(6) INFORMATIONAL MATERIALS. Any informational materials about the home visitation services provided under sub. (3) (a) that are distributed to a person who is offered or who is receiving those services shall state the sources of funding for the services.

SECTION 9421. Effective dates; health and family services.

(1) HOME VISITATION SERVICES. The treatment of sections 20.435 (5) (ab) (by SECTION 3), 46.515 (1) (i) and (j), (2) (by SECTION 7), (3) (title), (a), and (b), and 46.516 of the statutes takes effect on January 1, 2007.
(End)
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2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE

DOA:......Rhodes, BB0015 - Child Welfare Program Enhancement Plan
For 2005-07 Budget -- Not Ready For Introduction
2005 BILL

AN ACT ...; relating to: the budget.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
health and Human services
Children
Under current federal law, the state receives payments under Title IV-B of the federal Social Security Act (Title IV-B) for child and family services and under Title IV-E of the federal Social Security Act (Title IV-E) for foster care and adoption assistance. To receive those payments, the state is required to have state plans for those services and for that assistance that meet the requirements of those titles. Federal law requires that the programs administered by the state under those titles be reviewed to determine whether those programs are in substantial conformity with the state plan requirements under those titles. If the state is not in substantial conformity with those state plan requirements, federal law requires a certain percentage of Title IV-B and Title IV-E funds to be withheld from the state, except that federal law requires the state to adopt and implement a corrective action plan to achieve that substantial conformity and requires the federal Department of Health and Human Services to suspend the withholding of those funds while the corrective action plan is in effect.
This bill appropriates general purpose revenues for activities provided under the Child Welfare Program Enhancement Plan developed by DHFS to achieve substantial conformity with the state plan requirements of Title IV-B and Title IV-E.
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:
SECTION 1. 20.435 (3) (da) of the statutes is created to read:

20.435 (3) (da) Child Welfare Program Enhancement Plan; aids. The amounts in the schedule for activities provided under the Child Welfare Program Enhancement Plan developed under 45 CFR 1355.35.

****NOTE: This SECTION involves a change in an appropriation that must be reflected in the revised schedule in s. 20.005, stats.
(End)
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2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE

DOA:......Rhodes, BB0048 - Substance abuse prevention and treatment block grant funding
For 2005-07 Budget -- Not Ready For Introduction
2005 BILL

AN ACT ...; relating to: the budget.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
health and human services
Mental illness and developmental disabilities
Under current law, federal Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant moneys are appropriated to DHFS for distribution to counties, as community aids, for the prevention and treatment of substance abuse. Currently, those moneys are appropriated to DHFS under two separate appropriations. This bill consolidates those moneys into one appropriation.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:
SECTION 1. 20.435 (3) (o) of the statutes is repealed.

****NOTE: This SECTION involves a change in an appropriation that must be reflected in the revised schedule in s. 20.005, stats.

SECTION 2. 46.034 (3) of the statutes is amended to read:

46.034 (3) With the agreement of the affected county board of supervisors in a county with a single-county department or boards of supervisors in counties with a multicounty department, effective for the contract period beginning January 1, 1980, the department may approve a county with a single-county department or counties participating in a multicounty department to administer a single consolidated aid consisting of the state and federal financial aid available to that county or those counties from appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o) for services provided and purchased by county departments under ss. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, and 51.437. Under such an agreement, in the interest of improved service coordination and effectiveness, the county board of supervisors in a county with a single-county department or county boards of supervisors in counties with a multicounty department may reallocate among county departments under ss. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, and 51.437 funds that otherwise would be specified for use by a single county department. The budget under s. 46.031 (1) shall be the vehicle for expressing the proposed use of the single consolidated fund by the county board of supervisors in a county with a single-county department or county boards of supervisors in counties with a multicounty department. Approval by the department of this use of the fund shall be in the contract under s. 46.031 (2g). Counties that were selected by the department to pilot test consolidated aids for contract periods beginning January 1, 1978, may continue or terminate consolidation with the agreement of the affected county board of supervisors in a county with a single-county department or county boards of supervisors in counties with a multicounty department.

SECTION 3. 46.215 (2) (c) 1. of the statutes is amended to read:

46.215 (2) (c) 1. A county department of social services shall develop, under the requirements of s. 46.036, plans and contracts for care and services to be purchased, except for care and services under subch. III of ch. 49 or s. 301.08 (2). The department of health and family services may review the contracts and approve them if they are consistent with s. 46.036 and if state or federal funds are available for such purposes. The joint committee on finance may require the department of health and family services to submit the contracts to the committee for review and approval. The department of health and family services may not make any payments to a county for programs included in a contract under review by the committee. The department of health and family services shall reimburse each county for the contracts from the appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o), as appropriate, under s. 46.495.

SECTION 4. 46.22 (1) (e) 3. a. of the statutes is amended to read:

46.22 (1) (e) 3. a. A county department of social services shall develop, under the requirements of s. 46.036, plans and contracts for care and services, except under subch. III of ch. 49 and s. 301.08 (2), to be purchased. The department of health and family services may review the contracts and approve them if they are consistent with s. 46.036 and to the extent that state or federal funds are available for such purposes. The joint committee on finance may require the department of health and family services to submit the contracts to the committee for review and approval. The department of health and family services may not make any payments to a county for programs included in the contract that is under review by the committee. The department of health and family services shall reimburse each county for the contracts from the appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o) according to s. 46.495.

SECTION 5. 46.40 (1) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:

46.40 (1) (a) Within the limits of available federal funds and of the appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o), the department shall distribute funds for community social, mental health, developmental disabilities, and alcohol and other drug abuse services and for services under ss. 46.51, 46.87, 46.985, and 51.421 to county departments under ss. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, and 51.437 and to county aging units, as provided in subs. (2), (2m), and (7) to (9).

SECTION 6. 46.495 (1) (am) of the statutes is amended to read:

46.495 (1) (am) The department shall reimburse each county from the appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o) for social services as approved by the department under ss. 46.215 (1), (2) (c) 1., and (3) and 46.22 (1) (b) 1. d. and (e) 3. a. except that no reimbursement may be made for the administration of or aid granted under s. 49.02.

SECTION 7. 51.423 (1) of the statutes is amended to read:

51.423 (1) The department shall fund, within the limits of the department's allocation for mental health services under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o) and subject to this section, services for mental illness, developmental disability, alcoholism, and drug abuse to meet standards of service quality and accessibility. The department's primary responsibility is to guarantee that county departments established under either s. 51.42 or 51.437 receive a reasonably uniform minimum level of funding and its secondary responsibility is to fund programs which meet exceptional community needs or provide specialized or innovative services. Moneys appropriated under s. 20.435 (7) (b) and earmarked by the department for mental health services under s. 20.435 (7) (o) shall be allocated by the department to county departments under s. 51.42 or 51.437 in the manner set forth in this section.

SECTION 8. 51.423 (2) of the statutes is amended to read:

51.423 (2) From the appropriations under s. 20.435 (3) (o) and (7) (b) and (o), the department shall distribute the funding for services provided or purchased by county departments under s. 46.23, 51.42, or 51.437 to such county departments as provided under s. 46.40. County matching funds are required for the distributions under s. 46.40 (2) and (9) (b). Each county's required match for the distributions under s. 46.40 (2) for a year equals 9.89% of the total of the county's distributions under s. 46.40 (2) for that year for which matching funds are required plus the amount the county was required by s. 46.26 (2) (c), 1985 stats., to spend for juvenile delinquency-related services from its distribution for 1987. Each county's required match for the distribution under s. 46.40 (9) (b) for a year equals 9.89% of that county's amounts described in s. 46.40 (9) (a) (intro.) for that year. Matching funds may be from county tax levies, federal and state revenue sharing funds, or private donations to the counties that meet the requirements specified in sub. (5). Private donations may not exceed 25% of the total county match. If the county match is less than the amount required to generate the full amount of state and federal funds distributed for this period, the decrease in the amount of state and federal funds equals the difference between the required and the actual amount of county matching funds.
(End)
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2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE

DOA:......Rhodes, BB0049 - Statewide automated child welfare information system confidentiality

2005 BILL

AN ACT ...; relating to: the budget.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
health and human services
Children
Under current law, information received by DHFS, DOC, a county department of human services or social services, or a licensed child welfare agency (collectively "agency") about an individual who is in the care or legal custody of the agency is confidential and may not be disclosed, except under certain exceptions. Similarly, under current law, treatment records concerning an individual who is receiving or who has received services for mental illness, developmental disabilities, alcoholism, or drug dependence that are maintained by DHFS, a county department of community programs or developmental disabilities services, or a treatment facility are confidential and may be released without the informed consent of the individual who is the subject of the record (subject individual) only under certain circumstances.
This bill permits an agency to enter information received about an individual in its care or legal custody, and a person maintaining treatment records to enter information concerning a subject individual, into the statewide automated child welfare information system (generally referred to as "WISACWIS"). The bill also permits DHFS; DOC; a county department of human services, social services, community programs, or developmental disabilities services (county department); or any other organization that has entered into an information sharing and access agreement with DHFS, DOC, or a county department and that has been approved for access to WISACWIS by DHFS to have access to information concerning a client under the Children's Code, the Juvenile Justice Code, or the Mental Health Act that is maintained on WISACWIS, if necessary to enable DHFS, DOC, the county department, or other organization to perform its duties under the Children's Code, the Juvenile Justice Code, or the Mental Health Act or to coordinate the delivery of services under the Children's Code, the Juvenile Justice Code, or the Mental Health Act to a client.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:
SECTION 1. 48.78 (2) (h) of the statutes is created to read:

48.78 (2) (h) Paragraph (a) does not prohibit the department, a county department, or a licensed child welfare agency from entering the content of any record kept or information received about an individual in its care or legal custody into the statewide automated child welfare information system established under s. 46.03 (7) (g). Paragraph (a) also does not prohibit a county department under s. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, or 51.437, the department of health and family services, the department of corrections, or any other organization that has entered into an information sharing and access agreement with one of those county departments or departments and that has been approved for access to the statewide automated child welfare information system by the department of health and family services from having access to information concerning a client of that county department, department, or organization under this chapter or ch. 51 or 938 that is maintained in the statewide automated child welfare information system, if necessary to enable the county department, department, or organization to perform its duties under this chapter or ch. 51 or 938 or to coordinate the delivery of services under this chapter or ch. 51 or 938 to the client. Before entering any information about an individual into the statewide automated child welfare information system, the department, county department, or licensed child welfare agency entering the information shall notify the individual that the information entered may be disclosed as provided in this paragraph.

SECTION 2. 51.30 (4) (b) 27. of the statutes is created to read:

51.30 (4) (b) 27. For the purpose of entering information concerning the subject individual into the statewide automated child welfare information system established under s. 46.03 (7) (g). A county department under s. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, or 51.437, the department of health and family services, the department of corrections, or any other organization that has entered into an information sharing and access agreement with one of those county departments or departments and that has been approved for access to the statewide automated child welfare information system by the department of health and family services may have access to information concerning a client of that county department, department, or organization under this chapter or ch. 48 or 938 that is maintained in the statewide automated child welfare information system, if necessary to enable the county department, department, or organization to perform its duties under this chapter or ch. 48 or 938 or to coordinate the delivery of services under this chapter or ch. 48 or 938 to the client. Before entering any information about an individual into the statewide automated child welfare information system, the person entering the information shall notify the individual that the information entered may be disclosed as provided in this subdivision.

SECTION 3. 938.78 (2) (h) of the statutes is created to read:

938.78 (2) (h) Paragraph (a) does not prohibit an agency from entering the content of any record kept or information received about an individual in its care or legal custody into the statewide automated child welfare information system established under s. 46.03 (7) (g). Paragraph (a) also does not prohibit a county department under s. 46.215, 46.22, 46.23, 51.42, or 51.437, the department of health and family services, the department of corrections, or any other organization that has entered into an information sharing and access agreement with one of those county departments or departments and that has been approved for access to the statewide automated child welfare information system by the department of health and family services from having access to information concerning a client of that county department, department, or organization under this chapter or ch. 48 or 51 that is maintained in the statewide automated child welfare information system, if necessary to enable the county department, department, or organization to perform its duties under this chapter or ch. 48 or 51 or to coordinate the delivery of services under this chapter or ch. 48 or 51 to the client. Before entering any information about an individual into the statewide automated child welfare information system, the agency entering the information shall notify the individual that the information entered may be disclosed as provided in this paragraph.
(End)
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2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE

DOA:......Koskinen, BB0069 - Sales tax collected by nonprofit retailers; increase occasional sales threshold
For 2005-07 Budget -- Not Ready For Introduction
2005 BILL

AN ACT ...; relating to: the budget.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
taxation
Other taxation
Under current law, the state imposes a sales tax on all retailers at the rate of 5 percent of the gross receipts from the sale, lease, or rental of tangible personal property and the sale of certain services. For sales tax purposes, a retailer includes a seller who sells any tangible personal property or taxable service. A retailer who is subject to the sales tax must obtain a seller's permit, collect the sales tax, and remit the collected tax to DOR. The Wisconsin Supreme Court has held that a religious organization that sells tangible personal property is not a retailer subject to the sales tax, if the sales that the religious organization makes are not mercantile in nature. See Kollasch v. Adamany, 104 Wis. 2d 552 (1981).
Under this bill, a retailer who is subject to the sales tax includes a person who makes any sale, regardless of whether the sale is mercantile in nature, of tangible personal property or certain services.
Under current law, a nonprofit organization that sells tangible personal property or services is required to have a seller's permit, if it sells property or services on more than 20 days during the year and the gross receipts from such sales exceed $15,000. Under the bill, a nonprofit organization that sells tangible personal property or services is required to have a seller's permit, if it sells property or services on more than 20 days during the year and the gross receipts from such sales exceed $25,000.
Under current law, the sales of tangible personal property or taxable services made by a nonprofit organization at an event involving entertainment are subject to the sales tax and the use tax, if the organization's payment for the entertainment exceeds $300. Under the bill, the sales of tangible personal property or taxable services made by a nonprofit organization at an event involving entertainment are subject to the sales tax and the use tax, if the organization's payment for the entertainment exceeds $500.
This bill will be referred to the Joint Survey Committee on Tax Exemptions for a detailed analysis, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
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:
SECTION 1. 77.51 (13) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:

77.51 (13) (a) Every seller who makes any sale, regardless of whether the sale is mercantile in nature, of tangible personal property or taxable a service specified under s. 77.52 (2) (a).

SECTION 2. 77.54 (7m) of the statutes is amended to read:

77.54 (7m) Occasional sales of tangible personal property or services, including but not limited to admissions or tickets to an event; by a neighborhood association, church, civic group, garden club, social club or similar nonprofit organization; not involving entertainment for which payment in the aggregate exceeds $300 $500 for performing or as reimbursement of expenses unless access to the event may be obtained without payment of a direct or indirect admission fee; conducted by the organization if the organization is not engaged in a trade or business and is not required to have a seller's permit. For purposes of this subsection, an organization is engaged in a trade or business and is required to have a seller's permit if its sales of tangible personal property and services, not including sales of tickets to events, and its events occur on more than 20 days during the year, unless its receipts do not exceed $15,000 $25,000 during the year. The exemption under this subsection does not apply to gross receipts from the sale of bingo supplies to players or to the sale, rental or use of regular bingo cards, extra regular cards and special bingo cards.

SECTION 9441. Effective dates; revenue.

(1) NONRESIDENT RETAILER AND OCCASIONAL SALES. The treatment of sections 77.51 (13) (a) and 77.54 (7m) of the statutes takes effect on January 1, 2006.
(End)
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2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE

DOA:......Koskinen, BB0071 - Authorize state agencies to disclose information to DOR
For 2005-07 Budget -- Not Ready For Introduction
2005 BILL

AN ACT ...; relating to: the budget.
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