Rule-making notices
Notice of Hearings
Health and Family Services
(Community Services, Chs. HFS 30—)
[CR 03-010]
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to ss. 227.16 (1), 227.17, and 227.18, Stats., the Department of Health and Family Services will hold a public hearing on the proposed order of the Department creating Ch. HFS 39, relating to voluntarily relinquishing custody of a newborn who is 72 hours old or younger.
Hearing Information
The public hearings will be held:
Date & Time   Location
April 7, 2003   Bureau of Milwaukee Child Welfare, Site 3
1:00 p.m.   6111 N. Teutonia Avenue
  Milwaukee, WI 53209
April 8, 2003   Room B-139
1:00 p.m.   1 West Wilson Street
  Madison, WI 53708
The hearing sites are fully accessible to people with disabilities.
Analysis Prepared by the Department of Health and Family Services
The proposed order creates rules under the authority of s. 48.195 (6), Stats., to guide the process by which a parent may voluntarily relinquish custody of a newborn who is 72 hours old or younger and sets forth the process by which a law enforcement officer, emergency medical technician, or hospital staff member may take custody of the newborn. The proposed order, as does s. 48.195 (2) (c), Stats., prohibits any officer, employee, or agent of this state or of a political subdivision of this state from attempting to locate or ascertain the identity of a parent who voluntarily relinquishes custody of a newborn or of any person who assists the parent in that relinquishment, unless the officer, employee, or agent has reasonable cause to suspect that the newborn has been the victim of abuse or neglect, as defined in ss. 48.02 (1) and 48.981 (1) (d), Stats., or that a person assisting the parent has or is attempting to coerce or induce the parent into relinquishing custody of the newborn. This does not prevent the parent or person assisting the parent from providing such information voluntarily. Nothing in the proposed order is intended to affect the manner in which a law enforcement officer, emergency medical technician, or hospital staff member performs the duties prescribed by law, licensure or certification to be performed by a law enforcement officer, emergency medical technician, or hospital staff member.
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The proposed order will not have a significant economic impact on small businesses.
Fiscal estimate
The proposed order will implement the new statutory provisions at s. 48.195, Stats. Under the law and the rule, a person can relinquish custody of a newborn to a law enforcement officer, emergency medical technician or a hospital staff member. The purpose of the law is to prevent a parent from abandoning a child in a place where the child would be at substantial risk of death. Prior to the law, these abandoned children either would have died or would have been found and placed in foster care. The new law should decrease the number of child deaths and increase the number of children placed safely in foster care. If the number of children in foster care increases, costs will increase for county human services or social services department and for Department of Health and Family Services, which operates the child protective services system in Milwaukee County. Given the very small numbers of such cases, there will be little change in the number of children placed in foster care and, therefore, there will be little or no increase in costs. However, any change in costs are the result of the new statutory provision and not this rule.
Contact Person
To find out more about the hearing or to request a copy of the proposed rules, write, phone or e-mail:
Cynthia Emerson
Policy Coordination Section
Division of Children and Family Services
Department of Health and Family Services
P.O. Box 8916
Madison, WI 53708-8916
(608) 266-8001
If you are hearing or visually impaired, do not speak English, or have circumstances that might make communication at a hearing difficult and if you, therefore, require an interpreter or a non-English, large print or taped version of the hearing document, contact the person at the address or phone number given above at least 10 days before the hearing. With less than 10 days notice, an interpreter may not be available.
Written comments received by mail or e-mail at an above address no later than April 18, 2003 will be given the same consideration as testimony presented at a hearing.
Notice of Proposed Rule
Health and Family Services
(Community Services, Chs. HFS 30—)
[CR 03-001]
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to ss. 46.297, Stats., and according to the procedures set forth in s. 227.16 (2) (e), Stats., the Department of Health and Family Services will repeal and recreate ch. HFS 78, relating to the telecommunications assistance program for deaf, deafblind and severely hard of hearing persons' purchase of telecommunications equipment, as herein proposed, without public hearing, unless a petition for a hearing is received by the Department within 30 days after the publication of this notice on March 15, 2003. A petition for a hearing will be accepted if signed by any of the following who will be affected by the proposed rule: 25 persons; the representative of an association that represents a farm, labor, business or professional group; or a municipality.
Contact Person
If you have any questions about this rule or about filing a written petition for a hearing, contact Alice Sykora, Bureau for Deaf and Hard of Hearing, P.O. Box 7851, Madison, WI 53707-7851, 608-266-3168 TTY or via email at sykoram@dhfs.state.wi.us.
Analysis Prepared by the Department of Health & Family Services
Under Wisconsin statute at ss. 196.218 and 46.297, Stats., and pursuant to administrative rules under s. PSC 160.071 and Ch. HFS 78, respectively, Wisconsin operates two programs persons with hearing loss may use to obtain financial assistance for purchasing telecommunications equipment. The Public Service Commission (PSC) administers one program, known as the Telecommunications Equipment Purchase Program (TEPP) and the Department of Health and Family Services administers the other, known as the Telecommunication Assistance Program (TAP.) Both programs receive periodic legislative appropriations from which the financial assistance is provided to approved applicants. The PSC's TEPP program's funding is substantially larger than that available for the Department's TAP program. Moreover, the PSC's TEPP program requires applicants to pay $100 towards the purchase of telecommunications equipment. To both conserve the limited TAP program funds and to better integrate the TAP program with the PSC TEPP program, with certain exceptions, the Department proposes reducing the existing assistance limit of $600 per voucher to a maximum of $100 per voucher, to be used in meeting the copayment requirement of the TEPP program. By so doing, the TAP program's more limited resources may be conserved, thereby extending the TAP program benefits to a greater number of potential recipients. To also make ch. HFS 78 more consistent with s. PSC 160.071, the Department proposes reducing the waiting period for subsequent applications from four years to three.
The current rules also limit TAP program financial assistance to one person per household. That constraint has prevented other household members with otherwise qualifying needs from receiving TAP program assistance. Moreover, the current household limitation is narrower than that used by PSC for the TEPP program. To better unify the eligibility criteria between the two programs, the Department proposes to modify the rule to eliminate the one person per household constraint and to expand the eligibility for financial assistance by loosening the definition of who shares a household with a deaf or severely hard of hearing person. The Department proposes to eliminate financial assistance for the installation of telecommunications equipment. Finally, the Department also proposes to update the terminology used to refer to deaf and severely hard of hearing persons.
The Department's authority to repeal and recreate these rules is found in s. 46.297 (4) (a), Stats. The rules interpret s. 46.297, Stats.
Text of Proposed Rules
SECTION 1. Chapter HFS 78 is repealed and recreated to read:
Chapter HFS 78
TELECOMMUNICATION ASSISTANCE FOR DEAF, DEAFBLIND AND SEVERELY HARD OF HEARING PERSONS
HFS 78.01   Authority and purpose.
HFS 78.02   Applicability.
HFS 78.03   Definitions.
HFS 78.04   Application procedure.
HFS 78.05   Eligibility requirements.
HFS 78.06   TAP assistance restrictions.
HFS 78.07   Purchase and care of telecommunications devices.
HFS 78.01 Authority and purpose. This chapter is promulgated under the authority of s. 46.297 (4), Stats., for the purpose of implementing the telecommunication assistance program (TAP) for persons who are deaf, deafblind or severely hard of hearing. The chapter sets forth eligibility requirements, uniform application procedures, criteria for granting assistance and policies relating to the purchase and maintenance of the telecommunications equipment.
HFS 78.02 Applicability. This chapter applies to the department and to all deaf, deafblind and severely hard of hearing persons who apply to the department for program funding for the purchase of telecommunication equipment for their homes.
HFS 78.03 Definitions. In this chapter:
(1) “Deaf, deafblind or severely hard of hearing" means a hearing loss significant enough to prevent the individual from using the telephone system without technological adaptations that facilitate effective communication in a visual or audible mode.
(2) “Department" means the Wisconsin department of health and family services.
(3) “Household" means a residence unit whose members share a common living arrangement.
(4) “Public service commission" or "PSC" means the Wisconsin public service commission.
(5) “TAP manager" means the department's staff member responsible for developing and implementing TAP.
(6) “Telecommunication assistance program" or "TAP" means a financial assistance program created by s. 46.297, Stats., for the purpose of making telecommunication devices available to deaf, deafblind and severely hard of hearing persons who do not have the means to afford these devices.
(7) “Telecommunication device" or "device" means any technology needed by a deaf, deafblind or severely hard of hearing person to facilitate his or her use of a telephone.
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