66.0511 History
History: 1987 a. 131;
1997 a. 176;
1999 a. 150 s.
366; Stats. 1999 s. 66.0511.
66.0513
66.0513
Police, pay when acting outside county or municipality. 66.0513(1)(1) Any chief of police, sheriff, deputy sheriff, county traffic officer or other peace officer of any city, county, village or town, who is required by command of the governor, sheriff or other superior authority to maintain the peace, or who responds to the request of the authorities of another municipality, to perform police or peace duties outside territorial limits of the city, county, village or town where the officer is employed, is entitled to the same wage, salary, pension, worker's compensation, and all other service rights for this service as for service rendered within the limits of the city, county, village or town where regularly employed.
66.0513(2)
(2) All wage and disability payments, pension and worker's compensation claims, damage to equipment and clothing, and medical expense arising under
sub. (1), shall be paid by the city, county, village or town regularly employing the officer. Upon making the payment the city, county, village or town shall be reimbursed by the state, county or other political subdivision whose officer or agent commanded the services out of which the payments arose.
66.0513 History
History: 1975 c. 147 s.
54;
1999 a. 150 s.
367; Stats. 1999 s. 66.0513.
66.0513 Annotation
The use of the phrase "required by command" in sub. (1) plainly does not mean that officers who volunteer to go to another city, county, village, or town are excluded from worker's compensation and other benefits. A governmental body obligated to reimburse another for worker's compensation payments under this section is obligated under worker's compensation law for purposes of worker's compensation insurance coverage. Milwaukee County v. Juneau County, 2004 WI App 23,
269 Wis. 2d 730,
676 N.W.2d 513,
02-2880.
66.0515
66.0515
Receipts for fees. Every officer or employee upon receiving fees shall, if requested to do so by the person paying the fees, deliver to that person a receipt for the fees, specifying for which account each portion of the fees respectively accrued.
66.0515 History
History: 1991 a. 316;
1999 a. 150 s.
270; Stats. 1999 s. 66.0515.
66.0517(2)(a)(a)
Town, village and city weed commissioner. The chairperson of each town, the president of each village and the mayor of each city may appoint one or more commissioners of noxious weeds on or before May 15 in each year. A weed commissioner shall take the official oath and the oath shall be filed in the office of the town, village or city clerk. A weed commissioner shall hold office for one year and until a successor has qualified or the town chairperson, village president or mayor determines not to appoint a weed commissioner. If more than one commissioner is appointed, the town, village or city shall be divided into districts by the officer making the appointment and each commissioner shall be assigned to a different district. The town chairperson, village president or mayor may appoint a resident of any district to serve as weed commissioner in any other district of the same town, village or city.
66.0517(2)(b)
(b)
County weed commissioner. A county may by resolution adopted by its county board provide for the appointment of a county weed commissioner and determine the duties, term and compensation for the county weed commissioner. When a weed commissioner has been appointed under this paragraph and has qualified, the commissioner has the powers and duties of a weed commissioner described in this section. Each town chairperson, village president or mayor may appoint one or more deputy weed commissioners, who shall work in cooperation with the county weed commissioner in the district assigned by the appointing officer.
66.0517(3)(a)(a)
Destruction of noxious weeds. A weed commissioner shall investigate the existence of noxious weeds in his or her district. If a person in a district neglects to destroy noxious weeds as required under
s. 66.0407 (3), the weed commissioner shall destroy, or have destroyed, the noxious weeds in the most economical manner. A weed commissioner may enter upon any lands that are not exempt under
s. 66.0407 (5) and cut or otherwise destroy noxious weeds without being liable to an action for trespass or any other action for damages resulting from the entry and destruction, if reasonable care is exercised.
66.0517(3)(b)1.1. Except as provided in
sub. (2) (b), a weed commissioner shall receive compensation for the destruction of noxious weeds as determined by the town board, village board, or city council upon presenting to the proper treasurer the account for noxious weed destruction, verified by oath and approved by the appointing officer. The account shall specify by separate items the amount chargeable to each piece of land, describing the land, and shall, after being paid by the treasurer, be filed with the town, village, or city clerk. The clerk shall enter the amount chargeable to each tract of land in the next tax roll in a column headed "For the Destruction of Weeds", as a tax on the lands upon which the weeds were destroyed. The tax shall be collected under
ch. 74, except in case of lands which are exempt from taxation, railroad lands, or other lands for which taxes are not collected under
ch. 74. A delinquent tax may be collected as is a delinquent real property tax under
chs. 74 and
75 or as is a delinquent personal property tax under
ch. 74. In case of railroad lands or other lands for which taxes are not collected under
ch. 74, the amount chargeable against these lands shall be certified by the town, village, or city clerk to the secretary of administration who shall add the amount designated to the sum due from the company owning, occupying, or controlling the lands specified. The secretary of administration shall collect the amount chargeable as prescribed in
subch. I of ch. 76 and return the amount collected to the town, city, or village from which the certification was received.
66.0517(3)(b)2.
2. For the performance of duties other than the destruction of noxious weeds, a weed commissioner shall receive compensation to be determined by the town board, village board or city council.
66.0517 History
History: 1999 a. 150;
2003 a. 33.
FINANCE; REVENUES
66.0601(1)(a)(a)
Bonus to state institution. No appropriation or bonus, except a donation, may be made by a town, village, or city, nor municipal liability created nor tax levied, as a consideration or inducement to the state to locate any public educational, charitable, reformatory, or penal institution.
66.0601(1)(b)
(b)
Payments for abortions restricted. No city, village, town, family care district under
s. 46.2895 or agency or subdivision of a city, village or town may authorize funds for or pay to a physician or surgeon or a hospital, clinic or other medical facility for the performance of an abortion except those permitted under and which are performed in accordance with
s. 20.927.
66.0601(1)(c)
(c)
Payments for abortion-related activity restricted. No city, village, town, family care district under
s. 46.2895 or agency or subdivision of a city, village or town may authorize payment of funds for a grant, subsidy or other funding involving a pregnancy program, project or service if
s. 20.9275 (2) applies to the pregnancy program, project or service.
66.0601(2)
(2) Celebration of holidays. A town, county, school board, or school district may appropriate money for the purpose of initiating or participating in appropriate celebrations of any legal holiday listed in
s. 995.20.
66.0602(1)(a)
(a) "Debt service" includes debt service on debt issued or reissued to fund or refund outstanding municipal or county obligations, interest on outstanding municipal or county obligations, and related issuance costs and redemption premiums.
66.0602(1)(b)
(b) "Penalized excess" means the levy over the limit for the political subdivision, not including any amount that is excepted from the limit under
subs. (3),
(4), and
(5).
66.0602(1)(c)
(c) "Political subdivision" means a city, village, town, or county.
66.0602(1)(d)
(d) "Valuation factor" means a percentage equal to the percentage change in the political subdivision's January 1 equalized value due to new construction less improvements removed between the previous year and the current year, but not less than 2. Except as provided in
subs. (3),
(4), and
(5), no political subdivision may increase its levy in any year by a percentage that exceeds the political subdivision's valuation factor. In determining its levy in any year, a city, village, or town shall subtract any tax increment that is calculated under
s. 60.85 (1) (L) or
66.1105 (2) (i).
66.0602(3)(a)(a) If a political subdivision transfers to another governmental unit responsibility for providing any service that the political subdivision provided in the preceding year, the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section to the political subdivision in the current year is decreased to reflect the cost that the political subdivision would have incurred to provide that service, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.0602(3)(b)
(b) If a political subdivision increases the services that it provides by adding responsibility for providing a service transferred to it from another governmental unit that provided the service in the preceding year, the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section to the political subdivision in the current year is increased to reflect the cost of that service, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.0602(3)(c)
(c) If a city or village annexes territory from a town, the city's or village's levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section is increased in the current year by an amount equal to the town levy on the annexed territory in the preceding year and the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section in the current year for the town from which the territory is annexed is decreased by that same amount, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.0602(3)(d)1.1. If the amount of debt service for a political subdivision in the preceding year is less than the amount of debt service needed in the current year, as a result of the political subdivision adopting a resolution before July 1, 2005, authorizing the issuance of debt, the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section to the political subdivision in the current year is increased by the difference between these 2 amounts, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.0602(3)(d)2.
2. The limit otherwise applicable under this section does not apply to amounts levied by a political subdivision for the payment of any general obligation debt service, including debt service on debt issued or reissued to fund or refund outstanding obligations of the political subdivision, interest on outstanding obligations of the political subdivision, or the payment of related issuance costs or redemption premiums, authorized on or after July 1, 2005, and secured by the full faith and credit of the political subdivision.
66.0602(3)(e)
(e) The limit otherwise applicable under this section does not apply to the amount that a county levies in that year for a county children with disabilities education board.
66.0602(3)(f)
(f) The limit otherwise applicable under this section does not apply to the amount that a 1st class city levies for school purposes.
66.0602(3)(g)
(g) If a county has provided a service in a part of the county in the preceding year and if a city, village, or town has provided that same service in another part of the county in the preceding year, and if the provision of that service is consolidated at the county level, the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section to the county in the current year is increased to reflect the total cost of providing that service, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.0602(3)(h)1.1. Subject to
subd. 2., the limit otherwise applicable under this section does not apply to the amount that a city, village, or town levies in that year to pay for charges assessed by a joint fire department organized under
s. 61.65 (2) (a) 3. or
62.13 (2m), but only to the extent that the amount levied to pay for such charges would cause the city, village, or town to exceed the limit that is otherwise applicable under this section.
66.0602(3)(h)2.
2. The exception to the limit that is described under
subd. 1. applies only if all of the following apply:
66.0602(3)(h)2.a.
a. The total charges assessed by the joint fire department for the current year increase, relative to the total charges assessed by the joint fire department for the previous year, by a percentage that is less than or equal to the percentage change in the U.S. consumer price index for all urban consumers, U.S. city average, as determined by the U.S. department of labor, for the 12 months ending on September 30 of the year of the levy, plus 2 percent.
66.0602(3)(h)2.b.
b. The governing body of each city, village, and town that is served by the joint fire department adopts a resolution in favor of exceeding the limit as described in
subd. 1.
66.0602(4)(a)(a) A political subdivision may exceed the levy increase limit if its governing body adopts a resolution to that effect and if the resolution is approved in a referendum. The resolution shall specify the proposed amount of increase in the levy beyond the amount that is allowed, and shall specify whether the proposed amount of increase is for the next fiscal year only or if it will apply on an ongoing basis. With regard to a referendum relating to the 2005 levy, the political subdivision may call a special referendum for the purpose of submitting the resolution to the electors of the political subdivision for approval or rejection. With regard to a referendum relating to the 2006 levy, the referendum shall be held at the next succeeding spring primary or election or September primary or general election.
66.0602(4)(b)
(b) The clerk of the political subdivision shall publish type A, B, C, D, and E notices of the referendum under
s. 10.01 (2).
Section 5.01 (1) applies in the event of failure to comply with the notice requirements of this paragraph.
66.0602(4)(c)
(c) The referendum shall be held in accordance with
chs. 5 to
12. The political subdivision shall provide the election officials with all necessary election supplies. The form of the ballot shall correspond substantially with the standard form for referendum ballots prescribed by the elections board under
ss. 5.64 (2) and
7.08 (1) (a). The question shall be submitted as follows: "Under state law, the increase in the levy of the .... (name of political subdivision) for the tax to be imposed for the next fiscal year, .... (year), is limited to ....%, which results in a levy of $.... Shall the .... (name of political subdivision) be allowed to exceed this limit and increase the levy for the next fiscal year, .... (year), by a total of ....%, which results in a levy of $....?".
66.0602(4)(d)
(d) Within 14 days after the referendum, the clerk of the political subdivision shall certify the results of the referendum to the department of revenue. The levy increase limit otherwise applicable to the political subdivision is increased in the next fiscal year by the percentage approved by a majority of those voting on the question. If the resolution specifies that the increase is for one year only, the amount of the increase shall be subtracted from the base used to calculate the limit for the 2nd succeeding fiscal year.
66.0602(5)
(5) Exception, certain towns. A town with a population of less than 2,000 may exceed the levy increase limit otherwise applicable under this section to the town if the town board adopts a resolution supporting an increase and places the question on the agenda of an annual town meeting or a special town meeting and if the annual or special town meeting adopts a resolution endorsing the town board's resolution. The limit otherwise applicable to the town is increased in the next fiscal year by the percentage approved by a majority of those voting on the question. Within 14 days after the adoption of the resolution, the town clerk shall certify the results of the vote to the department of revenue.
66.0602(6)
(6) Penalties. If the department of revenue determines that a political subdivision has a penalized excess in any year, the department of revenue shall do all of the following:
66.0602(6)(a)
(a) Reduce the amount of county and municipal aid payments to the political subdivision under
s. 79.035 in the following year by an amount equal to the amount of the penalized excess.
66.0602(6)(b)
(b) Ensure that the amount of any reductions in county and municipal aid payments under
par. (a) lapses to the general fund.
66.0602(6)(c)
(c) Ensure that the amount of the penalized excess is not included in determining the limit described for the political subdivision for the following year.
66.0602(7)
(7) Sunset. This section does not apply beginning January 1, 2007.
66.0602 History
History: 2005 a. 25,
484.
66.0603(1g)(a)(a) In this section, "governing board" has the meaning given under
s. 34.01 (1) but does not include a local cultural arts district board created under
subch. V of ch. 229.
66.0603(1m)(a)(a) A county, city, village, town, school district, drainage district, technical college district or other governing board, other than a local professional football stadium district board created under
subch. IV of ch. 229, may invest any of its funds not immediately needed in any of the following:
66.0603(1m)(a)1.
1. Time deposits in any credit union, bank, savings bank, trust company or savings and loan association which is authorized to transact business in this state if the time deposits mature in not more than 3 years.
66.0603(1m)(a)2.
2. Bonds or securities issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the federal government, or by a commission, board or other instrumentality of the federal government.
66.0603(1m)(a)3.
3. Bonds or securities of any county, city, drainage district, technical college district, village, town or school district of this state.
66.0603(1m)(a)3s.
3s. Bonds issued by the University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics Authority.
66.0603(1m)(a)4.
4. Any security which matures or which may be tendered for purchase at the option of the holder within not more than 7 years of the date on which it is acquired, if that security has a rating which is the highest or 2nd highest rating category assigned by Standard & Poor's corporation, Moody's investors service or other similar nationally recognized rating agency or if that security is senior to, or on a parity with, a security of the same issuer which has such a rating.
66.0603(1m)(a)5.
5. Securities of an open-end management investment company or investment trust, if the investment company or investment trust does not charge a sales load, if the investment company or investment trust is registered under the investment company act of 1940,
15 USC 80a-1 to
80a-64, and if the portfolio of the investment company or investment trust is limited to the following:
66.0603(1m)(a)5.a.
a. Bonds and securities issued by the federal government or a commission, board or other instrumentality of the federal government.
66.0603(1m)(a)5.b.
b. Bonds that are guaranteed as to principal and interest by the federal government or a commission, board or other instrumentality of the federal government.
66.0603(1m)(b)1.1. A town, city, or village may invest surplus funds in any bonds or securities issued under the authority of the municipality, whether the bonds or securities create a general municipality liability or a liability of the property owners of the municipality for special improvements, and may sell or hypothecate the bonds or securities. Funds of an employer, as defined by
s. 40.02 (28), in a deferred compensation plan may also be invested and reinvested in the same manner authorized for investments under
s. 881.01.
66.0603(1m)(b)2.
2. Funds of any school district operating under
ch. 119, held in trust for pension plans intended to qualify under section
401 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code, other than funds held in the public employee trust fund, may be invested and reinvested in the same manner as is authorized for investments under
s. 881.01.
66.0603(1m)(b)3.
3. A school district may invest and reinvest funds that are held in trust, other than funds held in the public employee trust fund, solely to provide any of the following benefits, in the same manner as is authorized for investments under
s. 881.01:
66.0603(1m)(b)3.a.
a. Post-employment health care benefits provided either separately or through a defined benefit pension plan.
66.0603(1m)(b)3.b.
b. Other post-employment benefits provided separately from a defined benefit pension plan.
66.0603(1m)(b)4.
4. A school board may not discuss or vote on establishing a trust fund to provide the benefits described in
subd. 3. unless the notice of the school board meeting at which the discussion or vote may occur includes the issue as a separate agenda item.
66.0603(1m)(c)
(c) A local government, as defined under
s. 25.50 (1) (d), may invest surplus funds in the local government pooled-investment fund. Cemetery care funds, including gifts where the principal is to be kept intact, may also be invested under
ch. 881.
66.0603(1m)(d)
(d) A county, city, village, town, school district, drainage district, technical college district or other governing board as defined by
s. 34.01 (1) may engage in financial transactions in which a public depository, as defined in
s. 34.01 (5), agrees to repay funds advanced to it by the local government plus interest, if the agreement is secured by bonds or securities issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the federal government.