64. The dwelling code council.
65. The elections advisory council.
66. The emergency medical services board.
67. The environmental education board.
68. The equal rights council.
69. The farm mediation and arbitration board.
70. The fertilizer research council.
71. The fire prevention council.
72. The Fox River management commission.
73. The gang violence prevention council.
74. The Great Lakes compact commission.
75. The groundwater coordinating council.
76. The group insurance board.
77. The hazardous pollution prevention board.
78. The historic preservation review board.
79. The historical markers council.
80. The housing advisory council.
81. The inland lakes protection and rehabilitation council.
82. The investment and local impact fund board.
83. The labor and management council.
84. The labor standards council.
85. The laboratory of hygiene board.
86. The Lake Superior commercial fishing board.
87. The land and water conservation board.
88. The land information board.
89. The law enforcement standards board.
90. The low-level radioactive waste council.
91. The lower Wisconsin state riverway board.
92. The Kickapoo Valley governing board.
93. The metallic mining council.
94. The midwest low-level radioactive waste commission.
95. The midwestern higher education commission.
96. The Milwaukee River revitalization council.
97. The Minnesota-Wisconsin boundary area commission.
98. The minority business development board.
99. The Mississippi River parkway commission.
100. The multifamily dwelling code council.
101. The national and community service board.
102. The natural areas preservation council.
103. The nonmetallic mining council.
104. The office of health care information.
105. The office of justice assistance.
106. The off-the-road vehicle council.
107. The parole commission.
108. The pesticide review board.
109. The petroleum storage environmental cleanup council.
110. The pharmacy internship board.
111. The plumbers council.
112. The prison industries board.
113. The public records and forms board.
114. The radiation protection council.
115. The recycling market development board.
116. The rural economic development board.
117. The rural health development council.
118. The rustic roads board.
119. The savings and loan review board.
120. The savings bank review board.
121. The school district boundary appeal board.
122. The self-insurers council.
123. The small business environmental council.
124. The small employer insurance board.
125. The snowmobile recreational council.
126. The state capitol and executive residence board.
127. The state council on alcohol and other drug abuse.
128. The state emergency response board.
129. The state trails council.
130. The state use board.
131. The submerged cultural resources council.
132. The tax appeals commission.
133. The teachers retirement board.
134. The telecommunications retraining board.
135. The uniform commercial code statewide lien system council.
136. The university and crime laboratories cooperation council.
137. The waste facility siting board.
138. The Wisconsin apprenticeship council.
139. The Wisconsin conservation corps board.
140. The Wisconsin retirement board.
141. The Wisconsin sesquicentennial commission.
142. The Wisconsin waterways commission.
143. The Women's council.
144. The youth apprenticeship council.
(c)Reporting requirements; evaluation; recommendations. No later than October 1, 1995, each specified state body shall submit to the lieutenant governor a report on a form prescribed by the lieutenant governor describing its functions and the justification, if any, for continuation of those functions. The lieutenant governor shall evaluate the information contained in the reports and shall consider whether to recommend continuation of each specified state body that is required to submit a report under this subsection or transfer of the functions of that body to another state body. The department of administration shall assist the lieutenant governor in performing this evaluation upon request of the lieutenant governor. The lieutenant governor shall, no later than January 1, 1996, submit a report to the cochairpersons of the joint committee on finance containing a single piece of proposed legislation providing for termination of all specified state bodies and their functions, effective on April 1, 1996, except that if a specified state body demonstrates to the satisfaction of the lieutenant governor that the functions of the body should be continued after March 31, 1996, the lieutenant governor may include in the proposed legislation provision for transfer of the functions of the body to another state body. In the report, the lieutenant governor shall also include any findings, recommendations or conclusions that he reaches as a result of his evaluation. If the lieutenant governor recommends continuation of any specified state body after March 31, 1996, the lieutenant governor shall also submit with the report a single piece of proposed legislation providing for termination or transfer of the functions of all specified state bodies except those bodies which the lieutenant governor recommends to be continued.
(7x)Transfer of municipal boundary review.
(a)Assets and liabilities. On the effective date of this paragraph, the assets and liabilities of the department of administration primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, shall become the assets and liabilities of the department of development.
(b)Employe transfers. All incumbent employes holding positions in the department of administration having duties primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, are transferred on the effective date of this paragraph to the department of development.
(c)Employe status. Employes transferred under paragraph (b) have all the rights and the same status under subchapter V of chapter 111 and chapter 230 of the statutes in the department of development that they enjoyed in the department of administration immediately before the transfer. Notwithstanding section 230.28 (4) of the statutes, no employe so transferred who has attained permanent status in class is required to serve a probationary period.
(d)Tangible personal property, records. On the effective date of this paragraph, all tangible personal property, including records, of the department of administration primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, is transferred to the department of development.
(e)Contracts. All contracts entered into by the department of administration primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, in effect on the effective date of this paragraph remain in effect and are transferred to the department of development. The department of development shall carry out any such contractual obligations until modified or rescinded by the department of development to the extent allowed under the contract.
(f)Rules and orders. All rules promulgated by the department of administration primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, that are in effect on the effective date of this paragraph remain in effect until their specified expiration date or until amended or repealed by the department of development. All orders issued by the department of administration primarily related to the functions of municipal boundary review, as determined by the secretary of administration, that are in effect on the effective date of this paragraph remain in effect until their specified expiration date or until modified or rescinded by the department of development.
Loading...
Loading...