STATE OF
MINNESOTA
NINETY-SECOND
SESSION - 2021
_____________________
THIRTY-EIGHTH
DAY
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Wednesday, April 14, 2021
The House of Representatives convened at
10:30 a.m. and was called to order by Dan Wolgamott, Speaker pro tempore.
Prayer was offered by the Reverend Kevin
Schill, Retired United Methodist Pastor, New Brighton, 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
Agbaje
Akland
Anderson
Backer
Bahner
Bahr
Baker
Becker-Finn
Bennett
Berg
Bernardy
Bierman
Bliss
Boldon
Burkel
Carlson
Christensen
Daniels
Daudt
Davids
Davnie
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Erickson
Feist
Fischer
Franke
Franson
Frazier
Frederick
Freiberg
Garofalo
Gomez
Green
Greenman
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Haley
Hamilton
Hansen, R.
Hanson, J.
Hassan
Hausman
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Her
Hertaus
Hollins
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Igo
Johnson
Jordan
Jurgens
Keeler
Kiel
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Koznick
Kresha
Lee
Liebling
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Long
Lucero
Lueck
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
McDonald
Mekeland
Miller
Moller
Moran
Morrison
Mortensen
Mueller
Munson
Murphy
Nash
Nelson, M.
Nelson, N.
Neu Brindley
Noor
Novotny
O'Driscoll
Olson, B.
Olson, L.
O'Neill
Pelowski
Petersburg
Pfarr
Pierson
Pinto
Poston
Pryor
Quam
Raleigh
Rasmusson
Reyer
Richardson
Robbins
Sandell
Sandstede
Schomacker
Schultz
Scott
Stephenson
Sundin
Swedzinski
Theis
Thompson
Torkelson
Urdahl
Vang
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
A quorum was present.
Albright, Boe, West and Xiong, T., were
excused.
The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the
Journal of the preceding day. There
being no objection, further reading of the Journal was dispensed with and the
Journal was approved as corrected by the Chief Clerk.
REPORTS
OF STANDING COMMITTEES AND DIVISIONS
Moran from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 993, A bill for an act relating to higher education; providing funding and policy changes for the Office of Higher Education, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, the University of Minnesota, and the Mayo Clinic; freezing certain tuition rates; creating and modifying certain student aid programs; restricting limitations on student access to transcripts; modifying certain school accountability provisions; expanding the hunger-free campus designation; modifying data provision of the college savings plan; establishing pilot projects; requiring reports; appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 136A.121, subdivisions 2, 6, 9; 136A.125, subdivisions 2, 4; 136A.126, subdivisions 1, 4; 136A.1275; 136A.1704; 136A.246, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, by adding a subdivision; 136A.63, subdivision 2; 136A.645; 136A.653, subdivision 5; 136A.675; 136A.68; 136A.822, subdivision 12; 136A.8225; 136A.823, by adding a subdivision; 136A.827, subdivisions 4, 8; 136F.245, subdivisions 1, 2; 136F.305; 136F.38, subdivision 3; 136G.05, subdivision 10; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 135A; 136A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 136A.1703; 136A.823, subdivision 2; 136F.245, subdivision 3; Minnesota Rules, parts 4830.9050; 4830.9060; 4830.9070; 4830.9080; 4830.9090.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 9, delete lines 19 to 24 and insert:
"(d) The commissioner of the Office of Higher Education, in collaboration with the statewide student associations designated in Minnesota Statutes, section 136F.245, subdivision 2, shall create an application process and selection criteria for awarding the grants."
Page 9, line 27, delete "135A.102" and insert "136A.91"
Page 21, delete section 1
Page 24, after line 16, insert:
"Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, 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 82 percent of the parental contribution. For independent students with dependents
other than a spouse, the assigned family responsibility is 74 73
percent of the student contribution. For
independent students without dependents other than a spouse, the assigned
family responsibility is 38 37 percent of the student
contribution."
Page 25, line 18, delete "110" and insert "113"
Page 28, line 13, before the semicolon, insert "or for graduate students enrolled in six or more semester credits or the equivalent"
Page 28, line 15, before the semicolon, insert "or for graduate students enrolled in five semester credits or the equivalent"
Page 28, line 17, before the semicolon, insert "or for graduate students enrolled in three or four semester credits or the equivalent"
Page 28, line 19, before the period, insert "or for graduate students enrolled in one or two semester credits or the equivalent"
Page 51, after line 30, insert:
"Sec. 34. [136A.91]
CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT GRANTS.
Subdivision 1. Grants. (a) The Office of Higher Education
must establish a competitive grant program for postsecondary institutions to
expand concurrent enrollment opportunities.
To the extent that there are qualified applicants, the commissioner of
the Office of Higher Education shall distribute grant funds to ensure:
(1) eligible students throughout the
state have access to concurrent enrollment programs; and
(2) preference for grants that expand
programs is given to programs already at capacity.
(b) The commissioner may award grants
under this section to postsecondary institutions for any of the following
purposes:
(1) to develop new concurrent enrollment
courses under section 124D.09, subdivision 10, that satisfy the elective
standard for career and technical education;
(2) to expand the existing concurrent
enrollment programs already offered by the postsecondary institution by:
(i) creating new sections within the
same high school;
(ii) offering the existing course in new
high schools; or
(iii) supporting the preparation,
recruitment, and success of students who are underrepresented in concurrent
enrollment classrooms;
(3) to create online graduate tracks
specifically for high school teachers to receive the necessary credentials to
teach concurrent enrollment courses in various content areas, as dictated by
the Higher Learning Commission; or
(4) to supplement high school teacher
tuition support for graduate courses not eligible for funding under the
concurrent enrollment training program.
Subd. 2. Application. (a) The commissioner shall develop a
grant application process. A grant
applicant must:
(1) specify the purpose under
subdivision 1, paragraph (b), for which the institution is applying;
(2) specify both program and student
outcome goals;
(3) include student feedback in the
development of new programs or the expansion of existing programs; and
(4) demonstrate a commitment to
equitable access to concurrent enrollment coursework for all eligible high
school students.
(b) A postsecondary institution applying
for a grant under subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (3), must provide a 50
percent match for the grant funds.
Subd. 3. Report. By December 1 of each year, the office
shall submit a report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over higher education regarding:
(1) the amount of funds granted under
each clause of subdivision 1, paragraph (b);
(2) the courses developed by grant
recipients and the number of students who enrolled in the courses under
subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (1);
(3) the programs expanded and the number of students who enrolled in programs under subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (2);
(4) the graduate programs developed by
postsecondary institutions and the number of high school teachers enrolled in
these graduate courses under subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (3); and
(5) the number of teachers provided tuition support under subdivision 1, paragraph (b), clause (4)."
Renumber the sections in sequence and correct the internal references
Correct the title numbers accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1076, A bill for an act relating to state government; appropriating money for environment, natural resources, and tourism; appropriating money from environment and natural resources trust fund; modifying provisions for forestry, wildlife, game and fish, invasive species, aquaculture, farmed Cervidae, pesticides, outdoor recreation, fees, waters of the state, land exchanges, waste management, pollution control and enforcement, and electric-assisted bicycles; modifying and creating accounts; providing for disposition of certain revenue; modifying commissioner authority and duties; establishing grant programs; providing for uniformity in DUI enforcement for recreational vehicles; requiring reimbursement of certain costs; adding and deleting land from certain state parks; establishing new state forest; authorizing private sale of certain tax-forfeited and surplus state land; authorizing certain land leases and transfers; requiring studies and reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 16A.151, subdivision 2; 16B.335, subdivision 2; 17.4982, subdivisions 6, 8, 9, 12, by adding subdivisions; 17.4985, subdivisions 2, 3, 5; 17.4986, subdivisions 2, 4; 17.4991, subdivision 3; 17.4992, subdivision 2; 17.4993, subdivision 1; 18B.09, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 35.155, subdivisions 1, 4, 6, 10, 11, by adding a subdivision; 84.027, subdivisions 13a, 18; 84.415, by adding a subdivision; 84.63; 84.631; 84.66, subdivisions 1, 3; 84.787, subdivision 7; 84.795, subdivision 5; 84.797, subdivision 7; 84.82, subdivisions 1a, 7a; 84.83, subdivision 5; 84.92, subdivision 8; 84.943, subdivisions 3, 5, by adding subdivisions; 84.946, subdivision 4; 84D.02, subdivision 3; 84D.11, subdivision 1a; 84D.15; 85.015, subdivision 10; 85.019, by adding a subdivision; 85.052, subdivisions 1, 2, 6, by adding a subdivision; 85.053, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 85.054, subdivision 1; 85.055, subdivision 1; 85.43; 85.47; 86B.415, subdivisions 1, 1a, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7; 86B.705, subdivision 2; 88.79, subdivision 1; 89.001, subdivision 8; 89.021, by adding a subdivision; 89.17; 89.35, subdivision 2; 89.37, subdivision 3; 89A.03, subdivision 2; 89A.11; 92.50, by adding a subdivision; 92.502; 94.3495, subdivision 3; 97A.015, subdivisions 25, 43; 97A.065, subdivision 2; 97A.401, subdivision 1, by adding a subdivision; 97A.421, subdivision 1; 97A.475, subdivision 41; 97A.505, subdivisions 3b, 8; 97B.071; 97B.811, subdivision 4a; 97C.005, subdivision 3; 97C.081, subdivisions 3, 3a; 97C.342, subdivision 2; 97C.515, subdivision 2; 97C.605, subdivisions 1, 2c, 3; 97C.611; 97C.805, subdivision 2; 97C.836; 103B.103; 103C.315, subdivision 4; 103G.255; 103G.271, subdivision 4a, by adding subdivisions; 103G.287, subdivision 5; 115.03, subdivision 1; 115.061; 115.071, subdivisions 1, 4, by adding
subdivisions; 115A.03, by adding subdivisions; 115A.1310, subdivision 12b; 115A.1312, subdivision 1; 115A.1314, subdivision 1; 115A.1316, subdivision 1; 115A.1318, subdivision 2; 115A.1320, subdivision 1; 115A.565, subdivision 1; 115B.17, subdivision 13; 115B.406, subdivisions 1, 9; 115B.407; 115B.421; 115B.49, subdivision 4; 116.06, by adding a subdivision; 116.07, subdivisions 6, 9, by adding subdivisions; 116.11; 116G.07, by adding a subdivision; 116G.15, by adding a subdivision; 168.002, subdivision 18; 168.1295, subdivision 1; 169.011, subdivisions 27, 42, by adding subdivisions; 169.222, subdivisions 4, 6a, by adding a subdivision; 169A.20, subdivision 1; 169A.52, by adding a subdivision; 169A.54, by adding a subdivision; 171.306, by adding a subdivision; 290C.01; 325E.046; Laws 2016, chapter 154, sections 16; 48; Laws 2017, chapter 96, section 2, subdivision 9, as amended; Laws 2018, chapter 214, article 4, section 2, subdivision 6; Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 4, article 1, section 3, subdivisions 4, 5; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 84; 86B; 97B; 103B; 103C; 103F; 115A; 116; 171; 325F; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 84.91, subdivision 1; 85.0505, subdivision 3; 85.0507; 85.054, subdivision 19; 86B.331, subdivision 1; 97C.605, subdivisions 2, 2a, 2b, 5; 115.44, subdivision 9; 115B.48, subdivision 8; 115C.13; 169A.20, subdivisions 1a, 1b, 1c; Minnesota Rules, parts 6256.0500, subparts 2, 2a, 2b, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8; 7044.0350.
Reported the same back with the recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.
The report was
adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1342, A bill for an act relating to economic development; appropriating money for workforce and business development; establishing paid medical leave benefits; modifying unemployment insurance benefits; making policy and technical changes to programs administered by the Department of Employment and Economic Development; authorizing rulemaking; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 13.719, by adding a subdivision; 116J.035, subdivision 6; 116J.431, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 116J.8748, subdivision 3; 116J.994, subdivision 6; 116L.02; 116L.03, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 116L.05, subdivision 5; 116L.17, subdivisions 1, 4; 116L.20, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 116L.40, subdivisions 5, 6, 9, 10, by adding a subdivision; 116L.41, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding subdivisions; 116L.42, subdivisions 1, 2; 116L.98, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 177.27, subdivision 4; 181.032; 256J.561, by adding a subdivision; 256J.95, subdivisions 3, 11; 256P.01, subdivision 3; 268.035, subdivision 21c; 268.085, subdivisions 2, 4a, 7; 268.101, subdivision 2; 268.133; 268.136, subdivision 1; 268.19, subdivision 1; Laws 2017, chapter 94, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, as amended; Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, as amended; article 2, section 8; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 116J; 116L; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 116L.18; 268.085, subdivisions 4, 8.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:
"ARTICLE 1
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. JOBS
AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT APPROPRIATIONS.
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(a) 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 "2022" and
"2023" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2022, or June 30, 2023,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2022. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2023. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2022 and 2023.
(b)
If an appropriation in this article is enacted more than once in the 2021
regular or special legislative session, the appropriation must be given effect
only once.
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APPROPRIATIONS |
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|
|
|
Available for the Year |
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|
|
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Ending June 30 |
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2022 |
2023 |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT |
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|
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Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
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$128,635,000 |
|
$129,999,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
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2022 |
2023
|
General |
117,200,000
|
94,684,000
|
Remediation |
700,000
|
700,000
|
Workforce Development |
10,735,000
|
10,735,000
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Family and medical benefit insurance account |
-0-
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23,880,000
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The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. Business
and Community Development |
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58,936,000
|
|
46,935,000
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Appropriations
by Fund |
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General |
56,886,000
|
44,885,000
|
Remediation |
700,000
|
700,000
|
Workforce Development |
1,350,000
|
1,350,000
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(a) $1,787,000 each year is for the
greater Minnesota business development public infrastructure grant program
under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431.
This appropriation is available until June 30, 2025.
(b) $1,425,000 each year is for the
business development competitive grant program.
Of this amount, up to five percent is for administration and monitoring
of the business development competitive grant program. All grant awards shall be for two consecutive
years. Grants shall be awarded in the
first year.
(c) $1,772,000 each year is for
contaminated site cleanup and development grants under Minnesota Statutes,
sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This
appropriation is available until expended.
(d)
$700,000 each year is from the remediation fund for contaminated site cleanup
and development grants under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This appropriation is available until
expended.
(e) $139,000 each year is for the Center
for Rural Policy and Development.
(f) $25,000 each year is for the
administration of state aid for the Destination Medical Center under Minnesota
Statutes, sections 469.40 to 469.47.
(g) $875,000 each year is for the host
community economic development program established in Minnesota Statutes,
section 116J.548.
(h) $500,000 each year is for the small
business development center program for grants to the regional small business
development center offices and the lead center.
This is a onetime appropriation.
(i) $3,000,000 each year is for technical
assistance to small businesses. Of this
amount:
(1) $1,500,000 is for grants to nonprofit
lenders to provide additional equity support to leverage other capital sources;
(2) $750,000 is for the business
development competitive grant program; and
(3) $750,000 is for grants to small
business incubators that serve minority-, veteran-, and women-owned businesses,
or businesses owned by persons with disabilities, to provide commercial space,
technical assistance, and education services.
This is a onetime appropriation.
(j)(1) $10,000,000 in the first year is
for grants to local communities to increase the number of quality child care
providers to support economic development.
This is a onetime appropriation and is available through June 30, 2023. Fifty percent of grant funds must go to
communities located outside the seven-county metropolitan area as defined in
Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2.
(2) Grant recipients must obtain a 50
percent nonstate match to grant funds in either cash or in-kind contribution,
unless the commissioner waives the requirement.
Grant funds available under this subdivision must be used to implement
projects to reduce the child care shortage in the state, including but not
limited to funding for child care business start-ups or expansion, training,
facility modifications, direct subsidies or incentives to retain employees, or improvements required for licensing, and assistance with licensing and other regulatory requirements. In awarding grants, the commissioner must give priority to communities that have demonstrated a shortage of child care providers.
(3) Within one year of receiving grant
funds, grant recipients must report to the commissioner on the outcomes of the
grant program, including but not limited to the number of new providers, the
number of additional child care provider jobs created, the number of additional
child care slots, and the amount of cash and in-kind local funds invested. Within one month of all grant recipients
reporting on program outcomes, the commissioner must report the grant
recipients' outcomes to the chairs and ranking members of the legislative
committees with jurisdiction over early learning and child care and economic
development.
(k) $2,000,000 in the first year is for a
grant to the Minnesota Initiative Foundations.
This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2025. The Minnesota Initiative Foundations must use
grant funds under this section to:
(1) facilitate planning processes for
rural communities resulting in a community solution action plan that guides
decision making to sustain and increase the supply of quality child care in the
region to support economic development;
(2) engage the private sector to invest
local resources to support the community solution action plan and ensure
quality child care is a vital component of additional regional economic
development planning processes;
(3) provide locally based training and technical
assistance to rural child care business owners individually or through a
learning cohort. Access to financial and
business development assistance must prepare child care businesses for quality
engagement and improvement by stabilizing operations, leveraging funding from
other sources, and fostering business acumen that allows child care businesses
to plan for and afford the cost of providing quality child care; and
(4) recruit child care programs to
participate in Parent Aware, Minnesota's quality and improvement rating system,
and other high quality measurement programs.
The Minnesota Initiative Foundations must work with local partners to
provide low-cost training, professional development opportunities, and
continuing education curricula. The
Minnesota Initiative Foundations must fund, through local partners, an enhanced
level of coaching to rural child care providers to obtain a quality rating
through Parent Aware or other high quality measurement programs.
(l)
$7,500,000 each year is for the Minnesota job creation fund under Minnesota
Statutes, section 116J.8748. Of this
amount, the commissioner of employment and economic development may use up to
three percent for administrative expenses.
This appropriation is available until expended. The base amount for this purpose in fiscal
year 2024 and beyond is $8,000,000.
(m) $7,750,000 each year is for the
Minnesota investment fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731. Of this amount, the commissioner of
employment and economic development may use up to three percent for
administration and monitoring of the program.
In fiscal year 2024 and beyond, the base amount is $12,370,000. This appropriation is available until
expended. Notwithstanding Minnesota
Statutes, section 116J.8731, money appropriated to the commissioner for the
Minnesota investment fund may be used for the redevelopment program under
Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.575 and 116J.5761, at the discretion of the
commissioner. Grants under this
paragraph are not subject to the grant amount limitation under Minnesota
Statutes, section 116J.8731.
(n) $1,000,000 each year is for the
Minnesota emerging entrepreneur loan program under Minnesota Statutes, section
116M.18. Funds available under this
paragraph are for transfer into the emerging entrepreneur program special
revenue fund account created under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 116M, and are
available until expended. Of this
amount, up to four percent is for administration and monitoring of the program.
(o) $325,000 each year is for the
Minnesota Film and TV Board. The
appropriation in each year is available only upon receipt by the board of $1 in
matching contributions of money or in-kind contributions from nonstate sources
for every $3 provided by this appropriation, except that each year up to
$50,000 is available on July 1 even if the required matching contribution has
not been received by that date.
(p) $12,000 each year is for a grant to
the Upper Minnesota Film Office.
(q) $500,000 each year is for a grant to
the Minnesota Film and TV Board for the film production jobs program under
Minnesota Statutes, section 116U.26. This
appropriation is available until June 30, 2025.
(r) $4,195,000 each year is for the
Minnesota job skills partnership program under Minnesota Statutes, sections
116L.01 to 116L.17. If the appropriation
for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is
available. This appropriation is
available until expended.
(s)
$1,350,000 each year from the workforce development fund and $250,000 each year
from the general fund are for jobs training grants under Minnesota Statutes,
section 116L.42.
(t) $2,500,000 each year is for Launch
Minnesota. This is a onetime
appropriation and funds are available until June 30, 2025. Of this amount:
(1) $1,500,000 each year is for innovation
grants to eligible Minnesota entrepreneurs or start-up businesses to assist
with their operating needs;
(2)
$500,000 each year is for administration of Launch Minnesota; and
(3) $500,000 each year is for grantee
activities at Launch Minnesota.
(u) $1,050,000 each year is for the
microenterprise development program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8736. Of these amounts, $150,000 each year is for
providing technical assistance and outreach to microenterprise development
organizations.
(v) $5,298,000 in the first year and
$5,297,000 in the second year are for grants to the Neighborhood Development
Center, Metropolitan Economic Development Association, Latino Economic
Development Center, Northside Economic Opportunity Network, and African
Economic Development Solutions to provide business development services and
funding. Of these amounts, at least
$2,000,000 each year must be used for services and funding for entrepreneurs
who are women of color. This is a
onetime appropriation.
(w) $375,000 each year is for the
publication, dissemination, and use of labor market information under Minnesota
Statutes, section 116J.401.
Subd. 3. Employment
and Training Programs |
|
9,921,000
|
|
9,921,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
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General |
8,421,000
|
8,421,000
|
Workforce Development |
1,500,000
|
1,500,000
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(a) $500,000 each year from the general
fund and $500,000 each year from the workforce development fund are for rural
career counseling coordinators in the workforce service areas and for the
purposes specified under Minnesota Statutes, section 116L.667.
(b) $750,000 each year is for the women and
high-wage, high‑demand, nontraditional jobs grant program under Minnesota
Statutes, section 116L.99. Of this
amount, up to five percent is for administration and monitoring of the program.
(c) $2,546,000 each year is for the pathways to prosperity competitive grant program. Of this amount, up to five percent is for administration and monitoring of the program.
(d) $500,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for a grant to the American Indian Opportunities and
Industrialization Center, in collaboration with the Northwest Indian Community
Development Center, to reduce academic disparities for American Indian students
and adults. This is a onetime
appropriation. The grant funds may be
used to provide:
(1) student tutoring and testing support
services;
(2) training and employment placement in
information technology;
(3) training and employment placement
within trades;
(4) assistance in obtaining a GED;
(5) remedial training leading to
enrollment and to sustain enrollment in a postsecondary higher education
institution;
(6) real-time work experience in
information technology fields and in the trades;
(7) contextualized adult basic education;
(8) career and educational counseling for
clients with significant and multiple barriers; and;
(9) reentry services and counseling for
adults and youth.
After notification to the chairs and
minority leads of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over jobs and
economic development, the commissioner may transfer this appropriation to the
commissioner of education.
(e) $500,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for current Minnesota affiliates of OIC of America, Inc.
This appropriation shall be divided equally among the eligible centers.
(f) $1,000,000 each year is for
competitive grants to organizations providing services to relieve economic
disparities in the Southeast Asian community through workforce recruitment,
development, job creation, assistance of smaller organizations to increase
capacity, and outreach. Of this amount,
up to five percent is for administration and monitoring of the program.
(g) $1,000,000 each year is for a
competitive grant program to provide grants to organizations that provide
support services for individuals, such as job training, employment preparation,
internships,
job assistance to parents, financial literacy, academic and behavioral
interventions for low-performing students, and youth intervention. Grants made under this section must focus on
low-income communities, young adults from families with a history of
intergenerational poverty, and communities of color. Of this amount, up to five percent is for
administration and monitoring of the program.
(h) $1,000,000 each year is for a grant to
Propel Nonprofits to provide capacity-building grants and related technical
assistance to small, culturally specific organizations that primarily serve
historically underserved cultural communities.
Propel Nonprofits may only award grants to nonprofit organizations that
have an annual organizational budget of less than $500,000. These grants may be used for:
(1) organizational infrastructure
improvements, including developing database management systems and financial
systems, or other administrative needs that increase the organization's ability
to access new funding sources;
(2) organizational workforce development,
including hiring culturally competent staff, training and skills development,
and other methods of increasing staff capacity; or
(3) creating or expanding partnerships
with existing organizations that have specialized expertise in order to
increase capacity of the grantee organization to improve services to the
community.
Of this amount, up to five percent may be
used by Propel Nonprofits for administrative costs. This is a onetime appropriation.
(i) $750,000 each year is for the
youth-at-work competitive grant program under Minnesota Statutes, section
116L.562. Of this amount, up to five
percent is for administration and monitoring of the youth workforce development
competitive grant program. All grant
awards shall be for two consecutive years.
Grants shall be awarded in the first year.
(j) $875,000 each year is for a grant to
the Minnesota Technology Association to support the SciTech Internship Program,
a program that supports science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM)
internship opportunities for two- and four-year college students and graduate
students in their fields of study. The
internship opportunities must match students with paid internships within STEM
disciplines at small, for-profit companies located in Minnesota having fewer
than 250 employees worldwide. At least
200 students must be matched in the first year and at least 200 students
must be matched in the second year. No
more than 15 percent of the hires may be graduate students. Selected hiring
companies
shall receive from the grant 50 percent of the wages paid to the intern, capped
at $2,500 per intern. The program must
work toward increasing the participation among women or other underserved
populations. This is a onetime
appropriation.
Subd. 4. General
Support Services |
|
3,692,000
|
|
4,005,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General Fund |
3,637,000
|
3,950,000
|
Workforce Development |
55,000
|
55,000
|
$1,269,000 each year is for transfer to the
Minnesota Housing Finance Agency for operating the Olmstead Compliance Office.
Subd. 5. Minnesota
Trade Office |
|
2,142,000
|
|
2,142,000
|
(a) $200,000 each year is for the STEP
grants in Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.979.
The base for this purpose in fiscal year 2024 and beyond is $300,000.
(b) $180,000 each year is for the Invest Minnesota
marketing initiative in Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.9781.
(c) $270,000 each year is for the Minnesota
Trade Offices under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.978.
Subd. 6. Vocational
Rehabilitation |
|
36,691,000
|
|
36,691,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General |
28,861,000
|
28,861,000
|
Workforce Development |
7,830,000
|
7,830,000
|
(a) $14,300,000 each year is for the
state's vocational rehabilitation program under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
268A.
(b) $8,995,000 each year from the general
fund and $6,830,000 each year from the workforce development fund are for
extended employment services for persons with severe disabilities under
Minnesota Statutes, section 268A.15.
(c) $2,555,000 each year is for grants to programs that provide employment support services to persons with mental illness under Minnesota Statutes, sections 268A.13 and 268A.14.
(d) $3,011,000 each year is for grants to
centers for independent living under Minnesota Statutes, section 268A.11.
(e) $1,000,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for grants under Minnesota Statutes, section
268A.16, for employment services for persons, including transition-age youth,
who
are deaf, deafblind, or hard-of-hearing.
If the amount in the first year is insufficient, the amount in the
second year is available in the first year.
Subd. 7. Services
for the Blind |
|
6,425,000
|
|
6,425,000
|
Of this amount, $500,000 each year is for
senior citizens who are becoming blind. At
least one-half of the funds for this purpose must be used to provide training
services for seniors who are becoming blind.
Training services must provide independent living skills to seniors who
are becoming blind to allow them to continue to live independently in their
homes.
Subd. 8. Paid
Family and Medical Leave |
|
10,828,000
|
|
23,880,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General |
10,828,000
|
-0-
|
Family and medical benefit insurance account |
-0-
|
23,880,000
|
(a) $10,828,000 in the first year is for
the purposes of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
(b) $23,250,000 in the second year is from
the family and medical benefit insurance account for the purposes of Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 268B. The base
appropriation is $51,041,000 in fiscal year 2024 and $50,125,000 in fiscal year
2025. Starting in fiscal year 2026, the
base appropriation is $46,465,000.
(c) $630,000 in the second year is from the
family medical benefit insurance account for the purpose of outreach,
education, and technical assistance for employees and employers regarding
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. Of
this amount, at least half must be used for grants to community-based groups
providing outreach, education, and technical assistance for employees,
employers, and self-employed individuals regarding Minnesota Statutes, chapter
268B. Outreach must include efforts to
notify self-employed individuals of their ability to elect coverage under
Minnesota Statutes, section 268B.11, and provide them with technical assistance
in doing so.
Sec. 3. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY |
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$528,000 |
|
$518,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2022
|
2023
|
General |
528,000
|
-0-
|
Family and medical benefit insurance account |
-0- |
518,000 |
(a)
$528,000 in the first year is for the purposes of Minnesota Statutes, chapter
268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
(b) $518,000 in the second year is from the
family and medical benefit insurance account for the purposes of Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 268B. The base
appropriation is $468,000 in fiscal year 2024 and $618,000 in fiscal year 2025.
Sec. 4. DEPARTMENT
OF HUMAN SERVICES |
|
$-0- |
|
$574,000 |
$574,000 in the second year is from the
family and medical benefit insurance account for information technology system
costs associated with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 5. MANAGEMENT
AND BUDGET |
|
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$28,000 |
|
$1,953,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2022
|
2023
|
General |
28,000
|
1,930,000
|
Family and medical benefit insurance account |
-0-
|
23,000
|
(a) $28,000 in the first year is for information technology systems upgrades necessary to comply with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
(b) $23,000 in the second year from the
family and medical benefit insurance account is for ongoing maintenance of
these information technology systems. For
fiscal year 2024 and beyond, the base appropriation is $13,000.
(c) $1,930,000 in the second year is for
the premiums and notice acknowledgment required of employers under Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 268B. For fiscal year
2024 and beyond, the base appropriation is $3,727,000.
Sec. 6. HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES |
|
$11,000 |
|
$-0- |
$11,000 in the first year is for systems
upgrades necessary to comply with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 7. SUPREME
COURT |
|
$20,000 |
|
$-0- |
$20,000 in the first year is for judicial
responsibilities associated with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 8. COURT
OF APPEALS |
|
$-0- |
|
$-0- |
For fiscal year 2025, the base from the
family and medical benefit insurance account for judicial responsibilities
associated with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B, is $5,600,000.
Sec. 9. FAMILY
AND MEDICAL BENEFITS; TRANSFER.
In the second year only, $11,416,000
shall be transferred from the family and medical benefit insurance account to
the general fund.
ARTICLE 2
PRIOR YEAR APPROPRIATIONS
Section 1. Laws 2017, chapter 94, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, as amended by Laws 2017, First Special Session chapter 7, section 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Business
and Community Development |
|
$46,074,000 |
|
$40,935,000 |
Appropriations by Fund |
||
General |
$43,363,000 |
$38,424,000 |
Remediation |
$700,000 |
$700,000 |
Workforce Development |
$1,861,000 |
$1,811,000 |
Special Revenue |
$150,000 |
-0- |
(a) $4,195,000 each year is for the Minnesota job skills partnership program under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116L.01 to 116L.17. If the appropriation for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available. This appropriation is available until spent.
(b) $750,000 each year is for grants to the Neighborhood Development Center for small business programs:
(1) training, lending, and business services;
(2) model outreach and training in greater Minnesota; and
(3) development of new business incubators.
This is a onetime appropriation.
(c) $1,175,000 each year is for a grant to the Metropolitan Economic Development Association (MEDA) for statewide business development and assistance services, including services to entrepreneurs with businesses that have the potential to create job opportunities for unemployed and underemployed people, with an emphasis on minority-owned businesses. This is a onetime appropriation.
(d) $125,000 each year is for a grant to the White Earth Nation for the White Earth Nation Integrated Business Development System to provide business assistance with workforce development, outreach, technical assistance, infrastructure and operational support, financing, and other business development activities. This is a onetime appropriation.
(e)(1) $12,500,000 each year is for the Minnesota investment fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731. Of this amount, the commissioner of employment and economic development may use up to three percent for administration and monitoring of the program. This appropriation is available until spent.
(2) Of the amount appropriated in fiscal year 2018, $4,000,000 is for a loan to construct and equip a wholesale electronic component distribution center investing a minimum of $200,000,000 and constructing a facility at least 700,000 square feet in size. Loan funds may be used for purchases of materials, supplies, and equipment for the construction of the facility and are available from July 1, 2017, to June 30, 2021. The commissioner of employment and economic development shall forgive the loan after verification that the project has satisfied performance goals and contractual obligations as required under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731.
(3) Of the amount appropriated in fiscal year
2018, $700,000 is for a loan to extend an effluent pipe that will deliver
reclaimed water to an innovative waste-to-biofuel project investing a minimum
of $150,000,000 and constructing a facility that is designed to process
approximately 400,000 tons of waste annually.
Loan grant to the Metropolitan Council under Minnesota Statutes,
section 116.195, for wastewater infrastructure to support industrial users in
Rosemount that require significant water use.
Grant funds are available until June 30, 2021 2025.
(f) $8,500,000 each year is for the Minnesota job creation fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8748. Of this amount, the commissioner of employment and economic development may use up to three percent for administrative expenses. This appropriation is available until expended. In fiscal year 2020 and beyond, the base amount is $8,000,000.
(g) $1,647,000 each year is for contaminated site cleanup and development grants under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This appropriation is available until spent. In fiscal year 2020 and beyond, the base amount is $1,772,000.
(h) $12,000 each year is for a grant to the Upper Minnesota Film Office.
(i) $163,000 each year is for the Minnesota Film and TV Board. The appropriation in each year is available only upon receipt by the board of $1 in matching contributions of money or in-kind contributions from nonstate sources for every $3 provided by this appropriation, except that each year up to $50,000 is available on July 1 even if the required matching contribution has not been received by that date.
(j) $500,000 each year is from the general fund for a grant to the Minnesota Film and TV Board for the film production jobs program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116U.26. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2021.
(k) $139,000 each year is for a grant to the Rural Policy and Development Center under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.421.
(l)(1) $1,300,000 each year is for the greater Minnesota business development public infrastructure grant program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431. This appropriation is available until spent. If the appropriation for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available. In fiscal year 2020 and beyond, the base amount is $1,787,000. Funds available under this paragraph may be used for site preparation of property owned and to be used by private entities.
(2) Of the amounts appropriated, $1,600,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to the city of Thief River Falls to support utility extensions, roads, and other public improvements related to the construction of a wholesale electronic component distribution center at least 700,000 square feet in size and investing a minimum of $200,000,000. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431, a local match is not required. Grant funds are available from July 1, 2017, to June 30, 2021.
(m) $876,000 the first year and $500,000 the second year are for the Minnesota emerging entrepreneur loan program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116M.18. Funds available under this paragraph are for transfer into the emerging entrepreneur program special revenue fund account created under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 116M, and are available until spent. Of this amount, up to four percent is for administration and monitoring of the program. In fiscal year 2020 and beyond, the base amount is $1,000,000.
(n) $875,000 each year is for a grant to Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. for the small business growth acceleration program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116O.115. This is a onetime appropriation.
(o) $250,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to the Minnesota Design Center at the University of Minnesota for the greater Minnesota community design pilot project.
(p) $275,000 in fiscal year 2018 is from the general fund to the commissioner of employment and economic development for a grant to Community and Economic Development Associates (CEDA) for an economic development study and analysis of the effects of current and projected economic growth in southeast Minnesota. CEDA shall report on the findings and recommendations of the study to the committees of the house of representatives and senate with jurisdiction over economic development and workforce issues by February 15, 2019. All results and information gathered from the study shall be made available for use by cities in southeast Minnesota by March 15, 2019. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2020.
(q) $2,000,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to Pillsbury United Communities for construction and renovation of a building in north Minneapolis for use as the "North Market" grocery store and wellness center, focused on offering healthy food, increasing health care access, and providing job creation and economic opportunities in one place for children and families living in the area. To the extent possible, Pillsbury United Communities shall employ individuals who reside within a five mile radius of the grocery store and wellness center. This appropriation is not available until at least an equal amount of money is committed from nonstate sources. This appropriation is available until the project is completed or abandoned, subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.642.
(r) $1,425,000 each year is for the business development competitive grant program. Of this amount, up to five percent is for administration and monitoring of the business development competitive grant program. All grant awards shall be for two consecutive years. Grants shall be awarded in the first year.
(s) $875,000 each year is for the host community economic development grant program established in Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.548.
(t) $700,000 each year is from the remediation fund for contaminated site cleanup and development grants under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This appropriation is available until spent.
(u) $161,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to the Rural Policy and Development Center. This is a onetime appropriation.
(v) $300,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. This is a onetime appropriation.
(w) $50,000 in fiscal year 2018 is from the workforce development fund for a grant to Fighting Chance for behavioral intervention programs for at-risk youth.
(x) $1,350,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for job training grants under Minnesota Statutes, section 116L.42.
(y)(1) $519,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for grants to local communities to increase the supply of quality child care providers in order to support economic development. At least 60 percent of grant funds must go to communities located outside of the seven‑county metropolitan area, as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2. Grant recipients must obtain a 50 percent nonstate match to grant funds in either cash or in-kind contributions. Grant funds available under this paragraph must be used to implement solutions to reduce the child care shortage in the state including but not limited to funding for child care business start-ups or expansions, training, facility modifications or improvements required for licensing, and assistance with licensing and other regulatory requirements. In awarding grants, the commissioner must give priority to communities that have documented a shortage of child care providers in the area.
(2) Within one year of receiving grant funds, grant recipients must report to the commissioner on the outcomes of the grant program including but not limited to the number of new providers, the number of additional child care provider jobs created, the number of additional child care slots, and the amount of local funds invested.
(3) By January 1 of each year, starting in 2019, the commissioner must report to the standing committees of the legislature having jurisdiction over child care and economic development on the outcomes of the program to date.
(z) $319,000 in fiscal year 2018 is from the general fund for a grant to the East Phillips Improvement Coalition to create the East Phillips Neighborhood Institute (EPNI) to expand culturally tailored resources that address small business growth and create green jobs. The grant shall fund the collaborative work of Tamales y Bicicletas, Little Earth of the United Tribes, a nonprofit serving East Africans, and other coalition members towards developing EPNI as a community space to host activities including, but not limited to, creation and expansion of small businesses, culturally specific entrepreneurial activities, indoor urban farming, job training, education, and skills development for residents of this low-income, environmental justice designated neighborhood. Eligible uses for grant funds include, but are not limited to, planning and start-up costs, staff and consultant costs, building improvements, rent, supplies, utilities, vehicles, marketing, and program activities. The commissioner shall submit a report on grant activities and quantifiable outcomes to the committees of the house of representatives and the senate with jurisdiction over economic development by December 15, 2020. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2020.
(aa) $150,000 the first year is from the renewable development account in the special revenue fund established in Minnesota Statutes, section 116C.779, subdivision 1, to conduct the biomass facility closure economic impact study.
(bb)(1)$300,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to East Side Enterprise Center (ESEC) to expand culturally tailored resources that address small business growth and job creation. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2020. The appropriation shall fund the work of African Economic Development Solutions, the Asian Economic Development Association, the Dayton's Bluff Community Council, and the Latino Economic Development Center in a collaborative approach to economic development that is effective with smaller, culturally diverse communities that seek to increase the productivity and success of new immigrant and minority populations living and working in the community. Programs shall provide minority business growth and capacity building that generate wealth and jobs creation for local residents and business owners on the East Side of St. Paul.
(2) In fiscal year 2019 ESEC shall use funds to share its integrated service model and evolving collaboration principles with civic and economic development leaders in greater Minnesota communities which have diverse populations similar to the East Side of St. Paul. ESEC shall submit a report of activities and program outcomes, including quantifiable measures of success annually to the house of representatives and senate committees with jurisdiction over economic development.
(cc) $150,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to Mille Lacs County for the purpose of reimbursement grants to small resort businesses located in the city of Isle with less than $350,000 in annual revenue, at least four rental units, which are open during both summer and winter months, and whose business was adversely impacted by a decline in walleye fishing on Lake Mille Lacs.
(dd)(1) $250,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for a grant to the Small Business Development Center hosted at Minnesota State University, Mankato, for a collaborative initiative with the Regional Center for Entrepreneurial Facilitation. Funds available under this section must be used to provide entrepreneur and small business development direct professional business assistance services in the following counties in Minnesota: Blue Earth, Brown, Faribault, Le Sueur, Martin, Nicollet, Sibley, Watonwan, and Waseca. For the purposes of this section, "direct professional business assistance services" must include, but is not limited to, pre-venture assistance for individuals considering starting a business. This appropriation is not available until the commissioner determines that an equal amount is committed from nonstate sources. Any balance in the first year does not cancel and is available for expenditure in the second year.
(2) Grant recipients shall report to the commissioner by February 1 of each year and include information on the number of customers served in each county; the number of businesses started, stabilized, or expanded; the number of jobs created and retained; and business success rates in each county. By April 1 of each year, the commissioner shall report the information submitted by grant recipients to the chairs of the standing committees of the house of representatives and the senate having jurisdiction over economic development issues.
(ee)
$500,000 in fiscal year 2018 is for the central Minnesota opportunity grant
program established under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.9922. This appropriation is available until June
30, 2022.
(ff) $25,000 each year is for the administration of state aid for the Destination Medical Center under Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.40 to 469.47.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from July 1, 2017.
Sec. 2. Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, as amended by Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 12, section 4, and Laws 2020, chapter 112, section 1, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Business
and Community Development |
|
44,931,000 |
|
42,381,000 |
Appropriations by Fund |
||
General |
40,756,000 |
38,206,000 |
Remediation |
700,000 |
700,000 |
Workforce Development |
3,475,000 |
3,475,000 |
(a) $1,787,000 each year is for the greater Minnesota business development public infrastructure grant program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2023.
(b) $1,425,000 each year is for the business development competitive grant program. Of this amount, up to five percent is for administration and monitoring of the business development competitive grant program. All grant awards shall be for two consecutive years. Grants shall be awarded in the first year.
(c) $1,772,000 each year is for contaminated site cleanup and development grants under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2023.
(d) $700,000 each year is from the remediation fund for contaminated site cleanup and development grants under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.551 to 116J.558. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2023.
(e) $139,000 each year is for the Center for Rural Policy and Development.
(f) $25,000 each year is for the administration of state aid for the Destination Medical Center under Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.40 to 469.47.
(g) $875,000 each year is for the host community economic development program established in Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.548.
(h) $125,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to the White Earth Nation for the White Earth Nation Integrated Business Development System to provide business assistance with workforce development, outreach, technical assistance, infrastructure and operational support, financing, and other business development activities. This is a onetime appropriation.
(i) $450,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. for the small business growth acceleration program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116O.115. This is a onetime appropriation.
(j) $250,000 the first year is for a grant to the Rondo Community Land Trust for improvements to leased commercial space in the Selby Milton Victoria Project that will create long-term affordable space for small businesses and for build-out and development of new businesses.
(k) $400,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to the Metropolitan Economic Development Association (MEDA) for statewide business development and assistance services, including services to entrepreneurs with businesses that have the potential to create job opportunities for unemployed and underemployed people, with an emphasis on minority-owned businesses. This is a onetime appropriation.
(l) $750,000 in fiscal year 2020 is for grants to local communities to increase the supply of quality child care providers to support economic development. At least 60 percent of grant funds must go to communities located outside of the seven-county metropolitan area as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2. Grant recipients must obtain a 50 percent nonstate match to grant funds in either cash or in-kind contributions. Grant funds available under this section must be used to implement projects to reduce the child care shortage in the state, including but not limited to funding for child care business start-ups or expansion, training, facility modifications or improvements required for licensing, and assistance with licensing and other regulatory requirements. In awarding grants, the commissioner
must give priority to communities that have demonstrated a shortage of child care providers in the area. This is a onetime appropriation. Within one year of receiving grant funds, grant recipients must report to the commissioner on the outcomes of the grant program, including but not limited to the number of new providers, the number of additional child care provider jobs created, the number of additional child care slots, and the amount of cash and in-kind local funds invested.
(m) $750,000 in fiscal year 2020 is for a grant to the Minnesota Initiative Foundations. This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2023. The Minnesota Initiative Foundations must use grant funds under this section to:
(1) facilitate planning processes for rural communities resulting in a community solution action plan that guides decision making to sustain and increase the supply of quality child care in the region to support economic development;
(2) engage the private sector to invest local resources to support the community solution action plan and ensure quality child care is a vital component of additional regional economic development planning processes;
(3) provide locally based training and technical assistance to rural child care business owners individually or through a learning cohort. Access to financial and business development assistance must prepare child care businesses for quality engagement and improvement by stabilizing operations, leveraging funding from other sources, and fostering business acumen that allows child care businesses to plan for and afford the cost of providing quality child care; or
(4) recruit child care programs to participate in Parent Aware, Minnesota's quality and improvement rating system, and other high quality measurement programs. The Minnesota Initiative Foundations must work with local partners to provide low-cost training, professional development opportunities, and continuing education curricula. The Minnesota Initiative Foundations must fund, through local partners, an enhanced level of coaching to rural child care providers to obtain a quality rating through Parent Aware or other high quality measurement programs.
(n)(1) $650,000 each year from the workforce development fund is for grants to the Neighborhood Development Center for small business programs. This is a onetime appropriation.
(2) Of the amount appropriated in the first year, $150,000 is for outreach and training activities outside the seven-county metropolitan area, as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2.
(o) $8,000,000 each year is for the Minnesota job creation fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8748. Of this amount, the commissioner of employment and economic development may use up to three percent for administrative expenses. This appropriation is available until expended.
(p)(1) $11,970,000 each year is for the Minnesota investment fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731. Of this amount, the commissioner of employment and economic development may use up to three percent for administration and monitoring of the program. In fiscal year 2022 and beyond, the base amount is $12,370,000. This appropriation is available until expended. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731, funds appropriated to the commissioner for the Minnesota investment fund may be used for the redevelopment program under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116J.575 and 116J.5761, at the discretion of the commissioner. Grants under this paragraph are not subject to the grant amount limitation under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731.
(2) Of the amount appropriated in the first
year, $2,000,000 $3,000,000 is for a loan to a paper mill in
Duluth for a retrofit project that will support the operation and
manufacture of packaging conversion of the existing Duluth paper mill
for the manufacture of new paper grades.
The company that owns the paper mill must spend $20,000,000 on invest
$25,000,000 in project activities by December 31, 2020 May 1,
2023, in order to be eligible to receive this loan. Loan funds may be used for purchases of
materials, supplies, and equipment for the project and are available from July
1, 2019 April 1, 2021, to July 30, 2021 May 1, 2023. The commissioner of employment and economic
development shall forgive 25 percent of the loan each year after the second
year during a five-year period if the mill has retained at least 150 80
full-time equivalent employees and has satisfied other performance goals and
contractual obligations as required under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8731.
(q) $700,000 in fiscal year 2020 is for the airport infrastructure renewal (AIR) grant program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.439.
(r) $100,000 in fiscal year 2020 is for a grant to FIRST in Upper Midwest to support competitive robotics teams. Funds must be used to make up to five awards of no more than $20,000 each to Minnesota-based public entities or private nonprofit organizations for the creation of competitive robotics hubs. Awards may be used for tools, equipment, and physical space to be utilized by robotics teams. At least 50 percent of grant funds must be used outside of the seven-county metropolitan area, as defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2. The grant recipient shall report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the
legislative committees with jurisdiction over jobs and economic growth by February 1, 2021, on the status of awards and include information on the number and amount of awards made, the number of customers served, and any outcomes resulting from the grant. The grant requires a 50 percent match from nonstate sources.
(s) $1,000,000 each year is for the Minnesota emerging entrepreneur loan program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116M.18. Funds available under this paragraph are for transfer into the emerging entrepreneur program special revenue fund account created under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 116M, and are available until expended. Of this amount, up to four percent is for administration and monitoring of the program.
(t) $163,000 each year is for the Minnesota Film and TV Board. The appropriation in each year is available only upon receipt by the board of $1 in matching contributions of money or in-kind contributions from nonstate sources for every $3 provided by this appropriation, except that each year up to $50,000 is available on July 1 even if the required matching contribution has not been received by that date.
(u) $12,000 each year is for a grant to the Upper Minnesota Film Office.
(v) $500,000 each year is from the general fund for a grant to the Minnesota Film and TV Board for the film production jobs program under Minnesota Statutes, section 116U.26. This appropriation is available until June 30, 2023.
(w) $4,195,000 each year is for the Minnesota job skills partnership program under Minnesota Statutes, sections 116L.01 to 116L.17. If the appropriation for either year is insufficient, the appropriation for the other year is available. This appropriation is available until expended.
(x) $1,350,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for jobs training grants under Minnesota Statutes, section 116L.42.
(y) $2,500,000 each year is for Launch Minnesota. This is a onetime appropriation and funds are available until June 30, 2023. Of this amount:
(1) $1,600,000 each year is for innovation grants to eligible Minnesota entrepreneurs or start-up businesses to assist with their operating needs;
(2)
$450,000 each year is for administration of Launch Minnesota; and
(3) $450,000 each year is for grantee activities at Launch Minnesota.
(z) $500,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for a grant to Youthprise to give grants through a competitive process to community organizations to provide economic development services designed to enhance long-term economic self-sufficiency in communities with concentrated East African populations. Such communities include but are not limited to Faribault, Rochester, St. Cloud, Moorhead, and Willmar. To the extent possible, Youthprise must make at least 50 percent of these grants to organizations serving communities located outside the seven-county metropolitan area, as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2. This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2022.
(aa) $125,000 each year is for a grant to the Hmong Chamber of Commerce to train ethnically Southeast Asian business owners and operators in better business practices. This is a onetime appropriation and is available until June 30, 2023.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from July 1, 2019.
Sec. 3. GRANT
TO THE NORTHEAST ENTREPRENEUR FUND; APPROPRIATION.
$1,148,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of employment and
economic development for a grant to the Northeast Entrepreneur Fund, a small
business administration microlender and community development financial
institution operating in northern Minnesota, to be made only upon the Northeast
Entrepreneur Fund's repayment of its current $1,148,000 loan issued by the
commissioner. Grant funds must be used
as capital for accessing additional federal lending for small businesses
impacted by COVID-19 and must be returned to the commissioner for deposit in
the general fund if the Northeast Entrepreneur Fund fails to secure such
federal funds before January 1, 2022. This
is a onetime appropriation.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 4. APPROPRIATION;
SMALL BUSINESS COVID-19 GRANT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of employment and economic development.
(c) "Department" means the
Department of Employment and Economic Development.
(d) "Eligible organization"
means the Minnesota Initiative Foundations, community development financial
institutions, and other nonprofits the commissioner determines to be similarly
qualified.
(e) "Program" means the small
business COVID-19 grant program under this section.
Subd. 2. Appropriation. $50,000,000 in fiscal year 2021 is
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner for the small business
COVID-19 grant program under this section.
Of this amount:
(1) $24,900,000 is for grants to the
Minnesota Initiative Foundations to provide grants to businesses in greater
Minnesota. Up to ten percent of this
amount may be used for the administrative costs of the Minnesota Initiative
Foundations;
(2)
$24,900,000 is for grants to eligible organizations to provide grants to
businesses in the seven-county metropolitan area defined in section 473.121,
subdivision 2. Up to ten percent of this
amount may be used for the administrative costs of the eligible organizations;
and
(3) $200,000 is for the administrative
costs of the department.
Any funds not spent by eligible
organizations by December 31, 2021, must be returned to the commissioner and
canceled back to the general fund.
Subd. 3. Distribution
of grants. (a) Of grants
given under this section, a minimum of:
(1) $10,000,000 must be awarded to
businesses that employ the equivalent of six full-time workers or less;
(2) $10,000,000 must be awarded to
minority business enterprises, as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section
116M.14, subdivision 5; and
(3) $3,000,000 must be awarded under
subdivision 5.
(b) No business may receive more than
one grant under this section.
Subd. 4. Grants
to businesses. (a) To be
eligible for a grant under this subdivision, a business must:
(1) have primary business operations
located in the state of Minnesota;
(2) be owned by a resident of the state
of Minnesota;
(3) employ the equivalent of 100
full-time workers or less; and
(4) be able to demonstrate financial
hardship as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak.
(b) Grants under this subdivision shall
be for no less than $5,000 and no more than $100,000.
(c) Grant funds must be used for working
capital to support payroll expenses, rent or mortgage payments, utility bills,
and other similar expenses that occur or have occurred since November 1, 2020,
in the regular course of business, but not to refinance debt that existed at
the time of the governor's COVID-19 peacetime emergency declaration.
Subd. 5. Grants
to businesses renting space to other businesses. (a) To be eligible for a grant under
this subdivision, a business must:
(1) be an operator of privately owned
permanent indoor retail space that has an ethnic cultural emphasis and at least
12 tenants that are primarily businesses with fewer than 20 employees;
(2) have primary business operations
located in the state of Minnesota;
(3) be owned by a resident of the state
of Minnesota;
(4) employ the equivalent of 100
full-time workers or less; and
(5) be able to demonstrate financial
hardship as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak.
(b) Grants under this subdivision shall
be for no more than $250,000.
(c)
Up to $20,000 of grant funds a business receives may be used for working
capital to support payroll expenses, rent or mortgage payments, utility bills,
and other similar expenses that occur or have occurred since November 1, 2020,
in the regular course of business, but not to refinance debt that existed at
the time of the governor's COVID-19 peacetime emergency declaration.
(d) The remainder of grant funds must
be used to maintain existing tenants of the operator through the issuing of
credits or forgiveness of rent. Any
tenant receiving such a benefit from the grant must meet the requirements under
subdivision 4, paragraph (a).
Subd. 6. Applications. (a) The commissioner may develop
criteria, forms, applications, and reporting requirements for use by eligible
organizations providing grants to businesses.
(b) All businesses applying for a grant
must include as part of their application a business plan for continued
operation.
Subd. 7. Exemptions. All grants and grant making processes
under this section are exempt from Minnesota Statutes, sections 16A.15,
subdivision 3; 16B.97; and 16B.98, subdivisions 5, 7, and 8. The commissioner must audit the use of grant
funds under this section in accordance with standard accounting practices. The exemptions under this paragraph expire on
December 30, 2021.
Subd. 8. Reports. (a) By January 31, 2022, eligible
organizations participating in the program must provide a report to the
commissioner that include descriptions of the businesses supported by the
program, the amounts granted, and an explanation of administrative expenses.
(b) By February 15, 2022, the
commissioner must report to the legislative committees in the house of
representatives and senate with jurisdiction over economic development about
grants made under this program based on the information received under
paragraph (a).
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 5. CANCELLATIONS;
FISCAL YEAR 2021.
(a)
$1,022,000 of the fiscal year 2021 general fund appropriation under Laws 2019,
First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 2, subdivision 4, is
canceled.
(b) $25,000,000 of the fiscal year 2021
general fund appropriation under Laws 2020, Seventh Special Session chapter 2,
article 3, section 2, is canceled.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
ARTICLE 3
DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116J.035, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Receipt of gifts, money; appropriation. (a) The commissioner may:
(1) apply for, accept, and disburse gifts, bequests, grants, payments for services, loans, or other property from the United States, the state, private foundations, or any other source;
(2) enter into an agreement required for the gifts, grants, or loans; and
(3) hold, use, and dispose of its assets according to the terms of the gift, grant, loan, or agreement.
(b) Money received by the commissioner under this subdivision must be deposited in a separate account in the state treasury and invested by the State Board of Investment. The amount deposited, including investment earnings, is appropriated to the commissioner to carry out duties under this section.
(c) Money received by the commissioner
under this subdivision for State Services for the Blind is exempt from
depositing gifts, bequests, charitable contributions, and similar contributions
made solely into the state treasury.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116J.431, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Eligible projects. (a) An economic development project for which a county or city may be eligible to receive a grant under this section includes:
(1) manufacturing;
(2) technology;
(3) warehousing and distribution;
(4) research and development;
(5) agricultural processing, defined as transforming, packaging, sorting, or grading livestock or livestock products into goods that are used for intermediate or final consumption, including goods for nonfood use; or
(6) industrial park development that would be used by any other business listed in this subdivision even if no business has committed to locate in the industrial park at the time the grant application is made.
(b) Up to 15 percent of the development
of a project may be for a purpose that is ancillary to the project but that is
not included under this subdivision as an eligible project. A city or county must provide notice to the
commissioner for the commissioner's approval of the proposed ancillary
development purpose.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to projects that have
been funded previously under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116J.431, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3a. Development
restrictions expiration. After
ten years from the date of the grant award under this section, a project that
has been developed for its original project purpose may be developed for any
lawful purpose.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment and applies to projects that have
been funded previously under Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.431.
Sec. 4. [116J.8736]
MICROENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The commissioner of employment and
economic development shall establish the microenterprise development program to
award grants to microenterprise development organizations to encourage
microenterprise development.
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of employment and economic development.
(c)
"Disadvantaged entrepreneur" means an owner of a microenterprise who
is a low-income person or otherwise lacks adequate access to capital or other
resources essential for business success.
(d) "Low-income person" means
a person with an income adjusted for family size that does not exceed:
(1) for metropolitan areas, 80 percent
of median income; or
(2) for nonmetropolitan areas, the
greater of 80 percent of the area median income or 80 percent of the statewide
nonmetropolitan area median income.
(e) "Microenterprise" means a
business, including a start-up, home-based, or self-employed business, with no
more than five employees.
(f) "Microenterprise development
organization" means a nonprofit entity that provides one or more of the
services under subdivision 4 to disadvantaged entrepreneurs.
(g) "Program" means the
microenterprise development program established under this section.
Subd. 3. Grants
to microenterprise development organizations. The commissioner shall make grants to
microenterprise development organizations through a competitive grant process
based on criteria developed by the commissioner and shall consider each
applicant's:
(1) plan for providing business
development services and loans to microenterprises;
(2) scope of services to be provided;
(3) plan for coordinating services and
loans with financial institutions;
(4) ability to provide business training
and technical assistance to disadvantaged entrepreneurs;
(5) ability to monitor and provide
financial oversight of recipients of loans and services; and
(6) sources and sufficiency of operating
funds.
In selecting grant recipients, the commissioner shall
ensure that services are provided to all regions of the state, including both
metropolitan areas and communities in greater Minnesota.
Subd. 4. Eligible
uses of grant funds. Microenterprise
development organizations may use grant funds for any of the following
purposes:
(1) satisfying matching fund
requirements for federal or private grants or loans that will allow the
microenterprise development organization to provide another service under this
subdivision to disadvantaged entrepreneurs;
(2) establishing a revolving loan fund
for loans to disadvantaged entrepreneurs.
The loans may be zero interest and must be for no more than $25,000 per
microenterprise;
(3) guaranteeing loans from private
financial institutions to disadvantaged entrepreneurs;
(4) providing technical assistance,
mentoring, training, or physical space to disadvantaged entrepreneurs; and
(5) up to ten percent of grant funds may
be used for the operating costs of the microenterprise development organization
and its administrative costs for the program.
Subd. 5. Reports
to the legislature. (a) By
December 1, 2023, and every December 1 thereafter until given permission by the
commissioner to cease reporting, grant recipients must submit a report to the
commissioner on the use of grant funds in the form that the commissioner
prescribes and include any documentation of and supporting information
regarding the grant that the commissioner requires, including:
(1) the demand for services under the
program;
(2) information on the types of
applicants seeking program services; and
(3) a list of all loans or loan
guarantees made, including the name of the recipient, the amount, and its
intended purpose.
(b) By December 31, 2023, and every
December 31 thereafter until all grant recipients have ceased reporting, the
commissioner must submit a report as required under Minnesota Statutes, section
3.195, that details the use of funds under this section, including the
information provided by grant recipients, as well as an analysis of the impact
of the program. A copy of this report
must also be sent to the chairs and ranking minority members of the committees
of the house of representatives and the senate having jurisdiction over
economic development.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116J.8748, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Minnesota job creation fund business designation; requirements. (a) To receive designation as a Minnesota job creation fund business, a business must satisfy all of the following conditions:
(1) the business is or will be engaged in, within Minnesota, one of the following as its primary business activity:
(i) manufacturing;
(ii) warehousing;
(iii) distribution;
(iv) information technology;
(v) finance;
(vi) insurance; or
(vii) professional or technical services;
(2) the business must not be primarily engaged in lobbying; gambling; entertainment; professional sports; political consulting; leisure; hospitality; or professional services provided by attorneys, accountants, business consultants, physicians, or health care consultants, or primarily engaged in making retail sales to purchasers who are physically present at the business's location;
(3) the business must enter into a binding construction and job creation business subsidy agreement with the commissioner to expend directly, or ensure expenditure by or in partnership with a third party constructing or managing the project, at least $500,000 in capital investment in a capital investment project that includes a new, expanded, or remodeled facility within one year following designation as a Minnesota job creation fund business or $250,000 if the project is located outside the metropolitan area as defined in section 200.02, subdivision 24, or if 51 percent of the business is cumulatively owned by minorities, veterans, women, or persons with a disability; and:
(i) create at least ten new full-time employee positions within two years of the benefit date following the designation as a Minnesota job creation fund business or five new full-time employee positions within two years of the benefit date if the project is located outside the metropolitan area as defined in section 200.02, subdivision 24, or if 51 percent of the business is cumulatively owned by minorities, veterans, women, or persons with a disability; or
(ii) expend at least $25,000,000, which may include the installation and purchase of machinery and equipment, in capital investment and retain at least 200 employees for projects located in the metropolitan area as defined in section 200.02, subdivision 24, and 75 employees for projects located outside the metropolitan area;
(4) positions or employees moved or relocated from another Minnesota location of the Minnesota job creation fund business must not be included in any calculation or determination of job creation or new positions under this paragraph; and
(5) a Minnesota job creation fund business must not terminate, lay off, or reduce the working hours of an employee for the purpose of hiring an individual to satisfy job creation goals under this subdivision.
With the commissioner's authorization, the one-year period requirement
to meet minimum capital investment requirements under clause (3) and the
minimum job creation requirements under clause (3), item (i), may be extended
for up to 12 months for projects that must meet these requirements within 12
months of an active peacetime emergency as declared by the governor.
(b) Prior to approving the proposed designation of a business under this subdivision, the commissioner shall consider the following:
(1) the economic outlook of the industry in which the business engages;
(2) the projected sales of the business that will be generated from outside the state of Minnesota;
(3) how the business will build on existing regional, national, and international strengths to diversify the state's economy;
(4) whether the business activity would occur without financial assistance;
(5) whether the business is unable to expand at an existing Minnesota operation due to facility or land limitations;
(6) whether the business has viable location options outside Minnesota;
(7) the effect of financial assistance on industry competitors in Minnesota;
(8) financial contributions to the project made by local governments; and
(9) any other criteria the commissioner deems necessary.
(c) Upon receiving notification of local approval under subdivision 2, the commissioner shall review the determination by the local government and consider the conditions listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) to determine whether it is in the best interests of the state and local area to designate a business as a Minnesota job creation fund business.
(d) If the commissioner designates a business as a Minnesota job creation fund business, the business subsidy agreement shall include the performance outcome commitments and the expected financial value of any Minnesota job creation fund benefits.
(e) The commissioner may amend an agreement once, upon request of a local government on behalf of a business, only if the performance is expected to exceed thresholds stated in the original agreement.
(f) A business may apply to be designated as a Minnesota job creation fund business at the same location more than once only if all goals under a previous Minnesota job creation fund agreement have been met and the agreement is completed.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from March 15, 2020.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116J.994, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Failure to meet goals. (a) The subsidy agreement must specify the recipient's obligation if the recipient does not fulfill the agreement. At a minimum, the agreement must require a recipient failing to meet subsidy agreement goals to pay back the assistance plus interest to the grantor or, at the grantor's option, to the account created under section 116J.551 provided that repayment may be prorated to reflect partial fulfillment of goals. The interest rate must be set at no less than the implicit price deflator for government consumption expenditures and gross investment for state and local governments prepared by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the United States Department of Commerce for the 12-month period ending March 31 of the previous year. The grantor, after a public hearing, may extend for up to one year the period for meeting the wage and job goals under subdivision 4 provided in a subsidy agreement or up to two years if a peacetime emergency under section 12.31, subdivision 2, as declared by the governor is active during the initial two-year compliance period. A grantor may extend the period for meeting other goals under subdivision 3, paragraph (a), clause (3), by documenting in writing the reason for the extension and attaching a copy of the document to its next annual report to the department.
(b) A recipient that fails to meet the terms of a subsidy agreement may not receive a business subsidy from any grantor for a period of five years from the date of failure or until a recipient satisfies its repayment obligation under this subdivision, whichever occurs first.
(c) Before a grantor signs a business subsidy agreement, the grantor must check with the compilation and summary report required by this section to determine if the recipient is eligible to receive a business subsidy.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from March 15, 2020.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.02, is amended to read:
116L.02
JOB SKILLS PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM.
(a) The Minnesota Job Skills
Partnership program is created to act as a catalyst to bring together employers
with specific training needs with educational or other nonprofit institutions
which can design programs to fill those needs.
The partnership shall work closely with employers to prepare, train and
place prospective or incumbent workers in identifiable positions as well as
assisting educational or other nonprofit institutions in developing training
programs that coincide with current and future employer requirements. The partnership shall provide grants to
educational or other nonprofit institutions for the purpose of training workers. A participating business must match the
grant-in-aid made by the Minnesota Job Skills Partnership. The match may be in the form of funding,
equipment, or faculty.
(b) The partnership program is
authorized to use funds to pay for training for individuals who have incomes at
or below 200 percent of the federal poverty line. The board may grant funds to eligible
recipients to pay for board‑certified training. Eligible recipients of grants may include
public, private, or nonprofit entities that provide employment services to
low-income individuals.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.03, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Members. The partnership shall be governed by a
board of 12 13 directors.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Appointment. The Minnesota Job Skills Partnership
Board consists of: seven eight
members appointed by the governor, the commissioner of employment and economic
development, the chancellor, or the chancellor's designee, of the Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities, the president, or the president's designee, of
the University of Minnesota, and two nonlegislator members, one appointed by
the Subcommittee on Committees of the senate Committee on Rules and
Administration and one appointed by the speaker of the house. If the chancellor or the president of the
university makes a designation under this subdivision, the designee must have
experience in technical education. Four
of the appointed members must be members of the governor's Workforce
Development Board, of whom two must represent organized labor and two must
represent business and industry. One
of the appointed members must be a representative of a nonprofit organization
that provides workforce development or job training services. Two of the
members must be from community-based organizations that have demonstrated
experience and expertise in addressing the employment, training, or education
needs of individuals or communities facing barriers to employment.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.03, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Qualifications. Members must have expertise in, and be
representative of one of the following fields of: education,
job skills training, labor, business, and or government.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.05, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5.
Use of workforce development
funds. After March 1 of any fiscal
year, the board may use workforce development funds appropriated
under section 116L.20, subdivision 2, paragraph (b), clause (1), for the
purposes outlined in sections 116L.02 and 116L.04, or to provide incumbent
worker training services under section 116L.18 116L.21 and 116L.22 if
the following conditions have been met:
(1) the board examines relevant economic indicators, including the projected number of layoffs for the remainder of the fiscal year and the next fiscal year, evidence of declining and expanding industries, the number of initial applications for and the number of exhaustions of unemployment benefits disaggregated by race and ethnicity, job vacancy data, and any additional relevant information brought to the board's attention;
(2) the board accounts for all allocations made in section 116L.17, subdivision 2;
(3) based on the past expenditures and projected revenue, the board estimates future funding needs for services under section 116L.17 for the remainder of the current fiscal year and the next fiscal year;
(4) the board determines there will be unspent funds after meeting the needs of dislocated workers in the current fiscal year and there will be sufficient revenue to meet the needs of dislocated workers in the next fiscal year; and
(5) the board reports its findings in clauses (1) to (4) to the chairs of legislative committees with jurisdiction over the workforce development fund, to the commissioners of revenue and management and budget, and to the public.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.17, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following terms have the meanings given them in this subdivision.
(b) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of employment and economic development.
(c) "Dislocated worker" means an individual who is a resident of Minnesota at the time employment ceased or was working in the state at the time employment ceased and:
(1) has been temporarily or
permanently separated or has received a notice of temporary or permanent
separation from public or private sector employment and is eligible for or has
exhausted entitlement to unemployment benefits, and is unlikely to return to
the previous industry or occupation;
(2) has been long-term unemployed and has
limited opportunities for employment or reemployment in the same or a similar
occupation in the area in which the individual resides, including older
individuals who may have substantial barriers to employment by reason of age;
(3) (2) has been terminated or
has received a notice of termination of employment as a result of a plant
closing or a substantial layoff at a plant, facility, or enterprise;
(4) (3) has been
self-employed, including farmers and ranchers, and is unemployed as a result of
general economic conditions in the community in which the individual resides or
because of natural disasters;
(5) (4) is a veteran as
defined by section 197.447, has been discharged or released from active duty
under honorable conditions within the last 36 months, and (i) is unemployed or
(ii) is employed in a job verified to be below the skill level and earning
capacity of the veteran;
(6) (5) is an individual
determined by the United States Department of Labor to be covered by trade
adjustment assistance under United States Code, title 19, sections 2271 to
2331, as amended; or
(7) (6) is a displaced
homemaker. A "displaced
homemaker" is an individual who has spent a substantial number of years in
the home providing homemaking service and (i) has been dependent upon the
financial support of another; and now due to divorce, separation, death, or
disability of that person, must find employment to self support; or (ii)
derived the substantial share of support from public assistance on account of
dependents in the home and no longer receives such support. To be eligible under this clause, the support
must have ceased while the worker resided in Minnesota.
For the purposes of this section, "dislocated worker" does not include an individual who was an employee, at the time employment ceased, of a political committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or party unit, as those terms are used in chapter 10A, or an organization required to file with the federal elections commission.
(d) "Eligible organization" means a state or local government unit, nonprofit organization, community action agency, business organization or association, or labor organization.
(e) "Plant closing" means the announced or actual permanent shutdown of a single site of employment, or one or more facilities or operating units within a single site of employment.
(f) "Substantial layoff" means a permanent reduction in the workforce, which is not a result of a plant closing, and which results in an employment loss at a single site of employment during any 30-day period for at least 50 employees excluding those employees that work less than 20 hours per week.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.17, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Use of funds. Funds granted by the board under this section may be used for any combination of the following, except as otherwise provided in this section:
(1) employment transition services such as developing readjustment plans for individuals; outreach and intake; early readjustment; job or career counseling; testing; orientation; assessment of skills and aptitudes; provision of occupational and labor market information; job placement assistance; job search; job development; prelayoff assistance; relocation assistance; programs provided in cooperation with employers or labor organizations to provide early intervention in the event of plant closings or substantial layoffs; and entrepreneurial training and business consulting;
(2) support services, including assistance
to help the participant relocate to employ existing skills; out-of-area job
search assistance; family care assistance, including child care; commuting
transportation assistance; emergency housing and rental assistance;
counseling assistance, including personal and financial; health care; emergency
health assistance; emergency financial assistance; work-related tools and
clothing; and other appropriate support services that enable a person to
participate in an employment and training program with the goal of
reemployment;
(3) specific, short-term training to help the participant enhance current skills in a similar occupation or industry; entrepreneurial training, customized training, or on-the-job training; basic and remedial education to enhance current skills; and literacy and work-related English training for non-English speakers;
(4) long-term training in a new occupation or industry, including occupational skills training or customized training in an accredited program recognized by one or more relevant industries. Long-term training shall only be provided to dislocated workers whose skills are obsolete and who have no other transferable skills likely to result in employment at a comparable wage rate. Training shall only be provided for occupations or industries with reasonable expectations of job availability based on the service provider's thorough assessment of local labor market information where the individual currently resides or is willing to relocate. This clause shall not restrict training in personal services or other such industries; and
(5) direct training services to provide a measurable increase in the job-related skills of participating incumbent workers, including basic assessment, counseling, and preemployment training services requested by the qualifying employer.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.20, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Disbursement of special assessment funds. (a) The money collected under this section shall be deposited in the state treasury and credited to the workforce development fund to provide for employment and training programs. The workforce development fund is created as a special account in the state treasury.
(b) All money in the fund not otherwise
appropriated or transferred is appropriated to the Job Skills Partnership Board
for the purposes of section 116L.17 and as provided for in paragraph (d). Of
the money in the fund not otherwise appropriated or transferred by July 1 of
each year:
(1) at least 30 percent is appropriated
to the Job Skills Partnership Board for the purposes of section 116L.17. If the conditions under section 116L.05,
subdivision 5, are met as of March 1 of each year, a minimum of 50 percent and
up to a maximum of 70 percent of the unspent money must be transferred for the
programs under sections 116L.21 and 116L.22;
(2) up to five percent is appropriated
to the Job Skills Partnership Board for the purposes of sections 116L.02 and
116L.04; and
(3) up to 65 percent is appropriated to
the commissioner for workforce development grants under subdivision 3.
(c) The board must act as the fiscal agent for the money and must disburse that money for the purposes of section 116L.17, not allowing the money to be used for any other obligation of the state. All money in the workforce development fund shall be deposited, administered, and disbursed in the same manner and under the same conditions and requirements as are provided by law for the other special accounts in the state treasury, except that all interest or net income resulting from the investment or deposit of money in the fund shall accrue to the fund for the purposes of the fund.
(c) (d) Reimbursement for costs
related to collection of the special assessment shall be in an amount
negotiated between the commissioner and the United States Department of Labor.
(d) If the board determines that the
conditions of section 116L.05, subdivision 5, have been met, the board may use
funds for the purposes outlined in section 116L.04, or to provide incumbent
worker training services under section 116L.18.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.20, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3. Workforce
development grants. (a)
Grants awarded using money appropriated under subdivision 2, paragraph (b),
clause (3), must be allocated to maximize delivery to organizations with strong
relationships with individuals who are Black, Indigenous, or People of Color. Grant awards must be consistent with the
overall geographic population distribution of the state. Preference or priority for grant awards must
be given to organizations with experience serving communities with the greatest
needs that are Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.
(b) Of the amount appropriated under
subdivision 2, paragraph (b), clause (3):
(1) up to six percent is for
administration and monitoring of the workforce development programs; and
(2) grants must be made for programs
under sections 116L.362, 116L.561, 116L.562, 116L.96, 116L.981, and 116L.99.
(c) Of the amount appropriated under
subdivision 2, paragraph (b), clause (3), remaining after the appropriations
under paragraph (b):
(1) 50 percent is for removing barriers
to employment grants under section 116L.21; and
(2) 50 percent is for innovative
employment solutions grants under section 116L.22.
(d) When making competitive grants for
adult grantees, the commissioner shall benchmark outcomes against similar
populations with similar barriers to employment. The commissioner must consider the following
outcomes for competitive grant awards focused on adults: job placement and retention, wage levels, and
credentials attainment. The commissioner
must consider the following outcomes for competitive grant awards focused on
youth: work readiness, credentials, and
placement.
Sec. 16. [116L.21]
REMOVING BARRIERS TO EMPLOYMENT GRANT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of employment and economic development.
(c) "Minority" means a person
who identifies as a member of one or more of the following groups:
(1) Black, including persons having
origins of any of the Black African racial groups not of Hispanic origin;
(2)
Hispanic, including persons of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central American,
South American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race;
(3) Asian and Pacific Islander,
including persons having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far
East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands; and
(4) American Indian or Alaskan Native,
including persons having origins in any of the original people of North America
and maintaining identifiable Tribal affiliations through membership and
participation or community identification.
(d) "Program" means the
removing barriers to employment grant program under this section.
(e) "Targeted population"
means socially and economically disadvantaged minority populations who
experience complex needs and barriers to employment.
Subd. 2. Establishment. The commissioner shall establish a
competitive grant program for organizations to provide individuals with
barriers to employment the services, including supportive services, needed to
enter, participate in, and complete workforce preparation, training, and
education programs.
Subd. 3. Grants. (a) Grants under this section shall be
awarded on a competitive basis after consultation with the Grant Review
Advisory Council under section 116L.23.
(b) The commissioner must provide
outreach and technical assistance to prospective applicants.
(c) Grant applicants may be required to
participate in technical assistance activities, including but not limited to
convening communities of practice to identify and help replicate evidence-based
practices and to help facilitate an assessment and evaluation of grant
performance and initiative success.
Subd. 4. Award
criteria. (a) The
commissioner shall develop criteria for the selection of grant recipients that
focus on but are not limited to the applicant's demonstrated capacity to
provide services to targeted populations.
(b) Priority must be given to
applications that integrate individuals from targeted populations into career
pathway programs aligned with regional labor market needs.
(c) Grant awards must cumulatively
ensure the provision of services statewide and to a range of targeted
populations.
Subd. 5. Capacity
building grants. (a) A
portion of the money available for this program must be allocated for capacity
building competitive grants to small, culturally specific nonprofit
organizations that serve historically underserved cultural communities and have
an annual organizational budget of less than $500,000.
(b) Capacity building grants may be
used for the following purposes: organizational
infrastructure improvement, organizational workforce development, and the
creation or expansion of partnerships.
Subd. 6. Performance
outcome measures. Reporting
and performance outcomes for this program must comply with the requirements
under section 116L.98.
Subd. 7. Report
to the legislature. (a)
Within one year of receiving grant funds under this section, organizations must
each submit a written report to the commissioner on the use of grant funds.
(b)
Beginning in January 2023, the commissioner must submit a biennial report on
the information reported under paragraph (a), as required under section 3.195. A copy of this report must also be sent to
the chairs and ranking minority members of the committees of the house of
representatives and the senate having jurisdiction over workforce development.
Sec. 17. [116L.22]
INNOVATIVE EMPLOYMENT SOLUTIONS GRANT PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of employment and economic development.
(c) "Department" means the
Department of Employment and Economic Development.
(d) "Minority" means a person
who identifies as a member of one or more of the following groups:
(1) Black, including persons having
origins of any of the Black African racial groups not of Hispanic origin;
(2) Hispanic, including persons of
Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central American, South American, or other
Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race;
(3) Asian and Pacific Islander,
including persons having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far
East, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands; and
(4) American Indian or Alaskan Native,
including persons having origins in any of the original people of North America
and maintaining identifiable Tribal affiliations through membership and
participation or community identification.
(e) "Performance measures"
means specific, measurable, time-based goals, the completion of which predicates
payment under a pay for performance agreement.
(f) "Program" means the
innovative employment solutions grant program under this section.
(g) "Targeted population"
means socially and economically disadvantaged minority populations who
experience complex needs and barriers to employment.
Subd. 2. Establishment. The commissioner shall establish a
competitive grant program for organizations to provide individuals with
barriers to employment the services, including supportive services needed to enter,
participate in, and complete workforce preparation, training, and education
programs aligned with regional labor market needs in innovative ways. This program shall fund new ideas and
approaches and work with organizations with no previous record of accomplishments
with the department. Priority must be
given to applications that integrate individuals from targeted populations into
career pathway programs aligned with regional labor market needs.
Subd. 3. Grants. (a) Grants under this section shall be
awarded on a competitive basis after consultation with the Grant Review
Advisory Council under section 116L.23.
(b) The commissioner must provide
outreach and technical assistance to prospective applicants.
(c) Grant applicants may be required to
participate in technical assistance activities, including but not limited to
convening communities of practice to identify and help replicate evidence-based
practices and to help facilitate an assessment and evaluation of grant
performance and initiative success.
Subd. 4. Pay
for performance. (a) All
grants under the program must be pay for performance under a written agreement
with the commissioner that stipulates the specific project, services, time
period, number of participants, population targeted, and quantifiable
performance measures the applicant organization will achieve, along with an
amount of money that will be paid to the organization if those performance
measures are achieved within the stated time period.
(b) Achievement of the specified performance
measures shall be determined by an independent evaluator procured by the
organization.
(c) To enter into a written agreement
under this subdivision, the applicant organization must first provide evidence
that it has secured all necessary financing before service delivery begins and
must provide information on these sources of funding, including any matching
funds that will be used.
Subd. 5. Performance
outcome measures. Reporting
and performance outcomes for this program must comply with the requirements
under section 116L.98.
Subd. 6. Report
to legislature. (a) Within
one year of receiving grant funds under this section, organizations must each
submit a written report to the commissioner on the use of grant funds.
(b) Beginning in January 2023, the
commissioner must submit a biennial report on the information reported under
paragraph (a), as required under section 3.195.
A copy of this report must also be sent to the chairs and ranking
minority members of the committees of the house of representatives and the
senate having jurisdiction over workforce development.
Sec. 18. [116L.23]
GRANT REVIEW ADVISORY COUNCIL.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. The commissioner of employment and
economic development shall establish a Grant Review Advisory Council to review
grant applications and make recommendations to the commissioner.
Subd. 2. Appointment
of members. (a) By July 15,
2021, the commissioner shall appoint 15 members to the advisory council. These members must have demonstrated
experience and expertise in workforce development and must represent a diverse
range of communities and perspectives.
(b) After the initial appointments,
members of the advisory council shall be appointed no later than January 15 of
every odd-numbered year and shall serve until January 15 of the next
odd-numbered year. Members may be
removed and vacancies filled as provided in section 15.059, subdivision 4. Appointed members are eligible for
reappointment and shall serve until their successors have been appointed.
Subd. 3. Operations. (a) The commissioner shall convene the
first meeting of the advisory council no later than August 1, 2021. The advisory council shall elect a chair and
other officers at its first meeting and biannually thereafter. The duties of these officers shall be
established by the advisory council.
(b) Members of the advisory council
serve without compensation or payment of expenses.
(c) The commissioner shall provide
meeting space and administrative services for the advisory council. All costs necessary to support the advisory
council's operations must be absorbed using existing appropriations available
to the commissioner.
(d) The advisory council is subject to
chapter 13D, but may close a meeting to discuss sensitive private business
information included in grant applications.
Data related to an application for a grant submitted to the advisory
council is governed by section 13.599.
Subd. 4. Review
of grants. The advisory
council shall establish criteria for ranking applicants for awards under each
grant program in which the council provides recommendations to the commissioner. This criteria must consider which applicants
are currently able or have the best potential to:
(1) reach a broad diverse audience,
including any populations targeted by the program, through their recruitment
and outreach efforts;
(2)
significantly increase enrollment in and completion of the training program the
applicant plans to promote; and
(3) fill existing market needs for
skilled workers.
The advisory council must also consider the documented
employment outcomes each applicant achieved when operating similar programs in
the past.
Subd. 5. Conflicts
of interest. A member of the
advisory council must not participate in the consideration of an application
submitted by anyone with whom the member has a financial or personal
relationship and must complete a conflict of interest form indicating the
nature of such a relationship before participating in the consideration of any
applicants in the same round of applications to that grant program.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.40, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a. Automation
technology. "Automation
technology" means a process or procedure performed with minimal human
assistance. Automation or automatic
control is the use of various control systems for operating equipment such as
machinery, processes in factories, or other applications with minimal or
reduced human intervention. Adoption,
implementation, and utilization of any one of three types of automation in
production are acceptable for consideration of this program, including fixed
automation, programmable automation, and flexible automation.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.40, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Employee. "Employee" means the individual employed in a new or existing job.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.40, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Employer. "Employer" means the individual, corporation, partnership, limited liability company, or association providing new jobs or investing in new automation technology and entering into an agreement.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.40, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Program
costs. "Program costs"
means all necessary and incidental costs of providing program services,
except that program costs are increased by $1,000 per employee for an
individual with a disability. The
term does not include the cost of purchasing equipment to be owned or used by
the training or educational institution or service.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.40, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. Program services. "Program services" means training and education specifically directed to new or existing jobs that are determined to be appropriate by the commissioner, including in-house training; services provided by institutions of higher education and federal, state, or local agencies; or private training or educational services. Administrative services and assessment and testing costs are included.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.41, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Service
provision. Upon request, the
commissioner shall provide or coordinate the provision of program services
under sections 116L.40 to 116L.42 to a business eligible for grants under this
section 116L.42. The commissioner
shall specify the form of and required information to be provided with
applications for projects to be funded with grants under this section 116L.42.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.41, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1a. Job
training incentive program. (a)
The commissioner may provide grants in aid of up to $200,000 to new or
expanding employers at a location in Minnesota and outside of the metropolitan
area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2, for the provision of
program services using the guidelines in this subdivision.
(b) The program must involve training
and education specifically directed to new jobs that are determined to be
appropriate by the commissioner.
(c) The program must give preference to
projects that provide training for economically disadvantaged people, people of
color, or people with disabilities and to employers located in economically
distressed areas.
(d) Employers are eligible for
reimbursement of program costs of up to $10,000 per new job for which training
is provided, with an additional $1,000 available per new job for an individual
with a disability.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.41, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 1b. Automation
incentive program. (a) The
commissioner may provide grants in aid of up to $35,000 to employers at a location in Minnesota outside of the metropolitan
area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2, for the provision of
program services using the guidelines in this subdivision.
(b) The employer must be an existing
business located in Minnesota that is in the manufacturing or skilled assembly
production industry and has 150 or fewer full-time employees companywide.
(c) The employer must be invested in
new automation technology within the past year or plan to invest in new
automation technology within the project time frame specified in the agreement
under subdivision 3.
(d) The program must involve training
and education for full-time, permanent employees that is directly related to
the new automation technology.
(e) The program must give preference to
projects that provide training for economically disadvantaged people, people of
color, or people with disabilities and to employers located in economically
distressed areas.
(f) Employers are eligible for program
cost reimbursement of up to $5,000 per employee trained on new automation
technology and retained.
Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.41, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Agreements; required terms. (a) The commissioner may enter into an agreement to establish a project with an employer that:
(1) identifies program costs to be paid from sources under the program;
(2) identifies program costs to be paid by the employer;
(3) provides that on-the-job training costs for employees may not exceed 50 percent of the annual gross wages and salaries of the new jobs in the first full year after execution of the agreement up to a maximum of $10,000 per eligible employee;
(4) provides that each employee must be
paid wages at least equal to the median hourly wage for the county in which the
job is located, as reported in the most recently available data from the United
States Bureau of the Census, plus benefits, by the earlier of the end of the
training period or 18 months of employment under the project receiving
training through the project must be paid wages of at least 120 percent of the
federal poverty guidelines for a family of four, plus benefits; and
(5) provides that job training will be provided and the length of time of training.
(b) Before entering into a final agreement, the commissioner shall:
(1) determine that sufficient funds for
the project are available under section 116L.42; and
(2) investigate the applicability of other training programs and determine whether the job skills partnership grant program is a more suitable source of funding for the training and whether the training can be completed in a timely manner that meets the needs of the business.
The investigation under clause (2) must be completed within 15 days or as soon as reasonably possible after the employer has provided the commissioner with all the requested information.
Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.42, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Recovery of program costs. Amounts paid by employers for program costs are repaid by a job training grant equal to the lesser of the following:
(1) the amount of program costs specified in the agreement for the project; or
(2) the amount of program costs paid by
the employer for new training employees under a project.
Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.42, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Reports. (a) By February 1, 2018 2024,
the commissioner shall report to the governor and the legislature on the program. The report must include at least:
(1) the amount of grants issued under the program;
(2) the number of individuals receiving training under the program, including the number of new hires who are individuals with disabilities;
(3) the number of new hires attributable to the program, including the number of new hires who are individuals with disabilities;
(4) an analysis of the effectiveness of the grant in encouraging employment or investments in automation technology; and
(5) any other information the commissioner determines appropriate.
(b) The report to the legislature must be distributed as provided in section 3.195.
Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.98, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Requirements. The commissioner shall develop and implement a uniform outcome measurement and reporting system for adult workforce-related programs funded in whole or in part by state funds as well as for youth workforce-related programs funded in whole or in part by state funds. For the purpose of this section, "workforce-related programs" means all education and training programs administered by the commissioner and includes programs and services administered by the commissioner and provided to individuals enrolled in adult basic education under section 124D.52 and the Minnesota family investment program under chapter 256J.
Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.98, 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.
(b) "Credential" means
postsecondary degrees, diplomas, licenses, and certificates awarded in
recognition of an individual's attainment of measurable technical or
occupational skills necessary to obtain employment or advance with an
occupation. This definition does not
include certificates awarded by workforce investment boards or work‑readiness
certificates.
(c) "Exit" means to have not received service under a workforce program for 90 consecutive calendar days. The exit date is the last date of service.
(d) "Net impact" means the use of matched control groups and regression analysis to estimate the impacts attributable to program participation net of other factors, including observable personal characteristics and economic conditions.
(e) "Placement" means when a
participant exits into unsubsidized employment, postsecondary education,
vocational or occupational skills training, a registered apprenticeship, or the
military.
(e) (f) "Pre-enrollment"
means the period of time before an individual was enrolled in a workforce
program.
Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 116L.98, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Uniform outcome report card; reporting by commissioner. (a) By December 31 of each even‑numbered year, the commissioner must report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the committees of the house of representatives and the senate having jurisdiction over economic development and workforce policy and finance the following information separately for each of the previous two fiscal or calendar years, for each program subject to the requirements of subdivision 1:
(1) the total number of participants enrolled;
(2) the median pre-enrollment wages based on participant wages for the second through the fifth calendar quarters immediately preceding the quarter of enrollment excluding those with zero income;
(3) the total number of participants with zero income in the second through fifth calendar quarters immediately preceding the quarter of enrollment;
(4) the total number of participants enrolled in training;
(5) the total number of participants enrolled in training by occupational group;
(6) the total number of participants that exited the program and the average enrollment duration of participants that have exited the program during the year;
(7) the total number of exited participants who completed training;
(8) the total number of exited participants who attained a credential;
(9) the total number of participants employed during three consecutive quarters immediately following the quarter of exit, by industry;
(10) the median wages of participants employed during three consecutive quarters immediately following the quarter of exit;
(11) the total number of participants
employed during eight consecutive quarters immediately following the quarter of
exit, by industry; and
(12) the median wages of participants
employed during eight consecutive quarters immediately following the quarter of
exit;.
(13) the total cost of the program;
(14) the total cost of the program per
participant;
(15) the cost per credential received
by a participant; and
(16) the administrative cost of the
program.
(b) The report to the legislature
must contain participant information by education level, race and ethnicity,
gender, and geography, and a comparison of exited participants who completed
training and those who did not. The
report to the legislature shall include a summary of current program trends in
the state that are relevant to workforce development and employment outcomes.
(c) The requirements of this
section apply to programs administered directly by the commissioner or
administered by other organizations under a grant made by the department.
(b) For youth workforce-related
programs funded in whole or in part by state funds the following shall be
reported:
(1) the total number of participants
enrolled in training;
(2) the total number of participants
who completed training;
(3) the total number of exited
participants who have a placement in employment;
(4) the total number of exited
participants who have a placement in post-secondary education;
(5) the total number of exited
participants with a placement in occupational or vocational skills training, apprenticeship
training, or military training;
(6) the total number of exited
participants who have returned to school;
(7)
the total number of exited participants who earned academic credit or service
learning credit for work-based learning or participation in work experience;
(8) the total number of exited
participants who have earned their high school diploma or GED;
(9) the total number of exited
participants who have earned a certificate or industry-recognized credential;
and
(10) the total number of exited
participants who have completed and attained a work readiness skills training. "Work readiness" means a
participant has the knowledge the participant needs in order to seek out
employment. Activities, programs, or
services must be designed to help an individual acquire a combination of basic
academic skills, critical thinking skills, digital literacy skills, and
self-management skills, including competencies in: (i) utilizing resources; (ii) using
information; (iii) working with others; (iv) understanding systems; (v) skills
necessary for successful transition into and completion of postsecondary
education or training, or employment; and (vi) other employability skills. Competencies are measured through a pre- and
post-training checklist completed and evaluated by employers.
Sec. 33. [116L.981]
PATHWAYS TO PROSPERITY PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Pathways
to prosperity. (a) The
commissioner shall establish a pathways to prosperity grant program to award
grants to organizations to train low-skill, low-income adults, and adults
facing the greatest employment disparities, and to assist them in finding
employment in high-demand industries with long-term employment opportunities.
(b) "Pathways to prosperity"
means a combination of rigorous and high-quality education, training, and other
services that:
(1) aligns with the skill needs of
high-growth industries in the state, regional, or local economy;
(2) prepares individuals to enter in
demand careers;
(3) includes counseling and to support
an individual in achieving the individual's education and career goals;
(4) includes, as appropriate, education
offered concurrently with and in the same context as workforce preparation
activities and training for a specific occupation or occupational cluster;
(5) organizes education, training, and
other services to meet the particular needs of an individual in a manner that
accelerates the educational and career advancement of the individual to the
extent practicable;
(6) enables an individual to attain a
relevant academic award, certificate, or industry-recognized credential; and
(7) helps an individual enter or
advance within a specific occupation or occupational cluster.
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Career pathway" means a
career-readiness program that combines vocational skills training, education,
and support services and results in either industry-specific training or an
industry-recognized credential. Career
pathway includes sector specific vocational skills training that leads to
employment in high-demand occupations.
(c) "Pathways to prosperity grant
program" or "grant program" means the competitive grant program
created in this section.
Subd. 3. Competitive
grant process. (a) The
commissioner shall award grants to applicants through a competitive grant
process. This process shall include an
expedited application process for previous grant recipients that operate career
pathway programs that are aligned with current labor market needs and that are
meeting or exceeding their performance goals related to training and placement
for individuals facing multiple barriers to employment.
(b) The commissioner shall develop
criteria for making grants in consultation with workforce development service
providers. These criteria shall include
guidelines for multiple types of career pathways. These criteria shall also consider a
program's alignment with the labor market in the community where the program
operates and, where applicable, a program's previous grant performance.
(c) All reporting requirements for
grant recipients shall be outlined in plain language in both the request for
proposal and the grant contract.
(d) The commissioner shall provide
applicants with technical assistance with understanding application procedures
and program guidelines.
(e) All grants shall be two years in
length.
Subd. 4. Performance
metrics. Reporting and
performance outcomes for the grant program under this section shall comply with
the requirements under section 116L.98.
Sec. 34. Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 7, article 2, section 8, is amended to read:
Sec. 8. LAUNCH
MINNESOTA.
Subdivision 1. Establishment. Launch Minnesota is established within the Business and Community Development Division of the Department of Employment and Economic Development to encourage and support the development of new private sector technologies and support the science and technology policies under Minnesota Statutes, section 3.222. Launch Minnesota must provide entrepreneurs and emerging technology-based companies business development assistance and financial assistance to spur growth.
Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the terms defined in this subdivision have the meanings given.
(b) "Advisory board" means the board established under subdivision 9.
(c) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of employment and economic development.
(d) "Department" means the Department of Employment and Economic Development.
(e) "Entrepreneur" means a Minnesota resident who is involved in establishing a business entity and secures resources directed to its growth while bearing the risk of loss.
(f) "Greater Minnesota" means the area of Minnesota located outside of the metropolitan area as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 473.121, subdivision 2.
(g) "High technology"
includes aerospace, agricultural processing, renewable energy, energy
efficiency and conservation, environmental engineering, food technology, cellulosic
ethanol, information technology, materials science technology, nanotechnology,
telecommunications, biotechnology, medical device products, pharmaceuticals,
diagnostics, biologicals, chemistry, veterinary science, and similar fields. "Innovative technology and
business"
means
a new novel business model or product; a derivative product incorporating new
elements into an existing product; a new use for a product; or a new process or
method for the manufacture, use, or assessment of any product or activity,
patentability, or scalability. Innovative
technology or business model does not include locally based retail, lifestyle,
or business services. The business must
not be engaged in real estate development, insurance, banking, lending,
lobbying, political consulting, information technology consulting, wholesale or
retail trade, leisure, hospitality, transportation, construction, ethanol
production from corn, or professional services provided by attorneys,
accountants, business consultants, physicians, or health care consultants.
(h)
"Institution of higher education" has the meaning given in Minnesota
Statutes, section 136A.28, subdivision 6.
(i) "Minority group member" means a United States citizen or lawful permanent resident who is Asian, Pacific Islander, Black, Hispanic, or Native American.
(j) "Minority-owned business"
means a business for which one or more minority group members:
(1) own at least 50 percent of the
business or, in the case of a publicly owned business, own at least 51 percent
of the stock; and
(2) manage the business and control the
daily business operations.
(k) (j) "Research and
development" means any activity that is:
(1) a systematic, intensive study directed toward greater knowledge or understanding of the subject studies;
(2) a systematic study directed specifically toward applying new knowledge to meet a recognized need; or
(3) a systematic application of knowledge toward the production of useful materials, devices, systems and methods, including design, development and improvement of prototypes and new processes to meet specific requirements.
(l) (k) "Start-up"
means a business entity that has been in operation for less than ten years, has
operations in Minnesota, and is in the development stage defined as devoting substantially
all of its efforts to establishing a new business and either of the following
conditions exists:
(1) planned principal operations have not commenced; or
(2) planned principal operations have commenced, but have generated less than $1,000,000 in revenue.
(m) (l) "Technology-related
assistance" means the application and utilization of
technological-information and technologies to assist in the development and
production of new technology-related products or services or to increase the
productivity or otherwise enhance the production or delivery of existing
products or services.
(n) (m) "Trade
association" means a nonprofit membership organization organized to
promote businesses and business conditions and having an election under Internal
Revenue Code section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(6).
(o) (n) "Veteran"
has the meaning given in Minnesota Statutes, section 197.447.
(p) "Women" means persons of
the female gender.
(q) "Women-owned business"
means a business for which one or more women:
(1) own at least 50 percent of the business or, in the case of a publicly owned business, own at least 51 percent of the stock; and
(2) manage the business and control the
daily business operations.
Subd. 3. Duties. The commissioner, by and through Launch Minnesota, shall:
(1) support innovation and initiatives
designed to accelerate the growth of high-technology innovative
technology and business start-ups in Minnesota;
(2) in partnership with other
organizations, offer classes and instructional sessions on how to start a
high-tech and innovative an innovative technology and business
start-up;
(3) promote activities for entrepreneurs and investors regarding the state's growing innovation economy;
(4) hold events and meetings that gather key stakeholders in the state's innovation sector;
(5) conduct outreach and education on innovation activities and related financial programs available from the department and other organizations, particularly for underserved communities;
(6) interact and collaborate with statewide partners including but not limited to businesses, nonprofits, trade associations, and higher education institutions;
(7) administer an advisory board to assist with direction, grant application review, program evaluation, report development, and partnerships;
(8) accept grant applications under subdivisions 5, 6, and 7 and work with the advisory board to review and prioritize the applications and provide recommendations to the commissioner; and
(9) perform other duties at the commissioner's discretion.
Subd. 4. Administration. (a) The department commissioner
shall employ an executive director in the unclassified service, one staff
member to support Launch Minnesota, and one staff member in the business and community
development division to manage grants. The
executive director shall:
(1) assist the commissioner and the advisory board in performing the duties of Launch Minnesota; and
(2) comply with all state and federal program requirements, and all state and federal securities and tax laws and regulations.
(b) To the extent possible, the space
that Launch Minnesota shall may occupy and lease must be
physical space in a private coworking facility that includes office
space for staff and space for community engagement for training entrepreneurs. The physical space leased under this
paragraph is exempt from the requirements in Minnesota Statutes, section
16B.24, subdivision 6.
(c) At least three times per month, Launch
Minnesota staff shall visit communicate with organizations in
greater Minnesota that have received a grant under subdivision 7. To the extent possible, Launch Minnesota
shall form partnerships with organizations located throughout the state.
(d) Launch Minnesota must accept grant
applications under this section and provide funding recommendations to the
commissioner, who and the commissioner shall distribute grants
based in part on the recommendations.
Subd. 5. Application process. (a) The commissioner shall establish the application form and procedures for grants.
(b) Upon receiving recommendations from
Launch Minnesota, the department commissioner is responsible for
evaluating all applications using evaluation criteria which shall be developed
by Launch Minnesota in consultation with the advisory board and the
commissioner.
(c) For grants under subdivision 6, priority shall be given if the applicant is:
(1) a business or entrepreneur located in greater Minnesota; or
(2) a business owner, individual with a disability, or entrepreneur who is a woman, veteran, or minority group member.
(d) For grants under subdivision 7, priority shall be given if the applicant is planning to serve:
(1) businesses or entrepreneurs located in greater Minnesota; or
(2) business owners, individuals with disabilities, or entrepreneurs who are women, veterans, or minority group members.
(e) The department staff, and not Launch
Minnesota staff, is are responsible for awarding funding,
disbursing funds, and monitoring grantee performance for all grants awarded
under this section.
(f) Grantees must provide 50 percent in
matching funds by equal expenditures and grant payments must be provided
on a reimbursement basis after review of submitted receipts by the department.
(g) Grant applications must be accepted on a regular periodic basis by Launch Minnesota and must be reviewed by Launch Minnesota and the advisory board before being submitted to the commissioner with their recommendations.
Subd. 6. Innovation grants. (a) The commissioner shall distribute innovation grants under this subdivision.
(b) The commissioner shall provide a grant of up to $35,000 to an eligible business or entrepreneur for research and development expenses, direct business expenses, and the purchase of technical assistance or services from public higher education institutions and nonprofit entities. Research and development expenditures may include but are not limited to proof of concept activities, intellectual property protection, prototype designs and production, and commercial feasibility. Expenditures funded under this subdivision are not eligible for the research and development tax credit under Minnesota Statutes, section 290.068. Direct business expenses may include rent, equipment purchases, and supplier invoices. Taxes imposed by federal, state, or local government entities may not be reimbursed under this paragraph. Technical assistance or services must be purchased to assist in the development or commercialization of a product or service to be eligible. Each business or entrepreneur may receive only one grant per biennium under this paragraph.
(c) The commissioner shall provide a
grant of up to $7,500 to reimburse an entrepreneur for housing or child care
expenses for the entrepreneur or their spouse or children. Each entrepreneur may receive only one grant
per biennium under this paragraph.
(d) (c) The commissioner
shall provide a grant of up to $35,000 in Phase 1 or $50,000 in Phase
2 to an eligible business or entrepreneur that, as a registered client of
the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, has been awarded a first
time Phase 1 or Phase 2 award pursuant to the SBIR or Small Business
Technology Transfer
(STTR)
programs after July 1, 2019. Each
business or entrepreneur may receive only one grant per biennium under this
paragraph. Grants under this paragraph
are not subject to the requirements of subdivision 2, paragraph (l) (k),
but do require a recommendation from the Launch Minnesota advisory
board.
Subd. 7. Entrepreneur
education grants. (a) The
commissioner shall make entrepreneur education grants to institutions of higher
education and other organizations to provide educational programming to
entrepreneurs and provide outreach to and collaboration with businesses,
federal and state agencies, institutions of higher education, trade
associations, and other organizations working to advance innovative, high
technology businesses throughout Minnesota.
(b) Applications for entrepreneur
education grants under this subdivision must be submitted to the commissioner
and evaluated by department staff other than Launch Minnesota. The evaluation criteria must be developed by
Launch Minnesota, in consultation with the advisory board, and the
commissioner, and priority must be given to an applicant who demonstrates
activity assisting businesses business owners or entrepreneurs
residing in greater Minnesota or who are women, veterans, or minority group
members.
(c) Department staff other than Launch
Minnesota staff is are responsible for awarding funding,
disbursing funds, and monitoring grantee performance under this subdivision.
(d) Grantees may use the grant funds to deliver the following services:
(1) development and delivery to high
innovative technology businesses of industry specific or innovative
product or process specific counseling on issues of business formation, market
structure, market research and strategies, securing first mover advantage or
overcoming barriers to entry, protecting intellectual property, and securing
debt or equity capital. This counseling
is to be delivered in a classroom setting or using distance media
presentations;
(2) outreach and education to businesses
and organizations on the small business investment tax credit program under
Minnesota Statutes, section 116J.8737, the MNvest crowd-funding program under
Minnesota Statutes, section 80A.461, and other state programs that support high
innovative technology business creation especially in underserved
communities;
(3) collaboration with institutions of higher education, local organizations, federal and state agencies, the Small Business Development Center, and the Small Business Assistance Office to create and offer educational programming and ongoing counseling in greater Minnesota that is consistent with those services offered in the metropolitan area; and
(4) events and meetings with other innovation-related organizations to inform entrepreneurs and potential investors about Minnesota's growing information economy.
Subd. 8. Report. Launch Minnesota shall report by December 31, 2022, and again by December 31, 2023, to the chairs and ranking minority members of the committees of the house of representatives and senate having jurisdiction over economic development policy and finance. Each report shall include information on the work completed, including awards made by the department under this section and progress toward transferring some activities of Launch Minnesota to an entity outside of state government.
Subd. 9. Advisory board. (a) The commissioner shall establish an advisory board to advise the executive director regarding the activities of Launch Minnesota, make the recommendations described in this section, and develop and initiate a strategic plan for transferring some activities of Launch Minnesota to a new or existing public‑private partnership or nonprofit organization outside of state government.
(b)
The advisory board shall consist of ten 12 members and is
governed by Minnesota Statutes, section 15.059.
A minimum of seven members must be from the private sector representing
business and at least two members but no more than three members must be from
government and higher education. At
least three of the members of the advisory board shall be from greater
Minnesota and at least three members shall be minority group members. Appointees shall represent a range of
interests, including entrepreneurs, large businesses, industry organizations,
investors, and both public and private small business service providers.
(c) The advisory board shall select a
chair from its private sector members.
The executive director shall provide administrative support to the
committee.
(d) The commissioner, or a designee, shall serve as an ex-officio, nonvoting member of the advisory board.
Subd. 10. Expiration. This section expires January 1, 2024.
Sec. 35. GRANT
EXCEPTIONS.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
sections 116J.8731, subdivision 5, and 116J.8748, subdivision 4, the
commissioner may approve a Minnesota investment fund grant or job creation fund
grant of up to $2,000,000 for qualified applicants. This section expires July 1, 2022.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 36. ONETIME
EXCEPTION TO RESTRICTIONS ON USE OF MINNESOTA INVESTMENT FUND LOCAL GOVERNMENT
LOAN REPAYMENT FUNDS.
(a) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 116J.8731, a home rule charter or statutory city, county, or town that
has uncommitted money received from repayment of funds awarded under Minnesota
Statutes, section 116J.8731, may choose to transfer 20 percent of the balance
of that money to the state general fund before June 30, 2022. Any local entity that does so may then use
the remaining 80 percent of the uncommitted money as a general purpose aid for
any lawful expenditure.
(b) By February 15, 2023, a home rule
charter or statutory city, county, or town that exercises the option under
paragraph (a) shall submit to the chairs of the legislative committees with
jurisdiction over economic development policy and finance an accounting and
explanation of the use and distribution of the funds.
Sec. 37. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2020, section
116L.18, is repealed.
ARTICLE 4
FAMILY AND MEDICAL BENEFITS
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 13.719, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 7. Family
and medical insurance data. (a)
For the purposes of this subdivision, the terms used have the meanings given
them in section 268B.01.
(b) Data on applicants, family members,
or employers under chapter 268B are private or nonpublic data, provided that
the department may share data collected from applicants with employers or
health care providers to the extent necessary to meet the requirements of
chapter 268B or other applicable law.
(c)
The department and the Department of Labor and Industry may share data
classified under paragraph (b) to the extent necessary to meet the requirements
of chapter 268B or the Department of Labor and Industry's enforcement authority
over chapter 268B, as provided in section 177.27.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.27, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Compliance
orders. The commissioner may issue
an order requiring an employer to comply with sections 177.21 to 177.435,
181.02, 181.03, 181.031, 181.032, 181.101, 181.11, 181.13, 181.14, 181.145,
181.15, 181.172, paragraph (a) or (d), 181.275, subdivision 2a, 181.722, 181.79,
and 181.939 to 181.943, 268B.09, subdivisions 1 to 6, and 268B.14,
subdivision 3, or with any rule promulgated under section 177.28. The commissioner shall issue an order
requiring an employer to comply with sections 177.41 to 177.435 if the
violation is repeated. For purposes of
this subdivision only, a violation is repeated if at any time during the two
years that preceded the date of violation, the commissioner issued an order to
the employer for violation of sections 177.41 to 177.435 and the order is final
or the commissioner and the employer have entered into a settlement agreement
that required the employer to pay back wages that were required by sections
177.41 to 177.435. The department shall
serve the order upon the employer or the employer's authorized representative
in person or by certified mail at the employer's place of business. An employer who wishes to contest the order
must file written notice of objection to the order with the commissioner within
15 calendar days after being served with the order. A contested case proceeding must then be held
in accordance with sections 14.57 to 14.69.
If, within 15 calendar days after being served with the order, the
employer fails to file a written notice of objection with the commissioner, the
order becomes a final order of the commissioner.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.032, is amended to read:
181.032
REQUIRED STATEMENT OF EARNINGS BY EMPLOYER; NOTICE TO EMPLOYEE.
(a) At the end of each pay period, the employer shall provide each employee an earnings statement, either in writing or by electronic means, covering that pay period. An employer who chooses to provide an earnings statement by electronic means must provide employee access to an employer-owned computer during an employee's regular working hours to review and print earnings statements, and must make statements available for review or printing for a period of three years.
(b) The earnings statement may be in any form determined by the employer but must include:
(1) the name of the employee;
(2) the rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, including whether the employee is paid by hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or other method;
(3) allowances, if any, claimed pursuant to permitted meals and lodging;
(4) the total number of hours worked by the employee unless exempt from chapter 177;
(5) the total amount of gross pay earned by the employee during that period;
(6) a list of deductions made from the employee's pay;
(7) any amount deducted by the employer
under section 268B.14, subdivision 3, and the amount paid by the employer based
on the employee's wages under section 268B.14, subdivision 1;
(7) (8) the net amount of
pay after all deductions are made;
(8) (9) the date on which the pay period ends;
(9) (10) the legal name of
the employer and the operating name of the employer if different from the legal
name;
(10) (11) the physical
address of the employer's main office or principal place of business, and a
mailing address if different; and
(11) (12) the telephone
number of the employer.
(c) An employer must provide earnings statements to an employee in writing, rather than by electronic means, if the employer has received at least 24 hours notice from an employee that the employee would like to receive earnings statements in written form. Once an employer has received notice from an employee that the employee would like to receive earnings statements in written form, the employer must comply with that request on an ongoing basis.
(d) At the start of employment, an employer shall provide each employee a written notice containing the following information:
(1) the rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, including whether the employee is paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or other method, and the specific application of any additional rates;
(2) allowances, if any, claimed pursuant to permitted meals and lodging;
(3) paid vacation, sick time, or other paid time-off accruals and terms of use;
(4) the employee's employment status and whether the employee is exempt from minimum wage, overtime, and other provisions of chapter 177, and on what basis;
(5) a list of deductions that may be made from the employee's pay;
(6) the number of days in the pay period, the regularly scheduled pay day, and the pay day on which the employee will receive the first payment of wages earned;
(7) the legal name of the employer and the operating name of the employer if different from the legal name;
(8) the physical address of the employer's main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address if different; and
(9) the telephone number of the employer.
(e) The employer must keep a copy of the notice under paragraph (d) signed by each employee acknowledging receipt of the notice. The notice must be provided to each employee in English. The English version of the notice must include text provided by the commissioner that informs employees that they may request, by indicating on the form, the notice be provided in a particular language. If requested, the employer shall provide the notice in the language requested by the employee. The commissioner shall make available to employers the text to be included in the English version of the notice required by this section and assist employers with translation of the notice in the languages requested by their employees.
(f) An employer must provide the employee any written changes to the information contained in the notice under paragraph (d) prior to the date the changes take effect.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.19, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Use of data. (a) Except as provided by this section, data gathered from any person under the administration of the Minnesota Unemployment Insurance Law are private data on individuals or nonpublic data not on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivisions 9 and 12, and may not be disclosed except according to a district court order or section 13.05. A subpoena is not considered a district court order. These data may be disseminated to and used by the following agencies without the consent of the subject of the data:
(1) state and federal agencies specifically authorized access to the data by state or federal law;
(2) any agency of any other state or any federal agency charged with the administration of an unemployment insurance program;
(3) any agency responsible for the maintenance of a system of public employment offices for the purpose of assisting individuals in obtaining employment;
(4) the public authority responsible for child support in Minnesota or any other state in accordance with section 256.978;
(5) human rights agencies within Minnesota that have enforcement powers;
(6) the Department of Revenue to the extent necessary for its duties under Minnesota laws;
(7) public and private agencies responsible for administering publicly financed assistance programs for the purpose of monitoring the eligibility of the program's recipients;
(8) the Department of Labor and Industry and the Commerce Fraud Bureau in the Department of Commerce for uses consistent with the administration of their duties under Minnesota law;
(9) the Department of Human Services and the Office of Inspector General and its agents within the Department of Human Services, including county fraud investigators, for investigations related to recipient or provider fraud and employees of providers when the provider is suspected of committing public assistance fraud;
(10) local and state welfare agencies for monitoring the eligibility of the data subject for assistance programs, or for any employment or training program administered by those agencies, whether alone, in combination with another welfare agency, or in conjunction with the department or to monitor and evaluate the statewide Minnesota family investment program by providing data on recipients and former recipients of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D, 256J, or 256K, child care assistance under chapter 119B, or medical programs under chapter 256B or 256L or formerly codified under chapter 256D;
(11) local and state welfare agencies for the purpose of identifying employment, wages, and other information to assist in the collection of an overpayment debt in an assistance program;
(12) local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies for the purpose of ascertaining the last known address and employment location of an individual who is the subject of a criminal investigation;
(13) the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement has access to data on specific individuals and specific employers provided the specific individual or specific employer is the subject of an investigation by that agency;
(14) the Department of Health for the purposes of epidemiologic investigations;
(15) the Department of Corrections for the purposes of case planning and internal research for preprobation, probation, and postprobation employment tracking of offenders sentenced to probation and preconfinement and postconfinement employment tracking of committed offenders;
(16) the state auditor to the extent
necessary to conduct audits of job opportunity building zones as required under
section 469.3201; and
(17) the Office of Higher Education for
purposes of supporting program improvement, system evaluation, and research
initiatives including the Statewide Longitudinal Education Data System.;
and
(18) the Family and Medical Benefits
Division of the Department of Employment and Economic Development to be used as
necessary to administer chapter 268B.
(b) Data on individuals and employers that are collected, maintained, or used by the department in an investigation under section 268.182 are confidential as to data on individuals and protected nonpublic data not on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivisions 3 and 13, and must not be disclosed except under statute or district court order or to a party named in a criminal proceeding, administrative or judicial, for preparation of a defense.
(c) Data gathered by the department in the administration of the Minnesota unemployment insurance program must not be made the subject or the basis for any suit in any civil proceedings, administrative or judicial, unless the action is initiated by the department.
Sec. 5. [268B.01]
DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision 1. Scope. For the purposes of this chapter, the
terms defined in this section have the meanings given.
Subd. 2. Applicant. "Applicant" means an
individual applying for leave with benefits under this chapter.
Subd. 3. Applicant's
average weekly wage. "Applicant's
average weekly wage" means an amount equal to the applicant's high quarter
wage credits divided by 13.
Subd. 4. Base
period. (a) "Base
period," unless otherwise provided in this subdivision, means the most recent
four completed calendar quarters before the effective date of an applicant's
application for family or medical leave benefits if the application has an
effective date occurring after the month following the most recent completed
calendar quarter. The base period under
this paragraph is as follows:
If the application for family
or medical leave benefits is effective on or between these dates: |
The base period is the prior: |
February 1 to March 31 |
January 1 to December 31 |
May 1 to June 30 |
April 1 to March 31 |
August 1 to September 30 |
July 1 to June 30 |
November 1 to December 31 |
October 1 to September 30 |
(b) If an application for family or
medical leave benefits has an effective date that is during the month following
the most recent completed calendar quarter, then the base period is the first
four of the most recent five completed calendar quarters before the effective
date of an applicant's application for family or medical leave benefits. The base period under this paragraph is as
follows:
(c) Regardless of paragraph (a), a base
period of the first four of the most recent five completed calendar quarters
must be used if the applicant would have more wage credits under that base
period than under a base period of the four most recent completed calendar
quarters.
(d) If the applicant has insufficient
wage credits to establish a benefit account under a base period of the four
most recent completed calendar quarters, or a base period of the first four of
the most recent five completed calendar quarters, but during either base period
the applicant received workers' compensation for temporary disability under
chapter 176 or a similar federal law or similar law of another state, or if the
applicant whose own serious illness caused a loss of work for which the
applicant received compensation for loss of wages from some other source, the
applicant may request a base period as follows:
(1) if an applicant was compensated for
a loss of work of seven to 13 weeks during a base period referred to in
paragraph (a) or (b), then the base period is the first four of the most recent
six completed calendar quarters before the effective date of the application
for family or medical leave benefits;
(2) if an applicant was compensated for
a loss of work of 14 to 26 weeks during a base period referred to in paragraph
(a) or (b), then the base period is the first four of the most recent seven
completed calendar quarters before the effective date of the application for
family or medical leave benefits;
(3) if an applicant was compensated for
a loss of work of 27 to 39 weeks during a base period referred to in paragraph
(a) or (b), then the base period is the first four of the most recent eight completed
calendar quarters before the effective date of the application for family or
medical leave benefits; and
(4) if an applicant was compensated for
a loss of work of 40 to 52 weeks during a base period referred to in paragraph
(a) or (b), then the base period is the first four of the most recent nine
completed calendar quarters before the effective date of the application for
family or medical leave benefits.
Subd. 5. Benefit. "Benefit" or
"benefits" means monetary payments under this chapter associated with
qualifying bonding, family care, pregnancy, serious health condition,
qualifying exigency, or safety leave events, unless otherwise indicated by
context.
Subd. 6. Benefit account. "Benefit account" means a benefit account established under section 268B.04.
Subd. 7. Benefit
year. "Benefit
year" means the period of 52 calendar weeks beginning the date a benefit
account under section 268B.04 is effective.
For a benefit account established effective any January 1, April 1,
July 1, or October 1, the benefit year will be a period of 53 calendar
weeks.
Subd. 8. Bonding. "Bonding" means time spent
by an applicant who is a biological, adoptive, or foster parent with a
biological, adopted, or foster child in conjunction with the child's birth,
adoption, or placement.
Subd. 9. Calendar
day. "Calendar day"
or "day" means a fixed 24-hour period corresponding to a single
calendar date.
Subd. 10. Calendar
quarter. "Calendar
quarter" means the period of three consecutive calendar months ending on
March 31, June 30, September 30, or December 31.
Subd. 11. Calendar
week. "Calendar
week" has the same meaning as "week" under subdivision 46.
Subd. 12. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of employment and economic development, unless otherwise indicated
by context.
Subd. 13. Covered
employment. (a) "Covered
employment" means performing services of whatever nature, unlimited by the
relationship of master and servant as known to the common law, or any other
legal relationship performed for wages or under any contract calling for the
performance of services, written or oral, express or implied.
(b) "Employment" includes an
individual's entire service performed within or without or both within and
without this state, if:
(1) the service is localized in this
state; or
(2) the service is not localized in any
state, but some of the service is performed in this state and:
(i) the base of operations of the
employee is in the state, or if there is no base of operations, then the place
from which such service is directed or controlled is in this state; or
(ii) the base of operations or place
from which such service is directed or controlled is not in any state in which
some part of the service is performed, but the individual's residence is in
this state.
(c) "Covered employment" does
not include:
(1) a self-employed individual; or
(2) an independent contractor.
Subd. 14. Department. "Department" means the
Department of Employment and Economic Development, unless otherwise indicated
by context.
Subd. 15. Employee. (a) "Employee" means an
individual who is in the employment of an employer.
(b) Employee does not include employees
of the United States of America.
Subd. 16. Employer. (a) "Employer" means:
(1) any person, type of organization,
or entity, including any partnership, association, trust, estate, joint stock
company, insurance company, limited liability company, or corporation, whether
domestic or foreign, or the receiver, trustee in bankruptcy, trustee, or the
legal representative of a deceased person, having any individual in covered
employment;
(2) the state, statewide system, and
state agencies; and
(3) any local government entity,
including but not limited to a county, city, town, school district, municipal
corporation, quasimunicipal corporation, or other political subdivision. An employer also includes charter schools.
(b)
Employer does not include:
(1) the United States of America; or
(2) a self-employed individual who has
elected and been approved for coverage under section 268B.11 with regard to the
self-employed individual's own coverage and benefits.
Subd. 17. Estimated
self-employment income. "Estimated
self-employment income" means a self-employed individual's average net
earnings from self-employment in the two most recent taxable years. For a self-employed individual who had net
earnings from self-employment in only one of the years, the individual's
estimated self‑employment income equals the individual's net earnings
from self-employment in the year in which the individual had net earnings from
self-employment.
Subd. 18. Family
and medical benefit insurance account.
"Family and medical benefit insurance account" means
the family and medical benefit insurance account in the special revenue fund in
the state treasury under section 268B.02.
Subd. 19. Family
and medical benefit insurance enforcement account. "Family and medical benefit
insurance enforcement account" means the family and medical benefit
insurance enforcement account in the state treasury under section 268B.185.
Subd. 20. Family
benefit program. "Family
benefit program" means the program administered under this chapter for the
collection of premiums and payment of benefits related to family care, bonding,
safety leave, and leave related to a qualifying exigency.
Subd. 21. Family
care. "Family care"
means an applicant caring for a family member with a serious health condition
or caring for a family member who is a covered service member.
Subd. 22. Family
member. (a) "Family member"
means an employee's child, adult child, spouse, sibling, parent, parent-in-law,
grandchild, grandparent, stepparent, member of the employee's household, or
domestic partner.
(b) For the purposes of this chapter, a
child includes a stepchild, biological, adopted, or foster child of the
employee, or a child for whom the employee is standing in loco parentis.
(c) For the purposes of this chapter, a
grandchild includes a step-grandchild, biological, adopted, or foster
grandchild of the employee.
(d) For the purposes of this chapter,
an individual is a member of the employee's household if the individual has
resided at the same address as the employee for at least one year as of the
first day of leave under this chapter.
Subd. 23. Health
care provider. "Health
care provider" means:
(1) an individual who is licensed,
certified, or otherwise authorized under law to practice in the individual's
scope of practice as a physician, osteopath, surgeon, or advanced practice
registered nurse; or
(2) any other individual determined by
the commissioner by rule, in accordance with the rulemaking procedures in the
Administrative Procedure Act, to be capable of providing health care services.
Subd. 24. High
quarter. "High
quarter" means the calendar quarter in an applicant's base period with the
highest amount of wage credits.
Subd. 25. Incapacity. "Incapacity" means inability
to perform regular work, attend school, or perform other regular daily
activities due to a serious health condition, treatment therefore, or recovery
therefrom.
Subd. 26. Independent
contractor. (a) If there is
an existing specific test or definition for independent contractor in Minnesota
statute or rule applicable to an occupation or sector as of the date of
enactment of this chapter, that test or definition shall apply to that
occupation or sector for purposes of this chapter. If there is not an existing test or
definition as described, the definition for independent contractor shall be as
provided in this subdivision.
(b) An individual is an independent
contractor and not an employee of the person for whom the individual is
performing services in the course of the person's trade, business, profession,
or occupation only if:
(1) the individual maintains a separate
business with the individual's own office, equipment, materials, and other
facilities;
(2) the individual:
(i) holds or has applied for a federal
employer identification number; or
(ii) has filed business or
self-employment income tax returns with the federal Internal Revenue Service if
the individual has performed services in the previous year;
(3) the individual is operating under
contract to perform the specific services for the person for specific amounts
of money and under which the individual controls the means of performing the
services;
(4) the individual is incurring the
main expenses related to the services that the individual is performing for the
person under the contract;
(5) the individual is responsible for
the satisfactory completion of the services that the individual has contracted
to perform for the person and is liable for a failure to complete the services;
(6) the individual receives
compensation from the person for the services performed under the contract on a
commission or per-job or competitive bid basis and not on any other basis;
(7) the individual may realize a profit
or suffer a loss under the contract to perform services for the person;
(8) the individual has continuing or
recurring business liabilities or obligations; and
(9) the success or failure of the
individual's business depends on the relationship of business receipts to
expenditures.
(c) For the purposes of this chapter,
an insurance producer, as defined in section 60K.31, subdivision 6, is an
independent contractor of an insurance company, as defined in section 60A.02,
subdivision 4, unless the insurance producer and insurance company agree
otherwise.
Subd. 27. Inpatient
care. "Inpatient
care" means an overnight stay in a hospital, hospice, or residential
medical care facility, including any period of incapacity, or any subsequent
treatment in connection with such inpatient care.
Subd. 28. Maximum
weekly benefit amount. "Maximum
weekly benefit amount" means the state's average weekly wage as calculated
under section 268.035, subdivision 23.
Subd. 29. Medical
benefit program. "Medical
benefit program" means the program administered under this chapter for the
collection of premiums and payment of benefits related to an applicant's
serious health condition or pregnancy.
Subd. 30. Net
earnings from self-employment. "Net
earnings from self-employment" has the meaning given in section 1402 of
the Internal Revenue Code, as defined in section 290.01, subdivision 31.
Subd. 31. Pregnancy. "Pregnancy" means prenatal
care or incapacity due to pregnancy or recovery from childbirth, still birth,
miscarriage, or related health conditions.
Subd. 32. Qualifying
exigency. (a)
"Qualifying exigency" means a need arising out of a military member's
active duty service or notice of an impending call or order to active duty in
the United States armed forces, including providing for the care or other needs
of the family member's child or other dependent, making financial or legal
arrangements for the family member, attending counseling, attending military
events or ceremonies, spending time with the family member during a rest and
recuperation leave or following return from deployment, or making arrangements
following the death of the military member.
(b) For the purposes of this chapter, a
"military member" means a current or former member of the United
States armed forces, including a member of the National Guard or reserves, who,
except for a deceased military member, is a resident of the state and is a
family member of the employee taking leave related to the qualifying exigency.
Subd. 33. Safety
leave. "Safety
leave" means leave from work because of domestic abuse, sexual assault, or
stalking of the employee or employee's family member, provided the leave is to:
(1) seek medical attention related to
the physical or psychological injury or disability caused by domestic abuse,
sexual assault, or stalking;
(2) obtain services from a victim
services organization;
(3) obtain psychological or other
counseling;
(4) seek relocation due to the domestic
abuse, sexual assault, or stalking; or
(5) seek legal advice or take legal
action, including preparing for or participating in any civil or criminal legal
proceeding related to, or resulting from, the domestic abuse, sexual assault,
or stalking.
Subd. 34. Self-employed
individual. "Self-employed
individual" means a resident of the state who, in one of the two taxable
years preceding the current calendar year, derived at least $10,000 in net
earnings from self‑employment from an entity other than an S corporation
for the performance of services in this state.
Subd. 35. Self-employment
premium base. "Self-employment
premium base" means the lesser of:
(1) a self-employed individual's
estimated self-employment income for the calendar year plus the individual's
self-employment wages in the calendar year; or
(2)
the maximum earnings subject to the FICA Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability
Insurance tax in the taxable year.
Subd. 36. Self-employment
wages. "Self-employment
wages" means the amount of wages that a self‑employed individual
earned in the calendar year from an entity from which the individual also
received net earnings from self-employment.
Subd. 37. Serious
health condition. (a)
"Serious health condition" means a physical or mental illness,
injury, impairment, condition, or substance use disorder that involves:
(1) at-home care or inpatient care in a
hospital, hospice, or residential medical care facility, including any period
of incapacity; or
(2) continuing treatment or supervision
by a health care provider which includes any one or more of the following:
(i) a period of incapacity of more than
three consecutive, full calendar days, and any subsequent treatment or period
of incapacity relating to the same condition, that also involves:
(A) treatment two or more times by a
health care provider or by a provider of health care services under orders of,
or on referral by, a health care provider; or
(B) treatment by a health care provider
on at least one occasion that results in a regimen of continuing treatment
under the supervision of the health care provider;
(ii) a period of incapacity due to
pregnancy, or for prenatal care;
(iii) a period of incapacity or
treatment for a chronic health condition that:
(A) requires periodic visits, defined
as at least twice a year, for treatment by a health care provider or under
orders of, or on referral by, a health care provider;
(B) continues over an extended period
of time, including recurring episodes of a single underlying condition; and
(C) may cause episodic rather than
continuing periods of incapacity;
(iv) a period of incapacity which is
permanent or long term due to a condition for which treatment may not be
effective. The employee or family member
must be under the continuing supervision of, but need not be receiving active
treatment by, a health care provider; or
(v) a period of absence to receive
multiple treatments, including any period of recovery from the treatments, by a
health care provider or by a provider of health
care services under orders of, or on referral by, a health care provider, for:
(A) restorative surgery after an
accident or other injury; or
(B) a condition that would likely
result in a period of incapacity of more than three consecutive, full calendar
days in the absence of medical intervention or treatment.
(b) For the purposes of paragraph (a),
clauses (1) and (2), treatment by a health care provider means an in-person
visit or telemedicine visit with a health care provider, or by a provider of
health care services under orders of, or on referral by, a health care
provider.
(c) For the purposes of paragraph (a),
treatment includes but is not limited to examinations to determine if a serious
health condition exists and evaluations of the condition.
(d) Absences attributable to incapacity
under paragraph (a), clause (2), item (ii) or (iii), qualify for leave under
this chapter even if the employee or the family member does not receive
treatment from a health care provider during the absence, and even if the
absence does not last more than three consecutive, full calendar days.
Subd. 38. State's
average weekly wage. "State's
average weekly wage" means the weekly wage calculated under section
268.035, subdivision 23.
Subd. 39. Supplemental
benefit payment. (a)
"Supplemental benefit payment" means:
(1) a payment made by an employer to an
employee as salary continuation or as paid time off. Such a payment must be in addition to any
family or medical leave benefits the employee is receiving under this chapter;
and
(2) a payment offered by an employer to
an employee who is taking leave under this chapter to supplement the family or
medical leave benefits the employee is receiving.
(b) Employers may, but are not required
to, designate certain benefits including but not limited to salary
continuation, vacation leave, sick leave, or other paid time off as a
supplemental benefit payment.
(c) Nothing in this chapter requires an
employee to receive supplemental benefit payments.
Subd. 40. Taxable
year. "Taxable
year" has the meaning given in section 290.01, subdivision 9.
Subd. 41. Taxable
wages. "Taxable
wages" means those wages paid to an employee in covered employment each
calendar year up to an amount equal to the maximum wages subject to premium in
a calendar year, which is equal to the maximum earnings in that year subject to
the FICA Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance tax rounded to the
nearest $1,000.
Subd. 42. Typical
workweek hours. "Typical
workweek hours" means:
(1) for an hourly employee, the average
number of hours worked per week by an employee within the high quarter during
the base year; or
(2) 40 hours for a salaried employee,
regardless of the number of hours the salaried employee typically works.
Subd. 43. Wage
credits. "Wage
credits" means the amount of wages paid within an applicant's base period
for covered employment, as defined in subdivision 13.
Subd. 44. Wage
detail report. "Wage
detail report" means the report on each employee in covered employment
required from an employer on a calendar quarter basis under section 268B.12.
Subd. 45. Wages. (a) "Wages" means all
compensation for employment, including commissions; bonuses, awards, and
prizes; severance payments; standby pay; vacation and holiday pay; back pay as
of the date of payment; tips and gratuities paid to an employee by a customer
of an employer and accounted for by the employee to the employer; sickness and
accident disability payments, except as otherwise provided in this subdivision;
and the cash value of housing, utilities, meals, exchanges of services, and any
other goods and services provided to compensate an employee, except:
(1) the amount of any payment made to,
or on behalf of, an employee under a plan established by an employer that makes
provision for employees generally or for a class or classes of employees,
including any amount paid by an employer for insurance or annuities, or into a
plan, to provide for a payment, on account of (i) retirement, (ii) medical and
hospitalization expenses in connection with sickness or accident disability, or
(iii) death;
(2) the payment by an employer of the
tax imposed upon an employee under United States Code, title 26, section 3101
of the Federal Insurance Contribution Act, with respect to compensation paid to
an employee for domestic employment in a private household of the employer or
for agricultural employment;
(3)
any payment made to, or on behalf of, an employee or beneficiary (i) from or to
a trust described in United States Code, title 26, section 401(a) of the
federal Internal Revenue Code, that is exempt from tax under section 501(a)
at the time of the payment unless the payment is made to an employee of the
trust as compensation for services as an employee and not as a beneficiary of
the trust, or (ii) under or to an annuity plan that, at the time of the
payment, is a plan described in section 403(a);
(4) the value of any special discount
or markdown allowed to an employee on goods purchased from or services supplied
by the employer where the purchases are optional and do not constitute regular
or systematic payment for services;
(5) customary and reasonable directors'
fees paid to individuals who are not otherwise employed by the corporation of
which they are directors;
(6) the payment to employees for
reimbursement of meal expenses when employees are required to perform work
after their regular hours;
(7) the payment into a trust or plan
for purposes of providing legal or dental services if provided for all
employees generally or for a class or classes of employees;
(8) the value of parking facilities
provided or paid for by an employer, in whole or in part, if provided for all
employees generally or for a class or classes of employees;
(9) royalties to an owner of a
franchise, license, copyright, patent, oil, mineral, or other right;
(10) advances or reimbursements for
traveling or other ordinary and necessary expenses incurred or reasonably
expected to be incurred in the business of the employer. Traveling and other reimbursed expenses must
be identified either by making separate payments or by specifically indicating
the separate amounts where both wages and expense allowances are combined in a
single payment;
(11) residual payments to radio,
television, and similar artists that accrue after the production of television
commercials, musical jingles, spot announcements, radio transcriptions, film
soundtracks, and similar activities;
(12) the income to a former employee
resulting from the exercise of a nonqualified stock option;
(13) supplemental unemployment benefit
payments under a plan established by an employer, if the payment is not wages
under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act. The
payments are wages unless made solely for the supplementing of weekly state or
federal unemployment benefits. Supplemental
unemployment benefit payments may not be assigned, nor may any consideration be
required from the applicant, other than a release of claims in order to be
excluded from wages;
(14) sickness or accident disability payments
made by the employer after the expiration of six calendar months following the
last calendar month that the individual worked for the employer;
(15) disability payments made under the
provisions of any workers' compensation law;
(16) sickness or accident disability
payments made by a third-party payer such as an insurance company; or
(17) payments made into a trust fund,
or for the purchase of insurance or an annuity, to provide for sickness or
accident disability payments to employees under a plan or system established by
the employer that provides for the employer's employees generally or for a
class or classes of employees.
(b)
Nothing in this subdivision excludes from the term "wages" any
payment made under any type of salary reduction agreement, including payments
made under a cash or deferred arrangement and cafeteria plan, as defined in
United States Code, title 26, sections 401(k) and 125 of the federal Internal
Revenue Code, to the extent that the employee has the option to receive the payment
in cash.
(c) Wages includes the total payment to
the operator and supplier of a vehicle or other equipment where the payment
combines compensation for personal services as well as compensation for the
cost of operating and hiring the equipment in a single payment. This paragraph does not apply if:
(1) there is a preexisting written
agreement providing for allocation of specific amounts; or
(2) at the time of each payment there
is a written acknowledgment indicating the separate allocated amounts.
(d) Wages includes payments made for
services as a caretaker. Unless there is
a contract or other proof to the contrary, compensation is considered as being
equally received by a married couple where the employer makes payment to only
one spouse, or by all tenants of a household who perform services where two or
more individuals share the same dwelling and the employer makes payment to only
one individual.
(e) Wages includes payments made for
services by a migrant family. Where
services are performed by a married couple or a family and an employer makes
payment to only one individual, each worker is considered as having received an
equal share of the compensation unless there is a contract or other proof to
the contrary.
(f) Wages includes advances or draws
against future earnings, when paid, unless the payments are designated as a
loan or return of capital on the books and records of the employer at the time
of payment.
(g) Wages includes payments made by a
subchapter "S" corporation, as organized under the Internal Revenue
Code, to or on behalf of officers and shareholders that are reasonable
compensation for services performed for the corporation.
For a subchapter "S" corporation, wages does not
include:
(1) a loan for business purposes to an
officer or shareholder evidenced by a promissory note signed by an officer
before the payment of the loan proceeds and recorded on the books and records
of the corporation as a loan to an officer or shareholder;
(2) a repayment of a loan or payment of
interest on a loan made by an officer to the corporation and recorded on the
books and records of the corporation as a liability;
(3) a reimbursement of reasonable
corporation expenses incurred by an officer and documented by a written expense
voucher and recorded on the books and records of the corporation as corporate
expenses; and
(4) a reasonable lease or rental
payment to an officer who owns property that is leased or rented to the
corporation.
Subd. 46. Wages
paid. (a) "Wages
paid" means the amount of wages:
(1) that have been actually paid; or
(2) that have been credited to or set
apart so that payment and disposition is under the control of the employee.
(b)
Wage payments delayed beyond the regularly scheduled pay date are wages paid on
the missed pay date. Back pay is wages
paid on the date of actual payment. Any
wages earned but not paid with no scheduled date of payment are wages paid on
the last day of employment.
(c) Wages paid does not include wages
earned but not paid except as provided for in this subdivision.
Subd. 47. Week. "Week" means calendar week
ending at midnight Saturday.
Subd. 48. Weekly
benefit amount. "Weekly
benefit amount" means the amount of family and medical leave benefits
computed under section 268B.04.
Sec. 6. [268B.02]
FAMILY AND MEDICAL BENEFIT INSURANCE PROGRAM CREATION.
Subdivision 1. Creation. A family and medical benefit insurance
program is created to be administered by the commissioner according to the
terms of this chapter.
Subd. 2. Creation
of division. A Family and
Medical Benefit Insurance Division is created within the department under the
authority of the commissioner. The
commissioner shall appoint a director of the division. The division shall administer and operate the
benefit program under this chapter.
Subd. 3. Rulemaking. The commissioner may adopt rules to
implement the provisions of this chapter.
Subd. 4. Account
creation; appropriation. The
family and medical benefit insurance account is created in the special revenue
fund in the state treasury. Money in
this account is appropriated to the commissioner to pay benefits under and to
administer this chapter, including outreach required under section 268B.18.
Subd. 5. Information
technology services and equipment. The
department is exempt from the provisions of section 16E.016 for the purposes of
this chapter.
Sec. 7. [268B.03]
PAYMENT OF BENEFITS.
Subdivision 1. Requirements. The commissioner must pay benefits
from the family and medical benefit insurance account as provided under this
chapter to an applicant who has met each of the following requirements:
(1) the applicant has filed an
application for benefits and established a benefit account in accordance with
section 268B.04;
(2) the applicant has met all of the
ongoing eligibility requirements under section 268B.06;
(3) the applicant does not have an
outstanding overpayment of family or medical leave benefits, including any
penalties or interest;
(4) the applicant has not been held
ineligible for benefits under section 268.07, subdivision 2; and
(5) the applicant is not employed
exclusively by a private plan employer and has wage credits during the base
year attributable to employers covered under the state family and medical leave
program.
Subd. 2. Benefits
paid from state funds. Benefits
are paid from state funds and are not considered paid from any special
insurance plan, nor as paid by an employer.
An application for family or medical leave benefits is not considered a
claim against an employer but is considered a request for benefits from the
family and medical benefit insurance account.
The commissioner has the responsibility for the proper payment of
benefits regardless of the
level
of interest or participation by an applicant or an employer in any determination
or appeal. An applicant's entitlement to
benefits must be determined based upon that information available without
regard to a burden of proof. Any
agreement between an applicant and an employer is not binding on the
commissioner in determining an applicant's entitlement. There is no presumption of entitlement or
nonentitlement to benefits.
Sec. 8. [268B.04]
BENEFIT ACCOUNT; BENEFITS.
Subdivision 1. Application
for benefits; determination of benefit account. (a) An application for benefits may be
filed in person, by mail, or by electronic transmission as the commissioner may
require. The applicant must include
certification supporting a request for leave under this chapter. The applicant must meet eligibility
requirements at the time the application is filed and must provide all
requested information in the manner required.
If the applicant does not meet eligibility at the time of the
application or fails to provide all requested information, the communication is
not an application for family and medical leave benefits.
(b) The commissioner must examine each
application for benefits to determine the base period and the benefit year, and
based upon all the covered employment in the base period the commissioner must
determine the weekly benefit amount available, if any, and the maximum amount
of benefits available, if any. The
determination, which is a document separate and distinct from a document titled
a determination of eligibility or determination of ineligibility, must be
titled determination of benefit account.
A determination of benefit account must be sent to the applicant and all
base period employers, by mail or electronic transmission.
(c) If a base period employer did not
provide wage detail information for the applicant as required under section
268B.12, the commissioner may accept an applicant certification of wage
credits, based upon the applicant's records, and issue a determination of
benefit account.
(d) The commissioner may, at any time
within 24 months from the establishment of a benefit account, reconsider any
determination of benefit account and make an amended determination if the
commissioner finds that the wage credits listed in the determination were
incorrect for any reason. An amended
determination of benefit account must be promptly sent to the applicant and all
base period employers, by mail or electronic transmission. This paragraph does not apply to documents
titled determinations of eligibility or determinations of ineligibility issued.
(e) If an amended determination of
benefit account reduces the weekly benefit amount or maximum amount of benefits
available, any benefits that have been paid greater than the applicant was
entitled is an overpayment of benefits. A
determination or amended determination issued under this section that results
in an overpayment of benefits must set out the amount of the overpayment and
the requirement that the overpaid benefits must be repaid according to section
268B.185.
Subd. 2. Benefit
account requirements. (a)
Unless paragraph (b) applies, to establish a benefit account, an applicant must
have wage credits of at least 5.3 percent of the state's average annual wage
rounded down to the next lower $100.
(b) To establish a new benefit account
following the expiration of the benefit year on a prior benefit account, an
applicant must have performed actual work in subsequent covered employment and
have been paid wages in one or more completed calendar quarters that started
after the effective date of the prior benefit account. The wages paid for that employment must be at
least enough to meet the requirements of paragraph (a). A benefit account under this paragraph must
not be established effective earlier than the Sunday following the end of the
most recent completed calendar quarter in which the requirements of paragraph
(a) were met. An applicant must not
establish a second benefit account as a result of one loss of employment.
Subd. 3. Weekly
benefit amount; maximum amount of benefits available; prorated amount. (a) Subject to the maximum weekly
benefit amount, an applicant's weekly benefit is calculated by adding the
amounts obtained by applying the following percentage to an applicant's average
typical workweek and weekly wage during the high quarter of the base period:
(1)
90 percent of wages that do not exceed 50 percent of the state's average weekly
wage; plus
(2) 66 percent of wages that exceed 50
percent of the state's average weekly wage but not 100 percent; plus
(3) 55 percent of wages that exceed 100
percent of the state's average weekly wage.
(b) The state's average weekly wage is
the average wage as calculated under section 268.035, subdivision 23, at the
time a benefit amount is first determined.
(c) The maximum weekly benefit amount
is the state's average weekly wage as calculated under section 268.035,
subdivision 23.
(d) The state's maximum weekly benefit
amount, computed in accordance with section 268.035, subdivision 23, applies to
a benefit account established effective on or after the last Sunday in October. Once established, an applicant's weekly
benefit amount is not affected by the last Sunday in October change in the
state's maximum weekly benefit amount.
(e) For an employee receiving family or
medical leave, a weekly benefit amount is prorated when:
(1) the employee works hours for wages;
or
(2) the employee uses paid sick leave,
paid vacation leave, or other paid time off that is not considered a
supplemental benefit payment as defined in section 268B.01, subdivision 37.
Subd. 4. Timing
of payment. Except as
otherwise provided for in this chapter, benefits must be paid weekly.
Subd. 5. Maximum
length of benefits. (a)
Except as provided in paragraph (b), in a single benefit year, an applicant may
receive up to 12 weeks of benefits under this chapter related to the
applicant's serious health condition or pregnancy and up to 12 weeks of
benefits under this chapter for bonding, safety leave, or family care.
(b) An applicant may receive up to 12
weeks of benefits in a single benefit year for leave related to one or more
qualifying exigencies.
Subd. 6. Minimum
period for which benefits payable. Except
for a claim for benefits for bonding leave, any claim for benefits must be
based on a single qualifying event of at least seven calendar days. Benefits may be paid for a minimum duration
of eight consecutive hours in a week. If
an employee on leave claims eight hours at any point during a week, the minimum
duration is satisfied.
Subd. 7. Right
of appeal. (a) A
determination or amended determination of benefit account is final unless an
applicant files an appeal within 20 calendar days after the sending of the
determination or amended determination. Every
determination or amended determination of benefit account must contain a prominent
statement indicating in clear language the consequences of not appealing. Proceedings on the appeal are conducted in
accordance with section 268B.08.
(b) Any applicant may appeal from a
determination or amended determination of benefit account on the issue of
whether services performed constitute employment, whether the employment is
covered employment, and whether money paid constitutes wages.
Subd. 8. Limitations
on applications and benefit accounts.
(a) An application for family or medical leave benefits is
effective the Sunday of the calendar week that the application was filed. An application for benefits may be backdated
one calendar week before the Sunday of the week the application was actually
filed if the applicant
requests
the backdating within seven calendar days of the date the application is filed. An application may be backdated only if the
applicant was eligible for the benefit during the period of the backdating. If an individual attempted to file an
application for benefits, but was prevented from filing an application by the
department, the application is effective the Sunday of the calendar week the
individual first attempted to file an application.
(b) A benefit account established under
subdivision 2 is effective the date the application for benefits was effective.
(c) A benefit account, once established,
may later be withdrawn if:
(1) the applicant has not been paid any
benefits on that benefit account; and
(2) a new application for benefits is
filed and a new benefit account is established at the time of the withdrawal.
A benefit account may be withdrawn after
the expiration of the benefit year, and the new work requirements of
subdivision 2, paragraph (b), do not apply if the applicant was not paid any
benefits on the benefit account that is being withdrawn.
A determination or amended determination
of eligibility or ineligibility issued under section 268B.07 that was sent
before the withdrawal of the benefit account, remains in effect and is not
voided by the withdrawal of the benefit account.
Sec. 9. [268B.05]
CONTINUED REQUEST FOR BENEFITS.
A continued request for family or
medical leave benefits is a certification by an applicant, done on a weekly
basis, that the applicant is unable to perform usual work due to a qualifying
event and meets the ongoing eligibility requirements for benefits under section
268B.06. A continued request must
include information on possible issues of ineligibility.
Sec. 10. [268B.06]
ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS; PAYMENTS THAT AFFECT BENEFITS.
Subdivision 1. Eligibility
conditions. (a) An applicant
may be eligible to receive family or medical leave benefits for any week if:
(1) the applicant has filed a continued
request for benefits for that week under section 268B.05;
(2) the week for which benefits are
requested is in the applicant's benefit year;
(3) the applicant was unable to perform regular work due to a serious health condition, a qualifying exigency, safety leave, family care, bonding, pregnancy, or recovery from pregnancy for the period required under subdivision 2;
(4) the applicant has sufficient wage
credits from an employer or employers as defined in section 268B.01,
subdivision 41, to establish a benefit account under section 268B.04; and
(5) an applicant requesting benefits
under this chapter must fulfill certification requirements under subdivision 3.
(b) A self-employed individual or
independent contractor who has elected and been approved for coverage under
section 268B.11 need not fulfill the requirement of paragraph (a), clause (4).
Subd. 2. Seven-day
qualifying event. (a) The
period for which an applicant is seeking benefits must be or have been based on
a single event of at least seven calendar days' duration related to pregnancy,
recovery from pregnancy, family care, a qualifying exigency, safety leave, or
the applicant's serious health condition.
The days need not be consecutive.
(b)
Benefits related to bonding need not meet the seven-day qualifying event
requirement.
(c) The commissioner must use the
rulemaking authority under section 268B.02, subdivision 3, to adopt rules
regarding what serious health conditions and other events are prospectively
presumed to constitute seven-day qualifying events under this chapter.
Subd. 3. Certification. (a) Certification for an applicant
taking leave related to the applicant's serious health condition shall be
sufficient if the certification states the date on which the serious health
condition began, the probable duration of the condition, and the appropriate
medical facts within the knowledge of the health care provider as required by
the commissioner.
(b) Certification for an applicant
taking leave to care for a family member with a serious health condition shall
be sufficient if the certification states the date on which the serious health
condition commenced, the probable duration of the condition, the appropriate
medical facts within the knowledge of the health care provider as required by
the commissioner, a statement that the family member requires care, and an
estimate of the amount of time that the family member will require care.
(c) Certification for an applicant
taking leave related to pregnancy shall be sufficient if the certification
states the expected due date and recovery period based on appropriate medical
facts within the knowledge of the health care provider.
(d) Certification for an applicant
taking bonding leave because of the birth of the applicant's child shall be
sufficient if the certification includes either the child's birth certificate
or a document issued by the health care provider of the child or the health
care provider of the person who gave birth, stating the child's birth date.
(e) Certification for an applicant
taking bonding leave because of the placement of a child with the applicant for
adoption or foster care shall be sufficient if the applicant provides a
document issued by the health care provider of the child, an adoption or foster
care agency involved in the placement, or by other individuals as determined by
the commissioner that confirms the placement and the date of placement. To the extent that the status of an applicant
as an adoptive or foster parent changes while an application for benefits is
pending, or while the covered individual is receiving benefits, the applicant
must notify the department of such change in status in writing.
(f) Certification for an applicant
taking leave because of a qualifying exigency shall be sufficient if the
certification includes:
(1) a copy of the family member's
active-duty orders;
(2) other documentation issued by the
United States armed forces; or
(3) other documentation permitted by the
commissioner.
(g) Certification for an applicant
taking safety leave is sufficient if the certification includes a court record
or documentation signed by a volunteer or employee of a victim's services
organization, an attorney, a police officer, or an antiviolence counselor. The commissioner must not require disclosure
of details relating to an applicant's or applicant's family member's domestic
abuse, sexual assault, or stalking.
(h) Certifications under paragraphs (a)
to (e) must be reviewed and signed by a health care provider with knowledge of
the qualifying event associated with the leave.
(i) For a leave taken on an intermittent
or reduced-schedule basis, based on a serious health condition of an applicant
or applicant's family member, the certification under this subdivision must
include an explanation of how such leave would be medically beneficial to the
individual with the serious health condition.
Subd. 4. Not
eligible. An applicant is
ineligible for family or medical leave benefits for any portion of a typical
workweek:
(1) that occurs before the effective
date of a benefit account;
(2) that the applicant has an outstanding
misrepresentation overpayment balance under section 268B.185, subdivision 5,
including any penalties and interest;
(3) that the applicant fails or refuses
to provide information on an issue of ineligibility required under section
268B.07, subdivision 2; or
(4) for which the applicant worked for
pay.
Subd. 5. Vacation,
sick leave, and supplemental benefit payments. (a) An applicant is not eligible to
receive benefits for any portion of a typical workweek the applicant is
receiving, has received, or will receive vacation pay, sick pay, or personal
time off pay, also known as "PTO."
(b) Paragraph (a) does not apply:
(1) upon a permanent separation from
employment;
(2) to payments from a vacation fund
administered by a union or a third party not under the control of the employer;
or
(3) to supplemental benefit payments, as
defined in section 268B.01, subdivision 37.
(c) Payments under this subdivision are
applied to the period immediately following the later of the date of separation
from employment or the date the applicant first becomes aware that the employer
will be making a payment. The date the
payment is actually made or received, or that an applicant must agree to a
release of claims, does not affect the application of this subdivision.
Subd. 6. Workers'
compensation and disability insurance offset. (a) An applicant is not eligible to
receive benefits for any portion of a week in which the applicant is receiving
or has received compensation for loss of wages equal to or in excess of the
applicant's weekly family or medical leave benefit amount under:
(1) the workers' compensation law of
this state;
(2) the workers' compensation law of any
other state or similar federal law; or
(3) any insurance or trust fund paid in
whole or in part by an employer.
(b)
This subdivision does not apply to an applicant who has a claim pending for
loss of wages under paragraph (a).
If the applicant later receives compensation as a result of the pending
claim, the applicant is subject to paragraph (a) and the family or medical
leave benefits paid are overpaid benefits under section 268B.185.
(c) If the amount of compensation
described under paragraph (a) for any week is less than the applicant's weekly
family or medical leave benefit amount, benefits requested for that week are
reduced by the amount of that compensation payment.
Subd. 7. Separation,
severance, or bonus payments. (a)
An applicant is not eligible to receive benefits for any week the applicant is
receiving, has received, or will receive separation pay, severance pay, bonus
pay, or any other payments paid by an employer because of, upon, or after
separation from employment. This
subdivision applies if the payment is:
(1)
considered wages under section 268B.01, subdivision 43; or
(2) subject to the Federal Insurance
Contributions Act (FICA) tax imposed to fund Social Security and Medicare.
(b) Payments under this subdivision are
applied to the period immediately following the later of the date of separation
from employment or the date the applicant first becomes aware that the employer
will be making a payment. The date the
payment is actually made or received, or that an applicant must agree to a
release of claims, does not affect the application of this paragraph.
(c) This subdivision does not apply to
vacation pay, sick pay, personal time off pay, or supplemental benefit payment
under subdivision 4.
(d) This subdivision applies to all the
weeks of payment.
(e) Under this subdivision, if the
payment with respect to a week is equal to or more than the applicant's weekly
benefit amount, the applicant is ineligible for benefits for that week. If the payment with respect to a week is less
than the applicant's weekly benefit amount, benefits are reduced by the amount
of the payment.
Subd. 8. Social
Security disability benefits. (a)
An applicant who is receiving, has received, or has filed for primary Social
Security disability benefits for any week is ineligible for benefits for that
week, unless:
(1) the Social Security Administration
approved the collecting of primary Social Security disability benefits each
month the applicant was employed during the base period; or
(2) the applicant provides a statement
from an appropriate health care professional who is aware of the applicant's
Social Security disability claim and the basis for that claim, certifying that
the applicant is available for suitable employment.
(b) If an applicant meets the
requirements of paragraph (a), clause (1) or (2), there is no deduction from
the applicant's weekly benefit amount for any Social Security disability
benefits.
(c) Information from the Social
Security Administration is conclusive, absent specific evidence showing that
the information was erroneous.
Sec. 11. [268B.07]
DETERMINATION ON ISSUES OF ELIGIBILITY.
Subdivision 1. Employer
notification. (a) Upon a
determination that an applicant is entitled to benefits, the commissioner must
promptly send a notification to each current employer of the applicant, if any,
in accordance with paragraph (b).
(b) The notification under paragraph
(a) must include, at a minimum:
(1) the name of the applicant;
(2) that the applicant has applied for
and received benefits;
(3) the week the benefits commence;
(4) the weekly benefit amount payable;
and
(5) the maximum duration of benefits.
Subd. 2. Determination. (a) The commissioner must determine
any issue of ineligibility raised by information required from an applicant and
send to the applicant and any current base period employer, by mail or
electronic transmission, a document titled a determination of eligibility or a
determination of ineligibility, as is appropriate, within two weeks.
(b) If an applicant obtained benefits
through misrepresentation, the department is authorized to issue a
determination of ineligibility within 48 months of the establishment of the
benefit account.
(c) If the department has filed an
intervention in a worker's compensation matter under section 176.361, the
department is authorized to issue a determination of ineligibility within 48
months of the establishment of the benefit account.
(d) A determination of eligibility or
determination of ineligibility is final unless an appeal is filed by the
applicant within 20 calendar days after sending. The determination must contain a prominent
statement indicating the consequences of not appealing. Proceedings on the appeal are conducted in
accordance with section 268B.08.
(e) An issue of ineligibility required
to be determined under this section includes any question regarding the denial
or allowing of benefits under this chapter.
Subd. 3. Amended
determination. Unless an
appeal has been filed, the commissioner, on the commissioner's own motion, may
reconsider a determination of eligibility or determination of ineligibility
that has not become final and issue an amended determination. Any amended determination must be sent to the
applicant and any employer in the current base period by mail or electronic
transmission. Any amended determination
is final unless an appeal is filed by the applicant within 20 calendar days
after sending. Proceedings on the appeal
are conducted in accordance with section 268B.08.
Subd. 4. Benefit
payment. If a determination
or amended determination allows benefits to an applicant, the family or medical
leave benefits must be paid regardless of any appeal period or any appeal
having been filed.
Subd. 5. Overpayment. A determination or amended
determination that holds an applicant ineligible for benefits for periods an
applicant has been paid benefits is an overpayment of those family or medical
leave benefits. A determination or
amended determination issued under this section that results in an overpayment
of benefits must set out the amount of the overpayment and the requirement that
the overpaid benefits must be repaid according to section 268B.185.
Sec. 12. [268B.08]
APPEAL PROCESS.
Subdivision 1. Hearing. (a) The commissioner shall designate a
chief benefit judge.
(b) Upon a timely appeal to a
determination having been filed or upon a referral for direct hearing, the
chief benefit judge must set a time and date for a de novo due-process hearing
and send notice to an applicant and an employer, by mail or electronic
transmission, not less than ten calendar days before the date of the hearing.
(c) The commissioner may adopt rules on
procedures for hearings. The rules need
not conform to common law or statutory rules of evidence and other technical
rules of procedure.
(d) The chief benefit judge has discretion
regarding the method by which the hearing is conducted.
Subd. 2. Decision. (a) After the conclusion of the
hearing, upon the evidence obtained, the benefit judge must serve by mail or electronic transmission to all
parties the decision, reasons for the decision, and written findings of fact.
(b) Decisions of a benefit judge are not
precedential.
Subd. 3. Request
for reconsideration. Any
party, or the commissioner, may, within 30 calendar days after service of the
benefit judge's decision, file a request for reconsideration asking the judge
to reconsider that decision.
Subd. 4. Appeal
to court of appeals. Any
final determination on a request for reconsideration may be appealed by any
party directly to the Minnesota Court of Appeals.
Subd. 5. Benefit
judges. (a) Only employees of
the department who are attorneys licensed to practice law in Minnesota may
serve as a chief benefit judge, senior benefit judges who are supervisors, or
benefit judges.
(b) The chief benefit judge must assign a
benefit judge to conduct a hearing and may transfer to another benefit judge
any proceedings pending before another benefit judge.
Sec. 13. [268B.085]
LEAVE.
Subdivision 1. Right
to leave. Ninety calendar
days from the date of hire, an employee has a right to leave from employment
for any day, or portion of a day, for which the employee would be eligible for
benefits under this chapter, regardless of whether the employee actually
applied for benefits and regardless of whether the employee is covered under a
private plan or the public program under this chapter.
Subd. 2. Notice
to employer. (a) If the need
for leave is foreseeable, an employee must provide the employer at least 30
days' advance notice before leave under this chapter is to begin. If 30 days' notice is not practicable because
of a lack of knowledge of approximately when leave will be required to begin, a
change in circumstances, or a medical emergency, notice must be given as soon
as practicable. Whether leave is to be
continuous or is to be taken intermittently or on a reduced-schedule basis,
notice need only be given one time, but the employee must advise the employer
as soon as practicable if dates of scheduled leave change or are extended, or
were initially unknown. In those cases
where the employee is required to provide at least 30 days' notice of
foreseeable leave and does not do so, the employee must explain the reasons why
notice was not practicable upon request from the employer.
(b) "As soon as practicable"
means as soon as both possible and practical, taking into account all of the
facts and circumstances in the individual case.
When an employee becomes aware of a need for leave under this chapter
less than 30 days in advance, it should be practicable for the employee to
provide notice of the need for leave either the same day or the next day,
unless the need for leave is based on a medical emergency. In all cases, however, the determination of
when an employee could practicably provide notice must take into account the
individual facts and circumstances.
(c) An employee shall provide at least
verbal notice sufficient to make the employer aware that the employee needs
leave allowed under this chapter and the anticipated timing and duration of the
leave. An employer may require an
employee giving notice of leave to include a certification for the leave as
described in section 268B.06, subdivision 3.
Such certification, if required by an employer, is timely when the
employee delivers it as soon as practicable given the circumstances requiring
the need for leave, and the required contents of the certification.
(d) An employer may require an employee
to comply with the employer's usual and customary notice and procedural
requirements for requesting leave, absent unusual circumstances or other
circumstances caused by the reason for the employee's need for leave. Leave under this chapter must not be delayed
or denied where an employer's usual and customary notice or procedural
requirements require notice to be given sooner than set forth in this
subdivision.
(e) If an employer has failed to
provide notice to the employee as required under section 268B.26, paragraph
(a), (b), or (e), the employee is not required to comply with the notice
requirements of this subdivision.
Subd. 3. Bonding
leave. Bonding leave taken
under this chapter begins at a time requested by the employee. Bonding leave must begin within 12 months of
the birth, adoption, or placement of a foster child, except that, in the case
where the child must remain in the hospital longer than the mother, the leave
must begin within 12 months after the child leaves the hospital.
Subd. 4. Intermittent
or reduced-leave schedule. (a)
Leave under this chapter, based on a serious health condition, may be taken
intermittently or on a reduced-leave schedule if such leave would be medically
beneficial to the individual with the serious health condition. For all other leaves under this chapter,
leave may be taken intermittently or on a reduced-leave schedule. Intermittent leave is leave taken in separate
blocks of time due to a single, seven-day qualifying event. A reduced-leave schedule is a leave schedule
that reduces an employee's usual number of working hours per workweek or hours
per workday.
(b) Leave taken intermittently or on a
reduced-schedule basis counts toward the maximums described in section 268B.04,
subdivision 5.
Sec. 14. [268B.09]
EMPLOYMENT PROTECTIONS.
Subdivision 1. Retaliation
prohibited. An employer must
not retaliate against an employee for requesting or obtaining benefits, or for
exercising any other right under this chapter.
Subd. 2. Interference
prohibited. An employer must
not obstruct or impede an application for leave or benefits or the exercise of
any other right under this chapter.
Subd. 3. Waiver
of rights void. Any agreement
to waive, release, or commute rights to benefits or any other right under this
chapter is void.
Subd. 4. No
assignment of benefits. Any
assignment, pledge, or encumbrance of benefits is void. Benefits are exempt from levy, execution,
attachment, or any other remedy provided for the collection of debt. Any waiver of this subdivision is void.
Subd. 5. Continued
insurance. During any leave
for which an employee is entitled to benefits under this chapter, the employer
must maintain coverage under any group insurance policy, group subscriber
contract, or health care plan for the employee and any dependents as if the
employee was not on leave, provided, however, that the employee must continue
to pay any employee share of the cost of such benefits.
Subd. 6. Employee
right to reinstatement. (a)
On return from leave under this chapter, an employee is entitled to be returned
to the same position the employee held when leave commenced or to an equivalent
position with equivalent benefits, pay, and other terms and conditions of
employment. An employee is entitled to
reinstatement even if the employee has been replaced or the employee's position
has been restructured to accommodate the employee's absence.
(b)(1) An equivalent position is one
that is virtually identical to the employee's former position in terms of pay,
benefits, and working conditions, including privileges, prerequisites, and
status. It must involve the same or
substantially similar duties and responsibilities, which must entail substantially
equivalent skill, effort, responsibility, and authority.
(2) If an employee is no longer
qualified for the position because of the employee's inability to attend a
necessary course, renew a license, fly a minimum number of hours, or similar
condition, as a result of the leave, the employee must be given a reasonable
opportunity to fulfill those conditions upon return from leave.
(c)(1)
An employee is entitled to any unconditional pay increases which may have
occurred during the leave period, such as cost of living increases. Pay increases conditioned upon seniority,
length of service, or work performed must be granted in accordance with the
employer's policy or practice with respect to other employees on an equivalent
leave status for a reason that does not qualify for leave under this chapter. An employee is entitled to be restored to a
position with the same or equivalent pay premiums, such as a shift differential. If an employee departed from a position
averaging ten hours of overtime, and corresponding overtime pay, each week an
employee is ordinarily entitled to such a position on return from leave under
this chapter.
(2) Equivalent pay includes any bonus
or payment, whether it is discretionary or nondiscretionary, made to employees
consistent with clause (1). If a bonus
or other payment is based on the achievement of a specified goal such as hours
worked, products sold, or perfect attendance, and the employee has not met the
goal due to leave under this chapter, the payment may be denied, unless
otherwise paid to employees on an equivalent leave status for a reason that
does not qualify for leave under this chapter.
(d) Benefits under this section include
all benefits provided or made available to employees by an employer, including
group life insurance, health insurance, disability insurance, sick leave,
annual leave, educational benefits, and pensions, regardless of whether
benefits are provided by a practice or written policy of an employer through an
employee benefit plan as defined in section 3(3) of United States Code, title
29, section 1002(3).
(1) At the end of an employee's leave
under this chapter, benefits must be resumed in the same manner and at the same
levels as provided when the leave began, and subject to any changes in benefit levels
that may have taken place during the period of leave affecting the entire
workforce, unless otherwise elected by the employee. Upon return from a leave under this chapter,
an employee must not be required to requalify for any benefits the employee enjoyed
before leave began, including family or dependent coverages.
(2) An employee may, but is not
entitled to, accrue any additional benefits or seniority during a leave under
this chapter. Benefits accrued at the
time leave began must be available to an employee upon return from leave.
(3) With respect to pension and other
retirement plans, leave under this chapter must not be treated as or counted
toward a break in service for purposes of vesting and eligibility to
participate. If the plan requires an
employee to be employed on a specific date in order to be credited with a year
of service for vesting, contributions, or participation purposes, an employee
on leave under this chapter must be treated as employed on that date. Periods of leave under this chapter need not
be treated as credited service for purposes of benefit accrual, vesting, and
eligibility to participate.
(4) Employees on leave under this
chapter must be treated as if they continued to work for purposes of changes to
benefit plans. Employees on leave under
this chapter are entitled to changes in benefit plans, except those which may
be dependent upon seniority or accrual during the leave period, immediately
upon return from leave or to the same extent they would have qualified if no
leave had been taken.
(e) An equivalent position must have
substantially similar duties, conditions, responsibilities, privileges, and
status as the employee's original position.
(1) The employee must be reinstated to
the same or a geographically proximate worksite from where the employee had
previously been employed. If the
employee's original worksite has been closed, the employee is entitled to the
same rights as if the employee had not been on leave when the worksite closed.
(2) The employee is ordinarily entitled
to return to the same shift or the same or an equivalent work schedule.
(3) The employee must have the same or
an equivalent opportunity for bonuses, profit-sharing, and other similar
discretionary and nondiscretionary payments.
(4)
This chapter does not prohibit an employer from accommodating an employee's
request to be restored to a different shift, schedule, or position which better
suits the employee's personal needs on return from leave, or to offer a
promotion to a better position. However,
an employee must not be induced by the employer to accept a different position
against the employee's wishes.
(f) The requirement that an employee be
restored to the same or equivalent job with the same or equivalent pay,
benefits, and terms and conditions of employment does not extend to de minimis,
intangible, or unmeasurable aspects of the job.
Subd. 7. Limitations
on an employee's right to reinstatement.
An employee has no greater right to reinstatement or to other
benefits and conditions of employment than if the employee had been
continuously employed during the period of leave under this chapter. An employer must be able to show that an
employee would not otherwise have been employed at the time reinstatement is
requested in order to deny restoration to employment.
(1) If an employee is laid off during
the course of taking a leave under this chapter and employment is terminated,
the employer's responsibility to continue the leave, maintain group health plan
benefits, and restore the employee cease at the time the employee is laid off,
provided the employer has no continuing obligations under a collective
bargaining agreement or otherwise. An
employer would have the burden of proving that an employee would have been laid
off during the period of leave under this chapter and, therefore, would not be
entitled to restoration. Restoration to
a job slated for layoff when the employee's original position would not meet
the requirements of an equivalent position.
(2) If a shift has been eliminated or
overtime has been decreased, an employee would not be entitled to return to
work that shift or the original overtime hours upon restoration. However, if a position on, for example, a
night shift has been filled by another employee, the employee is entitled to
return to the same shift on which employed before taking leave under this
chapter.
(3) If an employee was hired for a
specific term or only to perform work on a discrete project, the employer has
no obligation to restore the employee if the employment term or project is over
and the employer would not otherwise have continued to employ the employee.
Subd. 8. Remedies. (a) In addition to any other remedies
available to an employee in law or equity, an employer who violates the
provisions of this section is liable to any employee affected for:
(1) damages equal to the amount of:
(i) any wages, salary, employment
benefits, or other compensation denied or lost to such employee by reason of
the violation, or, in cases in which wages, salary, employment benefits, or
other compensation have not been denied or lost to the employee, any actual
monetary losses sustained by the employee as a direct result of the violation;
and
(ii) reasonable interest on the amount
described in item (i); and
(2) such equitable relief as may be
appropriate, including employment, reinstatement, and promotion.
(b) An action to recover damages or
equitable relief prescribed in paragraph (a) may be maintained against any
employer in any federal or state court of competent jurisdiction by any one or
more employees for and on behalf of:
(1) the employees; or
(2) the employees and other employees
similarly situated.
(c)
The court in an action under this section must, in addition to any judgment
awarded to the plaintiff or plaintiffs, allow reasonable attorney fees,
reasonable expert witness fees, and other costs of the action to be paid by the
defendant.
(d) Nothing in this section shall be
construed to allow an employee to recover damages from an employer for the
denial of benefits under this chapter by the department, unless the employer
unlawfully interfered with the application for benefits under subdivision 2.
Sec. 15. [268B.10]
SUBSTITUTION OF A PRIVATE PLAN.
Subdivision 1. Application
for substitution. Employers
may apply to the commissioner for approval to meet their obligations under this
chapter through the substitution of a private plan that provides paid family,
paid medical, or paid family and medical benefits. In order to be approved as meeting an employer's
obligations under this chapter, a private plan must confer all of the same
rights, protections, and benefits provided to employees under this chapter,
including but not limited to benefits under section 268B.04 and employment
protections under section 268B.09. An
employee covered by a private plan under this section retains all applicable
rights and remedies under section 268B.09.
Subd. 2. Private
plan requirements; medical benefit program.
(a) The commissioner must approve an application for private
provision of the medical benefit program if the commissioner determines:
(1) all of the employees of the employer
are to be covered under the provisions of the employer plan;
(2) eligibility requirements for
benefits and leave are no more restrictive than as provided under this chapter;
(3) the weekly benefits payable under
the private plan for any week are at least equal to the weekly benefit amount
payable under this chapter, taking into consideration any coverage with respect
to concurrent employment by another employer;
(4) the total number of weeks for which
benefits are payable under the private plan is at least equal to the total
number of weeks for which benefits would have been payable under this chapter;
(5) no greater amount is required to be
paid by employees toward the cost of benefits under the employer plan than by
this chapter;
(6) wage replacement benefits are stated
in the plan separately and distinctly from other benefits;
(7) the private plan will provide
benefits and leave for any serious health condition or pregnancy for which
benefits are payable, and leave provided, under this chapter;
(8) the private plan will impose no
additional condition or restriction on the use of medical benefits beyond those
explicitly authorized by this chapter or regulations promulgated pursuant to
this chapter;
(9) the private plan will allow any
employee covered under the private plan who is eligible to receive medical
benefits under this chapter to receive medical benefits under the employer
plan; and
(10) coverage will continue under the
private plan while an employee remains employed by the employer.
(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), a
private plan may provide shorter durations of leave and benefit eligibility if
the total dollar value of wage replacement benefits under the private plan for
an employee for any particular qualifying event meets or exceeds what the total
dollar value would be under the public family and medical benefit program.
Subd. 3. Private
plan requirements; family benefit program.
(a) The commissioner must approve an application for private
provision of the family benefit program if the commissioner determines:
(1) all of the employees of the
employer are to be covered under the provisions of the employer plan;
(2) eligibility requirements for
benefits and leave are no more restrictive than as provided under this chapter;
(3) the weekly benefits payable under
the private plan for any week are at least equal to the weekly benefit amount
payable under this chapter, taking into consideration any coverage with respect
to concurrent employment by another employer;
(4) the total number of weeks for which
benefits are payable under the private plan is at least equal to the total
number of weeks for which benefits would have been payable under this chapter;
(5) no greater amount is required to be
paid by employees toward the cost of benefits under the employer plan than by
this chapter;
(6) wage replacement benefits are
stated in the plan separately and distinctly from other benefits;
(7) the private plan will provide
benefits and leave for any care for a family member with a serious health
condition, bonding with a child, qualifying exigency, or safety leave event for
which benefits are payable, and leave provided, under this chapter;
(8) the private plan will impose no
additional condition or restriction on the use of family benefits beyond those
explicitly authorized by this chapter or regulations promulgated pursuant to
this chapter;
(9) the private plan will allow any
employee covered under the private plan who is eligible to receive medical
benefits under this chapter to receive medical benefits under the employer
plan; and
(10) coverage will continue under the
private plan while an employee remains employed by the employer.
(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), a
private plan may provide shorter durations of leave and benefit eligibility if
the total dollar value of wage replacement benefits under the private plan for
an employee for any particular qualifying event meets or exceeds what the total
dollar value would be under the public family and medical benefit program.
Subd. 4. Use
of private insurance products. Nothing
in this section prohibits an employer from meeting the requirements of a
private plan through a private insurance product. If the employer plan involves a private
insurance product, that insurance product must conform to any applicable law or
rule.
Subd. 5. Private
plan approval and oversight fee. An
employer with an approved private plan is not required to pay premiums
established under section 268B.14. An
employer with an approved private plan is responsible for a private plan
approval and oversight fee equal to $250 for employers with fewer than 50
employees, $500 for employers with 50 to 499 employees, and $1,000 for
employers with 500 or more employees. The
employer must pay this fee (1) upon initial application for private plan
approval, and (2) any time the employer applies to amend the private plan. The commissioner must review and report on
the adequacy of this fee to cover private plan administrative costs annually
beginning October 1, 2022, as part of the annual report established in section
268B.21.
Subd. 6. Plan
duration. A private plan
under this section must be in effect for a period of at least one year and,
thereafter, continuously unless the commissioner finds that the employer has
given notice of withdrawal from the plan in a manner specified by the
commissioner in this section or rule. The
plan may be withdrawn by the employer
within
30 days of the effective date of any law increasing the benefit amounts or
within 30 days of the date of any change in the rate of premiums. If the plan is not withdrawn, it must be
amended to conform to provide the increased benefit amount or change in the
rate of the employee's premium on the date of the increase or change.
Subd. 7. Appeals. An employer may appeal any adverse
action regarding that employer's private plan to the commissioner, in a manner
specified by the commissioner.
Subd. 8. Employees
no longer covered. (a) An
employee is no longer covered by an approved private plan if a leave under this
chapter occurs after the employment relationship with the private plan employer
ends, or if the commissioner revokes the approval of the private plan.
(b) An employee no longer covered by an
approved private plan is, if otherwise eligible, immediately entitled to
benefits under this chapter to the same extent as though there had been no
approval of the private plan.
Subd. 9. Posting
of notice regarding private plan. An
employer with a private plan must provide a notice prepared by or approved by
the commissioner regarding the private plan consistent with section 268B.26.
Subd. 10. Amendment. (a) The commissioner must approve any
amendment to a private plan adjusting the provisions thereof, if the
commissioner determines:
(1) that the plan, as amended, will
conform to the standards set forth in this chapter; and
(2) that notice of the amendment has
been delivered to all affected employees at least ten days before the
submission of the amendment.
(b) Any amendments approved under this
subdivision are effective on the date of the commissioner's approval, unless
the commissioner and the employer agree on a later date.
Subd. 11. Successor
employer. A private plan in
effect at the time a successor acquires the employer organization, trade, or
business, or substantially all the assets thereof, or a distinct and severable
portion of the organization, trade, or business, and continues its operation
without substantial reduction of personnel resulting from the acquisition, must
continue the approved private plan and must not withdraw the plan without a
specific request for withdrawal in a manner and at a time specified by the
commissioner. A successor may terminate
a private plan with notice to the commissioner and within 90 days from the date
of the acquisition.
Subd. 12. Revocation
of approval by commissioner. (a)
The commissioner may terminate any private plan if the commissioner determines
the employer:
(1) failed to pay benefits;
(2) failed to pay benefits in a timely
manner, consistent with the requirements of this chapter;
(3) failed to submit reports as
required by this chapter or rule adopted under this chapter; or
(4) otherwise failed to comply with
this chapter or rule adopted under this chapter.
(b) The commissioner must give notice
of the intention to terminate a plan to the employer at least ten days before
taking any final action. The notice must
state the effective date and the reason for the termination.
(c) The employer may, within ten days
from mailing or personal service of the notice, file an appeal to the
commissioner in the time, manner, method, and procedure provided by the commissioner
under subdivision 7.
(d)
The payment of benefits must not be delayed during an employer's appeal of the
revocation of approval of a private plan.
(e) If the commissioner revokes
approval of an employer's private plan, that employer is ineligible to apply
for approval of another private plan for a period of three years, beginning on
the date of revocation.
Subd. 13. Employer
penalties. (a) The
commissioner may assess the following monetary penalties against an employer
with an approved private plan found to have violated this chapter:
(1) $1,000 for the first violation; and
(2) $2,000 for the second, and each
successive violation.
(b) The commissioner must waive
collection of any penalty if the employer corrects the violation within 30 days
of receiving a notice of the violation and the notice is for a first violation.
(c) The commissioner may waive
collection of any penalty if the commissioner determines the violation to be an
inadvertent error by the employer.
(d) Monetary penalties collected under
this section shall be deposited in the family and medical benefit insurance
account.
(e) Assessment of penalties under this
subdivision may be appealed as provided by the commissioner under subdivision
7.
Subd. 14. Reports,
information, and records. Employers
with an approved private plan must maintain all reports, information, and
records as relating to the private plan and claims for a period of six years
from creation and provide to the commissioner upon request.
Subd. 15. Audit
and investigation. The
commissioner may investigate and audit plans approved under this section both
before and after the plans are approved.
Sec. 16. [268B.11]
SELF-EMPLOYED AND INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR ELECTION OF COVERAGE.
Subdivision 1. Election
of coverage. (a) A
self-employed individual or independent contractor may file with the
commissioner by electronic transmission in a format prescribed by the
commissioner an application to be entitled to benefits under this chapter for a
period not less than 104 consecutive calendar weeks. Upon the approval of the commissioner, sent
by United States mail or electronic transmission, the individual is entitled to
benefits under this chapter beginning the calendar quarter after the date of
approval or beginning in a later calendar quarter if requested by the
self-employed individual or independent contractor. The individual ceases to be entitled to
benefits as of the first day of January of any calendar year only if, at least
30 calendar days before the first day of January, the individual has filed with
the commissioner by electronic transmission in a format prescribed by the
commissioner a notice to that effect.
(b) The commissioner may terminate any
application approved under this section with 30 calendar days' notice sent by
United States mail or electronic transmission if the self-employed individual
is delinquent on any premiums due under this chapter. If an approved application is terminated in
this manner during the first 104 consecutive calendar weeks of election, the
self-employed individual remains obligated to pay the premium under subdivision
3 for the remainder of that 104-week period.
Subd. 2. Application. A self-employed individual who applies
for coverage under this section must provide the commissioner with (1) the
amount of the individual's net earnings from self-employment, if any, from the
two most recent taxable years and all tax documents necessary to prove the
accuracy of the amounts reported, and (2) any other documentation the commissioner
requires. A self-employed individual who
is covered under this chapter must annually provide the commissioner with the
amount of the individual's net earnings from self-employment within 30 days
of filing a federal income tax return.
Subd. 3. Premium. A self-employed individual who elects
to receive coverage under this chapter must annually pay a premium equal to
one-half the percentage in section 268B.14, subdivision 5, clause (1), times
the lesser of:
(1) the individual's self-employment
premium base; or
(2) the maximum earnings subject to the
FICA Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance tax.
Subd. 4. Benefits. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary, a self-employed individual who has applied to and been approved for
coverage by the commissioner under this section is entitled to benefits on the
same basis as an employee under this chapter, except that a self-employed
individual's weekly benefit amount under section 268B.04, subdivision 1, must
be calculated as a percentage of the self-employed individual's self-employment
premium base, rather than wages.
Sec. 17. [268B.12]
WAGE REPORTING.
Subdivision 1. Wage
detail report. (a) Each
employer must submit, under the employer premium account described in section
268B.13, a quarterly wage detail report by electronic transmission, in a format
prescribed by the commissioner. The
report must include for each employee in covered employment during the calendar
quarter, the employee's name, Social Security number, the total wages paid to
the employee, and total number of paid hours worked. For employees exempt from the definition of
employee in section 177.23, subdivision 7, clause (6), the employer must report
40 hours worked for each week any duties were performed by a full-time employee
and must report a reasonable estimate of the hours worked for each week duties
were performed by a part-time employee. In
addition, the wage detail report must include the number of employees employed
during the payroll period that includes the 12th day of each calendar month
and, if required by the commissioner, the report must be broken down by
business location and separate business unit.
The report is due and must be received by the commissioner on or before
the last day of the month following the end of the calendar quarter. The commissioner may delay the due date on a
specific calendar quarter in the event the department is unable to accept wage
detail reports electronically.
(b) The employer may report the wages
paid to the next lower whole dollar amount.
(c) An employer need not include the
name of the employee or other required information on the wage detail report if
disclosure is specifically exempted from being reported by federal law.
(d) A wage detail report must be
submitted for each calendar quarter even though no wages were paid, unless the
business has been terminated.
Subd. 2. Electronic
transmission of report required. Each
employer must submit the quarterly wage detail report by electronic
transmission in a format prescribed by the commissioner. The commissioner has the discretion to accept
wage detail reports that are submitted by any other means or the commissioner
may return the report submitted by other than electronic transmission to the
employer, and reports returned are considered as not submitted and the late
fees under subdivision 3 may be imposed.
Subd. 3. Failure
to timely file report; late fees. (a)
Any employer that fails to submit the quarterly wage detail report when due
must pay a late fee of $10 per employee, computed based upon the highest of:
(1) the number of employees reported on
the last wage detail report submitted;
(2) the number of employees reported in
the corresponding quarter of the prior calendar year; or
(3) if no wage detail report has ever
been submitted, the number of employees listed at the time of employer
registration.
The late fee is canceled if the wage detail report is
received within 30 calendar days after a demand for the report is sent to the
employer by mail or electronic transmission.
A late fee assessed an employer may not be canceled more than twice each
12 months. The amount of the late fee
assessed may not be less than $250.
(b) If the wage detail report is not
received in a manner and format prescribed by the commissioner within 30 calendar
days after demand is sent under paragraph (a), the late fee assessed under
paragraph (a) doubles and a renewed demand notice and notice of the increased
late fee will be sent to the employer by mail or electronic transmission.
(c) Late fees due under this
subdivision may be canceled, in whole or in part, under section 268B.16.
Subd. 4. Missing
or erroneous information. (a)
Any employer that submits the wage detail report, but fails to include all
required employee information or enters erroneous information, is subject to an
administrative service fee of $25 for each employee for whom the information is
partially missing or erroneous.
(b) Any employer that submits the wage
detail report, but fails to include an employee, is subject to an
administrative service fee equal to two percent of the total wages for each
employee for whom the information is completely missing.
Subd. 5. Fees. The fees provided for in subdivisions
3 and 4 are in addition to interest and other penalties imposed by this chapter
and are collected in the same manner as delinquent taxes and credited to the
family and medical benefit insurance account.
Sec. 18. [268B.13]
EMPLOYER PREMIUM ACCOUNTS.
The commissioner must maintain a
premium account for each employer. The
commissioner must assess the premium account for all the premiums due under
section 268B.14, and credit the family and medical benefit insurance account
with all premiums paid.
Sec. 19. [268B.14]
PREMIUMS.
Subdivision 1. Payments. (a) Family and medical leave premiums
accrue and become payable by each employer for each calendar year on the
taxable wages that the employer paid to employees in covered employment.
Each employer must pay premiums
quarterly, at the premium rate defined under this section, on the taxable wages
paid to each employee. The commissioner
must compute the premium due from the wage detail report required under section
268B.12 and notify the employer of the premium due. The premiums must be paid to the family and
medical benefit insurance account and must be received by the department on or
before the last day of the month following the end of the calendar quarter.
(b)
If for any reason the wages on the wage detail report under section 268B.12 are
adjusted for any quarter, the commissioner must recompute the premiums due for
that quarter and assess the employer for any amount due or credit the employer
as appropriate.
Subd. 2. Payments
by electronic payment required. (a)
Every employer must make any payments due under this chapter by electronic
payment.
(b) All third-party processors, paying
on behalf of a client company, must make any payments due under this chapter by
electronic payment.
(c) Regardless of paragraph (a) or (b),
the commissioner has the discretion to accept payment by other means.
Subd. 3. Employee
charge back. Notwithstanding
section 177.24, subdivision 4, or 181.06, subdivision 1, employers and covered
business entities may deduct up to 50 percent of annual premiums paid under
this section from employee wages. Such
deductions for any given employee must be in equal proportion to the premiums
paid based on the wages of that employee, and all employees of an employer must
be subject to the same percentage deduction.
Deductions under this section must not cause an employee's wage, after
the deduction, to fall below the rate required to be paid to the worker by law,
including any applicable statute, regulation, rule, ordinance, government
resolution or policy, contract, or other legal authority, whichever rate of pay
is greater.
Subd. 4. Wages
and payments subject to premium. The
maximum wages subject to premium in a calendar year is equal to the maximum earnings in that year subject to the FICA
Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance tax.
Subd. 5. Annual
premium rates. The employer
premium rates for the calendar year beginning January 1, 2023, shall be as
follows:
(1) for employers participating in both
family and medical benefit programs, 0.6 percent;
(2) for an employer participating in
only the medical benefit program and with an approved private plan for the
family benefit program, 0.486 percent; and
(3) for an employer participating in
only the family benefit program and with an approved private plan for the
medical benefit program, 0.114 percent.
Subd. 6. Premium
rate adjustments. (a)
Beginning January 1, 2026, and each calendar year thereafter, the commissioner
must adjust the annual premium rates using the formula in paragraph (b).
(b) To calculate the employer rates for
a calendar year, the commissioner must:
(1) multiply 1.45 times the amount
disbursed from the family and medical benefit insurance account for the 52‑week
period ending September 30 of the prior year;
(2) subtract the amount in the family
and medical benefit insurance account on that September 30 from the resulting
figure;
(3) divide the resulting figure by
twice the total wages in covered employment of employees of employers without
approved private plans under section 268B.10 for either the family or medical
benefit program. For employers with an
approved private plan for either the medical benefit program or the family
benefit program, but not both, count only the proportion of wages in covered
employment associated with the program for which the employer does not have an
approved private plan; and
(4)
round the resulting figure down to the nearest one-hundredth of one percent.
(c) The commissioner must apportion the
premium rate between the family and medical benefit programs based on the
relative proportion of expenditures for each program during the preceding year.
Subd. 7. Deposit
of premiums. All premiums
collected under this section must be deposited into the family and medical
benefit insurance account.
Subd. 8. Nonpayment
of premiums by employer. The
failure of an employer to pay premiums does not impact the right of an employee
to benefits, or any other right, under this chapter.
Sec. 20. [268B.145]
INCOME TAX WITHHOLDING.
If the Internal Revenue Service
determines that benefits are subject to federal income tax, and an applicant
elects to have federal income tax deducted and withheld from the applicant's
benefits, the commissioner must deduct and withhold the amount specified in the
Internal Revenue Code in a manner consistent with state law.
Sec. 21. [268B.15]
COLLECTION OF PREMIUMS.
Subdivision 1. Amount
computed presumed correct. Any
amount due from an employer, as computed by the commissioner, is presumed to be
correctly determined and assessed, and the burden is upon the employer to show
its incorrectness. A statement by the
commissioner of the amount due is admissible in evidence in any court or
administrative proceeding and is prima facie evidence of the facts in the
statement.
Subd. 2. Priority
of payments. (a) Any payment
received from an employer must be applied in the following order:
(1) family and medical leave premiums
under this chapter; then
(2) interest on past due premiums; then
(3) penalties, late fees, administrative
service fees, and costs.
(b) Paragraph (a) is the priority used for
all payments received from an employer, regardless of how the employer may
designate the payment to be applied, except when:
(1) there is an outstanding lien and the
employer designates that the payment made should be applied to satisfy the
lien;
(2) the payment is specifically
designated by the employer to be applied to an outstanding overpayment of
benefits of an applicant;
(3) a court or administrative order
directs that the payment be applied to a specific obligation;
(4) a preexisting payment plan provides
for the application of payment; or
(5) the commissioner, under the compromise
authority of section 268B.16, agrees to apply the payment to a different
priority.
Subd. 3. Estimating
the premium due. Only if an
employer fails to make all necessary records available for an audit under
section 268B.21 and the commissioner has reason to believe the employer has not
reported all the required wages on the quarterly wage detail reports, may the
commissioner then estimate the amount of premium due and assess the employer
the estimated amount due.
Subd. 4. Costs. (a) Any employer and any applicant
subject to section 268B.185, subdivision 2, that fails to pay any amount when
due under this chapter is liable for any filing fees, recording fees, sheriff
fees, costs incurred by referral to any public or private collection agency, or
litigation costs, including attorney fees, incurred in the collection of the
amounts due.
(b) If any tendered payment of any amount
due is not honored when presented to a financial institution for payment, any
costs assessed the department by the financial institution and a fee of $25
must be assessed to the person.
(c) Costs and fees collected under this
subdivision are credited to the enforcement account under section 268B.185,
subdivision 3.
Subd. 5. Interest
on amounts past due. If any
amounts due from an employer under this chapter are not received on the date
due, the commissioner must assess interest on any amount that remains unpaid. Interest is assessed at the rate of one
percent per month or any part of a month.
Interest is not assessed on unpaid interest. Interest
collected under this subdivision is credited to the enforcement account under
section 268B.185, subdivision 3.
Subd. 6. Interest
on judgments. Regardless of
section 549.09, if a judgment is entered upon any past due amounts from an employer under this chapter, the
unpaid judgment bears interest at the rate specified in subdivision 5
until the date of payment.
Subd. 7. Credit
adjustments; refunds. (a) If
an employer makes an application for a credit adjustment of any amount paid
under this chapter within four years of the date that the payment was due, in a
manner and format prescribed by the commissioner, and the commissioner
determines that the payment or any portion thereof was erroneous, the
commissioner must make an adjustment and issue a credit without interest. If a credit cannot be used, the commissioner
must refund, without interest, the amount erroneously paid. The commissioner, on the commissioner's own
motion, may make a credit adjustment or refund under this subdivision.
(b) Any refund returned to the
commissioner is considered unclaimed property under chapter 345.
(c) If a credit adjustment or refund is denied
in whole or in part, a determination of denial must be sent to the employer by
mail or electronic transmission. The
determination of denial is final unless an employer files an appeal within 20
calendar days after sending. Proceedings
on the appeal are conducted in accordance with section 268B.08.
(d) If an employer receives a credit
adjustment or refund under this section, the employer must determine the amount
of any overpayment attributable to a deduction from employee wages under
section 268B.14, subdivision 3, and return any amount erroneously deducted to
each affected employee.
Subd. 8. Priorities
under legal dissolutions or distributions.
In the event of any distribution of an employer's assets
according to an order of any court, including any receivership, assignment for
benefit of creditors, adjudicated insolvency, or similar proceeding, premiums
then or thereafter due must be paid in full before all other claims except
claims for wages of not more than $1,000 per former employee, earned within six
months of the commencement of the proceedings.
In the event of an employer's adjudication in bankruptcy under federal
law, premiums then or thereafter due are entitled to the priority provided in
that law for taxes due in any state.
Sec. 22. [268B.155]
CHILD SUPPORT DEDUCTION FROM BENEFITS.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this section:
(1) "child support agency"
means the public agency responsible for child support enforcement, including
federally approved comprehensive Tribal IV-D programs; and
(2)
"child support obligations" means obligations that are being enforced
by a child support agency in accordance with a plan described in United States
Code, title 42, sections 454 and 455 of the Social Security Act that has been
approved by the secretary of health and human services under part D of title IV
of the Social Security Act. This does
not include any type of spousal maintenance or foster care payments.
Subd. 2. Notice
upon application. In an
application for family or medical leave benefits, the applicant must disclose
if child support obligations are owed and, if so, in what state and county. If child support obligations are owed, the
commissioner must, if the applicant establishes a benefit account, notify the
child support agency.
Subd. 3. Withholding
of benefit. The commissioner
must deduct and withhold from any family or medical leave benefits payable to
an applicant who owes child support obligations:
(1) the amount required under a proper
order of a court or administrative agency; or
(2) if clause (1) is not applicable,
the amount determined under an agreement under United States Code, title 42,
section 454 (20)(B)(i), of the Social Security Act; or
(3) if clause (1) or (2) is not
applicable, the amount specified by the applicant.
Subd. 4. Payment. Any amount deducted and withheld must
be paid to the child support agency, must for all purposes be treated as if it
were paid to the applicant as family or medical leave benefits and paid by the
applicant to the child support agency in satisfaction of the applicant's child
support obligations.
Subd. 5. Payment
of costs. The child support
agency must pay the costs incurred by the commissioner in the implementation
and administration of this section and sections 518A.50 and 518A.53.
Sec. 23. [268B.16]
COMPROMISE.
(a) The commissioner may compromise in
whole or in part any action, determination, or decision that affects only an
employer and not an applicant. This
paragraph applies if it is determined by a court of law, or a confession of
judgment, that an applicant, while employed, wrongfully took from the employer
$500 or more in money or property.
(b) The commissioner may at any time
compromise any premium or reimbursement due from an employer under this
chapter.
(c) Any compromise involving an amount
over $10,000 must be authorized by an attorney licensed to practice law in
Minnesota who is an employee of the department designated by the commissioner
for that purpose.
(d) Any compromise must be in the best
interest of the state of Minnesota.
Sec. 24. [268B.17]
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS.
From July 1, 2023, through December 31,
2023, the commissioner may spend up to seven percent of premiums collected
under section 268B.15 for administration of this chapter. Beginning January 1, 2024, and each calendar
year thereafter, the commissioner may spend up to seven percent of projected
benefit payments for that calendar year for the administration of this chapter. The department may enter into interagency
agreements with the Department of Labor and Industry, including agreements to
transfer funds, subject to the limit in this section, for the Department of
Labor and Industry to fulfill its enforcement authority of this chapter.
Sec. 25. [268B.18]
PUBLIC OUTREACH.
Beginning in fiscal year 2023, the
commissioner must use at least 0.5 percent of revenue collected under this
chapter for the purpose of outreach, education, and technical assistance for
employees, employers, and self‑employed individuals eligible to elect
coverage under section 268B.11. The
department may enter into interagency agreements with the Department of Labor
and Industry, including agreements to transfer funds, subject to the limit in
section 268B.17, to accomplish the requirements of this section. At least one-half of the amount spent under
this section must be used for grants to community-based groups.
Sec. 26. [268B.185]
BENEFIT OVERPAYMENTS.
Subdivision 1. Repaying
an overpayment. (a) Any
applicant who (1) because of a determination or amended determination issued
under this chapter, or (2) because of a benefit law judge's decision under
section 268B.08, has received any family or medical leave benefits that the
applicant was held not entitled to, is overpaid the benefits and must promptly
repay the benefits to the family and medical benefit insurance account.
(b) If the applicant fails to repay the
benefits overpaid, including any penalty and interest assessed under
subdivisions 2 and 4, the total due may be collected by the methods allowed
under state and federal law.
Subd. 2. Overpayment
because of misrepresentation. (a)
An applicant has committed misrepresentation if the applicant is overpaid
benefits by making a false statement or representation without a good faith
belief as to the correctness of the statement or representation.
(b) After the discovery of facts
indicating misrepresentation, the commissioner must issue a determination of
overpayment penalty assessing a penalty equal to 20 percent of the amount
overpaid. This penalty is in addition to
penalties under section 268B.19.
(c) Unless the applicant files an appeal
within 20 calendar days after the sending of a determination of overpayment
penalty to the applicant by mail or electronic transmission, the determination
is final. Proceedings on the appeal are
conducted in accordance with section 268B.08.
(d) A determination of overpayment
penalty must state the methods of collection the commissioner may use to
recover the overpayment, penalty, and interest assessed. Money received in repayment of overpaid
benefits, penalties, and interest is first applied to the benefits overpaid,
second to the penalty amount due, and third to any interest due.
(e) The department is authorized to
issue a determination of overpayment penalty under this subdivision within 48
months of the establishment of the benefit account upon which the benefits were
obtained through misrepresentation.
Subd. 3. Family
and medical benefit insurance enforcement account created. The family and medical benefit
insurance enforcement account is created in the state treasury. Any penalties and interest collected under
this section shall be deposited into the account under this subdivision and
shall be used only for the purposes of administering and enforcing this chapter. Only the commissioner may authorize
expenditures from the account under this subdivision.
Subd. 4. Interest. For any family and medical leave
benefits obtained by misrepresentation, and any penalty amounts assessed under
subdivision 2, the commissioner must assess interest on any amount that remains
unpaid beginning 30 calendar days after the date of a determination of
overpayment penalty. Interest is
assessed at the rate of one percent per month or any part of a month. A determination of overpayment penalty must
state that interest will be assessed. Interest
is not assessed on unpaid interest. Interest
collected under this subdivision is credited to the family and medical benefit
insurance enforcement account.
Subd. 5. Offset
of benefits. The commissioner
may offset from any future family and medical leave benefits otherwise payable
the amount of a nonmisrepresentation overpayment. Except when the nonmisrepresentation
overpayment resulted because the applicant failed to report deductible earnings
or deductible or benefit delaying payments, no single offset may exceed 50
percent of the amount of the payment from which the offset is made.
Subd. 6. Cancellation
of overpayments. (a) If
family and medical leave benefits overpaid for reasons other than
misrepresentation are not repaid or offset from subsequent benefits within six
years after the date of the determination or decision holding the applicant
overpaid, the commissioner must cancel the overpayment balance, and no
administrative or legal proceedings may be used to enforce collection of those
amounts.
(b) If family and medical leave
benefits overpaid because of misrepresentation including penalties and interest
are not repaid within ten years after the date of the determination of
overpayment penalty, the commissioner must cancel the overpayment balance and
any penalties and interest due, and no administrative or legal proceeding may
be used to enforce collection of those amounts.
(c) The commissioner may cancel at any
time any overpayment, including penalties and interest that the commissioner
determines is uncollectible because of death or bankruptcy.
Subd. 7. Court
fees; collection fees. (a) If
the department is required to pay any court fees in an attempt to enforce collection
of overpaid family and medical leave benefits, penalties, or interest, the
amount of the court fees may be added to the total amount due.
(b) If an applicant who has been
overpaid family and medical leave benefits because of misrepresentation seeks
to have any portion of the debt discharged under the federal bankruptcy code,
and the department files an objection in bankruptcy court to the discharge, the
cost of any court fees may be added to the debt if the bankruptcy court does
not discharge the debt.
(c) If the Internal Revenue Service
assesses the department a fee for offsetting from a federal tax refund the
amount of any overpayment, including penalties and interest, the amount of the
fee may be added to the total amount due.
The offset amount must be put in the family and medical benefit
insurance enforcement account and that amount credited to the total amount due
from the applicant.
Subd. 8. Collection
of overpayments. (a) The
commissioner has discretion regarding the recovery of any overpayment for
reasons other than misrepresentation. Regardless
of any law to the contrary, the commissioner is not required to refer any
overpayment for reasons other than misrepresentation to a public or private
collection agency, including agencies of this state.
(b) Amounts overpaid for reasons other
than misrepresentation are not considered a "debt" to the state of
Minnesota for purposes of any reporting requirements to the commissioner of
management and budget.
(c) A pending appeal under section 268B.08
does not suspend the assessment of interest, penalties, or collection of an
overpayment.
(d) Section 16A.626 applies to the
repayment by an applicant of any overpayment, penalty, or interest.
Sec. 27. [268B.19]
APPLICANT ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTIES.
(a) Any applicant who makes a false
statement or representation without a good faith belief as to the correctness
of the statement or representation in order to obtain or in an attempt to
obtain benefits may be assessed, in addition to any other penalties, an
administrative penalty of being ineligible for benefits for 13 to 104 weeks.
(b)
A determination of ineligibility setting out the weeks the applicant is
ineligible must be sent to the applicant by mail or electronic transmission. The department is authorized to issue a
determination of ineligibility under this subdivision within 48 months of the
establishment of the benefit account upon which the benefits were obtained, or
attempted to be obtained. Unless an
appeal is filed within 20 calendar days of sending, the determination is final. Proceedings on the appeal are conducted in
accordance with section 268B.08.
Sec. 28. [268B.20]
EMPLOYER MISCONDUCT; PENALTY.
(a) The commissioner must penalize an
employer if that employer or any employee, officer, or agent of that employer
is in collusion with any applicant for the purpose of assisting the applicant
in receiving benefits fraudulently. The
penalty is $500 or the amount of benefits determined to be overpaid, whichever
is greater.
(b) The commissioner must penalize an
employer if that employer or any employee, officer, or agent of that employer:
(1) made a false statement or
representation knowing it to be false;
(2) made a false statement or
representation without a good-faith belief as to the correctness of the
statement or representation; or
(3) knowingly failed to disclose a
material fact.
(c) The penalty is the greater of $500 or
50 percent of the following resulting from the employer's action:
(1) the amount of any overpaid benefits
to an applicant;
(2) the amount of benefits not paid to
an applicant that would otherwise have been paid; or
(3) the amount of any payment required
from the employer under this chapter that was not paid.
(d) Penalties must be paid within 30
calendar days of issuance of the determination of penalty and credited to the
family and medical benefit insurance account.
(e) The determination of penalty is final
unless the employer files an appeal within 30 calendar days after the sending
of the determination of penalty to the employer by United States mail or
electronic transmission.
Sec. 29. [268B.21]
RECORDS; AUDITS.
Subdivision 1. Employer
records; audits. (a) Each
employer must keep true and accurate records on individuals performing services
for the employer, containing the information the commissioner may require under
this chapter. The records must be kept
for a period of not less than four years in addition to the current calendar
year.
(b) For the purpose of administering this
chapter, the commissioner has the power to audit, examine, or cause to be
supplied or copied, any books, correspondence, papers, records, or memoranda
that are the property of, or in the possession of, an employer or any other
person at any reasonable time and as often as may be necessary. Subpoenas may be issued under section 268B.22
as necessary, for an audit.
(c) An employer or other person that
refuses to allow an audit of its records by the department or that fails to
make all necessary records available for audit in the state upon request of the
commissioner may be assessed an administrative penalty of $500. The penalty collected is credited to the
family and medical benefit insurance account.
(d)
An employer, or other person, that fails to provide a weekly breakdown of money
earned by an applicant upon request of the commissioner, information necessary
for the detection of applicant misrepresentation under section 268B.185,
subdivision 2, may be assessed an administrative penalty of $100. Any notice requesting a weekly breakdown must
clearly state that a $100 penalty may be assessed for failure to provide the
information. The penalty collected is
credited to the family and medical benefit insurance account.
Subd. 2. Department
records; destruction. (a) The
commissioner may make summaries, compilations, duplications, or reproductions
of any records pertaining to this chapter that the commissioner considers
advisable for the preservation of the information.
(b) Regardless of any law to the
contrary, the commissioner may destroy any records that are no longer necessary
for the administration of this chapter. In
addition, the commissioner may destroy any record from which the information
has been electronically captured and stored.
Sec. 30. [268B.22]
SUBPOENAS; OATHS.
(a) The commissioner or benefit judge has
authority to administer oaths and affirmations, take depositions, certify to
official acts, and issue subpoenas to compel the attendance of individuals and
the production of documents and other personal property necessary in connection
with the administration of this chapter.
(b) Individuals subpoenaed, other than
applicants or officers and employees of an employer that is the subject of the
inquiry, are paid witness fees the same as witness fees in civil actions in
district court. The fees need not be
paid in advance.
(c) The subpoena is enforceable through
the district court in Ramsey County.
Sec. 31. [268B.23]
LIEN; LEVY; SETOFF; AND CIVIL ACTION.
Subdivision 1. Lien. (a) Any amount due under this chapter,
from an applicant or an employer, becomes a lien upon all the property, within
this state, both real and personal, of the person liable, from the date of
assessment. For the purposes of this
section, "date of assessment" means the date the obligation was due.
(b) The lien is not enforceable against
any purchaser, mortgagee, pledgee, holder of a Uniform Commercial Code security
interest, mechanic's lien, or judgment lien creditor, until a notice of lien
has been filed with the county recorder of the county where the property is
situated, or in the case of personal property belonging to a nonresident person
in the Office of the Secretary of State.
When the notice of lien is filed with the county recorder, the fee for
filing and indexing is as provided in sections 272.483 and 272.484.
(c) Notices of liens, lien renewals,
and lien releases, in a form prescribed by the commissioner, may be filed with
the county recorder or the secretary of state by mail, personal delivery, or
electronic transmission into the computerized filing system of the secretary of
state. The secretary of state must, on
any notice filed with that office, transmit the notice electronically to the
appropriate county recorder. The filing
officer, whether the county recorder or the secretary of state, must endorse
and index a printout of the notice as if the notice had been mailed or
delivered.
(d) County recorders and the secretary
of state must enter information on lien notices, renewals, and releases into
the central database of the secretary of state.
For notices filed electronically with the county recorders, the date and
time of receipt of the notice and county recorder's file number, and for
notices filed electronically with the secretary of state, the secretary of
state's recording information, must be entered into the central database before
the close of the working day following the day of the original data entry by
the commissioner.
(e)
The lien imposed on personal property, even though properly filed, is not
enforceable against a purchaser of tangible personal property purchased at
retail or personal property listed as exempt in sections 550.37, 550.38, and
550.39.
(f) A notice of lien filed has priority
over any security interest arising under chapter 336, article 9, that is
perfected prior in time to the lien imposed by this subdivision, but only if:
(1) the perfected security interest
secures property not in existence at the time the notice of lien is filed; and
(2) the property comes into existence
after the 45th calendar day following the day the notice of lien is filed, or
after the secured party has actual notice or knowledge of the lien filing,
whichever is earlier.
(g) The lien is enforceable from the
time the lien arises and for ten years from the date of filing the notice of
lien. A notice of lien may be renewed
before expiration for an additional ten years.
(h) The lien is enforceable by levy
under subdivision 2 or by judgment lien foreclosure under chapter 550.
(i) The lien may be imposed upon
property defined as homestead property in chapter 510 but may be enforced only
upon the sale, transfer, or conveyance of the homestead property.
(j) The commissioner may sell and assign
to a third party the commissioner's right of redemption in specific real
property for liens filed under this subdivision. The assignee is limited to the same rights of
redemption as the commissioner, except that in a bankruptcy proceeding, the
assignee does not obtain the commissioner's priority. Any proceeds from the sale of the right of
redemption are credited to the family and medical benefit insurance account.
Subd. 2. Levy. (a) If any amount due under this
chapter, from an applicant or an employer, is not paid when due, the amount may
be collected by the commissioner by direct levy upon all property and rights of
property of the person liable for the amount due except property exempt from
execution under section 550.37. For the
purposes of this section, "levy" includes the power of distraint and
seizure by any means.
(b) In addition to a direct levy, the
commissioner may issue a warrant to the sheriff of any county who must proceed
within 60 calendar days to levy upon the property or rights to property of the
delinquent person within the county, except property exempt under section
550.37. The sheriff must sell that
property necessary to satisfy the total amount due, together with the
commissioner's and sheriff's costs. The
sales are governed by the law applicable to sales of like property on execution
of a judgment.
(c) Notice and demand for payment of the
total amount due must be mailed to the delinquent person at least ten calendar
days before action being taken under paragraphs (a) and (b).
(d) If the commissioner has reason to
believe that collection of the amount due is in jeopardy, notice and demand for
immediate payment may be made. If the
total amount due is not paid, the commissioner may proceed to collect by direct
levy or issue a warrant without regard to the ten calendar day period.
(e) In executing the levy, the
commissioner must have all of the powers provided in chapter 550 or any other
law that provides for execution against property in this state. The sale of property levied upon and the time
and manner of redemption is as provided in chapter 550. The seal of the court is not required. The levy may be made whether or not the
commissioner has commenced a legal action for collection.
(f) Where any assessment has been made
by the commissioner, the property seized for collection of the total amount due
must not be sold until any determination of liability has become final. No sale may be made unless a portion of the
amount due remains unpaid for a period of more than 30 calendar days after the
determination of liability becomes final.
Seized property may be sold at any time if:
(1)
the delinquent person consents in writing to the sale; or
(2) the commissioner determines that
the property is perishable or may become greatly reduced in price or value by
keeping, or that the property cannot be kept without great expense.
(g) Where a levy has been made to
collect the amount due and the property seized is properly included in a formal
proceeding commenced under sections 524.3-401 to 524.3-505 and maintained under
full supervision of the court, the property may not be sold until the probate
proceedings are completed or until the court orders.
(h) The property seized must be
returned if the owner:
(1) gives a surety bond equal to the
appraised value of the owner's interest in the property, as determined by the
commissioner; or
(2) deposits with the commissioner
security in a form and amount the commissioner considers necessary to insure
payment of the liability.
(i) If a levy or sale would irreparably
injure rights in property that the court determines superior to rights of the
state, the court may grant an injunction to prohibit the enforcement of the
levy or to prohibit the sale.
(j) Any person who fails or refuses to
surrender without reasonable cause any property or rights to property subject
to levy is personally liable in an amount equal to the value of the property or
rights not so surrendered, but not exceeding the amount due.
(k) If the commissioner has seized the
property of any individual, that individual may, upon giving 48 hours notice to
the commissioner and to the court, bring a claim for equitable relief before
the district court for the release of the property upon terms and conditions
the court considers equitable.
(l) Any person in control or possession
of property or rights to property upon which a levy has been made who
surrenders the property or rights to property, or who pays the amount due is
discharged from any obligation or liability to the person liable for the amount
due with respect to the property or rights to property.
(m) The notice of any levy may be
served personally or by mail.
(n) The commissioner may release the
levy upon all or part of the property or rights to property levied upon if the
commissioner determines that the release will facilitate the collection of the
liability, but the release does not prevent any subsequent levy. If the commissioner determines that property
has been wrongfully levied upon, the commissioner must return:
(1) the specific property levied upon,
at any time; or
(2) an amount of money equal to the
amount of money levied upon, at any time before the expiration of nine months
from the date of levy.
(o) Regardless of section 52.12, a levy
upon a person's funds on deposit in a financial institution located in this
state, has priority over any unexercised right of setoff of the financial
institution to apply the levied funds toward the balance of an outstanding loan
or loans owed by the person to the financial institution. A claim by the financial institution that it
exercised its right to setoff before the levy must be substantiated by evidence
of the date of the setoff, and verified by an affidavit from a corporate
officer of the financial institution. For
purposes of determining the priority of any levy under this subdivision, the
levy is treated as if it were an execution under chapter 550.
Subd. 3. Right
of setoff. (a) Upon
certification by the commissioner to the commissioner of management and budget,
or to any state agency that disburses its own funds, that a person, applicant,
or employer has a liability under this chapter, and that the state has
purchased personal services, supplies, contract services, or property from that
person, the commissioner of management and budget or the state agency must set
off and pay to the commissioner an amount sufficient to satisfy the unpaid
liability from funds appropriated for payment of the obligation of the state
otherwise due the person. No amount may
be set off from any funds exempt under section 550.37 or funds due an
individual who receives assistance under chapter 256.
(b) All funds, whether general or
dedicated, are subject to setoff.
(c) Regardless of any law to the
contrary, the commissioner has first priority to setoff from any funds
otherwise due from the department to a delinquent person.
Subd. 4. Collection
by civil action. (a) Any
amount due under this chapter, from an applicant or employer, may be collected
by civil action in the name of the state of Minnesota. Civil actions brought under this subdivision
must be heard as provided under section 16D.14.
In any action, judgment must be entered in default for the relief
demanded in the complaint without proof, together with costs and disbursements,
upon the filing of an affidavit of default.
(b) Any person that is not a resident
of this state and any resident person removed from this state, is considered to
appoint the secretary of state as its agent for the acceptance of process in
any civil action. The commissioner must
file process with the secretary of state, together with a payment of a fee of
$15 and that service is considered sufficient service and has the same force
and validity as if served personally within this state. Notice of the service of process, together
with a copy of the process, must be sent by certified mail to the person's last
known address. An affidavit of
compliance with this subdivision, and a copy of the notice of service must be
appended to the original of the process and filed in the court.
(c) No court filing fees, docketing
fees, or release of judgment fees may be assessed against the state for actions
under this subdivision.
Subd. 5. Injunction
forbidden. No injunction or
other legal action to prevent the determination, assessment, or collection of
any amounts due under this chapter, from an applicant or employer, are allowed.
Sec. 32. [268B.24]
CONCILIATION SERVICES.
The Department of Labor and Industry
may offer conciliation services to employers and employees to resolve disputes
concerning alleged violations of employment protections identified in section
268B.09.
Sec. 33. [268B.25]
ANNUAL REPORTS.
(a) Beginning on or before December 1,
2023, the commissioner must annually report to the Department of Management and
Budget and the house of representatives and senate committee chairs with jurisdiction
over this chapter on program administrative expenditures and revenue collection
for the prior fiscal year, including but not limited to:
(1) total revenue raised through
premium collection;
(2) the number of self-employed
individuals or independent contractors electing coverage under section 268B.11
and amount of associated revenue;
(3) the number of covered business
entities paying premiums under this chapter and associated revenue;
(4)
administrative expenditures including transfers to other state agencies
expended in the administration of the chapter;
(5) summary of contracted services
expended in the administration of this chapter;
(6) grant amounts and recipients under
sections 268B.29 and 268B.18;
(7) an accounting of required outreach
expenditures;
(8) summary of private plan approvals
including the number of employers and employees covered under private plans;
and
(9) adequacy and use of the private
plan approval and oversight fee.
(b) Beginning on or before December 1,
2023, the commissioner must annually publish a publicly available report
providing the following information for the previous fiscal year:
(1) total eligible claims;
(2) the number and percentage of claims
attributable to each category of benefit;
(3) claimant demographics by age,
gender, average weekly wage, occupation, and the type of leave taken;
(4) the percentage of claims denied and
the reasons therefor, including but not limited to insufficient information and
ineligibility and the reason therefor;
(5) average weekly benefit amount paid
for all claims and by category of benefit;
(6) changes in the benefits paid
compared to previous fiscal years;
(7) processing times for initial claims
processing, initial determinations, and final decisions;
(8) average duration for cases
completed; and
(9) the number of cases remaining open
at the close of such year.
Sec. 34. [268B.26]
NOTICE REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Each employer must post in a
conspicuous place on each of its premises a workplace notice prepared or
approved by the commissioner providing notice of benefits available under this
chapter. The required workplace notice
must be in English and each language other than English which is the primary
language of five or more employees or independent contractors of that
workplace, if such notice is available from the department.
(b) Each employer must issue to each
employee not more than 30 days from the beginning date of the employee's
employment, or 30 days before premium collection begins, whichever is later,
the following written information provided or approved by the department in the
primary language of the employee:
(1) an explanation of the availability
of family and medical leave benefits provided under this chapter, including
rights to reinstatement and continuation of health insurance;
(2) the amount of premium deductions
made by the employer under this chapter;
(3)
the employer's premium amount and obligations under this chapter;
(4) the name and mailing address of the
employer;
(5) the identification number assigned
to the employer by the department;
(6) instructions on how to file a claim
for family and medical leave benefits;
(7) the mailing address, email
address, and telephone number of the department; and
(8) any other information required by
the department.
Delivery is made when an employee provides written
acknowledgment of receipt of the information, or signs a statement indicating
the employee's refusal to sign such acknowledgment.
(c) Each employer shall provide to each
independent contractor with whom it contracts, at the time such contract is
made or, for existing contracts, within 30 days of the effective date of this
section, the following written information provided or approved by the
department in the self-employed individual's primary language:
(1) the address and telephone number of
the department; and
(2) any other information required by
the department.
(d) An employer that fails to comply
with this subdivision may be issued, for a first violation, a civil penalty of
$50 per employee and per independent contractor with whom it has contracted,
and for each subsequent violation, a civil penalty of $300 per employee or
self-employed individual with whom it has contracted. The employer shall have the burden of demonstrating
compliance with this section.
(e) Employer notice to an employee
under this section may be provided in paper or electronic format. For notice provided in electronic format
only, the employer must provide employee access to an employer-owned computer
during an employee's regular working hours to review and print required
notices.
Sec. 35. [268B.27]
RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER LEAVE; CONSTRUCTION.
Subdivision 1. Concurrent
leave. An employer may
require leave taken under this chapter to run concurrently with leave taken for
the same purpose under section 181.941 or the Family and Medical Leave Act,
United States Code, title 29, sections 2601 to 2654, as amended.
Subd. 2. Construction. Nothing in this chapter shall be
construed to:
(1) allow an employer to compel an
employee to exhaust accumulated sick, vacation, or personal time before or
while taking leave under this chapter;
(2) except as provided under section
268B.01, subdivision 37, prohibit an employer from providing additional benefits,
including but not limited to covering the portion of earnings not provided
under this chapter during periods of leave covered under this chapter; or
(3) limit the parties to a collective
bargaining agreement from bargaining and agreeing with respect to leave
benefits and related procedures and employee protections that meet or exceed,
and do not otherwise conflict with, the minimum standards and requirements in
this chapter.
Sec. 36. [268B.28]
SEVERABLE.
If the United States Department of
Labor or a court of competent jurisdiction determines that any provision of the
family and medical benefit insurance program under this chapter is not in
conformity with, or is inconsistent with, the requirements of federal law, the
provision has no force or effect. If
only a portion of the provision, or the application to any person or
circumstances, is determined not in conformity, or determined inconsistent, the
remainder of the provision and the application of the provision to other
persons or circumstances are not affected.
Sec. 37. [268B.29]
SMALL BUSINESS ASSISTANCE GRANTS.
(a) Employers with 50 or fewer
employees may apply to the department for grants under this section.
(b) The commissioner may approve a
grant of up to $3,000 if the employer hires a temporary worker to replace an
employee on family or medical leave for a period of seven days or more.
(c) For an employee's family or medical
leave, the commissioner may approve a grant of up to $1,000 as reimbursement
for significant additional wage-related costs due to the employee's leave.
(d) To be eligible for consideration
for a grant under this section, the employer must provide the department
written documentation showing the temporary worker hired or significant
wage-related costs incurred are due to an employee's use of leave under this
chapter.
(e) The grants under this section may
be funded from the family and medical benefit insurance account.
(f) For the purposes of this section,
the commissioner shall average the number of employees reported by an employer
over the last four completed calendar quarters to determine the size of the
employer.
(g) An employer who has an approved
private plan is not eligible to receive a grant under this section.
(h)
The commissioner may award grants under this section only up to a maximum of
$5,000,000 per calendar year.
Sec. 38. EFFECTIVE
DATES.
(a) Benefits under Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 268B, shall not be applied for or paid until January 1, 2024, and
thereafter.
(b) Sections 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 36, and 38 are
effective July 1, 2021.
(c) Section 15 is effective July 1,
2022.
(d) Sections 3, 17, 18, 19, 21, 23, 24,
25, 29, 30, 31, and 33 are effective January 1, 2023.
(e) Sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
14, 16, 20, 22, 26, 27, 28, 32, 34, 35, and 37 are effective January 1, 2024.
ARTICLE 5
FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE BENEFIT AS EARNINGS
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 256J.561, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4. Parents
receiving family and medical leave benefits. A parent who meets the criteria under
subdivision 2 and who receives benefits under chapter 268B is not required to
participate in employment services.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 256J.95, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Eligibility for diversionary work program. (a) Except for the categories of family units listed in clauses (1) to (8), all family units who apply for cash benefits and who meet MFIP eligibility as required in sections 256J.11 to 256J.15 are eligible and must participate in the diversionary work program. Family units or individuals that are not eligible for the diversionary work program include:
(1) child only cases;
(2) single-parent family units that include a child under 12 months of age. A parent is eligible for this exception once in a parent's lifetime;
(3) family units with a minor parent without a high school diploma or its equivalent;
(4) family units with an 18- or 19-year-old caregiver without a high school diploma or its equivalent who chooses to have an employment plan with an education option;
(5) family units with a caregiver who received DWP benefits within the 12 months prior to the month the family applied for DWP, except as provided in paragraph (c);
(6) family units with a caregiver who received MFIP within the 12 months prior to the month the family applied for DWP;
(7) family units with a caregiver who
received 60 or more months of TANF assistance; and
(8) family units with a caregiver who is
disqualified from the work participation cash benefit program, DWP, or MFIP due
to fraud.; and
(9) single-parent family units where a
parent is receiving family and medical leave benefits under chapter 268B.
(b) A two-parent family must participate in DWP unless both caregivers meet the criteria for an exception under paragraph (a), clauses (1) through (5), or the family unit includes a parent who meets the criteria in paragraph (a), clause (6), (7), or (8).
(c) Once DWP eligibility is determined, the four months run consecutively. If a participant leaves the program for any reason and reapplies during the four-month period, the county must redetermine eligibility for DWP.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 256J.95, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
Subd. 11. Universal participation required. (a) All DWP caregivers, except caregivers who meet the criteria in paragraph (d), are required to participate in DWP employment services. Except as specified in paragraphs (b) and (c), employment plans under DWP must, at a minimum, meet the requirements in section 256J.55, subdivision 1.
(b) A caregiver who is a member of a two-parent family that is required to participate in DWP who would otherwise be ineligible for DWP under subdivision 3 may be allowed to develop an employment plan under section 256J.521, subdivision 2, that may contain alternate activities and reduced hours.
(c) A participant who is a victim of family violence shall be allowed to develop an employment plan under section 256J.521, subdivision 3. A claim of family violence must be documented by the applicant or participant by providing a sworn statement which is supported by collateral documentation in section 256J.545, paragraph (b).
(d)
One parent in a two-parent family unit that has a natural born child under
12 months of age is not required to have an employment plan until the
child reaches 12 months of age unless the family unit has already used the
exclusion under section 256J.561, subdivision 3, or the previously allowed
child under age one exemption under section 256J.56, paragraph (a), clause (5).
if that parent:
(1) receives family and medical leave
benefits under chapter 268B; or
(2) has a natural born child under 12
months of age until the child reaches 12 months of age unless the family unit
has already used the exclusion under section 256J.561, subdivision 3, or the
previously allowed child under age one exemption under section 256J.56,
paragraph (a), clause (5).
(e) The provision in paragraph (d) ends the first full month after the child reaches 12 months of age. This provision is allowable only once in a caregiver's lifetime. In a two-parent household, only one parent shall be allowed to use this category.
(f) The participant and job counselor must meet in the month after the month the child reaches 12 months of age to revise the participant's employment plan. The employment plan for a family unit that has a child under 12 months of age that has already used the exclusion in section 256J.561 must be tailored to recognize the caregiving needs of the parent.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 256P.01, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Earned income. "Earned income" means cash or in-kind income earned through the receipt of wages, salary, commissions, bonuses, tips, gratuities, profit from employment activities, net profit from self-employment activities, payments made by an employer for regularly accrued vacation or sick leave, severance pay based on accrued leave time, benefits paid under chapter 268B, payments from training programs at a rate at or greater than the state's minimum wage, royalties, honoraria, or other profit from activity that results from the client's work, service, effort, or labor. The income must be in return for, or as a result of, legal activity.
Sec. 5. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
Sections 1 to 4 are effective January
1, 2024.
ARTICLE 6
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.035, subdivision 21c, is amended to read:
Subd. 21c. Reemployment
assistance training. (a) An
applicant is in "reemployment assistance training" when:
(1) (i) a reasonable opportunity for suitable employment for the applicant does not exist in the labor market area and additional training will assist the applicant in obtaining suitable employment;
(2) (ii) the curriculum,
facilities, staff, and other essentials are adequate to achieve the training
objective;
(3) (iii) the training is
vocational or short term academic training directed to an occupation or skill
that will substantially enhance the employment opportunities available to the
applicant in the applicant's labor market area;
(4) (iv) the training course
is full time by the training provider; and
(5) (v) the applicant is
making satisfactory progress in the training.;
(2)
the applicant can provide proof of enrollment in one or more programs offered
by an adult basic education consortium under section 124D.518. Programs may include but are not limited to:
(i) general educational development
diploma preparation;
(ii) local credit completion adult high school diploma preparation;
(iii) state competency-based adult high
school diploma preparation;
(iv) basic skills enhancement training
focused on math, functional literacy, reading, or writing;
(v) computer skills training; or
(vi) English as a second language
instruction;
(3) the applicant can provide proof of
enrollment in an English as a second language program taught by a licensed
instructor;
(4) the applicant can provide proof of
enrollment in an over-the-road truck driving training program offered by a
college or university within the Minnesota state system; or
(5) the applicant can provide proof of
enrollment in a program funded under section 116L.99.
(b) Full-time training provided through the dislocated worker program, the Trade Act of 1974, as amended, or the North American Free Trade Agreement is "reemployment assistance training," if that training course is in accordance with the requirements of that program.
(c) Apprenticeship training provided in order to meet the requirements of an apprenticeship program under chapter 178 is "reemployment assistance training."
(d) An applicant is in reemployment assistance training only if the training course has actually started or is scheduled to start within 30 calendar days.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.085, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Not eligible. An applicant is ineligible for unemployment benefits for any week:
(1) that occurs before the effective date of a benefit account;
(2) that the applicant, at any time during the week, has an outstanding misrepresentation overpayment balance under section 268.18, subdivision 2, including any penalties and interest;
(3) that occurs in a period when the
applicant is a student in attendance at, or on vacation from a secondary school
including the period between academic years or terms;
(4) (3) that the applicant is
incarcerated or performing court-ordered community service. The applicant's weekly unemployment benefit
amount is reduced by one-fifth for each day the applicant is incarcerated or
performing court‑ordered community service;
(5) (4) that the applicant
fails or refuses to provide information on an issue of ineligibility required
under section 268.101;
(6) (5) that the applicant is performing services 32 hours or more, in employment, covered employment, noncovered employment, volunteer work, or self-employment regardless of the amount of any earnings; or
(7) (6) with respect to which
the applicant has filed an application for unemployment benefits under any
federal law or the law of any other state.
If the appropriate agency finally determines that the applicant is not
entitled to establish a benefit account under federal law or the law of any
other state, this clause does not apply.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective August 1, 2021.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.085, subdivision 4a, is amended to read:
Subd. 4a. Social Security disability benefits. (a) An applicant who is receiving, has received, or has filed for primary Social Security disability benefits for any week is ineligible for unemployment benefits for that week, unless:
(1) the Social Security Administration approved the collecting of primary Social Security disability benefits each month the applicant was employed during the base period; or
(2) the applicant provides a statement from an appropriate health care professional who is aware of the applicant's Social Security disability claim and the basis for that claim, certifying that the applicant is available for suitable employment.
(b) If an applicant meets the requirements of paragraph (a), clause (1) or (2), there is no deduction from the applicant's weekly benefit amount for any Social Security disability benefits.
(c) If an applicant meets the requirements
of paragraph (a), clause (2), there must be deducted from the applicant's
weekly unemployment benefit amount 50 percent of the weekly equivalent of the
primary Social Security disability benefits the applicant is receiving, has
received, or has filed for, with respect to that week.
If the Social Security Administration
determines that the applicant is not entitled to receive primary Social
Security disability benefits for any week the applicant has applied for those
benefits, then this paragraph does not apply to that week.
(d) (c) Information from the
Social Security Administration is conclusive, absent specific evidence showing
that the information was erroneous.
(e) (d) This subdivision does
not apply to Social Security survivor benefits.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from January 1, 2021.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.085, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. School employees; between terms denial. (a) Wage credits from employment with an educational institution or institutions may not be used for unemployment benefit purposes for any week during the period between two successive academic years or terms if:
(1) the
applicant had employment for an educational institution or institutions in the
prior academic year or term; and
(2) there is a reasonable assurance that the applicant will have employment for an educational institution or institutions in the following academic year or term.
This paragraph applies to a vacation period or holiday recess if the applicant was employed immediately before the vacation period or holiday recess, and there is a reasonable assurance that the applicant will be employed immediately following the vacation period or holiday recess. This paragraph also applies to the period between two regular but not successive terms if there is an agreement for that schedule between the applicant and the educational institution.
This paragraph does not apply if the subsequent employment is substantially less favorable than the employment of the prior academic year or term, or the employment prior to the vacation period or holiday recess.
(b) Paragraph (a) does not apply to:
(1) an applicant who, at the end of
the prior academic year or term, had an agreement for a definite period of
employment between academic years or terms in other than an instructional,
research, or principal administrative capacity and the educational institution
or institutions failed to provide that employment.; or
(2) an applicant in a position for which
no license is required by the Professional Educator Licensing and Standards
Board or the Board of School Administrators.
(c) If unemployment benefits are denied to any applicant under paragraph (a) who was employed in the prior academic year or term in other than an instructional, research, or principal administrative capacity and who was not offered an opportunity to perform the employment in the following academic year or term, the applicant is entitled to retroactive unemployment benefits for each week during the period between academic years or terms that the applicant filed a timely continued request for unemployment benefits, but unemployment benefits were denied solely because of paragraph (a).
(d) This subdivision applies to employment with an educational service agency if the applicant performed the services at an educational institution or institutions. "Educational service agency" means a governmental entity established and operated for the purpose of providing services to one or more educational institutions.
(e) This subdivision applies to employment with Minnesota, a political subdivision, or a nonprofit organization, if the services are provided to or on behalf of an educational institution or institutions.
(f) Paragraph (a) applies beginning the Sunday of the week that there is a reasonable assurance of employment.
(g) Employment and a reasonable assurance with multiple education institutions must be aggregated for purposes of application of this subdivision.
(h) If all of the applicant's employment with any educational institution or institutions during the prior academic year or term consisted of on-call employment, and the applicant has a reasonable assurance of any on-call employment with any educational institution or institutions for the following academic year or term, it is not considered substantially less favorable employment.
(i) A "reasonable assurance" may be written, oral, implied, or established by custom or practice.
(j) An "educational institution" is a school, college, university, or other educational entity operated by Minnesota, a political subdivision or instrumentality thereof, or a nonprofit organization.
(k) An "instructional, research, or principal administrative capacity" does not include an educational assistant.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.101, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Determination. (a) The commissioner must determine any issue of ineligibility raised by information required from an applicant under subdivision 1, paragraph (a) or (c), and send to the applicant and any involved employer, by mail or electronic transmission, a document titled a determination of eligibility or a determination of ineligibility, as is appropriate. The determination on an issue of ineligibility as a result of a quit or a discharge of the applicant must state the effect on the employer under section 268.047. A determination must be made in accordance with this paragraph even if a notified employer has not raised the issue of ineligibility.
(b) The commissioner must determine any issue of ineligibility raised by an employer and send to the applicant and that employer, by mail or electronic transmission, a document titled a determination of eligibility or a determination of ineligibility as is appropriate. The determination on an issue of ineligibility as a result of a quit or discharge of the applicant must state the effect on the employer under section 268.047.
If a base period employer:
(1) was not the applicant's most recent employer before the application for unemployment benefits;
(2) did not employ the applicant during the six calendar months before the application for unemployment benefits; and
(3) did not raise an issue of ineligibility as a result of a quit or discharge of the applicant within ten calendar days of notification under subdivision 1, paragraph (b);
then any exception under section 268.047, subdivisions 2 and 3, begins the Sunday two weeks following the week that the issue of ineligibility as a result of a quit or discharge of the applicant was raised by the employer.
A communication from an employer must specifically set out why the applicant should be determined ineligible for unemployment benefits for that communication to be considered to have raised an issue of ineligibility for purposes of this section. A statement of "protest" or a similar term without more information does not constitute raising an issue of ineligibility for purposes of this section.
(c) Subject to section 268.031, an issue of ineligibility is determined based upon that information required of an applicant, any information that may be obtained from an applicant or employer, and information from any other source.
(d) Regardless of the requirements of this subdivision, the commissioner is not required to send to an applicant a copy of the determination where the applicant has satisfied a period of ineligibility because of a quit or a discharge under section 268.095, subdivision 10.
(e) The department is authorized to issue a determination on an issue of ineligibility within 24 months from the establishment of a benefit account based upon information from any source, even if the issue of ineligibility was not raised by the applicant or an employer.
If an applicant obtained unemployment benefits through misrepresentation under section 268.18, subdivision 2, the department is authorized to issue a determination of ineligibility within 48 months of the establishment of the benefit account.
If the department has filed an intervention in a worker's compensation matter under section 176.361, the department is authorized to issue a determination of ineligibility within 48 months of the establishment of the benefit account.
(f)
A determination of eligibility or determination of ineligibility is final
unless an appeal is filed by the applicant or employer within 20 60
calendar days after sending. The
determination must contain a prominent statement indicating the consequences of
not appealing. Proceedings on the appeal
are conducted in accordance with section 268.105.
(g) An issue of ineligibility required to be determined under this section includes any question regarding the denial or allowing of unemployment benefits under this chapter except for issues under section 268.07. An issue of ineligibility for purposes of this section includes any question of effect on an employer under section 268.047.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.133, is amended to read:
268.133
UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS WHILE IN ENTREPRENEURIAL TRAINING.
Unemployment benefits are available to dislocated workers participating in the converting layoffs into Minnesota businesses (CLIMB) program under section 116L.17, subdivision 11. Applicants participating in CLIMB are considered in reemployment assistance training under section 268.035, subdivision 21c. All requirements under section 268.069, subdivision 1, must be met, except the commissioner may waive:
(1) the deductible earnings provisions in section 268.085, subdivision 5; and
(2) the 32 hours of work limitation in
section 268.085, subdivision 2, clause (6) (5). A maximum of 500 applicants may receive
a waiver at any given time.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective August 1, 2021.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 268.136, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Shared work plan requirements. An employer may submit a proposed shared work plan for an employee group to the commissioner for approval in a manner and format set by the commissioner. The proposed shared work plan must include:
(1) a certified statement that the normal weekly hours of work of all of the proposed participating employees were full time or regular part time but are now reduced, or will be reduced, with a corresponding reduction in pay, in order to prevent layoffs;
(2) the name and Social Security number of each participating employee;
(3) the
number of layoffs that would have occurred absent the employer's ability to
participate in a shared work plan;
(4) a certified statement that each
participating employee was first hired by the employer at least one year
three months before the proposed shared work plan is submitted and is
not a seasonal, temporary, or intermittent worker;
(5) the hours of work each participating employee will work each week for the duration of the shared work plan, which must be at least 50 percent of the normal weekly hours but no more than 80 percent of the normal weekly hours, except that the plan may provide for a uniform vacation shutdown of up to two weeks;
(6) a certified statement that any health benefits and pension benefits provided by the employer to participating employees will continue to be provided under the same terms and conditions as though the participating employees' hours of work each week had not been reduced;
(7) a certified statement that the terms and implementation of the shared work plan is consistent with the employer's obligations under state and federal law;
(8) an acknowledgment that the employer understands that unemployment benefits paid under a shared work plan will be used in computing the future tax rate of a taxpaying employer or charged to the reimbursable account of a nonprofit or government employer;
(9) the proposed duration of the shared work plan, which must be at least two months and not more than one year, although a plan may be extended for up to an additional year upon approval of the commissioner;
(10) a starting date beginning on a Sunday at least 15 calendar days after the date the proposed shared work plan is submitted; and
(11) a signature of an owner or officer of the employer who is listed as an owner or officer on the employer's account under section 268.045.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective the day following final enactment.
Sec. 8. CONTINUED
SUSPENSION OF ONE-WEEK WAITING PERIOD.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 268.085, subdivision 1, the one-week nonpayable waiting period to
receive unemployment benefits is waived for applicants for unemployment
insurance benefit accounts established between December 27, 2020, and September
4, 2021.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from December 27, 2020.
Sec. 9. CONTINUED
SUSPENSION OF FIVE-WEEK BUSINESS OWNER BENEFIT LIMITATION.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 268.085, subdivision 9, the five-week limitation for receipt of
unemployment benefits for business owners is suspended for applicants for
unemployment insurance benefit accounts established between December 27, 2020,
and September 4, 2021.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from December 27, 2020.
Sec. 10. LEAVE
OF ABSENCE DUE TO COVID-19.
Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
section 268.085, subdivision 13a, for an applicant applying for an unemployment
insurance benefit account established between December 27, 2020, and September
4, 2021, a leave of absence is presumed to be an involuntary leave of absence
and not ineligible if:
(1) a determination has been made by
health authorities or by a health care professional that the presence of the
applicant in the workplace would jeopardize the health of others, whether or
not the applicant has actually contracted a communicable disease;
(2) a quarantine or isolation order has
been issued to the applicant pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, sections 144.419
to 144.4196;
(3) there is a recommendation from
health authorities or from a health care professional that the applicant should
self-isolate or self-quarantine due to elevated risk from COVID-19 due to being
immunocompromised;
(4) the applicant has been instructed by the applicant's employer not to come to the employer's place of business due to an outbreak of a communicable disease; or
(5)
the applicant has received a notification from a school district, day care, or
other child care provider that either (i) classes are canceled, or (ii) the
applicant's ordinary child care is unavailable, provided that the applicant
made reasonable effort to obtain other child care and requested time off or
other accommodation from the employer and no reasonable accommodation was
available.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from December 27, 2020.
Sec. 11. SUITABLE
EMPLOYMENT DURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC.
Notwithstanding the definition of
"suitable employment" provided in Minnesota Statutes, section
268.035, subdivision 23a, for an applicant applying for unemployment insurance
benefits between December 27, 2020, and September 4, 2021, employment is not
suitable under Minnesota Statutes, section 268.035, subdivision 23a, paragraphs
(a) and (b), if:
(1) the employment puts the health and
safety of the applicant at risk due to potential exposure of the applicant to
COVID-19; or
(2) the employment puts the health and
safety of other workers and the general public at risk due to potential exposure
of the other workers and the general public to COVID-19.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from December 27, 2020.
Sec. 12. PANDEMIC
UNEMPLOYMENT ASSISTANCE TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS.
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance
payments made to high school students under the federal CARES Act, United
States Code, title 15, chapter 116, and extended by the federal Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021, Public Law 116-260, subject to any necessary federal
approval, must not be counted as income when determining eligibility for the
programs administered by the Department of Human Services.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective retroactively from January 7, 2021.
Sec. 13. REPEALER.
(a) Minnesota Statutes 2020, section
268.085, subdivision 4, is repealed January 1, 2021.
(b) Minnesota Statutes 2020, section
268.085, subdivision 8, is repealed.
ARTICLE 7
LABOR APPROPRIATIONS
Section
1. LABOR AND INDUSTRY AND BUREAU OF MEDIATION SERVICES
APPROPRIATIONS. |
(a) 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 "2022" and
"2023" used in this article mean that the appropriations listed under
them are available for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2022, or June 30, 2023,
respectively. "The first year"
is fiscal year 2022. "The second
year" is fiscal year 2023. "The
biennium" is fiscal years 2022 and 2023.
(b)
If an appropriation in this article is enacted more than once in the 2021
regular or special legislative session, the appropriation must be given effect
only once.
|
|
|
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
Available for the Year |
|
|
|
|
Ending June 30 |
|
|
|
|
2022 |
2023 |
Sec. 2. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY |
|
|
|
Subdivision 1. Total
Appropriation |
|
$32,558,000 |
|
$32,742,000 |
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
|
2022 |
2023
|
General |
6,320,000
|
6,604,000
|
Workers' Compensation |
22,991,000
|
22,991,000
|
Workforce Development |
3,247,000
|
3,147,000
|
The amounts that may be spent for each
purpose are specified in the following subdivisions.
Subd. 2. General
Support |
|
6,515,000
|
|
6,515,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General |
476,000
|
476,000
|
Workers' Compensation |
6,039,000
|
6,039,000
|
$476,000 each year is for system upgrades. This appropriation is available until June
30, 2023. The base amount in fiscal year
2024 is zero. This appropriation
includes funds for information technology project services and support subject
to Minnesota Statutes, section 16E.0466.
Any ongoing information technology costs must be incorporated into the
service level agreement and must be paid to the Office of MN.IT Services by the
commissioner of labor and industry under the rates and mechanism specified in
that agreement.
Subd. 3. Labor
Standards and Apprenticeship |
|
7,391,000
|
|
7,675,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General |
5,644,000
|
5,928,000
|
Workforce Development |
1,747,000
|
1,747,000
|
(a) $2,046,000 each year is for wage theft
prevention.
(b) $151,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for prevailing wage enforcement.
(c)
$1,271,000 each year is from the workforce development fund for the
apprenticeship program under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 178.
(d) $100,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for labor education and advancement program grants
under Minnesota Statutes, section 178.11, to expand and promote registered
apprenticeship training for minorities and women.
(e) $225,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for grants to the Construction Careers Foundation
for the Helmets to Hard Hats Minnesota initiative. Grant funds must be used to recruit, retain,
assist, and support National Guard, reserve, and active duty military members'
and veterans' participation into apprenticeship programs registered with the
Department of Labor and Industry and connect them with career training and
employment in the building and construction industry. The recruitment, selection, employment, and
training must be without discrimination due to race, color, creed, religion,
national origin, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, physical or mental
disability, receipt of public assistance, or age. This is a onetime appropriation.
(f) $84,000 the first year and $34,000 the
second year are for outreach and enforcement efforts related to changes to the
parenting leave and accommodation law.
(g) $84,000 the first year and $34,000 the
second year are for outreach and enforcement efforts related to changes to the
Women's Economic Security Act.
(h) $1,306,000 the first year and
$1,941,000 the second year are for earned sick and safe time compliance and
enforcement efforts under Minnesota Statutes, sections 181.9445 to 181.9448,
and chapter 177. The base amount in
fiscal years 2024 and 2025 is $1,631,000.
(i) $300,000 each year is for earned sick
and safe time grants to community organizations under Minnesota Statutes,
section 177.50, subdivision 4.
(j) $131,000 the first year and $27,000
the second year are for purposes of implementing the Emergency Rehire and
Retention Law. The base amount in fiscal
year 2024 and after is zero.
(k) $344,000 the first year and $147,000
the second year are for the purposes of the Safe Workplaces for Meat and
Poultry Processing Workers Act under Minnesota Statutes, sections 179.87 to
179.8757.
Subd. 4. Workers'
Compensation |
|
11,882,000
|
|
11,882,000
|
This appropriation is from the workers'
compensation fund.
Subd. 5. Workplace
Safety |
|
5,070,000
|
|
5,070,000
|
This appropriation is from the workers'
compensation fund.
Subd. 6. Workforce
Development Initiatives |
|
1,700,000
|
|
1,600,000
|
Appropriations
by Fund |
||
General |
200,000
|
200,000
|
Workforce Development |
1,500,000
|
1,400,000
|
(a) $200,000 each year is for
identification of competency standards under Minnesota Statutes, section
175.45.
(b) $1,100,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for the youth skills training grants under Minnesota
Statutes, section 175.46. Of this
amount, $100,000 each year is for administration of the program.
(c) $300,000 each year is from the
workforce development fund for the pipeline program.
(d) $100,000 the first year is from the
workforce development fund for the Career Pathway Demonstration Program under
article 2, section 30, for a grant to Independent School District No. 294,
Houston, for the Minnesota Virtual Academy's career pathway program with
Operating Engineers Local 49. The
program may include up to five semesters of courses and must lead to
eligibility into the Operating Engineers Local 49 apprenticeship program. The grant may be used to encourage and
support student participation in the career pathway program through additional
academic, counseling, and other support services provided by the student's
enrolling school district. The Minnesota
Virtual Academy may contract with a student's enrolling school district to
provide these services. The appropriation
is available until June 30, 2023.
Sec. 3. WORKERS'
COMPENSATION COURT OF APPEALS |
$2,283,000 |
|
$2,283,000 |
This appropriation is from the workers'
compensation fund.
Sec. 4. BUREAU
OF MEDIATION SERVICES |
|
$2,805,000 |
|
$2,850,000 |
(a) $68,000 each year is for grants to area
labor management committees. Grants may
be awarded for a 12-month period beginning July 1 each year. Any unencumbered balance remaining at the end
of the first year does not cancel but is available for the second year.
(b)
$560,000 each year is for purposes of the Public Employment Relations Board
under Minnesota Statutes, section 179A.041.
(c) $47,000 each year is for rulemaking,
staffing, and other costs associated with peace officer grievance procedures.
Sec. 5. MINNESOTA
MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET |
$3,000 |
|
$-0- |
$3,000 the first year is for printing
costs associated with earned sick and safe time. This is a onetime appropriation.
Sec. 6. ATTORNEY
GENERAL |
|
$222,000 |
|
$222,000 |
$222,000 each year is for enforcement of
the Safe Workplaces for Meat and Poultry Processing Workers Act under Minnesota
Statutes, sections 179.87 to 179.8757.
Sec. 7. CANCELLATION;
FISCAL YEAR 2021.
(a)
$203,000 of the fiscal year 2021 general fund appropriation under Laws 2019,
First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 3, subdivision 2, is
canceled.
(b)
$102,000 of the fiscal year 2021 general fund appropriation under Laws 2019,
First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 5, is canceled.
Sec. 8. Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, section 3, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Workers'
Compensation |
|
14,882,000 |
|
11,882,000 |
$3,000,000 the first year is from the
workers' compensation fund for workers' compensation system upgrades. This amount is available until June 30, 2021
2023. This is a onetime
appropriation.
ARTICLE 8
LABOR AND INDUSTRY POLICY
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 13.7905, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. Occupational safety and health. (a) Certain data gathered or prepared by the commissioner of labor and industry as part of occupational safety and health inspections or reports are classified under sections 182.659, subdivision 8, 182.663, subdivision 4, and 182.668, subdivision 2.
(b) Certain data gathered or prepared
by the commissioner of labor and industry as part of occupational safety and
health citations are classified under section 182.66, subdivision 4.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 13.7905, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 8. Data
on individuals who are minors. Disclosure
of data on minors is governed by section 181A.112.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.24, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3a. Gratuities;
credit cards or charges. (a)
Gratuities received by an employee through a debit, charge, or credit card
payment shall be credited to that pay period in which they are received by the
employee.
(b) Where a gratuity is received by an
employee through a debit, charge, or credit card payment, the full amount of
gratuity indicated in the payment must be distributed to the employee for the
pay period in which it is received and no later than the next scheduled pay
period.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective August 1, 2021.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.27, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Compliance
orders. The commissioner may issue
an order requiring an employer to comply with sections 177.21 to 177.435,
181.02, 181.03, 181.031, 181.032, 181.101, 181.11, 181.13, 181.14, 181.145,
181.15, 181.172, paragraph (a) or (d), 181.275, subdivision 2a, 181.722,
181.79, and 181.939 to 181.943, and 181.987, or with any rule
promulgated under section 177.28. The
commissioner shall issue an order requiring an employer to comply with sections
177.41 to 177.435 or 181.987 if the violation is repeated. For purposes of this subdivision only, a
violation is repeated if at any time during the two years that preceded the
date of violation, the commissioner issued an order to the employer for
violation of sections 177.41 to 177.435 or 181.987 and the order is
final or the commissioner and the employer have entered into a settlement
agreement that required the employer to pay back wages that were required by
sections 177.41 to 177.435. The
department shall serve the order upon the employer or the employer's authorized
representative in person or by certified mail at the employer's place of
business. An employer who wishes to
contest the order must file written notice of objection to the order with the
commissioner within 15 calendar days after being served with the order. A contested case proceeding must then be held
in accordance with sections 14.57 to 14.69.
If, within 15 calendar days after being served with the order, the
employer fails to file a written notice of objection with the commissioner, the
order becomes a final order of the commissioner.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective October 15, 2021.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 178.012, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Apprenticeship
rules. Federal regulations governing
apprenticeship in effect on July 1, 2013 January 18, 2017, as
provided by Code of Federal Regulations, title 29, part parts 29,
sections 29.1 to 29.6 and 29.11, and 30, are the apprenticeship rules in
this state, subject to amendment by this chapter or by rule under section
178.041.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 179A.10, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. State
employees. Unclassified employees,
unless otherwise excluded, are included within the units which include the
classifications to which they are assigned for purposes of compensation. Supervisory employees shall only be assigned
to units 12 and, 16, and 18. The following are the appropriate units of
executive branch state employees:
(1) law enforcement unit;
(2) craft, maintenance, and labor unit;
(3) service unit;
(4) health care nonprofessional unit;
(5) health care professional unit;
(6) clerical and office unit;
(7) technical unit;
(8) correctional guards unit;
(9) state university instructional unit;
(10) state college instructional unit;
(11) state university administrative unit;
(12) professional engineering unit;
(13) health treatment unit;
(14) general professional unit;
(15) professional state residential instructional unit;
(16) supervisory employees unit; and
(17) public safety radio communications
operator unit.; and
(18) law enforcement supervisors unit.
Each unit consists of the classifications or positions assigned to it in the schedule of state employee job classification and positions maintained by the commissioner. The commissioner may only make changes in the schedule in existence on the day prior to August 1, 1984, as required by law or as provided in subdivision 4.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 179A.10, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. State
employee severance. Each of the
following groups of employees has the right, as specified in this subdivision,
to separate from the general professional, health treatment, or general
supervisory units provided for in subdivision 2: attorneys, physicians, and
professional employees of the Minnesota Office of Higher Education who are
compensated under section 43A.18, subdivision 4, State Patrol-supervisors,
enforcement supervisors employed by the Department of Natural Resources, and
criminal apprehension investigative-supervisors. This right must be exercised by petition
during the 60-day period commencing 270 days prior to the termination of a
contract covering the units. If one of
these groups of employees exercises the right to separate from the units they
have no right to meet and negotiate, but retain the right to meet and confer
with the commissioner of management and budget and with the appropriate
appointing authority on any matter of concern to them. The right to separate must be exercised as
follows: An employee organization or
group of employees claiming that a majority of any one of these groups of
employees on a statewide basis wish to separate from their units may petition
the commissioner for an election during the petitioning period. If the petition is supported by a showing of
at least 30 percent support for the petitioner from the employees, the
commissioner shall hold an election to ascertain the wishes of the majority
with respect to the issue of remaining within or severing from the units
provided in subdivision 2. This election
must be conducted within 30 days of the close of the petition period. If a majority of votes cast endorse severance
from the unit in favor of separate meet and confer status for any one of these
groups of employees, the commissioner shall certify that result. This election, where not inconsistent with
other provisions of this section, is governed by section 179A.12. If a group of employees elects to sever, the
group may rejoin that unit by following the same procedures specified above for
severance, but may only do so during the periods provided for severance.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.53, is amended to read:
181.53
CONDITIONS PRECEDENT TO EMPLOYMENT NOT REQUIRED.
(a) No person, whether acting directly or through an agent, or as the agent or employee of another, shall require as a condition precedent to employment any written statement as to the participation of the applicant in a strike, or as to a personal record, for more than one year immediately preceding the date of application; nor shall any person, acting in any of these capacities, use or require blanks or forms of application for employment in contravention of this section. Nothing in this section precludes an employer from requesting or considering an applicant's criminal history pursuant to section 364.021 or other applicable law.
(b) Except as provided in paragraph (c),
no person or employer, whether acting directly or through an agent, shall seek
to obtain; require consent to a request for; or use an employee or prospective
employee's credit information, including the employee or prospective employee's
credit score, credit history, credit account balances, payment history, savings
or checking account balances, or savings or checking account numbers:
(1) as a condition precedent to
employment;
(2) as a basis for hiring, compensation,
or any other term, privilege, or condition of employment; or
(3) as a basis for discharge or any
other adverse employment action.
(c) Paragraph (b) does not apply if:
(1) the information sought is required
by a state or federal law or regulation;
(2) the employer or prospective employer
is a financial institution or a credit union;
(3) the employer or prospective employer
has a bona fide business purpose for requesting the information that is
substantially related to the employee or prospective employee's position; or
(4) the employee or prospective
employee's position:
(i) is a managerial position that
involves setting the financial direction or control of the employer or
prospective employer;
(ii) involves routine access to
confidential financial and personal information, other than information
customarily provided in a routine retail transaction;
(iii) involves regular access to cash
totaling $10,000 or more of the employer, the prospective employer, a customer,
or a client;
(iv) is a peace officer; or
(v) requires a financial fiduciary
responsibility to the employer, the prospective employer, a customer, or a
client, including the authority to issue payments, collect debts, transfer
money, or enter into contracts.
(d) In addition to any remedies
otherwise provided by law, an employee or prospective employee injured by a
violation of paragraph (b) may bring a civil action to recover any and all
damages recoverable at law, together with costs and disbursements, including
reasonable attorney fees, and may receive such injunctive and other equitable
relief as determined by the court. If
the district court determines that a violation of paragraph (b) occurred, the
court may order any appropriate relief, including but not limited to
reinstatement, back pay, restoration of lost service credit if appropriate,
compensatory damages, and the expungement of any adverse records of an employee
or prospective employee who was the subject of the alleged acts of misconduct.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.939, is amended to read:
181.939 NURSING MOTHERS, LACTATING EMPLOYEES,
AND PREGNANCY ACCOMMODATIONS.
Subdivision 1. Nursing
mothers. (a) An employer must
provide reasonable unpaid break time times each day to an
employee who needs to express breast milk for her infant child. The break time must, if possible, times
may run concurrently with any break time times already
provided to the employee. An employer
is not required to provide break time under this section if to do so would
unduly disrupt the operations of the employer. An employer shall not reduce an employee's
compensation for time used for the purpose of expressing milk.
(b) The employer must make reasonable
efforts to provide a room or other location, in close proximity to the work
area, other than a bathroom or a toilet stall, that is shielded from view and
free from intrusion from coworkers and the public and that includes access to
an electrical outlet, where the employee can express her milk in privacy. The employer would be held harmless if
reasonable effort has been made.
Subd. 2. Pregnancy
accommodations. (a) An
employer must provide reasonable accommodations to an employee for health
conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth upon request, with the advice of
a licensed health care provider or certified doula, unless the employer
demonstrates that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the
operation of the employer's business. A
pregnant employee is not required to obtain the advice of a licensed health
care provider or certified doula, nor may an employer claim undue hardship for
the following accommodations: (1) more
frequent restroom, food, and water breaks; (2) seating; and (3) limits on
lifting over 20 pounds. The
employee and employer shall engage in an interactive process with respect to an
employee's request for a reasonable accommodation. Reasonable accommodation may include but is
not limited to temporary transfer to a less strenuous or hazardous position,
seating, frequent restroom breaks, and limits to heavy lifting. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
subdivision, an employer is not required to create a new or additional position
in order to accommodate an employee pursuant to this subdivision and is not
required to discharge an employee, transfer another employee with greater
seniority, or promote an employee.
(b) Nothing in this subdivision shall be
construed to affect any other provision of law relating to sex discrimination
or pregnancy or in any way diminish the coverage of pregnancy, childbirth, or
health conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth under any other provisions
of any other law.
(c) An employer shall not require an
employee to take a leave or accept an accommodation.
Subd. 3. Employer. (c) For the purposes of this
section, "employer" means a person or entity that employs one or more
employees and includes the state and its political subdivisions.
Subd. 4. No
employer retribution. (d)
An employer may shall not retaliate against an employee for
asserting rights or remedies under this section.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.940, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Employee. "Employee" means a person who performs services for hire for an employer from whom a leave is requested under sections 181.940 to 181.944 for:
(1) at least 12 months 90 days
preceding the request; and
(2) for an average number of hours per week
equal to one-half the full-time equivalent position in the employee's job
classification as defined by the employer's personnel policies or practices or
pursuant to the provisions of a collective bargaining agreement, during the 12-month
90-day period immediately preceding the leave.
Employee includes all individuals employed at any site owned or operated by the employer but does not include an independent contractor.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.940, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Employer. "Employer" means a person or
entity that employs 21 one or more employees at at least one
site, except that, for purposes of the school leave allowed under section
181.9412, employer means a person or entity that employs one or more employees
in Minnesota. The term and
includes an individual, corporation, partnership, association, nonprofit
organization, group of persons, state, county, town, city, school district, or
other governmental subdivision.
Sec. 12. [181.987]
USE OF SKILLED AND TRAINED CONTRACTOR WORKFORCES AT OIL REFINERIES.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Contractor" means a
vendor that enters into or seeks to enter into a contract with an owner or
operator of an oil refinery to perform construction, alteration, demolition,
installation, repair, maintenance, or hazardous material handling work at the
site of the oil refinery. Contractor
includes all contractors or subcontractors of any tier performing work as
described in this paragraph at the site of the oil refinery. Contractor does not include employees of the
owner or operator of an oil refinery.
(c) "Registered apprenticeship
program" means an apprenticeship program registered with the Department of
Labor and Industry under chapter 178 or with the United States Department of
Labor Office of Apprenticeship or a recognized state apprenticeship agency
under Code of Federal Regulations, title 29, parts 29 and 30.
(d) "Skilled and trained
workforce" means a workforce in which a minimum of 85 percent of the
employees of the contractor or subcontractor of any tier working at the site of
the oil refinery meet one of the following criteria:
(1) are currently registered as
apprentices in a registered apprenticeship program in the applicable trade;
(2) have graduated from a registered
apprenticeship program in the applicable trade; or
(3) have completed all of the classroom
training and work hour requirements needed to graduate from the registered
apprenticeship program their employer participates in.
Subd. 2. Use
of contractors by owner, operator; requirement. (a) An owner or operator of an oil
refinery shall, when contracting with contractors for the performance of
construction, alteration, demolition, installation, repair, maintenance, or
hazardous material handling work at the site of the oil refinery, require that
the contractors performing that work, and any subcontractors of any tier, use a
skilled and trained workforce when performing all work at the site of the oil
refinery.
(b) The requirement under this
subdivision applies only when each contractor and subcontractor of any tier is
performing work at the site of the oil refinery.
Subd. 3. Penalties. The Division of Labor Standards shall
receive complaints of violations of this section. The commissioner of labor and industry shall
fine an owner, operator, contractor, or subcontractor of any tier not less than
$5,000 nor more than $10,000 for each violation of the requirements in this
section. Each shift on which a violation
of this section occurs shall be considered a separate violation. This penalty is in addition to any penalties
provided under section 177.27, subdivision 7.
In determining the amount of a civil penalty under this subdivision, the
appropriateness of the penalty to the size of the violator's business and the
gravity of the violation shall be considered.
Subd. 4. Civil
actions. A person injured by
a violation of this section may bring a civil action for damages against an
owner or operator of an oil refinery. The
court may award to a prevailing plaintiff under this subdivision damages,
attorney fees, costs, disbursements, and any other appropriate relief as
otherwise provided by law.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective October 15, 2021.
Sec. 13. [181A.112]
DATA ON INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE MINORS.
(a) When the commissioner collects,
creates, receives, maintains, or disseminates the following data on individuals
who the commissioner knows are minors, the data are considered private data on
individuals, as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12, except for data
classified as public data according to section 13.43:
(1) name;
(2) date of birth;
(3) Social Security number;
(4) telephone number;
(5) email address;
(6) physical or mailing address;
(7) location data;
(8) online account access information;
and
(9) other data that would identify
participants who have registered for events, programs, or classes sponsored by
the Department of Labor and Industry.
(b) Data about minors classified under
this section maintain their classification as private data on individuals after
the individual is no longer a minor.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.66, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 4. Classification
of citation data. Notwithstanding
section 13.39, subdivision 2, the data in a written citation is classified as
public as soon as the commissioner has received confirmation that the employer
has received the citation. All data in
the citation is public, including but not limited to the employer's name; the
employer's address; the address of the worksite; the date or dates of
inspection; the date the citation was issued; the provision of the act,
standard, rule, or order alleged to have been violated; the severity level of
the citation; the description of the nature of the violation; the proposed
abatement date; the proposed penalty; and any abatement guidelines.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Willful
or repeated violations. Any employer
who willfully or repeatedly violates the requirements of section 182.653, or
any standard, rule, or order adopted under the authority of the commissioner as
provided in this chapter, may be assessed a fine not to exceed $70,000 $136,532
for each violation. The minimum fine for
a willful violation is $5,000 $9,753.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Serious
violations. Any employer who has
received a citation for a serious violation of its duties under section
182.653, or any standard, rule, or order adopted under the authority of the
commissioner as provided in this chapter, shall be assessed a fine not to
exceed $7,000 $13,653 for each violation. If a serious violation under section 182.653,
subdivision 2, causes or contributes to the death of an employee, the employer
shall be assessed a fine of up to $25,000 for each violation.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. Nonserious
violations. Any employer who has
received a citation for a violation of its duties under section 182.653,
subdivisions 2 to 4, where the violation is specifically determined not to be
of a serious nature as provided in section 182.651, subdivision 12, may be
assessed a fine of up to $7,000 $13,653 for each violation.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Failure
to correct a violation. Any employer
who fails to correct a violation for which a citation has been issued under
section 182.66 within the period permitted for its correction, which period
shall not begin to run until the date of the final order of the commissioner in
the case of any review proceedings under this chapter initiated by the employer
in good faith and not solely for delay or avoidance of penalties, may be
assessed a fine of not more than $7,000 $13,653 for each day
during which the failure or violation continues.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Posting
violations. Any employer who
violates any of the posting requirements, as prescribed under this chapter,
except those prescribed under section 182.661, subdivision 3a, shall be
assessed a fine of up to $7,000 $13,653 for each violation.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 182.666, is amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 6a. Increases
for inflation. (a) Each year,
beginning in 2022, the commissioner shall determine the percentage change in
the Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI, Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers (CPI-U) from the month of October in the preceding calendar
year to the month of October in the current calendar year.
(b) The commissioner shall increase the
fines in subdivisions 1 to 5, except for the fine for a serious violation under
section 182.653, subdivision 2, that causes or contributes to the death of an
employee, by the percentage change determined by the commissioner under
paragraph (a), if the percentage change is greater than zero. The fines shall be increased to the nearest
dollar.
(c) If the percentage change determined
by the commissioner under paragraph (a) is not greater than zero, the
commissioner shall not change any of the fines in subdivisions 1 to 5.
(d) A fine increase under this
subdivision takes effect on the next January 1 after the commissioner
determines the percentage change under
paragraph (a) and the increase applies to all fines assessed on or after the
next January 1.
(e) No later than December 1 of each
year, the commissioner shall give notice in the State Register of any increase
to the fines in subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.
Sec. 21. [299F.48]
AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEMS IN EXISTING HIGH-RISE BUILDINGS.
Subdivision 1. Requirements. This section applies to an existing
building in which at least one story used for human occupancy is 75 feet or
more above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access. An automatic sprinkler system must be
installed in those portions of the entire existing building in which an
automatic sprinkler system would be required if the building were constructed
on the effective date of this section. The
automatic sprinkler system must comply with standards in the State Fire Code
and the State Building Code and must be fully operational by August 1, 2033.
Subd. 2. Exemptions. (a) Subdivision 1 does not apply to:
(1) a monument or war memorial that is
included in the National Register of Historic Places or the state register of
historic places;
(2) an airport control tower or control
room;
(3) an open parking structure;
(4) a building used for agricultural
purposes;
(5) a residential building in which at
least 70 percent of the dwelling units are owner occupied;
(6) elevator equipment rooms and
elevator shafts;
(7) electric generation and
distribution facilities operated by a public utility, a municipal utility, or a
cooperative electric association;
(8) areas utilized for surgery,
surgical recovery, emergency backup power systems, and electrical closets
within facilities licensed by the Department of Health; or
(9) a manufacturing facility that is
required to meet the fire safety standards adopted by the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration in Code of Federal Regulations, title 29, part 1910,
subpart L.
(b) Subdivision 1 does not apply to an
area used exclusively for telecommunications equipment and associated generator
and power equipment and under exclusive control of a telecommunications
provider if:
(1) the area is separated from the
remainder of the building by construction equivalent to a one-hour fire
resistant wall and two-hour floor and ceiling assemblies; and
(2) the area has an automatic fire
detection and alarm system that complies with standards in the State Fire Code
and State Building Code.
Subd. 3. Reporting. By August 1, 2023, the owner of a
building subject to subdivision 1 shall submit to the state fire marshal a
letter stating the owner's intent to comply with this section and a plan for
achieving compliance by the deadline in subdivision 1.
Subd. 4. Extensions. The commissioner, or the state fire
marshal as the commissioner's designee, may grant extensions to the deadline
for reporting under subdivision 3 or the deadline for compliance under
subdivision 1. Any extension must
observe the spirit and intent of this section and be tailored to ensure public
welfare and safety. To be eligible for
an extension, the building owner must apply to the commissioner and demonstrate
a genuine inability to comply within the time prescribed despite appropriate
effort to do so.
Subd. 5. Rules. The commissioner may adopt rules to
implement this section.
Subd. 6. Working
group. The commissioner may
appoint a working group to advise the commissioner on the implementation of
this section, including the adoption of rules, and to advise the commissioner
on applications for extensions. If appointed,
a working group must include a representative from: the state fire marshal's office, the
Department of Administration, the Minnesota State Fire Chiefs Association, a
chapter of the Minnesota Building Owners and Managers Association, the
Minneapolis Public Housing Authority, the Minnesota Multi Housing Association,
the Minnesota Hotel and Motel Association, the Fire Marshals Association of
Minnesota, professional engineers or licensed architects, a municipal water
authority of a city of the first class, a national association of fire
sprinkler contractors, and a resident of a building subject to subdivision 1.
Subd. 7. Effect
on other laws. This section
does not supersede the State Building Code or State Fire Code.
Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.07, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Membership. (a) The Construction Codes Advisory Council consists of the following members:
(1) the commissioner or the commissioner's designee representing the department's Construction Codes and Licensing Division;
(2) the commissioner of public safety or the commissioner of public safety's designee representing the Department of Public Safety's State Fire Marshal Division;
(3) one member, appointed by the commissioner, engaged in each of the following occupations or industries:
(i) certified building officials;
(ii) fire chiefs or fire marshals;
(iii) licensed architects;
(iv) licensed professional engineers;
(v) commercial building owners and managers;
(vi) the licensed residential building industry;
(vii) the commercial building industry;
(viii) the heating and ventilation industry;
(ix) a member of the Plumbing Board;
(x) a member of the Board of Electricity;
(xi) a member of the Board of High Pressure Piping Systems;
(xii) the boiler industry;
(xiii) the manufactured housing industry;
(xiv) public utility suppliers;
(xv)
the Minnesota Building and Construction Trades Council; and
(xvi) local units of government.;
(xvii) the energy conservation industry;
and
(xviii) a building accessibility
advocate.
(b) The commissioner or the commissioner's designee representing the department's Construction Codes and Licensing Division shall serve as chair of the advisory council. For members who are not state officials or employees, compensation and removal of members of the advisory council are governed by section 15.059. The terms of the members of the advisory council shall be four years. The terms of eight of the appointed members shall be coterminous with the governor and the terms of the remaining nine appointed members shall end on the first Monday in January one year after the terms of the other appointed members expire. An appointed member may be reappointed. Each council member shall appoint an alternate to serve in their absence.
Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.092, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. License fees and license renewal fees. (a) The license fee for each license is the base license fee plus any applicable board fee, continuing education fee, and contractor recovery fund fee and additional assessment, as set forth in this subdivision.
(b) For purposes of this section, "license duration" means the number of years for which the license is issued except that if the initial license is not issued for a whole number of years, the license duration shall be rounded up to the next whole number.
(c) If there is a continuing education
requirement for renewal of the license, then a continuing education fee must be
included in the renewal license fee. The
continuing education fee for all license classifications is $5.
(c) (d) The base license fee
shall depend on whether the license is classified as an entry level, master,
journeyworker, or business license, and on the license duration. The base license fee shall be:
|
|
License Duration |
|
|
License Classification |
1 year |
2 years |
|
Entry level |
$10 |
$20 |
|
Journeyworker |
$20 |
$40 |
|
Master |
$40 |
$80 |
|
Business |
|
$180 |
(d) If there is a continuing education
requirement for renewal of the license, then a continuing education fee must be
included in the renewal license fee. The
continuing education fee for all license classifications shall be: $10 if the renewal license duration is one
year; and $20 if the renewal license duration is two years.
(e) If the license is issued under sections 326B.31 to 326B.59 or 326B.90 to 326B.925, then a board fee must be included in the license fee and the renewal license fee. The board fee for all license classifications shall be: $4 if the license duration is one year; and $8 if the license duration is two years.
(f) If the application is for the renewal of a license issued under sections 326B.802 to 326B.885, then the contractor recovery fund fee required under section 326B.89, subdivision 3, and any additional assessment required under section 326B.89, subdivision 16, must be included in the license renewal fee.
(g)
Notwithstanding the fee amounts described in paragraphs (c) (d) to
(f), for the period July 1, 2017 October 1, 2021, through
September 30, 2021 2023, the following fees apply:
|
|
License Duration |
|
|
License Classification |
1 year |
2 years |
|
Entry level |
$10 |
$20 |
|
Journeyworker |
$15 |
$30 |
|
Master |
$30 |
$60 |
|
Business |
|
$120 |
If there is a continuing education requirement
for renewal of the license, then a continuing education fee must be included in
the renewal license fee. The continuing
education fee for all license classifications shall be $5.
Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.106, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Adoption of code. (a) Subject to paragraphs (c) and (d) and sections 326B.101 to 326B.194, the commissioner shall by rule and in consultation with the Construction Codes Advisory Council establish a code of standards for the construction, reconstruction, alteration, and repair of buildings, governing matters of structural materials, design and construction, fire protection, health, sanitation, and safety, including design and construction standards regarding heat loss control, illumination, and climate control. The code must also include duties and responsibilities for code administration, including procedures for administrative action, penalties, and suspension and revocation of certification. The code must conform insofar as practicable to model building codes generally accepted and in use throughout the United States, including a code for building conservation. In the preparation of the code, consideration must be given to the existing statewide specialty codes presently in use in the state. Model codes with necessary modifications and statewide specialty codes may be adopted by reference. The code must be based on the application of scientific principles, approved tests, and professional judgment. To the extent possible, the code must be adopted in terms of desired results instead of the means of achieving those results, avoiding wherever possible the incorporation of specifications of particular methods or materials. To that end the code must encourage the use of new methods and new materials. Except as otherwise provided in sections 326B.101 to 326B.194, the commissioner shall administer and enforce the provisions of those sections.
(b) The commissioner shall develop rules addressing the plan review fee assessed to similar buildings without significant modifications including provisions for use of building systems as specified in the industrial/modular program specified in section 326B.194. Additional plan review fees associated with similar plans must be based on costs commensurate with the direct and indirect costs of the service.
(c) Beginning with the 2018 edition of the model building codes and every six years thereafter, the commissioner shall review the new model building codes and adopt the model codes as amended for use in Minnesota, within two years of the published edition date. The commissioner may adopt amendments to the building codes prior to the adoption of the new building codes to advance construction methods, technology, or materials, or, where necessary to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the public, or to improve the efficiency or the use of a building.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (c), the commissioner shall act on each new model residential energy code and the new model commercial energy code in accordance with federal law for which the United States Department of Energy has issued an affirmative determination in compliance with United States Code, title 42, section 6833. Beginning in 2022, the commissioner shall act on the new model commercial energy code by adopting each new published edition of ASHRAE 90.1 or a more efficient standard, and amending it as necessary to achieve a minimum of eight percent energy efficiency with each edition, as measured against energy consumption by an average building in each applicable building sector in 2003. These amendments must achieve a net zero energy standard for new commercial buildings by 2036 and thereafter. The commissioner may adopt amendments prior to adoption of the new energy codes, as amended for use in Minnesota, to advance construction methods, technology, or materials, or, where necessary to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the public, or to improve the efficiency or use of a building.
Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.89, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision
1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the
following terms have the meanings given them.
(b) "Gross annual receipts" means the total amount derived from residential contracting or residential remodeling activities, regardless of where the activities are performed, and must not be reduced by costs of goods sold, expenses, losses, or any other amount.
(c) "Licensee" means a person licensed as a residential contractor or residential remodeler.
(d) "Residential real estate" means a new or existing building constructed for habitation by one to four families, and includes detached garages intended for storage of vehicles associated with the residential real estate.
(e) "Fund" means the contractor recovery fund.
(f) "Owner" when used in connection with real property, means a person who has any legal or equitable interest in real property and includes a condominium or townhome association that owns common property located in a condominium building or townhome building or an associated detached garage. Owner does not include any real estate developer or any owner using, or intending to use, the property for a business purpose and not as owner‑occupied residential real estate.
(g) "Cycle One" means the
time period between July 1 and December 31.
(h) "Cycle Two" means the
time period between January 1 and June 30.
Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.89, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. Payment
limitations. The commissioner shall
not pay compensation from the fund to an owner or a lessee in an amount greater
than $75,000 per licensee. The
commissioner shall not pay compensation from the fund to owners and lessees in
an amount that totals more than $300,000 $800,000 per licensee. The commissioner shall only pay compensation
from the fund for a final judgment that is based on a contract directly between
the licensee and the homeowner or lessee that was entered into prior to the
cause of action and that requires licensure as a residential building
contractor or residential remodeler.
Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 326B.89, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
Subd. 9. Satisfaction
of applications for compensation. The
commissioner shall pay compensation from the fund to an owner or a lessee
pursuant to the terms of an agreement that has been entered into under
subdivision 7, clause (1), or pursuant to a final order that has been issued
under subdivision 7, clause (2), or subdivision 8 by December 1 of the
fiscal year following the fiscal year during which the agreement was entered
into or during which the order became final, subject to the limitations of this
section. At the end of each fiscal year
the commissioner shall calculate the amount of compensation to be paid from the
fund pursuant to agreements that have been entered into under subdivision 7,
clause (1), and final orders that have been issued under subdivision 7, clause
(2), or subdivision 8. If the calculated
amount exceeds the amount available for payment, then the commissioner shall
allocate the amount available among the owners and the lessees in the ratio
that the amount agreed to or ordered to be paid to each owner or lessee bears
to the amount calculated. The commissioner
shall mail notice of the allocation to all owners and lessees not less than 45
days following the end of the fiscal year. 31 for applications submitted
by July 1 or June 30 for applications submitted by January 1 of the fiscal year. The commissioner shall not pay compensation
to owners or lessees that totals more than $400,000 per licensee during Cycle
One of a fiscal year nor shall the commissioner pay out during Cycle One if the
payout will result in the exhaustion of a licensee's fund. If compensation paid to owners or lessees in
Cycle One would total more than $400,000 or would result in exhaustion
of a licensee's fund in Cycle One, the commissioner shall not make a final determination of compensation for claims against the licensee until the completion of Cycle Two. If the claims against a licensee for the fiscal year result in the exhaustion of a licensee's fund or the fund as a whole, the commissioner must prorate the amount available among the owners and lessees based on the amount agreed to or ordered to be paid to each owner or lessee. The commissioner shall mail notice of the proration to all owners and lessees no later than March 31 of the current fiscal year. Any compensation paid by the commissioner in accordance with this subdivision shall be deemed to satisfy and extinguish any right to compensation from the fund based upon the verified application of the owner or lessee.
Sec. 28. LAW
ENFORCEMENT SUPERVISORS TRANSITION.
(a) Until a negotiated collective
bargaining agreement with an exclusive representative of the law enforcement
supervisors unit established under Minnesota Statutes, section 179A.10,
subdivision 2, clause (18), is approved under Minnesota Statutes, section
3.855:
(1) state patrol supervisors and
enforcement supervisors employed by the Department of Natural Resources shall
remain in the commissioner's plan;
(2) criminal apprehension investigative
supervisors and other law enforcement supervisor positions currently in the
general supervisory employees unit shall remain in the general supervisory
employees unit represented by the Middle Management Association; and
(3) employees in positions to be
included in the law enforcement supervisors unit shall be authorized to
participate in certification elections for the law enforcement supervisors unit
and any negotiation and collective bargaining activities of the law enforcement
supervisors unit.
(b) In assigning positions included in
the law enforcement supervisors unit, employees in positions under paragraph
(a), clause (2), shall have the right to remain in the general supervisory
employees unit represented by the Middle Management Association. If a group of employees exercises this right,
the appropriate unit for such employees shall be the general supervisory employees
unit represented by the Middle Management Association, and the commissioner
shall assign them to such unit.
Sec. 29. CAREER
PATHWAY DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM.
Subdivision 1. Demonstration
program. A career pathway
demonstration program is created to encourage, support, and continue student
participation in a structured career pathway program.
Subd. 2. Report. On January 15, 2024, Independent
School District No. 294, Houston, must submit a written report to the
legislative committees having jurisdiction over education and workforce
development describing students' experiences with the program. The report must document the program's
spending, list the number of students participating in the program and entering
the apprenticeship program, and make recommendations for improving support of
career pathway programs statewide.
Sec. 30. REPEALER.
(a) Minnesota Statutes 2020, section
181.9414, is repealed.
(b) Minnesota Rules, part 5200.0080,
subpart 7, is repealed effective August 1, 2021.
ARTICLE 9
EARNED SICK AND SAFE TIME
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 181.942, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. Comparable
position. (a) An employee returning
from a leave of absence under section 181.941 is entitled to return to
employment in the employee's former position or in a position of comparable
duties, number of hours, and pay. An
employee returning from a leave of absence longer than one month must notify a
supervisor at least two weeks prior to return from leave. An employee returning from a leave under
section 181.9412 or 181.9413 sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 is
entitled to return to employment in the employee's former position.
(b) If, during a leave under sections 181.940 to 181.944, the employer experiences a layoff and the employee would have lost a position had the employee not been on leave, pursuant to the good faith operation of a bona fide layoff and recall system, including a system under a collective bargaining agreement, the employee is not entitled to reinstatement in the former or comparable position. In such circumstances, the employee retains all rights under the layoff and recall system, including a system under a collective bargaining agreement, as if the employee had not taken the leave.
Sec. 2. [181.9445]
DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. For the purposes of section 177.50 and
sections 181.9445 to 181.9447, the terms defined in this section have the
meanings given them.
Subd. 2. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of labor and industry or authorized designee or representative.
Subd. 3. Domestic
abuse. "Domestic
abuse" has the meaning given in section 518B.01.
Subd. 4. Earned
sick and safe time. "Earned
sick and safe time" means leave, including paid time off and other paid
leave systems, that is paid at the same hourly rate as an employee earns from
employment that may be used for the same purposes and under the same conditions
as provided under section 181.9447.
Subd. 5. Employee. "Employee" means any person who
is employed by an employer, including temporary and part-time employees, who
performs work for at least 80 hours in a year for that employer in Minnesota. Employee does not include:
(1) an independent contractor; or
(2) an individual employed by an air
carrier as a flight deck or cabin crew member who is subject to United States
Code, title 45, sections 181 to 188, and who is provided with paid leave equal
to or exceeding the amounts in section 181.9446.
Subd. 6. Employer. "Employer" means a person
who has one or more employees. Employer
includes an individual, a corporation, a partnership, an association, a
business trust, a nonprofit organization, a group of persons, a state, county,
town, city, school district, or other governmental subdivision. In the event that a temporary employee is
supplied by a staffing agency, absent a contractual agreement stating
otherwise, that individual shall be an employee of the staffing agency for all
purposes of section 177.50 and sections 181.9445 to 181.9448.
Subd. 7. Family
member. "Family
member" means:
(1) an employee's:
(i) child, foster child, adult child,
legal ward, or child for whom the employee is legal guardian;
(ii) spouse or registered domestic
partner;
(iii) sibling, stepsibling, or foster sibling;
(iv) parent or stepparent;
(v) grandchild, foster grandchild, or
stepgrandchild; or
(vi) grandparent or stepgrandparent;
(2) any of the family members listed in
clause (1) of a spouse or registered domestic partner;
(3) any individual related by blood or
affinity whose close association with the employee is the equivalent of a
family relationship; and
(4) up to one individual annually
designated by the employee.
Subd. 8. Health
care professional. "Health
care professional" means any person licensed under federal or state law to
provide medical or emergency services, including doctors, physician assistants,
nurses, and emergency room personnel.
Subd. 9. Prevailing
wage rate. "Prevailing
wage rate" has the meaning given in section 177.42 and as calculated by
the Department of Labor and Industry.
Subd. 10. Retaliatory
personnel action. "Retaliatory
personnel action" means:
(1) any form of intimidation, threat,
reprisal, harassment, discrimination, or adverse employment action, including
discipline, discharge, suspension, transfer, or reassignment to a lesser
position in terms of job classification, job security, or other condition of
employment; reduction in pay or hours or denial of additional hours; the
accumulation of points under an attendance point system; informing another
employer that the person has engaged in activities protected by this chapter;
or reporting or threatening to report the actual or suspected citizenship or
immigration status of an employee, former employee, or family member of an
employee to a federal, state, or local agency; and
(2) interference with or punishment for
participating in any manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under
this chapter.
Subd. 11. Sexual
assault. "Sexual
assault" means an act that constitutes a violation under sections 609.342
to 609.3453 or 609.352.
Subd. 12. Stalking. "Stalking" has the meaning
given in section 609.749.
Subd. 13. Year. "Year" means a regular and
consecutive 12-month period, as determined by an employer and clearly
communicated to each employee of that employer.
Sec. 3. [181.9446]
ACCRUAL OF EARNED SICK AND SAFE TIME.
(a) An employee accrues a minimum of
one hour of earned sick and safe time for every 30 hours worked up to a maximum
of 48 hours of earned sick and safe time in a year. Employees may not accrue more than 48 hours
of earned sick and safe time in a year unless the employer agrees to a higher
amount.
(b) Employers must permit an employee
to carry over accrued but unused sick and safe time into the following year. The total amount of accrued but unused earned
sick and safe time for an employee must not exceed 80 hours at any time, unless
an employer agrees to a higher amount.
(c) Employees who are exempt from
overtime requirements under United States Code, title 29, section 213(a)(1), as
amended through the effective date of this section, are deemed to work 40 hours
in each workweek for purposes of accruing earned sick and safe time, except
that an employee whose normal workweek is less than 40 hours will accrue
earned sick and safe time based on the normal workweek.
(d) Earned sick and safe time under
this section begins to accrue at the commencement of employment of the
employee.
(e) Employees may use accrued earned
sick and safe time beginning 90 calendar days after the day their employment
commenced. After 90 days from the day
employment commenced, employees may use earned sick and safe time as it is
accrued. The 90-calendar-day period
under this paragraph includes both days worked and days not worked.
Sec. 4. [181.9447]
USE OF EARNED SICK AND SAFE TIME.
Subdivision 1. Eligible
use. An employee may use
accrued earned sick and safe time for:
(1) an employee's:
(i) mental or physical illness, injury,
or other health condition;
(ii) need for medical diagnosis, care,
or treatment of a mental or physical illness, injury, or health condition; or
(iii) need for preventive medical or
health care;
(2) care of a family member:
(i) with a mental or physical illness,
injury, or other health condition;
(ii) who needs medical diagnosis, care,
or treatment of a mental or physical illness, injury, or other health
condition; or
(iii) who needs preventive medical or
health care;
(3) absence due to domestic abuse,
sexual assault, or stalking of the employee or employee's family member,
provided the absence is to:
(i) seek medical attention related to
physical or psychological injury or disability caused by domestic abuse, sexual
assault, or stalking;
(ii) obtain services from a victim services
organization;
(iii)
obtain psychological or other counseling;
(iv) seek relocation due to domestic
abuse, sexual assault, or stalking; or
(v) seek legal advice or take legal
action, including preparing for or participating in any civil or criminal legal
proceeding related to or resulting from domestic abuse, sexual assault, or
stalking;
(4) closure of the employee's place of
business due to weather or other public emergency or an employee's need to care
for a family member whose school or place of care has been closed due to
weather or other public emergency; and
(5) when it has been determined by the
health authorities having jurisdiction or by a health care professional that
the presence of the employee or family member of the employee in the community
would jeopardize the health of others because of the exposure of the employee
or family member of the employee to a communicable disease, whether or not the
employee or family member has actually contracted the communicable disease.
Subd. 2. Notice. An employer may require notice of the
need for use of earned sick and safe time as provided in this paragraph. If the need for use is foreseeable, an
employer may require advance notice of the intention to use earned sick and
safe time but must not require more than seven days' advance notice. If the need is unforeseeable, an employer may
require an employee to give notice of the need for earned sick and safe time as
soon as practicable.
Subd. 3. Documentation. When an employee uses earned sick and safe
time for more than three consecutive days, an employer may require reasonable
documentation that the earned sick and safe time is covered by subdivision 1. For earned sick and safe time under
subdivision 1, clauses (1) and (2), reasonable documentation may include a
signed statement by a health care professional indicating the need for use of
earned sick and safe time. For earned
sick and safe time under subdivision 1, clause (3), an employer must accept a
court record or documentation signed by a volunteer or employee of a victims
services organization, an attorney, a police officer, or an antiviolence
counselor as reasonable documentation. An
employer must not require disclosure of details relating to domestic abuse,
sexual assault, or stalking or the details of an employee's or an employee's
family member's medical condition as related to an employee's request to use
earned sick and safe time under this section.
Subd. 4. Replacement
worker. An employer may not
require, as a condition of an employee using earned sick and safe time, that
the employee seek or find a replacement worker to cover the hours the employee
uses as earned sick and safe time.
Subd. 5. Increment
of time used. Earned sick and
safe time may be used in the smallest increment of time tracked by the
employer's payroll system, provided such increment is not more than four hours.
Subd. 6. Retaliation
prohibited. An employer shall
not take retaliatory personnel action against an employee because the employee
has requested earned sick and safe time, used earned sick and safe time,
requested a statement of accrued sick and safe time, or made a complaint or
filed an action to enforce a right to earned sick and safe time under this
section.
Subd. 7. Reinstatement
to comparable position after leave. An
employee returning from a leave under this section is entitled to return to
employment in a comparable position. If,
during a leave under this section, the employer experiences a layoff and the
employee would have lost a position had the employee not been on leave,
pursuant to the good faith operation of a bona fide layoff and recall system,
including a system under a collective bargaining agreement, the employee is not
entitled to reinstatement in the former or comparable position. In such circumstances, the employee retains
all rights under the layoff and recall system, including a system under a
collective bargaining agreement, as if the employee had not taken the leave.
Subd. 8. Pay
and benefits after leave. An
employee returning from a leave under this section is entitled to return to
employment at the same rate of pay the employee had been receiving when the
leave commenced, plus any automatic adjustments in the employee's pay scale
that occurred during the leave period. The
employee returning from a leave is entitled to retain all accrued preleave
benefits of employment and seniority as if there had been no interruption in
service, provided that nothing under this section prevents the accrual of
benefits or seniority during the leave pursuant to a collective bargaining or
other agreement between the employer and employees.
Subd. 9. Part-time
return from leave. An
employee, by agreement with the employer, may return to work part time during
the leave period without forfeiting the right to return to employment at the
end of the leave, as provided under this section.
Subd. 10. Notice
and posting by employer. (a)
Employers must give notice to all employees that they are entitled to earned
sick and safe time, including the amount of earned sick and safe time, the
accrual year for the employee, and the terms of its use under this section;
that retaliation against employees who request or use earned sick and safe time
is prohibited; and that each employee has the right to file a complaint or
bring a civil action if earned sick and safe time is denied by the employer or
the employee is retaliated against for requesting or using earned sick and safe
time.
(b) Employers must supply employees with
a notice in English and other appropriate languages that contains the
information required in paragraph (a) at commencement of employment or the
effective date of this section, whichever is later.
(c) The means used by the employer must
be at least as effective as the following options for providing notice:
(1) posting a copy of the notice at each
location where employees perform work and where the notice must be readily
observed and easily reviewed by all employees performing work; or
(2) providing a paper or electronic copy
of the notice to employees.
The notice must contain all information required under
paragraph (a). The commissioner shall
create and make available to employers a poster and a model notice that
contains the information required under paragraph (a) for their use in complying
with this section.
(d) An employer that provides an
employee handbook to its employees must include in the handbook notice of
employee rights and remedies under this section.
Subd. 11. Required
statement to employee. (a)
Upon request of the employee, the employer must provide, in writing or
electronically, current information stating the employee's amount of:
(1) earned sick and safe time available
to the employee; and
(2) used earned sick and safe time.
(b) Employers may choose a reasonable
system for providing the information in paragraph (a), including but not
limited to listing information on each pay stub or developing an online system
where employees can access their own information.
Subd. 12. Employer
records. (a) Employers shall
retain accurate records documenting hours worked by employees and earned sick
and safe time taken and comply with all requirements under section 177.30.
(b) An employer must allow an employee
to inspect records required by this section and relating to that employee at a
reasonable time and place.
Subd. 13. Confidentiality
and nondisclosure. (a) If, in
conjunction with this section, an employer possesses:
(1) health or medical information
regarding an employee or an employee's family member;
(2) information pertaining to domestic
abuse, sexual assault, or stalking;
(3) information that the employee has
requested or obtained leave under this section; or
(4) any written or oral statement,
documentation, record, or corroborating evidence provided by the employee or an
employee's family member, the employer must treat such information as
confidential.
Information given by an employee may
only be disclosed by an employer if the disclosure is requested or consented to
by the employee, when ordered by a court or administrative agency, or when
otherwise required by federal or state law.
(b) Records and documents relating to
medical certifications, recertifications, or medical histories of employees or
family members of employees created for purposes of section 177.50 or sections
181.9445 to 181.9448 must be maintained as confidential medical records
separate from the usual personnel files.
At the request of the employee, the employer must destroy or return the
records required by sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 that are older than three
years prior to the current calendar year.
(c) Employers must not discriminate
against any employee based on records created for the purposes of section
177.50 or sections 181.9445 to 181.9448.
Sec. 5. [181.9448]
EFFECT ON OTHER LAW OR POLICY.
Subdivision 1. No
effect on more generous sick and safe time policies. (a) Nothing in sections 181.9445 to
181.9448 shall be construed to discourage employers from adopting or retaining
earned sick and safe time policies that meet or exceed, and do not otherwise
conflict with, the minimum standards and requirements provided in sections
181.9445 to 181.9447.
(b) Nothing in sections 181.9445 to
181.9447 shall be construed to limit the right of parties to a collective
bargaining agreement to bargain and agree with respect to earned sick and safe
time policies or to diminish the obligation of an employer to comply with any
contract, collective bargaining agreement, or any employment benefit program or
plan that meets or exceeds, and does not otherwise conflict with, the minimum
standards and requirements provided in this section.
(c) Employers who provide earned sick
and safe time to their employees under a paid time off policy or other paid
leave policy that meets or exceeds, and does not otherwise conflict with, the
minimum standards and requirements provided
in sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 are not required to provide additional earned
sick and safe time.
(d) An employer may opt to satisfy the
requirements of sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 for construction industry
employees by:
(1) paying at least the prevailing wage
rate as defined by section 177.42 and as calculated by the Department of Labor
and Industry; or
(2) paying at least the required rate
established in a registered apprenticeship agreement for apprentices registered
with the Department of Labor and Industry.
An employer electing this option is deemed to be in
compliance with sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 for construction industry
employees who receive either at least the prevailing wage rate or the rate
required in the applicable apprenticeship agreement regardless of whether the
employees are working on private or public projects.
(e)
Sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 do not prohibit an employer from establishing a
policy whereby employees may donate unused accrued sick and safe time to
another employee.
(f) Sections 181.9445 to 181.9448 do not
prohibit an employer from advancing sick and safe time to an employee before
accrual by the employee.
Subd. 2. Termination;
separation; transfer. Sections
181.9445 to 181.9448 do not require financial or other reimbursement to an
employee from an employer upon the employee's termination, resignation,
retirement, or other separation from employment for accrued earned sick and safe
time that has not been used. If an
employee is transferred to a separate division, entity, or location, but
remains employed by the same employer, the employee is entitled to all earned
sick and safe time accrued at the prior division, entity, or location and is
entitled to use all earned sick and safe time as provided in sections 181.9445
to 181.9448. When there is a separation
from employment and the employee is rehired within 180 days of separation by
the same employer, previously accrued earned sick and safe time that had not
been used must be reinstated. An
employee is entitled to use accrued earned sick and safe time and accrue
additional earned sick and safe time at the commencement of reemployment.
Subd. 3. Employer
succession. (a) When a different
employer succeeds or takes the place of an existing employer, all employees of
the original employer who remain employed by the successor employer are
entitled to all earned sick and safe time accrued but not used when employed by
the original employer, and are entitled to use all earned sick and safe time
previously accrued but not used.
(b) If, at the time of transfer of the
business, employees are terminated by the original employer and hired within 30
days by the successor employer following the transfer, those employees are
entitled to all earned sick and safe time accrued but not used when employed by
the original employer, and are entitled to use all earned sick and safe time
previously accrued but not used.
Sec. 6. REPEALER.
Minnesota Statutes 2020, section
181.9413, is repealed.
Sec. 7. EFFECTIVE
DATE.
This article is effective 180 days
following final enactment.
ARTICLE 10
EARNED SICK AND SAFE TIME ENFORCEMENT
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.27, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. Submission of records; penalty. The commissioner may require the employer of employees working in the state to submit to the commissioner photocopies, certified copies, or, if necessary, the originals of employment records which the commissioner deems necessary or appropriate. The records which may be required include full and correct statements in writing, including sworn statements by the employer, containing information relating to wages, hours, names, addresses, and any other information pertaining to the employer's employees and the conditions of their employment as the commissioner deems necessary or appropriate.
The commissioner may require the records to be submitted by certified mail delivery or, if necessary, by personal delivery by the employer or a representative of the employer, as authorized by the employer in writing.
The
commissioner may fine the employer up to $1,000 $10,000 for each
failure to submit or deliver records as required by this section, and up to $5,000
for each repeated failure. This
penalty is in addition to any penalties provided under section 177.32,
subdivision 1. In determining the amount
of a civil penalty under this subdivision, the appropriateness of such penalty
to the size of the employer's business and the gravity of the violation shall
be considered.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.27, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. Compliance
orders. The commissioner may issue
an order requiring an employer to comply with sections 177.21 to 177.435,
181.02, 181.03, 181.031, 181.032, 181.101, 181.11, 181.13, 181.14, 181.145,
181.15, 181.172, paragraph (a) or (d), 181.275, subdivision 2a, 181.722,
181.79, and 181.939 to 181.943, and 181.9445 to 181.9448, or with
any rule promulgated under section 177.28.
The commissioner shall issue an order requiring an employer to comply
with sections 177.41 to 177.435 if the violation is repeated. For purposes of this subdivision only, a
violation is repeated if at any time during the two years that preceded the
date of violation, the commissioner issued an order to the employer for
violation of sections 177.41 to 177.435 and the order is final or the
commissioner and the employer have entered into a settlement agreement that
required the employer to pay back wages that were required by sections 177.41
to 177.435. The department shall serve
the order upon the employer or the employer's authorized representative in
person or by certified mail at the employer's place of business. An employer who wishes to contest the order
must file written notice of objection to the order with the commissioner within
15 calendar days after being served with the order. A contested case proceeding must then be held
in accordance with sections 14.57 to 14.69.
If, within 15 calendar days after being served with the order, the
employer fails to file a written notice of objection with the commissioner, the
order becomes a final order of the commissioner.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 177.27, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. Employer
liability. If an employer is found
by the commissioner to have violated a section identified in subdivision 4, or
any rule adopted under section 177.28, and the commissioner issues an order to
comply, the commissioner shall order the employer to cease and desist from
engaging in the violative practice and to take such affirmative steps that in
the judgment of the commissioner will effectuate the purposes of the section or
rule violated. The commissioner shall
order the employer to pay to the aggrieved parties back pay, gratuities, and
compensatory damages, less any amount actually paid to the employee by the
employer, and for an additional equal amount as liquidated damages. Any employer who is found by the commissioner
to have repeatedly or willfully violated a section or sections identified in
subdivision 4 shall be subject to a civil penalty of up to $1,000 $10,000
for each violation for each employee. In
determining the amount of a civil penalty under this subdivision, the
appropriateness of such penalty to the size of the employer's business and the
gravity of the violation shall be considered.
In addition, the commissioner may order the employer to reimburse the
department and the attorney general for all appropriate litigation and hearing
costs expended in preparation for and in conducting the contested case
proceeding, unless payment of costs would impose extreme financial hardship on
the employer. If the employer is able to
establish extreme financial hardship, then the commissioner may order the
employer to pay a percentage of the total costs that will not cause extreme
financial hardship. Costs include but
are not limited to the costs of services rendered by the attorney general,
private attorneys if engaged by the department, administrative law judges,
court reporters, and expert witnesses as well as the cost of transcripts. Interest shall accrue on, and be added to,
the unpaid balance of a commissioner's order from the date the order is signed
by the commissioner until it is paid, at an annual rate provided in section
549.09, subdivision 1, paragraph (c). The
commissioner may establish escrow accounts for purposes of distributing
damages.
Sec. 4. [177.50]
EARNED SICK AND SAFE TIME ENFORCEMENT.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. The definitions in section 181.9445
apply to this section.
Subd. 2. Rulemaking
authority. The commissioner
may adopt rules to carry out the purposes of this section and sections 181.9445
to 181.9448.
Subd. 3. Individual
remedies. In addition to any
other remedies provided by law, a person injured by a violation of sections
181.9445 to 181.9448 may bring a civil action to recover general and special
damages, along with costs, fees, and reasonable attorney fees, and may receive
injunctive and other equitable relief as determined by a court. An action to recover damages under this
subdivision must be commenced within three years of the violation of sections
181.9445 to 181.9448 that caused the injury to the employee.
Subd. 4. Grants
to community organizations. The
commissioner may make grants to community organizations for the purpose of
outreach to and education for employees regarding their rights under sections
181.9445 to 181.9448. The
community-based organizations must be selected based on their experience,
capacity, and relationships in high-violation industries. The work under such a grant may include the
creation and administration of a statewide worker hotline.
Subd. 5. Report
to legislature. (a) The commissioner
must submit an annual report to the legislature, including to the chairs and
ranking minority members of any relevant legislative committee. The report must include, but is not limited
to:
(1) a list of all violations of sections
181.9445 to 181.9448, including the employer involved, and the nature of any
violations; and
(2) an analysis of noncompliance with
sections 181.9445 to 181.9448, including any patterns by employer, industry, or
county.
(b) A report under this section must not
include an employee's name or other identifying information, any health or
medical information regarding an employee or an employee's family member, or
any information pertaining to domestic abuse, sexual assault, or stalking of an
employee or an employee's family member.
Subd. 6. Contract
for labor or services. It is
the responsibility of all employers to not enter into any contract or agreement
for labor or services where the employer has any actual knowledge or knowledge
arising from familiarity with the normal facts and circumstances of the
business activity engaged in, or has any additional facts or information that,
taken together, would make a reasonably prudent person undertake to inquire
whether, taken together, the contractor is not complying or has failed to
comply with this section. For purposes
of this subdivision, "actual knowledge" means information obtained by
the employer that the contractor has violated this section within the past two
years and has failed to present the employer with credible evidence that such
noncompliance has been cured going forward.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective 180 days after final enactment.
ARTICLE 11
EMERGENCY REHIRE AND RETENTION
Section 1.
DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision 1. Applicability. For the purposes of sections 1 to 4,
the following terms have the meanings given.
Subd. 2. Air
carrier. "Air
carrier" means a person undertaking by any means, directly or indirectly,
to provide air transportation of persons, property, or mail.
Subd. 3. Aircraft.
"Aircraft" means any
contrivance invented, used, or designed for navigation of or flight in the air,
but excluding parachutes.
Subd. 4. Airport. "Airport" means any area of
land or water, except a restricted landing area, which is designed for the
landing and takeoff of aircraft, whether or not facilities are provided for the
shelter, surfacing, or repair of aircraft, or for receiving or discharging
passengers or cargo, and all appurtenant areas used or suitable for airport
buildings or other airport facilities, and all appurtenant rights-of-way,
whether heretofore or hereafter established.
Subd. 5. Airport
authority. "Airport
authority" means an authority created pursuant to Minnesota Statutes,
section 360.0426.
Subd. 6. Airport
facility management. "Airport
facility management" means a person directing or supervising airport
management activities, including but not limited to:
(1) information management;
(2) building and property management;
(3) civil services;
(4) procurement and logistics management;
and
(5) legal services.
Subd. 7. Airport
hospitality operation. (a)
"Airport hospitality operation" means a business that:
(1) prepares, delivers, inspects, or
provides any other service in connection with the preparation of food or beverage
for aircraft crew or passengers at an airport; or
(2) provides food and beverage, retail,
or other consumer goods or services to the public at an airport.
(b) Airport hospitality operation does
not include an air carrier certificated by the Federal Aviation Administration.
Subd. 8. Airport
service provider. (a)
"Airport service provider" means a business that performs, under
contract with a passenger air carrier, airport facility management, or airport
authority, functions on the property of the airport that are directly related
to the air transportation of persons, property, or mail, including but not
limited to:
(1) the loading and unloading of
property on aircraft;
(2) assistance to passengers under Code
of Federal Regulations, title 14, part 382;
(3) security;
(4) airport ticketing and check-in
functions;
(5) ground-handling of aircraft;
(6) aircraft cleaning and sanitization
functions; or
(7) airport authority.
(b) Airport service provider does not
include an air carrier certificated by the Federal Aviation Administration.
Subd. 9. Building
service. "Building
service" means janitorial, building maintenance, or security services.
Subd. 10. Business
day. "Business day"
means Monday through Friday, excluding any holidays as defined in Minnesota
Statutes, section 645.44.
Subd. 11. Change
in control. "Change in
control" means any sale, assignment, transfer, contribution, or other
disposition of all or substantially all of the assets used in the operation of
an enterprise or a discrete portion of the enterprise that continues in
operation as an enterprise, or a controlling interest, including by
consolidation, merger, or reorganization, of the incumbent employer or any
person who controls the incumbent employer.
Subd. 12. Declared
emergency. "Declared
emergency" means a national security or peacetime emergency declared by
the governor under Minnesota Statutes, section 12.31, a local emergency
declared by the mayor of a municipality or the chair of a county board of
commissioners under Minnesota Statutes, section 12.29, a federal public health
emergency declared by the secretary of the federal Department of Health and
Human Services, or a major disaster or national emergency declared by the
president.
Subd. 13. Eligible
employee. (a) "Eligible
employee" means an individual:
(1) whose primary place of employment
is at an enterprise subject to a change in control;
(2) who is employed directly by the
incumbent employer, or by an employer who has contracted with the incumbent
employer to provide services at the enterprise subject to a change in control;
and
(3) who has worked for the incumbent
employer for at least one month prior to the execution of the transfer
document.
(b) Eligible employee does not include
a managerial, supervisory, or confidential employee.
Subd. 14. Employee. "Employee" means an
individual who performs services for hire for at least two hours in a
particular week for an employer.
Subd. 15. Employer. "Employer" means any person
who directly, indirectly, or through an agent or any other person, including
through the services of a temporary service or staffing agency or similar
entity, owns or operates an enterprise and employs one or more employees.
Subd. 16. Enterprise. "Enterprise" means a hotel,
event center, airport hospitality operation, airport service provider, or the
provision of building service to office, retail, or other commercial buildings.
Subd. 17. Event
center. (a) "Event
center" means a publicly or privately owned structure of more than 50,000
square feet or 2,000 seats that is used for the purposes of public
performances, sporting events, business meetings, or similar events, and
includes concert halls, stadiums, sports arenas, racetracks, coliseums, and
convention centers.
(b) Event center also includes any
contracted, leased, or sublet premises connected to or operated in conjunction
with the event center's purpose, including food preparation facilities,
concessions, retail stores, restaurants, bars, and structured parking
facilities.
Subd. 18. Hotel. (a) "Hotel" means a
building, structure, enclosure, or any part thereof:
(1) used as, maintained as, advertised
as, or held out to be a place where sleeping accommodations, lodging, and other
related services are furnished to the public; and
(2)
containing 75 or more guest rooms, or suites of rooms, except adjoining rooms
do not constitute a suite of rooms. The
number of guest rooms, or suites of rooms, shall be calculated based on the
room count on the opening of the hotel or on December 31, 2019, whichever is
greater.
(b) Hotel also includes any contracted,
leased, or sublet premises connected to or operated in conjunction with the
hotel's purpose, or providing services thereat.
Subd. 19. Incumbent
employer. "Incumbent
employer" means a person who owns or operates an enterprise subject to a
change in control prior to the change in control.
Subd. 20. Laid-off
employee. "Laid-off
employee" means any employee who was employed by the employer for six
months or more in the 12 months preceding January 31, 2020, and whose most
recent separation from actively performing services for hire occurred after
January 31, 2020, and was due to a public health directive, government shutdown
order, lack of business, a reduction in force, or other economic,
nondisciplinary reason related to the declared emergency.
Subd. 21. Length
of service. "Length of
service" means the total of all periods of time during which an employee
has actively been performing services for hire with the employer, including
periods of time when the employee was on leave or on vacation.
Subd. 22. Person. "Person" means an
individual, corporation, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability
partnership, limited liability company, business trust, estate, trust, association,
joint venture, agency, instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial
entity, whether domestic or foreign.
Subd. 23. Successor
employer. "Successor
employer" means a person that owns or operates an enterprise subject to a
change in control after the change in control.
Subd. 24. Transfer
document. "Transfer
document" means the purchase agreement or other documents creating a
binding agreement to effect the change in control.
Sec. 2. EMERGENCY
REHIRE AND RETENTION OF LAID-OFF EMPLOYEES.
Subdivision 1. Rehire
and recall requirements. (a)
An employer shall offer its laid-off employees in writing, to their last known
physical address, and by email and text message to the extent the employer
possesses such information, all job positions that become available after the
effective date of this section for which the laid-off employees are qualified. A laid-off employee is qualified for a
position if the employee either:
(1) held the same or similar position
at the enterprise at the time of the employee's most recent separation from
actively performing services for hire with the employer; or
(2) is or can be qualified for the
position with the same training that would be provided to a new employee hired
into that position.
(b) The employer shall offer positions
to laid-off employees in an order of preference corresponding to paragraph (a),
clauses (1) and (2). If more than one
employee is entitled to preference for a position, the employer shall offer the
position to the laid-off employee with the greatest length of service for the
enterprise.
(c) A laid-off employee who is offered
a position pursuant to this section shall be given at least five business days
in which to accept or decline the offer.
An employer may make simultaneous conditional offers of employment to
laid-off employees, with a final offer of employment conditioned on application
of the priority system in paragraph (b).
(d)
An employer that declines to recall a laid-off employee on the grounds of lack
of qualifications and instead hires someone other than a laid-off employee
shall provide the laid-off employee a written notice within 30 days identifying
those hired in lieu of that recall, along with all reasons for the decision.
(e) This section also applies in any of
the following circumstances:
(1) the ownership of the employer
changed after the separation from employment of a laid-off employee but the
enterprise is conducting the same or similar operations as before the declared
emergency;
(2) the form of organization of the
employer changed after the declared emergency;
(3) substantially all of the assets of
the employer were acquired by another entity which conducts the same or similar
operations using substantially the same assets; or
(4) the employer relocates the
operations at which a laid-off employee was employed before the declared
emergency to a different location.
Subd. 2. Successor
employer and retention requirements.
(a)(1) The incumbent employer shall, within 15 days after
the execution of a transfer document, provide to the successor employer the
name, address, date of hire, and employment occupation classification of each
eligible employee.
(2) The successor employer shall
maintain a preferential hiring list of eligible employees identified by the
incumbent employer under clause (1), and shall be required to hire from that
list for a period beginning upon the execution of the transfer document and
continuing for six months after the enterprise is open to the public under the
successor employer.
(3) If the successor employer extends an
offer of employment to an eligible employee, the successor employer shall
retain written verification of that offer for at least three years from the
date the offer was made. The
verification shall include the name, address, date of hire, and employment
occupation classification of each eligible employee.
(b)(1) A successor employer shall retain
each eligible employee hired pursuant to this subdivision for no fewer than 90
days following the eligible employee's employment commencement date. During this 90-day transition employment
period, eligible employees shall be employed under the terms and conditions
established by the successor employer or as required by law. The successor employer shall provide eligible
employees with a written offer of employment.
This offer shall remain open for at least five business days from the
date of the offer. A successor employer
may make simultaneous conditional offers of employment to eligible employees,
with a final offer of employment conditioned on application of the priority
system set forth in clause (2).
(2) If, within the period established in
paragraph (a), clause (2), the successor employer determines that it requires
fewer eligible employees than were required by the incumbent employer, the
successor employer shall retain eligible employees by seniority within each job
classification to the extent that comparable job classifications exist.
(3) During the 90-day transition
employment period, the successor employer shall not discharge without cause an
eligible employee retained pursuant to this subdivision.
(4) At the end of the 90-day transition
employment period, the successor employer shall perform a written performance
evaluation for each eligible employee retained pursuant to this section. If the eligible employee's performance during
the 90-day transition employment period is satisfactory, the successor employer
shall consider offering the eligible employee continued employment under the
terms and conditions established by the successor employer or as required by
law. The successor employer shall retain
a record of the written performance evaluation for a period of no fewer than three
years.
(c)(1)
The incumbent employer shall post written notice of the change in control at
the location of the affected enterprise within five business days following the
execution of the transfer document. Notice
shall remain posted during any closure of the enterprise and for six months
after the enterprise is open to the public under the successor employer.
(2) Notice shall include but not be
limited to the name of the incumbent employer and its contact information, the
name of the successor employer and its contact information, and the effective
date of the change in control.
(3) Notice shall be posted in a
conspicuous place at the enterprise so as to be readily viewed by eligible
employees, other employees, and applicants for employment.
Subd. 3. Employment
protections. No employer
shall refuse to employ, terminate, reduce in compensation, or otherwise take
any adverse action against any employee for seeking to enforce their rights
under sections 1 to 4, by any lawful means, for participating in proceedings
related to these sections, opposing any practice prescribed by these sections,
or otherwise asserting rights under these sections. This subdivision also applies to any employee
who mistakenly, but in good faith, alleges noncompliance with these sections.
Subd. 4. Collective
bargaining rights. (a) All of
the provisions in sections 1 to 4 may be waived in a valid collective
bargaining agreement, but only if the waiver is explicitly set forth in that
agreement in clear and unambiguous terms. Unilateral implementation of terms and
conditions of employment by either party to a collective bargaining
relationship shall not constitute or be permitted as a waiver of all or any
part of the provisions of sections 1 to 4.
(b) Nothing in sections 1 to 4 limits
the right of employees to bargain collectively with their employers through
representatives of their own choosing to establish retention or rehiring
conditions more favorable to the employees than those required by these
sections.
Sec. 3. ENFORCEMENT
AND COMPLIANCE.
Subdivision 1. Enforcement. (a) An employee, including any
eligible employee, may file an action in the Minnesota District Court, or may
file a complaint with the Department of Labor and Industry, Labor Standards and
Apprenticeship Division, against the employer, or in the case of a violation of
section 2, subdivision 2, incumbent employer or the successor employer, for
violations of section 2, and may be awarded any or all of the following, as
appropriate:
(1) hiring and reinstatement rights
pursuant to section 2, with the 90-day transition employment period not
commencing until the eligible employee's employment commencement date with the
successor employer;
(2) front pay or back pay for each day
during which the violation continues, which shall be calculated at a rate of
compensation not less than the highest of any of the following rates:
(i) the average regular rate of pay
received by the employee or eligible employee during the last three years of
that employee's employment in the same occupation classification;
(ii) the most recent regular rate
received by the employee or eligible employee while employed by the employer,
incumbent employer, or successor employer; or
(iii) the regular rate received by the
individual in the position during the time that the employee or eligible
employee should have been employed;
(3) value of the benefits the employee
or eligible employee would have received under the employer or successor
employer's benefit plan; or
(4)
in an action brought in the district court, a prevailing employee shall be
awarded reasonable attorneys' fees and costs.
(b) The Labor Standards and
Apprenticeship Division shall investigate complaints filed under this section,
and if an employer, incumbent employer, or successor employer is found to have
violated section 2, the division shall determine and issue an award to an
employee pursuant to paragraph (a).
(c) No criminal penalties shall be
imposed for a violation of section 2.
(d) This subdivision shall not be
construed to limit a discharged employee or eligible employee's right to pursue
any other remedies available to an employee in law or equity.
Subd. 2. Compliance. The commissioner of labor and industry
may issue a compliance order under Minnesota Statutes, section 177.27,
subdivision 4, requiring an employer to comply with section 2.
Subd. 3. Interaction
with local law. Nothing in
this section shall prohibit a local government agency from enacting ordinances
that impose greater standards than, or establish additional enforcement
provisions to, those prescribed by this section.
Sec. 4. CITATION.
Sections 1 to 4 may be cited as the
"Emergency Rehire and Retention Law."
Sec. 5. EFFECTIVE
DATES.
Sections 1 to 4 are effective the day
following final enactment and expire December 31, 2022.
ARTICLE 12
ESSENTIAL WORKERS EMERGENCY LEAVE
Section 1.
ESSENTIAL WORKERS EMERGENCY
LEAVE.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section,
the following terms have the meanings given.
(b) "Airport service provider"
means a business other than an air carrier certificated by the Federal Aviation
Administration, that performs, under contract with a passenger air carrier,
airport facility management, or airport authority, functions on the property of
the airport that are directly related to the air transportation of persons,
property, or mail, including but not limited to:
(1) the loading and unloading of
property on aircraft;
(2) assistance to passengers under Code
of Federal Regulations, title 14, part 382;
(3) security;
(4) airport ticketing and check-in
functions;
(5) ground-handling of aircraft;
(6) aircraft cleaning and sanitization
functions; or
(7) airport authority.
(c)
"Child" means a biological, adopted, or foster child, stepchild,
legal ward, or child for whom the essential worker is a legal guardian.
(d) "Emergency paid sick
leave" means paid leave time provided under this section for a reason
provided in subdivision 2 that is not:
(1) fully compensated through workers'
compensation benefits or unemployment insurance benefits; or
(2) guaranteed to essential workers
through other paid sick leave benefits under state law or federal law or an
executive order related to COVID-19.
(e)
"Essential worker" means a person who performs services for hire for
an employer for one day or more, and who:
(1) is an emergency responder or health
care provider as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 29, section
826.30(c), including but not limited to nurses, peace officers, firefighters,
correctional institution personnel, emergency medical services personnel, and
social workers;
(2) is a licensed or unlicensed
employee employed by or under contract with:
(i) a hospital, boarding care home, or
outpatient surgical center licensed under Minnesota Statutes, sections 144.50
to 144.56;
(ii) a nursing home licensed under
Minnesota Statutes, sections 144A.01 to 144A.162;
(iii) a housing with services
establishment registered under Minnesota Statutes, section 144D.02, and
operating under Minnesota Statutes, sections 144G.01 to 144G.07;
(iv) the arranged home care provider of
an establishment specified in item (iii);
(v) an unlicensed health care clinic;
or
(vi) an unlicensed office of a
physician or advanced practice registered nurse;
(3) is a public school employee;
(4) works for an airport service
provider; or
(5) works for a private employer
performing work in the following sectors:
(i) building service, including
janitorial, building maintenance, and security services;
(ii) child care;
(iii) food service, including food
manufacture, production, processing, preparation, sale, and delivery;
(iv) hotel accommodations;
(v) manufacturing; or
(vi) retail, including but not limited
to sales, fulfillment, distribution, and delivery.
(f)
"Employer" means a person who employs one or more essential workers,
including but not limited to a corporation, partnership, limited liability
company, association, group of persons, hospital, state, county, town, city,
school district, or governmental subdivision, excluding the federal government.
(g) "Retaliatory personnel
action" means any form of intimidation, threat, reprisal, harassment,
discrimination, or adverse employment action, including discipline, discharge,
suspension, transfer, or reassignment to a lesser position in terms of job
classification, job security, or other condition of employment; reduction in
pay or hours or denial of additional hours; the accumulation of points under an
attendance point system; informing another employer that the person has engaged
in activities protected by this section; or reporting or threatening to report
the actual or suspected citizenship or immigration status of an employee,
former employee, or family member of an employee to a federal, state, or local
agency.
Subd. 2. Emergency
paid sick leave. An employer
shall provide emergency paid sick leave to an essential worker who is unable to
work or telework due to any of the following reasons:
(1) the essential worker is subject to
a federal, state, or local quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19;
(2) the essential worker has been
advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to concerns related to
COVID-19;
(3) the essential worker is
experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 and seeking a medical diagnosis;
(4) the essential worker is seeking or
awaiting the results of a diagnostic test for, or a medical diagnosis of,
COVID-19 and the essential worker has been exposed to COVID-19 or the essential
worker's employer has requested a test or diagnosis;
(5) the essential worker is obtaining
an immunization related to COVID-19 or recovering from an injury, disability,
illness, or condition related to the immunization;
(6) the essential worker is caring for
an individual who is subject to an order as described in clause (1) or has been
advised as described in clause (2); or
(7) the essential worker is caring for
a child of the essential worker if the school or place of care of the child has
been closed, or the child care provider of the child is unavailable due to
COVID-19 precautions.
Subd. 3. Duration
and use of leave. (a) An
essential worker is entitled to emergency paid sick leave as provided under
this section for the following number of hours through March 31, 2021, and an
equal number of hours for the period beginning April 1, 2021:
(1) up to 80 hours for an essential
worker who:
(i) the employer considers to work full
time;
(ii) works or was scheduled to work on
average what are considered full-time hours by the employer, including pursuant
to any applicable collective bargaining agreement; or
(iii) works or was scheduled to work at
least 40 hours per week for the employer on average over a two-week period;
(2) a number of hours equal to the
number of hours that an essential worker works for the employer on average over
a two-week period for any essential worker who:
(i)
the employer considers to work part time;
(ii) works or was scheduled to work on
average what are considered part-time hours by the employer, including pursuant
to any applicable collective bargaining agreement; or
(iii) works or was scheduled to work
fewer than 40 hours per week for the employer on average over a two-week
period; or
(3) 14 times the average number of
hours an essential worker worked per day for the employer for the previous six
months, or for the entire period the essential worker has worked for the
employer, whichever is shorter, for an essential worker who works variable
hours and who is not covered by clause (1) or (2).
(b) Leave under this section is
available for use by an essential worker for a reason listed in subdivision 2
beginning the day following final enactment and may be used intermittently,
provided that any amount of leave taken under this section ends with the essential
worker's next scheduled work shift immediately following the termination of the
essential worker's need for leave under a reason provided in subdivision 2.
(c) After the first workday or portion
thereof that an essential worker receives leave under this section, an employer
may require the essential worker to follow reasonable notice procedures to
continue receiving leave.
(d) Leave under this section expires 30
days after a peacetime emergency declared by the governor in an executive order
that relates to the infectious disease known as COVID-19 is terminated or
rescinded.
Subd. 4. Amount
of compensation. (a) An
essential worker shall receive compensation for each hour of emergency paid
sick leave received under this section in an amount that is the greater of:
(1) the essential worker's regular rate
of pay for the essential worker's last pay period, including pursuant to any
collective bargaining agreement that applies;
(2) the state minimum wage in effect
under Minnesota Statutes, section 177.24; or
(3) the local minimum wage to which the
essential worker is entitled.
(b) In no event shall emergency paid
sick time provided under this section exceed $511 per day, nor shall emergency
paid sick time provided under this section exceed $5,110 in the aggregate for
the period ending March 31, 2021, or $5,110 in the aggregate for the
period beginning April 1, 2021.
(c) Unused or remaining leave under
this section shall not carry over past the expiration of this section.
(d) Nothing in this section shall be
construed to require financial or other reimbursement to an essential worker
from an employer upon the essential worker's termination, resignation,
retirement, or other separation from employment for emergency paid sick time
under this section that has not been used by the essential worker.
Subd. 5. Relationship
to other leave. (a) Except as
provided in paragraph (c), emergency paid sick leave under this section is in
addition to any paid or unpaid leave provided to an essential worker by an
employer under a collective bargaining agreement, negotiated agreement,
contract, or any other employment policy.
(b) An essential worker may use leave
provided under this section first, and except as provided in paragraph (c), an
employer shall not require an essential worker to use other paid or unpaid
leave provided by the employer before the essential worker uses the leave
provided under this section or in lieu of the leave provided under this
section.
(c)
Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b), if an employer has already provided an
essential worker with additional paid leave for any reason provided in
subdivision 2, and the leave was in addition to the regular amount of paid
leave provided by the employer and compensated the essential worker in an
amount equal to or greater than the amount of compensation provided under this
section, the employer may credit the other additional paid leave toward the
total number of hours of emergency paid sick leave required under this section;
provided, however, that if the other paid leave compensated the essential
worker at an amount less than the amount of compensation provided under this
section, the employer is required to comply with this section to the extent of
the deficiency to receive the credit under this paragraph.
(d) An employer shall provide notice to
essential workers of the requirements for emergency paid sick leave provided
under this section.
(e) Nothing in this section is deemed:
(1) to limit the rights of an essential
worker or employer under any law, rule, regulation, or collectively negotiated
agreement, or the rights and benefits that accrue to essential workers through
collective bargaining agreements, or the rights of essential workers with
respect to any other employment benefits; or
(2) to prohibit any personnel action
that otherwise would have been taken regardless of a request to use, or use of,
any leave provided by this section.
(f) Nothing in this section shall
prevent an employer from providing, or the parties to a collective bargaining
agreement from agreeing to, leave benefits that meet or exceed and do not
otherwise conflict with the requirements for emergency paid sick leave under
this section.
Subd. 6. Nursing
home reimbursement for emergency paid sick leave benefits. Nursing homes reimbursed under
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 256R, may apply for reimbursement for emergency
paid sick leave costs described in this section from the commissioner of human
services under Minnesota Statutes, section 12A.10, subdivision 1, for expenses
incurred. The emergency paid sick leave
expenses under this section are not allowable costs under Minnesota Statutes,
chapter 256R.
Subd. 7. Requirements
and enforcement. (a) An
employer shall not take any retaliatory personnel action against an essential worker
for requesting or obtaining emergency paid sick leave under this section or for
bringing a complaint related to this section, including a proceeding that seeks
enforcement of this section.
(b) The Department of Labor and Industry
shall enforce this section. The
commissioner has the authority provided under Minnesota Statutes, section
177.27, subdivision 4, including the authority to issue an order requiring an
employer to comply with this section. The
commissioner may investigate complaints of violations of this section as
necessary to determine whether a violation has occurred. If the commissioner finds that an employer
has violated this section, the commissioner shall fine the employer up to
$1,000 for each willful violation for each essential worker.
EFFECTIVE
DATE. This section is
effective:
(1) the day following final enactment for
essential workers hired by an employer on or after the day following final
enactment of this section; and
(2) retroactively from March 13, 2020, for
essential workers who were employed on or after March 13, 2020, and are
currently employed as of the day following final enactment or May 17, 2021,
whichever is earlier.
Subdivisions 1 to 6 sunset on September 30, 2021, or 30
days after a peacetime emergency declared by the governor in an executive order
that relates to the infectious disease known as COVID-19 is terminated or
rescinded, whichever is later. Subdivision
7 sunsets June 30, 2023.
ARTICLE 13
SAFE WORKPLACES FOR MEAT AND
POULTRY PROCESSING WORKERS
Section 1.
[179.87] TITLE.
Sections 179.87 to 179.8757 may be
titled the Safe Workplaces for Meat and Poultry Processing Workers Act.
Sec. 2. [179.871]
DEFINITIONS.
Subdivision 1. Definitions. For purposes of sections 179.87 to
179.8757, the terms in this section have the meanings given.
Subd. 2. Authorized
employee representative. "Authorized
employee representative" has the meaning given in section 182.651,
subdivision 22.
Subd. 3. Commissioner. "Commissioner" means the
commissioner of labor and industry or the commissioner's designee.
Subd. 4. Coordinator. "Coordinator" means the
meatpacking industry worker rights coordinator or the coordinator's designee.
Subd. 5. Meat-processing
worker. "Meat-processing
worker" or "worker" means any individual who a meat‑processing
employer suffers or permits to work directly in contact with raw meatpacking
products in a meatpacking operation, including independent contractors and
persons performing work for an employer through a temporary service or staffing
agency.
Subd. 6. Meatpacking
operation. "Meatpacking
operation" or "meat-processing employer" means a business in
which slaughtering, butchering, meat canning, meatpacking, meat manufacturing,
poultry canning, poultry packing, poultry manufacturing, pet food
manufacturing, egg production, processing of meatpacking products, or rendering
occurs. Meatpacking operation or
meat-processing employer does not mean a grocery store, deli, restaurant, or
other business preparing meat or poultry products for immediate consumption.
Subd. 7. Meatpacking
products. "Meatpacking
products" means meat food products and poultry food products as defined in
section 31A.02, subdivision 10.
Subd. 8. Public
health emergency. "Public
health emergency" means a peacetime emergency declared by the governor
under section 12.31, a federal public health emergency declared by the
secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, or a national
emergency declared by the president due to infectious disease or another significant
threat to public health.
Sec. 3. [179.8715]
WORKER RIGHTS COORDINATOR.
(a) The commissioner must appoint a
meatpacking industry worker rights coordinator in the Department of Labor and
Industry and provide the coordinator with necessary office space, furniture,
equipment, supplies, and assistance.
(b) The coordinator must enforce
sections 179.87 to 179.8757, including inspecting, reviewing, and recommending
improvements to the practices and procedures of meatpacking operations in
Minnesota. A meat‑processing
employer must grant the coordinator full access to all meatpacking operations
in this state at any time that meatpacking products are being processed or
meat-processing workers are on the job.
(c) No later than December 1 each year, the coordinator must submit a report to the governor and the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative committees with jurisdiction over labor. The report must include recommendations to promote better treatment of meat-processing workers. The coordinator shall also post the report on the Department of Labor and Industry's website.
Sec. 4. [179.872]
REFUSAL TO WORK UNDER DANGEROUS CONDITIONS.
(a) A meat-processing worker has a right
to refuse to work under conditions that the worker reasonably believes would
expose the worker, other workers, or the public to an unreasonable risk of
illness or injury, or exposure to illness or injury, including the infectious
disease known as COVID-19.
(b) A meat-processing employer must not
discriminate or take adverse action against any worker for a good faith refusal
to work if the worker has requested that the employer correct a hazardous
condition and that condition remains uncorrected.
(c) A meat-processing worker who has
refused in good faith to work under paragraph (a) or (b) and who has not been
reassigned to other work by the meat-processing employer must, in addition to
retaining a right to continued employment, continue to be paid by the employer
for the hours that would have been worked until such time as the
meat-processing employer can demonstrate that the condition has been remedied.
Sec. 5. [179.874]
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE; DANGEROUS MEAT PACKING CONDITIONS.
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the
contrary, the provisions of this section govern unemployment insurance claims
for meat-processing workers.
(b) An individual who left employment
because a meat-processing employer failed to cure a working condition that made
the work environment unsuitable for health or safety reasons has good cause for
leaving employment.
(c) During a public health emergency, an
individual must not be required to prove that a working condition that made the
environment unsuitable for health or safety reasons was unique to the worker or
that the risk was not customary to the worker's occupation.
(d) An individual must be deemed to have
exhausted reasonable alternatives to leaving if the individual, authorized
employee representative, or another employee notified the meat-processing
employer of the unsafe or unhealthy working condition and the employer did not
cure it or if the employer knew or should have had reason to know that the
condition made the work environment unsuitable and did not cure it.
(e) During a public health emergency, an
individual has good cause to leave employment if the individual leaves to care
for a seriously ill or quarantined family or household member.
(f) An individual has good cause to
refuse an offer of employment or reemployment if the meat-processing employer
has not cured a working condition that makes the work environment unsuitable
for health or safety reasons, including any condition that required the
workplace to close or reduce operations pursuant to a state or federal
executive order issued during a public health emergency.
(g) An individual has good cause to
refuse an offer of employment or reemployment from a meat-processing employer
if the conditions of work would require the individual to violate government
public health guidance or to assume an unreasonable health risk.
(h) An individual has good cause to
refuse an offer of employment or reemployment from a meat-processing employer
if the individual is required to care for a child whose school is closed due to
a public health emergency or if the individual is required to otherwise care
for a family or household member during a public health emergency.
Sec. 6. [179.875]
ENFORCEMENT AND COMPLIANCE.
Subdivision 1. Administrative
enforcement. The coordinator,
either on the coordinator's initiative or in response to a complaint, may
inspect a meatpacking operation and subpoena records and witnesses. If a meat‑processing employer does not
comply with the coordinator's inspection, the coordinator may seek relief as
provided in this section.
Subd. 2. Compliance
authority. The commissioner
of labor and industry may issue a compliance order under section 177.27,
subdivision 4, requiring an employer to comply with sections 179.87 to
179.8757.
Subd. 3. Private
civil action. If a
meat-processing employer does not comply with a provision in sections 179.87 to
179.8757, an aggrieved worker, authorized employee representative, or other
person may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction within
three years of an alleged violation and, upon prevailing, must be awarded the
relief provided in this section. Pursuing
administrative relief is not a prerequisite for bringing a civil action.
Subd. 4. Other
government enforcement. The
attorney general may enforce sections 179.87 to 179.8757 under section 8.31. A city or county attorney may also enforce
these sections. Such law enforcement
agencies may inspect meatpacking operations and subpoena records and witnesses
and, where such agencies determine that a violation has occurred, may bring a
civil action as provided in this section.
Subd. 5. Relief. (a) In a civil action or
administrative proceeding brought to enforce sections 179.87 to 179.8757, the
court or coordinator must order relief as provided in this subdivision.
(b) For any violation of sections 179.87
to 179.8757:
(1) an injunction to order compliance
and restrain continued violations, including through a stop work order or
business closure;
(2) payment to a prevailing worker by a
meat-processing employer of reasonable costs, disbursements, and attorney fees;
and
(3) a civil penalty payable to the
state of not less than $100 per day per worker affected by the meat-processing
employer's noncompliance with sections 179.87 to 179.8757.
(c) For any violation of section
179.872:
(1) reinstatement of the worker to the
same position held before any adverse personnel action or to an equivalent
position, reinstatement of full fringe benefits and seniority rights, and
compensation for unpaid wages, benefits and other remuneration, or front pay in
lieu of reinstatement; and
(2) compensatory damages payable to the
aggrieved worker equal to the greater of $5,000 or twice the actual damages,
including unpaid wages, benefits and other remuneration, and punitive damages.
Subd. 6. Whistleblower
enforcement; penalty distribution. (a)
The relief provided in this section may be recovered through a private civil
action brought on behalf of the commissioner in a court of competent
jurisdiction by another individual, including an authorized employee
representative, pursuant to this subdivision.
(b) The individual must give written
notice to the coordinator of the specific provision or provisions of sections
179.87 to 179.8757 alleged to have been violated. The individual or representative organization
may commence a civil action under this subdivision if no enforcement action is
taken by the coordinator within 30 days.
(c)
Civil penalties recovered pursuant to this subdivision must be distributed as
follows:
(1) 70 percent to the commissioner for
enforcement of sections 179.87 to 179.8757; and
(2) 30 percent to the individual or
authorized employee representative.
(d) The right to bring an action under
this subdivision shall not be impaired by private contract. A public enforcement action must be tried
promptly, without regard to concurrent adjudication of a private claim for the
same alleged violation.
Sec. 7. [179.8755]
RETALIATION AGAINST EMPLOYEES AND WHISTLEBLOWERS PROHIBITED.
(a) No meat-processing employer or other
person may discriminate or take adverse action against any worker or other
person who raises a concern about meatpacking operation health and safety
practices or hazards to the employer, the employer's agent, other workers, a
government agency, or to the public, including through print, online, social,
or any other media.
(b) If an employer or other person takes
adverse action against a worker or other person within 90 days of the worker's
or person's engagement or attempt to engage in activities protected by sections
179.87 to 179.8757, such conduct raises a presumption that the action is
retaliatory. The presumption may be
rebutted by clear and convincing evidence that the action was taken for other
permissible reasons.
(c) No meat-processing employer or other
person may attempt to require any worker to sign a contract or other agreement
that would limit or prevent the worker from disclosing information about
workplace health and safety practices or hazards, or to otherwise abide by a
workplace policy that would limit or prevent such disclosures. Any such agreements or policies are hereby
void and unenforceable as contrary to the public policy of this state. An employer's attempt to impose such a
contract, agreement, or policy shall constitute an adverse action enforceable
under sections 179.87 to 179.8757.
(d) Reporting or threatening to report a
meat-processing worker's suspected citizenship or immigration status, or the
suspected citizenship or immigration status of a family member of the worker,
to a federal, state, or local agency because the worker exercises a right under
sections 179.87 to 179.8757 constitutes an adverse action for purposes of
establishing a violation of that worker's rights. For purposes of this paragraph, "family
member" means a spouse, parent, sibling, child, uncle, aunt, niece,
nephew, cousin, grandparent, or grandchild related by blood, adoption,
marriage, or domestic partnership.
(e) Any worker who brings a complaint
under sections 179.87 to 179.8757 and suffers retaliation is entitled to treble
damages in addition to lost pay and recovery of attorney fees and costs.
(f) Any company who is found to have
retaliated against a food processing worker must pay a fine of up to $5,000 to
the commissioner.
Sec. 8. [179.8756]
MEATPACKING WORKER CHRONIC INJURIES AND WORKPLACE SAFETY.
Subdivision 1. Safe
worker program required; facility committee. (a) Meat-processing employers must
adopt a safe worker program as part of the employer's work accident and injury
reduction program to minimize and prevent musculoskeletal disorders. For purposes of this section,
"musculoskeletal disorders" includes carpal tunnel syndrome,
tendinitis, rotator cuff injuries, trigger finger, epicondylitis, muscle
strains, and lower back injuries.
(b) The meat-processing employer's safe
worker program must be developed and implemented by a committee of individuals
who are knowledgeable of the tasks and work processes performed by workers at
the employer's facility. The committee
must include:
(1)
a certified professional ergonomist;
(2) a licensed, board-certified
physician, with preference given to a physician who has specialized experience
and training in occupational medicine, or if it is not practicable for a
physician to be a member of the committee, the employer must ensure that its
safe worker program is reviewed and approved by a licensed, board-certified
physician, with preference given to a physician who has specialized experience
and training in occupational medicine; and
(3) at least three workers employed in
the employer's facility who have completed a general industry outreach course
approved by the commissioner, one of whom must be an authorized employee
representative if the employer is party to a collective bargaining agreement.
Subd. 2. Program
elements. (a) The committee
must establish written procedures to identify ergonomic hazards and
contributing risk factors, which must include:
(1) the ergonomic assessment tools used
to measure ergonomic hazards;
(2) all jobs where the committee has an
indication or knowledge that ergonomic hazards may exist; and
(3) workers who perform the same job or
a sample of workers in that job who have the greatest exposure to the ergonomic
hazard.
(b) The committee must conduct
ergonomic assessments to identify hazards and contributing risk factors; review
all surveillance data at least quarterly to identify ergonomic hazards and
contributing risk factors; and maintain records of the hazard identification
process, which, at a minimum, must include the completed ergonomic assessment tools,
the results of the ergonomic assessments including the jobs and workers
evaluated, and the assessment dates.
(c) The committee must implement a
written ergonomic hazard prevention and control plan to identify and select
methods to eliminate, prevent, or control the ergonomic hazards and
contributing risk factors. The plan
must:
(1) set goals, priorities, and a
timeline to eliminate, prevent, or control the ergonomic hazards and
contributing risk factors identified;
(2) identify the person or persons
responsible for ergonomic hazard assessments and implementation of controls;
(3) rely upon the surveillance data and
the ergonomic risk assessment results; and
(4) take into consideration the
severity of the risk, the numbers of workers at risk, and the likelihood that
the intervention will reduce the risk.
(d) A meat-processing employer must
control, reduce, or eliminate ergonomic hazards which lead to musculoskeletal
disorders to the extent feasible by using engineering, work practice, and
administrative controls.
(e) The committee must monitor at least
annually the implementation of the plan including the effectiveness of controls
and evaluate progress in meeting program goals.
Subd. 3. New
employee training. (a) A
meat-processing employer must work with the committee to provide each new
employee with information regarding:
(1) the committee and its members;
(2)
the facility's hazard prevention and control plan;
(3) early signs and symptoms of
musculoskeletal injuries and the procedures for reporting them;
(4) procedures for reporting other
injuries and hazards;
(5) engineering and administrative
hazard controls implemented in the workplace, including ergonomic hazard
controls; and
(6) the availability and use of personal
protective equipment.
(b) A meat-processing employer must work
with the committee and ensure that new workers receive safety training prior to
staring a job that the worker has not performed before. The employer must provide the safety training
during working hours and compensate the new employee at the employee's standard
rate of pay. The employer also must give
a new employee an opportunity within 30 days of the employee's hire date to
receive a refresher training on the topics covered in the new worker safety
training. The employer must provide new
employee training in a language and with vocabulary that the employee can
understand.
Subd. 4. New
task and annual safety training. (a)
Meat-processing employers must provide every worker who is assigned a new task
if the worker has no previous work experience with training on how to safely
perform the task, the ergonomic and other hazards associated with the task, and
training on the early signs and symptoms of musculoskeletal injuries and the
procedures for reporting them. The
employer must give a worker an opportunity within 30 days of receiving the new
task training to receive refresher training on the topics covered in the new
task training. The employer must provide
this training in a language and with vocabulary that the employee can
understand.
(b) Meat-processing employers must
provide each worker with no less than eight hours of safety training each year. This annual training must address health and
safety topics that are relevant to the establishment, such as cuts,
lacerations, amputations, machine guarding, biological hazards, lockout/tagout,
hazard communication, ergonomic hazards, and personal protective equipment. At least two of the eight hours of annual
training must be on topics related to the facility's ergonomic injury
prevention program, including the assessment of surveillance data, the
ergonomic hazard prevention and control plan, and the early signs and symptoms
of musculoskeletal disorders and the procedures for reporting them. The employer must provide this training in a
language and with vocabulary that the employee can understand.
Subd. 5. Attestation
and record keeping. Meat-processing
employers must maintain a written attestation dated and signed by each person
who provides training and each employee who receives training pursuant to this
section. This attestation must certify
that the employer has provided training consistent with the requirements of
this section. The employer must ensure
that these records are up to date and available to the commissioner, the
coordinator, and the authorized employee representative upon request.
Subd. 6. Medical
services and qualifications. (a)
Meat-processing employers must ensure that:
(1) all first-aid providers, medical
assistants, nurses, and physicians engaged by the employer are licensed and
perform their duties within the scope of their licensed practice;
(2) medical management of
musculoskeletal disorders is under direct supervision of a licensed physician
specializing in occupational medicine who will advise on best practices for management
and prevention of work‑related musculoskeletal disorders; and
(3) medical management of
musculoskeletal injuries follows the most current version of the American
College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine practice guidelines.
(b)
Meat-processing employers must make a record of all worker visits to medical or
first aid personnel, regardless of severity or type of illness or injury, and
make these records available to the coordinator and the authorized employee
representative.
(c) Meat-processing employers must
maintain records of all ergonomic injuries suffered by workers for at least
five years.
(d) The coordinator may compile,
analyze, and publish annually, either in summary or detailed form, all reports
or information obtained under sections 179.87 to 179.8757, including
information about safe worker programs, and may cooperate with the United
States Department of Labor in obtaining national summaries of occupational
deaths, injuries, and illnesses. The
coordinator must preserve the anonymity of each employee with respect to whom
medical reports or information is obtained.
(e) Meat-processing employers must not
institute or maintain any program, policy, or practice that discourages
employees from reporting injuries, hazards, or safety standard violations.
Subd. 7. Rulemaking
required. The commissioner
must adopt rules requiring employers to maintain accurate records of
meat-processing worker exposure to ergonomic hazards.
Subd. 8. Pandemic
protections. (a) This
subdivision applies during a peacetime public health emergency declared under
section 12.31, subdivision 2.
(b) Meat-processing employers must
maintain at least a six-foot radius of space around and between each worker. An employer may accomplish such distancing by
increasing physical space between workstations, slowing production speeds,
staggering shifts and breaks, adjusting shift size, or a combination thereof. The employer must reconfigure common or
congregate spaces to allow for such distancing, including lunch rooms, break
rooms, and locker rooms. The coordinator
must reinforce social distancing by allowing workers to maintain six feet of
distance along with the use of plastic barriers.
(c) Meat-processing employers must
provide employees with face masks and must make face shields available on
request. Face masks, including
replacement face masks, and face shields must be provided at no cost to the
employee. All persons present at the
meatpacking operation must wear face masks in the facility except in those
parts of the facility where infection risk is low because workers work in
isolation.
(d) Meat-processing employers must
provide all meat-processing workers with the ability to frequently and
routinely sanitize their hands with either hand-washing or hand-sanitizing
stations. The employer must ensure that
restrooms have running hot and cold water and paper towels and are in sanitary
condition. The employer must provide
gloves to those who request them.
(e) Meat-processing employers must
clean and regularly disinfect all frequently touched surfaces in the workplace,
such as workstations, training rooms, machinery controls, tools, protective
garments, eating surfaces, bathrooms, showers, and other similar areas. Employers must install and maintain
ventilation systems that ensure unidirectional air flow, outdoor air, and
filtration in both production areas and common areas such as cafeterias and
locker rooms.
(f) Meat-processing employers must
disseminate all required communications, notices, and any published materials
regarding these protections in English, Spanish, and other languages as
required for employees to understand the communication.
(g) Meat-processing employers must
provide adequate break time for workers to use the bathroom, wash their hands,
and don and doff protective equipment.
(h)
Meat-processing employers must provide sufficient personal protective equipment
for each employee for each shift, plus replacements, at no cost to the employee. Meat-processing employers must provide
training in proper use of personal protective equipment, safety procedures, and
sanitation.
(i) As part of the meat-processing
employer's accident, injury, and illness reduction program, the employer must
create a health and safety committee consisting of equal parts company
management, employees, and authorized employee representatives. The health and safety committee must meet at
least twice a year and present results to the commissioner. If the meatpacking operation has no
collective bargaining agreement, a local labor representative must be
appointed.
(j) Meat-processing employers must
record all injuries and illnesses in the facility and make these records
available upon request to the health and safety committee. The employer also must make its records
available to the commissioner, and where there is a collective bargaining
agreement, to the authorized bargaining representative.
(k) Meat-processing employers must
provide paid sick time for workers to recuperate from illness or injury or to
care for ill family members. For
purposes of this paragraph, "family member" includes:
(1) biological, adopted, or foster
children, stepchildren, children of domestic partners or spouses, and legal
wards of workers;
(2) biological parents, stepparents,
foster parents, adoptive parents, or legal guardians of a worker or a worker's
spouse or domestic partner;
(3) a worker's legally married spouse
or domestic partner as registered under the laws of any state or political
subdivision;
(4) a worker's grandparent, whether
from a biological, step-, foster, or adoptive relationship;
(5) a worker's grandchild, whether from
a biological, step-, foster, or adoptive relationship;
(6) a worker's sibling, whether from a
biological, step-, foster, or adoptive relationship; and
(7) any other individual related by
blood or affinity to the worker whose association with the worker is the equal
of a family relationship.
(l) All meat-processing workers must
accrue at least one hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours worked. For purposes of this paragraph, paid sick
time means time that is compensated at the same hourly rate, including the same
benefits, as is normally earned by the worker.
(m) Meat-processing employers may
provide all paid sick time a worker is expected to accrue at the beginning of
the year or at the start of the worker's employment.
(n) Meat-processing employers must
carry an employee's earned paid sick time over into the following calendar year. If a worker does not wish to carry over sick
time, the meat-processing employer must pay the worker for accrued sick time. If a worker chooses to receive pay in lieu of
carried-over sick time, the employer must provide the worker with an amount of
paid sick time that meets or exceeds the requirements of sections 179.87 to
179.8757, to be available for the worker's immediate use at the start of the
following calendar year.
(o) Meat-processing employers must
maintain records for at least three years showing hours worked and paid sick
time accrued and used by workers. Employers
must allow the commissioner and coordinator access to these records in order to
ensure compliance with the requirements of sections 179.87 to 179.8757.
(p)
If a meat-processing employer transfers a worker to another division or
location of the same meat-processing employer, the worker is entitled to all
earned paid sick time accrued in the worker's previous position. If a worker is separated from employment and
rehired within one year by the same meat-processing employer, the meat‑processing
employer must reinstate the worker's earned sick time to the level accrued by
the worker as of the date of separation.
(q) If a meat-processing employer is
succeeded by a different employer, all workers of the original employer are
entitled to all earned paid sick time they accrued when employed by the
original employer.
(r) Meat-processing employers must not
require workers to find or search for a replacement worker to take the place of
the worker as a condition of the worker using paid sick time.
(s) Meat-processing employers must not
require workers to disclose details of private matters as a condition of using
paid sick time, including details of a worker or family member's illness,
domestic violence, sexual abuse or assault, or stalking and harassment. If the employer does possess such
information, it must be treated as confidential and not disclosed without the
express permission of the worker.
(t) Meat-processing employers must
provide workers written notice of their rights and the employer's requirements
under this section at the time the worker begins employment. This notice must be provided in English,
Spanish, or the employee's language of fluency.
The amount of paid sick time a worker has accrued, the amount of paid
sick time a worker has used during the current year, and the amount of pay the
worker has received as paid sick time must be recorded on or attached to the
worker's paycheck. Meat-processing
employers must display a poster in a conspicuous location in each facility
where workers are employed that displays the information required under this
paragraph. The poster must be displayed
in English and any language of fluency that is read or spoken by at least five
percent of the employer's workers.
(u) Nothing in this subdivision shall
be construed to:
(1) prohibit or discourage an employer
from adopting or retaining a paid sick time policy that is more generous than
the one provided in this subdivision;
(2) diminish the obligation of an employer
to comply with a collective bargaining agreement, or any other contract that
provides more generous paid sick time to a worker than provided for in this
subdivision; or
(3) override any provision of local law
that provides greater rights for paid sick time than is provided for in this
subdivision.
Subd. 9. Small
processor exemption. Meat-processing
operations having 50 or fewer employees are exempt from the requirements of
this section.
Sec. 9. [179.8757]
NOTIFICATION REQUIRED.
(a) Meat-processing employers must
provide written information and notifications about employee rights under
section 179.86 and sections 179.87 to 179.8757 to workers in their language of
fluency at least annually. If a worker
is unable to understand written information and notifications, the employer
must provide such information and notices orally in the worker's language of
fluency.
(b) The coordinator must notify covered
employers of the provisions of sections 179.87 to 179.8757 and any recent
updates at least annually.
(c) The coordinator must place information explaining sections 179.87 to 179.8757 on the Department of Labor and Industry's website in at least English, Spanish, and any other language that at least ten percent of meat‑processing workers communicate in fluently. The coordinator must also make the information accessible to persons with impaired visual acuity."
Delete the title and insert:
"A bill for an act relating to state government; appropriating money for jobs and economic development; establishing paid medical leave benefits; modifying unemployment insurance benefits; making policy and technical changes to programs administered by the departments of employment and economic development, labor and industry, and Bureau of Mediation Services; providing earned sick and safe time leave; providing emergency leave for essential workers; establishing an emergency rehire and retention program; establishing safe workplaces for meat and poultry processing workers; providing penalties; authorizing rulemaking; classifying data; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 13.719, by adding a subdivision; 13.7905, subdivision 6, by adding a subdivision; 116J.035, subdivision 6; 116J.431, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 116J.8748, subdivision 3; 116J.994, subdivision 6; 116L.02; 116L.03, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 116L.05, subdivision 5; 116L.17, subdivisions 1, 4; 116L.20, subdivision 2, by adding a subdivision; 116L.40, subdivisions 5, 6, 9, 10, by adding a subdivision; 116L.41, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding subdivisions; 116L.42, subdivisions 1, 2; 116L.98, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 177.24, by adding a subdivision; 177.27, subdivisions 2, 4, 7; 178.012, subdivision 1; 179A.10, subdivisions 2, 3; 181.032; 181.53; 181.939; 181.940, subdivisions 2, 3; 181.942, subdivision 1; 182.66, by adding a subdivision; 182.666, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, by adding a subdivision; 256J.561, by adding a subdivision; 256J.95, subdivisions 3, 11; 256P.01, subdivision 3; 268.035, subdivision 21c; 268.085, subdivisions 2, 4a, 7; 268.101, subdivision 2; 268.133; 268.136, subdivision 1; 268.19, subdivision 1; 326B.07, subdivision 1; 326B.092, subdivision 7; 326B.106, subdivision 1; 326B.89, subdivisions 1, 5, 9; Laws 2017, chapter 94, article 1, section 2, subdivision 2, as amended; Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 7, article 1, sections 2, subdivision 2, as amended; 3, subdivision 4; article 2, section 8; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 116J; 116L; 177; 179; 181; 181A; 299F; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 268B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 116L.18; 181.9413; 181.9414; 268.085, subdivisions 4, 8; Minnesota Rules, part 5200.0080, subpart 7."
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
Moran from the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:
H. F. No. 1684, A bill for an act relating to transportation; establishing a budget for transportation; appropriating money for transportation purposes, including Department of Transportation, Metropolitan Council, and Department of Public Safety activities; authorizing the sale and issuance of state bonds; modifying prior appropriations; modifying various fees and surcharges; modifying various transportation-related tax provisions; establishing a transit sales and use tax; providing for noncompliant drivers' licenses and identification cards; establishing advisory committees; establishing accounts; modifying various provisions governing transportation policy and finance; making technical changes; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 13.6905, by adding a subdivision; 16A.88, subdivision 1a; 84.787, subdivision 7; 84.797, subdivision 7; 84.92, subdivision 8; 97A.055, subdivision 2; 117.075, subdivisions 2, 3; 160.02, subdivision 1a; 160.262, subdivision 3; 160.266, subdivisions 1b, as amended, 6, by adding a subdivision; 161.115, subdivision 27; 161.14, by adding subdivisions; 161.23, subdivisions 2, 2a; 161.44, subdivisions 6a, 6b; 162.145, subdivision 3; 163.07, subdivision 2; 168.002, subdivisions 10, 18; 168.013, subdivisions 1a, 1m; 168.12, subdivision 1; 168.183; 168.301, subdivision 1; 168.31, subdivision 4;
168.327, subdivisions 1, 6, by adding subdivisions; 168A.11, subdivisions 1, 2; 169.011, subdivisions 5, 9, 27, 42, by adding subdivisions; 169.035, subdivision 3; 169.09, subdivision 13; 169.18, subdivisions 3, 10; 169.222, subdivisions 1, 4, 6a, by adding a subdivision; 169.451, subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision; 169.522, subdivision 1; 169.58, by adding a subdivision; 169.812, subdivision 2; 169.92, subdivision 4; 171.04, subdivision 5; 171.06, subdivisions 2a, 3, by adding subdivisions; 171.07, subdivisions 1, 3, 15; 171.071, by adding a subdivision; 171.12, subdivisions 7a, 7b, 9, by adding a subdivision; 171.13, subdivisions 1, 6, 9; 171.16, subdivisions 2, 3, by adding a subdivision; 171.18, subdivision 1; 171.20, subdivision 4; 171.27; 171.29, subdivision 2; 174.01, by adding a subdivision; 174.03, subdivisions 1c, 12; 174.185, subdivision 3; 174.24, subdivision 7; 174.285, subdivision 5; 174.40, subdivision 5; 174.42, subdivision 2; 174.50, subdivisions 6d, 7, by adding a subdivision; 174.56, subdivision 1; 219.015, subdivisions 1, 2; 219.1651; 296A.07, subdivision 3; 296A.08, subdivision 2; 296A.083, subdivision 2; 297A.64, subdivision 5; 297A.94; 297A.99, subdivision 1; 297B.02, subdivision 1; 299A.55, subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision; 299D.03, subdivision 5; 325E.15; 360.012, by adding a subdivision; 360.013, by adding subdivisions; 360.55, by adding a subdivision; 360.59, subdivision 10; 473.39, by adding a subdivision; 473.391, by adding a subdivision; 480.15, by adding a subdivision; 609.855, subdivisions 1, 7, by adding a subdivision; Laws 2012, chapter 287, article 3, sections 2; 3; 4; Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 9, section 20; Laws 2019, First Special Session chapter 3, article 1, section 4, subdivision 3; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 161; 168; 169; 171; 174; 297A; 345; 473; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2020, sections 168.327, subdivision 5; 169.09, subdivision 7; 171.015, subdivision 7; Minnesota Rules, parts 7410.2610, subparts 1, 2, 3, 3a, 5a, 5b, 6; 7414.1490; 7470.0300; 7470.0400; 7470.0500; 7470.0600; 7470.0700.
Reported the same back with the following amendments:
Page 2, delete line 29 and insert:
"Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation |
|
$3,171,073,000 |
|
$3,078,802,000" |
Page 2, line 32, delete "33,121,000" and insert "33,621,000"
Page 2, line 34, delete "865,933,000" and insert "866,037,000" and delete "906,924,000" and insert "905,575,000"
Page 2, line 35, delete "216,720,000" and insert "216,747,000" and delete "227,421,000" and insert "227,067,000"
Page 4, line 24, delete "2,000,000" and insert "2,500,000"
Page 9, delete line 23 and insert:
"(a) County State-Aid Highways |
|
866,037,000
|
|
905,575,000" |
Page 10, delete line 17 and insert:
"(b) Municipal State-Aid Streets |
|
216,747,000
|
|
227,067,000" |
Page 15, delete line 25 and insert:
"Subdivision
1. Total Appropriation |
|
$254,010,000 |
|
$236,476,000" |
Page 18, line 26, delete "each year" and insert "fiscal year 2022"
Page 20, delete subdivision 3 and insert:
"Subd. 3. Transfer to general fund. The commissioner of public safety must transfer $1,600,000 in fiscal year 2024 from the vehicle services operating account in the special revenue fund to the general fund."
Adjust amounts accordingly
With the recommendation that when so amended the bill be placed on the General Register.
The
report was adopted.
SECOND READING
OF HOUSE BILLS
H. F. Nos. 993, 1076, 1342
and 1684 were read for the second time.
MESSAGES FROM
THE SENATE
The
following message was received from the Senate:
Madam Speaker:
I hereby announce the passage by the
Senate of the following Senate Files, herewith transmitted:
S. F. Nos. 1284 and 1315.
Cal R. Ludeman,
Secretary of the Senate
FIRST READING OF
SENATE BILLS
S. F. No. 1284, A bill for an act relating to financial institutions; modifying checking account requirements; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 48.512, subdivisions 2, 3, 7.
The bill was read for the first time.
Davnie moved that S. F. No. 1284 and H. F. No. 1067, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
S. F. No. 1315, A bill for an act relating to corrections; authorizing the placement of pregnant and postpartum female inmates in community-based programs; requiring reports; amending Minnesota Statutes 2020, section 244.065.
The bill was read for the first time.
Becker-Finn moved that S. F. No. 1315 and H. F. No. 1403, now on the General Register, be referred to the Chief Clerk for comparison. The motion prevailed.
The Speaker assumed the Chair.
REPORT
FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES
AND
LEGISLATIVE ADMINISTRATION
Winkler from the Committee on Rules and
Legislative Administration, pursuant to rules 1.21 and 3.33, designated the
following bills to be placed on the Calendar for the Day for Thursday, April
15, 2021 and established a prefiling requirement for amendments offered to the
following bills:
H. F. Nos. 1077 and 1079.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS
Ecklund moved that the name of Pelowski be
added as an author on H. F. No. 14. The motion prevailed.
Hansen, R., moved that the name of Hollins
be added as an author on H. F. No. 30. The motion prevailed.
Koegel moved that the name of Robbins be
added as an author on H. F. No. 477. The motion prevailed.
Thompson moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1103. The motion prevailed.
Thompson moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1104. The motion prevailed.
Olson, L., moved that the name of Freiberg
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1192. The motion prevailed.
Freiberg moved that the name of Lippert be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1358. The motion prevailed.
Hanson, J., moved that the name of Gomez
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1686. The motion prevailed.
Hollins moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1762. The motion prevailed.
Long moved that the name of Sandstede be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2216. The motion prevailed.
Hamilton moved that the name of Lueck be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2475. The motion prevailed.
Ecklund moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2516. The motion prevailed.
Keeler moved that the names of Wolgamott;
Bliss; Boe; Olson, B.; Gruenhagen; Hausman; Fischer; Masin; Long; Hansen, R.;
Nelson, M.; Koznick; O'Driscoll; Hornstein and Hamilton be added as authors on
H. F. No. 2519. The
motion prevailed.
Daudt moved that House Concurrent
Resolution No. 1 be recalled from the Committee on Rules and Legislative
Administration and be placed upon its adoption.
A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.
Moran was excused for the remainder
of today's session.
The question was taken on the Daudt motion
and the roll was called. There were 61
yeas and 68 nays as follows:
Those who voted in the affirmative were:
Akland
Anderson
Backer
Bahr
Baker
Bennett
Bliss
Burkel
Daniels
Daudt
Davids
Demuth
Dettmer
Drazkowski
Erickson
Franke
Franson
Garofalo
Green
Grossell
Gruenhagen
Haley
Hamilton
Heinrich
Heintzeman
Hertaus
Igo
Johnson
Jurgens
Kiel
Koznick
Kresha
Lucero
Lueck
McDonald
Mekeland
Miller
Mortensen
Mueller
Munson
Nash
Nelson, N.
Neu Brindley
Novotny
O'Driscoll
Olson, B.
O'Neill
Petersburg
Pfarr
Pierson
Poston
Quam
Raleigh
Rasmusson
Robbins
Schomacker
Scott
Swedzinski
Theis
Torkelson
Urdahl
Those who voted in the negative were:
Acomb
Agbaje
Bahner
Becker-Finn
Berg
Bernardy
Bierman
Boldon
Carlson
Christensen
Davnie
Ecklund
Edelson
Elkins
Feist
Fischer
Frazier
Frederick
Freiberg
Gomez
Greenman
Hansen, R.
Hanson, J.
Hassan
Hausman
Her
Hollins
Hornstein
Howard
Huot
Jordan
Keeler
Klevorn
Koegel
Kotyza-Witthuhn
Lee
Liebling
Lillie
Lippert
Lislegard
Long
Mariani
Marquart
Masin
Moller
Morrison
Murphy
Nelson, M.
Noor
Olson, L.
Pelowski
Pinto
Pryor
Reyer
Richardson
Sandell
Sandstede
Schultz
Stephenson
Sundin
Thompson
Vang
Wazlawik
Winkler
Wolgamott
Xiong, J.
Youakim
Spk. Hortman
The motion did
not prevail.
ADJOURNMENT
Winkler moved that when the House adjourns
today it adjourn until 10:30 a.m., Thursday, April 15, 2021. The motion prevailed.
Winkler moved that the House adjourn. The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 10:30 a.m., Thursday, April 15, 2021.
Patrick
D. Murphy, Chief
Clerk, House of Representatives