STATE OF MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-SIXTH SESSION - 2009
_____________________
TWENTY-NINTH DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Thursday, April 2, 2009
The House of Representatives convened at
10:30 a.m. and was called to order by Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Speaker of
the House.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Sharon
Osborn, Asbury United Methodist Church, Duluth, Minnesota.
The members of the House gave the pledge
of allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.
The roll was called and the following
members were present:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Beard
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Davids
Davnie
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Eken
Emmer
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Knuth
Koenen
Kohls
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Loon
Mack
Magnus
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murdock
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Nornes
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rosenthal
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Torkelson
Urdahl
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
A quorum was present.
Atkins, Buesgens, Eastlund and Mahoney were
excused.
Mariani was excused until 10:55 a.m. Hortman was excused until 11:45 a.m.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the Journal of the preceding
day. Morgan moved that further reading
of the Journal be dispensed with and that the Journal be approved as corrected
by the Chief Clerk. The motion
prevailed.
REPORTS OF
CHIEF CLERK
S. F. No. 33 and
H. F. No. 116, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical.
Ward moved that
S. F. No. 33 be substituted for H. F. No. 116 and
that the House File be indefinitely postponed.
The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 284 and
H. F. No. 300, 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. 284 be substituted for
H. F. No. 300 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 675 and
H. F. No. 842, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Olin moved that the rules be so far
suspended that S. F. No. 675 be substituted for
H. F. No. 842 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 708 and
H. F. No. 903, 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. 708 be substituted for
H. F. No. 903 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1197 and
H. F. No. 1227, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be identical with certain exceptions.
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Rukavina moved that the rules be so far
suspended that S. F. No. 1197 be substituted for
H. F. No. 1227 and that the House File be indefinitely
postponed. The motion prevailed.
PETITIONS AND COMMUNICATIONS
The following communications were
received:
STATE OF MINNESOTA
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
SAINT PAUL 55155
April 1, 2009
The
Honorable Margaret Anderson Kelliher
Speaker of
the House of Representatives
The State of
Minnesota
Dear Speaker
Kelliher:
Please be advised that I have received,
approved, signed, and deposited in the Office of the Secretary of State the
following House File:
H. F. No. 1797, relating to
transportation; providing for receipt and appropriation of federal economic
recovery funds.
Sincerely,
Tim
Pawlenty
Governor
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 Acts of the 2009 Session of the State Legislature have been
received from the Office of the Governor and are 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 2009 |
Date Filed 2009 |
236 8 11:29 a.m.
April 1 April
1
1797 9 11:31 a.m.
April 1 April
1
Sincerely,
Mark
Ritchie
Secretary
of State
REPORTS OF
STANDING COMMITTEES AND DIVISIONS
Pelowski from the Committee on State
and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 17, A bill for an act
relating to local government; authorizing the Central Iron Range Sanitary Sewer
District.
Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee
on Taxes.
The
report was adopted.
Thissen from
the Committee on Health Care and Human Services Policy and Oversight to which
was referred:
H. F. No. 181,
A bill for an act relating to health; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
sections 256L.04, subdivisions 1, 7a, by adding a subdivision; 256L.05,
subdivisions 3, 3a; 256L.07, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, by adding a subdivision;
256L.15, subdivisions 2, 3; 256L.17, subdivision 5; proposing coding for new
law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 256L; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008,
section 256L.17, subdivision 6.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, after
line 7, insert:
"Section
1. [256.0122]
SIMPLIFICATION OF ENROLLMENT AND RENEWAL PROCEDURES.
Subdivision
1. Preprinted
forms for renewals. For
children enrolled in medical assistance or MinnesotaCare, the commissioner
shall develop a preprinted renewal form that contains the child's income information
available to the commissioner. This form
must be mailed to the parent of the child prior to the child's renewal date,
along with a notice to the parent that eligibility of the child for medical
assistance or MinnesotaCare shall be renewed based on the information contained
in the form. The parent must review the
information and if the information is no longer accurate, indicate this on the
form and return the form to the commissioner with the current information. If the form is not returned, the commissioner
shall determine eligibility for the child based on information on the
form. Nothing in this subdivision shall
be construed as prohibiting the commissioner from verifying income through
electronic or other means. If the
commissioner determines that the child is no longer eligible, the commissioner
shall disenroll the child.
Subd. 2.
Continuous eligibility. Children under the age of 19 who, at the
time of application or renewal, meet the eligibility criteria for medical
assistance or MinnesotaCare, shall be continuously eligible for the program for
12 months or until the child reaches age 19, whichever is earlier.
Subd. 3.
Open enrollment and
streamlined application and enrollment process. (a) The commissioner and local agencies
working in partnership must develop a streamlined and efficient application and
enrollment process for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees that
meets the criteria specified in this subdivision.
(b) The
commissioners of human services and education shall provide recommendations to
the legislature by January 15, 2010, on the creation of an open enrollment
process for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare that is tied to the public
education system, including prekindergarten programs. The recommendations must:
(1) be
developed in consultation with medical assistance and MinnesotaCare enrollees
and representatives from organizations that advocate on behalf of children and
families, low-income persons and minority populations, counties, school
administrators and nurses, health plans, and health care providers;
(2) be based
on enrollment and renewal procedures best practices, including express lane
eligibility as required under subdivision 4;
(3) simplify
the enrollment and renewal processes wherever possible; and
(4)
establish a process to:
(i)
disseminate information on medical assistance and MinnesotaCare to all children
in the public education system, including prekindergarten programs; and
(ii) enroll
children and other household members who are eligible.
The
commissioners of human services and education shall implement an open
enrollment process by August 1, 2010, to be effective beginning with
the 2010-2011 school year.
(c) The
commissioner and local agencies shall develop an online application process for
medical assistance and MinnesotaCare.
(d) The
commissioner shall develop an application that is easily understandable and
does not exceed four pages in length.
(e) The
commissioner of human services shall present to the legislature, by January 15,
2010, an implementation plan for the open enrollment period and online
application process.
Subd. 4.
Express lane eligibility. (a) Children who complete an application
for educational benefits and indicate an interest in enrolling in medical
assistance or MinnesotaCare on the application form shall have the form
considered an application for those programs.
(b) The
commissioner of education shall modify the application for educational benefits
to:
(1) include
a separate section for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare;
(2) include
a check-box to allow all of the children included on the application for
educational benefits to apply for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare; and
(3) specify
that if this application box is checked, the information on the application
will be shared with the commissioner of human services.
(c) The
commissioner of human services shall match the children's Social Security
numbers with the Social Security Administration database to comply with federal
citizenship documentation requirements.
(d) The
commissioner of education shall forward electronically the information for
families who apply for medical assistance or MinnesotaCare to the commissioner
of human services within five business days of determining an applicant's eligibility
for the free and reduced-price school lunch program.
(e) The
commissioner of human services shall accept the income determination made by
the commissioner of education in administering the free and reduced-price
school lunch program as proof of income for medical assistance and
MinnesotaCare eligibility until renewal.
Within 30 days of receipt of information provided by the commissioner of
education under paragraph (d), the commissioner of human services shall:
(1) enroll
all eligible children in the medical assistance or MinnesotaCare programs; and
(2) provide
information about medical assistance and MinnesotaCare to other household
members.
The date of
application for the medical assistance and MinnesotaCare programs is the date
on the signed application for educational benefits.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 256.962,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Outreach
grants. (a) The commissioner shall
award grants to public and private organizations, regional collaboratives, and
regional health care outreach centers for outreach activities, including, but
not limited to:
(1) providing
information, applications, and assistance in obtaining coverage through
Minnesota public health care programs;
(2)
collaborating with public and private entities such as hospitals, providers,
health plans, legal aid offices, pharmacies, insurance agencies, and
faith-based organizations to develop outreach activities and partnerships to
ensure the distribution of information and applications and provide assistance
in obtaining coverage through Minnesota health care programs; and
(3) providing
or collaborating with public and private entities to provide multilingual and
culturally specific information and assistance to applicants in areas of high
uninsurance in the state or populations with high rates of uninsurance; and
(4)
targeting families with incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty
guidelines or who belong to underserved populations. $2,000,000 shall be
allocated out of the health care access fund for outreach grants.
(b) The
commissioner shall ensure that all outreach materials are available in
languages other than English.
(c) The
commissioner shall establish an outreach trainer program to provide training to
designated individuals from the community and public and private entities on
application assistance in order for these individuals to provide training to
others in the community on an as-needed basis."
Page 3, line 9,
delete "256L.04" and insert "256L.07, subdivision 8,"
Page 5, line
33, delete "equal to or"
Page 8, delete
section 13
Renumber the
sections in sequence
Amend the title
as follows:
Page 1, line 2,
after the semicolon, insert "simplifying enrollment and renewal procedures
for medical assistance and MinnesotaCare; changing eligibility provisions for
MinnesotaCare; changing coverage provisions and sliding fee scale for
MinnesotaCare;"
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.
Thissen from
the Committee on Health Care and Human Services Policy and Oversight to which
was referred:
H. F. No. 249,
A bill for an act relating to health occupations; modifying emeritus status
requirements for licensed psychologists; creating an inactive licensure status
for licensed psychologists; authorizing licensed psychologists to provide a
final determination not to certify; adding a licensed psychologist to the
Health Care Reform Review Council; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections
62M.09, subdivision 3a; 62U.09, subdivision 2; 148.89, subdivision 5;
148.9105, subdivisions 1, 3, 6, 7, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 148.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
62M.09, subdivision 3a, is amended to read:
Subd. 3a. Mental
health and substance abuse reviews. (a)
A peer of the treating mental health or substance abuse provider or a physician
must review requests for outpatient services in which the utilization review
organization has concluded that a determination not to certify a mental health
or substance abuse service for clinical reasons is appropriate, provided that
any final determination not to certify treatment is made by a psychiatrist
certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and appropriately
licensed in this state or by a doctoral-level psychologist licensed in this
state if the treating provider is a psychologist.
(b) Notwithstanding the notification
requirements of section 62M.05, a utilization review organization that has made
an initial decision to certify in accordance with the requirements of section
62M.05 may elect to provide notification of a determination to continue
coverage through facsimile or mail.
(c) This subdivision does not apply to
determinations made in connection with policies issued by a health plan company
that is assessed less than three percent of the total amount assessed by the
Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 62U.09,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Members. (a) The Health Care Reform Review Council
shall consist of 14 15 members who are appointed as follows:
(1) two members
appointed by the Minnesota Medical Association, at least one of whom must
represent rural physicians;
(2) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Nurses Association;
(3) two members
appointed by the Minnesota Hospital Association, at least one of whom must be a
rural hospital administrator;
(4) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Academy of Physician Assistants;
(5) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Business Partnership;
(6) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce;
(7) one member
appointed by the SEIU Minnesota State Council;
(8) one member
appointed by the AFL-CIO;
(9) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Council of Health Plans;
(10) one member
appointed by the Smart Buy Alliance;
(11) one member
appointed by the Minnesota Medical Group Management Association; and
(12) one
consumer member appointed by AARP Minnesota; and
(13) one
member appointed by the Minnesota Psychological Association.
(b) If a member
is no longer able or eligible to participate, a new member shall be appointed
by the entity that appointed the outgoing member.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 148.89,
subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Practice
of psychology. "Practice of
psychology" means the observation, description, evaluation,
interpretation, or modification of human behavior by the application of
psychological principles, methods, or procedures for any reason, including to
prevent, eliminate, or manage symptomatic, maladaptive, or undesired behavior
and to enhance interpersonal relationships, work, life and developmental
adjustment, personal and organizational effectiveness, behavioral health, and
mental health. The practice of
psychology includes, but is not limited to, the following services, regardless
of whether the provider receives payment for the services:
(1)
psychological research and teaching of psychology;
(2) assessment,
including psychological testing and other means of evaluating personal
characteristics such as intelligence, personality, abilities, interests,
aptitudes, and neuropsychological functioning;
(3) a
psychological report, whether written or oral, including testimony of a
provider as an expert witness, concerning the characteristics of an individual
or entity;
(4)
psychotherapy, including but not limited to, categories such as behavioral,
cognitive, emotive, systems, psychophysiological, or insight-oriented
therapies; counseling; hypnosis; and diagnosis and treatment of:
(i) mental and
emotional disorder or disability;
(ii) alcohol
and substance dependence or abuse;
(iii) disorders
of habit or conduct;
(iv) the
psychological aspects of physical illness or condition, accident, injury, or
disability, including the psychological impact of medications;
(v) life
adjustment issues, including work-related and bereavement issues; and
(vi) child,
family, or relationship issues;
(5)
psychoeducational services and treatment; and
(6)
consultation and supervision.
Sec. 4. DEADLINE
FOR APPOINTMENT.
The
Minnesota Psychological Association must appoint its member to the Health Care
Reform Review Council under section 2 no later than October 1, 2009."
Delete the
title and insert:
"A bill
for an act relating to health occupations; modifying the definition of
"the practice of psychology"; authorizing a doctoral-level licensed
psychologist to provide a final determination not to certify; adding a member
from the Minnesota Psychological Association to the Health Care Reform Review
Council; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 62M.09, subdivision 3a;
62U.09, subdivision 2; 148.89, subdivision 5."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Atkins from the
Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F. No. 412,
A bill for an act relating to real estate; adjusting the statute of repose for
homeowner warranty claims; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 541.051,
subdivision 4.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
541.051, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Applicability. For the purposes of This section
does not apply to actions based on breach of the statutory warranties set
forth in section 327A.02, or to actions based on breach of an express written
warranty, except as provided by this subdivision. Such actions shall be brought within two
years of the discovery of the breach in all cases where the breach is
discovered within ten years after the warranty date. In the case of an action under section
327A.05, which accrues during the ninth or tenth year after the warranty date,
as defined in section 327A.01, subdivision 8, an action may be brought within
two years of the discovery of the breach Where the breach is discovered
more than ten years after the warranty date, such actions shall be brought
within one year after the discovery of the breach, but in no event may an
action under section 327A.05 or an action based on breach of an express
written warranty be brought more than 12 years after the effective
warranty date. An action for
contribution
or indemnity
arising out of actions described in this subdivision may be brought no later
than two years after the earlier of commencement of the action against the
party seeking contribution or indemnity, or payment of a final judgment,
arbitration award, or settlement arising out of the breach.
EFFECTIVE DATE.
This section is effective the day following final enactment and
applies to cases pending or commenced on or after that date."
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. 775, A
bill for an act relating to public safety; motor vehicles; crediting vehicle
service fees to the vehicle services operating account; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2008, sections 168.017, subdivision 5; 168.021, subdivision 4; 168.10,
subdivision 1i; 168.29; 168.62, subdivision 3.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Solberg from the
Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 855, A
bill for an act relating to capital improvements; authorizing spending to
acquire and better public land and buildings and other improvements of a
capital nature with certain conditions; establishing new programs and modifying
existing programs; authorizing the sale of state bonds; repealing and modifying
previous appropriations; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
sections 16A.641, subdivisions 4, 7; 16A.66, subdivision 2; 16A.86, subdivision
2, by adding a subdivision; 85.015, by adding a subdivision; 134.45, by adding
a subdivision; 135A.046, subdivision 2; 174.03, subdivision 1b; 174.88,
subdivision 2; Laws 2005, chapter 20, article 1, section 23, subdivision
16, as amended; Laws 2006, chapter 258, sections 20,
subdivision 7; 21, subdivisions 5, 6, as amended; 23, subdivision 3,
as amended; Laws 2008, chapter 179, section 3, subdivisions 12, as amended, 21,
25; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 16A; 84; 174;
473; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 16A.86, subdivision 3;
116.156; 473.399, subdivision 4; Laws 2008, chapter 179, section 8, subdivision
3.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 10, after
line 4, insert:
"(m) St. Vincent"
Page 10, line 5,
delete "(m)" and insert "(n)"
Page 10, line
14, after "Oakport Township," insert "St. Vincent,"
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Thissen from the
Committee on Health Care and Human Services Policy and Oversight to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 866, A
bill for an act relating to insurance; requiring school districts to obtain
employee health coverage through the public employees insurance program;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 43A.316, subdivisions 9, 10, by
adding subdivisions; 62E.02, subdivision 23; 62E.10, subdivision 1; 62E.11,
subdivision 5; 297I.05, subdivision 5; 297I.15, subdivision 3.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 2, line 29,
after the period, insert ""School employer" does not include
any school district or other entity referenced in this paragraph that is
self-insured, either individually or as part of a self-insured group, for
health coverage as of January 1, 2010."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and
Elections.
The
report was adopted.
Atkins from the
Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1038,
A bill for an act relating to utilities; authorizing Public Utilities
Commission to order refunds of unlawful utility rate revenues; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 216B.23, by adding a subdivision; 237.081, by
adding a subdivision; 237.74, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
216B.23, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a.
Authority to issue refund. On determining that a public utility has
charged a rate in violation of this chapter, a commission rule, or a commission
order, the commission, after conducting a proceeding, may require the public
utility to refund to its customers, in a manner approved by the commission, any
revenues the commission finds were collected as a result of the unlawful
conduct. Any refund authorized by this
section is permitted in addition to any remedies authorized by section 216B.16
or any other law governing rates.
Exercising authority under this section does not preclude the commission
from pursuing penalties under sections 216B.57 to 216B.61 for the same conduct.
Nothing in
this section shall be construed as allowing retroactive ratemaking. In addition, nothing in this section shall be
construed to allow refunds based on claims that prior or current approved rates
have been unjust, unreasonable, unreasonably preferential, discriminatory,
insufficient, inequitable, or inconsistent in application to a class of
customers. Moreover, nothing in this
section shall be construed to allow refunds based on claims that approved rates
have not encouraged energy conservation or renewable energy use, or have not
furthered the goals of section 216B.164, 216B.241, or 216C.05. A refund under this paragraph shall not apply
to revenues collected more than six years prior to the date of the notice of
the commission proceeding required under this subdivision."
Delete the title
and insert:
"A bill for
an act relating to utilities; authorizing Public Utilities Commission to order
refunds of unlawful utility rate revenues; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
section 216B.23, by adding a subdivision."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Pelowski from
the Committee on State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and
Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1218,
A bill for an act relating to state government; ratifying state labor
contracts.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 2, after
line 14, insert:
"Subd.
10. State university faculty.
The settlement agreement between the state of Minnesota and the Inter
Faculty Organization, recommended for approval by the Legislative Coordinating
Commission Subcommittee on Employee Relations on March 23, 2009, is ratified."
Page 2, delete
line 16 and insert:
"Section
1, subdivisions 1 to 9, are effective the day following final enactment. Section 1, subdivision 10, is effective July
1, 2009."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Rukavina from
the Higher Education and Workforce Development Finance and Policy Division to
which was referred:
H. F. No. 1251,
A bill for an act relating to economic development; authorizing the economic
development authority to become a member of a limited liability company;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 469.101, subdivision 6.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. WINONA
COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY; WIND ENERGY PROJECT.
(a) The
Winona County economic development authority may form or become a member of a
limited liability company organized under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 322B, for
the purpose of developing a community-based energy development project pursuant
to Minnesota Statutes, section 216B.1612.
A project authorized by this section may not sell, transmit, or
distribute the electrical energy at retail or provide for end use of the
electrical energy to an off-site facility of the economic development authority
or the limited liability company.
Nothing in this section modifies the exclusive service territories or
exclusive right to serve as provided in Minnesota Statutes, sections 216B.37 to
216B.43.
(b) The
authority may acquire a leasehold interest in property outside its corporate
boundaries for the purpose of developing a community-based energy development
project as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 216B.1612.
EFFECTIVE DATE.
This section is effective the day after the county of Winona and its
chief clerical officer comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021,
subdivisions 2 and 3."
Delete the
title and insert:
"A bill
for an act relating to economic development; authorizing an economic
development authority to become a limited liability company member."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee
on Taxes.
The
report was adopted.
Pelowski
from the Committee on State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology
and Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1268,
A bill for an act relating to state government; authorizing use of state space
for employee fitness and wellness activities; authorizing rulemaking; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 16B.24, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Civil Justice.
The
report was adopted.
Thissen from
the Committee on Health Care and Human Services Policy and Oversight to which
was referred:
H. F. No. 1276,
A bill for an act relating to health and human services; relieving counties of certain
mandates; allowing counties to place children for treatment in bordering
states; modifying county payment of funeral expenses; modifying certain nursing
facility rules; providing an alternative licensing method for day training and
habilitation services; accepting certain independent audits; modifying renewal
notice requirements; modifying health care program information that school
district or charter school must provide; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
sections 62Q.37, subdivision 3; 144A.04, subdivision 11, by adding a
subdivision; 144A.45, subdivision 1; 245.4882, subdivisions 1, 2; 245.4885,
subdivision 1a; 245A.09, subdivision 7; 256.935; 256.962, subdivisions 6, 7;
256B.0625, subdivision 41; 256B.0915, subdivision 3h; 256B.0945, subdivision 1;
256F.13, subdivision 1; 260C.212, subdivisions 4a, 11; 261.035; 471.61,
subdivision 1; repealing Minnesota Rules, part 4668.0110, subpart 5.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line
24, strike "subdivisions 7 and 9" and insert "subdivision 7,
and for children in voluntary placement for treatment, the court review process
in section 260D.06"
Page 1, line
26, delete "which includes" and insert "that may
include"
Page 2, line
15, delete "county has inspected and" and insert "state
has"
Page 2, delete
section 4 and insert:
"Sec.
4. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
256.935, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision
1. Cremation
and funeral expenses. On the
death of any person receiving public assistance through MFIP, the county agency
shall pay attempt to contact the decedent's spouse or next of
kin. If the agency is not able to
contact a spouse or next of kin, the agency shall pay for cremation of the
person's remains. If the county agency
contacts the decedent's spouse or next of kin and it is determined that
cremation is not in accordance with the religious and moral beliefs of the
decedent or the decedent's spouse or the decedent's next of kin, the county
agency shall pay an amount for funeral expenses including the transportation
of the body into or out of the community in which the deceased resided not
exceeding the amount paid for comparable services under section 261.035 plus
actual cemetery charges. No cremation
or funeral expenses shall be paid if the estate of the deceased is
sufficient to pay such expenses or if the spouse, who was legally responsible
for the support of the deceased while living, is able to pay such expenses;
provided, that the additional payment or donation of the cost of cemetery lot,
interment, religious service, or for the transportation of the body into or out
of the community in which the deceased resided, shall not limit payment by the
county agency as herein authorized.
Freedom of choice in the selection of a funeral director shall be granted
to persons lawfully authorized to make arrangements for the cremation or burial
of any such deceased recipient. In
determining the sufficiency of such estate, due regard shall be had for the
nature and marketability of the assets of the estate. The county agency may grant cremation or funeral
expenses where the sale would cause undue loss to the estate. Any amount paid for cremation or funeral
expenses shall be a prior claim against the estate, as provided in section
524.3-805, and any amount recovered shall be reimbursed to the agency which
paid the expenses. The commissioner
shall specify requirements for reports, including fiscal reports, according to
section 256.01, subdivision 2, paragraph (17) (q). The state share shall pay the entire amount
of county agency expenditures. Benefits
shall be issued to recipients by the state or county subject to provisions of
section 256.017."
Page 3, line
32, delete "county has inspected and" and insert "state
has"
Page 6, line
29, strike "The commissioner shall revise"
Page 6, strike
line 30
Page 6, line
31, strike "group family foster care."
Page 7, delete
section 10 and insert:
"Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 261.035, is
amended to read:
261.035 CREMATION AND FUNERALS AT EXPENSE OF
COUNTY.
When a person
dies in any county without apparent means to provide for that person's funeral
or final disposition, the county board shall first investigate to determine
whether that person had contracted for any prepaid funeral arrangements. If prepaid arrangements have been
made, the county shall authorize arrangements to be implemented in accord with
the instructions of the deceased. If it
is determined that the person did not leave sufficient means to defray the
necessary expenses of a funeral and final disposition, nor any spouse of
sufficient ability to procure the burial, the county board shall provide for a
funeral and final disposition cremation of the person's remains to
be made at the expense of the county.
If it is determined that cremation is not in accordance with the
religious and moral beliefs of the decedent or the decedent's spouse or the
decedent's next of kin, the county board shall provide for a funeral. Counties may establish a maximum rate for
funeral expenses. Any funeral and
final disposition provided at the expense of the county shall be in accordance
with religious and moral beliefs of the decedent or the decedent's spouse or
the decedent's next of kin. If the
wishes of the decedent are not known and the county has no information about
the existence of or location of any next of kin, the county may determine
the method of final disposition may provide for cremation of the
person's remains."
Page 8, line 3,
after "audit" insert ", including standards and audit
practices,"
Page 8, delete
sections 2 and 3 and insert:
"Sec.
2. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
144A.04, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
Subd. 11. Incontinent
residents. Notwithstanding Minnesota
Rules, part 4658.0520, an incontinent resident must be checked according to
a specific time interval written in the resident's treated according to
the comprehensive assessment and care plan.
The resident's attending physician must authorize in writing any
interval longer than two hours unless the resident, if competent, or a family
member or legally appointed conservator, guardian, or health care agent of a
resident who is not competent, agrees in writing to waive physician involvement
in determining this interval, and this waiver is documented in the resident's
care plan.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 144A.04, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 12.
Resident positioning. Notwithstanding Minnesota Rules, part
4658.0525, subpart 4, the position of residents unable to change their own
position must be changed based on the comprehensive assessment and care plan."
Page 12, delete
section 8
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.
Atkins from the
Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1306,
A bill for an act relating to pet animals; requiring a notice for retail sales
of cocoa bean shell mulch; 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.128]
NOTICE FOR UNPROCESSED COCOA BEAN SHELL MULCH.
(a) Except
as provided in paragraph (d), a person who sells a product containing cocoa
bean shell mulch at retail must post the notice in paragraph (b) in a manner
clearly visible to a consumer examining a product containing cocoa bean mulch
offered for sale.
(b) The
notice must be in 36-point type or larger and state:
"The
ingestion of cocoa bean shell mulch that has not been processed to be nontoxic
is poisonous to pets. If a pet has eaten
unprocessed cocoa bean shell mulch, you should immediately contact a
veterinarian or the Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435."
(c) A
retailer may include additional language in the notice in order to promote the
sale of a product containing unprocessed cocoa bean shell mulch, provided that
the language in paragraph (b) is present.
(d) This
section does not apply to the sale of product containing cocoa bean shell mulch
that has been processed to remove theobromine to a nontoxic level from the
cocoa bean shell mulch."
Delete the
title and insert:
"A bill
for an act relating to pet animals; requiring a notice for retail sales of
unprocessed cocoa bean shell mulch; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 325E."
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. 1467,
A bill for an act relating to railroads; directing commissioner to apply for
federal grants for rail safety technology; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
section 219.01.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section
219.01, is amended to read:
219.01 TRACK SAFETY STANDARDS; SAFETY TECHNOLOGY
GRANTS. (a) The track safety standards of the
United States Department of Transportation and Federal Railroad Administration
apply to railroad trackage and are the standards for the determination of
unsafe trackage within the state.
(b) The
commissioner of transportation shall apply to the Federal Railroad
Administration under Public Law 110-432, the Railroad Safety Enhancement Act of
2008 (the act), for (1) railroad safety technology grant funding available
under section 105 of the act and (2) development and installation of rail
safety technology, including provision for switch position indicator signals in
nonsignalized main track territory, under section 406 of the act. The commissioner shall respond and make
application to the Federal Railroad Administration notice of funds availability
under the Rail Safety Assurance Act in a timely manner and before the date of
the program deadline to assure full consideration of the application. The commissioner shall (i) prioritize grant
requests for the installation of switch indicator signals on all segments of
nonsignalized track where posted speeds are in excess of 20 miles per hour and
(ii) apply for grant funding in each year after 2009 until all nonsignalized
track territory in the state has switch indicator signals installed and in
operation.
(c) Prior to
applying for funds under paragraph (b), the commissioner shall solicit grant
requests from all eligible railroads.
The commissioner shall submit written notice to the chairs of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over transportation policy and finance of an
acceptance by a class one or class two railroad of federal grant program
funding for switch point indicator monitor systems.
(d)
Participating railroads shall provide the 20 percent nonfederal match. Railroads shall provide all technical
documentation requested by the commissioner and required by the Federal
Railroad Administration for the applications under paragraph (b). Railroads are responsible for developing,
acquiring, and installing all rail safety technology obtained under this
section in accordance with requirements established by the Federal Railroad
Administration."
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Pelowski from the Committee on State
and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and Elections to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 1849, A bill for an act
relating to local government; removing, extending, or modifying certain
mandates upon local governmental units; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008,
sections 6.80, by adding a subdivision; 211B.37; 306.243, by adding a
subdivision; 326B.145; 344.18; 375.12, subdivision 2; 375.17, subdivision 1;
382.265; 384.151, subdivision 1a; 385.373, subdivision 1a; 386.015, subdivision
2; 387.20, subdivisions 1, 2; 429.041, subdivisions 1, 2; 469.015; 471.999;
473.862; 508.12, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 14; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 15.435;
373.42; 384.151, subdivisions 1, 3; 385.373, subdivisions 1, 3; 386.015,
subdivisions 1, 4; 387.20, subdivision 4; 471.661.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting
clause and insert:
"Section 1. [14.128]
EFFECTIVE DATE FOR RULES REQUIRING LOCAL IMPLEMENTATION.
Subdivision 1.
Determination. An agency must determine if a local
government will be required to adopt or amend an ordinance or other regulation
to comply with a proposed agency rule.
An agency must make this determination before the close of the hearing
record or before the agency submits the record to the administrative law judge
if there is no hearing. The
administrative law judge must review and approve or disapprove the agency's
determination. "Local government" means a town, county, or home rule
charter or statutory city.
Subd. 2.
Effective dates. If the agency determines that the proposed
rule requires adoption or amendment of an ordinance or other regulation, or if
the administrative law judge disapproves the agency's determination that the
rule does not have this effect, the rule may not become effective until:
(1) the next July 1 or January 1 after
notice of final adoption is published in the State Register; or
(2) a later date provided by law or
specified in the proposed rule.
Subd. 3.
Exceptions. Subdivision 2 does not apply:
(1) to a rule adopted under section
14.388, 14.389, or 14.3895, or under another law specifying that the rulemaking
procedures of this chapter do not apply;
(2) if the administrative law judge
approves an agency's determination that the rule has been proposed pursuant to
a specific federal statutory or regulatory mandate that requires the rule to
take effect before the date specified in subdivision 1; or
(3) if the governor waives application
of subdivision 2.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 16C.28,
subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Establishment
and purpose. (a) The state
recognizes the importance of the inclusion of a best value contracting system
for construction as an alternative to the current low-bid system of
procurement. In order to accomplish that
goal, state and local governmental entities shall be able to choose the best
value system in different phases.
(b) "Best value" means the
procurement method defined in section 16C.02, subdivision 4a.
(c) The following entities are
eligible to participate in phase I:
(1) state agencies;
(2) counties;
(3) cities; and
(4) school districts with the highest
25 percent enrollment of students in the state.
Phase I begins on July 1, 2007.
(d) The following entities are
eligible to participate in phase II:
(1) those entities included in phase
I; and
(2) school districts with the highest
50 percent enrollment of students in the state.
Phase II begins two years from July
1, 2007.
(e) The following entities are
eligible to participate in phase III:
(1) all entities included in phases I
and II; and
(2) all other townships, school
districts, and political subdivisions in the state.
Phase III begins three years from
July 1, 2007.
(f) The commissioner or any agency
for which competitive bids or proposals are required may not use best value
contracting as defined in section 16C.02, subdivision 4a, for more than one
project annually, or 20 percent of its projects, whichever is greater, in each
of the first three fiscal years in which best value construction contracting
is used.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 211B.37, is
amended to read:
211B.37 COSTS ASSESSED.
Except as otherwise provided in
section 211B.36, subdivision 3, the chief administrative law judge shall assess
the cost of considering complaints filed under section 211B.32 as provided in
this section. Costs of complaints
relating to a statewide ballot question or an election for a statewide or
legislative office must be assessed against the appropriation from the general
fund to the general account of the state elections campaign fund in section
10A.31, subdivision 4. Costs of
complaints relating to any other ballot question or elective office must be
assessed against
the county or counties in which
the election is held local jurisdiction where the election was the
subject of the complaint. Where the
election is held in more than one county jurisdiction, the chief
administrative law judge shall apportion the assessment among the counties
jurisdictions in proportion to their respective populations within the
election district to which the complaint relates according to the most recent
decennial federal census.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 306.243, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6.
Abandonment; end of operation
as cemetery. A county that
has accepted responsibility for an abandoned cemetery may prohibit further
burials in the abandoned cemetery, and may cease all acceptance of
responsibility for new burials.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 326B.145, is
amended to read:
326B.145 ANNUAL REPORT.
Beginning with the first report filed
by June 30, 2003, each municipality shall annually report by June 30 to the
department, in a format prescribed by the department, all construction and
development-related fees collected by the municipality from developers,
builders, and subcontractors if the cumulative fees collected exceeded $5,000
$10,000 in the reporting year. The
report must include:
(1) the number and valuation of units
for which fees were paid;
(2) the amount of building permit
fees, plan review fees, administrative fees, engineering fees, infrastructure
fees, and other construction and development-related fees; and
(3) the expenses associated with the
municipal activities for which fees were collected.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective on the day following final enactment, and is repealed on December 31,
2013, at which time this section reverts to the statute as it existed on the
day of final enactment.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 344.18, is
amended to read:
344.18 COMPENSATION OF VIEWERS.
Fence viewers must be paid for their
services by the person employing them at the rate of $15 each for each day's
employment. $60 must be deposited with the town or city treasurer before the
service is performed. Upon completion of
the service, any of the $60 not spent to compensate the fence viewers must be
returned to the depositor. The
town board may by resolution require the person employing the fence viewers to
post a bond or other security acceptable to the board for the total estimated
costs before the viewing takes place.
The total estimated costs may include the cost of professional and other
services, hearing costs, administrative costs, recording costs, and other costs
and expenses which the town may incur in connection with the viewing.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 365.28, is
amended to read:
365.28 PUBLIC BURIAL GROUND IS TOWN'S AFTER TEN YEARS.
A tract of land in a town becomes
town property after it has been used as a public burial ground for ten years if
the tract is not owned by a cemetery association. The town board shall control the burial
ground as it controls other town cemeteries.
A town that has accepted responsibility for an abandoned cemetery may
prohibit further burials in the abandoned cemetery, and may cease all
acceptance of responsibility for new burials.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 375.055,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Fixed
by county board. (a) The
county commissioners in all counties, except Hennepin and Ramsey, shall receive
as compensation for services rendered by them for their respective counties,
annual salaries and in addition may receive per diem payments and reimbursement
for necessary expenses in performing the duties of the office as set by
resolution of the county board. The
salary and schedule of per diem payments shall not be effective until January 1
of the next year. The resolution shall contain
a statement of the new salary on an annual basis. The board may establish a schedule of per
diem payments for service by individual county commissioners on any board,
committee, or commission of county government including committees of the
board, or for the performance of services by individual county commissioners
when required by law. In addition to its
publication in the official newspaper of the county as part of the proceedings
of the meeting of the county board, the resolution setting the salary and
schedule of per diem payments shall be published in one other newspaper of the
county, if there is one located in a different municipality in the county than
the official newspaper. The salary of a
county commissioner or the schedule of per diem payments shall not change
except in accordance with this subdivision.
(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), a
resolution adopted by the county board to decrease commissioners' salaries or
per diem payments may take effect at any time.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 375.12,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Small
claims totaled. Individualized
itemized accounts, claims or demands allowed by the county board pursuant to
section 471.38, subdivision 1, need not be published pursuant to subdivision 1,
if the amount allowed from each claim is $300 $2,000 or
less. The official proceedings following
the itemization of accounts required shall contain a statement showing the
total number of claims that did not exceed $300 $2,000 and their
total dollar amount.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 382.265, is
amended to read:
382.265 CLERK HIRE IN CERTAIN COUNTIES.
In all counties of this state where
the amount of clerk hire now or hereafter provided by law for any county office
shall be insufficient to meet the requirements of said office, the county
officer in need of additional clerk hire shall prepare a petition and statement
setting forth therein the amount of additional clerk hire needed and file the
same with the county auditor, who shall present the same to the board of county
commissioners at the next meeting of said board. If the board of county commissioners shall
grant said petition by majority vote of all members elected to the board, then
the amount of additional clerk hire requested in said petition shall thereupon
become effective for said office. Said
board shall act on any such petition within 60 days from the time it has been
filed with the county auditor. If the
board of county commissioners shall determine that the amount of additional
clerk hire requested in said petition is excessive and more than is necessary
for said office, it shall fix the amount of such additional clerk hire to be
allowed, if any, and notify such officer thereof. If said county officer or any taxpayer of
the county shall be dissatisfied with the decision of the board of county
commissioners, the officer may, at the officer's own expense, within ten days
after the decision of said board, appeal to the district court. The district court, either in term or
vacation and upon ten days' notice to the chair of the board of county
commissioners, shall hear such appeal and summarily determine the amount of
additional clerk hire needed by an order, a copy of which shall be filed with
the county auditor.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 383B.021, is
amended to read:
383B.021 COMPENSATION.
No per diem payment shall be allowed
county board members for service on the county board or any other county
body. County board members shall pay for
parking in county owned parking facilities where payment is required. County board members may be allowed mileage
for use of their personal automobile at a rate per mile.
The Hennepin County board may set the
salary of board members by resolution limited to that subject. The salary must be stated as a fixed dollar
amount. Adjustments in commissioners'
salaries shall be adopted by the county board by resolution prior to a general
election to take effect January 1 of the succeeding year, except that a
resolution adopted by the county board to decrease commissioners' salaries may
take effect at any time. Any
resolution that makes an adjustment must state the change and the resulting
salary for a member as fixed dollar amounts.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 384.151,
subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Implementation. (a) The county board of each of the counties specified
in subdivision 1 of less than 75,000 population annually shall set
by resolution the salary of the county auditor which shall be paid to the
county auditor at such intervals as the board shall determine but not less
often than once each month.
(b) At the January meeting prior to
the first date on which applicants may file for the office of county auditor
the board shall set by resolution the minimum salary to be paid the county
auditor for the term next following.
(c) In the event a vacancy occurs in
the office of county auditor the board may set the annual salary for the
remainder of the calendar year at an amount less than was set for that year.
(d) The board, in any case specified
in this subdivision, may not set the annual salary at an amount less than the
minimums provided in this subdivision but it may set the salary in excess of
such minimums.
(e) (d) The salary of the county auditor
shall not be reduced during the term for which the auditor was elected or
appointed.
(f) (e) In the event that duties are
assigned to the auditor which are in addition to duties as auditor, additional
compensation may be provided for the additional duties. The county board by resolution shall
determine the additional compensation which shall be paid and specify the
duties for which the additional compensation is to be paid.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 385.373,
subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Implementation. (a) The county board of each of the counties specified
in subdivision 1 of less than 75,000 population annually shall set
by resolution the salary of the county treasurer which shall be paid to the
county treasurer at such intervals as the board shall determine but not less
often than once each month.
(b) At the January meeting prior to
the first date on which applicants may file for the office of county treasurer
the board shall set by resolution the minimum salary to be paid the county treasurer
for the term next following.
(c) In the event a vacancy occurs in
the office of county treasurer the board may set the annual salary for the
remainder of the calendar year at an amount less than was set for that year.
(d) The board in no case may set the
annual salary at an amount less than the minimums provided in this subdivision
but it may set the salary in excess of the minimums.
(e) (d) The salary of the county treasurer
shall not be reduced during the term for which the treasurer was elected or
appointed.
(f) (e) In the event that duties are
assigned to the treasurer which are in addition to duties as treasurer,
additional compensation may be provided for the additional duties. The county board by resolution shall
determine the additional compensation which shall be paid and specify the
duties for which the additional compensation is to be paid.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 386.015,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Board's
salary procedure. (a) The county
board of each of the counties specified in subdivision 1 of less than
75,000 population annually shall set by resolution the salary of the county
recorder which shall be paid to the county recorder at such intervals as the
board shall determine but not less often than once each month.
(b) At the January meeting prior to
the first date on which applicants may file for the office of county recorder
the board shall set by resolution the minimum salary to be paid county recorder
for the term next following.
(c) In the event a vacancy occurs in
the office of the county recorder the board may set the annual salary for the
remainder of the calendar year at an amount less than was set for that year.
(d) The board in any case specified
in this subdivision may not set the annual salary at an amount less than the
minimum provided in subdivision 1 but it may set the salary in excess of such
minimums.
(e) (d) The salary of the county recorder
shall not be reduced during the term for which the recorder is elected or
appointed.
(f) (e) In the event that duties are
assigned to the county recorder which are in addition to duties as county
recorder, additional compensation may be provided for the additional
duties. The county board by resolution
shall determine the additional compensation which shall be paid and specify the
duties for which the additional compensation is to be paid.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 387.20,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Counties
under 75,000. (a) The sheriffs of
all counties of the state with less than 75,000 inhabitants according to the
1960 federal census shall receive yearly salaries for all services rendered by
them for their respective counties, not less than the following amounts
according to the then last preceding federal census:
(1) in counties with less than 10,000
inhabitants, $6,000;
(2) in counties with 10,000 but less
than 20,000 inhabitants, $6,500;
(3) in counties with 20,000 but less
than 30,000 inhabitants, $7,000;
(4) in counties with 30,000 but less
than 40,000 inhabitants, $7,500;
(5) in counties with 40,000 or more
inhabitants, $8,000.
(b) (a) In addition to such the
sheriff's salary each, the sheriff shall be reimbursed for
all expenses incurred in the performance of official duties for the sheriff's
county and the claim for such the expenses shall be prepared,
allowed, and paid in the same manner as other claims against counties are
prepared, allowed, and paid except that the expenses incurred by such
the sheriffs in the performance of service required of them in connection
with insane persons either by a district court or by law and a per diem for
deputies and assistants necessarily required under such the
performance of such the services shall be allowed and paid as
provided by the law regulating the apprehension, examination, and commitment of
insane persons; provided that any sheriff or deputy receiving an annual salary
shall pay over any per diem received to the county in the manner and at the
time prescribed by the county board, but not less often than once each month.
(c) (b) All claims for livery hire shall state the
purpose for which such livery was used and have attached thereto a receipt for
the amount paid for such livery signed by the person of whom it was hired.
(d) (c) A county may pay a sheriff or deputy as
compensation for the use of a personal automobile in the performance of
official duties a mileage allowance prescribed by the county board or a monthly
or other periodic allowance in lieu of mileage.
The allowance for automobile use is not subject to limits set by other
law.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 387.20,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Board
procedure, details. (a) The county
board of each of the counties specified in this section of less than
75,000 population annually shall set by resolution the salary of the county
sheriff which shall be paid to the county sheriff at such intervals as the
board shall determine, but not less often than once each month.
(b) At the January meeting prior to
the first date on which applicants may file for the office of county sheriff
the board shall set by resolution the minimum salary to be paid the county
sheriff for the term next following.
(c) In the event a vacancy occurs in
the office of county sheriff, the board may set the annual salary for the
remainder of the calendar year at an amount less than was set for that year.
(d) The board in any case specified
in this subdivision may not set the annual salary at an amount less than the
minimum provided in this subdivision, but it may set the salary in excess of
such minimums.
(e) (d) The salary of the county sheriff
shall not be reduced during the term for which the sheriff was elected or
appointed.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 415.11, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3.
Temporary reductions. Notwithstanding subdivision 2 or a charter
provision to the contrary, the governing body may enact an ordinance to take
effect before the next succeeding municipal election that reduces the salaries
of the members of the governing body.
The ordinance shall be in effect for 12 months, unless another period of
time is specified in the ordinance, after which the salary of the members
reverts to the salary in effect immediately before the ordinance was enacted.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 429.041,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Plans
and specifications, advertisement for bids.
When the council determines to make any improvement, it shall let the
contract for all or part of the work, or order all or part of the work done by
day labor or otherwise as authorized by subdivision 2, no later than one year
after the adoption of the resolution ordering such improvement, unless a
different time limit is specifically stated in the resolution ordering the
improvement. The
council shall cause plans and
specifications of the improvement to be made, or if previously made, to be
modified, if necessary, and to be approved and filed with the clerk, and if the
estimated cost exceeds $50,000 the amount in section 471.345,
subdivision 3, shall advertise for bids for the improvement in the
newspaper and such other papers and for such length of time as it may deem
advisable. If the estimated cost exceeds
$100,000 twice the amount in section 471.345, subdivision 3,
publication shall be made no less than three weeks before the last day for
submission of bids once in the newspaper and at least once in either a
newspaper published in a city of the first class or a trade paper. To be eligible as such a trade paper, a
publication shall have all the qualifications of a legal newspaper except that
instead of the requirement that it shall contain general and local news, such
trade paper shall contain building and construction news of interest to
contractors in this state, among whom it shall have a general circulation. The advertisement shall specify the work to
be done, shall state the time when the bids will be publicly opened for
consideration by the council, which shall be not less than ten days after the
first publication of the advertisement when the estimated cost is less than $100,000
twice the amount in section 471.345, subdivision 3, and not less than three
weeks after such publication in other cases, and shall state that no bids will
be considered unless sealed and filed with the clerk and accompanied by a cash
deposit, cashier's check, bid bond, or certified check payable to the clerk,
for such percentage of the amount of the bid as the council may specify. In providing for the advertisement for bids
the council may direct that the bids shall be opened publicly by two or more
designated officers or agents of the municipality and tabulated in advance of
the meeting at which they are to be considered by the council. Nothing herein shall prevent the council from
advertising separately for various portions of the work involved in an
improvement, or from itself, supplying by such means as may be otherwise
authorized by law, all or any part of the materials, supplies, or equipment to
be used in the improvement or from combining two or more improvements in a
single set of plans and specifications or a single contract.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 429.041,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Contracts;
day labor. In contracting for an
improvement, the council shall require the execution of one or more written
contracts and bonds, conditioned as required by law. The council shall award the contract to the
lowest responsible bidder or it may reject all bids. If any bidder to whom a contract is awarded
fails to enter promptly into a written contract and to furnish the required
bond, the defaulting bidder shall forfeit to the municipality the amount of the
defaulter's cash deposit, cashier's check, bid bond, or certified check, and
the council may thereupon award the contract to the next lowest responsible
bidder. When it appears to the council that
the cost of the entire work projected will be less than $50,000 the
amount in section 471.345, subdivision 3, or whenever no bid is submitted
after proper advertisement or the only bids submitted are higher than the
engineer's estimate, the council may advertise for new bids or, without
advertising for bids, directly purchase the materials for the work and do it by
the employment of day labor or in any other manner the council considers
proper. The council may have the work
supervised by the city engineer or other qualified person but shall have the
work supervised by a registered engineer if done by day labor and it appears to
the council that the entire cost of all work and materials for the improvement
will be more than $25,000 the lowest amount in section 471.345,
subdivision 4. In case of improper
construction or unreasonable delay in the prosecution of the work by the
contractor, the council may order and cause the suspension of the work at any
time and relet the contract, or order a reconstruction of any portion of the
work improperly done, and where the cost of completion or reconstruction
necessary will be less than $50,000 the amount in section 471.345,
subdivision 3, the council may do it by the employment of day labor.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 469.015, is
amended to read:
469.015 LETTING OF CONTRACTS; PERFORMANCE BONDS.
Subdivision 1. Bids;
notice. All construction work, and
work of demolition or clearing, and every purchase of equipment, supplies, or
materials, necessary in carrying out the purposes of sections 469.001 to
469.047, that involve expenditure of $50,000 the amount in section
471.345, subdivision 3, or more shall be awarded by contract. Before receiving bids the authority shall
publish, once a week for two consecutive weeks in an official newspaper of
general circulation in the community a notice that bids will be received for
that construction work, or that purchase
of equipment, supplies, or
materials. The notice shall state the
nature of the work and the terms and conditions upon which the contract is to
be let, naming a time and place where bids will be received, opened and read
publicly, which time shall be not less than seven days after the date of the
last publication. After the bids have
been received, opened and read publicly and recorded, the authority shall award
the contract to the lowest responsible bidder, provided that the authority
reserves the right to reject any or all bids.
Each contract shall be executed in writing, and the person to whom the
contract is awarded shall give sufficient bond to the authority for its
faithful performance. If no satisfactory
bid is received, the authority may readvertise.
The authority may establish reasonable qualifications to determine the
fitness and responsibility of bidders and to require bidders to meet the
qualifications before bids are accepted.
Subd. 1a. Best
value alternative. As an alternative
to the procurement method described in subdivision 1, the authority may issue a
request for proposals and award the contract to the vendor or contractor
offering the best value under a request for proposals as described in section
16C.28, subdivision 1, paragraph (a), clause (2), and paragraph (c).
Subd. 2. Exception;
emergency. If the authority by a
vote of four-fifths of its members shall declare that an emergency exists
requiring the immediate purchase of any equipment or material or supplies at a
cost in excess of $50,000 the amount in section 471.345, subdivision
3, but not exceeding $75,000 one-half again as much as the amount
in section 471.345, subdivision 3, or making of emergency repairs, it shall
not be necessary to advertise for bids, but the material, equipment, or
supplies may be purchased in the open market at the lowest price obtainable, or
the emergency repairs may be contracted for or performed without securing
formal competitive bids. An emergency,
for purposes of this subdivision, shall be understood to be unforeseen circumstances
or conditions which result in the placing in jeopardy of human life or
property.
Subd. 3. Performance
and payment bonds. Performance and
payment bonds shall be required from contractors for any works of construction
as provided in and subject to all the provisions of sections 574.26 to 574.31
except for contracts entered into by an authority for an expenditure of less
than $50,000 the minimum threshold amount in section 471.345,
subdivision 3.
Subd. 4. Exceptions. (a) An authority need not require competitive
bidding in the following circumstances:
(1) in the case of a contract for the
acquisition of a low-rent housing project:
(i) for which financial assistance is
provided by the federal government;
(ii) which does not require any
direct loan or grant of money from the municipality as a condition of the
federal financial assistance; and
(iii) for which the contract provides
for the construction of the project upon land that is either owned by the
authority for redevelopment purposes or not owned by the authority at the time
of the contract but the contract provides for the conveyance or lease to the
authority of the project or improvements upon completion of construction;
(2) with respect to a structured
parking facility:
(i) constructed in conjunction with,
and directly above or below, a development; and
(ii) financed with the proceeds of
tax increment or parking ramp general obligation or revenue bonds;
(3) until August 1, 2009, with
respect to a facility built for the purpose of facilitating the operation of
public transit or encouraging its use:
(i) constructed in conjunction with,
and directly above or below, a development; and
(ii) financed with the proceeds of
parking ramp general obligation or revenue bonds or with at least 60 percent of
the construction cost being financed with funding provided by the federal
government; and
(4) in the case of any building in
which at least 75 percent of the usable square footage constitutes a housing
development project if:
(i) the project is financed with the
proceeds of bonds issued under section 469.034 or from nongovernmental sources;
(ii) the project is either located on
land that is owned or is being acquired by the authority only for development
purposes, or is not owned by the authority at the time the contract is entered
into but the contract provides for conveyance or lease to the authority of the
project or improvements upon completion of construction; and
(iii) the authority finds and
determines that elimination of the public bidding requirements is necessary in
order for the housing development project to be economical and feasible.
(b) An authority need not require a
performance bond for the following projects:
(1) a contract described in paragraph
(a), clause (1);
(2) a construction change order for a
housing project in which 30 percent of the construction has been completed;
(3) a construction contract for a
single-family housing project in which the authority acts as the general
construction contractor; or
(4) a services or materials contract
for a housing project.
For purposes of this paragraph,
"services or materials contract" does not include construction
contracts.
Subd. 5. Security
in lieu of bond. The authority may
accept a certified check or cashier's check in the same amount as required for
a bond in lieu of a performance bond for contracts entered into by an authority
for an expenditure of less than $50,000 the minimum threshold amount
in section 471.345, subdivision 3.
The check must be held by the authority for 90 days after the contract
has been completed. If no suit is
brought within the 90 days, the authority must return the amount of the check
to the person making it. If a suit is
brought within the 90-day period, the authority must disburse the amount of the
check pursuant to the order of the court.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 473.862, is
amended to read:
473.862 METRO COUNTIES OTHER THAN HENNEPIN, RAMSEY, ANOKA, AND DAKOTA.
Subdivision 1. Contents
of plan. Comprehensive plans of
counties shall contain at least the following:
(a) Except for the counties of
Hennepin and, Ramsey, Anoka, and Dakota, a land use plan
as specified in section 473.859, subdivision 2, for all unincorporated
territory within the county;
(b) A public facilities plan which
shall include all appropriate matters specified in section 473.859,
subdivision 3, including a transportation plan, and a description of
existing and projected solid waste disposal sites and facilities;
(c) An implementation program, as
specified in section 473.859, subdivision 4.
Subd. 2. Towns
with no plan by 1976. Each county
other than Hennepin and, Ramsey, Anoka, and Dakota shall
prepare, with the participation and assistance of the town, the comprehensive
plan for any town within the county which fails by December 31, 1976, to take
action by resolution pursuant to section 473.861, subdivision 2 and shall
prepare all or part of any plan delegated to it pursuant to section 473.861,
subdivision 2.
Subd. 3. Towns
that cannot plan. Each county other
than Hennepin and, Ramsey, Anoka, and Dakota shall
prepare, with the participation and assistance of the town, the comprehensive
plan for each town within the county not authorized to plan under sections
462.351 to 462.364, or under special law.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 641.12,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Fee. A county board may require that each person
who is booked for confinement at a county or regional jail, and not released
upon completion of the booking process, pay a fee of up to $10 to the
sheriff's department of the county in which the jail is located to cover
costs incurred by the county in the booking of that person. The fee is payable immediately from any money
then possessed by the person being booked, or any money deposited with the
sheriff's department on the person's behalf.
If the person has no funds at the time of booking or during the period
of any incarceration, the sheriff shall notify the district court in the county
where the charges related to the booking are pending, and shall request the
assessment of the fee. Notwithstanding
section 609.10 or 609.125, upon notification from the sheriff, the district
court must order the fee paid to the sheriff's department as part of any
sentence or disposition imposed. If the
person is not charged, is acquitted, or if the charges are dismissed, the
sheriff shall return the fee to the person at the last known address listed in
the booking records.
Sec. 23. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections
373.42; 384.151, subdivisions 1 and 3; 385.373, subdivisions 1 and 3; 386.015,
subdivisions 1 and 4; and 387.20, subdivision 4, are repealed."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to
local government; removing, extending, or modifying certain mandates upon local
governmental units; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 16C.28,
subdivision 1a; 211B.37; 306.243, by adding a subdivision; 326B.145; 344.18;
365.28; 375.055, subdivision 1; 375.12, subdivision 2; 382.265; 383B.021;
384.151, subdivision 1a; 385.373, subdivision 1a; 386.015, subdivision 2;
387.20, subdivisions 1, 2; 415.11, by adding a subdivision; 429.041,
subdivisions 1, 2; 469.015; 473.862; 641.12, subdivision 1; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 14; repealing Minnesota Statutes
2008, sections 373.42; 384.151, subdivisions 1, 3; 385.373, subdivisions 1, 3;
386.015, subdivisions 1, 4; 387.20, subdivision 4."
With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Hornstein from
the Transportation and Transit Policy and Oversight Division to which was
referred:
H. F. No. 1856,
A bill for an act relating to pupil transportation; authorizing a school
district to report actual costs instead of allocated costs for contracted
services; clarifying certain field trip costs; broadening resident district
involvement when a student is placed in another district for care and
treatment; increasing the maximum weight of a
type A-I school
bus; modifying seat back and tailpipe equipment standards; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2008, sections 123B.92, subdivisions 1, 5; 125A.15; 125A.51; 169.011,
subdivision 71; 169.443, subdivision 9; 169.4501, subdivision 1; 169.4503,
subdivision 20, by adding a subdivision; 169.454, subdivision 13; 169A.03,
subdivision 23; 171.01, subdivision 22; 171.02, subdivisions 2, 2a;
171.321, subdivisions 1, 4, 5.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee
on Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Solberg from
the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2134,
A bill for an act relating to capital improvements; appropriating money for
asset preservation for various state agencies and higher education facilities;
authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds; proposing coding for new law
in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 84.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line 8,
delete "$21,500,000" and insert "$20,000,000"
Page 1, line
11, delete "$31,500,000" and insert "$30,000,000"
Page 2, line 7,
delete "$2,173,000" and insert "$2,138,000"
Page 2, line
22, delete "$72,840,000" and insert "$69,805,000"
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Mullery from
the Committee on Civil Justice to which was referred:
S. F. No. 166,
A bill for an act relating to insurance; regulating life insurance; prohibiting
stranger-originated life insurance; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 60A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 61A.073;
61A.074.
Reported the
same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, delete
lines 14 to 20
Page 1, line
21, delete "5" and insert "4"
Page 1, line
22, delete "6" and insert "5"
Page 2, line 3,
delete "7" and insert "6"
Page 2, line 7,
delete "8" and insert "7"
Page 2, line 9,
delete "9" and insert "8"
Page 2, line
13, delete "10" and insert "9"
Page 2, line
14, delete "11" and insert "10"
Page 3, line
25, delete "12" and insert "11"
Page 4, delete
lines 1 to 2
Page 7, line 6,
delete "PRESUMPTION OF STOLI
PRACTICES" and insert "PROHIBITION;
ENTRY INTO LIFE SETTLEMENT CONTRACT"
Page 7, delete
lines 8 to 25 and insert:
"Subdivision
1. Prohibition; entry into life settlement contract. No person at any time prior to, or at the
time of, the application for, or issuance of, a policy, or during a two-year
period commencing with the date of issuance of the policy, shall enter into a
life settlement contract regardless of the date the compensation is to be
provided and regardless of the date the assignment, transfer, sale, devise,
bequest, or surrender of the policy is to occur, except as otherwise provided
by law.
Subd. 2.
Presumption. When a rebuttable presumption is created
under this section, the burden of rebutting the presumption is on the
policyowner and not the insured."
Page 7, line
26, delete "2" and insert "3"
Page 8, line
12, delete everything after "beneficiary"
Page 8, line
13, delete "is issued"
Page 8, line
15, delete everything after "contract"
Page 8, line
16, delete everything before the period
Page 8, delete
lines 21 and 22 and insert:
"(3) if
the answer to clause (2) is "yes," then an inquiry regarding whether
the insured underwent a life-expectancy evaluation during the 18 months
immediately preceding the issuance of the policy;
(4) if the answer
to clause (3) is "yes," then an inquiry regarding whether, during the
same period, the results of the life-expectancy evaluation were shared with or
used by any person for the purposes of determining the actual or potential
value of the policy in the secondary market;
(5) if the
answer to clause (4) is "yes," then an inquiry regarding whether
either of the following conditions exist:
(i) there
was an agreement or understanding before issuance of the policy, between the
insured and another person, to guarantee any liability or to purchase or stand
ready to purchase the policy, including through an assumption or forgiveness of
the loan; or
(ii) the
policyowner funded a portion of the policy premiums by other than the following
means:
(A) using
personal assets provided by the insured or by a person who is closely related
to the insured by blood or who has a lawful substantial economic interest in
the continued life, health, and bodily safety of the insured; or
(B) full
recourse liability financing incurred by the insured;"
Page 8, line 23,
delete "(4)" and insert "(6)"
Page 8, line 26,
delete "(5)" and insert "(7)"
Page 10, delete
lines 8 to 12
Page 10, line
13, delete "5" and insert "3"
With the
recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the
Committee on Commerce and Labor.
The
report was adopted.
Pelowski from
the Committee on State and Local Government Operations Reform, Technology and
Elections to which was referred:
S. F. No. 275, A
bill for an act relating to natural resources; renaming the Minnesota River
Basin Joint Powers Board; clarifying the duties and membership of board;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 103F.378.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Atkins from the
Committee on Commerce and Labor to which was referred:
S. F. No. 743, A
bill for an act relating to commerce; weights and measures; updating petroleum
standards; establishing standards for biodiesel blends and fuels; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 239.761, subdivisions 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11,
16; 239.77, subdivision 1; 296A.01, subdivisions 8, 20, 23, 24, 26, 28.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass and be placed on the
Consent Calendar.
The
report was adopted.
Solberg from the
Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
S. F. No. 1329,
A bill for an act relating to the Public Facilities Authority; providing for
use of federal funds allocated to the state by the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act; providing for clean water and drinking water loans and
grants; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections
446A.07, subdivision 7; 446A.081, subdivision 8.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Sertich from the
Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration to which was referred:
Senate
Concurrent Resolution No. 7, A Senate concurrent resolution relating to
adjournment for more than three days.
Reported the
same back with the recommendation that the senate concurrent resolution be
adopted.
The
report was adopted.
SECOND READING OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 412, 775, 855, 1038, 1306, 1467
and 2134 were read for the second time.
SECOND READING OF SENATE
BILLS
S. F. Nos. 33, 284, 675, 708, 1197, 275,
743 and 1329 were read for the second time.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Downey, Kahn, Kiffmeyer and Winkler
introduced:
H. F. No. 2270, A bill for an act relating
to state government; assigning the Legislative Audit Commission and the
commissioner of finance duties relating to financial management and internal
controls; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 3.97, by adding a
subdivision; 16A.055, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 16A.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on State and Local Government Operations Reform,
Technology and Elections.
Abeler and Murphy, E., introduced:
H. F. No. 2271, A bill for an act relating
to health licensing boards; appropriating money.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Finance.
Davids introduced:
H. F. No. 2272, A bill for an act relating
to clean water; creating ground fuel storage grants; appropriating money.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Finance.
Thao introduced:
H. F. No. 2273, A bill for an act relating
to occupations and professions; providing licensure for dental professionals;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, sections 150A.01, subdivision 8; 150A.02,
subdivision 1; 150A.05, subdivisions 1, 2; 150A.06, subdivisions 2a, 2b, 2c,
2d, 4a, 5, 7, 8; 150A.08, subdivisions 1, 3, 3a, 5, 6, 8; 150A.081; 150A.09,
subdivisions 1, 3; 150A.091, subdivisions 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15,
by adding subdivisions; 150A.10, subdivisions 1a, 2, 4; 150A.12; 150A.13;
repealing Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 150A.09, subdivision 6.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Health Care and Human Services Policy and
Oversight.
Lesch, Kahn and Lanning introduced:
H. F. No. 2274, A bill for an act relating
to taxation; income; providing for a film investment credit; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 290.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Morgan and Masin introduced:
H. F. No. 2275, A bill for an act relating
to transportation; designating Sioux Trail Transit Way; requiring Metropolitan
Council to conduct Sioux Trail Transit Way feasibility study.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Transportation and Transit Policy and Oversight Division.
Kelly introduced:
H. F. No. 2276, A bill for an act relating
to the arts; appropriating money to Independent School District No. 813,
Lake City.
The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Finance.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following message was received from
the Senate:
Madam
Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the
Senate of the following Senate Files, herewith transmitted:
S. F. Nos. 764 and 811.
Colleen J. Pacheco, First Assistant
Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF SENATE
BILLS
S. F. No. 764, A bill for an act relating to state
government; allowing state agencies to conduct meetings by telephone or by
electronic means; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter
13D.
The bill was read for the first time.
Johnson moved that S. F. No. 764 and H. F. No. 456, now on
the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 811, A bill for an act relating to education
finance; authorizing Independent School District No. 2887, McLeod West, to
issue general obligation bonds for its reorganization operating debt.
The bill was read for the first time.
Shimanski moved that S. F. No. 811 and H. F. No. 1040, now on
the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
FISCAL CALENDAR
Pursuant to rule 1.22, Solberg requested
immediate consideration of S. F. No. 95.
S. F. No. 95, A bill for an act relating
to state government finance; providing deficiency funding for certain state
agencies; appropriating money.
The bill was read for the third time and
placed upon its final passage.
The question was taken on the passage of
the bill and the roll was called. There
were 128 yeas and 0 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Beard
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Davids
Davnie
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Eken
Emmer
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Knuth
Koenen
Kohls
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Loon
Mack
Magnus
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murdock
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Nornes
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rosenthal
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Torkelson
Urdahl
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
The bill was passed and its title agreed
to.
Pursuant to rule 1.22, Lenczewski requested
immediate consideration of S. F. No. 832.
S. F. No. 832, A bill for an act relating
to taxation; income; extending the exception to minimum contacts required for
jurisdiction to ownership of property on the premises of a printer under
specific circumstances; amending Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 290.015,
subdivision 3.
The bill was read for the third time and
placed upon its final passage.
The question was taken on the passage of
the bill and the roll was called. There
were 128 yeas and 0 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Beard
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brod
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Davids
Davnie
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Eken
Emmer
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Greiling
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Knuth
Koenen
Kohls
Laine
Lanning
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Loon
Mack
Magnus
Marquart
Masin
McFarlane
McNamara
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murdock
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Nornes
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rosenthal
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Sertich
Severson
Shimanski
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Torkelson
Urdahl
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Westrom
Winkler
Zellers
Spk. Kelliher
The bill was passed and its title agreed
to.
There being no objection, the order of
business advanced to Motions and Resolutions.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Thao moved that the name of Otremba be
added as an author on H. F. No. 535. The motion prevailed.
Kalin moved that the name of Sterner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 680. The motion prevailed.
Lanning moved that his name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 855.
The motion prevailed.
Brown moved that her name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 920.
The motion prevailed.
Hayden moved that the name of Knuth be
added as an author on H. F. No. 985. The motion prevailed.
Eken moved that the name of Sterner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1237. The motion prevailed.
Thissen moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1328. The motion prevailed.
Rosenthal moved that the name of Knuth be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1432. The motion prevailed.
Rosenthal moved that the name of Sterner
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1539. The motion prevailed.
Swails moved that the name of McNamara be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1665. The motion prevailed.
Hornstein moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1705. The motion prevailed.
Eken moved that the name of Olin be shown
as chief author on H. F. No. 1733. The motion prevailed.
Hilty moved that the name of Kalin be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1744. The motion prevailed.
Norton moved that the name of Brynaert be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1785. The motion prevailed.
Atkins moved that the name of Zellers be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1853. The motion prevailed.
Gottwalt moved that the name of Bunn be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1865. The motion prevailed.
Rukavina moved that the name of Sterner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2118. The motion prevailed.
Slocum moved that the name of Hansen be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2141. The motion prevailed.
Reinert moved that his name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 2156.
The motion prevailed.
Clark moved that the name of Reinert be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2165. The motion prevailed.
Howes moved that his name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 2191.
The motion prevailed.
Murphy, M., moved that the name of
Loeffler be added as an author on H. F. No. 2229. The motion prevailed.
Scalze moved that the names of Ruud;
Rosenthal; Murphy, E.; Hornstein; Swails; Nelson; Peterson; Davnie and Slawik
be added as authors on H. F. No. 2249. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the name of Brynaert be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2257. The motion prevailed.
Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the
unofficial engrossment, was reported to the House.
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 6
A Senate concurrent resolution adopting
Permanent Joint Rules of the Senate and House of Representatives.
Be
It Resolved, by the Senate of the State of Minnesota, the House of
Representatives concurring:
The Permanent Joint Rules of the Senate
and the House of Representatives for the 86th Legislature shall read as
follows:
JOINT RULES
OF THE SENATE AND
HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
ARTICLE
I: JOINT CONVENTIONS
1.01 How Governed
1.02 President's Duties
1.03 President's Right to Vote
1.04 Stating Questions
1.05 Order of Debate
1.06 Calling Member to Order
1.07 Call of the Convention
1.08 Elections
1.09 No Smoking
1.10 Parliamentary Procedure
ARTICLE
II: BILLS
2.01 Form
2.02 Appropriating Money
2.03 Deadlines
2.04 Amending Bills Originating in other
House
2.05 Receding From Position
2.06 Conference Committees
2.07 Enrollment and Signature
ARTICLE
III: GENERAL PROVISIONS
3.01 Suspension of Joint Rules
3.02 Odd Year Session Adjournment
3.03 Interim Committee and Commission
Reports
ARTICLE
IV: ELECTION OF REGENTS
4.01 Joint Committee
4.02 Joint Convention
ARTICLE
I: JOINT CONVENTION
HOW
GOVERNED
1.01 The Speaker of the House shall preside at all
Conventions of the two houses of the Legislature and shall call the members to
order. The Chief Clerk of the House
shall be the Secretary and the Sergeant at Arms of the House shall be the
Sergeant at Arms of the Convention.
PRESIDENT'S
DUTIES
1.02 The President of the Convention shall
preserve order and decorum. The
President may speak on all points of order in preference to other members and
shall decide questions of order, subject to an appeal to the Convention by any
member. The President shall rise to put
a question but may state it while seated.
PRESIDENT'S RIGHT TO VOTE
1.03 The President shall have the right to vote in
all cases except appeals from the President's decisions. The President shall vote last on all
questions.
STATING QUESTIONS
1.04 Questions shall be put to the Convention in
the following form: "As many as are
of the opinion that (the question) shall pass, say 'Aye.'" After an affirmative vote is expressed the
nays shall be called as follows: "As many as are of the contrary opinion,
say 'No.'" If the President is in
doubt or a division is called, those in the affirmative shall rise first and
those in the negative afterward.
ORDER OF DEBATE
1.05 When any member wishes to speak to the
Convention on any matter, the member shall rise and respectfully address the
President, and not speak further until recognized. The member shall speak only to the question
under debate and avoid personal remarks.
When two or more members rise at the same time, the President shall
designate the member to speak first. No
member shall speak more than twice on the same question without permission of
the Convention.
CALLING MEMBER TO ORDER
1.06 If any member of the Joint Convention is
called to order for offensive words in debate, the member calling to order
shall report the words to which exception is taken and the Secretary shall
record them. No member may be called to
order for any language used in debate if exception is not taken before any
other member has spoken or any other business has taken place. A member called to order shall immediately
sit down unless another member moves to permit the member to explain. In any case, the Joint Convention, if
appealed to, shall decide without debate.
Only if the decision is in favor of the member called to order shall the
member be at liberty to proceed.
CALL OF THE CONVENTION
1.07 Five members may demand a call of the
Convention at any time except after voting has commenced. When such a call is demanded, the doors shall
be closed, the roll shall be called, the absent members shall be sent for, and
no member may be permitted to leave the Chamber, unless excused by the
President, until the call is lifted.
Proceedings under the roll call may be suspended by a majority vote of
all the members of the Convention. A
call of the Convention may be lifted by a majority vote of all the members of
the Convention.
ELECTIONS
1.08 In all elections by the Joint Convention,
members shall vote viva voce and the roll of Senate members shall be called
first. Whenever there is an election of
any officer in Joint Convention, the result shall be certified by the President
of the Senate and the Speaker of the House and announced by them to their
respective houses. The result shall be
entered in the Journal of each house and communicated to the Governor by the
Secretary of the Convention.
NO SMOKING
1.09 No person is permitted to smoke in the
Chamber or in the gallery during a Joint Convention.
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURE
1.10 The rules of the House shall be the Rules of
the Joint Convention of both houses in all cases in which the foregoing rules
are not applicable.
ARTICLE
II: BILLS
FORM
2.01 The title of each bill shall clearly state
its subject and briefly state its purpose.
When a bill amends or repeals an existing act, the title shall refer to
the chapter, section or subdivision.
Reference
shall be made to Minnesota Statutes for the provisions appearing therein unless
reference to previous session laws is required for some special reason.
Bills shall
refer to Minnesota Statutes as follows:
"Minnesota
Statutes .........., section .........."
Bills shall
refer to the session laws as follows:
"Laws
.........., chapter .........., section .........."
A bill for
the amendment of a statute shall contain the full text of the section or
subdivision to be amended as it appears in the latest edition of Minnesota
Statutes unless it has been amended, in which event it shall contain the full
text as amended.
The words
and characters constituting the amending matter shall be inserted in the proper
place in the text and underscored. The
words and characters to be eliminated by the amendment shall be stricken by
drawing a line through them. The text of
a new section or subdivision shall also be underscored when a bill amends an
existing chapter or section by adding a new section or subdivision. In the omnibus appropriation bills required
by Joint Rule 2.02, sections making an appropriation or transfer and not
amending a statute or session law need not have new material underscored. Before a committee favorably reports upon a
bill, the chair of the committee shall see that the bill conforms to this
rule. When a bill is printed in the
Journal, the new matter shall be in italics or underscored and the matter to be
eliminated shall be capitalized and in parentheses or stricken by drawing a line
through it. A bill drafted by the
Revisor of Statutes for the purposes of correcting errors in Minnesota Statutes
need not comply with the provisions of this paragraph if the bill is labeled
"REVISOR'S BILL" immediately below the title, and if there is attached
thereto a memorandum of information explaining the reasons for the bill.
If the bill
is for an original law and not for an amendment of an existing law, the
sections and subdivisions shall be arranged, subdivided, and numbered in like
manner as Minnesota Statutes. If such a
bill assigns to the sections thereof headnotes or identification by the decimal
system of numbering used in Minnesota Statutes, such headnotes and decimal
identification may be submitted by standing committee chairs to the Revisor of
Statutes for examination. Any such
headnotes shall be capital letters enclosed in brackets, and shall be subject
to the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 648.36 645.49.
All numbers
in titles shall be expressed in figures.
All numbers of section or chapter of law shall be in figures. In the body of a bill numbers in excess of
ten shall be in figures, except for a special reason they may be written, but
when written they shall not be followed by numbers or parentheses.
A bill may
include or be accompanied by a table of contents.
A bill that
repeals a statute may include or be accompanied by an appendix containing the
full text of the section or subdivision repealed.
A bill
containing a constitutional amendment may only contain the statutory language
and changes necessary to conduct the constitutional election and to implement
the constitutional amendment, should it pass.
Extraneous statutory changes or additional topics may not be included in
a bill proposing a constitutional amendment.
APPROPRIATING MONEY
2.02 The same bill shall not appropriate public
money or property to more than one local or private purpose.
No clause
appropriating money for a local or private purpose shall be contained in a bill
appropriating money for the State government or public institutions.
All
resolutions authorizing the issuing of abstracts by the Secretary of the Senate
or the Chief Clerk of the House for the payment of money shall be upon the call
of "yeas" and "nays."
DEADLINES
2.03 The Legislature shall establish by concurrent
resolution deadlines for each regular session.
The deadlines do not apply to the House committees on Capital
Investment, Ways and Means, Finance, Taxes, or Rules and Legislative
Administration, nor to the Senate committees on Capital Investment, Finance,
Taxes, or Rules and Administration.
The first
deadline is for committees to act favorably on bills in the house of origin.
The second
deadline is for committees to act favorably on bills, or companions of bills,
that met the first deadline in the other house.
A committee
has until the second deadline to act favorably on a bill, or the companion of a
bill, that by the first deadline was referred to a finance committee. The deadline for a committee of either house
to act on a bill that has been recommended favorably by the Legislative
Commission on Pensions and Retirement is the second committee deadline. The major appropriation bills are exempt from
the first two deadlines.
The third
deadline is for committees to act favorably on major appropriation and finance
bills.
When a
committee in either house acts favorably on a bill after a deadline established
in the concurrent resolution, the bill must be referred in the Senate to the
Committee on Rules and Administration and in the House of Representatives to
the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration for disposition. Either rules committee, when reporting a bill
referred to the committee under this rule, may waive application of the rule to
subsequent actions on that bill by other committees.
All bills
necessary to implement the governor's budget submitted by a state agency or
department must be made available for introduction within 15 calendar days
after the governor's budget was submitted.
A bill introduced after that date must be referred to the Committee on
Rules and Administration in the Senate or the Committee on Rules and
Legislative Administration in the House of Representatives and may not be heard
without the approval of that committee.
AMENDING BILLS ORIGINATING IN OTHER HOUSE
2.04 Either house shall have the power to amend
any bill, memorial, or resolution passed by the other house.
RECEDING FROM POSITION
2.05 Prior to a Conference Committee on any
matter, either house may recede from its position on any difference existing
between the two houses. In order to
recede, and if the matter is not in the possession of a house, that house shall
request return of the matter from the other house. To recede, a majority of a house shall
govern, except in cases otherwise provided in the Constitution. If the question is put and lost, it shall not
be put again on the same day. A
reconsideration of the question shall in all respects be regulated by the rules
of that house.
CONFERENCE COMMITTEES
2.06 In all cases of disagreement between the
Senate and House on amendments adopted by either house to a bill, memorial or
resolution passed by the other house, a Conference Committee consisting of not
less than three members nor more than five members from each house may be
requested by either house. The other
house shall appoint a similar committee.
The manner
of procedure shall be as follows: The
house of origin passes a bill and transmits it to the other body. If the other body adopts an amendment to the bill
and passes it as amended, it shall return the bill with a record of its actions
to the house of origin. If the house of
origin refuses to concur in the amendment, it shall ask for a Conference
Committee, appoint such a committee on its part, and transmit the bill with a
record of its action to the other house.
If the other house adheres to its amendment, it shall appoint a like
committee and return the bill to the house of origin.
All
Conference Committees shall be open to the public.
As much as practical,
meetings of Conference Committees shall be announced as far in advance as
possible, with the intent to provide a 24-hour notice, and actions taken
shall be agreed upon in an open meeting.
At an agreed upon hour the Conference Committee shall meet. The members from each house shall state to
the members from the other house, orally or in writing, the reason for their
respective positions. The members shall
confer thereon. A conference committee
may not meet between the hours of midnight and 7:00 a.m., except that a
committee may extend a meeting for up to one hour past midnight by a vote of
two-thirds of the members appointed to the committee by each house. The chair shall rotate between the Senate
and the House of Representatives at least every calendar day, Sundays and
holidays excepted. The conferees
shall report to their respective houses the agreement they have reached, or, if
none, the fact of a disagreement.
If an
agreement is reported, the house of origin shall act first upon the report. A Conference Committee report must be limited
to provisions that are germane to the bill and amendments that were referred to
the Conference Committee. A provision is
not germane if it relates to a substantially different subject or is intended
to accomplish a substantially different purpose from that of the bill and
amendment that were referred to the Conference Committee.
A
Conference Committee report may not appropriate a larger sum of money than the
larger of the bill or the amendments that were referred to the Conference
Committee unless the additional appropriation is authorized by the Speaker of
the House of Representatives and the Majority Leader of the Senate.
A
Conference Committee report may not delegate rulemaking to a department or
agency of state government or exempt a department or agency of state government
from rulemaking unless the delegation or exemption was included in either the
bill or the amendment that was referred to the Conference Committee.
A
Conference Committee report may not create a new commission, council, task
force, board, or other body to which a member of the legislature may be
appointed unless the body was created in either the bill or the amendment that
was referred to the Conference Committee.
If the
report is adopted and repassed as amended by the Conference Committee by the
house of origin, the report, the bill and a record of its action shall be
transmitted to the other house.
Except
after the last Thursday on which the Legislature can meet in regular session in
odd-numbered years, and after the last Thursday on which the Legislature
intended, when it adopted the concurrent resolution required by Rule 2.03, to
meet in regular session in even-numbered years, a written or electronic copy
of a report of a Conference Committee shall be placed on the desk of each
member of a house, or delivered electronically, twelve hours before
action on the report by that house. If
the report has been reprinted in the Journal of either house for a preceding
day and is available to the members, the Journal copy shall serve as the
written report. The member presenting
the Conference Committee report to the body shall disclose, either in writing
or orally, the substantial changes from the bill or the amendment as they were
last before the body.
ENROLLMENT AND SIGNATURE
2.07 After a bill or memorial or joint resolution
has been passed by both houses, it shall be carefully and properly enrolled by
the Revisor of Statutes under the direction of the Secretary of the Senate for
a matter originating in the Senate or the Chief Clerk of the House for a matter
originating in the House.
The
enrollment shall be prepared on archival quality paper approximately 8
1/2" x 14" in size and may be produced by means of a copying
machine. An enrolled bill shall be
labeled "An Act" but otherwise shall be identical to the bill passed
by the Legislature. Other enrollments
shall be identical to the memorial or joint resolution passed by the
legislature.
The Revisor
of Statutes shall obtain the signatures and certificates of the proper officers
to the enrollment. A joint resolution
applying to the Congress of the United States to call a convention for
proposing amendments to the Constitution of the United States, ratifying an
amendment to the Constitution of the United States, proposing an amendment to
the Minnesota Constitution, or prescribing the compensation of judges shall not
be presented to the Governor for approval but shall be deposited by the Revisor
of Statutes with the Secretary of State.
All other enrollments shall be presented to the Governor for approval.
ARTICLE
III: GENERAL PROVISIONS
SUSPENSION
OF JOINT RULES
3.01 Either house may suspend the Joint Rules of
the Senate and House by a vote of two-thirds of its members.
ODD YEAR SESSION ADJOURNMENT
3.02 Adjournment of the regular session in any
odd-numbered year to a date certain in the following year shall be equivalent
to daily adjournment, except that upon adjournment in any odd-numbered year to
a date certain in the following year:
(a) Any
bill being considered by a Conference Committee shall be returned to the house
of origin, laid on the table, and the Conference Committee shall be discharged;
(b) Any
bill referred to the Committee on Rules and Administration in the Senate or the
Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration in the House pursuant to
Joint Rule 2.03 shall be returned to the standing committee to which it was
last previously referred; and
(c) Any
bill returned by the Governor to the house of origin with the Governor's
objections following the adjournment shall be laid on the table.
INTERIM COMMITTEE AND COMMISSION REPORTS
3.03 Except as otherwise provided by law, the
report of any interim committee or commission to the Legislature shall be
submitted on paper 8 1/2" x 11" in size, spiral bound, stapled, or
punched on the left edge to fit a standard size three ring binder intended for
that size paper. A brief summary of the
recommendations of the commission or committee shall appear first and be clearly
separated from its findings, discussions, and exhibits. If the report contains legislative
recommendations, a copy of any proposed legislation, particularly if extensive
in character, shall if possible be attached as an exhibit at the end of the
report.
ARTICLE
IV: ELECTION OF REGENTS
JOINT
COMMITTEE
4.01 By May 7 February 28 of each
odd-numbered year, or at a date agreed to by concurrent resolution, a joint
committee shall meet to recommend nominees for regent of the University of
Minnesota to be presented to a Joint Convention of the legislature. The members of the joint committee are the
members of the senate and house committees budget and policy
divisions on higher education.
A majority of the members from each house is a quorum of the joint
committee.
The joint
committee shall determine the number of persons, and the person or persons to
be recommended for each open seat.
Each person
recommended by the regent candidate advisory council is considered to be
nominated. Other persons may be
nominated by a member of the committee at the meeting. The joint committee may recommend
to the joint convention candidates recommended by the advisory council and any
other candidates nominated by the joint committee. Nominations may be made by
committee members only. Nominations must
be made for a specified congressional or student seat, or for any at-large
seat. In recommending nominees, the
joint committee must consider the needs of the University of Minnesota. A candidate other than one recommended by the
advisory council may be nominated for consideration by the joint committee only
if the nomination receives the support of at least three house of
representatives members of the committee and two senate members of the
committee. The joint committee must make
recommendations for vacancies on the Board of Regents.
The roll
shall be called viva voce on the recommendation of regents. A majority vote of the members of the
joint committee is required for a candidate to be recommended. A
candidate must receive a majority vote of members from the house of
representatives and from the senate on the joint committee to be recommended to
the joint convention.
The joint
committee must meet to interview candidates and recommend candidates to the
joint convention.
JOINT CONVENTION
4.02 At the Joint Convention of the Senate and
House of Representatives called to elect regents, the joint committee shall
report the name of the person or persons recommended for each seat. These persons are considered to be
nominated. Any member of the legislature
may submit additional nominations. If
there is more than one at-large seat to be filled, all candidates nominated for
an at-large seat are candidates for any of the at-large seats.
The roll
shall be called viva voce on the election of regents. The roll must be called first on
congressional district seats until they are filled, then on the student seat,
and then on the at-large seats.
Each member
may cast one vote for each seat to be filled, but no more than one vote for a
candidate.
The
candidate for each seat receiving a majority of the votes cast must be declared
elected. If there is more than one
at-large seat to be filled and more than one candidate who receives a majority
of the votes cast, the candidates receiving the highest number of votes must be
declared elected; in case of a tie for the highest number of votes, the votes
must be cast again. If no candidate
receives a majority of the votes cast for a seat, on each succeeding ballot the
candidate with the fewest votes must be dropped from consideration and the
votes cast again until a majority vote is achieved. Any candidate with fewer than 20 votes on any
ballot shall also be dropped on succeeding ballots.
Sertich
moved that Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment, be
now adopted.
Sertich
moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment,
as follows:
Page 4,
line 28, strike "in italics or"
Page 4,
line 28, strike "capitalized and in parentheses or"
Page 5,
line 6, strike "capital letters enclosed in brackets" and insert
"in bold face"
The motion prevailed and the amendment was
adopted.
Seifert and
Kahn moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial
engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 9,
after line 22, insert:
"PARKING
3.04 The parking spaces directly in front of the
State Capitol shall be available for and reserved for public use. No member, staff, state employee, or
registered lobbyist may park in these spaces."
Renumber
the sections in sequence and correct the internal references
Sertich moved that the Seifert and Kahn
amendment to Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment, as
amended, be referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration.
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Sertich
motion and the roll was called. There
were 71 yeas and 58 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brynaert
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Dittrich
Eken
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hosch
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kalin
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Norton
Olin
Pelowski
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Scalze
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Winkler
Spk. Kelliher
Those who voted in the negative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Beard
Brod
Brown
Bunn
Cornish
Davids
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Emmer
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Holberg
Howes
Kahn
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Kohls
Lanning
Liebling
Loon
Mack
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Morgan
Murdock
Nornes
Obermueller
Otremba
Paymar
Peppin
Reinert
Rosenthal
Sanders
Scott
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Sterner
Torkelson
Urdahl
Westrom
Zellers
The motion prevailed and the Seifert and
Kahn amendment to Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial
engrossment, as amended, was referred to the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration.
Seifert
moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment,
as amended, as follows:
Page 7, line
19, after "excepted." insert "A conference committee on an
appropriations or tax omnibus bill must meet in public at least once each day,
with the exceptions of Sundays and holidays, until the conference committee
reports."
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Seifert
amendment and the roll was called. There
were 45 yeas and 84 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Brod
Davids
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Doepke
Downey
Drazkowski
Emmer
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Holberg
Hoppe
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Kohls
Lanning
Loon
Mack
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Murdock
Nornes
Peppin
Rosenthal
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Torkelson
Urdahl
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anzelc
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Davnie
Dill
Dittrich
Doty
Eken
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Winkler
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
McNamara
moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment,
as amended, as follows:
Page 9,
after line 22, insert:
"3.04
The regular legislative session for
2010 shall begin no earlier than March 1, 2010.
This rule shall sunset after that date."
The motion did not prevail and the amendment
was not adopted.
Seifert
moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment,
as amended, as follows:
Page 7, line
1, after the second "members" insert ", which must consist of
at least one member of the minority party,"
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Seifert
amendment and the roll was called. There
were 58 yeas and 71 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Beard
Brod
Bunn
Cornish
Davids
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dill
Doepke
Doty
Downey
Drazkowski
Emmer
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hamilton
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Kalin
Kath
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Kohls
Lanning
Lenczewski
Loon
Mack
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Murdock
Newton
Nornes
Olin
Otremba
Peppin
Rosenthal
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Swails
Torkelson
Urdahl
Ward
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Davnie
Dittrich
Eken
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Norton
Obermueller
Paymar
Pelowski
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Sterner
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Wagenius
Welti
Winkler
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
Anderson,
S., moved to amend Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial
engrossment, as amended, as follows:
Page 5,
after line 25, insert:
"TAX INCREASES
2.025 No clause raising a tax or fee of general
applicability may be included in a bill passed by either body unless 60 percent
of the total membership of that body votes to approve that measure."
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Anderson,
S., amendment and the roll was called.
There were 48 yeas and 82 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Beard
Brod
Cornish
Davids
Dean
Demmer
Dettmer
Dittrich
Doepke
Downey
Drazkowski
Emmer
Garofalo
Gottwalt
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Holberg
Hoppe
Howes
Kelly
Kiffmeyer
Kohls
Lanning
Loon
Mack
Magnus
McFarlane
McNamara
Murdock
Nornes
Peppin
Rosenthal
Sanders
Scalze
Scott
Seifert
Severson
Shimanski
Smith
Torkelson
Urdahl
Westrom
Zellers
Those who voted in the negative were:
Anzelc
Benson
Bigham
Bly
Brown
Brynaert
Bunn
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Davnie
Dill
Doty
Eken
Falk
Faust
Fritz
Gardner
Greiling
Hansen
Hausman
Haws
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Huntley
Jackson
Johnson
Juhnke
Kahn
Kalin
Kath
Knuth
Koenen
Laine
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lieder
Lillie
Loeffler
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Morgan
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nelson
Newton
Norton
Obermueller
Olin
Otremba
Paymar
Pelowski
Persell
Peterson
Poppe
Reinert
Rukavina
Ruud
Sailer
Sertich
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Solberg
Sterner
Swails
Thao
Thissen
Tillberry
Wagenius
Ward
Welti
Winkler
Spk. Kelliher
The motion did not prevail and the
amendment was not adopted.
The question recurred on the Sertich
motion that Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment, as
amended, be now adopted. The motion
prevailed and Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, the unofficial engrossment,
as amended, relating to the Permanent Joint Rules of the Senate and House of
Representatives for the 86th Legislature, was adopted.
Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 7 was
reported to the House.
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 7
A Senate concurrent resolution relating to
adjournment for more than three days.
Be It
Resolved, by the Senate of the State of Minnesota, the House of
Representatives concurring:
1.
Upon their adjournments, the Senate and House of Representative may each
set their next day of meeting for Tuesday, April 14, 2009.
2.
Each house consents to adjournment of the other house for more than
three days.
Sertich moved that Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 7 be now
adopted. The motion prevailed and Senate
Concurrent Resolution No. 7 was adopted.
Sertich moved that H. F. No. 925, now on the General Register,
be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means. 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 Thursday, April 2, 2009:
S. F. Nos. 978, 265 and 401; and
H. F. Nos. 525, 936 and 1209.
CALENDAR FOR THE DAY
Sertich moved that the Calendar for the Day be continued. The motion prevailed.
FISCAL CALENDAR ANNOUNCEMENT
Pursuant to rule 1.22, Solberg announced his intention to place
H. F. No. 855; and S. F. Nos. 1197 and 1329 on the Fiscal Calendar for Monday,
April 6, 2009.
ADJOURNMENT
Sertich moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn
until 1:00 p.m., Monday, April 6, 2009.
The motion prevailed.
Sertich moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 1:00 p.m., Monday, April 6, 2009.
Albin
A. Mathiowetz,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives