Senator Chvala, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Senate Bill 351
Read a third time and passed.
Senate Bill 494
Relating to: suspension of licenses, permits and other credentials for failure to pay child support or to comply with a subpoena or warrant related to paternity or child support proceedings and requiring social security numbers on license, permit and other credential applications and on certain documents concerning marriage and children; creating a record matching program to match information about delinquent child support obligors with financial account information of financial institutions; creating a statutory lien for delinquent child support obligations; creating a mechanism for enforcing child support liens; fees for the child and spousal support, establishment of paternity and medical liability support program and cooperation with child support efforts under Wisconsin works; income withholding for support or maintenance, adjudicating paternity when the mother fails to appear and other technical changes related to child support enforcement; access to certain agency records, nonliability for providing information from records, issuing subpoenas, ordering genetic tests; providing notice to new employers of a parent's obligation to provide health care coverage for a child; hospital-based voluntary establishment of paternity; administratively changing interstate income-withholding orders to sum certain amounts; presumption of paternity; access by county child support employes to tax information; acknowledgment of paternity; procedure, temporary orders and probable cause in paternity actions; payment for genetic tests in paternity actions; changes in departmental responsibility for support enforcement; intercepting delinquent support and certain other payments from pension plan disbursements; intercepting delinquent support from court judgments and settlements; granting rulemaking authority; making appropriations; and providing a penalty.
Read a second time.
Senator Burke, with unanimous consent, asked that Senate Bill 494 be referred to the Joint Committee on Finance.
Senator Burke, with unanimous consent, asked that the rules be suspended and that Senate Bill 494 be withdrawn from the Joint Committee on Finance and taken up at this time.
Read a second time.
Senator Chvala, with unanimous consent, asked that Senate Bill 494 be placed at the foot of the 11th order of business on the calendar of March 19, 1998.
Senate Bill 360
Relating to: allowing brewers and alcohol beverage wholesalers to contribute money or things of value to or for the benefit of certain festivals held in 2nd class cities.
Read a second time.
The question was: Adoption of Senate amendment 1 to Senate Bill 360?
Adopted.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Chvala, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Senate Bill 360
Read a third time.
The ayes and noes were demanded and the vote was: ayes, 21; noes, 11; absent or not voting, 0; as follows:
Ayes - Senators Breske, Burke, Chvala, Clausing, Decker, George, Grobschmidt, Huelsman, Jauch, Moen, Moore, Plache, C. Potter, Risser, Rosenzweig, Rude, Shibilski, Welch, Wineke, Wirch and Zien - 21.
Noes - Senators Cowles, Darling, Drzewiecki, Ellis, Farrow, Fitzgerald, A. Lasee, Panzer, Roessler, Schultz and Weeden - 11.
Absent or not voting - None.
Passed.
Senate Bill 495
Relating to: mental health crisis intervention services; requirements for a Level I local health officer; coordination by a local board of health of activities of a sanitarian; fetal death reports; access by a coroner, deputy coroner, medical examiner or medical examiner's assistant to patient health care records; confidentiality restrictions on cancer reports; service contracts under community integration programs; eliminating outdated requirements for bed assessments for nursing homes and intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded; designation by a nursing home of a person to accept service of notice or mail; required information for licenses for nursing homes and community-based residential facilities; eliminating a date for posting notice about the long-term care ombudsman program; eliminating dates for determinations that nursing homes are institutions for mental diseases; resident rights and responsibilities for residents of nursing homes and community-based residential facilities; eliminating dates for requesting and providing information about nursing homes; evaluations of integrated services projects; matching funds requirements for participants in integrated services projects; eliminating a requirement for a plan and report on school-community alcohol and drug abuse prevention and other services; eliminating a requirement that a person investigating a report of suspected or threatened emotional abuse of a child determine that the person responsible for the emotional damage is neglecting, refusing or unable for reasons other than poverty to remedy the harm; and prohibiting an adoptive parent from moving for relief from an order granting adoption or petitioning for a rehearing of such an order (suggested as remedial legislation by the department of health and family services).
Read a second time.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
S536 Senate Bill 495
Read a third time and passed.
Senate Bill 496
Relating to: ozone-depleting refrigerant and mobile air conditioners.
Read a second time.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Senate Bill 496
Read a third time and passed.
Senate Bill 40
Relating to: the election of certain persons to a city, village or town planning commission.
Read a second time.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Senate Bill 40
Read a third time and passed.
Senate Bill 494
Relating to: suspension of licenses, permits and other credentials for failure to pay child support or to comply with a subpoena or warrant related to paternity or child support proceedings and requiring social security numbers on license, permit and other credential applications and on certain documents concerning marriage and children; creating a record matching program to match information about delinquent child support obligors with financial account information of financial institutions; creating a statutory lien for delinquent child support obligations; creating a mechanism for enforcing child support liens; fees for the child and spousal support, establishment of paternity and medical liability support program and cooperation with child support efforts under Wisconsin works; income withholding for support or maintenance, adjudicating paternity when the mother fails to appear and other technical changes related to child support enforcement; access to certain agency records, nonliability for providing information from records, issuing subpoenas, ordering genetic tests; providing notice to new employers of a parent's obligation to provide health care coverage for a child; hospital-based voluntary establishment of paternity; administratively changing interstate income-withholding orders to sum certain amounts; presumption of paternity; access by county child support employes to tax information; acknowledgment of paternity; procedure, temporary orders and probable cause in paternity actions; payment for genetic tests in paternity actions; changes in departmental responsibility for support enforcement; intercepting delinquent support and certain other payments from pension plan disbursements; intercepting delinquent support from court judgments and settlements; granting rulemaking authority; making appropriations; and providing a penalty.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that Senate Bill 494 be placed after Assembly Bill 669 on the calendar of March 19, 1998.
Senator Moore, with unanimous consent, asked to be added as a coauthor of Senate Bill 494.
__________________
Second reading and amendments of Assembly Joint resolutions and Assembly Bills
Assembly Joint Resolution 106
Relating to: federal spending on transportation.
The question was: Shall Assembly Joint Resolution 106 be concurred in?
Concurred in.
Assembly Bill 131
Relating to: load weight limits on trucks registered with the department of transportation as special interest, reconstructed, replica, street modified or homemade vehicles.
Read a second time.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Senator Drzewiecki, with unanimous consent, asked to be added as a cosponsor of Assembly Bill 131.
Assembly Bill 131
Read a third time and concurred in.
Assembly Bill 334
Relating to: the regulation of home inspectors, providing an exemption from emergency rule procedures, granting rule-making authority and providing penalties.
Read a second time.
Ordered to a third reading.
Senator Moen, with unanimous consent, asked that the bill be considered for final action at this time.
Assembly Bill 334
Read a third time and concurred in.
Assembly Bill 410
Relating to: original adult court jurisdiction over a juvenile who is alleged to have attempted or committed a violation of any state criminal law if that violation may be joined with an alleged assault, battery, homicide or attempted homicide over which the adult court has original jurisdiction, the elimination of reverse waiver for a juvenile who is once waived always waived, the imposition of a juvenile adjudication and disposition by an adult court on a juvenile who has been found to have committed a lesser offense, the financial ability of a juvenile, either alone or with the assistance of a parent with custody of the juvenile, to make restitution for any damage or injury resulting from the juvenile's act or to pay a forfeiture imposed on the juvenile, sanctions for a juvenile in need of protection or services based on habitual truancy or being a school dropout who violates a condition of his or her dispositional order and sanctions for contempt of court by a juvenile who violates a condition of his or her dispositional order, the rules of evidence at postdispositional hearings under the juvenile justice code and the disclosure of juvenile court records to other juvenile courts for the purposes of preparing a presentence investigation, determining custody of a juvenile, setting bail, impeaching a witness and determining whether a juvenile who would otherwise be an heir has intentionally killed the decedent.
Read a second time.
Senator George moved that Assembly Bill 410 be referred to the committee on Senate Organization.
The question was: Shall Assembly Bill 410 be referred to the committee on Senate Organization?
The ayes and noes were demanded and the vote was: ayes, 12; noes, 20; absent or not voting, 0; as follows:
S537 Ayes - Senators Breske, Darling, Farrow, George, A. Lasee, Moore, Panzer, Risser, Rosenzweig, Schultz, Weeden and Wineke - 12.
Noes - Senators Burke, Chvala, Clausing, Cowles, Decker, Drzewiecki, Ellis, Fitzgerald, Grobschmidt, Huelsman, Jauch, Moen, Plache, C. Potter, Roessler, Rude, Shibilski, Welch, Wirch and Zien - 20.
Absent or not voting - None.
Referal refused.
Senator George moved rejection of Senate amendment 1 to Assembly Bill 410.
Senator George, with unanimous consent, asked to withdraw his motion to reject Senate amendment 1 to Assembly Bill 410.
The question was: Adoption of Senate amendment 1 to Assembly Bill 410?
Adopted.
Senate amendment 2 to Assembly Bill 410 offered by Senator Huelsman.
The question was: Adoption of Senate amendment 2 to Assembly Bill 410?
Adopted.
Senate amendment 3 to Assembly Bill 410 offered by Senators Roessler and C. Potter.
The question was: Adoption of Senate amendment 3 to Assembly Bill 410?
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