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The Wisconsin Legislature concluded
the 2003-04 regular legislative session late
last week in which literally hundreds of bills
received some consideration, but not all made
the cut. Below we have highlighted some of the
bills that received final legislative approval
last week. The legislative enactments cover
a wide range of subject matters including the
regulation of high cost mortgage lending, tightening
the requirements for expert opinion evidence
in civil cases, allowing boards and members
of nonprofit associations to conduct business
via e-mail, encouraging capital investment in
Wisconsin, state minimum wage preemption, job
training and a TIF trailer bill. The Administration
will be extremely busy examining the very lengthy
list of bills presented to the Governor over
the past few weeks.
[EDITOR’S NOTE: All of
the links below are to the individual bill’s
history which, in turn, provides links to the
bill text as well as any adopted Substitute
Amendment (replaces entire bill) and any adopted
amendments to the original bill or the Substitute
amendment. We believe this will provide the
most comprehensive coverage, particularly in
light of the flurry of activity last week, including
amendments, which may have significantly altered
the original proposal(s).]
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Legislative Session Over,
Bills Ready for Governor
Both houses were busy this week with final
action on several bills remaining for
the current floor period. Selected items
that received final consideration last
week include:
Assembly Bills
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AB 254,
relating to revisions and additions
to condominium law.
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AB 417, relating to the retainage of public construction
contracts.
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AB 516,
relating to an exemption from the
requirement to obtain an air pollution
construction permit for certain equipment
at a nonmetallic mineral processing
facility.
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AB 591,
relating to recording and filing documents
with the offices of register of deeds
and the Department of Financial Institutions.
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AB 595,
relating to civil liability exemption
for claims resulting from weight gain
and obesity.
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AB 608,
relating to making changes to the
comprehensive planning statute known
as Smart Growth.
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AB 633, relating
to state minimum wage preemption.
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AB 728,
relating to comprehensive planning
by local governmental units and fees
imposed by political subdivisions.
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AB 730,
relating to the acquisition of in-state
banks and in-state bank holding companies.
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AB 792,
relating to regulating high cost mortgage
lending.
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AB 812,
relating to registration of livestock
premises and granting rule-making
authority.
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AB 830,
relating to funding for engineering
instruction at the University of Wisconsin-Rock
County campus and making an appropriation.
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AB 843,
relating to the issuance of debt by
natural gas and electric public utilities
to finance certain environmental activities.
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AB 859,
relating to manufacturing extension
center grants.
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AB 868,
relating to the siting and expansion
of certain livestock facilities; local
zoning ordinances relating to livestock
facilities; creating a Livestock Facility
Siting Review Board.
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AB 890, relating to meetings
of the boards and members of nonprofit
corporations.
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AB 925,
relating to enforcement of the one-family
and two-family dwelling code in certain
cities, villages, and towns.
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AB 926,
relating to regulation of high capacity
wells, notification of well construction,
groundwater quantity management, granting
rule-making authority, and making
appropriations.
Senate Bills
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SB 49,
relating to expert opinion evidence.
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SB 61,
relating to environmental compliance
audits, environmental management systems,
providing incentives for improving
environmental performance, providing
immunity from civil penalties for
certain violations of environmental
requirements, access to certain information,
granting rule-making authority, and
providing a penalty.
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SB 71,
relating to treatment of prescription
drug costs, diagnostic testing, and
payments under mandated insurance
coverage of treatment for nervous
and mental disorders and alcoholism
and other drug abuse problems, and
granting rule-making authority.
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SB 87,
relating to limiting the authority
of cities and villages to annex territory.
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SB 218,
relating to the authority of the board
of directors of business corporations
and corporate committees; corporate
shareholder notices and meetings;
mergers, conversions, and other business
combinations; the transfer of corporate
property to certain affiliates; and
naming limited partnerships.
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SB 261,
relating to creating a qualified new
business venture tax credit and a
capital gains tax exemption regarding
investments in certified venture capital
funds and qualified new business ventures,
requiring a study of new Wisconsin
businesses, facilitating the development
of certain investor networks.
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SB 272,
relating to local government telecommunications
utilities and public hearings for
ordinances and resolutions authorizing
local government cable television,
telecommunications, and Internet access
facilities.
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SB 323,
relating to changing the procedures
for the incorporation of cities and
villages, creating a board to review
incorporation petitions, and changing
annexation procedures affected by
incorporation petitions.
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SB 340,
relating to various changes in the
unemployment insurance law, granting
rule-making authority, and making
appropriations.
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SB 369,
relating to reciprocal agreements
for real estate licenses.
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SB 372,
relating to making patient health
care records concerning health care
operations inapplicable to restrictions
on release without informed consent.
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SB 384,
relating to authorizing technical
college districts to issue revenue
bonds for the purpose of providing
services and facilities to businesses,
granting rule-making authority, and
making an appropriation.
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SB 428,
relating to TIF trailer legislation.
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SB 435,
relating to waiver of a requirement
under hemophilia treatment program
to apply for other coverage.
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SB 436,
relating to motor vehicle emission
inspections.
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SB 446,
relating to vehicle protection product
warranties.
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SB 484, relating to contracts for services under
Medical Assistance.
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SB 451,
relating to appropriating money to
technical college districts for the
Wisconsin Advantage Jobs Training
Program and making an appropriation.
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SB 471,
relating to brownfield revolving loan
programs and making appropriations.
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SB 472,
relating to making private insurance
available to facilitate environmental
cleanups.
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SB 512,
relating to the property tax exemption
for property that is leased as residential
housing.
Governor Bill Signings
Governor Doyle signed several bills into
law last week, including AB 651,
relating to parental liability for acts
of their minor child, recovery of damages
for certain criminal actions, increasing
the jurisdictional amount in small claims
court, garnishment, attorney fees, exemption
from execution of accounts, civil actions
by collection agencies, earnings garnishment,
retail theft, recovery in actions involving
worthless checks, and revocation of fish
and game approvals for which payment is
made by worthless checks.
The Governor has also
scheduled several bill signings for this
afternoon, Monday, March 15, including
SB 100,
relating to small business regulatory
reform including the creation of a Small
Business Regulatory Review Board.
Governor Recommends State
Minimum Wage Increase
It was reported in last week’s Tidbits
that Governor Doyle had announced
that the state’s Minimum Wage Advisory
Council had voted, March 1, 16-2 in favor
of increasing the state’s minimum
wage from the current $5.25 per hour to
$6.50 per hour by 2005. This increase
is, however, lower than the current proposal
before the City of Madison Common Council
which would raise the minimum wage in
Madison to $7.75 per hour.
While that effort has
not been approved by the city government
at this time, the state Legislature has
passed separate legislation that would
preempt any local government minimum wage
ordinance that does not conform to the
state minimum wage policy. This bill,
AB 633,
is currently enrolled and awaits action
by the Governor.
Alternative Hub Airline
Incentive Heard in Joint Finance
On Wednesday, March 10, 2004, the Joint
Finance Committee held a public hearing
on legislation that would provide incentive
grant payments for airlines that operate
hub facilities in Wisconsin. (AB 933
introduced by Representative Jeff Stone;
SB 533
introduced by Senator Alberta Darling).
Currently, airlines operating
from a hub facility may qualify for an
exemption from the advalorem property
tax, (the airline equivalent of an M&E
exemption on equipment that generates
taxable revenue) but that exemption has
been challenged and subsequently ruled
unconstitutional on Commerce Clause grounds
in the Dane County Circuit Court. Both
the State of Wisconsin and Midwest Airlines
have filed an appeal of the lower court
decision, which is pending.
The recently introduced
legislation provides an alternative incentive
for airlines that qualify as hub airlines
in the event the appeal is lost and the
tax exemption is voided. It would
provide a grant payment based on the number
of passengers boarded in Wisconsin and
is proposed to go into effect in October
of 2005.
Proponents of the legislation
testified that the current incentive is
working to encourage the growth of air
service in Wisconsin and that an alternative
incentive was warranted if the tax exemption
was struck down.
The two airlines that
currently meet the qualifying criteria
for treatment as a hub airline (Midwest
Airlines and Air Wisconsin) individually
noted their recent capital investments
in Wisconsin, which combined is over $800
million in new planes and maintenance
facilities, since the tax exemption was
enacted in 2001. They also maintained
that the legislation is necessary to provide
a degree of certainty as they simultaneously
continue to pursue their expansion plans
and face the uncertainty of a legal decision
on appeal.
The legislation is likely
to be pursued in the next budget or as
early as this spring if the two houses
decide to meet in Extraordinary Session.
For further information
on legislative activity of interest to
CTCW members, go to CTCW
Legislative Tracking Report. (Updated
3/15/04)
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| Federal Developments |
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Sykes Nomination Approved
by Committee
On Thursday, March 11, the U.S. Senate
Judiciary Committee voted 14-5 to recommend
confirmation of the nomination of Wisconsin
Supreme Court Justice Diane S. Sykes to
the federal appeals court in Chicago.
Among those voting to support Sykes’
confirmation were Wisconsin Democrat senators
Kohl and Feingold. The nomination will
now be presented to the full Senate.
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Monday,
March 15, 2004:
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St. Sen. Roger Breske,
(D-Eland), 6:00 p.m., Birnamwood,
Wis.
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St. Rep. Terri McCormick,
(R-Appleton), 5:00 p.m., Neenah, Wis.
Wednesday,
March 17, 2004:
Thursday,
March 18, 2004:
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St. Rep. Mark Pettis,
(R-Hertel), 5:00 p.m., Siren, Wis.
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St. Sen. Wirch, (D-Kenosha),
7:30 a.m., Madison, Wis.
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St. Sen. Wirch, (D-Kenosha),
5:00 p.m., Kenosha, Wis.
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CTCW Political Tidbits
is a weekly newsletter on Wisconsin political
and policy developments prepared for CTCW members
by The Hamilton Consulting
Group. Employees of CTCW member organizations
can subscribe at: http://www.ctcw.org/form-subscribe-tidbits.html.
To unsubscribe, go to: http://www.ctcw.org/form-unsubscribe-tidbits.html.
© 2004 The Hamilton
Consulting Group
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For Further Information
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For further
information on these initiatives,
contact Jim Hough at
The Hamilton Consulting Group.

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In the News
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New
laws wrong answer on lawsuits (opinion):
Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, Mar.
15, 2004.
Veto
bill to block wage hikes (opinion):
Madison Capital Times, Mar. 14, 2004.
Capital
Briefing: St. Paul Pioneer Press,
Mar. 13, 2004.
Senate
sends Doyle bill on livestock expansion:
Appleton Post-Crescent, Mar. 13, 2004.
Leaders
tout changes at end of session: Manitowoc
Herald Times, Mar. 13, 2004.
Plover
woman named to Natural Resources Board:
Stevens Point Journal, Mar. 13, 2004.
State Senate
approves ban on gay marriage: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, Mar. 12, 2004.
Bill
bans lie tests for abuse victims:
Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, Mar. 12,
2004.
U.S.
Senate panel OKs nomination of Sykes to
U.S. appeals court: St. Paul Pioneer
Press, Mar. 12, 2004.
Assembly
postpones action on rent-to-own: Appleton
Post-Crescent, Mar. 11, 2004.
Airlines
would get $18.1 million in breaks:
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Mar. 11, 2004.
County
board size bill goes to Doyle for OK:
Oshkosh Northwestern, Mar. 11, 2004.
State's high-tech
efforts lagging: Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, Mar. 11, 2004.
Jobless
data for state mixed: Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, Mar. 11, 2004.
Business
growth boosted: Manitowoc Herald Times,
Mar. 11, 2004.
Bill
to halt obesity lawsuits passes: St.
Paul Pioneer Press, Mar. 10, 2004.
Report:
state job market to rebound: Madison
Capital Times, Mar. 10, 2004.
Protect
state ground water: Wisconsin State
Journal, Mar. 10, 2004.
State is
16th in asbestos deaths: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, Mar. 10, 2004.
Doyle
in fight vs. new power market system:
Madison Capital Times, Mar. 9, 2004.
More job
losses feared among auto suppliers:
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Mar. 9, 2004.
State legislative
committee approves rent-to-own bill:
Janesville Gazette, Mar. 9, 2004.
Legislators
mull more testing for elderly drivers:
Racine Journal Times, Mar. 8, 2004.
The
state's court obligation (opinion):
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Mar. 6, 2004.
Business
program in state’s best interest
(opinion): Green Bay Press-Gazette,
Mar. 6, 2004.
State factory
jobs hit lowest since '92: Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel, Mar. 5, 2004.
Markup
law doesn’t help consumers, AAA
says: Fond du Lac Reporter, Mar. 5,
2004.
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