LRB-4038/1
GMM/EHS/FFK:kjf/eev/cjs:rs
2013 - 2014 LEGISLATURE
January 27, 2014 - Introduced by Representatives Krug, LeMahieu, Endsley,
Loudenbeck and Spiros. Referred to Committee on Children and Families.
AB677,1,10 1An Act to amend 13.92 (4) (c), 13.92 (4) (d), 13.92 (4) (e), 13.92 (4) (f), 35.93 (2)
2(b) 4., 35.93 (2) (c) 1., 35.93 (3), 35.93 (3) (e) (intro.), 35.93 (3) (e) 1., 227.01 (13)
3(intro.), 227.11 (2) (intro.) and 227.27 (2); and to create 13.92 (4) (bm) and
4227.265 of the statutes; relating to: rule-making procedures; amending
5various rules promulgated by the Department of Children and Families
6governing the certification of child care operators, governing the licensing of
7child welfare agencies, and establishing standards for the operation of child
8care centers; and eliminating rules promulgated by the Department of Children
9and Families related to retaining public assistance case records and the
10transitional jobs demonstration project.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Statutory treatments
Rule-making procedures
Current law sets forth a procedure for the promulgation of administrative rules
(rules). Generally, that procedure consists of the following steps:
1. The agency planning to promulgate the rule prepares a statement of the
scope of the proposed rule, which the governor and the agency head must approve

before any state employee or official may perform any activity in connection with the
drafting of the proposed rule.
2. The agency drafts the proposed rule, together with an economic impact
analysis, plain language analysis, and fiscal estimate for the proposed rule, and
submits those materials to the Legislative Council Staff for review.
3. Subject to certain exceptions, a public hearing is held on the proposed rule.
4. The final draft of the proposed rule is submitted to the governor for approval.
5. The final draft of the proposed rule, together with an economic impact
analysis, plain language analysis, and fiscal estimate for the proposed rule, are
submitted to the legislature for review by one standing committee in each house and
by the Joint Committee for Review of Administrative Rules.
6. The proposed rule is filed with the Legislative Reference Bureau (LRB) for
publication in the Wisconsin Administrative Code (code) and the Wisconsin
Administrative Register (register), and, subject to certain exceptions, the rule
becomes effective on the first day of the first month beginning after publication.
Under this bill, if a bill that repeals or modifies a rule is enacted, the ordinary
rule-making procedures under current law do not apply. Instead, the LRB must
publish the repeal or modification, in the code and the register, and the repeal or
modification, subject to certain exceptions, takes effect on the first day of the first
month beginning after publication.
Treatments of administrative rules
Child care certification
Under current law, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) regulates
the certification of child care operators for the purpose of reimbursement under the
Wisconsin Shares child care subsidy program. Under DCF's current rules, agencies
that may certify child care operators are called "county and tribal agencies" and
include county departments of social services, county departments of human
services, and tribal agencies. This bill amends DCF rules to refer to agencies that
certify child care operators as "certification agencies." The bill expands the
definition to include DCF in a county with a population of 750,000 or more and any
agency that certifies child care operators through a contract with DCF, a county
department of social services, a county department of human services, or a tribal
agency.
DCF's current rules allow any county or tribal agency's action to deny, suspend,
revoke, or refuse to renew a child care operator's certification to be appealed under
administrative procedures that apply to local units of government. The bill amends
DCF rules to specify that an action by DCF in a county with a population of 750,000
or more to deny, suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew a child care operator's
certification may be appealed under administrative procedures that apply to state
agencies.
DCF's current rules also require a family or in-home child care provider to
demonstrate to a county or tribal agency that he or she is free from tuberculosis prior
to certification or recertification, and allows the agency to accept tuberculosis test
results only if administered up to 12 months before the certification application date.
This bill amends DCF rules to allow a child care provider to demonstrate that he or

she is free from tuberculosis prior to the date that provider began working with
children if later than the certification date. The bill also amends DCF rules to allow
a certification agency to accept the results of a tuberculosis test administered up to
12 months prior to the date the provider began working with children if later than
the certification date.
Child care center operations
Under current law, no person may for compensation provide care and
supervision for four or more children under the age of seven for less than 24 hours
a day unless that person obtains from DCF a license to operate a child care center.
Current law requires DCF to promulgate rules establishing standards for the
operation of child care centers.
Those rules include a rule requiring a child care center providing care and
supervision for not more than eight children (family child care center) to provide
written information to parents on whether the family child care center has insurance
coverage on vehicles, if transportation is provided by the family child care center.
This bill eliminates that requirement.
Those rules also include a rule requiring a family child care center to maintain
for each child enrolled in the family child care center a written record of enrollment
information and health history on a form provided by DCF. This bill requires
enrollment information and health history to be maintained on separate forms
provided by DCF.
In addition, those rules include: 1) a rule requiring a child receiving care from
a family child care center or a child care center providing care and supervision for
more than eight children (group child care center) to have an initial health
examination no later than three months after being admitted to the child care center
and to have followup health examinations at certain intervals after that; and 2) a
rule requiring a report on such a health examination to be made on a form provided
by DCF that is signed and dated by a licensed physician, physician assistant, or
HealthCheck provider, which is a provider of health assessment and evaluation
services certified by the Department of Health Services. This bill permits a health
examination report to be made on an electronic printout from a licensed physician,
physician assistant, or HealthCheck provider.
Finally, the bill corrects, in the DCF rules relating to child care, certain
cross-references to the rules governing the responsibilities and qualifications of
group child care center program directors, teachers, and assistant teachers.
Child welfare agency licensing
Under current law, no person may provide care and maintenance for four or
more children for 75 days in a 12-month period unless the person obtains from DCF
a license to operate a child welfare agency. A child welfare agency license is valid
until revoked or suspended, but must be reviewed every two years. To continue a
child welfare agency license for an additional two years, a child welfare agency must
submit an application for continuance of the license to DCF at least 30 days prior to
the continuation date of the license. If DCF approves the application, DCF must
continue the license for an additional two years.

Current rules promulgated by DCF governing the licensing of child welfare
agencies, however, require a subsequent application by a child welfare agency to be
submitted to DCF at least three weeks prior to the expiration of the current license.
This bill conforms those rules to the statutes by modifying those rules to require a
subsequent application by a child welfare agency to be submitted to DCF at least 30
days
prior to the continuation date of the current license.
Public assistance records and transitional jobs demonstration project
The transitional jobs demonstration project, under which DCF provides a wage
subsidy to an employer who employs an individual who is at least 21 but not more
than 64 years of age, is ineligible for Wisconsin Works (W-2), has an annual
household income that is below 150 percent of the poverty line, is unemployed for at
least four weeks, and is not eligible to receive unemployment insurance benefits, was
repealed on July 1, 2013. This bill eliminates rules DCF was required to promulgate
to operate the transitional jobs demonstration project.
Under current DCF rules, a county, tribal, or W-2 agency that contracts with
DCF to administer one or more public assistance programs (income maintenance
agency) is required to retain certain items used to verify information related to a
public assistance case for certain amounts of time. For example, under current DCF
rules, an income maintenance agency must retain items to verify an applicant's
social security number, birth information, alien status, and medicare enrollment, if
required to determine eligibility for public assistance, while the public assistance
case is open. Current DCF rules also provide the conditions under which original
case records that are copied in microfilm reproduction, optical disk, or electronic
format may be destroyed. Finally, current DCF rules require that destruction of
public assistance records must be done in a manner that make the records
unreadable. This bill eliminates DCF's rules related to retaining public assistance
case records.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB677,1 1Section 1. 13.92 (4) (bm) of the statutes is created to read:
AB677,5,42 13.92 (4) (bm) If 2 or more rules filed under s. 227.20 or modified under s.
3227.265 affect the same unit of the Wisconsin administrative code without taking
4cognizance of the effect thereon of the other rules and if the legislative reference
5bureau finds that there is no mutual inconsistency in the changes made by each such
6rule, the legislative reference bureau shall incorporate the changes made by each
7rule into the text of the unit and document the incorporation in a note to the unit.

1For each such incorporation, the legislative reference bureau shall include in a
2correction bill a provision formally validating the incorporation. Section 227.27 (2)
3is not affected by printing decisions made by the legislative reference bureau under
4this paragraph.
AB677,2 5Section 2. 13.92 (4) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB677,5,76 13.92 (4) (c) The legislative reference bureau may insert in the Wisconsin
7administrative code a note explaining any change made under par. (b) or (bm).
AB677,3 8Section 3. 13.92 (4) (d) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB677,5,109 13.92 (4) (d) Sections 227.114, 227.116, 227.135, and 227.14 to 227.24 do not
10apply to any change made by the legislative reference bureau under par. (b) or (bm).
AB677,4 11Section 4. 13.92 (4) (e) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB677,5,1312 13.92 (4) (e) The legislative reference bureau shall prepare and keep on file a
13record of each change made under par. (b) or (bm).
AB677,5 14Section 5. 13.92 (4) (f) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB677,5,1615 13.92 (4) (f) The legislative reference bureau shall notify the agency involved
16of each change made under par. (b) or (bm).
AB677,6 17Section 6. 35.93 (2) (b) 4. of the statutes, as affected by 2013 Wisconsin Act 20,
18is amended to read:
AB677,5,2119 35.93 (2) (b) 4. Copies of all rules filed with the legislative reference bureau
20under s. 227.20 (1) or modified under s. 227.265 since the compilation of the
21preceding register, including emergency rules filed under s. 227.24 (3).
AB677,7 22Section 7. 35.93 (2) (c) 1. of the statutes, as affected by 2013 Wisconsin Act 20,
23is amended to read:
AB677,6,3
135.93 (2) (c) 1. Each chapter of the Wisconsin administrative code that has been
2affected by rules filed with legislative reference bureau under s. 227.20 (1) or
3modified under s. 227.265
, in accordance with sub. (3) (e) 1.
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