Rule-making notices
Notice of Hearings
Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection
The state of Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection (DATCP) announces that it will hold public hearings on a proposed new rule, Chapter ATCP 106, Wis. Adm. Code, relating to Price Gouging During and Emergency.
DATCP will hold three public hearings at the times and places shown below. DATCP invites the public to attend the hearings and comment on the proposed rule. Following the public hearings, the hearing record will remain open until Friday, March 16, 2007 for additional written comments. Comments may be sent to the Division of Trade and Consumer Protection at the address below, by email to kevin.leroy@datcp.state.wi.us or online at https://apps4.dhfs.state.wi.us/admrules/public/Home
You may obtain a free copy of this rule by contacting the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection, Division of Trade and Consumer Protection, 2811 Agriculture Drive, P.O. Box 8911, Madison, WI 53708. You can also obtain a copy by calling (608) 224-4928 or emailing kevin.leroy@datcp.state.wi.us. Copies will also be available at the hearings. To view the proposed rule online, go to:
To provide comments or concerns relating to small business, please contact DATCP's small business regulatory coordinator Keeley Moll at the address above, by emailing to Keeley.Moll@datcp.state.wi.us or by telephone at (608) 224-5039.
Hearing impaired persons may request an interpreter for these hearings. Please make reservations for a hearing interpreter by February 13, 2007, by writing to Kevin LeRoy, Division of Trade and Consumer Protection, P.O. Box 8911, Madison, WI 53708-8911, telephone (608) 224-4928. Alternatively, you may contact the DATCP TDD at (608) 224-5058. Handicap access is available at the hearings.
Hearing Dates and Locations:
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
DATCP Northwest Regional Office
3610 Oakwood Hills Pkwy
Eau Claire, WI 54701-7754
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
9:30 a.m.. to 11:30 a.m.
DATCP Northeast Regional Office
Room 152A
200 N Jefferson Street
Green Bay WI 54301
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection
2811 Agriculture Drive, Board Room (CR-106)
Madison, Wisconsin, 53718-6777
Analysis Prepared by the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection
This rule implements s. 100.305, Stats. (created by 2005 Wis. Act 450), which prohibits price gouging in sales of consumer goods or services during an emergency declared by the Governor. This rule includes standards for determining what constitutes illegal price gouging.
Statutory Authority
Statutory Authority:   ss. 93.07 (1), 93.15 and 100.305 (3), Stats.
Statutes Interpreted:   ss. 93.06 (1) and (9), 93.15, 93.16 and 100.305, Stats.
The Wisconsin department of agriculture, trade and consumer protection (“DATCP") is responsible for administering the price gouging prohibition under s. 100.305, Stats. Section 100.305, Stats., prohibits sellers from selling “consumer goods or services" at wholesale or retail at “unreasonably excessive prices" if the Governor, by executive order, has certified that the state or a part of the state is in a “period of abnormal economic disruption" due to an emergency. An emergency may include, for example, a destructive act of nature, a disruption of energy supplies that poses a serious risk to the public health or welfare, a hostile action, or a strike or civil disorder.
DATCP has broad general authority, under s. 93.07 (1), Stats., to adopt rules to implement laws under its jurisdiction. Under s. 100.305 (3), Stats., DATCP is specifically required to adopt rules defining what constitutes an “unreasonably excessive price" for purposes of the price gouging prohibition under s. 100.305, Stats.
Under ss. 93.06 (1) and (9) and 93.14 to 93.16, Stats., DATCP may investigate possible rule violations, and may require persons to provide documents, testimony and other evidence related to its investigation. Under s. 93.15, Stats., DATCP may by general order (rule) require persons to answer DATCP questions and submit documents for inspection.
Rule Content
Under this rule, a seller may not sell a consumer good or service in a declared emergency area during a declared emergency period at a price that is more than 10% above the highest price at which the seller sold like consumer goods or services to like customers in the relevant trade area during the 60-day period immediately preceding the emergency declaration. A seller may charge a higher price if the seller can prove, based on evidence in the seller's possession at the time of sale, that any of the following apply:
The higher price does not exceed the seller's cost plus normal markup. “Normal markup" means the percentage markup, over the seller's cost, which the seller regularly used in sales of like goods or services to like customers in the relevant trade area during the 60-day period immediately preceding the emergency declaration. This allows sellers to pass on bona fide cost increases.
The higher price is required by law. For example, a seller may prove that the higher price is required to comply with Wisconsin's Unfair Sales Act (“minimum markup law"), s. 100.30, Stats.
The Governor's emergency declaration directly or impliedly exempts the sale from coverage under the emergency declaration.
Under this rule, DATCP may require a seller to submit written, documented answers to DATCP questions related to the seller's compliance with this rule, including information related to any of the following:
The highest price at which the seller sold a consumer good or service to like customers in the relevant trade area during the 60-day period immediately preceding the emergency declaration.
The scope of the relevant trade area.
Any defenses claimed by the seller under this rule.
Other information relevant to DATCP's investigation.
Federal and Surrounding State Regulations
Federal Law
At various times in United States history, the federal government has imposed price controls. There are no federal “price gouging" prohibitions currently in effect. However, there are federal laws that set or limit prices for certain products or services in certain sectors. Some of these laws may preempt state “price gouging" provisions related to the federally-regulated products or services. For example, state law may not regulate interest rates charged by federally chartered banks, or certain prices charged by certain federally regulated common carriers. The scope and effect of federal regulation varies by industry sector, and is highly specific to individual federal programs.
Other States
Many states have prohibited price gouging during declared periods of emergency. Most of those states prohibit prices above pre-emergency prices, except that most states allow sellers to pass on increased costs. Four states prohibit increased markups over cost, and 6 states cap price increases at some percentage such as 10% or 25%.
Nineteen states prohibit prices that are “unconscionably excessive," “exorbitant," “unjustified," or “grossly excessive" without defining those terms or establishing more specific standards. However, the New York attorney general found that New York's broad prohibition against “unconscionably excessive" prices was unworkable without more specific standards.
The states surrounding Wisconsin have the following regulations:
Illinois, on September 2, 2005, adopted an emergency rule (now expired) which prohibited “unconscionably high prices for petroleum products."
Indiana prohibits price gouging in the sale of fuel. Price gouging occurs if a retailer charges a price that grossly exceeds the average price at which the fuel was readily available during the 7 days immediately preceding the declared emergency and the increase is not attributable to cost factors to the retailer.
Iowa regulates prices on “merchandise needed by disaster victims." The Iowa regulation prohibits “unjustified prices" during times of disaster and recovery (60 day maximum) in a declared disaster zone.
Michigan's consumer act prohibits, among other things, a price that is “grossly in excess" of the price at which similar property or services are sold.
Minnesota does not regulate price gouging.
Ohio prohibits, during a state of emergency, prices that are substantially higher than “the price at which the goods or services were readily obtainable during the 30 days immediately preceding the state of emergency" or “the average price of the goods or services during the 30 days immediately preceding the state of emergency."
Business Impact Analysis
Depending on the scope of a declared emergency, this rule could conceivably affect nearly every business that sells consumer goods in the state (whether at wholesale or retail). A declared emergency may be statewide or localized in scope, and may be broad-based or confined to certain economic sectors. The impact of this rule will vary accordingly.
This rule could have a substantial impact on a wide array of businesses. But it is not possible to predict the impact on individual businesses or on business generally.
Loading...
Loading...
Links to Admin. Code and Statutes in this Register are to current versions, which may not be the version that was referred to in the original published document.