Under current law, DATCP awards grants for land and water resource management projects and for the construction of animal waste management systems. Current law authorizes the issuance of up to $3,000,000 in state bonds for this program. This bill increases that bonding authority by $3,575,000.
Under current law, DATCP regulates establishments where animals are slaughtered and where meat is processed if those establishments are not federally licensed. This bill requires slaughtering and meat processing establishments that are not federally licensed to comply with the federal regulations that apply to federally licensed establishments, except as otherwise provided in rules promulgated by DATCP.
Under current law, DATCP collects fees related to fertilizer, animal feeds and pesticides from persons who manufacture and sell these products. The fees are used for the management of agricultural chemicals. The 1997-99 biennial budget act lowered the amount of these fees for two years. This bill extends the lower fee amounts for two additional year
or the fertilizer and animal feed fees, the bill also imposes a weights and measures fee on each ton of fertilizer or animal feed sold. The fees are used by DATCP for its weights and measures inspection program. This bill reduces the fertilizer and animal feed fees so that the total fee per ton remains the same as it is under current law.
Under current law, drainage boards operate drainage districts, which drain property owned by two or more persons. DATCP assists drainage boards and oversees their activities and promulgates rules that apply to drainage boards.
This bill establishes a program under which DATCP makes grants to drainage boards to assist the boards to comply with applicable laws and rules.
This bill authorizes DATCP to accept electronic applications and payments for licenses issued and services provided by DATCP. DATCP may charge a fee to cover its electronic processing costs.
Commerce and economic development
Economic development
This bill authorizes the department of commerce to award grants and loans to businesses that are located in the same county as a casino that is operated by a federally recognized American Indian tribe or band or in a county adjacent to such a county. A grant for professional services, such as engineering studies, feasibility studies, marketing assistance or legal or accounting services, may not exceed $15,000. A grant or loan for fixed asset financing may not exceed $100,000. For either of these grants or loans, the department must determine that the recipient has been negatively impacted by the existence of the casino and that the recipient has a need for the grant or loan to improve its profitability. Unless the department waives the requirement for financial hardship reasons, any business receiving a grant or loan must provide matching funds for 25% of the cost of the project.
The bill also authorizes the department to award a grant or loan to a business described above for the purpose of diversifying the economy of a community in proximity to a casino. In determining whether to award a grant or loan, the department must consider a project's potential to retain or increase jobs, potential for significant capital investment and contribution to the economy of the community in proximity to the casino and to the economy of the state. A business that receives a grant or loan must provide matching funds for at least 25% of the cost of the project. Moneys for all of these grants and loans come from Indian gaming receipts. In addition, Indian gaming receipts are used for economic development grants for Brown County in fiscal years 1999-2000 and 2000-01.
Under current law, general purpose revenue is appropriated to the department of commerce for economic development for American Indians. This bill changes the source of the funding to Indian gaming receipts.
The Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA) administers a number of loan guarantee programs. Under the small business development loan guarantee program, WHEDA may guarantee up to 80% or $200,000, whichever is less, of the principal of a loan made by a private lending institution to a business that employs 50 or fewer full-time employes (small business), or to the elected governing body of a federally recognized American Indian tribe or band in this state, for certain business development projects. The total outstanding guaranteed principal amount of all loans that WHEDA may guarantee under the program is $9,900,000.
This bill adds a new type of eligible borrower to the program: a small business that is located in the same county as a casino that is operated by a federally recognized American Indian tribe or band or in a county that is adjacent to such a county. For such a loan, WHEDA may guarantee up to 100% or $200,000, whichever is less, of the loan principal. In addition, for such a loan WHEDA annually may pay to the financial institution that made the loan up to 3.5% of the outstanding balance of the loan as an interest subsidy. The bill increases the total outstanding guaranteed principal amount of all loans that WHEDA may guarantee under the program from $9,900,000 to $21,150,000. The bill also authorizes WHEDA to use Indian gaming receipts for guarantees and interest subsidies for loans made to businesses located in the same counties as American Indian casinos or in counties adjacent to those counties.
Currently, under the physician loan assistance and health care provider loan assistance programs, the department of commerce may repay up to a specified amount in educational loans on behalf of a physician, physician's assistant, nurse-midwife or nurse practitioner who agrees to practice at least 32 clinic hours per week for three years in one or more eligible practice areas, defined generally as areas in this state with shortages of certain types of health care providers. The loan repayments are funded from general purpose revenue. This bill changes the funding source to Indian gaming revenue.
This bill appropriates Indian gaming receipts to the department of tourism for tourism marketing expenditures and for providing funds to nonprofit organizations for the joint effort marketing of tourism in the state.
This bill authorizes WHEDA to organize and maintain a nonstock, nonprofit corporation for the purpose of investing in biotechnology companies in this state. Biotechnology is defined as technology related to life sciences. General purpose revenue is provided to the corporation for start-up capital and for its reasonable administrative expenses. WHEDA must provide administrative services to the corporation by assigning its own employes or by contracting with private or state agencies to provide the services.
The corporation may invest in a biotechnology company by purchasing capital participation instruments, such as capital stock, partnership or membership interests, evidences of indebtedness and royalties, in a commercial, industrial or other economic enterprise undertaken by the biotechnology company. The corporation may not purchase more than 49% of the voting stock in any such enterprise and may not invest more than $200,000 in any one biotechnology company.
The board of directors of the corporation includes the executive director of WHEDA, the secretary of commerce, the secretary of administration, the executive director of the investment board, the president of the University of Wisconsin System and the president of Forward Wisconsin, Inc., or the designee of any of them, and three other members who are initially appointed by the governor and who must include representatives of the state's biotechnology research community, biotechnology industry and venture capital industry.
This bill authorizes the department of commerce to award a grant of not more than $1,000,000 to a consortium of business, governmental and educational entities in the Racine-Kenosha area for a manufacturing technology training center. The consortium must submit a business plan to the department, and the secretary of commerce must approve the plan before the grant may be made. The department and the consortium must enter into a written agreement concerning the use of the grant proceeds, and the consortium must submit a report to the department on the use of the grant proceeds within six months after spending the proceeds.
This bill authorizes the department of commerce to make a loan of not more than $600,000 to a person for a project that includes a pedestrian bridge. In order to receive the loan, the person must submit a project plan and the plan must be approved by the secretary of commerce. The person must enter into a written agreement with the department related to the use of the loan proceeds, and must agree to report to the department on the use of the loan proceeds after the proceeds are spent.
This bill eliminates the manufacturing assistance grants program, under which the development finance board awards grants to fund a management assessment and plan, to provide customized training for employes of a business supplying a manufacturing business and to provide support for a manufacturing extension center technology transfer program. Grants may not total more than $750,000 in a fiscal biennium and are funded with general purpose revenue from the Wisconsin development fund and with repayments from grants and loans made from the Wisconsin development fund.
This bill authorizes the department of commerce to award a grant to a technology-based nonprofit organization to provide support for a manufacturing extension center. Grants awarded under the program may not exceed $1,000,000 in a fiscal year and are funded solely with repayments of grants and loans made from the Wisconsin development fund.
This bill authorizes the department of commerce to award grants for costs associated with the start-up or expansion of a business that is or will be located in a city, village or town that has a population of more than 6,000 or that is located in a county with a population density of 150 or more persons per square mile. The department may not award more than $15,000 to any one person in a fiscal biennium, and may not award more than $250,000 under the program in a fiscal biennium. A person may not receive a grant unless the person submits to the department a comprehensive informational application and contributes at least 25% of the cost of the project.
Currently, if the department of commerce designates an area as a development zone, a development opportunity zone or an enterprise development zone, a person or corporation that conducts or that intends to conduct economic activity in the designated zone may be eligible for certain tax credits, called development zones credits, based on the creation or retention of jobs and on expenses incurred to remediate environmental problems.
This bill eliminates the requirement that the department obtain the approval of the joint committee on finance to designate more than 50 enterprise development zones and increases the number of enterprise development zones that the department may designate to 100. The bill increases the amount in tax credits that the department must allow a person to claim for creating or retaining a job in a development zone or in an enterprise development zone. The bill increases to $300,000,000 the total amount of tax credits that may be claimed under the development zone and enterprise development zone programs together. Under current law, the amount of tax credits that may be claimed under the development zone program is $33,155,000 and the amount that may be claimed under the enterprise development zone program is not specified. Finally, the bill authorizes the department to designate enterprise development zones for projects that will likely provide for significant environmental remediation. Under current law, the department may designate an enterprise development zone only for a project that is likely to retain or increase employment in the state and that will likely have a positive effect on an area that meets at least three criteria relating generally to economic circumstances. Of the 100 enterprise development zones that the department may designate under the bill, the department must designate at least ten for projects for environmental remediation.
Currently, the department of commerce awards grants to persons for the redevelopment of brownfields and associated environmental remediation activities. Brownfields are abandoned, idle or underused industrial or commercial facilities or sites that are adversely affected for expansion or redevelopment by actual or perceived environmental contamination. Grants are paid from general purpose revenue and from the environmental fund.
This bill adds another type of grant to the program based on the creation or retention of jobs. Under the bill, any person eligible for a grant under the current program is eligible for the new type of grant if, in addition to satisfying the criteria under current law, the grant applicant creates or retains jobs with the grant proceeds. At least 80% of the jobs created or retained must be filled by individuals who are parents of minor children and who have family incomes that do not exceed 200% of the federal poverty line. The new grants are paid from the federal temporary assistance for needy families block grant moneys. The current requirement that the department must award at least seven grants under the program for projects that are located in municipalities with a population of less than 30,000 is changed to a requirement that the department must award at least 14 grants for projects that are located in municipalities with a population of less than 50,000.
The department of commerce currently awards grants and loans from the Wisconsin development fund for various purposes generally related to technology and product research and development and labor training. This bill provides that in fiscal year 1999-2000 the department of commerce may provide up to $100,000 in assistance from the fund to a nonprofit organization that provides assistance to organizations and individuals in urban areas.
Currently, WHEDA guarantees the repayment of loans made to businesses and individuals for various specified purposes by private lending institutions. The loans are guaranteed from the Wisconsin development reserve fund. This bill transfers $2,000,000 from the Wisconsin development reserve fund to the environmental fund, which funds such activities as environmental repair, groundwater management and nonpoint source water pollution abatement. In addition, the bill reduces WHEDA's loan guarantee authority for the remediation of brownfields.
Currently, moneys in the housing rehabilitation loan program administration fund may be used to pay for WHEDA's expenses in administering the housing rehabilitation loan program, which promotes housing rehabilitation through, among other things, the purchase of housing rehabilitation loans from lenders. Moneys may be transferred to the general fund if the moneys are no longer required for the housing rehabilitation loan program. This bill eliminates the transfer of moneys to the general fund and instead authorizes the transfer of moneys to the Wisconsin development reserve fund, which WHEDA uses to fund loan guarantees under all of its loan guarantee programs.
The bill also eliminates the cultural and architectural landmark loan guarantee program, under which WHEDA may guarantee a loan to an organization for acquiring, constructing, improving or rehabilitating a property that is an architectural masterpiece and that has historical significance.
Under the statutes, records created and maintained by a governmental agency are normally open to inspection by anyone who requests inspection or copies of the records. Also under current law, a governmental agency is prohibited from selling or renting a record containing an individual's name or address unless authorized by statute. This bill allows the department of tourism to refuse to reveal names, addresses and related demographic information from any lists maintained by the department of persons who have requested travel information from the department. In addition, if the department reveals information from any such list, the department may charge a fee to recover its costs in compiling and providing the information.
Under current law, the department of commerce awards grants to community-based organizations for regional economic development, but is limited in the amount that it may award in a fiscal year. This bill removes this limit so that the department may use its discretion in the total amount of grants awarded.
Under current law, the department of commerce provides technical assistance, or a grant for technical assistance, to individuals, nonprofit organizations and businesses with fewer than 25 full-time employes for developing and planning the start-up or expansion of a business that is expected to provide job opportunities for persons with severe disabilities. This bill makes businesses with fewer than 100 employes eligible for such assistance.
Commerce
This bill allows a savings bank, a savings and loan association and a state bank (a financial institution) to become certified by the division of banking in the department of financial institutions (DFI) as a universal bank. If certified as a universal bank, the financial institution may exercise certain additional powers.
In order to be certified as a universal bank, a financial institution must be chartered or organized, and regulated, as a Wisconsin financial institution and be in existence and continuous operation for at least three years; must be well-capitalized or adequately capitalized; must not exhibit moderately severe or unsatisfactory financial, managerial, operational and compliance weaknesses; and must not have been the subject of any enforcement action within the 12 months preceding the application.
A financial institution that the division of banking certifies as a universal bank retains its original status and remains subject to all of the laws that applied to the financial institution prior to its certification as a universal bank, except to the extent that such laws are inconsistent with the powers and duties of universal banks.
The bill expands the powers of a financial institution that becomes certified as a universal bank to include any activity authorized for any savings bank, savings and loan association or state bank. In addition, the bill does all of the following with respect to the powers that a universal bank may exercise:
1. The bill grants a universal bank the authority to exercise all powers that may be exercised, either directly or through a subsidiary, by a national bank, a federally chartered savings bank or a federally chartered savings and loan association.
2. A universal bank may deal in loans or extensions of credit for any purpose. Like state banks, the limitations imposed on a universal bank's lending generally focus on the total amount of liabilities of any one lender at any one time. Although the limit varies, the general rule is that the total liabilities of any one person to a universal bank may not exceed 20% of the capital of the universal bank. In addition, the bill grants a universal bank additional authority to lend an aggregate amount to all borrowers not to exceed 20% of the bank's capital. The division of banking may suspend this additional authority based upon factors including the universal bank's capital adequacy, management, earnings, liquidity and sensitivity to market risk.
3. To the extent consistent with safe and sound banking powers, a universal bank may purchase, sell, underwrite and hold certain investment securities in an amount up to 100% of the universal bank's capital. A universal bank may not invest greater than 20% of its capital in any one obligor or issuer. Subject to certain limits, the bill also allows a universal bank to purchase, sell, underwrite and hold equity securities. Universal banks may also invest in certain housing properties and projects and profit-participation projects. The bill provides that a universal bank also may invest without limitation in several specific types of securities. The universal bank may invest in risk management instruments, including financial futures transactions, financial operations transactions and forward commitments, solely for the purpose of reducing, hedging or otherwise managing its interest rate risk exposure. In addition, a universal bank may invest in other financial institutions. However, the bill contains specific provisions governing the purchase by a universal bank of its own stock and of stock in banks and bank holding companies.
4. The bill grants a universal bank the authority to establish the types and terms of deposits that the universal bank solicits and accepts. A universal bank may pledge its assets as security for deposits and, with the approval of the division of banking, may securitize its assets for sale to the public. In addition, a universal bank may exercise certain safe deposit and trust powers.
5. A universal bank may exercise all powers necessary or convenient to effect the purposes for which the universal bank is organized or to further the businesses in which the universal bank is lawfully engaged. In addition, the bill allows a universal bank to engage in activities that are reasonably related or incident to the purposes of the universal bank. The bill specifies numerous activities that are either reasonably related or incidental powers, including real estate-related services; insurance services, other than insurance underwriting; securities brokerage; investment advice; securities and bond underwriting; mutual fund activities; financial consulting; and tax planning and preparation. A universal bank may also engage in any activity permitted to be engaged in by bank holding companies under the federal Bank Holding Company Act.
Under Wisconsin's version of the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (UUPA), the holder of certain types of intangible property that is presumed to be abandoned must report and deliver the property to the state treasurer. If the presumption that the property is abandoned is incorrect, the holder must file a statement with the state treasurer explaining the error in the presumption. The UUPA defines intangible property to include a sales credit reflected in a vendor's bookkeeping. This bill excludes from the definition of intangible property a balance credited by a business association to a commercial customer's account in the ordinary course of business. Thus, the bill eliminates the requirement that a vendor either report and deliver to the state treasurer a sales credit issued to a commercial customer's account or file a statement with the state treasurer explaining why the sales credit is not reportable as abandoned property.
Under current law, certain articles and substances, including toys containing mercury, are statutorily banned from being sold or distributed in this state. This bill expands the ban to include fever thermometers that contain mercury.
Under current law, a person who owns a meter used to sell or deliver liquefied petroleum gas must comply with certain requirements to ensure the accuracy of the meter and the price charged to the purchaser. These requirements include registering the meter with the department of agriculture, trade and consumer protection (DATCP) and having the meter inspected annually by a meter servicing company that is licensed by DATCP. The meter service company then must file with DATCP a report of the test results.
This bill changes the registration requirement to a licensing requirement and imposes the requirement on the operator of the meter instead of the owner. The bill also imposes the requirement that the meter be inspected on the operator instead of on the owner.
Current law imposes fees on meter owners for failing to comply with these registration and testing requirements and on meter servicing companies for failing to comply with the reporting requirements. This bill authorizes DATCP to suspend or revoke operator licenses for and meter and servicing licenses for these failures.
On January 1, 1999, 11 members of the European Union (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, Finland, Ireland, Austria and Luxembourg) adopted the euro as their single currency. Beginning on January 1, 1999, there is a three-year period for the conversion of the currencies of the members to the euro. On January 1, 2002, euro notes and coins will be introduced and on July 1, 2002, the member currencies will be withdrawn from circulation.
This bill provides a general mechanism for interpreting contracts or other legal instruments that are entered into or executed in this state or that contain provisions that require the contract or other legal instrument to be interpreted according to the laws of this state and that use currencies or other monetary units affected by the introduction of the euro. Generally, under the bill, any contract or other legal instrument that uses a currency or other monetary unit that is affected by the euro must use the euro as a commercially reasonable substitute for the currency or monetary unit. The bill also provides that no person may discharge or otherwise excuse performance under any contract or other legal instrument, or unilaterally alter the terms of, or terminate, any contract or other legal instrument, as a result of the requirement that the euro be a commercially reasonable substitute for the currency or monetary unit.
This bill changes the name of the division of savings and loan in DFI to the division of savings institutions.
This bill authorizes DFI to charge members of the public a fee for accessing or using DFI's databases or computer systems.
Buildings and safety
Under current law, the department of commerce regulates private sewage systems. A private sewage system is a sewage treatment system with a septic tank or an alternative sewage system approved by the department of commerce, such as a holding tank. Under current law, a person who is responsible for a point source of pollution (pollution from a pipe or similar conveyance into the surface water or groundwater of this state) is generally required to obtain a water pollution discharge permit from the department of natural resources (DNR).
Under this bill, the department of commerce regulates small sewage systems rather than private sewage systems. A small sewage system either is a wastewater treatment and disposal system that discharges below the surface of the ground and that has a design flow that does not exceed a maximum established by the department of commerce or is a holding tank. The bill authorizes DNR to exempt small sewage systems from the requirement to obtain a water pollution discharge permit.
Current law charges governmental units (counties in which small sewage systems are located or, for counties with a population of at least 500,000, the cities, villages or towns in which such systems are located) with certain regulatory duties concerning private sewage systems. Governmental units may delegate these regulatory duties to town sanitary districts or certain public inland lake protection and rehabilitation districts if these districts consent. This bill permits governmental units to delegate these regulatory duties to the department of commerce if the department consents.
Under current law, one statute authorizes governmental units to issue sanitary permits for the installation of small sewage systems and another statute authorizes both the department of commerce and governmental units to issue sanitary permits. The department's practice has been to issue sanitary permits for the installation of small sewage systems on state-owned property only. This bill permits both the department and governmental units to issue sanitary permits for the installation of small sewage systems on either private or state-owned property.
Current law prohibits a governmental unit from issuing a sanitary permit for the installation of a small sewage system if the department of commerce finds that the governmental unit has not adopted a small sewage system ordinance, as required by law, or if the governmental unit fails to carry out its regulatory duties concerning small sewage systems. This bill provides instead that the department may order the governmental unit to remedy its failure to adopt a small sewage system ordinance or to carry out its regulatory duties.
Under current law, the department of commerce administers a grant program for the replacement or rehabilitation of certain types of failing small sewage systems. Generally, a covered system is one that discharges sewage into surface water, groundwater or bedrock or to drain tile or the surface of the ground. Under the program, the department awards grants to eligible local governmental units which, in turn, award grants to eligible individuals and businesses. A person is generally eligible for a grant to replace or rehabilitate a failing sewage system if, among other things, he or she owns a principal residence that was constructed and inhabited before July 1, 1978, and that is served by a covered system and if the person's annual Wisconsin adjusted income does not exceed $45,000. If there is insufficient funding for all eligible individuals and businesses, the grants are prorated.
Under this bill, in a year in which the department of commerce must prorate funds under the program, a local governmental unit that received a prorated grant may apply for a no-interest loan to increase the prorated grants provided to eligible individuals and businesses. To obtain a loan, a local governmental unit must enter into a financial assistance agreement with the department of administration and the department of commerce. In addition, the bill provides that a person is eligible for a grant if the system serving the principal residence was installed before July 1, 1978, the person's federal adjusted gross income does not exceed $45,000 and the person meets the other eligibility requirements.
Current law requires small sewage systems to be inspected every three years by, among others, persons licensed by DNR to service septic tanks (pumpers). This bill eliminates pumpers as a class of approved inspectors for small sewage systems and adds small sewage system inspectors certified by the department of commerce. The bill also eliminates the three-year inspection requirement and requires instead that the department of commerce establish a schedule for the inspection or pumping of systems.
Current law requires cities and metropolitan sewerage districts to report to the department of commerce each failure of a state licensed plumber to qualify as a journeyman or master plumber and each wilful violation of any plumbing regulation. This bill eliminates this reporting requirement.
Correctional system
Adult correctional system
This bill provides that the department of corrections (DOC) may not enter into any contract or other agreement if, in the performance of the contract or agreement, a prisoner would perform data entry or telemarketing services and have access to any information that may serve to identify a minor or have access to an individual's financial transaction card numbers, checking or savings account numbers or social security number. Under the bill, a financial transaction card means an instrument or device issued to the cardholder for obtaining anything on credit, for certifying or guaranteeing the availability of funds sufficient to honor a draft or check or for gaining access to an account.
Under current law, DOC may, until July 1, 1999, operate the juvenile secured correctional facility at Prairie du Chien as a state prison for nonviolent offenders who are not more than 21 years of age. This bill extends that authority to July 1, 2001.
This bill requires DOC to establish a probation and parole holding and alcohol and other drug abuse treatment facility in Milwaukee, a medium security correctional institution in Redgranite and a medium security correctional facility in New Lisbon.
Juvenile correctional system
Under current law relating to community youth and family aids (generally referred to as "youth aids"), various state and federal funds are allocated to counties to pay for state-provided juvenile correctional services and local delinquency-related and juvenile justice services. DOC charges counties for the costs of services provided by DOC. This bill provides new per person daily cost assessments upon counties for juvenile placements during the 1999-2001 fiscal biennium as follows:
Under current law, DOC may operate or contract for the operation of secured correctional facilities for holding in secure custody juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent and placed in a secured correctional facility under the supervision of DOC by the court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under the juvenile justice code (juvenile court). Current law also permits DOC to license child welfare agencies to operate secured child caring institutions (secured CCI's) for holding in secure custody juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent and referred to the child welfare agency by the juvenile court or by DOC. A juvenile court may place a juvenile in a secured correctional facility or a secured CCI only if the juvenile has been adjudicated delinquent for committing an act that would be punishable by a sentence of six months or more if committed by an adult and has been found to be a danger to the public and in need of restrictive custodial treatment.
This bill permits the county board of supervisors of not more than one county to establish, and DOC to license, a secured group home for holding in secure custody juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent for committing an act that would be punishable by a sentence of six months or more if committed by an adult, who have been found to be a danger to the public and in need of restrictive custodial treatment and who have been placed under the supervision of DOC by the juvenile court.
Under current law, various laws apply to juveniles who are placed in a secured correctional facility or a secured CCI. Those laws relate to such subjects as sex offender registration, the commitment of sexually violent persons, a deoxyribonucleic acid data bank of sex offenders, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing when certain persons have been significantly exposed to HIV, adult jurisdiction and criminal penalties for certain persons who commit assault, transfers to a state treatment facility, aftercare planning, escape, notification of victims and witnesses when a juvenile is released or escapes from correctional custody, taking runaways into custody, strip searches and an exception to the open records law when disclosing a record would endanger the security of an institution. This bill applies those laws to juveniles who are placed in a secured group home in the same manner as those laws apply to juveniles who are placed in a secured correctional facility or a secured CCI.
Under current law, DOC provides a corrective sanctions program for juveniles who have been placed under the supervision of DOC. Under the corrective sanctions program, DOC must place a participant in the community, provide intensive surveillance of the participant and provide an average of $5,000 per year per slot to purchase community-based treatment services for participants. This bill reduces the amount that DOC must provide to purchase community-based treatment services for corrective sanctions program participants to $3,000 per year per slot.
courts and procedure
Circuit courts
Current law provides for limited payment of attorney fees by the unsuccessful litigant to the successful litigant in all civil actions. In a civil action concerning money damages or property, the successful litigant is entitled to attorney fees based on the following schedule:
This bill changes the amount of attorney fees allowed in these cases as follows:
The bill also increases the amount of attorney fees recoverable in civil cases that do not involve money damages or property from a maximum of $100 to a maximum of $500.
Under current law, in civil cases certain disbursements, such as those made for the costs of certified copies of public papers or records, postage and depositions, are recoverable by the successful litigant, but are limited to $50 for each item. This bill expands the list of disbursements that are recoverable to include such items as overnight delivery and facsimile transmissions and increases the limit to $100 for each item. The bill also increases the amount that a successful litigant may recover for the cost of each expert witness testifying on behalf of the successful litigant from $100 to $300 and for filing a motion from $50 to $300.
Under current law, when the clerk of circuit court collects a fee from a person commencing a civil action, including garnishment, small claims and forfeiture actions, the clerk is also required to collect a $7 justice information system fee. Four-sevenths of the $7 fee is used to pay the costs incurred by the department of administration to develop and operate the automated justice information system. Two-sevenths of the $7 fee is used to pay the costs incurred by the director of state courts for the operation of the circuit court, court of appeals and supreme court automated information systems and for the payment of interpreter fees. The remaining $1 of the fee does not have a specified purpose.
This bill raises the justice information system fee from $7 to $9 and uses the additional $2 of each fee to pay the costs incurred by the director of state courts for the operation of the circuit court, court of appeals and supreme court automated information systems and for the payment of interpreter fees.
Public defender
Under current law, the state public defender (SPD) provides legal representation to indigent persons in criminal, delinquency and certain related cases. The SPD assigns cases either to staff attorneys in the agency's trial division or local private attorneys. A staff attorney working in the trial division is expected to meet an annual caseload standard. This bill provides that, beginning on July 1, 2000, the SPD may exempt up to ten staff attorneys in the trial division from the annual caseload standards based on the need of those attorneys to perform other assigned duties.
Other courts and procedure
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