1. Prohibiting a foreclosure purchaser from entering into a foreclosure
reconveyance unless, among other things, the foreclosure purchaser verifies that the
foreclosed homeowner has the ability to pay for the subsequent conveyance of the
interest back to the foreclosed homeowner.
2. Requiring a foreclosure purchaser either to ensure that title to the dwelling
has been reconveyed to the foreclosed homeowner or to pay to the foreclosed
homeowner consideration of at least 82 percent of the fair market value of the
property within 150 days of either the eviction from the property of, or the voluntary

relinquishment of possession of the property by, the foreclosed homeowner. If the
foreclosure purchaser pays the foreclosed homeowner, the foreclosure purchaser
must provide a detailed accounting of the basis for the payment amount on a form
prescribed by the attorney general, in consultation with the secretary of agriculture,
trade and consumer protection.
3. Prohibiting a foreclosure purchaser from entering into repurchase or lease
terms, as part of the subsequent conveyance, that are unfair or commercially
unreasonable and from engaging in any other unfair conduct.
4. Prohibiting a foreclosure purchaser from acting as an advisor or consultant
or in any other manner representing that the foreclosure purchaser is acting on
behalf of the foreclosed homeowner.
5. Prohibiting a foreclosure purchaser from taking certain actions, such as
accepting from the foreclosed homeowner any instrument of conveyance of any
interest in the residence in foreclosure or transferring any interest in the residence
to a third party, before the time for the foreclosed homeowner to cancel the
transaction has fully elapsed.
The bill specifies penalties that apply if a foreclosure purchaser violates any of
the provisions, authorizes a court to order punitive damages for a violation, and
specifies that a violation shall be considered a fraud and that a foreclosed homeowner
may bring an action for damages. The bill also provides that a court must grant a
90-day stay in an eviction action if the property was the subject of a foreclosure
reconveyance and the defendant was the owner of the property, has continuously
occupied the property since it was conveyed to a third party, and has either
commenced an action concerning the foreclosure reconveyance or asserts fraud or
other deceptive practices in connection with the foreclosure reconveyance.
The bill also addresses foreclosure consultants. With numerous specified
exceptions, a foreclosure consultant is defined as a person who offers to a foreclosed
homeowner to perform for compensation any of various services that will assist the
foreclosed homeowner with the loan default or foreclosure, such as stopping the
foreclosure sale, assisting the foreclosed homeowner to obtain a loan, or saving the
property from foreclosure.
The bill provides that any agreement (contract) between a foreclosure
consultant and a foreclosed homeowner for the rendition of services must be in
writing, and that a foreclosed homeowner who enters into a contract for services with
a foreclosure consultant has the right to cancel the contract without penalty within
three days by delivering, personally or by certified mail, a notice of cancellation to
the foreclosure consultant. The bill specifies the information that the contract must
contain and requires that duplicate copies of a notice of cancellation be attached to
the contract.
The bill sets out actions by a foreclosure consultant that are violations and
provides that the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection
(DATCP) may investigate violations of the requirements under the bill and may
commence an action to restrain a violation or to recover a forfeiture for a violation.
The Department of Justice is required to furnish legal services to DATCP. The bill

also provides that any person suffering pecuniary loss because of a violation of the
requirements under the bill may commence an action against the violator.
Under current law, if property that is subject to a mortgage is leased after the
lien of the mortgage attaches, the lease is subject to termination if the interest of the
mortgagor terminates. Thus, the lease of a tenant to property that is subject to a
mortgage terminates and the tenant may be evicted, if the landlord loses the
property in a foreclosure action.
This bill requires the plaintiff in a foreclosure action against residential rental
property to provide the tenants of the property with notice that a foreclosure action
has been filed, notice that the plaintiff has been granted judgment, along with notice
of the date on which the redemption period ends, and notice of the date and time of
the hearing to confirm the sale of the property. The bill also requires a landlord to
notify any prospective tenant in writing that a foreclosure action has been
commenced and, if judgment has been entered, the date on which the redemption
period ends. In addition, the bill provides that a tenant may retain possession of the
rental unit for up to two months after the end of the month in which the sale of the
property is confirmed, and may withhold rent in the amount of the security deposit
for the last period during which the tenant actually retains possession of the rental
unit.
Under current law, the director of state courts has established a consolidated
electronic system that contains information about cases filed in the circuit courts in
the state, including both civil cases and criminal cases. This system, known as the
Consolidated Court Automation Programs (CCAP), contains a variety of information
about circuit court cases. The information regarding case data contained on the
CCAP system is available in the court's Internet Web site called the Wisconsin
Circuit Court Access (WCCA). This bill prohibits the placing of any information on
a civil action concerning the removal of a tenant from a residential rental property
in the WCCA Internet Web site if that removal was the result of a mortgage
foreclosure of the residential rental property.
Education
This bill directs the Wisconsin Technical College System Board to award to
technical college district boards at least $1,000,000 annually in training program
grants for training in advanced manufacturing skills, with priority given to welding.
Health and human services
Hospital assessment and Medical Assistance
Under current law, the state assesses hospitals a total of $1,500,000 each year.
The amount each hospital pays is allocated in proportion to the hospital's gross
private pay revenues. The hospital assessment revenue is used to support the
Medical Assistance (MA) Program, long-term care programs, and community-based
mental health services.
This bill increases the amount of the hospital assessment to $275,445,110 for
state fiscal year (SFY) 2008-09. The bill provides that the amount of the assessment
in future years shall be established in the biennial budget act. The bill charges the
total assessment amount against eligible hospitals in proportion to their gross
patient revenues. Under the bill, all hospitals in the state other than critical access

hospitals, institutions for mental diseases, and certain psychiatric hospitals that are
not a satellite of an acute care hospital from the assessment are eligible hospitals.
The bill provides that a specified portion of the assessment revenue shall be
used to pay hospitals for services provided under MA and transfers the remaining
amount of assessment revenue to the MA trust fund. Under the bill, the amount
allocated to hospitals for MA services in SFY 2008-09, including both the state and
federal share under MA, is the amount of the hospital assessment revenue divided
by 57.75 percent, which is $476,961,200. In SFY 2008-09, $79,604,800 in
assessment revenue is transferred to the MA trust fund. Of the amount transferred
to the MA trust fund, 0.5 percent ($398,000) is appropriated to the Department of
Health Services (DHS) for the administrative costs associated with the hospital
assessment and the other $79,206,800 is appropriated for MA. For SFY 2008-09, the
bill also appropriates general purpose revenue in the amount of $750,000 for
supplemental payments to certain rural hospitals in counties that border another
state. Finally, in SFY 2008-09, the bill reduces the amount of general purpose
revenues appropriated for MA by $78,456,800.
Beginning in SFY 2009-10, the amount of payments to hospitals for MA
services from hospital assessment revenue plus the federal share of MA is equal to
the amount of the total assessment revenue divided by 61.68 percent. The remainder
of the hospital assessment revenue is transferred to the MA trust fund. One-half of
one percent of the transferred amount is appropriated to DHS for administrative
costs associated with the hospital assessment. Also beginning in SFY 2009-10, the
bill requires DHS to pay the University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics
$3,000,000 annually from the MA trust fund for the costs of providing
uncompensated care.
The bill provides that DHS shall spend the portion of the hospital assessment
revenue that is allocated to pay for hospital services under MA on the following:
increased reimbursement for eligible hospitals that are reimbursed on a
fee-for-service basis; payments to health maintenance organizations (HMOs) that
the HMOs must use to increase reimbursement to eligible hospitals; an increase of
$2,744,000 in supplemental payments to certain rural hospitals; $8,000,000 in
supplemental payments to hospitals that satisfy criteria established by the
American College of Surgeons for classification as a Level I adult trauma center; and
supplemental payments to hospitals based on performance, under a methodology
developed by DHS.
The bill provides that if the federal government does not pay the federal share
under MA for any payment made with hospital assessment revenue, DHS must
refund to hospitals the amount of the hospital assessment revenue used to make the
payment. DHS must make refunds to hospitals in proportion to the percent of the
assessment that the hospitals paid. In addition, DHS must recoup any payments
that are made with hospital assessment revenue and for which the federal
government does not pay the federal share under MA.
In addition to the decrease in general purpose revenue appropriated for MA in
association with the hospital assessment, the bill increases the amount of general
purpose revenue appropriated for MA for SFY 2008-09 by $50,000,000.

Under current law, a hospital must be approved by DHS to operate in this state.
Upon approval, DHS issues a hospital a certificate of approval. This bill provides
that DHS must issue a single hospital certificate of approval for the University of
Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics Authority (UWHCA) that applies to all of UWHCA's
inpatient and outpatient facilities that satisfy DHS's requirements for a hospital and
for which UWHCA requests approval. The bill also provides that all facilities listed
on the hospital certificate of approval for UWHCA are a hospital for purposes of
reimbursement under MA.
Public assistance
Under current law, $365,197,900 in federal block grant aids is appropriated to
the Department of Children and Families (DCF) in fiscal year 2008-09 for aids to
individuals and organizations. Of that amount, $355,352,000 is allocated for child
care services for persons participating in the Wisconsin Works (W-2) program. This
bill increases that appropriation by $47,175,000 and that allocation by $20,384,400.
The bill also increases allocations for fiscal year 2008-09 of federal child care
development funds and federal moneys received under the Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families block grant program for emergency assistance and child care
administration.
Under current law, $121,021,700 in general purpose revenue is appropriated
to DCF in fiscal year 2008-09 for administration and benefits payment under the
W-2 program and other Temporary Assistance to Needy Families programs. This
bill decreases that appropriation by $22,529,000.
state government
This bill requires the secretary of administration to lapse or transfer to the
general fund from the unencumbered balances of appropriations to executive state
agencies, other than sum sufficient appropriations and appropriations of federal
revenues, an amount equal to $125,000,000 before July 1, 2011. Under the bill, all
executive branch state agencies, except for the Investment Board and the
Department of Employee Trust Funds, are subject to the lapse and transfer
provisions. The bill also requires the cochairpersons of the Joint Committee on
Legislative Organization to take actions before July 1, 2011, to ensure that from
general purpose revenue appropriations to the legislature an amount equal to
$500,000 is lapsed from sum certain appropriation accounts or is subtracted from the
expenditure estimates for any other types of appropriations, or both. The lapse from
appropriations to the legislature is included as part of the $125,000,000 lapse and
transfer requirement.
Current statutes contain a rule of proceeding that provides that no bill may be
adopted by the legislature if the bill would cause in any fiscal year the amount of
moneys designated as "Total Expenditures" in the general fund summary for that
fiscal year, less any amounts transferred to the budget stabilization fund in that
fiscal year, to exceed the sum of the amount of moneys designated as "Taxes" and
"Departmental Revenues" in the general fund summary for that fiscal year. This bill
provides that this requirement does not apply to the 2008-09 fiscal year.
This bill increases the legislature's role in approving the expenditure of federal
economic stimulus funds during the 2008-09 fiscal year and the 2009-11 fiscal

biennium. Under the bill, "federal economic stimulus funds" are defined to mean
federal moneys received by the state beginning on the bill's effective date and ending
on June 30, 2011, pursuant to federal legislation enacted during the 111th Congress
for the purpose of reviving the economy of the United States. The bill involves the
legislature in approving the expenditure of federal economic stimulus funds in two
general ways.
First, the bill provides that, as soon as practical after the receipt of any federal
economic stimulus funds by the state, the governor must submit to the Joint
Committee on Finance (JCF) a plan or plans for the expenditure of the federal
economic stimulus funds. After receiving the plan or plans, the cochairpersons of
JCF may direct the governor to implement the plan or plans. In lieu of directing the
governor to implement the plan or plans, the cochairpersons must convene a meeting
of JCF within 14 days after the plan or plans are submitted to either approve or
modify and approve the plan or plans. The governor shall then implement the plan
or plans as approved by JCF. The bill requires that a separate plan be submitted for
transportation expenditures. This process, however, does not apply to federal
economic stimulus funds the expenditure of which is contained in any bill introduced
in either house of the legislature at the request of the governor. If for any reason a
project specified in a plan cannot be completed on a timely basis, or if federal
economic stimulus funds cannot be expended as proposed in the plan, the governor
must submit a revised plan to the cochairpersons of JCF. The revised plan may only
be implemented if approved by JCF using the procedures specified in this paragraph.
Second, the bill creates a new procedure for review of the use of federal economic
stimulus funds for state building projects. Currently, with certain exceptions, the
Building Commission is prohibited from authorizing the design, construction, repair,
remodeling, or improvement, or the acquisition of land by the state for the
construction, repair, remodeling, or improvement of any state building, structure, or
facility for any project costing more than $500,000, regardless of funding source,
unless the project is enumerated by law in the Authorized State Building Program.
This bill provides that, if a state building, structure, or facility is proposed to
be designed or constructed, if an existing state building, structure, or facility is
proposed to be repaired, remodeled, or improved, or if land is proposed to be acquired
by the state for any such purpose, and the design, construction, repair, remodeling,
improvement, or acquisition is proposed to be financed solely with federal economic
stimulus funds, the project, if approved by JCF as part of a plan, is not subject to an
enumeration requirement.
Current statutes contain a rule of proceeding governing legislative action on
certain bills. Generally, the rule provides that no bill directly or indirectly affecting
general purpose revenues may be adopted if the bill would cause the estimated
general fund balance on June 30 of any fiscal year to be less than a certain amount
of the total general purpose revenue appropriations for that fiscal year. For fiscal
year 2008-09, the amount is $65,000,000. This bill provides that this requirement
does not apply to the 2008-09 fiscal year.
The bill makes the following changes to the loan program administered by the
Board of Commissioners of Public Lands (BCPL):

1. Provides that any borrower, after January 1 and before September 1 in any
year, may prepay one or more installments of a state trust fund loan in advance of
the due date and that all interest upon the advance payment terminates. Currently,
a borrower may do this only after March 15 and before August 1 in any year.
2. Requires that borrowers repay loans directly to BCPL and not to the
secretary of administration.
3. With respect to loans to counties, provides that a county must demonstrate
to BCPL that the loan is for the purpose of acquiring or installing energy efficient
equipment. Currently, counties must demonstrate to BCPL that the loan is for one
of a number of enumerated purposes, or satisfies certain conditions, which do not
specifically include the acquisition or installation of energy efficient equipment.
4. Clarifies the conditions under which school districts may receive short-term
loans of ten years or less from BCPL without the approval of the electors of the school
districts. These conditions are currently specified in chapter 67 of the Wisconsin
Statutes, by cross-reference, and this bill recreates these conditions in chapter 24
of the Wisconsin Statutes.
taxation
Income taxation
Under current law, a person may claim a credit against the person's income or
franchise tax liability that is equal to 10 percent of the amount that the person paid
in the taxable year for dairy manufacturing modernization or expansion related to
the claimant's dairy manufacturing operation. If the amount of the credit exceeds
the amount of the person's tax liability, the person receives a refund. Under current
law, dairy cooperatives are, generally, not subject to state income or franchise taxes
and, therefore, are not eligible to claim the credit for dairy manufacturing
modernization or expansion.
This bill allows the members of a dairy cooperative to claim the credit for the
dairy manufacturing modernization or expansion expenses paid by the cooperative.
The dairy cooperative determines the amount of the credit that each member may
claim, based on the amount of milk each member delivers to the cooperative.
This bill requires that all related corporations file a combined report for state
income and franchise tax purposes and calculate their state tax liability based on the
business activity of all the related corporations.
This bill provides an income and franchise tax credit for 10 percent of the
amount that a person pays in the taxable year for meat processing modernization or
expansion related to the person's meat processing operation.
Under current law, a person may claim as credit against the person's income or
franchise tax liability, in each of two consecutive taxable years, 12.5 percent of the
person's investment in a qualified new business venture, as determined by
Commerce. The maximum amount of a person's investment that can be used as the
basis for the credit is $2,000,000 and a business may receive no more than $1,000,000
in investments that qualify for the credit.
Under this bill, a person may claim an income and franchise tax credit equal
to 25 percent of the person's investment in a qualified new business venture. The bill

allows a person to use more than $2,000,000 in investments as the basis for the credit
and to transfer the amount of any unused credit to another taxpayer.
Under current law, a person must add to the person's taxable income the
amount of any deduction the person claimed for interest expenses and rental
expenses paid to a related entity, unless the expenses are paid primarily for business
purposes and not in order to avoid taxes. Under this bill,a person must add to the
person's taxable income the amount of any deduction the person claimed for interest
expenses, rental expenses, intangible expenses, and management fees paid to a
related entity, unless the expenses or fees are paid primarily for business purposes
and not in order to avoid taxes.
Other taxation
This bill adopts the substantive provisions of the Main Street Equity Act for
purposes of administering and collecting state, county, and stadium district sales
and use taxes. The act is intended to modernize sales and use tax administration for
the states that adopt the act and to encourage out-of-state retailers to collect the
state, county, and stadium district sales and use taxes voluntarily. Under current
federal law, generally, an out-of-state retailer who sells tangible personal property
or services to customers in this state is not required to collect the sales tax or use tax
imposed on such sales, if the retailer has no physical presence in this state. See Quill
v. North Dakota
, 504 U.S. 298; 112 S. Ct. 1904 (1992).
This bill also imposes sales and use taxes on specified digital goods and
additional digital goods. "Specified digital goods" are digital audio works, digital
audiovisual works, and digital books. "Additional digital goods" means greeting
cards, finished artwork, periodicals, and video or electronic games, if all such items
are transferred electronically. Under the bill, the sale of specified digital goods or
additional digital goods that are transferred electronically to the purchaser are
exempt from the sales and use taxes, if the sale of the goods in tangible form is exempt
from the sales and use taxes.
transportation
Under current law, the Department of Transportation (DOT) must annually
submit to the Joint Committee on Finance (JCF) a plan for adjusting DOT's federal
funds appropriations if the most recent federal funds estimates vary from DOT's
federal funds appropriations by more than 5 percent.
This bill specifies that this requirement does not apply with respect to the first
$300,000,000 of federal economic stimulus funds, intended to be used for
transportation purposes, resulting from federal legislation enacted between
January 2009 and January 2011 (stimulus funds). The bill also requires DOT, with
one exception, to encumber or expend the first $300,000,000 of stimulus funds only
for specified projects.
Wisconsin housing and economic development authority
Under current law, the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development
Authority (WHEDA) makes, participates in making, and issues bonds or notes to
fund homeownership mortgage loans on behalf of qualified, low-income applicants.
Homeownership mortgage loans include loans to finance the construction or
long-term financing of a residential structure or dwelling unit that is the principle

residence of the applicant. Homeownership mortgage loans may not be made to
finance the acquisition or replacement of an applicant's existing mortgage.
This bill authorizes WHEDA to issue bonds for and to make and participate in
the making of loans for the refinancing of qualified subprime loans if WHEDA
determines that the applicant will suffer financial hardship if the loan is not
refinanced. A qualified subprime loan is defined as an adjustable rate single-family
residential mortgage loan made after December 31, 2001 and before January 1, 2008.
The bill directs the secretary of administration to determine the date after which no
bonds or notes may be issued by WHEDA to refinance subprime loans.
This bill establishes a Homeowner Eviction and Lien Protection program under
the authority of WHEDA. Under the program, WHEDA may enter into agreements
with lenders to encourage the lenders to refinance mortgage loans of persons or
families who are not able to obtain refinancing in the absence of an agreement.
WHEDA may also make and participate in making loans to refinance mortgage
loans. A mortgage loan is defined as a loan secured by a first lien real estate mortgage
on a single-family dwelling that is used as the principal residence of the applicant.
The bill appropriates a total of $4,000,000 in GPR in the 2008-09 and 2009-10 fiscal
years to WHEDA to operate the program. The bill requires WHEDA to make
quarterly reports to the Joint Committee on Finance, and authorizes the
cochairpersons of the Joint Committee on Finance to convene a meeting at any time
to review or dissolve the program.
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.
Because this bill directly or substantially affects the development,
construction, cost or availability of housing in this state, the Department of
Administration, as required by law, will prepare a report to be printed as an appendix
to this bill.
Because this bill creates a new crime or revises a penalty for an existing crime,
the Joint Review Committee on Criminal Penalties may be requested to prepare a
report concerning the proposed penalty and the costs or savings that are likely to
result if the bill is enacted.
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:
SB62, s. 1 1Section 1. 13.94 (1) (ms) of the statutes is created to read:
SB62,15,22 13.94 (1) (ms) No later than July 1, 2014, prepare a financial and performance
3evaluation audit of the economic development tax benefit program under ss. 560.701

1to 560.706. The legislative audit bureau shall file a copy of the report of the audit
2under this paragraph with the distributees specified in par. (b).
SB62, s. 2 3Section 2. 13.94 (4) (a) 1. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,15,194 13.94 (4) (a) 1. Every state department, board, examining board, affiliated
5credentialing board, commission, independent agency, council or office in the
6executive branch of state government; all bodies created by the legislature in the
7legislative or judicial branch of state government; any public body corporate and
8politic created by the legislature including specifically the Fox River Navigational
9System Authority, the Lower Fox River Remediation Authority, and the Wisconsin
10Aerospace Authority, a professional baseball park district, a local professional
11football stadium district, a local cultural arts district and a long-term care district
12under s. 46.2895; every Wisconsin works agency under subch. III of ch. 49; every
13provider of medical assistance under subch. IV of ch. 49; technical college district
14boards; development zones designated under s. 560.71; every county department
15under s. 51.42 or 51.437; every nonprofit corporation or cooperative or
16unincorporated cooperative association to which moneys are specifically
17appropriated by state law; and every corporation, institution, association or other
18organization which receives more than 50% of its annual budget from appropriations
19made by state law, including subgrantee or subcontractor recipients of such funds.
SB62, s. 3 20Section 3. 15.09 (6) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,16,621 15.09 (6) Reimbursement for expenses. Members of a council shall not be
22compensated for their services, but, except as otherwise provided in this subsection,
23members of councils created by statute shall be reimbursed for their actual and
24necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties, such reimbursement
25in the case of an elective or appointive officer or employee of this state who represents

1an agency as a member of a council to be paid by the agency which pays his or her
2salary. Members of the mortgage loan originator council under s. 15.187 (1) may not
3be reimbursed for their actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance
4of their duties. Members of the agricultural education and workforce development
5council may not be reimbursed for their actual and necessary expenses incurred in
6the performance of their duties.
SB62, s. 4 7Section 4. 15.187 (1) (intro.), (a), (b) and (c) of the statutes are amended to
8read:
SB62,16,129 15.187 (1) Loan Mortgage loan originator review council. (intro.) There is
10created in the department of financial institutions a mortgage loan originator
11council. The council shall consist of the following members, appointed by the
12secretary of financial institutions for 4-year terms:
SB62,16,1413 (a) Three Four persons who are mortgage loan originators registered licensed
14under s. 224.72 (1m) 224.725.
SB62,16,1615 (b) One person who is an agent of a mortgage broker registered licensed under
16s. 224.72 (1m).
SB62,16,1817 (c) One person who is an agent of a mortgage banker registered licensed under
18s. 224.72 (1m).
SB62, s. 5 19Section 5. 15.187 (1) (d) of the statutes is repealed.
SB62, s. 6 20Section 6. 20.005 (3) (schedule) of the statutes: at the appropriate place, insert
21the following amounts for the purposes indicated: - See PDF for table PDF
SB62, s. 7 1Section 7. 20.005 (3) (schedule) of the statutes: at the appropriate place, insert
2the following amounts for the purposes indicated: - See PDF for table PDF
SB62, s. 8 3Section 8. 20.143 (1) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,18,44 20.143 (1) (c) Wisconsin development fund; grants, loans, reimbursements, and
5assistance.
Biennially, the amounts in the schedule for grants and loans under s.
6560.275 (2) and subch. V of ch. 560; for reimbursements under s. 560.167; for
7providing assistance under s. 560.06; for the costs specified in s. 560.607; for the loan
8under 1999 Wisconsin Act 9, section 9110 (4); for the grants under 1995 Wisconsin
9Act 27
, section 9116 (7gg), 1995 Wisconsin Act 119, section 2 (1), 1997 Wisconsin Act
1027
, section 9110 (6g), 1999 Wisconsin Act 9, section 9110 (5), 2003 Wisconsin Act 33,
11section 9109 (1d) and (2q), and 2007 Wisconsin Act 20, section 9108 (4u), (6c), (7c),
12(7f), (8c), (8i), (9i), and (10q), and 2009 Wisconsin Act .... (this act), section 9110 (2 )

1and (3)
; and for providing up to $100,000 annually for the continued development of
2a manufacturing and advanced technology training center in Racine. Of the
3amounts in the schedule, $50,000 shall be allocated in each of fiscal years 1997-98
4and 1998-99 for providing the assistance under s. 560.06 (1).
SB62, s. 9 5Section 9. 20.143 (1) (gm) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,18,106 20.143 (1) (gm) Wisconsin development fund, administration of grants and
7loans.
All moneys received from origination fees under s. 560.68 (3), and from
8transfer fees under s. 560.205 (3) (e),
for administering the programs under subch.
9V of ch. 560 and for the costs of underwriting grants and loans awarded under subch.
10V of ch. 560.
SB62, s. 10 11Section 10. 20.143 (2) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,18,1512 20.143 (2) (b) Housing grants and loans; general purpose revenue. Biennially,
13the amounts in the schedule for grants and loans under s. 560.9803 and for grants
14under s. 560.9805 and for the grant under 2009 Wisconsin Act .... (this act), section
159110 (1)
.
SB62, s. 11 16Section 11. 20.435 (4) (gp) of the statutes is repealed.
SB62, s. 12 17Section 12. 20.435 (4) (jw) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB62,18,2418 20.435 (4) (jw) BadgerCare Plus and hospital assessment administrative costs.
19Biennially, the amounts in the schedule to provide a portion of the state share of
20administrative costs for the BadgerCare Plus Medical Assistance program under s.
2149.471. Ten and for administration of the hospital assessment under s. 50.38. All
22moneys transferred under s. 50.38 (9) and 10
percent of all moneys received from
23penalty assessments under s. 49.471 (9) (c) shall be credited to this appropriation
24account.
SB62, s. 13 25Section 13. 20.435 (4) (w) of the statutes is amended to read:
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