LRB-4003/1
ARG:eev:rs
2013 - 2014 LEGISLATURE
April 3, 2014 - Introduced by Representatives Mason, Barca, Ohnstad and Sinicki.
Referred to Committee on Transportation.
AB908,1,10 1An Act to amend 32.02 (11), 32.05 (1) (a), 32.07 (2), 40.02 (28), 66.0301 (1) (a),
266.0903 (1) (d), 70.11 (2), 71.26 (1) (b), chapter 77 (title), subchapter V (title) of
3chapter 77 [precedes 77.70], 85.064 (1) (b), 85.20 (4m) (a) (intro.), 85.20 (4m) (a)
46. e., 85.20 (4s), 345.05 (2) and 611.11 (4) (a); to repeal and recreate 111.70
5(1) (j); and to create 20.395 (1) (hy), 20.566 (1) (gh), 20.835 (4) (gh), 59.58 (7),
666.1038, 71.05 (1) (c) 9., 71.26 (1m) (j), 71.45 (1t) (j), 74.09 (3) (gd), 77.54 (9a) (er),
777.70 (2), subchapter XIII (title) of chapter 77 [precedes 77.9971], 77.9971,
877.9972, 77.9973, 85.062 (3) (c), 85.20 (4m) (a) 6. f. and 345.05 (1) (ag) of the
9statutes; relating to: the creation of a Southeastern Regional Transit
10Authority and a Milwaukee Transit Authority and making appropriations.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
The 2009 Biennial Budget Act (2009 Act 28) authorized the creation of several
regional transit authorities (RTAs): the Dane County RTA, the Chippewa Valley
RTA, and the Chequamegon Bay RTA. Under 2009 Act 28, each RTA, once created,
was a public body corporate and politic and a separate governmental entity. Among
its powers, an RTA could operate a transportation system or provide for its operation

by contracting with a public or private organization; impose, by its board of directors
adopting a resolution, a sales and use tax in the RTA's jurisdictional area at a rate
not exceeding 0.5 percent of the sales price if certain conditions were satisfied;
acquire property by condemnation; and issue tax-exempt revenue bonds. An RTA
had a duty to provide, or contract for the provision of, transit service within the RTA's
jurisdictional area.
Prior to 2009 Act 28, the counties of Kenosha, Racine, and Milwaukee were
required to create a Regional Transit Authority (the KRM authority). The KRM
authority was responsible for the coordination of transit and commuter rail
programs within these three counties but had no authority to manage or operate any
transit system. The KRM authority was authorized to impose a rental car
transaction fee within these three counties, which fee was to be used to hire staff,
conduct studies, and prepare a report to the legislature and the governor, due by
November 15, 2008.
Act 28 terminated the KRM authority as of October 1, 2009, and created a
successor entity, the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority (SERTA). The SERTA
was a public body corporate and politic and a separate governmental entity; it
consisted of the counties of Kenosha, Racine, and Milwaukee. The jurisdictional area
of the SERTA was the geographic area formed by the combined territorial boundaries
of the counties of Kenosha, Racine, and Milwaukee. The powers of the SERTA were
vested in its board of directors. The SERTA's powers were limited but included all
powers necessary and convenient to create, construct, and manage a commuter rail
transit system connecting the cities of Kenosha, Racine, and Milwaukee (KRM
commuter rail line). Upon approval by its board of directors, the SERTA could
impose a rental car transaction fee, in the counties of Kenosha, Racine, and
Milwaukee, of not more than $18 per transaction, except that the SERTA's board of
directors could have this fee annually adjusted for inflation. From each rental car
transaction fee, the SERTA could retain not more than $2 per transaction for
administration of the SERTA and could retain the remainder for expenditures
related to the KRM commuter rail line, including planning, construction,
maintenance, operations, and engineering expenditures. The SERTA was the only
entity in the counties of Milwaukee, Racine, and Kenosha that could submit an
application to the Federal Transit Administration under the federal New Starts
Grant Program for funding for the KRM commuter rail line (New Starts application).
The 2011 Biennial Budget Act (2011 Act 32) eliminated authorization to create
an RTA, eliminated the SERTA, and dissolved the Dane County RTA, the Chippewa
Valley RTA, and the Chequamegon Bay RTA to the extent previously created.
This bill recreates the SERTA, with modifications, and allows the Milwaukee
County board to create a Milwaukee Transit Authority (MTA), a public body
corporate and politic and a separate governmental entity. Once created, the MTA's
jurisdictional area is Milwaukee County. The MTA's authority is vested in its board
of directors and its bylaws govern its management, operations, and administration.
The MTA's board of directors must annually prepare a budget and have its financial
statements audited. The MTA's revenues can be used only for the expenses and
specific purposes of the MTA.

Upon creation, the MTA and the Milwaukee County board must contract for the
MTA to provide, beginning on January 1, 2015, or as soon after creation of the MTA
as is reasonably feasible, whichever is later, transit service and transit planning in
Milwaukee County. The MTA must be provided sales and use tax revenues from
Milwaukee County (discussed below). The MTA has all powers necessary and
convenient to carry out its purpose, but the MTA's powers are limited to those
provided by statute.
If the MTA is created, then upon approval of a New Starts application, the MTA
must begin the process of winding down and dissolving and must complete this
process within 120 days. The SERTA then becomes the successor to the MTA. As
part of the winding down of the MTA, the MTA's assets and liabilities become the
assets and liabilities of the SERTA and the MTA's tangible personal property is
transferred to the SERTA. In addition, the MTA's contracts are transferred to the
SERTA, except that the MTA's contract with Milwaukee County to provide transit
service in Milwaukee County terminates. Responsibility for providing transit
service and transit planning in Milwaukee County is then assumed by the SERTA,
which must provide transit service in Milwaukee County in the same manner
applicable to Kenosha County and Racine County (discussed below).
If Milwaukee County creates an MTA, the bill requires Milwaukee County to
also adopt an ordinance to impose a sales and use tax at the rate of 0.5 percent of the
sales price or purchase price. These tax revenues must be distributed to the MTA
and Milwaukee County cannot levy property taxes for transit purposes. In addition,
Milwaukee County must indicate on property tax bills the amount of the reduction
in property taxes associated with this requirement to remove transit expenditures
from the property tax levy. However, when the MTA is wound down and dissolved
and responsibility for transit is assumed by SERTA, the tax revenues must be
distributed to the SERTA.
This bill, in recreating the SERTA, also makes modifications to the SERTA as
it existed before 2011 Act 32, including the following:
1. The SERTA consists of both the counties and cities of Kenosha, Racine, and
Milwaukee, not just the counties. The SERTA also includes any municipality within
these counties that operates a transit system receiving state transit aids.
2. Beginning on January 1, 2015, the SERTA must assume responsibility for
providing transit service and transit planning in Kenosha County and Racine
County. If an MTA is created and then wound down and dissolved (upon approval
of a New Starts application), the SERTA also assumes responsibility for providing
transit service and transit planning in Milwaukee County. The SERTA may also
provide transit service outside its jurisdictional area if such transit service would
benefit residents within the SERTA's jurisdictional area. In lieu of directly providing
transit service, the SERTA may contract with existing transit providers for the
provision of transit service. The SERTA can also acquire a transit system by entering
into a transfer agreement with the owner of the system. The SERTA has all powers
necessary and convenient to carry out these responsibilities, including the power to
apply for and utilize state and federal funds.

3. If any county transfers sales tax revenues to the SERTA, the SERTA can
expend these funds only in the county in which the revenues were generated and only
for purposes of providing transit service or transit planning in that county. These
funds cannot be expended for purposes related to the KRM commuter rail line.
4. The SERTA may use a portion of its rental car transaction fee, as well as state
transit aids, to provide incentive funds to the cities of Kenosha and Racine. The
SERTA must provide $2,500,000 in incentive funds to each of the cities of Kenosha
and Racine if the city commits to support the SERTA's provision of transit service,
from city property tax revenues, at then-current operating levels and at
inflation-adjusted future operating levels.
5. The SERTA must develop goals and criteria for increasing transit service,
increasing connectivity among transit systems, and reducing passenger fare support
for transit. The SERTA must evaluate success in achieving these goals and meeting
these criteria.
6. The bonding limit for revenue bonds issued by SERTA is increased from
$50,000,000 to $250,000,000. After January 1, 2015, the SERTA also has additional
authority to use revenue bond proceeds for transit systems where the SERTA
provides transit service.
7. A KRM commuter rail line cannot include a stop in any municipality in the
SERTA's jurisdictional area unless the municipality has a sustainable mechanism
to help fund local transit and the municipality is a member of the SERTA.
8. The SERTA is the only entity in southeast Wisconsin that may submit a New
Starts application for funding for any purpose.
9. The bill clarifies that SERTA may operate the KRM commuter rail line itself
or may contract for a rail service to operate the KRM commuter rail line.
The bill also includes the following relating to SERTA and the MTA, if created:
1. The SERTA has authority to acquire property by condemnation.
2. Employees of the SERTA and of the MTA are participatory employees under
the Wisconsin Retirement System (WRS) if the SERTA and the MTA, respectively,
elect to join the WRS.
3. Employees of the MTA and SERTA are covered by the Municipal
Employment Relations Act (MERA). MERA provides that all matters relating to
wages, hours, and conditions of employment are subject to collective bargaining and
all municipal employees are expressly granted the right to self-organize and to
bargain collectively through a representative of their choice.
4. The MTA and SERTA are "local governmental units" for purposes of the
prevailing wage and hour law. Under current law, certain workers employed on a
public works project contracted by a local governmental unit must be paid at the rate
paid for a majority of the hours worked in the person's trade or occupation in the
county in which the project is located, as determined by the Department of Workforce
Development, and may not be required or permitted to work more than ten hours per
day and 40 hours per week, unless they are paid 1.5 times their basic rate of pay for
all hours worked in excess of those hours.
5. MTA and SERTA property is not subject to state and local property taxes.

6. The SERTA and the MTA are treated like municipalities, counties, and other
political subdivisions for purposes of claims and liability resulting from the negligent
operation of a motor vehicle and may participate in organizing municipal insurance
mutuals to provide insurance and risk management services.
7. The SERTA can enter into intergovernmental cooperation contracts with
other governmental units.
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:
AB908,1 1Section 1. 20.005 (3) (schedule) of the statutes: at the appropriate place, insert
2the following amounts for the purposes indicated: - See PDF for table PDF - See PDF for table PDF
AB908,2 3Section 2. 20.395 (1) (hy) of the statutes is created to read:
AB908,6,2
120.395 (1) (hy) Tier A-4 transit operating aids, state funds. The amounts in the
2schedule for mass transit aids under s. 85.20 (4m) (a) 6. f.
AB908,3 3Section 3. 20.566 (1) (gh) of the statutes is created to read:
AB908,6,114 20.566 (1) (gh) Administration of southeastern regional transit authority fees.
5The amounts in the schedule for administering the fees imposed under subch. XIII
6of ch. 77. An amount equal to 2.55 percent of all moneys received from the fees
7imposed under subch. XIII of ch. 77 shall be credited to this appropriation.
8Notwithstanding s. 20.001 (3) (a), at the end of each fiscal year the unencumbered
9balance in this appropriation account that exceeds 10 percent of the expenditures
10from this appropriation during the fiscal year shall be transferred to the
11appropriation account under s. 20.835 (4) (gh).
AB908,4 12Section 4. 20.835 (4) (gh) of the statutes is created to read:
AB908,6,1813 20.835 (4) (gh) Southeastern regional transit authority fees. All moneys
14received from the fees imposed under subch. XIII of ch. 77, and from the
15appropriation account under s. 20.566 (1) (gh), for distribution to the southeastern
16regional transit authority under s. 59.58 (7), except that 2.55 percent of the moneys
17received from the fees imposed under subch. XIII of ch. 77 shall be credited to the
18appropriation account under s. 20.566 (1) (gh).
AB908,5 19Section 5. 32.02 (11) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB908,6,2420 32.02 (11) Any housing authority created under ss. 66.1201 to 66.1211;
21redevelopment authority created under s. 66.1333; community development
22authority created under s. 66.1335; local cultural arts district created under subch.
23V of ch. 229, subject to s. 229.844 (4) (c); or local exposition district created under
24subch. II of ch. 229; or the transit authority under s. 59.58 (7).
AB908,6 25Section 6. 32.05 (1) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB908,7,21
132.05 (1) (a) Except as provided under par. (b), a county board of supervisors
2or a county highway committee when so authorized by the county board of
3supervisors, a city council, a village board, a town board, a sewerage commission
4governing a metropolitan sewerage district created by ss. 200.05 or 200.21 to 200.65,
5the secretary of transportation, a commission created by contract under s. 66.0301,
6a joint local water authority created by contract under s. 66.0823, the transit
7authority under s. 59.58 (7),
a housing authority under ss. 66.1201 to 66.1211, a local
8exposition district created under subch. II of ch. 229, a local cultural arts district
9created under subch. V of ch. 229, a redevelopment authority under s. 66.1333 or a
10community development authority under s. 66.1335 shall make an order providing
11for the laying out, relocation and improvement of the public highway, street, alley,
12storm and sanitary sewers, watercourses, water transmission and distribution
13facilities, mass transit facilities, airport, or other transportation facilities, gas or
14leachate extraction systems to remedy environmental pollution from a solid waste
15disposal facility, housing project, redevelopment project, cultural arts facilities,
16exposition center or exposition center facilities which shall be known as the
17relocation order. This order shall include a map or plat showing the old and new
18locations and the lands and interests required. A copy of the order shall, within 20
19days after its issue, be filed with the county clerk of the county wherein the lands are
20located or, in lieu of filing a copy of the order, a plat may be filed or recorded in
21accordance with s. 84.095.
AB908,7 22Section 7. 32.07 (2) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB908,8,823 32.07 (2) The petitioner shall determine necessity if application is by the state
24or any commission, department, board or other branch of state government or by a
25city, village, town, county, school district, board, commission, public officer,

1commission created by contract under s. 66.0301, joint local water authority under
2s. 66.0823, transit authority under s. 59.58 (7), redevelopment authority created
3under s. 66.1333, local exposition district created under subch. II of ch. 229, local
4cultural arts district created under subch. V of ch. 229, housing authority created
5under ss. 66.1201 to 66.1211 or for the right-of-way of a railroad up to 100 feet in
6width, for a telegraph, telephone or other electric line, for the right-of-way for a gas
7pipeline, main or service or for easements for the construction of any elevated
8structure or subway for railroad purposes.
AB908,8 9Section 8. 40.02 (28) of the statutes is amended to read:
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