66.77(3)(a)1.1. If the governing body of a county wishes to exceed the operating levy rate limit otherwise applicable to the county under this section, it shall adopt a resolution to that effect. The resolution shall specify either the operating levy rate or the operating levy that the governing body wishes to impose for either a specified number of years or an indefinite period. The governing body shall call a special referendum for the purpose of submitting the resolution to the electors of the county for approval or rejection. In lieu of a special referendum, the governing body may specify that the referendum be held at the next succeeding spring primary or election or September primary or general election to be held not earlier than 30 days after the adoption of the resolution of the governing body.
66.77(3)(a)2. 2. The clerk of the county shall publish type A, B, C, D and E notices of the referendum under s. 10.01 (2). Section 5.01 (1) applies in the event of failure to comply with the notice requirements of this subdivision.
66.77(3)(a)3. 3. The referendum shall be held in accordance with chs. 5 to 12. The governing body shall provide the election officials with all necessary election supplies. The form of the ballot shall correspond substantially with the standard form for referendum ballots prescribed by the elections board under ss. 5.64 (2) and 7.08 (1) (a). If the resolution under subd. 1. specifies the operating levy rate, the question shall be submitted as follows: "Under state law, the operating levy rate for the.... (name of county), for the tax to be imposed for the year.... (year), is limited to $.... per $1,000 of equalized value. Shall the.... (name of county) be allowed to exceed this rate limit for.... (a specified number of years) (an indefinite period) by $.... per $1,000 of equalized value that results in an operating levy rate of $.... per $1,000 of equalized value?" If the resolution under subd. 1. specifies the operating levy, the question shall be submitted as follows: "Under state law, the operating levy rate for the.... (name of county), for the tax to be imposed for the year.... (year), is limited to $.... per $1,000 of equalized value. Notwithstanding the operating levy rate limit, shall the.... (name of county) be allowed to levy an amount not to exceed $.... (operating levy) for operating purposes for the year.... (year), which may increase the operating levy rate for.... (a specified number of years) (an indefinite period)? This would allow a....% increase above the levy of $.... (preceding year operating levy) for the year.... (preceding year)."
66.77(3)(a)4. 4. Within 14 days after the referendum, the clerk of the county shall certify the results of the referendum to the department of revenue. A county may exceed the operating levy rate limit otherwise applicable to it under this section in that year by an amount not exceeding the amount approved by a majority of those voting on the question.
66.77(3)(b)1.1. If an increased operating levy rate is approved by a referendum under par. (a) for a specified number of years, the increased operating levy rate shall be the operating levy rate limit for that number of years for purposes of this section. If an increased operating levy rate is approved by a referendum under par. (a) for an indefinite period, the increased operating levy rate shall be the operating levy rate limit for purposes of this section.
66.77(3)(b)2. 2. If an increased operating levy is approved by a referendum under par. (a), the increased operating levy shall be used to calculate the operating levy rate limit for the approved year for purposes of this section. After the approved year, the operating levy rate limit in the approved year or the operating levy rate limit that would have been applicable if there had been no referendum, whichever is greater, shall be the limit for the specified number of years or for an indefinite period for purposes of this section.
66.77(3)(c)1.1. If a county transfers to another governmental unit responsibility for providing any service that the county provided in the preceding year, the levy rate limit otherwise applicable under this section to the county in the current year is decreased to reflect the cost that the county would have incurred to provide that service, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.77(3)(c)2. 2. If a county increases the services that it provides by adding responsibility for providing a service transferred to it from another governmental unit in any year, the levy rate limit otherwise applicable under this section to the county in the current year is increased to reflect the cost of that service, as determined by the department of revenue.
66.77(4) (4)Penalties. If the department of revenue determines that a county has a penalized excess in any year, the department of revenue shall do all of the following:
66.77(4)(a) (a) Reduce the amount of the shared revenue payments to the county under subch. I of ch. 79 in the following year by an amount equal to the amount of the penalized excess.
66.77(4)(b) (b) If the amount of the reduction made under par. (a) is insufficient to recover fully the amount of the penalized excess, request the department of transportation to reduce the aids paid in that following year to the county under s. 86.30 (2) (e) by the amount needed to recover as much of the remainder as is possible.
66.77(4)(c) (c) Ensure that the amount of any reductions in shared revenue payments under par. (a) lapses to the general fund.
66.77(4)(d) (d) Ensure that the amount of the penalized excess is not included in determining the limit described under sub. (2) for the county for the following year.
66.77(5) (5)Rate comparison. Annually, the department of revenue shall compare the operating levy rate limit of each county under this section to the actual operating levy rate imposed by the county.
66.77 History History: 1993 a. 16, 490.
66.80 66.80 Benefit funds for officers and employes of first class cities.
66.80(1)(1) In all 1st class cities in this state, whether organized under general or special charter, annuity and benefit funds shall be created, established, maintained and administered by each city for all officers and employes of the city, who at the time this section shall come into effect are not contributors, participants or beneficiaries in any pension fund now in operation in such city by authority of law; provided that before this section shall be in effect in any city to which it applies, it must first have been approved by a majority vote of the members elect of the common council of the city.
66.80(2) (2) Upon approval by a majority vote of the members of the common council of such city the common council shall create a retirement board, the members of which shall serve without compensation, which board shall have full power and authority to administer such annuity and benefit fund, and to make such rules and regulations under which all participants shall contribute to and receive benefits from such fund. Three members of the retirement board shall be city employes elected by the members of the retirement system and shall serve 4-year terms and 5 members shall be appointed under s. 66.146 and shall serve 3-year terms. The common council may provide for contribution by the city to such annuity and benefit fund. The executive director of the retirement board shall be appointed under s. 66.146.
66.80(3) (3) The common council of such city may provide for annuity and benefit funds for officers and employes of boards, agencies, departments, commissions and divisions of the city government, including a housing authority created under the provisions of s. 66.40.
66.80 History History: 1987 a. 382; 1995 a. 225.
66.805 66.805 Death benefit payments to foreign beneficiaries. A retirement system of any city of the first class may provide by appropriate enactment of the local legislative body that no beneficiary may be designated for the payment of any retirement allowance, pension or proceeds of a member of such retirement system if such beneficiary is not a resident of either the United States or Canada. If a beneficiary is designated who is neither a resident of the United States nor Canada, any contributions or retirement allowance which would have been paid to the beneficiary had the beneficiary been a resident of either the United States or Canada shall be deemed payable to the estate of the deceased member of such retirement system. The local legislative body of the city of the first class may also provide by appropriate enactment that if a death benefit would be payable because of the death of a member of the retirement system and the designated beneficiary of such death benefit is not a resident of either the United States or Canada, the death benefit which would have been paid had the designated beneficiary been a resident of either the United States or Canada, shall be deemed payable to the estate of the deceased member.
66.805 History History: 1991 a. 316.
66.81 66.81 Exemption of funds and benefits from taxation, execution and assignment. All moneys and assets of any retirement system of any city of the first class and all benefits and allowances and every portion thereof, both before and after payment to any beneficiary, granted under any such retirement system shall be exempt from any state, county or municipal tax or from attachment or garnishment process, and shall not be seized, taken, detained or levied upon by virtue of any executions, or any process or proceeding whatsoever issued out of or by any court of this state, for the payment and ratification in whole or in part of any debt, claim, damage, demand or judgment against any member of or beneficiary under any such retirement system, and no member of or beneficiary under any such retirement system shall have any right to assign any benefit or allowance, or any part thereof, either by way of mortgage or otherwise; however, this prohibition shall not apply to assignments made for the payment of insurance premiums. The exemption from taxation contained herein shall not apply with respect to any tax on income.
66.81 History History: 1991 a. 316.
66.81 Annotation Although this section prohibits court order awarding portion of pension fund to nonemploye spouse, court may order employe spouse to make specific payout selection under the retirement plan. Marriage of Lindsey v. Lindsey, 140 W (2d) 684, 412 NW (2d) 132 (Ct. App. 1987).
66.82 66.82 Investment of retirement funds in 1st class cities. The board of any retirement system in a 1st class city, whose funds are independent of control by the investment board, shall have the power in addition to others provided to invest funds from the system, in excess of the amount of cash required for current operations, in loans, securities and any other investments authorized for investment of funds of the public employe trust fund under s. 25.17 (3) (a) and (4). The independent retirement system board shall be then subject to the conditions imposed on the investment board in making the investments under s. 25.17 (3) (e) to (g), (4), (7), (8) and (15) but is exempt from the operation of ch. 881. In addition to all other authority for the investment of funds granted to the board of any retirement system of a 1st class city whose funds are independent of the control of the investment board, the retirement system board of the city may invest its funds in accordance with s. 206.34, 1969 stats. In making investments under this section, the board of a retirement system of a 1st class city may invest in shares of investments authorized under this section.
66.82 History History: 1971 c. 41 s. 12; 1971 c. 260 s. 92 (4); 1981 c. 96; 1983 a. 283.
66.88 66.88 Definitions. In ss. 66.88 to 66.918:
66.88(1) (1) "Capital costs" means the cost of acquiring, purchasing, adding to, leasing, planning, designing, constructing, extending and improving all or any part of a sewerage system and of paying principal, interest or premiums on any indebtedness incurred for these purposes.
66.88(2) (2) "Combined sewer overflow abatement" means decreasing discharges of a combination of storm and sanitary wastewater or storm and industrial wastewater directly or indirectly to the waters of the state that occur when the volume of wastewater flow exceeds the transport capacity of a combined storm and sanitary sewer system.
66.88(3) (3) "Commission" means the metropolitan sewerage commission created under s. 66.882.
66.88(4) (4) "District" means the metropolitan sewerage district created under s. 66.882.
66.88(5) (5) "Interceptor sewer" means a sewer that:
66.88(5)(a) (a) Is constructed, maintained and operated by the district;
66.88(5)(b) (b) Is either a force main sanitary sewer with a diameter greater than 12 inches or a gravity flow sanitary sewer with a diameter greater than 24 inches; and
66.88(5)(c) (c) Performs any of the following functions:
66.88(5)(c)1. 1. Receives and conveys sanitary sewage from a sanitary sewage collection system directly or indirectly to a sewage treatment facility.
66.88(5)(c)2. 2. Temporarily collects and stores excessive sewage flow until existing treatment plant capacity is available.
66.88(6) (6) "Local sewer" means any sewer constructed, operated or maintained by any municipality. "Local sewer" does not include any sewer that has been incorporated into the sewerage system under s. 66.896 (2). If the classification of any sewer is unclear, the presumption shall be that the sewer is local.
66.88(7) (7) "Municipality" means any city, town, village, sanitary district organized under subch. IX of ch. 60 or metropolitan sewerage district organized under ss. 66.20 to 66.26 that is located wholly or partially within the district or that contracts for services under s. 66.898.
66.88(8) (8) "Operating costs" means the costs of controlling, operating, managing or maintaining the sewerage system. "Operating costs" also includes replacement costs.
66.88(9) (9) "Replacement costs" means the costs of obtaining and installing equipment, accessories or appurtenances that are necessary during the service life of the district's sewerage system to maintain the capacity and performance for which the sewerage system was designed and constructed.
66.88(10) (10) "Sewerage service area" means the area of the district and the area for which service is provided by contract under s. 66.898.
66.88(11) (11) "Sewerage system" means all facilities of the district for collection, transportation, storage, pumping, treatment and final disposition of sewage. "Sewerage system" does not include any private sewage system, as defined in s. 145.01 (12), or any local sewer.
66.88(12) (12) "User" means any owner or occupant of any building or lot that is located within the sewerage service area and is furnished with sewerage service.
66.88 History History: 1981 c. 282; 1983 a. 189 ss. 70, 329 (8); 1983 a. 532 s. 36.
66.88 Note NOTE: See ss. 62.175, 62.18 and 62.185 for other provisions relating to city sewers.
66.882 66.882 Establishing a district and a commission.
66.882(1)(1)Establishment by resolution or reorganization.
66.882(1)(a)(a) Except as provided in par. (b), a commission is established under ss. 66.88 to 66.918 if the common council of any 1st class city passes a resolution of necessity by a majority vote of the members-elect.
66.882(1)(b)1.1. On April 27, 1982, each metropolitan sewerage district organized under s. 59.96, 1979 stats., is reorganized as a district under ss. 66.88 to 66.918 and a commission is created under ss. 66.88 to 66.918.
66.882(1)(b)2. 2. Commencing in 1983, the district reorganized under this paragraph shall, on or before November 1, annually pay or provide for the payment to any county obligated on account of bonds or bond anticipation notes issued on behalf of a district under s. 59.96 (7), 1979 stats., an amount sufficient to pay the interest and principal falling due in the succeeding year on the bonds and notes pursuant to the original terms of the bonds and notes. The county shall deposit amounts paid to it under this subdivision in the debt service funds for the bonds and notes established under s. 67.11. The county shall pay to the district any surplus in a debt service fund remaining after the bonds or notes for which the debt service fund was created are paid.
66.882(2) (2)Composition of the commission. The commission is composed of 11 members, who are appointed as follows:
66.882(2)(a) (a) Except as provided in s. 66.884 (7), the mayor of the 1st class city shall appoint 7 individuals as members of the commission, each of whom shall have his or her principal residence in the 1st class city. Three of the commissioners appointed under this paragraph shall be elected officials. Each commissioner appointed under this paragraph may take his or her seat immediately upon appointment, pending confirmation or rejection by a majority of the members-elect of the common council. An appointee whose confirmation is pending may act within the scope of authority of a commissioner until the mayor withdraws the appointment or the common council rejects the appointment, whichever is earlier. The mayor shall withdraw any appointment that the common council rejects and may only resubmit the appointment for confirmation after at least one subsequent appointment is rejected. For the purposes of this paragraph, "elected official" means:
66.882(2)(a)1. 1. The mayor of the 1st class city.
66.882(2)(a)2. 2. Members of the common council of the 1st class city.
66.882(2)(a)3. 3. Members of the county board of supervisors of the county in which the 1st class city is located who reside in the city.
66.882(2)(a)4. 4. State legislators who reside in the 1st class city.
66.882(2)(a)5. 5. The city attorney, comptroller or treasurer of the 1st class city.
66.882(2)(a)6. 6. Members of the board of school directors in charge of the public schools of the 1st class city.
66.882(2)(b) (b) Except as provided in s. 66.884 (7), an executive council composed of the elected executive officer of each city, village and town that is wholly or partly within the boundaries of the district under s. 66.888 (1), except a 1st class city, shall appoint 4 members of the commission by a majority vote of the members of the executive council. Each of these members shall have his or her principal residence within the district but outside the 1st class city. Three of these members shall be elected officials. Each commissioner appointed under this paragraph may take his or her seat immediately upon appointment.
66.882(2)(c) (c) The mayor and the executive council shall appoint the members of a commission that governs a district created under sub. (1) within 90 days after the passage of the resolution under sub. (1) (a) or within 90 days after the reorganization under sub. (1) (b).
66.882 History History: 1981 c. 282; 1983 a. 27; 1983 a. 207 s. 93 (8).
66.884 66.884 Commissioners.
66.884(1)(1)Term.
66.884(1)(a)(a) Except as provided in par. (b) and sub. (8):
66.884(1)(a)1. 1. Each commissioner appointed by the mayor of the 1st class city under s. 66.882 (2) (a) who is not an elected officer serves for a 3-year term or until a successor is appointed, whichever is later.
66.884(1)(a)2. 2. Each commissioner appointed by the mayor of the 1st class city under s. 66.882 (2) (a) who is an elected officer serves for a one-year term or until a successor is appointed, whichever is later.
66.884(1)(a)3. 3. Each commissioner appointed by the executive council under s. 66.882 (2) (b) serves for a 3-year term or until a successor is appointed, whichever is later.
66.884(1)(b) (b) Each term commences on the 2nd Tuesday of July. No commissioner may serve more than 9 consecutive years.
66.884(1)(c) (c) Of the initial commissioners who are not elected officers appointed by the mayor of the 1st class city under s. 66.882 (2) (a), one commissioner has a term of one year, one commissioner has a term of 2 years and 2 commissioners have a term of 3 years. One of the initial commissioners appointed by the executive council under s. 66.882 (2) (b) has a term of one year, one of the initial commissioners has a term of 2 years and 2 of the initial commissioners have terms of 3 years.
66.884(2) (2)Successors. The mayor shall appoint successors to commissioners appointed under s. 66.882 (2) (a) and the executive council shall appoint successors to commissioners appointed under s. 66.882 (2) (b), as provided in s. 66.882. Each successor shall be appointed at least 6 weeks before the expiration of the preceding commissioner's term.
66.884(3) (3)Change of residence or loss of elected status. Any commissioner appointed under s. 66.882 (2) (a) who moves his or her principal residence outside the 1st class city and any commissioner appointed under s. 66.882 (2) (b) who moves his or her principal residence outside the district or into the 1st class city shall resign. Any commissioner who is an elected official and who is not reelected or who otherwise leaves the elected office may serve not more than an additional 90 days after leaving office or until a successor is appointed, whichever occurs first.
66.884(4) (4)Vacancies. Vacancies occurring during the term of any commissioner shall be filled as provided under s. 66.882, but only for the balance of the unexpired term. All vacancies shall be filled within 90 days. The balance of the unexpired term constitutes one term for the commissioner appointed to fill the vacancy. A commissioner appointed to fill a vacancy may be reappointed for subsequent full terms, as provided in sub. (1) (a).
66.884(5) (5)Oath of office. Before assuming the duties of the office, each commissioner shall take and subscribe the oath of office required under s. 19.01 and file the oath with the secretary of state, duly certified by the official administering the oath.
66.884(6) (6)Expenses; salary. Each commissioner, including any commissioner who serves as a member of the legislature, shall receive actual and necessary expenses incurred while in the performance of the duties of the office and, in addition, shall receive a salary in an amount the commission specifies by resolution. Any change in salary after its initial establishment applies only to subsequently appointed or reappointed commissioners. The salary shall be paid at the time and in the same manner that the salaries of employes of the commission are paid.
66.884(7) (7)Reapportionment.
66.884(7)(a)(a) Commencing in 1990, in the year immediately following the date when the federal decennial census of population becomes available in printed form, the commission shall reapportion the allocation of appointments between s. 66.882 (2) (a) and (b) to reflect as nearly as possible the proportionate populations within the district of the 1st class city and of the cities, villages and towns that are represented on the executive council. As part of its reapportionment the commission may increase the number of seats to not more than 13 and may decrease the number of seats to not less than 9.
66.884(7)(b) (b) If the commission fails to reapportion itself under par. (a), any municipality, any aggrieved person or any county in which the district is initially created may petition the circuit court for the county in which the district is initially created for an order compelling reapportionment. After reasonable notice to the commission the court may order reapportionment.
66.884(8) (8)Removal from office. Any commissioner appointed by the mayor under s. 66.882 (2) (a) may be removed by the mayor. Any commissioner appointed by the executive council under s. 66.882 (2) (b) may be removed by the same process as is used for appointment.
66.884 History History: 1981 c. 282; 1987 a. 417.
66.884 AnnotationSee note to 13.625, citing 78 Atty. Gen. 149.
66.886 66.886 Commission; organization.
66.886(1) (1)Quorum. Six commissioners constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. If after reapportionment under s. 66.884 (7) the number of commissioners is increased to 12 or 13, 7 commissioners constitute a quorum. If after reapportionment under s. 66.884 (7) the number of commissioners is reduced to 9 or 10, 5 commissioners constitute a quorum.
66.886(2) (2)Action concerning financing for the district.
66.886(2)(a)(a) Except as provided in par. (b):
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