LRB-2034/1
ALL:jlg:ch
1999 - 2000 LEGISLATURE
January 27, 1999 - Printed by direction of Senate Chief Clerk.
AB51-engrossed,1,13 1An Act to repeal 13.0992; to amend 19.37 (2), 19.37 (3), 218.015 (7), 560.05 (3)
2and 775.01; and to create 13.0992, 16.528 (3) (f), 66.285 (4) (f), 134.92, 893.83
3and 904.17 of the statutes; relating to: gathering of information by state and
4local governmental officers and agencies concerning year 2000 and leap
5year-related processing and public access to such information; recovery of
6damages in certain actions against state and local governmental units and
7officers, employes and agents thereof caused by the incorrect processing,
8transmittal or receipt of certain date data; admissibility of statements
9regarding the year 2000 processing capabilities of a product or service;
10preparation of year 2000 impact statements; educational outreach concerning
11year 2000 and leap year-related computer failures; testing of local emergency
12contingency plans for responding to year 2000 computer problems; granting
13rule-making authority; and providing a penalty.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau

Engrossment information:
The text of Engrossed 1999 Assembly Bill 51 consists of the following
documents adopted in the assembly on January 26, 1999: Assembly Substitute
Amendment 1 as affected by Assembly Amendment 1, Assembly Amendment 5,
Assembly Amendment 6 and Assembly Amendment 9. The text also includes the
January 26, 1999, LRB correction to Assembly Substitute Amendment 1.
Content of Engrossed 1999 Assembly Bill 51:
Information gathering
This bill permits any state or local governmental unit which or officer who has
regulatory power over any person to require that person to provide to the unit or
officer information relating to year 2000 processing. Year 2000 processing
information includes any communication made by the person to any other person or
persons: 1) concerning an assessment, projection or estimate relating to, or plans,
objectives or timetables for implementing or verifying year 2000 processing
capabilities of an entity, product, service or set of products or services; 2) concerning
test plans, dates or results, or operational problems or solutions related to year 2000
processing by products or services that incorporate or otherwise utilize products; 3)
concerning the correction or avoidance of a year 2000 processing failure in computer
hardware, a computer system, a component of a computer system, a computer
program or software or services utilizing any computer hardware, system,
component, program or software or services; or 4) reviewing, commenting on, or
otherwise directly or indirectly relating to year 2000 processing capabilities. The
information may only pertain to a matter relating to public health or safety that is
regulated by that authority or a matter relating to public health or safety that has
an effect upon a matter that is regulated by that authority. The bill defines "year
2000 processing" as processing, transmitting or receiving date data from, into and
between the 20th and 21st centuries and during the years 1999 and 2000, and from
leap year calculations. Currently, no such authority exists.
Under the bill, if any business fails to provide the information required,
knowingly gives a false answer to a request for information or evades the answer to
any request for information, each director, partner or proprietor of that business is
subject to a forfeiture (civil penalty) of $100 for each offense. Each day of violation
constitutes a separate offense.
The bill requires each state or local governmental unit which or officer who
receives information under the bill to withhold from access all information provided
to the unit or officer under the public records access law, except that the unit or officer
must provide the information to the department of administration (DOA) upon
written request of the department and may, upon written consent of a person who
provides information to the unit or officer, provide the information to another
specified person or to any person.
This bill provides that no year 2000 processing information may be offered in
evidence only if the information is in a statement made by a person who knew that
the statement was false, misleading or deceptive or that was made with reckless
disregard as to the truth or falsity of the statement, if the information is in a
republished year 2000 statement that the person who republished the statement

knew was false, misleading or deceptive, if the information is in a statement made
by a person who was compensated for providing a year 2000 statement as part of a
contractual service or made by a person when soliciting a consumer, or if the
information is offered in any action brought by the state or a local governmental unit
acting in regulatory, supervisory or enforcement capacity.
State and local governmental liability
Currently, under the common law doctrine of sovereign immunity, the state is
immune from lawsuits, except in certain instances in which laws permit the state to
be sued or the enforcement of a federal or constitutional right is involved. State
authorities and local governmental units do not enjoy such broad immunity,
although narrower grants of immunity are provided to such authorities and units
under various specific laws. Also, in certain limited circumstances, a state
governmental officer, employe or agent may be sued for certain acts or omissions
even though a lawsuit arising from the same acts or omissions may not be brought
against the governmental unit that the officer, employe or agent serves. A state or
local governmental officer, employe or agent who is sued for a negligent action or
omission may be protected from liability currently if the officer, employe or agent
makes a good faith attempt to resolve the problem that results in the act or omission.
No punitive damages (damages not resulting from direct or indirect loss but
awarded, instead, as punishment for wrongful conduct) may be awarded in any
lawsuit against a state or local governmental officer, employe or agent based upon
tort (a noncontractual claim based upon alleged wrongful conduct). Damages in tort
lawsuits are generally limited to $250,000 in the case of a state officer, employe or
agent, or $50,000 in the case of a local governmental unit or officer, employe or agent
thereof. Currently, with certain exceptions, the state and local governments must
pay interest on late payments to vendors.
This bill provides that no person may recover any damages against any state
or local governmental unit, including a state authority, or any officer, employe or
agent thereof, for any act or omission caused by the failure of an electronic computing
device that is under the control of such a unit, officer, employe or agent to process,
transmit or receive date data from, into and between the 20th and 21st centuries and
during the years 1999 and 2000 and from leap year calculations if the unit had a
remediation plan in effect at the time of the act or omission that was designed to
prevent the failure and the unit or the officer, employe or agent made a good faith
attempt to find, identify and replace or correct any electronic computing device that
may have contributed to the failure. Under the bill, a governmental unit or officer,
employe or agent thereof must take these steps in order to benefit from any good faith
defense to an allegation of negligence. The bill also voids any provision of a contract
entered into on or after the day on which the bill becomes law that attempts to waive
the immunity provided under the bill. In addition, the bill provides that the state
and local governments are not required to pay interest to vendors on late payments
arising from a "year 2000" failure described above.
Year 2000 impact statements
This bill provides that whenever a bill is introduced in either house of the
legislature that would have an impact on the ability of a state governmental unit, a

local governmental unit or any other person to avoid a year 2000 problem, as defined
in the bill, the speaker of the assembly or president of the senate may require that
a year 2000 impact statement be prepared by DOA. The statement describes the
impact upon the year 2000 problem that would result from enactment of the bill. The
bill requires persons to provide information to DOA to assist in preparing the
statement. The bill establishes a procedure that protects the confidentiality of
information, unless a court authorizes its disclosure.
Educational outreach
This bill permits DOA to contract with one or more private contractors to
provide educational outreach with respect to the potential failure of computers to
process, transmit or receive date data from, into and between the 20th and 21st
centuries and during the years 1999 and 2000 and from leap year calculations, and
the methods of correction and contingency planning for such failures. Under the bill,
DOA has discretion to determine the persons to whom the outreach is to be provided.
Currently, DOA has no authority or responsibility to conduct outreach for this
purpose. Under current law, state agencies may contract for services that they are
authorized or required to provide if the services can be provided more economically
or efficiently by contract, subject to certain statutory requirements, rules of DOA and
collective bargaining laws and agreements. State agencies must justify the need for
contractual service procurements. This bill provides that certain of these statutes
and rules do not apply to the contractual services that DOA is permitted to procure
under the bill.
Emergency management contingency plans
Under current law, the adjutant general, as the head of the department of
military affairs (DMA), is required to develop and promulgate a statewide plan of
emergency management for the security of persons and property and to provide
training to and standards for local emergency management services agencies.
This bill requires the division of emergency management in the department
of military affairs (DMA) to review the county emergency response plans to
determine if those plans prepare the counties to respond to an emergency created by
a computer's failure to correctly respond to data regarding the year 2000. The bill
authorizes the division to assist counties in revising their emergency response plans
if those plans insufficiently respond to the year 2000 computer problems. The bill
allows the adjutant general to submit a request to the joint committee on finance
(JCF) for the contracting and testing of county emergency response plans. The bill
allows JCF to supplement DMA appropriations to implement the testing of the
contingency plans.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB51-engrossed, s. 1 1Section 1. 13.0992 of the statutes is created to read:
AB51-engrossed,5,2
113.0992 Review of bills impacting on year 2000 problem. (1)
2Definitions. In this section:
AB51-engrossed,5,33 (a) "Department" means the department of administration.
AB51-engrossed,5,84 (b) "Electronic computing device" means any computer hardware or software,
5computer chip, embedded chip, process control equipment or other information
6system used to capture, store, manipulate or process information, or that controls,
7monitors or assists in the operation of physical apparatus that relies on automation
8or digital technology to function.
AB51-engrossed,5,129 (c) "Local governmental unit" means a political subdivision of this state, a
10special purpose district in this state, an instrumentality or corporation of such a
11political subdivision or special purpose district, combination or subunit of any of the
12foregoing or a combination of an instrumentality of the state and any of the foregoing.
AB51-engrossed,5,1413 (d) "Processing" includes calculating, comparing, sequencing, displaying or
14storing.
AB51-engrossed,5,1715 (e) "State governmental unit" means this state, and every subunit or
16instrumentality of this state, including any institution or authority, regardless of
17whether moneys are appropriated to the unit.
AB51-engrossed,5,1918 (f) "Year 2000 problem" means a failure in year 2000 processing of an electronic
19computing device.
AB51-engrossed,5,2220 (g) "Year 2000 processing" means the processing, transmitting or receiving of
21date data from, into, and between the 20th and 21st centuries and during the years
221999 and 2000, and from leap year calculations.
AB51-engrossed,6,10 23(2) Report on bills impacting on year 2000 problem. (a) Whenever a bill is
24introduced in either house of the legislature that would have an impact on the ability
25of a state governmental unit, a local governmental unit or any other person to avoid

1a year 2000 problem, the department, upon the request of the speaker of the
2assembly or the president of the senate, shall prepare a report on the bill within 5
3working days of the request. The department shall request information from any
4individual, organization or state or local governmental unit that the department
5considers likely to be affected by the bill, if enacted. Individuals, organizations and
6state and local governmental units shall comply with requests by the department for
7information that is reasonably necessary for the department to prepare the report.
8To the greatest extent possible, reports under this section shall be based on the
9information obtained by the department from individuals, organizations and state
10and local governmental units under this paragraph.
AB51-engrossed,6,2111 (am) Any person providing information under this section may designate the
12information as confidential business information or a trade secret, as defined in s.
13134.90 (1) (c). The department of administration shall notify the person providing
14the information 15 days before any information designated as confidential or trade
15secret is disclosed to the legislature, an agency, as defined in s. 13.62 (2), a local
16governmental unit, as defined in s. 605.01 (1), or any other person. The person
17furnishing the information may seek a court order limiting or prohibiting the
18disclosure. In such cases, the court shall weigh the need for confidentiality of the
19information against the public interest in the disclosure. Confidentiality is waived
20if the person providing the information consents in writing to disclosure or if
21disclosure is authorized by a court.
AB51-engrossed,6,2322 (b) The report prepared under this section shall be printed as an appendix to
23that applicable bill and shall be distributed in the same manner as amendments.
AB51-engrossed,6,25 24(3) Findings of the department to be contained in the report. The report of
25the department shall contain the following information:
AB51-engrossed,7,2
1(a) A statement of the year 2000 problem affected by the bill, including all of
2the following:
AB51-engrossed,7,33 1. Whether current law creates a hardship and, if so, the degree of the hardship.
AB51-engrossed,7,54 2. The costs associated with complying with current law and any anticipated
5savings likely to result from the bill, if enacted.
AB51-engrossed,7,76 3. Whether any other efforts have been made to resolve the year 2000 problem
7affected by the bill.
AB51-engrossed,7,98 4. The degree of control by those affected by the bill over the year 2000 problem
9affected by the bill.
AB51-engrossed,7,1110 (b) A description of the proposed effect of the bill, if enacted, on the year 2000
11problem.
AB51-engrossed,7,1512 (c) Any other special considerations concerning the effect of the bill, such as the
13frequency of use of the proposed change and the support and involvement of
14businesses, industries, state governmental units and local governmental units
15affected by the proposed change.
AB51-engrossed,7,17 16(4) Rule-making authority. The department may promulgate any rules
17necessary for the administration of this section.
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