STATE OF
MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-SEVENTH
SESSION - 2011
_____________________
TWENTY-FIFTH
DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Wednesday, March 16, 2011
The House of Representatives convened at 4:30
p.m. and was called to order by Kurt Zellers, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by Deacon Nathan E.
Allen, Church of Saint Agnes, St. Paul, Minnesota.
The members of the House gave the pledge
of allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.
The roll was called and the following
members were present:
Abeler
Anderson, B.
Anderson, D.
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Atkins
Banaian
Barrett
Beard
Benson, J.
Benson, M.
Bills
Brynaert
Buesgens
Carlson
Champion
Clark
Cornish
Crawford
Daudt
Davids
Davnie
Dean
Dettmer
Dill
Dittrich
Doepke
Downey
Drazkowski
Eken
Erickson
Fabian
Falk
Franson
Fritz
Garofalo
Gauthier
Gottwalt
Greene
Greiling
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Hackbarth
Hamilton
Hancock
Hansen
Hausman
Hayden
Hilstrom
Hilty
Holberg
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Hosch
Howes
Huntley
Johnson
Kahn
Kath
Kelly
Kieffer
Kiel
Kiffmeyer
Knuth
Koenen
Kriesel
Lanning
Leidiger
LeMieur
Lenczewski
Lesch
Liebling
Lillie
Loeffler
Lohmer
Loon
Mack
Mahoney
Mariani
Marquart
Mazorol
McDonald
McElfatrick
McFarlane
McNamara
Melin
Moran
Morrow
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Murray
Myhra
Nelson
Nornes
Norton
O'Driscoll
Paymar
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Petersen, B.
Peterson, S.
Poppe
Quam
Rukavina
Runbeck
Sanders
Scalze
Schomacker
Scott
Shimanski
Simon
Slawik
Slocum
Smith
Stensrud
Swedzinski
Thissen
Tillberry
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vogel
Wagenius
Wardlow
Westrom
Winkler
Woodard
Spk. Zellers
A quorum was present.
Laine, Murdock and Ward were excused.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the
Journal of the preceding day. There
being no objection, further reading of the Journal was dispensed with and the
Journal was approved as corrected by the Chief Clerk.
REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES AND
DIVISIONS
Cornish from the Committee on Public Safety and Crime Prevention Policy and Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 6, A bill for an act relating to crime; increasing the penalty for criminal sexual conduct in the first degree; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 609.342, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. [609.3458]
INDETERMINATE SENTENCE FOR PREDATORY SEX OFFENDERS.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this section:
(1) "sex offense" means a
violation of section 609.342, 609.343, 609.344, or 609.345;
(2) "predatory sex offender" means a person who:
(i) is unable to control the person's
sexual impulses;
(ii) is dangerous to other persons; and
(iii) has a pattern of harmful sexual
conduct; and
(3) "harmful sexual conduct"
means sexual conduct that creates a substantial likelihood of serious physical
or emotional harm to another.
Subd. 2. Applicability. A prosecuting attorney may charge a person under this section when probable cause exists that the person:
(1) committed a sex offense; and
(2) is a predatory sex offender.
Subd. 3. Procedures. A person subject to prosecution under
this section shall have a bifurcated trial.
The first phase of the trial shall determine the person's guilt on the
sex offense charge. If the person is
found guilty of the sex offense, the second phase of the trial shall determine
whether the person is a predatory sex offender.
In both phases of the trial, the burden of proof is on the state and the
standard of proof is beyond a reasonable doubt.
A person charged under this section has all of the rights of a criminal
defendant in both phases of the trial.
Subd. 4. Indeterminate
sentence; minimum and maximum term specified. (a) A person convicted of a sex
offense who has been found by the fact finder to be a predatory sex offender
shall be committed to the custody of the commissioner of corrections for the
term required by paragraph (b).
(b) The minimum sentence of
incarceration for offenders sentenced under paragraph (a) shall be twice the
presumptive sentence under the sentencing guidelines for a person with the
offender's criminal history. When the
sentencing guidelines presume a stayed sentence for the sex offense, the court
shall specify a minimum sentence. Notwithstanding
any law to the contrary and the statutory maximum sentence for the offense, the
maximum sentence is 60 years.
(c) A person sentenced under this
section and subsequently released shall be placed on conditional release as
provided for in subdivision 9.
(d) Notwithstanding section 609.135,
the court may not stay the imposition or execution of the sentence required by
this subdivision. An offender committed
to the custody of the commissioner of corrections under this section may not be
released from incarceration except as provided in this section and section
244.05, subdivision 8.
Subd. 5. Sentence
of persons not found to be predatory sex offenders. If the person is convicted of the sex
offense but is not determined to be a predatory sex offender, the court shall
sentence the offender as otherwise provided by law.
Subd. 6. Release
authority. The commissioner
of corrections, under rules promulgated by the commissioner, may grant
supervised release to offenders sentenced under this section.
Subd. 7. Petition
for release, hearing. (a) A
person who has served the minimum period of incarceration to which the person
was sentenced may petition the commissioner of corrections for release. The commissioner shall hold a hearing on each
petition for release prior to making any determination. Within 45 days of the hearing, the
commissioner shall give written notice of the time and place of the hearing to
all interested parties, including the petitioner, the sentencing court, the
county attorney's office that prosecuted the case, and any victims of the crime
who requested notification. The hearing
must be held on the record. Upon the
approval of the commissioner, the petitioner may subpoena witnesses to appear
at the hearing.
(b) If the commissioner determines the
person satisfies the criteria for conditional release, the commissioner shall
release the person from incarceration no later than 14 days after making a
determination.
(c) If the commissioner rejects the
person's petition for release, the commissioner must specify in writing the
reasons for the rejection. The person
may not petition for release again until 24 months have elapsed since the
rejection, unless the commissioner specifies a shorter time period.
Subd. 8. Criteria for release. (a) A person sentenced under this section shall not be released from incarceration unless it appears to the satisfaction of the commissioner that the person:
(1) no longer poses a threat to the
public;
(2) is no longer in need of programming
in a secure facility; and
(3) is capable of reintegration with
the general public.
(b) The person seeking release has the
burden of showing, by clear and convincing evidence, that the criteria in
paragraph (a) have been met.
Subd. 9. Conditional
release. (a) A person
sentenced under this section shall serve, upon release from incarceration, a
conditional release term. The
conditional release term shall be the 60-year maximum term under this section
less the amount of time actually served, but the term cannot be less than ten
years.
(b) The commissioner of corrections
shall establish the conditions of release for a person granted conditional
release.
(c) The county attorney in the county
where the conviction occurred, the person's conditional release agent, or any
other interested party may file a petition with the court alleging that the
person failed to satisfy any condition of release. If the court determines that a person has
violated a condition of release, the court may order an appropriate
sanction, including, but not limited
to, incarcerating the person for a period specified by the court in a local or
state correctional facility. The period
may be of any duration up to the remainder of time left in the person's
conditional release term.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective August 1, 2011, and
applies to crimes committed on or after that date."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to crime prevention; providing for indeterminate sentencing for certain convicted sex offenders; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 609."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Westrom from the Committee on
Civil Law to which was referred:
H. F. No. 32, A bill for an act relating to
civil law; restoring state and local government tort liability limits to
pre-2008 levels; prohibiting state and local government contracts that require
contractors to provide liability insurance or other security in excess of those
limits; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 3.736, subdivision 4;
466.04, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 3.736,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Limits.
The total liability of the state and its employees acting within the
scope of their employment on any tort claim shall not exceed:
(a) $300,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $300,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
before August 1, 2007;
(b) $400,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $400,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
on or after August 1, 2007, and before July 1, 2009;
(c) $500,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $500,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
on or after July 1, 2009;
(d) $750,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1,
1998, and before
January 1, 2000;
(e) $1,000,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1,
2000, and before
January 1, 2008, and for claims involving nonprofit organizations engaged in
or administering outdoor recreational activities funded in whole or in part by
the state or operating under the authorization of a permit issued by an agency
or department of the state;
(f) $1,200,000 for any number of claims arising out of a
single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1, 2008, and
before July 1, 2009; or
(g) $1,500,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after July 1,
2009.
If the amount awarded to or settled upon multiple claimants
exceeds the applicable limit under clause (d), (e), (f), or (g), any party may
apply to the district court to apportion to each claimant a proper share of the
amount available under the applicable limit under clause (d), (e), (f), or (g). The share apportioned to each claimant shall
be in the proportion that the ratio of the award or settlement bears to the
aggregate awards and settlements for all claims arising out of the occurrence.
The limitation imposed by this subdivision on individual
claimants includes damages claimed for loss of services or loss of support
arising out of the same tort.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment,
and applies to claims arising from acts or omissions that occur on or after that
date.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 466.04,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Limits; punitive damages. (a) Liability of any municipality on any
claim within the scope of sections 466.01 to 466.15 shall not exceed:
(1) $300,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $300,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
before January 1, 2008;
(2) $400,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $400,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
on or after January 1, 2008, and before July 1, 2009;
(3) $500,000 when the claim is one for death by wrongful act
or omission and $500,000 to any claimant in any other case, for claims arising
on or after July 1, 2009;
(4) $750,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1,
1998, and before
January 1, 2000;
(5) $1,000,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1,
2000, and before
January 1, 2008, and for claims involving nonprofit organizations engaged in
or administering outdoor recreational activities funded in whole or in part by
a municipality or operating under the authorization of a permit issued by a
municipality;
(6) $1,200,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after January 1,
2008, and before
July 1, 2009;
(7) $1,500,000 for any number of claims
arising out of a single occurrence, for claims arising on or after July 1,
2009; or
(8) twice the limits provided in clauses (1) to (7) when the
claim arises out of the release or threatened release of a hazardous substance,
whether the claim is brought under sections 115B.01 to 115B.15 or under any
other law.
(b) No award for damages on any such claim shall include
punitive damages.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment,
and applies to claims arising from acts or omissions that occur on or after
that date."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to civil law; providing
state and municipal liability for certain claims involving certain nonprofit
organizations; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 3.736, subdivision 4;
466.04, subdivision 1."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Abeler from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 113, A bill for an act relating to
taxation; gross revenues; exempting certain payments; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2010, section 295.53, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 2, line 34, delete everything after the comma
Page 2, delete line 35 and insert "if 60 percent or
more of the entity's"
Page 2, line 36, delete everything before "gross"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Taxes.
The
report was adopted.
Davids from the Committee on
Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 174, A bill for an act relating to
state government; requiring the Department of Revenue to issue a request for
proposals for a tax analytics and business intelligence contract.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
be re-referred to the Committee on State Government Finance without further
recommendation.
The
report was adopted.
Gottwalt from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 201, A bill for an act relating to
health; limiting use of funds for state-sponsored health programs for funding
abortions.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Gottwalt from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 233, A bill for an act relating to
state government; requiring the Department of Human Services to issue a request
for proposals for a Medicaid fraud detection and business intelligence
contract.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Government Operations and
Elections.
The
report was adopted.
Gunther from the Committee on
Jobs and Economic Development Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 342, A bill for an act relating to
manufactured homes; providing for inspections; modifying alternative design
plans and reinstallation requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010,
sections 327.32, subdivisions 1a, 1b, 1e; 327.33, subdivision 1, by adding
subdivisions.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 2, line 33, strike "feet"
Page 3, line 4, strike "feet"
Page 3, after line 32, insert:
"EFFECTIVE DATE. This
section is effective the day following final enactment."
Page 4, line 5, delete "......." and insert
"the day following final enactment."
Page 4, line 16, reinstate the stricken
"department" and delete "permitting"
Page 4, line 17, delete "authority"
Page 4, line 27, delete "......." and
insert "the day following final enactment."
Page 4, delete section 4 and insert:
"Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 327.33,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Inspections. The commissioner shall, through the
department's inspectors or through a designated recognized inspection service
acting as authorized representative of the commissioner perform sufficient
inspections of manufacturing premises and manufactured homes to ensure
compliance with sections 327.31 to 327.35, except that municipalities which
have adopted the State Building Code may provide inspection and plan review
services in noncode areas of the state.
The commissioner shall have the exclusive right to conduct
inspections, except for the inspections conducted or authorized by the
secretary.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 327.33,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Fees.
The commissioner shall by rule establish reasonable fees for seals,
installation seals and inspections which are sufficient to cover all costs
incurred in the administration of sections 327.31 to 327.35. The commissioner shall also establish by rule
a monitoring inspection fee in an amount that will comply with the secretary's
fee distribution program. This
monitoring inspection fee shall be an amount paid by the manufacturer for each
manufactured home produced in Minnesota.
The monitoring inspection fee shall be paid by the manufacturer to the
secretary. The rules of the fee
distribution program require the secretary to distribute the fees collected
from all manufactured home manufacturers among states approved and
conditionally approved based on the number of new manufactured homes whose
first location after leaving the manufacturer is on the premises of a
distributor, dealer or purchaser in that state.
Fees for inspections in areas that have not adopted the State
Building Code must be equal to the fees for inspections in code areas of the
state. Third-party vendors may charge
their usual and normal charge for inspections.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Page 5, delete sections 5 to 7
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Gottwalt from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 364, A bill for an act relating to
chemical health; providing interstate contracts for detoxification services;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 245.50.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Peppin from the Committee on
Government Operations and Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 418, A bill for an act relating to
state government; proposing the Back Office Consolidation Act; centralizing
accounting, financial reporting, procurement, fleet services, human resources,
and payroll functions in the Department of Administration; proposing coding for
new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 16B.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 1, line 16, delete "must" and insert
"may"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on State Government Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Cornish from the Committee on Public Safety and Crime Prevention Policy and Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 447, A bill for an act relating to vulnerable adults; modifying provisions governing investigations, reviews, and hearings; making the crime of criminal abuse of a vulnerable adult a registrable offense under the predatory offender registration law; changing terminology; increasing the criminal penalty for assaulting a vulnerable adult; providing criminal penalties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 144.7065, subdivision 10; 243.166, subdivision 1b; 256.021; 256.045, subdivision 4; 518.165, subdivision 5; 524.5-118, subdivision 2; 609.2231, by adding a subdivision; 609.224, subdivision 2; 626.557, subdivisions 9, 9a, 9c, 9d, 12b, by adding a subdivision; 626.5571, subdivision 1; 626.5572, subdivision 13.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Judiciary Policy and Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Hamilton from the Committee on
Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 548, A bill for an act relating to
property taxation; including the sale of game birds and waterfowl in the
definition of agricultural products; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section
273.13, subdivision 23.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 4, line 6, reinstate the stricken language, and after
"raised" insert "on a game farm licensed under section
97A.105 or"
Page 4, line 7, reinstate the stricken language
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Taxes.
The
report was adopted.
Gottwalt from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 584, A bill for an act relating to
human services; modifying license requirements for adult foster care and family
adult day services; directing commissioner to apply for federal waiver for
medical assistance reimbursement; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections
245A.11, subdivision 2b; 245A.143, subdivision 1; 256B.49, subdivision 16a.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Erickson from the Committee on
Education Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 638, A bill for an act relating to
education; creating a school grading system; creating a school recognition
program; modifying school report cards; authorizing rulemaking; requiring a
report; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 120B.36, subdivision 1, by adding
subdivisions; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 120B.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section
1. [120B.361]
SCHOOL AND DISTRICT GRADING SYSTEM AND SCHOOL RECOGNITION PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. School and district grades.
(a) Consistent with the state growth targets established under
sections 120B.299 and 120B.35, subdivision 3, paragraphs (a) and (b), and the
school performance report cards under section 120B.36, subdivision 1, an
"A to F" school and district grading system is established to help
identify those schools and districts where students are achieving low, medium,
or high growth and achieving or not achieving proficiency on statewide
assessments under section 120B.30. For
purposes of this section, and using the state growth target, the commissioner
annually must grade each public school and district "A" to
"F" and then report that grade under section 120B.36, subdivision 1,
based on the following calculations:
(1) 50 percent of a school's grade must be determined based
on the numbers and percentages of students in each applicable student category
for which assessment data is disaggregated under section 120B.35, subdivision
3, paragraph (b), clause (2), and paragraph (c), who achieved proficiency on
the statewide reading and mathematics assessments under section 120B.30 in the
previous school year;
(2) 25 percent of a school's grade must be determined based
on the numbers and percentages of students in each applicable student category
for which assessment data is disaggregated under section 120B.35, subdivision
3, paragraph (b), clause (2), and paragraph (c), who achieved low growth,
medium growth, or high growth on the statewide reading and mathematics
assessments under section 120B.30 in the previous school year;
(3) 15 percent of a school's grade must be determined based
on the numbers and percentages of students in each applicable student category
for which assessment data is disaggregated under section 120B.35, subdivision
3, paragraph (b), clause (2), and paragraph (c), who achieved low growth and
did not achieve proficiency on the statewide reading assessments under section
120B.30 in the previous school year;
(4) ten percent of a school's grade must be determined based
on the numbers and percentages of students in each applicable student category
for which assessment data is disaggregated under section 120B.35, subdivision
3, paragraph (b), clause (2), and paragraph (c), who achieved low growth and
did not achieve proficiency on the statewide mathematics assessments under
section 120B.30 in the previous school year; and
(5) using the calculations in clauses (1) to (4), a school
district's grade must be determined based on the combined average scores of all
district schools.
(b) The grade a school or district receives under this
subdivision must accurately reflect the differences in schools' performances
based on students' proficiency and growth and the calculations required under
this subdivision. A school or district
may appeal its grade in writing to the commissioner within 30 days of receiving
notice of its grade. The commissioner's
decision regarding the grade is final. Grades
given under this section are nonpublic data under section 13.02, subdivision 9,
until not later than ten days after the appeal under this paragraph is
complete.
Subd. 2. School recognition. (a)
A school that received a letter grade of "A" in the previous school
year, improved at least one letter grade in the previous school year, or
improved two or more letter grades in the two previous school years is eligible
to receive a school recognition award.
(b) A school recognition award under this subdivision equals
$100 per enrollee for each eligible school.
The commissioner must distribute the award to each eligible school.
(c) An eligible school that receives a school recognition
award may use the award to:
(1) pay onetime bonuses for licensed staff employed at the
school;
(2) pay onetime expenditures for educational equipment or
materials to help maintain or improve student academic achievement; or
(3) temporarily employ licensed or otherwise qualified staff
to help maintain or improve student academic achievement.
Notwithstanding other law to the contrary, any award a
school receives under this subdivision is not subject to a collective
bargaining agreement.
(d) To distribute the award at the school, and consistent
with paragraph (c), an eligible school may select a site team that includes at
least the school principal or other person having administrative control of the
school, teachers employed at the school, the parent of a student enrolled in
the school, and a community representative to decide how best to use the award. Alternatively, if by November 1 in the year
in which the award is made the site team cannot reach agreement or if no site
team is selected, the school principal or other person having administrative
control of the school must distribute the award.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment
and requires the education commissioner to use student performance data
beginning in the 2011-2012 school year, determine and report a letter grade for
each school and district, and distribute school recognition awards beginning in
the 2012-2013 school year and later.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 126C.10,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. General education revenue. For fiscal year 2006 and later,
The general education revenue for each district equals the sum of the
district's basic revenue, extended time revenue, gifted and talented revenue,
basic skills revenue, training and experience revenue, secondary sparsity
revenue, elementary sparsity revenue, transportation sparsity revenue, total
operating capital revenue, equity revenue, alternative teacher compensation
revenue, school recognition award, and transition revenue.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective for revenue for fiscal year 2013
and later.
Sec. 3. REPORT;
PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTING SCHOOL AND DISTRICT GRADING SYSTEM.
The commissioner of education must convene a stakeholder
group that includes assessment and evaluation directors, educators, and
researchers to advise the commissioner on developing a plan to implement the
school and district grading system under Minnesota Statutes, section 120B.361. The commissioner must present the plan in
writing to the education policy and finance committees of the legislature by
February 15, 2012, and include any recommendations for further clarifying
Minnesota Statutes, section 120B.361.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 4. REPORT;
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR INCREASING SCHOOLS' FINANCIAL FLEXIBILITY.
The commissioner of education must submit to the education
policy and finance committees of the legislature by February 1, 2013, written
recommendations that identify fiscal mandates the legislature might waive to
give greater financial flexibility to schools that received a letter grade of
"A," improved at least one letter grade in the preceding school year,
or improved two or more letter grades in the two preceding school years under
Minnesota Statutes, section 120B.361, subdivision 1.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal
references
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Hoppe from the Committee on
Commerce and Regulatory Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 657, A bill for an act relating to
commerce; regulating certain practices with respect to event tickets;
establishing minimum standards for consumer protection; proposing coding for
new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325E; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010,
section 609.807.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 1, line 8, delete "sections 325E.68 to 325E.72"
and insert "this section and section 325E.69"
Page 1, line 14, after "persons" insert
", including but not limited to those venues for which public funding
has been provided for the construction, maintenance, or operation of the venue
or any infrastructure related to it, or which is located on property owned by a
municipality or other government entity"
Page 2, line 4, after the second comma, insert "for
initial sale"
Page 2, line 7, after the period, insert "A ticket
issuer does not include a person involved in or facilitating ticket resale."
Page 2, delete section 2
Page 3, line 11, delete "325E.70" and
insert "325E.69"
Page 3, line 19, after "resold" insert
"or transferred"
Pages 4 and 5, delete sections 4 to 6
Page 5, line 18, delete "to 6" and insert
"and 2" and delete "January 1, 2012" and
insert "August 1, 2011"
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 3, delete everything before
"proposing"
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass.
The
report was adopted.
Gottwalt from the Committee on
Health and Human Services Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 746, A bill for an act relating to
state government; requiring Department of Human Services to issue a request for
proposals for an integrated online eligibility and application portal for food
support, cash assistance, child care, and health care programs.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Government Operations and
Elections.
The
report was adopted.
Peppin from the Committee on
Government Operations and Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 789, A bill for an act relating to
public employment; modifying public employee insurance program eligible
employers; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 43A.316, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass.
The
report was adopted.
Davids from the Committee on
Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 873, A bill for an act relating to
education finance; removing obsolete language; amending Minnesota Statutes
2010, section 126C.10, subdivision 13a.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Davids from the Committee on
Taxes to which was referred:
H. F. No. 874, A bill for an act relating to
education finance; removing obsolete language; amending Minnesota Statutes
2010, section 126C.10, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Westrom from the Committee on
Civil Law to which was referred:
H. F. No. 939, A bill for an act relating to
corrections; requiring the commissioner of corrections to issue a request for
proposals for housing individuals committed to the custody of the commissioner
in private prisons; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 241.01,
subdivision 3a.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 2, delete section 2 and insert:
"Sec. 2. ISSUANCE
OF REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS; PRISON PRIVATIZATION.
Subdivision 1. Request for proposals. The
commissioner of administration, in consultation with the commissioner of
corrections, must issue a request for proposals within 30 days of the effective
date of this act, and must authorize one or more vendors by November 1, 2011,
to provide correctional facilities, services, and supervision for persons
committed to the commissioner of corrections by the courts of this state. The commissioner may consider proposals from vendors
with facilities in Minnesota and from vendors that propose building facilities
in Minnesota. The commissioner may
consider proposals that involve multiple sites.
The Department of Corrections may submit a proposal. A proposal submitted by the department must
be given the same consideration as proposals from private vendors.
Subd. 2. Minimum requirements. To
qualify for consideration, a vendor must:
(1) agree to house prisoners at a cost to the state that is
at least five percent below the Department of Correction's current per diem for
the medium security facility that is most costly for the department to operate;
(2) agree, in the event that transferring prisoners to
private prisons results in the displacement of state workers, to give priority
in hiring to qualified employees of the Department of Corrections; and
(3) meet or exceed the prison standards promulgated by the
American Correctional Association.
Subd. 3. Per diem calculation. In
calculating the per diem for the most costly medium security facility operated
by the department, the commissioner must use the per diem calculation required
under Minnesota Statutes, section 241.018, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), and
add the following expenses, if they are not already included:
(1) all labor expenses, including direct wage and salary
costs, training costs, overtime, and supervisory overhead;
(2) total employee fringe and other personnel expenses;
(3) contract management costs;
(4) the imputed tax impact of the facility if the facility
were privately operated and required to pay federal, state, and local taxes;
and
(5) any other cost particular to incarcerating offenders at
the facility.
Subd. 4. Selection criteria. In
establishing criteria and preferences for vendors, the commissioner of
administration must consult with the commissioner of corrections, the executive
director of the Sentencing Guidelines Commission, and the commissioner of human
services, as appropriate. The
commissioner must consider the following factors in issuing the request for
proposals:
(1) the level or levels of security for which custodial care
and services will be needed;
(2) the type and length of treatment, educational, and other
programs and services appropriate to offenders likely to be housed in a private
correctional facility;
(3) the transport of offenders to and from any private
facilities;
(4) the division between the state and private provider of
all costs associated with providing care, custody, and rehabilitation for
offenders committed to the commissioner of corrections;
(5) the recidivism rate of the vendor; and
(6) other factors deemed appropriate for consideration by
the commissioner of administration, corrections, or human services, or by the
executive director of the Sentencing Guidelines Commission.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 3. DISPLACED
CORRECTIONAL EMPLOYEES.
Unless prohibited by applicable collective bargaining
agreements, correctional employees who are displaced due to the transfer of
state inmates to private facilities shall have priority in consideration for
vacant positions within the Department of Corrections and at secure facilities
operated by the Department of Human Services.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Public Safety and Crime Prevention
Policy and Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Erickson from the Committee on Education Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 945, A bill for an act relating to education; modifying teacher licensure, evaluations, and tenure; authorizing rulemaking; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 120B.35, subdivision 1; 120B.36, subdivision 1; 122A.18, by adding a subdivision; 122A.40, subdivisions 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, by adding a subdivision; 122A.41, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 14; 122A.60; 122A.61, subdivision 1; 123B.09, subdivision 8; 123B.143, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 122A.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
TEACHER EVALUATION AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 120B.35, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. School and student indicators of growth and achievement. The commissioner must develop and implement a system for measuring and reporting academic achievement and individual student growth, consistent with the statewide educational accountability and reporting system. The system components must measure and separately report the adequate yearly progress of schools and the growth of individual students: students' current achievement in schools under subdivision 2; and individual students' educational growth over time under subdivision 3. The commissioner annually must report a student's growth and progress toward grade-level proficiency under section 120B.299 as it relates to applicable state academic standards and the statewide assessments aligned with those standards. The system also must include statewide measures of student academic growth that identify schools with high levels of growth, and also schools with low levels of growth that need
improvement. When determining a school's effect, the data must include both statewide measures of student achievement and, to the extent annual tests are administered, indicators of achievement growth that take into account a student's prior achievement. Indicators of achievement and prior achievement must be based on highly reliable statewide or districtwide assessments. Indicators that take into account a student's prior achievement must not be used to disregard a school's low achievement or to exclude a school from a program to improve low achievement levels.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2012, and applies
to growth data beginning in the 2012-2013 school year.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Professional
development and mentoring for probationary teachers. (a) A school board and the exclusive
representative of the teachers in the district must collaborate in establishing
a professional development model for probationary teachers, consistent with
subdivision 8, that uses a district's professional development resources,
including those under sections 122A.414, if applicable, 122A.60, and 122A.61,
to improve teaching and learning.
(b) A school board and an exclusive representative of the teachers in the district must develop a probationary teacher peer review process through joint agreement. The process may include having trained observers serve as mentors or coaches or having teachers participate in professional learning communities.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Professional
development and peer coaching for continuing contract teachers. (a) A school board and the exclusive
representative of the teachers in the district must collaborate in establishing
a professional development model for continuing contract teachers, consistent
with subdivision 6, that uses a district's professional development resources,
including those under sections 122A.414, if applicable, 122A.60, and 122A.61,
to improve teaching and learning.
(b) A school board and an exclusive representative of the teachers in the district shall develop a peer review process for continuing contract teachers through joint agreement. The process may include having trained observers serve as peer coaches or having teachers participate in professional learning communities.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Professional
development and mentoring for probationary teachers. (a) A school board and the exclusive
representative of the teachers in the district must collaborate in establishing
a professional development model for probationary teachers, consistent with
subdivision 5, that uses a district's professional development resources,
including those under sections 122A.414, if applicable, 122A.60, and 122A.61,
to improve teaching and learning.
(b) A board and an exclusive representative of the teachers in the district must develop a probationary teacher peer review process through joint agreement. The process may include having trained observers serve as mentors or coaches or having teachers participate in professional learning communities.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Professional
development and peer coaching for continuing contract teachers. (a) A school board and the exclusive
representative of the teachers in the district must collaborate in establishing
a professional development model for probationary teachers, consistent with
subdivision 3, that uses a district's professional development resources,
including those under sections 122A.414, if applicable, 122A.60, and 122A.61,
to improve teaching and learning.
(b) A school board and an exclusive representative of the teachers in the district must develop a peer review process for nonprobationary teachers through joint agreement. The process may include having trained observers serve as peer coaches or having teachers participate in professional learning communities.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 6. [122A.411]
TEACHER EVALUATIONS.
Subdivision 1. Evaluation structure. A teacher evaluation structure is established to provide information about teacher effectiveness for teachers, districts, and charter schools to use in developing and improving teacher performance and student learning. The three-part structure contains:
(1) a teacher appraisal framework that identifies performance measures for determining teacher effectiveness;
(2) a mechanism for translating the performance data into a five-part teacher effectiveness rating scale; and
(3) a four-tier status designation that
identifies teachers as standard, advanced, distinguished, or exemplary based on
a teacher's effectiveness rating over time.
Subd. 2. Teacher appraisal framework. (a) Each school district and charter school must create and implement a teacher appraisal framework. The framework must translate performance measures and scores under this subdivision into five performance effectiveness rating scores where "5" is the highest rating and "1" is the lowest rating. The department, in collaboration with the Board of Teaching, must make available to districts and charter schools appraisal frameworks and other materials from evidence-based sources to assist districts and charter schools in implementing an appraisal framework, consistent with this section.
(b) If statewide assessment results are
available under section 120B.35, these results are the basis for 50 percent of
a teacher's total appraisal.
(c) If statewide assessment results are
unavailable, 40 percent of a teacher's total appraisal must consist of results
from districtwide assessments of state and local standards and another ten
percent of the teacher's total appraisal must consist of results from
teacher-developed assessments.
(d) If no districtwide assessment
results are available, 50 percent of a teacher's total appraisal must consist
of teacher-developed and administrator-approved assessments of state and local
standards. A school administrator shall
meet with teachers at least annually under this paragraph to review, modify if
needed, and approve local course and grade-level expectations for student
achievement and growth.
(e) A charter school or a school board, in consultation with its teachers, must identify the performance measures used as a basis for the other 50 percent of a teacher's total appraisal under this subdivision. The appraisal must include data from parent surveys and at least two annual evaluations performed by a trained school administrator. Other performance measures may include student surveys, peer observations and review, teacher performance portfolios, video classroom observations with teacher reflection after viewing videos, measures approved as part of an educational improvement plan under section 122A.413, and other highly reliable research-based measures.
Subd. 3. Teacher performance effectiveness ratings. (a) Beginning in the 2012-2013 school year and consistent with subdivision 2, a school district or charter school annually must use the following scale to determine a teacher performance effectiveness rating and corresponding status designation under subdivision 4 for each teacher who teaches a subject for which statewide assessment results are available under section 120B.35:
(1) a teacher is "highly
effective" if the teacher's appraisal shows that the teacher's students,
on average, achieved one and one-half or more years of growth on statewide
assessments and the teacher received a "5" performance rating under
the district or charter school appraisal framework;
(2) a teacher is "effective"
if the teacher's appraisal shows that the teacher's students, on average,
achieved at least one year of growth on statewide assessments and the teacher
received a "4" performance rating under the district or charter
school appraisal framework;
(3) a teacher is "average" if
the teacher's appraisal shows that the teacher's students, on average, achieved
at least 0.9 years of growth on statewide student assessments and the teacher
received a "3" performance rating under the district or charter
school appraisal framework;
(4) a teacher "needs improvement"
if the teacher's appraisal shows that the teacher's students, on average,
achieved between 0.5 and 0.9 years of growth on statewide assessments or the
teacher received a "2" or lower performance rating under the district
or charter school appraisal framework; and
(5) a teacher is
"ineffective" if the teacher's appraisal shows that the teacher's
students, on average, achieved less than one-half year of growth on statewide
assessments and the teacher received a "1" performance rating under
the district or charter school appraisal framework.
(b) Beginning in the 2012-2013 school year and consistent with subdivision 2, a school district or charter school annually must use the following teacher performance effectiveness rating scale and corresponding status designation under subdivision 4 for each teacher who teaches a subject for which no statewide assessment data exist:
(1) a teacher is "highly
effective" if the teacher receives a "5" performance rating
under the district or charter school appraisal framework;
(2) a teacher is "effective"
if the teacher receives a "4" performance rating under the district
or charter school appraisal framework;
(3) a teacher is "average" if
the teacher receives a "3" performance rating under the district or
charter school appraisal framework;
(4) a teacher "needs
improvement" if the teacher receives a "2" performance rating
under the district or charter school appraisal framework; and
(5) a teacher is
"ineffective" if the teacher receives a "1" performance
rating under the district or charter school appraisal framework.
Subd. 4. Teacher
status designations. (a)
Beginning no later than the 2012-2013 school year, a school district or charter
school shall establish a four-tier status designation for identifying teachers'
effectiveness, consistent with this section, using measures of teacher
performance and student learning as they relate to meeting state and local
education standards.
(b) To receive a "standard"
designation, a probationary teacher during the three-year probationary period
must receive at least one rating of "average," "effective,"
or "highly effective" under the district or charter school appraisal
framework and meet applicable professional development requirements.
(c) A licensed teacher who has a
"standard" designation must receive a rating of "average,"
"effective," or "highly effective" in four years out of
each five-year employment period and meet applicable professional development
requirements to receive an "advanced" status designation.
(d) A teacher who receives a
"highly effective" rating in three years out of a five-year
employment period and meets applicable professional development requirements
receives a "distinguished" status designation.
(e) A teacher who receives a
"highly effective" rating in seven years during two consecutive
five-year employment periods and meets applicable professional development
requirements receives an "exemplary" status designation.
(f) A teacher who receives a
"distinguished" or "exemplary" status designation keeps
that designation for the remainder of the five-year employment period in which
the teacher received the designation.
Subd. 5. Data
gathering and analysis. Beginning
in the 2012-2013 school year, the department, in consultation with the Board of
Teaching, shall assist a school district or charter school in collecting and
aggregating student data needed to implement subdivisions 2, 3, and 4. If the school district or charter school and
the department agree that an ongoing need exists for department assistance, the
district or charter school and the department shall enter into a data-sharing
agreement. Any data on individual
students or teachers received, collected, or created that are used to generate
summary data under this section are nonpublic data under chapter 13.
Subd. 6. Reports. (a) Beginning in the 2012-2013 school year, each school district and charter school annually shall report to the department by August 31 the following information about the school year just completed:
(1) each teacher's performance
effectiveness rating determined under subdivision 2, paragraph (b), (c), or
(d);
(2) each teacher's performance
effectiveness rating determined under subdivision 2, paragraph (e);
(3) each teacher's status designation
under subdivision 4;
(4) each teacher's professional
preparation program;
(5) its appraisal framework; and
(6) its graduation rate.
(b) Beginning in 2014, the department
annually by February 15 shall submit a report to the committees of the
legislature with primary jurisdiction over kindergarten through grade 12
education policy and finance that analyzes and evaluates summary data generated
under paragraph (a) to determine the effectiveness of teacher appraisal systems
in improving teaching and learning.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.60, is amended to read:
122A.60
STAFF DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Staff
development committee. A school
board must use the revenue authorized in section 122A.61 for in-service
education for programs under section 120B.22, subdivision 2, or for
staff development and teacher training plans under this section. The board must establish an advisory staff
development committee to develop the plan, assist site professional development
teams in developing a site plan consistent with the goals of the plan, and
evaluate staff development efforts at the site level. A majority of the advisory committee and the
site professional development team must be teachers representing various grade
levels, subject areas, and special education.
The advisory committee must also include nonteaching staff, parents, and
administrators.
Subd. 1a. Effective staff development activities. (a) Staff development activities must be aligned with district and school site staff development plans, based on student achievement and growth data, and focused on student learning goals. Activities must:
(1) focus on the school classroom and research-based
scientifically based research strategies that improve student learning;
(2) provide opportunities for teachers to practice and improve their instructional skills over time and receive instructional-based observations using objective standards-based assessments to assist in the professional growth process;
(3) provide regular opportunities for teachers to use student data as part of their daily work to increase student achievement;
(4) enhance teacher content knowledge and instructional skills;
(5) align with state and local academic standards;
(6) provide job-embedded or integrated
professional development opportunities during the teacher contract day
to build professional relationships, foster collaboration among principals and
staff who provide instruction to identify instructional strategies to
meet students' learning goals, plan instruction, practice new teaching
strategies, and review the results of implementing those strategies, and
provide opportunities for teacher-to-teacher coaching and mentoring; and
(7) align with the plan of the district or
site for those participating in an alternative teacher
professional pay system under section 122A.414.
Staff development activities also may include curriculum development and curriculum training programs, and activities that provide teachers and other members of site-based teams training to enhance team performance. The school district also may implement other staff development activities required by law and activities associated with professional teacher compensation models.
(b) Release time provided for teachers to supervise students on field trips and school activities, or independent tasks not associated with enhancing the teacher's knowledge and instructional skills, such as preparing report cards, calculating grades, or organizing classroom materials, may not be counted as staff development time that is financed with staff development reserved revenue under section 122A.61.
Subd. 2. Contents of plan. The plan must be based on student achievement and growth and include student learning goals, the staff development outcomes under subdivision 3, the means to achieve the outcomes, and procedures for evaluating progress at each school site toward meeting education outcomes, consistent with relicensure requirements under section 122A.18, subdivision 4. The plan also must:
(1) support stable and productive professional communities achieved through ongoing and schoolwide progress and growth in teaching practice;
(2) emphasize coaching, professional learning communities, classroom action research, and other job-embedded models;
(3) maintain a strong subject matter focus premised on students' learning goals;
(4) ensure specialized preparation and learning about issues related to teaching students with special needs and limited English proficiency; and
(5) reinforce national and state standards of effective teaching practice.
Subd. 3. Staff development outcomes. The advisory staff development committee must adopt a staff development plan increasing teacher effectiveness and student learning and for improving student achievement. The plan must be consistent with education outcomes that the school board determines. The plan must include ongoing staff development activities that contribute toward continuous improvement in achievement of the following goals:
(1) improve student achievement of state
and local education academic standards in all areas of the
curriculum by using best practices methods and benchmark assessments aligned
with academic standards;
(2) effectively meet the needs of a diverse student population, including at-risk children, children with disabilities, and gifted children, within the regular classroom and other settings;
(3) provide an inclusive curriculum for a racially, ethnically, and culturally diverse student population that is consistent with the state education diversity rule and the district's education diversity plan;
(4) improve staff collaboration and
develop mentoring and peer coaching programs for teachers new to the school
or district in their first five years of teaching;
(5) effectively teach and model violence prevention policy and curriculum that address early intervention alternatives, issues of harassment, and teach nonviolent alternatives for conflict resolution; and
(6) provide teachers and other members of site-based management teams with appropriate management and financial management skills.
Subd. 4. Staff
development report. (a) By October 15
1 of each year, the district and site staff development committees shall
write and submit a report of staff development activities and expenditures for
the previous year, in the form and manner determined by the commissioner. The report, signed by the district
superintendent and staff development chair, must include assessment and evaluation
data indicating progress toward district and site staff development goals based
on teaching and learning outcomes, including the percentage of teachers and
other staff involved in instruction who participate in effective staff
development activities under subdivision 3.
(b) The report must break down expenditures for:
(1) curriculum development and curriculum training programs; and
(2) staff development training models, workshops, and conferences, and the cost of releasing teachers or providing substitute teachers for staff development purposes.
The report also must indicate whether the expenditures were incurred at the district level or the school site level, and whether the school site expenditures were made possible by grants to school sites that demonstrate exemplary use of allocated staff development revenue. These expenditures must be reported using the uniform financial and accounting and reporting standards.
(c) The commissioner shall report the staff development progress and expenditure data to the house of representatives and senate committees having jurisdiction over education by February 15 each year.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.61, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Staff
development revenue. A district is
required to reserve an amount equal to at least two percent of the basic
revenue under section 126C.10, subdivision 2, for in-service education for
programs under section 120B.22, subdivision 2, for with the primary
purpose of creating and implementing district and school site staff
development plans, including.
Funds also may be used to support plans for challenging
instructional activities and experiences under section 122A.60, and for
curriculum development and programs, other in-service education, teachers'
workshops, teacher conferences, the cost of substitute teachers staff
development purposes, preservice and in-service education for special
education professionals and paraprofessionals, and other related costs for
staff development efforts. A district
may annually waive the requirement to reserve their basic revenue under this
section if a majority vote of the licensed teachers in the district and a majority
vote of the school board agree to a resolution to waive the requirement. A district in statutory operating debt is
exempt from reserving basic revenue according to this section. Districts may expend an additional amount of
unreserved revenue for staff development based on their needs. With the exception of amounts reserved for
staff development from revenues allocated directly to school sites, the board
must initially allocate 50 percent of the reserved revenue to each school site
in the district on a per teacher basis, which must be retained by the school
site until used. The board may retain 25
percent to be used for district wide staff development efforts. The remaining 25 percent of the revenue must
be used to make grants to school sites for best practices methods. A grant may be used for any purpose
authorized under section 120B.22, subdivision 2, or 122A.60, or for
the costs of curriculum development and programs, other in-service education,
teachers' workshops, teacher conferences, substitute teachers for staff
development purposes, and other staff development efforts, and determined by
the site professional development team.
The site professional development team must demonstrate to the school
board the extent to which staff at the site have met the outcomes of the
program. The board may withhold a
portion of initial allocation of revenue if the staff development outcomes are
not being met.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2013-2014 school year and later.
Sec. 9. [122A.73]
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATOR DEVELOPMENT.
A school board and the school administrators in a district must collaboratively establish a professional development model for school administrators that uses the district's professional development resources, including those resources under sections 122A.414, if applicable, 122A.60, and 122A.61. The professional development model must, at a minimum:
(1) provide professional development to
accurately and effectively evaluate teachers under section 122A.411;
(2) provide professional development to
better recommend appropriate professional development strategies for teachers;
(3) make appropriate recommendations
for principals to participate in development opportunities, including the
Principals' Leadership Institute under section 122A.74 or other statewide
development programs; and
(4) provide professional development
opportunities targeted to identifying systemic strengths and weaknesses within
a school.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2012.
Sec. 10. APPRAISAL
IMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE.
Consistent with Minnesota Statutes, section 122A.411, districts and charter schools shall implement the teacher appraisal framework according to the following timeline:
(1) in the 2011-2012 school year, develop
an appraisal framework and a system to collect data;
(2) in the 2012-2013 school year,
implement the teacher appraisal framework and data collection system as a pilot
program; and
(3) beginning in the 2013-2014 school
year, fully implement the teacher appraisal framework and data collection
system.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE 2
TEACHER EMPLOYMENT
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 120B.36, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. School performance report cards. (a) The commissioner shall report student academic performance under section 120B.35, subdivision 2; the percentages of students showing low, medium, and high growth under section 120B.35, subdivision 3, paragraph (b); school safety and student engagement and connection under section 120B.35, subdivision 3, paragraph (d); rigorous coursework under section 120B.35, subdivision 3, paragraph (c); two separate student-to-teacher ratios that clearly indicate the definition of teacher consistent with sections 122A.06 and 122A.15 for purposes of determining these ratios; staff characteristics excluding salaries; the number of teachers in each performance effectiveness rating category under section 122A.411, subdivision 3, by school site; student enrollment demographics; district mobility; and extracurricular activities. The report also must indicate a school's adequate yearly progress status, and must not set any designations applicable to high- and low-performing schools due solely to adequate yearly progress status.
(b) The commissioner shall develop, annually update, and post on the department Web site school performance report cards.
(c) The commissioner must make available performance report cards by the beginning of each school year.
(d) A school or district may appeal its adequate yearly progress status in writing to the commissioner within 30 days of receiving the notice of its status. The commissioner's decision to uphold or deny an appeal is final.
(e) School performance report card data are nonpublic data under section 13.02, subdivision 9, until not later than ten days after the appeal procedure described in paragraph (d) concludes. The department shall annually post school performance report cards to its public Web site no later than September 1.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2014.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Probationary
period. (a) The first three
consecutive years of a teacher's first teaching experience in Minnesota in a
single district is deemed to be a probationary period of employment, and after
completion thereof, the probationary period in each district in which the
teacher is thereafter employed shall be one year. The school board must issue an annual
employment contract and adopt a plan for written evaluation of teachers
during the probationary period that complies with section 122A.411. During the first 60 school days only of a
probationary teacher's first year of employment, the board may terminate the
teacher at will. Evaluation must
occur at least three times each year for a teacher performing services on 120
or more school days, at least two times each year for a teacher performing
services on 60 to 119 school days, and at least one time each year for a
teacher performing services on fewer than 60 school days. Days devoted to parent-teacher conferences,
teachers' workshops, and other staff development opportunities and days on
which a teacher is absent from school must not be included in determining the
number of school days on which a teacher performs services. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph
(b), during the probationary period any annual contract with any teacher may or
may not be renewed as the school board shall see fit. However, The board must give any such
probationary teacher whose contract it declines to renew for the
following school year written notice to that effect before July 1. If the teacher requests reasons for any
nonrenewal of a teaching contract, the board must give the teacher its reason
in writing, including a statement that appropriate supervision was furnished
describing the nature and the extent of such supervision furnished the teacher
during the employment by the board, within ten days after receiving such
request. The school board may, after a
hearing held upon due notice, discharge a teacher during the probationary
period for cause, effective immediately, under section 122A.44.
(b) A board must discharge a probationary teacher, effective immediately, upon receipt of notice under section 122A.20, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), that the teacher's license has been revoked due to a conviction for child abuse or sexual abuse.
(c) A probationary teacher whose first three years of consecutive employment are interrupted for active military service and who promptly resumes teaching consistent with federal reemployment timelines for uniformed service personnel under United States Code, title 38, section 4312(e), is considered to have a consecutive teaching experience for purposes of paragraph (a).
(d) A probationary teacher must complete at least 60 days of teaching service each year during the probationary period. Days devoted to parent-teacher conferences, teachers' workshops, and other staff development opportunities and days on which a teacher is absent from school do not count as days of teaching service under this paragraph.
(e) A district must decide whether to issue a contract to a probationary classroom teacher at the end of the teacher's probationary period based on:
(1) the teacher's professional growth
plan based on standards of effective professional practice, student learning
goals, and teacher evaluations under this subdivision that comply with section
122A.411;
(2) the teacher's appraisal results and
performance effectiveness rating under section 122A.411; and
(3) other locally selected criteria
aligned to instructional practices in teaching and learning.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Termination
of contract after probationary period. (a)
A teacher who has completed a probationary period in any district, and who has
not been discharged or advised of a refusal to renew the teacher's contract
under subdivision 5, shall elect to have a continuing renewable
five-year contract with such the district where contract
terms and conditions, including salary and salary increases, are established
based either on the length
of the school calendar or an extended
school calendar under section 120A.415. Thereafter,
The teacher's contract must remain in full force and effect, except as modified
by mutual consent of the board and the teacher, until terminated by a majority
roll call vote of the full membership of the board prior to April 1 upon one of
the grounds specified in subdivision 9 or July 1 upon one of the grounds
specified in subdivision 10 or 11, or until the teacher is discharged pursuant
to subdivision 13, or by the written resignation of the teacher submitted prior
to April 1. If an agreement as to the
terms and conditions of employment for the succeeding school year has not been
adopted pursuant to the provisions of sections 179A.01 to 179A.25 prior to
March 1, the teacher's right of resignation is extended to the 30th calendar
day following the adoption of said the contract in compliance
with under section 179A.20, subdivision 5. Such Written resignation by the
teacher is effective as of on June 30 if submitted prior to
before that date and the teachers' teacher's right of resignation
for the next school year then beginning shall cease on
July 15.
(b) Before a teacher's contract is
terminated by the board, the board must notify the teacher in writing and state
its ground for the proposed termination in reasonable detail together with a
statement that the teacher may make a written request for a hearing before the
board within 14 days after receipt of such notification. If the grounds are those specified in subdivision 9 or 13, the notice must also state a
teacher may request arbitration under subdivision 15. Within 14 days after receipt of this notification
the teacher may make a written request for a hearing before the board or an
arbitrator and it shall be granted upon reasonable notice to the teacher of the
date set for hearing, before final action is taken. If no hearing is requested within such period,
it shall be deemed acquiescence by the teacher to the board's action. Such The teacher's termination shall
take effect at the close of the school year in which the contract is terminated
in the manner aforesaid must comply with subdivision 9 or 13. Such A contract may be
terminated at any time by mutual consent of the board and the teacher and this
section does not affect the powers of a board to suspend, discharge, or demote
a teacher under and pursuant to other provisions of law.
(b) (c) A teacher electing
to have a continuing contract based on the extended school calendar under
section 120A.415 must participate in staff development training under
subdivision 7a and shall receive an increased base salary.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective
for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7b. Teacher
employment. (a) A school
district must use a teacher appraisal framework to make informed decisions
about teacher development and performance.
Teachers must participate in ongoing professional development to improve
teaching and learning throughout a term of employment.
(b) After completing the initial
three-year probationary period without discharge, a teacher who is reemployed
by a school board continues in service and holds that position during good
behavior and efficient and competent service for a renewable five-year
term. The terms and conditions of a
teacher's employment contract, including salary and salary increases, must be
based either on the length of the school year or an extended school calendar
under section 120A.415.
(c) At the end of every five-year term, the school board either must continue or terminate a teacher's employment based on:
(1) a portfolio of the teacher's
five-year professional growth plan based on standards of professional practice,
student learning, and successful teacher evaluations, consistent with section
122A.411, that are conducted at least twice per year by a trained school
administrator;
(2) the teacher's appraisal results and performance effectiveness rating under section 122A.411; and
(3) other locally selected criteria
aligned to instructional practices in teaching and learning.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Grounds for termination. (a) A continuing contract may be terminated, effective at the close of the school year, upon any of the following grounds:
(a) (1) inefficiency;
(b) (2) neglect of duty, or
persistent violation of school laws, rules, regulations, or directives;
(c) (3) conduct unbecoming a
teacher which materially impairs the teacher's educational effectiveness;
(d) (4) other good and
sufficient grounds rendering the teacher unfit to perform the teacher's duties. ; or
(5) the teacher is ineffective under
section 122A.411 and not recommended by the district for continued employment
under this section.
(b) A contract must not be
terminated upon one of the grounds specified in clause under
paragraph (a), (b), (c), or (d), clause (5), unless the
teacher fails to correct the deficiency after being given written notice of the
specific items of complaint and reasonable time within which 180 days
after receiving the notice to remedy them.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. Negotiated
unrequested leave of absence. The
school board and the exclusive bargaining representative of the teachers may
negotiate a plan providing for unrequested leave of absence without pay or
fringe benefits for as many teachers as may be necessary because of
discontinuance of position, lack of pupils, financial limitations, or merger of
classes caused by consolidation of districts.
Failing to successfully negotiate such a plan, the provisions of
subdivision 11 shall apply. The
negotiated plan must not include provisions which would result in the exercise
of seniority by a teacher holding a provisional license, other than a
vocational education license, contrary to the provisions of subdivision 11,
clause (c), or the reinstatement of a teacher holding a provisional license,
other than a vocational education license, contrary to the provisions of
subdivision 11, clause (e). The
provisions of section 179A.16 do not apply for the purposes of this
subdivision.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.40, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
Subd. 11. Unrequested
leave of absence. (a) The
board may place on unrequested leave of absence, without pay or fringe
benefits, as many teachers as may be necessary because of discontinuance of
position, lack of pupils, financial limitations, or merger of classes caused by
consolidation of districts. The
unrequested leave is effective at the close of the school year. In placing teachers on unrequested leave, the
superintendent may exempt from the effects of paragraphs (b) to (f) those
teachers who, in the superintendent's judgment, are able to provide instruction
that similarly licensed teachers cannot provide or whose subject area license
meets unmet district needs for student instruction. The board is governed by the following
provisions: paragraphs (b) to (k).
(a) The board may place probationary
teachers on unrequested leave first in the inverse order of their
employment. A teacher who has acquired
continuing contract rights must not be placed on unrequested leave of absence
while probationary teachers are retained in positions for which the teacher who
has acquired continuing contract rights is licensed;
(b) Teachers who have acquired
continuing contract rights shall be placed on unrequested leave of absence
in fields in which they are licensed in the following order:
(1) teachers with a "needs
improvement" or "ineffective" rating under section 122A.411 in
the inverse order in which they were employed by the school district.;
(2) teachers with an
"average" rating under section 122A.411 with four or more years of
teaching experience in the inverse order in which they were employed by the
school district;
(3) teachers with an
"effective" rating under section 122A.411 with fewer than four years
of teaching experience in the inverse order in which they were employed by the
school district;
(4) teachers with a "highly
effective" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in which
they were employed by the school district;
(5) teachers with a
"distinguished" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in
which they were employed by the school district; and
(6) teachers with an
"exemplary" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in
which they were employed by the school district.
(c) In the case of equal seniority within
a clause of paragraph (b), the order in which teachers who have acquired
continuing contract rights shall be placed on unrequested leave of absence in
fields in which they are licensed is negotiable;.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of
clause (b), a teacher is not entitled to exercise any seniority when that
exercise results in that teacher being retained by the district in a field for
which the teacher holds only a provisional license, as defined by the board of
teaching, unless that exercise of seniority results in the placement on
unrequested leave of absence of another teacher who also holds a provisional
license in the same field. The
provisions of this clause do not apply to vocational education licenses;
(d) Notwithstanding clauses (a), paragraphs
(b) and (c), if the placing of a probationary teacher on unrequested leave
before a teacher who has acquired continuing rights, the placing of a teacher
who has acquired continuing contract rights on unrequested leave before another
teacher who has acquired continuing contract rights but who has greater
seniority, or the restriction restrictions imposed by the
provisions of clause paragraph (b) or (c) would place the
district in violation of its affirmative action program, the district may
retain the probationary teacher, the teacher with less seniority, or
the provisionally licensed teacher; with a lower designated status or
less seniority.
(e) Teachers placed on unrequested leave
of absence must be reinstated to the positions from which they have been given
leaves of absence or, if not available, to other available positions in the
school district in fields in which they are licensed. Reinstatement must be in the inverse order of
placement on leave of absence. A
teacher must not be reinstated to a position in a field in which the teacher
holds only a provisional license, other than a vocational education license,
while another teacher who holds a nonprovisional license in the same field
remains on unrequested leave. The
order of reinstatement of teachers who have equal seniority and who are placed
on unrequested leave in the same school year is negotiable;.
(f) Appointment of a new teacher must not
be made while there is available, on unrequested leave, a teacher who is
properly licensed to fill such vacancy, unless the teacher fails to advise the
school board within 30 days of the date of notification that a position is
available to that teacher who may return to employment and assume the duties of
the position to which appointed on a future date determined by the board;.
(g) A teacher placed on unrequested leave
of absence may engage in teaching or any other occupation during the period of
this leave;.
(h) The unrequested leave of absence must
not impair the continuing contract rights of a teacher or result in a
loss of credit for previous years of service;.
(i) The unrequested leave of absence of a
teacher who is placed on unrequested leave of absence and who is not reinstated
shall continue for a period of five years until that teacher's
contract expires under subdivision 7b, after which the right to
reinstatement shall terminate. The
teacher's right to reinstatement shall also terminate if the teacher fails to
file with the board by April 1 of any year a written statement requesting reinstatement;.
(j) The
same provisions applicable to terminations of probationary or continuing
contracts in subdivisions 5 and 7 must apply to placement on unrequested
leave of absence;.
(k) Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to impair the rights of teachers placed on unrequested leave of absence to receive unemployment benefits if otherwise eligible.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Probationary
period; discharge or demotion. (a)
All teachers in the public schools in cities of the first class during the
first three years of consecutive employment shall be deemed to be in a
probationary period of employment during which period any annual contract
with any teacher may, or may not, be renewed as the school board, after
consulting with the peer review committee charged with evaluating the
probationary teachers under subdivision 3, shall see fit. The school site management team or the
school board if there is no school site management team, shall issue
an annual employment contract and adopt a plan for a written evaluation of
teachers during the probationary period according to subdivision 3 that
is consistent with section 122A.411.
During the first 60 days only of a probationary teacher's first year of
employment, the board may terminate the teacher at will. Evaluation by the peer review committee
charged with evaluating of probationary teachers under subdivision
3 shall occur at least three times each year for a teacher performing
services on 120 or more school days, at least two times each year for a teacher
performing services on 60 to 119 school days, and at least one time each year
for a teacher performing services on fewer than 60 school days. Days devoted to parent-teacher conferences,
teachers' workshops, and other staff development opportunities and days on
which a teacher is absent from school shall not be included in determining the
number of school days on which a teacher performs services. The school board may, during such
probationary period, discharge or demote a teacher for any of the causes as
specified in this code. A written
statement of the cause of such discharge or demotion shall be given to the
teacher by the school board at least 30 days before such removal or demotion
shall become effective, and the teacher so notified shall have no right of
appeal therefrom.
(b) A probationary teacher whose first three years of consecutive employment are interrupted for active military service and who promptly resumes teaching consistent with federal reemployment timelines for uniformed service personnel under United States Code, title 38, section 4312(e), is considered to have a consecutive teaching experience for purposes of paragraph (a).
(c) A probationary teacher must complete at least 60 days of teaching service each year during the probationary period. Days devoted to parent-teacher conferences, teachers' workshops, and other staff development opportunities and days on which a teacher is absent from school do not count as days of teaching service under this paragraph.
(d) A district must decide whether to issue a contract to a probationary classroom teacher at the end of the teacher's probationary period based on:
(1) a portfolio of the teacher's
professional growth plan based on standards of effective professional practice,
student learning goals, and successful teacher evaluations, consistent with
section 122A.411, that are conducted at least twice per year by a trained
school administrator;
(2) the teacher's appraisal results and
performance effectiveness rating under section 122A.411; and
(3) other locally selected criteria
aligned to instructional practices in teaching and learning.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Period
of service after probationary period; discharge or demotion Teacher
employment. (a) A school
district must use a teacher appraisal framework to make informed decisions
about teacher development and performance.
Teachers must participate in ongoing professional development to improve
teaching and learning throughout a term of employment.
(b) After the completion of such
completing the initial three-year probationary period, without
discharge, such teachers as are thereupon a teacher who is
reemployed shall continue in service and hold their respective that
position during good behavior and efficient and competent service for a
renewable five-year term and must not be discharged or demoted except for
cause after a hearing. The terms and
conditions of a teacher's employment contract, including salary and salary
increases, must be based either on the length of the school year or an extended
school calendar under section 120A.415.
(b) (c) A probationary
teacher is deemed to have been reemployed for the ensuing school year, unless
the school board in charge of such school gave such teacher notice in writing
before July 1 of the termination of such employment.
(c) (d) A teacher electing
to have an employment contract based on the extended school calendar under
section 120A.415 must participate in staff development training under
subdivision 4a and shall receive an increased base salary.
(e) At the end of every five-year term, the school board must either continue or terminate a teacher's employment based on:
(1) a portfolio of the teacher's
five-year professional growth plan based on standards of professional practice,
student learning, and successful teacher evaluations, consistent with section
122A.411, that are conducted at least twice per year by a trained school
administrator;
(2) the teacher's appraisal results and performance effectiveness rating under section 122A.411; and
(3) other locally selected criteria
aligned to instructional practices in teaching and learning.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Grounds for discharge or demotion. (a) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b), causes for the discharge or demotion of a teacher either during or after the probationary period must be:
(1) immoral character, conduct unbecoming a teacher, or insubordination;
(2) failure without justifiable cause to teach without first securing the written release of the school board having the care, management, or control of the school in which the teacher is employed;
(3) inefficiency in teaching or in the management of a school;
(4) affliction with active tuberculosis or
other communicable disease must be considered as cause for removal or
suspension while the teacher is suffering from such disability; or
(5) discontinuance of position or lack of
pupils.; or
(6) the teacher is ineffective under
section 122A.411 and not recommended by the district for employment under this
section.
For purposes of this paragraph, conduct
unbecoming a teacher includes an unfair discriminatory practice described in
section 363A.13. A contract must not
be discharged on the grounds specified in clause (6) unless the teacher fails
to correct the deficiency after being given written notice of the specific
items of complaint and 180 days within which to remedy them.
(b) A probationary or continuing-contract teacher must be discharged immediately upon receipt of notice under section 122A.20, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), that the teacher's license has been revoked due to a conviction for child abuse or sexual abuse.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 122A.41, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
Subd. 14. Services
terminated by discontinuance or lack of pupils; preference given. (a) A teacher whose services are
terminated on account of discontinuance of position or lack of pupils must
receive first consideration for other positions in the district for which that
teacher is qualified. In the event it
becomes necessary to discontinue one or more positions, in making such discontinuance,
teachers must be discontinued in any department in the following order:
(1) teachers with a "needs
improvement" or "ineffective" rating under section 122A.411 in
the inverse order in which they were employed, unless a board and the
exclusive representative of teachers in the district negotiate a plan providing
otherwise.;
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of
clause (a), a teacher is not entitled to exercise any seniority when that
exercise results in that teacher being retained by the district in a field for
which the teacher holds only a provisional license, as defined by the Board of
Teaching, unless that exercise of seniority results in the termination of
services, on account of discontinuance of position or lack of pupils, of
another teacher who also holds a provisional license in the same field. The provisions of this clause do not apply to
vocational education licenses.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of
clause (a), a teacher must not be reinstated to a position in a field in which
the teacher holds only a provisional license, other than a vocational education
license, while another teacher who holds a nonprovisional license in the same
field is available for reinstatement.
(2) teachers with an
"average" rating under section 122A.411 with four or more years of
teaching experience in the inverse order in which they were employed by the
school district;
(3) teachers with an
"effective" rating under section 122A.411 with fewer than four years
of teaching experience in the inverse order in which they were employed by the
school district;
(4) teachers with a "highly
effective" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in which
they were employed by the school district;
(5) teachers with a
"distinguished" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in
which they were employed by the school district; and
(6) teachers with an
"exemplary" rating under section 122A.411 in the inverse order in
which they were employed by the school district.
The superintendent may exempt from the
effects of this subdivision those teachers who, in the superintendent's
judgment, are able to provide instruction that similarly licensed teachers
cannot provide or whose subject area license meets unmet district needs for
student instruction.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective for the 2014-2015 school year and later.
Sec. 12. [122A.418]
TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS-BASED BONUSES.
(a) A teacher with a
"distinguished" rating under section 122A.411 shall receive an annual
bonus equal to ten percent of the teacher's base salary until the teacher no
longer has a "distinguished" rating.
(b) A teacher with an
"exemplary" rating under section 122A.411 shall receive an annual
bonus equal to 20 percent of the teacher's base salary until the teacher no
longer has an "exemplary" rating.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2019.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 123B.09, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Duties. The board must superintend and manage the
schools of the district; adopt rules for their organization, government, and
instruction; keep registers; and prescribe textbooks and courses of study. The board may enter into an agreement with a
postsecondary institution for secondary or postsecondary nonsectarian courses
to be taught at a secondary school, nonsectarian postsecondary institution, or
another location. Consistent with
section 122A.40, subdivision 10, or 122A.41, subdivision 14, as applicable, the
board must not enter into an agreement that limits a district superintendent's
ability to assign and reassign teachers or administrators to the schools in
which the teachers will teach or the administrators will administer to best
meet student and school needs as determined by the superintendent.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 123B.143, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Contract; duties. All districts maintaining a classified secondary school must employ a superintendent who shall be an ex officio nonvoting member of the school board. The authority for selection and employment of a superintendent must be vested in the board in all cases. An individual employed by a board as a
superintendent shall have an initial
employment contract for a period of time no longer than three years from the date
of employment. Any subsequent employment
contract must not exceed a period of three years. A board, at its discretion, may or may not
renew an employment contract. A board
must not, by action or inaction, extend the duration of an existing employment
contract. Beginning 365 days prior to
the expiration date of an existing employment contract, a board may negotiate
and enter into a subsequent employment contract to take effect upon the
expiration of the existing contract. A
subsequent contract must be contingent upon the employee completing the terms
of an existing contract. If a contract
between a board and a superintendent is terminated prior to the date specified
in the contract, the board may not enter into another superintendent contract
with that same individual that has a term that extends beyond the date
specified in the terminated contract. A
board may terminate a superintendent during the term of an employment contract
for any of the grounds specified in section 122A.40, subdivision 9 or 13. A superintendent shall not rely upon an
employment contract with a board to assert any other continuing contract rights
in the position of superintendent under section 122A.40. Notwithstanding the provisions of sections
122A.40, subdivision 10 or 11, 123A.32, 123A.75, or any other law to the
contrary, no individual shall have a right to employment as a superintendent
based on order of employment in any district.
If two or more districts enter into an agreement for the purchase or
sharing of the services of a superintendent, the contracting districts have the
absolute right to select one of the individuals employed to serve as
superintendent in one of the contracting districts and no individual has a
right to employment as the superintendent to provide all or part of the
services based on order of employment in a contracting district. The superintendent of a district shall perform
the following:
(1) visit and supervise the schools in the district, report and make recommendations about their condition when advisable or on request by the board;
(2) recommend to the board employment and dismissal of teachers;
(3) before the start of the school year,
and at other times as needed, assign highly effective, distinguished, and
exemplary teachers, as defined in section 122A.411, to schools to best meet
student and school needs as determined by the superintendent;
(4) superintend school grading practices and examinations for promotions;
(4) (5) make reports required
by the commissioner; and
(5) (6) perform other duties
prescribed by the board.
Sec. 15. EFFECT
OF TEACHER DIVERSITY ON STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT.
(a) The commissioner of education shall
develop a request for proposal to study and report on the impact that a
culturally, racially, and ethnically diverse teaching faculty has on the
educational outcomes of minority students, including academic performance,
graduation rates, and participation in postsecondary programs. The study must control for the level of
teacher effectiveness.
(b) The commissioner of education also
shall develop a request for proposal to evaluate and report on school district
practices for recruiting a culturally, racially, and ethnically diverse
teaching faculty.
(c) The commissioner must submit the
reports under paragraphs (a) and (b) to the education policy and finance
committees of the legislature by February 1, 2015.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2013. The study in
paragraph (a) may not begin until after the 2013-2014 school year.
Sec. 16. ADVISORY
TASK FORCE ON IMPLEMENTING TEACHER EVALUATION STRUCTURE.
Consistent with Minnesota Statutes,
section 122A.411, and related sections, the commissioner of education shall
convene a nine-member advisory task force to make recommendations related to
implementing the state's teacher evaluation structure. Task force members shall include: one representative each from the Minnesota
Chamber of Commerce, the Minnesota Business Partnership, the Minnesota
Assessment Group, the Minnesota Association of School Administrators, and the
Minnesota Elementary and Secondary School Principals Association, appointed by
the respective organizations; two representatives from Education Minnesota, one
of whom must be a currently licensed classroom teacher teaching in a first class
city school district, appointed by Education Minnesota; and two parents of
students currently enrolled in Minnesota public schools, one of whom must be a
parent of color, appointed by the Minnesota Parent Teacher Organization. The commissioner or the commissioner's
designee shall serve as a nonvoting member of the task force and shall provide
technical assistance to the task force upon request. The task force must review the statutory
sections that compose this act and recommend to the commissioner any changes
needed to fully implement the teacher evaluation structure, including statutory
changes to accomplish the recommendations.
The commissioner must report the task force recommendations to the
education policy and finance committees of the legislature by February 15,
2012. The advisory task force expires
June 1, 2012.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to education; modifying teacher evaluations and tenure; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 120B.35, subdivision 1; 120B.36, subdivision 1; 122A.40, subdivisions 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, by adding a subdivision; 122A.41, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 14; 122A.60; 122A.61, subdivision 1; 123B.09, subdivision 8; 123B.143, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 122A."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass and be re-referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Erickson from the Committee on
Education Reform to which was referred:
H. F. No. 947, A bill for an act relating to
education; modifying alternative teacher pay system; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2010, section 122A.414, subdivisions 1a, 2, 2a, 2b.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 4, line 10, strike the comma and insert "or"
Page 4, line 11, strike "or school site,"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Peppin from the Committee on
Government Operations and Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 978, A bill for an act relating to
elections; modifying certain election administration and districting
procedures; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 203B.085; 204B.135,
subdivision 1; 204B.14, subdivisions 2, 3; 204B.44; 204B.45, subdivision 2;
204C.06, subdivision 2; 375.025, subdivisions 2, 4.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 5, line 3, after "the" insert "mail
and absentee ballot"
Page 5, delete line 22
Page 5, line 23, delete "a precinct."
Page 5, after line 27, insert:
"Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 204B.46, is
amended to read:
204B.46 MAIL
ELECTIONS; QUESTIONS.
A county, municipality, or school district submitting
questions to the voters at a special election may conduct an election by mail
with no polling place other than the office of the auditor or clerk. No more than two questions may be submitted
at a mail election and no offices may be voted on. Notice of the election must be given to the
county auditor at least 53 days prior to the election. This notice shall also fulfill the
requirements of Minnesota Rules, part 8210.3000. The special mail ballot procedures must be
posted at least six weeks prior to the election. Not more than 30 nor later than 14 days prior
to the election, the auditor or clerk shall mail ballots by nonforwardable mail
to all voters registered in the county, municipality, or school district. No later than 14 days before the election,
the auditor or clerk must make a subsequent mailing of ballots to those voters
who register to vote after the initial mailing but before the 20th day before
the election. Eligible voters not
registered at the time the ballots are mailed may apply for ballots pursuant to
chapter 203B. The auditor or clerk must
appoint a ballot board to examine the mail and absentee ballot return
envelopes and mark them "Accepted" or "Rejected" within
three days of receipt if there are 14 or fewer days before election day, or
within five days of receipt if there are more than 14 days before election day. The board may consist of staff trained as
election judges. Election judges
performing the duties in this section must be of different major political
parties, unless they are exempt from that requirement under section 205.075,
subdivision 4, or section 205A.10. If an
envelope has been rejected at least five days before the election, the ballots
in the envelope must remain sealed and the auditor or clerk must provide the
voter with a replacement ballot and return envelope in place of the spoiled
ballot. If the ballot is rejected within
five days of the election, the envelope must remain sealed and the official in
charge of the ballot board must attempt to contact the voter by telephone or
e-mail to notify the voter that the voter's ballot has been rejected. The official must document the attempts made
to contact the voter.
If the ballot is accepted, the county auditor or municipal
clerk must mark the roster to indicate that the voter has already cast a ballot
in that election. After the close of
business on the fourth day before the election, the ballots from return
envelopes marked "Accepted" may be opened, duplicated as needed in
the manner provided by section 206.86, subdivision 5, initialed by the ballot
board, and deposited in the appropriate ballot box.
In all other respects, the provisions of the Minnesota
Election Law governing deposit and counting of ballots apply.
The mail and absentee ballots for a precinct must be counted
together and reported as one vote total. No vote totals from
ballots may be made public before the close of voting on election day."
Page 6, after line 9, insert:
"Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 206.57,
subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Required certification. In addition to the requirements in
subdivision 1, a voting system must be certified by an independent testing
authority accredited by the Election Assistance Commission or other
designated agency at the time of submission of the application required by
subdivision 1 to be in conformity with voluntary voting system guidelines
issued by the Election Assistance Commission or other designated agency. The application must be accompanied by the
certification report of the voting systems test laboratory. A certification under this section from an
independent testing authority accredited by the Election Assistance Commission or
other designated agency meets the requirement of Minnesota Rules, part
8220.0350, item L. A vendor must provide
a copy of the source code for the voting system to the secretary of state. A chair of a major political party or the
secretary of state may select, in consultation with the vendor, an independent
third-party evaluator to examine the source code to ensure that it functions as
represented by the vendor and that the code is free from defects. A major political party that elects to have
the source code examined must pay for the examination. Except as provided by this subdivision, a
source code that is trade secret information must be treated as nonpublic
information, according to section 13.37.
A third-party evaluator must not disclose the source code to anyone
else."
Page 7, line 17, delete "9" and insert
"11"
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 Redistricting.
The
report was adopted.
Smith from the Committee on
Judiciary Policy and Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 998, A bill for an act relating to
health; establishing the Human Cloning Prohibition Act; providing penalties;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 145.
Reported the same back with the
following amendments:
Page 2, lines 9 and 11, delete "felony" and
insert "misdemeanor"
Page 2, line 13, delete "$......." and
insert "$500"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill pass
and be re-referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
The
report was adopted.
Peppin from the Committee on
Government Operations and Elections to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1017, A bill for an act relating to
state lands; authorizing city of Red Wing to convey certain property; providing
for conveyance of certain surplus state land; amending Laws 1976, chapter 50,
section 1, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill
pass.
The
report was adopted.
SECOND READING OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 657, 789 and
1017 were read for the second time.
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF
HOUSE BILLS
The
following House Files were introduced:
Rukavina and Melin introduced:
H. F. No. 1136, A bill for an act relating to local government; modifying the regional library system maintenance of effort formula; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 134.34, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
Rukavina and Melin introduced:
H. F. No. 1137, A bill for an act relating to higher education; directing a portion of the permanent university fund for a mining engineering program and forestry research; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 137.022, subdivision 4, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Higher Education Policy and Finance.
Abeler introduced:
H. F. No. 1138, A bill for an act relating to human services; requiring a conference in case management and personal care assistance appeals; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256.045, subdivision 4a.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Reform.
Hancock, Peppin, Beard, Sanders and Winkler introduced:
H. F. No. 1139, A bill for an act relating to local government; authorizing single source acquisition of public safety equipment; authorizing long-term leasing of public safety equipment; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 471.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Beard introduced:
H. F. No. 1140, A bill for an act relating to transportation; establishing requirements governing capital requests for projects to establish fixed guideway transit and rail lines; amending requirements on fixed guideway transit and rail line project and financial reporting; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 16A.11, subdivision 3a; 16A.86, subdivision 3a; 174.93.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance.
Gunther, Kiffmeyer and Poppe introduced:
H. F. No. 1141, A bill for an act relating to taxation; creating a teleworking credit; providing a sales tax exemption for telework expenses; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297A.67, by adding a subdivision; 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.
Kiffmeyer introduced:
H. F. No. 1142, A bill for an act relating to health; eliminating health care provider reporting requirements that are not required for federal compliance; requiring a sunset for future reporting requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 144.05, by adding a subdivision; 256.01, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Reform.
Kiffmeyer introduced:
H. F. No. 1143, A bill for an act relating to human services; requiring certain medical assistance enrollees and all MinnesotaCare enrollees to receive basic services through an enrolled provider network; providing major medical coverage to these enrollees; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 256B.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
Cornish introduced:
H. F. No. 1144, A bill for an act relating to state government; requiring specified type of notice for termination of the rights of former employees in the state employee group insurance program; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 43A.27, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Lenczewski introduced:
H. F. No. 1145, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for the I-35W/I-494 Interchange; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance.
Melin, Anzelc and Rukavina introduced:
H. F. No. 1146, A bill for an act relating to waters; appropriating money for the Central Iron Range Sanitary Sewer District.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Hausman introduced:
H. F. No. 1147, A bill for an act relating to history and cultural heritage; appropriating money to Como Park Zoo and Conservatory.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Murdock introduced:
H. F. No. 1148, A bill for an act relating to environment; modifying landfill cleanup program; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 115B.412, subdivision 8, by adding subdivisions.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Beard introduced:
H. F. No. 1149, A bill for an act relating to transportation finance; appropriating money for aeronautics activities.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance.
Loeffler, Cornish, Kahn and Nelson introduced:
H. F. No. 1150, A bill for an act relating to employment; specifying duties and rights of classified employees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 181.932, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 43A.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Eken introduced:
H. F. No. 1151, A bill for an act relating to natural resources; exempting from registration with the state any snowmobile or all-terrain vehicle that is registered by an Indian tribal government to a tribal member; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 84.82, subdivision 6; 84.8205, subdivision 1; 84.922, subdivision 1a.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Sanders and Beard introduced:
H. F. No. 1152, A bill for an act relating to commerce; regulating return of pledged goods and location restrictions of pawnbrokers; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 325J.08; 325J.10; 325J.13.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Commerce and Regulatory Reform.
Slawik, Greiling, Mariani, Moran, Brynaert and Davnie introduced:
H. F. No. 1153, A bill for an act relating to education finance; providing funding for full-day kindergarten for certain kindergarten programs; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 126C.05, subdivision 1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
Eken introduced:
H. F. No. 1154, A bill for an act proposing an amendment to the Minnesota Constitution, article VII, by adding a section; providing for certain officers to be elected by a majority of the votes cast at the general election for the office.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Eken introduced:
H. F. No. 1155, A bill for an act relating to human services; increasing the supplemental rate for a group residential provider; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 256I.05, subdivision 1n.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Finance.
Eken introduced:
H. F. No. 1156, A bill for an act relating to long-term care; imposing a long-term care tax to fund services; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 290.06, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Anderson, B.; Hosch; Hamilton; Murdock; Quam; Anderson, P., and Erickson introduced:
H. F. No. 1157, A bill for an act relating to agriculture; requiring Public Utilities Commission to submit to the legislature proposed legislation establishing protocol for investigating complaints of stray voltage on dairy and livestock operations; creating a task force.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development Policy and Finance.
Peterson, S., and Benson, J., introduced:
H. F. No. 1158, A bill for an act relating to economic development; creating a startup business loan guarantee program; establishing a loan guarantee trust fund; requiring reports; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 116J.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Drazkowski introduced:
H. F. No. 1159, A bill for an act relating to state government; reducing salary of all state employees and elected officials by six percent.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Banaian, Howes, Clark, Mahoney, Gottwalt and Lillie introduced:
H. F. No. 1160, A bill for an act relating to economic development; appropriating money for a grant to the Boys and Girls Club.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Cornish introduced:
H. F. No. 1161, A bill for an act relating to human rights; amending education and program development requirements; amending certificates of compliance provisions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 363A.06, subdivision 1; 363A.36, subdivision 1; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 363A.36, subdivision 5.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Public Safety and Crime Prevention Policy and Finance.
Ward, McNamara, Hansen and Persell introduced:
H. F. No. 1162, A bill for an act relating to natural resources; modifying nonnative species provisions; modifying requirements for permits to control or harvest aquatic plants; providing criminal penalties and civil penalties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 84D.01, subdivisions 8a, 16, 21, by adding subdivisions; 84D.02, subdivision 6; 84D.03, subdivisions 3, 4; 84D.09; 84D.10, subdivisions 1, 3, 4; 84D.11, subdivision 2a;
84D.13, subdivisions 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; 84D.15, subdivision 2; 103G.615, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 84D; 86B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 84D.02, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Gunther introduced:
H. F. No. 1163, A bill for an act relating to accountants; modifying fees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 326A.04, subdivision 5; 326A.05, subdivision 5; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 326A; repealing Minnesota Rules, part 1105.0600.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Murdock and Gunther introduced:
H. F. No. 1164, A bill for an act relating to economic development; modifying JOBZ; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 469.312, subdivision 5.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Abeler, Hornstein and Sanders introduced:
H. F. No. 1165, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for the Ramsey Northstar Commuter Rail Station; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance.
Gottwalt introduced:
H. F. No. 1166, A bill for an act relating to human services; permitting the state to contract with third-party administrators to provide medical assistance benefits; requiring use of a competitive request for proposal process; repealing mandatory participation by health maintenance organizations; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 256B.0644; 256B.69, subdivisions 2, 5; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 62D.04, subdivision 5.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Reform.
Smith and Murphy, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 1167, A bill for an act relating to retirement; Public Employees Retirement Association privatizations; adding Cedarview Care Center and Traverse Care Center to covered privatization list; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 353F.02, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Smith; Murphy, M., and Dill introduced:
H. F. No. 1168, A bill for an act relating to retirement; voluntary statewide lump-sum volunteer firefighter retirement plan of the Public Employees Retirement Association; permitting municipal or independent nonprofit firefighting corporation contributions in excess of the applicable funding requirement; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 353G.08, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Downey introduced:
H. F. No. 1169, A bill for an act relating to taxation; sales and use; resale ticket purchases; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297A.67, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Gunther introduced:
H. F. No. 1170, A bill for an act relating to employment; modifying worker classification regulation, penalties, and fees; authorizing rulemaking; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 181.723; 326B.081, subdivision 3; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 181.723, subdivision 17; Minnesota Rules, parts 5202.0100; 5202.0110; 5202.0120; 5202.0130; 5202.0140; 5202.0150; 5202.0160.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance.
Westrom introduced:
H. F. No. 1171, A bill for an act relating to state government; imposing certain conditions on nonprofit organizations that receive a grant or a direct appropriation from the state; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 16A.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
Westrom introduced:
H. F. No. 1172, A bill for an act relating to state government; providing for revenue from legislative public information publications and from legislative media productions; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 3.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on State Government Finance.
Brynaert, Slocum, Urdahl, Davnie, Mariani, Greiling and Dittrich introduced:
H. F. No. 1173, A bill for an act relating to education; further clarifying professional development and evaluation requirements for probationary and continuing contract teachers; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 122A.40, subdivisions 5, 6, 8; 122A.41, subdivisions 2, 3, 5.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Education Reform.
Hoppe; Murphy, E., and Woodard introduced:
H. F. No. 1174, A bill for an act relating to liquor; authorizing on-sale liquor license for private, nonprofit college with certain conditions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 340A.404, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Commerce and Regulatory Reform.
Buesgens introduced:
H. F. No. 1175, A bill for an act relating to motor vehicles; authorizing additional deputy registrar of motor vehicles for Scott County.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance.
McFarlane, Dittrich and Petersen, B., introduced:
H. F. No. 1176, A bill for an act relating to education finance; modifying the uses of alternative facilities revenue; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 123B.59, subdivisions 1, 2.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
Falk introduced:
H. F. No. 1177, A bill for an act relating to energy; providing for grants to promote community energy outreach and assistance.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment, Energy and Natural Resources Policy and Finance.
Loeffler introduced:
H. F. No. 1178, A bill for an act relating to state employment; creating an unpaid leave job retention program; requiring reports.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations and Elections.
McFarlane introduced:
H. F. No. 1179, A bill for an act relating to pupil transportation; modifying pupil transportation provisions; clarifying Department of Education's role in maintaining training programs; including use of certain lift buses in the category of revenue authorized for reimbursement; including actual contracted transportation costs as a method for allocating pupil transportation costs; amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 123B.88, subdivision 13; 123B.90, subdivision 3; 123B.92, subdivision 1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Education Finance.
CALENDAR FOR
THE DAY
Dean
moved that the Calendar for the Day be continued. The motion prevailed.
MOTIONS AND
RESOLUTIONS
Davids moved that the name of Dettmer be
added as an author on H. F. No. 122. The motion prevailed.
Ward moved that the name of LeMieur be
added as an author on H. F. No. 189. The motion prevailed.
Gottwalt moved that the name of Anderson,
P., be added as an author on H. F. No. 200. The motion prevailed.
Garofalo moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 495. The motion prevailed.
Smith moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 556. The motion prevailed.
Peterson, S., moved that her name be
stricken as an author on H. F. No. 628. The motion prevailed.
Loon moved that the name of Wardlow be
added as an author on H. F. No. 703. The motion prevailed.
Champion moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 718. The motion prevailed.
McFarlane moved that the names of Greene
and Knuth be added as authors on H. F. No. 729. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 732. The motion prevailed.
Loon moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 743. The motion prevailed.
Mack moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 745. The motion prevailed.
Mariani moved that the name of Greene be
added as an author on H. F. No. 751. The motion prevailed.
Kahn moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 760. The motion prevailed.
McFarlane moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 844. The motion prevailed.
Franson moved that her name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 884.
The motion prevailed.
Davnie moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 891. The motion prevailed.
Hamilton moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 905. The motion prevailed.
Hilty moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 914. The motion prevailed.
Kahn moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 918. The motion prevailed.
Holberg moved that the name of Swedzinski
be added as an author on H. F. No. 936. The motion prevailed.
Howes moved that the name of Lanning be
added as an author on H. F. No. 960. The motion prevailed.
Holberg moved that the name of Davids be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1042. The motion prevailed.
Abeler moved that the names of Holberg and
Fritz be added as authors on H. F. No. 1054. The motion prevailed.
Urdahl moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1061. The motion prevailed.
Norton moved that the names of Morrow,
Simon, Kath and Melin be added as authors on
H. F. No. 1071. The
motion prevailed.
Westrom moved that the name of McFarlane
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1074. The motion prevailed.
Shimanski moved that the name of Morrow be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1094. The motion prevailed.
Hosch moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1095. The motion prevailed.
Gunther moved that H. F. No. 611 be recalled from the Committee on Commerce and Regulatory Reform and be re-referred to the Committee on Jobs and Economic Development Finance. The motion prevailed.
ADJOURNMENT
Dean moved that when the House adjourns
today it adjourn until 3:00 p.m., Thursday, March 17, 2011. The motion prevailed.
Dean moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 3:00 p.m., Thursday, March 17, 2011.
Albin
A. Mathiowetz,
Chief Clerk, House of Representatives