STATE OF
MINNESOTA
NINETY-FIRST
SESSION - 2019
_____________________
FIFTY-NINTH
DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Monday, May 20, 2019
The House of Representatives convened at
11:00 a.m. and was called to order by Melissa Hortman, Speaker of the House.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Richard
D. Buller, Valley Community Presbyterian Church, Golden Valley, 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
Daudt
Davids
Davnie
Dehn
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Fabian
Fischer
Franson
Freiberg
Gomez
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Halverson
Hamilton
Hansen
Hausman
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Her
Hertaus
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Koznick
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Layman
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nash
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
O'Neill
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
West
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
A quorum was present.
Garofalo, Hassan and McDonald were excused
until 9:15 p.m.
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.
PETITIONS
AND COMMUNICATIONS
The following communications were
received:
STATE OF
MINNESOTA
OFFICE OF
THE GOVERNOR
SAINT PAUL
55155
May 18,
2019
The
Honorable Melissa Hortman
Speaker
of the House of Representatives
The
State of Minnesota
Dear Speaker Hortman:
Please be advised that I have received,
approved, signed, and deposited in the Office of the Secretary of State the
following House Files:
H. F. No. 622, relating
to commerce; modifying advertising requirements related to real estate brokers
and licensees.
H. F. No. 559, relating
to health occupations; requiring a provider-patient relationship in order to
make ophthalmic prescriptions.
H. F. No. 810, relating
to veterans; authorizing the placement of a plaque in the court of honor on the
Capitol grounds to honor all Minnesota veterans who served in the United States
armed forces, both at home and abroad, during World War I.
H. F. No. 281, relating
to Open Meeting Law; modifying requirements for attendance by interactive
television.
H. F. No. 2849, relating
to higher education; providing student relief from Argosy University closure;
requiring a report.
H. F. No. 1733, relating
to agriculture; making policy and technical changes to various agriculture
provisions including provisions related to aquaculture, pesticides, nursery
law, food handlers, eggs, milk, cheese, food, loans, open-air swine basins, and
other provisions; extending the Organic Advisory Task Force.
Sincerely,
Tim
Walz
Governor
STATE
OF MINNESOTA
OFFICE OF
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
ST. PAUL
55155
The Honorable Melissa Hortman
Speaker of the House of
Representatives
The Honorable Jeremy R. Miller
President of the Senate
I have the honor to inform you that the
following enrolled Acts of the 2019 Session of the State Legislature have been
received from the Office of the Governor and are deposited in the Office of the
Secretary of State for preservation, pursuant to the State Constitution,
Article IV, Section 23:
S. F. No. |
H. F. No. |
Session Laws Chapter No. |
Time and Date Approved 2019 |
Date Filed 2019 |
2313 26 5:49
p.m. May 17 May 17
998 27 5:49
p.m. May 17 May 17
955 28 5:49
p.m. May 17 May 17
326 29 5:50 p.m. May 17 May
17
622 30 5:50
p.m. May 17 May 17
559 31 5:51
p.m. May 17 May 17
810 32 5:51
p.m. May 17 May 17
281 33 5:51
p.m. May 17 May 17
2849 34 5:52
p.m. May 17 May 17
1753 35 5:52
p.m. May 17 May 17
322 36 5:53
p.m. May 17 May 17
1618 37 5:53
p.m. May 17 May 17
1733 38 5:54
p.m. May 17 May 17
278 39 5:54
p.m. May 17 May 17
Sincerely,
Steve
Simon
Secretary
of State
INTRODUCTION AND FIRST READING OF HOUSE BILLS
The
following House Files were introduced:
Mekeland introduced:
H. F. No. 2918, A bill for an act relating to economic development; appropriating money for public infrastructure for a business park in Becker.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Franson introduced:
H. F. No. 2919, A bill for an act relating to commerce; consumer protection; prohibiting an adjuster or insurer from certain actions relating to motor vehicle repairs and claims; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 72A.201, subdivision 6; 72B.092, subdivision 1.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Commerce.
Morrison and Zerwas introduced:
H. F. No. 2920, A bill for an act relating to health; modifying the Minnesota Athletic Trainers Act; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 148.7802, by adding a subdivision; 148.7806; 148.7807; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 148.7802, subdivisions 4, 5.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.
Drazkowski, Munson, Bahr and Miller introduced:
H. F. No. 2921, A bill for an act relating to state government finance; appropriating money to continue operations of a state agency if a bill to fund the operations of that agency has not been enacted by July 1, 2019.
The bill was read for the first time and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.
Winkler moved that the House recess
subject to the call of the Chair. The
motion prevailed.
RECESS
RECONVENED
The House reconvened and was called to
order by Speaker pro tempore Halverson.
The following Conference Committee Report
was received:
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE REPORT ON H. F. No. 400
A bill for an act relating to health; establishing the Opioid Addiction Advisory Council; establishing the opioid stewardship fund; establishing an opiate product registration fee; modifying provisions related to opioid addiction prevention, education, intervention, treatment, and recovery; requiring reports; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 16A.151, subdivision 2; 145.9269, subdivision 1; 145C.05, subdivision 2; 151.252, subdivision 1; 151.37, subdivision 12; 151.47, by adding a subdivision; 151.71, by adding a subdivision; 152.105, subdivision 2; 152.11, subdivision 2d, by adding subdivisions; 214.12, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 16A; 62Q; 145; 145C; 151.
May 20, 2019
The Honorable Melissa Hortman
Speaker of the House of Representatives
The Honorable Jeremy R. Miller
President of the Senate
We, the undersigned conferees for H. F. No. 400 report that we have agreed upon the items in dispute and recommend as follows:
That the Senate recede from its amendments and that H. F. No. 400 be further amended as follows:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
OPIATE EPIDEMIC RESPONSE
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 16A.151, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Exceptions. (a) If a state official litigates or settles a matter on behalf of specific injured persons or entities, this section does not prohibit distribution of money to the specific injured persons or entities on whose behalf the litigation or settlement efforts were initiated. If money recovered on behalf of injured persons or entities cannot reasonably be distributed to those persons or entities because they cannot readily be located or identified or because the cost of distributing the money would outweigh the benefit to the persons or entities, the money must be paid into the general fund.
(b) Money recovered on behalf of a fund in the state treasury other than the general fund may be deposited in that fund.
(c) This section does not prohibit a state official from distributing money to a person or entity other than the state in litigation or potential litigation in which the state is a defendant or potential defendant.
(d) State agencies may accept funds as directed by a federal court for any restitution or monetary penalty under United States Code, title 18, section 3663(a)(3) or United States Code, title 18, section 3663A(a)(3). Funds received must be deposited in a special revenue account and are appropriated to the commissioner of the agency for the purpose as directed by the federal court.
(e) Tobacco settlement revenues as defined in section 16A.98, subdivision 1, paragraph (t), may be deposited as provided in section 16A.98, subdivision 12.
(f) Any money received by the state resulting from a
settlement agreement or an assurance of discontinuance entered into by the
attorney general of the state, or a court order in litigation brought by the
attorney general of the state, on behalf of the state or a state agency,
against one or more opioid manufacturers or opioid wholesale drug distributors
related to alleged violations of consumer fraud laws in the marketing, sale, or
distribution of opioids in this state or other alleged illegal actions that
contributed to the excessive use of opioids, must be deposited in a separate
account in the state treasury and the commissioner shall notify the chairs and
ranking minority members of the finance committee in the senate and the ways
and means committee in the house of representatives that an account has been
created. This paragraph does not apply
to attorney fees and costs awarded to the state or the Attorney General's
Office, to contract attorneys hired by the state or Attorney General's Office,
or to other state agency attorneys. If
the licensing fees under section 151.065, subdivision 1, clause (16), and
section 151.065, subdivision 3, clause (14), are reduced and the registration
fee under section 151.066, subdivision 3, is repealed in
accordance
with section 256.043, subdivision 4, then the commissioner shall transfer from
the separate account created in this paragraph to the opiate epidemic response
account under section 256.043 an amount that ensures that $20,940,000 each
fiscal year is available for distribution in accordance with section 256.043,
subdivisions 2 and 3.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.065, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Application fees. Application fees for licensure and registration are as follows:
(1) pharmacist licensed by examination, $145;
(2) pharmacist licensed by reciprocity, $240;
(3) pharmacy intern, $37.50;
(4) pharmacy technician, $37.50;
(5) pharmacy, $225;
(6) drug wholesaler, legend drugs only, $235
$5,000;
(7) drug wholesaler, legend and nonlegend
drugs, $235 $5,000;
(8) drug wholesaler, nonlegend drugs,
veterinary legend drugs, or both, $210 $5,000;
(9) drug wholesaler, medical gases, $175
$5,000;
(10) drug wholesaler, also licensed as a
pharmacy in Minnesota, $150 $5,000;
(11) drug manufacturer, nonopiate
legend drugs only, $235 $5,000;
(12) drug manufacturer, nonopiate
legend and nonlegend drugs, $235 $5,000;
(13) drug manufacturer, nonlegend or
veterinary legend drugs, $210 $5,000;
(14) drug manufacturer, medical gases, $185
$5,000;
(15) drug manufacturer, also licensed as a
pharmacy in Minnesota, $150 $5,000;
(16) drug manufacturer of
opiate-containing controlled substances listed in section 152.02, subdivisions
3 to 5, $55,000;
(16) (17) medical gas
distributor, $110 $5,000;
(17) (18) controlled
substance researcher, $75; and
(18) (19) pharmacy
professional corporation, $125.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2019, and
applies to any license issued on or after that date.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.065, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Annual renewal fees. Annual licensure and registration renewal fees are as follows:
(1) pharmacist, $145;
(2) pharmacy technician, $37.50;
(3) pharmacy, $225;
(4) drug wholesaler, legend drugs only, $235
$5,000;
(5) drug wholesaler, legend and nonlegend
drugs, $235 $5,000;
(6) drug wholesaler, nonlegend drugs,
veterinary legend drugs, or both, $210 $5,000;
(7) drug wholesaler, medical gases, $185
$5,000;
(8) drug wholesaler, also licensed as a
pharmacy in Minnesota, $150 $5,000;
(9) drug manufacturer, nonopiate
legend drugs only, $235 $5,000;
(10) drug manufacturer, nonopiate
legend and nonlegend drugs, $235 $5,000;
(11) drug manufacturer, nonlegend,
veterinary legend drugs, or both, $210 $5,000;
(12) drug manufacturer, medical gases, $185
$5,000;
(13) drug manufacturer, also licensed as a
pharmacy in Minnesota, $150 $5,000;
(14) drug manufacturer of
opiate-containing controlled substances listed in section 152.02, subdivisions
3 to 5, $55,000;
(14) (15) medical gas
distributor, $110 $5,000;
(15) (16) controlled
substance researcher, $75; and
(16) (17) pharmacy
professional corporation, $75.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1, 2019, and
applies to any license renewed on or after that date.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.065, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Deposit
of fees. (a) The license fees
collected under this section, with the exception of the fees identified in
paragraphs (b) and (c), shall be deposited in the state government special
revenue fund.
(b) $5,000 of each fee collected under
subdivision 1, clauses (6) to (15) and (17), and subdivision 3, clauses (4) to
(13) and (15), and the fees collected under subdivision 1, clause (16), and
subdivision 3, clause (14), shall be deposited in the opiate epidemic response
account established in section 256.043.
(c)
If the fees collected under subdivision 1, clause (16), or subdivision 3,
clause (14), are reduced, $5,000 of the reduced fee shall be deposited in the
opiate epidemic response account in section 256.043.
Sec. 5. [151.066] OPIATE PRODUCT REGISTRATION
FEE.
Subdivision 1.
Definition. (a) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given to them in this subdivision.
(b) "Manufacturer" means a manufacturer
licensed under section 151.252 that is engaged in the manufacturing of an
opiate.
(c) "Opiate" means any opiate-containing
controlled substance listed in section 152.02, subdivisions 3 to 5, that is
distributed, delivered, sold, or dispensed into or within this state.
(d) "Wholesaler" means a wholesale drug
distributor licensed under section 151.47 that is engaged in the wholesale drug
distribution of an opiate.
Subd. 2.
Reporting requirements. (a) By March 1 of each year, beginning
March 1, 2020, each manufacturer and each wholesaler must report to the board
every sale, delivery, or other distribution within or into this state of any
opiate that is made to any practitioner, pharmacy, hospital, veterinary
hospital, or other person who is permitted by section 151.37 to possess
controlled substances for administration or dispensing to patients that
occurred during the previous calendar year.
Reporting must be in the automation of reports and consolidated orders
system format unless otherwise specified by the board. If a manufacturer or wholesaler fails to
provide information required under this paragraph on a timely basis, the board
may assess an administrative penalty of $500 per day. This penalty shall not be considered a form
of disciplinary action.
(b) By March 1 of each year, beginning March 1, 2020,
each owner of a pharmacy with at least one location within this state must
report to the board any intracompany delivery or distribution into this state,
of any opiate, to the extent that those deliveries and distributions are not
reported to the board by a licensed wholesaler owned by, under contract to, or
otherwise operating on behalf of the owner of the pharmacy. Reporting must be in the manner and format
specified by the board for deliveries and distributions that occurred during
the previous calendar year. The report
must include the name of the manufacturer or wholesaler from which the owner of
the pharmacy ultimately purchased the opiate, and the amount and date that the
purchase occurred.
Subd. 3.
Determination of an opiate
product registration fee. (a)
The board shall annually assess an opiate product registration fee on any
manufacturer of an opiate that annually sells, delivers, or distributes an
opiate within or into the state 2,000,000 or more units as reported to the
board under subdivision 2.
(b) The annual registration fee for each manufacturer
meeting the requirement under paragraph (a) is $250,000.
(c) In conjunction with the data reported under this
section, and notwithstanding section 152.126, subdivision 6, the board may use
the data reported under section 152.126, subdivision 4, to determine which
manufacturers meet the requirement under paragraph (a) and are required to pay
the registration fees under this subdivision.
(d) By April 1 of each year, beginning April 1, 2020,
the board shall notify a manufacturer that the manufacturer meets the
requirement in paragraph (a) and is required to pay the annual registration fee
in accordance with section 151.252, subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
(e) A manufacturer may dispute the board's determination
that the manufacturer must pay the registration fee no later than 30 days after
the date of notification. However, the
manufacturer must still remit the fee as required by section 151.252,
subdivision 1, paragraph (b). The
dispute must be filed with the board in the manner and using the
forms
specified by the board. A manufacturer
must submit, with the required forms, data satisfactory to the board that
demonstrates that the assessment of the registration fee was incorrect. The board must make a decision concerning a
dispute no later than 60 days after receiving the required dispute forms. If the board determines that the manufacturer
has satisfactorily demonstrated that the fee was incorrectly assessed, the
board must refund the amount paid in error.
(f) For purposes of this subdivision, a
unit means the individual dosage form of the particular drug product that is
prescribed to the patient. One unit
equals one tablet, capsule, patch, syringe, milliliter, or gram.
Subd. 4. Report. (a) The Board of Pharmacy shall
evaluate the registration fee on drug manufacturers established under this
section, and whether the registration fee and the increased licensure fees have
impacted the prescribing practices of opiates by reducing the number of opiate
prescriptions issued during calendar years 2021, 2022, and 2023, or creating
any unintended consequences in the availability of opiates for the treatment of
chronic or intractable pain to the extent the board has the ability to
effectively identify a correlation. Notwithstanding
section 152.126, subdivision 6, the board may access the data reported under
section 152.126, subdivision 4, to conduct this evaluation.
(b) The board shall submit the results
of its evaluation to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and finance
by March 1, 2024.
Subd. 5. Legislative
review. The legislature shall
review the reports from the Opiate Epidemic Response Advisory Council under
section 256.042, subdivision 5, paragraph (a), the reports from the
commissioner of management and budget on
the Results First evaluation activities under section 256.042, subdivision 5,
paragraph (b), the report from the Board of Pharmacy under subdivision
4, and any other relevant report or information related to the opioid crisis in
Minnesota, to make a determination about whether the opiate product
registration fee assessed under this section should continue beyond July 1,
2024.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.252, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirements. (a) No person shall act as a drug manufacturer without first obtaining a license from the board and paying any applicable fee specified in section 151.065.
(b) In addition to the license required
under paragraph (a), each manufacturer required to pay the registration fee
under section 151.066 must pay the fee by June 1 of each year, beginning June
1, 2020. In the event of a change of
ownership of the manufacturer, the new owner must pay the registration fee
specified under section 151.066, subdivision 3, that the original owner would
have been assessed had the original owner retained ownership. The registration fee collected under this
paragraph shall be deposited in the opiate epidemic response account
established under section 256.043.
(b) (c) Application for a drug
manufacturer license under this section shall be made in a manner specified by
the board.
(c) (d) No license shall be
issued or renewed for a drug manufacturer unless the applicant agrees to
operate in a manner prescribed by federal and state law and according to
Minnesota Rules.
(d) (e) No license shall be
issued or renewed for a drug manufacturer that is required to be registered
pursuant to United States Code, title 21, section 360, unless the applicant
supplies the board with proof of registration.
The board may establish by rule the standards for licensure of drug
manufacturers that are not required to be registered under United States Code,
title 21, section 360.
(e) (f) No license shall be issued or renewed for a drug manufacturer that is required to be licensed or registered by the state in which it is physically located unless the applicant supplies the board with proof of licensure or registration. The board may establish, by rule, standards for the licensure of a drug manufacturer that is not required to be licensed or registered by the state in which it is physically located.
(f) (g) The board shall
require a separate license for each facility located within the state at which
drug manufacturing occurs and for each facility located outside of the state at
which drugs that are shipped into the state are manufactured, except a
manufacturer of opiate-containing controlled substances shall not be required
to pay the fee under section 151.065, subdivision 1, clause (16), or 151.065,
subdivision 3, clause (14), for more than one facility.
(g) (h) The board shall not
issue an initial or renewed license for a drug manufacturing facility unless
the facility passes an inspection conducted by an authorized representative of
the board. In the case of a drug
manufacturing facility located outside of the state, the board may require the
applicant to pay the cost of the inspection, in addition to the license fee in
section 151.065, unless the applicant furnishes the board with a report, issued
by the appropriate regulatory agency of the state in which the facility is
located or by the United States Food and Drug Administration, of an inspection
that has occurred within the 24 months immediately preceding receipt of the
license application by the board. The
board may deny licensure unless the applicant submits documentation
satisfactory to the board that any deficiencies noted in an inspection report
have been corrected.
Sec. 7. [256.042]
OPIATE EPIDEMIC RESPONSE ADVISORY COUNCIL.
Subdivision 1. Establishment
of the advisory council. (a)
The Opiate Epidemic Response Advisory Council is established to develop and
implement a comprehensive and effective statewide effort to address the opioid
addiction and overdose epidemic in Minnesota.
The council shall focus on:
(1) prevention and education, including
public education and awareness for adults and youth, prescriber education, the
development and sustainability of opioid overdose prevention and education
programs, the role of adult protective services in prevention and response, and
providing financial support to local law enforcement agencies for opiate
antagonist programs;
(2) training on the treatment of opioid
addiction, including the use of all Food and Drug Administration approved
opioid addiction medications, detoxification, relapse prevention, patient
assessment, individual treatment planning, counseling, recovery supports,
diversion control, and other best practices;
(3) the expansion and enhancement of a
continuum of care for opioid-related substance use disorders, including primary
prevention, early intervention, treatment, recovery, and aftercare services;
and
(4) the development of measures to
assess and protect the ability of cancer patients and survivors, persons
battling life threatening illnesses, persons suffering from severe chronic
pain, and persons at the end stages of life, who legitimately need prescription
pain medications, to maintain their quality of life by accessing these pain
medications without facing unnecessary barriers. The measures must also address the needs of
individuals described in this clause who are elderly or who reside in
underserved or rural areas of the state.
(b) The council shall:
(1) review local, state, and federal
initiatives and activities related to education, prevention, treatment, and
services for individuals and families experiencing and affected by opioid use
disorder;
(2)
establish priorities to address the state's opioid epidemic, for the purpose of
recommending initiatives to fund;
(3)
recommend to the commissioner of human services specific projects and
initiatives to be funded;
(4) ensure that available funding is
allocated to align with other state and federal funding, to achieve the
greatest impact and ensure a coordinated state effort;
(5) consult with the commissioners of
human services, health, and management and budget to develop measurable
outcomes to determine the effectiveness of funds allocated; and
(6) develop recommendations for an
administrative and organizational framework for the allocation, on a sustainable and ongoing basis, of any money
deposited into the separate account under section 16A.151, subdivision 2,
paragraph (f), in order to address the opioid abuse and overdose epidemic in
Minnesota and the areas of focus specified in paragraph (a).
(c) The council, in consultation with
the commissioner of management and budget, and within available appropriations,
shall select from the awarded grants projects that include promising practices
or theory-based activities for which the commissioner of management and budget
shall conduct evaluations using experimental or quasi-experimental design. Grants awarded to proposals that include
promising practices or theory-based activities and that are selected for an
evaluation shall be administered to support the experimental or
quasi-experimental evaluation and require grantees to collect and report
information that is needed to complete the evaluation. The commissioner of management and budget,
under section 15.08, may obtain additional relevant data to support the
experimental or quasi-experimental evaluation studies.
(d) The council, in consultation with
the commissioners of human services, health, public safety, and management and
budget, shall establish goals related to addressing the opioid epidemic and
determine a baseline against which progress shall be monitored and set measurable
outcomes, including benchmarks. The
goals established must include goals for prevention and public health, access
to treatment, and multigenerational impacts.
The council shall use existing measures and data collection systems to
determine baseline data against which progress shall be measured. The council shall include the proposed goals,
the measurable outcomes, and proposed benchmarks to meet these goals in its
initial report to the legislature under subdivision 5, paragraph (a), due
January 31, 2021.
Subd. 2. Membership. (a) The council shall consist of the
following 19 voting members, appointed by the commissioner of human services
except as otherwise specified, and three nonvoting members:
(1) two members of the house of
representatives, appointed in the following sequence: the first from the majority party appointed
by the speaker of the house and the second from the minority party appointed by
the minority leader. Of these two
members, one member must represent a district outside of the seven-county
metropolitan area, and one member must represent a district that includes the
seven-county metropolitan area. The appointment by the minority leader must ensure
that this requirement for geographic diversity in appointments is met;
(2) two members of the senate,
appointed in the following sequence: the
first from the majority party appointed by the senate majority leader and the
second from the minority party appointed by the senate minority leader. Of these two members, one member must represent
a district outside of the seven-county metropolitan area and one member must
represent a district that includes the seven-county metropolitan area. The appointment by the minority leader must
ensure that this requirement for geographic diversity in appointments is met;
(3) one member appointed by the Board
of Pharmacy;
(4) one member who is a physician
appointed by the Minnesota Medical Association;
(5)
one member representing opioid treatment programs, sober living programs, or
substance use disorder programs licensed under chapter 245G;
(6) one member appointed by the
Minnesota Society of Addiction Medicine who is an addiction psychiatrist;
(7) one member representing
professionals providing alternative pain management therapies, including, but
not limited to, acupuncture, chiropractic, or massage therapy;
(8) one member representing nonprofit
organizations conducting initiatives to address the opioid epidemic, with the
commissioner's initial appointment being a member representing the Steve Rummler
Hope Network, and subsequent appointments representing this or other
organizations;
(9) one member appointed by the
Minnesota Ambulance Association, who is serving with an ambulance service as an
emergency medical technician, advanced emergency medical technician, or
paramedic;
(10) one member representing the
Minnesota courts who is a judge or law enforcement officer;
(11) one public member who is a
Minnesota resident and who is in opioid addiction recovery;
(12) two members representing Indian
tribes, one representing the Ojibwe tribes and one representing the Dakota
tribes;
(13) one public member who is a
Minnesota resident and who is suffering from chronic pain, intractable pain, or
a rare disease or condition;
(14) one mental health advocate
representing persons with mental illness;
(15) one member representing the
Minnesota Hospital Association;
(16) one member representing a local
health department; and
(17) the commissioners of human
services, health, and corrections, or their designees, who shall be ex officio
nonvoting members of the council.
(b) The commissioner of human services
shall coordinate the commissioner's appointments to provide geographic, racial,
and gender diversity, and shall ensure that at least one-half of council
members appointed by the commissioner reside outside of the seven-county
metropolitan area. Of the members
appointed by the commissioner, to the extent practicable, at least one member
must represent a community of color disproportionately affected by the opioid
epidemic.
(c) The council is governed by section
15.059, except that members of the council shall receive no compensation other
than reimbursement for expenses. Notwithstanding
section 15.059, subdivision 6, the council shall not expire.
(d) The chair shall convene the council
at least quarterly, and may convene other meetings as necessary. The chair shall convene meetings at different
locations in the state to provide geographic access, and shall ensure that at
least one-half of the meetings are held at locations outside of the
seven-county metropolitan area.
(e) The commissioner of human services
shall provide staff and administrative services for the advisory council.
(f) The council is subject to chapter
13D.
Subd. 3. Conflict
of interest. Advisory council
members must disclose to the council, refrain from participating in
discussions, and recuse themselves from voting on any matter before the council
if the member has a conflict of interest.
A conflict of interest means a financial association that has the
potential to bias or have the appearance of biasing a council member's decision
related to the opiate epidemic response grant decision process or other council
activities under this section.
Subd. 4. Grants. (a) The commissioner of human services
shall submit a report of the grants proposed by the advisory council to be
awarded for the upcoming fiscal year to the chairs and ranking minority members
of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over health and human services
policy and finance, by March 1 of each year, beginning March 1, 2020.
(b) The commissioner of human services shall award grants from the opiate epidemic response account under section 256.043. The grants shall be awarded to proposals selected by the advisory council that address the priorities in subdivision 1, paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (4), unless otherwise appropriated by the legislature. No more than three percent of the grant amount may be used by a grantee for administration.
Subd. 5. Reports. (a) The advisory council shall report
annually to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and finance
by January 31 of each year, beginning January 31, 2021. The report shall include information about
the individual projects that receive grants and the overall role of the project
in addressing the opioid addiction and overdose epidemic in Minnesota. The report must describe the grantees and the
activities implemented, along with measurable outcomes as determined by the
council in consultation with the commissioner of human services and the
commissioner of management and budget. At
a minimum, the report must include information about the number of individuals
who received information or treatment, the outcomes the individuals achieved,
and demographic information about the individuals participating in the project;
an assessment of the progress toward achieving statewide access to qualified
providers and comprehensive treatment and recovery services; and an update on
the evaluations implemented by the commissioner of management and budget for
the promising practices and theory-based projects that receive funding.
(b) The commissioner of management and
budget, in consultation with the Opiate Epidemic Response Advisory Council,
shall report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over health and human services policy and finance
when an evaluation study described in subdivision 1, paragraph (c), is complete
on the promising practices or theory-based projects that are selected for
evaluation activities. The report shall
include demographic information; outcome information for the individuals in the
program; the results for the program in promoting recovery, employment, family
reunification, and reducing involvement with the criminal justice system; and
other relevant outcomes determined by the commissioner of management and budget
that are specific to the projects that are evaluated. The report shall include information about
the ability of grant programs to be scaled to achieve the statewide results
that the grant project demonstrated.
(c) The advisory council, in its annual
report to the legislature under paragraph (a) due by January 31, 2024, shall
include recommendations on whether the appropriations to the specified entities
under this act should be continued, adjusted, or discontinued; whether funding should
be appropriated for other purposes related to opioid abuse prevention,
education, and treatment; and on the appropriate level of funding for existing
and new uses.
Sec. 8. [256.043]
OPIATE EPIDEMIC RESPONSE ACCOUNT.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The opiate epidemic response account
is established in the special revenue fund in the state treasury. The registration fees assessed by the Board
of Pharmacy under section 151.066 and the license fees identified in section
151.065, subdivision 7, paragraphs (b) and (c), shall be deposited into the
account. Beginning in fiscal year 2021,
the funds in the account are appropriated each fiscal year to the commissioner
of human services, unless otherwise specified in law.
Subd. 2. Transfers
from account to state agencies. (a)
Beginning in fiscal year 2021, the commissioner of human services shall
transfer the following amounts each fiscal year from the account to the
agencies specified in this subdivision.
(b) $126,000 to the Board of Pharmacy
for the collection of the registration fees under section 151.066.
(c) $672,000 to the commissioner of
public safety for the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Of this amount, $384,000 is for drug
scientists and lab supplies and $288,000 is for special agent positions focused
on drug interdiction and drug trafficking.
Subd. 3. Appropriations
from account. (a) After the
transfers described in subdivision 2, and the appropriations in article 3,
section 1, paragraphs (e), (f), (g), and (h) are made, $249,000 shall be allocated
by the commissioner for the provision of administrative services to the Opiate
Epidemic Response Advisory Council and for the administration of the grants
awarded under paragraph (c).
(b) After the transfers in subdivision
2 and the allocation of funds in paragraph (a) are made, 50 percent of the
remaining amount shall be distributed by the commissioner to county social
service and tribal social service agencies to provide child protection services
to children and families who are affected by addiction. The commissioner shall distribute this money
proportionally to counties and tribal social service agencies based on out‑of-home
placement episodes where parental drug abuse is the primary reason for the
out-of-home placement using data from the previous calendar year. County and tribal social service agencies
receiving funds from the opiate epidemic response account must annually report
to the commissioner on how the funds were used to provide child protection
services, including measurable outcomes, as determined by the commissioner. County social service agencies and tribal
social service agencies must not use funds received under this paragraph to
supplant current state or local funding received for child protection services
for children and families who are affected by addiction.
(c) After making the transfers in
subdivision 2 and the allocation of funds in paragraphs (a) and (b), the
commissioner shall award grants as specified by the Opiate Epidemic Response
Advisory Council in accordance with section 256.042, unless otherwise
appropriated by the legislature.
Subd. 4. Settlement;
sunset. (a) If the state
receives a total sum of $250,000,000 either as a result of a settlement
agreement or an assurance of discontinuance entered into by the attorney
general of the state, or resulting from a court order in litigation brought by
the attorney general of the state on behalf of the state or a state agency,
against one or more opioid manufacturers or opioid wholesale drug distributors
related to alleged violations of consumer fraud laws in the marketing, sale, or
distribution of opioids in this state, or other alleged illegal actions that contributed to the excessive use of opioids,
or from the fees collected under section 151.065, subdivisions 1 and 3,
and section 151.066, that are deposited into the opiate epidemic response
account established in section 256.043, or from a combination of both, the fees
specified in section 151.065, subdivision 1, clause (16), and section 151.065, subdivision 3, clause (14), shall be reduced to
$5,260, and the opiate registration fee in section 151.066, subdivision 3,
shall be repealed.
(b) The commissioner of management and
budget shall inform the board of pharmacy, the governor, and the legislature
when the amount specified in paragraph (a) has been reached. The board shall apply the reduced license fee
for the next licensure period.
(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the
reduction of the license fee in section 151.065, subdivisions 1 and 3, and the
repeal of the registration fee in section 151.066 shall not occur before July
1, 2024.
Sec. 9. OPIATE
EPIDEMIC RESPONSE ADVISORY COUNCIL FIRST MEETING.
The commissioner of human services
shall convene the first meeting of the Opiate Epidemic Response Advisory
Council established under Minnesota Statutes, section 256.042, no later than
October 1, 2019. The members shall elect
a chair at the first meeting.
Sec. 10. REVISOR
INSTRUCTION.
The fee increases in Minnesota
Statutes, section 151.065, subdivisions 1 and 3 in this act are in addition to
any other fee increases in Minnesota Statutes, section 151.065, subdivisions 1
and 3, enacted in 2019 regular or special sessions. If multiple fees are enacted, the revisor of
statutes shall add the fees together for publication in the 2020 Minnesota
Statutes Supplement to effectuate the intent of the legislature.
ARTICLE 2
OTHER PROVISIONS
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 145C.05, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Provisions that may be included. (a) A health care directive may include provisions consistent with this chapter, including, but not limited to:
(1) the designation of one or more alternate health care agents to act if the named health care agent is not reasonably available to serve;
(2) directions to joint health care agents regarding the process or standards by which the health care agents are to reach a health care decision for the principal, and a statement whether joint health care agents may act independently of one another;
(3) limitations, if any, on the right of the health care agent or any alternate health care agents to receive, review, obtain copies of, and consent to the disclosure of the principal's medical records or to visit the principal when the principal is a patient in a health care facility;
(4) limitations, if any, on the nomination of the health care agent as guardian for purposes of sections 524.5-202, 524.5-211, 524.5-302, and 524.5-303;
(5) a document of gift for the purpose of making an anatomical gift, as set forth in chapter 525A, or an amendment to, revocation of, or refusal to make an anatomical gift;
(6) a declaration regarding intrusive mental health treatment under section 253B.03, subdivision 6d, or a statement that the health care agent is authorized to give consent for the principal under section 253B.04, subdivision 1a;
(7) a funeral directive as provided in section 149A.80, subdivision 2;
(8) limitations, if any, to the effect of dissolution or annulment of marriage or termination of domestic partnership on the appointment of a health care agent under section 145C.09, subdivision 2;
(9) specific reasons why a principal wants a health care provider or an employee of a health care provider attending the principal to be eligible to act as the principal's health care agent;
(10)
health care instructions by a woman of child bearing age regarding how she
would like her pregnancy, if any, to affect health care decisions made on her
behalf; and
(11) health care instructions regarding
artificially administered nutrition or hydration.; and
(12) health care instructions to
prohibit administering, dispensing, or prescribing an opioid, except that these
instructions must not be construed to limit the administering, dispensing, or
prescribing an opioid to treat substance abuse, opioid dependence, or an
overdose, unless otherwise prohibited in the health care directive.
(b) A health care directive may include a statement of the circumstances under which the directive becomes effective other than upon the judgment of the principal's attending physician in the following situations:
(1) a principal who in good faith generally selects and depends upon spiritual means or prayer for the treatment or care of disease or remedial care and does not have an attending physician, may include a statement appointing an individual who may determine the principal's decision-making capacity; and
(2) a principal who in good faith does not generally select a physician or a health care facility for the principal's health care needs may include a statement appointing an individual who may determine the principal's decision‑making capacity, provided that if the need to determine the principal's capacity arises when the principal is receiving care under the direction of an attending physician in a health care facility, the determination must be made by an attending physician after consultation with the appointed individual.
If a person appointed under clause (1) or (2) is not reasonably available and the principal is receiving care under the direction of an attending physician in a health care facility, an attending physician shall determine the principal's decision-making capacity.
(c) A health care directive may authorize a health care agent to make health care decisions for a principal even though the principal retains decision-making capacity.
Sec. 2. [145C.17]
OPIOID INSTRUCTIONS ENTERED INTO HEALTH RECORD.
At the request of the patient or health
care agent, a health care provider shall enter into the patient's health care record
any instructions relating to administering, dispensing, or prescribing an
opioid.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.01, subdivision 27, is amended to read:
Subd. 27. Practice of pharmacy. "Practice of pharmacy" means:
(1) interpretation and evaluation of prescription drug orders;
(2) compounding, labeling, and dispensing drugs and devices (except labeling by a manufacturer or packager of nonprescription drugs or commercially packaged legend drugs and devices);
(3) participation in clinical interpretations and monitoring of drug therapy for assurance of safe and effective use of drugs, including the performance of laboratory tests that are waived under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act of 1988, United States Code, title 42, section 263a et seq., provided that a pharmacist may interpret the results of laboratory tests but may modify drug therapy only pursuant to a protocol or collaborative practice agreement;
(4) participation in drug and therapeutic device selection; drug administration for first dosage and medical emergencies; intramuscular and subcutaneous administration used for the treatment of alcohol or opioid dependence; drug regimen reviews; and drug or drug-related research;
(5) drug administration, through
intramuscular and subcutaneous administration used to treat mental illnesses as
permitted under the following conditions:
(i) upon the order of a prescriber and
the prescriber is notified after administration is complete; or
(ii) pursuant to a protocol or
collaborative practice agreement as defined by section 151.01, subdivisions 27b
and 27c, and participation in the initiation, management, modification,
administration, and discontinuation of drug therapy is according to the
protocol or collaborative practice agreement between the pharmacist and a
dentist, optometrist, physician, podiatrist, or veterinarian, or an advanced
practice registered nurse authorized to prescribe, dispense, and administer
under section 148.235. Any changes in
drug therapy or medication administration made pursuant to a protocol or
collaborative practice agreement must be documented by the pharmacist in the
patient's medical record or reported by the pharmacist to a practitioner
responsible for the patient's care;
(5) (6) participation in
administration of influenza vaccines to all eligible individuals six years of
age and older and all other vaccines to patients 13 years of age and older by
written protocol with a physician licensed under chapter 147, a physician
assistant authorized to prescribe drugs under chapter 147A, or an advanced
practice registered nurse authorized to prescribe drugs under section 148.235,
provided that:
(i) the protocol includes, at a minimum:
(A) the name, dose, and route of each vaccine that may be given;
(B) the patient population for whom the vaccine may be given;
(C) contraindications and precautions to the vaccine;
(D) the procedure for handling an adverse reaction;
(E) the name, signature, and address of the physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse;
(F) a telephone number at which the physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse can be contacted; and
(G) the date and time period for which the protocol is valid;
(ii) the pharmacist has successfully completed a program approved by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education specifically for the administration of immunizations or a program approved by the board;
(iii) the pharmacist utilizes the Minnesota Immunization Information Connection to assess the immunization status of individuals prior to the administration of vaccines, except when administering influenza vaccines to individuals age nine and older;
(iv) the pharmacist reports the administration of the immunization to the Minnesota Immunization Information Connection; and
(v) the pharmacist complies with guidelines for vaccines and immunizations established by the federal Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, except that a pharmacist does not need to comply with those portions of the guidelines that establish immunization schedules when administering a vaccine pursuant to a valid, patient-specific
order issued by a physician licensed under chapter 147, a physician assistant authorized to prescribe drugs under chapter 147A, or an advanced practice nurse authorized to prescribe drugs under section 148.235, provided that the order is consistent with the United States Food and Drug Administration approved labeling of the vaccine;
(6) (7) participation in the
initiation, management, modification, and discontinuation of drug therapy
according to a written protocol or collaborative practice agreement between: (i) one or more pharmacists and one or more
dentists, optometrists, physicians, podiatrists, or veterinarians; or (ii) one
or more pharmacists and one or more physician assistants authorized to
prescribe, dispense, and administer under chapter 147A, or advanced practice
nurses authorized to prescribe, dispense, and administer under section 148.235. Any changes in drug therapy made pursuant to
a protocol or collaborative practice agreement must be documented by the
pharmacist in the patient's medical record or reported by the pharmacist to a
practitioner responsible for the patient's care;
(7) (8) participation in the
storage of drugs and the maintenance of records;
(8) (9) patient counseling on
therapeutic values, content, hazards, and uses of drugs and devices;
(9) (10) offering or
performing those acts, services, operations, or transactions necessary in the
conduct, operation, management, and control of a pharmacy; and
(10) (11) participation in the
initiation, management, modification, and discontinuation of therapy with
opiate antagonists, as defined in section 604A.04, subdivision 1, pursuant to:
(i) a written protocol as allowed under clause (6); or
(ii) a written protocol with a community health board medical consultant or a practitioner designated by the commissioner of health, as allowed under section 151.37, subdivision 13.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 151.37, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
Subd. 12. Administration of opiate antagonists for drug overdose. (a) A licensed physician, a licensed advanced practice registered nurse authorized to prescribe drugs pursuant to section 148.235, or a licensed physician assistant authorized to prescribe drugs pursuant to section 147A.18 may authorize the following individuals to administer opiate antagonists, as defined in section 604A.04, subdivision 1:
(1) an emergency medical responder registered pursuant to section 144E.27;
(2) a peace officer as defined in section
626.84, subdivision 1, paragraphs (c) and (d); and
(3) correctional employees of a state or local political subdivision;
(4) staff of community-based health
disease prevention or social service programs;
(5) a volunteer firefighter; and
(6) a licensed school nurse or certified public health nurse employed by, or under contract with, a school board under section 121A.21.
(b) For
the purposes of this subdivision, opiate antagonists may be administered by one
of these individuals only if:
(1) the licensed physician, licensed physician assistant, or licensed advanced practice registered nurse has issued a standing order to, or entered into a protocol with, the individual; and
(2) the individual has training in the recognition of signs of opiate overdose and the use of opiate antagonists as part of the emergency response to opiate overdose.
(c) Nothing in this section prohibits the possession and administration of naloxone pursuant to section 604A.04.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 152.105, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Sheriff to maintain collection receptacle. (a) The sheriff of each county shall maintain or contract for the maintenance of at least one collection receptacle for the disposal of noncontrolled substances, pharmaceutical controlled substances, and other legend drugs, as permitted by federal law. For purposes of this section, "legend drug" has the meaning given in section 151.01, subdivision 17. The collection receptacle must comply with federal law. In maintaining and operating the collection receptacle, the sheriff shall follow all applicable provisions of Code of Federal Regulations, title 21, parts 1300, 1301, 1304, 1305, 1307, and 1317, as amended through May 1, 2017.
(b) A sheriff may meet the requirements
of paragraph (a) by providing public educational information and making an
alternative method available to the public, at no charge, for safely destroying
unwanted legend drugs, including an at-home prescription drug deactivation and
disposal product, so long as the alternative method meets the requirements of
the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, the United States Drug Enforcement
Administration, and the Board of Pharmacy.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 152.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. General prescription requirements for controlled substances. (a) A written prescription or an oral prescription reduced to writing, when issued for a controlled substance in Schedule II, III, IV, or V, is void unless (1) it is written in ink and contains the name and address of the person for whose use it is intended; (2) it states the amount of the controlled substance to be compounded or dispensed, with directions for its use; (3) if a written prescription, it contains the handwritten signature, address, and federal registry number of the prescriber and a designation of the branch of the healing art pursued by the prescriber; and if an oral prescription, the name and address of the prescriber and a designation of the prescriber's branch of the healing art; and (4) it shows the date when signed by the prescriber, or the date of acceptance in the pharmacy if an oral prescription.
(b) An electronic prescription for a controlled substance in Schedule II, III, IV, or V is void unless it complies with the standards established pursuant to section 62J.497 and with those portions of Code of Federal Regulations, title 21, parts 1300, 1304, 1306, and 1311, that pertain to electronic prescriptions.
(c) A prescription for a controlled substance in Schedule II, III, IV, or V that is transmitted by facsimile, either computer to facsimile machine or facsimile machine to facsimile machine, is void unless it complies with the applicable requirements of Code of Federal Regulations, title 21, part 1306.
(d) Every licensed pharmacy that dispenses a controlled substance prescription shall retain the original prescription in a file for a period of not less than two years, open to inspection by any officer of the state, county, or municipal government whose duty it is to aid and assist with the enforcement of this chapter. An original electronic or facsimile prescription may be stored in an electronic database, provided that the database provides a means by which original prescriptions can be retrieved, as transmitted to the pharmacy, for a period of not less than two years.
(e) Every licensed pharmacy shall distinctly label the container in which a controlled substance is dispensed with the directions contained in the prescription for the use of that controlled substance.
(f)
No prescription for an opiate or narcotic pain reliever listed in Schedules II
through IV of section 152.02 may be initially dispensed more than 30 days after
the date on which the prescription was issued.
No subsequent refills indicated on a prescription for a Schedule III or
IV opiate or narcotic pain reliever may be dispensed more than 30 days
after the previous date on which the prescription was initially filled or
refilled. After the authorized refills
for Schedule III or IV opiate or narcotic pain relievers have been used up or
are expired, no additional authorizations may be accepted for that prescription. If continued therapy is necessary, a new
prescription must be issued by the prescriber.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 152.11, subdivision 2d, is amended to read:
Subd. 2d. Identification
requirement for Schedule II or III controlled substance prescriptions. (a) No person may dispense a
controlled substance included in Schedule II or III Schedules II
through V without requiring the person purchasing the controlled substance,
who need not be the person patient for whom the controlled
substance prescription is written, to present valid photographic
identification, unless the person purchasing the controlled substance, or if
applicable the person for whom the controlled substance prescription is
written, is known to the dispenser. A
doctor of veterinary medicine who dispenses a controlled substance must comply
with this subdivision.
(b) This subdivision applies only to
purchases of controlled substances that are not covered, in whole or in part,
by a health plan company or other third-party payor.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 152.11, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Limit
on quantity of opiates prescribed for acute dental and ophthalmic pain. (a) When used for the treatment of
acute pain, prescriptions for opiates or narcotic pain relievers listed in
Schedules II through IV in section 152.02 shall not exceed a seven-day supply
for an adult and shall not exceed a five-day supply for a minor under 18 years
of age.
(a) (b) Notwithstanding
paragraph (a), when used for the treatment of acute dental pain,
including acute pain associated with wisdom teeth extraction surgery or
acute pain associated with refractive surgery, prescriptions for opiate or
narcotic pain relievers listed in Schedules II through IV of section 152.02
shall not exceed a four-day supply. The
quantity prescribed shall be consistent with the dosage listed in the
professional labeling for the drug that has been approved by the United States
Food and Drug Administration.
(b) (c) For the purposes of
this subdivision, "acute pain" means pain resulting from disease,
accidental or intentional trauma, surgery, or another cause, that the
practitioner reasonably expects to last only a short period of time. Acute pain does not include chronic pain or
pain being treated as part of cancer care, palliative care, or hospice or other
end-of-life care.
(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), if
in the professional clinical judgment of a practitioner more than a four-day
supply of a prescription listed in Schedules II through IV of section 152.02 is
required to treat a patient's acute pain, the practitioner may issue a
prescription for the quantity needed to treat such acute pain.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) or
(b), if, in the professional clinical judgment of a practitioner, more than the
limit specified in paragraph (a) or (b) is required to treat a patient's acute
pain, the practitioner may issue a prescription for the quantity needed to
treat the patient's acute pain.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 152.126, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Access to reporting system data. (a) Except as indicated in this subdivision, the data submitted to the board under subdivision 4 is private data on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12, and not subject to public disclosure.
(b) Except as specified in subdivision 5, the following persons shall be considered permissible users and may access the data submitted under subdivision 4 in the same or similar manner, and for the same or similar purposes, as those persons who are authorized to access similar private data on individuals under federal and state law:
(1) a prescriber or an agent or employee of the prescriber to whom the prescriber has delegated the task of accessing the data, to the extent the information relates specifically to a current patient, to whom the prescriber is:
(i) prescribing or considering prescribing any controlled substance;
(ii) providing emergency medical treatment for which access to the data may be necessary;
(iii) providing care, and the prescriber has reason to believe, based on clinically valid indications, that the patient is potentially abusing a controlled substance; or
(iv) providing other medical treatment for which access to the data may be necessary for a clinically valid purpose and the patient has consented to access to the submitted data, and with the provision that the prescriber remains responsible for the use or misuse of data accessed by a delegated agent or employee;
(2) a dispenser or an agent or employee of the dispenser to whom the dispenser has delegated the task of accessing the data, to the extent the information relates specifically to a current patient to whom that dispenser is dispensing or considering dispensing any controlled substance and with the provision that the dispenser remains responsible for the use or misuse of data accessed by a delegated agent or employee;
(3) a licensed pharmacist who is providing pharmaceutical care for which access to the data may be necessary to the extent that the information relates specifically to a current patient for whom the pharmacist is providing pharmaceutical care: (i) if the patient has consented to access to the submitted data; or (ii) if the pharmacist is consulted by a prescriber who is requesting data in accordance with clause (1);
(4) an individual who is the recipient of a controlled substance prescription for which data was submitted under subdivision 4, or a guardian of the individual, parent or guardian of a minor, or health care agent of the individual acting under a health care directive under chapter 145C. For purposes of this clause, access by individuals includes persons in the definition of an individual under section 13.02;
(5) personnel or designees of a health-related licensing board listed in section 214.01, subdivision 2, or of the Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board, assigned to conduct a bona fide investigation of a complaint received by that board that alleges that a specific licensee is impaired by use of a drug for which data is collected under subdivision 4, has engaged in activity that would constitute a crime as defined in section 152.025, or has engaged in the behavior specified in subdivision 5, paragraph (a);
(6) personnel of the board engaged in the collection, review, and analysis of controlled substance prescription information as part of the assigned duties and responsibilities under this section;
(7) authorized personnel of a vendor under contract with the state of Minnesota who are engaged in the design, implementation, operation, and maintenance of the prescription monitoring program as part of the assigned duties and responsibilities of their employment, provided that access to data is limited to the minimum amount necessary to carry out such duties and responsibilities, and subject to the requirement of de-identification and time limit on retention of data specified in subdivision 5, paragraphs (d) and (e);
(8) federal, state, and local law enforcement authorities acting pursuant to a valid search warrant;
(9) personnel of the Minnesota health care programs assigned to use the data collected under this section to identify and manage recipients whose usage of controlled substances may warrant restriction to a single primary care provider, a single outpatient pharmacy, and a single hospital;
(10) personnel of the Department of Human Services assigned to access the data pursuant to paragraph (i);
(11) personnel of the health professionals
services program established under section 214.31, to the extent that the
information relates specifically to an individual who is currently enrolled in
and being monitored by the program, and the individual consents to access to
that information. The health professionals
services program personnel shall not provide this data to a health-related
licensing board or the Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board, except as
permitted under section 214.33, subdivision 3.; and
For purposes of clause (4), access by an individual
includes persons in the definition of an individual under section 13.02; and
(12) personnel or designees of a health-related licensing board listed in section 214.01, subdivision 2, assigned to conduct a bona fide investigation of a complaint received by that board that alleges that a specific licensee is inappropriately prescribing controlled substances as defined in this section.
(c) By July 1, 2017, every prescriber licensed by a health-related licensing board listed in section 214.01, subdivision 2, practicing within this state who is authorized to prescribe controlled substances for humans and who holds a current registration issued by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, and every pharmacist licensed by the board and practicing within the state, shall register and maintain a user account with the prescription monitoring program. Data submitted by a prescriber, pharmacist, or their delegate during the registration application process, other than their name, license number, and license type, is classified as private pursuant to section 13.02, subdivision 12.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), beginning January 1, 2021, a prescriber or an agent or employee of the prescriber to whom the prescriber has delegated the task of accessing the data, must access the data submitted under subdivision 4 to the extent the information relates specifically to the patient:
(1) before the prescriber issues an
initial prescription order for a Schedules II through IV opiate controlled
substance to the patient; and
(2) at least once every three months
for patients receiving an opiate for treatment of chronic pain or participating
in medically assisted treatment for an opioid addiction.
(e) Paragraph (d) does not apply if:
(1) the patient is receiving palliative
care, or hospice or other end-of-life care;
(2) the patient is being treated for
pain due to cancer or the treatment of cancer;
(3) the prescription order is for a
number of doses that is intended to last the patient five days or less and is
not subject to a refill;
(4) the prescriber and patient have a
current or ongoing provider/patient relationship of a duration longer than one
year;
(5)
the prescription order is issued within 14 days following surgery or three days
following oral surgery or follows the prescribing protocols established under
the opioid prescribing improvement program under section 256B.0638;
(6) the controlled substance is
prescribed or administered to a patient who is admitted to an inpatient
hospital;
(7) the controlled substance is
lawfully administered by injection, ingestion, or any other means to the
patient by the prescriber, a pharmacist, or by the patient at the direction of
a prescriber and in the presence of the prescriber or pharmacist;
(8) due to a medical emergency, it is
not possible for the prescriber to review the data before the prescriber issues
the prescription order for the patient; or
(9) the prescriber is unable to access
the data due to operational or other technological failure of the program so
long as the prescriber reports the failure to the board.
(f) Only permissible users identified in paragraph (b), clauses (1), (2), (3), (6), (7), (9), and (10), may directly access the data electronically. No other permissible users may directly access the data electronically. If the data is directly accessed electronically, the permissible user shall implement and maintain a comprehensive information security program that contains administrative, technical, and physical safeguards that are appropriate to the user's size and complexity, and the sensitivity of the personal information obtained. The permissible user shall identify reasonably foreseeable internal and external risks to the security, confidentiality, and integrity of personal information that could result in the unauthorized disclosure, misuse, or other compromise of the information and assess the sufficiency of any safeguards in place to control the risks.
(e) (g) The board shall not
release data submitted under subdivision 4 unless it is provided with evidence,
satisfactory to the board, that the person requesting the information is
entitled to receive the data.
(f) (h) The board shall
maintain a log of all persons who access the data for a period of at least
three years and shall ensure that any permissible user complies with paragraph
(c) prior to attaining direct access to the data.
(g) (i) Section 13.05,
subdivision 6, shall apply to any contract the board enters into pursuant to
subdivision 2. A vendor shall not use
data collected under this section for any purpose not specified in this
section.
(h) (j) The board may
participate in an interstate prescription monitoring program data exchange
system provided that permissible users in other states have access to the data
only as allowed under this section, and that section 13.05, subdivision 6,
applies to any contract or memorandum of understanding that the board enters
into under this paragraph.
(i) (k) With available
appropriations, the commissioner of human services shall establish and
implement a system through which the Department of Human Services shall
routinely access the data for the purpose of determining whether any client
enrolled in an opioid treatment program licensed according to chapter 245A has
been prescribed or dispensed a controlled substance in addition to that
administered or dispensed by the opioid treatment program. When the commissioner determines there have
been multiple prescribers or multiple prescriptions of controlled substances,
the commissioner shall:
(1) inform the medical director of the opioid treatment program only that the commissioner determined the existence of multiple prescribers or multiple prescriptions of controlled substances; and
(2) direct the medical director of the opioid treatment program to access the data directly, review the effect of the multiple prescribers or multiple prescriptions, and document the review.
If determined necessary, the commissioner of human services shall seek a federal waiver of, or exception to, any applicable provision of Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, section 2.34, paragraph (c), prior to implementing this paragraph.
(j) (l) The board shall
review the data submitted under subdivision 4 on at least a quarterly basis and
shall establish criteria, in consultation with the advisory task force, for
referring information about a patient to prescribers and dispensers who
prescribed or dispensed the prescriptions in question if the criteria are met.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 214.12, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Opioid
and controlled substances prescribing.
(a) The Board of Medical Practice, the Board of Nursing, the
Board of Dentistry, the Board of Optometry, and the Board of Podiatric Medicine
shall require that licensees with the authority to prescribe controlled
substances obtain at least two hours of continuing education credit on best
practices in prescribing opioids and controlled substances, including
nonpharmacological and implantable device alternatives for treatment of pain
and ongoing pain management, as part of the continuing education requirements
for licensure renewal. Licensees shall
not be required to complete more than two credit hours of continuing education
on best practices in prescribing opioids and controlled substances before this
subdivision expires. Continuing
education credit on best practices in prescribing opioids and controlled
substances must meet board requirements.
(b) Paragraph (a) does not apply to any
licensee who is participating in the opioid prescribing improvement program
under section 256B.0638, unless the licensee has been terminated as a medical
assistance provider under section 256B.0638, subdivision 5, paragraph (d).
(c) This subdivision expires January 1,
2023.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
ARTICLE 3
APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1.
APPROPRIATIONS.
(a) Board of Pharmacy; administration. $244,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund to the Board of Pharmacy for onetime
information technology and operating costs for administration of licensing
activities under Minnesota Statutes, section 151.066. This is a onetime appropriation.
(b) Commissioner of human services; administration. $309,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund and $60,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the opiate epidemic response account to the commissioner of
human services for the provision of administrative services to the Opiate
Epidemic Response Advisory Council and for the administration of the grants
awarded under paragraphs (f), (g), and (h).
The opiate epidemic response account base for this appropriation is $60,000
in fiscal year 2022, $60,000 in fiscal year 2023, $60,000 in fiscal year 2024,
and $0 in fiscal year 2025.
(c) Board of Pharmacy; administration. $126,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund to the Board of Pharmacy for the collection
of the registration fees under section 151.066.
(d) Commissioner of public safety; enforcement activities. $672,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of public safety for the
Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Of this
amount, $384,000 is for drug scientists and lab supplies and $288,000 is for
special agent positions focused on drug interdiction and drug trafficking.
(e)
Commissioner of management and
budget; evaluation activities. $300,000
in fiscal year 2020 is appropriated from the general fund and $300,000 in
fiscal year 2021 is appropriated from the opiate epidemic response account to
the commissioner of management and budget for evaluation activities under
Minnesota Statutes, section 256.042, subdivision 1, paragraph (c). The opiate epidemic response account base for
this appropriation is $300,000 in fiscal year 2022, $300,000 in fiscal year
2023, $300,000 in fiscal year 2024, and $0 in fiscal year 2025.
(f) Commissioner of human services; grants for Project ECHO. $400,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund and $400,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the opiate epidemic response account to the commissioner of
human services for grants of $200,000 to CHI St. Gabriel's Health Family
Medical Center for the opioid-focused Project ECHO program and $200,000 to
Hennepin Health Care for the opioid-focused Project ECHO program. The opiate epidemic response account base for
this appropriation is $400,000 in fiscal year 2022, $400,000 in fiscal year
2023, $400,000 in fiscal year 2024, and $0 in fiscal year 2025.
(g) Commissioner of human services; opioid overdose prevention grant. $100,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund and $100,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the opiate epidemic response account to the commissioner of
human services for a grant to a nonprofit organization that has provided
overdose prevention programs to the public in at least 60 counties within the
state, for at least three years, has received federal funding before January 1,
2019, and is dedicated to addressing the opioid epidemic. The grant must be used for opioid overdose
prevention, community asset mapping, education, and overdose antagonist
distribution. The opiate epidemic
response account base for this appropriation is $100,000 in fiscal year 2022,
$100,000 in fiscal year 2023, $100,000 in fiscal year 2024, and $0 in fiscal
year 2025.
(h) Commissioner of human services; traditional healing. $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the general fund and $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the opiate epidemic response account to the commissioner of
human services to award grants to tribal nations and five urban Indian
communities for traditional healing practices to American Indians and to
increase the capacity of culturally specific providers in the behavioral health
workforce. The opiate epidemic response
account base for this appropriation is $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2022,
$2,000,000 in fiscal year 2023, $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2024, and $0 in
fiscal year 2025.
(i) Board of Dentistry; continuing education. $11,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the state government special revenue fund to the Board of
Dentistry to implement the continuing education requirements under Minnesota
Statutes, section 214.12, subdivision 6.
(j) Board of Medical Practice; continuing education. $17,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the state government special revenue fund to the Board of
Medical Practice to implement the continuing education requirements under
Minnesota Statutes, section 214.12, subdivision 6.
(k) Board of Nursing; continuing education. $17,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the state government special revenue fund to the Board of
Nursing to implement the continuing education requirements under Minnesota
Statutes, section 214.12, subdivision 6.
(l) Board of Optometry; continuing education. $5,000 in fiscal year 2020 is
appropriated from the state government special revenue fund to the Board of
Optometry to implement the continuing education requirements under Minnesota
Statutes, section 214.12, subdivision 6.
(m) Board of Podiatric Medicine; continuing education. $5,000 in fiscal year 2020 is appropriated
from the state government special revenue fund to the Board of Podiatric
Medicine to implement the continuing education requirements under Minnesota
Statutes, section 214.12, subdivision 6.
(n) Commissioner of health; nonnarcotic pain management and wellness. $1,250,000 is appropriated in fiscal
year 2020 from the general fund to the commissioner of health, to provide
funding for:
(1)
statewide mapping and assessment of community-based nonnarcotic pain management
and wellness resources; and
(2) up to five demonstration projects in different
geographic areas of the state to provide community-based nonnarcotic pain
management and wellness resources to patients and consumers.
The
demonstration projects must include an evaluation component and scalability
analysis. The commissioner shall award
the grant for the statewide mapping and assessment, and the demonstration
project grants, through a competitive request for proposal process. Grants for statewide mapping and assessment
and demonstration projects may be awarded simultaneously. In awarding demonstration project grants, the
commissioner shall give preference to proposals that incorporate innovative
community partnerships, are informed and led by people in the community where
the project is taking place, and are culturally relevant and delivered by
culturally competent providers. This is
a onetime appropriation.
(o) Commissioner
of health; administration. $38,000
in fiscal year 2020 is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner
of health for the administration of the grants awarded in paragraph (n).
Sec. 2. TRANSFER.
By June 30, 2021, the commissioner of human services
shall transfer $5,439,000 from the opiate epidemic response account to the
general fund. This is a onetime transfer.
Sec. 3. EXPIRATION OF UNCODIFIED LANGUAGE.
The uncodified language in this article shall not expire on June 30, 2021."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to health; establishing the opiate product registration fee and the Opiate Epidemic Response Advisory Council; modifying certain licensure and registration fees; modifying sections relating to prescription drugs and controlled substances; requiring reports; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 16A.151, subdivision 2; 145C.05, subdivision 2; 151.01, subdivision 27; 151.065, subdivisions 1, 3, by adding a subdivision; 151.252, subdivision 1; 151.37, subdivision 12; 152.105, subdivision 2; 152.11, subdivisions 1, 2d, 4; 152.126, subdivision 6; 214.12, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 145C; 151; 256."
We request the adoption of this report and repassage of the bill.
House Conferees: Liz Olson, Laurie Halverson and Dave Baker.
Senate Conferees: Julie A. Rosen, Rich Draheim and Chris A. Eaton.
Olson moved that the report of the
Conference Committee on H. F. No. 400 be adopted and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Conference Committee. The motion prevailed.
H. F. No. 400, A bill for an act relating to health; establishing the Opioid Addiction Advisory Council; establishing the opioid stewardship fund; establishing an opiate product registration fee; modifying provisions related to opioid addiction prevention, education, intervention, treatment, and recovery; requiring reports;
appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 16A.151, subdivision 2; 145.9269, subdivision 1; 145C.05, subdivision 2; 151.252, subdivision 1; 151.37, subdivision 12; 151.47, by adding a subdivision; 151.71, by adding a subdivision; 152.105, subdivision 2; 152.11, subdivision 2d, by adding subdivisions; 214.12, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 16A; 62Q; 145; 145C; 151.
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 109 yeas and 25 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Acomb
Anderson
Backer
Bahner
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Bernardy
Bierman
Boe
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Daniels
Davnie
Dehn
Demuth
Dettmer
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Fabian
Fischer
Freiberg
Garofalo
Gomez
Gunther
Haley
Halverson
Hamilton
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Her
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Layman
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
Pelowski
Persell
Petersburg
Pierson
Pinto
Poppe
Poston
Pryor
Richardson
Robbins
Runbeck
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schultz
Scott
Stephenson
Sundin
Tabke
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vang
Wagenius
Wazlawik
West
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
Those who voted in the negative were:
Albright
Bahr
Daudt
Davids
Drazkowski
Franson
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Koznick
Lucero
McDonald
Mekeland
Munson
Nash
Neu
O'Neill
Quam
Schomacker
Swedzinski
Vogel
Zerwas
The bill was repassed, as amended by
Conference, and its title agreed to.
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. 316.
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. 316
A bill for an act relating to state government; requiring involvement in user acceptance testing from local units of governments impacted by new information technology business software; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 168.33, by adding a subdivision; 171.061, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 15.
May 20, 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. 316 report that we have agreed upon the items in dispute and recommend as follows:
That the Senate concur in the House amendment.
We request the adoption of this report and repassage of the bill.
Senate Conferees: Jeff Howe, Mary Kiffmeyer and Carolyn Laine.
House Conferees: Sandra Masin, Kristin Bahner and Bob Vogel.
Masin moved that the report of the
Conference Committee on S. F. No. 316 be adopted and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Conference Committee. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 316, A bill for an act relating to state government; requiring involvement in user acceptance testing from local units of governments impacted by new information technology business software; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 168.33, by adding a subdivision; 171.061, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 15.
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 134 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
Daudt
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
Koznick
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Layman
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McDonald
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nash
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
O'Neill
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
West
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
The bill was repassed, as amended by
Conference, and its title agreed to.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Long moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 689. The motion prevailed.
Hornstein moved that the names of
Kunesh-Podein, Christensen and Moran be added as authors on
H. F. No. 2836. The
motion prevailed.
Marquart moved that the names of Loeffler
and Drazkowski be added as authors on H. F. No. 2897. The motion prevailed.
Kotyza-Witthuhn moved that the name of
Loeffler be added as an author on H. F. No. 2903. The motion prevailed.
Morrison moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2914. The motion prevailed.
Elkins moved that the name of Bahner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2917. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the House recess
subject to the call of the Chair. The
motion prevailed.
RECESS
RECONVENED
The House reconvened and was called to
order by Speaker pro tempore Halverson.
Her was excused between the hours of 10:30
p.m. and 11:40 p.m.
There being no objection, the order
of business reverted to Messages from the Senate.
MESSAGES FROM THE SENATE
The following
messages were received from the Senate:
Madam Speaker:
I hereby announce that the Senate has concurred in and adopted the report of the Conference Committee on:
H. F. No. 400, A bill for an act relating to health; establishing the Opioid Addiction Advisory Council; establishing the opioid stewardship fund; establishing an opiate product registration fee; modifying provisions related to opioid addiction prevention, education, intervention, treatment, and recovery; requiring reports; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 16A.151, subdivision 2; 145.9269, subdivision 1; 145C.05, subdivision 2; 151.252, subdivision 1; 151.37, subdivision 12; 151.47, by adding a subdivision; 151.71, by adding a subdivision; 152.105, subdivision 2; 152.11, subdivision 2d, by adding subdivisions; 214.12, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 16A; 62Q; 145; 145C; 151.
The Senate has repassed said bill in accordance with the recommendation and report of the Conference Committee. Said House File is herewith returned to the House.
Cal R. Ludeman, Secretary of 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. 2415.
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. 2415
A bill for an act relating to higher education; providing funding and policy changes for the Office of Higher Education, the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, and the University of Minnesota; modifying the state grant formula; requiring a report; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 13.322, subdivision 3; 135A.15, subdivision 2; 136A.101, subdivision 5a; 136A.121, subdivision 6; 136A.1215, subdivision 4; 136A.1275, subdivisions 2, 3; 136A.15, subdivision 8; 136A.16, subdivisions 1, 2, 5, 8, 9; 136A.162; 136A.1701, subdivision 7; 136A.1789, subdivisions 1, 3, 5; 136A.64, subdivisions 1, 5, by adding a subdivision; 136A.645; 136A.646; 136A.672, by adding a subdivision; 136A.821, by adding subdivisions; 136A.822, subdivisions 6, 10, 12; 136A.8295, by adding subdivisions; 136A.87; 136F.20, by adding a subdivision; 136F.38; 136F.58, by adding a subdivision; 179A.20, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 136A; 136F; 137; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 136A.15, subdivisions 2, 7; 136A.1701, subdivision 12.
May 20, 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. 2415 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. 2415 be further amended as follows:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
HIGHER EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. APPROPRIATIONS. |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are
available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2020" and
"2021" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, or June 30, 2021,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2020. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2021. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
||
|
|
|
Available for the Year |
||
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
||
|
|
|
2020 |
2021 |
|
Sec. 2. MINNESOTA
OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION |
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$269,133,000 |
|
$268,883,000 |
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. State
Grants |
|
207,437,000
|
|
207,437,000
|
If the appropriation in this subdivision
for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is
available for it.
Subd. 3. Child
Care Grants |
|
6,694,000 |
|
6,694,000 |
Subd. 4. State
Work-Study |
|
14,502,000
|
|
14,502,000
|
Subd. 5. Interstate
Tuition Reciprocity |
|
11,018,000 |
|
11,018,000 |
If the appropriation in this subdivision
for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is
available to meet reciprocity contract obligations.
Subd. 6. Safety
Officer's Survivors |
|
100,000 |
|
100,000 |
This appropriation is to provide
educational benefits under Minnesota Statutes, section 299A.45, to eligible
dependent children and to the spouses of public safety officers killed in the
line of duty.
If the appropriation in this subdivision
for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is
available for it.
Subd. 7. American
Indian Scholarships |
|
3,500,000
|
|
3,500,000
|
The commissioner must contract with or
employ at least one person with demonstrated competence in American Indian
culture and residing in or near the city of Bemidji to assist students with the
scholarships under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.126, and with other
information about financial aid for which the students may be eligible. Bemidji State University must provide office
space at no cost to the Office of Higher Education for purposes of
administering the American Indian scholarship program under Minnesota Statutes,
section 136A.126. This appropriation
includes funding to administer the American Indian scholarship program.
Subd. 8. Tribal
College Grants |
|
150,000
|
|
150,000
|
For tribal college assistance grants under
Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.1796.
Subd. 9. Intervention for College Attendance Program Grants |
796,000
|
|
796,000
|
For the intervention for college
attendance program under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.861.
The commissioner may use no more than
three percent of this appropriation to administer the intervention for college
attendance program grants.
The base for fiscal year 2022 and
thereafter is $785,000.
Subd. 10. Student-Parent
Information |
|
122,000 |
|
122,000 |
Subd. 11. Get
Ready! |
|
180,000 |
|
180,000 |
Subd. 12. Minnesota
Education Equity Partnership |
|
45,000
|
|
45,000
|
Subd. 13. Midwest
Higher Education Compact |
|
115,000
|
|
115,000
|
Subd. 14. MN
Reconnect |
|
1,005,000
|
|
1,005,000
|
For the Office of Higher Education to award grant funds to
students and institutions under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.123. This is a onetime appropriation.
Subd. 15. United
Family Medicine Residency Program |
|
501,000
|
|
501,000
|
For a grant to United Family Medicine residency program. This appropriation shall be used to support
up to 21 resident physicians each year in family practice at United Family
Medicine residency programs and shall prepare doctors to practice family care
medicine in underserved rural and urban areas of the state. It is intended that this program will improve
health care in underserved communities, provide affordable access to
appropriate medical care, and manage the treatment of patients in a cost‑effective
manner.
Subd. 16. MnLINK
Gateway and Minitex |
|
5,905,000
|
|
5,905,000
|
Subd. 17. Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System |
1,782,000
|
|
1,782,000
|
Subd. 18. Hennepin
Healthcare |
|
645,000
|
|
645,000
|
For transfer to Hennepin Healthcare for graduate family
medical education programs at Hennepin Healthcare.
Subd. 19. College
Possible |
|
500,000
|
|
500,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for immediate transfer to College
Possible to support programs of college admission and college graduation for
low-income students through an intensive curriculum of coaching and support at
both the high school and postsecondary level.
(b) This appropriation must, to the extent possible, be
proportionately allocated between students from greater Minnesota and students
in the seven-county metropolitan area.
(c) This appropriation must be used by College Possible
only for programs supporting students who are residents of Minnesota and
attending colleges or universities within Minnesota.
(d) By February 1 of each year, College Possible must
report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees
and divisions with jurisdiction over higher education and E-12 education on
activities funded by this appropriation.
The report must include, but is not limited to, information about the
expansion of College Possible in Minnesota, the number of College Possible
coaches
hired, the expansion within existing partner high schools, the expansion of
high school partnerships, the number of high school and college students
served, the total hours of community service by high school and college
students, and a list of communities and organizations benefiting from student
service hours.
Subd. 20. Spinal Cord Injury and Traumatic Brain Injury Research Grant Program |
3,000,000
|
|
3,000,000
|
For transfer to the spinal cord and
traumatic brain grant account in the special revenue fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 136A.901, subdivision 1.
The commissioner may use no more than
three percent of the amount transferred under this subdivision to administer
the grant program.
Subd. 21. Summer
Academic Enrichment Program |
|
250,000
|
|
250,000
|
For summer academic enrichment grants
under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.091.
The commissioner may use no more than
three percent of this appropriation to administer the grant program under this
subdivision.
Subd. 22. Dual Training Competency Grants; Office of Higher Education |
2,000,000
|
|
2,000,000
|
For transfer to the Dual Training
Competency Grants account in the special revenue fund under Minnesota Statutes,
section 136A.246, subdivision 10.
Subd. 23. Dual Training Competency Grants; Department of Labor and Industry |
200,000
|
|
200,000
|
For transfer to the commissioner of labor
and industry for identification of competency standards for dual training under
Minnesota Statutes, section 175.45.
Subd. 24. Concurrent
Enrollment Courses |
|
340,000
|
|
340,000
|
(a) $225,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$225,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for grants to develop new concurrent
enrollment courses under Minnesota Statutes, section 124D.09, subdivision 10,
that satisfy the elective standard for career and technical education. Any balance in the first year does not cancel
but is available in the second year.
(b)
$115,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $115,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for grants to
postsecondary institutions currently sponsoring a concurrent enrollment course
to expand existing programs. The
commissioner shall determine the application process and the grant amounts. The commissioner must give preference to
expanding programs that are at capacity.
Any balance in the first year does not cancel but is available in the
second year.
(c) By December 1 of each year, the office
shall submit a brief report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over higher education regarding:
(1) the courses developed by grant
recipients and the number of students who enrolled in the courses under paragraph
(a); and
(2) the programs expanded and the number
of students who enrolled in programs under paragraph (b).
Subd. 25. Campus
Sexual Assault Reporting |
|
25,000
|
|
25,000
|
For the sexual assault reporting required
under Minnesota Statutes, section 135A.15.
Subd. 26. Campus Sexual Violence Prevention and Response Coordinator |
150,000
|
|
150,000
|
For the Office of Higher Education to
staff a campus sexual violence prevention and response coordinator to serve as
a statewide resource providing professional development and guidance on best
practices for postsecondary institutions.
$50,000 each year is for administrative funding to conduct trainings and
provide materials to postsecondary institutions.
Subd. 27. Emergency Assistance for Postsecondary Students |
269,000
|
|
269,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for the Office
of Higher Education to allocate grant funds on a matching basis to eligible
institutions as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.103, located in
Minnesota with a demonstrable homeless student population.
(b) This appropriation shall be used to
meet immediate student needs that could result in a student not completing the
term or their program including, but not limited to, emergency housing, food,
and transportation. Institutions shall
minimize any negative impact on student financial aid resulting from the
receipt of emergency funds.
(c)
The commissioner shall determine the application process and the grant amounts. The Office of Higher Education shall partner
with interested postsecondary institutions, other state agencies, and student
groups to establish the programs.
(d) The base for this appropriation in
fiscal year 2022 and all years thereafter is $175,000.
Subd. 28. Grants
to Teacher Candidates |
|
1,250,000
|
|
1,250,000
|
For grants to teacher candidates under
Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.1275. Of
this amount, $750,000 each year is directed to support candidates belonging to
an underrepresented racial or ethnic group and meeting other eligibility
requirements. If this dedicated amount
is not fully spent because of a lack of qualifying candidates, any remaining
amount may be awarded to qualifying teacher candidates in a shortage area.
The commissioner may use no more than
three percent of the appropriation for administration of the program.
Subd. 29. Teacher
Shortage Loan Forgiveness |
|
200,000
|
|
200,000
|
For transfer to the teacher shortage loan
forgiveness repayment account in the special revenue fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 136A.1791, subdivision 8.
The commissioner may use no more than
three percent of the amount transferred under this subdivision to administer
the program.
Subd. 30. Large Animal Veterinarian Loan Forgiveness Program |
375,000
|
|
375,000
|
For transfer to the large animal
veterinarian loan forgiveness program account in the special revenue fund under
Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.1795, subdivision 2.
Subd. 31. Agricultural Educators Loan Forgiveness |
50,000
|
|
50,000
|
For transfer to the agricultural education
loan forgiveness account in the special revenue fund under Minnesota Statutes,
section 136A.1794, subdivision 2.
Subd. 32. Aviation Degree Loan Forgiveness Program |
25,000
|
|
25,000
|
For transfer to the aviation degree loan
forgiveness program account in the special revenue fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 136A.1789, subdivision 2.
Subd. 33. Grants for Students with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities |
200,000 |
|
200,000 |
For grants for students with intellectual and developmental
disabilities under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.1215.
Subd. 34. Loan
Repayment Assistance Program |
|
25,000 |
|
25,000 |
For a grant to the Loan Repayment Assistance Program of
Minnesota to provide education debt relief to attorneys with full‑time
employment providing legal advice or representation to low-income clients or
support services for this work.
Subd. 35. Minnesota Independence College and
Community |
1,000,000 |
|
1,000,000 |
For a grant to Minnesota Independence College and Community
for need-based scholarships and tuition reduction. Beginning with students first enrolled in the
fall of 2019, eligibility is limited to resident students as defined in
Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.101, subdivision 8.
Subd. 36. Student
Loan Debt Counseling |
|
200,000 |
|
200,000 |
For student loan debt counseling under Minnesota Statutes,
section 136A.1788.
The Office of Higher Education may use no more than three
percent of the appropriation to administer the student loan debt counseling
program.
Subd. 37. Agency
Administration |
|
4,577,000 |
|
4,327,000 |
Up to $500,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $250,000 in fiscal
year 2021 are available for communications and outreach to students, adults,
and families to provide information on the expected costs of college and the
various grant options made available to them through the state.
Subd. 38. Balances
Forward |
|
|
|
|
A balance in the first year under this section does not
cancel, but is available for the second year.
Subd. 39. Transfers
|
|
|
|
|
The commissioner of the Office of Higher Education may
transfer unencumbered balances from the appropriations in this section to the
state grant appropriation, the interstate tuition reciprocity appropriation,
the child care grant appropriation, the Indian scholarship appropriation, the
state work-study appropriation, the get ready appropriation, the intervention
for college attendance
appropriation,
the student-parent information appropriation, the summer academic enrichment
program appropriation, and the public safety officers' survivors appropriation. Transfers from the child care or state
work-study appropriations may only be made to the extent there is a projected
surplus in the appropriation. A transfer
may be made only with prior written notice to the chairs and ranking minority
members of the senate and house of representatives committees with jurisdiction
over higher education finance.
Sec. 3. BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES |
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$758,679,000 |
|
$765,659,000 |
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Central
Office and Shared Services Unit |
|
33,074,000 |
|
33,074,000 |
For the Office of the Chancellor and the
Shared Services Division.
Subd. 3. Operations
and Maintenance |
|
721,490,000 |
|
728,470,000 |
(a) The Board of Trustees must establish
tuition rates as follows:
(1) for the 2019-2020 academic year, the
tuition rate at colleges must not exceed the 2018-2019 academic year rate by
more than three percent, and for the 2020-2021 academic year, the tuition rate
must not exceed the 2019-2020 academic year rate by more than three percent;
(2) for the 2019-2020 academic year, the
tuition rates for undergraduates at universities must not exceed the 2018-2019
academic year rate by more than three percent, except as provided under clause
(3), and for the 2020-2021 academic year, the tuition rate must not exceed the
2019-2020 academic year rate by more than three percent;
(3) for the 2019-2020 academic year, the
university with the lowest 2018-2019 academic year banded tuition rate may
increase its tuition to a tuition rate up to or equal to the 2019-2020 academic
year tuition rate of the university with the second lowest 2018‑2019
academic year banded tuition rate. For
the 2020-2021 academic year, the tuition rate must not exceed the 2019-2020
academic year rate by more than three percent; and
(4) for the 2019-2020 and 2020-2021
academic years, the differential tuition rate for online courses must not
exceed the 2018-2019 academic year rate.
The
student tuition relief may not be offset by increases in mandatory fees,
charges, or other assessments to the student.
Except under clause (4), colleges and universities are permitted to
increase differential tuition charges in fiscal years 2020 and 2021 where costs
for course or program delivery have increased due to extraordinary
circumstances beyond the control of the college or university. Rates and rationale must be approved by the
Board of Trustees.
(b) $3,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$3,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 are to provide supplemental aid for operations
and maintenance to the president of each two-year institution in the system
with at least one campus that is not located in a metropolitan county, as
defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 4. The board shall transfer $100,000 for each
campus not located in a metropolitan county in each year to the president of
each institution that includes such a campus, provided that no institution may
receive more than $300,000 in total supplemental aid each year.
(c) The Board of Trustees is requested to
help Minnesota close the attainment gap by funding activities which improve retention
and completion for students of color.
(d) $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$6,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for workforce development scholarships under
Minnesota Statutes, section 136F.38. The
base for fiscal year 2022 and thereafter is $4,000,000.
(e) $300,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$300,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for transfer to the Cook County Higher
Education Board to provide educational programming, workforce development, and
academic support services to remote regions in northeastern Minnesota. The Cook County Higher Education Board shall
continue to provide information to the Board of Trustees on the number of
students served, credit hours delivered, and services provided to students.
(f) This appropriation includes $40,000 in
fiscal year 2020 and $40,000 in fiscal year 2021 to implement the sexual
assault policies required under Minnesota Statutes, section 135A.15.
(g) This appropriation includes $8,000,000
in fiscal year 2020 and $8,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 for upgrading the Integrated
Statewide Record System.
(h) This appropriation includes $250,000
in fiscal year 2020 and $250,000 in fiscal year 2021 for developing and
offering courses to implement the Z-Degree textbook program under Minnesota
Statutes, section 136F.305. This is a
onetime appropriation.
(i)
This appropriation includes $500,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $500,000 in fiscal
year 2021 to support local partnership programs at Minnesota State Colleges and
Universities campuses. Local
partnerships must be comprised of campuses and local businesses and may also
include K-12 school districts, trade associations, local chambers of commerce,
and economic development authorities. Funds
must be used to develop new and accelerate existing employer-led workforce
exposure programs, technical education pathway programs, dual-training
programs, internships, youth skills training programs, and other
industry-recognized programs in high-growth, high-demand industries. Priority consideration for funding shall be
given to local partnerships whose program addresses an industry with a
demonstrated workforce shortage. Local
partnerships must demonstrate how business and industry are providing financial
and in-kind contributions to the program.
This is a onetime appropriation.
(j) This appropriation includes $250,000
in fiscal year 2020 and $250,000 in fiscal year 2021 for leveraged equipment
acquisition. For the purposes of this
section, "equipment" means equipment for instructional purposes for
programs that the board has determined would produce graduates with skills for
which there is a high employer need within the state. An equipment acquisition may be made using
this appropriation only if matched by cash or in-kind contributions from
nonstate sources. This is a onetime appropriation.
(k) $125,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$125,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for the mental health services for students
required under Minnesota Statutes, section 136F.20, subdivision 3. This is a onetime appropriation.
(l) The total operations and maintenance
base for fiscal year 2022 and thereafter is $725,345,000.
Subd. 4. Learning
Network of Minnesota |
|
4,115,000 |
|
4,115,000 |
Sec. 4. BOARD OF REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA |
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$671,673,000 |
|
$673,413,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2020
|
2021
|
General |
669,516,000
|
671,256,000
|
Health Care Access |
2,157,000
|
2,157,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Operations
and Maintenance |
|
601,078,000
|
|
602,818,000
|
(a)(1) The Board of Regents is requested
to establish tuition rates as follows: for
the 2019-2020 academic year, the resident undergraduate tuition rate is
requested to not exceed the 2018-2019 academic year rate by more than three
percent, and for the 2020‑2021 academic year, the resident undergraduate
tuition rate is requested to not exceed the 2019-2020 academic year rate by
more than three percent; and
(2) for the 2019-2020 and 2020-2021
academic years, it is requested that the differential tuition rate and fees for
online courses not exceed the 2018-2019 academic year rate and fees.
(b) $15,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$15,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 are to: (1)
increase the medical school's research capacity; (2) improve the medical
school's ranking in National Institutes of Health funding; (3) ensure the
medical school's national prominence by attracting and retaining world-class
faculty, staff, and students; (4) invest in physician training programs in
rural and underserved communities; and (5) translate the medical school's
research discoveries into new treatments and cures to improve the health of
Minnesotans.
(c) $7,800,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$7,800,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for health training restoration. This appropriation must be used to support
all of the following: (1) faculty
physicians who teach at eight residency program sites, including medical
resident and student training programs in the Department of Family Medicine;
(2) the Mobile Dental Clinic; and (3) expansion of geriatric education and
family programs.
(d) $4,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $4,000,000
in fiscal year 2021 are for the Minnesota Discovery, Research, and InnoVation
Economy funding program for cancer care research.
(e) $500,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$500,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for the University of Minnesota, Morris
branch, to cover the costs of tuition waivers under Minnesota Statutes, section
137.16.
Subd. 3. Primary
Care Education Initiatives |
|
2,157,000 |
|
2,157,000 |
This appropriation is from the health care
access fund.
Subd. 4. Special
Appropriations |
|
|
|
|
(a) Agriculture and Extension Service |
|
42,922,000
|
|
42,922,000
|
For the Agricultural Experiment Station
and the Minnesota Extension Service:
(1)
the agricultural experiment stations and Minnesota Extension Service must
convene agricultural advisory groups to focus research, education, and
extension activities on producer needs and implement an outreach strategy that
more effectively and rapidly transfers research results and best practices to
producers throughout the state;
(2) this appropriation includes funding
for research and outreach on the production of renewable energy from Minnesota
biomass resources, including agronomic crops, plant and animal wastes, and
native plants or trees. The following
areas should be prioritized and carried out in consultation with Minnesota
producers, renewable energy, and bioenergy organizations:
(i) biofuel and other energy production
from perennial crops, small grains, row crops, and forestry products in
conjunction with the Natural Resources Research Institute (NRRI);
(ii) alternative bioenergy crops and
cropping systems; and
(iii) biofuel coproducts used for
livestock feed;
(3) this appropriation includes funding
for the College of Food, Agricultural, and Natural Resources Sciences to
establish and provide leadership for organic agronomic, horticultural,
livestock, and food systems research, education, and outreach and for the
purchase of state-of-the-art laboratory, planting, tilling, harvesting, and
processing equipment necessary for this project;
(4) this appropriation includes funding
for research efforts that demonstrate a renewed emphasis on the needs of the
state's agriculture community. The
following areas should be prioritized and carried out in consultation with
Minnesota farm organizations:
(i) vegetable crop research with priority
for extending the Minnesota vegetable growing season;
(ii) fertilizer and soil fertility
research and development;
(iii) soil, groundwater, and surface water
conservation practices and contaminant reduction research;
(iv) discovering and developing plant
varieties that use nutrients more efficiently;
(v) breeding and development of turf seed
and other biomass resources in all three Minnesota biomes;
(vi) development of new disease-resistant
and pest-resistant varieties of turf and agronomic crops;
(vii)
utilizing plant and livestock cells to treat and cure human diseases;
(viii) the development of dairy
coproducts;
(ix) a rapid agricultural response fund
for current or emerging animal, plant, and insect problems affecting production
or food safety;
(x) crop pest and animal disease research;
(xi) developing animal agriculture that is
capable of sustainably feeding the world;
(xii) consumer food safety education and
outreach;
(xiii) programs to meet the research and
outreach needs of organic livestock and crop farmers; and
(xiv) alternative bioenergy crops and
cropping systems; and growing, harvesting, and transporting biomass plant
material; and
(5) by February 1, 2021, the Board of
Regents must submit a report to the legislative committees and divisions with
jurisdiction over agriculture and higher education finance on the status and
outcomes of research and initiatives funded in this paragraph.
(b) Health Sciences |
|
9,204,000
|
|
9,204,000
|
$346,000 each year is to support up to 12
resident physicians in the St. Cloud Hospital family practice residency
program. The program must prepare
doctors to practice primary care medicine in rural areas of the state. The legislature intends this program to
improve health care in rural communities, provide affordable access to
appropriate medical care, and manage the treatment of patients in a more
cost-effective manner. The remainder of
this appropriation is for the rural physicians associates program; the
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory; health sciences research; dental care; the
Biomedical Engineering Center; and the collaborative partnership between the
University of Minnesota and Mayo Clinic for regenerative medicine, research,
clinical translation, and commercialization.
(c) College of Science and Engineering |
|
1,140,000
|
|
1,140,000
|
For the geological survey and the talented
youth mathematics program.
(d)
System Special |
|
7,181,000
|
|
7,181,000
|
For general research, the Labor Education Service,
Natural Resources Research Institute, Center for Urban and Regional Affairs,
Bell Museum of Natural History, and the Humphrey exhibit.
$2,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$2,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for the Natural Resources Research Institute
to invest in applied research for economic development.
(e) University of Minnesota and Mayo Foundation Partnership |
7,991,000
|
|
7,991,000
|
This appropriation is for the following
activities:
(1) $7,491,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$7,491,000 in fiscal year 2021 are for the direct and indirect expenses of the
collaborative research partnership between the University of Minnesota and the
Mayo Foundation for research in biotechnology and medical genomics. An annual report on the expenditure of these
funds must be submitted to the governor and the chairs of the legislative
committees responsible for higher education finance by June 30 of each fiscal
year.
(2) $500,000 in fiscal year 2020 and
$500,000 in fiscal year 2021 are to award competitive grants to conduct
research into the prevention, treatment, causes, and cures of Alzheimer's
disease and other dementias.
Subd. 5. Academic
Health Center |
|
|
|
|
The appropriation for Academic Health
Center funding under Minnesota Statutes, section 297F.10, is estimated to be
$22,250,000 each year.
Sec. 5. MAYO
CLINIC |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$1,351,000 |
|
$1,351,000 |
The amounts that may be spent are
specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Medical
School |
|
665,000 |
|
665,000 |
The state must pay a capitation each year
for each student who is a resident of Minnesota. The appropriation may be transferred between
each year of the biennium to accommodate enrollment fluctuations. It is intended that during the biennium the
Mayo Clinic use the capitation money to increase the number of doctors
practicing in rural areas in need of doctors.
Subd. 3. Family Practice and Graduate Residency Program |
686,000
|
|
686,000
|
The state must pay stipend support for up
to 27 residents each year.
ARTICLE 2
HIGHER EDUCATION
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 13.322, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Minnesota Office of Higher Education. (a) General. Data sharing involving the Minnesota Office of Higher Education and other institutions is governed by section 136A.05.
(b) Student financial aid. Data collected and used by the Minnesota Office of Higher Education on applicants for financial assistance are classified under section 136A.162.
(c) Minnesota college savings plan data. Account owner data, account data, and data on beneficiaries of accounts under the Minnesota college savings plan are classified under section 136G.05, subdivision 10.
(d) School financial records. Financial records submitted by schools registering with the Minnesota Office of Higher Education are classified under section 136A.64.
(e) Enrollment and financial aid data. Data collected from eligible institutions on student enrollment and federal and state financial aid are governed by sections 136A.121, subdivision 18, and 136A.1701, subdivision 11.
(f) Student complaint data. Data
collected from student complaints are governed by sections 136A.672,
subdivision 6, and 136A.8295, subdivision 7.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 127A.70, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Powers and duties; report. (a) The partnership shall develop recommendations to the governor and the legislature designed to maximize the achievement of all P-20 students while promoting the efficient use of state resources, thereby helping the state realize the maximum value for its investment. These recommendations may include, but are not limited to, strategies, policies, or other actions focused on:
(1) improving the quality of and access to education at all points from preschool through graduate education;
(2) improving preparation for, and transitions to, postsecondary education and work;
(3) ensuring educator quality by creating rigorous standards for teacher recruitment, teacher preparation, induction and mentoring of beginning teachers, and continuous professional development for career teachers; and
(4) realigning the governance and administrative structures of early education, kindergarten through grade 12, and postsecondary systems in Minnesota.
(b) Under the direction of the P-20 Education Partnership Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System Governance Committee, the Office of Higher Education and the Departments of Education and Employment and Economic Development shall improve and expand the Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System (SLEDS) and the Early Childhood Longitudinal Data System (ECLDS) to provide policymakers, education and workforce leaders, researchers, and members of the public with data, research, and reports to:
(1) expand reporting on students' educational outcomes for diverse student populations including at-risk students, children with disabilities, English learners, and gifted students, among others, and include formative and summative evaluations based on multiple measures of child well-being, early childhood development, and student progress toward career and college readiness;
(2) evaluate the effectiveness of early care, educational, and workforce programs; and
(3) evaluate the relationship between
relationships among early care, education, and workforce
outcomes, consistent with section 124D.49.
To the extent possible under federal and state law, research and reports should be accessible to the public on the Internet, and disaggregated by demographic characteristics, organization or organization characteristics, and geography.
It is the intent of the legislature that the Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System and the Early Childhood Longitudinal Data System inform public policy and decision-making. The SLEDS governance committee and ECLDS governance committee, with assistance from staff of the Office of Higher Education, the Department of Education, and the Department of Employment and Economic Development, shall respond to legislative committee and agency requests on topics utilizing data made available through the Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System and the Early Childhood Longitudinal Data System as resources permit. Any analysis of or report on the data must contain only summary data.
(c) By January 15 of each year, the partnership shall submit a report to the governor and to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees and divisions with jurisdiction over P-20 education policy and finance that summarizes the partnership's progress in meeting its goals and identifies the need for any draft legislation when necessary to further the goals of the partnership to maximize student achievement while promoting efficient use of resources.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 135A.15, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Victims' rights. The policy required under subdivision 1 shall, at a minimum, require that students and employees be informed of the policy, and shall include provisions for:
(1) filing criminal charges with local law enforcement officials in sexual assault cases;
(2) the prompt assistance of campus authorities, at the request of the victim, in notifying the appropriate law enforcement officials and disciplinary authorities of a sexual assault incident;
(3) allowing sexual assault victims to decide whether to report a case to law enforcement;
(4) requiring campus authorities to treat sexual assault victims with dignity;
(5) requiring campus authorities to offer sexual assault victims fair and respectful health care, counseling services, or referrals to such services;
(6) preventing campus authorities from suggesting to a victim of sexual assault that the victim is at fault for the crimes or violations that occurred;
(7) preventing campus authorities from suggesting to a victim of sexual assault that the victim should have acted in a different manner to avoid such a crime;
(8) subject to subdivision 10, protecting the privacy of sexual assault victims by only disclosing data collected under this section to the victim, persons whose work assignments reasonably require access, and, at a sexual assault victim's request, police conducting a criminal investigation;
(9) an investigation and resolution of a sexual assault complaint by campus disciplinary authorities;
(10) a sexual assault victim's participation in and the presence of the victim's attorney or other support person who is not a fact witness to the sexual assault at any meeting with campus officials concerning the victim's sexual assault complaint or campus disciplinary proceeding concerning a sexual assault complaint;
(11) ensuring that a sexual assault victim may decide when to repeat a description of the incident of sexual assault;
(12) notice to a sexual assault victim of the availability of a campus or local program providing sexual assault advocacy services and information on free legal resources and services;
(13) notice to a sexual assault victim of the outcome of any campus disciplinary proceeding concerning a sexual assault complaint, consistent with laws relating to data practices;
(14) the complete and prompt assistance of campus authorities, at the direction of law enforcement authorities, in obtaining, securing, and maintaining evidence in connection with a sexual assault incident;
(15) the assistance of campus authorities in preserving for a sexual assault complainant or victim materials relevant to a campus disciplinary proceeding;
(16) during and after the process of investigating a complaint and conducting a campus disciplinary procedure, the assistance of campus personnel, in cooperation with the appropriate law enforcement authorities, at a sexual assault victim's request, in shielding the victim from unwanted contact with the alleged assailant, including transfer of the victim to alternative classes or to alternative college-owned housing, if alternative classes or housing are available and feasible;
(17) forbidding retaliation, and establishing a process for investigating complaints of retaliation, against sexual assault victims by campus authorities, the accused, organizations affiliated with the accused, other students, and other employees;
(18) at the request of the victim, providing students who reported sexual assaults to the institution and subsequently choose to transfer to another postsecondary institution with information about resources for victims of sexual assault at the institution to which the victim is transferring; and
(19) consistent with laws governing access to student records, providing a student who reported an incident of sexual assault with access to the student's description of the incident as it was reported to the institution, including if that student transfers to another postsecondary institution.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.101, subdivision 5a, is amended to read:
Subd. 5a. Assigned
family responsibility. "Assigned
family responsibility" means the amount of a family's contribution to a
student's cost of attendance, as determined by a federal need analysis. For dependent students, the assigned family
responsibility is 84 82 percent of the parental contribution. For independent students with dependents
other than a spouse, the assigned family responsibility is 76 74
percent of the student contribution. For
independent students without dependents other than a spouse, the assigned
family responsibility is 40 38 percent of the student
contribution.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.121, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Cost
of attendance. (a) The recognized
cost of attendance consists of: (1) an
allowance specified in law for living and miscellaneous expenses, and (2) an
allowance for tuition and fees equal to the lesser of the average tuition and
fees charged by the institution, or a tuition and fee maximum if one is
established in law. If no living and
miscellaneous expense allowance is established in law, the allowance is equal
to 101 106 percent of the federal poverty guidelines for a one
person household in Minnesota for nine months.
If no tuition and fee maximum is established in law, the allowance for
tuition and fees is equal to the lesser of:
(1) the average tuition and fees charged by the institution, and (2) for
two-year programs, an amount equal to the highest tuition and fees charged at a
public two-year institution, or for four-year programs, an amount equal to the
highest tuition and fees charged at a public university.
(b) For a student registering for less than full time, the office shall prorate the cost of attendance to the actual number of credits for which the student is enrolled.
(c) The recognized cost of attendance for a student who is confined to a Minnesota correctional institution shall consist of the tuition and fee component in paragraph (a), with no allowance for living and miscellaneous expenses.
(d) For the purpose of this subdivision, "fees" include only those fees that are mandatory and charged to full‑time resident students attending the institution. Fees do not include charges for tools, equipment, computers, or other similar materials where the student retains ownership. Fees include charges for these materials if the institution retains ownership. Fees do not include optional or punitive fees.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1215, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Maximum grant amounts. (a) The amount of a grant under this section equals the tuition and fees at the student's postsecondary institution, minus:
(1) any Pell or state grants the student receives; and
(2) any institutional aid the student receives.
(b) If appropriations are insufficient to
provide the full amount calculated under paragraph (a) to all eligible
applicants, the commissioner must reduce the grants of all maximum
grant amount available to recipients proportionally.
Sec. 7. [136A.123]
MN RECONNECT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Program
administration. The
commissioner of the Office of Higher Education must administer a credential
completion program for adult learners consistent with this section.
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purpose of this section,
the terms defined in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(b) "Cost of attendance"
means tuition and required fees charged by the institution and the campus-based
budget used for federal financial aid for food, housing, books, supplies,
transportation, and miscellaneous expenses.
(c) "Eligible student" means
an individual who:
(1) meets the eligibility requirements
in section 136A.121, subdivision 2, paragraphs (a), clauses (1), (2), (4), and
(5), and (b);
(2)
is 25 years old or older and under 62;
(3) has previously completed a minimum
of 15 credits in a certificate or degree-seeking program that have been
accepted by a participating institution;
(4) has not enrolled in any Minnesota
institution in the two academic years prior to enrollment at a participating
institution;
(5) has not completed a certificate,
diploma, or degree of 16 credits or longer in length prior to enrollment at a
participating institution in this program;
(6) has enrolled in three or more
credits each term;
(7) reports a family adjusted gross
income of $85,000 or less; and
(8) has applied for the grant on the
form required by the commissioner.
(d) "Grant" means funds
awarded under this section.
(e) "Participating
institution" means a two-year institution within the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities System selected under subdivision 5.
(f) "Program" means a
certificate, diploma, or degree program offered by a participating institution.
(g) To the extent not inconsistent with
this section, the definitions in section 136A.101 apply to this section.
Subd. 3. Student
application. Application for
a grant must be made by a FAFSA or state aid application and any additional
form required by the commissioner. Applications
are due on a schedule set by the commissioner.
Subd. 4. Student grants. (a) The commissioner must, to the extent funds are available, make grants to eligible students to attend a program at a participating institution. The amount of a grant per spring or fall academic term is the lesser of $1,000 or the difference between the cost of attendance and other scholarships or grants received by the student. If the appropriation is greater than the projected grants for the spring and fall terms, the commissioner may award grants up to $1,000 per student for summer or interim terms.
(b) An eligible student may renew a student
grant by applying for renewal on a form provided by the commissioner and on a
schedule set by the commissioner. An
eligible student may receive a student grant under this section for up to six
semesters or the equivalent.
Subd. 5. Participating
institutions. (a) A two-year
institution within the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System may
apply to become a participating institution.
The commissioner, in conjunction with a selection committee, shall
select institutions through a competitive application process. Priority must be given to institutions
participating in the most recently completed fiscal year.
(b) Participating institutions must:
(1) demonstrate a commitment to adult
learners through adoption of best practice policies, programs, and services;
and
(2) complete an adult learner
assessment prior to participation.
Subd. 6. Institutional
grants. Participating
institutions may receive funds for student advising, resolving student
financial holds, and improving services to eligible students.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1275, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Eligibility. To be eligible for a grant under this section, a teacher candidate must:
(1) be enrolled in a Professional Educator
Licensing and Standards Board-approved teacher preparation program that
requires at least 12 weeks of student teaching in order to be recommended for a
full professional any Tier 3 teaching license;
(2) demonstrate financial need based on criteria established by the commissioner under subdivision 3;
(3) intend to teach in a shortage area
or belong to an underrepresented racial or ethnic group; and
(4) (3) be meeting
satisfactory academic progress as defined under section 136A.101, subdivision
10.; and
(4) intend to teach in a shortage area
or belong to a racial or ethnic group underrepresented in the Minnesota teacher
workforce. Intent can be documented
based on the teacher license field the student is pursuing or a statement of
intent to teach in an economic development region defined as a shortage area in
the year the student receives a grant.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1275, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Administration;
repayment. (a) The commissioner must
establish an application process and other guidelines for implementing this
program, including repayment responsibilities for stipend recipients who do
not complete student teaching or who leave Minnesota to teach in another state
during the first year after student teaching.
(b) The commissioner must determine each academic year the stipend amount up to $7,500 based on the amount of available funding, the number of eligible applicants, and the financial need of the applicants.
(c) The percentage of the total award funds
available at the beginning of the fiscal year reserved for teacher
candidates who identify as belonging to an underrepresented a
racial or ethnic group underrepresented in the Minnesota teacher workforce
must be equal to or greater than the total percentage of students of underrepresented
racial or ethnic groups underrepresented in the Minnesota teacher workforce
as measured under section 120B.35, subdivision 3. If this percentage cannot be met because of a
lack of qualifying candidates, the remaining amount may be awarded to teacher
candidates who intend to teach in a shortage area.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.15, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Eligible
student. "Eligible
student" means a student who is officially registered or accepted for
enrollment at an eligible institution in Minnesota or a Minnesota resident who
is officially registered as a student or accepted for enrollment at an eligible
institution in another state or province. Non-Minnesota residents are eligible
students if they are enrolled or accepted for enrollment in a minimum of one
course of at least 30 days in length during the academic year that requires
physical attendance at an eligible institution located in Minnesota. Non‑Minnesota resident students
enrolled exclusively during the academic year in correspondence courses or
courses offered over the Internet are not eligible students. Non-Minnesota resident students not
physically attending classes in Minnesota due to enrollment in a study abroad program
for 12 months or less are eligible students.
Non‑Minnesota residents enrolled in study abroad programs
exceeding 12 months are not eligible students. An eligible student, for section 136A.1701,
means a student who gives informed consent authorizing the disclosure of data
specified in section 136A.162, paragraph (c), to a consumer credit reporting
agency.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.16, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Designation. Notwithstanding chapter 16C, the office
is designated as the administrative agency for carrying out the purposes and
terms of sections 136A.15 to 136A.1702 136A.1704. The office may establish one or more loan
programs.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.16, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Rules,
policies, and conditions. The
office shall adopt policies and may prescribe appropriate rules and
conditions to carry out the purposes of sections 136A.15 to 136A.1702
136A.1704. The policies and
rules except as they relate to loans under section 136A.1701 must be compatible
with the provisions of the National Vocational Student Loan Insurance Act of
1965 and the provisions of title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, and
any amendments thereof.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.16, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Agencies. The office may contract with loan
servicers, collection agencies, credit bureaus, or any other person, to carry
out the purposes of sections 136A.15 to 136A.1702 136A.1704.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.16, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Investment. Money made available to the office that
is not immediately needed for the purposes of sections 136A.15 to 136A.1702
136A.1704 may be invested by the office.
The money must be invested in bonds, certificates of indebtedness, and
other fixed income securities, except preferred stocks, which are legal
investments for the permanent school fund.
The money may also be invested in prime quality commercial paper that is
eligible for investment in the state employees retirement fund. All interest and profits from such
investments inure to the benefit of the office or may be pledged for security
of bonds issued by the office or its predecessors.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.16, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Staff. The office may employ the professional
and clerical staff the commissioner deems necessary for the proper
administration of the loan programs established and defined by sections 136A.15
to 136A.1702 136A.1704.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.162, is amended to read:
136A.162
CLASSIFICATION OF DATA.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c), data on applicants for financial assistance collected and used by the office for student financial aid programs administered by that office are private data on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12.
(b) Data on applicants may be disclosed to the commissioner of human services to the extent necessary to determine eligibility under section 136A.121, subdivision 2, clause (5).
(c) The following data collected in the
Minnesota supplemental loan program under section sections
136A.1701 and 136A.1704 may be disclosed to a consumer credit reporting
agency only if the borrower and the cosigner give informed consent, according
to section 13.05, subdivision 4, at the time of application for a loan:
(1) the lender-assigned borrower identification number;
(2) the name and address of borrower;
(3) the name and address of cosigner;
(4) the date the account is opened;
(5) the outstanding account balance;
(6) the dollar amount past due;
(7) the number of payments past due;
(8) the number of late payments in previous 12 months;
(9) the type of account;
(10) the responsibility for the account; and
(11) the status or remarks code.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1701, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Repayment
of loans. (a) The office
shall establish repayment procedures for loans made under this section, but
in no event shall the period of permitted repayment for SELF II or SELF III
loans exceed ten years from the eligible student's termination of the student's
postsecondary academic or vocational program, or 15 years from the date of the
student's first loan under this section, whichever is less. in accordance with the policies, rules,
and conditions authorized under section 136A.16, subdivision 2. The office will take into consideration the
loan limits and current financial market conditions when establishing repayment
terms.
(b) For SELF IV loans, eligible
students with aggregate principal loan balances from all SELF phases that are
less than $18,750 shall have a repayment period not exceeding ten years from
the eligible student's graduation or termination date. For SELF IV loans, eligible students with
aggregate principal loan balances from all SELF phases of $18,750 or greater
shall have a repayment period not exceeding 15 years from the eligible
student's graduation or termination date.
For SELF IV loans, the loans shall enter repayment no later than seven
years after the first disbursement date on the loan.
(c) For SELF loans from phases after
SELF IV, eligible students with aggregate principal loan balances from all SELF
phases that are:
(1) less than $20,000, must have a
repayment period not exceeding ten years from the eligible student's graduation
or termination date;
(2) $20,000 up to $40,000, must have a
repayment period not exceeding 15 years from the eligible student's graduation
or termination date; and
(3) $40,000 or greater, must have a
repayment period not exceeding 20 years from the eligible student's graduation
or termination date. For SELF loans from
phases after SELF IV, the loans must enter repayment no later than nine years
after the first disbursement date of the loan.
Sec. 18. [136A.1788]
STUDENT LOAN DEBT COUNSELING.
Subdivision 1. Grant. A program is established under the
Office of Higher Education to provide a grant to a Minnesota-based nonprofit
qualified debt counseling organization to provide individual student loan debt
repayment counseling to borrowers who are Minnesota residents concerning loans
obtained to attend a postsecondary institution.
The number of individuals receiving counseling may be limited to those
capable of being served with available appropriations for that purpose. A goal of the counseling program is to
provide two counseling sessions to at least 75 percent of borrowers receiving
counseling.
The purpose of the counseling is to
assist borrowers to:
(1) understand their loan and repayment
options;
(2) manage loan repayment; and
(3) develop a workable budget based on the borrower's full financial situation regarding income, expenses, and other debt.
Subd. 2. Qualified debt counseling organization. A qualified debt counseling
organization is an organization that:
(1) has experience in providing individualized student loan counseling;
(2) employs certified financial
counselors; and
(3) is based in Minnesota and has offices at multiple rural and metropolitan area locations in the state to provide in-person counseling.
Subd. 3. Grant
application and award. (a)
Applications for a grant shall be on a form created by the commissioner and on
a schedule set by the commissioner. Among
other provisions, the application must include a description of:
(1) the characteristics of borrowers to
be served;
(2) the services to be provided and a
timeline for implementation of the services;
(3) how the services provided will help
borrowers manage loan repayment;
(4) specific program outcome goals and
performance measures for each goal; and
(5) how the services will be evaluated
to determine whether the program goals were met.
(b) The commissioner shall select one grant recipient for a two-year award every two years. A grant may be renewed biennially.
Subd. 4. Program evaluation. (a) The grant recipient must submit a report to the commissioner by January 15 of the second year of the grant award. The report must evaluate and measure the extent to which program outcome goals have been met.
(b) The grant recipient must collect, analyze, and report on participation and outcome data that enable the office to verify the outcomes.
(c) The evaluation must include information on the number of borrowers served with on-time student loan payments, the number who brought their loans into good standing, the number of student loan defaults, the number who developed a monthly budget plan, and other information required by the commissioner. Recipients of the counseling must be surveyed on their opinions about the usefulness of the counseling and the survey results must be included in the report.
Subd. 5. Report to legislature. By February 1 of the second year of each grant award, the commissioner must submit a report to the committees in the legislature with jurisdiction over higher education finance regarding grant program outcomes.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1789, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the terms in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(b) "Qualified aircraft technician" means an individual who (1) has earned an associate's or bachelor's degree preparing individuals to obtain an aviation mechanic's certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration from a postsecondary institution located in Minnesota, and (2) has obtained an aviation mechanic's certificate from the Federal Aviation Administration.
(c) "Qualified education loan"
means a government, commercial, or foundation loan used by an individual for
actual costs paid for tuition to a postsecondary institution located in
Minnesota for a professional flight training degree and reasonable
educational and living expenses related to the postsecondary education of the
qualified aircraft technician or qualified pilot.
(d) "Qualified pilot" means an
individual who (1) has earned an associate's or bachelor's degree in
professional flight training preparing individuals to obtain an airline
transport pilot certificate from a postsecondary institution located in
Minnesota, and (2) is in the process of obtaining or has obtained an airline
transport pilot certificate.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1789, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Eligibility. (a) To be eligible to participate in the loan forgiveness program under this section, an individual must:
(1) be a qualified pilot or qualified aircraft technician;
(2) have qualified education loans;
(3) reside in Minnesota; and
(4) submit an application to the commissioner in the form and manner prescribed by the commissioner.
(b) An applicant selected to participate
must sign a contract to agree to serve a minimum one-year five-year
full‑time service obligation according to subdivision 4. To complete the service obligation, the
applicant must work full time in Minnesota as a qualified pilot or qualified
aircraft technician. A participant must
complete one year of service under this paragraph for each year the participant
receives an award under this section.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.1789, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Loan forgiveness. (a) The commissioner may select eligible applicants each year for participation in the aviation degree loan forgiveness program, within the limits of available funding. Applicants are responsible for securing their own qualified education loans.
(b) For each year that the participant meets the eligibility requirements under subdivision 3, the commissioner must make annual disbursements directly to:
(1) a selected qualified pilot of $5,000 or the balance of the participant's qualified education loans, whichever is less; and
(2) a selected qualified aircraft technician of $3,000 or the balance of the participant's qualified education loans, whichever is less.
(c) An individual may receive disbursements under this section for a maximum of five years.
(d) The participant must provide the commissioner with verification that the full amount of the loan repayment disbursement received by the participant has been applied toward the designated qualified education loan. After each disbursement, verification must be received by the commissioner and approved before the next repayment disbursement is made.
(e) If the participant receives a
disbursement in the participant's fifth year of eligibility, the participant
must provide the commissioner with verification that the full amount of the
participant's final loan repayment disbursement was applied toward the designated
qualified education loan. If a
participant does not provide the verification as required under this paragraph
within six 12 months of receipt of the final disbursement, the
commissioner must collect from the participant the total amount of
the final disbursement paid to the participant under the loan
forgiveness program plus interest at a rate established according to section
270C.40. The commissioner must
deposit the money collected in the aviation degree loan forgiveness program
account.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.64, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Schools to provide information. As a basis for registration, schools shall provide the office with such information as the office needs to determine the nature and activities of the school, including but not limited to the following which shall be accompanied by an affidavit attesting to its accuracy and truthfulness:
(1) articles of incorporation, constitution, bylaws, or other operating documents;
(2) a duly adopted statement of the school's mission and goals;
(3) evidence of current school or program licenses granted by departments or agencies of any state;
(4) a fiscal balance sheet on an accrual basis, or a certified audit of the immediate past fiscal year including any management letters provided by the independent auditor or, if the school is a public institution outside Minnesota, an income statement for the immediate past fiscal year;
(5) all current promotional and recruitment materials and advertisements; and
(6) the current school catalog and, if not contained in the catalog:
(i) the members of the board of trustees or directors, if any;
(ii) the current institutional officers;
(iii) current full-time and part-time faculty with degrees held or applicable experience;
(iv) a description of all school facilities;
(v) a description of all current course offerings;
(vi) all requirements for satisfactory completion of courses, programs, and degrees;
(vii) the school's policy about freedom or limitation of expression and inquiry;
(viii) a current schedule of fees, charges for tuition, required supplies, student activities, housing, and all other standard charges;
(ix) the school's policy about refunds and adjustments;
(x) the school's policy about granting credit
for prior education, training, and experience; and
(xi) the school's policies about student
admission, evaluation, suspension, and dismissal.; and
(xii) the school's disclosure to students
on the student complaint process under section 136A.672.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.64, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5.
Public information. All information submitted to the office
is public information except financial records, student complaint data, and
accreditation records and information reports. Except for accreditation reports, the
office may disclose financial any records or information submitted
to the office:
(1) to law enforcement officials; or
(2) in connection with a legal or
administrative proceeding to:
(i) to defend its decision to
approve or disapprove granting of degrees or the use of a name or;
(ii) defend its decisions decision
to revoke the institution's approval at a hearing under chapter 14 or
other legal proceedings; or
(iii) enforce a requirement of law.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.64, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 8. Disclosure. Schools must disclose on their
website, student handbook, and student catalog the student complaint process
under section 136A.672 to students.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.645, is amended to read:
136A.645
SCHOOL CLOSURE.
(a) When a school decides intends
to cease postsecondary education operations, it must cooperate with the
office in assisting students to find alternative means to complete their
studies with a minimum of disruption, and inform the office of the following
announces its closure, or is informed by the office that the office
anticipates the school's closure due to its registration status or ability to
meet criteria for approval under section 136A.65, the school must provide the
office:
(1)
the planned date for termination of postsecondary education operations;
(2) the planned date for the transfer of
the student records;
(3) confirmation of the name and address
of the organization to receive and hold the student records; and
(4) the official at the organization
receiving the student records who is designated to provide official copies of
records or transcripts upon request.
(1) a notice of closure, including the
name of the school, the name of the school owner, an active mailing address and
telephone number that the school owner may be reached at after the school
physically closes, the name of the school director, and the planned date for
termination of postsecondary operations;
(2) a report of all students currently
enrolled and all students enrolled within the prior 120 days, including the
following information for each student: name,
address, school email address, alternate email address, program of study,
number of credits completed, number of credits remaining, and enrollment status
at closure;
(3) a report of refunds due to any
student and the amount due;
(4) a written statement from the
school's owner or designee affirming that all recruitment efforts, school
marketing, advertisement, solicitation, and enrollment of new students has
ceased;
(5) a copy of any communication between
the school's accreditors about the school closure;
(6) confirmation that the requirements
for student records under section 136A.68 have been satisfied, including:
(i) the planned date for the transfer
of the student records;
(ii) confirmation of the name and
address of the organization to receive and hold the student records; and
(iii) the official at the organization
receiving the student records who is designated to provide official copies of
records or transcripts upon request;
(7) academic information, including the
school's most recent catalog, all course syllabi, and faculty credential
information; and
(8) copies of any teach-out, transfer,
or train-out agreement between the school and a new school for students to be
able to complete their studies. A
teach-out fulfills the original contract or agreement between the closing
school and the student. If a teach-out
is arranged for another approved school to do the remaining occupational
training, that other school must (i) provide comparable education and training
and (ii) agree that students transferring from the closing school pay only what
the cost of tuition and fees remain unpaid according to the terms and
conditions in the enrollment agreement entered into between the student and the
closing school.
(b) Upon notice from a school of its
intention to cease operations, the office shall notify the school of the date
on which it must cease the enrollment of students and all postsecondary
educational operations.
(b) Without limitation as to other circumstance, a school shall be deemed to have ceased operations when the school:
(1) has an unscheduled nonemergency closure or cancellation of classes for more than 24 hours without prior notice to the office;
(2) announces it is closed or closing; or
(3) files for bankruptcy.
(c) When a school is deemed to have
ceased operations, the office shall provide the school a reasonable time to
correct student records and grant credentials.
After that time, the office must revoke the school's registration. This revocation is not appealable under
section 136A.65, subdivision 8.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.646, is amended to read:
136A.646
ADDITIONAL SECURITY.
(a) New schools that have been granted
conditional approval for degrees or names to allow them the opportunity to
apply for and receive accreditation under section 136A.65, subdivision 7, or
shall provide a surety bond in a sum equal to ten percent of the net revenue
from tuition and fees in the registered institution's prior fiscal year, but in
no case shall the bond be less than $10,000.
(b) Any registered institution that
is notified by the United States Department of Education that it has fallen
below minimum financial standards and that its continued participation in Title
IV will be conditioned upon its satisfying either the Zone Alternative, Code of
Federal Regulations, title 34, section 668.175, paragraph (f), or a Letter of
Credit Alternative, Code of Federal Regulations, title 34, section 668.175,
paragraph (c), shall provide a surety bond in a sum equal to the "letter
of credit" required by the United States Department of Education in the
Letter of Credit Alternative, but in no event shall such bond be less than
$10,000 nor more than $250,000. If
the letter of credit required by the United States Department of Education is
higher than ten percent of the Title IV, Higher Education Act program funds
received by the institution during its most recently completed fiscal year, the
office shall reduce the office's surety requirement to represent ten percent of
the Title IV, Higher Education Act program funds received by the institution
during its most recently completed fiscal year, subject to the minimum and
maximum in this paragraph.
(b) (c) In lieu of a bond,
the applicant may deposit with the commissioner of management and budget:
(1) a sum equal to the amount of the required surety bond in cash;
(2) securities, as may be legally purchased by savings banks or for trust funds, in an aggregate market value equal to the amount of the required surety bond; or
(3) an irrevocable letter of credit issued by a financial institution to the amount of the required surety bond.
(c) (d) The surety of any
bond may cancel it upon giving 60 days' notice in writing to the office and
shall be relieved of liability for any breach of condition occurring after the
effective date of cancellation.
(d) (e) In the event of a
school closure, the additional security must first be used to destroy any
private educational data under section 13.32 left at a physical campus in
Minnesota after all other governmental agencies have recovered or retrieved
records under their record retention policies.
Any remaining funds must then be used to reimburse tuition and fee costs
to students that were enrolled at the time of the closure or had withdrawn in
the previous 120 calendar days but did not graduate. Priority for refunds will be given to
students in the following order:
(1) cash payments made by the student or on behalf of a student;
(2) private student loans; and
(3) Veteran Administration education benefits that are not restored by the Veteran Administration. If there are additional security funds remaining, the additional security funds may be used to cover any administrative costs incurred by the office related to the closure of the school.
Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.672, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Private
information. Student
complaint data are private data on individuals, as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12. The office may disclose student complaint
data as provided in section 136A.64, subdivision 5.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.821, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 18. Clock
hour. "Clock hour"
means a period of time consisting of a 50- to 60-minute class, lecture, or
recitation in a 60-minute period; a 50- to 60-minute faculty-supervised
laboratory, shop training, or internship in a 60-minute period; or 60 minutes
of preparation in a correspondence course.
If a school seeks to determine the number of clock hours in an
educational program by aggregating the number of minutes in that program, it
must divide those minutes by 60.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.821, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 19. Student
record. "Student
record" means a transcript or record of student attendance in a program
that includes, at a minimum, the student's name; the student's address; the
school's name; the school's address; the title of the course or program; the
total number of hours or courses completed; the dates of enrollment and
attendance; the grade record of each course; any credential awarded; and
cumulative grade for the program.
Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.822, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Bond. (a) No license shall be issued to any private career school which maintains, conducts, solicits for, or advertises within the state of Minnesota any program, unless the applicant files with the office a continuous corporate surety bond written by a company authorized to do business in Minnesota conditioned upon the faithful performance of all contracts and agreements with students made by the applicant.
(b)(1) The amount of the surety bond shall
be ten percent of the preceding year's net income revenue from
student tuition, fees, and other required institutional charges collected, but
in no event less than $10,000, except that a private career school may deposit
a greater amount at its own discretion. A
private career school in each annual application for licensure must compute the
amount of the surety bond and verify that the amount of the surety bond
complies with this subdivision. A
private career school that operates at two or more locations may combine net income
revenue from student tuition, fees, and other required institutional
charges collected for all locations for the purpose of determining the annual
surety bond requirement. The net revenue
from tuition and fees used to determine the amount of the surety bond required
for a private career school having a license for the sole purpose of recruiting
students in Minnesota shall be only that paid to the private career school by
the students recruited from Minnesota.
(2) A person required to obtain a private career school license due to the use of "academy," "institute," "college," or "university" in its name and which is also licensed by another state agency or board, except not including those schools licensed exclusively in order to participate in state grants or SELF loan financial aid programs, shall be required to provide a school bond of $10,000.
(c) The bond shall run to the state of Minnesota and to any person who may have a cause of action against the applicant arising at any time after the bond is filed and before it is canceled for breach of any contract or agreement made by the applicant with any student. The aggregate liability of the surety for all breaches of the conditions of the
bond shall not exceed the principal sum deposited by the private career school under paragraph (b). The surety of any bond may cancel it upon giving 60 days' notice in writing to the office and shall be relieved of liability for any breach of condition occurring after the effective date of cancellation.
(d) In lieu of bond, the applicant may deposit with the commissioner of management and budget a sum equal to the amount of the required surety bond in cash, an irrevocable letter of credit issued by a financial institution equal to the amount of the required surety bond, or securities as may be legally purchased by savings banks or for trust funds in an aggregate market value equal to the amount of the required surety bond.
(e) Failure of a private career school to post and maintain the required surety bond or deposit under paragraph (d) may result in denial, suspension, or revocation of the school's license.
Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.822, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. Catalog, brochure, or electronic display. Before a license is issued to a private career school, the private career school shall furnish to the office a catalog, brochure, or electronic display including:
(1) identifying data, such as volume number and date of publication;
(2) name and address of the private career school and its governing body and officials;
(3) a calendar of the private career school showing legal holidays, beginning and ending dates of each course quarter, term, or semester, and other important dates;
(4) the private career school policy and regulations on enrollment including dates and specific entrance requirements for each program;
(5) the private career school policy and regulations about leave, absences, class cuts, make-up work, tardiness, and interruptions for unsatisfactory attendance;
(6) the private career school policy and regulations about standards of progress for the student including the grading system of the private career school, the minimum grades considered satisfactory, conditions for interruption for unsatisfactory grades or progress, a description of any probationary period allowed by the private career school, and conditions of reentrance for those dismissed for unsatisfactory progress;
(7) the private career school policy and regulations about student conduct and conditions for dismissal for unsatisfactory conduct;
(8) a detailed schedule of fees, charges for tuition, books, supplies, tools, student activities, laboratory fees, service charges, rentals, deposits, and all other charges;
(9) the private career school policy and regulations, including an explanation of section 136A.827, about refunding tuition, fees, and other charges if the student does not enter the program, withdraws from the program, or the program is discontinued;
(10) a description of the available facilities and equipment;
(11) a course outline syllabus for each course offered showing course objectives, subjects or units in the course, type of work or skill to be learned, and approximate time, hours, or credits to be spent on each subject or unit;
(12) the private career school policy and regulations about granting credit for previous education and preparation;
(13) a notice to students relating to the transferability of any credits earned at the private career school to other institutions;
(14) a procedure for investigating and
resolving student complaints; and
(15) the name and address of the office.;
and
(16) the student complaint process and
rights under section 136A.8295.
A private career school that is exclusively a distance education school is exempt from clauses (3) and (5).
Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.822, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
Subd. 12. Permanent student records. A private career school licensed under sections 136A.82 to 136A.834 and located in Minnesota shall maintain a permanent student record for each student for 50 years from the last date of the student's attendance. A private career school licensed under this chapter and offering distance instruction to a student located in Minnesota shall maintain a permanent record for each Minnesota student for 50 years from the last date of the student's attendance. Records include school transcripts, documents, and files containing student data about academic credits earned, courses completed, grades awarded, degrees awarded, and periods of attendance. To preserve permanent student records, a private career school shall submit a plan that meets the following requirements:
(1) at least one copy of the records must be held in a secure, fireproof depository;
(2) an appropriate official must be designated to provide a student with copies of records or a transcript upon request;
(3) an alternative method, approved by the office, of complying with clauses (1) and (2) must be established if the private career school ceases to exist; and
(4) a continuous surety bond or irrevocable letter of credit issued by a financial institution must be filed with the office in an amount not to exceed $20,000 if the private career school has no binding agreement approved by the office, for preserving student records. The bond or irrevocable letter of credit shall run to the state of Minnesota. In the event of a school closure, the surety bond or irrevocable letter of credit must be used by the office to retrieve, recover, maintain, digitize, and destroy academic records.
Sec. 33. [136A.8225]
SCHOOL CLOSURE.
(a) When a school intends to cease
postsecondary education operations, announces its closure, or is informed by
the office that the office anticipates the school's closure due to its
licensure status or ability to meet criteria for approval under section
136A.822, subdivision 8, the school must provide the office:
(1) a notice of closure, including the
name of the school, the name of the school owner, an active mailing address and
telephone number that the school owner may be reached at after the school
physically closes, the name of the school director, and the planned date for
termination of postsecondary operations;
(2)
a report of all students currently enrolled and all students enrolled within
the prior 120 days, including the following information for each student: name, address, school email address,
alternate email address, program of study, number of credits completed, number
of credits remaining, and enrollment status at closure;
(3) a report of refunds due to any
student and the amount due;
(4) a written statement from the
school's owner or designee affirming that all recruitment efforts, school
marketing, advertisement, solicitation, and enrollment of new students has
ceased;
(5) a copy of any communication between
the school's accreditors about the school closure;
(6) confirmation that the requirements
for student records under section 136A.822, subdivision 12, have been
satisfied, including:
(i) the planned date for the transfer
of the student records;
(ii) confirmation of the name and
address of the organization to receive and hold the student records; and
(iii) the official at the organization
receiving the student records who is designated to provide official copies of
records or transcripts upon request;
(7) academic information, including the
school's most recent catalog, all course syllabi, and faculty credential
information; and
(8) copies of any teach-out, transfer,
or train-out agreement between the school and a new school for students to be
able to complete their studies. A
teach-out fulfills the original contract or agreement between the closing
school and the student. If a teach-out
is arranged for another approved school to do the remaining occupational
training, that other school must (i) provide comparable education and training
and (ii) agree that students transferring from the closing school pay only what
the cost of tuition and fees remain unpaid according to the terms and
conditions in the enrollment agreement entered into between the student and the
closing school.
(b) Without limitation as to other
circumstance, a school shall be deemed to have ceased operations when the
school:
(1) has an unscheduled nonemergency
closure or cancellation of classes for more than 24 hours without prior notice
to the office;
(2) announces it is closed or closing; or
(3) files for bankruptcy.
(c) When a school is deemed to have
ceased operations, the office shall provide the school a reasonable time to
correct student records and grant credentials.
After that time, the office must revoke the school's license. This revocation is not appealable under
section 136A.829, subdivision 2.
Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.8295, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6. Disclosure. Schools must disclose on their
website, student handbook, and student catalog the student complaint process under
this section to students.
Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.8295, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Private
information. Student
complaint data are private data on individuals, as defined in section 13.02, subdivision
12. The office may disclose student
complaint data to law enforcement officials or in connection with a legal or
administrative proceeding commenced to enforce a requirement of law.
Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136A.87, is amended to read:
136A.87
PLANNING INFORMATION FOR POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION.
(a) The office shall make available to all residents beginning in 7th grade through adulthood information about planning and preparing for postsecondary opportunities. Information must be provided to all 7th grade students and their parents annually by September 30 about planning for their postsecondary education. The office may also provide information to high school students and their parents, to adults, and to out-of-school youth.
(b) The office shall gather and share information with students and parents about the dual credit acceptance policies of each Minnesota public and private college and university. The office shall gather and share information related to the acceptance policies for concurrent enrollment courses, postsecondary enrollment options courses, advanced placement courses, and international baccalaureate courses. This information must be shared on the office's website and included in the information under paragraph (a).
(c) The information provided under paragraph (a) may include the following:
(1) the need to start planning early;
(2) the availability of assistance in educational planning from educational institutions and other organizations;
(3) suggestions for studying effectively during high school;
(4) high school courses necessary to be adequately prepared for postsecondary education;
(5) encouragement to involve parents actively in planning for all phases of education;
(6) information about postsecondary education and training opportunities existing in the state, their respective missions and expectations for students, their preparation requirements, admission requirements, and student placement;
(7) ways to evaluate and select postsecondary institutions;
(8) the process of transferring credits among Minnesota postsecondary institutions and systems;
(9) the costs of postsecondary education and the availability of financial assistance in meeting these costs, including specific information about the Minnesota Promise;
(10) the interrelationship of assistance
from student financial aid, public assistance, and job training programs; and
(11) financial planning for postsecondary
education.; and
(12) postsecondary education options
for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136F.20, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3. Mental
health services and health insurance information. (a) The Board of Trustees must
contract with one or more independent mental health organizations to provide
mental health care, including by use of telemedicine, on campus at up to five
state colleges. To be eligible to apply
for the program, the state college must employ one or more faculty counselors. These grants are designed to build on the
current support provided by faculty counselors and are not a replacement for
them. Mental health services must be
provided without charge to students who are uninsured, who have high
co-payments, or whose health insurance does not cover the service provided. A memorandum of understanding shall be
developed between the college and the mental health organization outlining the
use of space on campus, how the students will be notified of the service, how
they will collaborate with faculty counselors, the provision of services, and
other items.
(b) A mental health organization
providing mental health care under paragraph (a) must also provide information
and guidance to students seeking health insurance.
Sec. 38. [136F.245]
HUNGER FREE CAMPUS DESIGNATION.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. A Hunger Free Campus designation for
Minnesota State community and technical colleges is established. In order to be awarded the designation, a
campus must meet the following minimum criteria:
(1) have an established on-campus food pantry or partnership with a local food bank to provide regular, on‑campus food distributions;
(2) provide information to students on SNAP, MFIP, and other programs that reduce food insecurity;
(3) hold or participate in one hunger awareness event per academic year;
(4) have an established emergency assistance grant that is available to students; and
(5) establish a hunger task force that
meets a minimum of three times per academic year. The task force must include at least two
students currently enrolled at the college.
Subd. 2. Designation
approval. The statewide
student association representing the community and technical colleges shall
create an application process and a nonmonetary award, and provide final
approval for the designation at each college.
Subd. 3. Expiration. This section expires July 1, 2023.
Sec. 39. [136F.305]
Z-DEGREES.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Custom textbook" means
course materials that are compiled by a publisher at the direction of a faculty
member or, if applicable, the other adopting entity in charge of selecting
course materials for courses taught at a state college or university. Custom textbooks may include items such as
selections from original instructor materials, previously copyrighted publisher
materials, copyrighted third-party works, or elements unique to a specific
state college or university.
(c) "Incentive" means
anything provided to faculty to identify, review, adapt, author, or adopt open
textbooks.
(d)
"Open educational resources" are high-quality teaching, learning, and
research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under
an intellectual property license that permits their free use and repurposing by
others, and may include other resources that are legally available and free of
cost to students. Open educational
resources include course materials, modules, custom and open textbooks, articles,
faculty-created content, streaming videos, tests, software, and any other
tools, materials, or techniques used to support access to knowledge.
(e) "Open textbook" means a
textbook that is distributed using an open copyright license that at a minimum
allows a student to obtain, retain, reuse, and redistribute the material at no
cost.
(f) "System office" means the
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system office.
(g) "Z-Degree" means a
zero-textbook-cost associate's degree.
Subd. 2. Requirement. Three additional colleges must offer
the opportunity to earn a Z-Degree by academic year 2020-2021. A college's course offerings for its Z-Degree
program must include at least two distinct courses in each transfer curriculum
goal area and at least enough credits in each transfer curriculum goal area to
complete the transfer curriculum package.
Subd. 3. Open
educational resource development. (a)
The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities must develop a program to offer a
Z-degree at three additional colleges by expanding the use of open educational
resources, including custom and open textbooks.
The system office must provide opportunities for faculty to identify,
review, adapt, author, and adopt open educational resources. The system office must develop incentives to
academic departments to identify, review, adapt, author, or adopt open educational
resources within their academic programs.
(b) The programs and incentives
developed under this subdivision must be implemented pursuant to faculty
collective bargaining agreements.
Subd. 4. Report. The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities must submit reports by January 13, 2021, and
January 12, 2022, to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over higher education. Each report must include (1) the number of
courses transitioned to using an open textbook resulting from the programs in
this section, and (2) the total amount of student textbook savings resulting
from the transitions.
Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 136F.38, is amended to read:
136F.38
WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT SCHOLARSHIPS.
Subdivision 1. Program established. The board shall develop a scholarship program to incentivize new students and students returning from the workforce to enter high-demand occupations upon graduation.
Subd. 2. Scholarship awards. The program shall award scholarships at the beginning of an academic term, in the amount of $2,500, to be distributed evenly between two terms.
Subd. 3. Program
eligibility. (a) Scholarships shall
be awarded only to a student eligible for resident tuition, as defined in
section 135A.043, who is enrolled in any of the following programs of study or
certification: (1) advanced
manufacturing; (2) agriculture; (3) health care services; or (4)
information technology; (5) early childhood; or (6) transportation.
(b)
The student must be enrolled for at least nine credits at a two-year college
in the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system.
Subd. 4. Renewal;
cap. A student who has received a
scholarship may apply again but total lifetime awards are not to exceed $5,000
$7,500 per student. Students may
only be awarded a second scholarship upon completion of two academic terms. Students may be awarded a third scholarship
if the student transfers to a corresponding program at a Minnesota state university.
Subd. 5. Administration. (a) The board shall establish an application process and other guidelines for implementing this program.
(b) The board shall give preference to students in financial need.
Subd. 5a. Local
business partnerships. Beginning
in 2020, and each year thereafter, the board shall withhold ten percent of the
appropriation. The withheld funds must
be distributed in the following year to institutions that successfully leverage
private matching funds from local businesses, resulting in additional
scholarships by partnering with the local business community.
Subd. 6. Report required. The board must submit an annual report by February 1 of each year about the scholarship awards to the chairs and ranking minority members of the senate and house of representatives committees with jurisdiction over higher education finance and policy. The first report is due no later than February 1, 2019. The annual report shall describe the following:
(1) the number of students receiving a scholarship at each two-year college and each university during the previous fiscal year;
(2) the number of scholarships awarded for each program of study or certification described in subdivision 3, paragraph (a);
(3) the number of scholarship recipients who completed a program of study or certification described in subdivision 3, paragraph (a);
(4) the number of scholarship recipients who secured employment by their graduation date and those who secured employment within three months of their graduation date;
(5) a list of the institutions that
received funding under subdivision 5a, the amount of funding each institution
received, and whether all withheld funds were distributed;
(6) a list of occupations scholarship recipients are entering; and
(6) (7) the number of
students who were denied a scholarship.
Sec. 41. Laws 2017, chapter 89, article 1, section 2, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
Subd. 29. Emergency
Assistance for Postsecondary Students |
175,000 |
|
175,000 |
(a) This appropriation is for the Office of
Higher Education to allocate grant funds on a matching basis to schools eligible
institutions as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 136A.103, located in
Minnesota with a demonstrable homeless student population.
(b)
This appropriation shall be used to meet immediate student needs that could
result in a student not completing the term or their program including, but not
limited to, emergency housing, food, and transportation. Emergency assistance does not impact the
amount of state financial aid received.
Institutions shall minimize any negative impact on student financial
aid resulting from the receipt of emergency funds.
(c) The commissioner shall determine the application process and the grant amounts. Any balance in the first year does not cancel but shall be available in the second year. The Office of Higher Education shall partner with interested postsecondary institutions, other state agencies, and student groups to establish the programs.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 42. COLLEGE
SAVINGS PLAN MATCHING GRANTS.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
sections 136G.05, subdivision 5, 136G.09, subdivisions 10 and 12, 136G.11, and
136G.13, subdivisions 2, 3, and 4, through June 30, 2021, the commissioner of
the Office of Higher Education may resolve matching grant issues that occurred
after January 1, 2013. The commissioner
shall limit the authority under this section to assisting account owners or
successors who were negatively impacted by issues related to the matching
grant.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective
the day following final enactment and expires June 30, 2021.
Sec. 43. STUDY
AND JUSTIFICATION FOR THE TUITION DIFFERENTIAL OR ADDITIONAL FEES FOR ONLINE
COURSES.
The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities shall, and the Board of Regents of the
University of Minnesota is requested to, each provide a report by January 15,
2020, to the members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
higher education issues related to the tuition differential for online courses
and additional online course fees. The
report must include both a detailed analysis of onetime investments that have
been made in order to provide online courses and a detailed analysis of ongoing
costs, compared to the investments and costs associated with in-person courses,
including physical campus infrastructure and classroom space, and other costs
associated with providing an in-person course on the campus of the institution. The report must provide a plan to achieve
parity related to the amount charged for online courses and comparable
in-person courses by the 2021-2022 academic year. If the institution determines that parity
cannot be achieved, the report must provide justification for the difference in
cost.
Sec. 44. MINNESOTA
STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES AND UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ADMINISTRATIVE COST
REPORTS.
The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities shall provide a report to the chairs and
ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over
higher education by July 1, 2021, detailing how the Minnesota State Colleges
and Universities define, categorize, and account for administrative costs. The report must further identify measures
taken to use innovation and cost efficiencies to lower administrative costs. The Board of Regents of the University of
Minnesota is requested to provide a similar report by July 1, 2021.
Sec. 45. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections
136A.15, subdivisions 2 and 7; and 136A.1701, subdivision 12, are repealed."
Correct the title numbers accordingly
We request the adoption of this report and repassage of the bill.
Senate
Conferees: Paul Anderson, Rich Draheim, Scott M. Jensen, Jerry Relph and
Greg D. Clausen.
House Conferees: Connie Bernardy, Laurie Pryor, Ben Lien, Ginny Klevorn and Bud Nornes.
Bernardy moved that the report of the
Conference Committee on S. F. No. 2415 be adopted and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Conference Committee. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 2415, A bill for an act relating to higher education; providing funding and policy changes for the Office of Higher Education, the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, and the University of Minnesota; modifying the state grant formula; requiring a report; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 13.322, subdivision 3; 135A.15, subdivision 2; 136A.101, subdivision 5a; 136A.121, subdivision 6; 136A.1215, subdivision 4; 136A.1275, subdivisions 2, 3; 136A.15, subdivision 8; 136A.16, subdivisions 1, 2, 5, 8, 9; 136A.162; 136A.1701, subdivision 7; 136A.1789, subdivisions 1, 3, 5; 136A.64, subdivisions 1, 5, by adding a subdivision; 136A.645; 136A.646; 136A.672, by adding a subdivision; 136A.821, by adding subdivisions; 136A.822, subdivisions 6, 10, 12; 136A.8295, by adding subdivisions; 136A.87; 136F.20, by adding a subdivision; 136F.38; 136F.58, by adding a subdivision; 179A.20, by adding a subdivision; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 136A; 136F; 137; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 136A.15, subdivisions 2, 7; 136A.1701, subdivision 12.
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 84 yeas and 49 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Acomb
Bahner
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Bernardy
Bierman
Brand
Cantrell
Carlson, A.
Carlson, L.
Christensen
Claflin
Considine
Daniels
Davnie
Dehn
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Fischer
Freiberg
Gomez
Halverson
Hansen
Hassan
Hausman
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Kunesh-Podein
Layman
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Noor
Nornes
Olson
Persell
Petersburg
Pinto
Poppe
Pryor
Richardson
Sandell
Sandstede
Sauke
Schomacker
Schultz
Stephenson
Sundin
Swedzinski
Tabke
Theis
Urdahl
Vang
Wagenius
Wazlawik
West
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
Those who voted in the negative were:
Albright
Anderson
Backer
Bahr
Boe
Daudt
Davids
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Erickson
Fabian
Franson
Garofalo
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Gunther
Haley
Hamilton
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Koznick
Kresha
Lucero
Lueck
McDonald
Mekeland
Miller
Munson
Nash
Nelson, N.
Neu
O'Driscoll
O'Neill
Pelowski
Pierson
Poston
Quam
Robbins
Runbeck
Scott
Torkelson
Vogel
Zerwas
The bill was repassed, as amended by
Conference, and its title agreed to.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
SUSPENSION OF RULES
Winkler moved that the rules be so far suspended so that S. F. No. 973, now on the General Register, be given its third reading and be placed upon its final passage. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 973 was reported
to the House.
Mann moved to amend S. F. No. 973, the first unofficial engrossment, as follows:
Page 4, line 4, delete "This is a onetime appropriation." and insert "The base for this appropriation is $150,000 in fiscal year 2022, $150,000 in fiscal year 2023, and $0 in fiscal year 2024 and later."
The motion
prevailed and the amendment was adopted.
S. F. No. 973, A bill for an act relating to health; requesting the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota to establish an advisory council on rare diseases; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 137.
The bill was read for the third time, as
amended, and placed upon its final passage.
The question was taken on the passage of
the bill and the roll was called. There
were 133 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
Daudt
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
Hertaus
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Koznick
Kresha
Kunesh-Podein
Layman
Lee
Lesch
Liebling
Lien
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Loeffler
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mahoney
Mann
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McDonald
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Munson
Murphy
Nash
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu
Noor
Nornes
O'Driscoll
Olson
O'Neill
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
West
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Xiong, T.
Youakim
Zerwas
Spk. Hortman
The bill was
passed, as amended, and its title agreed to.
Winkler moved that the House recess
subject to the call of the Chair. The
motion prevailed.
RECESS
RECONVENED
The House reconvened and was called to
order by Speaker pro tempore Halverson.
There being no objection, the order of
business reverted to Messages from the Senate.
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. 2226.
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. 2226
A bill for an act relating to agriculture; establishing a budget for the Department of Agriculture, the Board of Animal Health, the Agricultural Utilization Research Institute, and the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency; modifying programs; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 17.041, subdivision 1; 18B.34, subdivision 5; 18C.425, subdivision 6; 18C.70, subdivision 5; 18C.71, subdivision 4; 18C.80, subdivision 2; 18K.02, subdivision 3; 18K.06; 28A.16; 41A.15, subdivision 10, by adding a subdivision; 41A.16, subdivisions 1, 2, 4; 41A.17, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 41A.18, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 41B.055, subdivision 4; 116.06, by adding a subdivision; 116.07, subdivisions 7, 7d; 223.16, subdivisions 2a, 4; 223.17, subdivisions 3, 4, 5, 6, by adding subdivisions; 223.177, subdivisions 2, 3, 8; 232.21, by adding subdivisions; 232.22, subdivisions 3, 4; 232.23, subdivision 3; 232.24, subdivisions 1, 2; 299D.085, by adding a subdivision; 326B.815, subdivision 1; 327.31, by adding a subdivision; 327B.041; 327C.095, subdivisions 4, 6, 12, 13, by adding a subdivision; 428A.11, subdivisions 4, 6; 462A.2035, subdivisions 1a, 1b; 462A.209, subdivision 8; 462A.22, subdivision 9; 462A.24; 462A.33, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 462A.37, subdivision 2; 462A.38, subdivision 1; 474A.02, by adding subdivisions; 474A.03, subdivision 1; 474A.061, subdivisions 1, 2a, by adding a subdivision; 474A.091, subdivisions 2, 3; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 41B; 327.
May 20, 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. 2226 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. 2226 be further amended as follows:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
AGRICULTURE APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. AGRICULTURE
APPROPRIATIONS. |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are
available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2020" and
"2021" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, or June 30, 2021,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2020. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2021. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2020 |
2021 |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT
OF AGRICULTURE |
|
|
|
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Protection
Services |
|
|
|
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2020 |
2021
|
General |
18,650,000
|
18,650,000
|
Remediation |
399,000
|
399,000
|
(a) $399,000 the first year and $399,000
the second year are from the remediation fund for administrative funding for
the voluntary cleanup program.
(b) $175,000 the first year and $175,000
the second year are for compensation for destroyed or crippled livestock under
Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737. The
first year appropriation may be spent to compensate for livestock that were
destroyed or crippled during fiscal year 2019.
If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the
second year is available in the first year.
The commissioner may use up to $5,000 each year to reimburse expenses
incurred by university extension educators to provide fair market values of
destroyed or crippled livestock.
(c) $250,000 the first year and $250,000
the second year are for rapid detection, identification, containment, control,
and management of high-priority plant pests and pathogens including emerald ash
borer.
(d) $155,000 the first year and $155,000
the second year are for compensation for crop damage under Minnesota Statutes,
section 3.7371. If the amount in the
first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is available in the first
year. The commissioner may use up to
$30,000 of the appropriation each year to reimburse expenses incurred by the
commissioner or the commissioner's approved agent to investigate and resolve
claims.
If the commissioner determines that claims
made under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737 or 3.7371, are unusually high,
amounts appropriated for either program may be transferred to the appropriation
for the other program.
(e)
$450,000 the first year and $450,000 the second year are additional funding for
the noxious weed and invasive plant program.
The base amount for this appropriation in fiscal year 2022 and later is
$225,000.
(f) $175,000 the first year and $175,000
the second year are for industrial hemp development.
(g) $150,000 the first year and $150,000
the second year are for additional meat and poultry inspection services.
(h) $275,000 the first year and $275,000
the second year are to replace capital equipment in the Department of
Agriculture's analytical laboratory. The
base amount for this appropriation in fiscal year 2022 and later is $225,000.
(i) $250,000 the first year and $250,000
the second year are for agricultural emergency preparedness and response.
Subd. 3. Agricultural
Marketing and Development |
|
3,996,000
|
|
3,996,000
|
(a) $186,000 the first year and $186,000
the second year are for transfer to the Minnesota grown account and may be used
as grants for Minnesota grown promotion under Minnesota Statutes, section
17.102. Grants may be made for one year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2021, for Minnesota grown grants in this paragraph are available until
June 30, 2023.
(b) $100,000 the first year and $100,000
the second year are to expand domestic and international marketing
opportunities for farmers and value-added processors, including staffing to
facilitate farm-to-school sales and new markets for Minnesota-grown hemp.
(c) $634,000 the first year and $634,000
the second year are for continuation of the dairy development and profitability
enhancement and dairy business planning grant programs established under Laws
1997, chapter 216, section 7, subdivision 2, and Laws 2001, First Special
Session chapter 2, section 9, subdivision 2.
The commissioner may allocate the available sums among permissible
activities, including efforts to improve the quality of milk produced in the
state, in the proportions that the commissioner deems most beneficial to
Minnesota's dairy farmers. The
commissioner must submit a detailed accomplishment report and a work plan
detailing future plans for, and anticipated accomplishments from, expenditures
under this program to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees and divisions with jurisdiction over agriculture policy
and finance on or before the start of each fiscal year. If significant changes are made to the plans
in the course of the year, the commissioner must notify the chairs and ranking
minority members.
(d)
$50,000 the first year and $50,000 the second year are for additional community
outreach on farms and rural mental health services including the 24-hour
hotline, service availability, and mental health forums. Of this appropriation, $12,000 each year is
to provide professional development training for Farm Business Management
instructors in the Minnesota State system.
The appropriations under this paragraph are onetime.
(e) The commissioner may use funds appropriated in this
subdivision for annual cost-share payments to resident farmers or entities that
sell, process, or package agricultural products in this state for the costs of
organic certification. The commissioner
may allocate these funds for assistance to persons transitioning from
conventional to organic agriculture.
Subd. 4. Agriculture, Bioenergy, and Bioproduct Advancement |
23,653,000 |
|
23,654,000 |
(a) $9,300,000 the first year and $9,300,000 the second
year are for transfer to the agriculture research, education, extension, and
technology transfer account under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14,
subdivision 3. Of these amounts: at least $600,000 the first year and $600,000
the second year are for the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station's
agriculture rapid response fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision
1, clause (2); $2,000,000 the first year and $2,000,000 the second year
are for grants to the Minnesota Agriculture Education Leadership Council to
enhance agricultural education with priority given to Farm Business Management
challenge grants; $350,000 the first year and $350,000 the second year are for
potato breeding; and $450,000 the first year and $450,000 the second year are
for the cultivated wild rice breeding project at the North Central Research and
Outreach Center to include a tenure track/research associate plant breeder. The commissioner shall transfer the remaining
funds in this appropriation each year to the Board of Regents of the University
of Minnesota for purposes of Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14. Of the amount transferred to the Board of
Regents, up to $1,000,000 each year is for research on avian influenza.
To the extent practicable, money expended under Minnesota
Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), must supplement
and not supplant existing sources and levels of funding. The commissioner may use up to one percent of
this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program.
(b) $14,353,000 the first year and $14,354,000 the second
year are for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in
Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12. Except
as provided below, the commissioner may allocate the appropriation each year
among the following areas: facilitating
the start-up, modernization,
improvement,
or expansion of livestock operations including beginning and transitioning
livestock operations with preference given to robotic dairy-milking equipment;
providing funding not to exceed $400,000 each year to develop and enhance
farm-to-school markets for Minnesota farmers by providing more fruits,
vegetables, meat, grain, and dairy for Minnesota children in school and child
care settings including, at the commissioner's discretion, reimbursing schools
for purchases from local farmers; assisting value-added agricultural businesses
to begin or expand, to access new markets, or to diversify, including
aquaponics systems; providing funding not to exceed $300,000 each year for
urban youth agricultural education or urban agriculture community development;
providing funding not to exceed $300,000 each year for the good food access
program under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.1017; facilitating the start-up,
modernization, or expansion of other beginning and transitioning farms
including by providing loans under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.056;
sustainable agriculture on-farm research and demonstration; development or
expansion of food hubs and other alternative community-based food distribution
systems; enhancing renewable energy infrastructure and use; crop research
including basic and applied turf seed research; Farm Business Management
tuition assistance; and good agricultural practices/good handling practices
certification assistance. The
commissioner may use up to 6.5 percent of this appropriation for costs incurred
to administer the program.
Of the amount appropriated for the agricultural growth,
research, and innovation program in Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12:
(1) $1,000,000 the first year and $1,000,000 the second
year are for distribution in equal amounts to each of the state's county fairs
to preserve and promote Minnesota agriculture;
(2) $2,500,000 the first year and $2,500,000 the second
year are for incentive payments under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41A.16,
41A.17, and 41A.18. Notwithstanding
Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.28, the first year appropriation is available
until June 30, 2021, and the second year appropriation is available until June
30, 2022. If this appropriation exceeds
the total amount for which all producers are eligible in a fiscal year, the
balance of the appropriation is available for the agricultural growth,
research, and innovation program. The
base amount for the allocation under this clause is $3,000,000 in fiscal year
2022 and later;
(3) up to $5,000,000 the first year is for Dairy
Assistance, Investment, Relief Initiative (DAIRI) grants to Minnesota dairy
farmers who enroll for five years of coverage under the federal dairy margin
coverage program and produced no more than 16,000,000 pounds of milk in 2018. The commissioner must award DAIRI grants
based on participating producers' amount of
2018
milk, up to 5,000,000 pounds per participating producer, at a rate determined
by the commissioner within the limits of available funding;
(4) up to $5,000,000 the second year is for innovative soybean processing and research;
(5) $75,000 the first year is for a grant
to Greater Mankato Growth, Inc. for assistance to agricultural-related
businesses to promote jobs, innovation, and synergy development; and
(6) $75,000 the first year and $75,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Turf Seed Council for basic and
applied research.
The amounts in clauses (3) to (6) are
onetime.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 16A.28, any unencumbered balance does not cancel at the end of the
first year and is available for the second year and appropriations encumbered
under contract on or before June 30, 2021, for agricultural growth, research,
and innovation grants are available until June 30, 2024.
The base amount for the agricultural
growth, research, and innovation program is $14,693,000 in fiscal year 2022 and
$14,693,000 in fiscal year 2023, and includes funding for incentive payments
under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41A.16, 41A.17, 41A.18, and 41A.20.
The commissioner must consult with the
commissioner of transportation, the commissioner of administration, and local
units of government to identify at least ten parcels of publicly owned land
that are suitable for urban agriculture.
Subd. 5. Administration
and Financial Assistance |
|
7,510,000
|
|
7,508,000
|
(a) $474,000 the first year and $474,000
the second year are for payments to county and district agricultural societies
and associations under Minnesota Statutes,
section 38.02, subdivision 1. Aid
payments to county and district agricultural societies and associations shall
be disbursed no later than July 15 of each year. These payments are the amount of aid from the
state for an annual fair held in the previous calendar year.
(b) $2,000 the first year is for a grant
to the Minnesota State Poultry Association.
This is a onetime appropriation, and is available until June 30, 2021.
(c) $18,000 the first year and $18,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Livestock Breeders Association. These are onetime appropriations.
(d)
$47,000 the first year and $47,000 the second year are for the Northern Crops
Institute. These appropriations may be
spent to purchase equipment. These are
onetime appropriations.
(e) $267,000 the first year and $267,000
the second year are for farm advocate services.
(f) $17,000 the first year and $17,000 the
second year are for grants to the Minnesota Horticultural Society. These are onetime appropriations.
(g) $250,000 the first year and $250,000
the second year are for transfer to the Board of Trustees of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities for statewide mental health counseling support
to farm families and business operators through the Minnesota State
Agricultural Centers of Excellence. South
Central College and Central Lakes College shall serve as the fiscal agents. The base amount for this appropriation in
fiscal year 2022 and later is $238,000.
(h) $1,700,000 the first year and
$1,700,000 the second year are for grants to Second Harvest Heartland on behalf
of Minnesota's six Feeding America food banks for the following:
(1) to purchase milk for distribution to
Minnesota's food shelves and other charitable organizations that are eligible
to receive food from the food banks. Milk
purchased under the grants must be acquired from Minnesota milk processors and
based on low-cost bids. The milk must be
allocated to each Feeding America food bank serving Minnesota according to the
formula used in the distribution of United States Department of Agriculture
commodities under The Emergency Food Assistance Program. Second Harvest Heartland may enter into
contracts or agreements with food banks for shared funding or reimbursement of
the direct purchase of milk. Each food
bank that receives funding under this clause may use up to two percent for
administrative expenses; and
(2) to compensate agricultural producers
and processors for costs incurred to harvest and package for transfer surplus
fruits, vegetables, and other agricultural commodities that would otherwise go
unharvested, be discarded, or sold in a secondary market. Surplus commodities must be distributed
statewide to food shelves and other charitable organizations that are eligible
to receive food from the food banks. Surplus
food acquired under this clause must be from Minnesota producers and processors. Second Harvest Heartland may use up to 15
percent of each grant awarded under this clause for administrative and
transportation expenses.
Of
the amount appropriated under this paragraph, at least $600,000 each year must
be allocated under clause (1). Notwithstanding
Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.28, any unencumbered balance the first year
does not cancel and is available in the second year. Second Harvest Heartland must submit quarterly
reports to the commissioner in the form prescribed by the commissioner. The reports must include but are not limited
to information on the expenditure of funds, the amount of milk or other
commodities purchased, and the organizations to which this food was distributed. The base for this appropriation is $1,650,000
in fiscal year 2022 and $1,650,000 in fiscal year 2023.
(i) $150,000 the first year and $150,000 the second year
are for grants to the Center for Rural Policy and Development. These are onetime appropriations.
(j) $250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year are for grants to the Minnesota Agricultural Education and Leadership Council for programs of the council under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 41D.
(k) The commissioner shall continue to increase connections
with ethnic minority and immigrant farmers to farming opportunities and farming
programs throughout the state.
Sec. 3. BOARD
OF ANIMAL HEALTH |
|
$5,677,000 |
|
$5,677,000 |
$200,000 the first year and $200,000 the second year are
for agricultural emergency preparedness and response.
Sec. 4. AGRICULTURAL UTILIZATION RESEARCH
INSTITUTE |
$3,893,000 |
|
$3,893,000 |
Sec. 5. Laws 2015, First Special Session chapter 4, article 1, section 2, subdivision 4, as amended by Laws 2016, chapter 184, section 11, Laws 2016, chapter 189, article 2, section 26, and Laws 2017, chapter 88, article 1, section 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Agriculture,
Bioenergy, and Bioproduct Advancement |
14,993,000 |
|
18,316,000 |
$4,483,000 the first year and $8,500,000 the second year are for transfer to the agriculture research, education, extension, and technology transfer account under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 3. The transfer in this paragraph includes money for plant breeders at the University of Minnesota for wild rice, potatoes, and grapes. Of these amounts, at least $600,000 each year is for the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station's Agriculture Rapid Response Fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, clause (2). Of the amount appropriated in this paragraph, $1,000,000 each year is for transfer to the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota for research to determine (1) what is causing avian influenza, (2) why
some fowl are more susceptible, and (3) prevention measures that can be taken. Of the amount appropriated in this paragraph, $2,000,000 each year is for grants to the Minnesota Agriculture Education Leadership Council to enhance agricultural education with priority given to Farm Business Management challenge grants. The commissioner shall transfer the remaining grant funds in this appropriation each year to the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota for purposes of Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14.
To the extent practicable, funds expended under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), must supplement and not supplant existing sources and levels of funding. The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program. Any unencumbered balance does not cancel at the end of the first year and is available for the second year.
$10,235,000 the first year and $9,541,000 the second year are
for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in Minnesota
Statutes, section 41A.12. No later than
February 1, 2016, and February 1, 2017, the commissioner must report to the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance
regarding the commissioner's accomplishments and anticipated accomplishments in
the following areas: facilitating the
start-up, modernization, or expansion of livestock operations including
beginning and transitioning livestock operations; developing new markets for
Minnesota farmers by providing more fruits, vegetables, meat, grain, and dairy
for Minnesota school children; assisting value-added agricultural businesses to
begin or expand, access new markets, or diversify products; developing urban
agriculture; facilitating the start-up, modernization, or expansion of other
beginning and transitioning farms including loans under Minnesota Statutes,
section 41B.056; sustainable agriculture on farm research and demonstration;
development or expansion of food hubs and other alternative community-based
food distribution systems; incentive payments under Minnesota Statutes,
sections 41A.16, 41A.17, and 41A.18; and research on bioenergy, biobased
content, or biobased formulated products and other renewable energy development. The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of
this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program. Any unencumbered balance does not cancel at
the end of the first year and is available for the second year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, the appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30,
2017, for agricultural growth, research, and innovation grants are available
until June 30, 2019 2020.
The commissioner may use funds appropriated for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program as provided in this paragraph. The commissioner may award grants to owners of
Minnesota facilities producing bioenergy, biobased content, or a biobased formulated product; to organizations that provide for on‑station, on-farm field scale research and outreach to develop and test the agronomic and economic requirements of diverse strands of prairie plants and other perennials for bioenergy systems; or to certain nongovernmental entities. For the purposes of this paragraph, "bioenergy" includes transportation fuels derived from cellulosic material, as well as the generation of energy for commercial heat, industrial process heat, or electrical power from cellulosic materials via gasification or other processes. Grants are limited to 50 percent of the cost of research, technical assistance, or equipment related to bioenergy, biobased content, or biobased formulated product production or $500,000, whichever is less. Grants to nongovernmental entities for the development of business plans and structures related to community ownership of eligible bioenergy facilities together may not exceed $150,000. The commissioner shall make a good-faith effort to select projects that have merit and, when taken together, represent a variety of bioenergy technologies, biomass feedstocks, and geographic regions of the state. Projects must have a qualified engineer provide certification on the technology and fuel source. Grantees must provide reports at the request of the commissioner.
Of the amount appropriated for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision, $1,000,000 the first year and $1,000,000 the second year are for distribution in equal amounts to each of the state's county fairs to preserve and promote Minnesota agriculture.
Of the amount appropriated for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision, $500,000 in fiscal year 2016 and $806,000 in fiscal year 2017 are for incentive payments under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41A.16, 41A.17, and 41A.18. If the appropriation exceeds the total amount for which all producers are eligible in a fiscal year, the balance of the appropriation is available to the commissioner for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.28, the first year appropriation is available until June 30, 2017, and the second year appropriation is available until June 30, 2018. The commissioner may use up to 4.5 percent of the appropriation for administration of the incentive payment programs.
Of the amount appropriated for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in this subdivision, $250,000 the first year is for grants to communities to develop or expand food hubs and other alternative community-based food distribution systems. Of this amount, $50,000 is for the commissioner to consult with existing food hubs, alternative community-based food distribution systems, and University of Minnesota Extension to identify best practices for use by other Minnesota communities. No later than
December 15, 2015, the commissioner must report to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture and health regarding the status of emerging alternative community-based food distribution systems in the state along with recommendations to eliminate any barriers to success. Any unencumbered balance does not cancel at the end of the first year and is available for the second year. This is a onetime appropriation.
$250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year are for grants that enable retail petroleum dispensers to dispense biofuels to the public in accordance with the biofuel replacement goals established under Minnesota Statutes, section 239.7911. A retail petroleum dispenser selling petroleum for use in spark ignition engines for vehicle model years after 2000 is eligible for grant money under this paragraph if the retail petroleum dispenser has no more than 15 retail petroleum dispensing sites and each site is located in Minnesota. The grant money received under this paragraph must be used for the installation of appropriate technology that uses fuel dispensing equipment appropriate for at least one fuel dispensing site to dispense gasoline that is blended with 15 percent of agriculturally derived, denatured ethanol, by volume, and appropriate technical assistance related to the installation. A grant award must not exceed 85 percent of the cost of the technical assistance and appropriate technology, including remetering of and retrofits for retail petroleum dispensers and replacement of petroleum dispenser projects. The commissioner may use up to $35,000 of this appropriation for administrative expenses. The commissioner shall cooperate with biofuel stakeholders in the implementation of the grant program. The commissioner must report to the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance by February 1 each year, detailing the number of grants awarded under this paragraph and the projected effect of the grant program on meeting the biofuel replacement goals under Minnesota Statutes, section 239.7911. These are onetime appropriations.
$25,000 the first year and $25,000 the second year are for grants to the Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation to promote local foods through an annual event that raises public awareness of local foods and connects local food producers and processors with potential buyers.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 6. Laws 2017, chapter 88, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Protection
Services |
|
17,821,000 |
|
17,825,000 |
Appropriations by Fund |
||
|
2018
|
2019 |
General |
17,428,000 |
17,428,000 |
Remediation |
393,000 |
397,000 |
(a) $25,000 the first year and $25,000 the second year are to develop and maintain cottage food license exemption outreach and training materials.
(b) $75,000 the first year and $75,000 the second year are to coordinate the correctional facility vocational training program and to assist entities that have explored the feasibility of establishing a USDA-certified or state "equal to" food processing facility within 30 miles of the Northeast Regional Corrections Center.
(c) $125,000 the first year and $125,000 the second year are for additional funding for the noxious weed and invasive plant program. These are onetime appropriations.
(d) $250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year are for transfer to the pollinator habitat and research account in the agricultural fund. These are onetime transfers.
(e) $393,000 the first year and $397,000 the second year are from the remediation fund for administrative funding for the voluntary cleanup program.
(f) $200,000 the first year and $200,000 the second year are for the industrial hemp pilot program under Minnesota Statutes, section 18K.09. These are onetime appropriations.
(g) $175,000 the first year and $175,000 the second year are for compensation for destroyed or crippled livestock under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737. This appropriation may be spent to compensate for livestock that were destroyed or crippled during fiscal year 2017. If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is available in the first year. The commissioner may use up to $5,000 of this appropriation the second year to reimburse expenses incurred by university extension educators to provide fair market values of destroyed or crippled livestock.
(h) $155,000 the first year and $155,000 the second year are for compensation for crop damage under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.7371. If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the second year is available in the first year. The commissioner may use up to $30,000 of the appropriation each year to reimburse expenses incurred by the commissioner or the commissioner's approved agent to investigate and resolve claims.
If the commissioner determines that claims made under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.737 or 3.7371, are unusually high, amounts appropriated for either program may be transferred to the appropriation for the other program.
(i) $250,000 the first year and $250,000 the second year are to expand current capabilities for rapid detection, identification, containment, control, and management of high priority plant pests and pathogens. These are onetime appropriations.
(j) $300,000 the first year and $300,000 the second year are for transfer to the noxious weed and invasive plant species assistance account in the agricultural fund to award grants to local units of government under Minnesota Statutes, section 18.90, with preference given to local units of government responding to Palmer amaranth or other weeds on the eradicate list. These are onetime transfers.
(k) $120,000 the first year and $120,000 the second year are for wolf-livestock conflict prevention grants under article 2, section 89. The commissioner must submit a report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over agriculture policy and finance by January 15, 2020, on the outcomes of the wolf-livestock conflict prevention grants and whether livestock compensation claims were reduced in the areas that grants were awarded. These are onetime appropriations.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective the day
following final enactment.
Sec. 7. Laws 2017, chapter 88, article 1, section 2, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Agriculture, Bioenergy, and Bioproduct Advancement |
22,581,000 |
|
22,636,000 |
(a) $9,300,000 the first year and $9,300,000 the second year are for transfer to the agriculture research, education, extension, and technology transfer account under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 3. Of these amounts: at least $600,000 the first year and $600,000 the second year are for the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station's agriculture rapid response fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, clause (2); $2,000,000 the first year and $2,000,000 the second year are for grants to the Minnesota Agriculture Education Leadership Council to enhance agricultural education with priority given to Farm Business Management challenge grants; $350,000 the first year and $350,000 the second year are for potato breeding; and $450,000 the first year and $450,000 the second year are for the cultivated wild rice breeding project at the North Central Research and Outreach Center to include a tenure track/research associate plant breeder. The commissioner shall transfer the remaining funds in this appropriation each year to the Board of Regents of the University of Minnesota for purposes of Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14. Of the amount transferred to the Board of Regents, up to $1,000,000 each year is for research on avian influenza, including prevention measures that can be taken.
To the extent practicable, funds expended under Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.14, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), must supplement and not supplant existing sources and levels of funding. The commissioner may use up to one percent of this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program.
(b) $13,256,000 the first year and $13,311,000 the second year are for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12. Except as provided below, the commissioner may allocate the appropriation each year among the following areas: facilitating the start-up, modernization, or expansion of livestock operations including beginning and transitioning livestock operations; developing new markets for Minnesota farmers by providing more fruits, vegetables, meat, grain, and dairy for Minnesota school children; assisting value‑added agricultural businesses to begin or expand, access new markets, or diversify; providing funding not to exceed $250,000 each year for urban youth agricultural education or urban agriculture community development; providing funding not to exceed $250,000 each year for the good food access program under Minnesota Statutes, section 17.1017; facilitating the start-up, modernization, or expansion of other beginning and transitioning farms including by providing loans under Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.056; sustainable agriculture on-farm research and demonstration; development or expansion of food hubs and other alternative community-based food distribution systems; enhancing renewable energy infrastructure and use; crop research; Farm Business Management tuition assistance; good agricultural practices/good handling practices certification assistance; establishing and supporting farmer-led water management councils; and implementing farmer-led water quality improvement practices. The commissioner may use up to 6.5 percent of this appropriation for costs incurred to administer the program.
Of the amount appropriated for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program in Minnesota Statutes, section 41A.12:
(1) $1,000,000 the first year and $1,000,000 the second year are for distribution in equal amounts to each of the state's county fairs to preserve and promote Minnesota agriculture; and
(2) $1,500,000 the first year and $1,500,000 the second year are for incentive payments under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41A.16, 41A.17, and 41A.18. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.28, the first year appropriation is available until June 30, 2019, and the second year appropriation is available until June 30, 2020. If this appropriation exceeds the total amount for which all producers are eligible in a fiscal year, the balance of the appropriation is available for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program.
The commissioner may use funds appropriated under this subdivision to award up to two value-added agriculture grants per year of up to $1,000,000 per grant for new or expanding agricultural production or processing facilities that provide significant economic impact to the region. The commissioner may use funds appropriated under this subdivision for additional value‑added agriculture grants for awards between $1,000 and $200,000 per grant.
Appropriations in clauses (1) and (2) are
onetime. Any unencumbered balance does
not cancel at the end of the first year and is available for the second year. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section
16A.28, appropriations encumbered under contract on or before June 30, 2019,
for agricultural growth, research, and innovation grants are available until
June 30, 2021 2022.
The base budget for the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program is $14,275,000 for fiscal years 2020 and 2021 and includes funding for incentive payments under Minnesota Statutes, sections 41A.16, 41A.17, 41A.18, and 41A.20.
The commissioner must develop additional innovative production incentive programs to be funded by the agricultural growth, research, and innovation program.
The commissioner must consult with the commissioner of transportation, the commissioner of administration, and local units of government to identify parcels of publicly owned land that are suitable for urban agriculture.
(c) $25,000 the first year and $25,000 the second year are for grants to the Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation to promote local foods through an annual event that raises public awareness of local foods and connects local food producers and processors with potential buyers.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE 2
AGRICULTURE STATUTORY CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 17.041, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Establishment;
appropriation. An agricultural
emergency account is established in the agricultural fund. Money in the account, including interest, is
appropriated to the commissioner for emergency response and preparedness
activities for agricultural emergencies affecting producers of livestock,
poultry, crops, or other agricultural products.
Eligible uses include, but are not limited to, agency costs
directly attributed to responding to agricultural emergencies and
purchasing necessary equipment and reimbursing costs incurred by local units of
government that are not eligible for reimbursement from other sources.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 17.118, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in this subdivision have the meanings given them.
(b) "Livestock" means beef cattle, dairy cattle, swine, poultry, goats, mules, farmed Cervidae, Ratitae, bison, sheep, horses, and llamas.
(c) "Qualifying expenditures" means the amount spent for:
(1) the acquisition, construction, or improvement of buildings or facilities for the production of livestock or livestock products;
(2) the development of pasture for use by livestock including, but not limited to, the acquisition, development, or improvement of:
(i) lanes used by livestock that connect pastures to a central location;
(ii) watering systems for livestock on pasture including water lines, booster pumps, and well installations;
(iii) livestock stream crossing stabilization; and
(iv) fences; or
(3) the acquisition of equipment for livestock housing, confinement, feeding, and waste management including, but not limited to, the following:
(i) freestall barns;
(ii) watering facilities;
(iii) feed storage and handling equipment;
(iv) milking parlors;
(v) robotic equipment;
(vi) scales;
(vii) milk storage and cooling facilities;
(viii) bulk tanks;
(ix) computer hardware and software and associated equipment used to monitor the productivity and feeding of livestock;
(x) manure pumping and storage facilities;
(xi) swine farrowing facilities;
(xii) swine and cattle finishing barns;
(xiii) calving facilities;
(xiv) digesters;
(xv) equipment used to produce energy;
(xvi) on-farm processing facilities equipment;
(xvii) fences, including but not limited to farmed Cervidae perimeter fences required under section 35.155, subdivision 4; and
(xviii) livestock pens and corrals and sorting, restraining, and loading chutes.
Except for qualifying pasture development expenditures under clause (2), qualifying expenditures only include amounts that are allowed to be capitalized and deducted under either section 167 or 179 of the Internal Revenue Code in computing federal taxable income. Qualifying expenditures do not include an amount paid to refinance existing debt.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18B.07, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Prohibited pesticide use. (a) A person may not use, store, handle, distribute, or dispose of a pesticide, rinsate, pesticide container, or pesticide application equipment in a manner:
(1) that is inconsistent with a label or labeling as defined by FIFRA;
(2) that endangers humans, damages agricultural products, food, livestock, fish, or wildlife; or
(3) that will cause unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.
(b) A person may not direct a pesticide onto property beyond
the boundaries of the target site. A
person may not apply a pesticide resulting in damage to adjacent property. A person who applies a pesticide resulting
in damage to adjacent property that is part of the state outdoor recreation
system is subject to enhanced monetary penalties as provided in section 18D.40.
(c) A person may not directly apply a pesticide on a human by overspray or target site spray, except when:
(1) the pesticide is intended for use on a human;
(2) the pesticide application is for mosquito control operations;
(3) the pesticide application is for control of gypsy moth, forest tent caterpillar, or other pest species, as determined by the commissioner, and the pesticide used is a biological agent; or
(4) the pesticide application is for a public health risk, as determined by the commissioner of health, and the commissioner of health, in consultation with the commissioner of agriculture, determines that the application is warranted based on the commissioner's balancing of the public health risk with the risk that the pesticide application poses to the health of the general population, with special attention to the health of children.
(d) For pesticide applications under paragraph (c), clause (2), the following conditions apply:
(1) no practicable and effective alternative method of control exists;
(2) the pesticide is among the least toxic available for control of the target pest; and
(3) notification to residents in the area to be treated is provided at least 24 hours before application through direct notification, posting daily on the treating organization's website, if any, and by sending a broadcast email to those persons who request notification of such, of those areas to be treated by adult mosquito control techniques during the next calendar day. For control operations related to human disease, notice under this paragraph may be given less than 24 hours in advance.
(e) For pesticide applications under paragraph (c), clauses (3) and (4), the following conditions apply:
(1) no practicable and effective alternative method of control exists;
(2) the pesticide is among the least toxic available for control of the target pest; and
(3) notification of residents in the area to be treated is provided by direct notification and through publication in a newspaper of general circulation within the affected area.
(f) For purposes of this subdivision, "direct notification" may include mailings, public meetings, posted placards, neighborhood newsletters, or other means of contact designed to reach as many residents as possible. Public meetings held to meet this requirement for adult mosquito control, under paragraph (d), must be held within each city or town where the pesticide treatments are to be made, at a time and location that is convenient for residents of the area where the treatments will occur.
(g) A person may not apply a pesticide in a manner so as to expose a worker in an immediately adjacent, open field.
(h) Notwithstanding that the application is done in a manner consistent with the label or labeling, it is a violation of this chapter to directly apply a pesticide to a site where an application has not been: (1) requested, ordered, contracted for, or permitted; or (2) performed pursuant to paragraph (c), clause (2), (3), or (4).
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18C.425, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Payment of inspection fee. (a) The person who registers and distributes in the state a specialty fertilizer, soil amendment, or plant amendment under section 18C.411 shall pay the inspection fee to the commissioner.
(b) The person licensed under section 18C.415 who distributes a fertilizer to a person not required to be so licensed shall pay the inspection fee to the commissioner, except as exempted under section 18C.421, subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
(c) The person responsible for payment of
the inspection fees for fertilizers, soil amendments, or plant amendments sold
and used in this state must pay an inspection fee of 39 cents per ton, and
until June 30, 2019 2024, an additional 40 cents per ton, of
fertilizer, soil amendment, and plant amendment sold or distributed in this
state, with a minimum of $10 on all tonnage reports. Notwithstanding section 18C.131, the
commissioner must deposit all revenue from the additional 40 cents per ton fee
in the agricultural fertilizer research and education account in section 18C.80. Products sold or distributed to manufacturers
or exchanged between them are exempt from the inspection fee imposed by this
subdivision if the products are used exclusively for manufacturing purposes.
(d) A registrant or licensee must retain invoices showing proof of fertilizer, plant amendment, or soil amendment distribution amounts and inspection fees paid for a period of three years.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18C.70, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Expiration. This section expires June 30, 2020
2025.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18C.71, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Eligible projects. Eligible project activities include research, education, and technology transfer related to the production and application of fertilizer, soil amendments, and other plant amendments. Chosen projects must contain a component of outreach that achieves a timely dissemination of findings and their applicability to the production agricultural community or metropolitan fertilizer users.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18C.71, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Expiration. This section expires June 30, 2020
2025.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18C.80, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Expiration. This section expires June 30, 2020
2025.
Sec. 9. [18D.40]
ENHANCED PENALTIES; OUTDOOR RECREATION LANDS.
Notwithstanding limitations placed on
administrative or civil penalty amounts under sections 18D.315 and 18D.325, a
person who applies a pesticide resulting in damage to adjacent property that is
part of the state outdoor recreation system may be subject to a monetary
penalty equal to twice the amount that the commissioner would otherwise assess
for a comparable violation.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18K.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Industrial hemp. "Industrial hemp" means the plant Cannabis sativa L. and any part of the plant, whether growing or not, including the plant's seeds, and all the plant's derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis. Industrial hemp is not marijuana as defined in section 152.01, subdivision 9.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 18K.03, is amended to read:
18K.03
AGRICULTURAL CROP; POSSESSION AUTHORIZED.
Industrial hemp is an agricultural crop in this state. A person may possess, transport, process, sell, or buy industrial hemp that is grown pursuant to this chapter or lawfully grown in another state.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 28A.16, is amended to read:
28A.16
PERSONS SELLING LIQUOR.
(a) The provisions of the Minnesota consolidated food licensing law, sections 28A.01 to 28A.16 and acts amendatory thereto, shall not apply to persons licensed to sell 3.2 percent malt liquor "on-sale" as provided in section 340A.403, or to persons licensed to sell intoxicating liquors "on-sale" or "off-sale" as provided in sections 340A.404 to 340A.407, provided that these persons sell only ice manufactured and packaged by another, or bottled or canned soft drinks and prepacked candy at retail.
(b)
When an exclusive liquor store is not exempt under paragraph (a), the
commissioner must exclude all gross sales
of off-sale alcoholic beverages when determining the applicable license fee
under section 28A.08, subdivision 3.
For purposes of this paragraph, "exclusive liquor store" and
"alcoholic beverage" have the meanings given in section 340A.101.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41B.02, subdivision 10a, as amended by Laws 2019, chapter 38, section 21, is amended to read:
Subd. 10a. Livestock expansion and modernization. "Livestock expansion and modernization" means the purchase of a livestock farm or improvements to a livestock operation, including the purchase and construction or installation of improvements to land, buildings, and other permanent structures, including equipment incorporated in or permanently affixed to the land, buildings, or structures, which are useful for and intended to be used for the purpose of raising livestock.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41B.045, is amended to read:
41B.045
LIVESTOCK EXPANSION AND MODERNIZATION LOAN PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The authority may establish, adopt rules for, and implement a loan program to finance livestock expansions and modernizations in the state.
Subd. 2. Loan participation. The authority may participate in a livestock expansion and modernization loan with an eligible lender to a livestock farmer who meets the requirements of section 41B.03, subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), and who are actively engaged in a livestock operation. A prospective borrower must have a total net worth, including assets and liabilities of the borrower's spouse and dependents, of less than $1,700,000 in 2017 and an amount in subsequent years which is adjusted for inflation by multiplying that amount by the cumulative inflation rate as determined by the United States All-Items Consumer Price Index.
Participation is limited to 45 percent of the principal amount of the loan or $525,000, whichever is less. The interest rates and repayment terms of the authority's participation interest may be different from the interest rates and repayment terms of the lender's retained portion of the loan.
Subd. 3. Specifications. Each loan participation must be secured by a mortgage on real property and such other security as the authority may require.
Subd. 4. Application and origination fee. The authority may impose a reasonable nonrefundable application fee for each application for a loan participation and an origination fee for each loan issued under the livestock expansion and modernization loan program. The origination fee initially shall be set at 1.5 percent and the application fee at $50. The authority may review the fees annually and make adjustments as necessary. The fees must be deposited in the state treasury and credited to the Rural Finance Authority administrative account established in section 41B.03.
Subd. 5. Interest rate. The interest rate per annum on the livestock expansion and modernization loan participation must be at the rate of interest determined by the authority to be necessary to provide for the timely payment of principal and interest when due on bonds or other obligations of the authority issued under this chapter, to provide financing for loan participations made under the livestock expansion and modernization loan program, and to provide for reasonable and necessary costs of issuing, carrying, administering, and securing the bonds or notes and to pay the costs incurred and to be incurred by the authority in the implementation of the livestock expansion and modernization loan program.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41B.055, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Eligible expenditures. Money may be used for loans for the acquisition of equipment for animal housing, confinement, animal feeding, milk production, and waste management, including the following, if related to animal husbandry:
(1) fences;
(2) watering facilities;
(3) feed storage and handling equipment;
(4) milking parlors;
(5) milking equipment, including robotic equipment;
(6) scales;
(7) milk storage and cooling facilities;
(8) manure pumping and storage facilities;
(9) capital investment in pasture;
(10) hoop barns;
(11) portable structures;
(12) hay and forage equipment; and
(13) related structural work for the installation of equipment.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 116.06, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 16a. Pastures. "Pastures" means areas,
including winter feeding areas as part of a grazing area, where grass or other
growing plants are used for grazing of livestock and where the concentration of
animals allows a vegetative cover to be maintained during the growing season. "Pastures" also includes
agricultural land that is used for growing crops during the growing season and
is used for grazing of livestock on vegetation or crop residues during the
winter. In either case, a cover of
vegetation or crop residues is not required:
(1) in the immediate vicinity of
supplemental feeding or watering devices;
(2) in associated corrals and chutes
where livestock are gathered for the purpose of sorting, veterinary services,
loading and unloading trucks and trailers, and other necessary activities
related to good animal husbandry practices;
(3) in associated livestock access lanes
used to convey livestock to and from areas of the pasture; and
(4) in sacrificial areas: (i) that are part of a larger pasture system;
(ii) are used to temporarily accommodate livestock due to an extraordinary
situation for as short a time period as possible not to exceed 90 days during
the growing season; (iii) are used to protect other pasture areas when adverse
soil or weather conditions pose a risk of damaging the pastures; and (iv) on
which the vegetation is naturally restored or replanted after the adverse soil
or weather conditions are removed and the livestock are moved to other areas of
the pasture.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 116.07, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Counties; processing applications for animal lot permits. Any Minnesota county board may, by resolution, with approval of the Pollution Control Agency, assume responsibility for processing applications for permits required by the Pollution Control Agency under this section for livestock feedlots, poultry lots or other animal lots. The responsibility for permit application processing, if assumed by a county, may be delegated by the county board to any appropriate county officer or employee.
(a) For the purposes of this subdivision, the term "processing" includes:
(1) the distribution to applicants of forms provided by the Pollution Control Agency;
(2) the receipt and examination of completed application forms, and the certification, in writing, to the Pollution Control Agency either that the animal lot facility for which a permit is sought by an applicant will comply with applicable rules and standards, or, if the facility will not comply, the respects in which a variance would be required for the issuance of a permit; and
(3) rendering to applicants, upon request, assistance necessary for the proper completion of an application.
(b) For the purposes of this subdivision, the term "processing" may include, at the option of the county board, issuing, denying, modifying, imposing conditions upon, or revoking permits pursuant to the provisions of this section or rules promulgated pursuant to it, subject to review, suspension, and reversal by the Pollution Control Agency. The Pollution Control Agency shall, after written notification, have 15 days to review, suspend, modify, or reverse the issuance of the permit. After this period, the action of the county board is final, subject to appeal as provided in chapter 14. For permit applications filed after October 1, 2001, section 15.99 applies to feedlot permits issued by the agency or a county pursuant to this subdivision.
(c) For the purpose of administration of rules adopted under this subdivision, the commissioner and the agency may provide exceptions for cases where the owner of a feedlot has specific written plans to close the feedlot within five years. These exceptions include waiving requirements for major capital improvements.
(d) For purposes of this subdivision, a discharge caused by an extraordinary natural event such as a precipitation event of greater magnitude than the 25-year, 24-hour event, tornado, or flood in excess of the 100-year flood is not a "direct discharge of pollutants."
(e) In adopting and enforcing rules under this subdivision, the commissioner shall cooperate closely with other governmental agencies.
(f) The Pollution Control Agency shall work with the Minnesota Extension Service, the Department of Agriculture, the Board of Water and Soil Resources, producer groups, local units of government, as well as with appropriate federal agencies such as the Natural Resources Conservation Service and the Farm Service Agency, to notify and educate producers of rules under this subdivision at the time the rules are being developed and adopted and at least every two years thereafter.
(g) The Pollution Control Agency shall adopt rules governing the issuance and denial of permits for livestock feedlots, poultry lots or other animal lots pursuant to this section. Pastures are exempt from the rules authorized under this paragraph. No feedlot permit shall include any terms or conditions that impose any requirements related to any pastures owned or utilized by the feedlot operator other than restrictions under a manure management plan. A feedlot permit is not required for livestock feedlots with more than ten but less than 50 animal units; provided they are not in shoreland areas. A livestock feedlot permit does not become required solely because of a change in the ownership of the buildings, grounds, or feedlot. These rules apply both to permits issued by counties and to permits issued by the Pollution Control Agency directly.
(h) The Pollution Control Agency shall exercise supervising authority with respect to the processing of animal lot permit applications by a county.
(i) Any new rules or amendments to existing rules proposed under the authority granted in this subdivision, or to implement new fees on animal feedlots, must be submitted to the members of legislative policy and finance committees with jurisdiction over agriculture and the environment prior to final adoption. The rules must not become effective until 90 days after the proposed rules are submitted to the members.
(j) Until new rules are adopted that provide for plans for manure storage structures, any plans for a liquid manure storage structure must be prepared or approved by a registered professional engineer or a United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service employee.
(k) A county may adopt by ordinance standards for animal feedlots that are more stringent than standards in Pollution Control Agency rules.
(l) After January 1, 2001, a county that has not accepted delegation of the feedlot permit program must hold a public meeting prior to the agency issuing a feedlot permit for a feedlot facility with 300 or more animal units, unless another public meeting has been held with regard to the feedlot facility to be permitted.
(m) After the proposed rules published in the State Register, volume 24, number 25, are finally adopted, the agency may not impose additional conditions as a part of a feedlot permit, unless specifically required by law or agreed to by the feedlot operator.
(n) For the purposes of feedlot permitting, a discharge from land-applied manure or a manure stockpile that is managed according to agency rule must not be subject to a fine for a discharge violation.
(o) For the purposes of feedlot permitting, manure that is land applied, or a manure stockpile that is managed according to agency rule, must not be considered a discharge into waters of the state, unless the discharge is to waters of the state, as defined by section 103G.005, subdivision 17, except type 1 or type 2 wetlands, as defined in section 103G.005, subdivision 17b, and does not meet discharge standards established for feedlots under agency rule.
(p) Unless the upgrade is needed to correct an immediate public health threat under section 145A.04, subdivision 8, or the facility is determined to be a concentrated animal feeding operation under Code of Federal Regulations, title 40, section 122.23, in effect on April 15, 2003, the agency may not require a feedlot operator:
(1) to spend more than $3,000 to upgrade an existing feedlot with less than 300 animal units unless cost-share money is available to the feedlot operator for 75 percent of the cost of the upgrade; or
(2) to spend more than $10,000 to upgrade an existing feedlot with between 300 and 500 animal units, unless cost-share money is available to the feedlot operator for 75 percent of the cost of the upgrade or $50,000, whichever is less.
(q) For the purposes of this section,
"pastures" means areas, including winter feeding areas as part of a
grazing area, where grass or other growing plants are used for grazing and
where the concentration of animals allows a vegetative cover to be maintained
during the growing season except that vegetative cover is not required:
(1) in the immediate vicinity of
supplemental feeding or watering devices;
(2) in associated corrals and chutes
where livestock are gathered for the purpose of sorting, veterinary services, loading and unloading trucks and trailers, and
other necessary activities related to good animal husbandry practices; and
(3)
in associated livestock access lanes used to convey livestock to and from areas
of the pasture.
(r) (q) A feedlot operator
who stores and applies up to 100,000 gallons per calendar year of private truck
wash wastewater resulting from trucks that transport animals or supplies to and
from the feedlot does not require a permit to land-apply industrial by-products
if the feedlot operator stores and applies the wastewater in accordance with
Pollution Control Agency requirements for land applications of industrial
by-product that do not require a permit.
(s) (r) A feedlot operator
who holds a permit from the Pollution Control Agency to land-apply industrial
by‑products from a private truck wash is not required to have a certified
land applicator apply the private truck wash wastewater if the wastewater is
applied by the feedlot operator to cropland owned or leased by the feedlot
operator or by a commercial animal waste technician licensed by the
commissioner of agriculture under chapter 18C.
For purposes of this paragraph and paragraph (r) (q),
"private truck wash" means a truck washing facility owned or leased,
operated, and used only by a feedlot operator to wash trucks owned or leased by
the feedlot operator and used to transport animals or supplies to and from the
feedlot.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 116.07, subdivision 7d, is amended to read:
Subd. 7d. Exemption. (a) Notwithstanding subdivision 7
or Minnesota Rules, chapter 7020, to the contrary, and notwithstanding the
proximity to public or private waters, an owner or resident of agricultural
land on which livestock have been allowed to pasture at any time during the
ten-year period beginning January 1, 2010, is permanently exempt from
requirements related to feedlot or manure management on that land for so long
as the property remains in pasture.
(b) For the purposes of this
subdivision, "pasture" means areas where livestock graze on grass or
other growing plants. Pasture also means
agricultural land where livestock are allowed to forage during the winter time
and which land is used for cropping purposes in the growing season. In either case, the concentration of animals
must be such that a vegetative cover, whether of grass, growing plants, or
crops, is maintained during the growing season except in the immediate vicinity
of temporary supplemental feeding or watering devices.
Sec. 19. INDUSTRIAL
HEMP; RULEMAKING.
After consulting with stakeholders, the
commissioner of agriculture may use the expedited rulemaking process in
Minnesota Statutes, section 14.389, to adopt the rules required under Minnesota
Statutes, section 18K.06, to conform to the Agriculture Improvement Act of
2018, Public Law 115-334, and federal rules authorized under that act. The commissioner of agriculture's authority
to adopt rules under this section expires June 30, 2020.
Sec. 20. INDUSTRIAL
HEMP; REPORT.
(a) The commissioner of agriculture
must submit a plan to the secretary of the United States Department of
Agriculture and request primary regulatory authority over the production of
industrial hemp in this state, as provided under section 10113 of the
Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018.
(b) The commissioner of agriculture, in
consultation with the commissioners of public safety and health, must develop a
framework for regulating the possession and use of tetrahydrocannabinol
resulting from industrial hemp processing,
including but not limited to the extraction of cannabidiol or other
components. No later than February 15,
2020, the commissioner of agriculture must submit the proposed framework to the
chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees and divisions
with jurisdiction over agriculture, public safety, and health.
Sec. 21. EMERGING
FARMERS; REPORT.
No later than February 1, 2020, the
commissioner of agriculture must report recommendations to the legislative
committees and divisions with jurisdiction over agriculture finance regarding
how best to cultivate and support emerging farmers, with priority given to
emerging farmers who are women, veterans, persons with disabilities, American
Indian or Alaskan Native, and members of communities of color.
Sec. 22. NURSERY
STOCK; REPORT.
By March 1, 2020, the commissioner of
agriculture must report recommendations to the members of the legislative
committees or divisions with jurisdiction over agriculture policy regarding the
regulatory oversight of nursery stock labeled as beneficial to pollinators. The report must include a summary of the
Minnesota Department of Agriculture's technical ability to test for
insecticides on different parts of plants that comprise nursery stock,
including the minimum detectable concentration for various insecticides, and
the cost per test.
ARTICLE 3
BIOINCENTIVE PROGRAM CHANGES
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.15, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Advanced
biofuel. "Advanced
biofuel" has the meaning given in section 239.051, subdivision 1a. means a renewable fuel, other than ethanol
derived from corn starch, that has lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions that are
at least 50 percent less than baseline lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.15, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2e. Biomass. "Biomass" means any organic
matter that is available on a renewable or recurring basis, including
agricultural crops and trees, wood and wood waste and residues, plants including
aquatic plants, grasses, residues, fibers, animal waste, and the organic
portion of solid wastes.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.15, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. Renewable
chemical. "Renewable
chemical" means a chemical with biobased content., polymer,
monomer, plastic, or composite material that is entirely produced from biomass.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.16, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment under
this section must source from Minnesota at least 80 percent raw
materials from Minnesota. of the
biomass used to produce an advanced biofuel, except that, if a facility is
sited 50 miles or less from the state border, raw materials biomass
used to produce an advanced biofuel may be sourced from outside of
Minnesota, but only if at least 80 percent of the biomass is sourced from
within a 100-mile radius of the facility or from within Minnesota. Raw materials must be from agricultural or
forestry sources or from solid waste.
The facility must be located in Minnesota, must begin production at a
specific location by June 30, 2025, and must not begin operating above 23,750
MMbtu of quarterly advanced biofuel production before July 1, 2015. Eligible facilities include existing
companies and facilities that are adding advanced biofuel production capacity,
or retrofitting existing capacity, as well as new companies and facilities. Production of conventional corn ethanol and
conventional biodiesel is not eligible. Eligible
advanced biofuel facilities must produce at least 23,750 1,500
MMbtu of advanced biofuel quarterly.
(b) No payments shall be made for advanced biofuel production that occurs after June 30, 2035, for those eligible biofuel producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of advanced biofuel shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments under this section to an advanced biofuel facility at a different location.
(d) A producer that ceases production for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the producer resumes production.
(e) Renewable chemical production for which payment has been received under section 41A.17, and biomass thermal production for which payment has been received under section 41A.18, are not eligible for payment under this section.
(f) Biobutanol is eligible under this section.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.16, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Payment amounts; limits. (a) The commissioner shall make payments
to eligible producers of advanced biofuel.
The amount of the payment for each eligible producer's annual production
is $2.1053 per MMbtu for advanced biofuel production from cellulosic biomass,
and $1.053 per MMbtu for advanced biofuel production from sugar or,
starch, oil, or animal fat at a specific location for ten years after
the start of production.
(b) Total payments under this section to an eligible
biofuel producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount necessary for
2,850,000 MMbtu of biofuel production. Total
payments under this section to all eligible biofuel producers in a fiscal year
may not exceed the amount necessary for 17,100,000 MMbtu of biofuel production. The commissioner shall award payments on a
first-come, first-served basis within the limits of available funding If
the total amount for which all producers are eligible in a quarter exceeds the
amount available for payments, the commissioner shall make the payments on a
pro rata basis.
(c) For purposes of this section, an entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one advanced biofuel facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.16, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Cellulosic forestry biomass requirements. All forestry-derived cellulosic biomass used
for advanced biofuel production must be produced using Minnesota state
forest biomass harvesting guidelines or the equivalent. All cellulosic biomass from brushlands
must be produced using Minnesota brushland harvesting biomass harvest
harvesting guidelines or the equivalent.
Forestry-derived cellulosic biomass that comes from land parcels greater
than 160 acres must be certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, the Sustainable
Forestry Initiative, or the American Tree Farm System. Uncertified land from parcels of 160 acres or
less, tribal lands, and federal land must be harvested by a logger
who has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota logger
education program or the equivalent and have a forest stewardship management
plan., as defined in section 290C.02, subdivision 7, or the
equivalent, and be harvested by a logger who has completed training for biomass
harvesting from the Minnesota logger education program or the equivalent.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.17, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment under
this program section must source from Minnesota at least
80 percent biobased content from Minnesota. of the biomass used to
produce a renewable chemical, except that, if a facility is sited 50 miles
or less from the state border, biobased content must biomass used to
produce a renewable chemical may be sourced from outside of Minnesota,
but only if at least 80 percent of the biomass is sourced from within a
100-mile radius of the facility or from within Minnesota. Biobased content must be from agricultural
or forestry sources or from solid waste.
The facility must be located in Minnesota, must begin production at a
specific location by June 30, 2025, and must not begin production of 750,000
250,000 pounds of
chemicals
quarterly before January 1, 2015. Eligible
facilities include existing companies and facilities that are adding production
capacity, or retrofitting existing capacity, as well as new companies and
facilities. Eligible renewable chemical
facilities must produce at least 750,000 250,000 pounds of
renewable chemicals quarterly. Renewable
chemicals produced through processes that are fully commercial before January
1, 2000, are not eligible.
(b) No payments shall be made for renewable chemical production that occurs after June 30, 2035, for those eligible renewable chemical producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of renewable chemicals shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments under this section to a renewable chemical facility at a different location.
(d) A producer that ceases production for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the producer resumes production.
(e) Advanced biofuel production for which payment has been received under section 41A.16, and biomass thermal production for which payment has been received under section 41A.18, are not eligible for payment under this section.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.17, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Payment amounts; bonus; limits. (a) The commissioner shall make payments to eligible producers of renewable chemicals located in the state. The amount of the payment for each producer's annual production is $0.03 per pound of sugar-derived renewable chemical, $0.03 per pound of cellulosic sugar, starch, oil, or animal fat, and $0.06 per pound of cellulosic-derived renewable chemical produced at a specific location for ten years after the start of production.
(b) An eligible facility producing renewable chemicals using agricultural cellulosic biomass is eligible for a 20 percent bonus payment for each pound produced from agricultural biomass that is derived from perennial crop or cover crop biomass.
(c) Total payments under this section to an eligible
renewable chemical producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount
necessary for 99,999,999 pounds of renewable chemical production. Total payments under this section to all
eligible renewable chemical producers in a fiscal year may not exceed the
amount necessary for 599,999,999 pounds of renewable chemical production. The commissioner shall award payments on a
first-come, first-served basis within the limits of available funding If
the total amount for which all producers are eligible in a quarter exceeds the
amount available for payments, the commissioner shall make the payments on a
pro rata basis.
(d) An eligible facility may blend renewable chemicals
with other chemicals that are not renewable chemicals, but only the percentage
attributable to renewable chemicals in the blended product is eligible to
receive payment.
(d) (e) For purposes of this section, an
entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one renewable chemical
production facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.17, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Cellulosic forestry biomass
requirements. All forestry-derived
cellulosic biomass used for renewable chemical production must be
produced using Minnesota state forest biomass harvesting
guidelines or the equivalent. All
cellulosic biomass from brushlands must be produced using Minnesota brushland harvesting
biomass harvest harvesting guidelines or the equivalent. Forestry-derived cellulosic biomass that
comes from land parcels greater than 160 acres must be certified by the Forest
Stewardship Council, the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, or the
American Tree Farm System. Uncertified
land from parcels of 160 acres or less, tribal lands, and
federal
land must be harvested by a logger who has completed training for biomass
harvesting from the Minnesota logger education program or the equivalent and
have a forest stewardship management plan, as defined in
section 290C.02, subdivision 7, or the equivalent, and be harvested by a logger
who has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota logger education
program or the equivalent.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.18, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Eligibility. (a) A facility eligible for payment under
this section must source from Minnesota at least 80 percent raw
materials from Minnesota. of the biomass used for biomass thermal
production, except that, if a facility is sited 50 miles or less from the
state border, raw materials should biomass used for biomass thermal
production may be sourced from outside of Minnesota, but only if at
least 80 percent of the biomass is sourced from within a 100-mile radius of
the facility, or from within Minnesota.
Raw materials Biomass must be from agricultural or
forestry sources. The facility must be
located in Minnesota, must have begun production at a specific location by June
30, 2025, and must not begin before July 1, 2015. Eligible facilities include existing
companies and facilities that are adding production capacity, or retrofitting
existing capacity, as well as new companies and facilities. Eligible biomass thermal production
facilities must produce at least 250 MMbtu of biomass thermal quarterly.
(b) No payments shall be made for biomass thermal production that occurs after June 30, 2035, for those eligible biomass thermal producers under paragraph (a).
(c) An eligible producer of biomass thermal production shall not transfer the producer's eligibility for payments under this section to a biomass thermal production facility at a different location.
(d) A producer that ceases production for any reason is ineligible to receive payments under this section until the producer resumes production.
(e) Biofuel production for which payment has been received under section 41A.16, and renewable chemical production for which payment has been received under section 41A.17, are not eligible for payment under this section.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.18, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Payment amounts; bonus; limits; blending. (a) The commissioner shall make payments to eligible producers of biomass thermal located in the state. The amount of the payment for each producer's annual production is $5.00 per MMbtu of biomass thermal production produced at a specific location for ten years after the start of production.
(b) An eligible facility producing biomass thermal using agricultural cellulosic biomass is eligible for a 20 percent bonus payment for each MMbtu produced from agricultural biomass that is derived from perennial crop or cover crop biomass.
(c) Total payments under this section to
an eligible thermal producer in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount
necessary for 30,000 MMbtu of thermal production. Total payments under this section to all
eligible thermal producers in a fiscal year may not exceed the amount necessary
for 150,000 MMbtu of total thermal production.
The commissioner shall award payments on a first-come, first-served
basis within the limits of available funding If the total amount for
which all producers are eligible in a quarter exceeds the amount available for
payments, the commissioner shall make the payments on a pro rata basis.
(d)
An eligible facility may blend a cellulosic feedstock with other fuels in the
biomass thermal production facility, but only the percentage attributable to cellulosic
material biomass meeting the cellulosic forestry biomass requirements or
agricultural cellulosic biomass sourcing plan is eligible to receive
payment.
(e) When a facility is eligible due to
adding production capacity or retrofitting existing capacity, the entire amount
of biomass meeting the cellulosic forestry biomass requirements or agricultural
cellulosic biomass sourcing plan is assumed to have been used for the biomass
thermal production from the added or retrofitted production capacity.
(f) For purposes of this section, an entity that holds a controlling interest in more than one biomass thermal production facility is considered a single eligible producer.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.18, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Cellulosic
forestry biomass requirements. All
forestry-derived cellulosic biomass used for biomass thermal production
must be produced using Minnesota state forest biomass harvesting
guidelines or the equivalent. All cellulosic
biomass from brushland brushlands must be produced using
Minnesota brushland harvesting biomass harvesting guidelines or
the equivalent. Forestry-derived
cellulosic biomass that comes from land parcels greater than 160 acres must be
certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, the Sustainable Forestry
Initiative, or the American Tree Farm System. Uncertified land from parcels of 160 acres or
less, tribal lands, and federal land must be harvested by a logger
who has completed training for biomass harvesting from the Minnesota logger
education program or the equivalent and have a forest stewardship management
plan., as defined in section 290C.02, subdivision 7, or the
equivalent and be harvested by a logger who has completed training for biomass
harvesting from the Minnesota logger education program or the equivalent.
Sec. 13. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 41A.15,
subdivisions 2a and 2b, are repealed.
ARTICLE 4
GRAIN BUYERS AND GRAIN WAREHOUSES
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.16, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Applicability. For the purpose of sections 223.15 to 223.22
223.23, the terms defined in this section have the meanings given them.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.16, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd. 2a. Cash
sale. (a) "Cash
sale" means:
(a) a sale that is not reduced to
writing as a voluntary extension of credit contract and for which payment
is tendered to the seller not later than the close of business on the next
business day after the sale, either in cash or by check, or by mailing or
wiring funds to the seller's account in the amount of at least 80 percent of
the value of the grain at delivery; or.
(b) a sale of a shipment of grain which
is part of a multiple shipment sale, for which a scale ticket clearly marked
"CASH" has been received by the seller before completion of the
entire sale, and for which payment is tendered in cash or by check not later
than ten days after the sale of that shipment, except that when the entire sale
is completed,
payment
is tendered in cash or by check not later than the close of business on the next
business day, or within 48 hours, whichever is later. For the purposes of this subdivision,
"cash" means currency or an equivalent manner of payment including
but not limited to a certified check; a cashier's check; and a postal, bank, or
express money order in which the amount of payment is verified and secured
before issuance.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1,
2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after that date.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.16, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Grain.
"Grain" means any cereal grain, coarse grain, or oilseed
in unprocessed form for which a standard has been established by the United
States Secretary of Agriculture or the Minnesota Board of Grain Standards,
dry edible beans, or other agricultural crops designated by the commissioner by
rule.
EFFECTIVE DATE. This section is effective July 1,
2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after that date.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.17, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Grain buyers and storage account; fees. (a) The commissioner shall set the fees for inspections under sections 223.15 to 223.22 at levels necessary to pay the expenses of administering and enforcing sections 223.15 to 223.22.
The fee for any license issued or renewed after June 30, 2005, shall be set according to the following schedule:
(a) (1) $140 plus $110 for each additional
location for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are less than $100,000;
(b) (2) $275 plus $110 for each additional
location for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are at least $100,000,
but not more than $750,000;
(c) (3) $415 plus $220 for each additional
location for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $750,000
but not more than $1,500,000;
(d) (4) $550 plus $220 for each additional
location for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $1,500,000
but not more than $3,000,000; and
(e) (5) $700 plus $220 for each additional
location for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than
$3,000,000.
(b) In addition to the license fee required under
paragraph (a), a grain buyer must pay to the commissioner an annual examination
fee for each licensed location, as follows:
(c) The fee for any supplemental
examination required by the commissioner under section 223.23 is $55 per hour
per examiner.
(d) A licensed grain buyer meeting the
annual examination requirements under section 223.23 is exempt from the fees
under paragraph (b) if the annual examination is conducted by the Agricultural
Marketing Service of the United State Department of Agriculture.
(e) A penalty amount not to exceed ten percent of the fees due may be imposed by the commissioner for each month for which the fees are delinquent.
(f) There is created the grain
buyers and storage account in the agricultural fund. Money collected pursuant to sections 223.15
to 223.19 223.23 shall be paid into the state treasury and
credited to the grain buyers and storage account and. Money in the account, including interest,
is appropriated to the commissioner for the administration and enforcement of
sections 223.15 to 223.22 223.23.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.17, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Bond. (a) Except as provided in paragraphs (c) to (e), before a grain buyer's license is issued, the applicant for the license must file with the commissioner a bond in a penal sum prescribed by the commissioner but not less than the following amounts:
(1) $10,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are $100,000 or less;
(2) $20,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $100,000 but not more than $750,000;
(3) $30,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $750,000 but not more than $1,500,000;
(4) $40,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $1,500,000 but not more than $3,000,000;
(5) $50,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $3,000,000 but not more than $6,000,000;
(6) $70,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $6,000,000 but not more than $12,000,000;
(7) $125,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases are more than $12,000,000 but not more than $24,000,000; and
(8) $150,000 for grain buyers whose gross annual purchases exceed $24,000,000.
(b)
A grain buyer who has filed a bond with the commissioner prior to July 1,
2004, is not required to increase the amount of the bond to comply with this
section until July 1, 2005. The commissioner
may postpone an increase in the amount of the bond until July 1, 2006, if a
licensee demonstrates that the increase will impose undue financial hardship on
the licensee, and that producers will not be harmed as a result of the
postponement. The commissioner may
impose other restrictions on a licensee whose bond increase has been postponed. The amount of the bond shall be based on the
most recent gross annual grain purchase report of the grain buyer.
(c) A first-time applicant for a grain buyer's license shall file a $50,000 bond with the commissioner. This bond shall remain in effect for the first year of the license. Thereafter, the licensee shall comply with the applicable bonding requirements contained in paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (8).
(d) In lieu of the bond required by this
subdivision the applicant may deposit with the commissioner of management and
budget cash, a certified check, a cashier's check, a postal, bank, or
express money order, assignable bonds or notes of the United States, or an
assignment of a bank savings account or investment certificate or an
irrevocable bank letter of credit as defined in section 336.5-102, in the same
amount as would be required for a bond.
(e) A grain buyer who purchases grain
immediately upon delivery solely with cash; a certified check; a cashier's
check; or a postal, bank, or express money order is exempt from this
subdivision if the grain buyer's gross annual purchases are $100,000 or less.
(e) (f) Bonds must be
continuous until canceled. To cancel a
bond, a surety must provide 90 days' written notice of the bond's termination
date to the licensee and the commissioner.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.17, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Cash
sales; manner of payment. For a cash
sale of a shipment of grain which is part of a multiple shipment sale,
the grain buyer shall tender payment to the seller in cash or, by
check, or by wiring or mailing payment to the seller's account. The grain buyer must tender payment as
required under this subdivision not later than ten days after the sale
of that shipment, except that when the entire sale is completed, payment shall
be tendered not later than the close of business on the next day after
the sale of the shipment, or within 48 hours after the sale of the
shipment, whichever is later. For
other cash sales the grain buyer, before the close of business on the next
business day after the sale, shall tender payment to the seller in cash or by
check, or shall wire or mail funds to the seller's account in the amount of at
least 80 percent of the value of the grain at the time of delivery. The grain buyer shall complete final
settlement as rapidly as possible through ordinary diligence.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.17, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Financial
statements. (a) Except as allowed
in paragraph (c), a grain buyer licensed under this chapter must annually
submit to the commissioner may require an annual a financial
statement from a licensee which has been prepared in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles. and which meets the
following requirements The annual financial statement required under
this subdivision must also:
(1) the financial statement shall
include, but not be limited to the following:
(i) a balance sheet;
(ii) a statement of income (profit and loss);
(iii) a statement of retained earnings;
(iv) a statement of changes in financial position; and
(v) a statement of the dollar amount of
grain purchased in the previous fiscal year of the grain buyer.;
(2) the financial statement shall
be accompanied by a compilation report of the financial statement that is
prepared by a grain commission firm or a management firm approved by the
commissioner or by an independent public accountant, in accordance with
standards established by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Grain buyers purchasing less than 150,000
bushels of grain per calendar year may submit a financial statement prepared by
a public accountant who is not an employee or a relative within the third
degree of kindred according to civil law.;
(3) the financial statement shall
be accompanied by a certification by the chief executive officer or the chief
executive officer's designee of the licensee, and where applicable, all
members of the governing board of directors under penalty of perjury, that
the financial statement accurately reflects the financial condition of the
licensee for the period specified in the statement.;
(4) for grain buyers purchasing under
$5,000,000 of grain annually, be reviewed by a certified public accountant in
accordance with standards established by the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants, and must show that the financial statements are free from
material misstatements; and
(5) for grain buyers purchasing
$5,000,000 or more of grain annually, be audited by a certified public
accountant in accordance with standards established by the American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants and must include an opinion statement from the
certified public accountant.
(b) Only one financial statement must be
filed for a chain of warehouses owned or operated as a single business entity,
unless otherwise required by the commissioner.
Any grain buyer having a net worth in excess of $500,000,000 need not
file the financial statement required by this subdivision but must provide the
commissioner with a certified net worth statement. All financial statements filed with the
commissioner are private or nonpublic data as provided in section 13.02.
(c) A grain buyer who purchases grain
immediately upon delivery solely with cash; a certified check; a cashier's
check; or a postal, bank, or express money order is exempt from this
subdivision if the grain buyer's gross annual purchases are $100,000 or less.
(d) The commissioner shall annually
provide information on a person's fiduciary duties to each licensee. To the extent practicable, the commissioner
must direct each licensee to provide this information to all persons required
to certify the licensee's financial statement under paragraph (a), clause (3).
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.177, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Oral
contracts. Any grain buyer entering
into a voluntary extension of credit contract orally or by phone shall give or
mail to the seller a written confirmation conforming to the requirements of
section 223.175 before the close of the next business day within ten
days of entering the voluntary extension of credit contract. Written confirmation of oral contracts must
meet the requirements of subdivision 3.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.177, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Contracts
reduced to writing. A voluntary
extension of credit contract must be reduced to writing by the grain buyer,
and mailed or given to the seller before the close of the next
business day after the contract is entered into or, in the case of an oral or
phone contract, after the written confirmation is received by the seller. Provided, however, that if a scale ticket has
been received by the seller prior to the completion of the grain shipment, the
contract must be reduced to writing within ten days after the sale, but not
later than the close of the next business day after the completion of the
entire sale, and signed by both buyer and seller within ten days of the
date of delivery of the grain. The
form of the contract shall comply with the requirements of section 223.175. A grain buyer may use an electronic version
of a voluntary extension of credit contract that contains the same information
as a written document and that conforms to the requirements of this chapter to
which a seller has applied an electronic signature in place of a written
document. There must not at any time be
an electronic and paper voluntary extension of credit contract representing the
same lot of grain.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 223.19, is amended to read:
223.19
RULES.
The commissioner may make rules pursuant
to chapter 14 to carry out the provisions of sections 223.15 to 223.22 223.23.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 11. [223.23]
ANNUAL EXAMINATION REQUIRED; SUPPLEMENTAL EXAMINATIONS.
A licensed grain buyer is subject to an
annual examination conducted by the commissioner or the Agricultural Marketing
Service of the United States Department of Agriculture. Examinations must include a measurement of
all grain owned and maintained by the grain buyer. The commissioner may require supplemental
examinations of a grain buyer as the commissioner deems necessary.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain buyer licenses issued on or after
that date.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.21, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Grain. "Grain" means any cereal grain,
coarse grain, or oilseed in unprocessed form for which a standard has been
established by the United States Secretary of Agriculture or the Minnesota
Board of Grain Standards, dry edible beans, or agricultural crops
designated by the commissioner by rule.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.21, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7a. Grain bank. "Grain bank" means a feed-processing plant that receives and stores grain it processes and returns to the grain's owner in amounts, at intervals, and with added ingredients that are mutually agreeable to the grain's owner and the person operating the plant. Grain bank does not include a seed cleaning plant.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.21, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 15. Temporary storage. "Temporary storage" means grain stored in outdoor piles or suitable structures, which are not in use for the entirety of the license period.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.22, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Fees;
grain buyers and storage account. (a)
There is created in the agricultural fund an account known as the grain buyers
and storage account. The commissioner
shall set the fees for examinations, certifications, and licenses under
sections 232.20 to 232.24 at levels necessary to pay the costs of administering
and enforcing sections 232.20 to 232.24.
All money collected pursuant to sections 232.20 to 232.24 shall be paid
by the commissioner into the state treasury and credited to the grain buyers
and storage account and. Money
in the account, including interest, is appropriated to the commissioner for
the administration and enforcement of sections 232.20 to 232.24.
(b) All money collected pursuant to
chapter 231 shall be paid by the commissioner into the grain buyers and storage
account and. Money in the
account is appropriated to the commissioner for the administration and
enforcement of chapter 231.
(c) The fees for a license to store grain are as follows:
(a) (1) For a license to
store grain, $110 for each home rule charter or statutory city or town in which
a public grain warehouse is operated.
(b) (2) In addition to the
license fee required under clause (1), a person with a license to store
grain in a public grain warehouse is subject to an examination fee for each
licensed location, based on the following schedule for one examination as
follows:
(c) (3) The fee for the
second examination supplemental examinations required by the
commissioner under section 232.24 is $55 per hour per examiner for
warehouse operators who choose to have it performed by the commissioner.
(d) A penalty amount not to exceed ten percent of the fees due may be imposed by the commissioner for each month for which the fees are delinquent.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.22, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Bonding. (a) Before a license is issued, except as provided under paragraph (c), the applicant for a public grain warehouse operator's license shall file with the commissioner a bond in a penal sum prescribed by the commissioner based on the annual average storage liability as stated on the statement of grain in storage report or on the gross annual grain purchase report, whichever is greater, and applying the following amounts:
(1) $10,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $0 but not more than $25,000;
(2) $20,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $25,001 but not more than $50,000;
(3) $30,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $50,001 but not more than $75,000;
(4) $50,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $75,001 but not more than $100,000;
(5) $75,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $100,001 but not more than $200,000;
(6) $125,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $200,001 but not more than $300,000;
(7) $175,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $300,001 but not more than $400,000;
(8) $225,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $400,001 but not more than $500,000;
(9) $275,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $500,001 but not more than $600,000;
(10) $325,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $600,001 but not more than $700,000;
(11) $375,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $700,001 but not more than $800,000;
(12) $425,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $800,001 but not more than $900,000;
(13) $475,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $900,001 but not more than $1,000,000; and
(14) $500,000 for storages with annual average storage liability of more than $1,000,000.
(b) Bonds must be continuous until canceled. To cancel a bond, a surety must provide 90 days' written notice of the bond's termination date to the licensee and the commissioner.
(c) In lieu of the bond required by this
subdivision, the applicant may deposit with the commissioner of management and
budget an irrevocable bank letter of credit as defined in section 336.5-102, in
the same amount as would be required for a bond.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.23, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Grain
delivered considered stored. All
grain delivered to a public grain warehouse operator shall be considered stored
at the time of delivery, unless arrangements have been made with the public
grain warehouse operator prior to or at the time of delivery to apply the grain
on contract, for shipment or consignment or for cash sale. Grain may be held in open storage or placed
on a warehouse receipt. Warehouse
receipts must be issued for all grain held in open storage within six months of
delivery to the warehouse unless the depositor has signed a statement that the
depositor does not desire a warehouse receipt.
The warehouse operator's tariff applies for any grain that is retained
in open storage or under warehouse receipt.
All grain in temporary storage must be owned and exclusively
maintained by the licensee. Grain
assigned to grain bank is considered stored grain.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 232.24, is amended to read:
232.24
SCHEDULE OF INSPECTION, FINANCIAL REPORTS.
Subdivision 1. Schedule
of examination. A licensee under
sections 232.20 to 232.24 is subject to two examinations an
examination annually conducted by the commissioner or the Agricultural
Marketing Service of the United States Department of Agriculture. The commissioner may, by rule, authorize
one examination to be conducted by a qualified nongovernmental unit require
supplemental examinations of a licensee as the commissioner deems necessary.
Subd. 2. Financial
reports. A licensee under sections
232.20 to 232.24 upon request must provide to the commissioner a copy of
the financial reports of an audit conducted by a qualified nongovernmental
unit containing information the commissioner requires report that
satisfies the requirements under section 223.17, subdivision 6.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020, and applies to grain storage licenses issued on or
after that date.
Sec. 19. FIDUCIARY
INFORMATION; GRAIN BUYING AND STORAGE.
The commissioner of agriculture, in
consultation with the Minnesota State Bar Association, must develop information
concerning the fiduciary duties of the chief executive officer and, where
applicable, the governing board of directors of each licensed grain buyer and
licensed public grain warehouse. No
later than March 1, 2020, the commissioner must submit the information to the
legislative committees and divisions with jurisdiction over agriculture policy
and finance.
ARTICLE 5
HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. APPROPRIATIONS. |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies for the purposes
specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are
available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2020" and
"2021" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, or June 30, 2021,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2020. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2021. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2020 |
2021 |
Sec. 2. HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$64,048,000 |
|
$56,548,000 |
(a) The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
(b) Unless otherwise specified, this
appropriation is for transfer to the housing development fund for the programs
specified in this section. Except as
otherwise indicated, this transfer is part of the agency's permanent budget
base.
Subd. 2. Challenge
Program |
|
17,925,000
|
|
12,925,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for the economic
development and housing challenge program under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.33.
(b) Of this amount, $1,208,000 each year
shall be made available during the first 11 months of the fiscal year
exclusively for housing projects for American Indians. Any funds not committed to housing projects
for American Indians in the first 11 months of the fiscal year shall be
available for any eligible activity under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.33.
(c)
The base for this program in fiscal year 2022 and beyond is $12,925,000.
Subd. 3. Workforce
Housing Development |
|
2,000,000
|
|
2,000,000
|
This appropriation is for the workforce
housing development program under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.39. If requested by the applicant and approved by
the agency, funded properties may include a portion of income and rent
restricted units. Funded properties may
include owner-occupied homes.
Subd. 4. Manufactured Home Park Infrastructure Grants |
2,000,000
|
|
0
|
(a)
This appropriation is for manufactured home park infrastructure grants under
Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.2035, subdivision 1b.
(b) The base for this program in fiscal
year 2022 and beyond is $1,000,000.
Subd. 5. Workforce
Homeownership Program |
|
500,000
|
|
0
|
(a) This appropriation is for the
workforce homeownership program under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.38.
(b) The base for this program in fiscal
year 2022 and beyond is $250,000.
Subd. 6. Housing
Trust Fund |
|
11,646,000
|
|
11,646,000
|
This appropriation is for deposit in the
housing trust fund account created under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.201,
and may be used for the purposes provided in that section.
Subd. 7. Homework
Starts with Home |
|
1,750,000
|
|
1,750,000
|
This appropriation is for the homework
starts with home program under Minnesota Statutes, sections 462A.201,
subdivision 2, paragraph (a), clause (4), and 462A.204, subdivision 8, to
provide assistance to homeless or highly mobile families with children eligible
for enrollment in a prekindergarten through grade 12 academic program.
Subd. 8. Rental
Assistance for Mentally Ill |
|
4,338,000
|
|
4,338,000
|
This appropriation is for the rental
housing assistance program for persons with a mental illness or families with
an adult member with a mental illness under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.2097. Among comparable proposals,
the agency shall prioritize those proposals that target, in part, eligible
persons who desire to move to more integrated, community-based settings.
Subd. 9. Family
Homeless Prevention |
|
10,269,000
|
|
10,269,000
|
This appropriation is for the family
homeless prevention and assistance programs under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.204.
Subd. 10. Home
Ownership Assistance Fund |
|
885,000
|
|
885,000
|
This appropriation is for the home
ownership assistance program under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.21,
subdivision 8. The agency shall continue
to strengthen its efforts to address the disparity gap in the homeownership
rate between white households and indigenous American Indians and communities
of color. To better understand and
address the disparity gap, the agency is required to collect, on a voluntary
basis, demographic information regarding race, color, national origin, and sex
of applicants for agency programs intended to benefit homeowners and
homebuyers.
Subd. 11. Affordable
Rental Investment Fund |
|
4,218,000
|
|
4,218,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for the
affordable rental investment fund program under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.21, subdivision 8b, to finance the acquisition, rehabilitation, and debt
restructuring of federally assisted rental property and for making equity
take-out loans under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.05, subdivision 39.
(b) The owner of federally assisted rental
property must agree to participate in the applicable federally assisted housing
program and to extend any existing low-income affordability restrictions on the
housing for the maximum term permitted. The
owner must also enter into an agreement that gives local units of government,
housing and redevelopment authorities, and nonprofit housing organizations the
right of first refusal if the rental property is offered for sale. Priority must be given among comparable
federally assisted rental properties to properties with the longest remaining
term under an agreement for federal assistance.
Priority must also be given among comparable rental housing developments
to developments that are or will be owned by local government units, a housing
and redevelopment authority, or a nonprofit housing organization.
(c) The appropriation also may be used to
finance the acquisition, rehabilitation, and debt restructuring of existing
supportive housing properties and naturally occurring affordable housing as
determined by the commissioner. For
purposes of this paragraph, "supportive housing" means affordable
rental housing with links to services necessary for individuals, youth, and
families with children to maintain housing stability.
Subd. 12. Owner-Occupied
Housing Rehabilitation |
|
2,772,000
|
|
2,772,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for the
rehabilitation of owner-occupied housing under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.05, subdivisions 14 and 14a.
(b) Notwithstanding any law to the
contrary, grants or loans under this subdivision may be made without rent or
income restrictions of owners or tenants.
To the extent practicable, grants or loans must be made available
statewide.
Subd. 13. Rental
Housing Rehabilitation |
|
3,743,000
|
|
3,743,000
|
(a) This appropriation is for the
rehabilitation of eligible rental housing under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.05, subdivision 14. In
administering a rehabilitation program for rental housing, the agency may apply
the processes and priorities adopted for administration of the economic
development and housing challenge program under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.33, and may provide grants or forgivable loans if approved by the agency.
(b) Notwithstanding any law to the
contrary, grants or loans under this subdivision may be made without rent or
income restrictions of owners or tenants.
To the extent practicable, grants or loans must be made available
statewide.
Subd. 14. Homeownership Education, Counseling, and Training |
857,000
|
|
857,000
|
This appropriation is for the homeownership
education, counseling, and training program under Minnesota Statutes, section
462A.209.
Subd. 15. Capacity-Building
Grants |
|
645,000
|
|
645,000
|
This appropriation is for nonprofit
capacity-building grants under Minnesota Statutes, section 462A.21, subdivision
3b. Of this amount, $125,000 each year
is for support of the Homeless Management Information System (HMIS).
Subd. 16. Build
Wealth MN |
|
500,000
|
|
500,000
|
This appropriation is for a grant to Build
Wealth Minnesota to provide a family stabilization plan program including
program outreach, financial literacy education, and budget and debt counseling.
Subd. 17. Availability
and Transfer of Funds |
|
|
|
|
Money appropriated in the first year in
this article is available the second year.
The commissioner may shift or transfer money in the second year in
subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 12, and 13 to address high‑priority housing
needs.
ARTICLE 6
HOUSING POLICY
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 299D.085, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3a. Trailer
use. A vehicle or a
combination of vehicles may tow a trailer during the movement of an
overdimensional load if:
(1) the party involved is a building
mover licensed by the commissioner of transportation under section 221.81;
(2) the building being moved is not a
temporary structure;
(3) the overdimensional load is a
manufactured home, as defined under section 327.31; or
(4)
the overdimensional load is a modular home, as defined under section 297A.668,
subdivision 8, paragraph (b).
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 326B.815, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Fees. (a) For the purposes of calculating fees
under section 326B.092, an initial or renewed residential contractor,
residential remodeler, or residential roofer license is a business license. Notwithstanding section 326B.092, the
licensing fee for manufactured home installers under section 327B.041 is $300
$180 for a three-year period.
(b) All initial and renewal licenses, except for manufactured home installer licenses, shall be effective for two years and shall expire on March 31 of the year after the year in which the application is made.
(c) The commissioner shall in a manner determined by the commissioner, without the need for any rulemaking under chapter 14, phase in the renewal of residential contractor, residential remodeler, and residential roofer licenses from one year to two years. By June 30, 2011, all renewed residential contractor, residential remodeler, and residential roofer licenses shall be two-year licenses.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327.31, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 23. Modular
home. For the purposes of
this section, "modular home" means a single-family dwelling
constructed in accordance with applicable standards adopted in Minnesota Rules,
chapter 1360 or 1361, and attached to a foundation designed to the State
Building Code.
Sec. 4. [327.335]
PLACEMENT OF MODULAR HOMES.
A modular home may be placed in a
manufactured home park as defined in section 327.14, subdivision 3. A modular home placed in a manufactured home
park is a manufactured home for purposes of chapters 327, 327C, and 504B, and
all rights, obligations, and duties under those chapters apply. A modular home may not be placed in a
manufactured home park without prior written approval of the park owner. Nothing in this section shall be construed to
inhibit the application of zoning, subdivision, architectural, or esthetic
requirements pursuant to chapters 394 and 462 that otherwise apply to
manufactured homes and manufactured home parks.
A modular home placed in a manufactured home park under this section
shall be assessed and taxed as a manufactured home.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327B.041, is amended to read:
327B.041
MANUFACTURED HOME INSTALLERS.
(a) Manufactured home installers are subject to all of the fees in section 326B.092 and the requirements of sections 326B.802 to 326B.885, except for the following:
(1) manufactured home installers are not subject to the continuing education requirements of sections 326B.0981, 326B.099, and 326B.821, but are subject to the continuing education requirements established in rules adopted under section 327B.10;
(2) the examination requirement of section 326B.83, subdivision 3, for manufactured home installers shall be satisfied by successful completion of a written examination administered and developed specifically for the examination of manufactured home installers. The examination must be administered and developed by the commissioner. The commissioner and the state building official shall seek advice on the grading, monitoring, and updating of examinations from the Minnesota Manufactured Housing Association;
(3) a local government unit may not place a surcharge on a license fee, and may not charge a separate fee to installers;
(4) a dealer or distributor who does not install or repair manufactured homes is exempt from licensure under sections 326B.802 to 326B.885;
(5) the exemption under section 326B.805, subdivision 6, clause (5), does not apply; and
(6) manufactured home installers are not subject to the contractor recovery fund in section 326B.89.
(b) The commissioner may waive all or part of the
requirements for licensure as a manufactured home installer for any individual
who holds an unexpired license or certificate issued by any other state or
other United States jurisdiction if the licensing requirements of that
jurisdiction meet or exceed the corresponding licensing requirements of the
department and the individual complies with section 326B.092, subdivisions 1
and 3 to 7. For the purposes of
calculating fees under section 326B.092, licensure as a manufactured home
installer is a business license.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.01, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 8a.
Representative acting on
behalf of residents. "Representative
acting on behalf of residents" means a representative who is authorized to
represent residents in the purchase of property for the purposes of this
chapter, and has gained that authorization by obtaining the signature of
support from at least one resident who is a homeowner-signatory to the home's
lot lease agreement as defined by section 327C.01, subdivision 9, from at least
51 percent of the occupied homes in a manufactured home park. The signature of a resident who is a
signatory to the home's lot lease agreement asserting that they are a resident
of that manufactured home park shall be presumptive evidence of the claim that
the representative is authorized to act on behalf of the resident and shall be
exclusive to only one representative acting on behalf of residents.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Conversion of use; minimum notice. (a) At least nine 12
months before the conversion of all or a portion of a manufactured home park to
another use, or before closure of a manufactured home park or cessation of use
of the land as a manufactured home park, the park owner must prepare a closure
statement and provide a copy to the commissioners of health and the housing
finance agency, the local planning agency, and a
resident
of each manufactured home where the residential use is being converted. The closure statement must include the
following language in a font no smaller than 14 point: "YOU MAY BE ENTITLED TO COMPENSATION
FROM THE MINNESOTA MANUFACTURED HOME RELOCATION TRUST FUND ADMINISTERED BY THE
MINNESOTA HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY." A resident may not be required to vacate until
60 90 days after the conclusion of the public hearing required
under subdivision 4. If a lot is
available in another section of the park that will continue to be operated as a
park, the park owner must allow the resident to relocate the home to that lot
unless the home, because of its size or local ordinance, is not compatible with
that lot.
(b) Closure statements issued more than 24 months prior
to the park closure must contain a closure date. If the closure does not take place within 24
months and the original statement does not contain a closure date, the
statement must be reissued to the commissioners of health and the Housing
Finance Agency, the local planning agency, and a resident of each manufactured
home where the residential use is being converted.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Notice of hearing; proposed change in land
use. If the planned conversion or
cessation of operation requires a variance or zoning change, the municipality
local government authority must mail a notice at least ten days before
the hearing to a resident of each manufactured home in the park stating the
time, place, and purpose of the public hearing.
The park owner shall provide the municipality local government
authority with a list of the names and addresses of at least one resident
of each manufactured home in the park at the time application is made for a
variance or zoning change.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Closure statement. Upon receipt of the closure statement
from the park owner, the local planning agency shall submit the closure
statement to the governing body of the municipality local government
authority and request the governing body to schedule a public hearing. The municipality local government
authority must mail a notice at least ten days before the hearing to a
resident of each manufactured home in the park stating the time, place, and
purpose of the public hearing. The park
owner shall provide the municipality local government authority
with a list of the names and addresses of at least one resident of each
manufactured home in the park at the time the closure statement is submitted to
the local planning agency.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Public hearing; relocation compensation;
neutral third party. (a) Within
90 days after receiving notice of a closure statement, the governing body
of the affected municipality local government authority shall
hold a public hearing to review the closure statement and any impact that the
park closing may have on the displaced residents and the park owner. At the time of, and in the notice for, the
public hearing, displaced residents must be informed that they may be eligible
for payments from the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund under
section 462A.35 as compensation for reasonable relocation costs under
subdivision 13, paragraphs (a) and (e).
(b) The governing body of the municipality local
government authority may also require that other parties, including the municipality
local government authority, but excluding the park owner or its
purchaser, involved in the park closing provide additional compensation to
residents to mitigate the adverse financial impact of the park closing upon the
residents.
(c) At the public hearing, the municipality local
government authority shall appoint a qualified neutral third party,
to be agreed upon by both the manufactured home park owner and manufactured
home owners, whose hourly cost must be reasonable and paid from the Minnesota
manufactured home relocation trust fund.
The neutral third party shall act as a paymaster and arbitrator, with
decision-making authority to resolve any questions or disputes regarding any
contributions or disbursements to and from the Minnesota manufactured home
relocation trust fund by
either
the manufactured home park owner or the manufactured home owners. If the parties cannot agree on a neutral
third party, the municipality will make a determination local
government authority shall determine who shall act as the neutral third party.
(d) The qualified neutral third party
shall be familiar with manufactured housing and the requirements of this
section. The neutral third party shall
keep an overall receipts and cost summary together with a detailed accounting,
for each manufactured lot, of the payments received by the manufactured home
park owner, and expenses approved and payments disbursed to the manufactured
home owners, pursuant to subdivisions 12 and 13, as well as a record of all
services and hours it provided and at what hourly rate it charged to the
Minnesota manufactured home trust fund. This
detailed accounting shall be provided to the manufactured home park owner, the
municipality, and the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency to be included in its
yearly October 15 report as required in subdivision 13, paragraph (h), not
later than 30 days after the expiration of the 12-month notice provided in the
closure statement.
(e) At the public hearing, the
governing body of the local government authority shall determine if any
ordinance was in effect on May 26, 2007, that would provide compensation to
displaced residents and provide this information to the third party neutral to
determine the applicable amount of compensation under subdivision 13, paragraph
(f).
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Intent
to convert use of park at time of purchase.
(a) Before the execution of an agreement to purchase a
manufactured home park, the purchaser must notify the park owner, in writing,
if the purchaser intends to close the manufactured home park or convert it to
another use within one year of the execution of the agreement. If so, the park owner shall provide a
resident of each manufactured home with a 45-day written notice of the
purchaser's intent to close the park or convert it to another use and may
not enter into a purchase agreement for the sale of the park other than with a
representative acting on behalf of residents, until the 45 days have expired. The notice must state that the park owner
will promptly provide information on the cash price and the terms and
conditions of the purchaser's offer to residents requesting the information. The notice must be sent by first class mail
to a resident of each manufactured home in the park and made available in
alternative formats or translations if requested by a resident and the request
is a reasonable accommodation due to a disability of an adult resident or
because there is not an adult resident who is able to speak the language the
notice is provided in. The notice
period begins on the postmark date affixed to the notice and ends 45 days after
it begins. During the notice period
required in this subdivision, the owners of at least 51 percent of the
manufactured homes in the park or a nonprofit organization which has the
written permission of the owners of at least 51 percent of the manufactured
homes in the park to represent them in the acquisition of the park a
representative acting on behalf of residents shall have the right to make
an offer to meet the cash price and execute an agreement to purchase the
park for the purposes of keeping the park as a manufactured housing community
to agree to material terms and conditions set forth in the purchaser's offer
and to execute an agreement to purchase the park for the purposes of keeping
the park as a manufactured housing community. The park owner must accept the offer if it
meets in good faith negotiate a purchase agreement meeting the cash
price and the same terms and conditions set forth in the purchaser's offer
except that the seller is not obligated to provide owner financing. For purposes of this section, cash price
means the cash price offer or equivalent cash offer as defined in section
500.245, subdivision 1, paragraph (d). The
purchase agreement must permit the representative a commercially reasonable due
diligence period with access by the representative to all information
reasonably necessary to make an informed decision regarding the purchase. The representative may be required to enter
into a confidentiality agreement regarding the information.
(b) A representative acting on behalf
of residents must provide ten percent of the offer price as earnest money upon
gaining the required number of signatures to represent the residents in the
purchase of a manufactured home park. The
earnest money is refundable after six months; however, the earnest money may
become nonrefundable if the representative acting on behalf of residents is
unable to complete the purchase, and the original purchaser withdraws the offer
during the 45-day period in paragraph (a), and the manufactured home park is
sold to another
purchaser
for a lower price within six months of the notice to residents in paragraph
(a), then the park owner will be compensated from the earnest money for the
difference between the offer made by the original purchaser and the actual
lower purchase price.
(c) In the event of a sale to a representative acting on
behalf of residents, the representative must certify to the commissioner of
commerce that the property will be preserved as a manufactured home park for
ten years from the date of the sale.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Intent to convert Conversion of
use of park after purchase. If the purchaser
residents of a manufactured home park decides to convert the park to
another use within one year after the purchase of the park, the purchaser must
offer the park for purchase by the residents of the park have not been
provided the written notice of intent to close the park required by subdivision
6, the purchaser may not provide residents with the notice required by
subdivision 1 until 12 months after the date of purchase. For purposes of this subdivision, the date of
purchase is the date of the transfer of the title to the purchaser. The purchaser must provide a resident of
each manufactured home with a written notice of the intent to close the park
and all of the owners of at least 51 percent of the manufactured homes in the
park or a nonprofit organization which has the written permission of the owners
of at least 51 percent of the manufactured homes in the park to represent them
in the acquisition of the park shall have 45 days to execute an agreement for
the purchase of the park at a cash price equal to the original purchase price
paid by the purchaser plus any documented expenses relating to the acquisition
and improvement of the park property, together with any increase in value due
to appreciation of the park. The
purchaser must execute the purchase agreement at the price specified in this
subdivision and pay the cash price within 90 days of the date of the purchase
agreement. The notice must be sent by
first class mail to a resident of each manufactured home in the park. The notice period begins on the postmark date
affixed to the notice and ends 45 days after it begins.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Effect of noncompliance. If a manufactured home park is finally
sold or converted to another use in violation of subdivision 6 or 7, the
residents do not have any continuing right to purchase the park as a result
of that sale or conversion. A violation
of subdivision 6 or 7 is subject to have a right to any remedy provided
in section 8.31, except that relief shall be limited so that questions
of marketability of title shall not be affected.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
Subd. 11. Affidavit of compliance. After a park is sold, a park owner or
other person with personal knowledge bona fide purchaser acting in good
faith may record an affidavit with the county recorder or registrar of
titles in the county in which the park is located certifying compliance with
subdivision 6 or 7 or that subdivisions subdivision 6 and
7 are is not applicable. The
affidavit may be used as proof of the facts stated in the affidavit. A person acquiring an interest in a park or a
title insurer or attorney who prepares, furnishes, or examines evidence of
title may rely on the truth and accuracy of statements made in the affidavit
and is not required to inquire further as to the park owner's compliance with
subdivisions 6 and 7. When an affidavit
is recorded, the right to purchase provided under subdivisions 6 and 7
terminate, and if registered property, the registrar of titles shall delete the
memorials of the notice and affidavit from future certificates of title presumptive
evidence of compliance.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
Subd. 12. Payment to the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund. (a) If a manufactured home owner is required to move due to the conversion of all or a portion of a manufactured home park to another use, the closure of a park, or cessation of use of the land as a manufactured home park, the manufactured park owner shall, upon the change in use, pay to the commissioner of management and budget for deposit in the Minnesota
manufactured home relocation trust fund under section 462A.35, the lesser amount of the actual costs of moving or purchasing the manufactured home approved by the neutral third party and paid by the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency under subdivision 13, paragraph (a) or (e), or $3,250 for each single section manufactured home, and $6,000 for each multisection manufactured home, for which a manufactured home owner has made application for payment of relocation costs under subdivision 13, paragraph (c). The manufactured home park owner shall make payments required under this section to the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund within 60 days of receipt of invoice from the neutral third party.
(b) A manufactured home park owner is not required to make the payment prescribed under paragraph (a), nor is a manufactured home owner entitled to compensation under subdivision 13, paragraph (a) or (e), if:
(1) the manufactured home park owner relocates the manufactured home owner to another space in the manufactured home park or to another manufactured home park at the park owner's expense;
(2) the manufactured home owner is vacating the premises and has informed the manufactured home park owner or manager of this prior to the mailing date of the closure statement under subdivision 1;
(3) a manufactured home owner has abandoned the manufactured home, or the manufactured home owner is not current on the monthly lot rental, personal property taxes;
(4) the manufactured home owner has a pending eviction action for nonpayment of lot rental amount under section 327C.09, which was filed against the manufactured home owner prior to the mailing date of the closure statement under subdivision 1, and the writ of recovery has been ordered by the district court;
(5) the conversion of all or a portion of a manufactured home park to another use, the closure of a park, or cessation of use of the land as a manufactured home park is the result of a taking or exercise of the power of eminent domain by a governmental entity or public utility; or
(6) the owner of the manufactured home is not a resident of
the manufactured home park, as defined in section 327C.01, subdivision 9, or;
the owner of the manufactured home is a resident, but came to reside in the
manufactured home park after the mailing date of the closure statement under
subdivision 1; or the owner of the manufactured home has not paid the $15
assessment when due under paragraph (c).
(c) If the unencumbered fund balance in the manufactured home
relocation trust fund is less than $1,000,000 $2,000,000 as of
June 30 of each year, the commissioner of management and budget shall assess
each manufactured home park owner by mail the total amount of $15 for each
licensed lot in their park, payable on or before September December
15 of that year. The commissioner of
management Failure to notify and budget shall deposit any
payments in the Minnesota timely assess the manufactured home relocation
trust fund. On or before July 15 of park
owner by July 31 of any year shall waive the assessment and payment obligations
of the manufactured home park owner for that year. Together with said assessment notice, each
year, the commissioner of management and budget shall prepare and
distribute to park owners a letter explaining whether funds are being collected
for that year, information about the collection, an invoice for all licensed
lots, a notice for distribution to the residents, and a sample form for
the park owners to collect information on which park residents and lots
have been accounted for. In a font no
smaller than 14-point, the notice provided by management and budget for
distribution to residents by the park owner will include the payment deadline
of November 30 and the following language:
"THIS IS NOT AN OPTIONAL FEE.
IF YOU OWN A MANUFACTURED HOME ON A LOT YOU RENT IN A MANUFACTURED HOME
PARK, AND YOU RESIDE IN THAT HOME, YOU MUST PAY WHEN PROVIDED NOTICE."
If assessed under this paragraph, the
park owner may recoup the cost of the $15 assessment as a lump sum or as a
monthly fee of no more than $1.25 collected from park residents together with
monthly lot rent as provided in section 327C.03, subdivision 6. Park owners If, by September 15, a
park owner provides the notice to residents for the $15 lump sum, a park owner
may adjust payment for lots in their park that are vacant or
otherwise
not eligible for contribution to the trust fund under section 327C.095,
subdivision 12, paragraph (b), and for park residents who have not paid the
$15 assessment when due to the park owner by November 30, and deduct from
the assessment accordingly. The
commissioner of management and budget shall deposit any payments in the
Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund and provide to the Minnesota
Housing Finance Agency by December 31, a record for each manufactured home park
of the amount received for that park and the number of deductions made for each
of the following reasons: vacant lots,
ineligible lots, and uncollected fees.
(d) This subdivision and subdivision 13, paragraph (c), clause (5), are enforceable by the neutral third party, on behalf of the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency, or by action in a court of appropriate jurisdiction. The court may award a prevailing party reasonable attorney fees, court costs, and disbursements.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
Subd. 13. Change
in use, relocation expenses; payments by park owner. (a) If a manufactured home owner is
required to relocate due to the conversion of all or a portion of a
manufactured home park to another use, the closure
of a manufactured home park, or cessation of use of the land as a manufactured
home park under subdivision 1, and the manufactured home owner complies
with the requirements of this section, the manufactured home owner is entitled
to payment from the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund equal to
the manufactured home owner's actual relocation costs for relocating the
manufactured home to a new location within a 25 50-mile radius of
the park that is being closed, up to a maximum of $7,000 for a single-section
and $12,500 for a multisection manufactured home. The actual relocation costs must include the
reasonable cost of taking down, moving, and setting up the manufactured home,
including equipment rental, utility connection and disconnection charges, minor
repairs, modifications necessary for transportation of the home, necessary
moving permits and insurance, moving costs for any appurtenances, which meet
applicable local, state, and federal building and construction codes.
(b) A manufactured home owner is not entitled to compensation under paragraph (a) if the manufactured home park owner is not required to make a payment to the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund under subdivision 12, paragraph (b).
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (e), in order to obtain payment from the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund, the manufactured home owner shall submit to the neutral third party and the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency, with a copy to the park owner, an application for payment, which includes:
(1) a copy of the closure statement under subdivision 1;
(2) a copy of the contract with a moving or towing contractor, which includes the relocation costs for relocating the manufactured home;
(3) a statement with supporting materials of any additional relocation costs as outlined in subdivision 1;
(4) a statement certifying that none of the exceptions to receipt of compensation under subdivision 12, paragraph (b), apply to the manufactured home owner;
(5) a statement from the manufactured park
owner that the lot rental is current and that the annual $15 payments payment
to the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund have has
been paid when due; and
(6) a statement from the county where the manufactured home is located certifying that personal property taxes for the manufactured home are paid through the end of that year.
(d) The neutral third party shall promptly process all payments for completed applications within 14 days. If the neutral third party has acted reasonably and does not approve or deny payment within 45 days after receipt of the information set forth in paragraph (c), the payment is deemed approved. Upon approval and request by the neutral third party, the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall issue two checks in equal amount for 50 percent of the contract price payable to the mover and towing contractor for relocating the manufactured home in the amount of the actual relocation cost, plus a check to the home owner for additional certified costs associated with third-party vendors, that were necessary in relocating the manufactured home. The moving or towing contractor shall receive 50 percent upon execution of the contract and 50 percent upon completion of the relocation and approval by the manufactured home owner. The moving or towing contractor may not apply the funds to any other purpose other than relocation of the manufactured home as provided in the contract. A copy of the approval must be forwarded by the neutral third party to the park owner with an invoice for payment of the amount specified in subdivision 12, paragraph (a).
(e) In lieu of collecting a relocation
payment from the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund under
paragraph (a), the manufactured home owner may collect an amount from the fund
after reasonable efforts to relocate the manufactured home have failed due to
the age or condition of the manufactured home, or because there are no
manufactured home parks willing or able to accept the manufactured home within
a 25-mile radius. A manufactured home
owner may tender title of the manufactured home in the manufactured home park
to the manufactured home park owner, and collect an amount to be determined by
an independent appraisal. The appraiser
must be agreed to by both the manufactured home park owner and the manufactured
home owner. If the appraised market value
cannot be determined, the tax market value, averaged over a period of five
years, can be used as a substitute. The
maximum amount that may be reimbursed under the fund is $8,000 for a
single-section and $14,500 for a multisection manufactured home. The minimum amount that may be reimbursed
under the fund is $2,000 for a single section and $4,000 for a multisection
manufactured home. The manufactured home
owner shall deliver to the manufactured home park owner the current certificate
of title to the manufactured home duly endorsed by the owner of record, and
valid releases of all liens shown on the certificate of title, and a statement
from the county where the manufactured home is located evidencing that the
personal property taxes have been paid. The
manufactured home owner's application for funds under this paragraph must
include a document certifying that the manufactured home cannot be relocated,
that the lot rental is current, that the annual $15 payments to the Minnesota
manufactured home relocation trust fund have been paid when due, that the
manufactured home owner has chosen to tender title under this section, and that
the park owner agrees to make a payment to the commissioner of management and
budget in the amount established in subdivision 12, paragraph (a), less any
documented costs submitted to the neutral third party, required for demolition
and removal of the home, and any debris or refuse left on the lot, not to
exceed $1,000 $1,500. The
manufactured home owner must also provide a copy of the certificate of title
endorsed by the owner of record, and certify to the neutral third party, with a
copy to the park owner, that none of the exceptions to receipt of compensation
under subdivision 12, paragraph (b), clauses (1) to (6), apply to the
manufactured home owner, and that the home owner will vacate the home within 60
days after receipt of payment or the date of park closure, whichever is
earlier, provided that the monthly lot rent is kept current.
(f) The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency
must make a determination of the amount of payment a manufactured home owner
would have been entitled to under a local ordinance in effect on May 26, 2007. Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the
manufactured home owner's compensation for relocation costs from the fund under
section 462A.35, is the greater of the amount provided under this subdivision,
or the amount under the local ordinance in effect on May 26, 2007, that is
applicable to the manufactured home owner.
Nothing in this paragraph is intended to increase the liability of the
park owner.
(g) Neither the neutral third party nor the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall be liable to any person for recovery if the funds in the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund are insufficient to pay the amounts claimed. The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall keep a record of the time and date of its approval of payment to a claimant.
(h)(1) By October 15, 2019, the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall post on its website and report to the chairs of the senate Finance Committee and house of representatives Ways and Means Committee on the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund, including the account balance, payments to claimants, the amount of any advances to the fund, the amount of any insufficiencies encountered during the previous calendar year, and any itemized administrative charges or expenses deducted from the trust fund balance. If sufficient funds become available, the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall pay the manufactured home owner whose unpaid claim is the earliest by time and date of approval.
(h) (2) Beginning in 2019, the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall post on its website and
report to the chairs of the senate Finance Committee and house of
representatives Ways and Means Committee by January October 15 of
each year on the Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund, including
the aggregate account balance, the aggregate assessment payments
received, summary information regarding each closed park including the total
payments to claimants and payments received from each closed park, the
amount of any advances to the fund, the amount of any insufficiencies
encountered during the previous calendar fiscal year, reports
of neutral third parties provided pursuant to subdivision 4, and any itemized
administrative charges or expenses deducted from the trust fund balance, all
of which should be reconciled to the previous year's trust fund balance. If sufficient funds become available, the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall pay the manufactured home owner whose
unpaid claim is the earliest by time and date of approval.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 327C.095, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 16. Reporting
of licensed manufactured home parks.
The Department of Health or, if applicable, local units of
government that have entered into a delegation of authority agreement with the
Department of Health as provided in section 145A.07 shall provide, by March 31
of each year, a list of names and addresses of the manufactured home parks
licensed in the previous year, and for each manufactured home park, the current
licensed owner, the owner's address, the number of licensed manufactured home
lots, and other data as they may request for the Department of Management and
Budget to invoice each licensed manufactured home park in Minnesota.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 428A.11, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Housing improvements. "Housing improvements" has the meaning given in the city's enabling ordinance. Housing improvements may include improvements to common elements of a condominium or other common interest community or to a manufactured home park.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 428A.11, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Housing unit. "Housing unit" means real property and improvements thereon consisting of a one‑dwelling unit, or an apartment or unit as described in chapter 515, 515A, or 515B, respectively, or a manufactured home in a manufactured home park that is occupied by a person or family for use as a residence.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.2035, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Individual assistance grants. Eligible recipients may use individual assistance grants and loans under this program to:
(1) provide current residents of manufactured home parks with buy-out assistance not to exceed $4,000 per home with preference given to older manufactured homes; and
(2) provide down-payment assistance for
the purchase of new and preowned manufactured homes that comply with the
current version of the State Building United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development's Manufactured Housing Code in effect at the
time of the sale, not to exceed $10,000 per home.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.2035, subdivision 1b, is amended to read:
Subd. 1b. Manufactured home park infrastructure grants. Eligible recipients may use manufactured home park infrastructure grants under this program for:
(1) acquisition of and improvements in manufactured home parks; and
(2) infrastructure, including storm shelters and community facilities.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.209, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. Report. (a) By January 10 of every year,
each nonprofit organization or political subdivision that delivers
services under this section and capacity building under section 462A.21,
subdivision 3b, if the grant recipient has subgrantees, must submit a
report to the agency that summarizes the number of people served and the
sources and amounts of nonstate money used to fund the services. The report must include, at a minimum, the
following information:
(1) details of program costs;
(2) the number of staff, both within the organization and any outside organization;
(3) the number of program participants;
(4) the demographic information including, but not limited to, race, age, gender, and income of program participants, if available;
(5) a list of any and all subgrantees receiving funds from the program, as well as the amount of funding received;
(6) information about other sources of program funding including other public or private funding or in-kind donations;
(7) evidence that the organization
administering a program or a subgrantee of a program is in good standing with
the Minnesota Secretary of State and has provided an affidavit stating the
organization and subgrantee, if any, has met all applicable requirements under
chapter 289A;
(8) a short description of what each program does; and
(9) to the extent practicable,
quantifiable measures of program success.
(b) The agency shall annually submit
a report containing the information received from nonprofit organizations
and political subdivisions under paragraph (a) to the legislature members
of the legislative housing policy and finance committees and divisions by
February 15.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.22, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Biennial report. The agency shall also submit a biennial report of its activities and receipts, and a plan for the next biennium, to the governor and the legislature on or before February 15 in each odd-numbered year. The report shall include: (1) the distribution of money under each agency program by county, except for counties containing a city of the first class, where the distribution shall be reported by municipality; and (2) the cost per unit of housing and the cost per square foot of housing financed under each agency program.
In addition, the report shall include the cost to the agency of the issuance of its bonds for each issue in the biennium, along with comparable information for other state housing finance agencies.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.222, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Allocation procedure. (a) Projects will be awarded tax credits in two competitive rounds on an annual basis. The date for applications for each round must be determined by the agency. No allocating agency may award tax credits prior to the application dates established by the agency.
(b) Each allocating agency must meet the requirements of section 42(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through December 31, 1989, for the allocation of tax credits and the selection of projects.
(c) For projects that are eligible for an allocation of credits pursuant to section 42(h)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, tax credits may only be allocated if the project satisfies the requirements of the allocating agency's qualified allocation plan. For projects that are eligible for an allocation of credits pursuant to section 42(h)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, for which the agency is the issuer of the bonds for the project, or the issuer of the bonds for the project is located outside the jurisdiction of a city or county that has received reserved tax credits, the applicable allocation plan is the agency's qualified allocation plan.
(d) (1) To maximize the resources
available for and increase the supply of affordable housing in Minnesota by
leveraging the benefits to Minnesota from the use of tax-exempt bonds to
finance multifamily housing and to allow local units of government more flexibility
to address specific affordable housing needs in their communities, the agency
shall make residential rental housing projects financed with an allocation of
tax-exempt bonds under chapter 474A the highest strategic priority for tax
credits under the agency's qualified allocation plan under section 42(m)(1)(D)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
(2) For projects eligible for an
allocation of tax credits under section 42(h)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended, the agency's qualified allocation plan and other related
agency guidance and requirements:
(i) shall not include any selection
criteria other than (A) the criteria of section 42(m)(1)(C) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and (B) whether the project has received an
allocation of tax-exempt bonds under chapter 474A, with subitem (B) as the most
important criteria;
(ii) shall grant projects receiving an
allocation of tax-exempt bonds under chapter 474A the highest possible
preference and, to the extent applicable, ahead of any preference described in
section 42(m)(1)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended;
(iii) shall exclude any per-unit cost
limitations, cost reasonableness, or other similar restrictions for residential
rental housing projects financed with an allocation of tax-exempt bonds under
chapter 474A; and
(iv) shall not adopt or impose any
additional rules, requirements, regulations, or restrictions other than those
required by section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,
regarding the allocation of credits.
Each developer of a residential rental
housing project that has received an allocation of tax-exempt bonds under
chapter 474A and the proposed issuer of such tax-exempt bonds shall have
standing to challenge the agency's qualified allocation plan for failure to
comply with this clause.
In the event of any conflict or
inconsistency between this paragraph and section 462A.04, the provisions of
this paragraph shall govern and control.
The provisions of paragraph (d) shall not apply to any allocating agency
other than the agency.
(e) For applications submitted for the first round, an allocating agency may allocate tax credits only to the following types of projects:
(1) in the metropolitan area:
(i) new construction or substantial rehabilitation of projects in which, for the term of the extended use period, at least 75 percent of the total tax credit units are single-room occupancy, efficiency, or one bedroom units and which are affordable by households whose income does not exceed 30 percent of the median income;
(ii) new construction or substantial rehabilitation family housing projects that are not restricted to persons who are 55 years of age or older and in which, for the term of the extended use period, at least 75 percent of the tax credit units contain two or more bedrooms and at least one-third of the 75 percent contain three or more bedrooms; or
(iii) substantial rehabilitation projects in neighborhoods targeted by the city for revitalization;
(2) outside the metropolitan area, projects which meet a locally identified housing need and which are in short supply in the local housing market as evidenced by credible data submitted with the application;
(3) projects that are not restricted to persons of a particular age group and in which, for the term of the extended use period, a percentage of the units are set aside and rented to persons:
(i) with a serious and persistent mental illness as defined in section 245.462, subdivision 20, paragraph (c);
(ii) with a developmental disability as defined in United States Code, title 42, section 6001, paragraph (5), as amended through December 31, 1990;
(iii) who have been assessed as drug dependent persons as defined in section 254A.02, subdivision 5, and are receiving or will receive care and treatment services provided by an approved treatment program as defined in section 254A.02, subdivision 2;
(iv) with a brain injury as defined in section 256B.093, subdivision 4, paragraph (a); or
(v) with permanent physical disabilities that substantially limit one or more major life activities, if at least 50 percent of the units in the project are accessible as provided under Minnesota Rules, chapter 1340;
(4) projects, whether or not restricted to persons of a particular age group, which preserve existing subsidized housing, if the use of tax credits is necessary to prevent conversion to market rate use or to remedy physical deterioration of the project which would result in loss of existing federal subsidies; or
(5) projects financed by the Farmers Home Administration, or its successor agency, which meet statewide distribution goals.
(f) Before the date for applications for the final round, the allocating agencies other than the agency shall return all uncommitted and unallocated tax credits to a unified pool for allocation by the agency on a statewide basis.
(g) Unused portions of the state ceiling for low-income housing tax credits reserved to cities and counties for allocation may be returned at any time to the agency for allocation.
(h) If an allocating agency determines, at any time after the initial commitment or allocation for a specific project, that a project is no longer eligible for all or a portion of the low-income housing tax credits committed or allocated to the project, the credits must be transferred to the agency to be reallocated pursuant to the procedures
established in paragraphs (f) to (h); provided that if the tax credits for which the project is no longer eligible are from the current year's annual ceiling and the allocating agency maintains a waiting list, the allocating agency may continue to commit or allocate the credits until not later than the date of applications for the final round, at which time any uncommitted credits must be transferred to the agency.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.24, is amended to read:
462A.24
CONSTRUCTION; GRANTS AND LOANS; PRIORITIES.
(a) This chapter is necessary for the welfare of the state of Minnesota and its inhabitants; therefore, it shall be liberally construed to effect its purpose.
(b) To the extent practicable, the
agency shall award grant and loan amounts with a reasonable balance between
nonmetropolitan and metropolitan areas of the state.
(c) Beginning with applications made in
response to requests for proposals issued after July 1, 2020, after final
decisions are made on applications for programs of the agency, the results of
any quantitative scoring system used to rank applications shall be posted on
the agency website.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.33, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Created. (a) The economic development and
housing challenge program is created to be administered by the agency. Notwithstanding section 462A.24, this
section shall be construed based on the specific language within this section
and within an appropriation pursuant to this section.
(a) (b) The program shall
provide grants or loans for the purpose of construction, acquisition,
rehabilitation, demolition or removal of existing structures, construction
financing, permanent financing, interest rate reduction, refinancing, and gap
financing of housing to support economic development and redevelopment
activities or job creation or job preservation within a community or region by
meeting locally identified housing needs.
Gap financing is either:
(1) the difference between the costs of the property, including acquisition, demolition, rehabilitation, and construction, and the market value of the property upon sale; or
(2) the difference between the cost of the property and the amount the targeted household can afford for housing, based on industry standards and practices.
(b) (c) Preference for grants
and loans shall be given to comparable proposals that include regulatory
changes or waivers that result in identifiable cost avoidance or cost
reductions, such as increased density, flexibility in site development
standards, or zoning code requirements. Preference
must also be given among comparable proposals to proposals for projects that
are accessible to transportation systems, jobs, schools, and other services.
(c) (d) If a grant or loan is
used for demolition or removal of existing structures, the cleared land must be
used for the construction of housing to be owned or rented by persons who meet
the income limits of this section or for other housing-related purposes that primarily
benefit the persons residing in the adjacent housing. In making selections for grants or loans for
projects that demolish affordable housing units, the agency must review the
potential displacement of residents and consider the extent to which displacement
of residents is minimized.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective July 1, 2020.
Sec. 27. [462A.355]
ADVANCES TO MINNESOTA MANUFACTURED HOME RELOCATION TRUST FUND.
(a) The Minnesota Housing Finance
Agency or Department of Management and Budget as determined by the commissioner
of management and budget, is authorized to advance up to $400,000 from state
appropriations or other resources to the Minnesota manufactured home relocation
trust fund established under section 462A.35 if the account balance in the
Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund is insufficient to pay the
amounts claimed under section 327C.095, subdivision 13.
(b) The Minnesota Housing Finance
Agency or Department of Management and Budget shall be reimbursed from the
Minnesota manufactured home relocation trust fund for any money advanced by the
agency under paragraph (a) to the fund. Approved
claims for payment to manufactured home owners shall be paid prior to the money
being advanced by the agency or the department to the fund.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 462A.38, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Establishment. A workforce and affordable homeownership development program is established to award homeownership development grants to cities, tribal governments, nonprofit organizations, cooperatives created under chapter 308A or 308B, and community land trusts created for the purposes outlined in section 462A.31, subdivision 1, for development of workforce and affordable homeownership projects. The purpose of the program is to increase the supply of workforce and affordable, owner-occupied multifamily or single-family housing throughout Minnesota.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a. Aggregate
bond limitation. "Aggregate
bond limitation" means up to 55 percent of the reasonably expected
aggregate basis of a residential rental project and the land on which the
project is or will be located.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1b. AMI. "AMI" means the area median
income for the applicable county or metropolitan area as published by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, as adjusted for household size.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 12a. LIHTC. "LIHTC" means low-income
housing tax credits under section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 21a. Preservation
project. "Preservation
project" means any residential rental project, regardless of whether or
not the project is restricted to persons of a certain age or older, that is
expected to generate low-income housing tax credits under section 42 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and (1) receives federal
project-based
rental assistance, or (2) is funded through a loan from or guaranteed by the
United States Department of Agriculture's Rural Development Program. In addition, to qualify as a preservation
project, the amount of bonds requested in the application must not exceed the
aggregate bond limitation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 30. 30
percent AMI residential rental project.
"30 percent AMI residential rental project" means a
residential rental project that does not otherwise qualify as a preservation
project, is expected to generate low‑income housing tax credits under
section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, from 100 percent
of its residential units, and in which:
(1) all the residential units of the
project:
(i) are reserved for tenants whose
income, on average, is 30 percent of AMI or less;
(ii)
are rent-restricted in accordance with section 42(g)(2) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended; and
(iii) are subject to rent and income
restrictions for a period of not less than 30 years; or
(2)(i) is located outside of the
metropolitan area as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2, and within a
county or metropolitan area that has a current median area gross income that is
less than the statewide area median income for Minnesota;
(ii) all of the units of the project
are rent-restricted in accordance with section 42(g)(2) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended; and
(iii) all of the units of the project
are subject to the applicable rent and income restrictions for a period of not
less than 30 years.
In addition, to qualify as a 30 percent
AMI residential project, the amount of bonds requested in the application must
not exceed the aggregate bond limitation.
For purposes of this subdivision,
"on average" means the average of the applicable income limitation
level for a project determined on a unit-by-unit basis for example, a project
with one-half of its units subject to income limitations of not greater than 20
percent AMI and one-half subject to income limitations of not greater than 40
percent AMI would be subject to an income limitation on average of not greater
than 30 percent AMI.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 31. 50
percent AMI residential rental project.
"50 percent AMI residential rental project" means a
residential rental project that does not qualify as a preservation project or
30 percent AMI residential rental project, is expected to generate low-income
housing tax credits under section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, from 100 percent of its residential units, and in which all the
residential units of the project:
(1) are reserved for tenants whose
income, on average, is 50 percent of AMI or less;
(2)
are rent-restricted in accordance with section 42(g)(2) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended; and
(3)
are subject to rent and income restrictions for a period of not less than 30
years.
In addition, to qualify as a 50 percent
AMI residential rental project, the amount of bonds requested in the
application must not exceed the aggregate bond limitation.
For purposes of this subdivision,
"on average" means the average of the applicable income limitation
level for a project determined on a unit-by-unit basis for example, a project
with one-half of its units subject to income limitations of not greater than 40
percent AMI and one-half subject to income limitations of not greater than
60 percent AMI would be subject to an income limitation on average of not
greater than 50 percent AMI.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 32. 100
percent LIHTC project. "100
percent LIHTC project" means a residential rental project that is expected
to generate low-income housing tax credits under section 42 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, from 100 percent of its residential units and
does not otherwise qualify as a preservation project, 30 percent AMI
residential rental project, or 50 percent AMI residential rental project. In addition, to qualify as a 100 percent
LIHTC project, the amount of bonds requested in the application must not exceed
the aggregate bond limitation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.02, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 33. 20
percent LIHTC project. "20
percent LIHTC project" means a residential rental project that is expected
to generate low-income housing tax credits under section 42 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, from at least 20 percent of its residential
units and does not otherwise qualify as a preservation project, 30 percent
AMI residential rental project, 50 percent AMI residential rental project, or
100 percent LIHTC project. In addition,
to qualify as a 20 percent LIHTC project, the amount of bonds requested in the
application must not exceed the aggregate bond limitation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.03, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Under federal tax law; allocations. At the beginning of each calendar year after December 31, 2001, the commissioner shall determine the aggregate dollar amount of the annual volume cap under federal tax law for the calendar year, and of this amount the commissioner shall make the following allocation:
(1) $74,530,000 to the small issue pool;
(2) $122,060,000 to the housing pool, of
which 31 27 percent of the adjusted allocation is reserved until
the last Monday in July June each year until 2021 for
single-family housing programs, after which 31 percent of the adjusted
allocation is reserved until the last Monday in June for single-family programs;
(3) $12,750,000 to the public facilities pool; and
(4) amounts to be allocated as provided in subdivision 2a.
If the annual volume cap is greater or less than the amount of bonding authority allocated under clauses (1) to (4) and subdivision 2a, paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (4), the allocation must be adjusted so that each adjusted allocation is the same percentage of the annual volume cap as each original allocation is of the total bonding authority originally allocated.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.04, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
Subd. 1a. Entitlement
reservations. Any amount returned by
an entitlement issuer before July 15 the last Monday in June
shall be reallocated through the housing pool.
Any amount returned on or after July 15 the last Monday in
June shall be reallocated through the unified pool. An amount returned after the last Monday in
November shall be reallocated to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Allocation
application; small issue pool and public facilities pool. (a) For any requested allocations from
the small issue pool and the public facilities pool, an issuer may apply
for an allocation under this section by submitting to the department an
application on forms provided by the department, accompanied by (1) a
preliminary resolution, (2) a statement of bond counsel that the proposed issue
of obligations requires an allocation under this chapter and the Internal
Revenue Code, (3) the type of qualified bonds to be issued, (4) an application
deposit in the amount of one percent of the requested allocation before the
last Monday in July June, or in the amount of two percent of the
requested allocation on or after the last Monday in July June, and
(5) a public purpose scoring worksheet for manufacturing project and enterprise
zone facility project applications, and (6) for residential rental projects,
a statement from the applicant or bond counsel as to whether the project
preserves existing federally subsidized housing for residential rental project
applications and whether the project is restricted to persons who are 55 years
of age or older. The issuer must pay
the application deposit by a check made payable to the Department of
Management and Budget. The Minnesota
Housing Finance Agency, the Minnesota Rural Finance Authority, and the
Minnesota Office of Higher Education may apply for and receive an allocation
under this section without submitting an application deposit.
(b) An entitlement issuer may not apply
for an allocation from the public facilities pool under this
subdivision unless it has either permanently issued bonds equal to the
amount of its entitlement allocation for the current year plus any amount of
bonding authority carried forward from previous years or returned for
reallocation all of its unused entitlement allocation. An entitlement issuer may not apply for an
allocation from the housing pool unless it either has permanently issued bonds
equal to any amount of bonding authority carried forward from a previous year
or has returned for reallocation any unused bonding authority carried forward
from a previous year. For purposes
of this subdivision, its entitlement allocation includes an amount obtained
under section 474A.04, subdivision 6. This
paragraph does not apply to an application from the Minnesota Housing Finance
Agency for an allocation under subdivision 2a for cities who choose to have the
agency issue bonds on their behalf.
(c) If an application is rejected under this section, the commissioner must notify the applicant and return the application deposit to the applicant within 30 days unless the applicant requests in writing that the application be resubmitted. The granting of an allocation of bonding authority under this section must be evidenced by a certificate of allocation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a. Allocation
application; housing pool. (a)
For any requested allocations from the housing pool, an issuer may apply for an
allocation under this section by submitting to the department an application on
forms provided by the department, accompanied by (1) a preliminary resolution,
(2) a statement of bond counsel that the proposed issue of obligations requires
an allocation under this chapter and the Internal Revenue Code, (3) an
application deposit in the amount of two percent of the requested allocation,
(4) a sworn statement from the applicant identifying the project as either a
preservation project, 30 percent AMI residential rental project, 50 percent
AMI residential rental project, 100 percent LIHTC project, 20 percent LIHTC
project, or any other residential rental project, and (5) a certification from
the applicant or its accountant stating that the requested allocation does not
exceed the aggregate bond limitation. The
issuer must pay the application deposit to the Department of Management and
Budget. The Minnesota Housing Finance
Agency may apply for and receive an allocation under this section without
submitting an application deposit.
(b) An entitlement issuer may not apply
for an allocation from the housing pool unless it either has permanently issued
bonds equal to any amount of bonding authority carried forward from a previous
year or has returned for reallocation any unused bonding authority carried
forward from a previous year. For
purposes of this subdivision, its entitlement allocation includes an amount
obtained under section 474A.04, subdivision 6.
This paragraph does not apply to an application from the Minnesota
Housing Finance Agency for an allocation under subdivision 2a for cities who
choose to have the agency issue bonds on the city's behalf.
(c) If an application is rejected under
this section, the commissioner must notify the applicant and return the
application deposit to the applicant within 30 days unless the applicant
requests in writing that the application be resubmitted. The granting of an allocation of bonding
authority under this section must be evidenced by a certificate of allocation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective
January 1, 2020.
Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd. 2a. Housing
pool allocation. (a) Commencing on
the second Tuesday in January and continuing on each Monday through July 15
the last Monday in June, the commissioner shall allocate available
bonding authority from the housing pool to applications received on or before
the Monday of the preceding week for residential rental projects that meet the
eligibility criteria under section 474A.047.
Allocations of available bonding authority from the housing pool for
eligible residential rental projects shall be awarded in the following order of
priority: (1) projects that preserve
existing federally subsidized housing; (2) projects that are not restricted to
persons who are 55 years of age or older; and (3) other residential rental
projects. Prior to May 15, no allocation
shall be made to a project restricted to persons who are 55 years of age or
older.
(1) preservation projects;
(2) 30 percent AMI residential rental
projects;
(3) 50 percent AMI residential rental
projects;
(4) 100 percent LIHTC projects;
(5) 20 percent LIHTC projects; and
(6) other residential rental projects
for which the amount of bonds requested in their respective applications do not
exceed the aggregate bond limitation.
If
an issuer that receives an allocation under this paragraph does not issue
obligations equal to all or a portion of the allocation received within 120
days of the allocation or returns the allocation to the commissioner, the
amount of the allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation through the
housing pool or to the unified pool after July 15. If there are two or more applications for
residential rental projects at the same priority level and there is
insufficient bonding authority to provide allocations for all the projects in
any one allocation period, available bonding authority shall be randomly
awarded by lot but only for projects that can receive the full amount of their
respective requested allocations. If a
residential rental project does not receive any of its requested allocation
pursuant to this paragraph and the project applies for an allocation of bonds
again in the same calendar year or to the next successive housing pool, the project
shall be fully funded up to its original application request for bonding
authority before any new project, applying in the same allocation period, that
has an equal priority shall receive bonding authority. An issuer that receives an allocation under
this paragraph must issue obligations equal to all or a portion of the
allocation received on or before 180 days of the allocation. If an issuer that receives an allocation
under this paragraph does not issue obligations equal to all or a portion of
the allocation received within the time period provided in this paragraph or
returns the allocation to the commissioner, the amount of the allocation is
canceled and returned for reallocation through the housing pool or to the
unified pool after July 1.
(b) After January 1, and through January 15, The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency may accept applications from cities for single-family housing programs which meet program requirements as follows:
(1) the housing program must meet a locally identified housing need and be economically viable;
(2) the adjusted income of home buyers may not exceed 80 percent of the greater of statewide or area median income as published by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, adjusted for household size;
(3) house price limits may not exceed the federal price limits established for mortgage revenue bond programs. Data on the home purchase price amount, mortgage amount, income, household size, and race of the households served in the previous year's single-family housing program, if any, must be included in each application; and
(4) for applicants who choose to have the agency issue bonds on their behalf, an application fee pursuant to section 474A.03, subdivision 4, and an application deposit equal to one percent of the requested allocation must be submitted to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency before the agency forwards the list specifying the amounts allocated to the commissioner under paragraph (d). The agency shall submit the city's application fee and application deposit to the commissioner when requesting an allocation from the housing pool.
Applications by a consortium shall include the name of each member of the consortium and the amount of allocation requested by each member.
(c) Any amounts remaining in the housing
pool after July June 15 are available for single-family housing
programs for cities that applied in January and received an allocation under
this section in the same calendar year. For
a city that chooses to issue bonds on its own behalf or pursuant to a joint
powers agreement, the agency must allot available bonding authority based on
the formula in paragraphs (d) and (f). Allocations
will be made loan by loan, on a first-come, first-served basis among cities on
whose behalf the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency issues bonds.
Any city that received an allocation
pursuant to paragraph (f) in the same calendar year that wishes to issue bonds
on its own behalf or pursuant to a joint powers agreement for an amount
becoming available for single-family housing programs after July June
15 shall notify the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency by July June
15. The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency
shall notify each city making a request of the amount of its allocation within
three business days after July June 15. The city must comply with paragraph (f).
For purposes of paragraphs (a) to (h), "city" means a county or a consortium of local government units that agree through a joint powers agreement to apply together for single-family housing programs, and has the meaning given it in section 462C.02, subdivision 6. "Agency" means the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency.
(d) The total amount of allocation for mortgage bonds for one city is limited to the lesser of: (i) the amount requested, or (ii) the product of the total amount available for mortgage bonds from the housing pool, multiplied by the ratio of each applicant's population as determined by the most recent estimate of the city's population released by the state demographer's office to the total of all the applicants' population, except that each applicant shall be allocated a minimum of $100,000 regardless of the amount requested or the amount determined under the formula in clause (ii). If a city applying for an allocation is located within a county that has also applied for an allocation, the city's population will be deducted from the county's population in calculating the amount of allocations under this paragraph.
Upon determining the amount of each applicant's allocation, the agency shall forward to the commissioner a list specifying the amounts allotted to each application with all application fees and deposits from applicants who choose to have the agency issue bonds on their behalf.
Total allocations from the housing pool
for single-family housing programs may not exceed 31 27 percent
of the adjusted allocation to the housing pool until after July June
15 in 2020 and 2021, after which the allocations may not exceed 31 percent
of the adjusted allocation to the housing pool until after June 15.
(e) The agency may issue bonds on behalf
of participating cities. The agency
shall request an allocation from the commissioner for all applicants who choose
to have the agency issue bonds on their behalf and the commissioner shall
allocate the requested amount to the agency.
The agency may request an allocation at any time after the second
Tuesday in January and through the last Monday in July June. After awarding an allocation and receiving a
notice of issuance for the mortgage bonds issued on behalf of the participating
cities, the commissioner shall transfer the application deposits to the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency to be returned to the participating cities. The Minnesota Housing Finance Agency shall
return any application deposit to a city that paid an application deposit under
paragraph (b), clause (4), but was not part of the list forwarded to the
commissioner under paragraph (d).
(f) A city may choose to issue bonds on
its own behalf or through a joint powers agreement and may request an
allocation from the commissioner by forwarding an application with an
application fee pursuant to section 474A.03, subdivision 4, and a one percent
application deposit to the commissioner no later than the Monday of the week
preceding an allocation. If the total
amount requested by all applicants exceeds the amount available in the pool,
the city may not receive a greater allocation than the amount it would have
received under the list forwarded by the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency to
the commissioner. No city may request or
receive an allocation from the commissioner until the list under paragraph (d)
has been forwarded to the commissioner. A
city must request an allocation from the commissioner no later than the last
Monday in July June. No
city may receive an allocation from the housing pool for mortgage bonds which
has not first applied to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. The commissioner shall allocate the requested
amount to the city or cities subject to the limitations under this paragraph.
If a city issues mortgage bonds from an allocation received under this paragraph, the issuer must provide for the recycling of funds into new loans. If the issuer is not able to provide for recycling, the issuer must notify the commissioner in writing of the reason that recycling was not possible and the reason the issuer elected not to have the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency issue the bonds. "Recycling" means the use of money generated from the repayment and prepayment of loans for further eligible loans or for the redemption of bonds and the issuance of current refunding bonds.
(g) No entitlement city or county or city in an entitlement county may apply for or be allocated authority to issue mortgage bonds or use mortgage credit certificates from the housing pool. No city in an entitlement county may apply for or be allocated authority to issue residential rental bonds from the housing pool or the unified pool.
(h) A city that does not use at least 50
percent of its allotment by the date applications are due for the first
allocation that is made from the housing pool for single-family housing
programs in the immediately succeeding calendar year may not apply to the
housing pool for a single-family mortgage bond or mortgage credit certificate
program allocation that exceeds the amount of its allotment for the preceding
year that was used by the city in the immediately preceding year or receive an
allotment from the housing pool in the succeeding calendar year that exceeds
the amount of its allotment for the preceding year that was used in the
preceding year. The minimum allotment is
$100,000 for an allocation made prior to July June 15, regardless
of the amount used in the preceding calendar year, except that a city whose
allocation in the preceding year was the minimum amount of $100,000 and who did
not use at least 50 percent of its allocation from the preceding year is
ineligible for an allocation in the immediate succeeding calendar year. Each local government unit in a consortium
must meet the requirements of this paragraph.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, subdivision 2b, is amended to read:
Subd. 2b. Small
issue pool allocation. Commencing on
the second Tuesday in January and continuing on each Monday through the last
Monday in July June, the commissioner shall allocate available
bonding authority from the small issue pool to applications received on or
before the Monday of the preceding week for manufacturing projects and
enterprise zone facility projects. From
the second Tuesday in January through the last Monday in July June,
the commissioner shall reserve $5,000,000 of the available bonding authority
from the small issue pool for applications for agricultural development bond
loan projects of the Minnesota Rural Finance Authority.
Beginning in calendar year 2002, on the
second Tuesday in January through the last Monday in July June,
the commissioner shall reserve $10,000,000 of available bonding authority in
the small issue pool for applications for student loan bonds of or on behalf of
the Minnesota Office of Higher Education.
The total amount of allocations for student loan bonds from the small
issue pool may not exceed $10,000,000 per year.
The commissioner shall reserve $10,000,000 until the day after the last Monday in February, $10,000,000 until the day after the last Monday in April, and $10,000,000 until the day after the last Monday in June in the small issue pool for enterprise zone facility projects and manufacturing projects. The amount of allocation provided to an issuer for a specific enterprise zone facility project or manufacturing project will be based on the number of points received for the proposed project under the scoring system under section 474A.045.
If there are two or more applications for manufacturing and enterprise zone facility projects from the small issue pool and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide allocations for all projects in any one week, the available bonding authority shall be awarded based on the number of points awarded a project under section 474A.045, with those projects receiving the greatest number of points receiving allocation first. If two or more applications receive an equal number of points, available bonding authority shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective issuers.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, subdivision 2c, is amended to read:
Subd. 2c. Public
facilities pool allocation. From the
beginning of the calendar year and continuing for a period of 120 days, the
commissioner shall reserve $5,000,000 of the available bonding authority from
the public facilities pool for applications for public facilities projects to
be financed by the Western Lake Superior Sanitary District. Commencing on the second Tuesday in January
and continuing on each Monday through the last Monday in July June,
the commissioner shall allocate available bonding authority from the public
facilities pool to applications for eligible public facilities projects
received on or before the Monday of the preceding week. If there are two or more applications for
public facilities projects from the pool and there is insufficient available
bonding authority to provide allocations for all projects in any one week, the
available bonding authority shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to
by the respective issuers.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Return
of allocation; deposit refund for small issue pool or public facilities pool. (a) For any requested allocations from
the small issue pool or the public facilities pool, if an issuer that
receives an allocation under this section determines that it will not issue
obligations equal to all or a portion of the allocation received under this
section within 120 days of allocation or within the time period permitted by
federal tax law, whichever is less, the issuer must notify the department. If the issuer notifies the department or the
120-day period since allocation has expired prior to the last Monday in July
June, the amount of allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation
through the pool from which it was originally allocated. If the issuer notifies the department or the
120‑day period since allocation has expired on or after the last Monday
in July June, the amount of allocation is canceled and returned
for reallocation through the unified pool.
If the issuer notifies the department after the last Monday in November,
the amount of allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation to the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. To
encourage a competitive application process, the commissioner shall reserve,
for new applications, the amount of allocation that is canceled and returned
for reallocation under this section for a minimum of seven calendar days.
(b) An issuer that returns for reallocation
all or a portion of an allocation received under this section subdivision
within 120 days of allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund equal to:
(1) one-half of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned within 30 days of receiving allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 31 and 60 days of receiving allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 61 and 120 days of receiving allocation.
(c) No refund shall be available for allocations returned 120 or more days after receiving the allocation or beyond the last Monday in November.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.061, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Return
of allocation; deposit refund for housing pool. (a) For any requested allocations from
the housing pool, if an issuer that receives an allocation under this section
determines that it will not permanently issue obligations equal to all or a
portion of the allocation received under this section within the time period
provided
under
section 474A.061, subdivision 2a, paragraph (a), or within the time period
permitted by federal tax law, whichever is less, the issuer must notify the
department. If the issuer notifies the
department or the time period provided under section 474A.061, subdivision 2a,
paragraph (a), has expired prior to the last Monday in June, the amount of
allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation through the housing pool. If the issuer notifies the department or the
time period provided under section 474A.061, subdivision 2a, paragraph (a), has
expired on or after the last Monday in June, the amount of allocation is
canceled and returned for reallocation through the unified pool. If the issuer notifies the department after
the last Monday in November, the amount of allocation is canceled and returned
for reallocation to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. To encourage a competitive application
process, the commissioner shall reserve, for new applications, the amount of
allocation that is canceled and returned for reallocation under this section
for a minimum of seven calendar days.
(b) An issuer that returns for
reallocation all or a portion of an allocation received under this subdivision
within 180 days of allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund equal to:
(1) one-half of the application deposit
for the amount of bonding authority returned within 45 days of receiving
allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the application
deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 46 and 90 days of
receiving allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the application
deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 91 and 180 days of
receiving allocation.
(c) No refund shall be available for
allocations returned 180 or more days after receiving the allocation or beyond
the last Monday in November.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.062, is amended to read:
474A.062
MINNESOTA OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION 120-DAY ISSUANCE EXEMPTION.
The Minnesota Office of Higher Education is
exempt from the 120-day any time limitation on issuance requirements
of bonds set forth in this chapter and may carry forward allocations for
student loan bonds, subject to carryforward notice requirements of section
474A.131, subdivision 2.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.091, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Unified
pool amount. On the day after the
last Monday in July June any bonding authority remaining
unallocated from the small issue pool, the housing pool, and the public
facilities pool is transferred to the unified pool and must be reallocated as
provided in this section.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is effective
January 1, 2020.
Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.091, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Application for residential rental projects. (a) Issuers may apply for an allocation for residential rental bonds under this section by submitting to the department an application on forms provided by the department accompanied by:
(1)
a preliminary resolution,;
(2) a statement of bond counsel that the
proposed issue of obligations requires an allocation under this chapter and the
Internal Revenue Code,;
(3) the type of qualified bonds to be
issued, (4) an application deposit in the amount of two percent of the
requested allocation, (5) a public purpose scoring worksheet for
manufacturing and enterprise zone applications, and (6) for residential rental
projects, a statement from the applicant or bond counsel as to whether the
project preserves existing federally subsidized housing and whether the project
is restricted to persons who are 55 years of age or older.;
(4) a sworn statement from the applicant identifying the project as a preservation project, 30 percent AMI residential rental project, 50 percent AMI residential rental project, 100 percent LIHTC project, 20 percent LIHTC project, or any other residential rental project; and
(5) a certification from the applicant or its accountant stating that the requested allocation does not exceed the aggregate bond limitation.
The issuer must pay the application deposit by check to
the Department of Management and Budget.
An entitlement issuer may not apply for an allocation for public
facility bonds, residential rental project bonds, or mortgage bonds
under this section unless it has either permanently issued bonds equal to the
amount of its entitlement allocation for the current year plus any amount
carried forward from previous years or returned for reallocation all of its
unused entitlement allocation. For
purposes of this subdivision, its entitlement allocation includes an amount
obtained under section 474A.04, subdivision 6.
(b) An issuer that receives an
allocation under this subdivision must permanently issue obligations equal to
all or a portion of the allocation received on or before 180 days of the
allocation. If an issuer that receives
an allocation under this subdivision does not permanently issue obligations
equal to all or a portion of the allocation received within the time period
provided in this paragraph or returns the allocation to the commissioner, the
amount of the allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation through the
unified pool.
(c) Notwithstanding the
restrictions imposed on entitlement issuers under this subdivision, the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency may not receive an allocation for mortgage
bonds under this section prior to the first Monday in October, but may be
awarded allocations for mortgage bonds from the unified pool on or after the
first Monday in October. The
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency, the Minnesota Office of Higher Education,
and the Minnesota Rural Finance Authority may apply for and receive an
allocation under this section without submitting an application deposit.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.091, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a. Application
for all other types of qualified bonds.
(a) Issuers may apply for an allocation for all types of
qualified bonds other than residential rental bonds under this section by
submitting to the department an application on forms provided by the department
accompanied by:
(1) a preliminary resolution;
(2) a statement of bond counsel that
the proposed issue of obligations requires an allocation under this chapter and
the Internal Revenue Code;
(3)
the type of qualified bonds to be issued;
(4) an application deposit in the
amount of two percent of the requested allocation; and
(5) a public purpose scoring worksheet
for manufacturing and enterprise zone applications.
The issuer must pay the application deposit to the
Department of Management and Budget. An
entitlement issuer may not apply for an allocation for public facility bonds or
mortgage bonds under this section unless it has either permanently issued bonds
equal to the amount of its entitlement allocation for the current year plus any
amount carried forward from previous years or returned for reallocation all of
its unused entitlement allocation. For
purposes of this subdivision, an entitlement allocation includes an amount
obtained under section 474A.04, subdivision 6.
(b) An issuer that receives an allocation
under this subdivision must permanently issue obligations equal to all or a
portion of the allocation received on or before 120 days of the allocation. If an issuer that receives an allocation under
this subdivision does not permanently issue obligations equal to all or a
portion of the allocation received within the time period provided in this
paragraph or returns the allocation to the commissioner, the amount of the
allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation through the unified pool.
(c) Notwithstanding the restrictions
imposed on entitlement issuers under this subdivision, the Minnesota Housing
Finance Agency may not receive an allocation for mortgage bonds under this
section prior to the first Monday in October, but may be awarded allocations
for mortgage bonds from the unified pool on or after the first Monday in
October. The Minnesota Housing Finance
Agency, the Minnesota Office of Higher Education, and the Minnesota Rural
Finance Authority may apply for and receive an allocation under this section
without submitting an application deposit.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.091, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Allocation
procedure. (a) The commissioner
shall allocate available bonding authority under this section on the Monday of
every other week beginning with the first Monday in August July
through and on the last Monday in November.
Applications for allocations must be received by the department by 4:30 p.m.
on the Monday preceding the Monday on which allocations are to be made. If a Monday falls on a holiday, the
allocation will be made or the applications must be received by the next business
day after the holiday.
(b) Prior to October 1, only the following applications shall be awarded allocations from the unified pool. Allocations shall be awarded in the following order of priority:
(1) applications for residential rental project bonds;
(2) applications for small issue bonds for manufacturing projects; and
(3) applications for small issue bonds for agricultural development bond loan projects.
(c) On the first Monday in October through the last Monday in November, allocations shall be awarded from the unified pool in the following order of priority:
(1) applications for student loan bonds issued by or on behalf of the Minnesota Office of Higher Education;
(2) applications for mortgage bonds;
(3) applications for public facility projects funded by public facility bonds;
(4) applications for small issue bonds for manufacturing projects;
(5) applications for small issue bonds for agricultural development bond loan projects;
(6) applications for residential rental project bonds;
(7) applications for enterprise zone facility bonds;
(8) applications for governmental bonds; and
(9) applications for redevelopment bonds.
(d) If there are two or more applications for manufacturing projects from the unified pool and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide allocations for all manufacturing projects in any one allocation period, the available bonding authority shall be awarded based on the number of points awarded a project under section 474A.045 with those projects receiving the greatest number of points receiving allocation first. If two or more applications for manufacturing projects receive an equal amount of points, available bonding authority shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective issuers.
(e) If there are two or more applications for enterprise zone facility projects from the unified pool and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide allocations for all enterprise zone facility projects in any one allocation period, the available bonding authority shall be awarded based on the number of points awarded a project under section 474A.045 with those projects receiving the greatest number of points receiving allocation first. If two or more applications for enterprise zone facility projects receive an equal amount of points, available bonding authority shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective issuers.
(f) If there are two or more applications
for residential rental projects from the unified pool and there is insufficient
bonding authority to provide allocations for all residential rental projects in
any one allocation period, the available bonding authority shall be awarded in
the following order of priority: (1) projects
that preserve existing federally subsidized housing; (2) projects that are not
restricted to persons who are 55 years of age or older; and (3) preservation
projects; (2) 30 percent AMI residential rental projects; (3) 50 percent AMI
residential rental projects for which the amount of bonds requested in their
respective applications do not exceed the aggregate bond limitations; (4) 100
percent LIHTC projects; (5) 20 percent LIHTC projects; and (6) other
residential rental projects. If there
are two or more applications for residential rental projects at the same
priority level and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide
allocations for all the projects in any one allocation period, available
bonding authority shall be randomly awarded by lot but only for projects that
can receive the full amount of their respective requested allocations. If a residential rental project does not
receive any of its requested allocation pursuant to this paragraph and the
project applies in the next successive housing pool or the next successive
unified pool for an allocation of bonds, the project shall be fully funded up
to its original application request for bonding authority before any new
project, applying in the same allocation period, that has an equal priority
shall receive bonding authority.
(g) From the first Monday in August July
through the last Monday in November, $20,000,000 of bonding authority or an
amount equal to the total annual amount of bonding authority allocated to the
small issue pool under section 474A.03, subdivision 1, less the amount
allocated to issuers from the small issue pool for that year, whichever is
less, is reserved within the unified pool for small issue bonds to the extent such
the amounts are available within the unified pool.
(h) The total amount of allocations for mortgage bonds from the housing pool and the unified pool may not exceed:
(1) $10,000,000 for any one city; or
(2) $20,000,000 for any number of cities in any one county.
(i) The
total amount of allocations for student loan bonds from the unified pool may
not exceed $25,000,000 per year.
(j) If there is insufficient bonding authority to fund all projects within any qualified bond category other than enterprise zone facility projects, manufacturing projects, and residential rental projects, allocations shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective issuers.
(k) If an application is rejected, the commissioner must notify the applicant and return the application deposit to the applicant within 30 days unless the applicant requests in writing that the application be resubmitted.
(l) The granting of an allocation of bonding authority under this section must be evidenced by issuance of a certificate of allocation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.091, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Return
of allocation; deposit refund. (a)
If an issuer that receives an allocation under this section determines that it
will not permanently issue obligations equal to all or a portion of the
allocation received under this section within 120 the applicable
number of days of after the allocation required in this
chapter or within the time period permitted by federal tax law, whichever
is less, the issuer must notify the department.
If the issuer notifies the department or the 120-day applicable
period since allocation has expired prior to the last Monday in November, the
amount of allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation through the
unified pool. If the issuer notifies the
department on or after the last Monday in November, the amount of allocation is
canceled and returned for reallocation to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. To encourage a competitive application
process, the commissioner shall reserve, for new applications, the amount of
allocation that is canceled and returned for reallocation under this section
for a minimum of seven calendar days.
(b) An issuer that returns for reallocation all or a portion of an allocation for all types of bonds other than residential rental project bonds received under this section within 120 days of the allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund equal to:
(1) one-half of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned within 30 days of receiving the allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 31 and 60 days of receiving the allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 61 and 120 days of receiving the allocation.
(c) An issuer that returns for
reallocation all or a portion of an allocation for residential rental project
bonds received under this section within 180 days of the allocation shall
receive within 30 days a refund equal to:
(1)
one-half of the application deposit for the amount of bonding authority
returned within 45 days of receiving the allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the application
deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 46 and 90 days of
receiving the allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the application
deposit for the amount of bonding authority returned between 91 and 180 days of
receiving the allocation.
(c) (d) No refund of the
application deposit shall be available for allocations returned on or after the
last Monday in November.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.131, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Notice
of issue. (a) Each issuer that
issues bonds with an allocation received under this chapter shall provide a
notice of issue to the department on forms provided by the department stating:
(1) the date of issuance of the bonds;
(2) the title of the issue;
(3) the principal amount of the bonds;
(4) the type of qualified bonds under federal tax law;
(5) the dollar amount of the bonds issued that were subject to the annual volume cap; and
(6) for entitlement issuers, whether the allocation is from current year entitlement authority or is from carryforward authority.
For obligations that are issued as a part of a series of obligations, a notice must be provided for each series. A penalty of one-half of the amount of the application deposit not to exceed $5,000 shall apply to any issue of obligations for which a notice of issue is not provided to the department within five business days after issuance or before 4:30 p.m. on the last business day in December, whichever occurs first. Within 30 days after receipt of a notice of issue the department shall refund a portion of the application deposit equal to one percent of the amount of the bonding authority actually issued if a one percent application deposit was made, or equal to two percent of the amount of the bonding authority actually issued if a two percent application deposit was made, less any penalty amount.
(b) If an issuer that receives an
allocation under this chapter for a residential rental project issues
obligations as provided in this chapter, the commissioner shall refund 50
percent of any application deposit previously paid within 30 days of the
issuance of the obligations and the remaining 50 percent will be refunded
within 30 days after the date on which:
(1) final Internal Revenue Service Forms 8609 are provided to the commissioner with respect to preservation projects, 30 percent AMI residential rental projects, 50 percent AMI residential rental projects, 100 percent LIHTC projects, or 20 percent LIHTC projects, or
(2)
the issuer provides a certification and any other reasonable documentation
requested by the commissioner evidencing that construction of the project has
been completed.
If the issuer receives an allocation
under this chapter for a residential rental project and fails to issue the
bonds within the time permitted by federal law, the application deposit shall
be forfeited.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.131, subdivision 1b, is amended to read:
Subd. 1b. Deadline for issuance of qualified bonds. If an issuer fails to notify the department before 4:30 p.m. on the last business day in December of the permanent issuance of obligations pursuant to an allocation received for any qualified bond project or issuance of an entitlement allocation, the allocation is canceled and the bonding authority is allocated to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency for carryforward by the commissioner under section 474A.091, subdivision 6.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.14, is amended to read:
474A.14
NOTICE OF AVAILABLE AUTHORITY.
The department shall provide at its
official website a written notice of the amount of bonding authority in the
housing, small issue, and public facilities pools as soon after January 1 as
possible. The department shall provide
at its official website a written notice of the amount of bonding authority
available for allocation in the unified pool as soon after August July
1 as possible.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 474A.21, is amended to read:
474A.21
APPROPRIATION; RECEIPTS.
Any fees collected by the department under sections 474A.01 to 474A.21 must be deposited in a separate account in the general fund. The amount necessary to refund application deposits is appropriated to the department from the separate account in the general fund for that purpose. The interest accruing on application deposits and any application deposit not refunded as provided under section 474A.061, subdivision 4 or 7, or 474A.091, subdivision 5, or forfeited as provided under section 474A.131, subdivision 1, paragraph (b), or subdivision 2, must be deposited in the housing trust fund account under section 462A.201.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective January 1, 2020.
Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 504B.111, is amended to read:
504B.111
WRITTEN LEASE REQUIRED; PENALTY.
A landlord of a residential building with 12 or more residential units must have a written lease for each unit rented to a residential tenant. The written lease must identify the specific unit the residential tenant will occupy before the residential tenant signs the lease. Notwithstanding any other state law or city ordinance to the contrary, a landlord may ask for the tenant's full name and date of birth on the lease and application. A landlord who fails to provide a lease, as required under this section, is guilty of a petty misdemeanor.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to leases entered into
or renewed on or after that date.
Sec. 57. [504B.146]
LEASE DURATION NOTICE.
A written lease for a residential unit
must identify the lease start date and lease end date. If the lease requires the tenant to move in
or out of the residential unit on a date other than the first or last day of
the month, and the rent is prorated, then the lease must indicate the amount of
the prorated rent for the relevant months.
The information required by this section must be provided on the first
page of the lease.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to leases entered into
or renewed on or after that date.
Sec. 58. [504B.147]
TIME PERIOD FOR NOTICE TO QUIT OR RENT INCREASE.
Subdivision 1. Application. This section applies to a residential
lease that provides a time period for the landlord to give notice to quit the
premises or notice of a rent increase that is different than the time period
the tenant is required to give for notice of intention to quit the premises. For purposes of this section, "notice to
quit" includes a notice of nonrenewal of a lease.
Subd. 2. Tenant
option to choose notice period. The
tenant may give notice of an intention to quit the premises using either:
(1) the time period provided in the
lease for the tenant to give a notice of intention to quit the premises; or
(2) the time period provided in the
lease for the landlord to give a notice to quit the premises or notice of a
rent increase.
Subd. 3. Landlord
notice requirements. The
landlord may not give a notice to quit the premises or notice of a rent
increase that is shorter than the time period the lease provides for the tenant
to give notice of an intention to quit the premises.
Subd. 4. No
waiver. The requirements of
this section may not be waived or modified by the parties to a residential lease. Any provision, whether oral or written, of a
lease or other agreement by which any provision of this section is waived by a
tenant is contrary to public policy and void.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to leases entered into
or renewed on or after that date.
Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 504B.206, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Liability for rent; termination of tenancy. (a) A tenant who is a sole tenant and is terminating a lease under subdivision 1 is responsible for the rent payment for the full month in which the tenancy terminates. The tenant forfeits all claims for the return of the security deposit under section 504B.178 and is relieved of any other contractual obligation for payment of rent or any other charges for the remaining term of the lease, except as provided in this section. In a sole tenancy, the tenancy terminates on the date specified in the notice provided to the landlord as required under subdivision 1.
(b) In a tenancy with multiple tenants,
one of whom is terminating the lease under subdivision 1, any lease governing
all tenants is terminated at the latter later of the end of the
month or the end of the rent interval in which one tenant terminates the lease
under subdivision 1. All tenants are
responsible for the rent payment for the full month in which the tenancy
terminates. Upon termination, all
tenants forfeit all claims for the return of the security
deposit under section 504B.178 and are relieved of any other contractual obligation for payment of rent or any other charges for the remaining term of the lease, except as provided in this section. Any tenant whose tenancy was terminated under this paragraph may reapply to enter into a new lease with the landlord.
(c) This section does not affect a tenant's liability for delinquent, unpaid rent or other amounts owed to the landlord before the lease was terminated by the tenant under this section.
Sec. 60. ITASCA
COUNTY; CERTAIN FEES MAY BE REGULATED.
Itasca County may adopt an ordinance to
regulate license fee increases that may be imposed on a homeowner by the owner
or licensor of the underlying land on which the house is located. If the county adopts an ordinance under this
section, the ordinance must limit any license fee increase to no more than ten
percent of the license fee charged in the preceding 12-month period. In addition, the ordinance must not allow
more than one increase in a 12-month period.
"License fee" means a fee paid by a licensee pursuant to a
license agreement granting the licensee permission to use, enter, or occupy an
owner's or licensor's property. The
ordinance adopted may only apply to fees imposed pursuant to license agreements
entered into or renewed on or after the effective date of the ordinance.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 61. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section
327C.095, subdivision 8, is repealed.
ARTICLE 7
BROADBAND DEVELOPMENT
Section 1. BROADBAND
DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS. |
The sums shown in the columns marked
"Appropriations" are appropriated to the agencies and for the
purposes specified in this article. The
appropriations are from the general fund, or another named fund, and are
available for the fiscal years indicated for each purpose. The figures "2020" and
"2021" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, or June 30, 2021,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2020. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2021. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2020 and 2021.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2020 |
2021 |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT
OF EMPLOYMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT |
$20,250,000 |
|
$20,250,000 |
(a) $250,000 each year is for the Broadband
Development Office.
(b) $20,000,000 in fiscal year 2020 and $20,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 are appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of employment and economic development for deposit in the border-to-border broadband fund account under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.396. The appropriation is onetime and must be used for grants and the purposes specified under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.395."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to state government; establishing a budget for the Department of Agriculture, the Board of Animal Health, the Agricultural Utilization Research Institute, the Housing Finance Agency, and broadband development; making policy and technical changes to various provisions related to agriculture, food, rural development, and housing, including provisions related to grants, loans, pesticides, fertilizer, hemp, pastures, bioincentive programs, grain buyers, grain warehouses, manufactured homes, Housing Finance Agency loans and grants, Minnesota Bond Allocation Act, and residential leases; authorizing rulemaking; requiring reports; providing penalties and fees; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 17.041, subdivision 1; 17.118, subdivision 2; 18B.07, subdivision 2; 18C.425, subdivision 6; 18C.70, subdivision 5; 18C.71, subdivisions 1, 4; 18C.80, subdivision 2; 18K.02, subdivision 3; 18K.03; 28A.16; 41A.15, subdivisions 2, 10, by adding a subdivision; 41A.16, subdivisions 1, 2, 4; 41A.17, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 41A.18, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 41B.02, subdivision 10a, as amended; 41B.045; 41B.055, subdivision 4; 116.06, by adding a subdivision; 116.07, subdivisions 7, 7d; 223.16, subdivisions 1, 2a, 4; 223.17, subdivisions 3, 4, 5, 6; 223.177, subdivisions 2, 3; 223.19; 232.21, subdivision 7, by adding subdivisions; 232.22, subdivisions 3, 4; 232.23, subdivision 3; 232.24; 299D.085, by adding a subdivision; 326B.815, subdivision 1; 327.31, by adding a subdivision; 327B.041; 327C.01, by adding a subdivision; 327C.095, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13, by adding a subdivision; 428A.11, subdivisions 4, 6; 462A.2035, subdivisions 1a, 1b; 462A.209, subdivision 8; 462A.22, subdivision 9; 462A.222, subdivision 3; 462A.24; 462A.33, subdivision 1; 462A.38, subdivision 1; 474A.02, by adding subdivisions; 474A.03, subdivision 1; 474A.04, subdivision 1a; 474A.061, subdivisions 1, 2a, 2b, 2c, 4, by adding subdivisions; 474A.062; 474A.091, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 5, by adding a subdivision; 474A.131, subdivisions 1, 1b; 474A.14; 474A.21; 504B.111; 504B.206, subdivision 3; Laws 2015, First Special Session chapter 4, article 1, section 2, subdivision 4, as amended; Laws 2017, chapter 88, article 1, section 2, subdivisions 2, 4; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 18D; 223; 327; 462A; 504B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 41A.15, subdivisions 2a, 2b; 327C.095, subdivision 8."
We request the adoption of this report and repassage of the bill.
Senate
Conferees: Torrey N. Westrom, Bill Weber, Michael P. Goggin and Rich Draheim.
House Conferees: Jeanne Poppe, Alice Hausman, Gene Pelowski Jr., Todd Lippert and Bob Gunther.
Poppe moved that the report of the
Conference Committee on S. F. No. 2226 be adopted and that the
bill be repassed as amended by the Conference Committee.
Garofalo moved that the House refuse to
adopt the report of the Conference Committee on S. F. No. 2226
and that the bill be returned to the Conference Committee.
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
The
Speaker resumed the Chair.
LAY
ON THE TABLE
Winkler moved that the report of the
Conference Committee relating to S. F. No. 2226 be laid on the
table. The motion prevailed.
ADJOURNMENT
Winkler moved that when the House adjourns
today it adjourn until 12:00 noon, Tuesday, February 11, 2020. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 12:00 noon, Tuesday, February 11,
2020.
Patrick
D. Murphy, Chief
Clerk, House of Representatives