LRBs0291/2
GMM:wlj:jf
2013 - 2014 LEGISLATURE
ASSEMBLY SUBSTITUTE AMENDMENT 1,
TO ASSEMBLY BILL 750
February 11, 2014 - Offered by Representative Kapenga.
AB750-ASA1,1,7
1An Act to amend 104.001 (3) (b); and
to create 66.0903 (1r) of the statutes;
2relating to: preemption of city, village, town, or county living wage ordinances
3with respect to employees who perform work that is funded, in whole or in part,
4with state funds and preemption of residency requirements for laborers,
5workers, mechanics, and truck drivers employed on local projects of public
6works to which the prevailing wage law applies who perform work that is
7funded with state funds.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Under current law, a city, village, town, or county may not enact and administer
an ordinance establishing a living wage (local living wage ordinance), which is
defined under current law as compensation sufficient to enable an employee to
maintain himself or herself under conditions consistent with his or her welfare.
Current law, however, exempts from that prohibition an ordinance that requires an
employee of a county, city, village, or town, an employee who performs work under
a contract for the provision of services to a county, city, village, or town, or an
employee who performs work that is funded by financial assistance from a county,
city, village, or town to be paid at a minimum wage rate specified in the ordinance.
This substitute amendment provides that a local living wage ordinance is
preempted with respect to an employee who performs work that is funded, in whole
or in part, with funds of the state or federal funds passing through the state treasury.
Under current law, no local governmental unit may require, as a condition of
employment, that any employee or prospective employee reside within any
jurisdictional limit.
This substitute amendment prohibits a local governmental unit from requiring
that any laborer, worker, mechanic, or truck driver employed on a project of public
works to which the prevailing wage law applies who performs work that is funded,
in whole or in part, with funds of this state or federal funds passing through the state
treasury reside within any jurisdictional limit. Generally, the prevailing wage law
applies to any single-trade project of public works for which the estimated project
cost of completion is $48,000 or more and to any multiple-trade project of public
works for which the estimated project cost of completion is $100,000 or more.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB750-ASA1,1
1Section
1. 66.0903 (1r) of the statutes is created to read:
AB750-ASA1,2,62
66.0903
(1r) Residency requirements prohibited. (a) The legislature finds
3that residency requirements for laborers, workers, mechanics, and truck drivers
4employed on projects of public works to which this section applies who performs work
5that is funded, in whole or in part, with funds of this state or federal funds passing
6through the state treasury are a matter of statewide concern.
AB750-ASA1,2,147
(b) Except as provided in par. (c), no local governmental unit may require that
8any laborer, worker, mechanic, or truck driver employed on a project of public works
9to which this section applies who performs work that is funded, in whole or in part,
10with funds of this state or federal funds passing through the state treasury reside
11within any jurisdictional limit. If a local governmental unit has a residency
12requirement described in this paragraph that is in effect on the effective date of this
13paragraph .... [LRB inserts date], the residency requirement does not apply and may
14not be enforced.
AB750-ASA1,3,4
1(c) This subsection does not affect any statute that requires a person described
2in par. (b) to reside within the jurisdictional limit of any local governmental unit or
3any provision of state or local law that requires a person described in par. (b) to reside
4in this state.
AB750-ASA1,2
5Section
2. 104.001 (3) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB750-ASA1,3,166
104.001
(3) (b) An ordinance that requires an employee of a county, city, village,
7or town, an employee who performs work under a contract for the provision of
8services to a county, city, village, or town, or an employee who performs work that is
9funded by financial assistance from a county, city, village, or town, to be paid at a
10minimum wage rate specified in the ordinance
, except that this section preempts
11such an ordinance with respect to an employee who performs work that is funded,
12in whole or in part, with funds of this state or federal funds passing through the state
13treasury. Any ordinance described in this paragraph that is in effect on the effective
14date of this paragraph .... [LRB inserts date], is void with respect to an employee who
15performs work that is funded, in whole or in part, with funds of this state or federal
16funds passing through the state treasury.
AB750-ASA1,3,2118
(1)
Collective bargaining agreements. This act first applies to an employee
19who is affected by a collective bargaining agreement that contains provisions that
20are inconsistent with this act on the day on which the collective bargaining
21agreement expires or is modified, extended, or renewed, whichever occurs first.