36.59(2)(a) (a) A definition of and methodology for identifying large, high-risk information technology projects.
36.59(2)(b) (b) Standardized, quantifiable project performance measures for evaluating large, high-risk information technology projects.
36.59(2)(c) (c) Policies and procedures for routine monitoring of large, high-risk information technology projects.
36.59(2)(d) (d) A formal process for modifying information technology project specifications when necessary to address changes in program requirements.
36.59(2)(e) (e) Requirements for reporting changes in estimates of cost or completion date to the board and the joint committee on information policy and technology.
36.59(2)(f) (f) Methods for discontinuing projects or modifying projects that are failing to meet performance measures in such a way to correct the performance problems.
36.59(2)(g) (g) Policies and procedures for the use of master leases under s. 16.76 (4) to finance new large, high-risk information technology system costs and maintain current large, high-risk information technology systems.
36.59(2)(h) (h) A standardized progress point in the execution of large, high-risk information technology projects at which time the estimated costs and date of completion of the project is reported to the board and the joint committee on information policy and technology.
36.59(3) (3)Commercially available products. The Board of Regents shall promulgate:
36.59(3)(a) (a) A requirement that the system and each institution and college campus review commercially available information technology products prior to initiating work on a customized information technology development project to determine whether any commercially available product could meet the information technology needs of the system, institution, or college campus.
36.59(3)(b) (b) Procedures and criteria to determine when a commercially available information technology product must be used and when the system or an institution or college campus may consider the modification or creation of a customized information technology product.
36.59(3)(c) (c) A requirement that the system and each institution and college campus submit for approval by the board and prior to initiating work on a customized information technology product a justification for the modification or creation by the system, institution, or college campus of a customized information technology product.
36.59(4) (4)Master leases.
36.59(4)(a)(a) In this subsection, "master lease" has the meaning given under s. 16.76 (4).
36.59(4)(b) (b) Annually, no later than October 1, the Board of Regents shall submit to the governor and the members of the joint committee on information policy and technology a report documenting the use by the system and each institution and college campus of master leases to fund information technology projects in the previous fiscal year. The report shall contain all of the following information:
36.59(4)(b)1. 1. The total amount paid under master leases towards information technology projects in the previous fiscal year.
36.59(4)(b)2. 2. The master lease payment amounts approved to be applied to information technology projects in future years.
36.59(4)(b)3. 3. The total amount paid by the system and each institution and college campus on each information technology project for which debt is outstanding, as compared to the total financing amount originally approved for that information technology project.
36.59(4)(b)4. 4. A summary of repayments made towards any master lease in the previous fiscal year.
36.59(5) (5)High-cost projects.
36.59(5)(a)(a) Except as provided in par. (b), the Board of Regents shall include in each contract with a vendor of information technology that involves a large, high-risk information technology project under sub. (2) or that has a projected cost greater than $1,000,000, and require the system and each institution and college campus that enters into a contract for materials, supplies, equipment, or contractual services relating to information technology to include in each contract with a vendor of information technology that involves a large, high-risk information technology project under sub. (2) or that has a projected cost greater than $1,000,000 a stipulation requiring the vendor to submit to the board for approval any order or amendment that would change the scope of the contract and have the effect of increasing the contract price. The stipulation shall authorize the board to review the original contract and the order or amendment to determine all of the following and, if necessary, to negotiate with the vendor regarding any change to the original contract price:
36.59(5)(a)1. 1. Whether the work proposed in the order or amendment is within the scope of the original contract.
36.59(5)(a)2. 2. Whether the work proposed in the order or amendment is necessary.
36.59(5)(b) (b) The Board of Regents may exclude from a contract described in par. (a) the stipulation required under par. (a) if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
36.59(5)(b)1. 1. Including such a stipulation would negatively impact contract negotiations or significantly reduce the number of bidders on the contract.
36.59(5)(b)2. 2. If the exclusion is sought by the system or an institution or college campus, the system or that institution or college campus submits to the board a plain-language explanation of the reasons the stipulation was excluded and the alternative provisions the system, institution, or college campus will include in the contract to ensure that the contract will be completed on time and within the contract budget.
36.59(5)(b)3. 3. The board submits for approval by the joint committee on information policy and technology any explanation and alternative contract provisions required under subd. 2. If, within 14 working days after the date that the board submits any explanation and alternative contract provisions required under this subdivision, the joint committee on information policy and technology does not contact the board, the explanation and alternative contract provisions shall be deemed approved.
36.59(6) (6)Open-ended contracts.
36.59(6)(a)(a) The Board of Regents shall require the system and each institution and college campus that has entered into an open-ended contract for the development of information technology to submit to the board quarterly reports documenting the amount expended on the information technology development project. In this subsection, "open-ended contract" means a contract for information technology that includes one or both of the following:
36.59(6)(a)1. 1. Stipulations that provide that the contract vendor will deliver information technology products or services but that do not specify a maximum payment amount.
36.59(6)(a)2. 2. Stipulations that provide that the contract vendor shall be paid an hourly wage but that do not set a maximum limit on the number of hours required to complete the information technology project.
36.59(6)(b) (b) Compile and annually submit to the joint committee on information technology the reports required under par. (a).
36.59(7) (7)Reports. No later than March 1 and September 1 of each year, the Board of Regents shall submit to the joint committee on information policy and technology a report that documents for each information technology project within the system with an actual or projected cost greater than $1,000,000 or that the board has identified as a large, high-risk information technology project under sub. (2) (a) all of the following:
36.59(7)(a) (a) Original and updated project cost projections.
36.59(7)(b) (b) Original and updated completion dates for the project and any stage of the project.
36.59(7)(c) (c) An explanation for any variation between the original and updated costs and completion dates under pars. (a) and (b).
36.59(7)(d) (d) A copy of any contract entered into by the board for the project and not provided in a previous report.
36.59(7)(e) (e) All sources of funding for the project.
36.59(7)(f) (f) The amount of any funding provided for the project through a master lease under s. 16.76 (4).
36.59(7)(g) (g) Information about the status of the project, including any portion of the project that has been completed.
36.59(7)(h) (h) Any other information about the project, or related information technology projects, requested by the joint committee on information policy and technology.
36.59(7m) (7m)Information technology reports. The Board of Regents shall prepare and submit reports to the joint committee on information policy and technology upon request of the committee under s. 13.58 (5) (b) 3.
36.59(8) (8)Computer services data collection. The Board of Regents shall collect and maintain data necessary to calculate numerical measures of the efficiency and effectiveness of the mainframe computer services provided by the board at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
36.59 History History: 2007 a. 20 ss. 731m, 731p, 736x; 2009 a. 180.
36.60 36.60 Physician and dentist loan assistance program.
36.60(1)(1) Definitions. In this section:
36.60(1)(ac) (ac) "Clinic hours" means hours spent working with patients in a clinic.
36.60(1)(ad) (ad) "Dental health shortage area" means an area that is designated by the federal department of health and human services under 42 CFR part 5, appendix B, as having a shortage of dental professionals.
36.60(1)(ae) (ae) "Dentist" means a dentist, as defined in s. 447.01 (7), who is licensed under ch. 447 and who practices general or pediatric dentistry.
36.60(1)(ag) (ag) "Eligible practice area" means a primary care shortage area, a mental health shortage area, an American Indian reservation or trust lands of an American Indian tribe.
36.60(1)(aj) (aj) "Health professional shortage area" means an area that is designated by the federal department of health and human services under 42 CFR part 5, appendix A, as having a shortage of medical care professionals.
36.60(1)(ap) (ap) "Mental health shortage area" means an area that is designated by the federal department of health and human services under 42 CFR part 5, appendix C, as having a shortage of psychiatric professionals, excluding a state or federal prison and a state or county mental hospital.
36.60(1)(b) (b) "Physician" means a physician, as defined in s. 448.01 (5), who specializes in family practice, general internal medicine, general pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, or psychiatry.
36.60(1)(cm) (cm) "Primary care shortage area" means an area that is in a primary care health professional shortage area as determined by the federal department of health and human services under 42 CFR part 5, appendix A, excluding a state or federal prison.
36.60(1)(d) (d) "Rural area" has the meaning given in s. 36.63 (1) (c).
36.60(2) (2)Eligibility.
36.60(2)(a)1.1. Except as provided in subd. 2., the board may repay, on behalf of a physician or dentist, up to $50,000 in educational loans obtained by the physician or dentist from a public or private lending institution for education in an accredited school of medicine or dentistry or for postgraduate medical or dental training.
36.60(2)(a)2. 2. The board may repay, on behalf of a physician who agrees under sub. (3) to practice in a rural area, up to $100,000 in educational loans obtained by the physician from a public or private lending institution for education in an accredited school of medicine or for postgraduate medical training.
36.60(2)(b) (b) A physician or dentist who is a participant in the national health service corps scholarship program under 42 USC 254n, or a physician or dentist who was a participant in that program and who failed to carry out his or her obligations under that program, is not eligible for loan repayment under this section.
36.60(3) (3)Agreement.
36.60(3)(a)(a) The board shall enter into a written agreement with the physician, in which the physician agrees to practice at least 32 clinic hours per week for 3 years in one or more eligible practice areas in this state or in a rural area, except that a physician specializing in psychiatry may only agree to practice psychiatry in a mental health shortage area or in a rural area and a physician in the expanded loan assistance program under sub. (9) may only agree to practice at a public or private nonprofit entity in a health professional shortage area. The physician shall also agree to care for patients who are insured or for whom health benefits are payable under medicare, medical assistance, or any other governmental program.
36.60(3)(am) (am) The board shall enter into a written agreement with the dentist, in which the dentist agrees to practice at least 32 clinic hours per week for 3 years in one or more dental health shortage areas in this state or in a rural area. The dentist shall also agree to care for patients who are insured or for whom dental health benefits are payable under medicare, medical assistance, or any other governmental program.
36.60(3)(b) (b) The agreement shall specify that the responsibility of the board to make the payments under the agreement is subject to the amount of funds transferred to the board under s. 20.505 (8) (hm) 6r., the contributions received and penalties assessed by the board, and the appropriation under s. 20.285 (1) (qj).
36.60(4) (4)Loan repayment. Except as provided in sub. (4m), principal and interest due on loans, exclusive of any penalties, may be repaid by the board at the following rate:
36.60(4)(a) (a) Up to 40% of the principal of the loan or $20,000, whichever is less, during the first year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(4)(b) (b) Up to an additional 40% of the principal of the loan or $20,000, whichever is less, during the 2nd year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(4)(c) (c) Up to an additional 20% of the principal of the loan or $10,000, whichever is less, during the 3rd year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(4m) (4m)Loan repayment; rural physicians. If a physician agrees under sub. (3) to practice in a rural area, principal and interest due on the loan, exclusive of any penalties, may be repaid by the board at the following rate:
36.60(4m)(a) (a) Up to 40 percent of the principal of the loan or $40,000, whichever is less, during the first year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(4m)(b) (b) Up to an additional 40 percent of the principal of the loan or $40,000, whichever is less, during the 2nd year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(4m)(c) (c) Up to an additional 20 percent of the principal of the loan or $20,000, whichever is less, during the 3rd year of participation in the program under this section.
36.60(5) (5)Availability of funds; right of action against state.
36.60(5)(a)(a) The obligation of the board to make payments under an agreement entered into under sub. (3) (b) is subject to the amount of funds transferred to the board under s. 20.505 (8) (hm) 6r., the contributions received and penalties assessed by the board, and the appropriation under s. 20.285 (1) (qj).
36.60(5)(b) (b) If the cost of repaying the loans of all eligible applicants, when added to the cost of loan repayments scheduled under existing agreements, exceeds the total amount of funds transferred to the board under s. 20.505 (8) (hm) 6r., the contributions received and penalties assessed by the board, and the appropriation under s. 20.285 (1) (qj), the board shall establish priorities among the eligible applicants based upon the following considerations:
36.60(5)(b)1. 1. The degree to which there is an extremely high need for medical care in the eligible practice area, health professional shortage area, or rural area in which a physician desires to practice and the degree to which there is an extremely high need for dental care in the dental health shortage area or rural area in which a dentist desires to practice.
36.60(5)(b)2. 2. The likelihood that a physician will remain in the eligible practice area, health professional shortage area, or rural area, and that a dentist will remain in the dental health shortage area or rural area, in which he or she desires to practice after the loan repayment period.
36.60(5)(b)3. 3. The per capita income of the eligible practice area, health professional shortage area, or rural area in which a physician desires to practice and of the dental health shortage area or rural area in which a dentist desires to practice.
36.60(5)(b)4. 4. The financial or other support for physician recruitment and retention provided by individuals, organizations, or local governments in the eligible practice area, health professional shortage area, or rural area in which a physician desires to practice and for dentist recruitment and retention provided by individuals, organizations, or local governments in the dental health shortage area or rural area in which a dentist desires to practice.
36.60(5)(b)5. 5. The geographic distribution of the physicians and dentists who have entered into loan repayment agreements under this section and the geographic distribution of the eligible practice areas, health professional shortage areas, dental health shortage areas, and rural areas in which the eligible applicants desire to practice.
36.60(5)(b)6. 6. Other considerations that the board may specify by rule.
36.60(5)(d) (d) An agreement under sub. (3) does not create a right of action against the state on the part of the physician, dentist, or lending institution for failure to make the payments specified in the agreement.
36.60(6) (6)Local participation. The board shall encourage contributions to the program under this section by counties, cities, villages, and towns.
36.60(6m) (6m)Penalties. The board shall, by rule, establish penalties to be assessed by the board against physicians and dentists who breach agreements entered into under sub. (3). The rules shall do all of the following:
36.60(6m)(a) (a) Specify what actions constitute a breach of the agreement.
36.60(6m)(b) (b) Provide specific penalty amounts for specific breaches.
36.60(6m)(c) (c) Provide exceptions for certain actions, including breaches resulting from death or disability.
36.60(8) (8)Administration. The board shall do all of the following:
36.60(8)(b) (b) Identify eligible practice areas and rural areas with an extremely high need for medical care and dental health shortage areas and rural areas with an extremely high need for dental care.
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This is an archival version of the Wis. Stats. database for 2013. See Are the Statutes on this Website Official?