Under the bill, when DOJ is defending the state, the attorney general may
compromise and settle the action as the attorney general determines to be in the best
interest of the state. The bill eliminates the requirement under current law that, in

actions for injunctive relief or if there is a proposed consent decree, the attorney
general must 1) obtain the approval of any legislative intervenor or 2) if there is no
intervenor, submit a proposed plan to JCF and, in certain circumstances, obtain
approval of JCF. The bill also eliminates the requirement for the attorney general
to obtain approval from JCLO in certain circumstances before submitting a proposed
plan of settlement or compromise to JCF.
Gifts and grants and disposition of settlement funds
The bill repeals certain changes made by 2017 Wisconsin Act 369 relating to
gifts and grants and certain proceeds received by DOJ, specifically reversing
provisions that changed a DOJ gifts and grants appropriation and a DOJ gifts,
grants, and proceeds appropriation from continuing appropriations to annual
appropriations.
Second, the bill repeals the requirement that the attorney general must deposit
all settlement funds into the general fund. The bill restores procedures relating to
discretionary settlement funds under which the attorney general could expend
certain settlement funds not committed under the terms of a settlement after
submitting a plan to JCF for passive review only if either 1) the cochairpersons of
JCF do not schedule a meeting or 2) a meeting is scheduled and JCF approves a plan
for expenditure.
Certain legal expenses related to the tobacco settlement agreement
The bill establishes an appropriation from which DOJ may expend moneys for
its legal expenses related to participation in arbitration or other alternative dispute
resolution processes arising from payments under the Attorneys General Master
Tobacco Settlement Agreement of November 23, 1998. In 1998, numerous states and
territories including Wisconsin agreed to a settlement with the major U.S. tobacco
companies regarding dozens of state lawsuits brought to recover health care costs
associated with treating smoking-related illnesses. Under the agreement, the state
receives annual payments from U.S. tobacco product manufacturers in perpetuity.
General justice
Background checks on all transfers of firearms
Current law provides that a federally licensed firearms dealer may not transfer
a handgun after a sale until the dealer has performed a background check on the
prospective transferee to determine if he or she is prohibited from possessing a
firearm under state or federal law. The bill generally prohibits any person from
transferring any firearm, including the frame or receiver of a firearm, unless the
transfer occurs through a federally licensed firearms dealer and involves a
background check of the prospective transferee. Under the bill, the prohibition does
not apply to 1) a transfer to a firearms dealer or to a law enforcement or armed
services agency; 2) a transfer of a firearm classified as antique; 3) a transfer for no
more than 14 days for the purpose of hunting or target shooting that involves no more
than nominal consideration; or 4) a transfer that is by gift, bequest, or inheritance
to a family member. A person who is convicted of violating the prohibition is guilty
of a misdemeanor and must be fined not less than $500 nor more than $10,000, may

be imprisoned for not more than nine months, and may not possess a firearm for a
period of two years.
Creating the Office of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
The bill creates within DOJ the Office of Missing and Murdered Indigenous
Women, which is tasked with providing certain services to crime victims, their
families, witnesses, and others who are members of a tribe; providing training
relating to missing and murdered indigenous women, including search, rescue, and
response training; and establishing a grant program related to missing and
murdered indigenous women.
Hate crimes reporting portal
The bill requires DOJ to develop an Internet-based reporting system and a
telephone hotline for the reporting of hate crimes. Under the bill, DOJ must conduct
a public education campaign on hate crimes and where to report them and must
collect data relating to the reporting of hate crimes.
Relator appropriation
The bill creates a continuing appropriation to hold all money received by DOJ
that is owed to a relator, to provide payments to relators. A relator is a type of party
in a legal action in whose name an action is brought by a state.
Repeal of report on field prosecutor positions
2017 Wisconsin Act 261 created two field prosecutor attorney positions in DOJ
to assist the Division of Criminal Investigation and district attorneys. Act 261 also
required DOJ to submit annual reports to JCF on the activities and effectiveness of
the attorneys. The project positions terminate on April 11, 2023. The bill repeals the
requirement that DOJ submit the corresponding annual report.
Name of Shot Spotter Program
Under current law, DOJ provides money to the Shot Spotter Program in the city
of Milwaukee. The bill changes the name of the program to the “Gunfire Detection
Program.”
local government
Levy limits
Local levy overview
Generally, under current law, local levy increase limits are applied to the
property tax levies that are imposed by political subdivisions in December of each
year. Current law prohibits a political subdivision from increasing its levy by a
percentage that exceeds its valuation factor, which is defined as the greater of either
0 percent or the percentage change in the political subdivision's equalized value due
to new construction, less improvements removed.
Current law contains a number of exceptions to these levy increase limits, such
as amounts a county levies for a countywide emergency medical system, for a county
children with disabilities education board, and for certain bridge and culvert
construction and repair. In addition, a political subdivision may exceed the levy
increase limit that is otherwise applicable if its governing body adopts a resolution
to do so and if that resolution is approved by the voters in a referendum.

Alternative minimum valuation factor increase
The bill increases the alternative minimum valuation factor used to calculate
local levy limits from 0 percent to 2 percent, beginning with levies imposed in
December 2023.
Reduction for certain service revenues
Under current law, a political subdivision must reduce its allowable levy by the
estimated amount of any revenue from fees or payments in lieu of taxes if the revenue
is received for providing certain covered services that were funded with property tax
revenues in calendar year 2013. The covered services are certain garbage collection,
fire protection, snow plowing, street sweeping, and storm water management.
The bill repeals the requirement that a political subdivision must reduce its
allowable levy by the estimated amount of revenues received for providing covered
services that were funded with property tax revenues in calendar year 2013.
Reduction for service transfers
Under current law, if a political subdivision transfers to another governmental
unit the responsibility to provide a service that it provided in the previous year, the
levy increase limit otherwise applicable in the current year is decreased to reflect the
cost that the political subdivision would have incurred to provide that service. The
bill repeals that provision.
Approval of use of unused capacity
Current law provides two exceptions allowing a political subdivision to use
previously unused levy capacity. Under these exceptions, if a political subdivision's
allowable levy in prior years was greater than its actual levy in those years, the
otherwise applicable levy increase limit for the next succeeding year may be
increased by the difference between the allowable levy and the actual levy, up to a
specified maximum increase. These increases, in some cases, must be authorized by
a supermajority vote of the political subdivision's governing body. The bill eliminates
the supermajority requirements and, instead, requires only a simple majority vote
of the political subdivision's governing body for use of either of these unused levy
capacity exceptions.
Joint emergency services levy limit exception modification
Among the current law exceptions to local levy limits is an exception for the
amount that a municipality levies to pay for charges assessed by a joint fire
department or joint emergency medical services district organized by any
combination of two or more municipalities. This exception applies only to the extent
that the amount levied to pay for such charges would cause the municipality to
exceed the otherwise applicable levy limit and only if the charges assessed by the
department or district increase in the current year by an amount not greater than
the rate of inflation over the preceding year, plus 2 percent, and if the municipality's
governing body adopts a resolution in favor of exceeding the otherwise applicable
levy limit.
Under the bill, the exception is expanded to include joint fire services or joint
emergency medical services provided by a combination of two or more municipalities
through a joint district, joint ownership, joint purchase of services from a nonprofit

corporation, or joint contracting with a public or private services provider. The
exception is also expanded to cover all fees charged to a municipality by the joint fire
services or joint emergency medical services.
Exception for cross-municipality transit routes
The bill creates an exception to local levy limits for certain transit services.
Under the bill, amounts levied by a political subdivision for costs related to new or
enhanced transit services that cross adjacent county or municipal borders do not
apply to the limit if the political subdivisions between which the routes operate have
entered into an agreement to provide for the services and if the agreement is
approved in a referendum.
Exception for regional planning commission contributions
The bill creates a local levy increase limit exception for the amount a political
subdivision levies to pay for the political subdivision's share of the budget of a
regional planning commission (RPC). An RPC's budget is determined annually by
the RPC. The RPC then charges all political subdivisions within its jurisdiction a
proportional amount to fund the budget based on the equalized value of property in
the political subdivision and the total amount of equalized value of property within
the RPC's jurisdiction.
Tax incremental financing
Tax incremental financing overview
Under current law, cities and villages may use tax incremental financing (TIF)
to encourage development in the city or village. In general, under TIF, a city or
village pays for improvements in a tax incremental district (TID) and then collects
tax moneys attributable to all taxing jurisdictions on the increased property value
in the TID for a certain period of time to pay for the improvements. Ideally, after the
period of time, the city or village will have been repaid for its initial investment and
the property tax base in the TID will have permanently increased in value.
In general and in brief, a city or village makes use of TIF using the following
procedure:
1. The city or village designates an area as a TID and creates a project plan
laying out the expenditures that the city or village will make within the TID.
2. DOR establishes the base value of the TID. This value is the equalized value
of all taxable property within the TID at the time of its creation.
3. Each year thereafter, the value increment of the property within the TID is
determined by subtracting the base value from the current value of property within
the TID. The portion of taxes collected on any positive value increment is collected
by the city or village for use solely for the project costs of the TID. The taxes collected
by the city or village on positive value increments include taxes that would have been
collected by other taxing jurisdictions, such as counties or school districts, were the
TID not created.
4. Tax increments are collected until the city or village has recovered all of its
project costs or until the TID reaches its statutory termination date.

Workforce housing initiatives
The bill authorizes workforce housing initiatives and makes changes that affect
TIDs and state housing grants. The bill creates a definition for “workforce housing,”
changes the definition of a “mixed-use development” TID, increases the maximum
number of years a city or village may extend the life of a TID to improve its affordable
and workforce housing, requires a TID's project plan to contain alternative economic
projections, and changes the method of imposing certain impact fees.
Under the bill, a political subdivision may put into effect a workforce housing
initiative by taking one of several specified actions and posting on its website an
explanation of the initiative. Workforce housing initiatives include the following:
reducing permit processing times or impact fees for workforce housing; increasing
zoning density for a workforce housing development; rehabilitating existing
uninhabitable housing stock into habitable workforce housing; or implementing any
other initiative to address workforce housing needs. Once an initiative takes effect,
it remains in effect for five years. After June 30, 2024, if a political subdivision has
in effect at least three initiatives at the same time, DOA must give priority to housing
grant applications from, or related to a project in, the political subdivision.
The bill defines “workforce housing” to mean the following, subject to the
five-year average median costs as determined by the U.S. Bureau of the Census:
1. Housing that costs a household no more than 30 percent of the household's
gross median income.
2. Housing that is comprised of residential units for initial occupancy by
individuals whose household median income is no more than 120 percent of the
county's gross median income.
Under current law, a mixed-use development TID contains a combination of
industrial, commercial, or residential uses, although newly platted residential areas
may not exceed more than 35 percent of the real property within the TID. Under the
bill, newly platted residential areas may not exceed either the 35 percent limit or 60
percent of the real property within the TID if the newly platted residential use that
exceeds 35 percent is used solely for workforce housing.
The bill also requires a TID's project plan to include alternative projections of
the TID's finances and feasibility under different economic situations, including a
slower pace of development and lower rate of property value growth than expected
in the TID.
Currently, a city or village may extend the life of a TID for up to one year for
housing stock improvement if all of the following occurs:
1. The city or village pays off all of the TID's project costs.
2. The city or village adopts a resolution stating that it intends to extend the
life of the TID, the number of months it intends to do so, and how it intends to improve
housing stock.
3. The city or village notifies DOR.
Current law requires the city or village to use 75 percent of the tax increments
received during the period specified in the resolution to benefit affordable housing
in the city or village and 25 percent to improve the city's or village's housing stock.

Under the bill, a city or village may extend the life of a TID for up to three years
to improve its housing stock or increase the number of affordable and workforce
housing improvements, with at least 50 percent of the funds supporting units for
families with incomes of up to 60 percent of the county's median income. Also, for any
extension of more than one year, the other taxing jurisdictions must approve of the
extension.
Under current law, if a city, village, or town imposes an impact fee on a
developer to pay for certain capital costs to accommodate land development, the city,
village, or town may provide in the ordinance an exemption from, or a reduction in
the amount of, impact fees on land development that provides low-cost housing.
Under the bill, the impact fee exemption or reduction provisions also apply to
workforce housing. Current law prevents the shifting of an exemption from or
reduction in impact fees to any other development in the land development in which
the low-cost housing is located. The bill applies this provision to workforce housing
as well.
TIF 12 percent rule exception
Under current law, when creating a new TID or amending a TID, a city or
village must make a finding that the equalized value of taxable property of the new
or amended TID plus the value increment of all existing TIDs in the city or village
does not exceed 12 percent of the total equalized value of taxable property in the city
or village. Under the bill, in lieu of making the 12 percent finding, a city or village
may certify to DOR that 1) TIDs with sufficient value increments will close within
one year after certification so that the municipality will no longer exceed the 12
percent limit and 2) the city or village will not take any actions that would extend
the life of any TID under item 1.
General local government
Regional transit authorities
The bill creates, or authorizes the creation of, a southeast regional transit
authority (SE RTA), a Dane County regional transit authority (DC RTA), a Fox Cities
regional transit authority (FC RTA), and a regional transit authority in any other
metropolitan statistical area in which qualifying political subdivisions agree to
create one (statewide RTA). Upon creation, each transit authority is a public body
corporate and politic and a separate governmental entity.
The SE RTA is created if the governing body of Milwaukee County or Kenosha
County, or of any municipality located within that portion of Racine County east of
I 94, adopts a resolution authorizing the county or municipality to become a member
of the SE RTA. If any of these counties or municipalities fails to adopt a resolution
creating the SE RTA, these counties and municipalities, as well as Racine County,
may also join the SE RTA after it has been created by one or more other counties or
municipalities. If Milwaukee County or Kenosha County joins the SE RTA, all
municipalities located within Milwaukee County or Kenosha County, respectively,
become members of the SE RTA. Any of the counties of Waukesha, Ozaukee, and
Washington may join the SE RTA upon adoption of a resolution by the county's
governing body, and any municipality located within the county may join the SE RTA

upon adoption of a resolution by the municipality's governing body and approval of
the SE RTA's board of directors. The jurisdictional area of the SE RTA is the
geographic area formed by the combined territorial boundaries of counties and
municipalities that are members of the SE RTA.
The DC RTA is created if the governing body of Dane County adopts a resolution
authorizing the county to become a member of the DC RTA. Once created, the
members of the DC RTA consist of Dane County and all municipalities located within
the Madison metropolitan planning area (MMPA). Any municipality located within
Dane County but not within the MMPA may join the DC RTA upon adoption of a
resolution by the municipality's governing body and approval of the DC RTA's board
of directors. The jurisdictional area of the DC RTA is the geographic area formed by
the MMPA combined with the territorial boundaries of all municipalities outside the
MMPA that join the DC RTA.
The members of the FC RTA consist of Outagamie County, Calumet County, and
Winnebago County and all municipalities located within the urbanized area of the
Fox Cities metropolitan planning area (UFCMPA). Any municipality located within
Outagamie County, Calumet County, or Winnebago County but not within the
UFCMPA may join the FC RTA upon adoption of a resolution by the municipality's
governing body and approval of the FC RTA's board of directors. The jurisdictional
area of the FC RTA is the geographic area formed by UFCMPA combined with the
territorial boundaries of all municipalities outside the UFCMPA that join the FC
RTA.
A statewide RTA is created if any two or more political subdivisions located
within a metropolitan statistical area adopt resolutions authorizing the political
subdivision to become members of the RTA. Once created, the members of a
statewide RTA consist of all political subdivisions that adopt resolutions authorizing
participation. Any political subdivision located in whole or in part within a
metropolitan statistical area located in whole or in part within a statewide RTA's
jurisdiction may join the statewide RTA. The jurisdictional area of an authority
created under this paragraph is the geographic area formed by the combined
territorial boundaries of all participating political subdivisions.
An RTA's authority is vested in its board of directors. Directors serve four-year
terms. An RTA's bylaws govern its management, operations, and administration and
must include provisions specifying all of the following:
1. The functions or services to be provided by the RTA.
2. The powers, duties, and limitations of the RTA.
3. The maximum rate of the sales and use tax, not exceeding the statutory limit,
that may be imposed by the RTA.
An RTA may do all of the following:
1. Establish or acquire a comprehensive unified local transportation system,
which is a transportation system comprised of bus lines and other public
transportation facilities generally within the jurisdictional area of the RTA.
“Transportation system" is defined to include land, structures, equipment, and other
property for transportation of passengers, including by bus, rail, or other form of
mass transportation. The RTA may operate this transportation system or provide

for its operation by another. The RTA may contract with a public or private
organization to provide transportation services in lieu of directly providing these
services and may purchase and lease transportation facilities to public or private
transit companies. With two exceptions, an RTA may not directly or by contract
provide services outside the RTA's jurisdictional area.
2. Coordinate specialized transportation services for persons who are disabled
or aged 60 or older.
3. Own or lease real or personal property.
4. Acquire property by condemnation.
5. Enter upon highways to install, maintain, and operate the RTA's facilities.
6. Impose, by the adoption of a resolution by the RTA's board of directors, a sales
and use tax in the RTA's jurisdictional area at a rate of not more than 0.5 percent of
the sales price.
7. Impose a fee of $2 per transaction on the rental of passenger cars without
drivers.
8. Incur debts and obligations. An RTA may issue tax-exempt revenue bonds,
secured by a pledge of any income or revenues from any operations or other source
of moneys for the RTA. The bonds of an RTA are not a debt of its member political
subdivisions and neither the member political subdivisions nor the state are liable
for the payment of the bonds.
9. Set fees and charges for functions, facilities, and services provided by the
RTA.
10. Adopt bylaws and rules to carry out the powers and purposes of the RTA.
Loading...
Loading...