Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

HF 980

2nd Unofficial Engrossment - 82nd Legislature (2001 - 2002) Posted on 12/15/2009 12:00am

KEY: stricken = removed, old language.
underscored = added, new language.
  1.1                          A bill for an act 
  1.2             relating to capital improvements; authorizing spending 
  1.3             to acquire and better public land and buildings and 
  1.4             other public improvements of a capital nature with 
  1.5             certain conditions; authorizing spending to improve 
  1.6             and rehabilitate railroad rights-of-way and other rail 
  1.7             facilities whether public or private; requiring 
  1.8             certain studies and reports; authorizing sale of state 
  1.9             bonds; appropriating money; amending Minnesota 
  1.10            Statutes 2000, sections 16A.11, subdivision 6; 
  1.11            16A.501; 16A.632, subdivision 2; 16A.86, subdivision 
  1.12            3; 16B.31, subdivision 1; 16B.33, by adding a 
  1.13            subdivision; 16B.335, subdivision 3; 85.019, 
  1.14            subdivisions 4a, 4c; 103F.205, subdivision 1; 
  1.15            115A.151; 135A.046, subdivision 2; 136F.16, 
  1.16            subdivision 3; 136F.60, subdivision 1; 446A.072, 
  1.17            subdivision 4; Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, 
  1.18            section 15, subdivision 4; Laws 2000, chapter 492, 
  1.19            article 1, section 22, subdivision 3, as amended; Laws 
  1.20            2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 22, subdivision 
  1.21            4; Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 27; Laws 
  1.22            2001, First Special Session chapter 12, section 10; 
  1.23            proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, 
  1.24            chapters 16C; 103F; 116J; 134; repealing Minnesota 
  1.25            Statutes 2000, sections 116J.561; 116J.562; 116J.563; 
  1.26            116J.564; 116J.565; 116J.566; 116J.567; 134.45; 
  1.27            136F.13. 
  1.28  BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: 
  1.29  Section 1.  [CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT APPROPRIATIONS.] 
  1.30     The sums in the column under "APPROPRIATIONS" are 
  1.31  appropriated from the bond proceeds fund, or another named fund, 
  1.32  to the state agencies or officials indicated, to be spent for 
  1.33  public purposes.  Appropriations of bond proceeds must be spent 
  1.34  as authorized by the Minnesota Constitution, article XI, section 
  1.35  5, paragraph (a), to acquire and better public land and 
  1.36  buildings and other public improvements of a capital nature, or 
  2.1   as authorized by article XI, section 5, paragraphs (b) to (j), 
  2.2   or article XIV.  Unless otherwise specified, the appropriations 
  2.3   in this act are available until the project is completed or 
  2.4   abandoned.  Appropriations for asset preservation are available 
  2.5   until June 30, 2004. 
  2.6                               SUMMARY 
  2.7   UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA                          $  219,101,000 
  2.8   MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES           266,563,000 
  2.9   PERPICH CENTER FOR ARTS EDUCATION                     3,155,000 
  2.10  CHILDREN, FAMILIES, AND LEARNING                     65,955,000 
  2.11  MINNESOTA STATE ACADEMIES                             4,896,000 
  2.12  NATURAL RESOURCES                                   117,172,000 
  2.13  POLLUTION CONTROL AGENCY                             11,500,000 
  2.14  OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ASSISTANCE                    3,450,000 
  2.15  BOARD OF WATER AND SOIL RESOURCES                    14,800,000 
  2.16  AGRICULTURE                                          15,292,000 
  2.17  ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS                                   10,184,000 
  2.18  ADMINISTRATION                                      104,467,000 
  2.19  CAPITOL AREA ARCHITECTURAL AND PLANNING BOARD         2,879,000 
  2.20  AMATEUR SPORTS COMMISSION                             6,250,000 
  2.21  ARTS                                                 36,500,000 
  2.22  MILITARY AFFAIRS                                      4,857,000 
  2.23  TRANSPORTATION                                       67,646,000 
  2.24  METROPOLITAN COUNCIL                                 28,000,000 
  2.25  COMMERCE                                              5,000,000 
  2.26  HEALTH                                                  775,000 
  2.27  HUMAN SERVICES                                       24,838,000 
  2.28  VETERANS HOMES BOARD                                 17,344,000 
  2.29  CORRECTIONS                                          31,843,000 
  2.30  TRADE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT                      116,375,000 
  2.31  IRON RANGE RESOURCES AND REHABILITATION               1,800,000 
  2.32  HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY                               10,000,000 
  2.33  MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY                          9,143,000 
  2.34  BOND SALE EXPENSES                                    1,066,000 
  2.35  CANCELLATIONS                                        (2,388,000)
  2.36  TOTAL                                            $1,198,463,000
  3.1   Bond Proceeds Fund
  3.2   (General Fund Debt Service)                       1,076,078,000
  3.3   Bond Proceeds Fund  
  3.4   (User Financed Debt Service)                        120,127,000 
  3.5   General Fund                                          4,646,000 
  3.6   General Fund Cancellations                           (2,388,000)
  3.7                                                    APPROPRIATIONS
  3.8                                                    $ 
  3.9   Sec. 2.  UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA 
  3.10  Subdivision 1.  To the board of regents
  3.11  of the University of Minnesota for the 
  3.12  purposes specified in this section                  219,101,000 
  3.13  Subd. 2.  Higher Education Asset
  3.14  Preservation and Replacement                         80,000,000 
  3.15  To be spent in accordance with 
  3.16  Minnesota Statutes, section 135A.046.  
  3.17  The unspent portion of an 
  3.18  appropriation, but not to exceed ten 
  3.19  percent of the appropriation, for a 
  3.20  project in this section that is 
  3.21  complete, is available for higher 
  3.22  education asset preservation and 
  3.23  replacement under this subdivision, at 
  3.24  the same campus as the project for 
  3.25  which the original appropriation was 
  3.26  made and the debt service requirement 
  3.27  under subdivision 9 is reduced 
  3.28  accordingly.  Minnesota Statutes, 
  3.29  section 16A.642, applies from the date 
  3.30  of the original appropriation to the 
  3.31  unspent amount transferred. 
  3.32  The board of regents may use the 
  3.33  design-build method for implementing 
  3.34  the Jones Hall project.  
  3.35  Subd. 3.  Twin Cities - Minneapolis                            
  3.36  (a) Nicholson Hall                                   24,000,000
  3.37  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  3.38  Nicholson Hall, including complete 
  3.39  renovation of the original building and 
  3.40  demolition of the 1925 wing and 1946 
  3.41  auditorium. 
  3.42  (b) Mineral Resources Research Center                16,400,000
  3.43  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  3.44  the Mineral Resources Research Center. 
  3.45  This appropriation is not available 
  3.46  until the commissioner of finance has 
  3.47  determined that at least $2,000,000 has 
  3.48  been committed from nonstate sources.  
  3.49  The board of regents may use the 
  3.50  design-build method for implementing 
  3.51  this project.  
  3.52  (c) Translational Research Facility                  24,700,000
  4.1   To design, construct, furnish, and 
  4.2   equip the Translational Research 
  4.3   Facility, an addition to the Lyons 
  4.4   Research Lab building on the 
  4.5   Minneapolis campus. 
  4.6   This appropriation is not available 
  4.7   until the commissioner of finance has 
  4.8   determined that at least $12,300,000 
  4.9   has been committed from nonstate 
  4.10  sources.  
  4.11  The board of regents may use the 
  4.12  design-build method for implementing 
  4.13  this project.  
  4.14  (d) Teaching and Technology
  4.15  Center                                                3,000,000
  4.16  To predesign and design a teaching and 
  4.17  technology center for the Institute of 
  4.18  Technology. 
  4.19  (e) Northrup Auditorium Renovation                    2,000,000
  4.20  To design the renovation of Northrup 
  4.21  Memorial Auditorium. 
  4.22  Subd. 4.  Twin Cities - St. Paul                               
  4.23  (a) Plant Growth Facilities - Phase 2                18,700,000
  4.24  To complete the containment greenhouse, 
  4.25  replace the teaching and research 
  4.26  greenhouses, demolish the northwest 
  4.27  greenhouses, and renovate the remaining 
  4.28  greenhouses to meet current code 
  4.29  requirements. 
  4.30  (b) Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory                  1,500,000
  4.31  To renovate and upgrade the veterinary 
  4.32  diagnostic laboratory to provide 
  4.33  additional laboratory space for a 
  4.34  veterinary molecular diagnostic 
  4.35  laboratory.  The renovation and upgrade 
  4.36  must include space for molecular 
  4.37  diagnostic testing for paratuberculosis 
  4.38  (Johne's disease), porcine reproductive 
  4.39  and respiratory syndrome virus in 
  4.40  swine, avian pneumovirus in turkeys, 
  4.41  bovine mastitis, and emerging and 
  4.42  foreign animal diseases. 
  4.43  Subd. 5.  Crookston                                            
  4.44  Replace Bede Hall                                     7,701,000
  4.45  To demolish Bede Hall and to design, 
  4.46  construct, furnish, and equip a 
  4.47  replacement facility. 
  4.48  Subd. 6.  Duluth     
  4.49  Laboratory Science Building                          25,500,000 
  4.50  To design, construct, furnish, and 
  4.51  equip a new laboratory science building 
  4.52  to meet the needs of the chemistry and 
  4.53  biology programs.  
  5.1   This appropriation is not available 
  5.2   until the commissioner of finance has 
  5.3   determined that at least $7,500,000 has 
  5.4   been committed from nonstate sources.  
  5.5   Subd. 7.  Morris                                      8,600,000
  5.6   To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  5.7   the social science building to correct 
  5.8   building code deficiencies, remodel the 
  5.9   interior, install new windows, upgrade 
  5.10  the building's mechanical and 
  5.11  electrical systems, replace the roof, 
  5.12  and construct an addition over the 
  5.13  existing auditorium wing to create 
  5.14  space for faculty offices, and to 
  5.15  install fire protection systems in 
  5.16  three student housing facilities. 
  5.17  This appropriation is not available 
  5.18  until the commissioner of finance has 
  5.19  determined that at least $400,000 has 
  5.20  been committed from nonstate sources. 
  5.21  Subd. 8.  Classroom Improvements                      4,000,000
  5.22  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  5.23  approximately 45 classrooms on all four 
  5.24  University of Minnesota campuses.  
  5.25  Projects will focus on installing basic 
  5.26  technology infrastructure, such as 
  5.27  video projection and Internet access, 
  5.28  improving disability access, and making 
  5.29  basic improvements to enhance the 
  5.30  classroom learning environment. 
  5.31  Priority must be given to high-use 
  5.32  undergraduate classrooms. 
  5.33  Subd. 9.  Research and Outreach        
  5.34  Centers                                               3,000,000
  5.35  To acquire land and design, construct, 
  5.36  furnish and equip facilities at 
  5.37  research and outreach centers.  
  5.38  Projects funded by this appropriation 
  5.39  include: 
  5.40  (1) construction of research laboratory 
  5.41  and office space at the Northwest ROC 
  5.42  at Crookston; 
  5.43  (2) construction of an addition to the 
  5.44  aspen/larch genetics laboratory at the 
  5.45  North Central ROC at Grand Rapids and 
  5.46  acquisition of land for the development 
  5.47  of two test planting sites to conduct 
  5.48  research on fast growing trees; 
  5.49  (3) construction of a building at the 
  5.50  North Central ROC at Grand Rapids to 
  5.51  accommodate the farm machinery repair, 
  5.52  maintenance, and carpentry shops; and 
  5.53  (4) construction of an addition to the 
  5.54  administration building at the Southern 
  5.55  ROC at Waseca. 
  5.56  Subd. 10.  Debt Service
  5.57  (a) The board of regents shall pay the 
  5.58  debt service on one-third of the 
  6.1   principal amount of state bonds sold to 
  6.2   finance projects authorized by this 
  6.3   section, except for higher education 
  6.4   asset preservation and replacement, and 
  6.5   except that, where a nonstate match is 
  6.6   required, the debt service is due on a 
  6.7   principal amount equal to one-third of 
  6.8   the total project cost, less the match 
  6.9   committed before the bonds are sold. 
  6.10  After each sale of general obligation 
  6.11  bonds, the commissioner of finance 
  6.12  shall notify the board of regents of 
  6.13  the amounts assessed for each year for 
  6.14  the life of the bonds. 
  6.15  (b) The commissioner shall reduce the 
  6.16  board's assessment each year by 
  6.17  one-third of the net income from 
  6.18  investment of general obligation bond 
  6.19  proceeds in proportion to the amount of 
  6.20  principal and interest otherwise 
  6.21  required to be paid by the board.  The 
  6.22  board shall pay its resulting net 
  6.23  assessment to the commissioner of 
  6.24  finance by December 1 each year.  If 
  6.25  the board fails to make a payment when 
  6.26  due, the commissioner of finance shall 
  6.27  reduce allotments for appropriations 
  6.28  from the general fund otherwise 
  6.29  available to the board and apply the 
  6.30  amount of the reduction to cover the 
  6.31  missed debt service payment.  The 
  6.32  commissioner of finance shall credit 
  6.33  the payments received from the board to 
  6.34  the bond debt service account in the 
  6.35  state bond fund each December 1 before 
  6.36  money is transferred from the general 
  6.37  fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 
  6.38  16A.641, subdivision 10. 
  6.39  Subd. 11.  Minnesota Goods and Services                        
  6.40  The board of regents of the University 
  6.41  of Minnesota shall make a reasonable 
  6.42  attempt to give preference to 
  6.43  construction contractors who employ 
  6.44  Minnesota residents and to purchase 
  6.45  products manufactured in Minnesota for 
  6.46  use in construction projects undertaken 
  6.47  through a design-build process. 
  6.48  Sec. 3.  MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND 
  6.49  UNIVERSITIES 
  6.50  Subdivision 1.  To the board of trustees
  6.51  of the Minnesota state colleges and 
  6.52  universities for the purposes specified in 
  6.53  this section                                        266,563,000
  6.54  Subd. 2.  Higher Education Asset
  6.55  Preservation and Replacement                         35,885,000
  6.56  This appropriation is for the purposes 
  6.57  specified in Minnesota Statutes, 
  6.58  section 135A.046, including safety and 
  6.59  statutory compliance, envelope 
  6.60  integrity, mechanical systems, and 
  6.61  space restoration.  
  6.62  The unspent portion of an 
  6.63  appropriation, but not to exceed ten 
  7.1   percent of the appropriation, for a 
  7.2   project in this section that is 
  7.3   complete, is available for higher 
  7.4   education asset preservation and 
  7.5   replacement under this subdivision, at 
  7.6   the same campus as the project for 
  7.7   which the original appropriation was 
  7.8   made and the debt service requirement 
  7.9   under subdivision 23 is reduced 
  7.10  accordingly.  Minnesota Statutes, 
  7.11  section 16A.642, applies from the date 
  7.12  of the original appropriation to the 
  7.13  unspent amount transferred. 
  7.14  Subd. 3.  Roof Replacement                           33,264,000
  7.15  To replace roofs in accordance with 
  7.16  Minnesota Statutes, section 135A.046. 
  7.17  Subd. 4.  Mechanical, Electrical,
  7.18  and Infrastructure Systems                           30,851,000 
  7.19  To replace major mechanical, 
  7.20  electrical, and infrastructure systems 
  7.21  in accordance with Minnesota Statutes, 
  7.22  section 135A.046. 
  7.23  Subd. 5.  Alexandria Technical College                9,150,000 
  7.24  To construct, furnish, and equip a 
  7.25  smart classroom and computer laboratory 
  7.26  building, including an auditorium, 
  7.27  connected to the college's office 
  7.28  education building. 
  7.29  Subd. 6.  Bemidji State University                    1,000,000 
  7.30  To design the colocation of the 
  7.31  emerging technologies and health care 
  7.32  programs of Bemidji state university 
  7.33  and Northwest technical college. 
  7.34  Subd. 7.  Century Community and        
  7.35  Technical College                                     1,500,000
  7.36  To purchase the transition wing of 
  7.37  intermediate district No. 916 and 
  7.38  design renovation of space for 
  7.39  expansion of the computer center, 
  7.40  offices, and smart classrooms. 
  7.41  Subd. 8.  Dakota Technical College                      500,000
  7.42  To design the renovation of the west 
  7.43  side of the main campus facility to 
  7.44  create an information technology and 
  7.45  telecommunications center of excellence 
  7.46  and an integrated library and library 
  7.47  information technology center. 
  7.48  Subd. 9.  Fergus Falls                 
  7.49  Community College                                       760,000
  7.50  To design, construct, furnish, and 
  7.51  equip an expansion of the existing 
  7.52  maintenance shop. 
  7.53  To design an addition to link 
  7.54  Administration and Fine Arts to provide 
  7.55  a one-stop student service shop, smart 
  7.56  classrooms, open computer laboratories; 
  8.1   design renovation to provide space for 
  8.2   technology support next to the library; 
  8.3   and design asset preservation work. 
  8.4   Subd. 10.  Hennepin Technical College                 3,500,000
  8.5   To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  8.6   existing space at the Brooklyn Park and 
  8.7   Eden Prairie campuses and realign the 
  8.8   driveway at Brooklyn Park. 
  8.9   Subd. 11.  Inver Hills                  
  8.10  Community College                                       500,000
  8.11  To design renovation of existing space 
  8.12  and construction of an addition to 
  8.13  create a one-stop student services 
  8.14  shop; enlarge and colocate central 
  8.15  services, the bookstore, and a new 
  8.16  loading dock; upgrade mechanical 
  8.17  systems; and provide a welcoming front 
  8.18  door and help desk for the campus. 
  8.19  Subd. 12.  Lake Superior Community      
  8.20  and Technical College                                   700,000
  8.21  To design a student center addition to 
  8.22  house a consolidated system of student 
  8.23  services, smart classrooms, and open 
  8.24  laboratories. 
  8.25  Subd. 13.  Metropolitan State
  8.26  University                                           17,442,000
  8.27  To construct, furnish, and equip a 
  8.28  library and information access center. 
  8.29  This appropriation is not available 
  8.30  until the commissioner of finance has 
  8.31  determined that at least $2,504,000 has 
  8.32  been committed from nonstate sources.  
  8.33  Subd. 14.  Minneapolis Community
  8.34  and Technical College                                19,000,000
  8.35  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  8.36  the former technical and community 
  8.37  college buildings and to provide space 
  8.38  to begin to colocate Metropolitan State 
  8.39  University classrooms, offices, and 
  8.40  student service areas and to purchase 
  8.41  adjacent property that would also meet 
  8.42  the expansion and colocation needs of 
  8.43  MCTC and Metropolitan State University. 
  8.44  Subd. 15.  Minnesota State University - 
  8.45  Mankato - Phase 3                                     8,400,000
  8.46  To renovate, furnish, and equip Otto 
  8.47  Arena and adjacent areas to provide a 
  8.48  student fitness facility. 
  8.49  Subd. 16.  Minnesota West Community and
  8.50  Technical College at Worthington                      6,300,000
  8.51  To design, construct, furnish, and 
  8.52  equip a one-stop student services shop 
  8.53  and welcome counter addition. 
  8.54  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  8.55  two science laboratories and associated 
  9.1   preparation, storage, and office spaces.
  9.2   To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.3   consolidated nursing and allied health 
  9.4   department and other classroom spaces. 
  9.5   Subd. 17.  Minnesota State University - 
  9.6   Moorhead                                             18,955,000
  9.7   To construct, furnish, and equip a new 
  9.8   science laboratory and auditorium 
  9.9   addition to Hagen Hall. 
  9.10  Subd. 18.  Normandale Community 
  9.11  College                                               9,900,000
  9.12  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.13  the vacated science laboratories. 
  9.14  Subd. 19.  Northeast Higher Education  
  9.15  District - Virginia                                   5,496,000
  9.16  To design, renovate, and equip science 
  9.17  laboratories, a learning resource 
  9.18  center, a student commons, and 
  9.19  classrooms, including technology 
  9.20  equipped classrooms, and construct new 
  9.21  loading dock and driveway. 
  9.22  Subd. 20.  Northwest Technical College -     
  9.23  Moorhead Campus                                       5,400,000
  9.24  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.25  existing facilities and design, 
  9.26  construct, furnish, and equip an allied 
  9.27  health and applied technology 
  9.28  laboratory and support facilities. 
  9.29  Subd. 21.  Ridgewater Community and
  9.30  Technical College                                     2,880,000
  9.31  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.32  existing chemistry, physics, and 
  9.33  biology laboratories and convert a 
  9.34  classroom into a geology laboratory on 
  9.35  the Willmar campus.  
  9.36  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.37  interior space to convert obsolete 
  9.38  applied laboratory space on the 
  9.39  Hutchinson campus into chemistry, 
  9.40  physics, and biology laboratories. 
  9.41  Subd. 22.  South Central Technical                              
  9.42  College                                                  300,000
  9.43  To design renovation of teaching 
  9.44  laboratories at the North Mankato 
  9.45  campus and design asset preservation at 
  9.46  the Faribault campus. 
  9.47  Subd. 23.  Southeast Technical College                  580,000
  9.48  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
  9.49  a one-stop student services area and 
  9.50  workforce center entrance at Winona. 
  9.51  To design the renovation of a one-stop 
  9.52  student services areas and student 
  9.53  center entrance at Red Wing. 
 10.1   Subd. 24.  Southwest State University                          
 10.2   (a) Library                                           9,200,000
 10.3   To renovate and reconfigure, furnish, 
 10.4   and equip the library and construct a 
 10.5   new entrance. 
 10.6   (b) Fire Damage                                         500,000
 10.7   To replace and repair facilities at 
 10.8   Southwest state university that were 
 10.9   destroyed or damaged by a fire on 
 10.10  January 2, 2002.  The appropriation 
 10.11  must be used to augment insurance 
 10.12  settlements to design, construct, 
 10.13  furnish, and equip a food service 
 10.14  building at Southwest state university 
 10.15  in Marshall, Minnesota, and for repairs 
 10.16  of other campus facilities damaged by 
 10.17  the fire. 
 10.18  Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, 
 10.19  section 16B.33, or any other law, the 
 10.20  board may use a design-build method of 
 10.21  project development and construction 
 10.22  for this project.  The board may award 
 10.23  a design-build contract on the basis of 
 10.24  requests for proposals or a two-step 
 10.25  request for qualifications followed by 
 10.26  request for proposals without taking 
 10.27  bids.  
 10.28  Subd. 25.  St. Cloud State University                10,000,000 
 10.29  To design the renovation of Centennial 
 10.30  Hall and to renovate, furnish, and 
 10.31  equip phase 1 of the renovation of 
 10.32  Centennial Hall and its conversion from 
 10.33  library to classroom use and to design 
 10.34  the code correction and renovation of 
 10.35  Riverview Hall. 
 10.36  Subd. 26.  St. Cloud Technical College                  700,000
 10.37  To design the construction of a 
 10.38  multistory building connected to the 
 10.39  existing facility and the renovation of 
 10.40  part of "G" wing. 
 10.41  Subd. 27.  Winona State University                   30,000,000
 10.42  To design, construct, furnish, and 
 10.43  equip a new science building to serve 
 10.44  programs in biology, chemistry, 
 10.45  geoscience, physics, nursing, health 
 10.46  sciences, engineering, and K-12 science 
 10.47  teacher preparation. 
 10.48  Subd. 28.  Science Lab Renovations                    1,900,000
 10.49  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
 10.50  science laboratories at the campuses of 
 10.51  Southeast technical college at Winona 
 10.52  and Red Wing, Minnesota West at Canby 
 10.53  and Worthington, Minneapolis community 
 10.54  and technical college, and South 
 10.55  Central technical college at Faribault. 
 10.56  Subd. 29.  Land Acquisition                           2,000,000
 11.1   To acquire real property adjacent to or 
 11.2   near the state college and university 
 11.3   campuses from willing sellers. 
 11.4   Subd. 30.  Debt Service
 11.5   (a) The board shall pay the debt 
 11.6   service on one-third of the principal 
 11.7   amount of state bonds sold to finance 
 11.8   projects authorized by this section, 
 11.9   except for higher education asset 
 11.10  preservation and replacement in 
 11.11  subdivisions 2, 3, and 4, and except 
 11.12  that, where a nonstate match is 
 11.13  required, the debt service is due on a 
 11.14  principal amount equal to one-third of 
 11.15  the total project cost, less the match 
 11.16  committed before the bonds are sold. 
 11.17  After each sale of general obligation 
 11.18  bonds, the commissioner of finance 
 11.19  shall notify the board of the amounts 
 11.20  assessed for each year for the life of 
 11.21  the bonds. 
 11.22  (b) The commissioner shall reduce the 
 11.23  board's assessment each year by 
 11.24  one-third of the net income from 
 11.25  investment of general obligation bond 
 11.26  proceeds in proportion to the amount of 
 11.27  principal and interest otherwise 
 11.28  required to be paid by the board.  The 
 11.29  board shall pay its resulting net 
 11.30  assessment to the commissioner of 
 11.31  finance by December 1 each year.  If 
 11.32  the board fails to make a payment when 
 11.33  due, the commissioner of finance shall 
 11.34  reduce allotments for appropriations 
 11.35  from the general fund otherwise 
 11.36  available to the board and apply the 
 11.37  amount of the reduction to cover the 
 11.38  missed debt service payment.  The 
 11.39  commissioner of finance shall credit 
 11.40  the payments received from the board to 
 11.41  the bond debt service account in the 
 11.42  state bond fund each December 1 before 
 11.43  money is transferred from the general 
 11.44  fund under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 11.45  16A.641, subdivision 10. 
 11.46  Sec. 4.  PERPICH CENTER FOR ARTS EDUCATION 
 11.47  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner
 11.48  of administration for the purposes
 11.49  specified in this section                             3,155,000
 11.50  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                            643,000 
 11.51  For asset preservation capital 
 11.52  improvements on the campus, including 
 11.53  east wing climate control improvements, 
 11.54  ceiling replacements, centerwide 
 11.55  asbestos removal, flooring 
 11.56  replacements, and water pipe 
 11.57  replacement. 
 11.58  Subd. 3.  Performance Hall Catwalk                      125,000
 11.59  To design and construct a lighting 
 11.60  catwalk along the east wall of the 
 11.61  performance hall. 
 12.1   Subd. 4.  Renovate                     
 12.2   Food Service Kitchen                                    570,000
 12.3   To remove and upgrade kitchen 
 12.4   equipment, including cooking equipment, 
 12.5   counters, freezers, coolers, 
 12.6   dishwashers, plumbing, heating, 
 12.7   ventilating, air conditioning, fire 
 12.8   protection, electrical power 
 12.9   distribution, and lighting and to 
 12.10  create more room for the food service 
 12.11  line and expand the type of services 
 12.12  offered. 
 12.13  Subd. 5.  Repair and Maintenance 
 12.14  Building                                               1,817,000
 12.15  To demolish the existing storage 
 12.16  facilities and predesign, design, 
 12.17  construct, furnish, and equip a new 
 12.18  maintenance building. 
 12.19  Sec. 5.  CHILDREN, FAMILIES, AND LEARNING 
 12.20  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of
 12.21  children, families, and learning for the
 12.22  purposes specified in this section                   65,955,000
 12.23  Subd. 2.  Maximum Effort Capital                                
 12.24  Loans                                                          
 12.25  This appropriation is from the maximum 
 12.26  effort school loan fund for capital 
 12.27  loans to school districts as provided 
 12.28  in Minnesota Statutes, sections 126C.60 
 12.29  to 126C.72.  Capital loans to the 
 12.30  recipient school districts are approved 
 12.31  in the following amounts: 
 12.32  Independent School District No. 38,
 12.33  Red Lake                                             20,255,000
 12.34  To design, construct, renovate, 
 12.35  furnish, and equip school facilities, 
 12.36  and for health and safety capital 
 12.37  improvements to schools. 
 12.38  Up to $500,000 of this appropriation is 
 12.39  for facilities planning.  Any unused 
 12.40  portion of the $500,000 for facilities 
 12.41  planning may be spent for health and 
 12.42  safety capital improvements to the high 
 12.43  school and middle school. 
 12.44  The commissioner shall review the 
 12.45  proposed plan and budget of the project 
 12.46  and may reduce the amount of the loan 
 12.47  to ensure that the project will be 
 12.48  economical.  The commissioner may 
 12.49  recover the cost incurred by the 
 12.50  commissioner for any professional 
 12.51  services associated with the final 
 12.52  review and construction by reducing the 
 12.53  proceeds of the loan paid by the 
 12.54  district.  The commissioner shall 
 12.55  report to the legislature any 
 12.56  reductions to the appropriations in 
 12.57  this subdivision by January 10, 2003.  
 12.58  Subd. 3.  Metropolitan Magnet Schools                           
 13.1   For grants in accordance with the 
 13.2   metropolitan magnet school grant 
 13.3   program under Minnesota Statutes, 
 13.4   section 124D.88. 
 13.5   Southwest Integration Magnet School                   4,000,000
 13.6   For a grant to the West Metro Education 
 13.7   Program joint powers board to acquire 
 13.8   land, prepare a site, predesign, and 
 13.9   design a new building for the Southwest 
 13.10  Integration Magnet School in St. Louis 
 13.11  Park, to serve a population of 
 13.12  approximately 500 kindergarten through 
 13.13  grade 8 students. 
 13.14  Subd. 4.  Mighty Books                 
 13.15  Grant Program                                         1,000,000
 13.16  For the Mighty Books grant program 
 13.17  under new Minnesota Statutes, section 
 13.18  134.51. 
 13.19  Subd. 5.  Minnesota         
 13.20  Planetarium                                          20,000,000
 13.21  For a grant to the city of Minneapolis 
 13.22  to construct, furnish, and equip a new 
 13.23  Minnesota planetarium. 
 13.24  This appropriation is not available 
 13.25  until the commissioner has determined 
 13.26  that at least an equal amount has been 
 13.27  committed from nonstate sources.  
 13.28  Subd. 6.  Community Centers                                    
 13.29  (a) Asian Community Center                            2,500,000
 13.30  For a grant to the city of St. Paul to 
 13.31  design, construct, furnish, and equip 
 13.32  an Asian community center. 
 13.33  This appropriation is not available 
 13.34  until the commissioner has determined 
 13.35  that an equal amount has been committed 
 13.36  from nonstate sources.  
 13.37  (b) Colin Powell Youth 
 13.38  Leadership Center                                       700,000
 13.39  For a grant to Hennepin county to 
 13.40  acquire land for and to design, 
 13.41  construct, furnish, and equip the Colin 
 13.42  Powell Youth Leadership center in 
 13.43  Minneapolis.  The center will include a 
 13.44  national guard drill area, an education 
 13.45  wing, including a computer lab, a 
 13.46  multipurpose arts facility, a community 
 13.47  education space, a nutrition education 
 13.48  and cooking skills work-preparation 
 13.49  area, and four new basketball courts. 
 13.50  This appropriation is not available 
 13.51  until the commissioner has determined 
 13.52  that an equal amount has been committed 
 13.53  from nonstate sources. 
 13.54  (c) Neighborhood House/
 13.55  El Rio Vista                                          2,500,000
 14.1   For a grant to the city of St. Paul to 
 14.2   acquire land for and to design, 
 14.3   construct, furnish, and equip an 
 14.4   expansion of Neighborhood House/El Rio 
 14.5   Vista. 
 14.6   This appropriation is not available 
 14.7   until the commissioner has determined 
 14.8   that an equal amount has been committed 
 14.9   from nonstate sources.  
 14.10  Subd. 7.  Trollwood                    
 14.11  Performing Arts School                                5,500,000
 14.12  For a grant to the city of Moorhead to 
 14.13  acquire land for and to design, 
 14.14  construct, furnish, and equip Trollwood 
 14.15  Arts Village in the city of Moorhead. 
 14.16  This appropriation is not available 
 14.17  until the commissioner has determined 
 14.18  that an equal amount has been committed 
 14.19  from nonstate sources.  
 14.20  Subd. 8.  Youth Enrichment
 14.21  Grants                                                3,000,000
 14.22  For grants to local government units to 
 14.23  design, furnish, equip, renovate, 
 14.24  replace, or construct parks and 
 14.25  recreation facilities and school 
 14.26  facilities, including soccer fields, to 
 14.27  provide youth, with preference for 
 14.28  youth in grades 4 through 8, with 
 14.29  regular enrichment activities during 
 14.30  nonschool hours, including after 
 14.31  school, evenings, weekends, and school 
 14.32  vacation periods, and that will provide 
 14.33  equal access and programming for all 
 14.34  children.  Provided there are 
 14.35  sufficient applications, 50 percent of 
 14.36  this appropriation may only be spent in 
 14.37  accordance with the recommendations of 
 14.38  the Minnesota amateur sports 
 14.39  commission.  The buildings or 
 14.40  facilities may be leased to nonprofit 
 14.41  community organizations, subject to 
 14.42  Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.695, 
 14.43  for the same purposes.  Enrichment 
 14.44  programs include academic enrichment, 
 14.45  homework assistance, computer and 
 14.46  technology use, arts and cultural 
 14.47  activities, clubs, school-to-work and 
 14.48  workforce development, athletic, and 
 14.49  recreational activities.  Grants must 
 14.50  be used to expand the number of 
 14.51  children participating in enrichment 
 14.52  programs or improve the quality or 
 14.53  range of program offerings.  The 
 14.54  facilities must be fully available for 
 14.55  programming sponsored by nonprofit and 
 14.56  community groups serving youth, or 
 14.57  school, county, or city programs, for 
 14.58  maximum hours after school, evenings, 
 14.59  weekends, summers, and other school 
 14.60  vacation periods.  Priority must be 
 14.61  given to proposals that demonstrate 
 14.62  collaborations among political 
 14.63  subdivisions, private, nonprofit, and 
 14.64  public agencies, including regional 
 14.65  entities dealing with at-risk youth, 
 15.1   and community and parent organizations 
 15.2   in arranging for programming, staffing, 
 15.3   transportation, and equipment.  All 
 15.4   proposals must include an inventory of 
 15.5   existing facilities and an assessment 
 15.6   of programming needs in the community.  
 15.7   In awarding these grants, the 
 15.8   commissioner shall consider the 
 15.9   regional distributions required in Laws 
 15.10  1996, chapter 463, section 4, 
 15.11  subdivision 2.  Priority must be given 
 15.12  to school attendance areas with high 
 15.13  concentrations of children eligible for 
 15.14  free or reduced school lunch and to 
 15.15  government units demonstrating a 
 15.16  commitment to collaborative youth 
 15.17  efforts. 
 15.18  Subd. 9.  Early Childhood Learning                              
 15.19  and Child Protection Facilities                       5,000,000 
 15.20  For grants to construct or rehabilitate 
 15.21  facilities for programs under Minnesota 
 15.22  Statutes, section 119A.45. 
 15.23  Subd. 10.  Agriculture and             
 15.24  Food Sciences Academy                                 1,000,000
 15.25  To prepare a site for and to design the 
 15.26  agriculture and food science academy in 
 15.27  Ramsey county. 
 15.28  Subd. 11.  Library for the Blind
 15.29  Renovation                                              500,000 
 15.30  To design the renovation and expansion 
 15.31  of the Minnesota library for the blind 
 15.32  and physically handicapped. 
 15.33  Sec. 6.  MINNESOTA STATE ACADEMIES 
 15.34  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner
 15.35  of administration for the purposes
 15.36  specified in this section                             4,896,000
 15.37  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                          2,000,000 
 15.38  For asset preservation capital 
 15.39  improvements on both campuses of the 
 15.40  Minnesota state academies for the deaf 
 15.41  and the blind, including, but not 
 15.42  limited to, general asset preservation, 
 15.43  roof replacement, improvements to 
 15.44  heating and ventilation systems, 
 15.45  purchase of an emergency generator, and 
 15.46  demolition of West Cottage.  
 15.47  Subd. 3.  West Wing Noyes Hall -       
 15.48  Phase 2                                               2,896,000
 15.49  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
 15.50  the middle section of the building that 
 15.51  connects the east and west wings. 
 15.52  Sec. 7.  NATURAL RESOURCES 
 15.53  Subdivision 1.  To the 
 15.54  commissioner of natural resources 
 15.55  for the purposes specified
 15.56  in this section                                     117,172,000
 16.1   Subd. 2.  Statewide Asset Preservation                2,900,000 
 16.2   For asset preservation improvements and 
 16.3   betterments at department of natural 
 16.4   resources buildings statewide, 
 16.5   including removal of life safety 
 16.6   hazards and structural defects; 
 16.7   elimination or containment of hazardous 
 16.8   materials; code compliance 
 16.9   improvements; accessibility 
 16.10  improvements; replacement or renovation 
 16.11  of roofs, windows, tuckpointing, and 
 16.12  structural members; and improvements 
 16.13  necessary to preserve the interior and 
 16.14  exterior of buildings and other 
 16.15  infrastructure.  The commissioner shall 
 16.16  determine project priorities as 
 16.17  appropriate based upon need. 
 16.18  The unspent portion of an 
 16.19  appropriation, but not to exceed ten 
 16.20  percent of the appropriation, for a 
 16.21  project in this section that is 
 16.22  complete, is available for asset 
 16.23  preservation.  Minnesota Statutes, 
 16.24  section 16A.642, applies from the date 
 16.25  of the original appropriation to the 
 16.26  unspent amount transferred. 
 16.27  Subd. 3.  Field Office Renovations                    4,000,000 
 16.28  To design, acquire, renovate, 
 16.29  construct, furnish, and equip field 
 16.30  offices to relieve substandard employee 
 16.31  working conditions in existing 
 16.32  facilities.  Field offices to be 
 16.33  improved include:  Warroad regional 
 16.34  headquarters, metro regional 
 16.35  headquarters, Talcot Lake wildlife 
 16.36  management area, Little Fork forestry, 
 16.37  Hill City forestry, and Montrose 
 16.38  fisheries. 
 16.39  Subd. 4.  Office Facility Development                 4,600,000 
 16.40  To acquire, design, construct, furnish, 
 16.41  and equip consolidated area offices and 
 16.42  service facilities at Grand Marais and 
 16.43  Thief River Falls. 
 16.44  Subd. 5.  ADA Compliance                              1,000,000 
 16.45  For improvements and betterments of a 
 16.46  capital nature to remove barriers and 
 16.47  make department of natural resources 
 16.48  buildings, programs, and services 
 16.49  accessible to individuals with 
 16.50  disabilities, in compliance with state 
 16.51  and federal ADA guidelines. 
 16.52  Subd. 6.  State Park Initiative                      32,500,000
 16.53  For building, utility, and natural 
 16.54  resource projects within the Minnesota 
 16.55  state park system according to the 
 16.56  management plan required in Minnesota 
 16.57  Statutes, chapter 86A, as follows:  
 16.58  (1) to design, renovate, construct, 
 16.59  furnish, and equip state park 
 16.60  buildings; and 
 17.1   (2) to design, renovate, furnish, and 
 17.2   equip capital facilities at state 
 17.3   parks, state recreation areas, and 
 17.4   forest recreation areas, including, but 
 17.5   not limited to, roads, trails, bridges, 
 17.6   campgrounds, and utility systems. 
 17.7   This appropriation must be used to 
 17.8   substantially implement the master plan 
 17.9   for improvements dated June 23, 1997, 
 17.10  for the historic golf course at Fort 
 17.11  Ridgely state park. 
 17.12  $1,600,000 is to develop the Big Bog 
 17.13  state recreation area, including 
 17.14  constructing, furnishing, and equipping 
 17.15  a visitors center. 
 17.16  $2,900,000 is to develop the Red River 
 17.17  state recreation area. 
 17.18  Subd. 7.  State Park and Recreation Area
 17.19  Acquisition                                           4,000,000 
 17.20  For acquisition of land under Minnesota 
 17.21  Statutes, section 86A.05, subdivision 
 17.22  2, from willing sellers of private 
 17.23  lands within state park and recreation 
 17.24  area boundaries established by law.  
 17.25  Subd. 8.  Metro Regional Park Acquisition    
 17.26  and Betterment                                       10,000,000
 17.27  This appropriation is for a grant to 
 17.28  the metropolitan council.  The 
 17.29  commissioner shall pay the amount on a 
 17.30  reimbursement basis to the metropolitan 
 17.31  council upon receipt of a certified 
 17.32  copy of a council resolution requesting 
 17.33  payment.  The appropriation must be 
 17.34  used to pay the cost of rehabilitation, 
 17.35  acquisition, and development by the 
 17.36  council and local government units of 
 17.37  regional recreational open-space lands 
 17.38  in accordance with the council's policy 
 17.39  plan as provided in Minnesota Statutes, 
 17.40  section 473.315.  This appropriation 
 17.41  must not be used for research, 
 17.42  planning, administration, or tax 
 17.43  equivalency payments.  This 
 17.44  appropriation may be used for the 
 17.45  purchase of homes only if the purchases 
 17.46  are included in the work program 
 17.47  required by law and they are expressly 
 17.48  approved by the legislative commission 
 17.49  on Minnesota resources. 
 17.50  Subd. 9.  St. Cloud Regional 
 17.51  Parks and Trails                                      1,000,000
 17.52  For a grant to the St. Cloud regional 
 17.53  parks and trails coordinating board for 
 17.54  capital improvements to sites under its 
 17.55  jurisdiction.  
 17.56  This appropriation is not available 
 17.57  until the commissioner has determined 
 17.58  that an equal amount has been committed 
 17.59  from nonstate sources.  
 17.60  Money from this appropriation must 
 18.1   comply with the central Minnesota 
 18.2   regional parks and trails plan created 
 18.3   under Minnesota Statutes, section 85.50.
 18.4   Subd. 10.  Como Park Conservatory                      2,700,000
 18.5   For a grant to the metropolitan council 
 18.6   to complete restoration of the Como 
 18.7   Park conservatory.  The project must 
 18.8   include restoration of the fern room 
 18.9   and construction of a bonsai collection 
 18.10  space, an orchid growing and display 
 18.11  house, and a children's activity zone, 
 18.12  as well as corridors and connections to 
 18.13  the education resource building. 
 18.14  Subd. 11.  Forest Road and Bridge 
 18.15  Projects                                              1,200,000 
 18.16  For reconstruction, resurfacing, 
 18.17  replacement, or construction of other 
 18.18  improvements of a capital nature to 
 18.19  state forest roads and bridges 
 18.20  throughout the state under Minnesota 
 18.21  Statutes, section 89.002.  The 
 18.22  commissioner shall determine project 
 18.23  priorities as appropriate based on need.
 18.24  Subd. 12.  Reforestation                              1,500,000
 18.25  For improvements authorized under the 
 18.26  Minnesota Constitution, article XI, 
 18.27  section 5, clause (f).  To increase 
 18.28  reforestation activities to meet the 
 18.29  reforestation requirements of Minnesota 
 18.30  Statutes, section 89.002, subdivision 
 18.31  2, including planting, seeding, site 
 18.32  preparation, purchasing tree seeds and 
 18.33  seedlings, improving forest stands, and 
 18.34  protecting plantations. 
 18.35  Subd. 13.  State Forest Land Acquisition                500,000 
 18.36  To acquire private lands from willing 
 18.37  sellers within established boundaries 
 18.38  of state forests throughout the state 
 18.39  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 18.40  86A.05, subdivision 7. 
 18.41  Subd. 14.  State Trail Acquisition     
 18.42  and Development                                       3,800,000
 18.43  To acquire, develop, and renovate state 
 18.44  trails as specified in Minnesota 
 18.45  Statutes, section 85.015. 
 18.46  $475,000 is for the Goodhue Pioneer 
 18.47  trail. 
 18.48  $725,000 is for the Gitchi-Gami trail. 
 18.49  $450,000 is for the Shooting Star trail.
 18.50  $300,000 is for the Willard Munger 
 18.51  trail.  
 18.52  $300,000 is for the Luce Line trail. 
 18.53  $300,000 is for the Douglas trail. 
 18.54  $750,000 is for a grant to the city of 
 19.1   Austin to acquire land for the Blazing 
 19.2   Star trail. 
 19.3   $500,000 is to connect the portions of 
 19.4   the Paul Bunyan trail in the city of 
 19.5   Bemidji, including constructing an 
 19.6   underpass.  This appropriation is not 
 19.7   available until the commissioner has 
 19.8   determined that an equal amount has 
 19.9   been committed by the city of Bemidji.  
 19.10  Subd. 15.  Regional Trail Grants                        450,000
 19.11  For a grant to Wabasha county under 
 19.12  Minnesota Statutes, section 85.019, 
 19.13  subdivision 4b, to acquire and develop 
 19.14  the Great River Ridge trail.  
 19.15  Subd. 16.  Trail Connections                          1,492,000 
 19.16  For matching grants to local units of 
 19.17  government to acquire and better public 
 19.18  land and improvements needed for trails 
 19.19  that connect communities, trails, and 
 19.20  parks and thereby increase the 
 19.21  effective length of trail experiences 
 19.22  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 19.23  85.019, subdivision 4c.  
 19.24  $500,000 is for a grant to the city of 
 19.25  New Ulm to connect the city to Flandrau 
 19.26  state park. 
 19.27  $492,000 is for a grant to the city of 
 19.28  St. Louis Park to design and construct 
 19.29  a grade separated pedestrian and trail 
 19.30  crossing over Hennepin CSAH No. 25 at 
 19.31  Belt Line Boulevard in St. Louis Park. 
 19.32  The commissioner shall determine other 
 19.33  project priorities as appropriate based 
 19.34  on need. 
 19.35  Subd. 17.  Metro Greenways and Natural                          
 19.36  Areas                                                 2,000,000 
 19.37  To provide grants to local units of 
 19.38  government for acquisition or 
 19.39  betterment of greenways and natural 
 19.40  areas in the metro region and to 
 19.41  acquire greenways and natural areas in 
 19.42  the metro region through the purchase 
 19.43  of conservation easements or fee 
 19.44  titles.  The commissioner shall 
 19.45  determine the project priorities and 
 19.46  shall consult with representatives of 
 19.47  local units of government, nonprofit 
 19.48  organizations, and other interested 
 19.49  parties.  
 19.50  Subd. 18.  Well Sealing                                 600,000
 19.51  To identify and seal inactive wells on 
 19.52  state-owned land under Minnesota 
 19.53  Statutes, section 103I.311. 
 19.54  Subd. 19.  Lewis and Clark             
 19.55  Rural Water System                                      180,000
 19.56  This appropriation is from the general 
 19.57  fund. 
 20.1   For a grant to the Lewis and Clark 
 20.2   joint powers board to acquire land for, 
 20.3   and to predesign, design, construct, 
 20.4   furnish, and equip, a rural water 
 20.5   system to serve southwestern 
 20.6   Minnesota.  This appropriation is 
 20.7   available when matched by $8 of federal 
 20.8   money and $1 of local money for each $1 
 20.9   of state money. 
 20.10  Subd. 20.  Dam Improvements                           1,700,000
 20.11  To renovate or remove publicly owned 
 20.12  dams.  
 20.13  Up to $1,050,000 is for a grant to the 
 20.14  city of Crookston for phases 2 and 3 of 
 20.15  the Red Lake River restoration and 
 20.16  habitat improvement project.  
 20.17  The commissioner shall determine other 
 20.18  project priorities as appropriate based 
 20.19  on need as provided in Minnesota 
 20.20  Statutes, sections 103G.511 and 
 20.21  103G.515. 
 20.22  Subd. 21.  Flood Hazard Mitigation Grants            28,500,000 
 20.23  For the state share of flood hazard 
 20.24  mitigation grants for publicly owned 
 20.25  capital improvements to prevent or 
 20.26  alleviate flood damage under Minnesota 
 20.27  Statutes, section 103F.161, for Warren, 
 20.28  East Grand Forks, Montevideo, 
 20.29  Breckenridge, St. Anthony, St. Louis 
 20.30  Park, Granite Falls, Agassiz, 
 20.31  Minneapolis, Oakport, Hay Creek, North 
 20.32  Ottawa, Ross No. 7, and Crookston, and 
 20.33  for Dakota county to construct storm 
 20.34  water capital improvements for flood 
 20.35  mitigation in Lebanon Hills regional 
 20.36  park.  To the extent that the cost of a 
 20.37  project in Warren, East Grand Forks, 
 20.38  Montevideo, Breckenridge, Granite 
 20.39  Falls, Oakport, or Crookston exceeds 
 20.40  two percent of the median household 
 20.41  income in the municipality multiplied 
 20.42  by the number of households in the 
 20.43  municipality, this appropriation is 
 20.44  also for the local share of the project.
 20.45  If the commissioner would otherwise 
 20.46  fund a project in the city of 
 20.47  Minneapolis from this appropriation, 
 20.48  the commissioner shall provide a grant 
 20.49  of up to $1,000,000 to prevent and 
 20.50  alleviate flood damage at Lake of the 
 20.51  Isles.  Notwithstanding Minnesota 
 20.52  Statutes, section 103G.222, or any 
 20.53  other law, rule, ordinance, or 
 20.54  regulation to the contrary, a project 
 20.55  at Lake of the Isles to mitigate past 
 20.56  flood damage and prevent future 
 20.57  flooding paid for with this 
 20.58  appropriation or the appropriation in 
 20.59  Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, 
 20.60  section 7, requires a maximum 
 20.61  replacement of two acres of wetland for 
 20.62  each one acre of filled wetland inside 
 20.63  the entire watershed district. 
 21.1   Subd. 22.  Stream Protection
 21.2   and Restoration                                       1,000,000
 21.3   For the design and implementation of 
 21.4   stream restoration projects that employ 
 21.5   natural channel design principles. 
 21.6   Subd. 23.  Water Access
 21.7   Acquisition and Development                           1,500,000
 21.8   For public water access acquisition, 
 21.9   construction, and renovation to capital 
 21.10  projects on lakes and rivers, including 
 21.11  water access through the provision of 
 21.12  fishing piers and shoreline access 
 21.13  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 21.14  86A.05, subdivision 9. 
 21.15  Subd. 24.  Lake Superior               
 21.16  Safe Harbors                                          1,750,000
 21.17  $1,100,000 is to complete construction 
 21.18  of the public access at McQuade Road on 
 21.19  Lake Superior in cooperation with the 
 21.20  U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the 
 21.21  joint powers board made up of the city 
 21.22  of Duluth, St. Louis county, the town 
 21.23  of Duluth, and the town of Lakewood. 
 21.24  $250,000 is to acquire the dockage, 
 21.25  buildings, and other capital 
 21.26  improvements at the Knife River marina 
 21.27  in Lake county. 
 21.28  $400,000 is to increase the number of 
 21.29  slips at the Silver Bay harbor and 
 21.30  marina from 68 to at least 100. 
 21.31  Subd. 25.  Fish Hatchery
 21.32  Improvements                                            300,000
 21.33  For improvements of a capital nature to 
 21.34  design, construct, renovate, furnish, 
 21.35  and equip fish culture facilities under 
 21.36  Minnesota Statutes, section 97A.045, 
 21.37  subdivision 1. 
 21.38  Subd. 26.  Fisheries Acquisition 
 21.39  and Improvement                                         500,000
 21.40  To acquire aquatic management areas and 
 21.41  to make public improvements and 
 21.42  betterments of a capital nature to fish 
 21.43  habitat under Minnesota Statutes, 
 21.44  section 86A.05, subdivision 14.  
 21.45  Subd. 27.  Scientific and Natural Area                 
 21.46  Acquisition and Improvement                           2,500,000
 21.47  To acquire land for scientific and 
 21.48  natural areas and for development, 
 21.49  protection, or improvements of a 
 21.50  capital nature to scientific and 
 21.51  natural areas throughout the state 
 21.52  under Minnesota Statutes, sections 
 21.53  84.033 and 86A.05, subdivision 5.  
 21.54  Up to $1,500,000 is to acquire, 
 21.55  restore, and develop the Seminary fen 
 21.56  in the Assumption creek watershed in 
 21.57  Carver county.  The commissioner shall 
 22.1   manage the Seminary fen in accordance 
 22.2   with Minnesota Statutes, chapter 86A, 
 22.3   in part as an aquatic management area, 
 22.4   in part as a scientific and natural 
 22.5   area, and in part as a wildlife 
 22.6   management area. 
 22.7   Subd. 28.  Natural and Scenic Area      
 22.8   Land Acquisition Grants                               1,000,000
 22.9   For matching grants to local units of 
 22.10  government to acquire and better local 
 22.11  natural and scenic areas under 
 22.12  Minnesota Statutes, section 85.019, 
 22.13  subdivision 4a.  The commissioner shall 
 22.14  determine project priorities as 
 22.15  appropriate based on project 
 22.16  significance and need. 
 22.17  Subd. 29.  RIM Consolidated 
 22.18  Wildlife and Critical Habitat Match                   3,000,000
 22.19  To acquire land and interests in land 
 22.20  for wildlife management area purposes 
 22.21  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 22.22  97A.145; for improvements of a capital 
 22.23  nature to develop, protect, or improve 
 22.24  wildlife management areas and other 
 22.25  state lands throughout the state under 
 22.26  Minnesota Statutes, section 86A.05, 
 22.27  subdivision 8; and to provide state 
 22.28  match for the critical habitat private 
 22.29  sector matching account under Minnesota 
 22.30  Statutes, section 84.943, for the 
 22.31  acquisition or improvement of critical 
 22.32  fish, wildlife, and native plant 
 22.33  habitats.  
 22.34  Subd. 30.  Native Prairie    
 22.35  Bank Easements                                        1,000,000
 22.36  For acquisition of native prairie bank 
 22.37  easements under Minnesota Statutes, 
 22.38  section 84.96. 
 22.39  Subd. 31.  Work Program                                         
 22.40  The commissioner must submit a work 
 22.41  program and semiannual progress reports 
 22.42  in the form determined by the 
 22.43  legislative commission on Minnesota 
 22.44  resources and request its 
 22.45  recommendation before spending any 
 22.46  money appropriated by subdivisions 6 to 
 22.47  9, 14 to 17, 22, 26, 27, 29, and 30.  
 22.48  The commission's recommendation is 
 22.49  advisory only.  Failure to respond to a 
 22.50  request within 60 days after receipt is 
 22.51  a positive recommendation.  Work 
 22.52  programs involving land acquisition 
 22.53  must include a land acquisition plan. 
 22.54  Sec. 8.  POLLUTION CONTROL AGENCY                               
 22.55  Subdivision 1.  To the pollution control
 22.56  agency for the purposes specified
 22.57  in this section                                      11,500,000
 22.58  Subd. 2.  Closed Landfill Cleanup Program            10,000,000
 22.59  For the pollution control agency to 
 23.1   design and construct remedial systems 
 23.2   and acquire land at landfills 
 23.3   throughout the state in accordance with 
 23.4   the closed landfill program under 
 23.5   Minnesota Statutes, section 115B.39. 
 23.6   Subd. 3.  Brownfield to Green Space    
 23.7   Grant Program                                         1,500,000
 23.8   For grants to assess and clean up 
 23.9   underutilized property that is 
 23.10  contaminated.  The property must be 
 23.11  developed and owned as public open 
 23.12  space, parks, natural areas, and other 
 23.13  similar community amenities. 
 23.14  Sec. 9.  OFFICE OF 
 23.15  ENVIRONMENTAL ASSISTANCE                                       
 23.16  Subdivision 1.  To the office of environmental
 23.17  assistance for the purposes specified
 23.18  in this section                                       3,450,000
 23.19  Subd. 2.  Solid Waste Capital          
 23.20  Assistance Grants                                     2,300,000
 23.21  To the office of environmental 
 23.22  assistance for the solid waste capital 
 23.23  assistance grants program under 
 23.24  Minnesota Statutes, section 115A.54.  
 23.25  Grants from this appropriation must be 
 23.26  awarded to applicants whose 
 23.27  applications were on file with the 
 23.28  office before January 1, 2002.  
 23.29  Subd. 3.  Fergus Falls -              
 23.30  Solid Waste Combustor                                 1,150,000
 23.31  $1,150,000 is for a grant to the city 
 23.32  of Fergus Falls to design, construct, 
 23.33  and equip the city's municipal solid 
 23.34  waste combustor with new air pollution 
 23.35  control equipment to meet federal and 
 23.36  state environmental guidelines.  This 
 23.37  grant is in addition to any other state 
 23.38  grants previously awarded for this 
 23.39  project, including the 1997 grant to 
 23.40  the city of Fergus Falls by the office 
 23.41  of environmental assistance.  This 
 23.42  appropriation is not available until 
 23.43  the commissioner has determined that at 
 23.44  least $1,150,000 has been committed 
 23.45  from nonstate sources. 
 23.46  Sec. 10.  BOARD OF WATER AND SOIL RESOURCES 
 23.47  Subdivision 1.  To the board 
 23.48  of water and soil resources for the 
 23.49  purposes specified in this section                   14,800,000 
 23.50  Subd. 2.  RIM and PWP        
 23.51  Conservation Easements                                7,000,000 
 23.52  This appropriation is for the following 
 23.53  purposes: 
 23.54  (1) to acquire conservation easements 
 23.55  from landowners on marginal lands to 
 23.56  protect soil and water quality and to 
 23.57  support fish and wildlife habitat as 
 23.58  provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 
 24.1   103F.515; 
 24.2   (2) to acquire perpetual conservation 
 24.3   easements on existing type 1, 2, 3, and 
 24.4   6 wetlands and adjacent lands, and for 
 24.5   the establishment of permanent cover on 
 24.6   adjacent lands, in accordance with 
 24.7   Minnesota Statutes, section 103F.516; 
 24.8   and 
 24.9   (3) $640,000 of this amount may be used 
 24.10  to administer the program. 
 24.11  Subd. 3.  Streambank and Lakeshore       
 24.12  Protection and Restoration Program                    2,000,000
 24.13  To acquire conservation easements in 
 24.14  environmentally sensitive lake and 
 24.15  river shoreland areas from private 
 24.16  landowners and to provide for the 
 24.17  restoration of degraded or eroded 
 24.18  shoreland where a public interest in 
 24.19  the form of a conservation easement 
 24.20  exists.  The board may award grants to 
 24.21  local soil and water conservation 
 24.22  districts and participating local units 
 24.23  of government to accomplish the 
 24.24  purposes of this program, in accordance 
 24.25  with new Minnesota Statutes, section 
 24.26  103F.225. 
 24.27  $100,000 of this amount may be used to 
 24.28  administer the program. 
 24.29  Subd. 4.  Wetland Replacement          
 24.30  Due to Public Road Projects                           3,000,000
 24.31  To acquire land for wetlands or restore 
 24.32  wetlands to be used to replace wetlands 
 24.33  drained or filled as a result of the 
 24.34  repair, maintenance, or rehabilitation 
 24.35  of existing public roads as required by 
 24.36  Minnesota Statutes, section 103G.222, 
 24.37  subdivision 1, paragraph (m). 
 24.38  $400,000 of this amount may be used to 
 24.39  administer the program. 
 24.40  The purchase price paid for acquisition 
 24.41  of land, fee, or perpetual easement 
 24.42  must be the amount deemed reasonable by 
 24.43  the board.  The board may enter into 
 24.44  agreements with the federal government, 
 24.45  other state agencies, political 
 24.46  subdivisions, and nonprofit 
 24.47  organizations or fee owners to acquire 
 24.48  land and restore and create wetlands 
 24.49  and to acquire existing wetland banking 
 24.50  credits with money provided by this 
 24.51  appropriation.  Acquisition of or the 
 24.52  conveyance of land may be in the name 
 24.53  of the political subdivision.  
 24.54  Subd. 5.  Lazarus Creek                               1,500,000
 24.55  For a grant to Area II Minnesota River 
 24.56  Basin Projects, Inc. for construction 
 24.57  of the LQP-25/Lazarus Creek floodwater 
 24.58  retention project.  The grant may not 
 24.59  exceed 75 percent of the project's 
 24.60  cost.  The remaining share must be 
 25.1   provided by Area II Minnesota River 
 25.2   Basin Projects, Inc. 
 25.3   Subd. 6.  Stillwater - 
 25.4   Brown's Creek                                         1,300,000
 25.5   For a grant to the city of Stillwater 
 25.6   to provide environmental protection 
 25.7   capital improvements for Brown's Creek. 
 25.8   Subd. 7.  Work Program 
 25.9   The board must submit a work program 
 25.10  and semiannual progress reports in the 
 25.11  form determined by the legislative 
 25.12  commission on Minnesota resources and 
 25.13  request its recommendation before 
 25.14  spending any money appropriated by 
 25.15  subdivision 3.  The commission's 
 25.16  recommendation is advisory only.  
 25.17  Failure to respond to a request within 
 25.18  60 days after receipt is a positive 
 25.19  recommendation.  Work programs 
 25.20  involving land acquisition must include 
 25.21  a land acquisition plan. 
 25.22  Sec. 11.  AGRICULTURE                                          
 25.23  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of
 25.24  administration or another named agency for
 25.25  the purposes specified in this section               15,292,000
 25.26  Subd. 2.  Rural Finance Authority      
 25.27  Loan Participation                                   15,000,000
 25.28  For purposes as set forth in the 
 25.29  Minnesota Constitution, article XI, 
 25.30  section 5, clause (h).  To the rural 
 25.31  finance authority to purchase 
 25.32  participation interests in or to make 
 25.33  direct agricultural loans to farmers 
 25.34  under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 41B.  
 25.35  This appropriation is for the beginning 
 25.36  farmer program under Minnesota 
 25.37  Statutes, section 41B.039, the loan 
 25.38  restructuring program under Minnesota 
 25.39  Statutes, section 41B.04, the 
 25.40  seller-sponsored program under 
 25.41  Minnesota Statutes, section 41B.042, 
 25.42  the agricultural improvement loan 
 25.43  program under Minnesota Statutes, 
 25.44  section 41B.043, and the livestock 
 25.45  expansion loan program under Minnesota 
 25.46  Statutes, section 41B.045.  All debt 
 25.47  service on bond proceeds used to 
 25.48  finance this appropriation must be 
 25.49  repaid by the rural finance authority 
 25.50  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 25.51  16A.643.  Loan participations must be 
 25.52  priced to provide full interest and 
 25.53  principal coverage and a reserve for 
 25.54  potential losses. 
 25.55  Priority for loans must be given first 
 25.56  to basic beginning farmer loans; 
 25.57  second, to seller-sponsored loans; and 
 25.58  third, to agricultural improvement 
 25.59  loans. 
 25.60  Subd. 3.  Expansion of Metro           
 25.61  Greenhouse and Storage Bay                              292,000
 26.1   To design, construct, furnish, and 
 26.2   equip an expansion of the greenhouse 
 26.3   facility owned by the department of 
 26.4   agriculture on the campus of 
 26.5   Metropolitan state university in St. 
 26.6   Paul. 
 26.7   Sec. 12.  MINNESOTA ZOOLOGICAL
 26.8   GARDENS                                              
 26.9   Subdivision 1.  To the Minnesota 
 26.10  Zoological Gardens for the purposes 
 26.11  specified in this section                            10,184,000
 26.12  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                          3,000,000
 26.13  For capital asset preservation 
 26.14  improvements and betterments. 
 26.15  Subd. 3.  Phase 1 of Master Plan                      7,184,000
 26.16  To design, construct, furnish, and 
 26.17  equip zoo facilities consistent with 
 26.18  phase 1 of the facilities and business 
 26.19  master plan.  
 26.20  This appropriation is not available 
 26.21  until the commissioner of finance has 
 26.22  determined that additional money at 
 26.23  least equal to 25 percent of the 
 26.24  appropriated amount has been committed 
 26.25  to the project from nonstate sources. 
 26.26  Sec. 13.  ADMINISTRATION 
 26.27  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner
 26.28  of administration for the purposes
 26.29  specified in this section                           104,467,000
 26.30  Subd. 2.  Capital Asset
 26.31  Preservation and Replacement (CAPRA)                 17,000,000
 26.32  To be spent in accordance with 
 26.33  Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.632.  
 26.34  Subd. 3.  Electrical Utility
 26.35  Infrastructure - Phase 6                              3,231,000
 26.36  To complete the upgrade of the 
 26.37  high-voltage primary electrical 
 26.38  distribution system in the capitol 
 26.39  complex, replace the emergency 
 26.40  generator in the Capitol, and upgrade 
 26.41  the nonhigh-voltage electrical system 
 26.42  in the Capitol building. 
 26.43  Subd. 4.  Agency Relocation                           1,500,000 
 26.44  This appropriation is from the general 
 26.45  fund. 
 26.46  For relocation of state agencies as 
 26.47  determined by the commissioner of 
 26.48  administration, including, but not 
 26.49  limited to, the bureau of criminal 
 26.50  apprehension, tenants in the Veterans 
 26.51  Services building, and the departments 
 26.52  of Trade and Economic Development and 
 26.53  Economic Security. 
 27.1   Subd. 5.  Location of Department of 
 27.2   Agriculture Principal Administrative 
 27.3   Offices 
 27.4   The commissioner of administration, in 
 27.5   consultation with the commissioner of 
 27.6   agriculture, shall develop 
 27.7   comprehensive plans and timelines for 
 27.8   relocation of the principal 
 27.9   administrative offices of the 
 27.10  department of agriculture to a location 
 27.11  outside the metropolitan counties 
 27.12  listed in Minnesota Statutes, section 
 27.13  473.121, subdivision 4.  Planning for 
 27.14  the relocation must be completed no 
 27.15  later than March 31, 2003, the date on 
 27.16  which the current lease on the 
 27.17  Agriculture Department headquarters at 
 27.18  90 West Plato Blvd., Saint Paul, MN 
 27.19  expires. 
 27.20  Priority to be used in determining a 
 27.21  nonmetropolitan area location of the 
 27.22  principal administrative offices shall 
 27.23  be: 
 27.24  (1) relocation to an existing 
 27.25  state-owned building that is currently 
 27.26  vacant; 
 27.27  (2) relocation to suitable existing 
 27.28  space available for lease or purchase; 
 27.29  and 
 27.30  (3) relocation to newly constructed 
 27.31  administrative space. 
 27.32  This section is not intended to 
 27.33  preclude colocation of agriculture 
 27.34  department laboratories with laboratory 
 27.35  facilities of other appropriate 
 27.36  departments, nor to specify the 
 27.37  location of a colocated laboratory. 
 27.38  Subd. 6.  Renovate Governor's
 27.39  Residence                                             4,291,000
 27.40  To design, renovate, furnish and equip 
 27.41  the Governor's residence in St. Paul.  
 27.42  $45,000 is from the general fund for 
 27.43  relocation expenses. 
 27.44  Subd. 7.  Health and Agriculture       
 27.45  Laboratories                                         76,245,000
 27.46  Debt service on $15,717,000 of the 
 27.47  principal amount of bonds sold to 
 27.48  finance this project must be paid by 
 27.49  the commissioner of administration 
 27.50  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 27.51  16A.643, from parking revenue collected 
 27.52  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 27.53  16B.58. 
 27.54  To design, construct, furnish, and 
 27.55  equip a joint laboratory facility with 
 27.56  related parking in St. Paul for the 
 27.57  departments of health and agriculture. 
 27.58  Subd. 8.  Health, Agriculture, and     
 28.1   Human Services Office Facilities                               
 28.2   Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, 
 28.3   sections 15.50, subdivision 2, 
 28.4   paragraph (e), and 16B.24, subdivision 
 28.5   6, paragraphs (a) and (b), the 
 28.6   commissioner of administration is 
 28.7   authorized to enter into a long-term 
 28.8   lease-purchase agreement for up to 25 
 28.9   years for the development of office 
 28.10  facilities for the departments of 
 28.11  health, agriculture, and human services 
 28.12  and related parking for the department 
 28.13  of human services office facility. 
 28.14  Subd. 9.  Olmsted County -             
 28.15  Government Services Center                              700,000
 28.16  To predesign the Olmsted county 
 28.17  government services center, a facility 
 28.18  to colocate federal, state, and local 
 28.19  government offices, to the extent that 
 28.20  the predesign determines their 
 28.21  colocation to be feasible and 
 28.22  practical.  Participating agencies to 
 28.23  be evaluated in the predesign must 
 28.24  include, but need not be limited to, 
 28.25  the city of Rochester; Olmsted county; 
 28.26  the state departments of agriculture, 
 28.27  commerce, economic security, health, 
 28.28  human services, labor and industry, 
 28.29  natural resources, public safety, 
 28.30  revenue, and transportation, and the 
 28.31  board of water and soil resources; and 
 28.32  appropriate federal agencies.  
 28.33  Subd. 10.  Land Acquisition                           1,500,000 
 28.34  To acquire land to support existing 
 28.35  needs or to be used for future state 
 28.36  development and consolidation. 
 28.37  Sec. 14.  CAPITOL AREA ARCHITECTURAL
 28.38  AND PLANNING BOARD                                    2,879,000
 28.39  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of 
 28.40  administration for the purposes 
 28.41  specified in this section. 
 28.42  The appropriations in this section may 
 28.43  not be spent on any project that 
 28.44  affects space under the control of the 
 28.45  senate without the approval of the 
 28.46  secretary of the senate nor on any 
 28.47  project that affects space under the 
 28.48  control of the house of representatives 
 28.49  without the approval of the chief clerk 
 28.50  of the house. 
 28.51  Subd. 2.  Capitol Building Restoration                1,659,000
 28.52  To design, construct, and renovate 
 28.53  elevators in the Capitol building.  
 28.54  $646,000 is from the general fund to 
 28.55  plaster and repaint public spaces and 
 28.56  to conserve and repair existing artwork 
 28.57  on the ground, first, and second floors.
 28.58  Subd. 3.  Capitol Building Signage                      300,000
 29.1   To design, fabricate, and install 
 29.2   comprehensive signage in the Capitol 
 29.3   complex. 
 29.4   Subd. 4.  Capitol Interior Design                      920,000
 29.5   To complete schematic design for the 
 29.6   interior renovation, restoration, and 
 29.7   future maintenance of the capitol 
 29.8   building. 
 29.9   Sec. 15.  AMATEUR SPORTS COMMISSION                            
 29.10  Subdivision 1.  To the amateur sports
 29.11  commission for the purposes specified
 29.12  in this section                                       6,250,000
 29.13  Subd. 2.  Sports Conference Center                    5,150,000
 29.14  To construct, furnish, and equip a 
 29.15  sports conference center on the campus 
 29.16  of the National Sports Center and for 
 29.17  related capital development costs. 
 29.18  Subd. 3.  Spirit Mountain              
 29.19  Ski Area                                              1,000,000
 29.20  For a grant to the city of Duluth to 
 29.21  renovate the snowmaking system at the 
 29.22  Spirit Mountain ski area. 
 29.23  Subd. 4.  National Volleyball
 29.24  Center - Phase 2                                       100,000
 29.25  To design phase 2 of the National 
 29.26  Volleyball Center in Rochester. 
 29.27  Sec. 16.  ARTS                                                 
 29.28  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of
 29.29  administration for the purposes specified
 29.30  in this section                                      36,500,000
 29.31  Subd. 2.  Bloomington -               
 29.32  Bloomington Center for the Arts                       1,000,000
 29.33  This appropriation is from the general 
 29.34  fund. 
 29.35  To furnish and equip a new multipurpose 
 29.36  public arts facility to facilitate the 
 29.37  economic development, education, and 
 29.38  cultural activities in the city of 
 29.39  Bloomington that will serve the 
 29.40  southern and southwest metro areas. 
 29.41  This appropriation is not available 
 29.42  until the commissioner has determined 
 29.43  that at least an equal amount has been 
 29.44  committed from nonstate sources. 
 29.45  Subd. 3.  Minneapolis -
 29.46  Children's Theatre Company                            5,000,000
 29.47  For a grant to Hennepin county to 
 29.48  design, construct, furnish, and equip 
 29.49  an expansion of the Children's Theatre 
 29.50  Company's current facility. 
 29.51  This appropriation is not available 
 29.52  until the commissioner has determined 
 30.1   that an equal amount has been committed 
 30.2   from nonstate sources.  
 30.3   Subd. 4.  Minneapolis -              
 30.4   Guthrie Theater                                      30,000,000
 30.5   For a grant to the Minneapolis 
 30.6   community development agency to acquire 
 30.7   and prepare a site for and to design, 
 30.8   construct, furnish, and equip a new 
 30.9   Guthrie Theater in the city of 
 30.10  Minneapolis.  The Minneapolis community 
 30.11  development agency may enter into a 
 30.12  lease or management agreement for the 
 30.13  theater, subject to Minnesota Statutes, 
 30.14  section 16A.695.  
 30.15  This appropriation is not available 
 30.16  until the commissioner has determined 
 30.17  that an equal amount has been committed 
 30.18  from nonstate sources.  
 30.19  Subd. 5.  Rochester -                  
 30.20  Rochester Art Center                                    500,000
 30.21  For a grant to the city of Rochester to 
 30.22  design the new Rochester Art Center. 
 30.23  This appropriation is not available 
 30.24  until the commissioner has determined 
 30.25  that an equal amount has been committed 
 30.26  from nonstate sources. 
 30.27  Subd. 6.  St. Paul -  
 30.28  Minnesota African-American 
 30.29  Performing Arts Center 
 30.30  Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, 
 30.31  section 16A.642, $1,250,000 of the 
 30.32  appropriation in Laws 1999, chapter 
 30.33  240, article 2, section 12, subdivision 
 30.34  14, is available until July 1, 2004. 
 30.35  Sec. 17.  MILITARY AFFAIRS 
 30.36  Subdivision 1.  To the adjutant
 30.37  general for the purposes specified
 30.38  in this section                                       4,857,000
 30.39  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                          2,500,000 
 30.40  For asset preservation improvements and 
 30.41  betterments of a capital nature at 
 30.42  military affairs facilities statewide. 
 30.43  Subd. 3.  ADA Improvements                              857,000 
 30.44  For improvements and betterments of a 
 30.45  capital nature to remove barriers and 
 30.46  make department of military affairs 
 30.47  buildings, programs, and services 
 30.48  accessible to individuals with 
 30.49  disabilities, in compliance with state 
 30.50  and federal ADA guidelines. 
 30.51  Subd. 4.  Facility Life Safety         
 30.52  Improvements                                          1,000,000
 30.53  For life/safety improvements and 
 30.54  betterments of a capital nature at 
 30.55  military affairs facilities statewide. 
 31.1   Subd. 5.  Indoor Firing Range Renovation                500,000
 31.2   To renovate indoor firing ranges at 
 31.3   training and community centers 
 31.4   statewide and convert them to storage 
 31.5   or classroom use. 
 31.6   Sec. 18.  TRANSPORTATION 
 31.7   Subdivision 1.  To the
 31.8   commissioner of transportation for
 31.9   the purposes specified in this section               67,646,000
 31.10  Subd. 2.  Local Bridge
 31.11  Replacement and Rehabilitation                       40,000,000
 31.12  This appropriation is from the state 
 31.13  transportation fund as provided in 
 31.14  Minnesota Statutes, section 174.50, to 
 31.15  match federal money and to replace or 
 31.16  rehabilitate local deficient bridges. 
 31.17  Political subdivisions may use grants 
 31.18  made under this section to construct or 
 31.19  reconstruct bridges, including: 
 31.20  (1) matching federal-aid grants to 
 31.21  construct or reconstruct key bridges; 
 31.22  (2) paying the costs of preliminary 
 31.23  engineering and environmental studies 
 31.24  authorized under Minnesota Statutes, 
 31.25  section 174.50, subdivision 6a; 
 31.26  (3) paying the costs to abandon an 
 31.27  existing bridge that is deficient and 
 31.28  in need of replacement, but where no 
 31.29  replacement will be made; and 
 31.30  (4) paying the costs to construct a 
 31.31  road or street to facilitate the 
 31.32  abandonment of an existing bridge 
 31.33  determined by the commissioner to be 
 31.34  deficient, if the commissioner 
 31.35  determines that construction of the 
 31.36  road or street is more cost efficient 
 31.37  than the replacement of the existing 
 31.38  bridge. 
 31.39  Subd. 3.  Duluth -                     
 31.40  Aerial Lift Bridge Repainting                         1,000,000
 31.41  For a grant to the city of Duluth for 
 31.42  capital repair and restoration of the 
 31.43  aerial lift bridge.  This appropriation 
 31.44  is available when matched by $1 of 
 31.45  money secured or provided by the city 
 31.46  of Duluth for each $1 of state money. 
 31.47  Subd. 4   Port Development Assistance                 4,000,000 
 31.48  For grants under Minnesota Statutes, 
 31.49  sections 457A.01 to 457A.06.  Any 
 31.50  improvements made with the proceeds of 
 31.51  these grants must be publicly owned. 
 31.52  Subd. 5.  Rail Service Improvement                    4,000,000
 31.53  For the purposes defined under the rail 
 31.54  service improvement program under 
 31.55  Minnesota Statutes, sections 222.46 to 
 32.1   222.63. 
 32.2   Subd. 6.  Freight Access Improvements                 8,546,000
 32.3   Each grant is not available until the 
 32.4   commissioner has determined that an 
 32.5   equal amount has been committed from 
 32.6   any combination of municipal state-aid 
 32.7   money and nonstate sources.  The state 
 32.8   share may be allocated to any one or 
 32.9   more of the project elements, with the 
 32.10  nonstate money used to complete any 
 32.11  elements not completed with state money.
 32.12  $796,000 is for a grant to the city of 
 32.13  Minnetonka to acquire land and to 
 32.14  design and construct a new railroad 
 32.15  switching yard facility in the city of 
 32.16  Glencoe, to be owned by the McLeod 
 32.17  county rail authority. 
 32.18  $3,500,000 is for a grant to the city 
 32.19  of Savage to improve highway access to 
 32.20  the ports of Savage.  The improvements 
 32.21  may include local frontage roads, 
 32.22  access consolidations, road closures, 
 32.23  new signals, and acceleration and 
 32.24  deceleration lanes.  
 32.25  $4,250,000 is for a grant to the port 
 32.26  authority of Winona to construct 
 32.27  intermodal improvements at the Winona 
 32.28  harbor.  The improvements may include 
 32.29  commercial harbor dredging, overpass 
 32.30  construction, street widening, signal 
 32.31  installation, and intersection 
 32.32  reconstruction.  
 32.33  Subd. 7.  Northstar Corridor Rail Project             8,000,000 
 32.34  For a commuter rail system from Rice to 
 32.35  Minneapolis, including a multimodal 
 32.36  connection to the Hiawatha light rail 
 32.37  line in downtown Minneapolis. 
 32.38  This appropriation includes state money 
 32.39  to match federal money for a 
 32.40  feasibility study of extending the 
 32.41  Northstar corridor rail project from 
 32.42  Rice to Camp Ripley. 
 32.43  This appropriation must be spent for 
 32.44  purposes as set forth in the Minnesota 
 32.45  Constitution, article XI, section 5, 
 32.46  clause (a), to acquire and better 
 32.47  public lands and buildings and other 
 32.48  improvements of a capital nature, and 
 32.49  for purposes as set forth in the 
 32.50  Minnesota Constitution, article XI, 
 32.51  section 5, clause (i), to improve and 
 32.52  rehabilitate railroad rights-of-way and 
 32.53  other rail facilities whether public or 
 32.54  private. 
 32.55  This appropriation is not available 
 32.56  until the commissioner has determined 
 32.57  that an equal amount has been committed 
 32.58  from nonstate sources.  
 32.59  Subd. 8.  Greater Minnesota            
 32.60  Transit Facilities                                    2,000,000
 33.1   For capital assistance for greater 
 33.2   Minnesota transit systems to be used 
 33.3   for transit capital facilities. 
 33.4   Subd. 9. Radio Communications         
 33.5   Statewide System                                        100,000
 33.6   To the department of transportation for 
 33.7   planning the state radio communications 
 33.8   system infrastructure, coordinating it 
 33.9   with other state and local units of 
 33.10  government, and extending it to the 
 33.11  Rochester and St. Cloud districts of 
 33.12  the state patrol district radio system, 
 33.13  subject to the requirements of 
 33.14  Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.695. 
 33.15  Sec. 19.  METROPOLITAN COUNCIL 
 33.16  Subdivision 1.  To the metropolitan 
 33.17  council for the purposes specified
 33.18  in this section                                      28,000,000
 33.19  Subd. 2.  Northwest Metro Busway                      5,000,000
 33.20  To design and construct a busway in the 
 33.21  northwest metropolitan area between 
 33.22  downtown Minneapolis and Rogers.  This 
 33.23  appropriation is not available until 
 33.24  the commissioner of finance has 
 33.25  determined that Hennepin county has 
 33.26  committed at least $..,000,000 from 
 33.27  other sources and the metropolitan 
 33.28  council has committed at least 
 33.29  $..,000,000 from other sources.  Money 
 33.30  from any source may be used for roadway 
 33.31  design, reconstruction, acquisition of 
 33.32  land and right-of-way, and to design, 
 33.33  construct, furnish, and equip transit 
 33.34  stations and park and rides, and to 
 33.35  purchase buses. 
 33.36  In development of the project, the 
 33.37  council shall:  
 33.38  (1) take into consideration livable 
 33.39  communities principles, including 
 33.40  support of housing production and 
 33.41  ensuring integration of land use and 
 33.42  transportation needs of communities 
 33.43  along the route of the busway; and 
 33.44  (2) encourage citizen and stakeholder 
 33.45  participation in development of the 
 33.46  project. 
 33.47  Subd. 3.  Livable Communities Grant
 33.48  Program                                              10,000,000
 33.49  For public infrastructure grants for 
 33.50  development and redevelopment projects 
 33.51  of the livable communities grant 
 33.52  program under Minnesota Statutes, 
 33.53  sections 473.25 to 473.255, as 
 33.54  applicable. 
 33.55  In development of the project, the 
 33.56  council shall:  
 33.57  (1) take into consideration livable 
 34.1   communities principles, including 
 34.2   support of housing production and 
 34.3   ensuring integration of land use and 
 34.4   transportation needs of communities 
 34.5   along the route of the busway; 
 34.6   (2) take advantage of any local funding 
 34.7   for the project that may be available; 
 34.8   and 
 34.9   (3) encourage citizen and stakeholder 
 34.10  participation in development of the 
 34.11  project. 
 34.12  Subd. 4.  Snelling Bus Garage                        10,000,000
 34.13  To construct a replacement bus garage 
 34.14  for metro transit buses at the current 
 34.15  Snelling Avenue garage site in St. Paul.
 34.16  The metropolitan council must work with 
 34.17  the surrounding community to ensure the 
 34.18  garage accommodates the larger 
 34.19  development plans for the site.  This 
 34.20  appropriation is in addition to the 
 34.21  appropriation in Laws 2000, chapter 
 34.22  479, article 1, section 3, subdivision 
 34.23  2. 
 34.24  Subd. 5.  Central Corridor  
 34.25  Transitway                                            3,000,000
 34.26  For planning, final environmental 
 34.27  impact statement, and preliminary 
 34.28  engineering of the Central Corridor 
 34.29  Transitway between St. Paul and the 
 34.30  city of Minneapolis. 
 34.31  Sec. 20.  COMMERCE                                    5,000,000
 34.32  To the commissioner of finance for the 
 34.33  energy conservation investment loan 
 34.34  program under Minnesota Statutes, 
 34.35  section 216C.37. 
 34.36  Sec. 21.  HEALTH                                        775,000
 34.37  To design and construct a community 
 34.38  dental clinic at Lake Superior 
 34.39  community college in Duluth and design 
 34.40  and renovate the Northwest technical 
 34.41  college dental hygiene clinic in 
 34.42  Moorhead. 
 34.43  Sec. 22.  HUMAN SERVICES 
 34.44  Subdivision 1.  To the
 34.45  commissioner of administration
 34.46  for the purposes specified 
 34.47  in this section                                      24,838,000
 34.48  Subd. 2.  Systemwide Roof
 34.49  Renovation and Replacement                            2,789,000
 34.50  For renovation and replacement of roofs 
 34.51  at department of human services 
 34.52  facilities statewide. 
 34.53  Subd. 3.  Systemwide Asset
 34.54  Preservation                                          6,500,000
 34.55  For asset preservation improvements and 
 35.1   betterments of a capital nature at 
 35.2   state regional treatment centers.  
 35.3   The unspent portion of an 
 35.4   appropriation, but not to exceed ten 
 35.5   percent of the appropriation, for a 
 35.6   project in this section that is 
 35.7   complete, is available for asset 
 35.8   preservation.  Minnesota Statutes, 
 35.9   section 16A.642, applies from the date 
 35.10  of the original appropriation to the 
 35.11  unspent amount transferred. 
 35.12  Subd. 4.  Systemwide -                 
 35.13  Building and Structure Demolition                     2,250,000
 35.14  To demolish and dispose of hazardous 
 35.15  materials from obsolete buildings at 
 35.16  state regional treatment centers.  
 35.17  Subd. 5.  Brainerd                   
 35.18  Regional Treatment Center                             6,305,000
 35.19  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
 35.20  the residential and program areas in 
 35.21  building No. 20. 
 35.22  Subd. 6.  Fergus Falls                 
 35.23  Regional Treatment Center                             3,000,000
 35.24  To design, renovate, construct, 
 35.25  furnish, and equip facilities for the 
 35.26  psychiatric treatment program. 
 35.27  Subd. 7.  St. Peter         
 35.28  Regional Treatment Center                             3,619,000
 35.29  To design and replace the high-pressure 
 35.30  steam boilers and convert the system to 
 35.31  a low-pressure steam system at the St. 
 35.32  Peter regional treatment center. 
 35.33  Subd. 8.  People, Inc. North Side Community 
 35.34  Support Program                                         375,000
 35.35  For a grant to Minneapolis Community 
 35.36  Development Agency to purchase, 
 35.37  remodel, and complete accessibility 
 35.38  upgrades to an existing building or to 
 35.39  acquire land or construct a building to 
 35.40  be used by the People, Inc. North Side 
 35.41  Community Support Program, which may 
 35.42  provide office space for state 
 35.43  employees.  
 35.44  This appropriation is from the general 
 35.45  fund. 
 35.46  Sec. 23.  VETERANS HOMES BOARD 
 35.47  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner
 35.48  of administration for the purposes
 35.49  specified in this section                            17,344,000  
 35.50  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                          4,690,000 
 35.51  For asset preservation improvements and 
 35.52  betterments of a capital nature at 
 35.53  veterans homes statewide. 
 35.54  Subd. 3.  Hastings Veterans Home - Phase 3            8,553,000 
 36.1   For design and renovation of the 
 36.2   utility infrastructure systems and 
 36.3   related improvements at the campus of 
 36.4   the Hastings veterans home. 
 36.5   Subd. 4.  Luverne Veterans Home                         766,000 
 36.6   To design, construct, furnish, and 
 36.7   equip a building addition for 
 36.8   Alzheimer's and dementia programming 
 36.9   space at the Luverne veterans home. 
 36.10  Subd. 5.  Minneapolis Veterans Home                     990,000
 36.11  To design, renovate, furnish, and equip 
 36.12  building No. 4 to provide adult day 
 36.13  care services to veterans in the 
 36.14  surrounding communities. 
 36.15  This appropriation represents 35 
 36.16  percent of the estimated cost of the 
 36.17  renovation project.  
 36.18  The Minnesota veterans homes board must 
 36.19  apply for the federal money needed to 
 36.20  complete this project.  The 
 36.21  commissioner of administration shall 
 36.22  receive the federal money and use the 
 36.23  money to complete the project.  The 
 36.24  total appropriation may be spent for 
 36.25  this renovation project before the 
 36.26  federal money for the project is 
 36.27  received. 
 36.28  Subd. 6.  Silver Bay Veterans Home                    2,345,000 
 36.29  To replace the roof. 
 36.30  Sec. 24.  CORRECTIONS 
 36.31  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of
 36.32  administration for the purposes specified
 36.33  in this section                                      31,943,000
 36.34  Subd. 2.  Asset Preservation                         23,000,000 
 36.35  For improvements and betterments of a 
 36.36  capital nature at Minnesota 
 36.37  correctional facilities statewide, 
 36.38  including, but not limited to, 
 36.39  completing the perimeter wall and 
 36.40  security improvements at MCF-Stillwater.
 36.41  The unspent portion of an 
 36.42  appropriation, but not to exceed ten 
 36.43  percent of the appropriation, for a 
 36.44  project in this section that is 
 36.45  complete, is available for asset 
 36.46  preservation.  Minnesota Statutes, 
 36.47  section 16A.642, applies from the date 
 36.48  of the original appropriation to the 
 36.49  unspent amount transferred. 
 36.50  Subd. 3.  Minnesota Correctional       
 36.51  Facility - Lino Lakes                                 4,160,000
 36.52  To design, construct, furnish, and 
 36.53  equip a new 416-bed unit to house 
 36.54  offenders. 
 36.55  This appropriation is not available 
 37.1   until the commissioner has determined 
 37.2   that at least $10,179,000 has been 
 37.3   committed from federal sources.  
 37.4   Subd. 4.  Minnesota Correctional       
 37.5   Facility - Shakopee                                   3,070,000
 37.6   To design, construct, renovate, 
 37.7   furnish, and equip the Independent 
 37.8   Living Center (ILC) into a 48-bed 
 37.9   general population living unit; 
 37.10  increase space in the kitchen, serving, 
 37.11  and eating areas; increase space in the 
 37.12  visitation area; and modify the staff 
 37.13  control station in the segregation unit 
 37.14  to provide adequate space for updated 
 37.15  technical equipment and more room for 
 37.16  staff. 
 37.17  Subd. 5.  Minnesota Correctional       
 37.18  Facility - Stillwater                                    90,000
 37.19  To predesign a new 150-bed segregation 
 37.20  unit on the facility grounds. 
 37.21  Subd. 6.  Minnesota Correctional       
 37.22  Facility - Willow River/Moose Lake                    1,523,000
 37.23  To demolish the activities building at 
 37.24  Willow River and design, construct, 
 37.25  furnish, and equip a new activities 
 37.26  building for physical training as 
 37.27  required for the challenge 
 37.28  incarceration program under Minnesota 
 37.29  Statutes, sections 244.17 to 244.173. 
 37.30  Sec. 25.  TRADE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
 37.31  Subdivision 1.  To the commissioner of
 37.32  trade and economic development or other
 37.33  named agency for the purposes
 37.34  specified in this section                           116,375,000
 37.35  Subd. 2.  Redevelopment Account                      11,000,000
 37.36  For transfer to the redevelopment 
 37.37  account created in new Minnesota 
 37.38  Statutes, section 116J.571.  This 
 37.39  appropriation is only available for 
 37.40  grants to projects located outside of 
 37.41  the seven-county metropolitan area. 
 37.42  $1,000,000 is for a grant to the city 
 37.43  of Little Falls for environmental 
 37.44  cleanup of the Hennepin Paper Company 
 37.45  property in the city of Little Falls. 
 37.46  Subd. 3.  State Match for Federal Grants             16,000,000 
 37.47  To the public facilities authority to 
 37.48  match federal grants for eligible 
 37.49  projects in the water pollution control 
 37.50  revolving fund under Minnesota 
 37.51  Statutes, section 446A.07, and the 
 37.52  drinking water revolving loan fund 
 37.53  under Minnesota Statutes, section 
 37.54  446A.081. 
 37.55  Subd. 4.  Wastewater Infrastructure                            
 37.56  Funding Program                                      40,800,000 
 38.1   $800,000 of this appropriation is from 
 38.2   the general fund to administer the 
 38.3   wastewater infrastructure program. 
 38.4   To the public facilities authority for 
 38.5   grants to eligible municipalities under 
 38.6   the wastewater infrastructure program 
 38.7   established in Minnesota Statutes, 
 38.8   section 446A.072. 
 38.9   To the greatest extent practical, the 
 38.10  authority should use the grants for 
 38.11  projects on the 2002 project priority 
 38.12  list in priority order to qualified 
 38.13  applicants that submit plans and 
 38.14  specifications to the pollution control 
 38.15  agency or receive a funding commitment 
 38.16  from USDA rural development before 
 38.17  December 1, 2003. 
 38.18  $1,550,000 is for a grant to the city 
 38.19  of Bayport for the Middle St. Croix 
 38.20  River Watershed Management organization 
 38.21  to complete construction of the sewer 
 38.22  system extending from Minnesota 
 38.23  department of natural resources pond 
 38.24  82-310P (the prison pond) in Bayport 
 38.25  through the Stillwater prison grounds 
 38.26  to the St. Croix river.  
 38.27  $7,800,000 is for grants to North Shore 
 38.28  sanitary districts to predesign, 
 38.29  design, construct, furnish, and equip 
 38.30  wastewater treatment facilities within 
 38.31  the North Shore management zone and 
 38.32  that border the outstanding resource 
 38.33  value waters of Lake Superior. 
 38.34  Subd. 5.  Fairmont -                   
 38.35  Winnebago Avenue Sports Complex                         500,000
 38.36  For a grant to the city of Fairmont to 
 38.37  acquire land for, renovate, and expand 
 38.38  the Winnebago Avenue sports complex, 
 38.39  including reconfiguring two ball 
 38.40  fields, adding two fields, paving a 
 38.41  parking lot, and building other 
 38.42  amenities.  
 38.43  This appropriation is not available 
 38.44  until the commissioner has determined 
 38.45  that an equal amount has been committed 
 38.46  from nonstate sources.  
 38.47  Subd. 6.  Greater Minnesota 
 38.48  Business Development Infrastructure 
 38.49  Grant Program                                        15,000,000
 38.50  For grants under new Minnesota 
 38.51  Statutes, section 116J.431. 
 38.52  Subd. 7.  Itasca County -
 38.53  Children's Discovery Museum                             300,000
 38.54  For a grant to Itasca county to design, 
 38.55  construct, furnish, and equip the 
 38.56  Children's Discovery Museum in Grand 
 38.57  Rapids.  The county may enter into a 
 38.58  lease or management agreement for the 
 38.59  center, subject to Minnesota Statutes, 
 38.60  section 16A.695. 
 39.1   This appropriation is not available 
 39.2   until the commissioner has determined 
 39.3   that an equal amount has been committed 
 39.4   from nonstate sources.  
 39.5   Subd. 8.  Minneapolis -
 39.6   Empowerment Zone Projects                             8,000,000
 39.7   For a grant to the city of Minneapolis 
 39.8   for public infrastructure improvements 
 39.9   in the following empowerment zone 
 39.10  projects:  the Near Northside 
 39.11  redevelopment project; the Chicago/Lake 
 39.12  project; and the South East Minneapolis 
 39.13  industrial redevelopment project. 
 39.14  This appropriation is not available 
 39.15  until the commissioner has determined 
 39.16  that an equal amount has been committed 
 39.17  from nonstate sources.  
 39.18  Subd. 9.  Olivia -                     
 39.19  Minnesota Center for Agricultural Innovation          1,000,000
 39.20  For a grant to the city of Olivia to 
 39.21  acquire land and to design, construct, 
 39.22  furnish, and equip the Minnesota Center 
 39.23  for Agricultural Innovation. 
 39.24  This appropriation is not available 
 39.25  until the commissioner has determined 
 39.26  that an equal amount has been committed 
 39.27  from nonstate sources.  
 39.28  Subd. 10.  Red Lake                     
 39.29  Economic Development Facility                         1,400,000
 39.30  For the commissioner of administration 
 39.31  to plan, design, construct, furnish, 
 39.32  and equip an economic development 
 39.33  facility on the Red Lake Indian 
 39.34  reservation. 
 39.35  The facility must be constructed on 
 39.36  land leased to the state by the Red 
 39.37  Lake Band of Chippewa Indians.  The 
 39.38  ground lease must be executed by the 
 39.39  commissioner of administration under 
 39.40  Minnesota Statutes, section 16B.24, 
 39.41  subdivision 6, except that the initial 
 39.42  term of the ground lease must be at 
 39.43  least 20 years and the total term must 
 39.44  be at least 40 years, including renewal 
 39.45  options. 
 39.46  Construction of the facility is not 
 39.47  subject to the competitive bidding 
 39.48  requirements of Minnesota Statutes, 
 39.49  chapter 16C.  The commissioner may 
 39.50  contract directly with the Red Lake 
 39.51  Tribal Council to complete the facility.
 39.52  The commissioner must enter into an 
 39.53  agreement with the Red Lake Tribal 
 39.54  Council under Minnesota Statutes, 
 39.55  section 16A.695, to operate the 
 39.56  facility on behalf of the state to 
 39.57  carry out the state program of economic 
 39.58  development during the term of the 
 39.59  ground lease and any renewal options. 
 40.1   Subd. 11.  St. Cloud -                 
 40.2   Civic Center Expansion                                1,000,000
 40.3   For a grant to the city of St. Cloud to 
 40.4   predesign and design the expansion of 
 40.5   the St. Cloud civic center. 
 40.6   This appropriation is not available 
 40.7   until the commissioner has determined 
 40.8   that an equal amount has been committed 
 40.9   from nonstate sources.  
 40.10  Subd. 12.  St. Paul -                   
 40.11  Roy Wilkins Auditorium                                5,000,000
 40.12  For a grant to the city of St. Paul to 
 40.13  design a new Roy Wilkins Center. 
 40.14  This appropriation is not available 
 40.15  until the commissioner has determined 
 40.16  that an equal amount has been committed 
 40.17  from nonstate sources.  
 40.18  Subd. 13.  St. Paul -                   
 40.19  Phalen Boulevard Contamination Remediation            8,000,000
 40.20  For a grant to the city of St. Paul to 
 40.21  acquire land and to complete 
 40.22  contamination remediation on Phalen 
 40.23  Boulevard between I-35E and Johnson 
 40.24  Parkway. 
 40.25  This appropriation is not available 
 40.26  until the commissioner has determined 
 40.27  that an equal amount has been committed 
 40.28  from nonstate sources.  
 40.29  Subd. 14.  St. Paul -                   
 40.30  2004 Renaissance Project                              8,375,000
 40.31  For a grant to the city of St. Paul to 
 40.32  design and construct river edge 
 40.33  improvements and redevelop a public 
 40.34  park on Raspberry Island. 
 40.35  This appropriation is not available 
 40.36  until the commissioner has determined 
 40.37  that an equal amount has been committed 
 40.38  from nonstate sources.  
 40.39  Sec. 26.  IRON RANGE RESOURCES AND     
 40.40  REHABILITATION BOARD                                  1,800,000
 40.41  To design, construct, furnish, and 
 40.42  equip Mesabi station as the central 
 40.43  guest services facility for the Mesabi 
 40.44  trail. 
 40.45  Sec. 27.  HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY                     10,000,000
 40.46  To the commissioner of the housing 
 40.47  finance agency to rehabilitate and 
 40.48  construct transitional and supportive 
 40.49  housing for veterans and single adults 
 40.50  on land owned by the U.S. Department of 
 40.51  Veterans Affairs (VA) Medical Center 
 40.52  campus in Minneapolis. 
 40.53  Sec. 28.  MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY 
 40.54  Subdivision 1.  To the Minnesota 
 41.1   Historical Society for the purposes 
 41.2   specified in this section                             9,143,000
 41.3   Subd. 2.  Historic Site Asset 
 41.4   Preservation                                          5,000,000
 41.5   For capital improvements and 
 41.6   betterments at state historic sites, 
 41.7   buildings, landscaping at historic 
 41.8   buildings, exhibits, markers, and 
 41.9   monuments.  Up to $250,000 of this 
 41.10  appropriation may be used to predesign 
 41.11  and design major construction and 
 41.12  redevelopment projects at historic Fort 
 41.13  Snelling.  The society shall determine 
 41.14  project priorities as appropriate based 
 41.15  on need. 
 41.16  Subd. 3.  County and Local 
 41.17  Preservation Grants                                   1,500,000
 41.18  To be allocated to county and local 
 41.19  jurisdictions as matching money for 
 41.20  historic preservation projects of a 
 41.21  capital nature.  Grant recipients must 
 41.22  be public entities and must match state 
 41.23  funds on at least an equal basis.  The 
 41.24  facilities must be publicly owned.  
 41.25  Subd. 4.  Sibley House Historic Site                    542,000
 41.26  To renovate buildings at the site and 
 41.27  design future renovations. 
 41.28  Subd. 5.  Kelley Farm Land Acquisition                  655,000
 41.29  To acquire land or interests in land 
 41.30  adjacent to the Oliver Kelley Farm 
 41.31  historic site. 
 41.32  Subd. 6.  Fort Snelling Historic Site                   500,000
 41.33  $400,000 is to design a variety of 
 41.34  construction projects needed for a 
 41.35  major redevelopment and renewal of 
 41.36  historic Fort Snelling. 
 41.37  $100,000 is to expand restrooms in the 
 41.38  current visitor center. 
 41.39  Subd. 7.  Heritage Trails                               384,000
 41.40  To design and construct a trail at Fort 
 41.41  Ridgely state historic site. 
 41.42  Subd. 8.  Fort Belmont                                  200,000
 41.43  For a grant to Jackson county to 
 41.44  design, construct, furnish, and equip a 
 41.45  new site for historic Fort Belmont. 
 41.46  Subd. 9.  New Brighton                 
 41.47  Caboose and History Center                              100,000
 41.48  This appropriation is from the general 
 41.49  fund. 
 41.50  For a grant to the New Brighton area 
 41.51  historical society to renovate its 
 41.52  caboose and history center. 
 42.1   This appropriation is not available 
 42.2   until the commissioner of finance has 
 42.3   determined that an equal amount has 
 42.4   been committed from nonstate sources.  
 42.5   Subd. 10.  Pipestone County Museum                      125,000
 42.6   For a grant to the city of Pipestone to 
 42.7   design and construct an external shaft 
 42.8   and hoist way and install an elevator 
 42.9   adjacent to the Pipestone County Museum 
 42.10  and renovate a third-floor area to be 
 42.11  used as a community room and a museum 
 42.12  programs room. 
 42.13  This appropriation is not available 
 42.14  until the commissioner of finance has 
 42.15  determined that an equal amount has 
 42.16  been committed from nonstate sources.  
 42.17  Subd. 11.  Gibbs Museum            
 42.18  of Pioneer and Dakotah Life                             137,000
 42.19  For a grant to Ramsey county to 
 42.20  predesign, design, construct, furnish, 
 42.21  and equip a new interpretive center for 
 42.22  the Gibbs Museum. 
 42.23  This appropriation is not available 
 42.24  until the commissioner of finance has 
 42.25  determined that an equal amount has 
 42.26  been committed from nonstate sources. 
 42.27  Sec. 29.  BOND SALE EXPENSES                          1,066,000
 42.28  To the commissioner of finance for bond 
 42.29  sale expenses under Minnesota Statutes, 
 42.30  section 16A.641, subdivision 8.  This 
 42.31  appropriation is from the bond proceeds 
 42.32  fund. 
 42.33     Sec. 30.  [BOND SALE AUTHORIZATION.] 
 42.34     Subdivision 1.  [BOND PROCEEDS FUND.] To provide the money 
 42.35  appropriated in this act from the bond proceeds fund, the 
 42.36  commissioner of finance shall sell and issue bonds of the state 
 42.37  in an amount up to $1,135,950,000 in the manner, upon the terms, 
 42.38  and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota Statutes, sections 
 42.39  16A.631 to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota Constitution, article 
 42.40  XI, sections 4 to 7.  
 42.41     Subd. 2.  [MAXIMUM EFFORT SCHOOL LOAN FUND.] To provide the 
 42.42  money appropriated in this act from the maximum effort school 
 42.43  loan fund, the commissioner of finance shall sell and issue 
 42.44  bonds of the state in an amount up to $20,255,000 in the manner, 
 42.45  upon the terms, and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota 
 42.46  Statutes, sections 16A.631 to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota 
 42.47  Constitution, article XI, sections 4 to 7.  The proceeds of the 
 43.1   bonds, except accrued interest and any premium received on the 
 43.2   sale of the bonds, must be credited to a bond proceeds account 
 43.3   in the maximum effort school loan fund. 
 43.4      Subd. 3.  [TRANSPORTATION FUND.] To provide the money 
 43.5   appropriated in this act from the transportation fund, the 
 43.6   commissioner of finance shall sell and issue bonds of the state 
 43.7   in an amount up to $40,000,000 in the manner, upon the terms, 
 43.8   and with the effect prescribed by Minnesota Statutes, sections 
 43.9   16A.631 to 16A.675, and by the Minnesota Constitution, article 
 43.10  XI, sections 4 to 7.  The proceeds of the bonds, except accrued 
 43.11  interest and any premium received on the sale of the bonds, must 
 43.12  be credited to a bond proceeds account in the state 
 43.13  transportation fund. 
 43.14     Sec. 31.  [CANCELLATIONS AND TRANSFERS.] 
 43.15     Subdivision 1.  The unobligated balance of the 
 43.16  appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 404, section 7, subdivision 
 43.17  28, for the Sand Dunes state forest center, estimated to be 
 43.18  $113,000, is canceled to the general fund.  
 43.19     Subd. 2.  $500,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1998, 
 43.20  chapter 404, section 23, subdivision 27, for a production 
 43.21  facility associated with an educational and training facility, 
 43.22  is canceled to the general fund. 
 43.23     Subd. 3.  The $400,000 appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 
 43.24  404, section 25, subdivision 9, for a treaty site history 
 43.25  center, is canceled to the general fund. 
 43.26     Subd. 4.  The $375,000 appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 
 43.27  404, section 18, subdivision 4, for the People, Inc. North Side 
 43.28  community support program, is canceled to the general fund. 
 43.29     Subd. 5.  $1,000,000 of the appropriation in Laws 2000, 
 43.30  chapter 492, article 1, section 14, subdivision 3, to the 
 43.31  commissioner of administration for a grant to the Minneapolis 
 43.32  community development agency, for the Guthrie Theater, vetoed on 
 43.33  May 15, 2000, and approved by the legislature overriding the 
 43.34  veto on May 17, 2000, is canceled to the general fund. 
 43.35     Sec. 32.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16A.11, 
 43.36  subdivision 6, is amended to read: 
 44.1      Subd. 6.  [BUILDING MAINTENANCE AND CAPITAL BETTERMENT.] 
 44.2   The detailed operating budget and capital budget must include 
 44.3   amounts necessary to maintain and better state buildings.  The 
 44.4   commissioner of finance, in consultation with the commissioner 
 44.5   of administration, the board of trustees of the Minnesota state 
 44.6   colleges and universities, and the regents of the University of 
 44.7   Minnesota, shall establish budget guidelines for building 
 44.8   maintenance and betterment appropriations.  Unless otherwise 
 44.9   provided by the commissioner of finance, the combined amount to 
 44.10  be budgeted each year for building maintenance and betterment in 
 44.11  the operating budget and capital budget is two one percent of 
 44.12  the replacement cost of the building, adjusted up or down 
 44.13  depending on the age and condition of the building. 
 44.14     Sec. 33.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16A.501, is 
 44.15  amended to read: 
 44.16     16A.501 [REPORT ON EXPENDITURE OF BOND PROCEEDS.] 
 44.17     The commissioner of finance must report annually to the 
 44.18  legislature on the degree to which entities receiving 
 44.19  appropriations of bond proceeds for capital projects in previous 
 44.20  omnibus capital improvement acts have encumbered or expended 
 44.21  that money.  The report must be submitted to the chairs of the 
 44.22  house of representatives ways and means committee and the senate 
 44.23  finance committee by February 1 of each year. 
 44.24     Sec. 34.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16A.632, 
 44.25  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 44.26     Subd. 2.  [STANDARDS.] Article XI, section 5, clause (a), 
 44.27  of the constitution states general obligation bonds may be 
 44.28  issued to finance only the acquisition or betterment of state 
 44.29  land, buildings, and improvements of a capital nature.  In 
 44.30  interpreting this and applying it to the purposes of the program 
 44.31  contemplated in this section, the following standards are 
 44.32  adopted for the disbursement of money from the capital asset 
 44.33  preservation and replacement account:  
 44.34     (a) No new land, buildings, or major new improvements will 
 44.35  be acquired.  These projects, including all capital expenditures 
 44.36  required to permit their effective use for the intended purpose 
 45.1   on completion, will be estimated and provided for individually 
 45.2   through a direct appropriation for each project.  
 45.3      (b) An expenditure will be made from the account only when 
 45.4   it is a capital expenditure on a capital asset previously owned 
 45.5   by the state, within the meaning of accepted accounting 
 45.6   principles as applied to public expenditures.  The commissioner 
 45.7   of administration will consult with the commissioner of finance 
 45.8   to the extent necessary to ensure this and will furnish the 
 45.9   commissioner of finance a list of projects to be financed from 
 45.10  the account in order of their priority.  The commissioner shall 
 45.11  also furnish each revision of the list.  The legislature assumes 
 45.12  that many provisions for preservation and replacement of 
 45.13  portions of existing capital assets will constitute betterments 
 45.14  and capital improvements within the meaning of the constitution 
 45.15  and capital expenditures under correct accounting principles, 
 45.16  and will be financed more efficiently and economically under the 
 45.17  program than by direct appropriations for specific projects.  
 45.18  However, the purpose of the program is to accumulate data 
 45.19  showing how additional costs may be saved by appropriating money 
 45.20  from the general fund for preservation measures, the necessity 
 45.21  of which is predictable over short periods.  
 45.22     (c) The commissioner of administration will furnish 
 45.23  instructions to agencies to apply for funding of capital 
 45.24  expenditures for preservation and replacement from the account, 
 45.25  will review applications, will make initial allocations among 
 45.26  types of eligible projects enumerated below, will determine 
 45.27  priorities, and will allocate money in priority order until the 
 45.28  available appropriation has been committed.  
 45.29     (d) Categories of projects considered likely to be most 
 45.30  needed and appropriate for financing are the following:  
 45.31     (1) unanticipated emergencies of all kinds, for which a 
 45.32  relatively small amount should be initially reserved, replaced 
 45.33  from money allocated to low-priority projects, if possible, as 
 45.34  emergencies occur, and used for stabilization rather than 
 45.35  replacement if the cost would exhaust the account and should be 
 45.36  specially appropriated; 
 46.1      (2) projects to remove life safety hazards, like 
 46.2   replacement of mechanical systems, building code violations, or 
 46.3   structural defects, at costs not large enough to require major 
 46.4   capital requests to the legislature; 
 46.5      (3) elimination or containment of hazardous substances like 
 46.6   asbestos or PCBs; and 
 46.7      (4) moderate cost replacement and repair of roofs, windows, 
 46.8   tuckpointing, and structural members necessary to preserve the 
 46.9   exterior and interior of existing buildings; and 
 46.10     (5) up to ten percent of an appropriation awarded under 
 46.11  this section may be used for design costs for projects eligible 
 46.12  to be funded from this account in anticipation of future funding 
 46.13  from the account.  
 46.14     Sec. 35.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16A.86, 
 46.15  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 46.16     Subd. 3.  [EVALUATION.] (a) The commissioner shall evaluate 
 46.17  all requests from political subdivisions for state assistance 
 46.18  based on the following criteria: 
 46.19     (1) the political subdivision has provided for local, 
 46.20  private, and user financing for the project to the maximum 
 46.21  extent possible; 
 46.22     (2) the project helps fulfill an important state mission; 
 46.23     (3) the project is of regional or statewide significance; 
 46.24     (4) the project will not require new or any additional 
 46.25  state operating subsidies; 
 46.26     (5) the project will not expand the state's role in a new 
 46.27  policy area; 
 46.28     (6) state funding for the project will not create 
 46.29  significant inequities among local jurisdictions; 
 46.30     (7) the project will not compete with other facilities in 
 46.31  such a manner that they lose a significant number of users to 
 46.32  the new project; and 
 46.33     (8) the governing bodies of those political subdivisions 
 46.34  primarily benefiting from the project have passed resolutions in 
 46.35  support of the project and have established priorities for their 
 46.36  projects when submitting multiple requests; and 
 47.1      (9) if a predesign that meets the requirements of section 
 47.2   16B.335 has been completed and is available at the time the 
 47.3   project request is submitted to the commissioner of finance, the 
 47.4   applicant has submitted the project predesign to the 
 47.5   commissioner of administration. 
 47.6      (b) The commissioner's evaluation of each request, 
 47.7   including whether it meets each of the criteria in paragraph 
 47.8   (a), must be submitted to the legislature along with the 
 47.9   governor's recommendations under section 16A.11, subdivision 1, 
 47.10  whether or not the governor recommends that the request be 
 47.11  funded. 
 47.12     Sec. 36.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16B.31, 
 47.13  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 47.14     Subdivision 1.  [CONSTRUCTION PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS.] (a)
 47.15  The commissioner shall (1) have plans and specifications 
 47.16  prepared for the construction, alteration, or enlargement of all 
 47.17  state buildings, structures, and other improvements except 
 47.18  highways and bridges, and except for buildings and structures 
 47.19  under the control of the board of regents for the university of 
 47.20  Minnesota and of the board of trustees of the Minnesota state 
 47.21  colleges and universities; (2) approve those plans and 
 47.22  specifications; (3) advertise for bids and award all contracts 
 47.23  in connection with the improvements; (4) supervise and inspect 
 47.24  all work relating to the improvements; (5) approve all lawful 
 47.25  changes in plans and specifications after the contract for an 
 47.26  improvement is let; and (6) approve estimates for payment.  This 
 47.27  subdivision does not apply to the construction of the zoological 
 47.28  gardens.  
 47.29     (b) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the 
 47.30  commissioner, the board of regents for the university of 
 47.31  Minnesota, and the board of trustees for the Minnesota state 
 47.32  colleges and universities may solicit and award a design-build 
 47.33  contract for those projects designated by law for design-build 
 47.34  in section 2 using the procedures provided in section 16C.30. 
 47.35     (c) Paragraph (b) expires January 1, 2004. 
 47.36     (d) The commissioner, the board, the board of regents for 
 48.1   the university of Minnesota, and the board of trustees of the 
 48.2   Minnesota state colleges and universities shall create a panel 
 48.3   of representatives of all entities and also including 
 48.4   representatives of the construction industry and the 
 48.5   architecture and engineering professions, to evaluate the use of 
 48.6   design-build and the procedures for design-builder selection 
 48.7   under section 16C.30, and shall report to the legislature on or 
 48.8   before January 1, 2004, as to the success of design-build as a 
 48.9   method of construction and the need and desirability for any 
 48.10  changes in the selection procedure. 
 48.11     Sec. 37.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16B.33, is 
 48.12  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 48.13     Subd. 5.  [DESIGN-BUILD.] (a) The board shall select 
 48.14  design-builders pursuant to section 16C.30 for all such projects 
 48.15  undertaken with an estimated cost greater than $750,000.  In the 
 48.16  event a project is undertaken with an estimated cost of less 
 48.17  than $750,000, the commissioner or board, in the commissioner's 
 48.18  sole discretion, may select the design-builder following the 
 48.19  requirements in section 16C.30.  If the commissioner elects to 
 48.20  make the selection, the commissioner shall perform the duties 
 48.21  prescribed for the board in section 16C.30.  This paragraph does 
 48.22  not apply to projects under the control of the board of regents 
 48.23  for the university of Minnesota and the board of trustees for 
 48.24  the Minnesota state colleges and universities. 
 48.25     (b) Upon written request by the board of regents for the 
 48.26  university of Minnesota and the board of trustees for the 
 48.27  Minnesota state colleges and universities, the board shall 
 48.28  evaluate and recommend at least three design-builders following 
 48.29  the requirements in section 16C.30 for any such project under 
 48.30  the control of the board of regents and the board of trustees. 
 48.31     (c) The commissioner and the board of regents for the 
 48.32  university of Minnesota and the board of trustees for the 
 48.33  Minnesota state colleges and universities shall forward to the 
 48.34  board a written report describing each instance in which the 
 48.35  performance of a design-builder has been less than satisfactory 
 48.36  for projects under their supervision. 
 49.1      (d) This subdivision expires January 1, 2004. 
 49.2      Sec. 38.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 16B.335, 
 49.3   subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 49.4      Subd. 3.  [PREDESIGN REQUIREMENT.] The definitions in 
 49.5   paragraphs (a) and (b) apply to this section. 
 49.6      (a) "Predesign" means the stage in the development of a 
 49.7   project during which the purpose, scope, cost, and schedule of 
 49.8   the complete project are defined and instructions to design 
 49.9   professionals are produced.  
 49.10     (b) "Design" means the stage in the development of a 
 49.11  project during which schematic, design development, and contract 
 49.12  documents are produced. 
 49.13     (c) A recipient to whom an appropriation is made for a 
 49.14  project subject to review under subdivision 1 or notice under 
 49.15  subdivision 2 shall prepare a predesign package and submit it to 
 49.16  the commissioner for review and recommendation before proceeding 
 49.17  with design activities.  The commissioner must complete the 
 49.18  review and recommendation within ten working days after 
 49.19  receiving it.  Failure to review and recommend within the ten 
 49.20  days is considered a positive recommendation.  The predesign 
 49.21  package must be sufficient to define the purpose, scope, cost, 
 49.22  and schedule of the project and must demonstrate that the 
 49.23  project has been analyzed according to appropriate space needs 
 49.24  standards. 
 49.25     (d) This subdivision does not apply to capital projects for 
 49.26  park buildings owned by a local government unit in the 
 49.27  metropolitan area defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2. 
 49.28     Sec. 39.  [16C.29] [DEFINITIONS.] 
 49.29     Subdivision 1.  [SCOPE.] For purposes of section 16C.30, 
 49.30  the terms in this section have the meanings given them, unless 
 49.31  the context clearly indicates otherwise. 
 49.32     Subd. 2.  [BOARD.] "Board" means the designer selection 
 49.33  board, as described in section 16B.33. 
 49.34     Subd. 3.  [CLARIFICATIONS.] "Clarifications" means a 
 49.35  written or oral exchange of information that takes place after 
 49.36  the receipt of proposals to ensure conformance with the request 
 50.1   for proposals and to address minor, clerical revisions in a 
 50.2   proposal. 
 50.3      Subd. 4.  [COMMISSIONER.] "Commissioner" means the 
 50.4   commissioner of administration. 
 50.5      Subd. 5.  [DESIGNER.] "Designer" means an architect, 
 50.6   landscape architect, or engineer licensed or certified under 
 50.7   sections 326.02 to 326.15 or a partnership, association, or 
 50.8   corporation comprised primarily of registered architects, 
 50.9   landscape architects, or engineers or of all three. 
 50.10     Subd. 6.  [DISCUSSIONS.] "Discussions" means written or 
 50.11  oral exchanges that take place with the offeror of the top 
 50.12  ranked proposal with the intent of allowing the offeror to 
 50.13  revise its proposal. 
 50.14     Subd. 7.  [OWNER'S REPRESENTATIVE.] "Owner's 
 50.15  representative" means a qualified professional who may oversee 
 50.16  scheduling, cost control, constructability, project management, 
 50.17  quality control, life-cycle costing, and building technology. 
 50.18     Subd. 8.  [PERSON.] "Person" means an individual, 
 50.19  partnership, corporation, association, or any other legal entity.
 50.20     Subd. 9.  [PHASE-ONE SUBMITTAL.] "Phase-one submittal" 
 50.21  means statements of qualifications from design-builders under 
 50.22  section 16C.30, subdivision 5. 
 50.23     Subd. 10.  [PHASE-TWO PROPOSAL.] "Phase-two proposal" means 
 50.24  an offer by a design-builder to enter into a design-build 
 50.25  contract for a project under section 16C.30, subdivision 6, in 
 50.26  response to a request for proposals. 
 50.27     Subd. 11.  [PROJECT.] "Project" means an undertaking to 
 50.28  design and construct, erect, or remodel a building by or for the 
 50.29  state or an agency under the supervision and control of the 
 50.30  commissioner pursuant to section 16B.30 or the board of regents 
 50.31  for the university of Minnesota and the board of trustees for 
 50.32  the Minnesota state colleges and universities. 
 50.33     Subd. 12.  [EXPIRATION.] This section expires January 1, 
 50.34  2004. 
 50.35     Sec. 40.  [16C.30] [DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACTS.] 
 50.36     Subdivision 1.  [GENERAL AUTHORITY.] (a) Notwithstanding 
 51.1   any law to the contrary, the commissioner may solicit and award 
 51.2   a design-build contract between the department of administration 
 51.3   and a design-builder utilizing the competitive acquisition 
 51.4   process described in subdivisions 5 through 9 if the 
 51.5   commissioner meets the conditions in paragraph (b).  A 
 51.6   design-build contract may provide the architectural, 
 51.7   engineering, and related design services as well as the labor, 
 51.8   materials, supplies, equipment, and construction services for a 
 51.9   project.  A design-build contract may include telecommunications 
 51.10  cabling but must not include acquisition of personal property 
 51.11  related to the operations of the occupants.  The commissioner 
 51.12  may make changes to the project without invalidating the 
 51.13  design-build contract. 
 51.14     (b) The commissioner shall, for each project for which the 
 51.15  commissioner intends to use the design-build method, make a 
 51.16  written determination that it is in the best interest of the 
 51.17  state to use the design-build method to complete the project.  
 51.18  In making this determination, the commissioner shall use the 
 51.19  following criteria as the minimum basis for the determination: 
 51.20     (1) the extent to which the project requirements can be 
 51.21  adequately defined in a request for proposal before completing 
 51.22  the design process; 
 51.23     (2) the suitability of the delivery method with respect to 
 51.24  scope, schedule, cost, and quality factors; 
 51.25     (3) the suitability of the delivery method to minimize 
 51.26  life-cycle costs to the extent available within the project 
 51.27  budget; 
 51.28     (4) the suitability of the delivery method to efficiently 
 51.29  achieve functionality requirements; 
 51.30     (5) the impact of the project schedule on the agency's 
 51.31  delivery of services and project cost; 
 51.32     (6) the resources of the department of administration to 
 51.33  manage the project through employment of experienced personnel 
 51.34  or hiring of consultants; 
 51.35     (7) the resources of the department of administration to 
 51.36  oversee the project with persons who are familiar and 
 52.1   experienced with the design-build method of project delivery or 
 52.2   similar experience; and 
 52.3      (8) other criteria that the commissioner deems relevant and 
 52.4   that are included in the written determination. 
 52.5      (c) The authority and duties prescribed for the board, the 
 52.6   commissioner, and department of administration under this 
 52.7   section are granted to and must be performed by the board of 
 52.8   regents for the university of Minnesota and the board of 
 52.9   trustees for the Minnesota state colleges and universities on 
 52.10  projects under their control. 
 52.11     Subd. 2.  [LICENSING REQUIREMENTS.] (a) Each design-builder 
 52.12  shall be, employ, or have as a partner, member, coventurer, or 
 52.13  subcontractor, persons duly licensed, certified, or registered 
 52.14  to provide the services required to complete the project and do 
 52.15  business in this state. 
 52.16     (b) A design-builder may contract with the commissioner to 
 52.17  provide professional or construction services that the 
 52.18  design-builder is not itself licensed, certified, registered, or 
 52.19  qualified to perform, so long as the design-builder provides the 
 52.20  services through subcontracts with duly licensed, certified, or 
 52.21  registered, or otherwise qualified persons in accordance with 
 52.22  this section. 
 52.23     (c) Nothing in this section authorizing design-build 
 52.24  contracts is intended to limit or eliminate the responsibility 
 52.25  or liability owed by a professional on a design-build project to 
 52.26  the state or other third parties under existing law.  The design 
 52.27  service portion of a design-build contract shall be considered a 
 52.28  service and not a product. 
 52.29     Subd. 3.  [UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA AND MINNESOTA STATE 
 52.30  COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES SELECTION PROCESS.] (a) The board of 
 52.31  regents for the university of Minnesota and the board of 
 52.32  trustees for the Minnesota state colleges and universities shall 
 52.33  select design-builders for all design-build projects under their 
 52.34  supervision and control following the procedures and performing 
 52.35  the duties prescribed for the board and commissioner in 
 52.36  subdivisions 5 through 9.  The board of regents and the board of 
 53.1   trustees shall either use the board or establish an evaluation 
 53.2   team of at least seven persons to evaluate and recommend 
 53.3   design-builders under this section to include three persons 
 53.4   selected as provided in paragraph (b).  The final selection must 
 53.5   be made by the board of regents or the board of trustees. 
 53.6      (b) Upon written request from the board of regents or the 
 53.7   board of trustees, each of the following three organizations 
 53.8   shall nominate one individual whose name and qualifications 
 53.9   shall be submitted to the board of trustees for consideration:  
 53.10  the Consulting Engineers Council of Minnesota after consultation 
 53.11  with other professional engineering societies in the state; the 
 53.12  AIA Minnesota; and the Minnesota chapter of the Associated 
 53.13  General Contractors after consultation with other commercial 
 53.14  contractor associations in the state.  The board of regents or 
 53.15  the board of trustees may appoint the three named individuals to 
 53.16  the evaluation team but may reject a nominated individual and 
 53.17  request another nomination.  The board of regents or the board 
 53.18  of trustees shall determine the term of the appointment.  The 
 53.19  other members of the evaluation team must be representatives of 
 53.20  the university of Minnesota or the Minnesota state colleges and 
 53.21  universities. 
 53.22     Subd. 4.  [DEVELOPMENT OF DESIGN CRITERIA.] (a) Each 
 53.23  request for proposals for a design-build contract must contain 
 53.24  design criteria prepared by a design criteria professional who 
 53.25  holds licenses or certifications under sections 326.02 to 326.15 
 53.26  and is either an employee of the state, the university of 
 53.27  Minnesota, or a consultant hired by the commissioner.  If the 
 53.28  design criteria professional is a consultant hired by the state, 
 53.29  the licensure requirement may be met by employing individuals 
 53.30  who hold a license or licenses under sections 326.02 to 326.15.  
 53.31  The commissioner may elect to designate the board to select the 
 53.32  consultant in compliance with section 16B.33.  
 53.33     (b) Design criteria set forth in the request for proposals 
 53.34  must specify all information needed to adequately describe the 
 53.35  project including performance-based criteria such as 
 53.36  sustainability and life-cycle costing requirements; interior 
 54.1   space requirements, including adjacency diagrams; material 
 54.2   quality standards; architectural image and building form 
 54.3   standards; building air quality requirements; commissioning 
 54.4   requirements; building burn-in requirements; cost estimates; 
 54.5   design and construction schedules; site development 
 54.6   requirements; utility requirements; storm water retention and 
 54.7   disposal requirements; and parking requirements.  If necessary 
 54.8   to adequately describe the project, the design criteria must 
 54.9   include a boundary and topographic survey of the site, with the 
 54.10  legal description and geotechnical and environmental information 
 54.11  available concerning the site.  
 54.12     (c) There must be an owner's representative for each 
 54.13  design-build project.  The owner's representative must be either 
 54.14  an employee of the state, university of Minnesota, or a 
 54.15  consultant hired by the commissioner.  The commissioner, in 
 54.16  consultation with the agency, the owner's representative, and 
 54.17  the design criteria professional, shall determine the scope and 
 54.18  level of detail required for the design criteria to be included 
 54.19  in the request for proposals. 
 54.20     Subd. 5.  [SOLICITATION OF PROPOSALS.] (a) The commissioner 
 54.21  shall prepare a request for proposals, which must contain, at a 
 54.22  minimum, the following elements: 
 54.23     (1) the identity of the agency that will utilize the 
 54.24  completed project; 
 54.25     (2) the procedures for submitting proposals, the criteria 
 54.26  for evaluation of proposals and their relative weight for each 
 54.27  phase, how those criteria will be scored, and the procedures for 
 54.28  making awards; 
 54.29     (3) the terms and conditions for the design-build contract; 
 54.30     (4) the design criteria; 
 54.31     (5) the qualifications the design builder will be required 
 54.32  to have; 
 54.33     (6) a critical path method schedule for commencement and 
 54.34  completion of the project; 
 54.35     (7) budget limits for the project; 
 54.36     (8) affirmative action, disadvantaged businesses, small 
 55.1   business, or set-aside goals or requirements for the 
 55.2   design-build contract; 
 55.3      (9) requirements for insurance, required performance and 
 55.4   payment bonds, and bid bonds, and/or cash deposit; 
 55.5      (10) a description of the drawings, specifications, or 
 55.6   other submittals to be submitted with the phase-two proposal, 
 55.7   with guidance as to the form and level of completeness of the 
 55.8   drawings, specifications, or submittals that will be acceptable; 
 55.9      (11) the professional/technical contract to be entered into 
 55.10  with the design-builders selected to submit phase-two proposals, 
 55.11  including scope of work, use of ideas or information, and 
 55.12  compensation; and 
 55.13     (12) identification of any other material information 
 55.14  available from the commissioner or board, including, without 
 55.15  limitation, surveys, soils reports, drawings or models of 
 55.16  existing structures, environmental studies, photographs, or 
 55.17  references to public records. 
 55.18     (b) The solicitation of request for proposals does not 
 55.19  obligate the commissioner to enter into a design-build 
 55.20  contract.  The commissioner may accept or reject any or all 
 55.21  proposals or parts of proposals received as a result of this 
 55.22  request.  The notification of rejection of all proposals must 
 55.23  include an explanation for all proposals being rejected.  The 
 55.24  solicitation for proposals may be canceled at any time if it is 
 55.25  considered to be in the state's best interest in the 
 55.26  commissioner's sole discretion.  If the commissioner rejects all 
 55.27  proposals or cancels the solicitation for proposals, the 
 55.28  commissioner may resolicit a request for proposals using the 
 55.29  same or different requirements or request the board to select a 
 55.30  designer pursuant to section 16B.33 and proceed with the 
 55.31  design-bid-build or contractor preselect delivery method. 
 55.32     Subd. 6.  [QUALIFICATION; PHASE-ONE SUBMITTAL.] (a) In 
 55.33  phase one, the board and commissioner shall evaluate the 
 55.34  design-build qualifications of the design-builders who responded 
 55.35  to the request for proposals with phase-one submittals based on 
 55.36  each design-builder's experience, technical competence, and 
 56.1   capability to perform; the past performance of the 
 56.2   design-builder and its employees, quality control organization 
 56.3   and system, sustainability, and life-cycle costing methodology; 
 56.4   and other appropriate facts submitted by each design-builder in 
 56.5   response to the request for proposals all pursuant to the 
 56.6   weighted criteria that are stated for phase-one evaluations in 
 56.7   the request for proposals.  The phase-one or phase-two 
 56.8   evaluation of the "past performance" or "experience" of a 
 56.9   proposer must not include the exercise or assertion of a 
 56.10  person's legal rights.  The board or commissioner may require 
 56.11  clarifications or further information from design-builders to 
 56.12  ensure conformance of proposals with the request for proposals 
 56.13  and the design criteria. 
 56.14     (b) If the project is within the capitol area, the capitol 
 56.15  area architecture and planning board, as defined in section 
 56.16  15.50, shall participate in the evaluation of phase-one 
 56.17  submittals. 
 56.18     (c) The board shall select to a short list the most 
 56.19  qualified design-builders that have responded with phase-one 
 56.20  submittals based on the weighted criteria for phase-one 
 56.21  evaluations stated in the request for proposals.  For projects 
 56.22  involving only renovation, in the discretion of the 
 56.23  commissioner, the design-builder may be selected only on the 
 56.24  phase-one submissions, or after a phase-two submission.  For all 
 56.25  other projects, the board shall short-list at least three 
 56.26  potential design-builders to submit phase-two proposals.  The 
 56.27  board shall not proceed to obtain phase-two proposals or make a 
 56.28  selection, as applicable, unless it receives phase-one 
 56.29  submittals from at least three qualified design-builders.  If 
 56.30  the board receives fewer than three phase-one submittals from 
 56.31  qualified design-builders, the commissioner may cancel the 
 56.32  solicitation for proposals, revise the request for proposals, 
 56.33  and solicit new proposals or request the board to select a 
 56.34  designer pursuant to section 16B.33 and proceed with the 
 56.35  design-bid-build delivery method. 
 56.36     (d) The commissioner shall enter into the professional and 
 57.1   technical services contract included in the request for 
 57.2   proposals with each of the design-builders qualified by the 
 57.3   board to submit phase-two proposals. 
 57.4      Subd. 7.  [PHASE-TWO PROPOSALS.] (a) The professional and 
 57.5   technical services contract with the design-builders selected to 
 57.6   submit phase-two proposals provided in the request for proposals 
 57.7   must require at least the following: 
 57.8      (1) preliminary plans and specifications, renderings, and 
 57.9   models as may be required in the request for proposals in 
 57.10  sufficient detail, to describe the character, quality, and scope 
 57.11  of the project; 
 57.12     (2) a design and construction schedule; 
 57.13     (3) the all-inclusive fixed price at which the 
 57.14  design-builder will complete the project if the phase-two 
 57.15  proposal is accepted, including a total development cost budget 
 57.16  in detail by building component with all soft costs, allowances, 
 57.17  and design fees; and 
 57.18     (4) other materials the board or commissioner determines 
 57.19  are necessary to fix the design, schedule, and cost of the 
 57.20  project. 
 57.21     (b) Phase-two proposals must be sealed and may not be 
 57.22  opened until expiration of the time established for making 
 57.23  proposals as set forth in the request for proposals. 
 57.24     (c) Phase-two proposals must identify each person with whom 
 57.25  the design-builder proposes to enter into subcontracts for 
 57.26  primary design and construction obligations under the 
 57.27  design-build contract.  Persons so identified may not be 
 57.28  replaced without the approval of the commissioner, or the award 
 57.29  may be revoked. 
 57.30     (d) A written statement must be provided indicating that 
 57.31  the phase-two proposal meets all requirements of the request for 
 57.32  proposals. 
 57.33     (e) The commissioner may require each design-builder to 
 57.34  submit with its phase-one or phase-two proposal, as applicable, 
 57.35  a cash deposit or bid bond in the amount of five percent of the 
 57.36  budget for the design-build contract.  If the phase-one or 
 58.1   phase-two proposal, as applicable, is accepted but the 
 58.2   design-builder fails to execute the design-build contract, the 
 58.3   deposit or bond is forfeited to the extent allowable under law 
 58.4   including the cost to the state of delays, resolicitation, and 
 58.5   other results of the failure of the selected design-builder to 
 58.6   enter into the design-build contract. 
 58.7      Subd. 8.  [DESIGN-BUILDER SELECTION.] (a) After obtaining 
 58.8   and evaluating proposals from each design-builder according to 
 58.9   the criteria and procedures in the request for proposals, the 
 58.10  board shall rank the phase-one or phase-two proposals, as 
 58.11  applicable, and select the proposal that is rated the highest 
 58.12  based on the weighted evaluation criteria in the request for 
 58.13  proposal.  The board or commissioner may require clarifications 
 58.14  or further information from design-builders during the 
 58.15  evaluation process.  Selection according to this method may 
 58.16  result in an award not being made to the lowest cost proposal. 
 58.17     (b) Prior to final selection, the board or commissioner may 
 58.18  conduct discussions with the design-builder offering the top 
 58.19  ranked phase-two proposal to insure selection of the proposal 
 58.20  that is the best value based on the weighted evaluation criteria 
 58.21  in the request for proposal.  The board or commissioner may 
 58.22  remove the top-ranked proposal from consideration and proceed to 
 58.23  consider the next ranked proposal at any time. 
 58.24     (c) If the project is within the capitol area, the capitol 
 58.25  area architecture and planning board shall participate in the 
 58.26  evaluation of phase-two proposals. 
 58.27     Subd. 9.  [AWARD OF DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACT.] (a) The 
 58.28  commissioner may award and enter into the design-build contract 
 58.29  with the design-builder that submitted the phase-one or 
 58.30  phase-two proposal, as applicable, rated highest based on the 
 58.31  weighted evaluation criteria as evaluated by the board after any 
 58.32  clarifications and/or discussions, or as determined in 
 58.33  subdivision 8. 
 58.34     (b) The commissioner may negotiate additional provisions to 
 58.35  the design-build contract awarded under the request for 
 58.36  proposals. 
 59.1      Subd. 10.  [EXPIRATION.] This section expires January 1, 
 59.2   2004. 
 59.3      Sec. 41.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 85.019, 
 59.4   subdivision 4a, is amended to read: 
 59.5      Subd. 4a.  [NATURAL AND SCENIC AREAS.] The commissioner 
 59.6   shall administer a program to provide grants to units of 
 59.7   government and school districts for the acquisition and 
 59.8   betterment of natural and scenic areas such as blufflands, 
 59.9   prairies, shorelands, wetlands, and wooded areas.  A grant may 
 59.10  not exceed 50 percent or $500,000, whichever is less, of the 
 59.11  costs of acquisition and betterment of land acquired under this 
 59.12  subdivision.  The commissioner shall make payment to a unit of 
 59.13  government upon receiving documentation of reimbursable 
 59.14  expenditures. 
 59.15     Sec. 42.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 85.019, 
 59.16  subdivision 4c, is amended to read: 
 59.17     Subd. 4c.  [LOCAL TRAIL CONNECTIONS.] The commissioner 
 59.18  shall administer a program to provide grants to units of 
 59.19  government for up to 50 percent of the costs of acquisition and 
 59.20  betterment of public land and improvements needed for trails 
 59.21  that connect communities, trails, and parks and thereby increase 
 59.22  the effective length of trail experiences.  Recipients must 
 59.23  provide a nonstate cash match of at least one-half of total 
 59.24  eligible project costs.  If land used for the trails is not in 
 59.25  full public ownership, then the recipients must prove it is 
 59.26  dedicated to the purposes of the grants for at least 20 
 59.27  years.  The commissioner shall make payment to a unit of 
 59.28  government upon receiving documentation of reimbursable 
 59.29  expenditures.  A unit of government may enter into a lease or 
 59.30  management agreement for the trail, subject to section 16A.695. 
 59.31     Sec. 43.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 103F.205, 
 59.32  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 59.33     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICABILITY.] The definitions in this 
 59.34  section apply to sections 103F.201 to 103F.221 103F.225. 
 59.35     Sec. 44.  [103F.225] [SHORELAND PROTECTION PROGRAM.] 
 59.36     Subdivision 1.  [ESTABLISHMENT.] The board of water and 
 60.1   soil resources shall establish a program to acquire conservation 
 60.2   easements in environmentally sensitive lake and river shoreland 
 60.3   areas from private landowners and to provide for the restoration 
 60.4   of degraded or eroded shoreland where a public interest in the 
 60.5   form of a conservation easement exists.  The board may award 
 60.6   grants to local soil and water conservation districts and 
 60.7   participating local units of government to accomplish the 
 60.8   purposes of the program. 
 60.9      Subd. 2.  [CRITERIA.] A participating soil and water 
 60.10  conservation district must establish a working group of 
 60.11  interested individuals.  The working groups, along with the 
 60.12  county board and the soil and water conservation district, must 
 60.13  develop criteria for acquisition of lake and river shoreland 
 60.14  conservation easements and restoration of degraded or eroded 
 60.15  shoreland. 
 60.16     Subd. 3.  [USE OF GRANTS.] The board, a participating soil 
 60.17  and water conservation district, or local unit of government may 
 60.18  use a grant to acquire shoreland conservation easements, and to 
 60.19  restore degraded or eroded shoreland.  The grant may be up to 
 60.20  100 percent of the cost of acquisition of the easement and up to 
 60.21  75 percent of the cost of restoration.  A conservation easement, 
 60.22  as defined in section 84C.01, must be permanent and is subject 
 60.23  to section 103F.515, subdivisions 3 to 6, 8 and 9.  Section 
 60.24  273.117 applies to conservation easements granted under this 
 60.25  program. 
 60.26     Sec. 45.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 115A.151, is 
 60.27  amended to read: 
 60.28     115A.151 [STATE AND LOCAL FACILITIES.] 
 60.29     (a) A state agency, local unit of government, or school 
 60.30  district shall: 
 60.31     (1) ensure that facilities under its control, from which 
 60.32  mixed municipal solid waste is collected, have containers for at 
 60.33  least three recyclable materials, such as, but not limited to, 
 60.34  paper, glass, plastic, and metal; and 
 60.35     (2) transfer all recyclable materials collected to a 
 60.36  recycler. 
 61.1      (b) An entity that receives an appropriation from the state 
 61.2   for a capital improvement project after the effective date of 
 61.3   this section must comply with the requirements in paragraph (a). 
 61.4      Sec. 46.  [116J.431] [GREATER MINNESOTA BUSINESS 
 61.5   DEVELOPMENT PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE GRANT PROGRAM.] 
 61.6      Subdivision 1.  [GRANT PROGRAM ESTABLISHED.] The 
 61.7   commissioner shall make grants to cities to provide up to 50 
 61.8   percent of the capital costs of public infrastructure necessary 
 61.9   for an eligible economic development project.  The city 
 61.10  receiving a grant must provide for the remainder of the costs of 
 61.11  the project, either in cash or in kind.  In-kind contributions 
 61.12  may include the value of site preparation other than the public 
 61.13  infrastructure needed for the project. 
 61.14     For purposes of this section, "city" means a statutory or 
 61.15  home rule charter city located outside the metropolitan area, as 
 61.16  defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2.  
 61.17     "Public infrastructure" means publicly owned physical 
 61.18  infrastructure necessary to support economic development 
 61.19  projects, including, but not limited to, sewers, water supply 
 61.20  systems, utility extensions, streets, wastewater treatment 
 61.21  systems, stormwater management systems, and facilities for 
 61.22  pretreatment of wastewater to remove phosphorus. 
 61.23     The purpose of the grants is to keep or enhance jobs in the 
 61.24  area, increase the tax base, or to expand or create new economic 
 61.25  development. 
 61.26     Subd. 2.  [ELIGIBLE PROJECTS.] An economic development 
 61.27  project for which a city may be eligible to receive a grant 
 61.28  under this section includes: 
 61.29     (1) manufacturing; 
 61.30     (2) technology; 
 61.31     (3) warehousing and distribution; 
 61.32     (4) research and development; 
 61.33     (5) agricultural operations; or 
 61.34     (6) industrial park development that would be used by any 
 61.35  other business listed in this subdivision. 
 61.36     Subd. 3.  [INELIGIBLE PROJECTS.] The following projects are 
 62.1   not eligible for a grant under this section: 
 62.2      (1) retail development; or 
 62.3      (2) office space development, except as incidental to an 
 62.4   eligible purpose. 
 62.5      Subd. 4.  [APPLICATION.] The commissioner must develop 
 62.6   forms and procedures for soliciting and reviewing applications 
 62.7   for grants under this section.  At a minimum, a city must 
 62.8   include in its application a resolution of the city council 
 62.9   certifying that the required local match is available.  The 
 62.10  commissioner must award grants for complete applications for 
 62.11  eligible projects on a first-come, first-served basis. 
 62.12     Subd. 5.  [SET ASIDES.] (a) During the first two years of 
 62.13  the program, 20 percent of the amount available, up to 
 62.14  $3,000,000, must be used only for grants to cities of the fourth 
 62.15  class. 
 62.16     (b) Twenty percent of the amount available, up to 
 62.17  $3,000,000, must be used only for grants for industrial park 
 62.18  developments. 
 62.19     Subd. 6.  [MAXIMUM GRANT AMOUNT; MATCH.] A city may receive 
 62.20  no more than $1,000,000 in two years for one or more projects.  
 62.21     Subd. 7.  [CANCELLATION OF GRANT; RETURN OF GRANT 
 62.22  MONEY.] If after five years, the commissioner determines that a 
 62.23  project has not proceeded in a timely manner and is unlikely to 
 62.24  be completed, the commissioner must cancel the grant and require 
 62.25  the grantee to return all grant money awarded for that project.  
 62.26  For industrial park development projects, if after five years 
 62.27  the industrial park is not developed and available for business 
 62.28  use, the commissioner must cancel the grant and require the 
 62.29  grantee to return all grant money for that project.  If the 
 62.30  industrial park is developed and available for use within five 
 62.31  years, but no businesses have located in the park, the grantee 
 62.32  is not required to return any grant money.  
 62.33     Subd. 8.  [APPROPRIATION.] Grant money returned to the 
 62.34  commissioner is appropriated to the commissioner to make 
 62.35  additional grants under this section. 
 62.36     Sec. 47.  [116J.571] [CREATION OF ACCOUNTS.] 
 63.1      Two greater Minnesota redevelopment accounts are created, 
 63.2   one in the general fund and one in the bond proceeds fund.  
 63.3   Money in the accounts may be used to make grants as provided in 
 63.4   section 116J.575.  Money in the bond proceeds fund may only be 
 63.5   used for eligible costs for publicly owned property.  Money in 
 63.6   the general fund may be used to pay for the commissioner's costs 
 63.7   in reviewing the applications. 
 63.8      Sec. 48.  [116J.572] [DEFINITIONS.] 
 63.9      Subdivision 1.  [SCOPE OF APPLICATION.] For purposes of 
 63.10  sections 116J.571 to 116J.575, the terms in this section have 
 63.11  the meanings given. 
 63.12     Subd. 2.  [DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY.] "Development authority" 
 63.13  includes a statutory or home rule charter city, county, housing 
 63.14  and redevelopment authority, economic development authority, or 
 63.15  port authority located outside the seven-county metropolitan 
 63.16  area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2. 
 63.17     Subd. 3.  [ELIGIBLE COSTS OR COSTS.] "Eligible costs" or 
 63.18  "costs" means the costs of land acquisition, stabilizing 
 63.19  unstable soils, demolition, infrastructure improvements, ponding 
 63.20  or other environmental infrastructure; building construction, 
 63.21  design and engineering; and adaptive reuse of buildings.  
 63.22  Eligible costs do not include project administration and legal 
 63.23  fees. 
 63.24     Subd. 4.  [REDEVELOPMENT.] "Redevelopment" means recycling 
 63.25  obsolete, abandoned, or underutilized properties for new 
 63.26  industrial, commercial, or residential uses. 
 63.27     Sec. 49.  [116J.573] [CRITERIA FOR ACCOUNTS AND PROJECTS.] 
 63.28     Subdivision 1.  [ACCOUNTS.] Criteria for use of the 
 63.29  accounts created in section 116J.571 must be consistent with and 
 63.30  promote the purposes of sections 116J.571 to 116J.575.  They 
 63.31  include, but are not limited to: 
 63.32     (1) creating and preserving living wage jobs in greater 
 63.33  Minnesota; 
 63.34     (2) creating incentives for communities to include a full 
 63.35  range of housing opportunities; 
 63.36     (3) creating incentives for all communities to implement 
 64.1   compact, efficient, and mixed-use development; and 
 64.2      (4) creating incentives to assist communities in 
 64.3   maintaining a unique sense of place by preserving local, 
 64.4   cultural assets. 
 64.5      Subd. 2.  [PROJECTS.] To be eligible for funding by the 
 64.6   greater Minnesota redevelopment account, a project must: 
 64.7      (1) interrelate redevelopment with other public investments 
 64.8   in transportation, housing, schools, energy, utilities 
 64.9   information infrastructure, and other public services; 
 64.10     (2) interrelate affordable housing and employment growth 
 64.11  areas; 
 64.12     (3) intensify land use that leads to more compact 
 64.13  redevelopment; 
 64.14     (4) involve redevelopment that mixes incomes of residents 
 64.15  in housing, including introducing or reintroducing higher value 
 64.16  housing in lower income areas to achieve a mix of housing 
 64.17  opportunities; 
 64.18     (5) involve participation from citizens and the business 
 64.19  community in the planning and development of the proposed 
 64.20  redevelopment plan; 
 64.21     (6) encourage public infrastructure investments which 
 64.22  attract private sector redevelopment investment in commercial, 
 64.23  industrial, and residential properties adjacent to public 
 64.24  improvements, and provide project area residents with expanded 
 64.25  opportunities for private sector employment; or 
 64.26     (7) be sustainable at the local level and reduce the 
 64.27  probability of future requests for state development, 
 64.28  maintenance, or replacement assistance. 
 64.29     Subd. 3.  [OTHER FACTORS.] The factors listed in 
 64.30  subdivisions 1 and 2 are not ranked in order of priority.  
 64.31  Rather, the commissioner may weigh each factor depending upon 
 64.32  the facts and circumstances as the commissioner considers 
 64.33  appropriate.  The commissioner may consider other factors 
 64.34  including, but not limited to, blight reduction, community 
 64.35  stabilization, and property tax base maintenance or improvement. 
 64.36     Subd. 4.  [PARTNERSHIPS.] The commissioner shall give 
 65.1   priority to proposals using innovative financial partnerships 
 65.2   between government, private for-profit, and nonprofit sectors as 
 65.3   well as to proposals that meet current tax increment financing 
 65.4   requirements for a redevelopment district and contribute tax 
 65.5   increment financing towards the project. 
 65.6      Subd. 5.  [ANNUAL REPORT.] The commissioner shall prepare 
 65.7   and submit to the legislature an annual report on the greater 
 65.8   Minnesota redevelopment account.  The report must include 
 65.9   information on the amount of money in the account, the amount 
 65.10  distributed, to whom the grants were distributed and for what 
 65.11  purposes, and an evaluation of the effectiveness of the projects 
 65.12  funded in meeting the policies and goals of the program. 
 65.13     Sec. 50.  [116J.574] [GRANT APPLICATIONS.] 
 65.14     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICATION REQUIRED.] To obtain a grant, 
 65.15  a development authority shall apply to the commissioner. 
 65.16     Subd. 2.  [REQUIRED CONTENT.] The commissioner shall 
 65.17  prescribe and provide the application form.  The application 
 65.18  must include at least the following information: 
 65.19     (1) identification of the site; 
 65.20     (2) a detailed budget, including necessary supporting 
 65.21  evidence, of the total costs for the site including the total 
 65.22  eligible redevelopment costs; 
 65.23     (3) a complete redevelopment plan, including any specific 
 65.24  commitments from third parties to construct improvements on the 
 65.25  site; 
 65.26     (4) a complete financing plan, including the manner in 
 65.27  which the development authority uses innovative financial 
 65.28  partnerships between government, private for-profit, and 
 65.29  nonprofit sectors; and 
 65.30     (5) any additional information or material that the 
 65.31  commissioner prescribes. 
 65.32     Sec. 51.  [116J.575] [GRANTS.] 
 65.33     Subdivision 1.  [COMMISSIONER DISCRETION.] The 
 65.34  determination of whether to make a grant for a site is within 
 65.35  the discretion of the commissioner, subject to this section and 
 65.36  sections 116J.571 to 116J.574 and available unencumbered money 
 66.1   in the greater Minnesota redevelopment account.  The 
 66.2   commissioner's decisions and application of the priorities under 
 66.3   this section are not subject to judicial review, except for 
 66.4   abuse of discretion. 
 66.5      Subd. 2.  [APPLICATION CYCLES.] In making grants, the 
 66.6   commissioner shall establish semiannual application deadlines in 
 66.7   which grants will be authorized from all or part of the 
 66.8   available money in the account. 
 66.9      Sec. 52.  [134.51] [MIGHTY BOOKS GRANTS.] 
 66.10     Subdivision 1.  [ESTABLISHMENT.] The commissioner of 
 66.11  children, families, and learning shall award grants for the 
 66.12  mighty books program to assist Minnesota communities to 
 66.13  construct new, expand, or renovate libraries. 
 66.14     Subd. 2.  [ELIGIBILITY; DEFINITION.] Public library 
 66.15  jurisdictions may apply for grants to construct new, expand, or 
 66.16  renovate existing library facilities.  For purposes of this 
 66.17  section, "public library jurisdictions" means regional public 
 66.18  library systems, regional library districts, cities, and 
 66.19  counties operating libraries under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 
 66.20  134, that are members of regional public library systems. 
 66.21     Subd. 3.  [APPLICATION.] The commissioner shall develop 
 66.22  guidelines and a process for grant application; prepare 
 66.23  application forms; and establish application dates. 
 66.24     Subd. 4.  [QUALIFICATIONS.] A public library jurisdiction 
 66.25  may apply for a grant in an amount up to $250,000 or 50 percent 
 66.26  of the approved costs, whichever is less.  The public library 
 66.27  jurisdiction must provide a one-to-one match of nonstate money. 
 66.28     Subd. 5.  [APPROVAL BY COMMISSIONER.] The commissioner of 
 66.29  children, families, and learning, in consultation with the state 
 66.30  council on disability, shall examine and consider all 
 66.31  applications for grants and may approve or disapprove 
 66.32  applications.  If a public library jurisdiction is found not 
 66.33  qualified, the commissioner shall promptly notify it.  The grant 
 66.34  money must be used to renovate or expand an existing building 
 66.35  for use as a library; to construct a new library building; or to 
 66.36  remove architectural barriers from a building or a site.  First 
 67.1   priority shall be given to applications for removing 
 67.2   architectural barriers from a building. 
 67.3      Subd. 6.  [AWARD OF GRANTS.] The commissioners shall 
 67.4   prioritize grants on the following basis:  the degree of 
 67.5   collaboration with other public or private agencies; the public 
 67.6   library jurisdiction tax burden; the long-term feasibility of 
 67.7   the project; and the suitability of and need for the project.  
 67.8   If the total amount of the applications exceeds the amount that 
 67.9   is or can be made available, the commissioner shall award grants 
 67.10  according to the commissioner's judgment and discretion and 
 67.11  based upon a ranking of the projects according to the factors 
 67.12  listed in this subdivision.  The commissioner shall promptly 
 67.13  certify to each public library jurisdiction the amount, if any, 
 67.14  of the grant awarded to it. 
 67.15     Sec. 53.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 135A.046, 
 67.16  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
 67.17     Subd. 2.  [STANDARDS.] Capital budget expenditures for 
 67.18  Higher Education Asset Preservation and Replacement (HEAPR) 
 67.19  projects must be for one or more of the following:  code 
 67.20  compliance including health and safety, Americans with 
 67.21  Disabilities Act requirements, hazardous material abatement, 
 67.22  access improvement, or air quality improvement; or building or 
 67.23  infrastructure repairs necessary to preserve the interior and 
 67.24  exterior of existing buildings; or renewal to support the 
 67.25  existing programmatic mission of the campuses.  Up to ten 
 67.26  percent of an appropriation awarded under this section may be 
 67.27  used for design costs for projects eligible to be funded from 
 67.28  this account in anticipation of future funding from the account. 
 67.29     Sec. 54.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 136F.16, 
 67.30  subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
 67.31     Subd. 3.  [OFF-CAMPUS SITES.] The board shall not establish 
 67.32  off-campus centers or other permanent sites to provide academic 
 67.33  programs, courses, or student services without authorizing 
 67.34  legislation.  For the purposes of this subdivision, the campus 
 67.35  of Metropolitan State University is the seven-county 
 67.36  metropolitan area.  This section does not apply to sites set up 
 68.1   specifically for the delivery of courses and programs through 
 68.2   telecommunications.  
 68.3      Sec. 55.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 136F.60, 
 68.4   subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 68.5      Subdivision 1.  [PURCHASE OF NEIGHBORING PROPERTY; STATE 
 68.6   UNIVERSITIES.] The board may purchase property adjacent to or in 
 68.7   the vicinity of the campuses as necessary for the development of 
 68.8   a state college or university.  Before taking action, the board 
 68.9   shall consult with the chairs of the senate finance committee 
 68.10  and the house ways and means committee about the proposed 
 68.11  action.  The board shall explain the need to acquire property, 
 68.12  specify the property to be acquired, and indicate the source and 
 68.13  amount of money needed for the acquisition.  The amount needed 
 68.14  may be spent from sums previously appropriated for purposes of 
 68.15  the state colleges and universities, including, but not limited 
 68.16  to, general fund appropriations for instructional or 
 68.17  noninstructional expenditures, general fund appropriations 
 68.18  carried forward, or state college and university activity fund 
 68.19  appropriations.  The board may pay relocation costs, at its 
 68.20  discretion, when acquiring property. 
 68.21     Sec. 56.  Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 446A.072, 
 68.22  subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 68.23     Subd. 4.  [FUNDING LEVEL.] (a) The authority shall provide 
 68.24  supplemental assistance for essential project component costs as 
 68.25  certified by the commissioner of the pollution control agency 
 68.26  under section 116.182, subdivision 4.  
 68.27     (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c), a municipality may 
 68.28  not receive more than $4,000,000, or $15,000 per existing 
 68.29  connection, whichever is less, under this section unless 
 68.30  specifically approved by law.  If a project would be eligible 
 68.31  for more than $4,000,000 under paragraph (e), the authority 
 68.32  shall include a description of the project and the financing 
 68.33  plan in its report on needs in subdivision 11.  For a 
 68.34  municipality receiving grant funding after January 1, 2002, the 
 68.35  authority shall provide assistance in the form of a grant of up 
 68.36  to $30,000 per existing connection if the authority determines 
 69.1   that the municipality's construction and installation costs are 
 69.2   significantly increased due to geological conditions and more 
 69.3   stringent discharge limits. 
 69.4      (c) A sanitary district or multijurisdictional wastewater 
 69.5   treatment district may receive an additional $1,000,000 for each 
 69.6   municipality participating up to a maximum grant of $8,000,000, 
 69.7   unless a higher amount is specifically approved by law.  If a 
 69.8   project would be eligible for more than $8,000,000 under 
 69.9   paragraph (e), the authority shall include a description of the 
 69.10  project and the financing plan in its report on needs in 
 69.11  subdivision 11. 
 69.12     (d) The authority shall provide supplemental assistance for 
 69.13  up to one-half of the eligible grant funding level determined by 
 69.14  the United States Department of Agriculture Rural Development 
 69.15  funding for projects listed on the agency's project priority 
 69.16  list, in priority order.  In the case of multijurisdictional 
 69.17  projects when the United States Department of Agriculture Rural 
 69.18  Development is unable to fully fund up to one-half of the 
 69.19  eligible grant amount, the authority may provide up to an 
 69.20  additional $1,000,000 for each municipality participating up to 
 69.21  the limits under paragraph (c) but not to exceed the maximum 
 69.22  grant level determined by the United States Department of 
 69.23  Agriculture Rural Development as needed to keep the project 
 69.24  affordable.  For municipalities that are not eligible for United 
 69.25  States Department of Agriculture Rural Development funding for 
 69.26  wastewater, the authority shall provide supplemental assistance 
 69.27  for:  (1) essential project component costs calculated by first 
 69.28  determining the amount needed to reduce a municipality's annual 
 69.29  residential sewer costs to 1.4 percent of the municipality's 
 69.30  median household income or $25 per month per household, 
 69.31  whichever is greater, and then multiplying that amount by 80 
 69.32  percent to determine the actual award amount to supplement loans 
 69.33  under section 446A.07; and (2) up to 50 percent of the 
 69.34  incremental costs specifically identified by the agency as being 
 69.35  attributable to more stringent wastewater standards required to 
 69.36  protect outstanding resource value waters or outstanding 
 70.1   international resource value waters. 
 70.2      (e) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), in the event that a 
 70.3   municipality's monthly residential sewer service charges average 
 70.4   above $50, the authority will provide 90 percent of the grant 
 70.5   amount needed to reduce the average monthly sewer service charge 
 70.6   to $50, provided the project is ranked in the top 50 percentile 
 70.7   of the agency's intended use plan. 
 70.8      (f) The authority shall provide supplemental assistance to 
 70.9   a municipality that would not otherwise qualify for supplemental 
 70.10  assistance if: 
 70.11     (1) the municipality voluntarily accepts a sewer connection 
 70.12  from another governmental unit to serve residential, industrial, 
 70.13  or commercial developments that were completed before March 1, 
 70.14  1996, or are on lots whose plats were recorded before that date; 
 70.15  and 
 70.16     (2) fees charged by the municipality for the connection 
 70.17  must take into account state and federal grants used by the 
 70.18  municipality for the construction of the treatment plant. 
 70.19  The amount of supplemental assistance under this paragraph must 
 70.20  be sufficient to reduce debt service payments under section 
 70.21  446A.07 to an extent equivalent to a zero percent loan in an 
 70.22  amount up to the other governmental unit's project costs 
 70.23  necessary for connection.  Eligibility for supplemental 
 70.24  assistance under this paragraph ends three years after the 
 70.25  agency certifies that the connection has met the operational 
 70.26  performance standards established by the agency. 
 70.27     Sec. 57.  Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 15, 
 70.28  subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 70.29  Subd. 4.  Minnesota    
 70.30  Military Museum at Camp Ripley                          125,000
 70.31  To upgrade the electrical and lighting, 
 70.32  and heating, ventilation, and air 
 70.33  conditioning systems in the main 
 70.34  building of the Minnesota military 
 70.35  museum, to design and, construct, 
 70.36  furnish and equip, including permanent 
 70.37  display cases, an addition to the 
 70.38  museum, and to insulate a heating 
 70.39  system in building I-40.  The adjutant 
 70.40  general may enter into a lease or 
 70.41  management agreement for the museum, 
 70.42  subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 
 71.1   16A.695. 
 71.2      Sec. 58.  Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 22, 
 71.3   subdivision 3, as amended by Laws 2000, chapter 499, section 15, 
 71.4   which amendment was reenacted in Laws 2001, First Special 
 71.5   Session chapter 12, section 15, is amended to read: 
 71.6   Subd. 3.  Wastewater Infrastructure                            
 71.7   Funding Program                                      18,319,000 
 71.8   $6,309,000 $4,309,000 of this 
 71.9   appropriation is from the general fund 
 71.10  of which $319,000 is to administer the 
 71.11  wastewater infrastructure fund program. 
 71.12  To the public facilities authority for 
 71.13  grants to eligible municipalities under 
 71.14  the wastewater infrastructure program 
 71.15  established in Minnesota Statutes, 
 71.16  section 446A.072. 
 71.17  To the greatest extent practical, the 
 71.18  authority should use the grants for 
 71.19  projects on the 2000 intended use plan 
 71.20  in priority order to qualified 
 71.21  applicants that submit plans and 
 71.22  specifications to the pollution control 
 71.23  agency or receive a funding commitment 
 71.24  from USDA rural development before 
 71.25  December 1, 2001.  In determining 
 71.26  whether the penalty factor under 
 71.27  Minnesota Rules, part 7077.0196, should 
 71.28  be applied to a project, the pollution 
 71.29  control agency shall, beginning with 
 71.30  the 2001 Intended Use Plan and Project 
 71.31  Priority list, first assess the impact 
 71.32  of the new or expanded discharge 
 71.33  compared to the impact of the 
 71.34  preexisting conditions and to the 
 71.35  impact of alternative discharge 
 71.36  locations.  If the agency determines 
 71.37  that the new or expanded discharge is 
 71.38  to a less environmentally sensitive 
 71.39  area or that it is the preferable 
 71.40  location for the discharge compared to 
 71.41  the alternatives, the agency shall not 
 71.42  apply the penalty factor to the 
 71.43  project.  The pollution control agency 
 71.44  shall include as a factor in 
 71.45  prioritizing projects whether a project 
 71.46  is a multijurisdictional project 
 71.47  connecting areas with failing onsite 
 71.48  treatment systems with an existing or 
 71.49  regional wastewater treatment system. 
 71.50  The authority shall set aside up to 
 71.51  $400,000 for the Innovative Technology 
 71.52  Grants Program to provide 50 percent 
 71.53  reimbursement for the cost of equipment 
 71.54  and installation into an existing 
 71.55  municipal wastewater treatment system.  
 71.56  The project must be approved by the 
 71.57  pollution control agency and 
 71.58  demonstrate the application of existing 
 71.59  technology that has not been used 
 71.60  before in the treatment of municipal 
 71.61  wastewater, but has the potential to 
 71.62  improve the treatment of wastewater or 
 72.1   make the treatment process more cost 
 72.2   effective. 
 72.3   Beginning with the 2001 intended use 
 72.4   plan, the pollution control agency 
 72.5   shall include whether a community has a 
 72.6   moratorium on development as a factor 
 72.7   in prioritizing projects.  The agency 
 72.8   shall adopt rules implementing the 
 72.9   provisions of this paragraph under 
 72.10  Minnesota Statutes, section 14.389. 
 72.11     Sec. 59.  Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 22, 
 72.12  subdivision 4, is amended to read: 
 72.13  Subd. 4.  Clean Water Partnership                     2,000,000
 72.14  For deposit in the water pollution 
 72.15  control fund under Minnesota Statutes, 
 72.16  section 446A.07, for the clean water 
 72.17  partnership loan program under 
 72.18  Minnesota Statutes, section 
 72.19  103F.725.  This appropriation is from 
 72.20  the general fund. 
 72.21     Sec. 60.  Laws 2000, chapter 492, article 1, section 27, is 
 72.22  amended to read: 
 72.23     Sec. 27.  [CANCELLATIONS AND TRANSFERS.] 
 72.24     (a) The $734,000 appropriation in Laws 1994, chapter 643, 
 72.25  section 18, for the design of the labor interpretive center is 
 72.26  canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 1994, chapter 
 72.27  643, section 31, subdivision 1, is reduced by $734,000. 
 72.28     (b) The $1,100,000 appropriation in Laws 1994, chapter 643, 
 72.29  section 19, subdivision 9, as amended by Laws 1995, chapter 224, 
 72.30  section 124, and Laws 1997, chapter 183, article 3, section 30, 
 72.31  for the American Indian history center at Bemidji state 
 72.32  university is canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 
 72.33  1994, chapter 643, section 31, subdivision 1, is reduced by 
 72.34  $1,100,000. 
 72.35     (c) $130,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1994, chapter 
 72.36  643, section 23, for dam improvements is canceled.  The bond 
 72.37  sale authorization in Laws 1994, chapter 643, section 31, 
 72.38  subdivision 1, is reduced by $130,000. 
 72.39     (d) $383,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1996, chapter 
 72.40  463, section 13, subdivision 9, for a support services facility 
 72.41  near the corner of Mississippi Street and University Avenue is 
 72.42  canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 1996, chapter 
 72.43  463, section 27, subdivision 1, is reduced by $383,000.  
 73.1      (e) The unobligated balance of the appropriation in Laws 
 73.2   1996, chapter 463, section 15, subdivision 4, for an armory 
 73.3   facility and ramp near the corner of Rice Street and University 
 73.4   Avenue, estimated to be $197,000, is canceled to the general 
 73.5   fund. 
 73.6      (f) $1,355,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1996, chapter 
 73.7   463, section 16, subdivision 5, for the Brainerd bed expansion 
 73.8   project is canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 1996, 
 73.9   chapter 463, section 27, subdivision 1, is reduced by $1,355,000.
 73.10     (g) The $500,000 appropriation in Laws 1996, chapter 463, 
 73.11  section 22, subdivision 7, for the Battle Point historic site is 
 73.12  canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 1996, chapter 
 73.13  463, section 27, subdivision 1, is reduced by $500,000. 
 73.14     (h) $10,000,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1997, Second 
 73.15  Special Session chapter 2, section 2, for public safety disaster 
 73.16  assistance funds is canceled.  The bond sale authorization in 
 73.17  Laws 1997, Second Special Session chapter 2, section 12, is 
 73.18  reduced by $10,000,000. 
 73.19     (i) $5,800,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 
 73.20  404, section 13, subdivision 5, for the Minnesota labor 
 73.21  interpretive center is canceled to the general fund.  
 73.22     (j) $1,893,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 
 73.23  404, section 5, subdivision 5, for the Southwest Metropolitan 
 73.24  Integration Magnet School in Edina is canceled to the general 
 73.25  fund. 
 73.26     (k) The $800,000 appropriation in Laws 1998, chapter 404, 
 73.27  section 15, subdivision 5, for a tennis facility in the city of 
 73.28  St. Paul is canceled to the general fund.  
 73.29     (l) The $1,700,000 appropriation in Laws 1998 1999, chapter 
 73.30  404 240, article 2, section 22 11, for the Battle Point cultural 
 73.31  education center is canceled.  The bond sale authorization in 
 73.32  Laws 1998 1999, chapter 404 240, article 2, section 27 16, 
 73.33  subdivision 1, is reduced by $1,700,000. 
 73.34     (m) The balance of the appropriation in Laws 1998 1999, 
 73.35  chapter 404 240, article 2, section 23 12, subdivision 11 5, 
 73.36  for the St. Cloud community events center is transferred to the 
 74.1   board of trustees of the Minnesota state colleges and 
 74.2   universities to construct a new athletic facility on the south 
 74.3   side of the existing St. Cloud State University campus.  The 
 74.4   balance of the bond sale authorization in Laws 1998 1999, 
 74.5   chapter 404 240, article 2, section 27 16, subdivision 1, 
 74.6   attributable to the events center project is to provide the 
 74.7   money for the athletic facility project. 
 74.8      (n) $1,000,000 of the appropriation in Laws 1998 1999, 
 74.9   chapter 404 240, article 2, section 23 12, subdivision 24 
 74.10  14, for the Minnesota African-American Performing Arts Center is 
 74.11  canceled.  The bond sale authorization in Laws 1998 1999, 
 74.12  chapter 404 240, article 2, section 27 16, subdivision 1, is 
 74.13  reduced by $1,000,000. 
 74.14     (o) The $4,000,000 appropriation in Laws 1999, chapter 240, 
 74.15  article 1, section 3, for the Southwest Metropolitan Integration 
 74.16  Magnet School in Edina is canceled.  The bond sale authorization 
 74.17  in Laws 1999, chapter 240, article 1, section 13, is reduced by 
 74.18  $4,000,000. 
 74.19     (p) $321,000 of the unobligated balance of the 
 74.20  appropriation in Laws 1999, chapter 250, article 1, section 12, 
 74.21  subdivision 5, to demolish the capitol square building and 
 74.22  restructure the site as a temporary parking lot is canceled to 
 74.23  the general fund. 
 74.24     Sec. 61.  Laws 2001, First Special Session chapter 12, 
 74.25  section 10, is amended to read: 
 74.26  Sec. 10.  BOND SALE SCHEDULE   
 74.27  The commissioner of finance shall 
 74.28  schedule the sale of state general 
 74.29  obligation bonds so that, during the 
 74.30  biennium ending June 30, 2003, no more 
 74.31  than $629,739,000 $617,839,000 will 
 74.32  need to be transferred from the general 
 74.33  fund to the state bond fund to pay 
 74.34  principal and interest due and to 
 74.35  become due on outstanding state general 
 74.36  obligation bonds.  During the biennium, 
 74.37  before each sale of state general 
 74.38  obligation bonds, the commissioner of 
 74.39  finance shall calculate the amount of 
 74.40  debt service payments needed on bonds 
 74.41  previously issued and shall estimate 
 74.42  the amount of debt service payments 
 74.43  that will be needed on the bonds 
 74.44  scheduled to be sold.  The commissioner 
 74.45  shall adjust the amount of bonds 
 75.1   scheduled to be sold so as to remain 
 75.2   within the limit set by this section.  
 75.3   The amount needed to make the debt 
 75.4   service payments is appropriated from 
 75.5   the general fund as provided in 
 75.6   Minnesota Statutes, section 16A.641. 
 75.7      Sec. 62. [DULUTH GOVERNMENT SERVICES CENTER SALE.] 
 75.8      Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, sections 16A.695 and 
 75.9   94.09, or other law, administrative rule, or commissioner's 
 75.10  order to the contrary, the state of Minnesota by and through its 
 75.11  department of administration, shall at the request of the St. 
 75.12  Louis county board of commissioners, sell and convey to St. 
 75.13  Louis county by December 31, 2002, for a consideration in the 
 75.14  amount of $2,300,000, certain real property known as the 
 75.15  government services center and parking ramp legally described as:
 75.16     lots 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, Duluth proper first 
 75.17  division, West Second Street.  
 75.18     The conveyance must be in a form approved by the attorney 
 75.19  general. 
 75.20     All rights, obligations, and remedies under existing leases 
 75.21  of said real property are merged with this conveyance.  Current 
 75.22  leasehold rights and obligations must be assigned to St. Louis 
 75.23  county. 
 75.24     St. Louis county shall, for a period of at least ten years 
 75.25  following sale of the above-described property, continue to 
 75.26  allow the state of Minnesota to lease the space occupied by the 
 75.27  state of Minnesota at the time of the sale at the current lease 
 75.28  rate with adjustment for operational costs. 
 75.29     Sec. 63.  [REPEALER.] 
 75.30     Minnesota Statutes 2000, sections 116J.561; 116J.562; 
 75.31  116J.563; 116J.564; 116J.565; 116J.566; 116J.567; 134.45; and 
 75.32  136F.13, are repealed. 
 75.33     Sec. 64.  [EFFECTIVE DATE.] 
 75.34     This act is effective the day following final enactment, 
 75.35  except that section 60 is effective retroactively to May 16, 
 75.36  2000.