay as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Atkins
Beard
Benson
Berns
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Clark
Cornish
Davnie
Dean
DeLaForest
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Dominguez
Doty
Drazkowski
Eastlund
Eken
Emmer
Erickson
Faust
Finstad
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Heidgerken
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jaros
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Kranz
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Madore
Magnus
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Moe
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
Olin
Otremba
Ozment
Paulsen
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Peterson, A.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruth
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Simpson
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Tingelstad
Tschumper
Urdahl
Wagenius
Walker
Ward
Wardlow
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Wollschlager
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anderson, B.
The bill was passed and its title agreed to.
Sertich moved that the remaining bills on the Calendar for the
Day be continued. The motion prevailed.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Hilty moved that the name of Murphy, E., be added as an author
on H. F. No. 404. The
motion prevailed.
Moe moved that the name of Lillie be added as an author on
H. F. No. 3107. The
motion prevailed.
Loeffler moved that the name of Haws be added as an author on
H. F. No. 3257. The
motion prevailed.
Hornstein moved that the name of Walker be added as an author
on H. F. No. 3780. The
motion prevailed.
Hortman moved that the name of Morgan be added as an author on
H. F. No. 3807. The
motion prevailed.
Kalin moved that the name of Eastlund be added as an author on
H. F. No. 3953. The
motion prevailed.
Marquart moved that the name of Demmer be added as an author on
H. F. No. 4098. The
motion prevailed.
Murphy, E., moved that H. F. No. 3333 be
recalled from the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources and be
re-referred to the Committee on Finance. The motion prevailed.
Lieder moved that H. F. No. 3868, now on the
General Register, be re-referred to the Committee on Taxes. The motion prevailed.
Mullery moved that H. F. No. 4012 be recalled
from the Committee on Commerce and Labor and be re-referred to the Committee on
Public Safety and Civil Justice. The
motion prevailed.
Norton moved that S. F. No. 1605 be recalled
from the Transportation Finance Division and together with
H. F. No. 2628, now on the General Register, be referred to the
Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion
prevailed.
Atkins moved that S. F. No. 2830 be recalled
from the Committee on Commerce and Labor and together with
H. F. No. 3481, now on the Consent Calendar, be referred to the
Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion
prevailed.
ADJOURNMENT
Sertich moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn
until 12:00 noon, Tuesday, March 25, 2008.
The motion prevailed.
Sertich moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker declared the House stands
adjourned until 12:00 noon, Tuesday, March 25, 2008.
Albin
A. Mathiowetz,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives