Deposit current contractor (one who buys vegetables from a producer or who contracts with a producer to grow vegetables) fees of 1¢ per $100 in total paid and unpaid contractual obligations to producers to an appropriation which regulates vegetable procurement and dairy trade practices. Currently these fees are appropriated to the marketing services appropriation from which the bill transfers revenues to the fruit and vegetable inspection account. DATCP received $13,000 PR from this fee in 1997-98.
As drafted, the bill would require all fees of 1¢ per $100 in contractual obligations be deposited to the dairy and vegetable security and trade practices appropriation, but, due to a technical error, also to the fruit and vegetable inspection appropriation.
[Bill Sections: 173 thru 175, 180 and 181]
18. LIVESTOCK AND AQUACULTURE INSPECTION
Funding Positions
GPR - $195,800 - 2.00
PR
167,600 0.00
Total - $28,200 - 2.00
Governor: Delete 2.0 GPR positions and $97,900 GPR each year for a fish farm microbiologist and a health inspector position that were frozen by the Governor from the 1997-99 budget adjustment act.
Further, provide $83,800 PR annually in expenditure authority for field staff travel, increased license printing and new equipment purchases for livestock and aquaculture inspection, testing and enforcement activities. Revenues are collected from livestock market, dealer and trucker licenses, livestock vehicle registrations, livestock health certificates and deer and fish farm registrations.
19. DOG LICENSES AND RABIES CONTROL
PR-REV $3,000
Governor: Allow the Department to train local rabies control administrators and to charge a fee to cover training costs. Fees would be credited to an existing appropriation for dog licenses, rabies control, humane activities and related services. Program revenue is estimated at $1,500 annually. Specify that fees collected for humane officer training and certification under 1997 Act 192 be deposited to this appropriation.
[Bill Sections: 178, 179, 1946 and 9404(2)]
20. CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSESSMENT
PR-REV $150,000

PR $150,000
Governor: Provide $75,000 annually and create an appropriation for consumer protection information and education. Revenue would come from a new 15% surcharge on all fines and forfeitures for violations relating to consumer protection that occur beginning on the effective date of the bill. Fines and forfeitures related to weights and measures violations and marketing and trade practices would include the assessment. Examples of weights and measures fines and forfeitures assessed would be on one who obstructs an inspector, uses an incorrect weight or measure in sales, falsely advertises a quantity or price of any good or service, falsely tests milk for butterfat content or generally violates any provision under the weights and measures statutes (Chapter 98) or corresponding administrative rules. Examples of marketing and trade practice fines include false advertising, business to business violations, dairy industry violations, unfair trading methods, contracting infractions and plastic container labeling infractions, as well as any provision under the marketing and trade practice statutes (Chapter 100) or corresponding administrative rules. The 15% assessment would also apply to local ordinances enacted under the marketing and trade practice and weights and measures statutes and corresponding administrative rules. The 15% would be based on the total amount of fines and forfeitures imposed in any court, and if collected by a local court, it would be forwarded to the county treasurer and paid to the state in the same method as similar forfeitures.
[Bill Sections: 177, 1576, 1577, 1609 thru 1616, 1960, 3066 thru 3072, 3074 thru 3080, 3082, 3084, 3085, 3094, 3095, 3098, 3203 thru 3205 and 9304(2)]
21. TRADE AND CONSUMER PROTECTION POSITIONS
Funding Positions
PR $34,200 0.20
SEG
- 34,200 - 0.20
Total $0 0.00
Governor: Transfer 0.2 position and $17,100 annually from recycling SEG to PR and make other adjustments to realign trade and consumer protection staff. The positions and funding affected would be as follows:
Appropriation Positions Annual Funding
Grain inspection and certification 0.35 $34,200
Warehouse keeper and grain dealer regulation 0.19 6,500
Vegetable procurement and dairy trade regulation -0.39 -23,700
Weights and measures inspection 0.35 25,800
Ozone-depleting refrigerants and products regulation -0.3 -25,700
Recycling products regulation (SEG) -0.2 -17,100
TOTAL 0.00 $0
22. GINSENG FEES
Governor: Specify that ginseng dealer and grower annual registration fees and fees collected by DATCP to cover costs related to providing mandatory shipment certificates and report forms be deposited into an existing agricultural resource management appropriation used to publish informational materials. Although current law does not specify where the revenue is to be deposited, it has been deposited to this appropriation. In 1997-98, DATCP received $550 in ginseng related fees.
[Bill Sections: 185, 1935 and 1936]
23. MEAT PROCESSING
Governor: Require state licensed animal, poultry and carcass slaughter and processing facilities to comply with the standards that federally licensed facilities must meet, unless specified otherwise by DATCP rule. These standards generally deal with facilities for inspection, sanitation, ante-mortem inspection, post-mortem inspection, disposal of diseased or otherwise adulterated carcasses and parts, humane slaughtering, handling and disposal of condemned or other inedible products, rendering or other disposal of carcasses and parts passed for cooking, labeling, marking devices and containers, entry into official establishments, definitions and standards of identity or composition, sanitation, hazard analysis and critical control point systems and parts of poultry products inspection regulations. Under current law, the Department is required to issue various administrative rules for animal, poultry and carcass slaughter and processing facilities. The bill would allow, rather than require DATCP to issue any of those rules. These changes would take effect on January 1, 2000.
Allow DATCP to promulgate a retail food regulation or DHFS to promulgate a restaurant rule based on the model food code of the federal Food and Drug Administration under that format rather than according to the current statutory format.
[Bill Sections: 1949, 1950, 2356 and 9404(4)]
24. HAZARDOUS FOODS
Governor: Expand the definition of "potentially hazardous food" under food regulations of retail food establishments to clarify that it includes any food that requires temperature control because it is capable of supporting growth and toxin production of Clostridium botulinum (a bacteria commonly found in soil which causes the paralytic illness, botulism) or the growth of Salmonella enteritidis in raw shell eggs. DATCP currently considers these items to be potentially hazardous foods. Retail food establishment license fees depend on whether or not the establishment sells potentially hazardous food. The change would take effect on January 1, 2001.
[Bill Sections: 1947 and 9404(5)]
25. MERCURY THERMOMETERS
Governor: Ban any fever thermometer containing elemental mercury from being sold or distributed in the state. The ban would begin on the first day of the 13th month after publication of the bill.
[Bill Sections: 1961 and 9404(3)]
26. WEB PAGE MAINTENANCE
Funding Positions
PR $69,800 1.00
Governor: Provide 1.0 position and $29,900 in 1999-00 and $39,900 in 2000-01 for DATCP website maintenance. A site was developed by a limited-term employe and the new position would maintain and update the site regularly. Program revenues are derived from chargebacks to agency programs.
27. INFORMATION SALES POSITION
Positions
PR 0.50
Governor: Convert a limited-term employe position to a one-half time permanent position. Funding would be transferred from LTE salary and supplies. The staff maintains and provides computer lists to internal and external customers.
28. HEALTH AND SAFETY OFFICER
Positions
PR 0.60
Governor: Reallocate $22,700 in 1999-00 and $30,300 in 2000-01 from DATCP supplies (related to insurance premium savings) for a 0.6 position to coordinate health and safety initiatives and training for DATCP employes. DATCP plans to share the safety officer with the Department of Military Affairs (which would fund the other 40% of a full-time position).
29. DEBT SERVICE REESTIMATE
GPR - $43,200
Governor: Reestimate debt service on soil and water resource management general obligation bonds by -$84,900 in 1999-00 and $41,700 in 2000-01.
30. MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Governor: Transfer $25,400 GPR and 0.5 program and planning analyst position annually from the Food Safety Division to the Management Services Division to assist the Secretary's office.
31. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
PR $2,378,800
SEG
241,400
Total $2,620,200
Governor: Combine information technology funds into one appropriation. Currently, funds are transferred from various revenue accounts to cover appropriations. Those transfers do not appear as expenditures, but instead as revenue reductions. Spending authority would replace transfer authority, thus showing up as expenditures for record-keeping purposes. Revenue transfer authority of $85,400 PR and $120,700 SEG annually would be replaced with reciprocal spending authority. Also, increase spending authority for the one remaining IT appropriation by $1,359,000 PR in 1999-00 and $849,000 PR in 2000-01 to reflect chargebacks to various agency appropriations for IT expenditures.
[Bill Sections: 193 and 1933]
32. ELECTRONIC PROCESSING
Governor: Allow the Department to electronically process applications and payments for goods and services as well as DATCP-issued licenses, permits, registrations and certificates. The Department could also charge additional fees for electronic processing to cover the processing costs. Fees would be deposited into a new, continuing PR appropriation to be used for electronic processing.
[Bill Sections: 192 and 1927]
33. MILK STANDARDS PROGRAM
Governor: Remove obsolete language directing the PR appropriation for the milk standards program to reimburse the general fund for startup costs. The reimbursement was made.
[Bill Section: 191]
ARTS BOARD
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