1.1.................... moves to amend S.F. No. 1856 as follows:
1.2Delete everything after the enacting clause and insert:

1.3"ARTICLE 1
1.4MINNESOTA STADIUM AUTHORITY

1.5    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 3.971, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
1.6    Subd. 6. Financial audits. The legislative auditor shall audit the financial
1.7statements of the state of Minnesota required by section 16A.50 and, as resources permit,
1.8shall audit Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, the University of Minnesota, state
1.9agencies, departments, boards, commissions, courts, and other state organizations subject
1.10to audit by the legislative auditor, including the State Agricultural Society, Agricultural
1.11Utilization Research Institute, Enterprise Minnesota, Inc., Minnesota Historical
1.12Society, Labor Interpretive Center, Minnesota Partnership for Action Against Tobacco,
1.13Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, Minnesota Stadium Authority, Metropolitan
1.14Airports Commission, and Metropolitan Mosquito Control District. Financial audits
1.15must be conducted according to generally accepted government auditing standards. The
1.16legislative auditor shall see that all provisions of law respecting the appropriate and
1.17economic use of public funds are complied with and may, as part of a financial audit or
1.18separately, investigate allegations of noncompliance.

1.19    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 3.9741, is amended by adding a subdivision
1.20to read:
1.21    Subd. 4. Minnesota Stadium Authority. Upon the audit of the financial accounts
1.22and affairs of the Minnesota Stadium Authority, the authority is liable to the state for the
1.23total cost and expenses of the audit, including the salaries paid to the examiners while
1.24actually engaged in making the examination. The legislative auditor may bill the authority
2.1either monthly or at the completion of the audit. All collections received for the audits
2.2must be deposited in the general fund.

2.3    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 10A.01, subdivision 35, is
2.4amended to read:
2.5    Subd. 35. Public official. "Public official" means any:
2.6    (1) member of the legislature;
2.7    (2) individual employed by the legislature as secretary of the senate, legislative
2.8auditor, chief clerk of the house of representatives, revisor of statutes, or researcher,
2.9legislative analyst, or attorney in the Office of Senate Counsel and Research or House
2.10Research;
2.11    (3) constitutional officer in the executive branch and the officer's chief administrative
2.12deputy;
2.13    (4) solicitor general or deputy, assistant, or special assistant attorney general;
2.14    (5) commissioner, deputy commissioner, or assistant commissioner of any state
2.15department or agency as listed in section 15.01 or 15.06, or the state chief information
2.16officer;
2.17    (6) member, chief administrative officer, or deputy chief administrative officer of a
2.18state board or commission that has either the power to adopt, amend, or repeal rules under
2.19chapter 14, or the power to adjudicate contested cases or appeals under chapter 14;
2.20    (7) individual employed in the executive branch who is authorized to adopt, amend,
2.21or repeal rules under chapter 14 or adjudicate contested cases under chapter 14;
2.22    (8) executive director of the State Board of Investment;
2.23    (9) deputy of any official listed in clauses (7) and (8);
2.24    (10) judge of the Workers' Compensation Court of Appeals;
2.25    (11) administrative law judge or compensation judge in the State Office of
2.26Administrative Hearings or unemployment law judge in the Department of Employment
2.27and Economic Development;
2.28    (12) member, regional administrator, division director, general counsel, or operations
2.29manager of the Metropolitan Council;
2.30    (13) member or chief administrator of a metropolitan agency;
2.31    (14) director of the Division of Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement in the
2.32Department of Public Safety;
2.33    (15) member or executive director of the Higher Education Facilities Authority;
2.34    (16) member of the board of directors or president of Enterprise Minnesota, Inc.;
3.1    (17) member of the board of directors or executive director of the Minnesota State
3.2High School League;
3.3    (18) member of the Minnesota Ballpark Authority established in section 473.755;
3.4    (19) citizen member of the Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources;
3.5    (20) manager of a watershed district, or member of a watershed management
3.6organization as defined under section 103B.205, subdivision 13;
3.7    (21) supervisor of a soil and water conservation district;
3.8(22) director of Explore Minnesota Tourism;
3.9    (23) citizen member of the Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council established in
3.10section 97A.056; or
3.11(24) a citizen member of the Clean Water Council established in section 114D.30.; or
3.12(25) member or chief executive of the Minnesota Stadium Authority established
3.13in section 473J.07.

3.14    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 340A.404, subdivision 1, is
3.15amended to read:
3.16    Subdivision 1. Cities. (a) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license to
3.17the following establishments located within its jurisdiction:
3.18(1) hotels;
3.19(2) restaurants;
3.20(3) bowling centers;
3.21(4) clubs or congressionally chartered veterans organizations with the approval of
3.22the commissioner, provided that the organization has been in existence for at least three
3.23years and liquor sales will only be to members and bona fide guests, except that a club
3.24may permit the general public to participate in a wine tasting conducted at the club under
3.25section 340A.419;
3.26(5) sports facilities, restaurants, clubs, or bars located on land owned or leased by
3.27the Minnesota Stadium Authority;
3.28(5) (6) sports facilities located on land owned by the Metropolitan Sports
3.29Commission; and
3.30(6) (7) exclusive liquor stores.
3.31(b) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license, an on-sale wine license,
3.32or an on-sale malt liquor license to a theater within the city, notwithstanding any law, local
3.33ordinance, or charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph authorizes sales on
3.34all days of the week to persons attending events at the theater.
4.1(c) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license, an on-sale wine license,
4.2or an on-sale malt liquor license to a convention center within the city, notwithstanding
4.3any law, local ordinance, or charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph
4.4authorizes sales on all days of the week to persons attending events at the convention
4.5center. This paragraph does not apply to convention centers located in the seven-county
4.6metropolitan area.
4.7(d) A city may issue an on-sale wine license and an on-sale malt liquor license to
4.8a person who is the owner of a summer collegiate league baseball team, or to a person
4.9holding a concessions or management contract with the owner, for beverage sales at a
4.10ballpark or stadium located within the city for the purposes of summer collegiate league
4.11baseball games at the ballpark or stadium, notwithstanding any law, local ordinance, or
4.12charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph authorizes sales on all days of the
4.13week to persons attending baseball games at the ballpark or stadium.

4.14    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 352.01, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
4.15    Subd. 2a. Included employees. (a) "State employee" includes:
4.16    (1) employees of the Minnesota Historical Society;
4.17    (2) employees of the State Horticultural Society;
4.18    (3) employees of the Minnesota Crop Improvement Association;
4.19    (4) employees of the adjutant general whose salaries are paid from federal funds and
4.20who are not covered by any federal civilian employees retirement system;
4.21    (5) employees of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities who are employed
4.22under the university or college activities program;
4.23    (6) currently contributing employees covered by the system who are temporarily
4.24employed by the legislature during a legislative session or any currently contributing
4.25employee employed for any special service as defined in subdivision 2b, clause (8);
4.26    (7) employees of the legislature who are appointed without a limit on the duration
4.27of their employment and persons employed or designated by the legislature or by a
4.28legislative committee or commission or other competent authority to conduct a special
4.29inquiry, investigation, examination, or installation;
4.30    (8) trainees who are employed on a full-time established training program
4.31performing the duties of the classified position for which they will be eligible to receive
4.32immediate appointment at the completion of the training period;
4.33    (9) employees of the Minnesota Safety Council;
4.34    (10) any employees who are on authorized leave of absence from the Transit
4.35Operating Division of the former Metropolitan Transit Commission and who are employed
5.1by the labor organization which is the exclusive bargaining agent representing employees
5.2of the Transit Operating Division;
5.3    (11) employees of the Metropolitan Council, Metropolitan Parks and Open Space
5.4Commission, Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, or Metropolitan Mosquito
5.5Control Commission unless excluded under subdivision 2b or are covered by another
5.6public pension fund or plan under section 473.415, subdivision 3;
5.7    (12) judges of the Tax Court;
5.8    (13) personnel who were employed on June 30, 1992, by the University of
5.9Minnesota in the management, operation, or maintenance of its heating plant facilities,
5.10whose employment transfers to an employer assuming operation of the heating plant
5.11facilities, so long as the person is employed at the University of Minnesota heating plant
5.12by that employer or by its successor organization;
5.13    (14) personnel who are employed as seasonal employees in the classified or
5.14unclassified service;
5.15    (15) persons who are employed by the Department of Commerce as a peace officer
5.16in the Insurance Fraud Prevention Division under section 45.0135 who have attained the
5.17mandatory retirement age specified in section 43A.34, subdivision 4;
5.18    (16) employees of the University of Minnesota unless excluded under subdivision
5.192b, clause (3);
5.20    (17) employees of the Middle Management Association whose employment began
5.21after July 1, 2007, and to whom section 352.029 does not apply; and
5.22    (18) employees of the Minnesota Government Engineers Council to whom section
5.23352.029 does not apply.; and
5.24(19) employees of the Minnesota Stadium Authority.
5.25    (b) Employees specified in paragraph (a), clause (13), are included employees under
5.26paragraph (a) if employer and employee contributions are made in a timely manner in the
5.27amounts required by section 352.04. Employee contributions must be deducted from
5.28salary. Employer contributions are the sole obligation of the employer assuming operation
5.29of the University of Minnesota heating plant facilities or any successor organizations to
5.30that employer.

5.31    Sec. 6. [473J.01] PURPOSE.
5.32The purpose of this chapter is to provide for the construction, financing, and
5.33long-term use of a stadium and related stadium infrastructure as a venue for professional
5.34football and a broad range of other civic, community, athletic, educational, cultural,
5.35and commercial activities. The legislature finds and declares that the expenditure of
6.1public money for this purpose is necessary and serves a public purpose, and that property
6.2acquired by the Minnesota Stadium Authority for the construction of the stadium and
6.3related stadium infrastructure is acquired for a public use or public purpose under chapter
6.4117. The legislature further finds and declares that any provision in a lease or use
6.5agreement with a professional football team that requires the team to play all of its home
6.6games in a publicly funded stadium for the duration of the lease or use agreement, with the
6.7occasional exception of a game played elsewhere as set forth in such agreement, serves
6.8a unique public purpose for which the remedies of specific performance and injunctive
6.9relief are essential to its enforcement. The legislature further finds and declares that
6.10government assistance to facilitate the presence of professional football provides to the
6.11state of Minnesota and its citizens highly valued intangible benefits that are virtually
6.12impossible to quantify and, therefore, not recoverable even if the government receives
6.13monetary damages in the event of a team's breach of contract. Minnesota courts are,
6.14therefore, charged with protecting those benefits through the use of specific performance
6.15and injunctive relief as provided in this chapter and in the lease and use agreements.

6.16    Sec. 7. [473J.03] DEFINITIONS.
6.17    Subdivision 1. Application. For the purposes of this chapter, the terms defined in
6.18this section have the meanings given them, except as otherwise expressly provided or
6.19indicated by the context.
6.20    Subd. 2. Annual adjustment factor. "Annual adjustment factor" means the annual
6.21adjustment factor under section 297A.994, subdivision 4, paragraph (b).
6.22    Subd. 3. Authority. "Authority" means the Minnesota Stadium Authority
6.23established under section 473J.07.
6.24    Subd. 4. City. "City" means the city of Minneapolis.
6.25    Subd. 5. NFL. The "NFL" means the National Football League.
6.26    Subd. 6. NFL team. "NFL team" means the owner and operator of the NFL
6.27professional football team known, as of the effective date of this chapter, as the Minnesota
6.28Vikings or any team owned and operated by someone who purchases or otherwise takes
6.29ownership or control of or reconstitutes the NFL team known as the Minnesota Vikings.
6.30    Subd. 7. Stadium. "Stadium" means the stadium suitable for professional football
6.31to be designed, constructed, and financed under this chapter. A stadium must have a roof
6.32that covers the stadium, as set forth in section 473J.11, subdivision 3.
6.33    Subd. 8. Stadium costs. "Stadium costs" means the costs of acquiring land, the
6.34costs of stadium infrastructure, and of designing, constructing, equipping, and financing a
6.35stadium suitable for professional football.
7.1    Subd. 9. Stadium infrastructure. "Stadium infrastructure" means plazas, parking
7.2structures, rights of way, connectors, skyways and tunnels, and other such property,
7.3facilities, and improvements, owned by the authority or determined by the authority to
7.4facilitate the use and development of the stadium.
7.5    Subd. 10. Stadium site. "Stadium site" means all or portions of the current site of
7.6the existing football stadium and adjacent areas, bounded generally by Park and Eleventh
7.7Avenues and Third and Sixth Streets in the city of Minneapolis, the definitive boundaries
7.8of which shall be determined by the authority and agreed to by the NFL team.

7.9    Sec. 8. [473J.07] MINNESOTA STADIUM AUTHORITY.
7.10    Subdivision 1. Established. The Minnesota Stadium Authority is established as a
7.11public body, corporate and politic, and political subdivision of the state. The authority is
7.12not a joint powers entity or an agency or instrumentality of the city.
7.13    Subd. 2. Membership. (a) The authority shall consist of five members.
7.14(b) The chair and two members shall be appointed by the governor. One member
7.15appointed by the governor shall serve until December 31 of the third year following
7.16appointment and one member shall serve until December 31 of the fourth year following
7.17appointment. Thereafter, members appointed by the governor shall serve four-year terms,
7.18beginning January 1. Each member serves until a successor is appointed and takes office.
7.19The chair serves at the pleasure of the governor. Appointments under this paragraph are
7.20subject to the advice and consent of the senate. Senate confirmation shall be as provided
7.21by section 15.066.
7.22(c) The mayor of the city shall appoint two members to the authority. One member
7.23appointed by the mayor of the city shall serve until December 31 of the third year
7.24following appointment and one member shall serve until December 31 of the fourth year
7.25following appointment. Thereafter, members appointed under this paragraph shall serve
7.26four-year terms beginning January 1. Each member serves until a successor is appointed
7.27and takes office. Members appointed under this paragraph may reside within the city and
7.28may be appointed officials of a political subdivision.
7.29(d) The initial members of the authority must be appointed not later than 30 days
7.30after the date of enactment of this chapter.
7.31    Subd. 3. Compensation. The authority may compensate its members, other than the
7.32chair, as provided in section 15.0575. The chair shall receive, unless otherwise provided
7.33by other law, a salary in an amount fixed by the authority, and shall be reimbursed for
7.34reasonable expenses to the same extent as a member.
8.1    Subd. 4. Chair. The chair presides at all meetings of the authority, if present, and
8.2performs all other assigned duties and functions. The authority may appoint from among
8.3its members a vice-chair to act for the chair during the temporary absence or disability of
8.4the chair, and any other officers the authority determines are necessary or convenient.
8.5    Subd. 5. Removal. A member, other than the chair, may be removed by the
8.6appointing authority only for misfeasance, malfeasance, or nonfeasance in office, upon
8.7written charges, and after an opportunity to be heard in defense of the charges.
8.8    Subd. 6. Bylaws. The authority shall adopt bylaws to establish rules of procedure,
8.9the powers and duties of its officers, and other matters relating to the governance of the
8.10authority and the exercise of its powers. Except as provided in this section, the bylaws
8.11adopted under this subdivision must be similar in form and substance to bylaws adopted
8.12by the Minnesota Ballpark Authority pursuant to section 473.755.
8.13    Subd. 7. Audit. The legislative auditor shall audit the books and accounts of the
8.14authority once each year or as often as the legislative auditor's funds and personnel permit.
8.15The authority shall pay the total cost of the audit pursuant to section 3.9741.
8.16    Subd. 8. Executive director; employees. The authority may appoint an executive
8.17director to serve as the chief executive officer of the authority. The executive director
8.18serves at the pleasure of the authority and receives compensation as determined by the
8.19authority. The executive director may be responsible for the operation, management, and
8.20promotion of activities of the authority, as prescribed by the authority. The executive
8.21director has the powers necessarily incident to the performance of duties required and
8.22powers granted by the authority, but does not have authority to incur liability or make
8.23expenditures on behalf of the authority without general or specific directions by the
8.24authority, as shown by the bylaws or minutes of a meeting of the authority. The executive
8.25director is responsible for hiring, supervision, and dismissal of all other employees of
8.26the authority.
8.27    Subd. 9. Web site. The authority shall establish a Web site for purposes of providing
8.28information to the public concerning all actions taken by the authority. At a minimum, the
8.29Web site must contain a current version of the authority's bylaws, notices of upcoming
8.30meetings, minutes of the authority's meetings, and contact telephone, electronic mail, and
8.31facsimile numbers for public comments.
8.32    Subd. 10. Quorum; approvals. Any three members shall constitute a quorum for
8.33the conduct of business and action may be taken upon the vote of a majority of members
8.34present at a meeting duly called and held. During the design and construction stages of the
8.35stadium, a four-fifths vote of the authority is required for authority decisions related to
9.1zoning, land use, exterior design of the stadium, related parking, the plaza area, and the
9.2selection of the authority's lead representative during design and construction.

9.3    Sec. 9. [473J.08] LOCATION.
9.4The stadium to be constructed under this chapter shall be located at the stadium
9.5site in the city of Minneapolis.

9.6    Sec. 10. [473J.09] POWERS, DUTIES OF THE AUTHORITY.
9.7    Subdivision 1. Actions. The authority may sue and be sued. The authority is a public
9.8body and the stadium and stadium infrastructure are public improvements within the
9.9meaning of chapter 562. The authority is a municipality within the meaning of chapter 466.
9.10    Subd. 2. Acquisition of property. The authority may acquire from any public or
9.11private entity by lease, purchase, gift, or devise all necessary right, title, and interest in
9.12and to real property, air rights, and personal property deemed necessary to the purposes
9.13contemplated by this chapter. The authority may acquire, by the exercise of condemnation
9.14powers under chapter 117, land, other real property, air rights, personal property, and other
9.15right, title, and interest in property, within the stadium site and stadium infrastructure.
9.16    Subd. 3. Disposition of property. The authority may sell, lease, or otherwise
9.17dispose of any real or personal property acquired by the authority that is no longer required
9.18for accomplishment of the authority's purposes. The property may be sold in accordance
9.19with the procedures provided by section 469.065, except subdivisions 6 and 7, to the
9.20extent the authority deems it to be practical and consistent with this chapter. Title to the
9.21stadium must not be transferred or sold by the authority prior to the effective date of
9.22enactment of any legislation approving such transfer or sale.
9.23    Subd. 4. Data practices; open meetings. Except as otherwise provided in this
9.24chapter, the authority is subject to chapters 13 and 13D.
9.25    Subd. 5. Facility operation. The authority may develop, construct, equip, improve,
9.26own, operate, manage, maintain, finance, and control the stadium, stadium infrastructure,
9.27and related facilities constructed or acquired under this chapter, or may delegate such
9.28duties through an agreement, subject to the rights and obligations transferred to and
9.29assumed by the authority, the NFL team, other user, third-party manager, or program
9.30manager, under the terms of a lease, use agreement, or development agreement.
9.31    Subd. 6. Employees; contracts for services. The authority may employ persons
9.32and contract for services necessary to carry out its functions, including the utilization of
9.33employees and consultants retained by other governmental entities. The authority shall
9.34enter into an agreement with the city regarding traffic control for the stadium.
10.1    Subd. 7. Gifts, grants, loans. The authority may accept monetary contributions,
10.2property, services, and grants or loans of money or other property from the United States,
10.3the state, any subdivision of the state, any agency of those entities, or any person for any
10.4of its purposes, and may enter into any agreement required in connection with the gifts,
10.5grants, or loans. The authority shall hold, use, and dispose of the money, property, or
10.6services according to the terms of the monetary contributions, grant, loan, or agreement.
10.7    Subd. 8. Use agreements. The authority may lease, license, or enter into use
10.8agreements and may fix, alter, charge, and collect rents, fees, and charges for the use,
10.9occupation, and availability of part or all of any premises, property, or facilities under
10.10its ownership, operation, or control for purposes that will provide athletic, educational,
10.11cultural, commercial, or other entertainment, instruction, or activity for the citizens of
10.12Minnesota and visitors. The use agreements may provide that the other contracting party
10.13has exclusive use of the premises at the times agreed upon, as well as the right to retain
10.14some or all revenues from ticket sales, suite licenses, concessions, advertising, naming
10.15rights, NFL team designated broadcast/media, club seats, signage, and other revenues
10.16derived from the stadium. The lease or use agreement with an NFL team must provide for
10.17the payment by the NFL team of an agreed-upon portion of operating and maintenance
10.18costs and expenses and provide other terms in which the authority and NFL team agree. In
10.19no case may a lease or use agreement permit smoking in the stadium.
10.20    Subd. 9. Research. The authority may conduct research studies and programs;
10.21collect and analyze data; prepare reports, maps, charts, and tables; and conduct all
10.22necessary hearings and investigations in connection with its functions.
10.23    Subd. 10. Insurance. The authority may require any employee to obtain and file
10.24with the authority an individual bond or fidelity insurance policy. The authority may
10.25procure insurance in the amounts the authority considers necessary against liability of the
10.26authority or its officers and employees for personal injury or death and property damage or
10.27destruction, consistent with chapter 466, and against risks of damage to or destruction of
10.28any of its facilities, equipment, or other property.
10.29    Subd. 11. Exemption from Metropolitan Council review; Business Subsidy Act.
10.30The acquisition and betterment of a stadium and stadium infrastructure by the authority
10.31must be conducted pursuant to this chapter and are not subject to sections 473.165 and
10.32473.173. Section 116J.994 does not apply to any transactions of the authority or other
10.33governmental entity related to the stadium or stadium infrastructure or to any tenant or
10.34other users of the stadium or stadium infrastructure. The Metropolitan Council shall waive
10.35any sewer access charges or similar fees and charges customarily imposed attributable to
10.36the design and construction of the stadium and stadium infrastructure.
11.1    Subd. 12. Incidental powers. In addition to the powers expressly granted in this
11.2chapter, the authority has all powers necessary or incidental thereto.
11.3    Subd. 13. Transfers to the authority. In addition to any other payments required
11.4under this act, for operating years 2016 to 2020, the NFL team shall annually transfer to
11.5the authority amounts equal to the city of Minneapolis share of operating costs and capital
11.6reserves. These amounts shall be repaid to the NFL team by the state on behalf of the city
11.7of Minneapolis through a repayment schedule to be specified in law, and agreed to in all
11.8subsequent agreements between the city and the NFL team.

11.9    Sec. 11. [473J.11] STADIUM DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION.
11.10    Subdivision 1. Contracts. (a) The design, development, and construction of the
11.11stadium shall be a collaborative process between the authority and the NFL team. The
11.12authority and the NFL team shall establish a process to reach consensus on key elements
11.13of the stadium program and design, development, and construction.
11.14(b) Unless the authority and the NFL team agree otherwise:
11.15(1) the authority shall create a stadium design and construction group, including
11.16representatives of the authority and the NFL team, to manage the design of the stadium
11.17and oversee construction;
11.18(2) this group shall engage an owner's representative to act on behalf of the group.
11.19The cost of the owner's representative shall be a stadium cost; and
11.20(3) the authority and the NFL team shall enter into a development administration
11.21agreement providing for rights and responsibilities of the authority and the NFL team, the
11.22design and construction group, and the owner's representative for design and construction
11.23of the stadium, including but not limited to establishment of minimum design standards.
11.24This development administration agreement shall provide for binding arbitration in
11.25the event that the authority and the NFL team are unable to agree on minimum design
11.26standards or other material aspects of the design.
11.27(c) The authority may enter into an agreement with the NFL team and any other
11.28entity relating to the design, construction, financing, operation, maintenance, and use of
11.29the stadium and related facilities and stadium infrastructure. The authority may contract
11.30for materials, supplies, and equipment in accordance with section 471.345, except that
11.31the authority may employ or contract with persons, firms, or corporations to perform one
11.32or more or all of the functions of architect, engineer, construction manager, or program
11.33manager with respect to all or any part of the design, construction, financing, operation,
11.34maintenance, and use of the stadium and stadium infrastructure under the traditional
12.1separate design and build, integrated design-build, construction manager at risk, or
12.2public/private partnership (P3) structures, or a combination thereof.
12.3(d) The authority and the NFL team shall prepare a request for proposals for one or
12.4more of the functions described in paragraph (c). The request must be published in the
12.5State Register and shall include, at a minimum, such requirements that are agreed to by
12.6the authority and the NFL team. The authority and the NFL team may prequalify offerors
12.7by issuing a request for qualifications, in advance of the request for proposals, and select a
12.8short list of responsible offerors prior to discussions and evaluations.
12.9(e) As provided in the request for proposals, the authority, and the NFL team, may
12.10conduct discussions and negotiations with responsible offerors in order to determine
12.11which proposal is most advantageous to the authority and the NFL team and to negotiate
12.12the terms of an agreement. In conducting discussions, there shall be no disclosure of any
12.13information derived from proposals submitted by competing offerors and the content of all
12.14proposals is nonpublic data under chapter 13 until such time as a notice to award a contract
12.15is given by the authority. The agreement shall be subject to the approval of the NFL team.
12.16(f) Prior to the time the authority enters into a construction contract with a
12.17construction manager or program manager certifying a maximum price and a completion
12.18date as provided in paragraph (h), at the request of the NFL team, the authority may
12.19authorize, such authorization not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed, the NFL team
12.20to provide for management of the construction of the stadium and related stadium
12.21infrastructure, in which event the NFL team must assume the role and responsibilities
12.22of the authority for completion of construction in a manner consistent with the agreed
12.23minimum design standards and design documents, subject to the terms of this act,
12.24including responsibility for cost overruns.
12.25(g) The construction manager or program manager may enter into contracts with
12.26contractors for labor, materials, supplies, and equipment for the construction of the
12.27stadium and related stadium infrastructure through the process of public bidding, except
12.28that the construction manager or program manager may, with the consent of the authority
12.29or the NFL team if the NFL team has assumed responsibility for construction:
12.30(1) narrow the listing of eligible bidders to those which the construction manager
12.31or program manager determines to possess sufficient expertise to perform the intended
12.32functions;
12.33(2) award contracts to the contractors that the construction manager or program
12.34manager determines provide the best value under a request for proposals as described in
12.35section 16C.28, subdivision 1, paragraphs (a), clause (2), and (c), which are not required
12.36to be the lowest responsible bidder; and
13.1(3) for work the construction manager or program manager determines to be critical
13.2to the completion schedule, award contracts on the basis of competitive proposals, or
13.3perform work with its own forces without soliciting competitive bids if the construction
13.4manager or program manager provides evidence of competitive pricing.
13.5(h) The authority and the NFL team shall require that the construction manager or
13.6program manager certify, before the contract is signed, a fixed and stipulated construction
13.7price and completion date to the authority and post a performance bond in an amount
13.8at least equal to 100 percent of the certified price or such other security satisfactory to
13.9the authority, to cover any costs which may be incurred in excess of the certified price
13.10including, but not limited to, costs incurred by the authority or loss of revenues resulting
13.11from incomplete construction on the completion date. The authority may secure surety
13.12bonds as provided in section 574.26, securing payment of just claims in connection with
13.13all public work undertaken by the authority. Persons entitled to the protection of the
13.14bonds may enforce them as provided in sections 574.28 to 574.32 and are not entitled to a
13.15lien on any property of the authority under the provisions of sections 514.01 to 514.16.
13.16The construction of the stadium is a project as that term is defined in section 177.42,
13.17subdivision 2, and is subject to the prevailing wage law under sections 177.41 to 177.43.
13.18    Subd. 2. Changes. Unless otherwise agreed to by the authority and the NFL team,
13.19if either party requests an agreed upon change in minimum design standards, and this
13.20change is responsible for requiring the project to exceed the stated budget, the requesting
13.21party is liable for any cost overruns or associated liabilities.
13.22    Subd. 3. Stadium design. The stadium and stadium infrastructure shall be designed
13.23and constructed incorporating the following general program and design elements:
13.24(1) Unless otherwise agreed to by the authority and the NFL team, the stadium
13.25shall comprise approximately 1,500,000 square feet with approximately 65,000 seats,
13.26expandable to 72,000, shall meet or exceed NFL program requirements, and include
13.27approximately 150 suites and approximately 7,500 club seats or other such components as
13.28agreed to by the authority and the NFL team;
13.29(2) space for NFL team-related exhibitions and sales, which shall include the
13.30following: NFL team museum and Hall of Fame, retail merchandise and gift shop retail
13.31venues, and themed concessions and restaurants;
13.32(3) year-round space for the NFL team administrative operations, sales, and
13.33marketing, including a ticket office, team meeting space, locker, and training rooms;
13.34(4) space for administrative offices of the authority;
14.1(5) 2,000 parking spaces within one block of the stadium, connected by skyway or
14.2tunnel to the stadium, and 500 parking spaces within two blocks of the stadium, with a
14.3dedicated walkway on game days;
14.4(6) elements sufficient to provide community and civic uses as determined by the
14.5authority; and
14.6(7) a roof that is fixed or retractable, provided that if the roof is retractable, it is
14.7accomplished without any increase to the funding provided by the state or the city.
14.8    Subd. 4. Cost overruns, savings. The authority may accept financial obligations
14.9relating to cost overruns associated with acquisition of the stadium site, stadium
14.10infrastructure, and stadium design, development, and construction, provided that the
14.11authority shall not accept responsibility for cost overruns and shall not be responsible for
14.12cost overruns if the authority has authorized the NFL team to provide for management
14.13of construction of the stadium under section 473J.11, subdivision 1. Cost savings or
14.14additional funds obtained by the authority or the NFL team for the stadium or stadium
14.15infrastructure may be used first to fund additional stadium or stadium infrastructure, as
14.16agreed to by the authority and the NFL team, if any, and then to fund capital reserves.

14.17    Sec. 12. [473J.112] COMMEMORATIVE BRICKS.
14.18The authority shall sell commemorative bricks to be displayed at a prominent
14.19location in the new stadium, for an amount to be determined by the authority. The
14.20authority shall work with the commissioner to ensure that purchase of a brick is a tax
14.21deductible donation on the part of the donating person or organization. Funds raised
14.22through this section shall be appropriated to the commissioner of management and budget
14.23for a grant to the Minnesota Stadium Authority.
14.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

14.25    Sec. 13. [473J.12] EMPLOYMENT.
14.26    Subdivision 1. Hiring and recruitment. In the design, development, construction,
14.27management, operation, maintenance and capital repair, replacement and improvement of
14.28the stadium and stadium infrastructure, the authority shall make every effort to employ,
14.29and cause the NFL team, the construction manager and other subcontractors, vendors, and
14.30concessionaires to employ women and members of minority communities when hiring.
14.31Further, goals for construction contracts to be awarded to women- and minority-owned
14.32businesses will be in a percentage at least equal to the minimum used for city of
14.33Minneapolis development projects, and the other construction workforce will establish
15.1workforce utilization goals at least equal to current city goals and include workers from
15.2city zip codes that have high rates of poverty and unemployment.
15.3    Subd. 2. Other required agreements. The NFL team or the authority shall give
15.4food, beverage, retail, and concession workers presently employed by the NFL team or
15.5the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission or its vendors at the existing football
15.6stadium the opportunity to continue their employment in comparable positions at the new
15.7stadium. Workers who are presently represented under a collective bargaining agreement
15.8may seek to continue such representation in the facility and designate such, or another
15.9collective bargaining unit, as their representative.

15.10    Sec. 14. [473J.13] STADIUM OPERATIONS; CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS.
15.11    Subdivision 1. Stadium operation. The stadium shall be operated in a first-class
15.12manner, similar to and consistent with other comparable NFL stadiums, such as the
15.13stadium currently known as Lucas Oil Field. The authority and the team will mutually
15.14agree on a third-party management company or individual to manage the stadium and on
15.15certain major vendors to the stadium. The authority, with the approval of the NFL team,
15.16may enter into an agreement with a program manager for management of the stadium, for
15.17a maximum of 30 years.
15.18    Subd. 2. Operating expenses. (a) The authority must pay or cause to be paid
15.19all operating expenses of the stadium. The authority must require in the lease or use
15.20agreement with the NFL team that the NFL team pay the authority, beginning January 1,
15.212016, or other date as mutually agreed upon by the parties, toward operating costs of the
15.22stadium, $8,500,000 each year, increased by a three percent annual inflation rate.
15.23(b) Beginning January 1, 2016, or other date as mutually agreed upon by the
15.24parties, and continuing through 2020, the NFL team shall pay the authority operating
15.25expenses, $6,000,000 each year, increased by an annual adjustment factor. The payment
15.26of $6,000,000 per year beginning in 2016 is a payment by the team, which shall be repaid
15.27to the team by the state, using funds as provided under section 297A.994, subdivision 4,
15.28clause (4). After 2020, the state shall assume this payment, using funds generated in
15.29accordance with the city of Minneapolis as specified under section 287A.994.
15.30(c) The authority may establish an operating reserve to cover operating expense
15.31shortfalls and may accept funds from any source for deposit in the operating reserve. The
15.32establishment or funding of an authority operating reserve must not decrease the amounts
15.33required to be paid to the authority toward operating costs under this subdivision unless
15.34agreed to by the authority.
15.35(d) The authority will be responsible for operating cost overruns.
16.1(e) After the joint selection of the third-party manager or program manager, the
16.2authority may agree with a program manager or other third-party manager of the stadium
16.3on a fixed cost operating, management, or employment agreement with operating
16.4cost protections under which the program manager or third-party manager assumes
16.5responsibility for stadium operating costs and shortfalls. The agreement with the manager
16.6must require the manager to prepare an initial and ongoing operating plan and operating
16.7budgets for approval by the authority in consultation with the NFL team. The manager
16.8must agree to operate the stadium in accordance with the approved operating plan and
16.9operating budget.
16.10    Subd. 3. Public access. The authority will work to maximize access for public and
16.11amateur sports, community, and civic events, and other public events in type and on terms
16.12consistent with those currently held at the existing football stadium, as defined in section
16.13473.551, subdivision 9. The authority may provide that these events have exclusive use
16.14of the premises at agreed-upon times subject to the scheduling rights of the NFL team
16.15under the lease or use agreement.
16.16    Subd. 4. Capital improvements. (a) The authority shall establish a capital
16.17reserve fund. The authority shall be responsible for making, or for causing others to
16.18make, all capital repairs, replacements, and improvements for the stadium and stadium
16.19infrastructure. The authority shall maintain, or cause others to maintain, the stadium and
16.20stadium infrastructure in a safe, clean, attractive, and first-class manner so as to cause
16.21them to remain in a condition comparable to that of other comparable NFL facilities of
16.22similar design and age. The authority shall make, or cause others to make, all necessary
16.23or appropriate repairs, renewals, and replacements, whether structural or nonstructural,
16.24interior or exterior, ordinary or extraordinary, foreseen or unforeseen, in a prompt and
16.25timely manner. In addition, the authority, with approval of the NFL team, may enter into
16.26an agreement with a program manager to perform some or all of the responsibilities of the
16.27authority in this subdivision and to assume and accept financial liability for the cost of
16.28performing the responsibilities.
16.29(b) The NFL team must contribute $1,500,000 each year, beginning in 2016 or as
16.30otherwise determined for the term of the lease or use agreement to the operating reserve
16.31fund, increased by a three percent annual inflation rate.
16.32(c) The state shall contribute $1,500,000 each year, beginning in 2016 or as otherwise
16.33determined for the term of the lease to the operating reserve fund. The contributions of the
16.34state are subject to increase by an annual adjustment factor. The contribution under this
16.35paragraph shall be assumed by the team from 2016 through 2020, and repaid to the team
16.36by the state using funds in accordance with section 297A.994, subdivision 4, clause (4).
17.1(d) The authority with input from the NFL team shall develop short-term and
17.2long-term capital funding plans and shall use those plans to guide the future capital needs
17.3of the stadium and stadium infrastructure. The authority shall make the final determination
17.4with respect to funding capital needs. Any capital improvement proposed by the NFL
17.5team intended primarily to provide revenue enhancements to the NFL team shall be paid
17.6for by the NFL team, unless otherwise agreed to with the authority.
17.7    Subd. 5. Game-day payments. In addition to operating expense contributions
17.8of the NFL team under subdivision 2, the NFL team shall pay all NFL game day, NFL
17.9team-owned major league soccer, as provided in section 473J.15, subdivision 15, and
17.10other NFL team-sponsored event expenses within the stadium and stadium plaza areas.
17.11    Subd. 6. Cooperation with financing. The authority will cooperate with the
17.12NFL team to facilitate the financing of the NFL team's contribution. Such agreement to
17.13cooperate shall not require the authority to incur any additional costs or provide conduit
17.14financing. The lease, license, and other transaction documents shall include provisions
17.15customarily required by lenders in stadium financings.

17.16    Sec. 15. [473J.15] CRITERIA AND CONDITIONS.
17.17    Subdivision 1. Binding and enforceable. In developing the stadium and entering
17.18into related contracts, the authority must follow and enforce the criteria and conditions in
17.19this section, provided that a determination by the authority that those criteria or conditions
17.20have been met under any agreement or otherwise shall be conclusive.
17.21    Subd. 2. NFL team/private contribution; timing of expenditures. (a) The NFL
17.22team/private contribution, including stadium builder license proceeds, for stadium costs
17.23must be made in cash in the amount of at least $427,000,000.
17.24(b) Prior to the initial deposit of funds under this section, the team must provide
17.25security or other credit worthiness in the amount of $50,000,000, subject to the satisfaction
17.26of the authority. Prior to the first issuance of bonds under section 16A.965, the first portion
17.27of the NFL team/private contribution in the amount of $50,000,000 must be deposited as
17.28costs are incurred to the construction fund to pay for the initial stadium costs.
17.29(c) After the first $50,000,000 of stadium costs have been paid from the initial
17.30NFL team/private contribution, state funds shall be deposited as costs are incurred to the
17.31construction fund to pay for the next $50,000,000 of costs of the project. Prior to any state
17.32funds being deposited in the construction fund, the NFL team must provide security or a
17.33financing commitment reasonably satisfactory to the authority for the balance of the
17.34required NFL team/private contribution and for payment of cost overruns if the NFL
17.35team assumes responsibility for stadium construction under section 473J.11. Thereafter,
18.1budgeted project costs shall be borne by the authority and the NFL team/private
18.2contributions in amounts proportionate to their remaining funding commitments.
18.3(d) In the event the project terminates before the initial $100,000,000 in contributions
18.4are expended by the parties under this subdivision, the parties shall be reimbursed in the
18.5amounts they have deposited to the construction fund proportionate to project funding
18.6percentages, in the amounts of 56 percent by the authority and 44 percent by the NFL
18.7team/private contributions.
18.8    Subd. 3. Lease or use agreements; 30-year term. The authority must enter into
18.9a long-term lease or use agreement with the NFL team for the NFL team's use of the
18.10stadium. The NFL team must agree to play all preseason, regular season, and postseason
18.11home games at the stadium. Training facilities must remain in Minnesota during the term
18.12of the lease or use agreement. The lease or use agreement must be for a term of at least
18.1330 years from the date of substantial completion of the stadium for professional football
18.14games. The lease or use agreement may provide options for the NFL team to extend the
18.15term for up to four additional periods of five years. The lease or use agreement must
18.16include terms for default, termination, and breach of the agreement. Recognizing that
18.17the presence of professional football provides to the state of Minnesota and its citizens
18.18highly valued, intangible benefits that are virtually impossible to quantify and, therefore,
18.19not recoverable in the event of the NFL team owner's breach of contract, the lease and
18.20use agreements must provide for specific performance and injunctive relief to enforce
18.21provisions relating to use of the stadium for professional football and must not include
18.22escape clauses or buyout provisions. The NFL team must not enter into or accept any
18.23agreement or requirement with or from any entity that is inconsistent with the NFL team's
18.24binding commitment to the 30-year term of the lease or use agreement or that would in
18.25any manner dilute, interfere with, or negate the provisions of the lease or use agreement,
18.26providing for specific performance or injunctive relief. The legislature conclusively
18.27determines, as a matter of public policy, that the lease or use agreement, and any grant
18.28agreement under this chapter that includes a specific performance clause:
18.29(1) explicitly authorizes specific performance as a remedy for breach;
18.30(2) is made for adequate consideration and upon terms which are otherwise fair
18.31and reasonable;
18.32(3) has not been included through sharp practice, misrepresentation, or mistake;
18.33(4) if specifically enforced, does not cause unreasonable or disproportionate hardship
18.34or loss to the NFL team or to third parties; and
18.35(5) involves performance in a manner and the rendering of services of a nature and
18.36under circumstances that the beneficiary cannot be adequately compensated in damages.
19.1    Subd. 4. Lease or use agreements; revenues, payments. A lease or use agreement
19.2shall include rent and other fees and expenses to be paid by the NFL team. The authority
19.3shall agree to provide in the lease or use agreement for the NFL team to receive all NFL
19.4and team event related revenues, including but not limited to, suite revenues, advertising,
19.5concessions, signage, broadcast and media, and club seat revenue. The agreement shall
19.6also provide that all naming rights to the stadium are retained by the NFL team, subject to
19.7the approval of the name or names by the authority consistent with those criteria set out
19.8in the lease or use agreement. The agreement shall provide for the authority to receive
19.9all general ticket revenues and other event revenues other than from NFL team games,
19.10NFL team-owned major league soccer games, and other NFL team events agreed to by
19.11the authority. The stadium authority, or any company managing the stadium facilities on
19.12behalf of the authority, shall provide a public notice and seek a formal solicitation for
19.13requests for proposals for any contracts for goods, services, sponsorships, or advertising
19.14or signage rights at the stadium in excess of $25,000 in accordance with the definitions
19.15and terms set forth in chapter 16C, with the stadium authority acting as the responsible
19.16authority for seeking any such formal solicitations and awarding any such contracts
19.17pursuant to such solicitations.
19.18    Subd. 5. Notice of breach or default. Until 30 years from the date of stadium
19.19completion, the NFL team must provide written notice to the authority not less than 180
19.20days prior to any action, including any action imposed upon the NFL team by the NFL,
19.21which would result in a breach or default of provisions of the lease or use agreements
19.22required to be included under subdivision 3. If this notice provision is violated and the
19.23NFL team has already breached or been in default under the required provisions, the
19.24authority or the state of Minnesota may specifically enforce the lease or use agreement
19.25and Minnesota courts shall fashion equitable remedies so that the NFL team fulfills the
19.26conditions of the lease and use agreements.
19.27    Subd. 6. Enforceable financial commitments. The authority must determine before
19.28stadium construction begins that all public and private funding sources for construction,
19.29operating expenses, and capital improvements and repairs of the stadium are included in
19.30written agreements. The committed funds must be adequate to design, construct, furnish,
19.31and equip the stadium, and pay projected operating expenses and the costs of capital
19.32improvements and repairs during the term of the lease or use agreement with the NFL
19.33team. The NFL team must provide the authority access to NFL team financial or other
19.34information, which the authority deems necessary for such determination. Any financial
19.35information obtained by the authority under this subdivision is nonpublic data under
19.36section 13.02, subdivision 9.
20.1    Subd. 7. Environmental requirements. The authority must comply with all
20.2environmental requirements imposed by regulatory agencies for the stadium, site, and
20.3structure, except as provided by section 473J.09, subdivision 11, or by section 473J.17.
20.4    Subd. 8. Public share on sale of NFL team. The lease or use agreement must
20.5provide that, if the NFL team is sold or an interest in the NFL team is sold after the
20.6effective date of this chapter, a portion of the sale price must be paid to the authority and
20.7deposited in a reserve fund for improvements to the stadium or expended as the authority
20.8may otherwise direct. The portion required to be so paid to the authority is 18 percent
20.9of the amount in excess of the purchase price of the NFL team by the selling owner or
20.10owners, declining to zero 15 years after commencement of stadium construction in
20.11increments of 1.2 percent each year. The agreement must provide exceptions for sales
20.12to members of the owners' family and entities and trusts beneficially owned by family
20.13members, sales to employees of equity interests aggregating up to ten percent, sales related
20.14to capital infusions not distributed to the owners, and sales amongst existing owners not
20.15exceeding 20 percent equity interest in the NFL team.
20.16    Subd. 9. Authority's access to NFL team financial information. A notice
20.17provision for a material breach shall be agreed to between the authority and the NFL team.
20.18In the event there is a material breach by the NFL team under the lease or use agreement,
20.19the lease or use agreement must provide the authority access to audited financial statements
20.20of the NFL team and other financial information that the authority deems necessary to
20.21enforce the terms of any lease or use agreements. Any financial information obtained by
20.22the authority under this subdivision is nonpublic data under section 13.02, subdivision 9.
20.23    Subd. 10. NFL team name retained. The lease or use agreement must provide
20.24that the NFL team and NFL will transfer to the state of Minnesota the Minnesota Vikings'
20.25heritage and records, including the name, logo, colors, history, playing records, trophies,
20.26and memorabilia in the event of relocation of the NFL team is in violation of the lease
20.27or use agreement.
20.28    Subd. 11. Stadium design. (a) The authority and the NFL team will strive to build a
20.29stadium that is environmentally and energy efficient and will make an effort to build a
20.30stadium that is eligible to receive the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
20.31(LEED) certification for environmental design, and to the extent practicable, will strive to
20.32make the stadium design architecturally significant.
20.33(b) The stadium design must, to the extent feasible, follow sustainable building
20.34guidelines established under section 16B.325.
20.35(c) The authority and the team must ensure that the stadium be, to the greatest extent
20.36practicable, constructed of American-made steel.
21.1    Subd. 12. Necessary approvals. The authority and the NFL team must secure
21.2any necessary approvals to the terms of the lease and use agreement and the design and
21.3construction plans for the stadium, including prior approval of the NFL.
21.4    Subd. 13. Affordable access. The lease or use agreement must provide for an
21.5agreed-upon number of affordable tickets to the professional sporting events held in the
21.6stadium.
21.7    Subd. 14. Stadium builder's licenses. The authority shall own and retain the
21.8exclusive right to sell stadium builder's licenses in the stadium. The authority will retain
21.9the NFL team to act as the authority's agent in marketing and selling such licenses.
21.10    Subd. 15. Major league soccer. The authority shall, for five years after the first
21.11NFL team home game is played in the stadium, grant the NFL team the exclusive right to
21.12establish major league soccer at the stadium. The authority and the NFL team may enter
21.13into an agreement providing the terms and conditions of such an arrangement, provided:
21.14(1) if any of the NFL team owners whose family owns at least three percent of
21.15the NFL team purchases full or partial ownership in a major league soccer franchise,
21.16such franchise may play in the stadium under a use agreement with similar terms as are
21.17applicable to the NFL team at no additional rent, but including a provision of payment
21.18of game-day costs and reasonable marginal costs incurred by the authority as a result of
21.19the major league soccer team; and
21.20(2) capital improvements required by a major league soccer franchise must be
21.21financed by the owners of the major league soccer team, unless otherwise agreed to by
21.22the authority.
21.23    Subd. 16. NFL team-related entities. Subject to the prior approval of the authority,
21.24which shall not be unreasonably withheld, any of the obligations by the NFL team may
21.25be performed by the NFL team, a related entity, or a third party, and the NFL team, any
21.26entity related to the NFL team or third party may receive any revenues to which the NFL
21.27team is entitled hereunder; provided, however, the NFL team shall remain liable if any
21.28obligations are assigned to a related entity or third party.

21.29    Sec. 16. [473J.17] MUNICIPAL ACTIVITIES.
21.30    Subdivision 1. Property acquisition and disposition. The city may, to the extent
21.31legally permissible, acquire land, air rights, and other property interests within the
21.32development area for the stadium site and stadium infrastructure and convey it to the
21.33authority with or without consideration, prepare a site for development as a stadium, and
21.34acquire and construct any related stadium infrastructure. To the extent property parcels or
22.1interests acquired are more extensive than the stadium infrastructure requirements, the city
22.2may sell or otherwise dispose of the excess.
22.3    Subd. 2. Claims. Except as may be mutually agreed to by the city and the authority,
22.4the city has no interest in or claim to any assets or revenues of the authority.
22.5    Subd. 3. Environmental; planning and zoning. The authority is the responsible
22.6governmental unit for an environmental impact statement for the stadium prepared under
22.7section 116D.04, if an environmental impact statement is necessary. Notwithstanding
22.8section 116D.04, subdivision 2b, and implementing rules: (1) the environmental
22.9impact statement shall not be required to consider alternative stadium sites; and (2) the
22.10environmental impact statement must be determined to be adequate before commencing
22.11work on the foundation of the stadium, but the stadium and stadium infrastructure may
22.12otherwise be started and all preliminary and final government decisions and actions may
22.13be made and taken including, but not limited to, acquiring land; obtaining financing;
22.14granting permits or other land use approvals; entering into grant, lease, or use agreements;
22.15or preparing the site or related stadium infrastructure prior to a determination of the
22.16adequacy of the environmental impact statement.
22.17    Subd. 4. Local government expenditure. The city may make expenditures or
22.18grants for other costs incidental and necessary to further the purposes of this chapter and
22.19may, by agreement, reimburse in whole or in part, any entity that has granted, loaned, or
22.20advanced funds to the city to further the purposes of this chapter. The city may reimburse
22.21the authority or a local governmental entity or make a grant to the authority or such a
22.22governmental unit or be reimbursed by the authority or local governmental entity for site
22.23acquisition, preparation of the site for stadium development, and stadium infrastructure.
22.24    Subd. 5. Municipal authority. The legislature intends that, except as expressly
22.25limited herein, the city may acquire and develop stadium infrastructure, enter into contracts
22.26with the authority and other governmental or nongovernmental entities, appropriate funds,
22.27and make employees, consultants, and other revenues available for those purposes.
22.28    Subd. 6. Stadium Implementation Committee; city review. In order to accomplish
22.29the objectives of this act within the required time frame, it is necessary to establish an
22.30alternative process for municipal land use and development review. It is hereby found
22.31and declared that the construction of a stadium within the development area is consistent
22.32with the adopted area plan, is the preferred stadium location, and is a permitted land use.
22.33This subdivision establishes a procedure for all land use and development reviews and
22.34approvals by the city of Minneapolis for the stadium and related stadium infrastructure
22.35and supersedes all land use and development rules and restrictions and procedures
22.36imposed by other law, charter, or ordinance, including without limitation section 15.99.
23.1No later than 30 days after timely compliance of the city as provided in article 4, section 5,
23.2of this act, the city of Minneapolis shall establish a stadium implementation committee
23.3to make recommendations on the design plans submitted for the stadium, and stadium
23.4infrastructure, and related improvements. The implementation committee must take
23.5action to issue its recommendations within the time frames established in the planning
23.6and construction timetable issued by the authority which shall provide for no less than 60
23.7days for the committee's review. The recommendations of the implementation committee
23.8shall be forwarded to the city of Minneapolis Planning Commission for an advisory
23.9recommendation and then to the city council for final action in a single resolution, which
23.10final action must be taken within 45 days of the submission of the recommendations to the
23.11planning commission. The city council shall not impose any unreasonable conditions on
23.12the recommendations of the implementation committee, nor take any action or impose
23.13any conditions that will result in delay from the time frames established in the planning
23.14and construction timetable or in additional overall costs. Failure of the city council to act
23.15within the 45-day period shall be deemed to be approval. The authority may seek de novo
23.16review in the district court of any city council action. The district court or any appellate
23.17court shall expedite review to the maximum extent possible and timely issue relief, orders,
23.18or opinions as necessary to give effect to the provisions and objectives in this act.

23.19    Sec. 17. [473J.19] PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTION; SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS.
23.20Any real or personal property acquired, owned, leased, controlled, used, or occupied
23.21by the authority for any of the purposes of this chapter, is acquired, owned, leased,
23.22controlled, used, and occupied for public, governmental, and municipal purposes. The
23.23stadium and stadium infrastructure are exempt from ad valorem taxation by the state
23.24or any political subdivision of the state provided that the properties are subject to
23.25special assessments levied by a political subdivision for a local improvement in amounts
23.26proportionate to and not exceeding the special benefit received by the properties from the
23.27improvement. No possible use of any of the properties in any manner different from their
23.28use under this chapter may be considered in determining the special benefit received by
23.29the properties. Notwithstanding section 272.01, subdivision 2, or 273.19, real or personal
23.30property which is subject to a lease or use agreement between the authority and another
23.31person for uses related to the purposes of this chapter, including the operation of the
23.32stadium and related parking facilities, is exempt from taxation regardless of the length of
23.33the lease or use agreement or the characteristics of the entity leasing or using the property.
23.34This section, insofar as it provides an exemption or special treatment, does not apply to
23.35any real property that is leased for residential, business, or commercial development or to
24.1a restaurant that is open for general business more than 200 days a year, or other purposes
24.2different from those contemplated in this chapter.

24.3    Sec. 18. [473J.21] LIQUOR LICENSES.
24.4At the request of the authority, the city may issue intoxicating liquor licenses that are
24.5reasonably requested for the premises of the stadium site. These licenses are in addition to
24.6the number authorized by law. All provisions of chapter 340A not inconsistent with this
24.7section apply to the licenses authorized under this section.

24.8    Sec. 19. [473J.23] LOCAL TAXES.
24.9No new or additional local sales or use tax shall be imposed on sales at the stadium
24.10site unless the tax is applicable throughout the taxing jurisdiction. Except for a tax
24.11imposed under article 7, no new or additional local tax shall be imposed on sales of tickets
24.12and admissions to NFL team, NFL team-owned major league soccer, or other team related
24.13events at the stadium, notwithstanding any law or ordinance, unless the tax is applicable
24.14throughout the taxing jurisdiction. The admissions and amusements tax currently imposed
24.15by the city of Minneapolis pursuant to Laws 1969, chapter 1092, may apply to admissions
24.16for football and NFL team related events, including NFL team-owned major league soccer,
24.17as provided in section 473J.15, subdivision 15, at the stadium.

24.18    Sec. 20. [473J.25] METROPOLITAN SPORTS FACILITIES COMMISSION
24.19ASSETS; LIABILITIES TO AUTHORITY.
24.20    Subdivision 1. Authority expenses. The Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission
24.21shall pay the operating expenses of the authority including salaries, compensation, and
24.22other personnel, office, equipment, consultant and any other costs, until the commission is
24.23abolished pursuant to subdivision 3.
24.24    Subd. 2. Transfer. Within 90 days of the enactment of this chapter, the Metropolitan
24.25Sports Facilities Commission shall pay its outstanding obligations, settle its accounts, and
24.26transfer its remaining assets, liabilities, and obligations to the authority, for its purposes.
24.27    Subd. 3. Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission abolished; interim powers
24.28conferred on authority. Upon transfer to the authority of all remaining assets, liabilities,
24.29and obligations of the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, in subdivision 2, the
24.30Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission is abolished. When the remaining assets,
24.31liabilities, and obligations of the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission have been
24.32transferred to the authority and the commission has been abolished, the powers and duties
24.33of the commission under sections 473.551 to 473.599, and any other law shall devolve
25.1upon the authority, in addition to the powers and duties of the authority under chapter
25.2473J, until the first NFL home game is played at the stadium.
25.3    Subd. 4. Employees. Upon transfer of ownership all persons employed by the
25.4Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission shall be transferred to the Minnesota Stadium
25.5Authority without loss of right or privilege. Nothing in this section shall be construed to
25.6give any such person the right or privilege to continue in the same level or classification
25.7of employment previously held. The Minnesota Stadium Authority may assign any such
25.8person to an employment level and classification which it deems appropriate and desirable
25.9in accordance with its personnel code.

25.10    Sec. 21. EFFECTIVE DATE.
25.11Except as otherwise provided, this article is effective the day following final
25.12enactment.

25.13ARTICLE 2
25.14STATE STADIUM FUNDING

25.15    Section 1. [16A.965] STADIUM APPROPRIATION BONDS.
25.16    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) The definitions in this subdivision and in chapter
25.17473J apply to this section.
25.18(b) "Appropriation bond" means a bond, note, or other similar instrument of the state
25.19payable during a biennium from one or more of the following sources:
25.20(1) money appropriated by law from the general fund, including, without limitation,
25.21revenues deposited in the general fund as provided in articles 4 and 5, in any biennium for
25.22debt service due with respect to obligations described in subdivision 2, paragraph (b);
25.23(2) proceeds of the sale of obligations described in subdivision 2, paragraph (b);
25.24(3) payments received for that purpose under agreements and ancillary arrangements
25.25described in subdivision 2, paragraph (d); and
25.26(4) investment earnings on amounts in clauses (1) to (3).
25.27(c) "Debt service" means the amount payable in any biennium of principal, premium,
25.28if any, and interest on appropriation bonds.
25.29    Subd. 2. Authorization to issue appropriation bonds. (a) Subject to the limitations
25.30of this subdivision, the commissioner may sell and issue appropriation bonds of the state
25.31under this section for public purposes as provided by law, including, in particular, the
25.32financing of all or a portion of the acquisition, construction, improving, and equipping
25.33of the stadium project of the Minnesota Stadium Authority as provided by chapter 473J.
25.34Proceeds of the appropriation bonds must be credited to a special appropriation stadium
26.1bond proceeds fund in the state treasury. Net income from investment of the proceeds,
26.2as estimated by the commissioner, must be credited to the special appropriation stadium
26.3bond proceeds fund.
26.4(b) Appropriation bonds may be sold and issued in amounts that, in the opinion of
26.5the commissioner, are necessary to provide sufficient funds, not to exceed $548,000,000
26.6net of costs of issuance, deposits for debt service reserve funds, and costs of credit
26.7enhancement for achieving the purposes authorized as provided under paragraph (a), and
26.8pay debt service, pay costs of issuance, make deposits to reserve funds, pay the costs
26.9of credit enhancement, or make payments under other agreements entered into under
26.10paragraph (d); provided, however, that appropriation bonds issued and unpaid shall not
26.11exceed $650,000,000 in principal amount, excluding refunding bonds sold and issued
26.12under subdivision 4.
26.13(c) Appropriation bonds may be issued from time to time in one or more series on
26.14the terms and conditions the commissioner determines to be in the best interests of the
26.15state, but the term on any series of appropriation bonds may not exceed 30 years. The
26.16appropriation bonds of each issue and series thereof shall be dated and bear interest,
26.17and may be includable in or excludable from the gross income of the owners for federal
26.18income tax purposes.
26.19(d) At the time of, or in anticipation of, issuing the appropriation bonds, and at any
26.20time thereafter, so long as the appropriation bonds are outstanding, the commissioner may
26.21enter into agreements and ancillary arrangements relating to the appropriation bonds,
26.22including but not limited to trust indentures, grant agreements, lease or use agreements,
26.23operating agreements, management agreements, liquidity facilities, remarketing or
26.24dealer agreements, letter of credit agreements, insurance policies, guaranty agreements,
26.25reimbursement agreements, indexing agreements, or interest exchange agreements. Any
26.26payments made or received according to the agreement or ancillary arrangement shall be
26.27made from or deposited as provided in the agreement or ancillary arrangement. The
26.28determination of the commissioner included in an interest exchange agreement that the
26.29agreement relates to an appropriation bond shall be conclusive.
26.30(e) The commissioner may enter into written agreements or contracts relating to the
26.31continuing disclosure of information necessary to comply with, or facilitate the issuance
26.32of appropriation bonds in accordance with federal securities laws, rules, and regulations,
26.33including Securities and Exchange Commission rules and regulations in Code of Federal
26.34Regulations, title 17, section 240.15c 2-12. An agreement may be in the form of covenants
26.35with purchasers and holders of appropriation bonds set forth in the order or resolution
27.1authorizing the issuance of the appropriation bonds, or a separate document authorized
27.2by the order or resolution.
27.3(f) The appropriation bonds are not subject to chapter 16C.
27.4    Subd. 3. Form; procedure. (a) Appropriation bonds may be issued in the form
27.5of bonds, notes, or other similar instruments, and in the manner provided in section
27.616A.672. In the event that any provision of section 16A.672 conflicts with this section,
27.7this section shall control.
27.8(b) Every appropriation bond shall include a conspicuous statement of the limitation
27.9established in subdivision 6.
27.10(c) Appropriation bonds may be sold at either public or private sale upon such terms
27.11as the commissioner shall determine are not inconsistent with this section and may be sold
27.12at any price or percentage of par value. Any bid received may be rejected.
27.13(d) Appropriation bonds must bear interest at a fixed or variable rate.
27.14(e) Notwithstanding any other law, appropriation bonds issued under this section
27.15shall be fully negotiable.
27.16    Subd. 4. Refunding bonds. The commissioner from time to time may issue
27.17appropriation bonds for the purpose of refunding any appropriation bonds then
27.18outstanding, including the payment of any redemption premiums on the bonds, any
27.19interest accrued or to accrue to the redemption date, and costs related to the issuance and
27.20sale of the refunding bonds. The proceeds of any refunding bonds may, in the discretion of
27.21the commissioner, be applied to the purchase or payment at maturity of the appropriation
27.22bonds to be refunded, to the redemption of the outstanding appropriation bonds on any
27.23redemption date, or to pay interest on the refunding bonds and may, pending application,
27.24be placed in escrow to be applied to the purchase, payment, retirement, or redemption. Any
27.25escrowed proceeds, pending such use, may be invested and reinvested in obligations that
27.26are authorized investments under section 11A.24. The income earned or realized on the
27.27investment may also be applied to the payment of the appropriation bonds to be refunded
27.28or interest or premiums on the refunded appropriation bonds, or to pay interest on the
27.29refunding bonds. After the terms of the escrow have been fully satisfied, any balance of the
27.30proceeds and any investment income may be returned to the general fund or, if applicable,
27.31the special appropriation stadium bond proceeds fund for use in any lawful manner. All
27.32refunding bonds issued under this subdivision must be prepared, executed, delivered, and
27.33secured by appropriations in the same manner as the appropriation bonds to be refunded.
27.34    Subd. 5. Appropriation bonds as legal investments. Any of the following entities
27.35may legally invest any sinking funds, money, or other funds belonging to them or under
27.36their control in any appropriation bonds issued under this section:
28.1(1) the state, the investment board, public officers, municipal corporations, political
28.2subdivisions, and public bodies;
28.3(2) banks and bankers, savings and loan associations, credit unions, trust companies,
28.4savings banks and institutions, investment companies, insurance companies, insurance
28.5associations, and other persons carrying on a banking or insurance business; and
28.6(3) personal representatives, guardians, trustees, and other fiduciaries.
28.7    Subd. 6. No full faith and credit; state not required to make appropriations.
28.8The appropriation bonds are not public debt of the state, and the full faith, credit, and
28.9taxing powers of the state are not pledged to the payment of the appropriation bonds or to
28.10any payment that the state agrees to make under this section. Appropriation bonds shall
28.11not be obligations paid directly, in whole or in part, from a tax of statewide application
28.12on any class of property, income, transaction, or privilege. Appropriation bonds shall be
28.13payable in each fiscal year only from amounts that the legislature may appropriate for debt
28.14service for any fiscal year, provided that nothing in this section shall be construed to
28.15require the state to appropriate funds sufficient to make debt service payments with respect
28.16to the appropriation bonds in any fiscal year. Appropriation bonds shall be canceled and
28.17shall no longer be outstanding on the earlier of (1) the first day of a fiscal year for which
28.18the legislature shall not have appropriated amounts sufficient for debt service, or (2) the
28.19date of final payment of the principal of and interest on the appropriation bonds.
28.20    Subd. 7. Appropriation of proceeds. The proceeds of appropriation bonds and
28.21interest credited to the special appropriation stadium bond proceeds fund are appropriated
28.22to the commissioner for payment of capital expenses, debt service on outstanding
28.23indebtedness of the state, operating and capital reserves of the authority, and the funding
28.24of debt service reserves for the appropriation bonds, each as permitted by state and federal
28.25law, and nonsalary expenses incurred in conjunction with the sale of the appropriation
28.26bonds, and such proceeds may be granted, loaned, or otherwise provided to the authority
28.27for the public purpose provided by subdivision 2, paragraph (a).
28.28    Subd. 8. Commissioner; determination of available revenues. (a) By March 15
28.29of each fiscal year, the commissioner, in consultation with the commissioner of revenue,
28.30shall determine the estimated increase in revenues received from taxes imposed under
28.31chapter 297E over the estimated revenues under the February 2012 revenue forecast for
28.32that fiscal year. For fiscal years after fiscal year 2015, the commissioner shall use the
28.33February 2012 revenue forecast for fiscal year 2015 as the baseline. All calculations under
28.34this paragraph must be made net of estimated refunds of the taxes required to be paid.
28.35(b) Available revenues for purposes of subdivision 9, equal the amount determined
28.36under paragraph (a), less the following amounts for the fiscal year:
29.1(1) the appropriation to principal and interest on appropriation bonds under
29.2subdivision 9, paragraph (a);
29.3(2) the appropriations under article 5 for administration and any successor
29.4appropriation;
29.5(3) the reduction in revenues resulting from the sales tax exemptions under section
29.6297A.71, subdivisions 43 and 44;
29.7(4) reimbursements authorized by section 473J.15, subdivision 2; and
29.8(5) payment of compulsive gambling appropriations under article 5 and any
29.9successor appropriation.
29.10(c) If the estimated increase in revenues under paragraph (a) for the fiscal year are
29.11less than or equal to $52,000,000, then available revenues, as determined under paragraph
29.12(b), are allocated:
29.13(1) 50 percent to be used for appropriations under subdivision 9, paragraph (a); and
29.14(2) 50 percent to be used for appropriations under subdivision 9, paragraph (b)
29.15(d) If the estimated increase in revenues under paragraph (a) for the fiscal year are
29.16greater than $52,000,000, the first $16,000,000 of any available revenues, as determined
29.17under paragraph (b), is allocated for payment of gambling tax rebates under section
29.18297E.02, subdivision 12, and the remainder is allocated as provided under paragraph
29.19(c), clauses (1) and (2).
29.20(e) The provisions of this subdivision apply only after the issuance of appropriation
29.21bonds under subdivision 2.
29.22    Subd. 9. Appropriation for debt service and other purposes. (a) The amount
29.23needed to pay principal and interest on appropriation bonds issued under this section is
29.24appropriated each year from the general fund to the commissioner, subject to repeal,
29.25unallotment under section 16A.152, or cancellation otherwise pursuant to subdivision 6,
29.26for deposit into the bond payment accounts established for such purpose in the special
29.27appropriation stadium bond proceeds fund.
29.28(b) To the extent the commissioner determines revenues are available under the
29.29provisions of subdivision 8, paragraph (b), for the fiscal year, the following amounts
29.30are appropriated from the general fund:
29.31(1) to replenish the amount on deposit in any debt service reserve account established
29.32with respect to the appropriation bonds to the debt service reserve requirement amount as
29.33determined by order of the commissioner; and
29.34(2) to the extent not required under clause (1), for deposit to any general reserve
29.35account established by order of the commissioner for application against any shortfall in
29.36the amounts deposited to the general fund pursuant to section 297A.994.
30.1    Subd. 10. Waiver of immunity. The waiver of immunity by the state provided for
30.2by section 3.751, subdivision 1, shall be applicable to the appropriation bonds and any
30.3ancillary contracts to which the commissioner is a party.
30.4    Subd. 11. Validation. (a) Appropriation bonds issued under this section may be
30.5validated in the manner provided by this subdivision. If comparable appropriation bonds
30.6are judicially determined to be valid, nothing in this subdivision shall be construed
30.7to prevent the sale or delivery of any appropriation bonds or notes without entry of a
30.8judgment of validation by the Minnesota Supreme Court pursuant to this subdivision with
30.9respect to the appropriation bonds authorized under this section.
30.10(b) Any appropriation bonds issued under this section that are validated shall be
30.11validated in the manner provided by this subdivision.
30.12(c) The Minnesota Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction to determine the
30.13validation of appropriation bonds and all matters connected therewith.
30.14(d) The commissioner may determine the commissioner's authority to issue
30.15appropriation bonds and the legality of all proceedings in connection with issuing bonds.
30.16For this purpose, a complaint shall be filed by the commissioner in the Minnesota Supreme
30.17Court against the state and the taxpayers and citizens.
30.18(e) As a condition precedent to filing of a complaint for the validation of
30.19appropriation bonds, the commissioner shall take action providing for the issuance of
30.20appropriation bonds in accordance with law.
30.21(f) The complaint shall set out the state's authority to issue appropriation bonds, the
30.22action or proceeding authorizing the issue and its adoption, all other essential proceedings
30.23had or taken in connection with issuing bonds, the amount of the appropriation bonds to
30.24be issued and the maximum interest they are to bear, and all other pertinent matters.
30.25(g) The Minnesota Supreme Court shall issue an order directed against the state and
30.26taxpayers, citizens, and others having or claiming any right, title, or interest affected by
30.27the issuance of appropriation bonds, or to be affected by the bonds, allowing all persons,
30.28in general terms and without naming them, and the state through its attorney general, to
30.29appear before the Minnesota Supreme Court at a designated time and place and show
30.30why the complaint should not be granted and the proceedings and appropriation bonds
30.31validated. A copy of the complaint and order shall be served on the attorney general at
30.32least 20 days before the time fixed for hearing. The attorney general shall examine the
30.33complaint, and, if it appears or there is reason to believe that it is defective, insufficient, or
30.34untrue, or if in the opinion of the attorney general the issuance of the appropriation bonds
30.35in question has not been duly authorized, defense shall be made by the attorney general as
30.36the attorney general deems appropriate.
31.1(h) Before the date set for hearing, as directed by the Minnesota Supreme Court,
31.2either the clerk of the Minnesota appellate courts or the commissioner shall publish a copy
31.3of the order in a legal newspaper of general circulation in Ramsey County and the state, at
31.4least once each week for two consecutive weeks, commencing with the first publication,
31.5which shall not be less than 20 days before the date set for hearing. By this publication,
31.6all taxpayers, citizens, and others having or claiming any right, title, or interest in the
31.7state, are made parties defendant to the action and the Minnesota Supreme Court has
31.8jurisdiction of them to the same extent as if named as defendants in the complaint and
31.9personally served with process.
31.10(i) Any taxpayer, citizen, or person interested may become a party to the action by
31.11moving against or pleading to the complaint at or before the time set for hearing. The
31.12Minnesota Supreme Court shall determine all questions of law and fact and make orders
31.13that will enable it to properly try and determine the action and render a final judgment
31.14within 30 days of the hearing with the least possible delay.
31.15(j) If the judgment validates appropriation bonds, the judgment is forever conclusive
31.16as to all matters adjudicated and as against all parties affected and all others having or
31.17claiming any right, title, or interest affected by the issuance of appropriation bonds, or to
31.18be affected in any way by issuing the bonds, and the validity of appropriation bonds or of
31.19any revenues pledged for the payment of the bonds, or of the proceedings authorizing the
31.20issuance of the bonds, including any remedies provided for their collection, shall never
31.21be called in question in any court by any person or party.
31.22(k)(1) Appropriation bonds, when validated under this section, shall have stamped
31.23or written on the bonds, by the proper officers of the state issuing them, a statement
31.24in substantially the following form: "This appropriation bond is one of a series of
31.25appropriation bonds which were validated by judgment of the Supreme Court of the State
31.26of Minnesota, rendered on ……. , ....... (year)".
31.27(2) A certified copy of the judgment or decree shall be received as evidence in any
31.28court in this state.
31.29(l) The costs shall be paid by the state, except when a taxpayer, citizen, or other
31.30person contests the action or intervenes, the court may tax the whole or any part of the
31.31costs against the person that is equitable.
31.32(m) A justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court is not disqualified in any validation
31.33action because the justice is a landowner or taxpayer of the state.

31.34    Sec. 2. APPROPRIATION.
32.1If state appropriation bonds have not been issued under Minnesota Statutes, section
32.216A.965, amounts not to exceed the increased revenues estimated by the commissioner
32.3of management and budget under Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.965, subdivision 8,
32.4paragraph (a), are appropriated to the commissioner of management and budget to make
32.5grants to the Minnesota Stadium Authority for stadium costs as defined under Minnesota
32.6Statutes, section 473J.03, subdivision 8.

32.7ARTICLE 3
32.8CONFORMING CHANGES

32.9    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 3.971, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
32.10    Subd. 6. Financial audits. The legislative auditor shall audit the financial
32.11statements of the state of Minnesota required by section 16A.50 and, as resources permit,
32.12shall audit Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, the University of Minnesota, state
32.13agencies, departments, boards, commissions, courts, and other state organizations subject
32.14to audit by the legislative auditor, including the State Agricultural Society, Agricultural
32.15Utilization Research Institute, Enterprise Minnesota, Inc., Minnesota Historical
32.16Society, Labor Interpretive Center, Minnesota Partnership for Action Against Tobacco,
32.17Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, Metropolitan Airports Commission, and
32.18Metropolitan Mosquito Control District. Financial audits must be conducted according to
32.19generally accepted government auditing standards. The legislative auditor shall see that
32.20all provisions of law respecting the appropriate and economic use of public funds are
32.21complied with and may, as part of a financial audit or separately, investigate allegations
32.22of noncompliance.

32.23    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.55, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
32.24    Subdivision 1. Not public classification. The following data received, created, or
32.25maintained by or for publicly owned and operated convention facilities, or civic center
32.26authorities, or the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission are classified as nonpublic
32.27data pursuant to section 13.02, subdivision 9; or private data on individuals pursuant
32.28to section 13.02, subdivision 12:
32.29(a) a letter or other documentation from any person who makes inquiry to or who is
32.30contacted by the facility regarding the availability of the facility for staging events;
32.31(b) identity of firms and corporations which contact the facility;
32.32(c) type of event which they wish to stage in the facility;
32.33(d) suggested terms of rentals; and
32.34(e) responses of authority staff to these inquiries.

33.1    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 340A.404, subdivision 1, is
33.2amended to read:
33.3    Subdivision 1. Cities. (a) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license to
33.4the following establishments located within its jurisdiction:
33.5(1) hotels;
33.6(2) restaurants;
33.7(3) bowling centers;
33.8(4) clubs or congressionally chartered veterans organizations with the approval of
33.9the commissioner, provided that the organization has been in existence for at least three
33.10years and liquor sales will only be to members and bona fide guests, except that a club
33.11may permit the general public to participate in a wine tasting conducted at the club under
33.12section 340A.419; and
33.13(5) sports facilities located on land owned by the Metropolitan Sports Commission;
33.14and
33.15(6) exclusive liquor stores.
33.16(b) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license, an on-sale wine license,
33.17or an on-sale malt liquor license to a theater within the city, notwithstanding any law, local
33.18ordinance, or charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph authorizes sales on
33.19all days of the week to persons attending events at the theater.
33.20(c) A city may issue an on-sale intoxicating liquor license, an on-sale wine license,
33.21or an on-sale malt liquor license to a convention center within the city, notwithstanding
33.22any law, local ordinance, or charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph
33.23authorizes sales on all days of the week to persons attending events at the convention
33.24center. This paragraph does not apply to convention centers located in the seven-county
33.25metropolitan area.
33.26(d) A city may issue an on-sale wine license and an on-sale malt liquor license to
33.27a person who is the owner of a summer collegiate league baseball team, or to a person
33.28holding a concessions or management contract with the owner, for beverage sales at a
33.29ballpark or stadium located within the city for the purposes of summer collegiate league
33.30baseball games at the ballpark or stadium, notwithstanding any law, local ordinance, or
33.31charter provision. A license issued under this paragraph authorizes sales on all days of the
33.32week to persons attending baseball games at the ballpark or stadium.

33.33    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 352.01, subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
33.34    Subd. 2a. Included employees. (a) "State employee" includes:
33.35    (1) employees of the Minnesota Historical Society;
34.1    (2) employees of the State Horticultural Society;
34.2    (3) employees of the Minnesota Crop Improvement Association;
34.3    (4) employees of the adjutant general whose salaries are paid from federal funds and
34.4who are not covered by any federal civilian employees retirement system;
34.5    (5) employees of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities who are employed
34.6under the university or college activities program;
34.7    (6) currently contributing employees covered by the system who are temporarily
34.8employed by the legislature during a legislative session or any currently contributing
34.9employee employed for any special service as defined in subdivision 2b, clause (8);
34.10    (7) employees of the legislature who are appointed without a limit on the duration
34.11of their employment and persons employed or designated by the legislature or by a
34.12legislative committee or commission or other competent authority to conduct a special
34.13inquiry, investigation, examination, or installation;
34.14    (8) trainees who are employed on a full-time established training program
34.15performing the duties of the classified position for which they will be eligible to receive
34.16immediate appointment at the completion of the training period;
34.17    (9) employees of the Minnesota Safety Council;
34.18    (10) any employees who are on authorized leave of absence from the Transit
34.19Operating Division of the former Metropolitan Transit Commission and who are employed
34.20by the labor organization which is the exclusive bargaining agent representing employees
34.21of the Transit Operating Division;
34.22    (11) employees of the Metropolitan Council, Metropolitan Parks and Open Space
34.23Commission, Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, or Metropolitan Mosquito
34.24Control Commission unless excluded under subdivision 2b or are covered by another
34.25public pension fund or plan under section 473.415, subdivision 3;
34.26    (12) judges of the Tax Court;
34.27    (13) personnel who were employed on June 30, 1992, by the University of
34.28Minnesota in the management, operation, or maintenance of its heating plant facilities,
34.29whose employment transfers to an employer assuming operation of the heating plant
34.30facilities, so long as the person is employed at the University of Minnesota heating plant
34.31by that employer or by its successor organization;
34.32    (14) personnel who are employed as seasonal employees in the classified or
34.33unclassified service;
34.34    (15) persons who are employed by the Department of Commerce as a peace officer
34.35in the Insurance Fraud Prevention Division under section 45.0135 who have attained the
34.36mandatory retirement age specified in section 43A.34, subdivision 4;
35.1    (16) employees of the University of Minnesota unless excluded under subdivision
35.22b, clause (3);
35.3    (17) employees of the Middle Management Association whose employment began
35.4after July 1, 2007, and to whom section 352.029 does not apply; and
35.5    (18) employees of the Minnesota Government Engineers Council to whom section
35.6352.029 does not apply.
35.7    (b) Employees specified in paragraph (a), clause (13), are included employees under
35.8paragraph (a) if employer and employee contributions are made in a timely manner in the
35.9amounts required by section 352.04. Employee contributions must be deducted from
35.10salary. Employer contributions are the sole obligation of the employer assuming operation
35.11of the University of Minnesota heating plant facilities or any successor organizations to
35.12that employer.

35.13    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 473.121, subdivision 5a, is amended to read:
35.14    Subd. 5a. Metropolitan agency. "Metropolitan agency" means the Metropolitan
35.15Parks and Open Space Commission, and the Metropolitan Airports Commission, and
35.16Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission.

35.17    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 473.164, is amended to read:
35.18473.164 SPORTS, AIRPORT COMMISSIONS TO PAY COUNCIL COSTS.
35.19    Subdivision 1. Annually reimburse. The Metropolitan Sports Facilities
35.20Commission and the Metropolitan Airports Commission shall annually reimburse the
35.21council for costs incurred by the council in the discharge of its responsibilities relating to
35.22the commission. The costs may be charged against any revenue sources of the commission
35.23as determined by the commission.
35.24    Subd. 2. Estimates, budget, transfer. On or before May 1 of each year, the council
35.25shall transmit to each the commission an estimate of the costs which the council will
35.26incur in the discharge of its responsibilities related to the commission in the next budget
35.27year including, without limitation, costs in connection with the preparation, review,
35.28implementation and defense of plans, programs and budgets of the commission. Each The
35.29commission shall include the estimates in its budget for the next budget year and may
35.30transmit its comments concerning the estimated amount to the council during the budget
35.31review process. Prior to December 15 of each year, the amount budgeted by each the
35.32commission for the next budget year may be changed following approval by the council.
35.33During each budget year, the commission shall transfer budgeted funds to the council in
35.34advance when requested by the council.
36.1    Subd. 3. Final statement. At the conclusion of each budget year, the council, in
36.2cooperation with each the commission, shall adopt a final statement of costs incurred by the
36.3council for each the commission. Where costs incurred in the budget year have exceeded
36.4the amount budgeted, each the commission shall transfer to the council the additional
36.5moneys needed to pay the amount of the costs in excess of the amount budgeted, and shall
36.6include a sum in its next budget. Any excess of budgeted costs over actual costs may be
36.7retained by the council and applied to the payment of budgeted costs in the next year.

36.8    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 473.565, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
36.9    Subdivision 1. In MSRS; exceptions. All employees of the former commission
36.10shall be members of the Minnesota State Retirement System with respect to service
36.11rendered on or after May 17, 1977, except as provided in this section.

36.12    Sec. 8. REPEALER.
36.13Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 473.551; 473.552; 473.553, subdivisions 1, 2, 3,
36.144, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13; 473.556, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12,
36.1513, 14, 16, and 17; 473.561; 473.564, subdivisions 2 and 3; 473.572; 473.581; 473.592,
36.16subdivision 1; 473.595; 473.598; 473.599; and 473.76, are repealed.

36.17    Sec. 9. EFFECTIVE DATE.
36.18This article is effective June 30, 2016.

36.19ARTICLE 4
36.20MINNEAPOLIS CONVENTION CENTER

36.21    Section 1. [297A.994] CITY OF MINNEAPOLIS SALES TAX; ALLOCATION
36.22OF REVENUES.
36.23    Subdivision 1. Scope. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 297A.99,
36.24subdivision 11, the provisions of this section govern the remittance of the proceeds of
36.25taxes imposed by the city of Minneapolis under the special law.
36.26    Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For purposes of this section, the following definitions
36.27apply.
36.28(b) "City" means the city of Minneapolis.
36.29(c) "Special law" means Laws 1986, chapter 396, sections 4 and 5, as amended.
36.30(d) "Tax" means the sales taxes imposed by the city under the special law.
36.31(e) The terms defined under section 473J.03 apply for purposes of this section.
37.1    Subd. 3. General allocation of revenues. The commissioner shall apply the
37.2revenues from the taxes as follows:
37.3(1) the commissioner must deduct the costs of collecting and administering the taxes,
37.4according to the applicable law and agreements between the commissioner and the city.
37.5For revenues from the general sales tax, the commissioner must deduct a proportionate
37.6share of the cost of collection, as described in section 297A.99, subdivision 11;
37.7(2) after deducting the costs in clause (1), the commissioner must deduct refunds of
37.8any of these taxes due to taxpayers, if any;
37.9(3) after making the deductions provided in clause (2), notwithstanding the
37.10provisions of any agreement between the commissioner and the city providing for
37.11collection and remittance of these taxes, the commissioner must deposit to the general
37.12fund the amounts specified in subdivision 4; and
37.13(4) after depositing to the general fund under clause (3) as specified in subdivision
37.144, the commissioner must remit the remainder to the city for the uses provided in the
37.15special law.
37.16    Subd. 4. General fund allocations. (a) The commissioner must deposit to the
37.17general fund the following amounts, as required by subdivision 3, clause (3):
37.18(1) for state bond debt service support beginning in calendar year 2021, and for each
37.19calendar year thereafter through calendar year 2046, proportionate amounts periodically
37.20so that not later than December 31, 2046, an aggregate annual amount equal to a present
37.21value of $150,000,000 has been deposited in the general fund. To determine aggregate
37.22present value, the commissioner must consult with the commissioner of management and
37.23budget regarding the present value dates, discount rate or rates, and schedules of annual
37.24amounts. The present value date or dates must be based on the date or dates bonds are
37.25sold under section 16A.965, or the date or dates other state funds, if any, are deposited
37.26into the construction fund. The discount rate or rates must be based on the true interest
37.27cost of the bonds issued under section 16A.965, or an equivalent 30-year bond index, as
37.28determined by the commissioner of management and budget. The schedule of annual
37.29amounts must be certified to the commissioner by the commissioner of management and
37.30budget and the finance officer of the city;
37.31(2) for the capital improvement reserve appropriation to stadium authority beginning
37.32in calendar year 2021, and for each calendar year thereafter through calendar year 2046,
37.33so that not later than January 1, 2022, and as of January 1 of each following year, an
37.34aggregate annual amount equal to the amount paid by the state for calendar year 2021,
37.35under section 473J.13, subdivision 4, increased each year by an annual adjustment factor;
38.1(3) for the operating expense appropriation to stadium authority beginning in
38.2calendar year 2021, and for each calendar year thereafter through calendar year 2046,
38.3so that not later than January 1, 2022, and as of January 1 of each following year, an
38.4aggregate annual amount equal to the amount paid by the state for calendar year 2021
38.5under section 473J.13, subdivision 2, increased each year by an annual adjustment factor;
38.6(4) for recapture of NFL team advances for capital improvements and operating
38.7expenses for calendar years 2016 through 2020 beginning in calendar year 2021, and
38.8for each calendar year thereafter until all amounts under this clause have been paid,
38.9proportionate amounts periodically until an aggregate amount equal to the present value of
38.10all amounts paid by the NFL team have been deposited in the general fund. To determine
38.11the present value of the amounts paid by the NFL team to the authority and the present
38.12value of amounts deposited to the general fund under this clause, the commissioner shall
38.13consult with the commissioner of management and budget and the NFL team regarding the
38.14present value dates, discount rate or rates, and schedule of annual amounts. The present
38.15value dates must be based on the dates NFL team funds are paid to the authority, or the
38.16dates the commissioner of revenue deposits taxes for purposes of this clause to the general
38.17fund. The discount rates must be based on the reasonably equivalent cost of NFL team
38.18funds as determined by the commissioner of management and budget after consulting with
38.19the NFL team. The schedule of annual amounts must be revised to reflect amounts paid
38.20under section 473J.09, subdivision 13, and taxes deposited to the general fund from time
38.21to time under this clause, and the schedule and revised schedules must be certified to the
38.22commissioner by the commissioner of management and budget and the finance officer
38.23of the city, and are transferred as accrued from the general fund to the NFL team, for
38.24repayment of advances made by the NFL team to the city of Minneapolis; and
38.25(5) to capture increases in taxes imposed under the special law, for the benefit
38.26of the stadium authority, beginning in calendar year 2013 and for each calendar year
38.27thereafter through 2046, there shall be deposited to the general fund by February 15 of
38.28each following year, amounts calculated by the commissioner under this clause. For
38.29each year, the commissioner shall determine the excess, if any, of the taxes received
38.30by the commissioner over the benchmark scheduled amounts of the taxes, as described
38.31in this section. The benchmark scheduled amounts for each year must be based on the
38.32actual amount of the taxes for calendar year 2011 inflated for each subsequent year at an
38.33annual rate of two percent, according to a schedule certified to the commissioner by the
38.34commissioner of management and budget and the finance officer of the city. The amounts
38.35to be deposited to the general fund by the commissioner for each year equal:
39.1(i) zero for the amount of the taxes for the year up to a scheduled benchmark of
39.2$1,000,000, inflated at two percent per year, in excess of the taxes for calendar year 2011;
39.3(ii) 50 percent times the difference, if any, by which the amount of the taxes for
39.4the year exceeds the scheduled benchmark in item (i), as inflated, but not greater than a
39.5scheduled benchmark of $3,000,000, inflated at two percent per year, in excess of the
39.6taxes for calendar year 2011; and
39.7(iii) 25 percent times the difference, if any, by which the amount of the taxes for the
39.8year exceeds the scheduled benchmark of $3,000,000, inflated at two percent per year, in
39.9excess of the taxes for calendar year 2011.
39.10(b) The annual adjustment factor for purposes of this section and the special law
39.11for any year equals the increase, if any, in the amount of these taxes received by the
39.12commissioner in the preceding year over the amount received in the year prior to the
39.13preceding year, expressed as a percentage of the amount received in the year prior to the
39.14preceding year; provided, that the adjustment factor for any year must not be less than
39.15zero percent nor more than five percent.

39.16    Sec. 2. Laws 1986, chapter 396, section 4, as amended by Laws 1987, chapter 55,
39.17sections 5 and 6, and Laws 2009, chapter 88, article 4, sections 11 and 12, is amended to
39.18read:
39.19    Sec. 4. SALES AND USE TAX.
39.20    Subdivision 1. Imposition. Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 477A.016,
39.21or any other contrary provision of law, ordinance, or city charter, upon approval by
39.22the city's board of estimate and taxation by a vote of at least five members, the city of
39.23Minneapolis may by ordinance impose an additional sales tax of up to one-half of one
39.24percent on sales taxable pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, chapter 297A that occur within
39.25the city, and may also by ordinance impose an additional compensating use tax of up to
39.26one-half of one percent on uses of property within the city, the sale of which would be
39.27subject to the additional sales tax but for the fact such property was sold outside the city.
39.28The tax may not be imposed on gross receipts from sales of intoxicating liquor that are
39.29exempt from taxation under sections 297A.25 to 297A.257 or other any provision of
39.30chapter 297A exempting sales of intoxicating liquor and use from taxation, including
39.31amendments adopted after enactment of this act.
39.32    For purposes of this subdivision, sales that occur within the city shall not include (a)
39.33the sale of tangible personal property (i) which, without intermediate use, is shipped or
39.34transported outside Minneapolis by the purchaser and thereafter used in a trade or business
39.35or is stored, processed, fabricated or manufactured into, attached to or incorporated into
40.1other tangible personal property transported or shipped outside Minneapolis and thereafter
40.2used in a trade or business outside Minneapolis, and which is not thereafter returned to a
40.3point within Minneapolis, except in the course of interstate or intrastate commerce (storage
40.4shall not constitute intermediate use); or (ii) which the seller delivers to a common carrier
40.5for delivery outside Minneapolis, places in the United States mail or parcel post directed
40.6to the purchaser outside Minneapolis, or delivers to the purchaser outside Minneapolis by
40.7means of the seller's own delivery vehicles, and which is not thereafter returned to a point
40.8within Minneapolis, except in the course of interstate or intrastate commerce; or (b) sales
40.9which would be described in clause (e) or (u) of Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.25,
40.10subdivision 1 297A.68, subdivision 11 or 16, if the word "Minneapolis" were substituted
40.11for the words "Minnesota" or "state of Minnesota" in such clauses subdivisions. A tax
40.12may be imposed under this section only if the taxes imposed under section 5 are imposed
40.13at the maximum rate allowed under that section. The tax authorized by this section shall
40.14be imposed, until December 31, 2046. The tax may be further imposed through December
40.1531, 2050, by order of the commissioner of management and budget, as specified under
40.16article 7, section 1. The tax may be imposed and may be adjusted periodically by the city
40.17council in conformity with Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.99, subdivision 12, such that
40.18the rate imposed, rounded to the next highest one-tenth of one percent, does not exceed
40.19the rate estimated to be required to produce produces revenue sufficient to finance the
40.20costs purposes described in subdivision subdivisions 3 and 4, but in no case may the rate
40.21exceed one-half of one percent.
40.22    Subd. 2. Enforcement; collection. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b),
40.23these taxes shall be subject to the same interest penalties and other rules imposed
40.24under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 297A. The commissioner of revenue may enter into
40.25appropriate agreements with the city to provide for collection of these taxes by the state
40.26on behalf of the city. The commissioner may charge the city a reasonable fee for its
40.27collection from the proceeds of any taxes, as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section
40.28297A.99, subdivision 9.
40.29    (b) A taxpayer located outside of the city of Minneapolis who collects use tax under
40.30this section in an amount that does not exceed $10 in a reporting period is not required to
40.31remit that tax until the amount of use tax collected is $10.
40.32    Subd. 3. Use of property. Revenues received from the tax may only be used:
40.33    (1) to pay costs of collection;
40.34    (2) (1) to pay or secure the payment of any principal of, premium or interest on
40.35bonds issued in accordance with this act;
41.1    (3) (2) to pay costs to acquire, design, equip, construct, improve, maintain, operate,
41.2administer, or promote the convention center or related facilities, and other capital projects
41.3or economic developments under subdivision 4, including financing costs related to them;
41.4    (4) (3) to pay reasonable and appropriate costs determined by the city to replace
41.5housing and the ice arena removed from the site;
41.6    (5) (4) to maintain reserves for the foregoing purposes deemed reasonable and
41.7appropriate by the city; and
41.8(6) (5) to fund projects and for other purposes under subdivision 4.
41.9    Money for replacement housing shall be made available by the city only for new
41.10construction, conversion of nonresidential buildings, and for rehabilitation of vacant
41.11residential structures, only if all of the units in the newly constructed building, converted
41.12nonresidential building, or rehabilitated residential structure are to be used for replacement
41.13housing.
41.14    Subd. 4. Minneapolis downtown and neighborhood projects. (a) For revenues
41.15collected in calendar years 2009 and 2010, to the extent that revenues from the tax
41.16authorized in subdivision 1 exceeds the amount needed to fund the purposes in subdivision
41.173, the city may use the excess revenue to fund any city services. The total amount used in
41.18both years for this purpose may not exceed the total amount of aid and credit reductions
41.19under Minnesota Statutes, sections 273.1384 and 477A.011 to 477A.014 in calendar years
41.202008, 2009, and 2010 due to a governor's unallotment or due to statutory reductions.
41.21(b) Beginning with revenues collected in calendar year 2011, to the extent that
41.22revenues from the tax taxes authorized in subdivision 1 exceeds or in section 5 exceed
41.23the amount needed to fund the purposes in subdivision 3, the city may use the excess
41.24revenue in any year to fund capital projects to further residential, cultural, commercial,
41.25and economic development in both downtown Minneapolis and the Minneapolis
41.26neighborhoods, to fund other city expenditures in support of the capital projects, or
41.27for other economic development, provided the city may direct excess revenue first to
41.28convention center debt, operations, capital improvements, and marketing. The city may
41.29issue bonds to fund any such projects or improvements using these taxes or any other
41.30available city resources to finance or secure the bonds.

41.31    Sec. 3. Laws 1986, chapter 396, section 5, as amended by Laws 2001, First Special
41.32Session chapter 5, article 12, section 87, is amended to read:
41.33    Sec. 5. LIQUOR, LODGING, AND RESTAURANT TAXES.
41.34    The city may, by resolution, levy in addition to taxes authorized by other law:
42.1    (1) a sales tax of not more than three percent on the gross receipts on retail on-sales
42.2of intoxicating liquor and fermented malt beverages described in section 473.592
42.3occurring in the when sold at licensed on-sale liquor establishments located within the
42.4downtown taxing area, provided that this tax may not be imposed if sales of intoxicating
42.5liquor and fermented malt beverages are exempt from taxation under chapter 297A;
42.6    (2) a sales tax of not more than three percent on the gross receipts from the furnishing
42.7for consideration of lodging described in section 473.592 for a period of less than 30 days
42.8at a hotel, motel, rooming house, tourist court, or trailer camp located within the city by a
42.9hotel or motel which has more than 50 rooms available for lodging; the tax imposed under
42.10this clause shall be at a rate that, when added to the sum of the rate of the sales tax imposed
42.11under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 297A, the rate of the sales tax imposed under section 4,
42.12and the rate of any other taxes on lodging in the city of Minneapolis, equals 13 percent; and
42.13    (3) a sales tax of not more than three percent on the gross receipts on all sales of food
42.14primarily for consumption on or off the premises by restaurants and places of refreshment
42.15as defined by resolution of the city that occur within the downtown taxing area.
42.16The taxes authorized by this section shall be imposed until January 1, 2047. The taxes
42.17may be further imposed through December 31, 2050, by order of the commissioner of
42.18management and budget, under the authority granted under article 7, section 1.The taxes
42.19shall be imposed and may be adjusted periodically by the city council such that the rates
42.20imposed, produce revenue sufficient, together with the tax imposed under section 4, to
42.21finance the purposes described in section 4, subdivisions 3 and 4. These taxes shall be
42.22applied, first, as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.994, subdivision 3, clauses
42.23(1) to (3), and then, solely to pay costs of collection and to pay or, secure, maintain, and
42.24fund the payment of any principal of, premium on, and interest on any bonds or any
42.25costs referred to other purposes in section 4, subdivision 3 or 4. The commissioner of
42.26revenue may enter into appropriate agreements with the city to provide for the collection
42.27of these taxes by the state on behalf of the city. The commissioner may charge the city
42.28a reasonable fee for its collection from the proceeds of any taxes. These taxes shall be
42.29subject to the same interest penalties and enforcement provisions as the taxes imposed
42.30under section 473.592 Minnesota Statutes, chapter 297A.

42.31    Sec. 4. EFFECTIVE DATE; LOCAL APPROVAL.
42.32This article is effective the day after the governing body of the city of Minneapolis
42.33and its chief clerical officer comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions
42.342 and 3. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the city of Minneapolis and its chief
43.1clerical officer have 30 calendar days following final enactment of this act, to comply with
43.2Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

43.3    Sec. 5. SEVERABILITY; SAVINGS.
43.4If any part of this article is found to be invalid because it is in conflict with a
43.5provision of the Minnesota Constitution or for any other reason, all other provisions of
43.6this article shall remain valid and any rights, remedies, and privileges that have been
43.7otherwise accrued by this article, shall remain in effect and may be proceeded with and
43.8concluded under the provisions of this article.

43.9    Sec. 6. LOCAL SALES TAX REQUIREMENTS NOT TO APPLY.
43.10 The taxes authorized under Laws 1986, chapter 396, sections 4 and 5, as amended,
43.11are exempt from the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.99, subdivisions
43.122 and 3.

43.13ARTICLE 5
43.14LAWFUL GAMBLING

43.15    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.01, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
43.16    Subd. 7. Gambling product. "Gambling product" means bingo hard cards, bingo
43.17paper sheets, or linked bingo paper sheets, or electronic linked bingo games; pull-tabs;
43.18electronic pull-tab games; tipboards; paddle tickets and paddle ticket cards; raffle tickets;
43.19or any other ticket, card, board, placard, device, or token that represents a chance, for
43.20which consideration is paid, to win a prize.
43.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

43.22    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.01, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
43.23    Subd. 8. Gross receipts. "Gross receipts" means all receipts derived from lawful
43.24gambling activity including, but not limited to, the following items:
43.25(1) gross sales of bingo hard cards and, paper sheets, linked bingo paper sheets, and
43.26electronic linked bingo games before reduction for prizes, expenses, shortages, free plays,
43.27or any other charges or offsets;
43.28(2) the ideal gross of pull-tab, electronic pull-tab games, and tipboard deals or games
43.29less the value of unsold and defective tickets and before reduction for prizes, expenses,
43.30shortages, free plays, or any other charges or offsets;
43.31(3) gross sales of raffle tickets and paddle tickets before reduction for prizes,
43.32expenses, shortages, free plays, or any other charges or offsets;
44.1(4) admission, commission, cover, or other charges imposed on participants in
44.2lawful gambling activity as a condition for or cost of participation; and
44.3(5) interest, dividends, annuities, profit from transactions, or other income derived
44.4from the accumulation or use of gambling proceeds.
44.5Gross receipts does not include proceeds from rental under section 349.18,
44.6subdivision 3
.
44.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

44.8    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.01, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
44.9    Subd. 9. Ideal gross. "Ideal gross" means the total amount of receipts that would be
44.10received if every individual ticket in the pull-tab, electronic pull-tab games or tipboard
44.11deal, paddle wheel game, and raffle ticket was sold at its face value. In the calculation of
44.12ideal gross and prizes, a free play ticket pull-tab or electronic pull-tab shall be valued at
44.13face value. "Ideal gross" also means the total amount of receipts that would be received
44.14if every bingo paper sheet, linked bingo paper sheet, and electronic linked bingo games
44.15were sold at face value.
44.16EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

44.17    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
44.18    Subdivision 1. Imposition. A tax is imposed on all lawful gambling other than (1)
44.19paper or electronic pull-tab deals or games; (2) tipboard deals or games; and (3) electronic
44.20linked bingo; and (4) items listed in section 297E.01, subdivision 8, clauses (4) and (5), at
44.21the rate of 8.5 percent on the gross receipts as defined in section 297E.01, subdivision 8,
44.22less prizes actually paid. The tax imposed by this subdivision is in lieu of the tax imposed
44.23by section 297A.62 and all local taxes and license fees except a fee authorized under
44.24section 349.16, subdivision 8, or a tax authorized under subdivision 5.
44.25The tax imposed under this subdivision is payable by the organization or party
44.26conducting, directly or indirectly, the gambling.
44.27EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for games reported as played after
44.28June 30, 2012.

44.29    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
44.30    Subd. 3. Collection; disposition. (a) Taxes imposed by this section other than in
44.31subdivision 4 are due and payable to the commissioner when the gambling tax return
44.32is required to be filed. Taxes imposed by subdivision 4 are due and payable to the
45.1commissioner on or before the last business day of the month following the month in
45.2which the taxable sale was made. Distributors must file their monthly sales figures with
45.3the commissioner on a form prescribed by the commissioner. Returns covering the taxes
45.4imposed under this section must be filed with the commissioner on or before the 20th day
45.5of the month following the close of the previous calendar month. The commissioner
45.6may require that the returns be filed via magnetic media or electronic data transfer. The
45.7proceeds, along with the revenue received from all license fees and other fees under
45.8sections 349.11 to 349.191, 349.211, and 349.213, must be paid to the commissioner of
45.9management and budget for deposit in the general fund.
45.10(b) The sales tax imposed by chapter 297A on the sale of pull-tabs and tipboards by
45.11the distributor is imposed on the retail sales price. The retail sale of pull-tabs or tipboards
45.12by the organization is exempt from taxes imposed by chapter 297A and is exempt from all
45.13local taxes and license fees except a fee authorized under section 349.16, subdivision 8.
45.14(c) One-half of one percent of the revenue deposited in the general fund under
45.15paragraph (a), is appropriated to the commissioner of human services for the compulsive
45.16gambling treatment program established under section 245.98. One-half of one percent
45.17of the revenue deposited in the general fund under paragraph (a), is appropriated to
45.18the commissioner of human services for a grant to the state affiliate recognized by
45.19the National Council on Problem Gambling to increase public awareness of problem
45.20gambling, education and training for individuals and organizations providing effective
45.21treatment services to problem gamblers and their families, and research relating to problem
45.22gambling. Money appropriated by this paragraph must supplement and must not replace
45.23existing state funding for these programs.
45.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

45.25    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
45.26    Subd. 6. Combined net receipts tax. In addition to the taxes imposed under
45.27subdivisions 1 and 4, a tax is imposed on the combined receipts of the organization. As
45.28used in this section, "combined net receipts" is the sum of the organization's gross receipts
45.29from lawful gambling less gross receipts directly derived from the conduct of paper bingo,
45.30raffles, and paddle wheels, as defined in section 297E.01, subdivision 8, and less the net
45.31prizes actually paid, other than prizes actually paid for paper bingo, raffles, and paddle
45.32wheels, for the fiscal year. The combined net receipts of an organization are subject to a
45.33tax computed according to the following schedule:
46.1
46.2
46.3
If the combined net
receipts for the fiscal year
are:
The tax is:
46.4
Not over $500,000$87,500
zero6.89 percent
46.5
46.6
46.7
Over $500,000$87,500,
but not over $700,000
$122,500
1.7$6,029 plus 13.78 percent of the
amount over $500,000$87,500, but
not over $700,000$122,500
46.8
46.9
46.10
46.11
Over $700,000$122,500,
but not over $900,000
$157,500
$3,400$10,852 plus 3.420.67
percent of the amount over $700,000
$122,500, but not over $900,000
$157,500
46.12
46.13
46.14
Over $900,000$157,500
$10,200$18,086 plus 5.127.56
percent of the amount over $900,000
$157,500
46.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

46.16    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, is amended by adding a subdivision
46.17to read:
46.18    Subd. 6a. Unaccounted games. If a licensed distributor cannot account for a
46.19pull-tab game, an electronic pull-tab game, a tipboard deal, paddletickets, an electronic
46.20linked bingo game, bingo paper sheets, or linked bingo paper sheets, the distributor must
46.21report the sheets or games to the commissioner as lost and remit a tax of six percent
46.22on the ideal gross of the sheets or games.
46.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

46.24    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
46.25    Subd. 7. Untaxed gambling product. (a) In addition to penalties or criminal
46.26sanctions imposed by this chapter, a person, organization, or business entity possessing or
46.27selling a pull-tab, electronic pull-tab game or tipboard upon which the tax imposed by
46.28subdivision 4 this chapter has not been paid is liable for a tax of six percent of the ideal
46.29gross of each pull-tab, electronic pull-tab game, or tipboard. The tax on a partial deal
46.30must be assessed as if it were a full deal.
46.31(b) In addition to penalties and criminal sanctions imposed by this chapter, a person
46.32not licensed by the board who conducts bingo, linked bingo, electronic linked bingo,
46.33raffles, or paddle wheel games is liable for a tax of six percent of the gross receipts
46.34from that activity.
46.35(c) The tax must be assessed by the commissioner. An assessment must be
46.36considered a jeopardy assessment or jeopardy collection as provided in section 270C.36.
46.37The commissioner shall assess the tax based on personal knowledge or information
47.1available to the commissioner. The commissioner shall mail to the taxpayer at the
47.2taxpayer's last known address, or serve in person, a written notice of the amount of tax,
47.3demand its immediate payment, and, if payment is not immediately made, collect the tax
47.4by any method described in chapter 270C, except that the commissioner need not await the
47.5expiration of the times specified in chapter 270C. The tax assessed by the commissioner
47.6is presumed to be valid and correctly determined and assessed. The burden is upon the
47.7taxpayer to show its incorrectness or invalidity. The tax imposed under this subdivision
47.8does not apply to gambling that is exempt from taxation under subdivision 2.
47.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

47.10    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
47.11    Subd. 10. Refunds; appropriation. A person who has, under this chapter, paid
47.12to the commissioner an amount of tax for a period in excess of the amount legally due
47.13for that period, may file with the commissioner a claim for a refund of the excess. The
47.14amount necessary to pay the refunds under this subdivision and subdivision 4, paragraph
47.15(d), is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner.
47.16EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

47.17    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
47.18    Subd. 11. Unplayed or Defective pull-tabs or tipboards gambling products. If a
47.19deal of pull-tabs or tipboards registered with the board or bar coded in accordance with this
47.20chapter and chapter 349 and upon which the tax imposed by subdivision 4 has been paid is
47.21returned unplayed to the distributor, the commissioner shall allow a refund of the tax paid.
47.22If a defective deal registered with the board or bar coded in accordance with this
47.23chapter and chapter 349 and upon which the taxes have been paid is returned to the
47.24manufacturer, the distributor shall submit to the commissioner of revenue certification
47.25from the manufacturer that the deal was returned and in what respect it was defective.
47.26The certification must be on a form prescribed by the commissioner and must contain
47.27additional information the commissioner requires.
47.28The commissioner may require that no refund under this subdivision be made
47.29unless the that all defective and returned pull-tabs or, tipboards have been, paddle tickets,
47.30paper bingo sheets, and linked bingo paper sheets be set aside for inspection by the
47.31commissioner's employee.
47.32Reductions in previously paid taxes authorized by this subdivision must be made
47.33when and in the manner prescribed by the commissioner.
48.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for games sold by a licensed
48.2distributor after June 30, 2012.

48.3    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.13, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
48.4    Subd. 5. Untaxed gambling equipment. It is a gross misdemeanor for a person to
48.5possess gambling equipment for resale in this state that has not been stamped or bar-coded
48.6in accordance with this chapter and chapter 349 and upon which the taxes imposed by
48.7chapter 297A or section 297E.02, subdivision 4, have not been paid. The director of
48.8alcohol and gambling enforcement or the commissioner or the designated inspectors
48.9and employees of the director or commissioner may seize in the name of the state of
48.10Minnesota any unregistered or untaxed gambling equipment.
48.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for actions occurring after June
48.1230, 2012.

48.13    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 3b, is amended to read:
48.14    Subd. 3b. Bar operation. "Bar operation" means a method of selling and redeeming
48.15disposable gambling equipment by an employee of the lessor within a leased premises
48.16which is licensed for the on-sale of alcoholic beverages where such sales and redemptions
48.17are made by an employee of the lessor from a common area where food and beverages
48.18are also sold.

48.19    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 3c, is amended to read:
48.20    Subd. 3c. Bar bingo. "Bar bingo" is a bingo occasion conducted at a permitted
48.21premises in an area where intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent malt beverages are sold and
48.22where the licensed organization conducts another form of lawful gambling. Bar bingo
48.23does not include bingo games linked to other permitted premises.

48.24    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
48.25    Subd. 5. Bingo occasion. "Bingo occasion" means a single gathering or session at
48.26which a series of one or more successive bingo games is played. There is no limit on the
48.27number of games conducted during a bingo occasion but. A bingo occasion must not last
48.28longer than eight consecutive hours., except that linked bingo games played on electronic
48.29bingo devices may be played during regular business hours of the permitted premises,
48.30and all play during this period is considered a bingo occasion for reporting purposes. For
48.31permitted premises where the primary business is bingo, regular business hours shall be
48.32defined as the hours between 8:00 a.m. and 2:00 a.m.

49.1    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 6a, is amended to read:
49.2    Subd. 6a. Booth operation. "Booth operation" means a method of selling and
49.3redeeming disposable gambling equipment by an employee of a licensed organization in
49.4a premises the organization leases or owns where such sales and redemptions are made
49.5within a separate enclosure that is distinct from areas where food and beverages are sold.

49.6    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 12a, is amended to read:
49.7    Subd. 12a. Electronic bingo device. "Electronic bingo device" means an a
49.8handheld and portable electronic device that:
49.9(a) is used by a bingo player to:
49.10(1) monitor bingo paper sheets or a facsimile of a bingo paper sheet when purchased
49.11and played at the time and place of an organization's bingo occasion and which (1)
49.12provides a means for bingo players to, or to play an electronic bingo game that is linked
49.13with other permitted premises;
49.14(2) activate numbers announced by a bingo caller; (2) compares or displayed, and
49.15to compare the numbers entered by the player to the bingo faces previously stored in
49.16the memory of the device; and
49.17(3) identifies identify a winning bingo pattern. or game requirement; and
49.18(4) play against other bingo players;
49.19(b) limits the play of bingo faces to 36 faces per game;
49.20(c) requires coded entry to activate play but does not allow the use of a coin,
49.21currency, or tokens to be inserted to activate play;
49.22(d) may only be used for play against other bingo players in a bingo game;
49.23(e) has no additional function as an amusement or gambling device other than as an
49.24electronic pull-tab game defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 349.12, subdivision
49.2512c;
49.26(f) has the capability to ensure adequate levels of security internal controls; and
49.27(g) has the capability to permit the board to electronically monitor the operation of
49.28the device and the internal accounting systems; and
49.29(h) has the capability to allow use by a player who is visually impaired.
49.30Electronic bingo device does not mean any device into which coin, currency, or tokens are
49.31inserted to activate play.

49.32    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, is amended by adding a subdivision
49.33to read:
50.1    Subd. 12b. Electronic pull-tab device. "Electronic pull-tab device" means a
50.2handheld and portable electronic device that:
50.3(a) is used to play one or more electronic pull-tab games;
50.4(b) requires coded entry to activate play but does not allow the use of coin, currency,
50.5or tokens to be inserted to activate play;
50.6(c) requires that a player must activate or open each electronic pull-tab ticket and
50.7each individual line, row, or column of each electronic pull-tab ticket;
50.8(d) maintains information pertaining to accumulated win credits that may be applied
50.9to games in play or redeemed upon termination of play;
50.10(e) has no spinning symbols or other representations that mimic a video slot machine;
50.11(f) has no additional function as a gambling device other than as an electronic
50.12linked bingo game played on a device defined under Minnesota Statutes, section 349.12,
50.13subdivision 12a;
50.14(g) may incorporate an amusement game feature as part of the pull-tab game but
50.15may not require additional consideration for that feature or award any prize, or other
50.16benefit for that feature;
50.17(h) may have auditory or visual enhancements to promote or provide information
50.18about the game being played, provided the component does not affect the outcome of
50.19a game or display the results of a game;
50.20(i) maintains, on nonresettable meters, a printable, permanent record of all
50.21transactions involving each device electronic pull-tab games played on the device; and
50.22(j) is not a pull-tab dispensing device as defined under subdivision 32a; and
50.23(k) has the capability to allow use by a player who is visually impaired.

50.24    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, is amended by adding a subdivision
50.25to read:
50.26    Subd. 12c. Electronic pull-tab game. "Electronic pull-tab game" means a pull-tab
50.27game containing:
50.28(a) facsimiles of pull-tab tickets that are played on an electronic pull-tab device;
50.29(b) a predetermined, finite number of winning and losing tickets, not to exceed
50.307,500 tickets;
50.31(c) the same price for each ticket in the game;
50.32(d) a price paid by the player of not less than 25 cents per ticket;
50.33(e) tickets that are in conformance with applicable board rules for pull-tabs;
50.34(f) winning tickets that comply with prize limits under section 349.211;
50.35(g) a unique serial number that may not be regenerated;
51.1(h) an electronic flare that displays the game name, form number, predetermined,
51.2finite number of tickets in the game, and prize tier; and
51.3(i) no spinning symbols or other representations that mimic a video slot machine.

51.4    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, is amended by adding a subdivision
51.5to read:
51.6    Subd. 12d. Electronic pull-tab game system. "Electronic pull-tab game system"
51.7means the equipment leased from a licensed distributor and used by a licensed organization
51.8to conduct, manage, and record electronic pull-tab games, and to report and transmit the
51.9game results as prescribed by the board and the Department of Revenue. The system must
51.10provide security and access levels sufficient so that internal control objectives are met as
51.11prescribed by the board. The system must contain a point of sale station.

51.12    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 18, is amended to read:
51.13    Subd. 18. Gambling equipment. "Gambling equipment" means: gambling
51.14equipment that is either disposable or permanent gambling equipment.
51.15(a) Disposable gambling equipment includes the following:
51.16(1) bingo hard cards or paper sheets, including linked bingo paper sheets, devices for
51.17selecting bingo numbers, electronic bingo devices,;
51.18(2) paper and electronic pull-tabs,;
51.19(3) jar tickets, paddle wheels, paddle wheel tables,;
51.20(4) paddle tickets, and paddle ticket cards,;
51.21(5) tipboards, and tipboard tickets,; and
51.22(6) promotional tickets that mimic a pull-tab or tipboard, pull-tab dispensing devices,
51.23and programmable electronic devices that have no effect on the outcome of a game and
51.24are used to provide a visual or auditory enhancement of a game.
51.25(b) Permanent gambling equipment includes the following:
51.26(1) devices for selecting bingo numbers;
51.27(2) electronic bingo devices;
51.28(3) electronic pull-tab devices;
51.29(4) pull-tab dispensing devices;
51.30(5) programmable electronic devices that have no effect on the outcome of a game
51.31and are used to provide a visual or auditory enhancement of a game;
51.32(6) paddle wheels; and
51.33(7) paddle wheel tables.

52.1    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 25, is amended to read:
52.2    Subd. 25. Lawful purpose. (a) "Lawful purpose" means one or more of the
52.3following:
52.4    (1) any expenditure by or contribution to a 501(c)(3) or festival organization, as
52.5defined in subdivision 15a, provided that the organization and expenditure or contribution
52.6are in conformity with standards prescribed by the board under section 349.154, which
52.7standards must apply to both types of organizations in the same manner and to the same
52.8extent;
52.9    (2) a contribution to or expenditure for goods and services for an individual or
52.10family suffering from poverty, homelessness, or disability, which is used to relieve the
52.11effects of that suffering;
52.12    (3) a contribution to a program recognized by the Minnesota Department of Human
52.13Services for the education, prevention, or treatment of problem gambling;
52.14    (4) a contribution to or expenditure on a public or private nonprofit educational
52.15institution registered with or accredited by this state or any other state;
52.16    (5) a contribution to an individual, public or private nonprofit educational institution
52.17registered with or accredited by this state or any other state, or to a scholarship fund of a
52.18nonprofit organization whose primary mission is to award scholarships, for defraying the
52.19cost of education to individuals where the funds are awarded through an open and fair
52.20selection process;
52.21    (6) activities by an organization or a government entity which recognize military
52.22service to the United States, the state of Minnesota, or a community, subject to rules
52.23of the board, provided that the rules must not include mileage reimbursements in the
52.24computation of the per diem reimbursement limit and must impose no aggregate annual
52.25limit on the amount of reasonable and necessary expenditures made to support:
52.26    (i) members of a military marching or color guard unit for activities conducted
52.27within the state;
52.28    (ii) members of an organization solely for services performed by the members at
52.29funeral services;
52.30    (iii) members of military marching, color guard, or honor guard units may be
52.31reimbursed for participating in color guard, honor guard, or marching unit events within
52.32the state or states contiguous to Minnesota at a per participant rate of up to $35 per diem; or
52.33    (iv) active military personnel and their immediate family members in need of
52.34support services;
53.1    (7) recreational, community, and athletic facilities and activities intended primarily
53.2for persons under age 21, provided that such facilities and activities do not discriminate on
53.3the basis of gender and the organization complies with section 349.154, subdivision 3a;
53.4    (8) payment of local taxes authorized under this chapter, taxes imposed by the
53.5United States on receipts from lawful gambling, the taxes imposed by section 297E.02,
53.6subdivisions 1, 4, 5, and 6, and the tax imposed on unrelated business income by section
53.7290.05, subdivision 3 ;
53.8    (9) payment of real estate taxes and assessments on permitted gambling premises
53.9owned by the licensed organization paying the taxes, or wholly leased by a licensed
53.10veterans organization under a national charter recognized under section 501(c)(19) of the
53.11Internal Revenue Code;
53.12    (10) a contribution to the United States, this state or any of its political subdivisions,
53.13or any agency or instrumentality thereof other than a direct contribution to a law
53.14enforcement or prosecutorial agency;
53.15    (11) a contribution to or expenditure by a nonprofit organization which is a church
53.16or body of communicants gathered in common membership for mutual support and
53.17edification in piety, worship, or religious observances;
53.18    (12) an expenditure for citizen monitoring of surface water quality by individuals
53.19or nongovernmental organizations that is consistent with section 115.06, subdivision 4,
53.20and Minnesota Pollution Control Agency guidance on monitoring procedures, quality
53.21assurance protocols, and data management, provided that the resulting data is submitted
53.22to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency for review and inclusion in the state water
53.23quality database;
53.24    (13) a contribution to or expenditure on projects or activities approved by the
53.25commissioner of natural resources for:
53.26    (i) wildlife management projects that benefit the public at large;
53.27    (ii) grant-in-aid trail maintenance and grooming established under sections 84.83
53.28and 84.927, and other trails open to public use, including purchase or lease of equipment
53.29for this purpose; and
53.30    (iii) supplies and materials for safety training and educational programs coordinated
53.31by the Department of Natural Resources, including the Enforcement Division;
53.32    (14) conducting nutritional programs, food shelves, and congregate dining programs
53.33primarily for persons who are age 62 or older or disabled;
53.34    (15) a contribution to a community arts organization, or an expenditure to sponsor
53.35arts programs in the community, including but not limited to visual, literary, performing,
53.36or musical arts;
54.1    (16) an expenditure by a licensed fraternal organization or a licensed veterans
54.2organization for payment of water, fuel for heating, electricity, and sewer costs for:
54.3    (i) up to 100 percent for a building wholly owned or wholly leased by and used as
54.4the primary headquarters of the licensed veteran or fraternal organization; or
54.5    (ii) a proportional amount subject to approval by the director and based on the
54.6portion of a building used as the primary headquarters of the licensed veteran or fraternal
54.7organization;
54.8    (17) expenditure by a licensed veterans organization of up to $5,000 in a calendar
54.9year in net costs to the organization for meals and other membership events, limited to
54.10members and spouses, held in recognition of military service. No more than $5,000 can be
54.11expended in total per calendar year under this clause by all licensed veterans organizations
54.12sharing the same veterans post home;
54.13    (18) payment of fees authorized under this chapter imposed by the state of Minnesota
54.14to conduct lawful gambling in Minnesota;
54.15    (19) a contribution or expenditure to honor an individual's humanitarian service
54.16as demonstrated through philanthropy or volunteerism to the United States, this state,
54.17or local community;
54.18    (20) a contribution by a licensed organization to another licensed organization with
54.19prior board approval, with the contribution designated to be used for one or more of the
54.20following lawful purposes under this section: clauses (1) to (7), (11) to (15), (19), and (25);
54.21    (21) an expenditure that is a contribution to a parent organization, if the parent
54.22organization: (i) has not provided to the contributing organization within one year of the
54.23contribution any money, grants, property, or other thing of value, and (ii) has received
54.24prior board approval for the contribution that will be used for a program that meets one or
54.25more of the lawful purposes under subdivision 7a;
54.26    (22) an expenditure for the repair, maintenance, or improvement of real property
54.27and capital assets owned by an organization, or for the replacement of a capital asset that
54.28can no longer be repaired, with a fiscal year limit of five percent of gross profits from
54.29the previous fiscal year, with no carryforward of unused allowances. The fiscal year is
54.30July 1 through June 30. Total expenditures for the fiscal year may not exceed the limit
54.31unless the board has specifically approved the expenditures that exceed the limit due to
54.32extenuating circumstances beyond the organization's control. An expansion of a building
54.33or bar-related expenditures are not allowed under this provision.
54.34    (i) The expenditure must be related to the portion of the real property or capital asset
54.35that must be made available for use free of any charge to other nonprofit organizations,
55.1community groups, or service groups, or is used for the organization's primary mission or
55.2headquarters.
55.3    (ii) An expenditure may be made to bring an existing building that the organization
55.4owns into compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
55.5    (iii) An organization may apply the amount that is allowed under item (ii) to the
55.6erection or acquisition of a replacement building that is in compliance with the Americans
55.7with Disabilities Act if the board has specifically approved the amount. The cost of
55.8the erection or acquisition of a replacement building may not be made from gambling
55.9proceeds, except for the portion allowed under this item;
55.10    (23) an expenditure for the acquisition or improvement of a capital asset with a cost
55.11greater than $2,000, excluding real property, that will be used exclusively for lawful
55.12purposes under this section if the board has specifically approved the amount;
55.13    (24) an expenditure for the acquisition, erection, improvement, or expansion of real
55.14property, if the board has first specifically authorized the expenditure after finding that the
55.15real property will be used exclusively for lawful purpose under this section; or
55.16    (25) an expenditure, including a mortgage payment or other debt service payment,
55.17for the erection or acquisition of a comparable building to replace an organization-owned
55.18building that was destroyed or made uninhabitable by fire or catastrophe or to replace an
55.19organization-owned building that was taken or sold under an eminent domain proceeding.
55.20The expenditure may be only for that part of the replacement cost not reimbursed by
55.21insurance for the fire or catastrophe or compensation not received from a governmental
55.22unit under the eminent domain proceeding, if the board has first specifically authorized
55.23the expenditure.
55.24    (b) Expenditures authorized by the board under clauses (24) and (25) must be
55.2551 percent completed within two years of the date of board approval; otherwise the
55.26organization must reapply to the board for approval of the project. "Fifty-one percent
55.27completed" means that the work completed must represent at least 51 percent of the value
55.28of the project as documented by the contractor or vendor.
55.29    (c) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), "lawful purpose" does not include:
55.30    (1) any expenditure made or incurred for the purpose of influencing the nomination
55.31or election of a candidate for public office or for the purpose of promoting or defeating a
55.32ballot question;
55.33    (2) any activity intended to influence an election or a governmental decision-making
55.34process;
56.1    (3) a contribution to a statutory or home rule charter city, county, or town by a
56.2licensed organization with the knowledge that the governmental unit intends to use the
56.3contribution for a pension or retirement fund; or
56.4    (4) a contribution to a 501(c)(3) organization or other entity with the intent or effect
56.5of not complying with lawful purpose restrictions or requirements.
56.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

56.7    Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 25b, is amended to read:
56.8    Subd. 25b. Linked bingo game provider. "Linked bingo game provider" means
56.9any person who provides the means to link bingo prizes in a linked bingo game, who
56.10provides linked bingo paper sheets to the participating organizations games, who provides
56.11linked bingo prize management, and who provides the linked bingo game system.

56.12    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 25c, is amended to read:
56.13    Subd. 25c. Linked bingo game system. "Linked bingo game system" means the
56.14equipment used by the linked bingo provider to conduct, transmit, and track a linked
56.15bingo game. The system must be approved by the board before its use in this state and
56.16it must have dial-up or other the capability to permit the board to electronically monitor
56.17its operation remotely. For linked electronic bingo games, the system includes electronic
56.18bingo devices.

56.19    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 25d, is amended to read:
56.20    Subd. 25d. Linked bingo prize pool. "Linked bingo prize pool" means the total
56.21of all prize money that each participating organization has contributed to a linked bingo
56.22game prize and includes any portion of the prize pool that is carried over from one
56.23occasion game to another in a progressive linked bingo game.

56.24    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
56.25    Subd. 29. Paddle wheel. "Paddle wheel" means a vertical wheel marked off into
56.26sections containing one or more numbers, and which, after being turned or spun, uses a
56.27pointer or marker to indicate winning chances, and may only be used to determine a
56.28winning number or numbers matching a winning paddle ticket purchased by a player. A
56.29paddle wheel may be an electronic device that simulates a paddle wheel.

56.30    Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 31, is amended to read:
57.1    Subd. 31. Promotional ticket. A paper pull-tab ticket or paper tipboard ticket
57.2created and printed by a licensed manufacturer with the words "no purchase necessary" and
57.3"for promotional use only" and for which no consideration is given is a promotional ticket.

57.4    Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 32, is amended to read:
57.5    Subd. 32. Pull-tab. "Pull-tab" means a single folded or banded paper ticket or a,
57.6multi-ply card with perforated break-open tabs, or a facsimile of a paper pull-tab ticket
57.7used in conjunction with an electronic pull-tab device, the face of which is initially
57.8covered to conceal one or more numbers or symbols, and where one or more of each set of
57.9tickets or, cards, or facsimiles has been designated in advance as a winner.

57.10    Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 34, is amended to read:
57.11    Subd. 34. Tipboard. "Tipboard" means a board, placard or other device containing
57.12a seal that conceals the winning number or symbol, and that serves as the game flare for a
57.13tipboard game. A sports-themed tipboard is a board, placard, or other device that contains a
57.14grid of predesignated numbers for which the winning numbers are determined in whole or
57.15in part by the numerical outcome of one or more professional sporting events, serves as the
57.16game flare for player registration, but is not required to contain a seal. For a sports-themed
57.17tipboard, the winning numbers must be determined solely by the numerical outcome.

57.18    Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.12, subdivision 35, is amended to read:
57.19    Subd. 35. Tipboard ticket. "Tipboard ticket" is a single folded or banded ticket,
57.20or multi-ply card, the face of which is initially covered or otherwise hidden from view
57.21to conceal a number, symbol, or set of symbols, some of which have been designated in
57.22advance and at random as prize winners. For a sports-themed tipboard, the tipboard ticket
57.23contains a set of numbers used to determine the winner based on the numerical outcome
57.24of a professional sporting event.

57.25    Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.13, is amended to read:
57.26349.13 LAWFUL GAMBLING.
57.27Lawful gambling is not a lottery or gambling within the meaning of sections 609.75
57.28to 609.76 if it is conducted under this chapter. A pull-tab dispensing device, electronic
57.29bingo device, and electronic pull-tab device permitted under this chapter and by board
57.30rule is not a gambling device within the meaning of sections 609.75 to 609.76 and chapter
57.31299L. An electronic game device allowed under this chapter may not be a slot machine.
57.32Electronic game devices, including but not limited to electronic bingo devices, electronic
58.1paddle wheels, and electronic pull-tab devices authorized under this chapter, may only
58.2be used in the conduct of lawful gambling permitted under this chapter and board rule
58.3and may not display or simulate any other form of gambling or entertainment, except
58.4as otherwise allowed under this chapter.

58.5    Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.151, subdivision 4b, is amended to read:
58.6    Subd. 4b. Pull-tab sales from dispensing devices. (a) The board may by rule
58.7authorize but not require the use of pull-tab dispensing devices.
58.8(b) Rules adopted under paragraph (a):
58.9(1) must limit the number of pull-tab dispensing devices on any permitted premises
58.10to three; and
58.11(2) must limit the use of pull-tab dispensing devices to a permitted premises which is
58.12(i) a licensed premises for on-sales of intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent malt beverages;
58.13or (ii) a premises where bingo is conducted and admission is restricted to persons 18
58.14years or older.
58.15(c) Notwithstanding rules adopted under paragraph (b), pull-tab dispensing devices
58.16may be used in establishments licensed for the off-sale of intoxicating liquor, other than
58.17drugstores and general food stores licensed under section 340A.405, subdivision 1.

58.18    Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.151, subdivision 4c, is amended to read:
58.19    Subd. 4c. Electronic bingo devices. (a) The board may by rule authorize but not
58.20require the use of electronic bingo devices.
58.21(b) Rules adopted under paragraph (a):
58.22(1) must limit the number of bingo faces that can be played using an electronic
58.23bingo device to 36;
58.24(2) must require that an electronic bingo device be used with corresponding bingo
58.25paper sheets or a facsimile, printed at the point of sale, as approved by the board;
58.26(3) must require that the electronic bingo device site system have dial-up capability
58.27to permit the board to remotely monitor the operation of the device and the internal
58.28accounting systems; and
58.29(4) must prohibit the price of a face played on an electronic bingo device from being
58.30less than the price of a face on a bingo paper sheet sold at the same occasion.
58.31(b) The board, or the director if authorized by the board, may require the deactivation
58.32of an electronic bingo device for violation of a law or rule and to implement any other
58.33controls deemed necessary to ensure and maintain the integrity of electronic bingo devices
58.34and the electronic bingo games played on the devices.

59.1    Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.151, is amended by adding a subdivision
59.2to read:
59.3    Subd. 4d. Electronic pull-tab devices and electronic pull-tab game system. (a)
59.4The board may adopt rules it deems necessary to ensure the integrity of electronic pull-tab
59.5devices, the electronic pull-tab games played on the devices, and the electronic pull-tab
59.6game system necessary to operate them.
59.7(b) The board may not require an organization to use electronic pull-tab devices.
59.8(c) Before authorizing the lease or sale of electronic pull-tab devices and the
59.9electronic pull-tab game system, the board shall examine electronic pull-tab devices
59.10allowed under section 349.12, subdivision 12b. The board may contract for the
59.11examination of the game system and electronic pull-tab devices and may require a working
59.12model to be transported to locations the board designates for testing, examination, and
59.13analysis. The manufacturer must pay all costs of any testing, examination, analysis, and
59.14transportation of the model. The system must be approved by the board before its use in
59.15the state and must have the capability to permit the board to electronically monitor its
59.16operation and internal accounting systems.
59.17(d) The board may require a manufacturer to submit a certificate from an independent
59.18testing laboratory approved by the board to perform testing services, stating that the
59.19equipment has been tested, analyzed, and meets the standards required in this chapter
59.20and any applicable board rules.
59.21(e) The board, or the director if authorized by the board, may require the deactivation
59.22of an electronic pull-tab device for violation of a law or rule and to implement any other
59.23controls deemed necessary to ensure and maintain the integrity of electronic pull-tab
59.24devices and the electronic pull-tab games played on the devices.

59.25    Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.151, is amended by adding a subdivision
59.26to read:
59.27    Subd. 4e. Sports-themed tipboard rules. The board may adopt rules for the
59.28conduct of tipboards for which the winning numbers are determined in whole or in part
59.29by the numerical outcome of one or more professional sporting events. The rules must
59.30provide for operation procedures, internal control standards, posted information, records,
59.31and reports. The rules must provide for the award of prizes, method of payout, wagers,
59.32determination of winners, and the specifications of these tipboards.

59.33    Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.155, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
60.1    Subd. 3. Mandatory disqualifications. (a) In the case of licenses for manufacturers,
60.2distributors, distributor salespersons, linked bingo game providers, and gambling
60.3managers, the board may not issue or renew a license under this chapter, and shall revoke
60.4a license under this chapter, if the applicant or licensee, or a director, officer, partner,
60.5governor, or person in a supervisory or management position of the applicant or licensee:
60.6    (1) has ever been convicted of a felony or a crime involving gambling;
60.7    (2) has ever been convicted of (i) assault, (ii) a criminal violation involving the use
60.8of a firearm, or (iii) making terroristic threats;
60.9    (3) is or has ever been connected with or engaged in an illegal business;
60.10    (4) owes $500 or more in delinquent taxes as defined in section 270C.72;
60.11    (5) had a sales and use tax permit revoked by the commissioner of revenue within
60.12the past two years; or
60.13    (6) after demand, has not filed tax returns required by the commissioner of revenue.
60.14The board may deny or refuse to renew a license under this chapter, and may revoke a
60.15license under this chapter, if any of the conditions in this paragraph are applicable to
60.16an affiliate or direct or indirect holder of more than a five percent financial interest in
60.17the applicant or licensee.
60.18    (b) In the case of licenses for organizations, the board may not issue a license under
60.19this chapter, and shall revoke a license under this chapter, if the organization, or an officer
60.20or member of the governing body of the organization:
60.21    (1) has been convicted of a felony or gross misdemeanor involving theft or fraud; or
60.22    (2) has ever been convicted of a crime involving gambling; or.
60.23    (3) has had a license issued by the board or director permanently revoked for
60.24violation of law or board rule.

60.25    Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.155, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
60.26    Subd. 4. License revocation, suspension, denial; censure. (a) The board may by
60.27order (i) deny, suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew a license or premises permit, or (ii)
60.28censure a licensee or applicant, if it finds that the order is in the public interest and that the
60.29applicant or licensee, or a director, officer, partner, governor, person in a supervisory or
60.30management position of the applicant or licensee, an employee eligible to make sales on
60.31behalf of the applicant or licensee, or direct or indirect holder of more than a five percent
60.32financial interest in the applicant or licensee:
60.33    (1) has violated or failed to comply with any provision of this chapter or chapter
60.34297E or 299L, or any rule adopted or order issued thereunder;
61.1    (2) has filed an application for a license that is incomplete in any material respect, or
61.2contains a statement that, in light of the circumstances under which it was made, is false,
61.3misleading, fraudulent, or a misrepresentation;
61.4    (3) has made a false statement in a document or report required to be submitted to
61.5the board or the commissioner of revenue, or has made a false statement to the board, the
61.6compliance review group, or the director;
61.7    (4) has been convicted of a crime in another jurisdiction that would be a felony if
61.8committed in Minnesota;
61.9    (5) is permanently or temporarily enjoined by any gambling regulatory agency from
61.10engaging in or continuing any conduct or practice involving any aspect of gambling;
61.11    (6) has had a gambling-related license revoked or suspended, or has paid or been
61.12required to pay a monetary penalty of $2,500 or more, by a gambling regulator in another
61.13state or jurisdiction;
61.14    (7) has been the subject of any of the following actions by the director of alcohol
61.15and gambling enforcement or commissioner of public safety: (i) had a license under
61.16chapter 299L denied, suspended, or revoked, (ii) been censured, reprimanded, has paid or
61.17been required to pay a monetary penalty or fine, or (iii) has been the subject of any other
61.18discipline by the director or commissioner;
61.19    (8) has engaged in conduct that is contrary to the public health, welfare, or safety, or
61.20to the integrity of gambling; or
61.21    (9) based on past activities or criminal record poses a threat to the public interest or
61.22to the effective regulation and control of gambling, or creates or enhances the dangers of
61.23unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices, methods, and activities in the conduct of gambling
61.24or the carrying on of the business and financial arrangements incidental to the conduct of
61.25gambling.
61.26    (b) The revocation or suspension of an organization's license may not exceed a
61.27period of ten years, including any revocation or suspension imposed by the board prior to
61.28the effective date of this paragraph, except that:
61.29    (1) any prohibition placed by the board on who may be involved in the conduct,
61.30oversight, or management of the revoked organization's lawful gambling activity is
61.31permanent; and
61.32    (2) a revocation or suspension will remain in effect until any taxes, fees, and fines
61.33that are delinquent have been paid by the organization to the satisfaction of the board.

61.34    Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.161, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
61.35    Subdivision 1. Prohibited acts; licenses required. (a) No person may:
62.1    (1) sell, offer for sale, or furnish gambling equipment for use within the state other
62.2than for lawful gambling exempt or excluded from licensing, except to an organization
62.3licensed for lawful gambling;
62.4    (2) sell, offer for sale, or furnish gambling equipment for use within the state without
62.5having obtained a distributor license or a distributor salesperson license under this section
62.6except that an organization authorized to conduct bingo by the board may loan bingo
62.7hard cards and devices for selecting bingo numbers to another organization authorized to
62.8conduct bingo and a linked bingo game provider may provide electronic bingo devices for
62.9linked electronic bingo games;
62.10    (3) sell, offer for sale, or furnish gambling equipment for use within the state that is
62.11not purchased or obtained from a manufacturer or distributor licensed under this chapter; or
62.12    (4) sell, offer for sale, or furnish gambling equipment for use within the state that
62.13has the same serial number as another item of gambling equipment of the same type sold
62.14or offered for sale or furnished for use in the state by that distributor.
62.15    (b) No licensed distributor salesperson may sell, offer for sale, or furnish gambling
62.16equipment for use within the state without being employed by a licensed distributor or
62.17owning a distributor license.
62.18(c) No distributor or distributor salesperson may also be licensed as a linked bingo
62.19game provider under section 349.1635.

62.20    Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.161, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
62.21    Subd. 5. Prohibition. (a) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or other employee
62.22of a distributor, may also be a wholesale distributor of alcoholic beverages or an employee
62.23of a wholesale distributor of alcoholic beverages.
62.24    (b) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate, or
62.25other employee of a distributor, may: (1) be involved in the conduct of lawful gambling
62.26by an organization; (2) keep or assist in the keeping of an organization's financial records,
62.27accounts, and inventories; or (3) prepare or assist in the preparation of tax forms and other
62.28reporting forms required to be submitted to the state by an organization.
62.29    (c) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate,
62.30or other employee of a distributor may provide a lessor of gambling premises any
62.31compensation, gift, gratuity, premium, or other thing of value.
62.32    (d) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate, or
62.33other employee of a distributor may provide an employee or agent of the organization
62.34any compensation, gift, gratuity, premium, or other thing of value greater than $25 per
62.35organization in a calendar year.
63.1    (e) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate, or
63.2other employee of a distributor may participate in any gambling activity at any gambling
63.3site or premises where gambling equipment purchased or leased from that distributor or
63.4distributor salesperson is being used in the conduct of lawful gambling.
63.5    (f) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate, or
63.6other employee of a distributor may alter or modify any gambling equipment, except to
63.7add a "last ticket sold" prize sticker for a paper pull-tab game.
63.8    (g) No distributor, distributor salesperson, or any representative, agent, affiliate, or
63.9other employee of a distributor may: (1) recruit a person to become a gambling manager
63.10of an organization or identify to an organization a person as a candidate to become
63.11gambling manager for the organization; or (2) identify for an organization a potential
63.12gambling location.
63.13    (h) No distributor or distributor salesperson may purchase or lease gambling
63.14equipment for resale or lease to a person for use within the state from any person not
63.15licensed as a manufacturer under section 349.163, except for gambling equipment
63.16returned from an organization licensed under section 349.16, or exempt or excluded from
63.17licensing under section 349.166.
63.18    (i) No distributor or distributor salesperson may sell gambling equipment, except
63.19gambling equipment identified as a promotional ticket, to any person for use in Minnesota
63.20other than (i) a licensed organization or organization excluded or exempt from licensing,
63.21or (ii) the governing body of an Indian tribe.
63.22    (j) No distributor or distributor salesperson may sell or otherwise provide a paper
63.23pull-tab or tipboard deal with the symbol required by section 349.163, subdivision 5,
63.24paragraph (d), visible on the flare to any person other than in Minnesota to a licensed
63.25organization or organization exempt from licensing.

63.26    Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.162, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
63.27    Subd. 5. Sales from facilities. (a) All gambling equipment purchased or possessed
63.28by a licensed distributor for resale or lease to any person for use in Minnesota must, prior
63.29to the equipment's resale or lease, be unloaded into a storage facility located in Minnesota
63.30which the distributor owns or leases; and which has been registered, in advance and in
63.31writing, with the Division of Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement as a storage facility of
63.32the distributor. All unregistered gambling equipment and all unaffixed registration stamps
63.33owned by, or in the possession of, a licensed distributor in the state of Minnesota shall be
63.34stored at a storage facility which has been registered with the Division of Alcohol and
63.35Gambling Enforcement. No gambling equipment may be moved from the facility unless
64.1the gambling equipment has been first registered with the board or the Department of
64.2Revenue. A distributor must notify the board of the method that it will use to sell and
64.3transfer electronic pull-tab games to licensed organizations, and must receive approval of
64.4the board before implementing or making changes to the approved method.
64.5(b) Notwithstanding section 349.163, subdivisions 5, 6, and 8, a licensed
64.6manufacturer may ship into Minnesota approved or unapproved gambling equipment if the
64.7licensed manufacturer ships the gambling equipment to a Minnesota storage facility that
64.8is: (1) owned or leased by the licensed manufacturer; and (2) registered, in advance and
64.9in writing, with the Division of Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement as a manufacturer's
64.10storage facility. No gambling equipment may be shipped into Minnesota to the
64.11manufacturer's registered storage facility unless the shipment of the gambling equipment
64.12is reported to the Department of Revenue in a manner prescribed by the department.
64.13No gambling equipment may be moved from the storage facility unless the gambling
64.14equipment is sold to a licensed distributor and is otherwise in conformity with this chapter,
64.15is shipped to an out-of-state site and the shipment is reported to the Department of
64.16Revenue in a manner prescribed by the department, or is otherwise sold and shipped as
64.17permitted by board rule. A manufacturer must notify the board of the method that it will
64.18use to sell and transfer electronic pull-tab games to licensed distributors, and must receive
64.19approval of the board before implementing or making changes to the approved method.
64.20(c) All storage facilities owned, leased, used, or operated by a licensed distributor
64.21or manufacturer may be entered upon and inspected by the employees of the Division of
64.22Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement, the Division of Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement
64.23director's authorized representatives, employees of the Gambling Control Board or its
64.24authorized representatives, employees of the Department of Revenue, or authorized
64.25representatives of the director of the Division of Special Taxes of the Department of
64.26Revenue during reasonable and regular business hours. Obstruction of, or failure to
64.27permit, entry and inspection is cause for revocation or suspension of a manufacturer's or
64.28distributor's licenses and permits issued under this chapter.
64.29(d) Unregistered gambling equipment found at any location in Minnesota other than
64.30the manufacturing plant of a licensed manufacturer or a registered storage facility are
64.31contraband under section 349.2125. This paragraph does not apply:
64.32(1) to unregistered gambling equipment being transported in interstate commerce
64.33between locations outside this state, if the interstate shipment is verified by a bill of lading
64.34or other valid shipping document; and
64.35(2) to gambling equipment registered with the Department of Revenue for
64.36distribution to the tribal casinos.

65.1    Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.163, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
65.2    Subdivision 1. License required. No manufacturer of gambling equipment may
65.3sell any gambling equipment to any person for use or resale within the state, unless the
65.4manufacturer has a current and valid license issued by the board under this section and has
65.5satisfied other criteria prescribed by the board by rule. A manufacturer licensed under this
65.6section may also be licensed as a linked bingo game provider under section 349.1635.
65.7A manufacturer licensed under this section may not also be directly or indirectly
65.8licensed as a distributor under section 349.161.

65.9    Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.163, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
65.10    Subd. 5. Paper pull-tab and tipboard flares. (a) A manufacturer may not ship or
65.11cause to be shipped into this state or sell for use or resale in this state any deal of paper
65.12pull-tabs or tipboards that does not have its own individual flare as required for that deal
65.13by this subdivision and rule of the board. A person other than a manufacturer may not
65.14manufacture, alter, modify, or otherwise change a flare for a deal of paper pull-tabs or
65.15tipboards except as allowed by this chapter or board rules.
65.16(b) The flare of each paper pull-tab and tipboard game must have affixed to
65.17or imprinted at the bottom a bar code that provides all information required by the
65.18commissioner of revenue under section 297E.04, subdivision 2.
65.19The serial number included in the bar code must be the same as the serial number
65.20of the tickets included in the deal. A manufacturer who manufactures a deal of paper
65.21pull-tabs must affix to the outside of the box containing that game the same bar code that
65.22is affixed to or imprinted at the bottom of a flare for that deal.
65.23(c) No person may alter the bar code that appears on the outside of a box containing
65.24a deal of paper pull-tabs and tipboards. Possession of a box containing a deal of paper
65.25pull-tabs and tipboards that has a bar code different from the bar code of the deal inside
65.26the box is prima facie evidence that the possessor has altered the bar code on the box.
65.27(d) The flare of each deal of paper pull-tabs and tipboards sold by a manufacturer for
65.28use or resale in Minnesota must have imprinted on it a symbol that is at least one inch high
65.29and one inch wide consisting of an outline of the geographic boundaries of Minnesota
65.30with the letters "MN" inside the outline. The flare must be placed inside the wrapping of
65.31the deal which the flare describes.
65.32(e) Each paper pull-tab and tipboard flare must bear the following statement printed
65.33in letters large enough to be clearly legible:
65.34"Pull-tab (or tipboard) purchasers -- This pull-tab (or tipboard) game is not legal in
65.35Minnesota unless:
66.1-- an outline of Minnesota with letters "MN" inside it is imprinted on this sheet, and
66.2-- the serial number imprinted on the bar code at the bottom of this sheet is the same
66.3as the serial number on the pull-tab (or tipboard) ticket you have purchased."
66.4(f) The flare of each paper pull-tab and tipboard game must have the serial number
66.5of the game imprinted on the bar code at the bottom of the flare in numerals at least
66.6one-half inch high.

66.7    Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.163, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
66.8    Subd. 6. Samples of gambling equipment. (a) The board shall require each
66.9licensed manufacturer to submit to the board one or more samples of each item of gambling
66.10equipment the manufacturer manufactures manufactured for use or resale in this state.
66.11For purposes of this subdivision, a manufacturer is also required to submit the applicable
66.12version of any software necessary to operate electronic devices and related systems.
66.13(b) The board shall inspect and test all the equipment, including software and
66.14software upgrades, it deems necessary to determine the equipment's compliance with
66.15law and board rules. Samples required under this subdivision must be approved by the
66.16board before the equipment being sampled is shipped into or sold for use or resale in this
66.17state. The board shall impose a fee of $25 for each item of gambling equipment that the
66.18manufacturer submits for approval or for which the manufacturer requests approval. The
66.19board shall impose a fee of $100 for each sample of gambling equipment that it tests.
66.20(c) The board may require samples of gambling equipment to be tested by an
66.21independent testing laboratory prior to submission to the board for approval. All costs
66.22of testing by an independent testing laboratory must be borne by the manufacturer. An
66.23independent testing laboratory used by a manufacturer to test samples of gambling
66.24equipment must be approved by the board before the equipment is submitted to the
66.25laboratory for testing.
66.26(d) The board may request the assistance of the commissioner of public safety and
66.27the director of the State Lottery in performing the tests.

66.28    Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1635, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
66.29    Subd. 2. License application. The board may issue a license to a linked bingo game
66.30provider or to a manufacturer licensed under section 349.163 who meets the qualifications
66.31of this chapter and the rules promulgated by the board. The application shall be on a form
66.32prescribed by the board. The license is valid for two years and the fee for a linked bingo
66.33game provider license is $5,000 per year.

67.1    Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1635, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
67.2    Subd. 3. Attachments to application. An applicant for a linked bingo game
67.3provider license must attach to its application:
67.4(1) evidence of a bond in the principal amount of $100,000 payable to the state of
67.5Minnesota conditioned on the payment of all linked bingo prizes and any other money due
67.6and payable under this chapter;
67.7(2) detailed plans and specifications for the operation of the linked bingo game and
67.8the linked bingo system, along with a proposed fee schedule for the cost of providing
67.9services and equipment to licensed organizations which may not exceed 15 percent of
67.10gross profits, unless a higher percentage, not to exceed 20 percent, is authorized by the
67.11board. The fee schedule must incorporate costs paid to distributors for services provided
67.12under subdivision 5; and
67.13(3) any other information required by the board by rule.

67.14    Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1635, is amended by adding a
67.15subdivision to read:
67.16    Subd. 5. Linked bingo game services requirements. (a) A linked bingo game
67.17provider must contract with licensed distributors for linked bingo game services including,
67.18but not limited to, the solicitation of agreements with licensed organizations, and
67.19installation, repair, or maintenance of the linked bingo game system.
67.20(b) A distributor may not charge a fee to licensed organizations for services
67.21authorized and rendered under paragraph (a).
67.22(c) A linked bingo game provider may not contract with any distributor on an
67.23exclusive basis.
67.24(d) A linked bingo game provider may refuse to contract with a licensed distributor
67.25if the linked bingo game provider demonstrates that the licensed distributor is not capable
67.26of performing the services under the contract.

67.27    Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.165, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
67.28    Subd. 2. Contents of application. An application for a premises permit must
67.29contain:
67.30    (1) the name and address of the applying organization;
67.31    (2) a description of the site for which the permit is sought, including its address and,
67.32where applicable, its placement within another premises or establishment;
67.33    (3) if the site is leased, the name and address of the lessor and information about the
67.34lease the board requires, including all rents and other charges for the use of the site. The
68.1lease term is concurrent with the term of the premises permit. The lease must contain a
68.230-day termination clause. No lease is required for the conduct of a raffle; and
68.3    (4) other information the board deems necessary to carry out its purposes.
68.4    An organization holding a premises permit must notify the board in writing within
68.5ten days whenever any material change is made in the above information.

68.6    Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.17, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
68.7    Subd. 6. Conduct of bingo. The price of a face played on an electronic bingo
68.8device may not be less than the price of a face on a bingo paper sheet sold for the same
68.9game at the same occasion. A game of bingo begins with the first letter and number called
68.10or displayed. Each player must cover, mark, or activate the numbers when bingo numbers
68.11are randomly selected, and announced, and or displayed to the players, either manually
68.12or with a flashboard and monitor. The game is won when a player, using bingo paper,
68.13bingo hard card, or a facsimile of a bingo paper sheet, has completed, as described in the
68.14bingo program, a previously designated pattern or previously determined requirements
68.15of the game and declared bingo. The game is completed when a winning card, sheet, or
68.16facsimile is verified and a prize awarded pursuant to subdivision 3.

68.17    Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.17, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
68.18    Subd. 7. Bar bingo. An organization may conduct bar bingo subject to the
68.19following restrictions:
68.20    (1) the bingo is conducted at a site the organization owns or leases and which has a
68.21license for the sale of intoxicating beverages on the premises under chapter 340A; and
68.22    (2) the bingo is conducted using only bingo paper sheets or facsimiles of bingo paper
68.23sheets purchased from a licensed distributor or licensed linked bingo game provider; and.
68.24    (3) no rent may be paid for a bar bingo occasion.

68.25    Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.17, subdivision 8, is amended to read:
68.26    Subd. 8. Linked bingo games. (a) A licensed organization may conduct or
68.27participate in not more than two linked bingo games per occasion, one of which may be a,
68.28including progressive game games in which a portion of the prize is carried over from
68.29one occasion game to another until won by a player achieving a valid bingo within a
68.30predetermined amount of bingo numbers called based upon a predetermined and posted
68.31win determination.
68.32    (b) Each participating licensed organization shall contribute to each prize awarded in
68.33a linked bingo game in an amount not to exceed $300. Linked bingo games may only be
69.1conducted by licensed organizations who have a valid agreement with the linked bingo
69.2game provider.
69.3    (c) An electronic bingo device as defined in section 349.12, subdivision 12a, may
69.4be used for a linked bingo game.
69.5    (d) The board may adopt rules to:
69.6    (1) specify the manner in which a linked bingo game must be played and how the
69.7linked bingo prizes must be awarded;
69.8    (2) specify the records to be maintained by a linked bingo game provider;
69.9    (3) require the submission of periodic reports by the linked bingo game provider and
69.10specify the content of the reports;
69.11    (4) establish the qualifications required to be licensed as a linked bingo game
69.12provider; and
69.13    (5) any other matter involving the operation of a linked bingo game.

69.14    Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.17, is amended by adding a subdivision
69.15to read:
69.16    Subd. 9. Linked bingo games played exclusively on electronic bingo devices. In
69.17addition to the requirements of subdivision 8, the following requirements and restrictions
69.18apply when linked bingo games are played exclusively on electronic bingo devices.
69.19(a) The permitted premises must be:
69.20(1) a premises licensed for the on-sale or off-sale of intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent
69.21malt beverages, except for a general food store or drug store permitted to sell alcoholic
69.22beverages under section 340A.405, subdivision 1; or
69.23(2) a premises where bingo is conducted as the primary business and has a seating
69.24capacity of at least 100.
69.25(b) The number of electronic bingo devices is limited to:
69.26(1) no more than six devices in play for permitted premises with 200 seats or less;
69.27(2) no more than 12 devices in play for permitted premises with 201 seats or more;
69.28and
69.29(3) no more than 50 devices in play for permitted premises where bingo is the
69.30primary business.
69.31Seating capacity is determined as specified under the local fire code.
69.32(c) Prior to a bingo occasion, the linked bingo game provider, on behalf of the
69.33participating organizations, must provide to the board a bingo program in a format
69.34prescribed by the board.
70.1(d) Before participating in the play of a linked bingo game, a player must present
70.2and register a valid picture identification card that includes the player's address and
70.3date of birth.
70.4(e) An organization may remove from play a device that a player has not maintained
70.5in an activated mode for a specified period of time determined by the organization. The
70.6organization must provide the notice in its house rules.

70.7    Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1711, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
70.8    Subdivision 1. Sale of tickets. (a) Tipboard games must be played using only
70.9tipboard tickets that are either (1) attached to a placard and arranged in columns or rows,
70.10or (2) separate from the placard and contained in a receptacle while the game is in play.
70.11The placard serves as the game flare.
70.12(b) Except for a sports-themed tipboard, the placard must contain a seal that conceals
70.13the winning number or symbol. When a tipboard ticket is purchased and opened from a
70.14game containing more than 32 tickets, each player having a tipboard ticket with one or
70.15more predesignated numbers or symbols must sign the placard at the line indicated by the
70.16number or symbol on the tipboard ticket.

70.17    Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1711, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
70.18    Subd. 2. Determination of winners. When the predesignated numbers or symbols
70.19have all been purchased, or all of the tipboard tickets for that game have been sold,
70.20the seal must be removed to reveal a number or symbol that determines which of the
70.21predesignated numbers or symbols is the winning number or symbol. A tipboard may also
70.22contain consolation winners, or winning chances that are determined in whole or in part
70.23by the numerical outcome of one or more professional sporting events, that need not be
70.24determined by the use of the seal.

70.25    Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.1721, is amended to read:
70.26349.1721 CONDUCT OF PULL-TABS.
70.27    Subdivision 1. Cumulative or carryover games. The board shall by rule permit
70.28pull-tab games with multiple seals. The board shall also adopt rules for pull-tab games with
70.29cumulative or carryover prizes. The rules shall also apply to electronic pull-tab games.
70.30    Subd. 2. Event games. The board shall by rule permit pull-tab games in which
70.31certain winners are determined by the random selection of one or more bingo numbers
70.32or by another method approved by the board. The rules shall also apply to electronic
70.33pull-tab games.
71.1    Subd. 3. Pull-tab dispensing device location restrictions and requirements.
71.2The following pertain to pull-tab dispensing devices as defined under section 349.12,
71.3subdivision 32a.
71.4(a) The use of any pull-tab dispensing device must be at a permitted premises
71.5which is:
71.6(1) a licensed premises for on-sale of intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent malt
71.7beverages;
71.8(2) a premises where bingo is conducted as the primary business; or
71.9(3) an establishment licensed for the off-sale of intoxicating liquor, other than drug
71.10stores and general food stores licensed under section 340A.405, subdivision 1.
71.11(b) The number of pull-tab dispensing devices located at any permitted premises
71.12is limited to three.
71.13    Subd. 4. Electronic pull-tab device requirements and restrictions. The following
71.14pertain to the use of electronic pull-tab devices as defined under section 349.12,
71.15subdivision 12b.
71.16(a) The use of any electronic pull-tab device may only be at a permitted premises
71.17that is:
71.18(1) a premises licensed for the on-sale or off-sale of intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent
71.19malt beverages, except for a general food store or drug store permitted to sell alcoholic
71.20beverages under section 340A.405, subdivision 1; or
71.21(2) a premises where bingo is conducted as the primary business and has a seating
71.22capacity of at least 100; and
71.23(3) where the licensed organization sells paper pull-tabs.
71.24(b) The number of electronic pull-tab devices is limited to:
71.25(1) no more than six devices in play at any permitted premises with 200 seats or less;
71.26(2) no more than 12 devices in play at any permitted premises with 201 seats
71.27or more; and
71.28(3) no more than 50 devices in play at any permitted premises where the primary
71.29business is bingo.
71.30Seating capacity is determined as specified under the local fire code.
71.31(c) The hours of operation for the devices are limited to 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m.
71.32(d) All electronic pull-tab games must be sold and played on the permitted premises
71.33and may not be linked to other permitted premises.
71.34(e) Electronic pull-tab games may not be transferred electronically or otherwise to
71.35any other location by the licensed organization.
72.1(f) Electronic pull-tab games may be commingled if the games are from the same
72.2family of games and manufacturer and contain the same game name, form number, type
72.3of game, ticket count, prize amounts, and prize denominations. Each commingled game
72.4must have a unique serial number.
72.5(g) An organization may remove from play a device that a player has not maintained
72.6in an activated mode for a specified period of time determined by the organization. The
72.7organization must provide the notice in its house rules.
72.8(h) Before participating in the play of an electronic pull-tab game, a player must
72.9present and register a valid picture identification card that includes the player's address
72.10and date of birth.
72.11(i) Each player is limited to the use of one device at a time.
72.12    Subd. 5. Multiple chance games. The board may permit pull-tab games in which
72.13the holders of certain predesignated winning tickets, with a prize value not to exceed $75
72.14each, have the option of turning in the winning tickets for the chance to win a prize of
72.15greater value.

72.16    Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.18, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
72.17    Subdivision 1. Lease or ownership required; rent limitations. (a) An organization
72.18may conduct lawful gambling only on premises it owns or leases. Leases must be on a
72.19form prescribed by the board. The term of the lease is concurrent with the premises permit.
72.20Leases approved by the board must specify that the board may authorize an organization
72.21to withhold rent from a lessor for a period of up to 90 days if the board determines that
72.22illegal gambling occurred on the premises or that the lessor or its employees participated
72.23in the illegal gambling or knew of the gambling and did not take prompt action to stop the
72.24gambling. The lease must authorize the continued tenancy of the organization without
72.25the payment of rent during the time period determined by the board under this paragraph.
72.26Copies of all leases must be made available to employees of the board and the Division of
72.27Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement on request.
72.28    (b) Rent paid by an organization for leased premises for the conduct of pull-tabs,
72.29tipboards, and paddle wheels lawful gambling is subject to the following limits and
72.30restrictions:
72.31    (1) For booth operations, including booth operations where a pull-tab dispensing
72.32device is located, booth operations where a bar operation is also conducted, and booth
72.33operations where both a pull-tab dispensing device is located and a bar operation is also
72.34conducted, the maximum rent is: monthly rent may not exceed ten percent of gross profits
73.1for that month. Total rent paid to a lessor from all organizations from leases governed by
73.2this clause may not exceed $1,750 per month.
73.3    (i) in any month where the organization's gross profit at those premises does not
73.4exceed $4,000, up to $400; and
73.5    (ii) in any month where the organization's gross profit at those premises exceeds
73.6$4,000, up to $400 plus not more than ten percent of the gross profit for that month in
73.7excess of $4,000;
73.8    (2) For bar operations, including bar operations where a pull-tab dispensing device
73.9is located but not including bar operations subject to clause (1), and for locations where
73.10only a pull-tab dispensing device is located: monthly rent may not exceed:
73.11(i) 15 percent of the gross profits for that month from pull-tabs sold from a pull-tab
73.12dispensing device, electronic pull-tab games, and electronic linked bingo games; and
73.13(ii) more than 20 percent of gross profits from all other forms of lawful gambling.
73.14    (i) in any month where the organization's gross profit at those premises does not
73.15exceed $1,000, up to $200; and
73.16    (ii) in any month where the organization's gross profit at those premises exceeds
73.17$1,000, up to $200 plus not more than 20 percent of the gross profit for that month
73.18in excess of $1,000;
73.19    (3) a lease not governed by clauses (1) and (2) must be approved by the board before
73.20becoming effective; For electronic linked bingo games and electronic pull-tab games that
73.21are operated for separate time periods within a business day by an organization and the
73.22lessor, monthly rent may not be more than:
73.23(i) 15 percent of the gross profits for that month for the time periods operated by
73.24the lessor. The lessor is responsible for cash shortages that occur during the time periods
73.25the games are operated by the lessor; and
73.26(ii) ten percent of gross profits for that month for the time periods operated by the
73.27organization. The organization is responsible for cash shortages that occur during the time
73.28periods the games are operated by the organization.
73.29    (4) total rent paid to a lessor from all organizations from leases governed by clause
73.30(1) may not exceed $1,750 per month.
73.31    (c) Rent paid by an organization for leased premises for the conduct of bingo is
73.32subject to either of the following limits at the option of the parties to the lease:
73.33    (1) (4) For bingo conducted at a leased premises where the primary business is
73.34bingo, rent is limited to either not more than ten percent of the monthly gross profit from
73.35all lawful gambling activities held during bingo occasions, excluding bar bingo or at a
74.1rate based on a cost per square foot not to exceed 110 percent of a comparable cost per
74.2square foot for leased space as approved by the director; and.
74.3    (2) (5) No rent may be paid for bar bingo as defined in section 349.12, subdivision 3c.
74.4(6) A lease not governed by clauses (1) to (5) must be approved by the director
74.5before becoming effective.
74.6    (d) (c) Amounts paid as rent under leases are all-inclusive. No other services or
74.7expenses provided or contracted by the lessor may be paid by the organization, including,
74.8but not limited to, trash removal, janitorial and cleaning services, snow removal, lawn
74.9services, electricity, heat, security, security monitoring, storage, and other utilities or
74.10services, and, in the case of bar operations, cash shortages, unless approved by the
74.11director. The lessor shall be responsible for the cost of any communications network or
74.12service required to conduct electronic pull-tab games or electronic bingo games. Any
74.13other expenditure made by an organization that is related to a leased premises must be
74.14approved by the director. For bar operations, the lessor is responsible for cash shortages.
74.15An organization may not provide any compensation or thing of value to a lessor or the
74.16lessor's employees from any fund source other than its gambling account. Rent payments
74.17may not be made to an individual.
74.18    (e) (d) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), an organization may pay a lessor for food
74.19or beverages or meeting room rental if the charge made is comparable to similar charges
74.20made to other individuals or groups.
74.21    (f) No entity other than the (e) A licensed organization may not conduct any activity
74.22within a booth operation on behalf of the lessor on a leased premises.

74.23    Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.19, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
74.24    Subd. 2. Accounts. (a) Gross receipts from lawful gambling by each organization
74.25must be segregated from all other revenues of the conducting organization and placed in a
74.26separate gambling bank account.
74.27(b) All expenditures for allowable expenses, taxes, and lawful purposes must be
74.28made from the separate account except (1) in the case of expenditures previously approved
74.29by the organization's membership for emergencies as defined by board rule, (2) as provided
74.30in subdivision 2a, or (3) when restricted to one electronic fund transaction for the payment
74.31of taxes for the organization as a whole, the organization may transfer the amount of taxes
74.32related to the conduct of gambling to the general account at the time when due and payable.
74.33(c) The name and address of the bank, the account number for the separate account,
74.34and the names of organization members authorized as signatories on the separate account
75.1must be provided to the board when the application is submitted. Changes in the
75.2information must be submitted to the board at least ten days before the change is made.
75.3(d) Except for gambling receipts from electronic pull-tab games and linked
75.4electronic bingo games, gambling receipts must be deposited into the gambling bank
75.5account within four business days of completion of the bingo occasion, deal, or game from
75.6which they are received.
75.7(1) A deal of paper pull-tabs is considered complete when either the last pull-tab of
75.8the deal is sold or the organization does not continue the play of the deal during the next
75.9scheduled period of time in which the organization will conduct pull-tabs.
75.10(2) A tipboard game is considered complete when the seal on the game flare is
75.11uncovered or the organization does not continue the play of the deal during the next
75.12scheduled period of time in which the organization will conduct tipboards.
75.13(e) Gambling receipts from all electronic pull-tab games and all linked electronic
75.14bingo games must be recorded on a daily basis and deposited into the gambling bank
75.15account within two business days.
75.16(e) (f) Deposit records must be sufficient to allow determination of deposits made
75.17from each bingo occasion, deal, or game at each permitted premises.
75.18(f) (g) The person who accounts for gambling gross receipts and profits may not be
75.19the same person who accounts for other revenues of the organization.

75.20    Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.19, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
75.21    Subd. 3. Expenditures. (a) All expenditures of gross profits from lawful gambling
75.22must be itemized as to payee, purpose, amount, and date of payment.
75.23(b) Each licensed organization must report monthly to the board on a form in an
75.24electronic format prescribed by the board each expenditure or contribution of net profits
75.25from lawful gambling. The reports must provide for each expenditure or contribution:
75.26(1) the name of the recipient of the expenditure or contribution;
75.27(2) the date the expenditure or contribution was approved by the organization;
75.28(3) the date, amount, and check number or electronic transfer confirmation number
75.29of the expenditure or contribution;
75.30(4) a brief description of how the expenditure or contribution meets one or more of
75.31the purposes in section 349.12, subdivision 25; and
75.32(5) in the case of expenditures authorized under section 349.12, subdivision 25,
75.33paragraph (a), clause (7), whether the expenditure is for a facility or activity that primarily
75.34benefits male or female participants.
76.1(c) Authorization of the expenditures must be recorded in the monthly meeting
76.2minutes of the licensed organization.
76.3(d) Checks or authorizations for electronic fund transfers for expenditures of gross
76.4profits must be signed by at least two persons authorized by board rules to sign the
76.5checks or authorizations.
76.6(e) Expenditures of gross profits from lawful gambling for local, state, and federal
76.7taxes as identified in section 349.12, subdivision 25, paragraph (a), clause (8), may be
76.8transferred electronically from the organization's gambling account directly to bank
76.9accounts identified by local, state, or federal agencies if the organization's gambling
76.10account monthly bank statement specifically identifies the payee by name, the amount
76.11transferred, and the date of the transaction.
76.12(f) Expenditures of gross profits from lawful gambling for payments for lawful
76.13purpose expenditures and allowable expenses may be transferred electronically from the
76.14organization's gambling account directly to bank accounts identified by the vendor if the
76.15organization's gambling account monthly bank statement specifically identifies the payee
76.16by name, the amount transferred, the account number of the account into which the funds
76.17were transferred, and the date of the transaction.
76.18(g) Expenditures of gross profits from lawful gambling for payroll compensation
76.19to an employee's account and for the payment of local, state, and federal withholding
76.20taxes may be transferred electronically to and from the account of a payroll processing
76.21firm provided that the firm:
76.22(1) is currently registered with and meets the criteria of the Department of Revenue
76.23as a third-party bulk filer under section 290.92, subdivision 30;
76.24(2) is able to provide proof of a third-party audit and an annual report and statement
76.25of financial condition;
76.26(3) is able to provide evidence of a fidelity bond; and
76.27(4) can provide proof of having been in business as a third-party bulk filer for the
76.28most recent three years.
76.29(h) Electronic payments of taxes, lawful purpose expenditures, and allowable
76.30expenses are permitted only if they have been authorized by the membership, the
76.31organization maintains supporting documentation, and the expenditures can be verified.
76.32EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

76.33    Sec. 57. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.19, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
76.34    Subd. 5. Reports. (a) A licensed organization must report monthly to the
76.35Department of Revenue board in an electronic format prescribed by the board and to its
77.1membership monthly, or quarterly in the case of a licensed organization which does not
77.2report more than $1,000 in gross receipts from lawful gambling in any calendar quarter,
77.3on its gross receipts, expenses, profits, and expenditure of profits from lawful gambling
77.4for each permitted premises. The organization must account for and report on each form
77.5of lawful gambling conducted. The report organization must include a reconciliation of
77.6the organization's profit carryover with its cash balance on hand. If the organization
77.7conducts both bingo and other forms of lawful gambling, the figures for both must be
77.8reported separately.
77.9(b) The organization must report annually to its membership and annually file with
77.10the board a financial summary report in a format prescribed by the board that identifies the
77.11organization's receipts and use of lawful gambling proceeds, including: monthly to the
77.12commissioner of revenue as required under section 297E.06.
77.13(1) gross receipts;
77.14(2) prizes paid;
77.15(3) allowable expenses;
77.16(4) lawful purpose expenditures, including annual totals for types of charitable
77.17contributions and all taxes and fees as per section 349.12, subdivision 25, paragraph
77.18(a), clauses (8) and (18);
77.19(5) the percentage of annual gross profits used for charitable contributions; and
77.20(6) the percentage of annual gross profits used for all taxes and fees as per section
77.21349.12, subdivision 25, paragraph (a), clauses (8) and (18).
77.22EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

77.23    Sec. 58. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.19, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
77.24    Subd. 10. Pull-tab records. (a) The board shall by rule require a licensed
77.25organization to require each winner of a paper pull-tab prize of $50 or more to present
77.26identification in the form of a driver's license, Minnesota identification card, or other
77.27identification the board deems sufficient to allow the identification and tracking of the
77.28winner. The rule must require the organization to retain winning paper pull-tabs of $50 or
77.29more, and the identification of the winner of the pull-tab, for 3-1/2 years.
77.30    (b) An organization must maintain separate cash banks for each deal of paper
77.31pull-tabs unless (1) the licensed organization uses a pull-tab dispensing device, or (2) the
77.32organization uses a cash register, of a type approved by the board, which records all
77.33sales of paper pull-tabs by separate deals.
77.34    (c) The board shall:
78.1    (1) by rule adopt minimum technical standards for cash registers that may be used
78.2by organizations, and shall approve for use by organizations any cash register that meets
78.3the standards; and
78.4    (2) before allowing an organization to use a cash register that commingles receipts
78.5from several different paper pull-tab games in play, adopt rules that define how cash
78.6registers may be used and that establish a procedure for organizations to reconcile all
78.7pull-tab games in play at the end of each month.

78.8    Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.211, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
78.9    Subd. 1a. Linked bingo prizes. Prizes for a linked bingo game shall be limited
78.10as follows:
78.11(1) no organization may contribute more than $300 per linked bingo game to a
78.12linked bingo prize pool for linked bingo games played without electronic bingo devices,
78.13an organization may not contribute to a linked bingo game prize pool more than $300
78.14per linked bingo game per site;
78.15(2) for linked bingo games played exclusively with electronic bingo devices, an
78.16organization may not contribute more than 85 percent of the gross receipts per permitted
78.17premises to a linked bingo game prize pool;
78.18(2) (3) no organization may award more than $200 for a linked bingo game
78.19consolation prize. For purposes of this subdivision, a linked bingo game consolation
78.20prize is a prize awarded by an organization after a prize from the linked bingo prize pool
78.21has been won; and
78.22    (3) (4) for a progressive linked bingo game, if no player declares a valid bingo
78.23within the for a progressive prize or prizes based on a predetermined amount of bingo
78.24numbers called and posted win determination, a portion of the prize is gross receipts
78.25may be carried over to another occasion game until the accumulated progressive prize
78.26is won. The portion of the prize that is not carried over must be awarded to the first
78.27player or players who declares a valid bingo as additional numbers are called. If a valid
78.28bingo is declared within the predetermined amount of bingo numbers called, the entire
78.29prize pool for that game is awarded to the winner. The annual limit for progressive bingo
78.30game prizes contained in subdivision 2 must be reduced by the amount an organization
78.31contributes to progressive linked bingo games during the same calendar year.; and
78.32(5) for linked bingo games played exclusively with electronic bingo devices, linked
78.33bingo prizes in excess of $599 shall be paid by the linked bingo game provider to the
78.34player within three business days. Winners of linked bingo prizes in excess of $599 will
78.35be given a receipt or claim voucher as proof of a win.

79.1    Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 349.211, subdivision 2c, is amended to read:
79.2    Subd. 2c. Tipboard prizes. (a) The maximum prize which may be awarded for
79.3a tipboard ticket is $599 for $2 and under tipboard tickets, $899 for $3 tipboard tickets,
79.4$1,199 for $4 tipboard tickets, and $1,499 for $5 tipboard tickets, not including any
79.5cumulative or carryover prizes. Cumulative or carryover prizes in tipboard games shall
79.6not exceed $2,500. An organization may not sell any tipboard ticket for more than $5.
79.7(b) For sports-themed tipboards, the total prize payout may not exceed the amount in
79.8section 349.2113, and each chance or ticket may not be sold for more than $10.

79.9    Sec. 61. SEVERABILITY.
79.10If any provision of this act is found to be invalid because it is in conflict with a
79.11provision of the Minnesota Constitution or the Constitution of the United States, or for any
79.12other reason, all other provisions of this act shall remain valid and any rights, remedies,
79.13and privileges that have been otherwise accrued by this act, shall remain in effect and may
79.14be proceeded with and concluded under this act.

79.15    Sec. 62. APPROPRIATION.
79.16$1,219,000 in fiscal year 2013 is appropriated from the lawful gambling regulation
79.17account in the special revenue fund to the Gambling Control Board for operating expenses
79.18related to the regulatory oversight of lawful gambling for electronic pull-tabs and
79.19electronic linked bingo.

79.20    Sec. 63. REPEALER.
79.21Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 297E.02, subdivision 4; 349.15, subdivision 3;
79.22and 349.19, subdivision 2a, are repealed.
79.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for games sold by a licensed
79.24distributor after June 30, 2012, and the commissioner of revenue retains the authority to
79.25issue refunds under Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 297E.02, subdivision 4, paragraph
79.26(d), for games sold before July 1, 2012.

79.27    Sec. 64. EFFECTIVE DATE.
79.28Unless otherwise specifically provided, this act is effective the day following final
79.29enactment.

80.1ARTICLE 6
80.2MISCELLANEOUS

80.3    Section 1. USE OF THE STADIUM.
80.4    Subdivision 1. Amateur sports use. The lessee of the stadium must make the
80.5facilities of the stadium available to the Minnesota Amateur Sports Commission up to
80.6ten days each year on terms satisfactory to the commission for amateur sports activities
80.7consistent with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 240A, each year during the time the bonds
80.8issued pursuant to this act are outstanding. The commission must negotiate in good faith
80.9and may be required to pay no more than actual out-of-pocket expenses for the time
80.10it uses the stadium.
80.11    Subd. 2. High school league. The lessee of the stadium must make the facilities of
80.12the stadium available for use by the Minnesota State High School League for at least seven
80.13days each year for high school soccer and football tournaments. The lessee of the stadium
80.14must provide, and may not charge the league a fee for, this use, including security, ticket
80.15takers, custodial or cleaning services, or other similar services in connection with this use.

80.16ARTICLE 7
80.17STADIUM BLINK-ON FUNDING

80.18    Section 1. [16A.1524] BACKUP REVENUES; FOOTBALL STADIUM
80.19FUNDING.
80.20    (a) If the commissioner of management and budget determines that the amount of
80.21revenues under section 16A.965, subdivision 8, paragraph (a), for the next fiscal year will
80.22be less than the amounts specified in section 16A.965, subdivision 8, paragraph (b), for
80.23that fiscal year, the commissioner may implement the revenue options authorized in this
80.24article. If the commissioner determines to exercise the authority under this section for
80.25a fiscal year, the commissioner must implement the revenue options, as necessary, in
80.26the following order:
80.27(1) a tax on luxury boxes as provided under section 473J.14, paragraph (a), clause
80.28(1);
80.29    (2) a sports-themed lottery game under section 349A.20;
80.30(3) an extension of the convention center taxes under article 4 through calendar
80.31year 2050;
80.32    (4) excess revenue from Hennepin County tax as provided under section 473.757,
80.33subdivision 11, paragraph (d); and
80.34    (5) an admissions tax, as provided under section 473J.14, paragraph (a), clause (2).
81.1    (b) Revenue raised under the authority granted by this section must be deposited
81.2in the general fund.
81.3    (c) If the commissioner determines to implement one or more of the revenue options
81.4authorized by this section, each subsequent year the commissioner must determine if
81.5the revenue is needed and will be imposed and collected for the next fiscal year. If the
81.6commissioner determines that one or more revenue options implemented for a fiscal year
81.7are not needed for a subsequent fiscal year, the commissioner must terminate them in the
81.8reverse order they were required to be implemented by paragraph (a) with the last option
81.9implemented terminated first and so forth.
81.10    (d) Before implementing a revenue source authorized under this section, the
81.11commissioner must report the intent to do so to the Legislative Commission on Planning
81.12and Fiscal Policy. The commissioner must inform the commission of determinations to
81.13continue or discontinue each revenue source for a subsequent fiscal year.

81.14    Sec. 2. [349A.20] STADIUM, SPORTS-THEMED GAME.
81.15    The State Lottery shall conduct a game based on stadium or professional sports
81.16themes to generate a minimum of $2,100,000 in additional revenue for the fiscal year
81.17for the general fund.
81.18EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective pursuant to the authority granted
81.19under section 1, on the day following final enactment.

81.20    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2011 Supplement, section 473.757, subdivision 11, is
81.21amended to read:
81.22    Subd. 11. Uses of tax. (a) Revenues received from the tax imposed under
81.23subdivision 10 may be used:
81.24    (1) to pay costs of collection;
81.25    (2) to pay or reimburse or secure the payment of any principal of, premium, or
81.26interest on bonds issued in accordance with Laws 2006, chapter 257, section 12;
81.27    (3) to pay costs and make expenditures and grants described in this section, including
81.28financing costs related to them;
81.29    (4) to maintain reserves for the foregoing purposes deemed reasonable and
81.30appropriate by the county;
81.31    (5) to pay for operating costs of the ballpark authority other than the cost of
81.32operating or maintaining the ballpark; and
81.33    (6) to make expenditures and grants for youth activities and amateur sports and
81.34extension of library hours as described in subdivision 2;
82.1and for no other purpose.
82.2    (b) Revenues from the tax designated for use under paragraph (a), clause (5), must
82.3be deposited in the operating fund of the ballpark authority.
82.4    (c) After completion of the ballpark and public infrastructure, the tax revenues not
82.5required for current payments of the expenditures described in paragraph (a), clauses (1) to
82.6(6), shall be used to (i) redeem or defease the bonds and (ii) prepay or establish a fund for
82.7payment of future obligations under grants or other commitments for future expenditures
82.8which are permitted by this section. Upon the redemption or defeasance of the bonds and
82.9the establishment of reserves adequate to meet such future obligations, the taxes shall
82.10terminate and shall not be reimposed. For purposes of this subdivision, "reserves adequate
82.11to meet such future obligations" means a reserve that does not exceed the net present value
82.12of the county's obligation to make grants under paragraph (a), clauses (5) and (6), and to
82.13fund the reserve for capital improvements required under section 473.759, subdivision 3,
82.14for the 30-year period beginning on the date of the original issuance of the bonds, less
82.15those obligations that the county has already paid. Each fiscal year revenues available
82.16for use under this paragraph must be accumulated and may not be expended under this
82.17paragraph until 15 days after the close of the county's fiscal year, provided that the county
82.18has not received a notice under paragraph (d).
82.19    (d) Notwithstanding the authority to use revenues under paragraph (c), upon
82.20notification by the commissioner of management and budget under section 16A.1524 for a
82.21state fiscal year, the county must pay any revenues that would be available under paragraph
82.22(c) to the commissioner for that state fiscal year as provided under section 16A.1524.
82.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment
82.24without local approval by Hennepin County under Minnesota Statutes, section 645.023,
82.25subdivision 1, paragraph (c).

82.26    Sec. 4. [473J.14] ADMISSIONS TAX.
82.27    (a) Upon notification by the commissioner of management and budget under section
82.2816A.1524, the commission shall by resolution impose and maintain a ten percent tax
82.29on either or both of:
82.30(1) the gross receipts received for the rental of box seats, suites, sky boxes, and
82.31similar in the NFL stadium; or
82.32(2) the granting, issuance, sale, or distribution, by any private or public person,
82.33association, or corporation, of the privilege of admission to professional sporting events
82.34at the NFL stadium.
83.1(b) Each tax must be imposed in the years specified by the commissioner of
83.2management and budget. The suites rental tax under paragraph (a), clause (1), applies to
83.3the gross receipts, as defined under section 297A.61, received by the seller, as defined
83.4in section 297A.61, and is a debt owed by the seller to the commission. The admission
83.5tax under paragraph (a), clause (2), must be stated and charged separately from the sales
83.6price so far as practicable and the grantor, seller, or distributor must collect the tax from
83.7the person admitted and the tax is a debt from that person to the grantor, issuer, seller, or
83.8distributor, and the tax required to be collected is a debt owed by the grantor, issuer, seller,
83.9or distributor to the commission. Any tax imposed under this section is recoverable at
83.10law by the commission from the grantor, issuer, seller, or distributor in the same manner
83.11as other debts. Every person granting, issuing, selling, or distributing tickets for taxable
83.12admissions or renting boxes, suites, or similar may be required, as provided in resolutions
83.13of the commission, to secure a permit, to file returns, to deposit security for the payment
83.14of the tax, and to pay the penalties for nonpayment and interest on late payments, as the
83.15commission deems necessary or expedient to assure the prompt and uniform collection of
83.16either or both of the taxes.
83.17    (c) The commission shall remit the proceeds of any taxes imposed under this section
83.18to the commissioner of management and budget for deposit in the state's general fund.
83.19    (d) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, the imposition of an
83.20admission tax upon a national superbowl football game conducted at the NFL stadium is
83.21discretionary with the commission.

83.22    Sec. 5. [473J.145] MINNEAPOLIS; CONVENTION CENTER TAX
83.23EXTENSION.
83.24The taxes under Laws 1986, chapter 396, sections 4 and 5, may be extended by
83.25order of the commissioner of management and budget beyond the 2047 sunset specified
83.26under article 4, as an additional source of revenue for repayment of the bonds sold under
83.27article 2. Any revenues collected from the extension of these taxes through 2048, 2049,
83.28and 2050 are appropriated to the commissioner of management and budget for repayment
83.29of the bonds sold by the state under article 2.
83.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective pursuant to the authority granted
83.31under section 1, on the day following final enactment."
83.32Amend the title accordingly