LRB-1575/1
CTS:kjf:jf
2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE
October 4, 2005 - Introduced by Senators Miller, Hansen, Carpenter, Risser and
Wirch, cosponsored by Representatives Musser, Lehman, Molepske, Pocan,
Shilling, Black, Zepnick
and Berceau. Referred to Committee on Job
Creation, Economic Development and Consumer Affairs.
SB357,1,12 1An Act to amend 20.001 (intro.), 66.1105 (13), 71.07 (2dx) (a) 4., 71.28 (1dx) (a)
24., 71.47 (1dx) (a) 4., 560.70 (2m) and 560.785 (2) (b); and to create 13.94 (12),
320.926, 20.9265, 560.765 (3) (br) and 560.96 (3) (a) 4. of the statutes; relating
4to:
requiring state agencies, political subdivisions, and housing,
5redevelopment, and community development authorities, as well as subsidy
6recipients, to report on subsidies provided to businesses; requiring certain
7disclosures by business subsidy applicants; prohibiting business subsidies
8under certain circumstances; requiring the Legislative Audit Bureau to publish
9a report on business subsidies and to evaluate their effectiveness; defining a
10full-time job for purposes of development zone tax credits; altering eligibility
11requirements for development zone and technology zone tax credits; and
12providing a penalty.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill creates reporting and other requirements related to subsidies that are
provided to businesses by state and local government agencies. Under the bill, a

state agency is any office, department, agency, institution of higher learning, or other
body in state government. A local government agency is any political subdivision,
any housing, redevelopment, or community development authority, or an entity
created by any of them. A business includes a nonprofit business if it has at least 100
full-time employees and the ratio of highest-paid employee to lowest-paid employee
exceeds ten to one. A subsidy is defined as public improvements that cost at least
$25,000 and that exclusively benefit a single business or a defined group of
businesses; a grant or contribution of personal or real property if the grant or
contribution has a value of at least $25,000; a transfer of property to a business for
at least $25,000 below the property's acquisition cost or fair market value; and a loan
of at least $75,000 in value. Subsidies do not include tax credits, housing assistance,
assistance provided by the University of Wisconsin System, assistance for the sole
purpose of providing job readiness and training services, and certain other benefits.
The bill requires an agency that awards or provides a subsidy to a business to
develop criteria for awarding business subsidies and prohibits awarding a subsidy
to a business before the criteria are developed. Although no approval of the criteria
is required, the criteria must be submitted to the Legislative Audit Bureau (LAB).
The criteria must set minimum requirements for a business to meet to be eligible for
a business subsidy. If job creation is the public purpose of a subsidy, the criteria must
require that all jobs created as a result of the subsidy pay compensation that is equal
to at least 200 percent of the federal poverty line for a family of two. Health insurance
premiums paid by an employer may be counted toward meeting the compensation
amount.
The bill requires an agency that awards a subsidy to enter into an agreement
with the business receiving the subsidy. The agreement must contain specified
information, including a description of a public purpose for the subsidy (other than
expanding the property tax base), measurable goals for the subsidy, the time by
which the goals are to be achieved, any financial or other obligation of the business
if it does not achieve the goals by the time set in the agreement, and, if the public
purpose is job creation or retention, the number of jobs to be created or retained. In
the agreement, the business must commit to continuing operations at the location
where the subsidy is to be used for at least five years after the full amount of the
subsidy is received and generally must commit to using certain equipment
purchased through the subsidy in this state for at least five years.
A business that receives a subsidy is required to submit a report to the agency
that awarded the subsidy as required by that agency, but not later than 24 months
after first receiving the subsidy. Thereafter, the business must submit a report
annually until the time that was set in the subsidy agreement for achieving its goals.
The information contained in the reports generally addresses the requirements set
out in the subsidy agreement. In addition, the business must report on its progress
toward achieving its goals and on the wages and cost of health care benefits for each
job created or retained as a result of the subsidy. Granting agencies must keep the
reports in centrally located and easily accessible files. An agency's file must contain
the application, subsidy agreement, and all other documents related to the subsidy
and must be open to public inspection. An agency may utilize its public Web site to

satisfy this requirement. If a business fails to submit a report by the time it is due,
the granting agency must notify the business within 30 days. If the report remains
delinquent for six months after the due date, the granting agency must notify the
Department of Administration (DOA) and take action for the recovery of the subsidy
as specified in the subsidy agreement. In addition, the business may not apply for
another subsidy and an agency may not award another subsidy to the business. If
the business eventually submits the report, however, it may apply for and be
awarded another subsidy with the approval of the secretary of administration.
Annually, by April 1, every agency that received a report during the previous
calendar year from one or more businesses that received subsidies must submit a
report to LAB that summarizes the information submitted to the agency in the
businesses' reports. In addition, the Department of Commerce (Commerce) must
annually, by June 1, file a report with LAB that provides specified information about
the development zone and technology zone programs. Under these programs,
administered by Commerce, businesses located in areas of the state designated as
development or technology zones receive tax credits for certain activities, such as job
creation. Also, an agency that provides assistance under a statute that specifies the
recipient or the amount of assistance must file a report with LAB that identifies the
recipient, the amount, and the statute under which the assistance was provided.
Annually, by August 1, LAB is required to publish a report for the previous calendar
year that: 1) compiles and summarizes the reports received from the agencies that
granted business subsidies; 2) includes a report received from Commerce on the
development and technology zone programs; 3) includes the reports or specific
assistance provided under statutes; and 4) every other year, summarizes
Commerce's biennial report on the social, economic, and financial effects of tax
incremental financing projects. The report published by LAB must provide
information about: 1) the total amount of business subsidies awarded in each county;
2) the distribution of business subsidies, categorized by various characteristics, such
as type, amount, and public purpose; 3) the number and percentage of subsidy
recipients that achieved their goals within the time set; and 4) the number of jobs
created as a result of business subsidies, shown by wage bands. In the report, LAB
must compare and evaluate the effectiveness of each business subsidy or program
under which business subsidies are provided and must include recommendations for
improving the programs.
In addition to the reporting requirements, the bill imposes other requirements
related to business subsidies. The bill requires an applicant for a business subsidy
to reveal in the application whether the applicant has been found in a court or
administrative proceeding to have violated any federal or state environmental or
labor law. With certain exceptions, the bill requires that, before a business subsidy
is awarded, the agency awarding the subsidy must hold at least one public meeting
on the subsidy in the political subdivision in which the applicant proposes to conduct
the project for which the subsidy is to be awarded. The bill prohibits an agency from
awarding a business subsidy in the form of a grant, loan, or contribution of personal
or real property if the applicant intends to use the subsidy to subsidize any portion
of the cost of moving its business operations within the state from one political

subdivision to another, unless the political subdivision from which the business will
be moved consents to the move, or to this state from another state with which this
state has entered into an agreement related to businesses moving from one state to
another.
Under the development zone programs under current law, Commerce may
certify a business for tax credits on the basis of, among other things, the number of
full-time jobs that are created in a development zone. A full-time job is defined as
a regular, nonseasonal full-time position in which an individual is required to work
at least 2,080 hours per year and for which the individual receives a wage equal to
at least 150 percent of the federal minimum wage and benefits that are not required
by federal or state law. The bill raises the wage requirement in the definition of
full-time job under the development zone programs to an amount equal to the wage
requirement under the bill for business subsidies that have job creation as the public
purpose. Instead of 150 percent of the federal minimum wage, a full-time job must
pay compensation that is equal to at least 200 percent of the federal poverty line for
a family of two. Health insurance premiums paid by the employer may be counted
toward the compensation amount. The bill also imposes a requirement, similar to
that imposed under the bill with regard to business subsidies, that certain
equipment for which a development zone or technology zone tax credit is claimed
generally must be used in this state for at least five years.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be
printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB357, s. 1 1Section 1. 13.94 (12) of the statutes is created to read:
SB357,4,32 13.94 (12) Business subsidies report; compilation and summary. (a) In this
3subsection:
SB357,4,44 1. "Business" has the meaning given in s. 20.926 (2).
SB357,4,55 2. "Business subsidy" has the meaning given in s. 20.926 (3).
SB357,4,66 3. "Grantor" has the meaning given in s. 20.926 (4).
SB357,5,77 (b) Annually, by August 1, the legislative audit bureau shall publish a report
8that summarizes the business subsidies awarded in the preceding year. The report
9shall include any information and analysis that the legislative audit bureau
10determines is relevant and will assist the legislature in evaluating the cost,

1effectiveness, and equity of investing public moneys in businesses and economic
2development. The report may include any information and data that is available to
3the legislative audit bureau and shall include the reports filed under s. 20.9265 (4)
4(b) and (c) and a compilation and summary of the reports filed under s. 20.9265 (4)
5(a). In each year after the year in which the legislative audit bureau receives the
6report under s. 66.1105 (13), the legislative audit bureau shall include a summary
7of that report in the report under this subsection.
SB357,5,108 (c) The portion of the report under this subsection that is the compilation and
9summary of the reports under s. 20.9265 (4) (a) shall include at least all of the
10following information:
SB357,5,1111 1. The total amount of business subsidies awarded in each county of the state.
SB357,5,1212 2. Distribution of business subsidies, categorized by subsidy amounts.
SB357,5,1413 3. Distribution of business subsidy amounts, categorized by the length of time
14over which the subsidy is provided.
SB357,5,1615 4. Distribution of business subsidies, categorized by type of subsidy, amount of
16subsidy, and public purpose.
SB357,5,1817 5. The percentage and number of recipients that reached their goals by the
18times specified in their subsidy agreements under s. 20.9265 (2) (a) 6.
SB357,5,2019 6. The percentage and number of recipients that reached their interim goals,
20if any.
SB357,5,2221 7. The percentage and number of recipients that did not reach their goals by
22the times specified in their subsidy agreements under s. 20.9265 (2) (a) 6.
SB357,5,2523 8. The total dollar amount of business subsidies provided to recipients that did
24not reach their goals by the times specified in their subsidy agreements under s.
2520.9265 (2) (a) 6.
SB357,6,2
19. The number of jobs created as a result of business subsidies, shown in
2separate wage bands, as defined in s. 20.926 (10).
SB357,6,43 10. Fringe benefits paid or otherwise provided as a result of business subsidies,
4shown in separate wage bands, as defined in s. 20.926 (10).
SB357,6,105 (d) The compilation and summary of the reports under s. 20.9265 (4) (a) shall
6be presented in a manner that allows for comparisons across time periods and among
7grantors and, in addition, shall include sufficient information to enable comparisons
8between wages paid and fringe benefits provided by new jobs created as a result of
9business subsidies and wages paid and fringe benefits provided by comparable jobs
10in each area in which the new jobs are created.
SB357,6,1711 (e) In addition to summarizing and compiling the reports under s. 20.9265 (4)
12(a), the legislative audit bureau shall include in the report under this subsection a
13comparison and evaluation of the effectiveness of each business subsidy, or program
14under which business subsidies are provided, in achieving a public purpose and
15recommendations for improving the programs. The legislative audit bureau is not
16required to compare and evaluate under this paragraph the programs included in the
17reports filed under s. 20.9265 (4) (b) and (c).
SB357,6,2118 (f) The legislative audit bureau may develop a report form for the manual or
19electronic submission of the report required under s. 20.9265 (4) (a) to ensure that
20the appropriate data is collected to enable the legislative audit bureau to satisfy the
21requirements under this subsection.
SB357,6,2222 (g) The report under this subsection is open to public inspection.
SB357, s. 2 23Section 2. 20.001 (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB357,6,25 2420.001 Definitions and abbreviations. (intro.) In Except as otherwise
25provided, in
this chapter terms and abbreviations have the following meanings:
SB357, s. 3
1Section 3. 20.926 of the statutes is created to read:
SB357,7,3 220.926 Definitions for business subsidy awards and reports. In this
3section and s. 20.9265:
SB357,7,4 4(1) "Agency" means a state agency or a local government agency.
SB357,7,5 5(2) "Business" means any of the following:
SB357,7,66 (a) A person engaged in a business enterprise for profit in this state.
SB357,7,107 (b) An organization or enterprise operating not for profit in this state that has
8at least 100 full-time employees with a ratio of highest-paid to lowest-paid
9employee that exceeds 10 to one, determined on the basis of full-time equivalent
10positions.
SB357,7,12 11(3) (a) Except as provided in par. (b), "business subsidy" means any of the
12following:
SB357,7,1513 1. Public improvements that cost at least $25,000, that are made to buildings
14or lands owned by the state or a political subdivision, and that exclusively benefit a
15single business at the time that the improvements are made.
SB357,7,1716 2. Any of the following that has a cost to an agency or the state of at least
17$25,000 and that is given to a business by an agency:
SB357,7,1818 a. A grant.
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