Emergency rules now in effect
Under s. 227.24, Stats., state agencies may promulgate rules without complying with the usual rule-making procedures. Using this special procedure to issue emergency rules, an agency must find that either the preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare necessitates its action in bypassing normal rule-making procedures.
Emergency rules are published in the official state newspaper, which is currently the Wisconsin State Journal. Emergency rules are in effect for 150 days and can be extended up to an additional 120 days with no single extension to exceed 60 days.
Occasionally the Legislature grants emergency rule authority to an agency with a longer effective period than 150 days or allows an agency to adopt an emergency rule without requiring a finding of emergency.
Extension of the effective period of an emergency rule is granted at the discretion of the Joint Committee for Review of Administrative Rules under s. 227.24 (2), Stats.
Notice of all emergency rules which are in effect must be printed in the Wisconsin Administrative Register. This notice will contain a brief description of the emergency rule, the agency finding of emergency or a statement of exemption from a finding of emergency, date of publication, the effective and expiration dates, any extension of the effective period of the emergency rule and information regarding public hearings on the emergency rule.
Copies of emergency rule orders can be obtained from the promulgating agency. The text of current emergency rules can be viewed at www.legis.state.wi.us/rsb/code.

Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection (2)
1. Rules adopted creating s. ATCP 11.72 (15), (16), (17) and (18), relating to importing, selling, offering to sell, allowing public access to or disposal of prairie dogs or any mammal known to have been in contact with a prairie dog since April 1, 2003.
Finding of emergency
(1) During May and June 2003, at least 12 people in Wisconsin have developed illnesses within one to two weeks after the people have had contact with prairie dogs. Symptoms of the human illness include fever, cough, rash and swollen lymph nodes. Several of these people have needed to be hospitalized.
(2) Preliminary laboratory results indicate that the cause of the human illness is an orthopox virus that could be transmitted by prairie dogs. Some of the pet prairie dogs have exhibited signs of illness. There have been reports of other mammals that have come in contact with prairie dogs also exhibiting signs of illness.
(3) It is necessary to reduce the opportunities for human interaction with prairie dogs or other mammals that have been in contact with prairie dogs in order to protect the health, safety and welfare of Wisconsin residents. Therefore, the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection is adopting this emergency rule to protect the health, safety and welfare of the public.
Publication Date:   June 12, 2003
Effective Date:   June 12, 2003
Expiration Date:   November 9, 2003
Hearing Date:   July 15, 2003
2. Rules adopted revising s. ATCP 11.72 (15), (16), (17) and (18), relating to importing, selling, offering to sell, allowing public access to or disposal of prairie dogs or any rodent from Africa.
Finding of emergency
1. As a result of the outbreak of an orthopox virus later identified as monkey pox in Wisconsin, the department adopted an emergency rule in early June, 2003.
2. Since the June, 2003 emergency rule was adopted, there has been additional information learned about the origins of the infected animals and the actual form of orthopox virus responsible for the symptoms. As a result of this new information, the department has been able to refine its identification of animals that should be subject to the prohibitions previously imposed.
3. After the department adopted the emergency rule (albeit before the rule was published) the CDC and FDA adopted their joint order that indicates the animals of concern are prairie dogs and African rodents.
4. The CDC and FDA joint order confirms the threat to humans from exposure to prairie dogs and African rodents.
5. This amended emergency rule provides consistency between the CDC and FDA joint order and Wisconsin's emergency rule.
6. The Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection seeks to provide the greatest protection for Wisconsin citizens while creating the least acceptable disruption to their lives and businesses. Therefore, the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection adopts an amended emergency rule to protect the health, safety and welfare of the public.
Publication Date:   July 24, 2003
Effective Date:   July 24, 2003
Expiration Date:   November 9, 2003
Hearing Date:   September 3, 2003
Chiropractic Examining Board
Rules adopted revising ch. Chir 2, relating to passing and retaking the practical examination.
Finding of emergency
The Chiropractic Examining Board finds that preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare necessitates putting the rule amendments described into effect prior to the time the amendments would take effect if the agency complied with the notice, hearing and publication requirements established for rule-making in ch. 227, Stats. The facts warranting adoption of these rule amendments under s. 227.24, Stats., are as follows:
On December 19, 2002, the Chiropractic Examining Board adopted the national practical examination conducted by the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners as the board's practical examination for determining clinical competence in Wisconsin. The board has determined that the national practical examination is a better measure of competence than was the state examination previously administered by the board and that the public health, safety and welfare warrant that the national practical examination be instituted immediately. The rule changes herein conform the terminology used in the board's rule with the textual description of the national practical examination and resolve doubts about the examination grades issued to applicants who complete the national practical examination.
The national practical examination describes the examination parts in different terms than are used in s. Chir 3.02, although the national practical examination covers the practice areas described in the existing rule. The rule amendments to s. Chir 2.03 (2) (intro.) resolve this difference.
This order deletes the reference in the board's current rule to passing “each part" of the examination. The national practical examination has one part and an applicant receives one grade for the part. In utilizing the national examination, the board approves the grading and grading procedures of the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners. Grade review procedures in s. Chir 2.09 are superfluous and the rule is repealed. The rule requiring reexamination is modified to avoid confusion over examination parts. The board is proceeding with promulgating these rule changes through a proposed permanent rule-making order.
Publication Date:   June 28, 2003
Effective Date:   June 28, 2003
Expiration Date:   November 25, 2003
Hearing Date:   October 16, 2003
Employment Relations Commission
Rules adopted amending ss. ERC 1.06 (1) to (3), 10.21 (1) to (5) and 20.21 (1) to (4), relating to increased filing fees.
Finding of emergency
The Employment Relations Commission finds that an emergency exists and that rules are necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare. A statement of the facts constituting the emergency is as follows:
1. The Employment Relations Commission has a statutory responsibility in the private, municipal and state sectors for timely and peaceful resolution of collective bargaining disputes and for serving as an expeditious and impartial labor relations tribunal.
2. Effective July 26, 2003, 2003 Wisconsin Act 33 reduced the Employment Relations Commission's annual budget by $400,000 in General Program Revenue (GPR) and eliminated 4.0 GPR supported positions. These reductions lowered the Employment Relations Commission's annual base GPR funding level and the number of GPR supported positions by more than 16%.
Act 33 also abolished the Personnel Commission and transferred certain of the Personnel Commission's dispute resolution responsibilities to the Employment Relations Commission.
3. 2003 Wisconsin Act 33 increased the Employment Relations Commission's Program Revenue (PR) funding and positions by $237,800 and 2.0 PR positions respectively. The revenue to support these increases will be provided by increasing existing filing fees for certain dispute resolution services.
4. Unless the emergency rule making procedures of s. 227.24, Stats., are utilized by the Employment Relations Commission to provide the increased filing fee revenue needed to support the 2.0 PR positions, the Commission's ability to provide timely and expeditious dispute resolution services will be significantly harmed.
The emergency rules increase existing filing fees for Commission dispute resolution services in amounts necessary to fund 2.0 Program Revenue positions as authorized by 2003 Wisconsin Act 33.
Sections 111.09, 111.71, 111.94, 227.11 and 227.24., Stats., authorize promulgation of these emergency rules.
Publication Date:   August 25, 2003
Effective Date:   September 15, 2003
Expiration Date:   January 22, 2004
Hearing Date:   November 20, 2003
Financial Institutions - Securities
Rules adopted revising ch. DFI-Sec 4, relating to conforming Wisconsin's Securities Law rules concerning broker-dealer books and records to federally-mandated standards under the Securities Exchange Act.
Finding of emergency
The Division of Securities of the Department of Financial Institutions for the State of Wisconsin finds that an emergency exists and that the attached rules are necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare. A statement of the facts constituting the emergency follows:
Congress in its passage of the National Securities Markets Improvement Act (“NSMIA") in 1996 prohibited state securities regulators from establishing or enforcing under their state securities laws or rules, record-keeping requirements for securities broker-dealers that are inconsistent with, or not required by, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC").
Following passage of NSMIA, the SEC commenced a rule-making process that spanned a several-year period (including a 1998 reproposal of the entirety of the proposed rules for a new public comment period), culminating in adoption in late 2001 of an extensive series of broker-dealer books and records rules for effectiveness commencing May 2, 2003. The SEC's revised books and records rules cover a comprehensive series of areas, including: (1) customer account records; (2) order ticket information; (3) customer complaints; (4) mandated reports and audits; (5) compliance manuals; (6) records maintenance, retention, production and access; and (7) records required to be maintained at a firm's home office and at “local" offices.
Because of the preemptive effects of federal law under NSMIA, all of the existing provisions of the Wisconsin administrative rules in Chapter SEC 4 under the Wisconsin Securities Law dealing with broker-dealer books and records covering the information categories (1) to (6) described above are superseded by the federal rules established by the SEC that became effective today, May 2, 2003. Additionally, certain existing Wisconsin Rule of Conduct provisions tied to the existing Wisconsin books and records rules need to be revised appropriately.
Consequently, it is necessary to immediately revise and amend Wisconsin's broker-dealer books and records rules to conform to the federal rules that now have become effective, and to remove inconsistent requirements contained in the existing Wisconsin books and record-keeping rules. A subcommittee of the North American Securities Administrators Association (“NASAA"), an organization comprised of the securities administrators of all 50 states, including Wisconsin, has reviewed the impact of the SEC's books and record-keeping rules on existing state securities law licensing rules, and recommended that states utilize the incorporation-by-reference-of-the–federal-rules treatment as set forth in this Order Adopting Emergency Rules.
Accordingly, the emergency rules do the following:
(1) Under Section 1, the entirety of the existing Wisconsin general books and records requirement for licensed broker-dealers as set forth in rules DFI-Sec 4.03 (1) to (4) (that particularizes the types of required books and records, and prescribes records retention periods), is repealed and recreated to incorporate by reference the new, superseding, federal rules adopted by the SEC contained in sections 17a-3 and 4 under the Securities Exchange Act. New sub. (1) requires a firm to retain the books and records cross-referenced in federal SEC rules 17a-3 and 4, and new sub. (2) incorporates by reference the records preservation and retention requirements in federal SEC rule 17a-4. New subsections (3) and (4) replace the current Wisconsin rules in DFI-Sec 4.03 (3) and (4) [that prescribe branch office records and retention requirements], with language which provides that the books and records required to be prepared and maintained at broker-dealer offices triggering the definition of “branch office" under current rule DFI-Sec 1.02 (7) (a), are the same records prescribed under the new federal provisions in new federal Rule 17a-3, and must be held for the retention periods specified in new federal Rule 17a-4.
(2) Section 2 repeals current Wisconsin rule DFI-Sec 4.03 (6) [which permitted broker-dealers to utilize alternative records to satisfy the principal office and branch office records required in existing rules DFI-Sec 4.03 (1) and (3)], because under NSMIA, states no longer have the authority to permit alternative forms of broker-dealer records different from the records prescribed by federal law.
(3) Section 3 is a renumbering of current rule DFI-Sec 4.03 (7) to reflect the repeal of DFI-Sec 4.03 (6) in Section 2 above.
(4) Under Section 4, the existing Wisconsin Rule of Conduct provision in DFI-Sec 4.05 (5) [requiring broker-dealers to provide customers with prescribed new account information and subsequent amendments to such information] is amended to both substitute a cross-reference to the new federal provision on that subject in SEC rule 17a-3(a)(17) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and to repeal language in the Wisconsin rule inconsistent with federal provisions.
Publication Date:   May 7, 2003
Effective Date:   May 7, 2003
Expiration Date:   October 4, 2003
Hearing Date:   August 11, 2003
Extension Through:   November 30, 2003
Health and Family Services
(Management, Technology, Chs. HFS 1—)
Rules adopted revising ch. HFS 15, relating to assessments on occupied, licensed beds in nursing homes and intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded (ICF-MR).
Exemption from finding of emergency
The legislature by section 9124 (3) (b) of 2003 Wisconsin Act 33 provides an exemption from a finding of emergency for the adoption of the rule.
Analysis prepared by the Department of Health and Family Services
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 modified section 50.14 of the Wisconsin Statutes, relating to assessments on occupied, licensed beds in nursing homes and intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded (ICF-MR.)
Under section 50.14 of the Wisconsin Statutes, nursing facilities (nursing homes and ICF-MRs) are assessed a monthly fee for each occupied bed. Facilities owned or operated by the state, federal government, or located out of state are exempt from the assessment. Beds occupied by a resident whose nursing home costs are paid by Medicare are also exempt. The rate, specified in section 50.14 (2) of the statutes, was $32 per month per occupied bed for nursing homes and $100 per month per occupied bed for ICF-MRs.
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 made the following changes to section 50.14:
1. It broadened the scope of which types of long-term care facilities must pay a monetary assessment to the Department by:
- eliminating exemptions from being subject to the assessments of facilities owned or operated by the state or federal government, and beds occupied by residents whose care is reimbursed in whole or in part by medicare under 42 USC 1395 to 1395ccc; and
- eliminating the exclusion of unoccupied facility beds from facility bed count calculations.
2. It increased the per bed fee limit the Department may charge subject ICF-MRs, from $100 per bed to $435 per bed in fiscal year 2003-04 and $445 per bed in fiscal year 2004-05.
3. It increased the per bed fee limit the Department may charge subject nursing homes, from $32 per bed to $75 per bed.
4. It establishes the requirement that amounts collected in excess of $14.3 million in fiscal year 2003-04, $13.8 million in fiscal year 2004-05, and, beginning July 1, 2005, amounts in excess of 45% of the amount collected be deposited in the Medical Assistance Trust Fund.
5. It specifies that facility beds that have been delicensed under section 49.45 (6m) (ap) 1. of the statutes, but not deducted from the nursing home's licensed bed capacity under section 49.45 (6m) (ap) 4. a., are to be included in the number of beds subject to the assessment.
In response to these statutory changes, by this order, the Department is modifying chapter HFS 15 accordingly.
The Department is also proceeding with promulgating these rule changes on a permanent basis through a proposed permanent rulemaking order.
Publication Date:   July 28, 2003
Effective Date:   July 28, 2003
Expiration Date:   December 25, 2003
Hearing Date:   October 15, 2003
Health and Family Services
(Medical Assistance, Chs. HFS 100—)
Rules adopted revising chs. HFS 101 to 107, relating to the Medicaid Family Planning Demonstration Project.
Finding of emergency
The Department of Health and Family Services finds that an emergency exists and that the rules are necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare. The facts constituting the emergency are as follows:
On June 25, 1999, the Department submitted a request for a waiver of federal law to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency within the United States Department of Health and Human Services that controls states' use of Medicaid funds. On June 14, 2002, the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare granted the waiver, effective January 1, 2003. The waiver allows the state to expand Medicaid services by providing coverage of family planning services for females of child-bearing age who would not otherwise be eligible for Medicaid coverage. Under the waiver, a woman of child-bearing age whose income does not exceed 185% of the federal poverty line will be eligible for most of the family planning services currently available under Medicaid, as described in s. HFS 107.21. Through this expansion of coverage, the Department hopes to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies in Wisconsin.
Department rules for the operation of the Family Planning Demonstration Project must be in effect before the program begins. The program statute, s. 49.45 (24r) of the statutes, became effective on October 14, 1997. It directed the Department to request a federal waiver of certain requirements of the federal Medicaid Program to permit the Department to implement the Family Planning Demonstration Project not later than July 1, 1998, or the effective date of the waiver, whichever date was later. After CMS granted the waiver, the Department determined that the Family Planning Demonstration Project could not be implemented prior to January 1, 2003, and CMS approved this starting date. Upon approval of the waiver, the Department began developing policies for the project and subsequently the rules, which are in this order. The Department is publishing the rules by emergency order so the rules take effect in February 2003, rather than at the later date required by promulgating permanent rules. In so doing, the Department can provide health care coverage already authorized by CMS as quickly as possible to women currently not receiving family planning services and unable to pay for them. The Department is also proceeding with promulgating these rule changes on a permanent basis through a proposed permanent rulemaking order.
Publication Date:   January 31, 2003
Effective Date:   January 31, 2003*
Expiration Date:   June 30, 2003
Hearing Dates:   April 25 & 28, 2003
* The Joint Committee for Review of Administrative Rules suspended this emergency rule on April 30, 2003
Health and Family Services
(Health, Chs. HFS 110—)
Rules were adopted revising ch. HFS 144, relating to immunization of students.
Finding of emergency
The Department of Health and Family Services finds that an emergency exists and that the rules are necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety or welfare. The facts constituting the emergency are as follows:
The Department has a rulemaking order (CR03-033) containing a variety of relatively minor changes to over a dozen chapters of administrative rules administered by the Department. The Department had anticipated that CR03-033 would be in effect on or before September 1, 2003. One of the proposed changes in CR03-033 is a provision that changes school immunization standards. Clearinghouse Rule 03-033 has been delayed for reasons unrelated to the provisions in this order. Consequently, the identical provisions in CR03-033 will not be in effect on September 1, 2003. For reasons stated subsequently in this analysis, unless these changes to the minimum immunization requirements in chapter HFS 144, Immunization of Students, are in effect September 1, 2003, needless confusion and unintended effects will result.
In 2002, the Department's Wisconsin Immunization Program requested minor language changes to chapter HFS 144 as part of a planned “omnibus" rulemaking order containing a variety of proposed relatively minor changes. The HFS 144 proposed rule changes affect time sensitive vaccine requirements and were made so the Department's immunization requirements adhere to new vaccine recommendations made by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP.) For example, the current requirement for Measles-Mumps-Rubella vaccine (MMR) is two doses with the first dose received on or after the first birthday. New ACIP recommendations allow a 4-day grace period so children receiving doses four days before their first birthday would be compliant. The current requirements in chapter HFS 144 do not accept as valid a dose of MMR that was given even one day prior to the first birthday. Similar time sensitive changes impact the vaccine requirement for a dose of DTaP vaccine after the fourth birthday and a dose of Hib vaccine after the first birthday.
These changes need to be in place before the start of the new 2003-04 school year. Although the changes are minor in nature, they have a significant effect on the law's enforcement at the day care and school level. Again, using MMR as an example, without the change, the school will count the child that received the MMR one day before the first birthday as non-compliant. Non-compliance can, pursuant to s. 252.04 (5), Stats., result in exclusion from school or, pursuant to s. 252.04 (6), Stats., the name of the non-complaint student being turned over to the local district attorney's office for possible court action against the parents. Therefore, the child will either need to be re-immunized or the parent will need to sign a waiver, pursuant to s. 252.04 (3), Stats. The re-immunization requirement puts the school at odds with the health care provider that is currently acting in accordance with the revised ACIP recommendations. The signing of a waiver is not a desirable option as the school reporting process to the Department counts that child as waiving all vaccine requirements and will yield misleading information as to the Immunization Law compliance level of Wisconsin day care and student populations. The Department's Immunization Program sends Immunization Law packets to the schools in mid-August. These packets include the information the schools need for enforcement of the law when school starts in September. It is imperative that the Department have the rule changes in place before the start of the school year and include the information in the school packets. Therefore, the Department is issuing this emergency order to allow school districts and health professionals to act in a timely manner.
Publication Date:   August 15, 2003
Effective Date:   August 15, 2003
Expiration Date:   January 12, 2004
Hearing Date:   September 12, 2003
Insurance
Rules adopted creating s. Ins 8.49, relating to Small Employer Uniform Employee Application.
Finding of emergency
The Commissioner of Insurance finds that an emergency exists and that the rule is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, or welfare. Facts constituting the emergency are as follows:
The rule and the uniform small employer application are required by statute to be available by August 1, 2003. Due to implementation of 45 CFR 164 of HIPAA privacy provisions for covered entities, including health plans, and the commissioner's efforts to obtain clarification regarding authorization for release of personally identifiable health information provisions from the Office of Civil Rights a Division of Centers Medicare & Medicaid Services charged with enforcement of the privacy portions of HIPAA, it is not possible to complete the permanent rule process in time to meet the statutory requirement.
The commissioner intends to file the permanent rule corresponding to this emergency rule, clearinghouse No. 03-055, with the secretary of state within the next 150 days. Because the uniform application form is required to be available by August 1, 2003, it is necessary to promulgate the rule on an emergency basis. A hearing on the permanent rule was held on July 11, 2003, in accordance with s. 227.17, Wis. Stat., and the commissioner has had benefit of reviewing public comments and the clearinghouse report prior to issuing this emergency rule.
Publication Date:   August 1, 2003
Effective Date:   August 1, 2003
Expiration Date:   December 29, 2003
Natural Resources (2)
(Fish, Game, etc., Chs. NR 1-)
1.   Rules were adopted revising ch. NR 10, relating to the 2003 migratory game bird season.
Finding of emergency
The emergency rule procedure, pursuant to s. 227.24, Stats., is necessary and justified in establishing rules to protect the public welfare. The federal government and state legislature have delegated to the appropriate agencies rule- making authority to control the hunting of migratory birds. The State of Wisconsin must comply with federal regulations in the establishment of migratory bird hunting seasons and conditions. Federal regulations are not made available to this state until mid-August of each year. This order is designed to bring the state hunting regulations to conformity with the federal regulations. Normal rule-making procedures will not allow the establishment of these changes by September 1. Failure to modify our rules will result in the failure to provide hunting opportunity and continuation of rules which conflict with federal regulations.
Publication Date:   August 29, 2003
Effective Date:   August 29, 2003
Expiration Date:   January 26, 2004
Hearing Date:   October 14, 2003
2.   Rules were adopted revising ch. NR 10, relating to Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in Wisconsin.
Finding of emergency
The emergency rule procedure, pursuant to s. 227.24, Stats., is necessary and justified in establishing rules to protect the public health, safety and welfare. The state legislature has delegated to the department rule - making authority in 2001 Wisconsin Act 108 to control the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) in Wisconsin. CWD, bovine tuberculosis and other forms of transmissible diseases pose a risk to the health of the state's deer herd and citizens and is a threat to the economic infrastructure of the department, the state, it's citizens and businesses. These restrictions on deer baiting and feeding need to be implemented through the emergency rule procedure to help control and prevent the spread of CWD, bovine tuberculosis and other forms of transmissible diseases in Wisconsin's deer herd.
Publication Date:   September 11, 2003
Effective Date:   September 11, 2003
Expiration Date:   February 8, 2004
Hearing Date:   October 13, 2003
Revenue
Rule adopted revising s. Tax 18.07, relating to the 2004 assessment of agricultural land.
Finding of emergency
The Wisconsin Department of Revenue finds that an emergency exists and that a rule is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public welfare. The facts constituting the emergency are as follows:
Pursuant to s. 70.32 (2r) (c), Stats., the assessment of agricultural land is assessed according to the income that could be generated from its rental for agricultural use. Wisconsin Chapter Tax 18 specifies the formula that is used to estimate the net rental income per acre. The formula estimates the net income per acre of land in corn production based on a 5-year average corn price per bushel, cost of corn production per bushel and corn yield per acre. The net income is divided by a capitalization rate that is based on a 5-year average interest rate for a medium-sized, 1-year adjustable rate mortgage and net tax rate for the property tax levy two years prior to the assessment year.
For reasons of data availability, there is a three-year lag in determining the 5-year average. Thus, the 2003 use value is based on the 5-year average corn price, cost and yield for the 1996-2000 period, and the capitalization rate is based on the 5-year average interest rate for the 1998-2002 period. The 2004 use value is to be based on the 5-year average corn price, cost and yield for the 1997-2001 period, and the capitalization rate is to be based on the 1999-2003 period.
The data for the 1997-2001 period yields negative net income per acre due to declining corn prices and increasing costs of corn production. As a result, reliance on data for the 1997-2001 period will result in negative use values.
The department is issuing this emergency rule in order to ensure positive and stable assessments of agricultural land for 2004.
Publication Date:   October 3, 2003
Effective Date:   October 3, 2003
Expiration Date:   March 1, 2004
Workforce Development
(Workforce Solutions, Chs. DWD 11—59)
Rules adopted revising ch. DWD 59, relating to the child care local pass-through program.
Finding of emergency
The Department of Workforce Development finds that an emergency exists and that a rule is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, or welfare. A statement of facts constituting the emergency is:
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 allocated federal child care funds in a manner that assumes an increase in the match rate paid by local governments and tribes receiving grants under the child care local pass-through program. Budget documents prepared by the Legislative Fiscal Bureau specify that the budget option chosen requires that local governments and tribes contribute matching funds at a rate of 52% in 2003-2004, and slightly higher in 2004-2005. Chapter DWD 59 currently requires a minimum match rate of the state's federal medical assistance percentage rate, which is approximately 42%. The match rate for the pass-through program must be increased immediately so Wisconsin does not lose valuable federal child care dollars. These dollars help preserve the welfare of the state by ensuring that low-income families have access to quality affordable child care.
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 also reduced funding to the child care local pass-through program by 86%. Chapter DWD 59 requires a 2-step grant process wherein current grantees receive up to 75% of the funds under a noncompetitive process for 2 years following the receipt of the initial grant, and can apply, along with any eligible jurisdiction in the state, for the remaining 25% as initial grantees. The dramatically reduced funding for the pass-through program renders the current Chapter DWD 59 requirement to fund continuing grants while reserving funds for a new statewide request for proposals unwieldy, wasteful, and obsolescent. If the current process remains in place, it would not only waste state and local staff resources on extremely low-value administrative processes, it would waste public funds at a time when they are in short supply. This could further undermine state and local efforts to ensure a reasonable supply of reliable and quality child care for families who depend on this service in order to work. This emergency rule allows all available dollars to be used for continuing grants if there is insufficient funding to provide continuing grants of at least 50% of the eligible grantees' initial grant levels from the previous 2 grant cycles.
These changes are ordered as an emergency rule so they are effective before the new grant cycle begins on October 1, 2003. Delaying the next grant cycle until the permanent rule is effective is not a viable option because local governments need to know whether they will receive continued funding or will be forced to dismantle ongoing programs and lay-off staff when the current grant cycle ends on September 30. Also, federal law requires that the federal funds be matched and spent within the federal fiscal year of October 1 to September 30.
Publication Date:   October 7, 2003
Effective Date:   October 7, 2003
Expiration Date:   March 5, 2004
Hearing Date:   November 12, 2003
Workforce Development
(Civil Rights, Chs. DWD 218-225)
Rules adopted repealing chs. PC 1, 2, 4, 5 and 7 and revising chs. DWD 218 and 225 and creating ch. DWD 224, relating to the transfer of personnel commission responsibilities to the equal rights division.
Finding of emergency
The Department of Workforce Development finds that an emergency exists and that a rule is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, safety, or welfare. A statement of facts constituting the emergency is:
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 transfers the responsibility for processing certain employment-related complaints against state respondents from the Personnel Commission (PC) to the Equal Rights Division (ERD) effective upon publication of 2003 Wisconsin Act 33. The ERD needs rules governing the procedures for processing these complaints effective immediately to ensure that service is not seriously delayed by this administrative change. The PC expects to transfer approximately 200 pending cases to ERD immediately.
2003 Wisconsin Act 33 transfers responsibility from the PC to ERD for 9 different types of employment-related complaints against state respondents. The ERD has had responsibility for processing complaints against nonstate respondents for 8 of the 9 types of complaints. This order makes minor amendments to existing rules to include state respondents and creates a new rule chapter on whistleblower protection for state employees, which is the one issue that ERD has not previously handled because the law does not apply to nonstate respondents. The newly-created whistleblower rules are similar to the existing fair employment rules.
A nonstatutory provision of 2003 Wisconsin Act 33 transfers existing PC rules to ERD. This order repeals those rules. Adopting the PC rules would result in different procedures for cases against state respondents and nonstate respondents for no logical reason. The dual system would be difficult to administer and confusing to complainants, many of whom are pro se. Even if ERD adopted the PC rules, an emergency rule would be necessary to remove confusing irrelevant and obsolete information.
This order repeals the PC rules and revises ERD rules by emergency rule to ensure that a clear, logical, and fair process is in place for handling the newly-transferred responsibilities for protecting Wisconsin's workforce from discrimination and retaliation.
Publication Date:   August 5, 2003
Effective Date:   August 5, 2003
Expiration Date:   January 2, 2004
Hearing Date:   October 27, 2003
Links to Admin. Code and Statutes in this Register are to current versions, which may not be the version that was referred to in the original published document.