STATE OF
MINNESOTA
EIGHTY-NINTH
SESSION - 2015
_____________________
THIRTY-NINTH
DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Wednesday, April 15, 2015
The House of Representatives convened at
10:00 a.m. and was called to order by Tim O'Driscoll, Speaker pro tempore.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Paris
Pasch, Christ's Family Church, Hastings, 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:
Albright
Anderson, P.
Anderson, S.
Anzelc
Applebaum
Atkins
Backer
Baker
Barrett
Bennett
Bernardy
Bly
Carlson
Christensen
Clark
Considine
Cornish
Daniels
Davids
Davnie
Dean, M.
Dehn, R.
Dettmer
Dill
Drazkowski
Erhardt
Erickson
Fabian
Fenton
Fischer
Franson
Freiberg
Garofalo
Green
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Hackbarth
Halverson
Hamilton
Hancock
Hansen
Hausman
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Hilstrom
Hoppe
Hornstein
Hortman
Howe
Isaacson
Johnson, B.
Johnson, C.
Johnson, S.
Kahn
Kelly
Kiel
Knoblach
Koznick
Kresha
Laine
Lenczewski
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Loeffler
Lohmer
Loon
Loonan
Lucero
Lueck
Mack
Mahoney
Marquart
Masin
McNamara
Melin
Metsa
Miller
Moran
Mullery
Murphy, E.
Murphy, M.
Nash
Nelson
Newberger
Newton
Nornes
Norton
O'Driscoll
O'Neill
Pelowski
Peppin
Persell
Petersburg
Peterson
Pierson
Pinto
Poppe
Pugh
Quam
Rarick
Rosenthal
Runbeck
Sanders
Schoen
Schomacker
Schultz
Scott
Selcer
Simonson
Slocum
Smith
Sundin
Swedzinski
Theis
Thissen
Torkelson
Uglem
Urdahl
Vogel
Wagenius
Ward
Whelan
Wills
Winkler
Yarusso
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Daudt
A quorum was present.
Allen; Anderson, M.; Lesch; Mariani and
McDonald 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
Kelly from the Committee on Transportation Policy and Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 4, A bill for an act relating to transportation; requiring the Department of Transportation to implement certain efficiencies; appropriating money to construct, maintain, and rehabilitate highways, roads, and bridges.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
TRANSPORTATION APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1.
ROAD AND BRIDGE ACT OF 2015.
This act may be cited as the "Road
and Bridge Act of 2015."
Sec. 2. SUMMARY
OF APPROPRIATIONS. |
The amounts shown in this section
summarize direct appropriations by fund made in this act, and do not have legal
effect.
|
|
2016 |
|
2017 |
|
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
General |
|
$64,361,000
|
|
$40,875,000
|
|
$105,236,000
|
Airports |
|
25,109,000
|
|
25,109,000
|
|
50,218,000
|
C.S.A.H. |
|
844,521,000
|
|
786,152,000
|
|
1,630,673,000
|
M.S.A.S. |
|
218,127,000
|
|
197,506,000
|
|
415,633,000
|
Special Revenue |
|
61,422,000
|
|
54,425,000
|
|
115,847,000
|
H.U.T.D. |
|
10,436,000
|
|
10,449,000
|
|
20,885,000
|
Trunk Highway |
|
1,759,687,000
|
|
1,809,068,000
|
|
3,568,755,000
|
Transportation Stability |
|
25,000,000
|
|
25,000,000
|
|
50,000,000
|
Transit Assistance |
|
331,340,000
|
|
351,910,000
|
|
683,250,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
|
$3,340,003,000 |
|
$3,300,494,000 |
|
$6,640,497,000 |
Sec. 3. TRANSPORTATION
APPROPRIATIONS. |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The appropriations
are from the trunk highway fund, or another named fund, and are available for
the fiscal years indicated for each purpose.
Amounts for "Total Appropriation" and sums shown in the
corresponding columns marked "Appropriations by Fund" are summary
only and do have legal effect. The
figures "2016" and "2017" used in this article mean that
the appropriations listed under them are available for the fiscal year ending
June 30, 2016, or June 30, 2017, respectively.
"The first year" is fiscal year 2016. "The second year" is fiscal year
2017. "The biennium" is fiscal
years 2016 and 2017.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the
Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2016 |
2017 |
Sec. 4. DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$2,869,033,000 |
|
$2,830,817,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
18,058,000
|
18,058,000
|
Airports |
25,109,000
|
25,109,000
|
C.S.A.H. |
844,521,000
|
768,152,000
|
M.S.A.S. |
218,127,000
|
197,506,000
|
Special Revenue |
2,032,000
|
0 |
Trunk Highway |
1,663,396,000
|
1,710,832,000
|
Transportation Stability |
25,000,000
|
25,000,000
|
Transit Assistance |
64,790,000
|
68,160,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Multimodal
Systems |
|
|
|
|
(a) Aeronautics Activity |
|
|
|
|
(1) Airport Development and Assistance |
|
19,798,000
|
|
19,798,000
|
This appropriation is from the state
airports fund and must be spent according to Minnesota Statutes, section
360.305, subdivision 4.
The base appropriation in each of fiscal
years 2018 and 2019 is $14,323,000.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, subdivision 6, this appropriation is available for five years after the
date of appropriation.
If the appropriation for either year is
insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available for it.
(2) Aviation Support and Services |
|
6,411,000
|
|
6,411,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
Airports |
5,311,000
|
5,311,000
|
Trunk Highway |
1,100,000
|
1,100,000
|
$80,000
in each year is from the state airports fund for the Civil Air Patrol.
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $1,100,000.
The base appropriation from the trunk highway
fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
(b) Transit |
|
82,810,000
|
|
86,180,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
|
|
|
General |
17,245,000
|
17,245,000
|
Trunk Highway |
775,000
|
775,000
|
Transit Assistance |
64,790,000
|
68,160,000
|
The transit assistance fund appropriation
is from the greater Minnesota transit account under Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.88.
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $18,020,000.
The base appropriation from the transit
assistance fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is as provided in Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.88, subdivision 1a.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
(c) Safe Routes to School |
|
500,000
|
|
500,000
|
This appropriation is from the general fund
for the safe routes to school program under Minnesota Statutes, section 174.40.
(d) Freight |
|
7,653,000
|
|
5,153,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
256,000
|
256,000
|
Special Revenue |
2,500,000
|
0 |
Trunk Highway |
4,897,000
|
4,897,000
|
The special revenue fund appropriation is
from the vehicle services operating account for port development assistance
program grants under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 457A. Any improvements made with the proceeds of
these grants must be publicly owned. This
is a onetime appropriation and is available in the second year.
The
base appropriation from the general fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019
is $5,153,000.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
Subd. 3. State
Roads |
|
|
|
|
(a) Operations and Maintenance Activity |
|
|
|
|
(1) General Operations and Maintenance |
|
221,083,000
|
|
234,915,000
|
The base appropriation in fiscal year 2018
and thereafter is as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 161.04,
subdivision 7.
(2) Snow and Ice Management |
|
65,000,000
|
|
65,000,000
|
This appropriation is for snow plowing,
anti-icing treatment, ice removal, and related expenses.
If the appropriation in either year is
insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available for it.
If the appropriation in the second year is
insufficient, the commissioner may transfer an amount of up to ten percent of
the snow and ice management appropriation
for the biennium from the appropriation
for general operations and maintenance under clause (1).
If a balance remains in this
appropriation, the commissioner may transfer up to that amount for general
operations and maintenance under clause (1).
(b) Program Planning and Delivery Activity |
|
|
|
|
(1) Planning |
|
30,079,000
|
|
30,079,000
|
If a balance remains in this
appropriation, the commissioner may transfer up to that amount for program
delivery under clause (2).
(2) Program Delivery |
|
179,946,000
|
|
166,758,000
|
This appropriation includes use of
consultants to support development and management of projects.
The base appropriation in fiscal year 2018
is $164,238,000 and in fiscal year 2019 is $150,563,000.
$250,000 in the first year is for the
interchange safety improvement study under article 3, section 62.
$130,000
in each year is available for administrative costs of the department's targeted
group business program.
$266,000 in each year is available for
grants to metropolitan planning organizations outside the seven-county
metropolitan area.
$900,000 in each year is available for
grants for transportation studies outside the metropolitan area to identify
critical concerns, problems, and issues.
These grants are available: (1)
to regional development commissions; (2) in regions where no regional
development commission is functioning, to joint powers boards established under
an agreement of two or more political subdivisions in the region to exercise
the planning functions of a regional development commission; and (3) in regions
where no regional development commission or joint powers board is functioning,
to the department's district office for that region.
$1,000,000 in each year is available for
management of contaminated and regulated material on property owned by the
Department of Transportation, including mitigation of property conveyances,
facility acquisition or expansion, chemical release at maintenance facilities,
and spills on the trunk highway system where there is no known responsible
party. If the appropriation for either
year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available for it.
An amount up to the unexpended balance in
the appropriation under Laws 2012, First Special Session chapter 1, article 1,
section 4, subdivision 3, is available for the purposes stated in Minnesota
Statutes, section 12A.16, subdivision 2.
(c) State Road Construction |
|
897,889,000
|
|
905,356,000
|
This appropriation is for the actual
construction, reconstruction, and improvement of trunk highways, including
design-build contracts. This includes
the cost of actual payment to landowners for lands acquired for highway
rights-of-way, payment to lessees, interest subsidies, and relocation expenses.
The base appropriation in fiscal year 2018
and thereafter is as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 161.04,
subdivision 7.
$1,000,000 in the first year is to complete
projects using funds made available to the commissioner of transportation under
title XII of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Public Law
111-5, and implemented under Minnesota Statutes, section 161.36, subdivision 7.
The commissioner may expend up to one-half
of one percent of the federal appropriations under this paragraph as grants to
opportunity industrialization centers and other nonprofit job training centers
for job training programs related to highway construction.
The
commissioner may transfer up to $15,000,000 each year to the transportation
revolving loan fund.
The commissioner may collect receipts for
the partners' share of partnership projects.
These receipts are appropriated to the commissioner for these projects.
(d) Highway Debt Service |
|
197,103,000
|
|
236,428,000
|
$187,603,000 the first year and $226,928,000
the second year are for transfer to the state bond fund. If this appropriation is insufficient to make
all transfers required in the year for which it is made, the commissioner of
management and budget shall transfer the deficiency amount under the statutory
open appropriation, and notify the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over transportation finance and the
chairs of the senate Committee on Finance and the house of representatives
Committee on Ways and Means of the amount of the deficiency. Any excess appropriation cancels to the trunk
highway fund.
The base appropriation in fiscal year 2018
is $262,899,000 and in fiscal year 2019 is $281,012,000.
(e) Statewide Radio Communications |
|
5,171,000
|
|
5,171,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
3,000
|
3,000
|
Special Revenue |
32,000
|
0 |
Trunk Highway |
5,168,000
|
5,168,000
|
The general fund appropriation is to equip
and operate the Roosevelt signal tower for Lake of the Woods weather
broadcasting.
The special revenue fund appropriation is
from the vehicle services operating account for a weather transmitter in Lake
of the Woods County. This is a onetime
appropriation.
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $5,171,000.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
Subd. 4. Local
Roads |
|
|
|
|
(a) County State-Aid Highway Fund |
|
844,521,000
|
|
768,152,000
|
This appropriation is from the county
state-aid highway fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 161.081, and chapter
162, and is available until spent.
If
the commissioner of transportation determines that a balance remains in the
county state-aid highway fund following the appropriations and transfers made
in this paragraph, and that the appropriations made are insufficient for
advancing county state-aid highway projects, an amount necessary to advance the
projects, not to exceed the balance in the county state-aid highway fund, is
appropriated in each year to the commissioner.
Within two weeks of a determination under this contingent appropriation,
the commissioner of transportation shall notify the commissioner of management
and budget and the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over transportation finance concerning funds
appropriated. The commissioner shall
include in the next budget submission to the legislature under Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.11, any additional amount that is appropriated under this
paragraph.
(b) Municipal State-Aid Street Fund |
|
218,127,000
|
|
197,506,000
|
This appropriation is from the municipal
state-aid street fund under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 162, and is available
until spent.
If the commissioner of transportation
determines that a balance remains in the municipal state-aid street fund
following the appropriations and transfers made in this paragraph, and that the
appropriations made are insufficient for advancing municipal state-aid street
projects, an amount necessary to advance the projects, not to exceed the
balance in the municipal state-aid street fund, is appropriated in each year to
the commissioner. Within two weeks of a
determination under this contingent appropriation, the commissioner of
transportation shall notify the commissioner of management and budget and the
chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees with
jurisdiction over transportation finance concerning funds appropriated. The commissioner shall include in the next
budget submission to the legislature under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.11,
any additional amount that is appropriated under this paragraph.
(c) Small Cities Assistance |
|
25,000,000
|
|
25,000,000
|
This appropriation is from the small cities
assistance account in the transportation stability fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 162.145, for small cities assistance under that section.
The base appropriation in fiscal year 2018
is $27,500,000 and in fiscal year 2019 is $27,900,000.
Subd. 5. Agency
Management |
|
|
|
|
(a) Agency Services |
|
41,972,000
|
|
41,972,000
|
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $41,972,000.
The
base appropriation from the trunk highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and
thereafter is $0.
(b) Buildings |
|
17,838,000
|
|
17,838,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
54,000
|
54,000
|
Trunk Highway |
17,784,000
|
17,784,000
|
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $17,838,000.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
Any money appropriated to the commissioner
of transportation for building construction for any fiscal year before 2016 is available
to the commissioner of transportation during the biennium to the extent that
the commissioner spends the money on the building construction projects for
which the money was originally encumbered during the fiscal year for which it
was appropriated.
If the appropriation for either year is
insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available for it.
(c) Tort Claims |
|
600,000
|
|
600,000
|
This appropriation is to the commissioner
of transportation. If the appropriation
for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is
available for it.
Subd. 6. Flexible
Highway Account Transfers |
|
|
|
|
The commissioner of transportation shall
transfer from the flexible highway account in the county state-aid highway fund
the entire amount in each year to the county turnback account in the county
state-aid highway fund. The funds
transferred are for highway turnback purposes under Minnesota Statutes, section
161.081, subdivision 3.
Subd. 7. State Road Construction Appropriations
Carryforward |
|
|
|
Any money appropriated to the commissioner
of transportation for state road construction for any fiscal year before fiscal
year 2016 is available to the commissioner during the biennium to the extent
that the commissioner spends the money on the state road construction project
for which the money was originally encumbered during the fiscal year for which
it was appropriated.
Subd. 8. Contingent
Appropriation |
|
|
|
|
The commissioner of transportation, with
the approval of the governor and the written approval of at least five members
of a group consisting of the members of the Legislative Advisory Commission
under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.30, and the ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over transportation finance, may
transfer all or part of the unappropriated balance in the trunk highway fund to
an appropriation: (1) for trunk highway
design, construction, or inspection in order to take advantage of an
unanticipated receipt of income to the trunk highway fund or to take advantage
of federal advanced construction funding; (2) for trunk highway maintenance in
order to meet an emergency; or (3) to pay tort or environmental claims. Nothing in this subdivision authorizes the
commissioner to increase the use of federal advanced construction funding
beyond amounts specifically authorized. Any
transfer as a result of the use of federal advanced construction funding must
include an analysis of the effects on the long-term trunk highway fund balance. The amount transferred is appropriated for
the purpose of the account to which it is transferred.
Sec. 5. METROPOLITAN
COUNCIL |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation |
|
$301,514,000 |
|
$295,109,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
33,264,000
|
9,659,000
|
Special Revenue |
1,700,000
|
1,700,000
|
Transit Assistance |
266,550,000
|
283,750,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Transit
Operations |
|
299,814,000
|
|
293,409,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
33,264,000
|
9,659,000
|
Transit Assistance |
266,550,000
|
283,750,000
|
The transit assistance fund appropriation
is from the metropolitan area transit account under Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.88.
This appropriation is for transit system
operations under Minnesota Statutes, sections 473.371 to 473.449.
The
base appropriation from the general fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is
as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.13, subdivision 6.
The base appropriation from the transit
assistance fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is as provided in Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.88, subdivision 2.
To the extent that appropriations from the
general fund are reduced in this subdivision from base appropriations for
fiscal years 2016 and 2017, the amount appropriated from the metropolitan area
transit account that is in excess of the amount appropriated in fiscal year
2015 must be allocated first to purposes identified in the Metropolitan Council
2015 unified budget as adopted in December 2014, including Metro Mobility
service, and funded from general fund appropriations.
In each of the 2016 and 2017 Metropolitan
Council budget years, the Metropolitan Council shall provide financial
assistance to suburban transit providers under Minnesota Statutes, section
473.388, in an amount that equals no less than:
(1) the total assistance identified in the
Metropolitan Council 2015 unified budget as adopted in December 2014; plus
(2) the amount under clause (1) multiplied
by a percentage, calculated as (i) the total amount in the metropolitan area
transit account for fiscal year 2016 or 2017, as appropriate, less the total
amount in that account for the previous fiscal year; divided by (ii) the total
amount in that account for the previous fiscal year.
Subd. 3. Suburban Connections Demonstration Project |
1,500,000
|
|
1,500,000
|
(a) This appropriation is from the vehicle
services operating account in the special revenue fund for financial assistance
to replacement service providers under Minnesota Statutes, section 473.388, to
implement a demonstration project that provides regular route transit or
express bus service between municipalities in the metropolitan area, as defined
in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2, excluding cities of the
first class. The council may not retain
any portion of funds appropriated under this subdivision. Following notification under paragraph (b),
the council shall allocate the appropriated funds as directed by the
replacement service providers.
(b) The replacement service providers
shall collectively identify one or more demonstration projects for financial
assistance under this subdivision and submit a notification of the allocation
to the Metropolitan Council. Criteria
for evaluating and identifying demonstration projects must include but are not
limited to: (1) scope of service
offering improvements; (2) integration with transit
facilities
and major business, retail, or suburban centers; (3) extent to which a proposed
route complements existing transit service; and (4) density of employment along
a proposed route.
(c) This is a onetime appropriation.
Subd. 4. Transportation Management Organizations |
200,000
|
|
200,000
|
This appropriation is from the vehicle
services operating account in the special revenue fund for grants to
transportation management organizations that provide services exclusively or
primarily in: (1) each city of the first
class, as provided under Minnesota Statutes, section 410.01; and (2) the city
having the highest population as of the effective date of this section located
along the marked Interstate Highway 494 corridor. The council may not retain any portion of funds
appropriated under this section. From
the appropriation in each fiscal year, the council shall make grant payments in
full by July 31. Permissible uses of
funds under this section include administrative expenses and programming and
service expansion, including but not limited to staffing, communications,
outreach and education program development, and operations management. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 6. PUBLIC
SAFETY |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$176,956,000 |
|
$176,268,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
13,039,000
|
13,158,000
|
Special Revenue |
57,190,000
|
54,425,000
|
H.U.T.D. |
10,436,000
|
10,449,000
|
Trunk Highway |
96,291,000
|
98,236,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Administration
and Related Services |
|
|
|
|
(a) Office of Communications |
|
517,000
|
|
530,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
113,000
|
115,000
|
Trunk Highway |
404,000
|
415,000
|
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $530,000.
The
base appropriation from the trunk highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and
thereafter is $0.
(b) Public Safety Support |
|
9,035,000
|
|
9,124,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
3,532,000
|
3,537,000
|
Special Revenue |
450,000
|
450,000
|
H.U.T.D. |
1,366,000
|
1,366,000
|
Trunk Highway |
3,687,000
|
3,771,000
|
The base appropriation from the general
fund in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $8,674,000.
The base appropriation from the highway
user tax distribution fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
$380,000 in each year is from the general
fund for payment of public safety officer survivor benefits under Minnesota
Statutes, section 299A.44. If the
appropriation for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other
year is available for it.
$1,367,000 in each year is from the general
fund to be deposited in the public safety officer's benefit account. This money is available for reimbursements
under Minnesota Statutes, section 299A.465.
$600,000 in each year is from the general
fund and $100,000 in each year is from the trunk highway fund for soft body
armor reimbursements under Minnesota Statutes, section 299A.38.
$450,000 in each year is from the vehicle
services operating account in the special revenue fund for the creation of two
emergency response teams. One emergency
response team must be under the jurisdiction of the St. Cloud Fire
Department, or a similarly located fire department if necessary, and one
emergency response team must be under the jurisdiction of the Duluth Fire
Department. The commissioner shall
allocate the funds as needed to facilitate the creation and maintenance of the
emergency response teams. This is a
onetime appropriation.
$792,000 in each year is from the general
fund for transfer by the commissioner of management and budget to the trunk
highway fund on December 31, 2015, and December 31, 2016, respectively, in
order to reimburse the trunk highway fund for expenses not related to the fund. These represent amounts appropriated out of
the trunk highway fund for general fund purposes in the administration and
related services program.
$610,000
in each year is from the highway user tax distribution fund for transfer by the commissioner of management and budget to the
trunk highway fund on December 31, 2015, and December 31, 2016, respectively,
in order to reimburse the trunk highway fund for expenses not related to the
fund. These represent amounts
appropriated out of the trunk highway fund for highway user tax distribution
fund purposes in the administration and related services program.
(c) Technology and Support Services |
|
3,685,000
|
|
3,685,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
1,322,000
|
1,322,000
|
H.U.T.D. |
19,000
|
19,000
|
Trunk Highway |
2,344,000
|
2,344,000
|
The base appropriation from the general fund
in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $3,685,000.
The base appropriation from the highway
user tax distribution fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
The base appropriation from the trunk
highway fund in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is $0.
Subd. 3. State
Patrol |
|
|
|
|
(a) Patrolling Highways |
|
85,016,000
|
|
83,121,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
37,000
|
37,000
|
Special Revenue |
3,500,000
|
0
|
H.U.T.D. |
92,000
|
92,000
|
Trunk Highway |
81,387,000
|
82,992,000
|
$975,000 from the trunk highway fund in
fiscal year 2016 is to purchase a single-engine aircraft for the State Patrol,
exclusively for public safety purposes.
The special revenue fund appropriation is
from the vehicle services operating account to recruit, hire, train, equip, and
provide salary for additional State Patrol troopers. This is a onetime appropriation.
(b)
Commercial Vehicle Enforcement |
|
8,023,000
|
|
8,257,000
|
(c) Capitol Security |
|
8,035,000
|
|
8,147,000
|
This appropriation is from the general
fund.
The commissioner may not: (1) spend any money from the trunk highway
fund for capitol security; or (2) permanently transfer any state trooper from
the patrolling highways activity to capitol security.
The commissioner may not transfer any
money appropriated to the commissioner under this section: (1) to capitol security; or (2) from capitol
security.
(d) Vehicle Crimes Unit |
|
723,000
|
|
736,000
|
This appropriation is from the highway
user tax distribution fund.
This appropriation is to investigate: (1) registration tax and motor vehicle sales
tax liabilities from individuals and businesses that currently do not pay all
taxes owed; and (2) illegal or improper activity related to sale, transfer,
titling, and registration of motor vehicles.
Subd. 4. Driver
and Vehicle Services |
|
|
|
|
(a) Driver Services |
|
30,078,000
|
|
30,532,000
|
This appropriation is from the driver
services operating account in the special revenue fund.
Of the appropriation from the driver
services operating account, $31,000 in each year is to create a Data Services
Unit within the Division of Driver and Vehicle Services.
(b) Vehicle Services |
|
30,027,000
|
|
30,291,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
Special Revenue |
21,791,000
|
22,055,000
|
H.U.T.D. |
8,236,000
|
8,236,000
|
The special revenue fund appropriation is
from the vehicle services operating account in the special revenue fund.
Of the appropriation from the vehicle
services operating account, $59,000 in each year is to create a Data Services
Unit within the Division of Driver and Vehicle Services.
Subd. 5. Traffic
Safety |
|
446,000 |
|
457,000 |
Subd. 6. Pipeline
Safety |
|
1,371,000 |
|
1,388,000 |
This appropriation is from the pipeline
safety account in the special revenue fund.
Sec. 7. TRANSFERS;
GENERAL FUND.
On or before June 30, 2015, the
commissioner of management and budget shall transfer $228,000,000 from the
general fund as follows:
(1) $114,474,000 to the county state-aid
highway fund;
(2) $35,526,000 to the municipal
state-aid street fund;
(3) $50,000,000 to the small cities
assistance account in the transportation stability fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 162.145;
(4) $14,000,000 to the county state-aid
highway fund, for allocation in the same manner as provided under Minnesota
Statutes, section 16A.89, subdivision 5, paragraph (b); and
(5) $14,000,000 to the greater minnesota
transit account in the transit assistance fund.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 8. TRANSFER;
SPECIAL REVENUE FUND.
On or before July 15, 2015, the
commissioner of management and budget shall transfer $5,000,000 from the
vehicle services operating account in the special revenue fund to the Minnesota
grade crossing safety account in the special revenue fund, for the purposes
specified under Minnesota Statutes, section 219.1651.
Sec. 9. CONTINGENT
APPROPRIATIONS REDUCTIONS.
(a) In the appropriations specified
under paragraph (b), the amounts appropriated are reduced as necessary, if
legislation is not enacted in the 2015 legislative session or funds under that
legislation are insufficient, to provide for allocation to specified
transportation purposes of revenue from (1) the state general sales tax on
motor vehicle parts; (2) the state general sales tax on motor vehicle leases
under Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.815; (3) the state general sales tax on
motor vehicle rental; and (4) the tax on motor vehicle rental under Minnesota
Statutes, section 297A.64, subdivision 1.
(b) The appropriations in this article
to the commissioner of transportation that are subject to a contingent
reduction under paragraph (a) are as follows:
(1) for transit under section 4,
subdivision 2, paragraph (b), from the transit assistance fund;
(2) for state roads under section 4,
subdivision 3, in general operations and maintenance, program delivery, and
state road construction, and distributed in amounts proportional to the
original appropriations;
(3) for county state aid under section
4, subdivision 4, paragraph (a); and
(4) for municipal state aid under
section 4, subdivision 4, paragraph (b).
ARTICLE 2
TRUNK HIGHWAY BONDING
Section 1.
BOND APPROPRIATIONS.
The sums shown in the column under
"Appropriations" are appropriated from the bond proceeds account in
the trunk highway fund to the state agencies or officials indicated, to be
spent for public purposes. Appropriations
of bond proceeds must be spent as authorized by the Minnesota Constitution,
articles XI and XIV. Unless otherwise
specified, money appropriated in this article for a capital program or project
may be used to pay state agency staff costs that are attributed directly to the
capital program or project in accordance with accounting policies adopted by
the commissioner of management and budget.
SUMMARY |
||
Department of Transportation |
|
$1,300,000,000
|
Department of Management and
Budget |
|
1,300,000
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
|
$1,301,300,000 |
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Corridors
of Commerce |
|
|
|
$812,500,000 |
This appropriation is to the commissioner
of transportation for the corridors of commerce program under Minnesota
Statutes, section 161.088.
Of this appropriation, $125,000,000 is
available in each of fiscal years 2016 to
2021, and $62,500,000 is available in fiscal year 2022.
In any fiscal year covered by this appropriation, the commissioner may identify projects based on previous selection processes or may perform a new selection.
For projects within the department's
metropolitan district, the commissioner shall first select projects that: (1) are recommended under Minnesota Statutes,
section 161.088, subdivision 5, paragraph (b), from previous selection
processes; (2) are on (i) U.S. highways, or (ii) non-interstate highways having
an average annual daily traffic volume of at least 50,000 vehicles; and (3)
provide for capacity expansion through additional general purpose or auxiliary
lanes of travel.
For projects outside of the department's
metropolitan district, the commissioner shall first select any projects which
are either not completed or connected to projects, in which: (1) funds have been previously provided under
the corridors of commerce program for right-of-way acquisition, design, or
environmental analysis; and (2) the project provides for capacity expansion
through additional general purpose or auxiliary lanes of travel.
Subd. 2. Transportation
Economic Development |
|
|
|
32,500,000
|
This appropriation is for the
transportation economic development program under Minnesota Statutes, section
174.12.
Of this
appropriation, $5,000,000 is available in each of fiscal years 2016 to 2021,
and $2,500,000 is available in fiscal year 2022.
Subd. 3. State
Road Construction |
|
|
|
455,000,000
|
This appropriation is for the construction,
reconstruction, and improvement of trunk highways, including design-build
contracts. This includes the cost of
actual payment to landowners for lands acquired for highway rights-of-way,
payment to lessees, interest subsidies, and relocation expenses.
Of this appropriation, $70,000,000 is
available in each of fiscal years 2016 to
2021, and $35,000,000 is available in fiscal year 2022.
Subd. 4. Cancellations
|
|
|
|
|
The appropriations in this section cancel
as specified under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.642, except that the
commissioner of management and budget shall count the start of authorization
for issuance of state bonds as the first day of the fiscal year during which
the bonds are available to be issued as specified under subdivision 1, 2, or 3,
and not as the date of enactment of this section.
Sec. 3. BOND
SALE EXPENSES |
|
|
|
$1,300,000 |
This appropriation is to the commissioner
of management and budget for bond sale expenses under Minnesota Statutes,
sections 16A.641, subdivision 8, and 167.50, subdivision 4, and is effective
through fiscal year 2025.
Sec. 4. BOND
SALE AUTHORIZATION.
To provide the money appropriated in
this article from the bond proceeds account in the trunk highway fund, the
commissioner of management and budget shall sell and issue bonds of the state
in an amount up to $1,301,300,000 in the manner, upon the terms, and with the
effect prescribed by Minnesota Statutes, sections 167.50 to 167.52, and by the
Minnesota Constitution, article XIV, section 11, at the times and in the
amounts requested by the commissioner of transportation. The proceeds of the bonds, except accrued
interest and any premium received from the sale of the bonds, must be deposited
in the bond proceeds account in the trunk highway fund.
ARTICLE 3
TRANSPORTATION POLICY AND FINANCE
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 16A.11, subdivision 3a, is amended to read:
Subd. 3a. Part
three: detailed capital budget. The detailed capital budget must: (1) include recommendations for capital
projects to be funded during the next six fiscal years, including any
request for project funding from the metropolitan transit capital account in
the transportation stability fund under section 16A.89; and,
(2)
if applicable, must meet the requirements under section 174.93,
subdivision 1a. It must be submitted
with projects recommended by the governor and in order of importance among that
agency's requests as determined by the agency originating the request.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 16A.86, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Budget request. A political subdivision that requests an appropriation of state money for a local capital improvement project, including a request for project funding from the metropolitan transit capital account in the transportation stability fund under section 16A.89, is encouraged to submit the request to the commissioner of management and budget by July 15 of an odd-numbered year to ensure its full consideration. The requests must be submitted in the form and with the supporting documentation required by the commissioner of management and budget. All requests timely received by the commissioner must be submitted to the legislature, along with the governor's recommendations, whether or not the governor recommends that a request be funded, by the deadline established in section 16A.11, subdivision 1.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 16A.88, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Greater
Minnesota transit account; base appropriation. (a) The greater Minnesota transit
account is established within the transit assistance fund in the state treasury. Money in the account is annually
appropriated to the commissioner of transportation for assistance to
transit systems outside the metropolitan area under section 174.24. The commissioner may use up to $408,000 in
fiscal year 2008 and $416,000 in fiscal year 2009 and thereafter annually
for administration of the transit program.
The commissioner shall use funds appropriated by law from the
account for transit operations as provided in section 174.24 and related
program administration.
(b) The base appropriations from the
account to the commissioner of transportation for each forecasted fiscal year
after the current biennium equals the balance in the account for each year as
identified in the latest forecast under sections 16A.103 and 174.03,
subdivision 9.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 16A.88, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Metropolitan
area transit account; base appropriation. (a) The metropolitan area transit
account is established within the transit assistance fund in the state treasury. All money in the account is annually
appropriated to The Metropolitan Council shall use funds appropriated by
law from the account for the funding of transit systems within the
metropolitan area under sections 473.384, 473.386, 473.387, 473.388, and
473.405 to 473.449.
(b) The base appropriations from the
account to the Metropolitan Council for each forecasted fiscal year after the
current biennium equals the balance in the account for each year as identified
in the latest forecast under sections 16A.103 and 174.03, subdivision 9.
Sec. 5. [16A.89]
TRANSPORTATION STABILITY FUND.
Subdivision 1. Fund
established. A transportation
stability fund is established in the state treasury under the budgetary
jurisdiction of the legislative committees having jurisdiction over
transportation finance. The fund
consists of money provided by law, and any other funds donated, allotted,
transferred, or otherwise provided. Money
in the fund must be allocated solely for transportation purposes as specified
in this section and as provided by law.
Subd. 2. Financial
reports. Any report or
financial statement submitted to the legislature providing financial
information on the fund must include accounting information on each account
established within the fund, including revenues and sources, transfers, uses,
and account balance.
Subd. 3. Highway
allocation account. (a) A
highway allocation account is established in the transportation stability fund. The account consists of funds allocated under
section 297A.94 from the estimated general sales tax on motor vehicle repair
and replacement parts, and any other funds as provided by law.
(b) The commissioner of transportation
shall promptly transfer any funds deposited in the account to the highway user
tax distribution fund.
Subd. 4. Transit
allocation account. (a) A
transit allocation account is established in the transportation stability fund. The account consists of funds allocated under
section 297A.815, subdivision 3, from a portion of estimated motor vehicle
lease sales tax.
(b) The commissioner of transportation
shall promptly transfer any funds deposited in the account to the greater
Minnesota transit account in the transit assistance fund.
Subd. 5. County
highway allocation account. (a)
A county highway allocation account is established in the transportation
stability fund. The account consists of
funds allocated under section 297A.815, subdivision 3, from a portion of
estimated motor vehicle lease sales tax.
(b) The commissioner of transportation
shall promptly transfer any funds deposited in the account to the county
state-aid highway fund. Notwithstanding
any other law to the contrary, the commissioner of transportation shall
allocate the funds transferred under this paragraph to the counties in the
metropolitan area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 4, excluding the
counties of Hennepin and Ramsey, so that each county receives from that amount
the percentage that its population, as defined in section 477A.011, subdivision
3, estimated or established by July 15 of the year prior to the current
calendar year, bears to the total population of the counties receiving funds
under this paragraph.
Subd. 6. Metropolitan
transit capital account. (a)
A metropolitan transit capital account is established in the transportation
stability fund. The account consists of
funds allocated under section 297A.94 from the general sales tax on rental
motor vehicles, and any other funds as provided by law.
(b) Money in the metropolitan transit
capital account is for transit projects, as specified by law, of a capital
nature in metropolitan counties, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 4,
with priority for arterial bus rapid transit and express bus facilities. No funds in the account may be expended for
light rail transit, commuter rail, or streetcars.
(c) The base appropriations from the
metropolitan transit capital account for each forecasted fiscal year after the
current biennium equals the balance in the account for each year as identified
in the latest forecast under sections 16A.103 and 174.03, subdivision 9.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 16E.15, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Software
sale fund. (a) Except as provided in
paragraph paragraphs (b) and (c), proceeds of from
the sale or licensing of software products or services by the chief information
officer must be credited to the MN.IT services revolving fund. If a state agency other than the Office of MN.IT
Services has contributed to the development of software sold or licensed under
this section, the chief information officer may reimburse the agency by
discounting computer services provided to that agency.
(b) Proceeds of from the
sale or licensing of software products or services developed by the Pollution
Control Agency, or custom developed by a vendor for the agency, must be
credited to the environmental fund.
(c)
Proceeds from the sale or licensing of software products or services developed
by the Department of Transportation, or custom developed by a vendor for the
agency, using trunk highway funds must be credited to the trunk highway fund.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 117.036, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Appraisal. (a) Before commencing an eminent domain
proceeding under this chapter for an acquisition greater than $25,000,
the acquiring authority must obtain at least one appraisal for the property
proposed to be acquired. In making the
appraisal, the appraiser must confer with one or more of the owners of the
property, if reasonably possible. For
acquisitions less than $25,000, the acquiring authority may obtain a minimum
damage acquisition report in lieu of an appraisal. In making the minimum damage acquisition
report, the qualified person with appraisal knowledge must confer with one or
more of the owners of the property, if reasonably possible. Notwithstanding section 13.44, the acquiring
authority must provide the owner with a copy of (1) each appraisal for
property acquisitions over $25,000, or (2) the minimum damage acquisition
report for properties under $25,000, the acquiring authority has obtained
for the property at the time an offer is made, but no later than 60 days before
presenting a petition under section 117.055, and. The acquiring authority must also inform
the owner of the right to obtain an appraisal under this section. Upon request, the acquiring authority must
make available to the owner all appraisals of the property for
properties over $25,000, or the minimum damage acquisition report for
properties under $25,000. If the
acquiring authority is considering both a full and partial taking of the
property, the acquiring authority shall obtain and provide the owner with
appraisals for both types of takings for properties over $25,000 for
both types of takings, or minimum damage acquisition reports for properties
under $25,000.
(b) The owner may obtain an appraisal by a
qualified appraiser of the property proposed to be acquired. The owner is entitled to reimbursement for
the reasonable costs of the appraisal from the acquiring authority up to a
maximum of $1,500 for single family and two-family residential property and
minimum damage acquisitions and $5,000 for other types of property, provided
that the owner submits to the acquiring authority the information necessary for
reimbursement, including a copy of the owner's appraisal, at least five days
before a condemnation commissioners' hearing.
For purposes of this paragraph subdivision, a
"minimum damage acquisition" means an interest in property that a
qualified person with appraisal knowledge having an understanding of
the local real estate market indicates can be acquired for a cost of
$10,000 $25,000 or less.
(c) The acquiring authority must pay the reimbursement to the owner within 30 days after receiving a copy of the appraisal and the reimbursement information. Upon agreement between the acquiring authority and the owner, the acquiring authority may pay the reimbursement directly to the appraiser.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 117.036, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Use of appraisal at commissioners' hearing. An appraisal or minimum damage acquisition report must not be used or considered in a condemnation commissioners' hearing, nor may the appraiser who prepared the appraisal or the person who prepared the minimum damage acquisition report testify, unless a copy of the appraiser's written report or the minimum damage acquisition report is provided to the opposing party at least five days before the hearing.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 160.20, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Conditions. (a) A road authority may accept applications for permits for installation of drain tile along or across the right-of-way under its jurisdiction. The road authority may adopt reasonable rules for the installations and may require a bond before granting a permit. Permits for installation along a highway right-of-way must ensure that the length of the installation is restricted to the minimum necessary to achieve the desired agricultural benefits. A permit must not allow open trenches to be left on the right-of-way after installation of the drain tile is completed. A road authority that grants a permit for tile drain installation is not responsible for damage to that installation resulting from the action of the authority or any other permittee utilizing the right-of-way.
(b) A person who installs drain tile along or across a highway right-of-way without obtaining a permit as provided in this section is guilty of a misdemeanor.
(c) The commissioner shall take no action under this section which will result in the loss of federal aid for highway construction in the state.
(d) For the purpose of this section
subdivisions 2 to 4, "highway" means any highway as defined in
section 160.02 which is located outside the corporate limits of a home rule
charter or statutory city.
Sec. 10. [160.235]
TRAFFIC SIGNAL TIMING OPTIMIZATION.
(a) A road authority that has ownership
of a traffic signal on a principal arterial roadway or roadway with an average
daily traffic greater than 20,000 vehicles per day must complete an inventory
of all traffic signals under its ownership and submit it to the Department of
Transportation district engineer. The
inventory must include age of all signals, control equipment, communications,
detection type, timing plans in operation, and date of last timing
optimization.
(b) Based on the information from the
inventory, a road authority subject to paragraph (a) must develop and implement
a traffic signal system optimization plan, which must include re-evaluation of
traffic signal timing at least once every five years. Each road authority with a traffic signal
optimization plan must annually certify compliance with its plan and submit the
certification as part of its annual maintenance expenditure report.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
The initial inventory under paragraph (a) must be submitted on or before
December 30, 2015.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 160.27, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 10. Temporary
permit for field application. (a)
In connection with the use of the road right-of-way of a road authority,
excluding on controlled-access highways under section 160.08, a property owner
or occupant of property abutting the road right-of-way may apply for a permit
for temporary placement, for up to 14 days, of a pressurized flexible force
main for the transport of manure for field application.
(b) The property owner or occupant
must:
(1) identify the entire length of the
right-of-way for use under the permit;
(2) place the force main within the
backslope of the road authority's right-of-way where possible;
(3) place pumping equipment outside the
road authority's right-of-way; and
(4) meet all of the permit requirements
identified by the road authority.
(c) Once the road authority has issued
a permit, the property owner or occupant may install the force main over the
length of the right-of-way from the permittee's property to where the manure
will be applied, irrespective of whether the permittee is the owner or occupant
of all property abutting the portion of the right-of-way where the force main
is to be installed.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 161.04, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Forecasted
base appropriations. (a) For
purposes of this subdivision, "state and local government deflator"
means the implicit price deflator for government consumption expenditures and
gross investment for state and local governments as prepared by the United
States Department of Commerce.
(b) In conjunction with each forecast
under sections 16A.103 and 174.03, subdivision 9, the commissioner shall
identify base appropriations in each forecasted fiscal year from the trunk
highway fund to the commissioner for the general operations and maintenance and
the state road construction budget activities within the state roads budgetary
program. Each base appropriation must be
adjusted from the previous base as provided in paragraph (c), and in amounts
calculated such that following the financial policies of the department, the
unreserved portion of the trunk highway fund balance equals one percent of
total forecasted revenues to the trunk highway fund for that fiscal year.
(c) In each forecast, any change in the
forecasted base appropriations must be allocated:
(1) for the first forecasted fiscal
year:
(i) the greater of zero or the amount
being allocated under this paragraph multiplied by a percentage as calculated
in paragraph (d), for the general operations and maintenance budget activity;
and
(ii) the remainder for the state road
construction budget activity; and
(2) for a forecasted fiscal year after
the first year, for the state road construction budget activity.
(d) The percentage under paragraph (c),
clause (1)(i), equals: (1) the annual
state and local government deflator for the most recently available year, less
the annual state and local government deflator for the prior year; divided by
(2) the annual state and local government deflator for the prior year.
Sec. 13. [161.126]
PROHIBITION ON AESTHETIC ENHANCEMENTS.
(a) The commissioner may not use public
funds for any aesthetic enhancements that increase the total cost of a project
on a highway or bridge.
(b) For purposes of this subdivision:
(1) "aesthetic enhancements"
includes monuments, markers, memorials, sculptures, statues, decorative fixtures,
alternative materials, specialty signage, and other treatments designed to
impact the perceived beauty or visual appeal of the infrastructure;
(2) "public funds" includes
but is not limited to funding from federal and state sources; and
(3) "total cost" includes
costs of ongoing maintenance.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment, and applies to any project for
which a contract has not been entered into or let for bidding on or after that
date.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 161.231, is amended to read:
161.231
APPROPRIATION; PROCEEDS FROM LEASED STATE PROPERTY.
There is appropriated annually from the
fund or account in the state treasury to which the rental money from the
sale, lease, conveyance, or disposal of state leased property is
credited a sufficient amount of money to carry out the state's obligations
under the provisions of sections 15.16, 117.135, 117.226, 161.16, 161.202,
161.23, subdivision 3, 161.24, 161.241, 161.43, 161.433, 161.44, 161.442,
and 272.68, subdivision 3, including the inventorying, marketing, and
property management activities required to sell, lease, rent, permit, convey,
or otherwise dispose of the land or the interest in the land. At the discretion of the commissioner of
transportation, money in the account at the end of each biennium may cancel to
the trunk highway fund.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 161.321, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd. 2a. Small
targeted group business; subcontracting goals.
(a) The commissioner, as a condition of awarding a construction
contract, may set goals that require the prime contractor to subcontract
portions of the contract to small targeted group businesses. Prime contractors must demonstrate good faith
efforts to meet the project goals. The
commissioner shall establish a procedure for granting waivers from the
subcontracting requirement when qualified small targeted group businesses are
not reasonably available. The
prime contractor may request a subcontracting goal waiver for the difference
between the level of targeted group small business participation the prime
contractor has obtained and the level specified in the goal. The commissioner may grant the waiver only if
the prime contractor has demonstrated good faith efforts to meet the goal. The commissioner shall establish a procedure
for evaluating the good faith efforts of contractors. The commissioner may establish (1) financial
incentives for prime contractors who exceed the goals set for the use of
subcontractors under this subdivision; and (2) sanctions for prime contractors
who fail to make good faith efforts to meet the goals set under this
subdivision.
(b) The small targeted group business subcontracting requirements of this subdivision do not apply to prime contractors who are small targeted group businesses.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 161.321, subdivision 2c, is amended to read:
Subd. 2c. Veteran-owned
small business; subcontracting goals. (a)
The commissioner, as a condition of awarding a construction contract, may set
goals that require the prime contractor to subcontract portions of the contract
to veteran-owned small businesses, except when prohibited by federal law or
rule as a condition of receiving federal funds.
Prime contractors must demonstrate good faith efforts to meet the
project goals. The commissioner shall
establish a procedure for granting waivers from the subcontracting requirement
when qualified veteran-owned small businesses are not reasonably available. The prime contractor may request a
subcontracting goal waiver for the difference between the level of
veteran-owned small business participation the prime contractor has obtained
and the level specified in the goal. The
commissioner may grant the waiver only if the prime contractor has demonstrated
good faith efforts to meet the goal. The
commissioner shall establish a procedure for evaluating the good faith efforts
of contractors. The commissioner may
establish (1) financial incentives for prime contractors who exceed the goals
set for the use of subcontractors under this subdivision; and (2) sanctions for
prime contractors who have not been granted a waiver and fail to meet goals set
under this subdivision.
(b) The subcontracting requirements of this subdivision do not apply to prime contractors who are veteran-owned small businesses.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 161.321, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Contract
awards, limitations. Contracts
awarded pursuant to this section are may be subject to all
limitations contained in rules adopted by the commissioner of administration.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 162.07, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Apportionment sum and excess sum. (a) For purposes of this subdivision, "distribution amount" means the amount identified in section 162.06, subdivision 1, after the deductions provided for in section 162.06 for administrative costs, disaster account, research account, and state park road account.
(b) The apportionment sum is calculated by
subtracting the excess sum, as calculated in paragraph (c), from as 68
percent of the distribution amount.
(c) The excess sum is calculated as the
sum of revenue within 32 percent of the distribution amount:.
(1) attributed to that portion of the
gasoline excise tax rate under section 296A.07, subdivision 3, in excess of 20
cents per gallon, and to that portion of the excise tax rates in excess of the
energy equivalent of a gasoline excise tax rate of 20 cents per gallon for E85
and M85 under section 296A.07, subdivision 3, and special fuel under section
296A.08, subdivision 2;
(2) attributed to a change in the
passenger vehicle registration tax under section 168.013, imposed on or after
July 1, 2008, that exceeds (i) the amount collected in fiscal year 2008,
multiplied by (ii) the annual average United States Consumer Price Index for
the calendar year previous to the current calendar year, divided by the annual
average United States Consumer Price Index for calendar year 2007; and
(3) attributed to that portion of the
motor vehicle sales tax revenue in excess of the percentage allocated to the
county state-aid highway fund in fiscal year 2007.
(d) For purposes of this subdivision, the
United States Consumer Price Index identified in paragraph (c) is for all urban
consumers, United States city average, as determined by the United States
Department of Labor.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2015, for distribution calculations on or after that date.
Sec. 19. [162.145]
SMALL CITIES ASSISTANCE.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given them.
(b) "Eligible city" means a
statutory or home rule charter city that does not receive municipal state aid
under sections 162.09 to 162.14 in the calendar year in which funds are
distributed under this section.
(c) "Maximum aid" means 3.5
multiplied by the unweighted average amount
of assistance to a city in a fiscal year.
(d) "Population" means the
most recent population estimated or established as of 30 days before the date
of an allocation under subdivision 4, of (i) the most recent federal census,
(ii) a special census conducted under contract with the United States Bureau of
the Census, (iii) a population estimate made by the Metropolitan Council
pursuant to section 473.24, or (iv) a population estimate of the state
demographer made pursuant to section 4A.02.
(e) "State-aid adjustment
factor" means the greater of zero, or:
(1) 0.005; minus
(2)
the number of lane miles of county state-aid highway in a city, divided by the
total number of lane miles of county state-aid highway in all eligible cities.
(f) "Total population" means
the sum of populations of all eligible cities.
Subd. 2. Small
cities assistance account. A
small cities assistance account is created in the transportation stability fund. The account consists of funds as provided by
law, and any other money donated, allotted, transferred, or otherwise provided
to the account. Money in the account may
only be expended as provided under this section.
Subd. 3. Administration. (a) Subject to funds made available by
law, the commissioner shall allocate all funds as provided in subdivision 4 and
shall notify the commissioner of revenue.
(b) Following notification from the
commissioner of transportation, the commissioner of revenue shall distribute
the specified funds to cities in the same manner as local government aid under
chapter 477A. An appropriation to the
commissioner of transportation under this section is available to the
commissioner of revenue for the purposes specified in this paragraph.
(c) Notwithstanding other law to the
contrary, in order to receive distributions under this section, a city must
conform to the standards in section 477A.017, subdivision 2. A city that receives funds under this section
must make and preserve records necessary to show that the funds are spent in
compliance with subdivision 4.
Subd. 4. Distribution
formula. (a) In each fiscal
year in which funds are available under this section, the commissioner shall
allocate funds to eligible cities.
(b) The preliminary aid to each city is
calculated as follows:
(1) 5 percent of funds allocated
equally among all eligible cities;
(2) 35 percent of funds allocated
proportionally based on each city's share of lane miles of municipal streets
compared to total lane miles of municipal streets of all eligible cities;
(3) 35 percent of funds allocated
proportionally based on each city's share of population compared to total
population of all eligible cities; and
(4) 25 percent of funds allocated
proportionally based on each city's share of state-aid adjustment factor
compared to the sum of state-aid adjustment factors of all eligible cities.
(c) The final aid to each city is
calculated as the lesser of:
(1) the preliminary aid to the city
multiplied by an aid factor; or
(2) the maximum aid.
(d) The commissioner shall set the aid
factor under paragraph (c), which must be the same for all eligible cities, so
that the total funds allocated under this subdivision equals the total amount
available for the fiscal year.
Subd. 5. Use
of funds. (a) Funds
distributed under this section are available only for construction and
maintenance of roads located within the city, including:
(1) land acquisition, environmental
analysis, design, engineering, construction, reconstruction, and maintenance;
(2)
road projects partially located within the city;
(3) projects on county state-aid
highways located within the city; and
(4) cost participation on road projects
under the jurisdiction of another unit of government.
(b) Funds distributed under this
section are not subject to state-aid requirements under this chapter, including
but not limited to engineering standards adopted by the commissioner in rules.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 168.053, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Application;
fee; penalty. Any person, firm, or
corporation with a business located in Minnesota engaged in the business
of transporting motor vehicles owned by another, by delivering, by drive-away
or towing methods, either singly or by means of the full mount method, the
saddle mount method, the tow bar method, or any other combination thereof, and
under their own power, vehicles over the highways of the state from the
manufacturer or any other point of origin, to any point of destination, within
or without the state, shall make application to the registrar for a drive-away
in-transit license. This application for
annual license shall be accompanied by a registration fee of $250 and contain
information the registrar may require. Upon
the filing of the application and the payment of the fee, the registrar shall
issue to each drive-away operator a drive-away in-transit license plate, which
must be carried and displayed on the power unit consistent with section 169.79
and the plate shall remain on the vehicle while being operated within
Minnesota transported. The
license plate issued under this subdivision is not valid for the purpose of
permanent vehicle registration and is not valid outside Minnesota. Additional drive-away in-transit license
plates desired by any drive-away operator may be secured from the registrar of
motor vehicles upon the payment of a fee of $5 for each set of additional
license plates. Any person, firm, or
corporation engaging in the business as a drive-away operator, of transporting
and delivering by means of full mount method, the saddle mount method, the tow
bar method, or any combination thereof, and under their own power, motor
vehicles, who fails or refuses to file or cause to be filed an application, as
is required by law, and to pay the fees therefor as the law requires, shall be
found guilty of violating the provisions of sections 168.053 to 168.057; and,
upon conviction, fined not less than $50, and not more than $100, and all costs
of court. Each day so operating without
securing the license and plates as required shall constitute a separate
offense.
Sec. 21. [168.1294]
"START SEEING MOTORCYCLES" PLATES.
Subdivision 1. Issuance
of plates. The commissioner
shall issue special "Start Seeing Motorcycles" license plates or a
single motorcycle plate to an applicant who:
(1) is a registered owner of a
passenger automobile, noncommercial one-ton pickup truck, motorcycle, or
recreational motor vehicle;
(2) pays a fee of $10 for each set of
plates;
(3) pays the registration tax as
required under section 168.013, along with any other fees required by this
chapter;
(4) contributes a minimum of $10
annually to the motorcycle safety fund created under section 171.06,
subdivision 2a, paragraph (a), clause (1); and
(5) complies with this chapter and
rules governing registration of motor vehicles and licensing of drivers.
Subd. 2. Design. The representatives of American Bikers
for Awareness, Training, and Education of Minnesota shall design the special
plate to contain the inscription "Start Seeing Motorcycles" between
the bolt holes on the bottom of the plate with a design area on the left side
of the plate, subject to the approval of the commissioner.
Subd. 3. Plates
transfer. On application to
the commissioner and payment of a transfer fee of $5, special plates issued
under this section may be transferred to another motor vehicle if the
subsequent vehicle is:
(1) qualified under subdivision 1,
clause (1), to bear the special plates; and
(2) registered to the same individual
to whom the special plates were originally issued.
Subd. 4. Exemption. Special plates issued under this
section are not subject to section 168.1293, subdivision 2.
Subd. 5. Fees. Fees collected under subdivision 1,
clause (2), and subdivision 3 are credited to the vehicle services operating
account in the special revenue fund.
Subd. 6. No
refund. Contributions under
this section must not be refunded.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2016, for special "Start Seeing Motorcycles"
plates issued on or after that date.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 168.1299, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Issuance. Notwithstanding section 168.1293, the commissioner shall issue special Minnesota golf plates or a single motorcycle plate to an applicant who:
(1) is a registered owner of a passenger automobile, one-ton pickup truck, motorcycle, or recreational vehicle;
(2) pays a fee of $10 and any other fees required by this chapter;
(3) contributes a minimum of $30 annually after
January 1, 2017, to the Minnesota Section PGA Foundation account; and
(4) complies with this chapter and rules governing registration of motor vehicles and licensing of drivers.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2015, and applies to plates issued on or after that date.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.475, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Prohibition on use; penalty. (a) No person may operate a motor vehicle while using a wireless communications device to compose, read, or send an electronic message, when the vehicle is in motion or a part of traffic.
(b) A person who is convicted of a
second or subsequent violation under this section must pay a fine of $150 plus
the amount specified in the uniform fine schedule established by the Judicial
Council.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective August 1, 2015, and applies to violations committed on or after that
date.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.49, is amended to read:
169.49
HEADLAMPS.
(a) Every motor vehicle, other than
a motorcycle, shall must be equipped with at least two headlamps,
with including at least one on each side of the front of the
motor vehicle, which.
Headlamps shall must comply with the requirements and
limitations set forth in sections 169.47 to 169.79 169.66.
(b) Every motorcycle shall must
be equipped with at least one and not more than two four
headlamps, which shall must comply with the requirements and
limitations of sections 169.47 to 169.79 169.66.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.782, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Driver;
daily inspection, report. (a)
The driver of a commercial motor vehicle shall report in writing at the
completion of each day's work on inspect daily each commercial motor
vehicle the driver has operated. A
person who owns one or more commercial motor vehicles and who employs drivers
for those commercial motor vehicles must require each driver to submit a
written report at the completion of each day's work as required by this
section. The driver of a commercial
motor vehicle subject to this section is not required to prepare and submit a
written report if no defect or deficiency is discovered by or reported to the
driver, except that the driver of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle
shall prepare and submit a written report regardless of whether any defect or
deficiency is discovered by or reported to the driver.
(b) The inspection and report must cover the following parts and accessories: service brakes, including trailer and semitrailer brake connections; parking (hand) brake; steering mechanism; lighting devices and reflectors; tires; horn; windshield wiper or wipers; rear vision mirror or mirrors; coupling devices; wheels and rims; and emergency equipment.
(b) (c) The report must
identify the vehicle and list any defect or deficiency discovered by or
reported to the driver that would affect the safe operation of the vehicle or
result in its mechanical breakdown. If
no defect or deficiency is discovered by or reported to the driver, the report
must so indicate. The driver must sign
the report after completing it. In the
case of a commercial motor vehicle operated by two drivers, the signature of
one of the drivers satisfies the requirements of this subdivision if both
drivers agree concerning the defects or deficiencies. If a driver operates more than one commercial
motor vehicle during a day's work, a report must be prepared for each vehicle
operated.
(c) (d) Before operating or
allowing the operation of a commercial motor vehicle on which a report has been
prepared under this subdivision, the owner of the vehicle or the owner's agent
must repair defects or deficiencies listed on the report that would likely
affect the safe operation of the vehicle.
Before allowing the commercial motor vehicle to be operated again, the owner
or the owner's agent must certify, on the report listing the defect or
deficiency, that the defect or deficiency has been corrected or that correction
is unnecessary. A motor carrier must
keep the original vehicle inspection report for at least three months after the
date of inspection. The report must be
available for inspection by an authorized federal, state, or local official at
any time during this period.
(d) (e) A copy of the vehicle
inspection report, including a certification of corrections resulting from the
report, must be carried in the commercial motor vehicle, or in the power unit
of a commercial motor vehicle combination, at all times when the vehicle or
power unit is operated until the next inspection report is completed under this
subdivision. The copy must be made
available on demand to (1) a peace officer, (2) a person authorized under
section 221.221, and (3) a person described in section 299D.06.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.782, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Driver;
pretrip inspection. (a) Before
driving Prior to the first operation of a commercial motor vehicle following
completion of a daily inspection report under subdivision 1, a driver must:
(1) review the most recent vehicle inspection report on the vehicle;
(2) determine that the vehicle is in safe operating condition; and
(3) sign the inspection report in the vehicle.
The driver shall sign the report only if all defects and deficiencies listed in the report have been certified as having been corrected or as not requiring correction.
(b) If the commercial motor vehicle does
not contain the previous day's inspection report, the driver must make the
inspection and complete the report required under subdivision 1.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.782, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Exceptions. (a) With the exception of subdivision
2, paragraph (a), clause (2), This section does not apply to a commercial
motor vehicle that is a farm truck that may be operated by a person not holding
a commercial driver's license, provided that before driving the vehicle, a
driver must determine that the vehicle is in safe operating condition.
(b) This section does not apply to a commercial motor vehicle held for resale by a motor vehicle dealer licensed under section 168.27.
(c) This section does not apply to a covered farm vehicle as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 390.5, that is not carrying hazardous materials of a type or quantity that requires the vehicle to be placarded in accordance with Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, section 172.504.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.81, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3f. Length
limits exclusion; aerodynamic device.
An aerodynamic device that meets the requirements under Code of
Federal Regulations, title 23, section 658.16 (b)(4), is excluded from each
calculation of length under subdivision 2, 3, or 3c, including total vehicle
length and length of a semitrailer or trailer, whether in a vehicle combination
or not.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.865, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Six-axle
vehicles. (a) A road authority may
issue an annual permit authorizing a vehicle or combination of vehicles with a
total of six or more axles to haul raw or unprocessed agricultural qualifying
products and be operated with a gross vehicle weight of up to:
(1) 90,000 pounds; and
(2) 99,000 pounds during the period set by the commissioner under section 169.826, subdivision 1.
(b) Notwithstanding subdivision 3, paragraph (a), clause (4), a vehicle or combination of vehicles operated under this subdivision and transporting only sealed intermodal containers may be operated on an interstate highway if allowed by the United States Department of Transportation.
(c) Any combination of qualifying products
may be transported under a single permit issued under this subdivision.
(d) The fee for a permit issued under this subdivision is $300, or a proportional amount as provided in section 169.86, subdivision 5.
Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.865, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2.
Seven-axle vehicles. (a) A road authority may issue an annual
permit authorizing a vehicle or combination of vehicles with a total of seven
or more axles to haul raw or unprocessed agricultural qualifying
products and be operated with a gross weight of up to:
(1) 97,000 pounds; and
(2) 99,000 pounds during the period set by the commissioner under section 169.826, subdivision 1.
(b) Drivers of vehicles operating under this subdivision must comply with driver qualification requirements adopted under section 221.0314, subdivisions 2 to 5, and Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, parts 40 and 382, unless exempt under section 221.031, subdivision 2c.
(c) Any combination of qualifying products
may be transported under a single permit issued under this subdivision.
(d) The fee for a permit issued under this subdivision is $500, or a proportional amount as provided in section 169.86, subdivision 5.
Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.865, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Qualifying
products. For purposes of
this section, "qualifying products" consists of:
(1) raw or unprocessed agricultural
products;
(2) agricultural products transported
for processing as a biofuel, including but not limited to oat hulls and other
feedstocks;
(3) livestock and poultry feed, seed,
fertilizer, potash, and agricultural lime; and
(4) highway and building construction
materials, and associated demolition materials, including but not limited to
aggregate material as defined in section 298.75, subdivision 1, paragraph (a),
hot mix asphalt, plastic concrete, cementitious materials, concrete admixtures,
asphalt cement, construction demolition materials, and recycled road materials.
Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 169.87, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Recycling and garbage vehicles. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b), weight restrictions imposed under subdivisions 1 and 2 do not apply to a vehicle that does not exceed 20,000 pounds per single axle and is designed and used exclusively for recycling, while engaged in recycling in a political subdivision that mandates curbside recycling pickup.
(b)
Weight restrictions imposed under subdivisions 1 and 2 do not apply to: (1) a vehicle that does not exceed 14,000
pounds per single axle and is used exclusively for recycling as described in
paragraph (a), or; (2) a vehicle that does not exceed 14,000
pounds per single axle and is designed and used exclusively for collecting
mixed municipal solid waste, as defined in section 115A.03, subdivision 21,
while engaged in such collection; or (3) a portable toilet service vehicle
that does not exceed 14,000 pounds per single axle or 26,000 pounds gross
vehicle weight, and is designed and used exclusively for collecting liquid
waste from portable toilets, while engaged in such collection.
(c) Notwithstanding section 169.80,
subdivision 1, a violation of weight restrictions imposed under subdivisions 1
and 2 by a vehicle designed and used exclusively for recycling while engaged in
recycling in a political subdivision that mandates curbside recycling pickup
while engaged in such collection, or by a vehicle that is designed and
used exclusively for collecting mixed municipal solid waste as defined in
section 115A.03, subdivision 21, while engaged in such collection, or by a
portable toilet service vehicle that is designed and used exclusively for
collecting liquid waste from portable toilets, while engaged in such
collection, is not subject to criminal penalties but is subject to a civil
penalty for excess weight under section 169.871.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 173.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 18a. Electronic
advertising device. (a)
"Electronic advertising device" means an advertising device that is
capable of displaying digital content that can be changed through messaging or
electronic communications technology.
(b) Digital content consists of static
text and images only, and does not include animation, flashing or moving
lights, video, or other content having the appearance of movement.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 173.15, is amended to read:
173.15
PROHIBITED ADVERTISING DEVICES.
(a) After June 8, 1971 no advertising device shall be erected or maintained:
(1) which purports to be or resembles an official traffic-control device, sign, or signal, or railroad sign or signal; or which hides from view or interferes in any material degree with the effectiveness of any traffic-control device, sign, or signal, or railroad sign or signal, or which obstructs or interferes with the driver's view of approaching, merging, or intersecting traffic for a distance not to exceed 500 feet;
(2) which prominently displays the word "stop" or "danger";
(3) which contains statements, words, or pictures of an obscene, indecent, or immoral character, or such as would offend public morals or decency;
(4) on any right-of-way of the interstate system of highways, except as otherwise provided by law or allowed by the commissioner;
(5) on private land without the consent of the owner or occupant thereof;
(6) on trees, shrubs, or which are painted or drawn upon rocks or natural features, or on public utility poles;
(7) which has distracting flashing or moving lights so designed or lighted as to be a traffic hazard;
(8) to which access can be obtained only from an interstate main-traveled way but excluding frontage roads adjacent thereto;
(9) which are structurally unsafe, are in disrepair, or are abandoned.
(b) The prohibition under paragraph
(a), clause (7), does not include an electronic advertising device in which
digital content changes no more frequently than once every six seconds.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 174.40, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4a. Eligibility. A statutory or home rule charter city,
county, or town is eligible to receive funding under this section only if it
has adopted subdivision regulations that require safe routes to school
infrastructure in developments authorized on or after the effective date of
this section.
Sec. 36. [174.57]
SNOW AND ICE CONTROL; APPROPRIATION.
(a) In a fiscal year in which the
commissioner expends at least 110 percent of the total biennial appropriation
for snow and ice management specified in law, the commissioner may use an
additional amount for this purpose that does not exceed 50 percent of the
unappropriated reserves in the trunk highway fund. The amount identified by the commissioner
under this paragraph is appropriated from the trunk highway fund to the
commissioner for snow and ice management purposes.
(b) Upon using the appropriation authority
in this section, the commissioner shall notify the commissioner of management
and budget and the chairs and ranking minority members of the house of
representatives and senate committees having jurisdiction over transportation
finance. The commissioner shall include
in each budget submission to the legislature under section 16A.11 the amount
appropriated under this section for the budget biennium that is ending.
Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 174.636, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5. Legislative
authorization. The powers
conferred to the commissioner under sections 174.60 to 174.636 are subject to
the requirements under section 174.94.
Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 174.92, is amended to read:
174.92
EXERCISE OF POWER; COMMUTER RAIL; EXERCISE OF POWER.
Subdivision 1. Powers. The commissioner of transportation may exercise the powers granted in this chapter, as necessary, to plan, design, acquire, construct, and equip commuter rail facilities.
Subd. 2. Legislative
authorization. The powers
conferred to the commissioner under sections 174.80 to 174.92 are subject to
the requirements under section 174.94.
Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 174.93, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms have the meanings given:
(1) "commissioner" means the commissioner of transportation;
(2) "guideway" means a form of
transportation service provided to the public on a regular and ongoing basis,
that operates on exclusive or controlled rights-of-way or rails in whole or in
part, and includes: (i) each line
for intercity passenger rail, commuter rail, light rail transit, streetcars, and
highway bus rapid transit, and express bus service operated primarily
within a dedicated right-of-way; and (ii) any multimodal station serving two or
more lines identified in item (i); and
(3) "local unit of government" means a county, statutory or home rule charter city, town, or other political subdivision including, but not limited to, a regional railroad authority or joint powers board.
(b) For purposes of this section, "sources of funds" includes, but is not limited to, money from federal aid, state appropriations, the Metropolitan Council, special taxing districts, local units of government, fare box recovery, and nonpublic sources.
(c) For purposes of this section, "budget activity" includes, but is not limited to, environmental analysis, land acquisition, easements, design, preliminary and final engineering, acquisition of vehicles and rolling stock, track improvement and rehabilitation, and construction.
(d) For purposes of this section,
guideway excludes arterial bus rapid transit, limited-stop bus service, and
express bus service that is not operated primarily within a dedicated
right-of-way.
Sec. 40. [174.94]
GUIDEWAY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORIZATION.
(a) For purposes of this section,
"guideway" has the meaning given in section 174.93, subdivision 1.
(b) The commissioner and any political
subdivision, including but not limited to the Metropolitan Council, a regional
railroad authority, a county, or a statutory or home rule charter city, may not
complete an alternatives analysis or select a locally preferred alternative for
a guideway project unless on or after January 1, 2015: (1) a law is enacted that specifically
identifies and authorizes the project, or (2) state funds are appropriated
specifically for the project.
(c) Nothing in this section prohibits
the commissioner or any political subdivision from (1) performing transit
planning; (2) producing feasibility studies; or (3) commencing project
development, including through an alternatives analysis or preliminary
environmental analysis.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective
the day following final enactment, and applies for any project not approved by
the Federal Transit Administration for preliminary engineering or a subsequent
project phase as of the effective date of this section. The portion that relates to the Metropolitan
Council applies in the counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey,
Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 221.031, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 9a. Federal
out-of-service order; operation prohibited.
No intrastate carrier, private carrier engaged in intrastate
commerce, or person providing intrastate transportation service described in
section 221.025 shall operate a commercial motor vehicle in Minnesota while a
motor carrier out-of-service order issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration under Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, part 385 or 386, is
in effect.
Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 221.605, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4. Federal
out-of-service order; operation prohibited.
No interstate carrier or private carrier engaged in interstate
commerce shall operate a commercial motor vehicle in Minnesota while a motor
carrier out-of-service order issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration under Code of Federal Regulations, title 49, part 385 or 386, is
in effect.
Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 299A.465, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a. Volunteer
firefighter killed in line of duty. (a)
This subdivision applies when a volunteer firefighter is killed while on duty
and discharging the volunteer firefighter's duties as a volunteer firefighter.
(b) The municipality or municipalities
that operate the fire department that the volunteer firefighter serves with
shall provide health insurance coverage to the volunteer firefighter's
dependents, including the volunteer firefighter's spouse.
(c) The municipality or municipalities
that operate the fire department that the volunteer firefighter serves with
shall pay the same level of contribution to cover the volunteer firefighter's
dependents as is required for a firefighter under subdivision 2, paragraph (c). Coverage must continue for a spousal
dependent of the volunteer firefighter for the period of time that the person
is a dependent up to the age of 65, and coverage must continue for any other
dependent until the person is age 26.
Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 299A.465, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Definition. For purposes of this section:
(a) "Peace officer" or "officer" has the meaning given in section 626.84, subdivision 1, paragraph (c).
(b) "Dependent" means a person who meets the definition of dependent in section 62L.02, subdivision 11, at the time of the officer's or firefighter's injury or death. A person is not a dependent for purposes of this section during the period of time the person is covered under another group health plan.
(c) "Firefighter" has the meaning given in Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 424.03, but does not include volunteer firefighters.
(d) "Volunteer firefighter"
has the meaning given in section 299N.03, subdivision 7.
(e) "Fire department" has the
meaning given in section 299N.03, subdivision 4.
Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 299D.085, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Certificate. No person may operate as an
overdimensional load escort driver in this state without a certificate issued
by the commissioner, or by a state with which the commissioner has entered into
a reciprocal agreement. The commissioner
shall assess a fee for each certificate applicant, calculated to cover the
commissioner's cost of establishing and administering the program. No other certification is required to
escort an overdimensional load.
Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 299D.09, is amended to read:
299D.09
ESCORT SERVICE; APPROPRIATION; RECEIPTS.
(a) Fees charged for escort services provided by the State Patrol are annually appropriated to the commissioner of public safety to administer and provide these services.
(b) The fee charged for services
provided by the State Patrol with a vehicle is $79.28 an hour. The fee charged for services provided without
a vehicle is $59.28 an hour shall be set to recover actual costs as
determined by the commissioner of public safety by July 1 each year.
(c) The fees charged for State Patrol flight services are $140 an hour for a fixed wing aircraft, $490 an hour for a helicopter, and $600 an hour for the Queen Air in fiscal year 2012; and $139.64 an hour for a fixed wing aircraft, $560.83 an hour for a helicopter, and $454.84 an hour for the Queen Air in fiscal year 2013 and thereafter.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 47. [299F.037]
REPORTING FIREFIGHTER DEATHS.
Whenever an active firefighter dies,
whether or not the death is presumed to be in the line of duty, the fire chief
of the deceased firefighter must report, without undue delay, the death to the
state fire marshal. The notification
shall identify the cause of death and contain information concerning the
circumstances of the death.
Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 360.305, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Costs
allocated; local contribution; hangar construction account. (a) Except as otherwise provided in
this subdivision Annually by June 1, the commissioner of
transportation shall require as a condition of assistance by the state that
the establish local contribution rates which will apply to a
political subdivision, municipality, or public corporation make a
substantial contribution to the cost of the construction, improvement, maintenance,
or operation of the airport, in connection with which the assistance of the
state is sought. These costs are
referred to as project costs when applying for state or federal funding
assistance to construct, improve, maintain, or operate an airport, or to
acquire land for airport facilities or clear zones. If the commissioner does not establish local
contribution rates by June 1, the previous rates apply.
(b) For any airport, whether key,
intermediate, or landing strip, where only state and local funds are to be
used, the contribution shall be not less than one-fifth of the sum of:
(1) the project costs;
(2) acquisition costs of the land and
clear zones, which are referred to as acquisition costs. The commissioner may pay all costs beyond
the local contribution. Local
contribution rates shall not be less than five percent of the total cost of the
activity or acquisition, except that the commissioner may require less than
five percent for research projects, radio or navigational aids, activities, or
acquisitions for which federal funds are available to cover more than 90
percent of the total cost, or as otherwise necessary to respond to an
emergency.
(c) For any airport where federal,
state, and local funds are to be used, the contribution shall not be less than
five percent of the sum of the project costs and acquisition costs. The commissioner's establishment of local
contribution rates is not subject to the rulemaking requirements of chapter 14.
(d) The commissioner may pay the total
cost of radio and navigational aids.
(e)
Notwithstanding paragraph (b) or (c), the commissioner may pay all of the
project costs of a new landing strip, but not an intermediate airport or key
airport, or may pay an amount equal to the federal funds granted and used for a
new landing strip plus all of the remaining project costs; but the total amount
paid by the commissioner for the project costs of a new landing strip, unless
specifically authorized by an act appropriating funds for the new landing
strip, shall not exceed $200,000.
(f) Notwithstanding paragraph (b) or
(c), the commissioner may pay all the project costs for research and
development projects, including, but not limited to noise abatement; provided
that in no event shall the sums expended under this paragraph exceed five
percent of the amount appropriated for construction grants.
(g) (d) To receive aid under
this section for project costs or for acquisition costs, the
municipality must enter into an agreement with the commissioner giving assurance
that the airport will be operated and maintained in a safe, serviceable manner
for aeronautical purposes only for the use and benefit of the public:
(1) for 20 years after the date that
the municipality receives any state funds for project construction
or improvement costs are received by the municipality; and
(2) for 99 years after the date that
the municipality receives any state funds for land acquisition
costs are received by the municipality.
If any land acquired with state funds ceases to be used for aviation
purposes, the municipality shall repay the state airports fund the same
percentage of the appraised value of the property as that percentage of the
costs of acquisition and participation provided by the state to acquire the
land.
The agreement may contain other conditions as the commissioner deems reasonable.
(h) (e) The commissioner
shall establish a hangar construction revolving account, which shall be used
for the purpose of financing the construction of hangar buildings to be
constructed by municipalities owning airports.
All municipalities owning airports are authorized to enter into
contracts for the construction of hangars, and contracts with the commissioner
for the financing of hangar construction for an amount and period of time as
may be determined by the commissioner and municipality. All receipts from the financing contracts
shall be deposited in the hangar construction revolving account and are
reappropriated for the purpose of financing construction of hangar buildings. The commissioner may pay from the hangar
construction revolving account 80 percent of the cost of financing construction
of hangar buildings. For purposes of
this paragraph, the construction of hangars shall include their design. The commissioner shall transfer up to
$4,400,000 from the state airports fund to the hangar construction revolving
account.
(i) (f) The commissioner may
pay a portion of the purchase price of any contribute to costs
incurred by any municipality for airport maintenance and operations,
safety equipment, and of the actual airport snow removal costs
incurred by any municipality. The
portion to be paid by the state shall not exceed two-thirds of the cost of the
purchase price or snow removal. To
receive aid a municipality must enter into an agreement of the type referred to
in paragraph (g).
(j) (g) This subdivision
applies only to project costs or acquisition costs of municipally owned
airports incurred after June 1, 1971.
Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 398A.04, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2b. Legislative
authorization. The powers
conferred to a regional rail authority under this chapter are subject to the
requirements under section 174.94.
Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 473.13, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Forecasted
base appropriations. The base
appropriation from the general fund to the council for transit system operations under sections 473.371 to
473.449 in fiscal year 2018 and thereafter is the greater of zero or:
(1) $76,626,000; less
(2) funds in the metropolitan area
transit account in the transit assistance fund under section 16A.88 in that
fiscal year, attributable to motor vehicle sales tax revenue under section
297B.09; less funds appropriated to the council from that account in fiscal
year 2015, attributable to motor vehicle sales tax revenue; less
(3) the amount in grants to the council
under section 297A.992, subdivision 6a, in excess of 50 percent of the net
operating costs of those guideways for which the grants are provided.
APPLICATION. This section applies in the counties
of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 473.146, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Transportation planning. (a) The Metropolitan Council is the designated planning agency for any long-range comprehensive transportation planning required by section 134 of the Federal Highway Act of 1962, Section 4 of Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 and Section 112 of Federal Aid Highway Act of 1973 and other federal transportation laws. The council shall assure administration and coordination of transportation planning with appropriate state, regional and other agencies, counties, and municipalities.
(b) The council shall establish an advisory body consisting of citizens and representatives of municipalities, counties, and state agencies in fulfillment of the planning responsibilities of the council. The membership of the advisory body must consist of:
(1) the commissioner of transportation or the commissioner's designee;
(2) the commissioner of the Pollution Control Agency or the commissioner's designee;
(3) one member of the Metropolitan Airports Commission appointed by the commission;
(4) one person appointed by the council to represent nonmotorized transportation;
(5) one person appointed by the commissioner of transportation to represent the freight transportation industry;
(6) two persons appointed by the
council to represent public transit, with one appointed by the council,
and one appointed by the Suburban Transit Association who must be an elected
official from a city participating in the replacement service program under
section 473.388;
(7) ten elected officials of cities within the metropolitan area, including one representative from each first-class city, appointed by the Association of Metropolitan Municipalities;
(8) one member of the county board of each county in the seven-county metropolitan area, appointed by the respective county boards;
(9) eight citizens appointed by the council, one from each council precinct; and
(10) one member of the council, appointed by the council.
(c) The council shall appoint a chair from among the members of the advisory body.
EFFECTIVE
DATE; APPLICATION. This
section is effective the day following final enactment and applies in the
counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 473.39, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Limitations. The council may not issue certificates
of indebtedness, bonds, or other obligations secured in whole or in part by a
pledge of motor vehicle sales tax revenue received under sections 16A.88 and
297B.09, or by a pledge of any earnings from the council's investment of motor
vehicle sales tax revenues.
EFFECTIVE
DATE; APPLICATION. This
section is effective the day following final enactment and applies in the
counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 473.399, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Legislative
authorization. The powers
conferred to a responsible authority, as defined in section 473.3993,
subdivision 4, under sections 473.399 to 473.3999 are subject to the
requirements in section 174.94.
APPLICATION. This section applies in the counties
of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 473.4051, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Operating
costs. After operating revenue and
federal money have been used to pay for light rail transit operations,
50, 100 percent of the remaining operating and ongoing
maintenance costs must be paid by the state from nonstate sources. For purposes of this subdivision, state
sources include but are not limited to general fund appropriations and revenue
from the motor vehicle sales tax under chapter 297B.
APPLICATION. This section applies in the counties
of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington.
Sec. 55. Laws 2009, chapter 158, section 10, as amended by Laws 2012, chapter 287, article 3, section 56, and Laws 2014, chapter 255, section 20, is amended to read:
Sec. 10. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Sections 2 and 3 are effective August 1,
2009, and the amendments made in sections 2 and 3 to Minnesota Statutes,
sections 169.011 and 169.045, expire July 31, 2015.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 56. Laws 2014, chapter 312, article 11, section 3, the effective date, is amended to read:
EFFECTIVE
DATE. Subdivisions 1 to 4 are
effective January 1, 2015, for special Minnesota golf plates issued on or after
that date. Subdivision 5 is effective January
1, 2017 July 1, 2015.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 57. DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION EFFICIENCIES.
(a) In fiscal years 2016 and 2017, the
commissioner of transportation shall implement efficiencies identified by the
Transportation Strategic Management and Operations Advisory Task Force report
under Laws 2008, chapter 152, article 6, section 9, equal to 15 percent of the
Department of Transportation's total appropriations for fiscal years 2014 and
2015.
(b) The efficiency savings amount
identified in paragraph (a) is available to the commissioner of transportation
in fiscal years 2016 and 2017 for the construction, maintenance, or
rehabilitation, including pothole repair, of highways, roads, and bridges on
the trunk highway system.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 58. LEGISLATIVE
ROUTE NO. 228 REMOVED.
(a) Minnesota Statutes, section 161.115,
subdivision 159, is repealed effective the day after the commissioner of
transportation receives a copy of the agreement between the commissioner and
the governing body of Otter Tail County to transfer jurisdiction of Legislative
Route No. 228 and after the commissioner notifies the revisor of statutes
under paragraph (b).
(b) The revisor of statutes shall delete
the route identified in paragraph (a) from Minnesota Statutes when the
commissioner of transportation sends notice to the revisor electronically or in
writing that the conditions required to transfer the route have been satisfied.
Sec. 59. LEGISLATIVE
ROUTE NO. 275 REMOVED.
(a) Minnesota Statutes, section 161.115,
subdivision 206, is repealed effective the day after the commissioner of
transportation receives a copy of the agreement between the commissioner and
the governing body of Lac qui Parle County to transfer jurisdiction of
Legislative Route No. 275 and after the commissioner notifies the revisor
of statutes under paragraph (b).
(b) The revisor of statutes shall delete
the route identified in paragraph (a) from Minnesota Statutes when the
commissioner of transportation sends notice to the revisor electronically or in
writing that the conditions required to transfer the route have been satisfied.
Sec. 60. COST
PARTICIPATION POLICY.
The commissioner of transportation, in
consultation with representatives of local units of government, shall create
and adopt a policy concerning cost participation for cooperative construction
projects and maintenance responsibilities between the Department of
Transportation and local units of government.
The policy must minimize the share of cooperative project costs to be
funded by the local units of government while complying in all respects with
the state constitutional requirements concerning allowable uses of the trunk
highway fund. The policy should provide
and include sufficient flexibility for unique projects and locations if doing
so results in a lower total project cost.
The policy must be completed and adopted by the commissioner no later
than September 1, 2015.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 61. CONCRETE
DIAMOND GRINDING SLURRY.
The commissioner of transportation shall
not engage in a study, including under any agreement with a consultant, related
to the deposit of slurry generated from highway diamond grinding on the side of
roadways, unless the commissioner consults and reaches agreement with
interested representatives of the road construction and
maintenance
industry regarding the methodology and specifications for the study. The commissioner or a consultant operating
under an agreement with the commissioner shall consult with interested
representatives of the road construction and maintenance industry to evaluate
methods of determining best management practices.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 62. INTERSTATE
94/694/494 INTERCHANGE SAFETY IMPROVEMENT STUDY.
The commissioner of transportation must
conduct a safety improvement study for the interchange of signed Interstate
Highways 94, 694, and 494 in the cities of Woodbury and Oakdale. At a minimum, the study must provide specific
recommendations to improve the safety of the interchange and include cost
estimates for each recommended improvement.
The commissioner must report the findings and recommendations of the
study to the legislative committees having jurisdiction over transportation
policy and finance within 180 days after the effective date of this section.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 63. LEGISLATIVE
REPORT ON VEHICLE TITLE TRANSFER FEE FUNDS.
By November 1, 2015, the commissioner
of the Pollution Control Agency shall submit a report on motor vehicle title
transfer fee funds to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over transportation and environment
policy and finance. At a minimum, the
report must (1) identify the annual amount of revenue from the motor vehicle
title transfer fee under Minnesota Statutes, section 115A.908, over fiscal
years 2012 to 2015; (2) evaluate the policy rationale for allocation of revenue
from the title transfer fee; and (3) specify uses of funds from the title
transfer fee, including identification of any motor vehicle, road, or bridge
purposes for which funds are used.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 64. PUBLIC-PRIVATE
PARTNERSHIP PILOT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Toll facility,"
"BOT facility," and "BTO facility" have the meanings given
under Minnesota Statutes, section 160.84.
(c) "Responsible authority"
means the commissioner of transportation or the Metropolitan Council, as
appropriate.
Subd. 2. Public-private
partnership authority. (a) A
responsible authority is authorized to consider and utilize public-private
partnership procurement methods as provided in this section. A public-private partnership initiative must
take advantage of private sector efficiencies in design and construction, along
with expertise in finance and development, and provide a better long-term value
for the state than could be obtained through traditional procurement methods.
(b) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 160.845 or 160.98, or any other law to the contrary, a responsible authority may use in the pilot program an existing public-private partnership mechanism or a proposed mechanism that proves the best available option for the state. Mechanisms that a responsible authority may use consist only of: toll facilities, BOT facilities, BTO facilities, user fees, construction payments, joint development agreements, negotiated exactions, and air rights development.
(c)
A responsible authority may receive or solicit and evaluate proposals to build,
operate, and finance projects that are not inconsistent with the department's
or the Metropolitan Council's most recent transportation plans. If a responsible authority receives an
unsolicited proposal, the authority shall publish a notice in the State
Register at least once a week for two weeks stating that the authority has
received the proposal and will accept other proposals for the same project
purpose for 120 days after the initial date of publication. The private proposer must be selected on a
competitive basis.
Subd. 3. Pilot
program restrictions. (a) The
pilot program under this section is for a total of up to three projects that
are exclusively or primarily for infrastructure of a capital nature, excluding
rolling stock.
(b) A responsible authority may not
enter into a public-private partnership under this section for a project with a
total project cost estimate of more than $100,000,000.
(c) When entering into a public-private
partnership, a responsible authority may not enter into any noncompete
agreement that inhibits the state's ability to address ongoing or future
infrastructure needs.
(d) If a responsible authority enters
into a public-private partnership agreement that includes a temporary transfer
of ownership or control of a road, bridge, or other infrastructure investment
to the private entity, the agreement must include a provision requiring the
return of the road, bridge, or other infrastructure investment to the state
after a specified period of time that may not exceed 25 years.
(e) A responsible authority may only
consider new projects for a public-private partnership. A responsible authority is prohibited from
considering projects involving existing infrastructure for a public-private
partnership, unless the proposed project adds capacity to the existing
infrastructure.
Subd. 4. Consultation. (a) As part of the pilot program under
this section, the commissioner and the Metropolitan Council shall consult with
the commissioner of management and budget, the commissioner of employment and
economic development, the commissioner of administration, and one
representative each from the American Council of Engineering Companies -
Minnesota chapter, the Central Minnesota Transportation Alliance, and the
Minnesota County Engineers Association. In
addition, the commissioner shall invite the Federal Highway Administration and
the Metropolitan Council shall invite the Federal Transit Administration to
participate in consultation activities.
(b) Consultation activities include
reviewing projects proposed under this section, reviewing any contractual or
financial agreements to ensure program requirements are met, and ensuring that
any proposed or executed agreement serves the public interest.
Subd. 5. Evaluation
and selection of private entity and project. (a) A responsible authority shall
contract with one or more consultants to assist in proposal evaluation. The consultant must possess expertise and
experience in public-private partnership project evaluation methodology, such
as value for money, costs of public-private partnership compared with costs of
public project delivery, and cost-benefit analysis.
(b) When soliciting, evaluating, and
selecting a private entity with which to enter into a public-private
partnership and before selecting a project, a responsible authority must
consider:
(1) the ability of the proposed project
to improve safety, reduce congestion, increase capacity, and promote economic
growth;
(2) the proposed cost of and financial
plan for the project;
(3) the general reputation,
qualifications, industry experience, and financial capacity of the private
entity;
(4)
the project's proposed design, operation, and feasibility;
(5) the length and extent of
transportation and transit service disruption;
(6) comments from local citizens and
affected jurisdictions;
(7) the benefits to the public;
(8) the safety record of the private
entity; and
(9) any other criteria a responsible
authority deems appropriate.
Subd. 6. Public-private
agreement. (a) A
public-private agreement between a responsible authority and a private entity
must, at a minimum, specify:
(1) the planning, acquisition, financing,
development, design, construction, reconstruction, replacement, improvement,
maintenance, management, repair, leasing, or operation of the project;
(2) the term of the public-private
agreement;
(3) the type of property interest, if
any, that the private entity will have in the project;
(4) a description of the actions a responsible authority may take to ensure proper maintenance of the project;
(5) whether user fees will be collected
on the project and the basis by which the user fees are determined and modified
along with identification of the public agency that will determine and modify
fees;
(6) compliance with applicable federal,
state, and local laws;
(7) grounds for termination of the
public-private agreement by a responsible authority;
(8) adequate safeguards for the
traveling public and residents of the state in event of default on the
contract;
(9) financial protection for the state in the event of default, which must include payment and performance bonds, for any construction, that meet the requirements under Minnesota Statutes, sections 574.26 to 574.32; and
(10) procedures for amendment of the
agreement.
(b) A public-private agreement between
a responsible authority and a private entity may provide for:
(1) review and approval by a
responsible authority of the private entity's plans for the development and
operation of the project;
(2) inspection by a responsible
authority of construction and improvements to the project;
(3) maintenance by the private entity
of a liability insurance policy;
(4) filing of appropriate financial
statements by the private entity on a periodic basis;
(5) filing of traffic reports by the
private entity on a periodic basis;
(6)
financing obligations of a responsible authority and the private entity;
(7) apportionment of expenses between a
responsible authority and the private entity;
(8) the rights and remedies available
in the event of a default or delay;
(9) the rights and duties of the
private entity, a responsible authority, and other state or local governmental
entities with respect to the use of the project;
(10) the terms and conditions of
indemnification of the private entity by a responsible authority;
(11) assignment, subcontracting, or
other delegations of responsibilities of (i) the private entity, or (ii) a
responsible authority under agreement to third parties, including other private
entities or state agencies;
(12) if applicable, sale or lease to
the private entity of private property related to the project;
(13) traffic enforcement and other
policing issues; and
(14) any other terms and conditions a
responsible authority deems appropriate.
Subd. 7. Funding
from federal government. (a)
A responsible authority may accept from the United States or any of its
agencies funds that are available to the state for carrying out the pilot
program, whether the funds are available by grant, loan, or other financial
assistance.
(b) A responsible authority may enter
into agreements or other arrangements with the United States or any of its
agencies as necessary for carrying out the pilot program.
(c) A responsible authority shall seek
to maximize project funding from nonstate sources and may combine federal,
state, local, and private funds to finance a public-private partnership pilot
project.
Subd. 8. Legislative
reporting. By August 1
annually in 2016 through 2019, the commissioner of transportation and the
Metropolitan Council shall jointly submit to the chairs and ranking minority
members of the legislative committees having jurisdiction over transportation
policy and finance a list of all agreements executed under the pilot program
authority. At a minimum, the list must
identify each agreement, the contracting entities, the contract amount and
duration, and any repayment requirements, and provide an update on the
project's progress. The list may be
submitted electronically and is subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 3.195,
subdivision 1.
Subd. 9. Expiration. The authority to enter into new
agreements under this section expires on June 30, 2019.
Sec. 65. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2014, section
299E.02, is repealed."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to transportation; establishing a budget for transportation; appropriating money for transportation, including Department of Transportation, Metropolitan Council, and Department of Public Safety activities; amending various provisions governing transportation policy and finance; establishing funds and accounts; requiring reports; authorizing sale and issuance of trunk highway bonds; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 16A.11, subdivision 3a; 16A.86, subdivision 2; 16A.88, subdivisions 1a, 2; 16E.15, subdivision 2; 117.036, subdivisions 2, 4; 160.20, subdivision 4; 160.27, by adding a subdivision; 161.04, by adding a subdivision;
161.231; 161.321, subdivisions 2a, 2c, 4; 162.07, subdivision 1a; 168.053, subdivision 1; 168.1299, subdivision 1; 169.475, subdivision 2; 169.49; 169.782, subdivisions 1, 2, 4; 169.81, by adding a subdivision; 169.865, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding a subdivision; 169.87, subdivision 6; 173.02, by adding a subdivision; 173.15; 174.40, by adding a subdivision; 174.636, by adding a subdivision; 174.92; 174.93, subdivision 1; 221.031, by adding a subdivision; 221.605, by adding a subdivision; 299A.465, subdivision 5, by adding a subdivision; 299D.085, subdivision 2; 299D.09; 360.305, subdivision 4; 398A.04, by adding a subdivision; 473.13, by adding a subdivision; 473.146, subdivision 4; 473.39, by adding a subdivision; 473.399, by adding a subdivision; 473.4051, subdivision 2; Laws 2009, chapter 158, section 10, as amended; Laws 2014, chapter 312, article 11, section 3; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 16A; 160; 161; 162; 168; 174; 299F; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 299E.02."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The report was adopted.
Hamilton from the Committee on Agriculture Finance to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1437, A bill for an act relating to state government; appropriating money for agriculture, animal health, and agricultural utilization research; providing retail food establishment and food handler license fees; making policy and technical changes to various agricultural related provisions, including provisions related to pesticide control, plant protection, nursery law, seeds, food handlers, food, farmland, farming, and loans; establishing the farm opportunity loan program; modifying fees and surcharges; creating accounts; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 13.643, subdivision 1; 18B.01, subdivisions 28, 29; 18B.32, subdivision 1; 18B.33, subdivision 1; 18B.34, subdivision 1; 18C.425, subdivision 6; 18G.10, subdivisions 3, 4, 5; 18H.02, subdivision 20, by adding subdivisions; 18H.06, subdivision 2; 18H.07; 21.81, by adding subdivisions; 21.82, subdivisions 2, 4; 21.85, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 21.89, subdivision 2; 21.891, subdivisions 2, 5; 25.39, subdivision 1; 28A.03, by adding subdivisions; 28A.08, subdivision 1, by adding subdivisions; 28A.082, subdivision 1; 31.39, subdivision 1; 32.394, subdivisions 8, 8b; 41B.03, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 41B.04, subdivision 17; 41B.043, subdivision 3; 41B.045, subdivisions 3, 4; 41B.046, subdivision 5; 41B.047, subdivisions 1, 4; 41B.048, subdivision 6; 41B.049, subdivision 4; 41B.055, subdivision 3; 41B.056, subdivision 2; 41B.06; 500.24, subdivision 4; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 15; 41B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 17.115; 28A.08, subdivision 3; 41A.12, subdivision 4.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
AGRICULTURE APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. AGRICULTURE
APPROPRIATIONS |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are available
for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2016" and
"2017" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2016, or June 30, 2017,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2016. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2017. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2016 and 2017.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the
Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2016 |
2017 |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$36,756,000 |
|
$37,724,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
36,178,000
|
37,146,000
|
Remediation |
388,000
|
388,000
|
Agricultural |
190,000
|
190,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Protection
Services |
|
16,377,000
|
|
16,402,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2016
|
2017
|
General |
15,799,000
|
15,824,000
|
Agricultural |
190,000
|
190,000
|
Remediation |
388,000
|
388,000
|
$25,000 the first year and $25,000 the
second year are to develop and maintain cottage food license exemption outreach
and training materials.
$75,000 the second year is for a
coordinator for the correctional facility vocational training pilot program.
$388,000 the first year and $388,000 the
second year are from the remediation fund for administrative funding for the
voluntary cleanup program.
$225,000 the first year and $175,000 the
second year are for compensation for destroyed or crippled animals under
Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737. The
first year appropriation is for claims submitted during fiscal year 2016 and
for all claims submitted during fiscal year 2014 or 2015 that were not paid by
the commissioner due to a shortage of funding.
If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the
second year is available in the first year.
$125,000 the first year and $125,000 the second year are for compensation for crop damage under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.7371. If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is available in the first year.
If the commissioner determines that claims
made under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737 or 3.7371, are unusually high,
amounts appropriated for either program may be transferred to the appropriation
for the other program.
$70,000 the first year and $70,000 the
second year are for additional cannery inspections.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the
second year are for increased oversight of delegated local health boards.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the
second year are to decrease the turnaround time for retail food handler plan
reviews.
$1,024,000 the first year and $1,024,000
the second year are to streamline the retail food safety regulatory and
licensing experience for regulated businesses and to decrease the inspection
delinquency rate.
$1,350,000 the first year and $1,350,000
the second year are for additional inspections of food manufacturers and
wholesalers.
$150,000 the first year and $150,000 the
second year are for additional funding for dairy inspection services.
$150,000 the first year and $150,000 the
second year are for additional funding for laboratory services operations.
$250,000 the first year and $250,000 the
second year are for additional meat inspection services, including inspections
provided under the correctional facility vocational training pilot program.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
18B.05, $90,000 the first year and $90,000 the second year are from the
pesticide regulatory account in the agricultural fund for an increase in the
operating budget for the Laboratory Services Division.
$100,000 the first year and $100,000 the
second year are from the pesticide regulatory account in the agricultural fund
to update and modify applicator education and training materials.
Subd. 3. Agricultural
Marketing and Development |
|
3,873,000
|
|
3,873,000
|
The commissioner must provide one-stop
access for farmers in need of information or assistance to obtain or renew
licenses, meet state regulatory requirements, or resolve disputes with state
agencies.
The
commissioner must provide outreach to urban farmers regarding the department's
financial and technical assistance programs and must assist urban farmers in
applying for assistance.
$186,000 the first year and $186,000 the
second year are for transfer to the Minnesota grown account and may be used as
grants for Minnesota grown promotion under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.102. Grants may be made for one year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2017, for Minnesota grown grants in this paragraph are available until
June 30, 2019.
$634,000 the first year and $634,000 the
second year are for continuation of the dairy development and profitability
enhancement and dairy business planning grant programs established under Laws
1997, chapter 216, section 7, subdivision 2, and Laws 2001, First Special
Session chapter 2, section 9, subdivision 2.
The commissioner may allocate the available sums among permissible
activities, including efforts to improve the quality of milk produced in the
state, in the proportions that the commissioner deems most beneficial to
Minnesota's dairy farmers. The
commissioner must submit a detailed accomplishment report and a work plan
detailing future plans for, and anticipated accomplishments from, expenditures
under this program to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance on
or before the start of each fiscal year.
If significant changes are made to the plans in the course of the year,
the commissioner must notify the chairs and ranking minority members.
The commissioner may use funds
appropriated in this subdivision for annual cost-share payments to resident
farmers or entities that sell, process, or package agricultural products in
this state for the costs of organic certification. The commissioner may allocate these funds for
assistance for persons transitioning from conventional to organic agriculture.
Subd. 4. Agriculture, Bioenergy, and Bioproduct
Advancement |
10,880,000
|
|
11,823,000
|
$3,550,000 the first year and $4,100,000 the second year are for transfer to the agriculture research, education, extension, and technology transfer fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 3. The commissioner may use a portion of the appropriation each year only for direct expenses incurred by the commissioner to provide administrative services and to act as the fiscal agent for the board as required under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, paragraph (c).
To
the extent practicable, funds expended under Minnesota Statutes, section
41A.14, subdivision 2, clauses (1) and (2), must supplement and not supplant
existing sources and levels of funding. The
board may award grants to the University of Minnesota to support the Forever
Green Initiative.
$550,000 is appropriated in fiscal year
2015 to the commissioner of agriculture for the costs of avian influenza
emergency response activities not covered by federal funding. The appropriation under this paragraph is
available the day following final enactment.
This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2016.
$500,000 in fiscal year 2016 and
$1,500,000 in fiscal year 2017 are for incentive payments under Minnesota
Statutes, sections 41A.16, 41A.17, and 41A.18.
If the appropriation exceeds the total amount for which all producers
are eligible in a fiscal year, the balance of the appropriation is available to
the commissioner for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program
under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12.
These appropriations do not cancel and are available until spent. The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of
the appropriation for administration of the incentive payment programs.
$6,280,000 the first year and $6,223,000
the second year are for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation
program in Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12.
No later than February 1, 2016, and
February 1, 2017, the commissioner must report to the legislative committees
with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance regarding the
commissioner's accomplishments and anticipated accomplishments in the following
areas: facilitating the start-up,
modernization, or expansion of livestock operations including beginning and
transitioning livestock operations; developing new markets for Minnesota
farmers by providing more fruits, vegetables, meat, grain, and dairy for
Minnesota school children; assisting value-added agricultural businesses to
begin or expand, access new markets, or diversify products; facilitating the
start-up, modernization, or expansion of other beginning and transitioning
farms; sustainable agriculture on farm research and demonstration; development
or expansion of food hubs and other alternative community-based food
distribution systems; and research on bioenergy, biobased content, or biobased
formulated products and other renewable energy development. The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of
this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program. Any unencumbered balance does not cancel at
the end of the first year and is available for the second year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2017, for agricultural growth, research, and innovation grants are available
until June 30, 2019.
The
commissioner may use funds appropriated for the agricultural growth, research,
and innovation program as provided in this paragraph. The commissioner may award grants to owners
of Minnesota facilities producing bioenergy, biobased content, or a biobased
formulated product; to organizations that provide for on‑station, on-farm field scale research and outreach to develop
and test the agronomic and economic requirements of diverse strands of
prairie plants and other perennials for bioenergy systems; or to certain
nongovernmental entities. For the
purposes of this paragraph, "bioenergy" includes transportation fuels
derived from cellulosic material, as well as the generation of energy for
commercial heat, industrial process heat, or electrical power from cellulosic
materials via gasification or other processes.
Grants are limited to 50 percent of the cost of research, technical
assistance, or equipment related to bioenergy, biobased content, or biobased
formulated product production or $500,000, whichever is less. Grants to nongovernmental entities for the
development of business plans and structures related to community ownership of
eligible bioenergy facilities together may not exceed $150,000. The commissioner shall make a good-faith
effort to select projects that have merit and, when taken together, represent a
variety of bioenergy technologies, biomass feedstocks, and geographic regions
of the state. Projects must have a
qualified engineer provide certification on the technology and fuel source. Grantees must provide reports at the request
of the commissioner.
Of the amount appropriated for the
agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision,
$1,000,000 the first year and $1,000,000 the second year are for distribution
in equal amounts to each of the state's county fairs to preserve and promote
Minnesota agriculture.
Of the amount appropriated for the
agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision,
$250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year are for grants that enable
retail petroleum dispensers to dispense biofuels to the public in accordance
with the biofuel replacement goals established under Minnesota Statutes,
section 239.7911. A retail petroleum
dispenser selling petroleum for use in spark ignition engines for vehicle model
years after 2000 is eligible for grant money under this paragraph if the retail
petroleum dispenser has no more than 15 retail petroleum dispensing sites and
each site is located in Minnesota. The
grant money received under this paragraph must be used for the installation of
appropriate technology that uses fuel dispensing equipment appropriate for at
least one fuel dispensing site to dispense gasoline that is blended with 15
percent of agriculturally derived, denatured ethanol, by volume, and
appropriate technical assistance related to the installation. A grant award must not exceed 85 percent of
the cost of the technical assistance and appropriate technology, including
remetering of and retrofits for retail petroleum dispensers and replacement of
petroleum
dispenser projects. The commissioner may
use up to $35,000 of this appropriation for administrative expenses. The commissioner shall cooperate with the
Minnesota Biofuels Association in the implementation of the grant program. The commissioner must report to the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance by
February 1 each year, detailing the number of grants awarded under this
paragraph and the projected effect of the grant program on meeting the biofuel
replacement goals under Minnesota Statutes, section 239.7911.
Of the amount appropriated for the
agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision,
$25,000 the first year is for the livestock industry study.
Of the amount appropriated for the
agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision,
$50,000 the first year is for the imported bait fish feasibility study.
Of the amount appropriated for the
agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision,
$25,000 the first year and $25,000 the second year are for grants to the
Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation to promote local foods through an
annual event that raises public awareness of local foods and connects local
food producers and processors with potential buyers.
Subd. 5. Administration
and Financial Assistance |
|
5,626,000
|
|
5,626,000
|
$75,000 the first year and $75,000 the
second year are for grants to the Center for Rural Policy and Development.
The base for the farm-to-foodshelf program
in fiscal years 2018 and 2019 is $1,100,000 each year.
$47,000 the first year and $47,000 the
second year are for the Northern Crops Institute. These appropriations may be spent to purchase
equipment.
$18,000 the first year and $18,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Livestock Breeders Association.
$235,000 the first year and $235,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Agricultural Education and
Leadership Council for programs of the
council under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 41D.
$474,000 the first year and $474,000 the
second year are for payments to county and district agricultural societies and
associations under Minnesota Statutes, section 38.02, subdivision 1. Aid payments to county and district
agricultural societies and associations shall be disbursed no later than July
15 of each year. These payments are the
amount of aid from the state for an annual fair held in the previous calendar
year.
$1,000
the first year and $1,000 the second year are for grants to the Minnesota State
Poultry Association.
$108,000 the first year and $108,000 the
second year are for annual grants to the Minnesota Turf Seed Council for basic
and applied research on: (1) the
improved production of forage and turf seed related to new and improved
varieties; and (2) native plants, including plant breeding, nutrient
management, pest management, disease management, yield, and viability. The grant recipient may subcontract with a
qualified third party for some or all of the basic or applied research.
$550,000 the first year and $550,000 the
second year are for grants to Second Harvest Heartland on behalf of Minnesota's
six Second Harvest food banks for the purchase of milk for distribution to
Minnesota's food shelves and other charitable organizations that are eligible
to receive food from the food banks. Milk
purchased under the grants must be acquired from Minnesota milk processors and
based on low-cost bids. The milk must be
allocated to each Second Harvest food bank serving Minnesota according to the
formula used in the distribution of United States Department of Agriculture
commodities under The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP). Second Harvest Heartland must submit
quarterly reports to the commissioner on forms prescribed by the commissioner. The reports must include, but are not limited
to, information on the expenditure of funds, the amount of milk purchased, and
the organizations to which the milk was distributed. Second Harvest Heartland may enter into
contracts or agreements with food banks for shared funding or reimbursement of
the direct purchase of milk. Each food
bank receiving money from this appropriation may use up to two percent of the
grant for administrative expenses.
$113,000 the first year and $113,000 the
second year are for transfer to the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities for statewide mental health counseling support to
farm families and business operators. South
Central College shall serve as the fiscal agent.
$17,000 the first year and $17,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Horticultural Society.
Sec. 3. BOARD
OF ANIMAL HEALTH |
|
$5,918,000 |
|
$5,984,000 |
$600,000 the first year and $600,000 the
second year are for rapid response to poultry and livestock disease, including but
not limited to H5N2 avian flu.
$300,000 the first year and $300,000 the
second year are for the Invasive Terrestrial Plants and Pests Center for rapid
response to plant diseases and pests.
ARTICLE 2
AGRICULTURE POLICY
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 13.643, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Department
of Agriculture data. (a) Loan and grant applicant data. The following data on applicants,
collected by the Department of Agriculture in its sustainable agriculture revolving
loan and grant programs program under sections 17.115 and
section 17.116, are private or nonpublic: nonfarm income; credit history; insurance
coverage; machinery and equipment list; financial information; and credit
information requests.
(b) Farm advocate data. The following data supplied by farmer clients to Minnesota farm advocates and to the Department of Agriculture are private data on individuals: financial history, including listings of assets and debts, and personal and emotional status information.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.01, subdivision 28, is amended to read:
Subd. 28. Structural
pest. "Structural pest"
means a an invertebrate pest, other than a plant, or
commensal rodent in, on, under, or near a structure such as a
residential or commercial building.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.01, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
Subd. 29. Structural
pest control. "Structural pest
control" means the control of any structural pest through the use of a
device, a procedure, or application of pesticides or through other means
in or around a building or other structures, including trucks, boxcars, ships,
aircraft, docks, and fumigation vaults, and the business activity related to
use of a device, a procedure, or application of a pesticide.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.05, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Establishment. A pesticide regulatory account is established in the agricultural fund. Fees, assessments, and penalties collected under this chapter must be deposited in the agricultural fund and credited to the pesticide regulatory account. Money in the account, including interest, is appropriated to the commissioner for the administration and enforcement of this chapter and up to $20,000 per fiscal year may also be used by the commissioner for purposes of section 18H.14, paragraph (e).
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.32, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirement. (a) A person may not engage in structural pest control applications:
(1) for hire without a structural pest control license; and
(2) as a sole proprietorship, company, partnership, or corporation unless the person is or employs a licensed master in structural pest control operations.
(b)
A structural pest control licensee must have a valid license identification
card when applying to purchase a restricted use pesticide or apply
pesticides for hire and must display it upon demand by an authorized
representative of the commissioner or a law enforcement officer. The license identification card must contain
information required by the commissioner.
(c) Notwithstanding the licensing
requirements of this subdivision, a person may control the following nuisance
or economically damaging wild animals, by trapping, without a structural pest
control license:
(1) fur-bearing animals, as defined in
section 97A.015, with a valid trapping license or special permit from the
commissioner of natural resources; and
(2) skunks, woodchucks, gophers,
porcupines, coyotes, moles, and weasels.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.33, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirement. (a) A person may not apply a pesticide for hire without a commercial applicator license for the appropriate use categories or a structural pest control license.
(b) A commercial applicator licensee must
have a valid license identification card when applying to purchase a
restricted use pesticide or apply pesticides for hire and must display it
upon demand by an authorized representative of the commissioner or a law
enforcement officer. The commissioner
shall prescribe the information required on the license identification card.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18B.34, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirement. (a) Except for a licensed commercial applicator, certified private applicator, or licensed structural pest control applicator, a person, including a government employee, may not purchase or use a restricted use pesticide in performance of official duties without having a noncommercial applicator license for an appropriate use category.
(b) A licensee must have a valid license identification card when applying pesticides and must display it upon demand by an authorized representative of the commissioner or a law enforcement officer. The license identification card must contain information required by the commissioner.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18C.425, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Payment of inspection fee. (a) The person who registers and distributes in the state a specialty fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment under section 18C.411 shall pay the inspection fee to the commissioner.
(b) The person licensed under section 18C.415 who distributes a fertilizer to a person not required to be so licensed shall pay the inspection fee to the commissioner, except as exempted under section 18C.421, subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
(c) The person responsible for payment of
the inspection fees for fertilizers, soil amendments, or plant amendments sold
and used in this state must pay an inspection fee of 30 39 cents
per ton, and until June 30, 2019, an additional 40 cents per ton, of
fertilizer, soil amendment, and plant amendment sold or distributed in this
state, with a minimum of $10 on all tonnage reports. Notwithstanding section 18C.131, the
commissioner must deposit all revenue from the additional 40 cent per ton fee
in the agricultural fertilizer research and education account in section 18C.80. Products sold or distributed to manufacturers
or exchanged between them are exempt from the inspection fee imposed by this
subdivision if the products are used exclusively for manufacturing purposes.
(d) A registrant or licensee must retain invoices showing proof of fertilizer, plant amendment, or soil amendment distribution amounts and inspection fees paid for a period of three years.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18C.70, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Powers
and duties. The council must review
applications and select projects to receive agricultural fertilizer research
and education program grants, as authorized in section 18C.71. The council must establish a program to
provide grants to research, education, and technology transfer projects related
to agricultural fertilizer, soil amendments, and plant amendments. For the purpose of this section,
"fertilizer" includes soil amendments and plant amendments, but does
not include vegetable or animal manures that are not manipulated. The commissioner is responsible for all
fiscal and administrative duties in the first year and may use up to eight
percent of program revenue to offset costs incurred. No later than October 1, 2007, the
commissioner must provide the council with an estimate of the annual costs the
commissioner would incur in administering the program.
Sec. 10. [18C.80]
AGRICULTURAL FERTILIZER RESEARCH AND EDUCATION ACCOUNT.
Subdivision 1. Account;
appropriation. An
agricultural fertilizer research and education account is established in the
agricultural fund. Money in the account,
including interest earned, is appropriated to the commissioner for grants
determined by the Minnesota Agricultural Fertilizer Research and Education
Council under section 18C.71. The
commissioner may use up to $80,000 each fiscal year for direct costs incurred
to provide fiscal and administrative support to the council as required under
section 18C.70, subdivision 2. The
commissioner may also recover associated indirect costs from the account as
required under section 16A.127.
Subd. 2. Expiration. This section expires June 30, 2020.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18G.10, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Cooperative
agreements. The commissioner may
enter into cooperative agreements with federal and state agencies for
administration of the export certification program. An exporter of plants or plant products
desiring to originate shipments from Minnesota to a foreign country requiring a
phytosanitary certificate or export certificate must submit an application to
the commissioner.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18G.10, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Phytosanitary
and export certificates. An
exporter of plants or plant products desiring to originate shipments from
Minnesota to a foreign country requiring a phytosanitary certificate or export
certificate must submit an application to the commissioner. Application for phytosanitary certificates or
export certificates must be made on forms provided or approved by the
commissioner. The commissioner shall
may conduct inspections of plants, plant products, or facilities for
persons that have applied for or intend to apply for a phytosanitary
certificate or export certificate from the commissioner. Inspections must include one or more of
the following as requested or required:
(1) an inspection of the plants or
plant products intended for export under a phytosanitary certificate or export
certificate;
(2) field inspections of growing plants
to determine presence or absence of plant diseases, if necessary;
(3) laboratory diagnosis for presence
or absence of plant diseases, if necessary;
(4) observation and evaluation of
procedures and facilities utilized in handling plants and plant products, if
necessary; and
(5)
review of United States Department of Agriculture, Federal Grain Inspection
Service Official Export Grain Inspection Certificate logs.
The commissioner may issue a phytosanitary certificate or export certificate if the plants or plant products satisfactorily meet the requirements of the importing foreign country and the United States Department of Agriculture requirements. The requirements of the destination countries must be met by the applicant.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18G.10, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Certificate
fees. (a) The commissioner shall
assess the fees in paragraphs (b) to (f) fees sufficient to recover
all costs for the inspection, service, and work performed in carrying out
the issuance of a phytosanitary certificate or export certificate. The inspection fee must be based on
mileage and inspection time.
(b) Mileage charge: current United States Internal Revenue
Service mileage rate.
(c) Inspection time: $50 per hour minimum or fee necessary to
cover department costs. Inspection time
includes the driving time to and from the location in addition to the time
spent conducting the inspection.
(d) (b) If laboratory
analysis or other technical analysis is required to issue a certificate, the
commissioner must set and collect the fee to recover this additional cost.
(e) (c) The certificate fee for
product value greater than $250: is
$75 or a fee amount, not to exceed $300, that is sufficient to recover all
processing costs for each phytosanitary or export certificate issued for
any single shipment valued at more than $250 in addition to any mileage or
inspection time charges that are assessed.
(f) Certificate fee for product value
less than $250: $25 for each
phytosanitary or export certificate issued for any single shipment valued at
less than $250 in addition to any mileage or inspection time charges that are
assessed.
(g) (d) For services
provided for in subdivision 7 that are goods and services provided for the
direct and primary use of a private individual, business, or other entity, the
commissioner must set and collect the fees to cover the cost of the services
provided.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.02, subdivision 20, is amended to read:
Subd. 20. Nursery stock. "Nursery stock" means a plant intended for planting or propagation, including, but not limited to, trees, shrubs, vines, perennials, biennials, grafts, cuttings, and buds that may be sold for propagation, whether cultivated or wild, and all viable parts of these plants. Nursery stock does not include:
(1) field and forage crops or sod;
(2) the seeds of grasses, cereal
grains, vegetable crops, and flowers;
(3) vegetable plants, bulbs, or tubers;
(4) cut flowers, unless stems or other portions are intended for propagation;
(5) annuals; or
(6) Christmas trees.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 32a. Sod. "Sod" means the upper
portion of soil that contains the roots of grasses and the living grass plants.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 35. Tropical
plant. "Tropical
plant" means a plant that has a United States Department of Agriculture
hardiness zone designation of zone 6 or greater, or an annual minimum hardiness
temperature of -9 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.06, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Occasional
sales. (a) An individual may offer
nursery stock for sale and be exempt from the requirement to obtain a nursery
stock dealer certificate if:
(1) the gross sales of all nursery stock in a calendar year do not exceed $2,000;
(2) all nursery stock sold or distributed by the individual is intended for planting in Minnesota;
(3) all nursery stock purchased or procured for resale or distribution was grown in Minnesota and has been certified by the commissioner; and
(4) the individual conducts sales or distributions of nursery stock on ten or fewer days in a calendar year.
(b) The commissioner may prescribe the conditions of the exempt nursery sales under this subdivision and may conduct routine inspections of the nursery stock offered for sale.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.07, is amended to read:
18H.07
FEE SCHEDULE.
Subdivision 1. Establishment of fees. The commissioner shall establish fees sufficient to allow for the administration and enforcement of this chapter and rules adopted under this chapter, including the portion of general support costs and statewide indirect costs of the agency attributable to that function, with a reserve sufficient for up to six months. The commissioner shall review the fee schedule annually in consultation with the Minnesota Nursery and Landscape Advisory Committee. For the certificate year beginning January 1, 2006, the fees are as described in this section.
Subd. 2. Nursery
stock grower certificate. (a) A
nursery stock grower must pay an annual fee based on the area of all acreage on
which nursery stock is grown for certification as follows:
(1) less than one-half acre, $150;
(2) from one-half acre to two acres, $200;
(3) over two acres up to five acres, $300;
(4) over five acres up to ten acres, $350;
(5) over ten acres up to 20 acres, $500;
(6) over 20 acres up to 40 acres, $650;
(7) over 40 acres up to 50 acres, $800;
(8) over 50 acres up to 200 acres, $1,100;
(9) over 200 acres up to 500 acres, $1,500; and
(10) over 500 acres, $1,500 plus $2 for each additional acre.
(b) In addition to the fees in paragraph (a), a penalty of ten percent of the fee due must be charged for each month, or portion thereof, that the fee is delinquent up to a maximum of 30 percent for any application for renewal not postmarked by December 31 of the current year.
(c) A nursery stock grower found
operating without a valid nursery stock grower certificate cannot offer for
sale or sell nursery stock until: (1)
payment is received by the commissioner for (i) the certificate fee due, and
(ii) a penalty equal to the certificate fee owed; and (2) a new certificate is
issued to the nursery stock grower by the commissioner.
Subd. 3. Nursery stock dealer certificate. (a) A nursery stock dealer must pay an annual fee based on the dealer's gross sales of certified nursery stock per location during the most recent certificate year. A certificate applicant operating for the first time must pay the minimum fee. The fees per sales location are:
(1) gross sales up to $5,000, $150;
(2) gross sales over $5,000 up to $20,000, $175;
(3) gross sales over $20,000 up to $50,000, $300;
(4) gross sales over $50,000 up to $75,000, $425;
(5) gross sales over $75,000 up to $100,000, $550;
(6) gross sales over $100,000 up to $200,000, $675; and
(7) gross sales over $200,000, $800.
(b) In addition to the fees in paragraph (a), a penalty of ten percent of the fee due must be charged for each month, or portion thereof, that the fee is delinquent up to a maximum of 30 percent for any application for renewal not postmarked by December 31 of the current year.
(c) A nursery stock dealer found
operating without a valid nursery stock dealer certificate cannot offer for
sale or sell nursery stock until: (1)
payment is received by the commissioner for (i) the certificate fee due, and
(ii) a penalty equal to the certificate fee owed; and (2) a new certificate is
issued to the nursery stock dealer by the commissioner.
Subd. 4. Reinspection; additional or optional inspection fees. If a reinspection is required or an additional inspection is needed or requested a fee must be assessed based on mileage and inspection time as follows:
(1) mileage must be charged at the current United States Internal Revenue Service reimbursement rate; and
(2) inspection time must be charged at the
rate of $50 per hour a rate sufficient to recover all inspection costs,
including the driving time to and from the location in addition to the time
spent conducting the inspection.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 18H.17, is amended to read:
18H.17
NURSERY AND PHYTOSANITARY ACCOUNT.
A nursery and phytosanitary account is
established in the state treasury. The
fees and penalties collected under this chapter and interest attributable to
money in the account must be deposited in the state treasury and credited to
the nursery and phytosanitary account in the agricultural fund. Money in the account, including interest
earned, is annually appropriated to the commissioner for the administration and
enforcement for this chapter. The
commissioner may spend no more than $20,000 from the account each fiscal year
for purposes of section 18H.14, paragraph (e).
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 21.89, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Permits; issuance and revocation. The commissioner shall issue a permit to the initial labeler of agricultural, vegetable, flower, and wildflower seeds which are sold for use in Minnesota and which conform to and are labeled under sections 21.80 to 21.92. The categories of permits are as follows:
(1) for initial labelers who sell 50,000 pounds or less of agricultural seed each calendar year, an annual permit issued for a fee established in section 21.891, subdivision 2, paragraph (b);
(2) for initial labelers who sell vegetable, flower, and wildflower seed packed for use in home gardens or household plantings, and initial labelers who sell native grasses and wildflower seed in commercial or agricultural quantities, an annual permit issued for a fee established in section 21.891, subdivision 2, paragraph (c), based upon the gross sales from the previous year; and
(3) for initial labelers who sell more than 50,000 pounds of agricultural seed each calendar year, a permanent permit issued for a fee established in section 21.891, subdivision 2, paragraph (d).
In addition, the person shall furnish to the commissioner an itemized statement of all seeds sold in Minnesota for the periods established by the commissioner. This statement shall be delivered, along with the payment of the fee, based upon the amount and type of seed sold, to the commissioner no later than 30 days after the end of each reporting period. Any person holding a permit shall show as part of the analysis labels or invoices on all agricultural, vegetable, flower, wildflower, tree, or shrub seeds all information the commissioner requires. The commissioner may revoke any permit in the event of failure to comply with applicable laws and rules.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 21.891, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Seed fee permits. (a) An initial labeler who wishes to sell seed in Minnesota must comply with section 21.89, subdivisions 1 and 2, and the procedures in this subdivision. Each initial labeler who wishes to sell seed in Minnesota must apply to the commissioner to obtain a permit. The application must contain the name and address of the applicant, the application date, and the name and title of the applicant's contact person.
(b) The application for a seed permit
covered by section 21.89, subdivision 2, clause (1), must be accompanied by an
application fee of $50 $75.
(c) The application for a seed permit covered by section 21.89, subdivision 2, clause (2), must be accompanied by an application fee based on the level of annual gross sales as follows:
(1) for gross sales of $0 to $25,000, the
annual permit fee is $50 $75;
(2) for gross sales of $25,001 to $50,000,
the annual permit fee is $100 $150;
(3)
for gross sales of $50,001 to $100,000, the annual permit fee is $200 $300;
(4) for gross sales of $100,001 to
$250,000, the annual permit fee is $500 $750;
(5) for gross sales of $250,001 to
$500,000, the annual permit fee is $1,000 $1,500; and
(6) for gross sales of $500,001 and
above to $1,000,000, the annual permit fee is $2,000 $3,000;
and
(7) for gross sales of $1,000,001 and above, the annual permit fee is $4,500.
(d) The application for a seed permit
covered by section 21.89, subdivision 2, clause (3), must be accompanied by an
application fee of $50 $75.
Initial labelers holding seed fee permits covered under this paragraph
need not apply for a new permit or pay the application fee. Under this permit category, the fees for the
following kinds of agricultural seed sold either in bulk or containers are:
(1) oats, wheat, and barley, 6.3 9
cents per hundredweight;
(2) rye, field beans, soybeans, buckwheat,
and flax, 8.4 12 cents per hundredweight;
(3) field corn, 29.4 17
cents per hundredweight 80,000 seed unit;
(4) forage, lawn and turf grasses, and
legumes, 49 69 cents per hundredweight;
(5) sunflower, $1.40 $1.96
per hundredweight;
(6) sugar beet, $3.29 12 cents
per hundredweight 100,000 seed unit; and
(7) soybeans, 7.5 cents per 140,000
seed unit; and
(7) (8) for any agricultural
seed not listed in clauses (1) to (6) (7), the fee for the crop
most closely resembling it in normal planting rate applies.
(e) If, for reasons beyond the control and knowledge of the initial labeler, seed is shipped into Minnesota by a person other than the initial labeler, the responsibility for the seed fees are transferred to the shipper. An application for a transfer of this responsibility must be made to the commissioner. Upon approval by the commissioner of the transfer, the shipper is responsible for payment of the seed permit fees.
(f) Seed permit fees may be included in the cost of the seed either as a hidden cost or as a line item cost on each invoice for seed sold. To identify the fee on an invoice, the words "Minnesota seed permit fees" must be used.
(g) All seed fee permit holders must file semiannual reports with the commissioner, even if no seed was sold during the reporting period. Each semiannual report must be submitted within 30 days of the end of each reporting period. The reporting periods are October 1 to March 31 and April 1 to September 30 of each year or July 1 to December 31 and January 1 to June 30 of each year. Permit holders may change their reporting periods with the approval of the commissioner.
(h) The holder of a seed fee permit must pay fees on all seed for which the permit holder is the initial labeler and which are covered by sections 21.80 to 21.92 and sold during the reporting period.
(i) If a seed fee permit holder fails to submit a semiannual report and pay the seed fee within 30 days after the end of each reporting period, the commissioner shall assess a penalty of $100 or eight percent, calculated on an annual basis, of the fee due, whichever is greater, but no more than $500 for each late semiannual report. A $15 penalty must be charged when the semiannual report is late, even if no fee is due for the reporting period. Seed fee permits may be revoked for failure to comply with the applicable provisions of this paragraph or the Minnesota seed law.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 21.891, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Brand
name registration fee. The fee is $25
$50 for each variety registered for sale by brand name.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 25.341, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Application;
fee; term. A person who is required
to have a commercial feed license shall submit an application on a form
provided or approved by the commissioner accompanied by a fee of $25 $75
paid to the commissioner for each location.
A license is not transferable from one person to another, from one
ownership to another, or from one location to another. The license year is the calendar year. A license expires on December 31 of the year
for which it is issued, except that a license is valid through January 31 of
the next year or until the issuance of the renewal license, whichever comes
first, if the licensee has filed a renewal application with the commissioner on
or before December 31 of the year for which the current license was issued. Any person who is required to have, but fails
to obtain a license or a licensee who fails to comply with license renewal
requirements, shall pay a $50 $100 late fee in addition to the
license fee.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 25.39, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Amount of fee. (a) An inspection fee at the rate of 16 cents per ton must be paid to the commissioner on commercial feeds distributed in this state by the person who first distributes the commercial feed, except that:
(1) no fee need be paid on:
(i) a commercial feed if the payment has been made by a previous distributor; or
(ii) customer formula feeds if the inspection fee is paid on the commercial feeds
which are used as ingredients; or
(2) a Minnesota feed distributor who can substantiate that greater than 50 percent of the distribution of commercial feed is to purchasers outside the state may purchase commercial feeds without payment of the inspection fee under a tonnage fee exemption permit issued by the commissioner. Such location specific permits shall be issued on a calendar year basis to commercial feed distributors who submit a $100 nonrefundable application fee and comply with rules adopted by the commissioner relative to record keeping, tonnage of commercial feed distributed in Minnesota, total of all commercial feed tonnage distributed, and all other information which the commissioner may require so as to ensure that proper inspection fee payment has been made.
(b) In the case of pet food distributed in
the state only in packages of ten pounds or less, a listing of each product and
a current label for each product must be submitted annually on forms provided
by the commissioner and accompanied by an annual fee of $50 $100
for each product in lieu of the inspection fee.
This annual fee is due by July 1.
The inspection fee required by paragraph (a) applies to pet food
distributed in packages exceeding ten pounds.
(c) In the case of specialty pet food
distributed in the state only in packages of ten pounds or less, a listing of
each product and a current label for each product must be submitted annually on
forms provided by the commissioner and accompanied by an annual fee of $25
$100 for each product in lieu of the inspection fee. This annual fee is due by July 1. The inspection fee required by paragraph (a)
applies to specialty pet food distributed in packages exceeding ten pounds.
(d)
The minimum inspection fee is $10 $75 per annual reporting
period.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 25.39, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Containers of ten pounds or less. A distributor who is subject to the annual fee specified in subdivision 1, paragraph (b) or (c), shall do the following:
(1) before beginning distribution, file with the commissioner a listing of pet and specialty pet foods to be distributed in the state only in containers of ten pounds or less, on forms provided by the commissioner. The listing under this clause must be renewed annually before July 1 and is the basis for the payment of the annual fee. New products added during the year must be submitted to the commissioner as a supplement to the annual listing before distribution; and
(2) if the annual renewal of the listing
is not received before July 1 or if an unlisted product is distributed, pay a
late filing fee of $10 $100 per product in addition to the normal
charge for the listing. The late filing
fee under this clause is in addition to any other penalty under this chapter.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 28A.03, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 11. HACCP
plan. "Hazard analysis
critical control point plan" or "HACCP plan" means a written
document that delineates the formal procedures for following the HACCP
principles developed by the National Advisory Committee on Microbiological
Criteria for Foods.
Sec. 27. [28A.152]
COTTAGE FOODS EXEMPTION.
Subdivision 1. Licensing
provisions applicability. (a)
The licensing provisions of sections 28A.01 to 28A.16 do not apply to the
following:
(1) an individual who prepares and
sells food that is not potentially hazardous food, as defined in Minnesota
Rules, part 4626.0020, subpart 62, if the following requirements are met:
(i) the prepared food offered for sale under this clause is labeled to accurately reflect the name and address of the individual preparing and selling the food, the date on which the food was prepared, and the ingredients and any possible allergens; and
(ii) the individual displays at the
point of sale a clearly legible sign or placard stating: "These products are homemade and not
subject to state inspection."; and
(2) an individual who prepares and
sells home-processed and home-canned food products if the following
requirements are met:
(i) the products are pickles,
vegetables, or fruits having an equilibrium pH value of 4.6 or lower;
(ii) the products are home-processed
and home-canned in Minnesota;
(iii) the individual displays at the
point of sale a clearly legible sign or placard stating: "These canned goods are homemade and not
subject to state inspection."; and
(iv) each container of the product sold
or offered for sale under this clause is accurately labeled to provide the name
and address of the individual who processed and canned the goods, the date on
which the goods were processed and canned, and ingredients and any possible
allergens.
(b)
An individual who qualifies for an exemption under paragraph (a), clause (2),
is also exempt from the provisions of sections 31.31 and 31.392.
Subd. 2. Direct
sales to consumers. (a) An
individual qualifying for an exemption under subdivision 1 may sell the exempt
food:
(1) directly to the ultimate consumer;
(2) at a community event or farmers'
market; or
(3) directly from the individual's home
to the consumer, to the extent allowed by local ordinance.
(b) If an exempt food product will be
delivered to the ultimate consumer upon sale of the food product, the
individual who prepared the food product must be the person who delivers the
food product to the ultimate consumer.
(c) Food products exempt under
subdivision 1, paragraph (a), clause (2), may not be sold outside of Minnesota.
(d) Food products exempt under subdivision 1 may be sold over the Internet but must be delivered directly to the ultimate consumer by the individual who prepared the food product. The statement "These products are homemade and not subject to state inspection." must be displayed on the Web site that offers the exempt foods for purchase.
Subd. 3. Limitation on sales. An individual selling exempt foods under this section is limited to total sales with gross receipts of $18,000 or less in a calendar year.
Subd. 4. Registration. Except as provided in subdivision 8,
an individual who prepares and sells exempt food under subdivision 1 must
register annually with the commissioner.
The annual registration fee is $50.
Subd. 5. Training. Except as provided in subdivision 8,
an individual who prepares and sells exempt food under subdivision 1 must
complete a safe food handling training course that is approved by the
commissioner. The training shall not
exceed eight hours and must be completed every three years while the individual
is registered under subdivision 4.
Subd. 6. Local
ordinances. This section does
not preempt the application of any business licensing requirement or
sanitation, public health, or zoning ordinance of a political subdivision.
Subd. 7. Account
established. A cottage foods
account is created as a separate account in the agricultural fund in the state
treasury for depositing money received by the commissioner under this section. Money in the account, including interest, is
appropriated to the commissioner for purposes of this section.
Subd. 8. Sales
of less than $5,000. Subdivisions
4 and 5 do not apply to an individual with gross receipts of less than $5,000
in a calendar year from the sale of exempt food.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 32.075, is amended to read:
32.075
TERM OF LICENSE; TRANSFERABILITY; FEES AND PENALTIES.
Every An initial license
issued by the commissioner shall be for a period ending expires
on the following December 31st day of December next following, and
shall is not be transferable. A renewal license is valid for two years
and expires on December 31 of the second year. The fee for each such an
initial or renewal license shall be $50 and each renewal thereof
shall be $25 and is $60. The fee
shall be paid to the commissioner before any the
commissioner
issues an initial or renewal license or renewal thereof is issued. If a license renewal is not applied for on or
before January 1 of each year, a penalty of $10 $30 shall be
imposed. A person who does not renew a
license within one year following its December 31 expiration date, except those
persons who do not renew such license while engaged in active military service,
shall be required to prove competency and qualification pursuant to section
32.073, before a license is issued. The
commissioner may require any other person who renews a license to prove
competency and qualification in the same manner. All license fees and penalties received by
the commissioner shall be paid into the state treasury deposited in
the dairy services account in the agricultural fund.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 32.105, is amended to read:
32.105
MILK PROCUREMENT FEE.
Each dairy plant operator within the state
must pay to the commissioner on or before the 18th of each month a fee of .71
1.1 cents per hundredweight of milk purchased the previous month. If a milk producer within the state ships
milk out of the state for sale, the producer must pay the fee to the
commissioner unless the purchaser voluntarily pays the fee.
Producers who ship milk out of state or processors must submit monthly reports as to milk purchases along with the appropriate procurement fee to the commissioner. The commissioner may have access to all relevant purchase or sale records as necessary to verify compliance with this section and may require the producer or purchaser to produce records as necessary to determine compliance.
The fees collected under this section must be deposited in the dairy services account in the agricultural fund. Money in the account, including interest earned, is appropriated to the commissioner to administer this chapter.
Sec. 30. [41A.14]
AGRICULTURE RESEARCH, EDUCATION, EXTENSION, AND TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BOARD.
Subdivision 1. Creation. (a) The Agriculture Research,
Education, Extension, and Technology Transfer Board is created and consists of
the following members:
(1) the commissioner of agriculture;
(2) the dean of the College of Food,
Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences at the University of Minnesota;
(3) a person representing the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities system, appointed by the chancellor;
(4) a representative of the Minnesota
Farm Bureau and a representative of the Minnesota Farmers Union;
(5) a person representing agriculture industry statewide;
(6) a representative of each of the
state commodity councils organized under section 17.54 and the Minnesota Pork
Board;
(7) a person representing an
association of primary manufacturers of forest products;
(8) a person representing organic or
sustainable agriculture; and
(9) a person representing statewide
environment and natural resource conservation organizations.
The
commissioner and the dean shall be cochairs.
The commissioner, the dean, and the representative of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities system are nonvoting members of the board.
(b) Members under paragraph (a),
clauses (8) and (9), shall be appointed by the commissioner. The commissioner shall not provide daily or
expense compensation for board members.
(c) The commissioner shall provide
administrative services for the board and act as its fiscal agent.
(d) For each board meeting, the
commissioner shall provide advanced notice and a copy of the meeting minutes to
the chairs and ranking minority members of the house of representatives and
senate committees with jurisdiction over agriculture finance.
Subd. 2. Duties;
grants. The board shall
provide for investments that will most efficiently achieve long-term
agricultural productivity increases through improved infrastructure, vision,
and accountability. Priority shall be
given to human infrastructure. The board
shall provide grants for:
(1) agricultural research and
technology transfer needs and recipients including agricultural research and
extension at the University of Minnesota, research and outreach centers; the
College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences; the Minnesota
Agricultural Experiment Station; University of Minnesota Extension; the
University of Minnesota Veterinary School; the Veterinary Diagnostic
Laboratory; the Stakman-Borlaug Center; and the Minnesota Agricultural
Fertilizer Research and Education Council;
(2) agriculture rapid response for
plant and animal diseases and pests; and
(3) agricultural education including,
but not limited to, challenge grants awarded by the Minnesota Agriculture
Education Leadership Council, farm business management, mentoring programs,
graduate debt forgiveness, and high school programs.
Subd. 3. Fund. An agriculture research, education, extension,
and technology transfer fund is created in the state treasury. The fund consists of money received in the
form of gifts, grants, reimbursement, or appropriations from any source for any
of the purposes provided in subdivision 2, and any interest or earnings of the
fund. Money in the fund is appropriated
to the commissioner of agriculture for the purposes listed under subdivision 2.
Sec. 31. [41A.15]
DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision 1. Scope. For the purposes of sections 41A.15 to
41A.19, the terms defined in this section have the meanings given them.
Subd. 2. Advanced
biofuel. "Advanced
biofuel" has the meaning given in section 239.051, subdivision 1a.
Subd. 3. Biomass
thermal production. "Biomass
thermal production" means the generation of energy for commercial heat or
industrial process heat from a cellulosic material or other material composed
of forestry or agricultural feedstocks for a new or expanding capacity facility
or a facility that is displacing existing use of fossil fuel after the
effective date of this section.
Subd. 4. Cellulosic
biomass. "Cellulosic
biomass" means material primarily made up of cellulose, hemicellulose, or
lingnin, or a combination of those ingredients.
Subd. 5. Cellulosic
sugar. "Cellulosic
sugar" means sugar derived from cellulosic biomass from agricultural or
forestry resources.
Subd. 6. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of agriculture.
Subd. 7. Cover
crops. "Cover
crops" means grasses, legumes, forbs, or other herbaceous plants that are
known to be noninvasive and not listed as a noxious weed in Minnesota and that
are either interseeded into living cash crops or planted on agricultural fields
during fallow periods for seasonal cover and conservation purposes.
Subd. 8. MMbtu. "MMbtu" means 1,000,000
British thermal units.
Subd. 9. Perennial
crops. "Perennial
crops" means agriculturally produced plants that are known to be
noninvasive and not listed as a noxious weed in Minnesota and that have a life
cycle of at least three years at the location where the plants are being
cultivated. Biomass from alfalfa
produced in a two-year rotation shall be considered a perennial crop.
Subd. 10. Renewable
chemical. "Renewable
chemical" means a chemical with biobased content as defined in section
41A.105, subdivision 1a.
Sec. 32. [41A.16]
ADVANCED BIOFUEL PRODUCTION INCENTIVE.
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment
under this section must source at least 80 percent raw materials from Minnesota. If a facility is sited 50 miles or less from
the state border, raw materials may be sourced from within a 100-mile radius. Raw materials must be from agricultural or
forestry sources or from solid waste. The
facility must be located in Minnesota, must begin production at a specific
location by June 30, 2025, and must not begin operating above 95,000 MMbtu of
annual biofuel production before July 1, 2015.
Eligible facilities include existing
companies and facilities that are adding advanced biofuel production capacity,
or retrofitting existing capacity, as well as new companies and
facilities. Production of conventional
corn ethanol and conventional biodiesel is not eligible. Eligible advanced biofuel facilities must
produce at least 95,000 MMbtu a year.
(b) No payments shall be made for
advanced biofuel production that occurs after June 30, 2035, for those eligible
biofuel producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of advanced
biofuel shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments under this
section to an advanced biofuel facility at a different location.
(d) A producer that ceases production
for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the
producer resumes production.
(e) Renewable chemical production for
which payment has been received under section 41A.17, and biomass thermal
production for which payment has been received under section 41A.18, are not
eligible for payment under this section.
Subd. 2. Payment amounts; limits. (a) The commissioner shall make payments to eligible producers of advanced biofuel. The amount of the payment for each eligible producer's annual production is $2.1053 per MMbtu for advanced biofuel production from cellulosic biomass, and $1.053 per MMbtu for advanced biofuel production from sugar or starch at a specific location for ten years after the start of production.
(b) Total payments under this section
to an eligible biofuel producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount
necessary for 2,850,000 MMbtu of biofuel production. Total payments under this section to all
eligible biofuel producers in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount necessary
for 17,100,000 MMbtu of biofuel production.
(c) For purposes of this section, an
entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one advanced biofuel
facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Subd. 3. Perennial
and cover crops required. To
be eligible for payment under this section, a producer that produces advanced
biofuel from agricultural cellulosic biomass other than corn kernel fiber or
biogas must derive at least the following portions of the producer's total
eligible MMbtus from perennial crop or cover crop biomass:
(1) ten percent during the first two
years of eligible production;
(2) 30 percent during the third and
fourth years of eligible production; and
(3) 50 percent during the fifth through
tenth years of eligible production.
Subd. 4. Cellulosic
forestry biomass requirements. All
forestry-derived cellulosic biomass must be produced using Minnesota state
biomass harvesting guidelines or the equivalent. All biomass from brushlands must be produced
using Minnesota brushland harvesting biomass harvest guidelines or the
equivalent. Forestry-derived cellulosic
biomass that comes from land parcels greater than 160 acres must be certified
by the Forest Stewardship Council, Sustainable Forestry Initiative, or American
Tree Farm System. Uncertified land from
parcels of 160 acres or less and federal land must be harvested by a logger who
has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota logger
education program or the equivalent and have a forest stewardship plan.
Subd. 5. Agricultural
cellulosic biomass sourcing plan. (a)
An eligible producer who utilizes agricultural cellulosic biomass must submit a
responsible biomass sourcing plan for approval by the commissioner prior to
applying for payments under this section.
The commissioner shall make the plan publicly available. The plan must:
(1) provide a detailed explanation of
how agricultural cellulosic biomass will be produced and managed in a way that
preserves soil quality, does not increase soil and nutrient runoff, avoids
introduction of harmful invasive species, limits negative impacts on wildlife
habitat, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions;
(2) include the producer's approach to
verifying that biomass suppliers are following the plan;
(3) discuss how new technologies and practices that are not yet commercially viable may be encouraged and adopted during the life of the facility, and how the producer will encourage continuous improvement during the life of the project;
(4) include specific numeric goals and
timelines for making progress;
(5) require agronomic practices that
result in a positive Natural Resources Conservation Service Soil Conditioning
Index score for acres from which biomass from corn stover will be harvested;
and
(6) include biennial soil sampling to
verify maintained or increased levels of soil organic matter.
(b) An eligible producer who utilizes
agricultural cellulosic biomass and receives payments under this section shall submit an annual report on the producer's
responsible biomass sourcing plan to the commissioner by January 15 each
year. The report must include data on
progress made by the producer in meeting specific goals laid out in the plan. The commissioner shall make the report
publicly available. The commissioner
shall perform an annual review of submitted reports and may make a
determination that the producer is not following the plan based on the reports
submitted. The commissioner may take
appropriate steps, including reducing or ceasing payments, until the producer
is in compliance with the plan.
Subd. 6. Claims. (a) By the last day of October,
January, April, and July, each eligible biofuel producer shall file a claim for
payment for advanced biofuel production during the preceding three calendar
months. An eligible biofuel producer
that files a claim under this subdivision shall include a statement of the
eligible biofuel producer's total advanced biofuel production in Minnesota
during the quarter covered by the claim.
For each claim and
statement
of total advanced biofuel production filed under this subdivision, the volume
of advanced biofuel production must be examined by an independent certified
public accountant licensed under chapter 326A, in accordance with Statements on
Standards for Attestation Engagements established by the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants.
(b) The commissioner must issue
payments by November 15, February 15, May 15, and August 15. A separate payment must be made for each
claim filed.
Sec. 33. [41A.17]
RENEWABLE CHEMICAL PRODUCTION INCENTIVE.
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment
under this program must source at least 80 percent biobased content, as defined
in section 41A.105, subdivision 1a, clause (1), from Minnesota. If a facility is sited 50 miles or less from
the state border, biobased content must be sourced from within a 100-mile
radius. Biobased content must be from
agricultural or forestry sources or from solid waste. The facility must be located in Minnesota,
must begin production at a specific location by June 30, 2025, and must not
begin production of 3,000,000 pounds of chemicals annually before January 1,
2015. Eligible facilities include
existing companies and facilities that are adding production capacity, or
retrofitting existing capacity, as well as new companies and facilities. Eligible renewable chemical facilities must
produce at least 3,000,000 pounds per year.
Renewable chemicals produced through processes that are fully commercial
before January 1, 2000, are not eligible.
(b) No payments shall be made for
renewable chemical production that occurs after June 30, 2035, for those
eligible renewable chemical producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of renewable
chemicals shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments under this
section to a renewable chemical facility at a different location.
(d) A producer that ceases production
for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the
producer resumes production.
(e) Advanced biofuel production for
which payment has been received under section 41A.16, and biomass thermal
production for which payment has been received under section 41A.18, are not
eligible for payment under this section.
Subd. 2. Payment amounts; bonus; limits. (a) The commissioner shall make payments to eligible producers of renewable chemicals located in the state. The amount of the payment for each producer's annual production is $0.03 per pound of sugar-derived renewable chemical, $0.03 per pound of cellulosic sugar, and $0.06 per pound of cellulosic-derived renewable chemical produced at a specific location for ten years after the start of production.
(b) An eligible facility producing
renewable chemicals using agricultural cellulosic biomass is eligible for a 20
percent bonus payment for each MMbtu produced from agricultural biomass that is
derived from perennial crop or cover crop biomass.
(c) Total payments under this section
to an eligible renewable chemical producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the
amount necessary for 99,999,999 pounds of renewable chemical production. Total payments under this section to all
eligible renewable chemical producers in a fiscal year may not exceed the
amount necessary for 599,999,999 pounds of renewable chemical production.
(d) For purposes of this section, an
entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one renewable chemical
production facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Subd. 3. Cellulosic
biomass requirements. All
forestry-derived cellulosic biomass must be produced using Minnesota state
biomass harvesting guidelines or the equivalent. All cellulosic biomass from brushlands must
be produced using Minnesota brushland harvesting biomass harvest guidelines or
the equivalent. Forestry-derived
cellulosic biomass that comes from land parcels greater than 160 acres must be
certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, Sustainable Forestry Initiative,
or American Tree Farm System. Uncertified
land from parcels of 160 acres or less and federal land must be harvested by a
logger who has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota
logger education program or the equivalent and have a forest stewardship plan.
Subd. 4. Agricultural
cellulosic biomass sourcing plan. (a)
An eligible producer who utilizes agricultural cellulosic biomass must submit a
responsible biomass sourcing plan to the commissioner prior to applying for
payments under this section. The plan
must:
(1) provide a detailed explanation of
how agricultural cellulosic biomass will be produced and managed in a way that
preserves soil quality, does not increase soil and nutrient runoff, avoids
introduction of harmful invasive species, limits negative impacts on wildlife
habitat, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions;
(2) include the producer's approach to
verifying that biomass suppliers are following the plan;
(3) discuss how new technologies and
practices that are not yet commercially viable may be encouraged and adopted
during the life of the facility, and how the producer will encourage continuous
improvement during the life of the project; and
(4) include specific numeric goals and
timelines for making progress.
(b) An eligible producer who utilizes
agricultural cellulosic biomass and receives payments under this section shall
submit an annual report on the producer's responsible biomass sourcing plan to the commissioner by January 15 each year. The report must include data on progress made
by the producer in meeting specific goals laid out in the plan. The commissioner shall make the report publicly
available. The commissioner shall
perform an annual review of submitted reports and may make a determination that
the producer is not following the plan based on the reports submitted. The commissioner may take appropriate steps,
including reducing or ceasing payments, until the producer is in compliance
with the plan.
Subd. 5. Claims. (a) By the last day of October,
January, April, and July, each eligible renewable chemical producer shall file
a claim for payment for renewable chemical production during the preceding
three calendar months. An eligible
renewable chemical producer that files a claim under this subdivision shall
include a statement of the eligible producer's total renewable chemical
production in Minnesota during the quarter covered by the claim. For each claim and statement of total
renewable chemical production filed under this paragraph, the volume of
renewable chemical production must be examined by an independent certified
public accountant licensed under chapter 326A, in accordance with Statements on
Standards for Attestation Engagements established by the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants.
(b) The commissioner must issue payments by November 15, February 15, May 15, and August 15. A separate payment must be made for each claim filed.
Sec. 34. [41A.18]
BIOMASS THERMAL PRODUCTION INCENTIVE.
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment
under this section must source at least 80 percent raw materials from Minnesota. If a facility is sited 50 miles or less from
the state border, raw materials should be sourced from within a 100-mile radius. Raw materials must be from agricultural or
forestry sources. The facility must be
located in Minnesota, must have begun production at a specific location by June
30, 2025, and must not begin before July 1, 2015. Eligible facilities include existing
companies and facilities that are adding production capacity, or retrofitting
existing capacity, as well as new companies and facilities. Eligible biomass thermal production
facilities must produce at least 1,000 MMbtu per year.
(b)
No payments shall be made for biomass thermal production that occurs after June
30, 2035, for those eligible biomass thermal producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of biomass
thermal production shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments
under this section to a biomass thermal production facility at a different
location.
(d) A producer that ceases production
for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the
producer resumes production.
(e) Biofuel production for which
payment has been received under section 41A.16, and renewable chemical
production for which payment has been received under section 41A.17, are not
eligible for payment under this section.
Subd. 2. Payment
amounts; bonus; limits; blending. (a)
The commissioner shall make payments to eligible producers of biomass thermal
located in the state. The amount of the
payment for each producer's annual production is $5.00 per MMbtu of biomass
thermal production produced at a specific location for ten years after the
start of production.
(b) An eligible facility producing
biomass thermal using agricultural cellulosic biomass is eligible for a 20
percent bonus payment for each MMbtu produced from agricultural biomass that is
derived from perennial crop or cover crop biomass.
(c) Total payments under this section
to an eligible thermal producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount
necessary for 30,000 MMbtu of thermal production. Total payments under this section to all
eligible thermal producers in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount necessary
for 150,000 MMbtu of total thermal production.
(d) An eligible facility may blend a
cellulosic feedstock with other fuels in the biomass thermal production
facility, but only the percentage attributable to cellulosic material is
eligible to receive payment.
(e) For purposes of this section, an entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one biomass thermal production facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Subd. 3. Cellulosic biomass requirements. All forestry-derived cellulosic biomass must be produced using Minnesota state biomass harvesting guidelines or the equivalent. All biomass from brushland must be produced using Minnesota brushland harvesting biomass guidelines or the equivalent. Forestry-derived cellulosic biomass that comes from land parcels greater than 160 acres must be certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, or American Tree Farm. Uncertified land from parcels of 160 acres or less and federal land must be harvested by a logger who has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota logger education program or the equivalent and have a forest stewardship plan.
Subd. 4. Agricultural
cellulosic biomass sourcing plan. (a)
An eligible producer who utilizes agricultural cellulosic biomass must submit a
responsible biomass sourcing plan to the commissioner prior to applying for
payments under this section. The plan
must:
(1) provide a detailed explanation of
how agricultural cellulosic biomass will be produced and managed in a way that
preserves soil quality, does not increase soil and nutrient runoff, avoids
introduction of harmful invasive species, limits negative impacts on wildlife
habitat, and reduces greenhouse gas emissions;
(2) include the producer's approach to
verifying that biomass suppliers are following the plan;
(3)
discuss how new technologies and practices that are not yet commercially viable
may be encouraged and adopted during the life of the facility, and how the
producer will encourage continuous improvement during the life of the project;
and
(4) include specific numeric goals and
timelines for making progress.
(b) An eligible producer who utilizes
agricultural cellulosic biomass and receives payments under this section shall
submit an annual report on the producer's
responsible biomass sourcing plan to the commissioner by January 15 each
year. The report must include data on
progress made by the producer in meeting specific goals laid out in the
plan. The commissioner shall make
the report publicly available. The
commissioner shall perform an annual review of submitted reports and may make a
determination that the producer is not following the plan based on the reports
submitted. The commissioner may take
appropriate steps, including reducing or ceasing payments, until the producer
is in compliance with the plan.
Subd. 5. Claims. (a) By the last day of October,
January, April, and July, each producer shall file a claim for payment for
biomass thermal production during the preceding three calendar months. A producer that files a claim under this
subdivision shall include a statement of the producer's total biomass thermal
production in Minnesota during the quarter covered by the claim. For each claim and statement of total biomass
thermal production filed under this paragraph, the volume of biomass thermal
production must be examined by an independent certified public accountant
licensed under chapter 326A, in accordance with Statements on Standards for
Attestation Engagements established by the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants.
(b) The commissioner must issue payments
by November 15, February 15, May 15, and August 15. A separate payment shall be made for each
claim filed.
Sec. 35. [41A.19]
REPORT; INCENTIVE PROGRAMS.
By January 15 each year, the
commissioner shall report on the incentive programs under sections 41A.16,
41A.17, and 41A.18 to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
environment and agriculture policy and finance.
The report shall include information on production and incentive
expenditures under the programs.
Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.03, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Application
fee. The authority may impose a
reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each application submitted for a
beginning farmer loan or a seller-sponsored loan. The application fee is initially $50. The authority may review the fee annually and
make adjustments as necessary. The fee
must be deposited in the state treasury and credited to an account in the
special revenue fund. Money in the
account is appropriated to the commissioner for administrative expenses of the
beginning farmer and seller-sponsored loan programs the Rural Finance
Authority administrative account established in subdivision 7.
Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.03, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Rural
Finance Authority administrative account.
There is established in the agricultural fund a Rural Finance
Authority administrative account. Money
in the account, including interest, is appropriated to the commissioner of
agriculture for the administrative expenses of the loan programs administered
by the Rural Finance Authority.
Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.04, subdivision 17, is amended to read:
Subd. 17. Application and origination fee. The authority may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each application and an origination fee for each loan issued under the loan restructuring program. The origination fee is 1.5 percent of the authority's participation interest in the loan and the application fee is $50. The
authority
may review the fees annually and make adjustments as necessary. The fees must be deposited in the state
treasury and credited to an account in the special revenue fund. Money in the account is appropriated to the
commissioner for administrative expenses of the loan restructuring program the
Rural Finance Authority administrative account established in section 41B.03.
Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.043, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Application
and origination fee. The authority
may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each application
submitted for a participation issued under the agricultural improvement loan
program. The application fee is
initially $50. The authority may review
the fees annually and make adjustments as necessary. The fees must be deposited in the state
treasury and credited to an account in the special revenue fund. Money in this account is appropriated to the
commissioner for administrative expenses of the agricultural improvement loan
program the Rural Finance Authority administrative account established
in section 41B.03.
Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.045, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Specifications. No loan may be made to refinance an
existing debt. Each loan
participation must be secured by a mortgage on real property and such other
security as the authority may require.
Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.045, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Application
and origination fee. The authority
may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each application for
a loan participation and an origination fee for each loan issued under the
livestock expansion loan program. The
origination fee initially shall be set at 1.5 percent and the application fee
at $50. The authority may review the
fees annually and make adjustments as necessary. The fees must be deposited in the state
treasury and credited to an account in the special revenue fund. Money in this account is appropriated to the
commissioner for administrative expenses of the livestock expansion loan
program the Rural Finance Authority administrative account established
in section 41B.03.
Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.046, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Loans. (a) The authority may participate in a stock loan with an eligible lender to a farmer who is eligible under subdivision 4. Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $40,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may differ from the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan, but the authority's interest rate must not exceed 50 percent of the lender's interest rate.
(b) No more than 95 percent of the purchase price of the stock may be financed under this program.
(c) Security for stock loans must be the stock purchased, a personal note executed by the borrower, and whatever other security is required by the eligible lender or the authority.
(d) The authority may impose a reasonable
nonrefundable application fee for each application for a stock loan. The authority may review the fee annually and
make adjustments as necessary. The
application fee is initially $50. Application
fees received by the authority must be deposited in the revolving loan
account established in section 41B.06 Rural Finance Authority
administrative account established in section 41B.03.
(e) Stock loans under this program will be made using money in the revolving loan account established in section 41B.06.
(f) The authority may not grant stock loans in a cumulative amount exceeding $2,000,000 for the financing of stock purchases in any one cooperative.
(g) Repayments of financial assistance under this section, including principal and interest, must be deposited into the revolving loan account established in section 41B.06.
Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.047, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The authority shall establish and implement a disaster recovery loan program to help farmers:
(1) clean up, repair, or replace farm
structures and septic and water systems, as well as replace seed, other crop
inputs, feed, and livestock, when damaged by high winds, hail, tornado, or
flood; or
(2) purchase watering systems, irrigation
systems, and other drought mitigation systems and practices when drought is the
cause of the purchase.; or
(3) restore farmland.
Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.047, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Loans. (a) The authority may participate in a disaster recovery loan with an eligible lender to a farmer who is eligible under subdivision 3. Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $50,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may differ from the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan, but the authority's interest rate must not exceed four percent.
(b) Standards for loan amortization shall be set by the Rural Finance Authority not to exceed ten years.
(c) Security for the disaster recovery loans must be a personal note executed by the borrower and whatever other security is required by the eligible lender or the authority.
(d) The authority may impose a reasonable
nonrefundable application fee for a disaster recovery loan. The authority may review the fee annually and
make adjustments as necessary. The application
fee is initially $50. Application fees
received by the authority must be deposited in the revolving loan account
established under section 41B.06 Rural Finance Authority administrative
account established in section 41B.03.
(e) Disaster recovery loans under this program will be made using money in the revolving loan account established under section 41B.06.
(f) Repayments of financial assistance under this section, including principal and interest, must be deposited into the revolving loan account established under section 41B.06.
Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.048, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Loans. (a) The authority may disburse loans through a fiscal agent to farmers and agricultural landowners who are eligible under subdivision 5. The total accumulative loan principal must not exceed $75,000 per loan.
(b) The fiscal agent may impose a loan origination fee in the amount of one percent of the total approved loan. This fee is to be paid by the borrower to the fiscal agent at the time of loan closing.
(c) The loan may be disbursed over a period not to exceed 12 years.
(d) A borrower may receive loans, depending on the availability of funds, for planted areas up to 160 acres for up to:
(1) the total amount necessary for establishment of the crop;
(2) the total amount of maintenance costs, including weed control, during the first three years; and
(3) 70 percent of the estimated value of one year's growth of the crop for years four through 12.
(e) Security for the loan must be the crop, a personal note executed by the borrower, an interest in the land upon which the crop is growing, and whatever other security is required by the fiscal agent or the authority. All recording fees must be paid by the borrower.
(f) The authority may prescribe forms and establish an application process for applicants to apply for a loan.
(g) The authority may impose a reasonable,
nonrefundable application fee for each application for a loan under this
program. The application fee is
initially $50. Application fees received
by the authority must be deposited in the revolving loan account established
under section 41B.06 Rural Finance Authority administrative account
established in section 41B.03.
(h) Loans under the program must be made using money in the revolving loan account established under section 41B.06.
(i) All repayments of financial assistance granted under this section, including principal and interest, must be deposited into the revolving loan account established under section 41B.06.
(j) The interest payable on loans made by the authority for the agroforestry loan program must, if funded by revenue bond proceeds, be at a rate not less than the rate on the revenue bonds, and may be established at a higher rate necessary to pay costs associated with the issuance of the revenue bonds and a proportionate share of the cost of administering the program. The interest payable on loans for the agroforestry loan program funded from sources other than revenue bond proceeds must be at a rate determined by the authority.
(k) Loan principal balance outstanding plus all assessed interest must be repaid within 120 days of harvest, but no later than 15 years from planting.
Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.049, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Loans. (a) The authority may make a direct loan or participate in a loan with an eligible lender to a farmer who is eligible under subdivision 3. Repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may differ from repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan. Loans made under this section must be no-interest loans.
(b) Application for a direct loan or a loan participation must be made on forms prescribed by the authority.
(c) Standards for loan amortization shall be set by the Rural Finance Authority not to exceed ten years.
(d) Security for the loans must be a personal note executed by the borrower and whatever other security is required by the eligible lender or the authority.
(e) No loan proceeds may be used to refinance a debt existing prior to application.
(f)
The authority may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each
application for a direct loan or a loan participation. The authority may review the application fees
annually and make adjustments as necessary.
The application fee is initially set at $100 for a loan under
subdivision 1. The fees received by the
authority must be deposited in the revolving loan account established in
section 41B.06 Rural Finance Authority administrative account
established in section 41B.03.
Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.055, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Loans. (a) The authority may participate in a livestock equipment loan equal to 90 percent of the purchased equipment value with an eligible lender to a farmer who is eligible under subdivision 2. Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $40,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may differ from the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan, but the authority's interest rate must not exceed three percent. The authority may review the interest annually and make adjustments as necessary.
(b) Standards for loan amortization must be set by the Rural Finance Authority and must not exceed ten years.
(c) Security for a livestock equipment loan must be a personal note executed by the borrower and whatever other security is required by the eligible lender or the authority.
(d) Refinancing of existing debt is not an eligible purpose.
(e) The authority may impose a reasonable,
nonrefundable application fee for a livestock equipment loan. The authority may review the fee annually and
make adjustments as necessary. The
initial application fee is $50. Application
fees received by the authority must be deposited in the revolving loan
account established in section 41B.06 Rural Finance Authority
administrative account established in section 41B.03.
(f) Loans under this program must be made using money in the revolving loan account established in section 41B.06.
Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.056, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) The definitions in this subdivision apply to this section.
(b) "Intermediary" means any lending institution or other organization of a for-profit or nonprofit nature that is in good standing with the state of Minnesota that has the appropriate business structure and trained personnel suitable to providing efficient disbursement of loan funds and the servicing and collection of loans.
(c) "Specialty crops" means agricultural crops, such as annuals, flowers, perennials, and other horticultural products, that are intensively cultivated.
(d) "Eligible livestock" means poultry
that has been allowed access to the outside, sheep, or goats beef
cattle, dairy cattle, swine, poultry, goats, mules, farmed cervidae, ratitae,
bison, sheep, horses, and llamas.
Sec. 49. [41B.057]
FARM OPPORTUNITY LOAN PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The authority shall establish a farm
opportunity loan program to provide loans that enable farmers to:
(1) add value to crops or livestock
produced in Minnesota;
(2)
adopt best management practices that emphasize sufficiency and
self-sufficiency;
(3) reduce or improve management of
agricultural inputs resulting in environmental improvements; or
(4) increase production of on-farm
energy.
Subd. 2. Loan
criteria. (a) The farm
opportunity loan program shall provide loans for purchase of new or used
equipment and installation of equipment for projects that make environmental
improvements and enhance farm profitability.
The loan program shall also be used to add value to crops or livestock
produced in Minnesota by, but not limited to, initiating or expanding livestock
product processing; purchasing equipment to initiate, upgrade, or modernize
value-added agricultural businesses; or increasing farmers' processing and
aggregating capacity facilitating entry into farm-to-institution and other
markets. Eligible loan uses do not
include expenses related to seeds, fertilizer, fuel, or other operating
expenses.
(b) The authority may impose a
reasonable, nonrefundable application fee for a farm opportunity loan. The authority may review the fee annually and
make adjustments as necessary. The
initial application fee is $50. Application
fees received by the authority must be deposited in the Rural Finance Authority
administrative account established in section 41B.03.
(c) Loans may only be made to Minnesota
residents engaged in farming. Standards
for loan amortization must be set by the Rural Finance Authority and must not
exceed ten years.
(d) The borrower must show the ability
to repay the loan.
(e) Refinancing of existing debt is not
an eligible expense.
(f) Loans under this program must be
made using money in the revolving loan account established in section 41B.06.
Subd. 3. Loan
participation. The authority
may participate in a farm opportunity loan with an eligible lender, as defined
in section 41B.02, subdivision 8, to a farmer or a group of farmers on joint
projects who are eligible under subdivision 2, paragraph (c), and who are
actively engaged in farming. Participation
is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $45,000 per
individual, whichever is less. For loans
to a group made up of four or more individuals, participation is limited to 45
percent of the principal amount of the loan or $180,000, whichever is less. The interest rate on the loans must not
exceed six percent.
Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 41B.06, is amended to read:
41B.06
RURAL FINANCE AUTHORITY REVOLVING LOAN ACCOUNT.
There is established in the rural finance
administration fund a Rural Finance Authority revolving loan account that is
eligible to receive appropriations and the transfer of loan funds from other
programs. All repayments of financial
assistance granted from this account, including principal and interest, must be
deposited into this account. Interest
earned on money in the account accrues to the account, and the money in the
account is appropriated to the commissioner of agriculture for purposes of the
Rural Finance Authority livestock equipment, methane digester, disaster
recovery, value-added agricultural product, agroforestry, and
agricultural microloan, and farm opportunity loan programs, including
costs incurred by the authority to establish and administer the programs.
Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 135A.52, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Farm
business management. Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities campuses that offer farm business management
may specify space availability in the delivery of farm business management
courses.
Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 500.24, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Reports. (a) The chief executive officer of every pension or investment fund, corporation, limited partnership, limited liability company, or entity that is seeking to qualify for an exemption from the commissioner, and the trustee of a family farm trust that holds any interest in agricultural land or land used for the breeding, feeding, pasturing, growing, or raising of livestock, dairy or poultry, or products thereof, or land used for the production of agricultural crops or fruit or other horticultural products, other than a bona fide encumbrance taken for purposes of security, or which is engaged in farming or proposing to commence farming in this state after May 20, 1973, shall file with the commissioner a report containing the following information and documents:
(1) the name of the pension or investment fund, corporation, limited partnership, or limited liability company and its place of incorporation, certification, or registration;
(2) the address of the pension or investment plan headquarters or of the registered office of the corporation in this state, the name and address of its registered agent in this state and, in the case of a foreign corporation, limited partnership, or limited liability company, the address of its principal office in its place of incorporation, certification, or registration;
(3) the acreage and location listed by quarter-quarter section, township, and county of each lot or parcel of agricultural land or land used for the keeping or feeding of poultry in this state owned or leased by the pension or investment fund, limited partnership, corporation, or limited liability company;
(4) the names and addresses of the officers, administrators, directors, or trustees of the pension or investment fund, or of the officers, shareholders owning more than ten percent of the stock, including the percent of stock owned by each such shareholder, the members of the board of directors of the corporation, and the members of the limited liability company, and the general and limited partners and the percentage of interest in the partnership by each partner;
(5) the farm products which the pension or investment fund, limited partnership, corporation, or limited liability company produces or intends to produce on its agricultural land;
(6) with the first report, a copy of the title to the property where the farming operations are or will occur indicating the particular exception claimed under subdivision 3; and
(7) with the first or second report, a copy of the conservation plan proposed by the soil and water conservation district, and with subsequent reports a statement of whether the conservation plan was implemented.
The report of a corporation, trust, limited liability company, or partnership seeking to qualify hereunder as a family farm corporation, an authorized farm corporation, an authorized livestock farm corporation, a family farm partnership, an authorized farm partnership, a family farm limited liability company, an authorized farm limited liability company, or a family farm trust or under an exemption from the commissioner shall contain the following additional information: the number of shares, partnership interests, or governance and financial rights owned by persons or current beneficiaries of a family farm trust residing on the farm or actively engaged in farming, or their relatives within the third degree of kindred according to the rules of the civil law or their spouses; the name, address, and number of shares owned by each shareholder, partnership interests owned by each partner or governance and financial rights owned by each member, and a statement as to percentage of gross receipts of the corporation derived
from rent, royalties, dividends, interest, and annuities. No pension or investment fund, limited partnership, corporation, or limited liability company shall commence farming in this state until the commissioner has inspected the report and certified that its proposed operations comply with the provisions of this section.
(b) Every pension or investment fund, limited partnership, trust, corporation, or limited liability company as described in paragraph (a) shall, prior to April 15 of each year, file with the commissioner a report containing the information required in paragraph (a), based on its operations in the preceding calendar year and its status at the end of the year. A pension or investment fund, limited partnership, corporation, or limited liability company that does not file the report by April 15 must pay a $500 civil penalty. The penalty is a lien on the land being farmed under subdivision 3 until the penalty is paid.
(c) The commissioner may, for good cause shown, issue a written waiver or reduction of the civil penalty for failure to make a timely filing of the annual report required by this subdivision. The waiver or reduction is final and conclusive with respect to the civil penalty, and may not be reopened or modified by an officer, employee, or agent of the state, except upon a showing of fraud or malfeasance or misrepresentation of a material fact. The report required under paragraph (b) must be completed prior to a reduction or waiver under this paragraph. The commissioner may enter into an agreement under this paragraph only once for each corporation or partnership.
(d) All reports required by paragraph
(a) shall include a filing fee of $15. The
fee must be deposited in the state treasury and credited to an account in the
agricultural fund. Money in the account,
including interest, is appropriated to the commissioner for the administrative
expenses of this section.
(d) (e) Failure to file a
required report or the willful filing of false information is a gross
misdemeanor.
Sec. 53. Laws 2014, chapter 312, article 12, section 3, is amended to read:
Sec. 3. AGRICULTURE. |
|
$-0- |
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$2,750,000 |
$2,000,000 in 2015 is for a grant to Second
Harvest Heartland on behalf of the six Feeding America food banks that serve
Minnesota to compensate agricultural producers and processors for costs
incurred to harvest and package for transfer surplus fruits, vegetables, or
other agricultural commodities that would otherwise go unharvested or,
be discarded, or be sold in a secondary market. Surplus commodities must be distributed
statewide to food shelves and other charitable organizations that are eligible
to receive food from the food banks. Surplus
food acquired under this appropriation must be from Minnesota producers and
processors. Second Harvest Heartland
must report when required by, and in the form prescribed by, the commissioner. For fiscal year 2015, Second Harvest
Heartland may use up to 11 percent of any grant received for administrative
expenses and up to four percent of the grant for transportation expenses. For fiscal years 2016 and 2017, Second
Harvest Heartland may use up to five percent of any grant received for
administrative expenses. This is a
onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2017.
The commissioner shall examine how other states are implementing the industrial hemp research authority provided in Public Law 113-79 and gauge the interest of Minnesota higher education institutions. No later than January 15, 2015, the
commissioner must report the information and items for legislative consideration to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance.
$350,000 in 2015 is for an increase in retail food handler inspections.
$200,000 in 2015 is added to the appropriation in Laws 2013, chapter 114, article 1, section 3, subdivision 4, for distribution to the state's county fairs. This is a onetime appropriation.
$200,000 in 2015 is for a grant as determined by the commissioner to a public higher education institution to research porcine epidemic diarrhea virus. This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2017.
Sec. 54. LIVESTOCK
INDUSTRY STUDY.
The commissioner of agriculture must
identify causes of the relative growth or decline in the number of head of
poultry and livestock produced in Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Wisconsin, and Nebraska over the last ten years, including but not limited to
the impact of nuisance conditions and lawsuits filed against poultry or
livestock farms. No later than February
1, 2016, the commissioner must report findings by poultry and livestock sector
and provide recommendations on how to strengthen and expand Minnesota animal
agriculture to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture
policy and finance.
Sec. 55. FEASIBILITY
STUDY; IMPORTING BAIT FISH FOR RESALE.
The commissioner of agriculture shall
conduct a study to assess the feasibility of a Minnesota company with a valid
importation permit under Minnesota Statutes, section 97C.515, procuring
health-certified, farm-raised bait fish from an out-of-state facility and
transporting the fish directly to a Minnesota facility for the purpose of
resale. The work group also must study
how to increase Minnesota production of the bait fish species that would
otherwise be imported from producers in other states. The commissioner shall appoint a work group
of seven individuals to conduct the study, including representatives of the
Departments of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Explore Minnesota, and
private aquaculture, a University of Minnesota aquatic invasive species
specialist, a Minnesota aquaculture extension agent, and a United States Fish
and Wildlife aquatic invasive species specialist. The work group shall report the study to the
legislative policy and finance committees and divisions with jurisdiction over
agriculture, environment, and natural resources by February 1, 2016.
Sec. 56. CORRECTIONAL
FACILITY VOCATIONAL TRAINING PILOT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Pilot
program. The commissioner of
agriculture must coordinate a pilot program operated by the Northeast Regional
Corrections Center to train inmates for careers as meat cutters upon release. The commissioner must facilitate program
development and ensure that the program prepares inmates to meet applicable
food safety and licensure requirements.
Subd. 2. Program
development. In facilitating
development of the pilot program, the commissioner must consult with the
commissioner of employment and economic development and a representative of
each of the following organizations:
(1) Northeast Regional Corrections
Center; and
(2) United Food and Commercial Workers.
Subd. 3. Report
required. No later than
February 1, 2017, the commissioner must report on the progress and outcomes of
the program to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture,
economic development, higher education, and public safety.
Subd. 4. Expiration. This section expires on June 30, 2017.
Sec. 57. URBAN
AGRICULTURE DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL.
The commissioner of agriculture must
convene interested stakeholders and develop a proposal to effectively and efficiently
promote urban agriculture in Minnesota cities.
For purposes of this section, "urban agriculture" means
producing agricultural plants, poultry, or livestock on public or private
property within city limits. No later
than January 15, 2016, the commissioner must report to the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance and submit
proposed legislation that includes a new definition of urban agriculture if the
commissioner and stakeholders determine that a different definition more
accurately defines urban agriculture.
Sec. 58. BALANCES
TRANSFERRED; ACCOUNTS ABOLISHED.
The balances in the accounts created
under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41B.03, subdivision 6; 41B.04, subdivision
17; 41B.043, subdivision 3; and 41B.045, subdivision 4, are transferred to the
Rural Finance Authority administrative account established under Minnesota
Statutes, section 41B.03, subdivision 7, and the original accounts are
abolished.
The balance in the account created under
Minnesota Statutes, section 17.115, is transferred to the Rural Finance
Authority revolving loan account established under Minnesota Statutes, section
41B.06, and the original account is abolished.
Sec. 59. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections
17.115; 28A.15, subdivisions 9 and 10; and 116V.03, are repealed."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to agriculture; establishing a budget for agriculture; appropriating money for agriculture, animal health, and agricultural utilization research; making policy and technical changes to various agricultural related provisions, including provisions related to pesticide control, plant protection, nursery law, seeds, dairy, food handlers, food, farmland, farming, and loans; modifying license exclusions for the direct sale of certain prepared food; establishing the Agriculture Research, Education, Extension, and Technology Transfer Board; providing incentive payments; requiring studies; requiring reports; providing a vocational training pilot program; establishing the farm opportunity loan program; modifying fees and surcharges; creating accounts; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 13.643, subdivision 1; 18B.01, subdivisions 28, 29; 18B.05, subdivision 1; 18B.32, subdivision 1; 18B.33, subdivision 1; 18B.34, subdivision 1; 18C.425, subdivision 6; 18C.70, subdivision 2; 18G.10, subdivisions 3, 4, 5; 18H.02, subdivision 20, by adding subdivisions; 18H.06, subdivision 2; 18H.07; 18H.17; 21.89, subdivision 2; 21.891, subdivisions 2, 5; 25.341, subdivision 2; 25.39, subdivisions 1, 1a; 28A.03, by adding a subdivision; 32.075; 32.105; 41B.03, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 41B.04, subdivision 17; 41B.043, subdivision 3; 41B.045, subdivisions 3, 4; 41B.046, subdivision 5; 41B.047, subdivisions 1, 4; 41B.048, subdivision 6; 41B.049, subdivision 4; 41B.055, subdivision 3; 41B.056, subdivision 2; 41B.06; 135A.52, by adding a subdivision; 500.24, subdivision 4; Laws 2014, chapter 312, article 12, section 3; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 18C; 28A; 41A; 41B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 17.115; 28A.15, subdivisions 9, 10; 116V.03."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The report was adopted.
INTRODUCTION
AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The following House Files were introduced:
Davids introduced:
H. F. No. 2218, A bill for an act relating to taxation; tobacco; changing the tax rate for nicotine solution used in electronic cigarettes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, sections 297F.01, subdivision 19, by adding subdivisions; 297F.05, subdivision 3, by adding subdivisions; 297F.06, subdivisions 1, 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Uglem, McNamara, Sundin, Pinto, Metsa and Loeffler introduced:
H. F. No. 2219, A bill for an act relating to appropriations; appropriating money for shade tree grant purposes.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Agriculture Finance.
Kiel; Lien; Franson; Fabian; Marquart; Hancock; Persell; Nornes; Miller; Anderson, P., and Hausman introduced:
H. F. No. 2220, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for a regional charitable food distribution, warehouse and office facility to be located in Crookston; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Job Growth and Energy Affordability Policy and Finance.
Slocum and Wagenius introduced:
H. F. No. 2221, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for the 77th Street underpass; 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.
Peterson introduced:
H. F. No. 2222, A bill for an act relating to arts and cultural heritage; appropriating money for a regional arts center.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Legacy Funding Finance.
Peterson introduced:
H. F. No. 2223, A bill for an act relating to taxation; property; providing a reduced classification rate for unimproved commercial and industrial property; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 273.13, subdivision 24.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following message was received from the Senate:
Mr. Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the Senate of the following Senate Files, herewith transmitted:
S. F. Nos. 1081, 1147 and 1741.
JoAnne M. Zoff, Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. No. 1081, A bill for an act relating to public safety; accounting for untested sexual assault test kits; requiring a report.
The bill was read for the first time.
Schoen moved that S. F. No. 1081 and H. F. No. 1140, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1147, A bill for an act relating to real property; clarifying the mortgage foreclosure by advertisement publication requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2014, section 582.25; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 580.
The bill was read for the first time.
O'Driscoll moved that S. F. No. 1147 and H. F. No. 953, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1741, A bill for an act relating to health; allowing a patient to enjoin collection actions taken by a nonprofit hospital if the hospital has failed to provide a financial assistance policy; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 604.
The bill was read for the first time.
Hilstrom moved that S. F. No. 1741 and H. F. No. 1647, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
REPORT FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES
AND LEGISLATIVE ADMINISTRATION
Peppin from the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration, pursuant to rules 1.21 and 3.33, designated the following bills to be placed on the Calendar for the Day for Thursday, April 16, 2015 and established a prefiling requirement for amendments offered to the following bills:
H. F. Nos. 372, 830, 1434 and 722.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Heintzeman moved that the names of Theis and Fenton be added as authors on H. F. No. 299. The motion prevailed.
Lucero moved that the name of Vogel be added as an author on H. F. No. 830. The motion prevailed.
McDonald moved that the name of Zerwas be added as an author on H. F. No. 976. The motion prevailed.
Anzelc moved that the names of Fabian and Hancock be added as authors on H. F. No. 1202. The motion prevailed.
Drazkowski moved that the name of Knoblach be added as an author on H. F. No. 1460. The motion prevailed.
Rosenthal moved that the name of Schomacker be added as an author on H. F. No. 1530. The motion prevailed.
Atkins moved that the name of Applebaum be added as an author on H. F. No. 1693. The motion prevailed.
Mahoney moved that the names of Fischer and Hausman be added as authors on H. F. No. 2217. The motion prevailed.
ADJOURNMENT
Peppin moved that when the House adjourns today it adjourn until 3:30 p.m., Thursday, April 16, 2015. The motion prevailed.
Peppin moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and Speaker pro tempore O'Driscoll declared the House stands adjourned until 3:30 p.m., Thursday, April 16, 2015.
Patrick D. Murphy, Chief Clerk, House of Representatives