STATE OF
MINNESOTA
NINETY-FIRST
SESSION - 2019
_____________________
TWENTY-NINTH
DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Thursday, March 28, 2019
The House of Representatives convened at 3:30
p.m. and was called to order by Melissa Hortman, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by Ray Pratt, Retired Baptist
Minister, Wyoming, 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:
Acomb
Albright
Anderson
Backer
Bahner
Bahr
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Bernardy
Bierman
Boe
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Daniels
Davids
Davnie
Dehn
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Fabian
Fischer
Franson
Freiberg
Garofalo
Gomez
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Halverson
Hamilton
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Her
Hertaus
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Petersburg
Pierson
Pinto
Poppe
Poston
Pryor
Quam
Richardson
Robbins
Runbeck
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schomacker
Schultz
Scott
Stephenson
Sundin
Swedzinski
Tabke
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vang
Vogel
Wagenius
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
A quorum was present.
Daudt, Koznick, Layman, McDonald, Nash,
O'Neill and West 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
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 559, A bill for an act relating to health occupations; requiring a provider-patient relationship in order to make ophthalmic prescriptions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 148.56, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 145.713, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4. Provider-patient
relationship required. (a)
For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the meanings given:
(1) "contact lens" means any
lens that is placed directly on the surface of the eye, whether or not the lens
is intended to correct a visual defect, including any cosmetic, therapeutic, or
corrective lens;
(2) "ophthalmic prescription"
means a handwritten or electronic order of a provider that includes:
(i) in the case of contact lenses, all
information required by the Fairness to Contact Lens Consumers Act, United
States Code, title 15, section 7601, et seq.;
(ii) in the case of prescription
eyeglasses, all information required by the Ophthalmic Practice Rule, also
known as the Eyeglass Rule, Code of Federal Regulations, title 16, part 456;
and
(iii) necessary and appropriate information
for the dispensing of prescription eyeglasses or contact lenses for a patient,
including, at a minimum, the provider's name, the physical address of the
provider's practice, and the provider's telephone number; and
(3) "provider" means an optometrist
or physician.
(b) For the purposes of a provider
prescribing ophthalmic goods to a patient, the provider must establish a
provider-patient relationship through an examination pursuant to paragraph (c).
(c) An examination meets the
requirements of paragraph (b) if it takes place:
(1) in person;
(2) through face-to-face interactive,
two-way, real-time communication; or
(3) through store-and-forward
technologies when all of the following conditions are met:
(i) the provider obtains an updated medical
history and makes a diagnosis at the time of prescribing;
(ii) the provider conforms to the
standard of care expected of in-person care as appropriate to the patient's age
and presenting condition, including when the standard of care requires the use
of diagnostic testing and performance of a physical examination, which may be
carried out through the use of peripheral devices appropriate to the patient's
condition;
(iii)
the ophthalmic prescription is not determined solely by use of an online
questionnaire;
(iv) the provider is licensed and
authorized to issue an ophthalmic prescription in the state; and
(v) upon request, the provider provides
patient records in a timely manner in accordance with state and federal
requirements.
(d) This subdivision does not apply to
the sale of over-the-counter eyeglasses, also known as readers, that are not
designed to address the visual needs of the individual wearer.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2019, and applies to ophthalmic prescriptions written on or after that date."
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 616, A bill for an act relating to human services; modifying provision governing mental health; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 245.4889, subdivision 1; 256B.0622, subdivision 2a; 256B.0915, subdivision 3b.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 3, delete section 2 and insert:
"Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 256.478, is amended to read:
256.478
HOME AND COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES TRANSITIONS GRANTS TRANSITION TO COMMUNITY
INITIATIVE.
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) An individual is eligible for the
transition to community initiative if the individual meets the following
criteria:
(1) without the additional resources
available through the transitions to community initiative, the individual would
otherwise remain at the Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center, a state-operated
community behavioral health hospital, or the Minnesota Security Hospital;
(2) the individual's discharge would be
significantly delayed without the additional resources available through the
transitions to community initiative; and
(3) the individual met treatment
objectives and no longer needs hospital-level care or a secure treatment
setting.
(b) An individual who is in a community
hospital and on the waiting list for the Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center,
but for whom alternative community placement would be appropriate is eligible
for the transition to community initiative upon the commissioner's approval.
Subd. 2. Transition
grants. The commissioner shall
make available home and community-based services transition to
community grants to serve assist individuals who do not
meet eligibility criteria for the medical assistance program under section
256B.056 or 256B.057, but who otherwise meet the criteria under section
256B.092, subdivision 13, or 256B.49, subdivision 24 met the criteria
under subdivision 1.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2019."
Page 4, line 21, after "facility" insert "or another eligible facility"
Page 5, line 1, strike "256B.438" and insert "256R.17"
Page 6, after line 8, insert:
"Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 256B.092, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
Subd. 13. Waiver
allocations for transition populations. (a)
The commissioner shall make available additional waiver allocations and
additional necessary resources to assure timely discharges from the
Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center and the Minnesota Security Hospital in St. Peter
for individuals who meet the following eligibility criteria:
established under section 256.478, subdivision 1.
(1) are otherwise eligible for the
developmental disabilities waiver under this section;
(2) who would otherwise remain at the
Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center or the Minnesota Security Hospital;
(3) whose discharge would be
significantly delayed without the available waiver allocation; and
(4) who have met treatment objectives
and no longer meet hospital level of care.
(b) Additional waiver allocations under this subdivision must meet cost-effectiveness requirements of the federal approved waiver plan.
(c) Any corporate foster care home developed under this subdivision must be considered an exception under section 245A.03, subdivision 7, paragraph (a).
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2019.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 256B.49, subdivision 24, is amended to read:
Subd. 24. Waiver
allocations for transition populations. (a)
The commissioner shall make available additional waiver allocations and
additional necessary resources to assure timely discharges from the
Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center and the Minnesota Security Hospital in St. Peter
for individuals who meet the following eligibility criteria:
established under section 256.478, subdivision 1.
(1) are otherwise eligible for the
brain injury, community access for disability inclusion, or community
alternative care waivers under this section;
(2) who would otherwise remain at the
Anoka-Metro Regional Treatment Center or the Minnesota Security Hospital;
(3)
whose discharge would be significantly delayed without the available waiver
allocation; and
(4) who have met treatment objectives
and no longer meet hospital level of care.
(b) Additional waiver allocations under this subdivision must meet cost-effectiveness requirements of the federal approved waiver plan.
(c) Any corporate foster care home developed under this subdivision must be considered an exception under section 245A.03, subdivision 7, paragraph (a).
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2019.
Sec. 6. RATE-SETTING
PROPOSAL; MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES.
The commissioner of human services shall
develop a comprehensive rate-setting proposal, compliant with federal criteria,
for mental health outpatient, physician, and professional services that do not
have a cost-based, federally mandated, or contracted rate. The proposal must include recommendations for
changes to: (1) the existing fee
schedule that utilizes the Resource-Based Relative Value System (RBRVS); and (2)
alternate payment methodologies for services that do not have relative values,
in order to simplify the medical assistance fee‑for‑service rate
structure and improve consistency and transparency in payment. The proposal must also include recommendations
for adjusting payments to reflect variations in patient population, in order to
reduce incentives for health providers to avoid high-risk patients or
populations, including those with risk factors related to race, ethnicity,
language, country of origin, and sociodemographic factors. In developing the proposal, the commissioner
shall consult with key stakeholders, including but not limited to
community-based mental health, substance use disorder, and home health care
providers. The commissioner shall present
the proposal to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and finance
by February 15, 2020.
Sec. 7. DIRECTION
TO THE COMMISSIONER; FLEXIBLE ASSERTIVE COMMUNITY MODEL AND INTENSIVE
NONRESIDENTIAL REHABILITATIVE MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE STANDARDS.
The commissioner of human services, in consultation with stakeholders, shall develop recommendations for service standards and a payment methodology to implement the flexible assertive community treatment model in Minnesota. The commissioner shall also make recommendations for changes to the service standards and eligibility restriction on age for intensive nonresidential rehabilitative mental health services under Minnesota Statutes, section 256B.0957, to improve the consistency of the service and ensure the service effectively meets the needs of youth and adults in Minnesota. The commissioner shall report a summary of recommendations, including any necessary statutory changes, to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over mental health services by February 1, 2020."
Renumber the sections in sequence
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 2, delete "provision" and insert "provisions" and after the second semicolon, insert "requiring reports;"
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 783, A bill for an act relating to health; modifying requirements for supervisors of temporary body art technicians; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 146B.03, by adding a subdivision; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 146B.02, subdivision 7a.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, after line 18, insert:
"(c) The supervisory plan must
include, at a minimum:
(1) the areas of practice under
supervision;
(2) the anticipated supervision hours
per week;
(3) the anticipated duration of the
training period; and
(4) the method of providing supervision
if there are multiple technicians being supervised during the same time period.
(d) If the supervisory plan is terminated before completion of the technician's supervised practice, the supervisor must notify the commissioner in writing within 14 days of the change in supervision and include an explanation of why the plan was not completed."
Page 1, line 19, delete "(c)" and insert "(e)"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Halverson from the Committee on Commerce to which was referred:
H. F. No. 990, A bill for an act relating to financial institutions; adding an exemption to licensing requirements for residential mortgage originators; providing for conformity with federal truth in lending requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 58.04, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 58.04, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Residential mortgage originator licensing requirements. (a) No person shall act as a residential mortgage originator, or make residential mortgage loans without first obtaining a license from the commissioner according to the licensing procedures provided in this chapter.
(b) A licensee must be either a partnership, limited liability partnership, association, limited liability company, corporation, or other form of business organization, and must have and maintain a surety bond in the amounts prescribed under section 58.08.
(c) The following persons are exempt from the residential mortgage originator licensing requirements:
(1) a person who is not in the business of making residential mortgage loans and who makes no more than three such loans, with its own funds, during any 12-month period;
(2) a financial institution as defined in section 58.02, subdivision 10;
(3) an agency of the federal government, or of a state or municipal government;
(4) an employee or employer pension plan making loans only to its participants;
(5) a person acting in a fiduciary capacity,
such as a trustee or receiver, as a result of a specific order issued by a
court of competent jurisdiction; or
(6) a person exempted by order of the
commissioner.; or
(7) a manufactured home dealer, as
defined in section 327B.01, subdivision 7 or 11b, or a manufactured home
salesperson, as defined in section 327B.01, subdivision 19, that:
(i) performs only clerical or support
duties in connection with assisting a consumer in filling out a residential
mortgage loan application but does not in any way offer or negotiate loan
terms, or hold themselves out as a housing counselor;
(ii) does not receive any direct or
indirect compensation or gain from any individual or company for assisting
consumers with a residential mortgage loan application, in excess of the
customary salary or commission from the employer in connection with the sales
transaction; and
(iii) discloses to the borrower in
writing:
(A) any corporate affiliation with a
lender; and
(B) if an affiliation with a corporate lender exists, that the lender cannot guarantee the lowest or best terms available and the consumer has the right to choose their lender."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Ecklund from the Veterans and Military Affairs Finance and Policy Division to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1063, A resolution memorializing the United States government to honor veterans by funding construction costs for proposed veterans homes in Bemidji, Montevideo, and Preston.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1167, A bill for an act relating to health; requiring a study on breastfeeding disparities.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1262, A bill for an act relating to health occupations; modifying provisions related to marriage and family therapists; making technical and clarifying changes; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 148B.29, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 148B.31; 148B.32; 148B.33, subdivision 2; 148B.35; 148B.37, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 148B.38, subdivisions 1, 2; 148B.39; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 148B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 148B.01, subdivisions 1, 4, 7; 148B.03; 148B.04, subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; 148B.05, subdivision 1; 148B.06, subdivision 1; 148B.07; 148B.08; 148B.09; 148B.10; 148B.11; 148B.12; 148B.13; 148B.14; 148B.15; 148B.17; 148B.175; 148B.1751; 148B.30, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line 18, delete everything after "the" and insert "Board of Marriage and Family Therapy."
Page 1, delete line 19
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Halverson from the Committee on Commerce to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1269, A bill for an act relating to health; clarifying payment and denial of payment for mental health services; modifying primary care residency expansion grants; establishing practicum incentive payments; establishing American Indian traditional healing grants; developing a mental health training program; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 62A.15, subdivision 4, by adding a subdivision; 62J.692, subdivisions 1, 3; 144.1506, subdivision 2; 245.464, by adding a subdivision; 245.4661, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1393, A bill for an act relating to health; modifying a hospital construction or modification moratorium exception for an existing hospital in Carver County; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 144.551, subdivision 1.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Persell from the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1700, A bill for an act relating to environment; modifying requirements for remote sugar beet storage; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 115.03, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1867, A bill for an act relating to human services; establishing a state agency hearing for a county to dispute liability for a portion of the cost of care of clients in regional treatment centers or state nursing facilities due to delayed discharge; precluding recovery of disputed costs of care from clients; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 246.51, subdivision 3; 256.045, subdivision 3.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 3, line 19, after the semicolon, insert "or"
Page 3, line 20, delete "; or" and insert a period
Page 3, delete lines 21 to 24 and insert:
"The commissioner shall, upon enactment of this section, conduct ongoing meetings with representatives of counties to address the lack of available beds for individuals who meet the criteria for safety net services as defined in the December 30, 2015, report to the commissioner of human services, entitled "Transitioning MSOCS Residential to a Safety Net Service: Community Based Steering Committee Recommendations.""
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1983, A bill for an act relating to human services; modifying intervener services for persons who are deafblind; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 256C.23, by adding a subdivision; 256C.261.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2027, A bill for an act relating to health; modifying requirements for the volunteer health care provider program; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 214.40, subdivision 3.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line 14, delete the semicolon
Page 1, line 15, delete "(iii)"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2150, A bill for an act relating to health; allowing telemedicine evaluations to be used to prescribe medications for erectile dysfunction; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.37, subdivision 2.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2182, A bill for an act relating to human services; establishing the Direct Care Service Corps; requiring a report; appropriating money.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Pursuant to Joint Rule 2.03 and in
accordance with House Concurrent Resolution No. 1, H. F. No. 2182 was re‑referred
to the Committee on Rules and Legislative Administration.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2217, A bill for an act relating to human services; changing child protection grant allocation to counties; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 256M.41, subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2231, A bill for an act relating to human services; modifying rates for substance use treatment; directing commissioner of human services to establish continuum of care-based rate methodology; requiring a report; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 254B.12, subdivisions 2, 3.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, delete section 1
Page 3, line 2, after the comma, insert "one provider operating an opioid treatment program,"
Renumber the sections in sequence
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Sundin from the Committee on Labor to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2281, A bill for an act relating to labor and industry; requiring continuing education regarding financial management; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 326B.821, subdivision 21.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 1, line 10, delete "financial" and insert "business"
Amend the title as follows:
Page 1, line 2, delete "financial" and insert "business"
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Halverson from the Committee on Commerce to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2538, A bill for an act relating to commerce; appropriating money for unclaimed property compliance.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; GENERAL
Section 1.
[345A.101] DEFINITIONS.
(1) For the purposes of this chapter,
the terms defined in this section have the meanings given them.
(2) "Administrator" means the
commissioner of commerce.
(3)
"Administrator's agent" means a person with which the administrator
contracts to conduct an examination under this chapter on behalf of the
administrator. The term includes an
independent contractor of the person and each individual participating in the examination
on behalf of the person or contractor.
(4) "Affiliated group of
merchants" means two or more affiliated merchants or other persons that
are related by common ownership or common corporate control and that share the
same name, mark, or logo. Affiliated
group of merchants also applies to two or more merchants or other persons that
agree among themselves, by contract or otherwise, to redeem cards, codes, or
other devices bearing the same name, mark, or logo, other than the mark, logo,
or brand of a payment network, for the purchase of goods or services solely at
such merchants or persons. However,
merchants or other persons are not considered affiliated merely because they
agree to accept a card that bears the mark, logo, or brand of a payment network.
(5) "Apparent owner" means a
person whose name appears on the records of a holder as the owner of property
held, issued, or owing by the holder.
(6) "Business association"
means a corporation, joint stock company, investment company, other than an investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, United States Code, title 15,
sections 80a-1 to 80a-64, partnership, unincorporated association, joint
venture, limited liability company, business trust, trust company, land bank,
safe deposit company, safekeeping depository, financial organization, insurance
company, federally chartered entity, utility, sole proprietorship, or other
business entity, whether or not for profit.
(7) "District court" means
Ramsey County District Court.
(8) "Domicile" means:
(A) for a corporation, the state of its
incorporation;
(B) for a business association whose
formation requires a filing with a state, other than a corporation, the state
of its filing;
(C) for a federally chartered entity or
an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, United States Code, title 15, sections 80a-1 to 80a-64, the state of
its home office; and
(D) for any other holder, the state of
its principal place of business.
(9) "Electronic" means
relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, wireless, optical,
electromagnetic, or similar capabilities.
(10) "E-mail" means a
communication by electronic means which is automatically retained and stored
and may be readily accessed or retrieved.
(11) "Financial organization"
means a savings and loan association, building and loan association, savings
bank, industrial bank, bank, banking organization, or credit union.
(12) "Game-related digital
content" means digital content that exists only in an electronic game or
electronic‑game platform. The
term:
(A) includes:
i. game-play currency such as a virtual
wallet, even if denominated in United States currency; and
ii.
the following if for use or redemption only within the game or platform or
another electronic game or electronic-game platform:
1. points sometimes referred to as
gems, tokens, gold, and similar names; and
2. digital codes; and
(B) does not include an item that the
issuer:
i. permits to be redeemed for use
outside a game or platform for:
ii. money; or
iii. goods or services that have more
than minimal value; or
iv. otherwise monetizes for use outside
a game or platform.
(13) "Gift card" means:
(A) a stored-value card:
i. issued on a prepaid basis for a
specified amount;
ii. the value of which does not expire;
iii. that is not subject to a dormancy,
inactivity, or service fee;
iv. that may be decreased in value only
by redemption for merchandise, goods, or services upon presentation at a single
merchant or an affiliated group of merchants;
v. that, unless required by law, may
not be redeemed for or converted into money or otherwise monetized by the
issuer; and
(B) includes a prepaid commercial
mobile radio service, as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 47,
section 20.3, as amended.
(14) "Holder" means a person
obligated to hold for the account of, or to deliver or pay to, the owner,
property subject to this chapter.
(15) "Insurance company"
means an association, corporation, or fraternal or mutual-benefit organization,
whether or not for profit, engaged in the business of providing life
endowments, annuities, or insurance, including accident, burial, casualty,
credit-life, contract-performance, dental, disability, fidelity, fire, health,
hospitalization, illness, life, malpractice, marine, mortgage, surety,
wage-protection, and worker-compensation insurance.
(16) "Loyalty card" means a
record given without direct monetary consideration under an award, reward,
benefit, loyalty, incentive, rebate, or promotional program which may be used
or redeemed only to obtain goods or services or a discount on goods or services. Loyalty card does not include a record that
may be redeemed for money or otherwise monetized by the issuer.
(17)
"Mineral" means gas, oil, coal, oil shale, other gaseous liquid or
solid hydrocarbon, cement material, sand and gravel, road material, building
stone, chemical raw material, gemstone, fissionable and nonfissionable ores,
colloidal and other clay, steam and other geothermal resources, and any other
substance defined as a mineral by law of this state other than this chapter.
(18) "Mineral proceeds" means
an amount payable for extraction, production, or sale of minerals, or, on the
abandonment of the amount, an amount that becomes payable after abandonment. Mineral proceeds includes an amount payable:
(A) for the acquisition and retention
of a mineral lease, including a bonus, royalty, compensatory royalty, shut-in
royalty, minimum royalty, and delay rental;
(B) for the extraction, production, or
sale of minerals, including a net revenue interest, royalty, overriding
royalty, extraction payment, and production payment; and
(C) under an agreement or option,
including a joint-operating agreement, unit agreement, pooling agreement, and
farm-out agreement.
(19) "Money order" means a
payment order for a specified amount of money.
Money order includes an express money order and a personal money order
on which the remitter is the purchaser.
(20) "Municipal bond" means a
bond or evidence of indebtedness issued by a municipality or other political
subdivision of a state.
(21) "Net card value" means
the original purchase price or original issued value of a stored-value card,
plus amounts added to the original price or value, minus amounts used and any
service charge, fee, or dormancy charge permitted by law.
(22) "Nonfreely transferable
security" means a security that cannot be delivered to the administrator
by the Depository Trust Clearing Corporation or similar custodian of securities
providing post-trade clearing and settlement services to financial markets or
cannot be delivered because there is no agent to effect transfer. Nonfreely transferable security includes a
worthless security.
(23) "Owner" means a person
that has a legal, beneficial, or equitable interest in property subject to this
chapter or the person's legal representative when acting on behalf of the owner. Owner includes:
(A) a depositor, for a deposit;
(B) a beneficiary, for a trust other
than a deposit in trust;
(C) a creditor, claimant, or payee, for
other property; and
(D) the lawful bearer of a record that
may be used to obtain money, a reward, or a thing of value.
(24) "Payroll card" means a
record that evidences a payroll card account as defined in Regulation E, Code
of Federal Regulations, title 12, part 1005, as amended.
(25) "Person" means an
individual, estate, business association, public corporation, government or
governmental subdivision, agency, instrumentality, or other legal entity
whether or not for profit.
(26)
"Property" means tangible property described in section 345A.205 or a
fixed and certain interest in intangible property held, issued, or owed in the
course of a holder's business or by a government, governmental subdivision,
agency, or instrumentality. Property:
(A) includes all income from or
increments to the property;
(B) includes property referred to as or
evidenced by:
i. money, virtual currency, interest,
dividend, check, draft, deposit, or payroll card;
ii. a credit balance, customer's
overpayment, stored-value card, security deposit, refund, credit memorandum,
unpaid wage, unused ticket for which the issuer has an obligation to provide a
refund, mineral proceeds, or unidentified remittance;
iii. a security except for:
1. a worthless security; or
2. a security that is subject to a
lien, legal hold, or restriction evidenced on the records of the holder or
imposed by operation of law, if the lien, legal hold, or restriction restricts
the holder's or owner's ability to receive, transfer, sell, or otherwise
negotiate the security;
iv. a bond, debenture, note, or other
evidence of indebtedness;
v. money deposited to redeem a
security, make a distribution, or pay a dividend;
vi. an amount due and payable under an
annuity contract or insurance policy; and
vii. an amount distributable from a
trust or custodial fund established under a plan to provide health, welfare,
pension, vacation, severance, retirement, death, stock purchase,
profit-sharing, employee savings, supplemental unemployment insurance, or a
similar benefit; and
(C) does not include:
i. property held in a plan described in
section 529A of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, United States Code,
title 26, section 529A;
ii. game-related digital content;
iii. a loyalty card;
iv. a gift card; or
v. money held or owing by a public
pension fund enumerated in section 356.20, subdivision 2, or 356.30,
subdivision 3; or covered by sections 69.77 or 69.771 to 69.776, if the plan governing
the public pension fund includes a provision governing the disposition of
unclaimed amounts of money.
(27) "Putative holder" means
a person believed by the administrator to be a holder, until the person pays or
delivers to the administrator property subject to this chapter or the
administrator or a court makes a final determination that the person is or is
not a holder.
(28)
"Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or
that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in
perceivable form. "Records of the
holder" includes records maintained by a third party that has contracted
with the holder.
(29) "Security" means:
(A) a security as defined in article 8
of the Uniform Commercial Code, section 336.8-102;
(B) a security entitlement as defined
in article 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code, section 336.8-102, including a
customer security account held by a registered broker-dealer, to the extent the
financial assets held in the security account are not:
i. registered on the books of the
issuer in the name of the person for which the broker-dealer holds the assets;
ii. payable to the order of the person;
or
iii. specifically endorsed to the
person; or
(C) an equity interest in a business
association not included in subparagraph (A) or (B).
(30) "State" means a state of
the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(31) "Stored-value card"
means a record evidencing a promise made for consideration by the seller or
issuer of the record that goods, services, or money will be provided to the
owner of the record to the value or amount shown in the record. Stored-value card:
(A) includes:
i. a record that contains or consists
of a microprocessor chip, magnetic strip, or other means for the storage of
information, which is prefunded and whose value or amount is decreased on each
use and increased by payment of additional consideration; and
ii. a payroll card; and
(B) does not include a loyalty card,
gift card, or game-related digital content.
(32) "Utility" means a person
that owns or operates for public use a plant, equipment, real property,
franchise, or license for the following public services:
(A) transmission of communications or
information;
(B) production, storage, transmission,
sale, delivery, or furnishing of electricity, water, steam, or gas; or
(C) provision of sewage or septic
services, or trash, garbage, or recycling disposal.
(33) "Virtual currency" means
a digital representation of value used as a medium of exchange, unit of
account, or store of value, which does not have legal tender status recognized
by the United States. Virtual currency
does not include:
(A) the software or protocols governing
the transfer of the digital representation of value;
(B)
game-related digital content; or
(C) a loyalty card or gift card.
(34) "Worthless security"
means a security whose cost of liquidation and delivery to the administrator
would exceed the value of the security on the date a report is due under this
chapter.
Sec. 2. [345A.102]
INAPPLICABILITY TO FOREIGN TRANSACTION.
This chapter does not apply to property
held, due, and owing in a foreign country if the transaction out of which the
property arose was a foreign transaction.
ARTICLE 2
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; PRESUMPTION OF ABANDONMENT
Section 1.
[345A.201] WHEN PROPERTY
PRESUMED ABANDONED.
Subject to section 345A.210, the
following property is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed by the apparent
owner during the period specified below:
(1) a traveler's check, 15 years after
issuance;
(2) a money order, seven years after
issuance;
(3) cooperative property, including any
profit distribution or other sum held or owing by a cooperative to a
participating patron is presumed abandoned only if it has remained unclaimed by
the owner for more than seven years after it became payable or distributable;
(4) a state or municipal bond, bearer
bond, or original-issue discount bond, three years after the earliest of the
date the bond matures or is called or the obligation to pay the principal of
the bond arises;
(5) a debt of a business association,
three years after the obligation to pay arises;
(6) demand, savings, or time deposit,
including a deposit that is automatically renewable, three years after the
later of the maturity or the date of the last indication of interest in the
property by the apparent owner, except a deposit that is automatically
renewable is deemed matured three years after its initial date of maturity
unless the apparent owner consented to renewal in a record on file with the
holder at or about the time of the renewal;
(7) money or a credit owed to a
customer as a result of a retail business transaction, other than in-store
credit for returned merchandise, three years after the obligation arose;
(8) an amount owed by an insurance
company on a life or endowment insurance policy or an annuity contract that has
matured or terminated, three years after the obligation to pay arose under the
terms of the policy or contract or, if a policy or contract for which an amount
is owed on proof of death has not matured by proof of the death of the insured
or annuitant, as follows:
(A) with respect to an amount owed on a
life or endowment insurance policy, the earlier of:
i.
three years after the death of the insured; or
ii. two years after the insured has attained, or
would have attained if living, the limiting age under the mortality table in
which the reserve for the policy is based; and
(B) with respect to an amount owed on
an annuity contract, three years after the date of the death of the annuitant;
(9)
funds on deposit or held in trust for the prepayment of funeral or other
funeral-related expenses, the earliest of:
(A) two years after the date of death
of the beneficiary;
(B) one year after the date the
beneficiary has attained, or would have attained if living, the age of 105
where the holder does not know whether the beneficiary is deceased; or
(C) 30 years after the contract for
prepayment was executed;
(10) property distributable by a
business association in the course of dissolution, one year after the property
becomes distributable;
(11) property held by a court,
including property received as proceeds of a class action, three years after
the property becomes distributable;
(12) property held by a government or
governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, including municipal bond
interest and unredeemed principal under the administration of a paying agent or
indenture trustee, one year after the property becomes distributable;
(13) wages, commissions, bonuses, or
reimbursements to which an employee is entitled, or other compensation for
personal services, including amounts held on a payroll card, one year after the
amount becomes payable;
(14)
a deposit or refund owed to a subscriber by a utility, one year after the
deposit or refund becomes payable; and
(15) property not specified in this section
or sections 345A.202 to 345A.208, the earlier of three years after the owner
first has a right to demand the property or the obligation to pay or distribute
the property arises.
Notwithstanding any provision in this
section to the contrary, and subject to section 345A.210, a deceased owner
cannot indicate interest in the owner's property. If the owner is deceased and the abandonment
period for the owner's property specified in this section is greater than two
years, then the property, excluding any amounts owed by an insurance company on
a life or endowment insurance policy or an annuity contract that has matured or
terminated, shall instead be presumed abandoned two years from the date of the
owner's last indication of interest in the property.
Sec. 2. [345A.202]
WHEN TAX-DEFERRED RETIREMENT ACCOUNT PRESUMED ABANDONED.
(a) Subject to section 345A.210,
property held in a pension account or retirement account that qualifies for tax
deferral under the income tax laws of the United States is presumed abandoned
if it is unclaimed by the apparent owner after the later of:
(1) three years after the following
dates:
(A) except as in subparagraph (B), the
date a communication sent by the holder by first-class United States mail to
the apparent owner is returned to the holder undelivered by the United States
Postal Service; or
(B)
if such communication is re-sent within 30 days after the date the first
communication is returned undelivered, the date the second communication was
returned undelivered by the United States Postal Service; or
(2) the earlier of the following dates:
(A) three years after the date the
apparent owner becomes 70.5 years of age, if determinable by the holder; or
(B) one year after the date of
mandatory distribution following death if the Internal Revenue Code, as
amended, United States Code, title 26, section 1, et seq., requires
distribution to avoid a tax penalty and the holder:
(i) receives confirmation of the death
of the apparent owner in the ordinary course of its business; or
(ii) confirms the death of the apparent
owner under subsection (b).
(b) If a holder in the ordinary course
of its business receives notice or an indication of the death of an apparent
owner and subsection (a)(2) applies, the holder shall attempt, not later than
90 days after receipt of the notice or indication, to confirm whether the
apparent owner is deceased.
(c) If the holder does not send
communications to the apparent owner of an account described in subsection (a)
by first-class United States mail, the holder shall attempt to confirm the
apparent owner's interest in the property by sending the apparent owner an email
communication not later than two years after the apparent owner's last
indication of interest in the property; however, the holder promptly shall
attempt to contact the apparent owner by first-class United States mail if:
(1) the holder does not have
information needed to send the apparent owner an email communication or the
holder believes that the apparent owner's email address in the holder's
records is not valid;
(2) the holder receives notification
that the email communication was not received; or
(3) the apparent owner does not respond
to the email communication not later than 30 days after the communication was
sent.
(d) If first-class United States mail
sent under subsection (c) is returned to the holder undelivered by the United
States Postal Service, the property is presumed abandoned three years after the
later of:
(1) except as in paragraph (2), the
date a communication to contact the apparent owner sent by first-class United
States mail is returned to the holder undelivered;
(2) if such communication is sent later
than 30 days after the date the first communication is returned undelivered,
the date the second communication was returned undelivered; or
(3) the date established by subsection
(a)(2).
Sec. 3. [345A.203]
WHEN OTHER TAX-DEFERRED ACCOUNT PRESUMED ABANDONED.
(a) Subject to section 345A.210 and
except for property described in section 345A.202 and property held in a plan
described in section 529A of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended; United
States Code, title 26, section 529A, property held in an account or plan,
including a health savings account, that qualifies for tax deferral under the
income tax laws of the United States is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed
by the apparent owner three years after the earlier of:
(1)
the date, if determinable by the holder, specified in the income tax laws and
regulations of the United States by which distribution of the property must
begin to avoid a tax penalty, with no distribution having been made; or
(2) 30 years after the date the account
was opened.
(b)
If the owner is deceased, property subject to this section is presumed
abandoned two years from the earliest of:
(1) the date of the distribution or
attempted distribution of the property;
(2) the date the required distribution
as stated in the plan or trust agreement governing the plan; or
(3) the date, if determinable by the
holder, specified in the income tax laws of the United States by which
distribution of the property must begin in order to avoid a tax penalty.
Sec. 4. [345A.204]
WHEN CUSTODIAL ACCOUNT FOR MINOR PRESUMED ABANDONED.
(a) Subject to section 345A.210,
property held in an account established under a state's Uniform Gifts to Minors
Act or Uniform Transfers to Minors Act is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed
by or on behalf of the minor on whose behalf the account was opened three years
after the later of:
(1) except as in paragraph (2), the
date a communication sent by the holder by first-class United States mail to
the custodian of the minor on whose behalf the account was opened is returned
undelivered to the holder by the United States Postal Service;
(2) if the communication is re-sent
later than 30 days after the date the first communication is returned
undelivered, the date the second communication was returned undelivered; or
(3) the date on which the custodian is
required to transfer the property to the minor or the minor's estate in
accordance with the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act or Uniform Transfers to Minors
Act of the state in which the account was opened.
(b) If the holder does not send
communications to the custodian of the minor on whose behalf an account described
in subsection (a) was opened by first-class United States mail, the holder
shall attempt to confirm the custodian's interest in the property by sending
the custodian an email communication not later than two years after the
custodian's last indication of interest in the property; however, the holder
promptly shall attempt to contact the custodian by first-class United States
mail if:
(1) the holder does not have
information needed to send the custodian an email communication or the holder
believes that the custodian's email address in the holder's records is not
valid;
(2) the holder receives notification
that the email communication was not received; or
(3) the custodian does not respond to
the email communication not later than 30 days after the communication was
sent.
(c) If first-class United States mail
sent under subsection (b) is returned undelivered to the holder by the United
States Postal Service, the property is presumed abandoned three years after the
later of:
(1) the date a communication to contact
the custodian by first-class United States mail is returned to the holder
undelivered by the United States Postal Service; or
(2)
the date established by subsection (a)(3).
(d) When the property in the account
described in subsection (a) is transferred to the minor on whose behalf an
account was opened or to the minor's estate, the property in the account is no
longer subject to this section.
Sec. 5. [345A.205]
WHEN CONTENTS OF SAFE DEPOSIT BOX PRESUMED ABANDONED.
Tangible property held in a safe
deposit box and proceeds from a sale of the property by the holder permitted by
law of this state other than this chapter are presumed abandoned if the
property remains unclaimed by the apparent owner five years after the earlier
of the:
(1) expiration of the lease or rental
period for the safe deposit box; or
(2) earliest date when the lessor of
the safe deposit box is authorized by law of this state other than this chapter
to enter the safe deposit box and remove or dispose of the contents without
consent or authorization of the lessee.
Sec. 6. [345A.206]
WHEN STORED-VALUE CARD PRESUMED ABANDONED.
(a) Subject to section 345A.210, the
net card value of a stored-value card, other than a payroll card or a gift
card, is presumed abandoned on the latest of three years after:
(1) December 31 of the year in which
the card is issued or additional funds are deposited into it;
(2) the most recent indication of
interest in the card by the apparent owner; or
(3) a verification or review of the balance
by or on behalf of the apparent owner.
(b) The amount presumed abandoned in a
stored-value card is the net card value at the time it is presumed abandoned.
(c) If a holder has reported and
remitted to the administrator the net card value on a stored-value card
presumed abandoned under this section and the stored-value card does not have
an expiration date, then the holder must honor the card on presentation
indefinitely and may then request reimbursement from the administrator under
section 345A.605.
Sec. 7. [345A.208]
WHEN SECURITY PRESUMED ABANDONED.
(a) Subject to section 345A.210, a
security is presumed abandoned after the earlier of the following:
(1) three years after the date a
communication sent by the holder by first-class United States mail to the
apparent owner is returned to the holder undelivered by the United States
Postal Service or if such communication is re-sent no later than 30 days after
the first communication is returned, the date the second communication is
returned undelivered to the holder by the United States Postal Service; or
(2) five years after the date of the
apparent owner's last indication of interest in the security.
(b) If the holder does not send
communications to the apparent owner of a security by first-class United States
mail, the holder shall attempt to confirm the apparent owner's interest in the
security by sending the apparent owner an email communication not later than
two years after the apparent owner's last indication of interest in the
security; however, the holder promptly shall attempt to contact the apparent
owner by first-class United States mail if:
(1)
the holder does not have information needed to send the apparent owner an email
communication or the holder believes that the apparent owner's email address
in the holder's records is not valid;
(2) the holder receives notification
that the email communication was not received; or
(3) the apparent owner does not respond
to the email communication not later than 30 days after the communication was
sent.
(c) If first-class United States mail
sent under subsection (b) is returned to the holder undelivered by the United
States Postal Service, the security is presumed abandoned in accordance with
subsection (a)(2).
(d) If a holder, in the ordinary course
of business, receives notice or an indication of the death of an apparent
owner, the holder shall attempt, not later than 90 days after receipt of the
notice or indication, to confirm whether the apparent owner is deceased. Notwithstanding the standards set forth in
subsections (a), (b), and (c), if the holder either receives confirmation of
the death of the apparent owner in the ordinary course of business or confirms
the death of the apparent owner under this subsection, then the property shall
be presumed abandoned two years after the date of the owner's death.
Sec. 8. [345A.209]
WHEN RELATED PROPERTY PRESUMED ABANDONED.
At and after the time property is
presumed abandoned under this chapter, any other property right or interest
accrued or accruing from the property and not previously presumed abandoned is
also presumed abandoned.
Sec. 9. [345A.210]
INDICATION OF APPARENT OWNER INTEREST IN PROPERTY.
(a) The period after which property is
presumed abandoned is measured from the later:
(1) the date the property is presumed
abandoned under sections 345A.201 to 345A.211; or
(2) the latest indication of interest
by the apparent owner in the property.
(b) Under this chapter, an indication
of an apparent owner's interest in property includes:
(1) a record communicated by the
apparent owner to the holder or agent of the holder concerning the property or
the account in which the property is held;
(2) an oral communication by the apparent
owner to the holder or agent of the holder concerning the property or the
account in which the property is held, if the holder or its agent
contemporaneously makes and preserves a record of the fact of the apparent
owner's communication;
(3) presentment of a check or other
instrument of payment of a dividend, interest payment, or other distribution,
or evidence of receipt of a distribution made by electronic or similar means,
with respect to an account, underlying security, or interest in a business
association.
(4) activity directed by an apparent
owner in the account in which the property is held, including accessing the
account or information concerning the account, or a direction by the apparent
owner to increase, decrease, or otherwise change the amount or type of property
held in the account;
(5) a deposit into or withdrawal from
an account at a financial organization, except for an automatic debit or credit
previously authorized by the apparent owner or an automatic reinvestment of
dividends or interest; and
(6)
subject to subsection (e), payment of a premium on an insurance policy.
(c) An action by an agent or other
representative of an apparent owner, other than the holder acting as the
apparent owner's agent, is presumed to be an action on behalf of the apparent
owner.
(d) A communication with an apparent
owner by a person other than the holder or the holder's representative is not
an indication of interest in the property by the apparent owner unless a record
of the communication evidences the apparent owner's knowledge of a right to the
property.
(e) If the insured dies or the insured
or beneficiary of an insurance policy otherwise becomes entitled to the
proceeds before depletion of the cash surrender value of the policy by
operation of an automatic premium loan provision or other nonforfeiture
provision contained in the policy, the operation does not prevent the policy
from maturing or terminating.
(f) If the apparent owner has other
property with the holder to which section 345A.201, paragraph (6), applies, the
activity directed by the apparent owner toward any other accounts, including
but not limited to loan accounts, at the financial organization holding an
inactive account of the apparent owner shall be an indication of interest in
all such accounts if:
(1) the apparent owner engages in one
or more of the following activities:
(A) the apparent owner undertakes one
or more of the actions described in subsection (b) regarding an account that
appears on a consolidated statement with the inactive account;
(B) the apparent owner increases or
decreases the amount of funds in any other account the apparent owner has with
the financial organization; or
(C) the apparent owner engages in any
other relationship with the financial organization, including payment of any
amounts due on a loan; and
(2) the mailing address for the
apparent owner in the financial organization's records is the same for both the
inactive account and the active account.
Sec. 10. [345A.211]
KNOWLEDGE OF DEATH OF INSURED OR ANNUITANT.
(a) In this section, "death master
file" ("DMF") means the United States Social Security
Administration Death Master File or other database or service that is at least
as comprehensive as the United States Social Security Administration Death
Master File for determining that an individual reportedly has died.
(b) With respect to a life or endowment
insurance policy or annuity contract for which an amount is owed on proof of
death, but which has not matured by proof of death of the insured or annuitant,
the company has knowledge of the death of an insured or annuitant when:
(1) the company receives a death
certificate or court order determining that the insured or annuitant has died;
(2) the company receives notice of the
death of the insured or annuitant from the administrator or an unclaimed
property administrator of another state, a beneficiary, a policy owner, a
relative of the insured, a representative under the Probate Act of 1975, or an
executor or other legal representative of the insured's or annuitant's estate
and validates the death of the insured or annuitant;
(3)
the company conducts a comparison for any purpose between a DMF and the names
of some or all of the company's insureds or annuitants, finds a match that provides
notice that the insured or annuitant has died, and validates the death; or
(4) the administrator or the
administrator's agent conducts a comparison for the purpose of finding matches
during an examination conducted under this chapter between a DMF and the names
of some or all of the company's insureds or annuitants, and finds a match that
provides notice that the insured or annuitant has died.
(c) A holder shall perform a comparison
of its insureds' in-force policies, annuity contracts, and retained asset
accounts against a DMF on at least a semiannual basis by using the full DMF
once and thereafter using DMF updated files for future comparisons to identify
potential matches of its insureds.
(d) A death master file match under
subsection (b)(3) or (4) occurs if the criteria for an exact or partial match
are satisfied.
(1) an exact match occurs when the
Social Security number, first and last name, and date of birth contained in the
holder's records matches exactly to the data contained in the DMF;
(2) a partial match occurs in any of the
following circumstances:
(A) when the Social Security number
contained in the data found in the holder's records matches exactly or in
accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed below to the Social Security number
contained in the DMF, the first and last names match either exactly or in
accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed below, and the date of birth
matches exactly or in accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed below;
(B) when the holder's records do not
include a Social Security number or where the Social Security number is
incomplete or otherwise invalid, and there is a first name, last name, and date
of birth combination in the holder's data that is a match against the data
contained in the DMF where the first and last names match either exactly or in
accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed below and the date of birth
matches exactly or in accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed below;
(C) if there is more than one potentially
matched individual returned as a result of the process described in paragraphs
(A) and (B) above, the holder shall search the Social Security numbers obtained
from the DMF for the potential matched individuals against Accurint for
Insurance or an equivalent database. If
a search of those databases shows that the DMF Social Security number is listed
at the address in the holder's records for the insured, a partial match will be
considered to have been made only for individuals with a matching address;
(D) fuzzy match criteria includes the
following:
(i) a first name fuzzy match includes
one or more of the following: a
nickname; an initial instead of a full first name; accepted industry standard
phonetic name-matching algorithm; data entry mistakes with a maximum difference
of one character with at least five characters in length; a first and last name
are provided and cannot be reliably distinguished from one another; use of
interchanged first name and middle name; a misused compound name; and the use
of a "Mrs." in conjunction with a spouse's name where the date of
birth and Social Security number match exactly and the last name matches
exactly or in accordance with the fuzzy match criteria listed herein;
(ii) a last name fuzzy match includes
one or more of the following: Anglicized
forms of last names; compound last name; blank spaces in last name; accepted
industry standard phonetic name-matching algorithm; a first and last name are
provided and cannot be reliably distinguished from one another; use of
apostrophe or other punctuation; data entry mistakes with a maximum difference
of one character for last name with at least eight characters in length; and
married female last name variations;
(iii) a date of birth fuzzy match includes one of the following: two dates with a maximum of two digits in difference, but only one entry mistake per full date is allowable; transposition of the month and date portion of the date of birth; if the holder's records do not contain a complete date of birth, then a fuzzy match date of birth will be found to exist where the data available in the holder's records does not conflict with the data contained in the DMF; if the holder provided a first and last name match, either exactly or in accordance with the fuzzy match criteria herein and the Social Security number matches exactly against the DMF, the date of birth is a fuzzy match if the holder provided a date of birth that is within two years of the DMF-listed date of birth;
(iv) a Social Security number fuzzy
match includes one of the following: two
Social Security numbers with a maximum of two digits in difference, any number
position; two consecutive numbers are transposed; and the Social Security
number is less than nine digits in length, but at least seven digits, and is
entirely embedded within the other Social Security number;
(3) the DMF match does not constitute
proof of death for the purpose of submission to an insurance company of a claim
by a beneficiary, annuitant, or owner of the policy or contract for an amount
due under an insurance policy or annuity contract;
(4) the DMF match or validation of the
insured's or annuitant's death does not alter the requirements for a
beneficiary, annuitant, or owner of the policy or contract to make a claim to
receive proceeds under the terms of the policy or contract;
(5) an insured or an annuitant is
presumed dead if the date of the person's death is indicated by the DMF match
under either subsection (b)(3) or (4), unless the insurer has competent and
substantial evidence that the person is living, including but not limited to a
contact made by the insurer with the person or the person's legal
representation.
(e) This chapter does not affect the
determination of the extent to which an insurance company before the effective
date of this chapter had knowledge of the death of an insured or annuitant or
was required to conduct a DMF comparison to determine whether amounts owed by
the company on a life or endowment insurance policy or annuity contract were
presumed abandoned or unclaimed.
Sec. 11. [345A.211]
DEPOSIT ACCOUNT FOR PROCEEDS OF INSURANCE POLICY OR ANNUITY CONTRACT.
If proceeds payable under a life or
endowment insurance policy or annuity contract are deposited into an account
with check or draft-writing privileges for the beneficiary of the policy or
contract and, under a supplementary contract not involving annuity benefits
other than death benefits, the proceeds are retained by the insurance company
or the financial organization where the account is held, the policy or contract
includes the assets in the account.
ARTICLE 3
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; RULES FOR TAKING CUSTODY
OF PROPERTY PRESUMED ABANDONED
Section 1.
[345A.301] ADDRESS OF APPARENT
OWNER TO ESTABLISH PRIORITY.
In sections 345A.301 to 345A.307, the
following rules apply:
(1) The last known address of an
apparent owner is any description, code, or other indication of the location of
the apparent owner which identifies the state, even if the description, code,
or indication of location is not sufficient to direct the delivery of
first-class United States mail to the apparent owner.
(2)
If the United States postal zip code associated with the apparent owner is for
a post office located in this state, this state is deemed to be the state of
the last known address of the apparent owner unless other records associated
with the apparent owner specifically identify the physical address of the
apparent owner to be in another state.
(3) If the address under paragraph (2)
is in another state, the other state is deemed to be the state of the last
known address of the apparent owner.
(4) The address of the apparent owner
of a life or endowment insurance policy or annuity contract or its proceeds is
presumed to be the address of the insured or annuitant if a person other than
the insured or annuitant is entitled to the amount owed under the policy or
contract and the address of the other person is not known by the insurance
company and cannot be determined under section 345A.302.
Sec. 2. [345A.302]
ADDRESS OF APPARENT OWNER IN THIS STATE.
The administrator may take custody of
property that is presumed abandoned, whether located in this state, another
state, or a foreign country, if:
(1) the last known address of the
apparent owner in the records of the holder is in this state; or
(2) the records of the holder do not
reflect the identity or last known address of the apparent owner, but the
administrator has determined that the last known address of the apparent owner
is in this state.
Sec. 3. [345A.303]
IF RECORDS SHOW MULTIPLE ADDRESSES OF APPARENT OWNER.
(a) Except as provided in subsection
(b), if records of a holder reflect multiple addresses for an apparent owner
and this state is the state of the last known address, this state may take
custody of property presumed abandoned, whether located in this state or
another state.
(b)
If it appears from records of the holder that the last known address of the
apparent owner under subsection (a) is a temporary address and this
state is the state of the next most recently recorded address that is not a
temporary address, this state may take custody of the property presumed
abandoned.
Sec. 4. [345A.304]
HOLDER DOMICILED IN THIS STATE.
(a) Except as provided in subsection
(b) or section 345A.302 or 345A.303, the administrator may take custody of
property presumed abandoned, whether located in this state, another state, or a
foreign country, if the holder is domiciled in this state, another state, or a
governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality of this state and:
(1) another state or foreign country is
not entitled to the property because there is no last known address of the
apparent owner or other person entitled to the property in the records of the
holder; or
(2) the state or foreign country of the
last known address of the apparent owner or other person entitled to the
property does not provide for custodial taking of the property.
(b) Property is not subject to custody
of the administrator under subsection (a) if the property is specifically exempt
from custodial taking under the law of this state, another state, or foreign
country of the last known address of the apparent owner.
(c)
If a holder's state of domicile has changed since the time the property was
presumed abandoned, the holder's state of domicile in this section is deemed to
be the state where the holder was domiciled at the time the property was
presumed abandoned.
Sec. 5. [345A.305]
CUSTODY IF TRANSACTION TOOK PLACE IN THIS STATE.
Except as provided in sections 345A.302
to 345A.304, the administrator may take custody of property presumed abandoned
whether located in this state or another state if:
(1) the transaction out of which the
property arose took place in this state;
(2) the holder is domiciled in a state
that does not provide for the custodial taking of the property, except that if
the property is specifically exempt from custodial taking under the law of the
state of the holder's domicile, the property is not subject to the custody of
the administrator; and
(3) the last known address of the
apparent owner or other person entitled to the property is unknown or in a
state that does not provide for the custodial taking of the property, except
that if the property is specifically exempt from custodial taking under the law
of the state of the last known address, the property is not subject to the
custody of the administrator.
Sec. 6. [345A.306]
TRAVELER'S CHECK, MONEY ORDER, OR SIMILAR INSTRUMENT.
The administrator may take custody of
sums payable on a traveler's check, money order, or similar instrument presumed
abandoned to the extent permissible under United States Code, title 12,
sections 2501 through 2503, as amended.
Sec. 7. [345A.307]
BURDEN OF PROOF TO ESTABLISH ADMINISTRATOR'S RIGHT TO CUSTODY.
Subject to this chapter, if the
administrator asserts a right to custody of unclaimed property and there is a
dispute concerning such property, the administrator has the initial burden to
prove:
(1) the amount of the property;
(2) the property is presumed abandoned;
and
(3) the property is subject to the
custody of the administrator.
ARTICLE 4
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; REPORT BY HOLDER
Section 1.
[345A.401] REPORT REQUIRED BY
HOLDER.
(a) A holder of property presumed
abandoned and subject to the custody of the administrator shall report in a
record to the administrator concerning the property. A holder shall submit an electronic report in
a format prescribed by, and acceptable to, the administrator.
(b) A holder may contract with a third
party to make the report required under subsection (a).
(c) Whether or not a holder contracts
with a third party under subsection (b), the holder is responsible:
(1) to the administrator for the
complete, accurate, and timely reporting of property presumed abandoned; and
(2) for paying or delivering to the
administrator property described in the report.
Sec. 2. [345A.402]
CONTENT OF REPORT.
(a) The report required under section
345A.401 must:
(1) be signed by or on behalf of the
holder and verified as to its completeness and accuracy;
(2) be filed electronically, unless
exception is granted, and be in a secure format approved by the administrator
which protects confidential information of the apparent owner;
(3) describe the property;
(4) except for a traveler's check,
money order, or similar instrument, contain the name, if known, last known
address, if known, and Social Security number or taxpayer identification
number, if known or readily ascertainable, of the apparent owner of property
with a value of $50 or more;
(5) for an amount held or owing under a
life or endowment insurance policy or annuity contract, contain the name and
last known address of the insured, annuitant, or other apparent owner of the
policy or contract and of the beneficiary;
(6) for property held in or removed
from a safe deposit box, indicate the location of the property, and where it
may be inspected by the administrator;
(7) contain the commencement date for
determining abandonment under sections 345A.201 to 345A.211;
(8) state that the holder has complied
with the notice requirements of section 345A.501;
(9) identify property that is a
nonfreely transferable security and explain why it is a nonfreely transferable
security; and
(10) contain other information
prescribed by the administrator.
(b) A report under section 345A.401 may
include in the aggregate items valued under $50 each. If the report includes items in the aggregate
valued under $50 each, the administrator may not require the holder to provide
the name and address of an apparent owner of an item unless the information is
necessary to verify or process a claim in progress by the apparent owner.
(c) A report under section 345A.401 may
include personal information as defined in section 345A.401(a) about the
apparent owner or the apparent owner's property.
(d) If a holder has changed its name
while holding property presumed abandoned or is a successor to another person
that previously held the property for the apparent owner, the holder must
include in the report under section 345A.401 its former name or the name of the
previous holder, if any, and the known name and address of each previous holder
of the property.
Sec. 3. [345A.403]
WHEN REPORT TO BE FILED.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (b) and subject to subsection (c), the report under section 345A.401
must be filed before November 1 of each year and cover the 12 months preceding
July 1 of that year.
(b) Subject to subsection (c), the
report under section 345A.401 to be filed by an insurance company must be filed
before May 1 of each year for the immediately preceding calendar year.
(c)
Before the date for filing the report under section 345A.401, the holder of
property presumed abandoned may request the administrator to extend the time
for filing. The administrator may grant
an extension. If the extension is
granted, the holder may pay or make a partial payment of the amount the holder
estimates ultimately will be due. The
payment or partial payment terminates accrual of interest on the amount paid.
Sec. 4. [345A.404]
RETENTION OF RECORDS BY HOLDER.
A holder required to file a report
under section 345A.401 shall retain records for ten years after the later of
the date the report was filed or the last date a timely report was due to be
filed, unless a shorter period is provided by rule of the administrator. The holder may satisfy the requirement to
retain records under this section through an agent. The records must contain:
(1) the information required to be
included in the report;
(2) the date, place, and nature of the
circumstances that gave rise to the property right;
(3) the amount or value of the
property;
(4) the last known address of the
apparent owner, if known to the holder; and
(5) if the holder sells, issues, or
provides to others for sale or issue in this state traveler's checks, money
orders, or similar instruments, other than third-party bank checks, on which
the holder is directly liable, a record of the instruments while they remain
outstanding, indicating the state and date of issue.
Sec. 5. [345A.405]
PROPERTY REPORTABLE AND PAYABLE OR DELIVERABLE ABSENT OWNER DEMAND.
Property is reportable and payable or
deliverable under this chapter even if the owner fails to make demand or
present an instrument or document otherwise required to obtain payment.
ARTICLE 5
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; NOTICE TO APPARENT OWNER
OF PROPERTY PRESUMED ABANDONED
Section 1.
[345A.501] NOTICE TO APPARENT
OWNER BY HOLDER.
(a) Subject to subsection (b), the
holder of property presumed abandoned shall send to the apparent owner notice
by first-class United States mail that complies with section 345A.502 in a
format acceptable to the administrator not more than 180 days nor less than 60
days before filing the report under section 345A.401 if:
(1) the holder has in its records an
address for the apparent owner which the holder's records do not disclose to be
invalid and is sufficient to direct the delivery of first-class United States
mail to the apparent owner; and
(2) the value of the property is $50 or
more.
(b) If an apparent owner has consented
to receive email delivery from the holder, the holder shall send the notice
described in subsection (a) both by first-class United States mail to the
apparent owner's last known mailing address and by email, unless the holder
believes that the apparent owner's email address is invalid.
(c)
The holder of securities presumed abandoned under sections 345A.202, 345A.203,
or 345A.208 shall send the apparent owner notice by certified United States
mail that complies with section 345A.502, and in a format acceptable to the
administrator, not less than 60 days before filing the report under section
345A.401, if:
(1) the holder has in its records an
address for the apparent owner which the holder's records do not disclose to be
invalid and is sufficient to direct the delivery of United States mail to the
apparent owner; and
(2) the value of the property is $1,000
or more.
(d) In addition to other indications of
an apparent owner's interest in property pursuant to section 345A.210, a signed
return receipt in response to a notice sent pursuant to this section by
certified United States mail shall constitute a record communicated by the
apparent owner to the holder concerning the property or the account in which
the property is held.
Sec. 2. [345A.502]
CONTENTS OF NOTICE BY HOLDER.
(a) Notice under section 345A.501 must
contain a heading that reads substantially as follows: "Notice.
The State of Minnesota requires us to notify you that your property may
be transferred to the custody of the commissioner of commerce if you do not
contact us before (insert date that is 30 days after the date of this notice)."
(b) The notice under section 345A.501
must:
(1) identify the nature and, except for
property that does not have a fixed value, the value of the property that is
the subject of the notice;
(2) state that the property will be
turned over to the administrator;
(3) state that after the property is
turned over to the administrator an apparent owner that seeks return of the
property must file a claim with the administrator;
(4) state that property that is not
legal tender of the United States may be sold by the administrator; and
(5) provide instructions that the
apparent owner must follow to prevent the holder from reporting and paying or
delivering the property to the administrator.
Sec. 3. [345A.503]
NOTICE BY ADMINISTRATOR.
(a) The administrator shall give notice
to an apparent owner that property presumed abandoned and that appears to be
owned by the apparent owner is held by the administrator under this chapter.
(b) In providing notice under
subsection (a), the administrator shall:
(1) publish every 12 months in at least
one newspaper of general circulation in each county in this state notice of
property held by the administrator which must include:
(A) the total value of property
received by the administrator during the preceding 12-month period, taken from
the reports under section 345A.401;
(B) the total value of claims paid by
the administrator during the preceding 12-month period;
(C) the Internet address of the
unclaimed property website maintained by the administrator;
(D)
a telephone number and email address to contact the administrator to inquire
about or claim property; and
(E) a statement that a person may
access the Internet by a computer to search for unclaimed property and a
computer may be available as a service to the public at a local public library;
and
(2) maintain a website or database
accessible by the public and electronically searchable which contains the names
reported to the administrator of all apparent owners for whom property is being
held by the administrator. The
administrator need not list property on such website when:
(A) no owner name was reported;
(B) a claim has been initiated or is
pending for the property;
(C) the administrator has made direct
contact with the apparent owner of the property; and
(D) other instances exist where the
administrator reasonably believes exclusion of the property is in the best
interests of both the state and the owner of the property.
(c) The website or database maintained
under subsection (b)(2) must include instructions for filing with the
administrator a claim to property and a printable claim form with instructions
for its use.
(d) In addition to giving notice under
subsection (b), publishing the information under subsection (b)(1), and
maintaining the website or database under subsection (b)(2), the administrator
may use other printed publication, telecommunication, the Internet, or other
media to inform the public of the existence of unclaimed property held by the
administrator.
ARTICLE 6
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; TAKING CUSTODY
OF PROPERTY BY ADMINISTRATOR
Section 1.
[345A.601] DORMANCY CHARGE.
(a)
A holder may deduct a dormancy charge from property required to be paid or
delivered to the administrator if:
(1) a valid contract between the holder
and the apparent owner authorizes imposition of the charge for the apparent
owner's failure to claim the property within a specified time; and
(2) the holder regularly imposes the
charge and regularly does not reverse or otherwise cancel the charge.
(b) The amount of the deduction under
subsection (a) is limited to an amount that is not unconscionable considering
all relevant factors, including the marginal transactional costs incurred by
the holder in maintaining the apparent owner's property and any services
received by the apparent owner.
(c) A holder may not deduct an escheat
fee or impose other charges solely by virtue of property being reported as
presumed abandoned.
Sec. 2. [345A.602]
PAYMENT OR DELIVERY OF PROPERTY TO ADMINISTRATOR.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in
this section, on filing a report under section 345A.401, the holder shall pay
or deliver to the administrator the property described in the report.
(b)
If property in a report under section 345A.401 is an automatically renewable
deposit and a penalty or forfeiture in the payment of interest would result
from paying the deposit to the administrator at the time of the report, the
date for payment of the property to the administrator is extended until a
penalty or forfeiture no longer would result from payment, if the holder
informs the administrator of the extended date.
(c) Tangible property in a safe deposit
box may not be delivered to the administrator until 60 days after filing the
report under section 345A.401.
(d) If property reported to the
administrator under section 345A.401 is a security, the administrator may:
(1) make an endorsement, instruction,
or entitlement order on behalf of the apparent owner to invoke the duty of the
issuer, its transfer agent, or the securities intermediary to transfer the
security; or
(2) dispose of the security under
section 345A.702.
(e) If the holder of property reported to
the administrator under section 345A.401 is the issuer of a certificated
security, the administrator may obtain a replacement certificate in physical or
book-entry form under section 336.8‑405.
An indemnity bond is not required.
(f) The administrator shall establish
procedures for the registration, issuance, method of delivery, transfer, and
maintenance of securities delivered to the administrator by a holder.
(g) An issuer, holder, and transfer
agent or other person acting under this section under instructions of and on
behalf of the issuer or holder is not liable to the apparent owner for, and
must be indemnified by the state against, a claim arising with respect to
property after the property has been delivered to the administrator.
(h) A holder is not required to deliver
to the administrator a security identified by the holder as a nonfreely
transferable security. If the
administrator or holder determines that a security is no longer a nonfreely
transferable security, the holder shall deliver the security on the next
regular date prescribed for delivery of securities under this chapter. The holder shall make a determination
annually whether a security identified in a report filed under section 345A.401
as a nonfreely transferable security is no longer a nonfreely transferable
security.
Sec. 3. [345A.603]
EFFECT OF PAYMENT OR DELIVERY OF PROPERTY TO ADMINISTRATOR.
On payment or delivery of property to
the administrator under this chapter, the administrator, as agent for the
state, assumes custody and responsibility for safekeeping the property. A holder that pays or delivers property to
the administrator in good faith and substantially complies with sections
345A.501 and 345A.502 is relieved of liability which may arise thereafter with
respect to the property so paid or delivered.
Sec. 4. [345A.604]
RECOVERY OF PROPERTY BY HOLDERS FROM ADMINISTRATOR.
(a) A holder that under this chapter
pays money to the administrator may file a claim for reimbursement from the
administrator of the amount paid if the holder:
(1) paid the money in error; or
(2) after paying the money to the
administrator, paid money to a person the holder reasonably believed entitled
to the money.
(b)
If a claim for return of property is made, the holder shall include with the claim
evidence sufficient to establish that the apparent owner has claimed the
property from the holder or that the property was delivered by the holder to
the administrator in error.
Sec. 5. [345A.605]
CREDITING INCOME OR GAIN TO OWNER'S ACCOUNT.
If property other than money is
delivered to the administrator, the owner is entitled to receive from the
administrator income or gain realized or accrued on the property before the
property is sold. If the property was
interest-bearing, the administrator shall pay interest at the lesser of the
rate of the weekly average one-year constant maturity treasury yield, as
published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, for the
calendar week preceding the beginning of the fiscal quarter in which the
property was sold or the rate the property earned while in the possession of
the holder. Interest begins to accrue
when the property is delivered to the administrator and ends on the earlier of
the expiration of ten years after its delivery or the date on which payment is
made to the owner.
Sec. 6. [345A.606]
ADMINISTRATOR'S OPTIONS AS TO CUSTODY.
(a) The administrator may decline to
take custody of property reported under section 345A.401 if the administrator
determines that:
(1) the property has a value less than
the estimated expenses of notice and sale of the property; or
(2) taking custody of the property
would be unlawful.
(b) A holder may pay or deliver
property to the administrator before the property is presumed abandoned under
this chapter if the holder:
(1) sends the apparent owner of the
property notice required by section 345A.501 and provides the administrator
evidence of the holder's compliance with this paragraph;
(2) includes with the payment or
delivery a report regarding the property conforming to section 345A.402; and
(3) first obtains the administrator's
written consent to accept payment or delivery.
(c) A holder's request for the
administrator's consent under subsection (b)(3) must be in a record. If the administrator fails to respond to the
request not later than 30 days after receipt of the request, the administrator
is deemed to consent to the payment or delivery of the property and the payment
or delivery is considered to have been made in good faith.
(d) On payment or delivery of property
under subsection (b), the property is presumed abandoned.
Sec. 7. [345A.607]
DISPOSITION OF PROPERTY HAVING NO SUBSTANTIAL VALUE; IMMUNITY FROM LIABILITY.
(a) If the administrator takes custody
of property delivered under this chapter and later determines that the property
has no substantial commercial value or that the cost of disposing of the
property will exceed the value of the property, the administrator may return
the property to the holder or destroy or otherwise dispose of the property.
(b) An action or proceeding may not be
commenced against the state, an agency of the state, the administrator, another
officer, employee, or agent of the state, or a holder for or because of an act
of the administrator under this section, except for intentional misconduct or
malfeasance.
Sec. 8. [345A.608]
PERIODS OF LIMITATION AND REPOSE.
(a) Expiration, before, on, or after
the effective date of this chapter, of a period of limitation on an owner's
right to receive or recover property, whether specified by contract, statute,
or court order, does not prevent the property from being presumed abandoned or
affect the duty of a holder under this chapter to file a report or pay or
deliver property to the administrator.
(b) An action or proceeding may not be
maintained by the administrator to enforce this act's reporting, delivery, or
payment requirements more than ten years after the holder specifically
identified the property in a report filed with the administrator, or gave
express notice to the administrator of a dispute regarding the property. In the absence of such a report or other
express notice, the period of limitation is tolled. The period of limitation is also tolled by
filing a fraudulent report.
ARTICLE 7
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; SALE OF PROPERTY BY ADMINISTRATOR
Section 1.
[345A.701] PUBLIC SALE OF
PROPERTY.
(a) Subject to section 345A.702, not
earlier than three years after receipt of property presumed abandoned, the
administrator may sell the property.
(b) Before selling property under
subsection (a), the administrator shall give notice to the public of:
(1) the date of the sale; and
(2) a reasonable description of the
property.
(c) A sale under subsection (a) must be
to the highest bidder:
(1) at public sale at a location in
this state which the administrator determines to be the most favorable market
for the property;
(2) on the Internet; or
(3) on another forum the administrator
determines is likely to yield the highest net proceeds of sale.
(d) The administrator may decline the
highest bid at a sale under this section and reoffer the property for sale if
the administrator determines the highest bid is insufficient.
(e) If a sale held under this section
is to be conducted other than on the Internet, the administrator must publish
at least one notice of the sale, at least two weeks but not more than five
weeks before the sale, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in
which the property is sold. For purposes
of this subsection, the reasonable description of property to be sold required
by subsection (b) may be satisfied by posting such information on the
administrator's website so long as the newspaper notice includes the website
address where such information is posted.
Sec. 2. [345A.702]
DISPOSAL OF SECURITIES.
(a) The administrator may not sell or
otherwise liquidate a security until one year after the administrator receives
the security, unless requested to do so by the owner of the security in making
a claim for the property.
(b)
The administrator may not sell a security listed on an established stock
exchange for less than the price prevailing on the exchange at the time of sale. The administrator may sell a security not
listed on an established exchange by any commercially reasonable method.
Sec. 3. [345A.704]
PURCHASER OWNS PROPERTY AFTER SALE.
A purchaser of property at a sale
conducted by the administrator under this chapter takes the property free of
all claims of the owner, a previous holder, or a person claiming through the
owner or holder. The administrator shall
execute documents necessary to complete the transfer of ownership to the
purchaser.
ARTICLE 8
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; ADMINISTRATION OF PROPERTY
Section 1.
[345A.801] DEPOSIT OF FUNDS BY
ADMINISTRATOR.
(a) The administrator shall deposit in
the general fund all funds received under this chapter, including proceeds from
the sale of property under sections 345A.701 to 345A.704, except:
(1) expenses of disposition of property
delivered to the administrator under this chapter;
(2) expenses incurred in examining
records of or collecting property from a putative holder or holder; and
(3) as otherwise provided in this
chapter.
Sec. 2. [345A.802]
ADMINISTRATOR TO RETAIN RECORDS OF PROPERTY.
The administrator shall:
(1) record and retain the name and last
known address of each person shown on a report filed under section 345A.401 to
be the apparent owner of property delivered to the administrator;
(2) record and retain the name and last
known address of each insured or annuitant and beneficiary shown on the report;
(3) for each policy of insurance or
annuity contract listed in the report of an insurance company, record and
retain the policy or account number, the name of the company, and the amount
due or paid; and
(4) for each apparent owner listed in
the report, record and retain the name of the holder that filed the report and
the amount due or paid.
ARTICLE 9
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; CONFIDENTIALITY
AND SECURITY OF INFORMATION
Section 1.
[345A.901] DATA PRACTICES.
(a) All working papers, recorded
information, documents, and copies thereof produced by, obtained by, or
disclosed to the administrator or the administrator's agent in the course of an
examination made under this chapter are classified private or nonpublic for
purposes of the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 13, are not subject to subpoena, and may only be disclosed to:
(1)
the extent required or permitted by law to report upon or take special action
regarding compliance and delivery of unclaimed property, or ordered by a court
of law to testify or produce evidence in a civil or criminal proceeding;
(2) another department or agency of this
state or the United States;
(3) the person that administers the
unclaimed property law of another state, if the other state accords
substantially reciprocal privileges to the administrator of this state and
maintains the confidentiality and security of information obtained in a
substantially equivalent manner;
(4) a person subject to an examination
as required by this chapter; and
(5) the auditor or administrator of a
joint examination conducted with another state, the United States, a foreign
country or subordinate unit of a foreign country, or any other governmental
entity if the governmental entity conducting the examination maintains the
confidentiality and security of information in a substantially equivalent
manner.
(b) All personal information derived or
otherwise obtained by or communicated to the administrator or the
administrator's agent from a person making a claim for personal property are
classified private or nonpublic for purposes of the Minnesota Government Data
Practices Act, Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13, and may not be made public by
the administrator or the administrator's agent, except to:
(1) the subject, or the subject's
personal representative, attorney, other legal representative, heir, or agent
designated to have the information;
(2) the personal representative of an
estate, other legal representative, agent designated by a deceased apparent
owner, or a person entitled to inherit from a deceased apparent owner;
(3) another department or agency of this
state or the United States; and
(4) the extent required or permitted by
law or ordered by a court of law to testify or produce evidence in a civil or
criminal proceeding.
(c) Except as otherwise provided by law,
the administrator shall include on its website or in the database required by
section 345A.503(b)(2) the name of each apparent owner of property held by the
administrator. The administrator may
include in published notices, printed publications, telecommunications, the
Internet, or other media and on the website or in the database additional
information concerning the apparent owner's property if the administrator
believes the information will assist in identifying and returning property to
the owner and does not disclose personal information except the home or
physical address of an apparent owner.
ARTICLE 10
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY; HEARINGS, PROCEDURE,
AND JUDICIAL REVIEW
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 345.515, is amended to read:
345.515
AGREEMENTS TO LOCATE REPORTED PROPERTY.
It is unlawful for a person to seek or
receive from another person or contract with a person for a fee or compensation
for locating property, knowing it to have been reported or paid or delivered
to the commissioner pursuant to chapter 345 prior to 24 months after the
date the property is paid or delivered to the commissioner administrator.
No
An agreement entered into after 24 months after the date the property
is paid or delivered to the commissioner is valid only if a
person thereby undertakes to locate property included in a report for a fee or
other compensation exceeding ten percent of the value of the recoverable
property unless the agreement is in writing and, is signed by
the owner and, discloses the nature and value of the property and
the name and address of the holder thereof as such facts have been reported,
and provides for compensation in an amount that is no more than 15 percent
of the amount collected. Nothing in
this section shall be construed to prevent an owner from asserting at any time that
an agreement to locate property is based upon an excessive or unjust
consideration.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 345.53, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Commissioner's
Administrator's duties. (a)
The commissioner administrator or the administrator's agent may
at reasonable times and upon reasonable notice examine the records of any
person, including examination of appropriate records in the possession of an
agent of the person under examination, if there is reason to believe
that the person has failed to report property that should have been reported
pursuant to sections 345.31 to 345.60. the records are reasonably
necessary to determine whether the person has complied with this chapter. The administrator may issue an administrative
subpoena requiring the person or agent of the person to make records available
for examination, and bring an action seeking judicial enforcement of the
subpoena, as well as impose penalties under section 345.55.
(b) The administrator may contract with
a person to conduct an examination under this chapter. The contract shall be awarded pursuant to a
request for proposals issued in compliance with the state procurement rules.
(1) If the administrator contracts with
a person under this subsection, the contract may provide for compensation of
the person based on a fixed fee, hourly fee, or contingent fee.
(2) A contract under subsection (b) is
public data.
(c) If the administrator conducts an
examination under subsection (a), each person under examination shall pay an
examination fee upon the request of the administrator and to be based on the
salary cost of examiners or assistants, and at such an average rate per day or
fraction thereof so as to provide for the total cost of such examinations. In no case may the charges exceed the value
of the property found to be reportable and deliverable.
(d) All data gathered in the course of
an examination or audit of a holder or purported holder under this chapter is
classified as private or nonpublic information under the Minnesota Government
Data Practices Act, Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13, except as set forth in
section (b)(2) and except that such data may be disclosed as follows:
(1) to the extent required or permitted
by law to report upon or take special action regarding compliance and delivery
of unclaimed property, or ordered by a court of law;
(2) to another department or agency of
this state or the United States;
(3) to the person that administers the
unclaimed property law of another state, if the other state accords
substantially reciprocal privileges to the administrator of this state, and
maintains the confidentiality and security of information by law or by
agreement in a substantially equivalent manner;
(4) to a person subject to an
examination as required by this chapter; and
(5) to the auditor or administrator of
a joint examination conducted with another state, the United States, a foreign
country or subordinate unit of a foreign country, or any other governmental
entity if the governmental entity conducting the examination maintains the
confidentiality and security of information by law or by agreement in a
substantially equivalent manner.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 345.53, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3. Failure
of person examined to retain records.
If a person subject to examination under this chapter does not
retain the records required by section 345A.404, the administrator may
determine the value of property due using a reasonable method of estimation
based on all information available to the administrator, including
extrapolation and use of statistical sampling when appropriate and necessary. A payment made based on estimation under this
section is a penalty for failure to maintain the records required by section
345A.404, and does not relieve a person from an obligation to report and
deliver property to a state in which the holder is domiciled.
Sec. 4. [345A.950]
HEARINGS, PROCEDURE, JUDICIAL REVIEW.
(a) Any person aggrieved by a decision
of the administrator under this chapter as it relates to holder examinations
may, within 21 days after that decision, make a written request to the
administrator for a hearing pursuant to this article to determine whether the
decision complies with the requirements of this chapter.
(b) Any person aggrieved by a decision
of the administrator under this chapter as it relates to claims of ownership of
unclaimed property may, within 21 days after that decision or within 180 days
from the filing of the claim if the administrator fails to act on a claim, make
a written request to the administrator for a hearing pursuant to this article
to determine whether the decision complies with the requirements of this
chapter.
(c) At the administrator's discretion, a
hearing may be based upon written submissions, and nothing contained in this
section requires the observance of formal rules of pleading or evidence.
(d) The administrator shall commence a
hearing within 45 days after receipt of the request and shall give not less
than 15 days' written notice of the hearing.
Within 30 days after the hearing, the administrator shall affirm,
reverse, or modify the previous action and specify the reasons for that
decision in writing.
(e) An order or decision of the administrator
is a final decision subject to appeal in accordance with chapter 14.
Sec. 5. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 345.53,
subdivision 2, is repealed.
ARTICLE 11
APPROPRIATION
Section 1. UNCLAIMED
PROPERTY COMPLIANCE.
$384,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $384,000 in fiscal year 2021 are appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of commerce for additional compliance efforts with respect to unclaimed property. The commissioner may issue contracts for these services."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to commerce; unclaimed property; codifying the Revised Unclaimed Property Act; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 345.515; 345.53, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 345A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 345.53, subdivision 2."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Sundin from the Committee on Labor to which was referred:
H. F. No. 2543, A bill for an act relating to employment; exempting minor league baseball players from minimum wage and overtime requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 177.23, subdivision 7.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
S. F. No. 131, A bill for an act relating to health care; requiring facility fee disclosure; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 62J.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:
S. F. No. 584, A bill for an act relating to health licensing; converting allied health professions to a birth month renewal cycle; making technical corrections; modifying certain fees; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 147.01, subdivision 7; 147.012; 147.02, by adding a subdivision; 147A.06; 147A.07; 147A.28; 147B.02, subdivision 9, by adding a subdivision; 147B.08; 147C.15, subdivision 7, by adding a subdivision; 147C.40; 147D.17, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 147D.27, by adding a subdivision; 147E.15, subdivision 5, by adding a subdivision; 147E.40, subdivision 1; 147F.07, subdivision 5, by adding subdivisions; 147F.17, subdivision 1; 148.7815, subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 147A; 147B; 147C; 147D; 147E; 147F; repealing Minnesota Rules, part 5600.0605, subparts 5, 8.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
SECOND READING
OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 559, 783, 990,
1063, 1262, 1393, 1983, 2027 and 2150 were read for the second time.
SECOND READING
OF SENATE BILLS
S. F. Nos. 131 and 584 were
read for the second time.
INTRODUCTION
AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The
following House Files were introduced:
Poston, Miller, Anderson, Munson and Hamilton introduced:
H. F. No. 2744, A bill for an act relating to animals; increasing Board of Animal Health membership; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 35.02, subdivision 1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
Freiberg introduced:
H. F. No. 2745, A bill for an act relating to human services; establishing Capitol complex sighted assistance pilot project; requiring a report; appropriating money.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Acomb introduced:
H. F. No. 2746, A bill for an act relating to state government; appropriating money to preserve and make accessible historic resources.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Wazlawik introduced:
H. F. No. 2747, A bill for an act relating to environment; authorizing repair or replacement of subsurface sewage treatment systems to be financed through the agricultural best management practices loan program regardless of where in the state the subsurface sewage treatment system is located; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 17.117, subdivision 4.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Acomb, Wagenius and Bierman introduced:
H. F. No. 2748, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; energy; establishing a loan fund for energy conservation improvements in schools; appropriating money; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 216C.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Huot introduced:
H. F. No. 2749, A bill for an act relating to taxation; individual income; increasing the phaseout threshold for the past military service credit; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 290.0677, subdivision 1a.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Nelson, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 2750, A bill for an act relating to state government; reducing the base appropriation to the commissioner of administration; prohibiting a transfer to the Minnesota Film and TV Board in fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Nelson, M., introduced:
H. F. No. 2751, A bill for an act relating to state government; reducing the base appropriation to the Minnesota Humanities Center; prohibiting grants for the Healthy Eating, Here at Home program in fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Olson, Long and Edelson introduced:
H. F. No. 2752, A bill for an act relating to elections; requiring certain candidates for president and vice‑president to release federal income tax information; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 207A.13, by adding a subdivision.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
Gomez introduced:
H. F. No. 2753, A bill for an act relating to taxation; individual income; modifying tax brackets; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 290.06, subdivisions 2c, 2d.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Lislegard introduced:
H. F. No. 2754, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for improvements to the Hoyt Lakes Arena; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Lislegard introduced:
H. F. No. 2755, A bill for an act relating to higher education; appropriating money for the Iron Range engineering program.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Sandell introduced:
H. F. No. 2756, A bill for an act relating to taxation; income and estate; imposing additional tax on certain capital gain and dividend income; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 290.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Grossell introduced:
H. F. No. 2757, A bill for an act relating to natural resources; modifying bear-baiting restrictions; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 97B.426.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.
Vang introduced:
H. F. No. 2758, A resolution memorializing the President and Congress to direct the United States Food and Drug Administration to revise its current blood or plasma donor deferral policy related to men who have had sex with a man and to women who have had sex with a man who has had sex with another man within the previous 12 months from the most recent contact.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Government Operations.
Lesch and Davids introduced:
H. F. No. 2759, A bill for an act relating to taxation; regulating direct shippers of wine; imposing sales and use taxes, liquor gross receipts taxes, and excise taxes on direct shipments of wine; providing for licensing and required reports; providing for classification of data; prohibiting bootlegging; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 13.6905, by adding a subdivision; 295.75, subdivision 4; 297A.83, subdivision 1; 297G.07, subdivision 1; 299A.706; 340A.304; 340A.417; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 340A.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Taxes.
Torkelson, Urdahl, Bennett, Petersburg and Nelson, N., introduced:
H. F. No. 2760, A bill for an act relating to transportation; appropriating money for local roads and bridges; authorizing sale and issuance of general obligation bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Koegel introduced:
H. F. No. 2761, A bill for an act relating to capital investment; appropriating money for an interchange on marked Trunk Highway 65; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following
message was received from the Senate:
Madam Speaker:
I hereby announce that the Senate has concurred in and adopted the report of the Conference Committee on:
S. F. No. 1743.
The Senate has repassed said bill in accordance with the recommendation and report of the Conference Committee. Said Senate File is herewith transmitted to the House.
Cal R. Ludeman, Secretary of the Senate
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE REPORT ON S. F. No. 1743
A bill for an act relating to education; modifying the calculation of days and hours of instruction for students affected by snow days during the 2018-2019 school year; requiring affected school districts to report to the commissioner.
March 27, 2019
The Honorable Jeremy R. Miller
President of the Senate
The Honorable Melissa Hortman
Speaker of the House of Representatives
We, the undersigned conferees for S. F. No. 1743 report that we have agreed upon the items in dispute and recommend as follows:
That the House recede from its amendments and that S. F. No. 1743 be further amended as follows:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"Section 1. SCHOOL CALENDAR ADJUSTMENT; 2018-2019
SCHOOL YEAR.
Subdivision 1.
Required school days and hours. (a) Notwithstanding Minnesota
Statutes, sections 120A.32, 120A.41, and 126C.05, the board of a school
district or charter school that canceled school on one or more days during the
2018-2019 school year due to health and safety concerns may count those days as
instructional days for
purposes
of calculating the number of hours and days in the school year under Minnesota
Statutes, section 120A.41, and the calculation of average daily membership
under Minnesota Statutes, section 126C.05, for students enrolled both before
and after those school closure dates.
(b) If a school district or charter
school would not have met the required minimum number of days and hours of
instruction for students without the authority in paragraph (a), the district
or charter school must report to the commissioner of education in the form and
manner determined by the commissioner on the number of days and hours that the
district counted under paragraph (a) to meet the required days and hours of
instruction. A school district that counts
a day that school was canceled as an instructional day in accordance with
paragraph (a) is encouraged to adopt an e-learning day plan under Minnesota
Statutes, section 120A.414.
(c) If a school board resolves to count
a day that school was canceled as an instructional day in accordance with
paragraph (a), the school district must compensate employees and contract
employers in accordance with subdivisions 2 and 3.
Subd. 2. Instructional
day; employees. (a) This
subdivision applies to the employee of a school district that resolves to count
a day that school was canceled as an instructional day in accordance with
subdivision 1 who:
(1) was scheduled to work on a day that
school was canceled and counted as an instructional day;
(2) did not work on any or all of those
days; and
(3) did not receive compensation for
those days.
(b) Notwithstanding any law to the
contrary, for each day identified in paragraph (a), a school district must
either:
(1) allow any school district employee
under paragraph (a) the opportunity to work on another day that the school
district designates and must compensate the employee working on the designated
day at the employee's normal rate of pay; or
(2) compensate any school district
employee under paragraph (a) for each of the days not worked at the employee's
normal rate of pay.
Subd. 3. Contract
employer to pay eligible employees. (a)
For purposes of this subdivision, "contract employer" means an
employer who provides student-related services throughout the school year to a
school district, and "eligible employee" means a person:
(1) whose primary task is to provide
services to students attending a school district;
(2) who was scheduled to work for the
contract employer on any of the days that school was canceled and the school
board counts as an instructional day in accordance with subdivision 1;
(3) who did not work on any or all of
those days; and
(4)
who did not receive compensation for any or all of the employee's regularly
scheduled shifts on those school days.
(b) A school district must notify a
contract employer which days it counted as instructional days under subdivision
1, if any.
(c)
A contract employer who agrees to compensate its eligible employees at their
normal rate of pay for the hours of pay lost due to a school cancellation,
later counted as an instructional day under subdivision 1, must notify the
district of its intended action and, once notified, the school district must
fully compensate the contract employer for the days identified under paragraph
(b).
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), a
school district and contract employer may adjust the full, regularly scheduled
daily contract rate if special circumstances within the district warrant an
adjustment.
Subd. 4. Probationary
teachers. For the 2018-2019
school year only, for purposes of Minnesota Statutes, sections 122A.40,
subdivision 5, paragraph (e), and 122A.41, subdivision 2, paragraph (d), the
minimum number of days of teacher service that a probationary teacher must
complete equals the difference between 120 days and the number of scheduled
instructional days that were canceled due to health and safety concerns and
that the school board resolved to count as days of instruction under Minnesota
Statutes, section 120A.41.
Subd. 5. Accounting. Notwithstanding any law to the
contrary, services paid under subdivision 2 or 3, including expenses recorded
in the food service fund, may be charged to the same Uniform Financial
Accounting and Reporting Standards object code to which the service is charged
for an instructional day.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day following final enactment."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to education; modifying the calculation of days and hours of instruction and compensation for school days canceled during the 2018-2019 school year; requiring affected school districts to report to the commissioner."
We request the adoption of this report and repassage of the bill.
Senate Conferees: Carla J. Nelson, Charles W. Wiger and John Jasinski.
House Conferees: Shelly Christensen, Cheryl Youakim and Dean Urdahl.
Christensen moved that the report of the
Conference Committee on S. F. No. 1743 be adopted and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Conference Committee. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1743, A bill for an act relating to education; modifying the calculation of days and hours of instruction for students affected by snow days during the 2018-2019 school year; requiring affected school districts to report to the commissioner.
The bill was read for the third time, as
amended by Conference, and placed upon its repassage.
The question was taken on the repassage of
the bill and the roll was called. There
were 115 yeas and 12 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Acomb
Albright
Anderson
Backer
Bahner
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Bernardy
Bierman
Boe
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Daniels
Davids
Davnie
Dehn
Demuth
Dettmer
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Fabian
Fischer
Franson
Freiberg
Gomez
Grossell
Gunther
Haley
Halverson
Hamilton
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Heintzeman
Her
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Petersburg
Pierson
Pinto
Poppe
Poston
Pryor
Richardson
Robbins
Runbeck
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schomacker
Schultz
Scott
Stephenson
Sundin
Swedzinski
Tabke
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vang
Vogel
Wagenius
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
Those who voted in the negative were:
Bahr
Drazkowski
Garofalo
Green
Gruenhagen
Heinrich
Hertaus
Lucero
Mekeland
Miller
Munson
Quam
The bill was repassed, as amended by
Conference, and its title agreed to.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE, Continued
The
following message was received from the Senate:
Madam Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the
Senate of the following Senate Files, herewith transmitted:
S. F. Nos. 1547 and 1757.
Cal R. Ludeman,
Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF
SENATE BILLS
S. F. No. 1547, A bill for an act relating to unemployment insurance; adopting changes recommended by the Unemployment Insurance Advisory committee in the 2018 legislative session; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 268.035, subdivisions 4, 12, 15, 20; 268.044, subdivisions 2, 3; 268.046, subdivision 1; 268.047, subdivision 3; 268.051, subdivision 2a; 268.057, subdivision 5; 268.069, subdivision 1; 268.07, subdivision 1; 268.085, subdivisions 3, 3a, 13a, by adding subdivisions; 268.095, subdivisions 6, 6a; 268.105, subdivision 6; 268.145, subdivision 1; 268.18, subdivisions 2b, 5.
The bill was read for the first time.
Xiong, J., moved that S. F. No. 1547 and H. F. No. 374, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1757, A bill for an act relating to commerce; prohibiting the use of appropriated funds to support certain legal proceedings.
The bill was read for the first time.
MOTION TO
DECLARE URGENCY
Pursuant to Article IV, Section 19, of the
Constitution of the state of Minnesota, Fabian moved that the rule therein be
suspended and an urgency be declared and that the rules of the House be so far
suspended so that S. F. No. 1757 be given its second and third
readings and be placed upon its final passage.
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
LAY ON THE
TABLE
Winkler moved that the Fabian motion be
laid on the table.
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Winkler
motion and the roll was called. There
were 75 yeas and 51 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Acomb
Bahner
Becker-Finn
Bernardy
Bierman
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Davnie
Dehn
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Fischer
Freiberg
Gomez
Halverson
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Her
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kunesh-Podein
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Noor
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Pinto
Poppe
Pryor
Richardson
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schultz
Stephenson
Sundin
Tabke
Vang
Wagenius
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
Those who voted in the negative were:
Albright
Anderson
Bahr
Baker
Bennett
Boe
Daniels
Davids
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Erickson
Fabian
Franson
Garofalo
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Hamilton
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Kresha
Lucero
Lueck
Mekeland
Miller
Munson
Nelson, N.
Neu
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Petersburg
Pierson
Poston
Quam
Robbins
Runbeck
Schomacker
Scott
Swedzinski
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vogel
Zerwas
The
motion prevailed and the Fabian motion was laid on the table.
S. F. No. 1757 was referred to the Committee on Commerce.
ANNOUNCEMENT
BY THE SPEAKER
The Speaker announced the appointment of
the following members of the House to the committee to escort the Governor to
the Joint Convention on Wednesday, April 3, 2019:
Koegel,
Kotyza-Witthuhn, Vang, Boe and Munson.
REPORT FROM THE COMMITTEE ON
RULES
AND LEGISLATIVE ADMINISTRATION
Winkler 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 Monday, April 1,
2019 and established a prefiling requirement for amendments offered to the
following bills:
H. F. Nos. 495, 1543, 2051,
2265 and 2276.
CALENDAR FOR
THE DAY
S. F. No. 307 was reported
to the House.
Jurgens moved to amend S. F. No. 307, the first engrossment, as follows:
Page 1, line 5, delete "$10,000,000" and insert "$23,000,000" and delete "is" and insert "and $20,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 are"
Page 1, delete line 7 and insert "These are onetime transfers. Of the $23,000,000 transferred in fiscal year 2019, up to $3,000,000 is available to provide the state match for FEMA major disaster declaration DR-4414 for St. Louis County resulting from severe storms and flooding in October 2018."
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The question was taken on the Jurgens
amendment and the roll was called. There
were 47 yeas and 80 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Albright
Anderson
Backer
Baker
Bennett
Boe
Daniels
Davids
Demuth
Dettmer
Erickson
Fabian
Franson
Garofalo
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Hamilton
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Lueck
Nelson, N.
Neu
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Petersburg
Pierson
Poston
Quam
Robbins
Runbeck
Schomacker
Scott
Swedzinski
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vogel
Zerwas
Those who voted in the negative were:
Acomb
Bahner
Bahr
Becker-Finn
Bernardy
Bierman
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Davnie
Dehn
Drazkowski
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Fischer
Freiberg
Gomez
Halverson
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Her
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Noor
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Pinto
Poppe
Pryor
Richardson
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schultz
Stephenson
Sundin
Tabke
Vang
Wagenius
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
The
motion did not prevail and the amendment was not adopted.
S. F. No. 307, A bill for
an act relating to public safety; transferring money to the disaster
contingency account.
The bill was read for the third time and
placed upon its final passage.
The question was taken on the passage of
the bill and the roll was called. There
were 127 yeas and 0 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Acomb
Albright
Anderson
Backer
Bahner
Bahr
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Bernardy
Bierman
Boe
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Daniels
Davids
Davnie
Dehn
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Fabian
Fischer
Franson
Freiberg
Garofalo
Gomez
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Halverson
Hamilton
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Her
Hertaus
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Petersburg
Pierson
Pinto
Poppe
Poston
Pryor
Quam
Richardson
Robbins
Runbeck
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schomacker
Schultz
Scott
Stephenson
Sundin
Swedzinski
Tabke
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vang
Vogel
Wagenius
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
The
bill was passed and its title agreed to.
MOTIONS
AND RESOLUTIONS
Lucero moved that the name of Robbins be
added as an author on H. F. No. 114. The motion prevailed.
Albright moved that the names of Bierman
and O'Driscoll be added as authors on H. F. No. 306. The motion prevailed.
Garofalo moved that the name of Haley be
added as an author on H. F. No. 322. The motion prevailed.
Moran moved that the names of Cantrell and
Halverson be added as authors on H. F. No. 342. The motion prevailed.
Kresha moved that the name of Schomacker
be added as an author on H. F. No. 499. The motion prevailed.
Davnie moved that the name of Lillie be
added as an author on H. F. No. 521. The motion prevailed.
Moran moved that the name of Halverson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 563. The motion prevailed.
Morrison moved that the name of Bahner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 636. The motion prevailed.
Pelowski moved that the name of Bahner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 682. The motion prevailed.
Morrison moved that the name of Mann be
added as an author on H. F. No. 909. The motion prevailed.
Kunesh-Podein moved that the name of Gomez
be added as an author on H. F. No. 930. The motion prevailed.
Moran moved that the name of Olson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1050. The motion prevailed.
Xiong, J., moved that the name of Olson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1088. The motion prevailed.
Morrison moved that the names of Bahner
and Mann be added as authors on H. F. No. 1167. The motion prevailed.
Sandell moved that the name of
Kotyza-Witthuhn be added as an author on H. F. No. 1190. The motion prevailed.
Baker moved that the name of Mekeland be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1247. The motion prevailed.
Hansen moved that the names of Tabke,
Ecklund and Lippert be added as authors on H. F. No. 1292. The motion prevailed.
Hornstein moved that the name of Cantrell
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1388. The motion prevailed.
Stephenson moved that the name of Elkins
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1398. The motion prevailed.
Stephenson moved that the names of Bahner,
Becker-Finn and Xiong, J., be added as authors on H. F. No. 1424. The motion prevailed.
Fischer moved that the name of Xiong,
J., be added as an author on H. F. No. 1502. The motion prevailed.
Morrison moved that the name of Cantrell
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1535. The motion prevailed.
Liebling moved that the name of Cantrell
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1540. The motion prevailed.
Poppe moved that the name of Haley be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1553. The motion prevailed.
Huot moved that the name of Olson be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1750.
The motion prevailed.
Mariani moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1834. The motion prevailed.
Lee moved that the name of Mariani be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2000. The motion prevailed.
Mahoney moved that the name of Moran be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2043. The motion prevailed.
Liebling moved that the name of Long be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2094. The motion prevailed.
Kotyza-Witthuhn moved that the name of
Morrison be added as an author on H. F. No. 2111. The motion prevailed.
Nelson, M., moved that the name of Long be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2122. The motion prevailed.
Moran moved that the name of Xiong, J., be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2413. The motion prevailed.
Sundin moved that the name of Olson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2467. The motion prevailed.
Pierson moved that the names of Franson
and Xiong, T., be added as authors on H. F. No. 2500. The motion prevailed.
Hausman moved that the name of Davnie be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2526. The motion prevailed.
Murphy moved that the name of Lillie be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2529. The motion prevailed.
Mahoney moved that the name of Jurgens be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2537. The motion prevailed.
Bernardy moved that the names of Her and
Xiong, J., be added as authors on H. F. No. 2551. The motion prevailed.
Hansen moved that the names of
Becker-Finn, Tabke, Sundin, Christensen, Lillie, Mariani, Vang, Lien, Ecklund,
Richardson and Carlson, A., be added as authors on
H. F. No. 2574. The
motion prevailed.
Pryor moved that the name of Becker-Finn
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2663. The motion prevailed.
Claflin moved that the name of Huot be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2695. The motion prevailed.
Zerwas moved that the name of Albright be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2721. The motion prevailed.
Kiel moved that the name of Theis be added
as an author on H. F. No. 2722.
The motion prevailed.
Wolgamott moved that the name of
Lillie be added as an author on H. F. No. 2730. The motion prevailed.
Franson moved that the name of Kresha be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2732. The motion prevailed.
Lislegard moved that his name be stricken
as an author on H. F. No. 2736.
The motion prevailed.
Lesch moved that
H. F. No. 2051, now on the Calendar for the Day, be re-referred
to the Judiciary Finance and Civil Law Division. The motion prevailed.
ANNOUNCEMENT
BY THE SPEAKER
The Speaker announced the following appointments and changes
in committee assignments:
Environment and Natural Resources Finance Division: Add the name of Theis.
ADJOURNMENT
Winkler moved that when the House adjourns
today it adjourn until 3:30 p.m., Monday, April 1, 2019. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 3:30 p.m., Monday, April 1, 2019.
Patrick
D. Murphy, Chief
Clerk, House of Representatives