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HF 3167

1st Unofficial Engrossment - 88th Legislature (2013 - 2014) Posted on 04/08/2014 08:02pm

KEY: stricken = removed, old language.
underscored = added, new language.
1.1A bill for an act
1.2relating to financing of state and local government; making changes to individual
1.3income, property, sales and use, excise, estate, mineral, tobacco, alcohol, special,
1.4local, and other taxes and tax-related provisions; modifying local government
1.5aids; modifying exclusions, exemptions, and levy deadlines; modifying sales,
1.6use, and excise tax exemptions; changing sales, use, and excise tax remittances;
1.7modifying certain local sales and use taxes; modifying income tax credits
1.8and subtractions; clarifying estate tax provisions; providing for certain local
1.9development projects; changing license revocation procedures; modifying
1.10installment payments; removing obsolete, redundant, and unnecessary laws and
1.11administrative rules administered by the Department of Revenue; making various
1.12policy and technical changes; requiring reports; modifying special service
1.13districts; repealing purpose statements and certain reporting requirements;
1.14increasing certain abatement authority; reallocating certain bond payments;
1.15requiring fund transfer; modifying tax increment finance rules; appropriating
1.16money;amending Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 16D.02, subdivisions 3,
1.176; 16D.04, subdivisions 3, 4; 16D.07; 16D.11, subdivisions 1, 3, 7; 84A.20,
1.18subdivision 2; 84A.31, subdivision 2; 115B.49, subdivision 4; 116J.8737,
1.19subdivision 5, as amended; 163.06, subdivision 1; 270.11, subdivision 1; 270.12,
1.20subdivisions 2, 4; 270.87; 270A.03, subdivision 2; 270B.14, subdivision 3;
1.21270C.085; 270C.34, subdivision 2; 270C.52, subdivision 2; 270C.56, subdivision
1.223; 270C.72, subdivisions 1, 3; 272.01, subdivisions 1, 3; 272.02, subdivisions 10,
1.2393; 272.0211, subdivisions 1, 2, by adding a subdivision; 272.025, subdivision
1.241; 272.027, subdivision 1; 272.029, subdivisions 4a, 6; 272.03, subdivision
1.251; 273.01; 273.061, subdivision 6; 273.10; 273.11, subdivision 13; 273.112,
1.26subdivision 6a; 273.13, subdivision 22; 273.18; 273.33, subdivision 2; 273.37,
1.27subdivision 2; 273.3711; 274.01, subdivisions 1, 2; 274.014, subdivision 3;
1.28275.065, subdivision 1; 275.08, subdivisions 1a, 1d; 275.74, subdivision 2;
1.29275.75; 279.03, subdivisions 1, 1a, 2; 279.16; 279.23; 279.25; 280.001; 280.03;
1.30280.07; 280.11; 281.03; 281.327; 282.01, subdivision 6; 282.04, subdivision
1.314; 282.261, subdivisions 2, 4, 5; 282.322; 287.30; 289A.02, subdivision 7,
1.32as amended; 289A.18, subdivision 2; 289A.25, subdivision 1; 289A.60,
1.33subdivision 15; 290.01, subdivisions 5, 7, 19f, 29; 290.015, subdivision 1;
1.34290.0677, subdivisions 1, 1a; 290.07, subdivisions 1, 2; 290.081; 290.0922,
1.35subdivision 3; 290.095, subdivision 3; 290.9728, subdivision 2; 296A.01,
1.36subdivision 16; 297A.67, subdivision 13a, by adding subdivisions; 297A.68,
1.37by adding a subdivision; 297A.70, subdivision 10, by adding a subdivision;
1.38297A.94; 297B.09; 297F.03, subdivision 2; 297F.09, subdivision 10; 297G.09,
1.39subdivision 9; 297I.05, subdivision 14; 298.28, subdivisions 5, as amended,
2.17a, as added; 298.75, subdivision 2; 383E.21, subdivisions 1, 2; 412.131;
2.2469.176, subdivisions 1b, 3; 469.1763, subdivision 3; 473.665, subdivision 5;
2.3477A.0124, subdivisions 3, 5, by adding a subdivision; 477A.014, subdivision
2.41; 611.27, subdivisions 13, 15; Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, sections
2.5116J.8738, subdivisions 2, 3, 4; 116V.03; 136A.129, subdivisions 1, 3, 5;
2.6144F.01, subdivision 4; 270B.01, subdivision 8; 270B.03, subdivision 1; 273.13,
2.7subdivision 25; 273.1325, subdivisions 1, 2; 275.70, subdivision 5; 279.37,
2.8subdivision 2; 281.17; 289A.20, subdivision 4; 290.01, subdivisions 19, as
2.9amended, 19b, as amended, 19d, 31, as amended; 290.091, subdivision 2, as
2.10amended; 290.0921, subdivision 3; 290.191, subdivision 5; 290A.03, subdivision
2.1115, as amended; 291.005, subdivision 1, as amended; 297A.61, subdivision 3,
2.12as amended; 297A.68, subdivisions 42, 44; 297A.70, subdivisions 2, 13, 14;
2.13297A.75, subdivisions 1, 2, 3; 297B.01, subdivision 16; 297F.05, subdivision 1;
2.14298.28, subdivision 4; 360.531, subdivision 2; 403.162, subdivision 5; 423A.02,
2.15subdivision 3; 423A.022, subdivision 3; 428A.02, subdivision 1; 469.1763,
2.16subdivision 2; 477A.0124, subdivision 2; 477A.013, subdivision 8; 477A.03,
2.17subdivision 2b; 477A.12, subdivisions 1, 2; 477A.14, subdivision 1; Laws 1980,
2.18chapter 511, section 1, subdivision 2, as amended; Laws 1999, chapter 243,
2.19article 14, section 5, subdivision 1; Laws 2005, First Special Session chapter
2.203, article 5, section 38, subdivision 4; Laws 2006, chapter 257, section 2, as
2.21amended; Laws 2008, chapter 366, article 10, section 15; Laws 2013, chapter
2.22143, article 8, sections 3; 22; 23; 27; 37; article 9, section 23; article 11, section
2.2310; Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 3, section 4; proposing coding for new law
2.24in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 168A; 290; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2012,
2.25sections 3.192; 16D.02, subdivisions 5, 8; 16D.11, subdivision 2; 270C.131;
2.26270C.53; 270C.991, subdivision 4; 272.02, subdivisions 1, 1a, 48, 51, 53, 67, 72,
2.2782; 272.027, subdivision 2; 272.031; 273.015, subdivision 1; 273.03, subdivision
2.283; 273.075; 273.1383; 273.1386; 273.80; 275.77; 279.32; 281.173, subdivision
2.298; 281.174, subdivision 8; 281.328; 282.10; 282.23; 287.20, subdivision 4;
2.30287.27, subdivision 2; 289A.56, subdivision 7; 290.01, subdivisions 4b, 19e,
2.3120e; 290.06, subdivisions 30, 31; 290.0674, subdivision 3; 290.33; 295.52,
2.32subdivision 7; 297A.68, subdivision 38; 297A.71, subdivisions 4, 5, 7, 10,
2.3317, 18, 20, 32; 297F.08, subdivision 11; 297H.10, subdivision 2; 469.174,
2.34subdivision 10c; 469.175, subdivision 2b; 469.176, subdivision 1i; 469.1764;
2.35469.177, subdivision 10; 469.330; 469.331; 469.332; 469.333; 469.334; 469.335;
2.36469.336; 469.337; 469.338; 469.339; 469.340, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, 5; 469.341;
2.37477A.0124, subdivisions 1, 6; 505.173; Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement,
2.38section 469.340, subdivision 4; Laws 1961, chapter 372, sections 1; 2; Laws
2.391963, chapter 118, sections 1, as amended; 2, as amended; 3; 4, as amended; 5;
2.406, as amended; 7; 8; 9; 10; Laws 1996, chapter 471, article 8, sections 19; 20;
2.4121; 22; Minnesota Rules, parts 8002.0200, subpart 8; 8007.0200; 8100.0800;
2.428130.7500, subpart 7; 8130.8900, subpart 3; 8130.9500, subparts 1, 1a, 2, 3, 4, 5.
2.43BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:

2.44ARTICLE 1
2.45PROPERTY TAX

2.46    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 144F.01, subdivision 4,
2.47is amended to read:
2.48    Subd. 4. Property tax levy authority. The district's board may levy a tax on the
2.49taxable real and personal property in the district. The ad valorem tax levy may not exceed
2.500.048 percent of the estimated market value of the district or $400,000 $550,000, whichever
3.1is less. The proceeds of the levy must be used as provided in subdivision 5. The board shall
3.2certify the levy at the times as provided under section 275.07. The board shall provide the
3.3county with whatever information is necessary to identify the property that is located within
3.4the district. If the boundaries include a part of a parcel, the entire parcel shall be included
3.5in the district. The county auditors must spread, collect, and distribute the proceeds of the
3.6tax at the same time and in the same manner as provided by law for all other property taxes.
3.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for assessments in 2015, taxes
3.8payable in 2016, and thereafter.

3.9    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.02, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
3.10    Subd. 10. Personal property used for pollution control. Personal property used
3.11primarily for the abatement and control of air, water, or land pollution is exempt to the
3.12extent that it is so used, and real property is exempt if it is used primarily for abatement
3.13and control of air, water, or land pollution as part of an agricultural operation, as a part
3.14of a centralized treatment and recovery facility operating under a permit issued by the
3.15Minnesota Pollution Control Agency pursuant to chapters 115 and 116 and Minnesota
3.16Rules, parts 7001.0500 to 7001.0730, and 7045.0020 to 7045.1260, as a wastewater
3.17treatment facility and for the treatment, recovery, and stabilization of metals, oils,
3.18chemicals, water, sludges, or inorganic materials from hazardous industrial wastes, or as
3.19part of an electric generation system. For purposes of this subdivision, personal property
3.20includes ponderous machinery and equipment used in a business or production activity
3.21that at common law is considered real property.
3.22Any taxpayer requesting exemption of all or a portion of any real property or any
3.23equipment or device, or part thereof, operated primarily for the control or abatement of air,
3.24water, or land pollution shall file an application with the commissioner of revenue. If the
3.25property is an electric power generation facility located in a city, then the commissioner
3.26shall notify the county assessor, city finance officer, and superintendent of the school
3.27district of the jurisdictions that host the facility that the application has been received. The
3.28Minnesota Pollution Control Agency shall upon request of the commissioner furnish
3.29information and advice to the commissioner.
3.30The information and advice furnished by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
3.31must include statements as to whether the equipment, device, or real property meets
3.32a standard, rule, criteria, guideline, policy, or order of the Minnesota Pollution Control
3.33Agency, and whether the equipment, device, or real property is installed or operated
3.34in accordance with it. On determining that property qualifies for exemption, the
3.35commissioner shall issue an order exempting the property from taxation. If the property is
4.1an electric power generation facility located in a city, then the commissioner shall provide
4.2notification of the order to the county assessor, city finance officer, and superintendent
4.3of the school district of the jurisdictions that host the facility. The equipment, device, or
4.4real property shall continue to be exempt from taxation as long as the order issued by the
4.5commissioner remains in effect.
4.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

4.7    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.02, subdivision 93, is amended to read:
4.8    Subd. 93. Electric generation facility; personal property. Notwithstanding
4.9subdivision 9, clause (a), attached machinery and other personal property that is part of
4.10a simple-cycle electric generation facility of more than 40 megawatts and less than 125
4.11megawatts of installed capacity and that meets the requirements of this subdivision is
4.12exempt. At the time of construction, the facility must:
4.13(1) utilize natural gas as a primary fuel;
4.14(2) be located within two miles of parallel existing 36-inch natural gas pipelines and
4.15an existing 115-kilovolt high-voltage electric transmission line;
4.16(3) be designed to provide peaking, emergency backup, or contingency services;
4.17(4) satisfy a resource deficiency identified in an approved integrated resource plan
4.18filed under section 216B.2422; and
4.19(5) have an agreement with the host county, township, and school district for
4.20payment in lieu of personal property taxes to the host county, township, and school district
4.21for the operating life of the facility. Any amount distributed to the school district is not
4.22subject to the deductions under section 126C.21.
4.23Construction of the facility must be commenced after January 1, 2010 2015, and
4.24before January 1, 2014 2019. Property eligible for this exemption does not include electric
4.25transmission lines and interconnections or gas pipelines and interconnections appurtenant
4.26to the property or the facility.
4.27EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for assessments in 2015, taxes
4.28payable in 2016, and thereafter.

4.29    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.0211, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
4.30    Subdivision 1. Efficiency determination and certification. An owner or operator
4.31of a new or existing electric power generation facility, excluding wind energy conversion
4.32systems, may apply to the commissioner of revenue for a market value exclusion on the
4.33property as provided for in this section. This exclusion shall apply only to the market
5.1value of the equipment of the facility, and shall not apply to the structures and the land
5.2upon which the facility is located. The commissioner of revenue shall prescribe the forms
5.3and procedures for this application. Upon receiving the application, the commissioner of
5.4revenue shall: (1) request the commissioner of commerce to make a determination of the
5.5efficiency of the applicant's electric power generation facility; and (2) if the facility is in
5.6a city, notify the county assessor, city finance officer, and superintendent of the school
5.7district of the jurisdictions that host the facility that an application for an exclusion is being
5.8processed. The commissioner of commerce shall calculate efficiency as the ratio of useful
5.9energy outputs to energy inputs, expressed as a percentage, based on the performance of
5.10the facility's equipment during normal full load operation. The commissioner must include
5.11in this formula the energy used in any on-site preparation of materials necessary to convert
5.12the materials into the fuel used to generate electricity, such as a process to gasify petroleum
5.13coke. The commissioner shall use the Higher Heating Value (HHV) for all substances in
5.14the commissioner's efficiency calculations, except for wood for fuel in a biomass-eligible
5.15project under section 216B.2424; for these instances, the commissioner shall adjust the
5.16heating value to allow for energy consumed for evaporation of the moisture in the wood.
5.17The applicant shall provide the commissioner of commerce with whatever information the
5.18commissioner deems necessary to make the determination. Within 30 days of the receipt
5.19of the necessary information, the commissioner of commerce shall certify the findings of
5.20the efficiency determination to the commissioner of revenue and to the applicant. The
5.21commissioner of commerce shall determine the efficiency of the facility and certify the
5.22findings of that determination to the commissioner of revenue every two years thereafter
5.23from the date of the original certification.
5.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

5.25    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.0211, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
5.26    Subd. 2. Sliding scale exclusion. Based upon the efficiency determination provided
5.27by the commissioner of commerce as described in subdivision 1, the commissioner of
5.28revenue shall subtract eight percent of the taxable market value of the qualifying property
5.29for each percentage point that the efficiency of the specific facility, as determined by the
5.30commissioner of commerce, is above 40 percent. The reduction in taxable market value
5.31shall be reflected in the taxable market value of the facility beginning with the assessment
5.32year immediately following the determination. If the facility is located in a city, the
5.33commissioner shall notify the county assessor, city finance officer, and superintendent of
5.34the school district of the jurisdictions that host the facility of the reduction in taxable
5.35market value. For a facility that is assessed by the county in which the facility is located,
6.1the commissioner of revenue shall certify to the assessor of that county the percentage
6.2of the taxable market value of the facility to be excluded.
6.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

6.4    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.0211, is amended by adding a subdivision
6.5to read:
6.6    Subd. 5. Limitation. This section applies only to an electric power generation
6.7facility that was eligible for the exclusion under this section for taxes payable in 2014.
6.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes payable in 2014 and
6.9thereafter.

6.10    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.03, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
6.11    Subdivision 1. Real property. (a) For the purposes of taxation, "real property"
6.12includes the land itself, rails, ties, and other track materials annexed to the land, and all
6.13buildings, structures, and improvements or other fixtures on it, bridges of bridge companies,
6.14and all rights and privileges belonging or appertaining to the land, and all mines, iron ore
6.15and taconite minerals not otherwise exempt, quarries, fossils, and trees on or under it.
6.16(b) A building or structure shall include the building or structure itself, together with
6.17all improvements or fixtures annexed to the building or structure, which are integrated
6.18with and of permanent benefit to the building or structure, regardless of the present use
6.19of the building, and which cannot be removed without substantial damage to itself or to
6.20the building or structure.
6.21(c)(i) Real property does not include tools, implements, machinery, and equipment
6.22attached to or installed in real property for use in the business or production activity
6.23conducted thereon, regardless of size, weight or method of attachment, and mine shafts,
6.24tunnels, and other underground openings used to extract ores and minerals taxed under
6.25chapter 298 together with steel, concrete, and other materials used to support such openings.
6.26(ii) The exclusion provided in clause (i) shall not apply to machinery and equipment
6.27includable as real estate by paragraphs (a) and (b) even though such machinery and
6.28equipment is used in the business or production activity conducted on the real property if
6.29and to the extent such business or production activity consists of furnishing services or
6.30products to other buildings or structures which are subject to taxation under this chapter.
6.31(iii) The exclusion provided in clause (i) does not apply to the exterior shell of a
6.32structure which constitutes walls, ceilings, roofs, or floors if the shell of the structure has
6.33structural, insulation, or temperature control functions or provides protection from the
7.1elements, unless the structure is primarily used in the production of biofuels, wine, beer,
7.2distilled beverages, or dairy products. Such an exterior shell is included in the definition
7.3of real property even if it also has special functions distinct from that of a building, or if
7.4such an exterior shell is primarily used for the storage of ingredients or materials used in
7.5the production of biofuels, wine, beer, distilled beverages, or dairy products or the storage
7.6of finished biofuels, wine, beer, distilled beverages, or dairy products.
7.7(d) The term real property does not include tools, implements, machinery,
7.8equipment, poles, lines, cables, wires, conduit, and station connections which are part of a
7.9telephone communications system, regardless of attachment to or installation in real
7.10property and regardless of size, weight, or method of attachment or installation.
7.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with assessment year 2015.

7.12    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 275.065, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
7.13    Subdivision 1. Proposed levy. (a) Notwithstanding any law or charter to the
7.14contrary, on or before September 15 30, each taxing authority, other than a school district,
7.15shall adopt a proposed budget and county and each home rule charter or statutory city shall
7.16certify to the county auditor the proposed or, in the case of a town, the final property tax
7.17levy for taxes payable in the following year.
7.18    (b) Notwithstanding any law or charter to the contrary, on or before September 15,
7.19each town and each special taxing district shall adopt and certify to the county auditor a
7.20proposed property tax levy for taxes payable in the following year. For towns, the final
7.21certified levy shall also be considered the proposed levy.
7.22    (c) On or before September 30, each school district that has not mutually agreed
7.23with its home county to extend this date shall certify to the county auditor the proposed
7.24property tax levy for taxes payable in the following year. Each school district that has
7.25agreed with its home county to delay the certification of its proposed property tax levy
7.26must certify its proposed property tax levy for the following year no later than October
7.277. The school district shall certify the proposed levy as:
7.28    (1) a specific dollar amount by school district fund, broken down between
7.29voter-approved and non-voter-approved levies and between referendum market value
7.30and tax capacity levies; or
7.31    (2) the maximum levy limitation certified by the commissioner of education
7.32according to section 126C.48, subdivision 1.
7.33    (c) (d) If the board of estimate and taxation or any similar board that establishes
7.34maximum tax levies for taxing jurisdictions within a first class city certifies the maximum
7.35property tax levies for funds under its jurisdiction by charter to the county auditor by
8.1September 15 the date specified in paragraph (a), the city shall be deemed to have certified
8.2its levies for those taxing jurisdictions.
8.3    (d) (e) For purposes of this section, "taxing authority" includes all home rule and
8.4statutory cities, towns, counties, school districts, and "special taxing district" means a
8.5 special taxing districts district as defined in section 275.066. Intermediate school districts
8.6that levy a tax under chapter 124 or 136D, joint powers boards established under sections
8.7123A.44 to 123A.446, and Common School Districts No. 323, Franconia, and No. 815,
8.8Prinsburg, are also special taxing districts for purposes of this section.
8.9(e) (f) At the meeting at which the a taxing authority, other than a town, adopts its
8.10proposed tax levy under paragraph (a) or (b) this subdivision, the taxing authority shall
8.11announce the time and place of its subsequent regularly scheduled meetings at which
8.12the budget and levy will be discussed and at which the public will be allowed to speak.
8.13The time and place of those meetings must be included in the proceedings or summary
8.14of proceedings published in the official newspaper of the taxing authority under section
8.15123B.09 , 375.12, or 412.191.
8.16EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with taxes payable in 2015.

8.17    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
8.18    Subd. 2. Composite judgment. Amounts included in composite judgments
8.19authorized by section 279.37, subdivision 1, and confessed on or after July 1, 1982, are
8.20subject to interest at the rate determined pursuant to section 549.09. Amounts confessed
8.21under this authority after December 31, 1990, (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b),
8.22amounts included in composite judgments authorized by section 279.37, subdivision 1,
8.23 are subject to interest at the rate calculated under subdivision 1a. During each calendar
8.24year, interest shall accrue on the unpaid balance of the composite judgment from the time
8.25it is confessed until it is paid. The rate of interest is subject to change each year in the
8.26same manner that section 549.09 or subdivision 1a, whichever is applicable, for rate
8.27changes. Interest on the unpaid contract balance on judgments confessed before July 1,
8.281982, is payable at the rate applicable to the judgment at the time that it was confessed
8.29 The interest rate established at the time the judgment is confessed shall remain for the
8.30duration of that judgment.
8.31(b) A confession of judgment covering any part of a parcel classified as 1a or 1b, and
8.32used as the primary homestead of the owner, is subject to interest at the rate provided in
8.33section 279.37, subdivision 2, paragraph (b).
8.34EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective January 1, 2015.

9.1    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 279.37, subdivision 2, is
9.2amended to read:
9.3    Subd. 2. Installment payments. (a) The owner of any such parcel, or any person to
9.4whom the right to pay taxes has been given by statute, mortgage, or other agreement, may
9.5make and file with the county auditor of the county in which the parcel is located a written
9.6offer to pay the current taxes each year before they become delinquent, or to contest the
9.7taxes under Minnesota Statutes 1941, sections 278.01 to 278.13, and agree to confess
9.8judgment for the amount provided, as determined by the county auditor. By filing the
9.9offer, the owner waives all irregularities in connection with the tax proceedings affecting
9.10the parcel and any defense or objection which the owner may have to the proceedings, and
9.11also waives the requirements of any notice of default in the payment of any installment or
9.12interest to become due pursuant to the composite judgment to be so entered. Unless the
9.13property is subject to subdivision 1a, with the offer, the owner shall (i) tender one-tenth of
9.14the amount of the delinquent taxes, costs, penalty, and interest, and (ii) tender all current
9.15year taxes and penalty due at the time the confession of judgment is entered. In the offer,
9.16the owner shall agree to pay the balance in nine equal installments, with interest as provided
9.17in section 279.03, payable annually on installments remaining unpaid from time to time, on
9.18or before December 31 of each year following the year in which judgment was confessed.
9.19(b) If any part of the parcel consists of real estate classified as 1a or 1b and used
9.20as the primary homestead by the owner of the property, the interest rate on offers made
9.21under paragraph (a) shall be set annually by the commissioner of revenue at the greater of
9.22five percent or two percent above the prime rate charged by banks during the six-month
9.23period ending on September 30 of that year, rounded to the nearest full percent, provided
9.24that the rate shall not exceed the maximum annum rate specified under section 279.03,
9.25subdivision 1a. The rate of interest becomes effective on January 1 of the immediately
9.26succeeding year. The determination of the commissioner pursuant to this subdivision shall
9.27not be considered a "rule" and shall not be subject to the Administrative Procedure Act
9.28contained in chapter 14. In the event of default occurring in the payments to be made
9.29under any confessed judgment entered pursuant to this paragraph, the taxes and penalties
9.30due shall be subject to the interest rate specified in section 279.03.
9.31For purposes of this subdivision:
9.32(1) the term "prime rate charged by banks" means the average predominant prime
9.33rate quoted by commercial banks to large businesses, as determined by the Board of
9.34Governors of the Federal Reserve System; and
10.1(2) "default" means the cancellation of the confession of judgment due to
10.2nonpayment of the current year tax or failure to make any installment payment required by
10.3this confessed judgment within 60 days from the date on which payment was due.
10.4(c) The interest rate established at the time the judgment is confessed shall remain
10.5for the duration of that judgment. By October 15 of each year, the commissioner of
10.6revenue must determine the rate of interest as provided under paragraph (b) and, by
10.7November 1 of each year, must certify the rate to the county auditor.
10.8(d) A qualified property owner eligible to enter into a second confession of judgment
10.9may do so at the interest rate provided in paragraph (b).
10.10(e) Repurchase agreements or contracts for repurchase for properties being
10.11repurchased under section 282.261 are not eligible to receive the interest rate provided in
10.12paragraph (b).
10.13(f) The offer must be substantially as follows:
10.14"To the court administrator of the district court of ........... county, I, .....................,
10.15am the owner of the following described parcel of real estate located in ....................
10.16county, Minnesota:
10.17.............................. Upon that real estate there are delinquent taxes for the year ........., and
10.18prior years, as follows: (here insert year of delinquency and the total amount of delinquent
10.19taxes, costs, interest, and penalty). By signing this document I offer to confess judgment in
10.20the sum of $...... and waive all irregularities in the tax proceedings affecting these taxes and
10.21any defense or objection which I may have to them, and direct judgment to be entered for
10.22the amount stated above, minus the sum of $............, to be paid with this document, which
10.23is one-tenth or one-fifth of the amount of the taxes, costs, penalty, and interest stated above.
10.24I agree to pay the balance of the judgment in nine or four equal, annual installments, with
10.25interest as provided in section 279.03, payable annually, on the installments remaining
10.26unpaid. I agree to pay the installments and interest on or before December 31 of each year
10.27following the year in which this judgment is confessed and current taxes each year before
10.28they become delinquent, or within 30 days after the entry of final judgment in proceedings
10.29to contest the taxes under Minnesota Statutes, sections 278.01 to 278.13.
10.30Dated .............., ......."
10.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for confessions of judgment entered
10.32into on or after January 1, 2015.

10.33    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 383E.21, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
11.1    Subdivision 1. Authority to levy property taxes and incur debt. (a) To finance the
11.2cost of designing, constructing, and acquiring countywide public safety improvements
11.3and equipment, including personal property, benefiting both Anoka County and the
11.4municipalities located within Anoka County, the governing body of Anoka County may
11.5 levy property taxes for public safety improvements and equipment, and issue:
11.6(1) capital improvement bonds under the provisions of section 373.40 as if the
11.7infrastructure and equipment qualified as a "capital improvement" within the meaning of
11.8section 373.40, subdivision 1, paragraph (b); and
11.9(2) capital notes under the provisions of section 373.01, subdivision 3, as if the
11.10equipment qualified as "capital equipment" within the meaning of section 373.01,
11.11subdivision 3. Personal property acquired with the proceeds of the bonds or capital
11.12notes issued under this section must have an expected useful life at least as long as the
11.13term of debt.
11.14(b) The outstanding principal amount of the bonds and the capital notes issued under
11.15this section may not exceed $8,000,000 at any time. Any bonds or notes issued pursuant
11.16to this section must only be issued after approval by a majority vote of the Anoka County
11.17Joint Law Enforcement Council, a joint powers board.
11.18EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning for taxes payable in 2013
11.19and expires under section 383E.21, subdivision 3.

11.20    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 383E.21, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
11.21    Subd. 2. Treatment of levy. Notwithstanding sections 275.065, subdivision 3,
11.22and 276.04, the county may report the tax attributable to any levy to fund public safety
11.23capital improvements or equipment projects approved by the Anoka County Joint Law
11.24Enforcement Council or pay principal and interest on bonds or notes issued under this
11.25section as a separate line item on the proposed property tax notice and the property tax
11.26statement. Notwithstanding any provision in chapter 275 or 373 to the contrary, bonds or
11.27notes issued by Anoka County under this section must not be included in the computation
11.28of the net debt of Anoka County.
11.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning for taxes payable in 2013
11.30and expires under section 383E.21, subdivision 3.

11.31    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 428A.02, subdivision 1, is
11.32amended to read:
12.1    Subdivision 1. Ordinance. (a) The governing body of a city may adopt an ordinance
12.2establishing a special service district. Only property that is wholly or partially classified
12.3as class 3 under section 273.13 and used for commercial, industrial, or public utility
12.4purposes, or is vacant land zoned or designated on a land use plan for commercial or
12.5industrial use and located in the special service district, may be subject to the charges
12.6imposed by the city on the special service district. Other types of property properties may
12.7be included within the boundaries of the special service district but are not subject to the
12.8levies or charges imposed by the city on the special service district.
12.9    (b) If 50 percent or more of the estimated market value of a parcel of property
12.10is classified under section 273.13 as commercial, industrial, or vacant land zoned or
12.11designated on a land use plan for commercial or industrial use, or public utility for the
12.12current assessment year a property is subject to a service charge, then the entire taxable
12.13market value of the property, including any portion not classified as class 3, is may be
12.14 subject to a the service charge based on net tax capacity for purposes of sections 428A.01
12.15 to 428A.10.
12.16    (c) The ordinance shall describe with particularity the area within the city to be
12.17included in the district and the special services to be furnished in the district. The
12.18ordinance may not be adopted until after a public hearing has been held on the question.
12.19Notice of the hearing shall include the time and place of hearing, a map showing the
12.20boundaries of the proposed district, and a statement that all persons owning property in the
12.21proposed district that would be subject to a service charge will be given opportunity to be
12.22heard at the hearing. Within 30 days after adoption of the ordinance under this subdivision,
12.23the governing body shall send a copy of the ordinance to the commissioner of revenue.
12.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment,
12.25and applies to service district charges for 2014 and thereafter.

12.26    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.0124, subdivision 2,
12.27is amended to read:
12.28    Subd. 2. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following terms
12.29have the meanings given them.
12.30    (b) "County program aid" means the sum of "county need aid," "county tax base
12.31equalization aid," and "county transition aid."
12.32    (c) "Age-adjusted population" means a county's population multiplied by the county
12.33age index.
13.1    (d) "County age index" means the percentage of the population over age 65 within
13.2the county divided by the percentage of the population over age 65 within the state, except
13.3that the age index for any county may not be greater than 1.8 nor less than 0.8.
13.4    (e) "Population over age 65" means the population over age 65 established as of
13.5July 15 in an aid calculation year by the most recent federal census, by a special census
13.6conducted under contract with the United States Bureau of the Census, by a population
13.7estimate made by the Metropolitan Council, or by a population estimate of the state
13.8demographer made pursuant to section 4A.02, whichever is the most recent as to the stated
13.9date of the count or estimate for the preceding calendar year and which has been certified
13.10to the commissioner of revenue on or before July 15 of the aid calculation year. A revision
13.11to an estimate or count is effective for these purposes only if certified to the commissioner
13.12on or before July 15 of the aid calculation year. Clerical errors in the certification or use of
13.13estimates and counts established as of July 15 in the aid calculation year are subject to
13.14correction within the time periods allowed under section 477A.014.
13.15    (f) "Part I crimes" means the three-year average annual number of Part I crimes
13.16reported for each county by the Department of Public Safety for the most recent years
13.17available. By July 1 of each year, the commissioner of public safety shall certify to the
13.18commissioner of revenue the number of Part I crimes reported for each county for the
13.19three most recent calendar years available.
13.20    (g) "Households receiving food stamps" means the average monthly number of
13.21households receiving food stamps for the three most recent years for which data is
13.22available. By July 1 of each year, the commissioner of human services must certify to the
13.23commissioner of revenue the average monthly number of households in the state and in
13.24each county that receive food stamps, for the three most recent calendar years available.
13.25(h) "Watercraft trailer launch" means any public water access site designed for
13.26launching watercraft.
13.27(i) "Watercraft trailer parking space" means a parking space designated for a boat
13.28trailer at any public water access site designed for launching watercraft.
13.29    (h) (j) "County net tax capacity" means the county's adjusted net tax capacity under
13.30section 273.1325.
13.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in calendar year
13.322014 and thereafter.

13.33    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 477A.0124, subdivision 3, is amended to
13.34read:
14.1    Subd. 3. County need aid. For 2005 and subsequent years, (a) The money
14.2appropriated to county need aid each calendar year under section 477A.03, subdivision
14.32b, paragraph (a), shall be allocated as follows: 40 percent based on each county's share
14.4of age-adjusted population, 40 percent based on each county's share of the state total of
14.5households receiving food stamps, and 20 percent based on each county's share of the
14.6state total of Part I crimes.
14.7(b) The money appropriated to the county need aid each calendar year under section
14.8477A.03, subdivision 2b, paragraph (c), shall be allocated as follows: 50 percent based on
14.9each county's share of watercraft trailer launches and 50 percent based on each county's
14.10share of watercraft trailer parking spaces.
14.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in calendar year
14.122014 and thereafter.

14.13    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 477A.0124, is amended by adding a
14.14subdivision to read:
14.15    Subd. 3a. Use of proceeds. A county that receives a distribution under subdivision
14.163, paragraph (b), must use the proceeds solely to prevent the introduction of or limit
14.17the spread of aquatic invasive species at all access sites within the county. The county
14.18must establish, by resolution or through adoption of a plan, guidelines for the use of
14.19the proceeds. The guidelines set by the county board may include, but are not limited
14.20to, providing for site-level management, countywide awareness, and other procedures
14.21that the county finds necessary to achieve compliance. The county may appropriate the
14.22proceeds directly, or may use any portion of the proceeds to provide funding for a joint
14.23powers board or cooperative agreement with another political subdivision, a soil and water
14.24conservation district in the county, a watershed district in the county, or a lake association
14.25located in the county. Any money appropriated by the county to a different entity or
14.26political subdivision must be used as required under this section.
14.27For purposes of this section, "aquatic invasive species" means nonnative aquatic
14.28organisms that invade water beyond their natural and historic range.
14.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in calendar year
14.302014 and thereafter.

14.31    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.013, subdivision 8,
14.32is amended to read:
15.1    Subd. 8. City formula aid. (a) For aids payable in 2014 only, the formula aid for a
15.2city is equal to the sum of (1) its 2013 certified aid, and (2) the product of (i) the difference
15.3between its unmet need and its 2013 certified aid, and (ii) the aid gap percentage.
15.4    (b) For aids payable in 2015 and thereafter, the formula aid for a city is equal to the
15.5sum of (1) its formula aid in the previous year and (2) the product of (i) the difference
15.6between its unmet need and its certified formula aid in the previous year under subdivision
15.79, and (ii) the aid gap percentage.
15.8    (c) For aids payable in 2015 and thereafter, if a city's certified aid from the previous
15.9year is greater than the sum of its unmet need plus its aid adjustment under subdivision 13,
15.10its formula aid is adjusted to equal its unmet need.
15.11    (d) No city may have a formula aid amount less than zero. The aid gap percentage
15.12must be the same for all cities subject to paragraph (b).
15.13    (e) The applicable aid gap percentage must be calculated by the Department of
15.14Revenue so that the total of the aid under subdivision 9 equals the total amount available
15.15for aid under section 477A.03. Data used in calculating aids to cities under sections
15.16477A.011 to 477A.013 shall be the most recently available data as of January 1 in the
15.17year in which the aid is calculated.
15.18EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in calendar year
15.192015 and thereafter.

15.20    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.03, subdivision 2b,
15.21is amended to read:
15.22    Subd. 2b. Counties. (a) For aids payable in 2014 2015 and thereafter, the total
15.23aid payable under section 477A.0124, subdivision 3, is $100,795,000. Each calendar
15.24year, $500,000 of this appropriation shall be retained by the commissioner of revenue to
15.25make reimbursements to the commissioner of management and budget for payments
15.26made under section 611.27. The reimbursements shall be to defray the additional costs
15.27associated with court-ordered counsel under section 611.27. Any retained amounts not
15.28used for reimbursement in a year shall be included in the next distribution of county
15.29need aid that is certified to the county auditors for the purpose of property tax reduction
15.30for the next taxes payable year.
15.31    (b) For aids payable in 2014 2015 and thereafter, the total aid under section
15.32477A.0124, subdivision 4 , is $104,909,575. The commissioner of revenue shall transfer
15.33to the commissioner of management and budget $207,000 annually for the cost of
15.34preparation of local impact notes as required by section 3.987, and other local government
15.35activities. The commissioner of revenue shall transfer to the commissioner of education
16.1$7,000 annually for the cost of preparation of local impact notes for school districts
16.2as required by section 3.987. The commissioner of revenue shall deduct the amounts
16.3transferred under this paragraph from the appropriation under this paragraph. The amounts
16.4transferred are appropriated to the commissioner of management and budget and the
16.5commissioner of education respectively.
16.6(c) For aids payable in 2015 and thereafter, the total aid payable under section
16.7477A.0124, subdivision 3, paragraph (b), is $10,000,000. Notwithstanding section
16.8477A.015, the first installment of aid payable in 2015 under this paragraph shall be made
16.9on March 15, 2015, and the second installment shall be made on July 20, 2015.
16.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in calendar year
16.112015 and thereafter.

16.12    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.12, subdivision 1, is
16.13amended to read:
16.14    Subdivision 1. Types of land; payments. The following amounts are annually
16.15appropriated to the commissioner of natural resources from the general fund for transfer
16.16to the commissioner of revenue. The commissioner of revenue shall pay the transferred
16.17funds to counties as required by sections 477A.11 to 477A.14. The amounts, based on the
16.18acreage as of July 1 of each year prior to the payment year, are:
16.19(1) $5.133 multiplied by the total number of acres of acquired natural resources land
16.20or, at the county's option three-fourths of one percent of the appraised value of all acquired
16.21natural resources land in the county, whichever is greater;
16.22(2) $5.133, multiplied by the total number of acres of transportation wetland or, at
16.23the county's option, three-fourths of one percent of the appraised value of all transportation
16.24wetland in the county, whichever is greater;
16.25(3) $5.133, multiplied by the total number of acres of wildlife management land, or,
16.26at the county's option, three-fourths of one percent of the appraised value of all wildlife
16.27management land in the county, whichever is greater;
16.28(4) 50 percent of the dollar amount as determined under clause (1), multiplied by
16.29the number of acres of military refuge land in the county;
16.30(5) $1.50, multiplied by the number of acres of county-administered other natural
16.31resources land in the county;
16.32(6) $5.133, multiplied by the total number of acres of land utilization project land
16.33in the county;
16.34(7) $1.50, multiplied by the number of acres of commissioner-administered other
16.35natural resources land in the county; and
17.1    (8) without regard to acreage, and notwithstanding the rules adopted under section
17.284A.55, $300,000 for local assessments under section 84A.55, subdivision 9, that shall be
17.3divided and distributed to the counties containing state-owned lands within a conservation
17.4area in proportion to each county's percentage of the total annual ditch assessments.
17.5EFFECTIVE DATE.The amendments to clause (3) are effective for payments
17.6made in calendar year 2015 and later. The amendments to clause (8) are effective for
17.7assessments payable in calendar year 2014 and later.

17.8    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.12, subdivision 2, is
17.9amended to read:
17.10    Subd. 2. Procedure. (a) Each county auditor shall certify to the Department of
17.11Natural Resources during July of each year prior to the payment year the number of acres
17.12of county-administered other natural resources land within the county. The Department of
17.13Natural resources may, in addition to the certification of acreage, require descriptive lists
17.14of land so certified. The commissioner of natural resources shall determine and certify to
17.15the commissioner of revenue by March 1 of the payment year:
17.16(1) the number of acres and most recent appraised value of acquired natural
17.17resources land, wildlife management land, and military refuge land within each county;
17.18(2) the number of acres of commissioner-administered natural resources land within
17.19each county;
17.20(3) the number of acres of county-administered other natural resources land within
17.21each county, based on the reports filed by each county auditor with the commissioner
17.22of natural resources; and
17.23(4) the number of acres of land utilization project land within each county.
17.24(b) The commissioner of transportation shall determine and certify to the
17.25commissioner of revenue by March 1 of the payment year the number of acres of
17.26transportation wetland and the appraised value of the land, but only if it exceeds 500
17.27acres in a county.
17.28(c) Each auditor of a county that contains state-owned lands within a conservation
17.29area shall determine and certify to the commissioner of natural resources by May 31 of
17.30the payment year, the county's ditch assessments for state-owned lands subject to section
17.3184A.55, subdivision 9. A joint certification for two or more counties may be submitted to
17.32the commissioner of natural resources through the Consolidated Conservation Counties
17.33Joint Powers Board. The commissioner of natural resources shall certify the ditch
17.34assessments to the commissioner of revenue by June 15 of the payment year.
18.1(d) The commissioner of revenue shall determine the distributions provided for in this
18.2section using: (1) the number of acres and appraised values certified by the commissioner
18.3of natural resources and the commissioner of transportation by March 1 of the payment
18.4year; and (2) ditch assessments under paragraph (c), by June 30 of the payment year.
18.5EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for assessments payable in calendar
18.6year 2014 and later.

18.7    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.14, subdivision 1, is
18.8amended to read:
18.9    Subdivision 1. General distribution. Except as provided in subdivisions 2 and 3,
18.1040 percent of the total payment to the county shall be deposited in the county general
18.11revenue fund to be used to provide property tax levy reduction. The remainder shall be
18.12distributed by the county in the following priority:
18.13(a) (1) 64.2 cents, for each acre of county-administered other natural resources land
18.14shall be deposited in a resource development fund to be created within the county treasury
18.15for use in resource development, forest management, game and fish habitat improvement,
18.16and recreational development and maintenance of county-administered other natural
18.17resources land. Any county receiving less than $5,000 annually for the resource
18.18development fund may elect to deposit that amount in the county general revenue fund;
18.19(b) from the funds remaining, (2) within 30 days of receipt of the payment to
18.20the county, the county treasurer shall pay each organized township ten percent of the
18.21amount received a township with land that qualifies for payment under section 477A.12,
18.22subdivision 1
, clauses (1), (2), and (5) to (7), ten percent of the payment the county
18.23received for such land within that township. Payments for natural resources lands not
18.24located in an organized township shall be deposited in the county general revenue fund.
18.25Payments to counties and townships pursuant to this paragraph shall be used to provide
18.26property tax levy reduction, except that of the payments for natural resources lands not
18.27located in an organized township, the county may allocate the amount determined to be
18.28necessary for maintenance of roads in unorganized townships. Provided that, if the total
18.29payment to the county pursuant to section 477A.12 is not sufficient to fully fund the
18.30distribution provided for in this clause, the amount available shall be distributed to each
18.31township and the county general revenue fund on a pro rata basis; and
18.32(c) (3) any remaining funds shall be deposited in the county general revenue fund.
18.33Provided that, if the distribution to the county general revenue fund exceeds $35,000, the
18.34excess shall be used to provide property tax levy reduction.
19.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014.

19.2    Sec. 22. Laws 1999, chapter 243, article 14, section 5, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.3    Subdivision 1. Board plan and program. The board shall adopt a comprehensive
19.4plan for the collection, treatment, and disposal of sewage in the district for a designated
19.5period the board deems proper and reasonable. The board shall prepare and adopt
19.6subsequent comprehensive plans for the collection, treatment, and disposal of sewage
19.7in the district for each succeeding designated period as the board deems proper and
19.8reasonable. All comprehensive plans of the district shall be subject to the planning
19.9and zoning authority of Scott county and in conformance with all planning and zoning
19.10ordinances of Scott county. The first plan, as modified by the board, and any subsequent
19.11plan shall take into account the preservation and best and most economic use of water and
19.12other natural resources in the area; the preservation, use, and potential for use of lands
19.13adjoining waters of the state to be used for the disposal of sewage; and the impact the
19.14disposal system will have on present and future land use in the area affected. In no case
19.15shall the comprehensive plan provide for more than 325 364 connections to the disposal
19.16system. All connections must be charged a full assessment. Connections made after the
19.17initial assessment period ends must be charged an amount equal to the initial assessment
19.18plus an adjustment for inflation and plus any other charges determined to be reasonable
19.19and necessary by the board. Deferred assessments may be permitted, as provided for in
19.20Minnesota Statutes, chapter 429. The plans shall include the general location of needed
19.21interceptors and treatment works, a description of the area that is to be served by the
19.22various interceptors and treatment works, a long-range capital improvements program, and
19.23any other details as the board deems appropriate. In developing the plans, the board shall
19.24consult with persons designated for the purpose by governing bodies of any governmental
19.25unit within the district to represent the entities and shall consider the data, resources, and
19.26input offered to the board by the entities and any planning agency acting on behalf of one
19.27or more of the entities. Each plan, when adopted, must be followed in the district and may
19.28be revised as often as the board deems necessary.
19.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day after the governing body of
19.30the Cedar Lake area water and sanitary sewer district and its chief clerical officer timely
19.31complete their compliance with Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

19.32    Sec. 23. CITY OF JACKSON; LIMITATION ON ABATEMENTS.
19.33Notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1813, subdivision
19.348, the total amount of property taxes abated by the city of Jackson in any year may not
20.1exceed the greater of (1) ten percent of the city's net tax capacity for the taxes payable year
20.2to which the abatement applies; or (2) $240,000.
20.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes payable in 2015 through
20.4taxes payable in 2019.

20.5    Sec. 24. FUND TRANSFER FROM IRON RANGE RESOURCES AND
20.6REHABILITATION BOARD.
20.7The Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board must transfer $60,000 to the
20.8commissioner of management and budget for deposit into the general fund on July 1, 2014.

20.9    Sec. 25. HELENA TOWNSHIP, SCOTT COUNTY; REMOVAL OF
20.10SUBORDINATE SERVICE DISTRICT.
20.11    Subdivision 1. Application. This section applies to the subordinate service district
20.12established in Helena Township, Scott County, for the Silver Maple Bay Estates, under
20.13Minnesota Statutes, chapter 365A.
20.14    Subd. 2. Special provision for removal of the district. Notwithstanding the
20.15requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 365A.095, subdivision 2, if the district is
20.16removed as provided in Minnesota Statutes, section 365A.095, subdivision 1, after all
20.17outstanding obligations of the district have been paid in full, the town board may vote to
20.18sell or use the surplus of any land or equipment, or the surplus of any tax revenue or service
20.19charge, or any part of it, collected from or associated with the district to connect the owners
20.20of any property within the discontinued district to another public sewer system. Any
20.21surplus not used to connect residents to such sewer system may be distributed equally to
20.22the owners of any property within the discontinued district that were charged the extra tax
20.23or service fee during the most recent tax year for which the tax or service fee was imposed.
20.24Any surplus not refunded under this section must be transferred to the town's general fund.
20.25EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day after the governing body of
20.26Helena Township and its chief clerical officer timely complete their compliance with
20.27Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

20.28    Sec. 26. IRON RANGE FISCAL DISPARITIES STUDY.
20.29The commissioner of revenue, in consultation with the administrative auditor, as
20.30defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 276A.01, subdivision 2, shall conduct a study of
20.31the tax relief area revenue distribution program contained in Minnesota Statutes, chapter
20.32276A, commonly known as the Iron Range fiscal disparities program. By January 15,
21.12015, the commissioner of revenue shall submit a report to the chairs and ranking minority
21.2members of the house of representatives and senate tax committees consisting of the
21.3findings of the study and recommendations. The study must analyze:
21.4(1) the ability to use a municipality's contribution based on its commercial,
21.5industrial, and utility values from the current year rather than the previous year; and
21.6(2) recommended changes to the program to decrease the volatility of the program's
21.7distribution.
21.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

21.9    Sec. 27. PRIVATE SALE OF LAND; DISTRICT ONE HOSPITAL BOARD.
21.10(a) Notwithstanding Laws 1963, chapter 118, section 5, or any other law to the
21.11contrary, the District One Hospital District may, without advertising for bids, sell,
21.12convey, and transfer management, control, and operation of the hospital, any of the
21.13hospital's personal property, and any of the real property described in paragraph (b).
21.14Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the District One Hospital District may include
21.15some or all tangible and intangible personal property associated with the hospital as part
21.16of the negotiated sale price.
21.17(b) The land referred to in paragraph (a), is located in Rice County and consists of
21.18the parcels of property known as the District One Hospital and adjacent property. Legal
21.19descriptions for the properties are as follows:
21.20(1) LOT SIX (6), NORTH SEABURY ADDITION, FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY,
21.21MINNESOTA;
21.22(2) ALL OF BLOCK 4, AUDITOR'S PLAT NO. 1 OF THE SW1/4 OF SECTION
21.2332, TOWNSHIP 110 NORTH, RANGE 20 WEST OF THE 5TH P.M., FARIBAULT,
21.24RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA, EXCEPTING THEREFROM THAT PART OF SAID
21.25BLOCK 4 DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A POINT IN THE NORTH
21.26LINE OF SAID BLOCK 4, A DISTANCE OF 179.00 FEET WESTERLY FROM THE
21.27NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID BLOCK 4, THENCE SOUTHERLY, PARALLEL
21.28WITH THE EAST LINE OF SAID BLOCK 4, A DISTANCE OF 225.00 FEET; THENCE
21.29WESTERLY, PARALLEL WITH SAID NORTH LINE OF BLOCK 4, A DISTANCE OF
21.30154.00 FEET; THENCE NORTHERLY, PARALLEL WITH SAID EAST LINE, 75.00
21.31FEET; THENCE WESTERLY, PARALLEL WITH SAID NORTH LINE, 36.00 FEET;
21.32THENCE NORTHERLY, PARALLEL WITH SAID EAST LINE, 150.00 FEET TO A
21.33POINT IN SAID NORTH LINE; THENCE EASTERLY ALONG SAID NORTH LINE,
21.34190.00 FEET TO SAID POINT OF BEGINNING;
22.1(3) LOT THREE (3), NORTH SEABURY ADDITION, FARIBAULT, RICE
22.2COUNTY, MINNESOTA;
22.3(4) LOT 5, NORTH SEABURY ADDITION, FARIBAULT, MINNESOTA,
22.4ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF ON FILE AND OF RECORD IN THE
22.5REGISTER OF DEEDS FOR RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA;
22.6(5) LOT 7, 8, 9, 10, AND THE EAST 82.4 FEET OF LOT 11, ALL IN NORTH
22.7SEABURY ADDITION, FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA, AND THE
22.8EAST 82.4 FEET OF ALL OF LOTS 7 AND 8, BLOCK 1, FARIBAULT'S ADDITION
22.9TO FARIBAULT, WHICH LIES NORTH AND WEST OF A LINE DRAWN FROM
22.10THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID BLOCK 1, NORTHEASTERLY TO THE
22.11NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID LOT 7, OF BLOCK 1;
22.12(6) LOTS 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, THE SOUTH 10
22.13FEET OF LOT 18, THE WEST FIVE FEET OF LOT 32 AND LOT 23, EXCEPT
22.14THE EAST 141.22 FEET, ALL IN BLOCK 6, AUDITOR'S PLAT NO. 1, SW1/4 OF
22.15SECTION 32, TOWNSHIP 110 NORTH, RANGE 20 WEST OF THE 5TH PRINCIPAL
22.16MERIDIAN, FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA;
22.17(7) UNIT 2, CONDOMINIUM NUMBER 8, JOHNSTON HALL CONDOMINIUM,
22.18FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA;
22.19(8) UNIT 1, CONDOMINIUM NUMBER 8, JOHNSTON HALL CONDOMINIUM,
22.20FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA; AND
22.21(9) COMMON ELEMENTS, CONDOMINIUM NUMBER 8, JOHNSTON HALL
22.22CONDOMINIUM, FARIBAULT, RICE COUNTY, MINNESOTA.
22.23(c) Upon determination by the District One Hospital Board that all sale requirements
22.24have been met, and sufficient funds exist to pay all outstanding principal and interest on
22.25any bonds issued prior to and in conjunction with the sale, each statutory or home rule
22.26charter city and town located within the hospital district must file a petition with the
22.27hospital board for dissolution under Minnesota Statutes, section 447.38.
22.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

22.29    Sec. 28. TRANSITION PROVISION.
22.30The owner of any property lying within the boundaries of a special service district in
22.31existence as of June 1, 2014, that becomes potentially liable for a service charge due to the
22.32changes in eligibility requirements contained in section 1, may file a written objection
22.33with the city clerk as provided under Minnesota Statutes, section 428A.02, subdivision 4.
22.34The objection must be filed by August 1, 2014. The governing body of the city must make
22.35a determination on the objection within 30 days of its filing.
23.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment,
23.2and applies to service district charges for 2014 and thereafter.

23.3    Sec. 29. 2014 SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENT FOR AQUATIC INVASIVE
23.4SPECIES PREVENTION AID; APPROPRIATION.
23.5(a) For aids payable in 2014 only, the total aid payable under Minnesota Statutes,
23.6section 477A.0124, subdivision 3, paragraph (b), is $5,000,000.
23.7(b) Payment to the counties of the amounts determined under Minnesota Statutes,
23.8section 477A.0124, subdivision 3, paragraph (b), must be made by the commissioner
23.9of revenue from the general fund at the time provided in Minnesota Statutes, section
23.10477A.015 for the first installment of local government aid.
23.11(c) $5,000,000 is appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of revenue
23.12in fiscal year 2015 to make the aid payments under this section.
23.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for aids payable in 2014 only.

23.14    Sec. 30. APPROPRIATION.
23.15The sum of $60,000 in fiscal year 2015 is appropriated from the general fund
23.16to the commissioner of revenue to pay for the study required under section 26. This is
23.17a onetime appropriation.

23.18    Sec. 31. STUDY OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL PRODUCTION; IMPACT ON
23.19MINNESOTA.
23.20(a) $250,000 in fiscal year 2015 is appropriated from the general fund to the
23.21commissioner of employment and economic development, in consultation with the
23.22commissioner of revenue, to finance a study and analysis of the effects of current and
23.23projected oil production in North Dakota on the Minnesota economy with special focus on
23.24the northwestern region of Minnesota and area border cities as provided in paragraph (b).
23.25(b) The study and analysis must address:
23.26(1) current and projected economic, fiscal, and demographic effects and issues;
23.27(2) direct and indirect costs and benefits;
23.28(3) positive and negative effects; and
23.29(4) economic challenges and opportunities for economic growth or diversification.
23.30(c) The study must be objective, evidence-based, and designed to produce empirical
23.31data. Study data must be utilized to formulate policy recommendations on how the state,
23.32the northwestern region of the state, and border cities may respond to the challenges and
24.1opportunities for economic growth and financial investment that may be derived from the
24.2regional economic changes that are the result of oil production in North Dakota.
24.3(d) For the purposes of this section, "border cities" has the meaning given in
24.4Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1731.
24.5(e) The study and analysis must be conducted by an independent entity with
24.6demonstrated knowledge in the following areas:
24.7(1) the economy and demography of Minnesota;
24.8(2) the domestic and foreign oil industry; and
24.9(3) technologies, markets, and geopolitical factors that have an impact on current
24.10and future oil production in the region.
24.11(f) The commissioner shall report on the findings and recommendations of the study
24.12to the committees of the house of representatives and senate having jurisdiction over
24.13economic development and workforce issues by February 15, 2015.
24.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

24.15    Sec. 32. STUDY OF ENERGY PRODUCING SYSTEMS.
24.16(a) $150,000 in fiscal year 2015 is appropriated from the general fund to the
24.17commissioner of revenue to conduct a study and analysis of the property taxation of
24.18all energy producing systems in the state of Minnesota, including both traditional and
24.19renewable energy sources.
24.20(b) The study and analysis must address:
24.21(1) the various methods by which the personal and real property of energy producing
24.22systems are taxed;
24.23(2) the availability of any exclusions, exemptions, or payment-in-lieu of taxation
24.24arrangements that apply to the systems; and
24.25(3) recommendations on the taxation of solar energy producing systems, including
24.26both real and personal property.
24.27(c) The commissioner shall report the findings of the study to the committees of the
24.28house of representatives and senate having jurisdiction over taxes by February 1, 2015.
24.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

24.30    Sec. 33. REPEALER.
24.31Laws 1961, chapter 372, sections 1; and 2; Laws 1963, chapter 118, sections 1, as
24.32amended by Laws 1996, chapter 471, article 8, section 19; 2, as amended by Laws 1996,
24.33chapter 471, article 8, section 20; 3; 4, as amended by Laws 1996, chapter 471, article 8,
25.1section 21; 5; 6, as amended by Laws 1996, chapter 471, article 8, section 22; 7; 8; 9; and
25.210; and Laws 1996, chapter 471, article 8, sections 19; 20; 21; and 22, are repealed.
25.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon the statutory and home rule
25.4charter cities located within the hospital district filing a petition with the hospital board
25.5for dissolution under Minnesota Statutes, section 447.38.

25.6ARTICLE 2
25.7SALES, USE, AND EXCISE TAXES

25.8    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 116J.8738, subdivision 2,
25.9is amended to read:
25.10    Subd. 2. Qualified business. (a) A business is a qualified business if it satisfies the
25.11requirement of this paragraph and is not disqualified under the provisions of paragraph
25.12(b). To qualify, the business must:
25.13(1) have operated its trade or business in a city or cities in greater Minnesota for at
25.14least one year before applying under subdivision 3;
25.15(2) pay or agree to pay in the future each employee compensation, including benefits
25.16not mandated by law, that on an annualized basis equal at least 120 percent of the federal
25.17poverty level for a family of four;
25.18(3) plan and agree to expand its employment in one or more cities in greater Minnesota
25.19by the minimum number of employees required under subdivision 3, paragraph (c); and
25.20(4) have received certification from the commissioner under subdivision 3 that
25.21it is a qualified business.
25.22(b) A business is not a qualified business if it is either:
25.23(1) primarily engaged in making retail sales to purchasers who are physically present
25.24at the business's location or locations in greater Minnesota; or
25.25(2) a public utility, as defined in section 336B.01; or
25.26(3) primarily engaged in lobbying; gambling; entertainment; professional sports;
25.27political consulting; leisure; hospitality; or professional services provided by attorneys,
25.28accountants, business consultants, physicians, or health care consultants.
25.29(c) The requirements in paragraph (a) that the business's operations and expansion
25.30be located in a city do not apply to an agricultural processing facility.
25.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

25.32    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 116J.8738, subdivision 3, is
25.33amended to read:
26.1    Subd. 3. Certification of qualified business. (a) A business may apply to the
26.2commissioner for certification as a qualified business under this section. The commissioner
26.3shall specify the form of the application, the manner and times for applying, and the
26.4information required to be included in the application. The commissioner may impose an
26.5application fee in an amount sufficient to defray the commissioner's cost of processing
26.6certifications. A business must file a copy of its application with the chief clerical officer
26.7of the city at the same time it applies to the commissioner. For an agricultural processing
26.8facility located outside the boundaries of a city, the business must file a copy of the
26.9application with the county auditor.
26.10(b) The commissioner shall certify each business as a qualified business that:
26.11(1) satisfies the requirements of subdivision 2;
26.12(2) the commissioner determines would not expand its operations in greater
26.13Minnesota without the tax incentives available under subdivision 4; and
26.14(3) enters a business subsidy agreement with the commissioner that pledges to
26.15satisfy the minimum expansion requirements of paragraph (c) within three years or less
26.16following execution of the agreement.
26.17The commissioner must act on an application within 60 90 days after its filing.
26.18Failure by the commissioner to take action within the 60-day 90-day period is deemed
26.19approval of the application.
26.20(c) The following minimum expansion requirements apply, based on the number of
26.21employees of the business at locations in greater Minnesota:
26.22(1) a business that employs 50 or fewer full-time equivalent employees in greater
26.23Minnesota when the agreement is executed must increase its employment by five or more
26.24full-time equivalent employees;
26.25(2) a business that employs more than 50 but fewer than 200 full-time equivalent
26.26employees in greater Minnesota when the agreement is executed must increase the number
26.27of its full-time equivalent employees in greater Minnesota by at least ten percent; or
26.28(3) a business that employs 200 or more full-time equivalent employees in greater
26.29Minnesota when the agreement is executed must increase its employment by at least 21
26.30full-time equivalent employees (c) The business must increase the number of full-time
26.31equivalent employees in greater Minnesota from the time the business subsidy agreement
26.32is executed by two employees or ten percent, whichever is greater.
26.33(d) The city, or a county for an agricultural processing facility located outside the
26.34boundaries of a city, in which the business proposes to expand its operations may file
26.35comments supporting or opposing the application with the commissioner. The comments
26.36must be filed within 30 days after receipt by the city of the application and may include a
27.1notice of any contribution the city or county intends to make to encourage or support the
27.2business expansion, such as the use of tax increment financing, property tax abatement,
27.3additional city or county services, or other financial assistance.
27.4(e) Certification of a qualified business is effective for the 12-year seven-year period
27.5beginning on the first day of the calendar month immediately following execution of
27.6the business subsidy agreement the date that the commissioner informs the business of
27.7the award of the benefit.
27.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

27.9    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 116J.8738, subdivision 4, is
27.10amended to read:
27.11    Subd. 4. Available tax incentives. A qualified business is entitled to a sales tax
27.12exemption, up to $2,000,000 annually and $10,000,000 during the total period of the
27.13agreement, as provided in section 297A.68, subdivision 44, for purchases made during
27.14the period the business was certified as a qualified business under this section. The
27.15commissioner has discretion to set the maximum amounts of the annual and total sales tax
27.16exemption allowed for each qualifying business as part of the business subsidy agreement.
27.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

27.18    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 289A.20, subdivision 4, is
27.19amended to read:
27.20    Subd. 4. Sales and use tax. (a) The taxes imposed by chapter 297A are due and
27.21payable to the commissioner monthly on or before the 20th day of the month following the
27.22month in which the taxable event occurred, or following another reporting period as the
27.23commissioner prescribes or as allowed under section 289A.18, subdivision 4, paragraph
27.24(f) or (g), except that use taxes due on an annual use tax return as provided under section
27.25289A.11, subdivision 1 , are payable by April 15 following the close of the calendar year.
27.26    (b) A vendor having a liability of $120,000 $250,000 or more during a fiscal year
27.27ending June 30 must remit the June liability for the next year in the following manner:
27.28    (1) Two business days before June 30 of the year, the vendor must remit 90 81.4
27.29 percent of the estimated June liability to the commissioner.
27.30    (2) On or before August 20 of the year, the vendor must pay any additional amount
27.31of tax not remitted in June.
27.32    (c) A vendor having a liability of:
28.1    (1) $10,000 or more, but less than $120,000 $250,000 during a fiscal year ending
28.2June 30, 2013, and fiscal years thereafter, must remit by electronic means all liabilities
28.3on returns due for periods beginning in all subsequent calendar years on or before the
28.420th day of the month following the month in which the taxable event occurred, or on
28.5or before the 20th day of the month following the month in which the sale is reported
28.6under section 289A.18, subdivision 4; or
28.7(2) $120,000 $250,000 or more, during a fiscal year ending June 30, 2009 2013,
28.8and fiscal years thereafter, must remit by electronic means all liabilities in the manner
28.9provided in paragraph (a) on returns due for periods beginning in the subsequent calendar
28.10year, except for 90 81.4 percent of the estimated June liability, which is due two business
28.11days before June 30. The remaining amount of the June liability is due on August 20.
28.12(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (b) or (c), a person prohibited by the person's
28.13religious beliefs from paying electronically shall be allowed to remit the payment by mail.
28.14The filer must notify the commissioner of revenue of the intent to pay by mail before
28.15doing so on a form prescribed by the commissioner. No extra fee may be charged to a
28.16person making payment by mail under this paragraph. The payment must be postmarked
28.17at least two business days before the due date for making the payment in order to be
28.18considered paid on a timely basis.
28.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes remitted after May 30, 2014.

28.20    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 289A.60, subdivision 15, is amended to read:
28.21    Subd. 15. Accelerated payment of June sales tax liability; penalty for
28.22underpayment. For payments made after December 31, 2006 2013, if a vendor is
28.23required by law to submit an estimation of June sales tax liabilities and 90 81.4 percent
28.24payment by a certain date, the vendor shall pay a penalty equal to ten percent of the
28.25amount of actual June liability required to be paid in June less the amount remitted in
28.26June. The penalty must not be imposed, however, if the amount remitted in June equals
28.27the lesser of 90 81.4 percent of the preceding May's liability or 90 81.4 percent of the
28.28average monthly liability for the previous calendar year.
28.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes remitted after May 30, 2014.

28.30    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.67, subdivision 13a, is amended to read:
28.31    Subd. 13a. Instructional materials. Instructional materials, other than textbooks,
28.32that are prescribed for use in conjunction with a course of study in a postsecondary school,
28.33college, university, or private career school to students who are regularly enrolled at such
29.1institutions are exempt. For purposes of this subdivision, "instructional materials" means
29.2materials required to be used directly in the completion of the course of study, including,
29.3but not limited to, interactive CDs, tapes, digital audio works, digital audiovisual works,
29.4and computer software.
29.5Instructional materials do not include general reference works or other items
29.6incidental to the instructional process such as pens, pencils, paper, folders, or computers.
29.7For purposes of this subdivision, "school" and "private career school" have the meanings
29.8given in subdivision 13.
29.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

29.10    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.67, is amended by adding a subdivision
29.11to read:
29.12    Subd. 33. Bullion coin. Bullion coin as defined in section 80G.01, subdivision
29.132, are exempt.
29.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
29.15June 30, 2014.

29.16    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.67, is amended by adding a subdivision
29.17to read:
29.18    Subd. 34. Presentations accessed as digital audio and audiovisual works.
29.19The charge for a live or prerecorded presentation, such as a lecture, seminar,
29.20workshop, or course, where participants access the presentation as a digital audio
29.21work or digital audiovisual work, and are connected to the presentation via the
29.22Internet, telecommunications equipment or other device that transfers the presentation
29.23electronically, is exempt if:
29.24(1) participants and the presenter, during the time that participants access the
29.25presentation, are able to give, receive, and discuss the presentation with each other,
29.26although the amount of interaction and when in the presentation the interaction occurs
29.27may be limited by the presenter; and
29.28(2) for those presentations where participants are given the option to attend the
29.29same presentation in person:
29.30(i) any limitations on the amount of interaction and when it occurs during the
29.31presentation are the same for those participants accessing the presentation electronically
29.32as those attending in person; and
29.33(ii) the admission to the in person presentation is not subject to tax under this chapter.
30.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
30.2June 30, 2014.

30.3    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.68, is amended by adding a subdivision
30.4to read:
30.5    Subd. 3a. Coin-operated entertainment and amusement devices. Coin-operated
30.6entertainment and amusement devices, including, but not limited to, fortune-telling
30.7machines, cranes, foosball and pool tables, video and pinball games, batting cages, rides,
30.8photo or video booths, and jukeboxes, are exempt when purchased by retailers selling
30.9admission to places of amusement and making available amusement devices as provided
30.10in section 297A.61, subdivision 3, paragraph (g), clause (1).
30.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
30.12June 30, 2014.

30.13    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.68, subdivision 42,
30.14is amended to read:
30.15    Subd. 42. Qualified data centers. (a) Purchases of enterprise information
30.16technology equipment and computer software for use in a qualified data center, or a
30.17qualified refurbished data center, are exempt, except that computer software maintenance
30.18agreements are exempt for purchases made after June 30, 2013. The tax on purchases
30.19exempt under this paragraph must be imposed and collected as if the rate under section
30.20297A.62, subdivision 1 , applied, and then refunded after June 30, 2013, in the manner
30.21provided in section 297A.75. This exemption includes enterprise information technology
30.22equipment and computer software purchased to replace or upgrade enterprise information
30.23technology equipment and computer software in a qualified data center, or a qualified
30.24refurbished data center.
30.25(b) Electricity used or consumed in the operation of a qualified data center or
30.26qualified refurbished data center is exempt.
30.27(c) For purposes of this subdivision, "qualified data center, or a qualified refurbished
30.28data center, " means a facility in Minnesota:
30.29(1) that is comprised of one or more buildings that consist in the aggregate of
30.30at least 25,000 square feet, and that are located on a single parcel or on contiguous
30.31parcels, where the total cost of construction or refurbishment, investment in enterprise
30.32information technology equipment, and computer software is at least $30,000,000 within a
30.3348-month period. The 48-month period begins no sooner than July 1, 2012, except that
31.1costs for computer software maintenance agreements purchased before July 1, 2013, are
31.2not included in determining if the $30,000,000 threshold has been met;
31.3(2) that is constructed or substantially refurbished after June 30, 2012, where
31.4"substantially refurbished" means that at least 25,000 square feet have been rebuilt or
31.5modified, including:
31.6(i) installation of enterprise information technology equipment,; environmental
31.7control, computer software, and energy efficiency improvements; and
31.8(ii) building improvements; and
31.9(3) that is used to house enterprise information technology equipment, where the
31.10facility has the following characteristics:
31.11(i) uninterruptible power supplies, generator backup power, or both;
31.12(ii) sophisticated fire suppression and prevention systems; and
31.13(iii) enhanced security. A facility will be considered to have enhanced security if it
31.14has restricted access to the facility to selected personnel; permanent security guards; video
31.15camera surveillance; an electronic system requiring pass codes, keycards, or biometric
31.16scans, such as hand scans and retinal or fingerprint recognition; or similar security features.
31.17In determining whether the facility has the required square footage, the square footage
31.18of the following spaces shall be included if the spaces support the operation of enterprise
31.19information technology equipment: office space, meeting space, and mechanical and
31.20other support facilities. For purposes of this subdivision, "computer software" includes,
31.21but is not limited to, software utilized or loaded at the a qualified data center or qualified
31.22refurbished data center, including maintenance, licensing, and software customization.
31.23(d) For purposes of this subdivision, a "qualified refurbished data center" means an
31.24existing facility that qualifies as a data center under paragraph (c), clauses (2) and (3), but
31.25that is comprised of one or more buildings that consist in the aggregate of at least 25,000
31.26square feet, and that are located on a single parcel or contiguous parcels, where the total
31.27cost of construction or refurbishment, investment in enterprise information technology
31.28equipment, and computer software is at least $50,000,000 within a 24-month period.
31.29(e) For purposes of this subdivision, "enterprise information technology equipment"
31.30means computers and equipment supporting computing, networking, or data storage,
31.31including servers and routers. It includes, but is not limited to: cooling systems,
31.32cooling towers, and other temperature control infrastructure; power infrastructure for
31.33transformation, distribution, or management of electricity used for the maintenance and
31.34operation of a qualified data center or qualified refurbished data center, including but
31.35not limited to exterior dedicated business-owned substations, backup power generation
31.36systems, battery systems, and related infrastructure; and racking systems, cabling, and
32.1trays, which are necessary for the a maintenance and operation of the qualified data center
32.2or qualified refurbished data center.
32.3(f) A qualified data center or qualified refurbished data center may claim the
32.4exemptions in this subdivision for purchases made either within 20 years of the date of
32.5its first purchase qualifying for the exemption under paragraph (a), or by June 30, 2042,
32.6whichever is earlier.
32.7(g) The purpose of this exemption is to create jobs in the construction and data
32.8center industries.
32.9(h) This subdivision is effective for sales and purchases made after June 30, 2012,
32.10and before July 1, 2042.
32.11(i)(1) The commissioner of employment and economic development must certify
32.12to the commissioner of revenue, in a format approved by the commissioner of revenue,
32.13when a qualified data center has met the requirements under paragraph (c) or a qualified
32.14refurbished data center has met the requirements under paragraph (d). The certification
32.15must provide the following information regarding each qualified data center or qualified
32.16refurbished data center:
32.17(i) the total square footage amount;
32.18(ii) the total amount of construction or refurbishment costs and the total amount of
32.19qualifying investments in enterprise information technology equipment and computer
32.20software; and
32.21(iii) the beginning and ending of the applicable period under either paragraph (c) or
32.22(d) in which the qualifying expenditures and purchases under item (ii) were made, but in
32.23no case shall the period begin before July 1, 2012;
32.24(2) Any refund for sales tax paid on qualifying purchases under this subdivision must
32.25not be issued unless the commissioner of revenue has received the certification required
32.26under clause (1) either from the commissioner of employment and economic development
32.27or the qualified data center or qualified refurbished data center claiming the refund; and
32.28(3) The commissioner of employment and economic development must annually
32.29notify the commissioner of revenue of the qualified data centers that are projected to meet
32.30the requirements under paragraph (c) and the qualified refurbished data centers that are
32.31projected to meet the requirements under paragraph (d) in each of the next four years. The
32.32notification must provide the information required under clause (1), items (i) to (iii), for
32.33each qualified data center or qualified refurbished data center.
32.34EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

33.1    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.68, subdivision 44,
33.2is amended to read:
33.3    Subd. 44. Greater Minnesota business expansions. (a) Purchases and use of
33.4tangible personal property or taxable services by a qualified business, as defined in section
33.5116J.8738 , are exempt if:
33.6(1) the business subsidy agreement provides that the exemption under this
33.7subdivision applies;
33.8(2) the property or services are primarily used or consumed at the facility in greater
33.9Minnesota identified in the business subsidy agreement; and
33.10(3) the purchase was made and delivery received during the duration of the
33.11certification of the business as a qualified business under section 116J.8738.
33.12(b) Purchase and use of construction materials and supplies used or consumed in,
33.13and equipment incorporated into, the construction of improvements to real property in
33.14greater Minnesota are exempt if the improvements after completion of construction are
33.15to be used in the conduct of the trade or business of the qualified business, as defined in
33.16section 116J.8738. This exemption applies regardless of whether the purchases are made
33.17by the business or a contractor.
33.18(c) The exemptions under this subdivision apply to a local sales and use tax.
33.19(d) The tax on purchases imposed under this subdivision must be imposed and
33.20collected as if the rate under section 297A.62 applied, and then refunded in the manner
33.21provided in section 297A.75. The total amount refunded for a facility over the certification
33.22period is limited to the amount listed in the business subsidy agreement. No more than
33.23$7,000,000 may be refunded in a fiscal year for all purchases under this subdivision.
33.24Refunds must be allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. If more than $7,000,000 of
33.25eligible claims are made in a fiscal year, claims by qualified businesses carry over to the
33.26next fiscal year, and the commissioner must first allocate refunds to qualified businesses
33.27eligible for a refund in the preceding fiscal year. Any portion of the balance of funds
33.28allocated for refunds under this paragraph does not cancel and shall be carried forward to
33.29and available for refunds in subsequent fiscal years.
33.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

33.31    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.70, subdivision 2, is
33.32amended to read:
33.33    Subd. 2. Sales to government. (a) All sales, except those listed in paragraph (b),
33.34to the following governments and political subdivisions, or to the listed agencies or
33.35instrumentalities of governments and political subdivisions, are exempt:
34.1(1) the United States and its agencies and instrumentalities;
34.2(2) school districts, local governments, the University of Minnesota, state universities,
34.3community colleges, technical colleges, state academies, the Perpich Minnesota Center for
34.4Arts Education, and an instrumentality of a political subdivision that is accredited as an
34.5optional/special function school by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools;
34.6(3) hospitals and nursing homes owned and operated by political subdivisions of
34.7the state of tangible personal property and taxable services used at or by hospitals and
34.8nursing homes;
34.9(4) the Metropolitan Council, for its purchases of vehicles and repair parts to equip
34.10operations provided for in section 473.4051;
34.11(5) (4) other states or political subdivisions of other states, if the sale would be
34.12exempt from taxation if it occurred in that state; and
34.13(6) (5) public libraries, public library systems, multicounty, multitype library systems
34.14as defined in section 134.001, county law libraries under chapter 134A, state agency
34.15libraries, the state library under section 480.09, and the Legislative Reference Library.
34.16(b) This exemption does not apply to the sales of the following products and services:
34.17(1) building, construction, or reconstruction materials purchased by a contractor
34.18or a subcontractor as a part of a lump-sum contract or similar type of contract with a
34.19guaranteed maximum price covering both labor and materials for use in the construction,
34.20alteration, or repair of a building or facility;
34.21(2) construction materials purchased by tax exempt entities or their contractors to
34.22be used in constructing buildings or facilities which will not be used principally by the
34.23tax exempt entities;
34.24(3) the leasing of a motor vehicle as defined in section 297B.01, subdivision 11,
34.25except for leases entered into by the United States or its agencies or instrumentalities;
34.26(4) lodging as defined under section 297A.61, subdivision 3, paragraph (g), clause
34.27(2), and prepared food, candy, soft drinks, and alcoholic beverages as defined in section
34.28297A.67, subdivision 2 , except for lodging, prepared food, candy, soft drinks, and alcoholic
34.29beverages purchased directly by the United States or its agencies or instrumentalities; or
34.30(5) goods or services purchased by a local government as inputs to goods and
34.31services that are generally provided by a private business and the purchases would be
34.32taxable if made by a private business engaged in the same activity.
34.33(c) As used in this subdivision, "school districts" means public school entities and
34.34districts of every kind and nature organized under the laws of the state of Minnesota, and
34.35any instrumentality of a school district, as defined in section 471.59.
35.1(d) As used in this subdivision, "local governments" means cities, counties, and
35.2townships; special districts as defined under section 6.465; any instrumentality of a
35.3city, county, or township as defined in section 471.59; and any joint powers board or
35.4organization created under section 471.59.
35.5(e) As used in this subdivision, "goods or services generally provided by a private
35.6business" include, but are not limited to, goods or services provided by liquor stores, gas
35.7and electric utilities, golf courses, marinas, health and fitness centers, campgrounds, cafes,
35.8and laundromats, solid waste management services, housing facility improvements and
35.9maintenance, fitness and special interest classes, recreational and athletic facilities, banquet
35.10and private party facilities, aquatic facilities, and cemeteries. "Goods or services generally
35.11provided by a private business" do not include housing services,: sewer and water
35.12services, wastewater treatment, ambulance and other public safety services, correctional
35.13services, chore or homemaking services provided to elderly or disabled individuals, or
35.14 computing services, ball fields, road and street maintenance or, lighting, or any goods or
35.15services provided by local government only to local governments, and housing, chore, or
35.16homemaking services provided to the poor, elderly, or disabled individuals.
35.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
35.18December 31, 2014.

35.19    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.70, subdivision 13,
35.20is amended to read:
35.21    Subd. 13. Fund-raising sales by or for nonprofit groups. (a) The following
35.22sales by the specified organizations for fund-raising purposes are exempt, subject to the
35.23limitations listed in paragraph (b):
35.24(1) all sales made by a nonprofit organization that exists solely for the purpose of
35.25providing educational or social activities for young people primarily age 18 and under;
35.26(2) all sales made by an organization that is a senior citizen group or association of
35.27groups if (i) in general it limits membership to persons age 55 or older; (ii) it is organized
35.28and operated exclusively for pleasure, recreation, and other nonprofit purposes; and (iii)
35.29no part of its net earnings inures to the benefit of any private shareholders;
35.30(3) the sale or use of tickets or admissions to a golf tournament held in Minnesota if
35.31the beneficiary of the tournament's net proceeds qualifies as a tax-exempt organization
35.32under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code; and
35.33(4) sales of candy sold for fund-raising purposes by a nonprofit organization that
35.34provides educational and social activities primarily for young people age 18 and under.
35.35(b) The exemptions listed in paragraph (a) are limited in the following manner:
36.1(1) the exemption under paragraph (a), clauses (1) and (2), applies only if to the first
36.2$20,000 of the gross annual receipts of the organization from fund-raising do not exceed
36.3$10,000; and
36.4(2) the exemption under paragraph (a), clause (1), does not apply if the sales are
36.5derived from admission charges or from activities for which the money must be deposited
36.6with the school district treasurer under section 123B.49, subdivision 2, or be recorded in
36.7the same manner as other revenues or expenditures of the school district under section
36.8123B.49, subdivision 4 .
36.9(c) Sales of tangible personal property and services are exempt if the entire proceeds,
36.10less the necessary expenses for obtaining the property or services, will be contributed to
36.11a registered combined charitable organization described in section 43A.50, to be used
36.12exclusively for charitable, religious, or educational purposes, and the registered combined
36.13charitable organization has given its written permission for the sale. Sales that occur over
36.14a period of more than 24 days per year are not exempt under this paragraph.
36.15(d) For purposes of this subdivision, a club, association, or other organization of
36.16elementary or secondary school students organized for the purpose of carrying on sports,
36.17educational, or other extracurricular activities is a separate organization from the school
36.18district or school for purposes of applying the $10,000 $20,000 limit.
36.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
36.20December 31, 2014.

36.21    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.70, subdivision 14,
36.22is amended to read:
36.23    Subd. 14. Fund-raising events sponsored by nonprofit groups. (a) Sales of
36.24tangible personal property or services at, and admission charges for fund-raising events
36.25sponsored by, a nonprofit organization are exempt if:
36.26(1) all gross receipts are recorded as such, in accordance with generally accepted
36.27accounting practices, on the books of the nonprofit organization; and
36.28(2) the entire proceeds, less the necessary expenses for the event, will be used solely
36.29and exclusively for charitable, religious, or educational purposes. Exempt sales include
36.30the sale of prepared food, candy, and soft drinks at the fund-raising event.
36.31(b) This exemption is limited in the following manner:
36.32(1) it does not apply to admission charges for events involving bingo or other
36.33gambling activities or to charges for use of amusement devices involving bingo or other
36.34gambling activities;
37.1(2) all gross receipts are taxable if the profits are not used solely and exclusively for
37.2charitable, religious, or educational purposes;
37.3(3) it does not apply unless the organization keeps a separate accounting record,
37.4including receipts and disbursements from each fund-raising event that documents all
37.5deductions from gross receipts with receipts and other records;
37.6(4) it does not apply to any sale made by or in the name of a nonprofit corporation as
37.7the active or passive agent of a person that is not a nonprofit corporation;
37.8(5) all gross receipts are taxable if fund-raising events exceed 24 days per year;
37.9(6) it does not apply to fund-raising events conducted on premises leased for more
37.10than five days but less than 30 days; and
37.11(7) it does not apply if the risk of the event is not borne by the nonprofit organization
37.12and the benefit to the nonprofit organization is less than the total amount of the state and
37.13local tax revenues forgone by this exemption.
37.14(c) For purposes of this subdivision, a "nonprofit organization" means any unit of
37.15government, corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution organized and
37.16operated for charitable, religious, educational, civic, fraternal, and senior citizens' or
37.17veterans' purposes, no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of a private
37.18individual.
37.19(d) For purposes of this subdivision, "fund-raising events" means activities of
37.20limited duration, not regularly carried out in the normal course of business, that attract
37.21patrons for community, social, and entertainment purposes, such as auctions, bake sales,
37.22ice cream socials, block parties, carnivals, competitions, concerts, concession stands,
37.23craft sales, bazaars, dinners, dances, door-to-door sales of merchandise, fairs, fashion
37.24shows, festivals, galas, special event workshops, sporting activities such as marathons and
37.25tournaments, and similar events. Fund-raising events do not include the operation of a
37.26regular place of business in which services are provided or sales are made during regular
37.27hours such as bookstores, thrift stores, gift shops, restaurants, ongoing Internet sales,
37.28regularly scheduled classes, or other activities carried out in the normal course of business.
37.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
37.30December 31, 2014.

37.31    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.70, is amended by adding a
37.32subdivision to read:
37.33    Subd. 19. Nonprofit snowmobile clubs; machinery and equipment. Sales of
37.34tangible personal property to a nonprofit snowmobile club and that is used primarily and
37.35directly for the grooming of state or grant-in-aid snowmobile trails are exempt. The
38.1exemption applies to grooming machines, attachments, other associated accessories,
38.2and repair parts.
38.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
38.4June 30, 2014.

38.5    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297F.05, subdivision 1, is
38.6amended to read:
38.7    Subdivision 1. Rates; cigarettes. A tax is imposed upon the sale of cigarettes in
38.8this state, upon having cigarettes in possession in this state with intent to sell, upon any
38.9person engaged in business as a distributor, and upon the use or storage by consumers, at
38.10the following rates: rate of
38.11(1) on cigarettes weighing not more than three pounds per thousand, 141.5 mills,
38.12or 14.15 cents on each such cigarette; and
38.13(2) on cigarettes weighing more than three pounds per thousand, 283 mills on each
38.14such cigarette.
38.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014.

38.16    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297F.09, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
38.17    Subd. 10. Accelerated tax payment; cigarette or tobacco products distributor.
38.18    A cigarette or tobacco products distributor having a liability of $120,000 $250,000 or
38.19more during a fiscal year ending June 30, shall remit the June liability for the next year
38.20in the following manner:
38.21    (a) Two business days before June 30 of the year, the distributor shall remit the
38.22actual May liability and 90 81.4 percent of the estimated June liability to the commissioner
38.23and file the return in the form and manner prescribed by the commissioner.
38.24    (b) On or before August 18 of the year, the distributor shall submit a return showing
38.25the actual June liability and pay any additional amount of tax not remitted in June. A
38.26penalty is imposed equal to ten percent of the amount of June liability required to be paid
38.27in June, less the amount remitted in June. However, the penalty is not imposed if the
38.28amount remitted in June equals the lesser of:
38.29    (1) 90 81.4 percent of the actual June liability; or
38.30    (2) 90 81.4 percent of the preceding May's May liability.
38.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes remitted after May 30, 2014.

38.32    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297G.09, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
39.1    Subd. 9. Accelerated tax payment; penalty. A person liable for tax under this
39.2chapter having a liability of $120,000 $250,000 or more during a fiscal year ending June
39.330, shall remit the June liability for the next year in the following manner:
39.4    (a) Two business days before June 30 of the year, the taxpayer shall remit the actual
39.5May liability and 90 81.4 percent of the estimated June liability to the commissioner and
39.6file the return in the form and manner prescribed by the commissioner.
39.7    (b) On or before August 18 of the year, the taxpayer shall submit a return showing
39.8the actual June liability and pay any additional amount of tax not remitted in June. A
39.9penalty is imposed equal to ten percent of the amount of June liability required to be paid
39.10in June less the amount remitted in June. However, the penalty is not imposed if the
39.11amount remitted in June equals the lesser of:
39.12    (1) 90 81.4 percent of the actual June liability; or
39.13    (2) 90 81.4 percent of the preceding May liability.
39.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxes remitted after May 30, 2014.

39.15    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 360.531, subdivision 2, is
39.16amended to read:
39.17    Subd. 2. Rate. The tax shall be as follows:
39.18
Base Price
Tax
39.19
39.20
Under $499,999
Not over $500,000
$100
39.21
39.22
over $500,000 to $999,999
but not over $1,000,000
$200
39.23
39.24
over $1,000,000 to $2,499,999
but not over $2,500,000
$2,000
39.25
39.26
over $2,500,000 to $4,999,999
but not over $5,000,000
$4,000
39.27
39.28
over $5,000,000 to $7,499,999
but not over $7,500,000
$7,500
39.29
39.30
over $7,500,000 to $9,999,999
but not over $10,000,000
$10,000
39.31
39.32
over $10,000,000 to $12,499,999
but not over $12,500,000
$12,500
39.33
39.34
over $12,500,000 to $14,999,999
but not over $15,000,000
$15,000
39.35
39.36
over $15,000,000 to $17,499,999
but not over $17,500,000
$17,500
39.37
39.38
over $17,500,000 to $19,999,999
but not over $20,000,000
$20,000
39.39
39.40
over $20,000,000 to $22,499,999
but not over $22,500,000
$22,500
40.1
40.2
over $22,500,000 to $24,999,999
but not over $25,000,000
$25,000
40.3
40.4
over $25,000,000 to $27,499,999
but not over $27,500,000
$27,500
40.5
40.6
over $27,500,000 to $29,999,999
but not over $30,000,000
$30,000
40.7
40.8
over $30,000,000 to $39,999,999
but not over $40,000,000
$50,000
40.9
over $40,000,000 and over
$75,000
40.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014, and applies to aircraft
40.11tax due on or after that date.

40.12    Sec. 20. Laws 1980, chapter 511, section 1, subdivision 2, as amended by Laws 1991,
40.13chapter 291, article 8, section 22, Laws 1998, chapter 389, article 8, section 25, Laws
40.142003, First Special Session chapter 21, article 8, section 11, and Laws 2008, chapter
40.15154, article 5, section 2, is amended to read:
40.16    Subd. 2. (a) Notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes, section 477A.016, or any
40.17other law, ordinance, or city charter provision to the contrary, the city of Duluth may,
40.18by ordinance, impose an additional sales tax of up to two and one-quarter one and
40.19three-quarter percent on sales transactions which are described in Minnesota Statutes 2000,
40.20section 297A.01, subdivision 3, clause (c). When the city council determines that the taxes
40.21imposed under this subdivision and under Laws 1998, chapter 389, article 8, section 26, at a
40.22rate of one-half of one percent have produced revenue sufficient to pay (1) the debt service
40.23on bonds in a principal amount of $8,000,000 issued for capital improvements to the
40.24Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center, and (2) debt service on outstanding bonds
40.25originally issued in the principal amount of $4,970,000 to finance capital improvements to
40.26the Great Lakes Aquarium since the imposition of the taxes at the rate of one and one-half
40.27percent, the rate of the tax under this subdivision is reduced by one-half of one percent.
40.28 The imposition of this tax shall not be subject to voter referendum under either state law
40.29or city charter provisions. When the city council determines that the taxes imposed under
40.30this subdivision paragraph at a rate of three-quarters of one percent and other sources of
40.31revenue produce revenue sufficient to pay debt service on bonds in the principal amount
40.32of $40,285,000 plus issuance and discount costs, issued for capital improvements at the
40.33Duluth Entertainment and Convention Center, which include a new arena, the rate of tax
40.34under this subdivision must be reduced by three-quarters of one percent.
40.35(b) In addition to the tax in paragraph (a) and notwithstanding Minnesota Statutes,
40.36section 477A.016, or any other law, ordinance, or city charter provision to the contrary,
40.37the city of Duluth may, by ordinance, impose an additional sales tax of up to one-half of
41.1one percent on sales transactions which are described in Minnesota Statutes 2000, section
41.2297A.01, subdivision 3, clause (c). This tax expires when the city council determines that
41.3the tax imposed under this paragraph has produced revenues sufficient to pay the debt
41.4service on bonds in a principal amount of no more than $18,000,000, plus issuance and
41.5discount costs, to finance capital improvements to public facilities to support tourism and
41.6recreational activities in that portion of the city west of 34th Avenue West.
41.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day after the governing body of
41.8the city of Duluth and its chief clerical officer comply with Minnesota Statutes, section
41.9645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

41.10    Sec. 21. Laws 2005, First Special Session chapter 3, article 5, section 38, subdivision
41.114, is amended to read:
41.12    Subd. 4. Termination of taxes. The taxes imposed under this section expire at the
41.13earlier of (1) ten 15 years after the taxes are first imposed, or (2) when the city council first
41.14determines that the amount of revenues raised to pay for the projects under subdivision 2,
41.15shall meet or exceed the sum of $15,000,000. Any funds remaining after completion of
41.16the projects may be placed in the general fund of the city.
41.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day after compliance by the
41.18governing body of the city of Albert Lea and its chief clerical officer with Minnesota
41.19Statutes, section 645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

41.20    Sec. 22. Laws 2006, chapter 257, section 2, the effective date, as amended by Laws
41.212011, First Special Session chapter 7, article 3, section 17, is amended to read:
41.22EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases after June 30,
41.232006, and before July 1, 2015.
41.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

41.25    Sec. 23. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 22, the effective date, is amended to
41.26read:
41.27EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
41.28June 30, 2013 retroactively for sales and purchases made after April 1, 2009. Purchasers
41.29may apply for a refund of tax paid for qualifying purchases under this subdivision made
41.30after April 1, 2009, and before July 1, 2013, in the manner provided in Minnesota Statutes,
42.1section 297A.75. Notwithstanding limitations on claims for refunds under Minnesota
42.2Statutes, section 289A.40, claims may be filed with the commissioner until June 30, 2015.
42.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

42.4    Sec. 24. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 23, the effective date, is amended to
42.5read:
42.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
42.7June 30, 2013 retroactively for sales and purchases made after April 1, 2009. Purchasers
42.8may apply for a refund of tax paid for qualifying purchases under this subdivision made
42.9after April 1, 2009, and before July 1, 2013, in the manner provided in Minnesota Statutes,
42.10section 297A.75. Notwithstanding limitations on claims for refunds under Minnesota
42.11Statutes, section 289A.40, claims may be filed with the commissioner until June 30, 2015.
42.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

42.13    Sec. 25. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 27, the effective date, is amended to
42.14read:
42.15EFFECTIVE DATE.For the purpose of qualifying under paragraphs (c) and (d),
42.16this section is effective retroactively for sales and purchases made after June 30, 2013
42.17 2012. For the purpose of determining eligibility for the exemptions provided in this
42.18section, this section is effective for sales and purchases of computer software maintenance
42.19agreements made after June 30, 2013, and for sales and purchases for either a "qualified
42.20refurbished data center" or a "qualified data center" made after June 30, 2013, except that
42.21if the data center qualifies as a "qualified data center" as defined in Laws 2011, First
42.22Special Session chapter 7, article 3, section 7, then the exemptions provided in this section,
42.23other than for computer software maintenance agreements, continue to be effective for
42.24sales and purchases made after June 30, 2012.
42.25EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

42.26    Sec. 26. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 37, the effective date, is amended to
42.27read:
42.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively to capital investments
42.29made and jobs created after December 31, 2012, and effective retroactively for sales and
43.1purchases made after December 31, 2012, and before July 1, 2019. Applications for
43.2refunds on purchases exempt under this section must not be filed before June 30, 2015.
43.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

43.4    Sec. 27. CITY OF PROCTOR; LOCAL TAXES AUTHORIZED.
43.5    Subdivision 1. Food and beverage tax authorized. Notwithstanding Minnesota
43.6Statutes, section 297A.99 or 477A.016, or any ordinance, city charter, or other provision
43.7of law, the city of Proctor may, by ordinance, impose a sales tax of up to one percent on
43.8the gross receipts of all food and beverages sold by a restaurant or place of refreshment,
43.9as defined by resolution of the city, that is located within the city. For purposes of this
43.10section, "food and beverages" include retail on-sale of intoxicating liquor and fermented
43.11malt beverages.
43.12    Subd. 2. Use of proceeds from authorized taxes. The proceeds of the taxes
43.13imposed under subdivisions 1 and 2 must be used by the city to fund: (1) construction and
43.14improvement of walking and bicycle trails; (2) a multiuse civic center facility and parking
43.15improvements; and (3) improvements related to the redevelopment and realignment of a
43.16road through the fairgrounds property ceded to the city of Proctor by the city of Duluth.
43.17    Subd. 3. Collection, administration, and enforcement. The city may enter into
43.18an agreement with the commissioner of revenue to administer, collect, and enforce the
43.19taxes under subdivision 1. If the commissioner agrees to collect the tax, the provisions
43.20of Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.99, related to collection, administration, and
43.21enforcement, and Minnesota Statutes, section 270C.171, apply.
43.22EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day after the governing body of
43.23the city of Proctor and its chief clerical officer comply with Minnesota Statutes, section
43.24645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

43.25    Sec. 28. VALIDATION OF PRIOR ACT; AUTHORIZATION.
43.26Notwithstanding the time limits in Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021, the city of
43.27Albert Lea may approve Laws 2005, First Special Session chapter 3, article 5, section 38,
43.28as amended by Laws 2006, chapter 259, article 3, section 6, and file its approval with the
43.29secretary of state by June 15, 2014. If approved as authorized under this section, actions
43.30undertaken by the city pursuant to the approval of the voters on November 8, 2005, and
43.31otherwise in accordance with Laws 2005, First Special Session chapter 3, article 5, section
43.3238, as amended by Laws 2006, chapter 259, article 3, section 6, are validated.
43.33EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

44.1    Sec. 29. SALES TO INSTRUMENTALITIES OF THE STATES.
44.2Sales of the following items to an organization defined by the Internal Revenue
44.3Service as an instrumentality of each, and all, of the states relating to the holding of an
44.4annual meeting in this state are exempt:
44.5(1) prepared food, soft drinks, and candy, as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section
44.6297A.61, subdivisions 31 to 33; and
44.7(2) alcoholic beverages, as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 297A.67,
44.8subdivision 2.
44.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is applicable to sales and purchases made after
44.10June 30, 2014, and before January 1, 2015.

44.11ARTICLE 3
44.12INCOME AND ESTATE TAXES

44.13    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 116J.8737, subdivision 5, as amended by
44.14Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 3, is amended to read:
44.15    Subd. 5. Credit allowed. (a) (1) A qualified investor or qualified fund is eligible
44.16for a credit equal to 25 percent of the qualified investment in a qualified small business.
44.17Investments made by a pass-through entity qualify for a credit only if the entity is a
44.18qualified fund. The commissioner must not allocate more than $15,000,000
44.19$15,000,000 in credits to qualified investors or qualified funds for taxable years
44.20beginning after December 31, 2013, and before January 1, 2017; and
44.21(2) for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2014, and before January 1,
44.222017, $7,500,000 must be allocated to credits for qualifying investments in qualified
44.23greater Minnesota businesses and minority- or women-owned qualified small businesses
44.24in Minnesota. Any portion of a taxable year's credits that is reserved for qualifying
44.25investments in greater Minnesota businesses and minority- or women-owned qualified
44.26small businesses in Minnesota that is not allocated by September 30 of the taxable year is
44.27available for allocation to other credit applications beginning on October 1. Any portion
44.28of a taxable year's credits that is not allocated by the commissioner does not cancel and
44.29may be carried forward to subsequent taxable years until all credits have been allocated.
44.30(b) The commissioner may not allocate more than a total maximum amount in credits
44.31for a taxable year to a qualified investor for the investor's cumulative qualified investments
44.32as an individual qualified investor and as an investor in a qualified fund; for married
44.33couples filing joint returns the maximum is $250,000, and for all other filers the maximum
45.1is $125,000. The commissioner may not allocate more than a total of $1,000,000 in credits
45.2over all taxable years for qualified investments in any one qualified small business.
45.3(c) The commissioner may not allocate a credit to a qualified investor either as
45.4an individual qualified investor or as an investor in a qualified fund if, at the time the
45.5investment is proposed:
45.6(1) the investor is an officer or principal of the qualified small business; or
45.7(2) the investor, either individually or in combination with one or more members of
45.8the investor's family, owns, controls, or holds the power to vote 20 percent or more of
45.9the outstanding securities of the qualified small business.
45.10A member of the family of an individual disqualified by this paragraph is not eligible for a
45.11credit under this section. For a married couple filing a joint return, the limitations in this
45.12paragraph apply collectively to the investor and spouse. For purposes of determining the
45.13ownership interest of an investor under this paragraph, the rules under section 267(c) and
45.14267(e) of the Internal Revenue Code apply.
45.15(d) Applications for tax credits for 2010 must be made available on the department's
45.16Web site by September 1, 2010, and the department must begin accepting applications
45.17by September 1, 2010. Applications for subsequent years must be made available by
45.18November 1 of the preceding year.
45.19(e) Qualified investors and qualified funds must apply to the commissioner for tax
45.20credits. Tax credits must be allocated to qualified investors or qualified funds in the order
45.21that the tax credit request applications are filed with the department. The commissioner
45.22must approve or reject tax credit request applications within 15 days of receiving the
45.23application. The commissioner must allocate credits to approved applications if credits
45.24remain available. The investment specified in the application must be made within 60 days
45.25of the allocation of the credits. If the investment is not made within 60 days, the credit
45.26allocation is canceled and available for reallocation. A qualified investor or qualified fund
45.27that fails to invest as specified in the application, within 60 days of allocation of the
45.28credits, must notify the commissioner of the failure to invest within five business days of
45.29the expiration of the 60-day investment period. Credit applications that were approved but
45.30that did not receive an allocation of credits at the time of approval because the aggregate
45.31limit of credits for the year was exhausted remain eligible for allocation of credits if
45.32additional credits become available due to cancellations under this paragraph or due to
45.33termination of the time period for credits reserved for investment in qualified greater
45.34Minnesota businesses and minority- and women-owned small businesses under paragraph
45.35(a). Approved credit applications that do not receive credit allocations in the tax year must
45.36be resubmitted to be eligible for credit allocations in the following tax year.
46.1(f) All tax credit request applications filed with the department on the same day must
46.2be treated as having been filed contemporaneously. If two or more qualified investors or
46.3qualified funds file tax credit request applications on the same day, and the aggregate
46.4amount of credit allocation claims exceeds the aggregate limit of credits under this section
46.5or the lesser amount of credits that remain unallocated on that day, then the credits must
46.6be allocated among the qualified investors or qualified funds who filed on that day on a
46.7pro rata basis with respect to the amounts claimed. The pro rata allocation for any one
46.8qualified investor or qualified fund is the product obtained by multiplying a fraction,
46.9the numerator of which is the amount of the credit allocation claim filed on behalf of
46.10a qualified investor and the denominator of which is the total of all credit allocation
46.11claims filed on behalf of all applicants on that day, by the amount of credits that remain
46.12unallocated on that day for the taxable year.
46.13(g) A qualified investor or qualified fund, or a qualified small business acting on their
46.14behalf, must notify the commissioner when an investment for which credits were allocated
46.15has been made, and the taxable year in which the investment was made. A qualified fund
46.16must also provide the commissioner with a statement indicating the amount invested by
46.17each investor in the qualified fund based on each investor's share of the assets of the
46.18qualified fund at the time of the qualified investment. After receiving notification that the
46.19investment was made, the commissioner must issue credit certificates for the taxable year
46.20in which the investment was made to the qualified investor or, for an investment made by
46.21a qualified fund, to each qualified investor who is an investor in the fund. The certificate
46.22must state that the credit is subject to revocation if the qualified investor or qualified
46.23fund does not hold the investment in the qualified small business for at least three years,
46.24consisting of the calendar year in which the investment was made and the two following
46.25years. The three-year holding period does not apply if:
46.26(1) the investment by the qualified investor or qualified fund becomes worthless
46.27before the end of the three-year period;
46.28(2) 80 percent or more of the assets of the qualified small business is sold before
46.29the end of the three-year period;
46.30(3) the qualified small business is sold before the end of the three-year period;
46.31(4) the qualified small business's common stock begins trading on a public exchange
46.32before the end of the three-year period; or
46.33    (5) the qualified investor dies before the end of the three-year period.
46.34(h) The commissioner must notify the commissioner of revenue of credit certificates
46.35issued under this section.
46.36EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

47.1    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 136A.129, subdivision 1, is
47.2amended to read:
47.3    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the terms defined in
47.4this subdivision have the meanings given to them.
47.5(b) "Eligible employer" means a taxpayer under section 290.01 with employees
47.6located in greater Minnesota.
47.7(c) "Eligible institution" means a Minnesota public postsecondary institution or
47.8a Minnesota private, nonprofit, baccalaureate, or graduate degree-granting college or
47.9university.
47.10(d) "Eligible student" means a student enrolled in an eligible institution who has
47.11completed one-half of the credits necessary for the respective degree or certification,
47.12including a graduate degree.
47.13(e) "Greater Minnesota" means the area of the state outside of the counties of Anoka,
47.14Carver, Chisago, Dakota, Hennepin, Isanti, Ramsey, Scott, Sherburne, Washington, and
47.15Wright.
47.16EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

47.17    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 136A.129, subdivision 3, is
47.18amended to read:
47.19    Subd. 3. Program components. (a) An intern must be an eligible student who has
47.20been admitted to a major program that is related to the intern experience as determined
47.21by the eligible institution.
47.22(b) To participate in the program, an eligible institution must:
47.23(1) enter into written agreements with eligible employers to provide internships that
47.24are at least 12 eight weeks long and located in greater Minnesota;
47.25(2) determine that the work experience of the internship is related to the eligible
47.26student's course of study; and
47.27(3) (2) provide academic credit for the successful completion of the internship or
47.28ensure that it fulfills requirements necessary to complete a vocational technical education
47.29program.
47.30(c) To participate in the program, an eligible employer must enter into a written
47.31agreement with an eligible institution specifying that the intern:
47.32(1) would not have been hired without the tax credit described in subdivision 4;
47.33(2) did not work for the employer in the same or a similar job prior to entering
47.34the agreement;
47.35(3) does not replace an existing employee;
48.1(4) has not previously participated in the program;
48.2(5) will be employed at a location in greater Minnesota;
48.3(6) will be paid at least minimum wage for a minimum of 16 hours per week for a
48.4period of at least 12 eight weeks; and
48.5(7) will be supervised and evaluated by the employer.
48.6(d) The written agreement between the eligible institution and the eligible employer
48.7must certify a credit amount to the employer, not to exceed $2,000 per intern. The total
48.8dollar amount of credits that an eligible institution certifies to eligible employers in a
48.9calendar year may not exceed the amount of its allocation under subdivision 4.
48.10(e) Participating eligible institutions and eligible employers must report annually to
48.11the office. The report must include at least the following:
48.12(1) the number of interns hired;
48.13(2) the number of hours and weeks worked by interns; and
48.14(3) the compensation paid to interns.
48.15(f) An internship required to complete an academic program does not qualify for the
48.16greater Minnesota internship program under this section.
48.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

48.18    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 136A.129, subdivision 5, is
48.19amended to read:
48.20    Subd. 5. Reports to the legislature. (a) By February 1, 2015 2016, the office
48.21and the Department of Revenue shall report to the legislature on the greater Minnesota
48.22internship program. The report must include at least the following:
48.23(1) the number and dollar amount of credits allowed;
48.24(2) the number of interns employed under the program; and
48.25(3) the cost of administering the program.
48.26(b) By February 1, 2016 2017, the office and the Department of Revenue shall
48.27report to the legislature with an analysis of the effectiveness of the program in stimulating
48.28businesses to hire interns and in assisting participating interns in finding permanent
48.29career positions. This report must include the number of students who participated in the
48.30program who were subsequently employed full-time by the employer.

48.31    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 270B.01, subdivision 8, is
48.32amended to read:
48.33    Subd. 8. Minnesota tax laws. For purposes of this chapter only, unless expressly
48.34stated otherwise, "Minnesota tax laws" means:
49.1    (1) the taxes, refunds, and fees administered by or paid to the commissioner under
49.2chapters 115B, 289A (except taxes imposed under sections 298.01, 298.015, and 298.24),
49.3290, 290A, 291, 292, 295, 297A, 297B, 297H, and 403, or any similar Indian tribal tax
49.4administered by the commissioner pursuant to any tax agreement between the state and
49.5the Indian tribal government, and includes any laws for the assessment, collection, and
49.6enforcement of those taxes, refunds, and fees; and
49.7    (2) section 273.1315.
49.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

49.9    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 270B.03, subdivision 1, is
49.10amended to read:
49.11    Subdivision 1. Who may inspect. Returns and return information must, on request,
49.12be made open to inspection by or disclosure to the data subject. The request must be made
49.13in writing or in accordance with written procedures of the chief disclosure officer of the
49.14department that have been approved by the commissioner to establish the identification
49.15of the person making the request as the data subject. For purposes of this chapter, the
49.16following are the data subject:
49.17(1) in the case of an individual return, that individual;
49.18(2) in the case of an income tax return filed jointly, either of the individuals with
49.19respect to whom the return is filed;
49.20(3) in the case of a return filed by a business entity, an officer of a corporation,
49.21a shareholder owning more than one percent of the stock, or any shareholder of an S
49.22corporation; a general partner in a partnership; the owner of a sole proprietorship; a
49.23member or manager of a limited liability company; a participant in a joint venture; the
49.24individual who signed the return on behalf of the business entity; or an employee who is
49.25responsible for handling the tax matters of the business entity, such as the tax manager,
49.26bookkeeper, or managing agent;
49.27(4) in the case of an estate return:
49.28(i) the personal representative or trustee of the estate; and
49.29(ii) any beneficiary of the estate as shown on the federal estate tax return;
49.30(5) in the case of a trust return:
49.31(i) the trustee or trustees, jointly or separately; and
49.32(ii) any beneficiary of the trust as shown in the trust instrument;
49.33(6) if liability has been assessed to a transferee under section 270C.58, subdivision
49.341
, the transferee is the data subject with regard to the returns and return information
49.35relating to the assessed liability;
50.1(7) in the case of an Indian tribal government or an Indian tribal government-owned
50.2entity,
50.3(i) the chair of the tribal government, or
50.4(ii) any person authorized by the tribal government; and
50.5(8) in the case of a successor as defined in section 270C.57, subdivision 1, paragraph
50.6(b), the successor is the data subject and information may be disclosed as provided by
50.7section 270C.57, subdivision 4; and.
50.8(9) in the case of a gift return, the donor.
50.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

50.10    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 289A.02, subdivision 7, as amended by Laws
50.112014, chapter 150, article 1, section 7, is amended to read:
50.12    Subd. 7. Internal Revenue Code. Unless specifically defined otherwise, "Internal
50.13Revenue Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through December
50.1420, 2013 March 26, 2014.
50.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively for taxable years
50.16beginning after December 31, 2012.

50.17    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.01, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
50.18    Subd. 7. Resident. (a) The term "resident" means any individual domiciled
50.19in Minnesota, except that an individual is not a "resident" for the period of time that
50.20the individual is a "qualified individual" as defined in section 911(d)(1) of the Internal
50.21Revenue Code, if the qualified individual notifies the county within three months of
50.22moving out of the country that homestead status be revoked for the Minnesota residence
50.23of the qualified individual, and the property is not classified as a homestead while the
50.24individual remains a qualified individual.
50.25(b) "Resident" also means any individual domiciled outside the state who maintains
50.26a place of abode in the state and spends in the aggregate more than one-half of the tax
50.27year in Minnesota, unless:
50.28(1) the individual or the spouse of the individual is in the armed forces of the United
50.29States; or
50.30(2) the individual is covered under the reciprocity provisions in section 290.081.
50.31For purposes of this subdivision, presence within the state for any part of a calendar
50.32day constitutes a day spent in the state. Individuals shall keep adequate records to
50.33substantiate the days spent outside the state.
51.1The term "abode" means a dwelling maintained by an individual, whether or not
51.2owned by the individual and whether or not occupied by the individual, and includes a
51.3dwelling place owned or leased by the individual's spouse.
51.4(c) In determining if an individual is domiciled in Minnesota, neither the
51.5commissioner nor any court shall consider:
51.6(1) charitable contributions made by an the individual within or without the state in
51.7determining if the individual is domiciled in Minnesota; or
51.8(2) the location of the individual's attorneys, certified public accountants, or financial
51.9advisors within or without the state.
51.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

51.11    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.01, subdivision 19, as
51.12amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 9, is amended to read:
51.13    Subd. 19. Net income. The term "net income" means the federal taxable income,
51.14as defined in section 63 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through the
51.15date named in this subdivision, incorporating the federal effective dates of changes to the
51.16Internal Revenue Code and any elections made by the taxpayer in accordance with the
51.17Internal Revenue Code in determining federal taxable income for federal income tax
51.18purposes, and with the modifications provided in subdivisions 19a to 19f.
51.19    In the case of a regulated investment company or a fund thereof, as defined in section
51.20851(a) or 851(g) of the Internal Revenue Code, federal taxable income means investment
51.21company taxable income as defined in section 852(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code,
51.22except that:
51.23    (1) the exclusion of net capital gain provided in section 852(b)(2)(A) of the Internal
51.24Revenue Code does not apply;
51.25    (2) the deduction for dividends paid under section 852(b)(2)(D) of the Internal
51.26Revenue Code must be applied by allowing a deduction for capital gain dividends and
51.27exempt-interest dividends as defined in sections 852(b)(3)(C) and 852(b)(5) of the Internal
51.28Revenue Code; and
51.29    (3) the deduction for dividends paid must also be applied in the amount of any
51.30undistributed capital gains which the regulated investment company elects to have treated
51.31as provided in section 852(b)(3)(D) of the Internal Revenue Code.
51.32    The net income of a real estate investment trust as defined and limited by section
51.33856(a), (b), and (c) of the Internal Revenue Code means the real estate investment trust
51.34taxable income as defined in section 857(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code.
52.1    The net income of a designated settlement fund as defined in section 468B(d) of
52.2the Internal Revenue Code means the gross income as defined in section 468B(b) of the
52.3Internal Revenue Code.
52.4    The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through December 20, 2013 March
52.526, 2014, shall be in effect for taxable years beginning after December 31, 1996.
52.6    Except as otherwise provided, references to the Internal Revenue Code in
52.7subdivisions 19 to 19f mean the code in effect for purposes of determining net income for
52.8the applicable year.
52.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment,
52.10except the changes incorporated by federal changes are effective retroactively at the same
52.11time as the changes were effective for federal purposes.

52.12    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.01, subdivision 19b, as
52.13amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 11, is amended to read:
52.14    Subd. 19b. Subtractions from federal taxable income. For individuals, estates,
52.15and trusts, there shall be subtracted from federal taxable income:
52.16    (1) net interest income on obligations of any authority, commission, or
52.17instrumentality of the United States to the extent includable in taxable income for federal
52.18income tax purposes but exempt from state income tax under the laws of the United States;
52.19    (2) if included in federal taxable income, the amount of any overpayment of income
52.20tax to Minnesota or to any other state, for any previous taxable year, whether the amount
52.21is received as a refund or as a credit to another taxable year's income tax liability;
52.22    (3) the amount paid to others, less the amount used to claim the credit allowed under
52.23section 290.0674, not to exceed $1,625 for each qualifying child in grades kindergarten
52.24to 6 and $2,500 for each qualifying child in grades 7 to 12, for tuition, textbooks, and
52.25transportation of each qualifying child in attending an elementary or secondary school
52.26situated in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, or Wisconsin, wherein a
52.27resident of this state may legally fulfill the state's compulsory attendance laws, which
52.28is not operated for profit, and which adheres to the provisions of the Civil Rights Act
52.29of 1964 and chapter 363A. For the purposes of this clause, "tuition" includes fees or
52.30tuition as defined in section 290.0674, subdivision 1, clause (1). As used in this clause,
52.31"textbooks" includes books and other instructional materials and equipment purchased
52.32or leased for use in elementary and secondary schools in teaching only those subjects
52.33legally and commonly taught in public elementary and secondary schools in this state.
52.34Equipment expenses qualifying for deduction includes expenses as defined and limited in
52.35section 290.0674, subdivision 1, clause (3). "Textbooks" does not include instructional
53.1books and materials used in the teaching of religious tenets, doctrines, or worship, the
53.2purpose of which is to instill such tenets, doctrines, or worship, nor does it include books
53.3or materials for, or transportation to, extracurricular activities including sporting events,
53.4musical or dramatic events, speech activities, driver's education, or similar programs. No
53.5deduction is permitted for any expense the taxpayer incurred in using the taxpayer's or
53.6the qualifying child's vehicle to provide such transportation for a qualifying child. For
53.7purposes of the subtraction provided by this clause, "qualifying child" has the meaning
53.8given in section 32(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;
53.9    (4) income as provided under section 290.0802;
53.10    (5) to the extent included in federal adjusted gross income, income realized on
53.11disposition of property exempt from tax under section 290.491;
53.12    (6) to the extent not deducted or not deductible pursuant to section 408(d)(8)(E)
53.13of the Internal Revenue Code in determining federal taxable income by an individual
53.14who does not itemize deductions for federal income tax purposes for the taxable year, an
53.15amount equal to 50 percent of the excess of charitable contributions over $500 allowable
53.16as a deduction for the taxable year under section 170(a) of the Internal Revenue Code,
53.17under the provisions of Public Law 109-1 and Public Law 111-126;
53.18    (7) for individuals who are allowed a federal foreign tax credit for taxes that do not
53.19qualify for a credit under section 290.06, subdivision 22, an amount equal to the carryover
53.20of subnational foreign taxes for the taxable year, but not to exceed the total subnational
53.21foreign taxes reported in claiming the foreign tax credit. For purposes of this clause,
53.22"federal foreign tax credit" means the credit allowed under section 27 of the Internal
53.23Revenue Code, and "carryover of subnational foreign taxes" equals the carryover allowed
53.24under section 904(c) of the Internal Revenue Code minus national level foreign taxes to
53.25the extent they exceed the federal foreign tax credit;
53.26    (8) in each of the five tax years immediately following the tax year in which an
53.27addition is required under subdivision 19a, clause (7), or 19c, clause (12), in the case of a
53.28shareholder of a corporation that is an S corporation, an amount equal to one-fifth of the
53.29delayed depreciation. For purposes of this clause, "delayed depreciation" means the amount
53.30of the addition made by the taxpayer under subdivision 19a, clause (7), or subdivision 19c,
53.31clause (12), in the case of a shareholder of an S corporation, minus the positive value of
53.32any net operating loss under section 172 of the Internal Revenue Code generated for the
53.33tax year of the addition. The resulting delayed depreciation cannot be less than zero;
53.34    (9) job opportunity building zone income as provided under section 469.316;
53.35    (10) to the extent included in federal taxable income, the amount of compensation
53.36paid to members of the Minnesota National Guard or other reserve components of the
54.1United States military for active service, excluding compensation for services performed
54.2under the Active Guard Reserve (AGR) program. For purposes of this clause, "active
54.3service" means (i) state active service as defined in section 190.05, subdivision 5a, clause
54.4(1); or (ii) federally funded state active service as defined in section 190.05, subdivision
54.55b
, but "active service" excludes service performed in accordance with section 190.08,
54.6subdivision 3
;
54.7    (11) to the extent included in federal taxable income, the amount of compensation
54.8paid to Minnesota residents who are members of the armed forces of the United States
54.9or United Nations for active duty performed under United States Code, title 10; or the
54.10authority of the United Nations;
54.11    (12) an amount, not to exceed $10,000, equal to qualified expenses related to a
54.12qualified donor's donation, while living, of one or more of the qualified donor's organs
54.13to another person for human organ transplantation. For purposes of this clause, "organ"
54.14means all or part of an individual's liver, pancreas, kidney, intestine, lung, or bone marrow;
54.15"human organ transplantation" means the medical procedure by which transfer of a human
54.16organ is made from the body of one person to the body of another person; "qualified
54.17expenses" means unreimbursed expenses for both the individual and the qualified donor
54.18for (i) travel, (ii) lodging, and (iii) lost wages net of sick pay, except that such expenses
54.19may be subtracted under this clause only once; and "qualified donor" means the individual
54.20or the individual's dependent, as defined in section 152 of the Internal Revenue Code. An
54.21individual may claim the subtraction in this clause for each instance of organ donation for
54.22transplantation during the taxable year in which the qualified expenses occur;
54.23    (13) in each of the five tax years immediately following the tax year in which an
54.24addition is required under subdivision 19a, clause (8), or 19c, clause (13), in the case of a
54.25shareholder of a corporation that is an S corporation, an amount equal to one-fifth of the
54.26addition made by the taxpayer under subdivision 19a, clause (8), or 19c, clause (13), in the
54.27case of a shareholder of a corporation that is an S corporation, minus the positive value of
54.28any net operating loss under section 172 of the Internal Revenue Code generated for the
54.29tax year of the addition. If the net operating loss exceeds the addition for the tax year, a
54.30subtraction is not allowed under this clause;
54.31    (14) to the extent included in the federal taxable income of a nonresident of
54.32Minnesota, compensation paid to a service member as defined in United States Code, title
54.3310, section 101(a)(5), for military service as defined in the Servicemembers Civil Relief
54.34Act, Public Law 108-189, section 101(2);
54.35    (15) to the extent included in federal taxable income, the amount of national service
54.36educational awards received from the National Service Trust under United States Code,
55.1title 42, sections 12601 to 12604, for service in an approved Americorps National Service
55.2program;
55.3(16) to the extent included in federal taxable income, discharge of indebtedness
55.4income resulting from reacquisition of business indebtedness included in federal taxable
55.5income under section 108(i) of the Internal Revenue Code. This subtraction applies only
55.6to the extent that the income was included in net income in a prior year as a result of the
55.7addition under section 290.01, subdivision 19a, clause (13);
55.8(17) the amount of the net operating loss allowed under section 290.095, subdivision
55.911
, paragraph (c);
55.10(18) the amount of expenses not allowed for federal income tax purposes due
55.11to claiming the railroad track maintenance credit under section 45G(a) of the Internal
55.12Revenue Code;
55.13(19) the amount of the limitation on itemized deductions under section 68(b) of
55.14the Internal Revenue Code; and
55.15(20) the amount of the phaseout of personal exemptions under section 151(d) of the
55.16Internal Revenue Code.;
55.17(21) to extent included in federal taxable income, the amount of qualified
55.18transportation fringe benefits described in section 132(f)(1)(A) and (B) of the Internal
55.19Revenue Code. The subtraction is limited to the lesser of the amount of qualified
55.20transportation fringe benefits received in excess of the limitations under section
55.21132(f)(2)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code for the year or the difference between the
55.22maximum qualified parking benefits excludable under section 132(f)(2)(B) of the Internal
55.23Revenue Code minus the amount of transit benefits excludable under section 132(f)(2)(A)
55.24of the Internal Revenue Code; and
55.25(22) for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2013, and before January 1,
55.262015, to the extent included in federal taxable income, discharge of qualified principal
55.27residence indebtedness, as provided in subparagraph (E) of section 108(a)(1) of the
55.28Internal Revenue Code, without regard to whether subparagraph (E) of section 108(a)(1)
55.29of the Internal Revenue Code is in effect for the taxable year.
55.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
55.31December 31, 2013.

55.32    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.01, subdivision 31, as
55.33amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 13, is amended to read:
55.34    Subd. 31. Internal Revenue Code. Unless specifically defined otherwise, "Internal
55.35Revenue Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through December
56.120, 2013 March 26, 2014. Internal Revenue Code also includes any uncodified provision
56.2in federal law that relates to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code that are incorporated
56.3into Minnesota law. When used in this chapter, the reference to "subtitle A, chapter 1,
56.4subchapter N, part 1, of the Internal Revenue Code" is to the Internal Revenue Code as
56.5amended through March 18, 2010.
56.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment,
56.7except the changes incorporated by federal changes are effective retroactively at the same
56.8time as the changes were effective for federal purposes.

56.9    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.0677, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
56.10    Subdivision 1. Credit allowed; current military service. (a) An individual is
56.11allowed a credit against the tax due under this chapter equal to $59 for each month or
56.12portion thereof that the individual was in active military service in a designated area after
56.13September 11, 2001, and before January 1, 2009, while a Minnesota domiciliary.
56.14    (b) An individual is allowed a credit against the tax due under this chapter equal to
56.15$120 for each month or portion thereof that the individual was in active military service in
56.16a designated area after December 31, 2008, while a Minnesota domiciliary.
56.17(c) An individual is allowed a credit against the tax due under this chapter equal to
56.18$200 for each month or portion thereof that the individual was in active military service in
56.19a designated area after December 31, 2013, while a Minnesota domiciliary.
56.20    (c) (d) For active service performed after September 11, 2001, and before December
56.2131, 2006, the individual may claim the credit in the taxable year beginning after December
56.2231, 2005, and before January 1, 2007.
56.23    (d) (e) For active service performed after December 31, 2006, the individual may
56.24claim the credit for the taxable year in which the active service was performed.
56.25    (e) (f) If an individual entitled to the credit died prior to January 1, 2006, the
56.26individual's estate or heirs at law, if the individual's probate estate has closed or the estate
56.27was not probated, may claim the credit.
56.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
56.29December 31, 2013.

56.30    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.0677, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
56.31    Subd. 1a. Credit allowed; past military service. (a) A qualified individual is
56.32allowed a credit against the tax imposed under this chapter for past military service. The
56.33credit equals $750 $1,500. The credit allowed under this subdivision is reduced by ten
57.1percent of adjusted gross income in excess of $30,000, but in no case is the credit less
57.2than zero.
57.3    (b) For a nonresident or a part-year resident, the credit under this subdivision
57.4must be allocated based on the percentage calculated under section 290.06, subdivision
57.52c
, paragraph (e).
57.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
57.7December 31, 2013.

57.8    Sec. 14. [290.0682] VOLUNTEER FIRST RESPONDER CREDIT.
57.9    Subdivision 1. Credit allowed; volunteer first responders. (a) A qualified
57.10individual is allowed a credit against the tax due under this chapter equal to $450.
57.11(b) For a nonresident or part-year resident, the credit under this subdivision must
57.12be allocated based on the percentage calculated under section 290.06, subdivision 2c,
57.13paragraph (e).
57.14    Subd. 2. Definitions. For purposes of this section, "qualified individual" means an
57.15individual who is:
57.16(1) a volunteer firefighter as defined in section 424A.001, subdivision 10;
57.17(2) a volunteer ambulance attendant as defined in section 144E.001, subdivision 15; or
57.18(3) an emergency medical responder as defined in section 144E.001, subdivision 6,
57.19who provides emergency medical services as a volunteer.
57.20    Subd. 3. Credit to be refundable If the amount of total credits that the claimant is
57.21eligible to receive under this section exceeds the claimant's tax liability under chapter 290,
57.22the commissioner shall refund the excess to the claimant.
57.23    Subd. 3. Limitations. An individual is not eligible for the credit under this section
57.24unless the individual has served as a volunteer firefighter, volunteer ambulance attendant,
57.25or volunteer emergency medical provider for more than one calendar year.
57.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
57.27December 31, 2013.

57.28    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.081, is amended to read:
57.29290.081 INCOME OF NONRESIDENTS, RECIPROCITY.
57.30(a) The compensation received for the performance of personal or professional
57.31services within this state by an individual whose residence, place of abode, and place
57.32customarily returned to at least once a month is in another state, shall be excluded from
57.33gross income to the extent such compensation is subject to an income tax imposed by the
58.1state of residence; provided that such state allows a similar exclusion of compensation
58.2received by residents of Minnesota for services performed therein.
58.3(b) When it is deemed to be in the best interests of the people of this state, the
58.4commissioner may determine that the provisions of paragraph (a) shall not apply. As long
58.5as the provisions of paragraph (a) apply between Minnesota and Wisconsin, the provisions
58.6of paragraph (a) shall apply to any individual who is domiciled in Wisconsin.
58.7(c) For the purposes of paragraph (a), whenever the Wisconsin tax on Minnesota
58.8residents which would have been paid Wisconsin without paragraph (a) exceeds the
58.9Minnesota tax on Wisconsin residents which would have been paid Minnesota without
58.10paragraph (a), or vice versa, then the state with the net revenue loss resulting from
58.11paragraph (a) must be compensated by shall receive from the other state as provided in the
58.12agreement under paragraph (d) the amount of such loss. This provision shall be effective
58.13for all years beginning after December 31, 1972. The data used for computing the loss
58.14to either state shall be determined on or before September 30 of the year following the
58.15close of the previous calendar year.
58.16(d)(1) Interest is payable on all amounts calculated under paragraph (c) relating
58.17to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000. Interest accrues from July 1 of
58.18the taxable year.
58.19(2) The commissioner of revenue is authorized to enter into agreements with
58.20the state of Wisconsin specifying the compensation required under paragraph (b), the
58.21reciprocity payment due date dates, conditions constituting delinquency, interest rates, and
58.22a method for computing interest due. Calculation of compensation under the agreement
58.23must specify if the revenue loss is determined before or after the allowance of each state's
58.24credit for taxes paid to the other state.
58.25(3) For agreements entered into before October 1, 2014, the annual compensation
58.26required under paragraph (c) must equal at least the net revenue loss minus $1,000,000
58.27per fiscal year.
58.28(4) For agreements entered into after September 30, 2014, the annual compensation
58.29required under paragraph (c) must equal the net revenue loss per fiscal year.
58.30(5) For the purposes of clauses (3) and (4), "net revenue loss" means the difference
58.31between the amount of Minnesota income taxes Minnesota forgoes by not taxing
58.32Wisconsin residents on income subject to reciprocity and the credit Minnesota would
58.33have been required to give under section 290.06, subdivision 22, to Minnesota residents
58.34working in Wisconsin had there not been reciprocity.
58.35(e) If an agreement cannot be reached as to the amount of the loss, the commissioner
58.36of revenue and the taxing official of the state of Wisconsin shall each appoint a member
59.1of a board of arbitration and these members shall appoint the third member of the board.
59.2The board shall select one of its members as chair. Such board may administer oaths, take
59.3testimony, subpoena witnesses, and require their attendance, require the production of
59.4books, papers and documents, and hold hearings at such places as are deemed necessary.
59.5The board shall then make a determination as to the amount to be paid the other state
59.6which determination shall be final and conclusive.
59.7(f) The commissioner may furnish copies of returns, reports, or other information to
59.8the taxing official of the state of Wisconsin, a member of the board of arbitration, or a
59.9consultant under joint contract with the states of Minnesota and Wisconsin for the purpose
59.10of making a determination as to the amount to be paid the other state under the provisions
59.11of this section. Prior to the release of any information under the provisions of this section,
59.12the person to whom the information is to be released shall sign an agreement which
59.13provides that the person will protect the confidentiality of the returns and information
59.14revealed thereby to the extent that it is protected under the laws of the state of Minnesota.
59.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

59.16    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.091, subdivision 2, as
59.17amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 21, is amended to read:
59.18    Subd. 2. Definitions. For purposes of the tax imposed by this section, the following
59.19terms have the meanings given:
59.20    (a) "Alternative minimum taxable income" means the sum of the following for
59.21the taxable year:
59.22    (1) the taxpayer's federal alternative minimum taxable income as defined in section
59.2355(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code;
59.24    (2) the taxpayer's itemized deductions allowed in computing federal alternative
59.25minimum taxable income, but excluding:
59.26    (i) the charitable contribution deduction under section 170 of the Internal Revenue
59.27Code;
59.28    (ii) the medical expense deduction;
59.29    (iii) the casualty, theft, and disaster loss deduction; and
59.30    (iv) the impairment-related work expenses of a disabled person;
59.31    (3) for depletion allowances computed under section 613A(c) of the Internal
59.32Revenue Code, with respect to each property (as defined in section 614 of the Internal
59.33Revenue Code), to the extent not included in federal alternative minimum taxable income,
59.34the excess of the deduction for depletion allowable under section 611 of the Internal
60.1Revenue Code for the taxable year over the adjusted basis of the property at the end of the
60.2taxable year (determined without regard to the depletion deduction for the taxable year);
60.3    (4) to the extent not included in federal alternative minimum taxable income, the
60.4amount of the tax preference for intangible drilling cost under section 57(a)(2) of the
60.5Internal Revenue Code determined without regard to subparagraph (E);
60.6    (5) to the extent not included in federal alternative minimum taxable income, the
60.7amount of interest income as provided by section 290.01, subdivision 19a, clause (1); and
60.8    (6) the amount of addition required by section 290.01, subdivision 19a, clauses (7)
60.9to (9), and (11) to (14);
60.10    less the sum of the amounts determined under the following:
60.11    (1) interest income as defined in section 290.01, subdivision 19b, clause (1);
60.12    (2) an overpayment of state income tax as provided by section 290.01, subdivision
60.1319b
, clause (2), to the extent included in federal alternative minimum taxable income;
60.14    (3) the amount of investment interest paid or accrued within the taxable year on
60.15indebtedness to the extent that the amount does not exceed net investment income, as
60.16defined in section 163(d)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code. Interest does not include
60.17amounts deducted in computing federal adjusted gross income;
60.18    (4) amounts subtracted from federal taxable income as provided by section 290.01,
60.19subdivision 19b
, clauses (6), (8) to (14), and (16), (21), and (22); and
60.20(5) the amount of the net operating loss allowed under section 290.095, subdivision
60.2111
, paragraph (c).
60.22    In the case of an estate or trust, alternative minimum taxable income must be
60.23computed as provided in section 59(c) of the Internal Revenue Code.
60.24    (b) "Investment interest" means investment interest as defined in section 163(d)(3)
60.25of the Internal Revenue Code.
60.26    (c) "Net minimum tax" means the minimum tax imposed by this section.
60.27    (d) "Regular tax" means the tax that would be imposed under this chapter (without
60.28regard to this section and section 290.032), reduced by the sum of the nonrefundable
60.29credits allowed under this chapter.
60.30    (e) "Tentative minimum tax" equals 6.75 percent of alternative minimum taxable
60.31income after subtracting the exemption amount determined under subdivision 3.
60.32EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
60.33December 31, 2013.

60.34    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290A.03, subdivision 15, as
60.35amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 1, section 22, is amended to read:
61.1    Subd. 15. Internal Revenue Code. "Internal Revenue Code" means the Internal
61.2Revenue Code of 1986, as amended through December 20, 2013 March 26, 2014.
61.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively for property tax refunds
61.4based on property taxes payable after December 31, 2013, and rent paid after December
61.531, 2012.

61.6    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 291.005, subdivision 1, as
61.7amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 3, section 3, is amended to read:
61.8    Subdivision 1. Scope. Unless the context otherwise clearly requires, the following
61.9terms used in this chapter shall have the following meanings:
61.10    (1) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of revenue or any person to whom the
61.11commissioner has delegated functions under this chapter.
61.12    (2) "Federal gross estate" means the gross estate of a decedent as required to be valued
61.13and otherwise determined for federal estate tax purposes under the Internal Revenue Code.
61.14    (3) "Internal Revenue Code" means the United States Internal Revenue Code of
61.151986, as amended through March 1 26, 2014.
61.16    (4) "Minnesota gross estate" means the federal gross estate of a decedent after
61.17(a) excluding therefrom any property included in the estate which has its situs outside
61.18Minnesota, and (b) including any property omitted from the federal gross estate which
61.19is includable in the estate, has its situs in Minnesota, and was not disclosed to federal
61.20taxing authorities.
61.21    (5) "Nonresident decedent" means an individual whose domicile at the time of
61.22death was not in Minnesota.
61.23    (6) "Personal representative" means the executor, administrator or other person
61.24appointed by the court to administer and dispose of the property of the decedent. If there
61.25is no executor, administrator or other person appointed, qualified, and acting within this
61.26state, then any person in actual or constructive possession of any property having a situs in
61.27this state which is included in the federal gross estate of the decedent shall be deemed
61.28to be a personal representative to the extent of the property and the Minnesota estate tax
61.29due with respect to the property.
61.30    (7) "Resident decedent" means an individual whose domicile at the time of death
61.31was in Minnesota. The provisions of section 290.01, subdivision 7, paragraph (c), apply to
61.32determinations of domicile under this chapter.
61.33    (8) "Situs of property" means, with respect to:
61.34    (i) real property, the state or country in which it is located;
62.1    (ii) tangible personal property, the state or country in which it was normally kept
62.2or located at the time of the decedent's death or for a gift of tangible personal property
62.3within three years of death, the state or country in which it was normally kept or located
62.4when the gift was executed; and
62.5    (iii) a qualified work of art, as defined in section 2503(g)(2) of the Internal Revenue
62.6Code, owned by a nonresident decedent and that is normally kept or located in this state
62.7because it is on loan to an organization, qualifying as exempt from taxation under section
62.8501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, that is located in Minnesota, the situs of the art is
62.9deemed to be outside of Minnesota, notwithstanding the provisions of item (ii); and
62.10    (iv) intangible personal property, the state or country in which the decedent was
62.11domiciled at death or for a gift of intangible personal property within three years of death,
62.12the state or country in which the decedent was domiciled when the gift was executed.
62.13    For a nonresident decedent with an ownership interest in a pass-through entity with
62.14assets that include real or tangible personal property, situs of the real or tangible personal
62.15property, including qualified works of art, is determined as if the pass-through entity does
62.16not exist and the real or tangible personal property is personally owned by the decedent.
62.17If the pass-through entity is owned by a person or persons in addition to the decedent,
62.18ownership of the property is attributed to the decedent in proportion to the decedent's
62.19capital ownership share of the pass-through entity.
62.20(9) "Pass-through entity" includes the following:
62.21(i) an entity electing S corporation status under section 1362 of the Internal Revenue
62.22Code;
62.23(ii) an entity taxed as a partnership under subchapter K of the Internal Revenue Code;
62.24(iii) a single-member limited liability company or similar entity, regardless of
62.25whether it is taxed as an association or is disregarded for federal income tax purposes
62.26under Code of Federal Regulations, title 26, section 301.7701-3; or
62.27(iv) a trust to the extent the property is includible in the decedent's federal gross
62.28estate; but excludes
62.29    (v) an entity whose ownership interest securities are traded on an exchange regulated
62.30by the Securities and Exchange Commission as a national securities exchange under
62.31section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act, United States Code, title 15, section 78f.
62.32EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively for estates of decedents
62.33dying after December 31, 2013, except the changes in clause (7) are effective the day
62.34following final enactment.

63.1    Sec. 19. Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 3, section 4, the effective date, is amended to
63.2read:
63.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively for estates of decedents
63.4dying after December 31, 2013, and for taxable gifts made after June 30, 2013.
63.5EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

63.6    Sec. 20. DEFINITION OF TAXABLE GIFT FOR DECEDENTS DYING
63.7BEFORE JANUARY 1, 2014.
63.8For estates of decedents dying before January 1, 2014, "taxable gift" as used by
63.9Minnesota Statutes, section 291.005, subdivision 1, paragraph (4), means a transfer by gift
63.10which is included in taxable gifts for federal gift tax purposes under the following sections
63.11of the Internal Revenue Code: section 529; section 530; section 2501(a)(4); section 2503;
63.12sections 2511 to 2514; and sections 2516 to 2519; less the deductions allowed in sections
63.132522 to 2524 of the Internal Revenue Code, and after excluding taxable gifts of any
63.14property that has its situs outside Minnesota and including taxable gifts of any property
63.15tax that has its situs in Minnesota and were not disclosed to federal taxing authorities.
63.16EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively for taxable gifts made
63.17after June 30, 2013.

63.18    Sec. 21. TEMPORARY EDUCATION CREDITS.
63.19    Subdivision 1. Students with disabilities tutoring credit. (a) A taxpayer is allowed
63.20a credit, up to $2,000, against the tax imposed by Minnesota Statutes, chapter 290. The
63.21credit amount equals 75 percent of the amount of eligible expenses paid by a taxpayer who
63.22is a parent or guardian of a child for whom a Minnesota individualized education program is
63.23in effect pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, section 125A.08. The taxpayer claiming the credit
63.24under this subdivision must be a member of the child's individual education program team.
63.25(b) For the purposes of this subdivision, the following definitions apply:
63.26(1) "eligible expenses" means actual expenses, less the amount of expenses used to
63.27claim the credit under Minnesota Statutes, section 290.0674, subdivision 1, paid by the
63.28taxpayer for tutoring, instruction, or treatment by an instructor and not compensated by
63.29insurance, pretax account, or otherwise, to meet the cognitive, academic, communicative,
63.30social and emotional, motor ability, vocational, sensory, physical, or behavioral and
63.31functional needs of a student for purposes of improvement in meeting the academic
63.32standards required under Minnesota Statutes, section 120B.22; and
64.1(2) "instructor" means a person qualifying under Minnesota Statutes, section
64.2120A.22, subdivision 10, clauses (1) to (5), who is not a lineal ancestor or sibling of
64.3the qualifying child.
64.4(c) A taxpayer claiming the credit under this subdivision must provide documentation
64.5of eligibility for the credit in a form and manner prescribed by the commissioner of revenue.
64.6    Subd. 2. Reading credit. (a) A taxpayer is allowed a credit, up to $2,000, against the
64.7tax imposed by Minnesota Statutes, chapter 290. The credit amount equals 75 percent of
64.8the amount of eligible expenses paid by a taxpayer who is a parent or guardian of a child:
64.9(1) who has been evaluated for determination of a specific learning disability under
64.10Minnesota Rules, part 3525.1341, and was not found to meet the criteria under Minnesota
64.11Rules, part 3525.1341, subpart 2, to have a specific learning disability; and
64.12(2) for whom the evaluation indicated a determination of a deficiency in basic
64.13reading skills, reading comprehension, or reading fluency that impair a child to meet
64.14expected age or grade-level standards.
64.15(b) For purposes of this subdivision, the following definitions apply:
64.16(1) "eligible expenses" means actual expenses, less the amount of expenses used to
64.17claim the credit under Minnesota Statutes, section 290.0674, subdivision 1, paid by the
64.18taxpayer for tutoring, instruction, or treatment by an instructor and not compensated by
64.19insurance, pretax account, or otherwise, for purposes of meeting the academic standards
64.20required under Minnesota Statutes, section 120B.22;
64.21(2) "instructor" means a person qualifying under Minnesota Statutes, section
64.22120A.22, subdivision 10, clauses (1) to (5), who is not a lineal ancestor or sibling of
64.23the qualifying child; and
64.24(3) "treatment" means instruction that:
64.25(i) teaches language decoding skills in a systematic manner;
64.26(ii) uses recognized diagnostic assessments to determine what intervention would be
64.27most appropriate for individual students; and
64.28(iii) employs a research-based method.
64.29(c) A taxpayer claiming the credit under this subdivision must provide documentation
64.30of eligibility for the credit in a form and manner prescribed by the commissioner.
64.31    Subd. 3. Assignment of refunds. The provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section
64.32290.0679, except for subdivision 1, paragraphs (c) to (f), apply to the assignment of
64.33refunds authorized under this section. For purposes of assignment of refund under this
64.34section, a "qualifying taxpayer" means a taxpayer qualified to receive a credit under this
64.35section. In no case shall any condition for assignment require disclosure of the specific
64.36findings of an evaluation for a specific learning disability.
65.1    Subd. 4. Credit to be refundable. If the amount of total credits that the claimant is
65.2eligible to receive under this section exceeds the claimant's tax liability under Minnesota
65.3Statutes, chapter 290, the commissioner shall refund the excess to the claimant.
65.4    Subd. 5. Appropriation. An amount sufficient to pay the refunds authorized under
65.5this section is appropriated to the commissioner from the general fund.
65.6    Subd. 6. Report. By October 1, 2015, the commissioner must provide a report to
65.7the chairs and ranking minority members of the committees of the house of representatives
65.8and senate with jurisdiction over taxes on:
65.9(1) the number of taxpayers claiming the credits under this section and the average
65.10amount of credits claimed; and
65.11(2) the administration of the credits, including recommendations for ensuring
65.12compliance.
65.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment for
65.14tax year 2014 only.

65.15ARTICLE 4
65.16MINERALS

65.17    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 298.28, subdivision 4, is
65.18amended to read:
65.19    Subd. 4. School districts. (a) 32.15 33.5 cents per taxable ton, plus the increase
65.20provided in paragraph (d), less the amount that would have been computed under
65.21Minnesota Statutes 2008, section 126C.21, subdivision 4, for the current year for that
65.22district, must be allocated to qualifying school districts to be distributed, based upon the
65.23certification of the commissioner of revenue, under paragraphs (b), (c), and (f).
65.24    (b)(i) 3.43 3.88 cents per taxable ton must be distributed to the school districts in
65.25which the lands from which taconite was mined or quarried were located or within which
65.26the concentrate was produced. The distribution must be based on the apportionment
65.27formula prescribed in subdivision 2.
65.28    (ii) Four 4.45 cents per taxable ton from each taconite facility must be distributed
65.29to each affected school district for deposit in a fund dedicated to building maintenance
65.30and repairs, as follows:
65.31    (1) proceeds from Keewatin Taconite or its successor are distributed to Independent
65.32School Districts Nos. 316, Coleraine, and 319, Nashwauk-Keewatin, or their successor
65.33districts;
66.1    (2) proceeds from the Hibbing Taconite Company or its successor are distributed to
66.2Independent School Districts Nos. 695, Chisholm, and 701, Hibbing, or their successor
66.3districts;
66.4    (3) proceeds from the Mittal Steel Company and Minntac or their successors are
66.5distributed to Independent School Districts Nos. 712, Mountain Iron-Buhl, 706, Virginia,
66.62711, Mesabi East, and 2154, Eveleth-Gilbert, or their successor districts;
66.7    (4) proceeds from the Northshore Mining Company or its successor are distributed
66.8to Independent School Districts Nos. 2142, St. Louis County, and 381, Lake Superior,
66.9or their successor districts; and
66.10    (5) proceeds from United Taconite or its successor are distributed to Independent
66.11School Districts Nos. 2142, St. Louis County, and 2154, Eveleth-Gilbert, or their
66.12successor districts.
66.13    Revenues that are required to be distributed to more than one district shall be
66.14apportioned according to the number of pupil units identified in section 126C.05,
66.15subdivision 1
, enrolled in the second previous year.
66.16    (c)(i) 24.72 25.17 cents per taxable ton, less any amount distributed under paragraph
66.17(e), shall be distributed to a group of school districts comprised of those school districts
66.18which qualify as a tax relief area under section 273.134, paragraph (b), or in which there is
66.19a qualifying municipality as defined by section 273.134, paragraph (a), in direct proportion
66.20to school district indexes as follows: for each school district, its pupil units determined
66.21under section 126C.05 for the prior school year shall be multiplied by the ratio of the
66.22average adjusted net tax capacity per pupil unit for school districts receiving aid under
66.23this clause as calculated pursuant to chapters 122A, 126C, and 127A for the school year
66.24ending prior to distribution to the adjusted net tax capacity per pupil unit of the district.
66.25Each district shall receive that portion of the distribution which its index bears to the sum
66.26of the indices for all school districts that receive the distributions.
66.27    (ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), each school district that receives a distribution
66.28under sections 298.018; 298.23 to 298.28, exclusive of any amount received under this
66.29clause; 298.34 to 298.39; 298.391 to 298.396; 298.405; or any law imposing a tax on
66.30severed mineral values after reduction for any portion distributed to cities and towns
66.31under section 126C.48, subdivision 8, paragraph (5), that is less than the amount of its
66.32levy reduction under section 126C.48, subdivision 8, for the second year prior to the
66.33year of the distribution shall receive a distribution equal to the difference; the amount
66.34necessary to make this payment shall be derived from proportionate reductions in the
66.35initial distribution to other school districts under clause (i). If there are insufficient tax
66.36proceeds to make the distribution provided under this paragraph in any year, money must
67.1be transferred from the taconite property tax relief account in subdivision 6, to the extent
67.2of the shortfall in the distribution.
67.3    (d)(1) Any school district described in paragraph (c) where a levy increase pursuant
67.4to section 126C.17, subdivision 9, was authorized by referendum for taxes payable in
67.52001, shall receive a distribution of 21.3 cents per ton. Each district shall receive $175
67.6times the pupil units identified in section 126C.05, subdivision 1, enrolled in the second
67.7previous year or the 1983-1984 school year, whichever is greater, less the product of 1.8
67.8percent times the district's taxable net tax capacity in 2011.
67.9(2) Districts qualifying under paragraph (c) must receive additional taconite aid each
67.10year equal to 22.5 percent of the amount obtained by subtracting:
67.11(i) 1.8 percent of the district's net tax capacity for 2011, from:
67.12(ii) the district's weighted average daily membership for fiscal year 2012, multiplied
67.13by the sum of:
67.14(A) $415, plus
67.15(B) the district's referendum revenue allowance for fiscal year 2013.
67.16    If the total amount provided by paragraph (d) is insufficient to make the payments
67.17herein required then the entitlement of $175 per pupil unit shall be reduced uniformly
67.18so as not to exceed the funds available. Any amounts received by a qualifying school
67.19district in any fiscal year pursuant to paragraph (d) shall not be applied to reduce general
67.20education aid which the district receives pursuant to section 126C.13 or the permissible
67.21levies of the district. Any amount remaining after the payments provided in this paragraph
67.22shall be paid to the commissioner of Iron Range resources and rehabilitation who shall
67.23deposit the same in the taconite environmental protection fund and the Douglas J. Johnson
67.24economic protection trust fund as provided in subdivision 11.
67.25    Each district receiving money according to this paragraph shall reserve the lesser of
67.26the amount received under this paragraph or $25 times the number of pupil units served in
67.27the district. It may use the money for early childhood programs.
67.28    (e) There shall be distributed to any school district the amount which the school
67.29district was entitled to receive under section 298.32 in 1975.
67.30    (f) Four 4.45 cents per taxable ton must be distributed to qualifying school districts
67.31according to the distribution specified in paragraph (b), clause (ii), and 11 cents per
67.32taxable ton must be distributed according to the distribution specified in paragraph (c).
67.33These amounts are not subject to sections 126C.21, subdivision 4, and section 126C.48,
67.34subdivision 8
.
67.35EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning for the 2015 distribution.

68.1    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 298.28, subdivision 5, as amended by Laws
68.22014, chapter 150, article 6, section 11, is amended to read:
68.3    Subd. 5. Counties. (a) 21.05 21.941 cents per taxable ton is allocated to counties to
68.4be distributed, based upon certification by the commissioner of revenue, under paragraphs
68.5(b) to (d).
68.6    (b) 10.525 cents per taxable ton shall be distributed to the county in which the
68.7taconite is mined or quarried or in which the concentrate is produced, less any amount
68.8which is to be distributed pursuant to paragraph (c). The apportionment formula prescribed
68.9in subdivision 2 is the basis for the distribution.
68.10    (c) If an electric power plant owned by and providing the primary source of power for
68.11a taxpayer mining and concentrating taconite is located in a county other than the county
68.12in which the mining and the concentrating processes are conducted, one cent per taxable
68.13ton of the tax distributed to the counties pursuant to paragraph (b) and imposed on and
68.14collected from such taxpayer shall be paid to the county in which the power plant is located.
68.15    (d) 10.525 11.416 cents per taxable ton shall be paid to the county from which the
68.16taconite was mined, quarried or concentrated to be deposited in the county road and
68.17bridge fund. If the mining, quarrying and concentrating, or separate steps in any of those
68.18processes are carried on in more than one county, the commissioner shall follow the
68.19apportionment formula prescribed in subdivision 2.

68.20    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2013, section 298.28, subdivision 7a, as added by Laws
68.212014, chapter 150, article 6, section 13, is amended to read:
68.22    Subd. 7a. Iron Range school consolidation and cooperatively operated school
68.23account. The following amounts must be allocated to the Iron Range Resources and
68.24Rehabilitation Board to be deposited in the Iron Range school consolidation and
68.25cooperatively operated school account that is hereby created:
68.26(1) ten cents per taxable ton of the tax imposed under section 298.24;
68.27(2) the amount as determined under section 298.17, paragraph (b), clause (3); and
68.28(3) for distributions in 2015 through 2017, an amount equal to two-thirds of the
68.29increased tax proceeds attributable to the increase in the implicit price deflator as provided
68.30in section 298.24, subdivision 1; and
68.31(4) any other amount as provided by law.
68.32Expenditures from this account shall be made only to provide disbursements to
68.33assist school districts with the payment of bonds that were issued for qualified school
68.34projects, or for any other school disbursement as approved by the Iron Range Resources
68.35and Rehabilitation Board. For purposes of this section, "qualified school projects" means
69.1school projects within the taconite assistance area as defined in section 273.1341, that were
69.2(1) approved, by referendum, after December 7, 2009 April 3, 2006; and (2) approved by
69.3the commissioner of education pursuant to section 123B.71.
69.4No expenditure under this section shall be made unless approved by seven members
69.5of the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board.
69.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for production year 2014 and
69.7thereafter.

69.8    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 298.75, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
69.9    Subd. 2. Tax imposed. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (e), a county that
69.10imposes the aggregate production tax shall impose upon every operator a production tax
69.11of 21.5 cents per cubic yard or 15 cents per ton of aggregate material excavated in the
69.12county except that the county board may decide not to impose this tax if it determines
69.13that in the previous year operators removed less than 20,000 tons or 14,000 cubic yards of
69.14aggregate material from that county. The tax shall not be imposed on aggregate material
69.15excavated in the county until the aggregate material is transported from the extraction site
69.16or sold, whichever occurs first. When aggregate material is stored in a stockpile within the
69.17state of Minnesota and a public highway, road or street is not used for transporting the
69.18aggregate material, the tax shall not be imposed until either when the aggregate material
69.19is sold, or when it is transported from the stockpile site, or when it is used from the
69.20stockpile, whichever occurs first.
69.21    (b) Except as provided in paragraph (e), a county that imposes the aggregate
69.22production tax under paragraph (a) shall impose upon every importer a production tax
69.23of 21.5 cents per cubic yard or 15 cents per ton of aggregate material imported into the
69.24county. The tax shall be imposed when the aggregate material is imported from the
69.25extraction site or sold. When imported aggregate material is stored in a stockpile within
69.26the state of Minnesota and a public highway, road, or street is not used for transporting
69.27the aggregate material, the tax shall be imposed either when the aggregate material is
69.28sold, when it is transported from the stockpile site, or when it is used from the stockpile,
69.29whichever occurs first. The tax shall be imposed on an importer when the aggregate
69.30material is imported into the county that imposes the tax.
69.31    (c) If the aggregate material is transported directly from the extraction site to a
69.32waterway, railway, or another mode of transportation other than a highway, road or street,
69.33the tax imposed by this section shall be apportioned equally between the county where the
69.34aggregate material is extracted and the county to which the aggregate material is originally
70.1transported. If that destination is not located in Minnesota, then the county where the
70.2aggregate material was extracted shall receive all of the proceeds of the tax.
70.3    (d) A county, city, or town that receives revenue under this section is prohibited
70.4from imposing any additional host community fees on aggregate production within that
70.5county, city, or town.
70.6(e) A county that borders two other states and that is not contiguous to a county
70.7that imposes a tax under this section may impose the taxes under paragraphs (a) and (b)
70.8at the rate of ten cents per cubic yard or seven cents per ton. This paragraph expires
70.9December 31, 2014 2019.
70.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

70.11    Sec. 5. Laws 2008, chapter 366, article 10, section 15, is amended to read:
70.12    Sec. 15. 2008 DISTRIBUTIONS ONLY.
70.13    For distribution in 2008 only, a special fund is established to receive 11.4 cents per ton
70.14that otherwise would be allocated under Minnesota Statutes, section 298.28, subdivision 6.
70.15If sufficient funds are not available under Minnesota Statutes, section 298.28, subdivision
70.166
, to make the payments required under this section and under Minnesota Statutes, section
70.17298.28, subdivision 6 , the remaining amount needed to total 11.4 cents per ton may be
70.18taken from funds available under Minnesota Statutes, section 298.28, subdivision 9. If
70.192008 H.F. No. 1812 is enacted and includes a provision that distributes funds that would
70.20otherwise be allocated under Minnesota Statutes, section 298.28, subdivision 6, in a
70.21manner different from the distribution required in this section, the distribution in this
70.22section supersedes the distribution set in 2008 H.F. No. 1812 notwithstanding Minnesota
70.23Statutes, section 645.26. The following amounts are allocated to St. Louis County acting
70.24as the fiscal agent for the recipients for the following specified purposes:
70.25    (1) two cents per ton must be paid to the Hibbing Economic Development Authority
70.26to retire bonds and for economic development purposes;
70.27    (2) one cent per ton must be divided among and paid in equal shares to each of the
70.28board of St. Louis County School District No. 2142, the board of Ely School District No.
70.29696, the board of Mountain Iron-Buhl School District No. 712, and the board of Virginia
70.30School District No. 706 for each to study the potential for and impact of consolidation
70.31and streamlining the operations of their school districts;
70.32    (3) 0.25 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Grand Rapids, for industrial park work;
70.33    (4) 0.65 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Aitkin, for sewer and water for
70.34housing economic development projects;
71.1    (5) 0.5 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Crosby, for well and water tower
71.2infrastructure;
71.3    (6) 0.5 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Two Harbors, for well and water
71.4tower infrastructure;
71.5    (7) 1.5 cents per ton must be paid to the city of Silver Bay to pay for health and
71.6safety and maintenance improvements at a former elementary school building that is
71.7currently owned by the city, to be used for economic development purposes;
71.8    (8) 1.5 cents per ton must be paid to St. Louis County to extend water and sewer
71.9lines from the city of Chisholm to the St. Louis County fairgrounds;
71.10    (9) 1.5 cents per ton must be paid to the White Community Hospital for debt
71.11restructuring;
71.12    (10) 0.5 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Keewatin for street, sewer, and
71.13water improvements;
71.14    (11) 0.5 cent per ton must be paid to the city of Calumet for street, sewer, and water
71.15improvements; and
71.16    (12) one cent per ton must be paid to Breitung township for sewer and water
71.17extensions associated with the development of a state park, provided that if a new state
71.18park is not established in Breitung township by July 1, 2009, the money provided in
71.19this clause must be transferred to the northeast Minnesota economic development fund
71.20established in Minnesota Statutes, section 298.2213.
71.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
71.22Upon enactment, the city of Aitkin must release all funds under this section to St. Louis
71.23County acting as fiscal agent by July 1, 2014.

71.24    Sec. 6. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 11, section 10, is amended to read:
71.25    Sec. 10. 2013 DISTRIBUTION ONLY.
71.26For the 2013 distribution, a special fund is established to receive 38.7 cents per ton of
71.27any excess of the balance remaining after distribution of amounts required under Minnesota
71.28Statutes, section 298.28, subdivision 6. The following amounts are allocated to St. Louis
71.29County acting as the fiscal agent for the recipients for the following specific purposes:
71.30(1) 5.1 cents per ton to the city of Hibbing for improvements to the city's water
71.31supply system;
71.32(2) 4.3 cents per ton to the city of Mountain Iron for the cost of moving utilities
71.33required as a result of actions undertaken by United States Steel Corporation;
71.34(3) 2.5 cents per ton to the city of Biwabik for improvements to the city's water supply
71.35system, payable upon agreement with ArcelorMittal to satisfy water permit conditions;
72.1(4) 2 cents per ton to the city of Tower for the Tower Marina;
72.2(5) 2.4 cents per ton to the city of Grand Rapids for an eco-friendly heat transfer
72.3system to replace aging effluent lines and for parking lot repaving;
72.4(6) 2.4 cents per ton to the city of Two Harbors for wastewater treatment plant
72.5improvements;
72.6(7) 0.9 cents per ton to the city of Ely for the sanitary sewer replacement project;
72.7(8) 0.6 cents per ton to the town of Crystal Bay for debt service of the Claire Nelson
72.8Intermodal Transportation Center;
72.9(9) 0.5 cents per ton to the Greenway Joint Recreation Board for the Coleraine
72.10hockey arena renovations;
72.11(10) 1.2 cents per ton for the West Range Regional Fire Hall and Training Center
72.12to merge the existing fire services of Coleraine, Bovey, Taconite Marble, Calumet, and
72.13Greenway Township;
72.14(11) 2.5 cents per ton to the city of Hibbing for the Memorial Building;
72.15(12) 0.7 cents per ton to the city of Chisholm for public works infrastructure;
72.16(13) 1.8 cents per ton to the Crane Lake Water and Sanitary District for sanitary
72.17sewer extension;
72.18(14) 2.5 cents per ton for the city of Buhl for the roof on the Mesabi Academy;
72.19(15) 1.2 cents per ton to the city of Gilbert for the New Jersey/Ohio Avenue project;
72.20(16) 1.5 2.0 cents per ton to the city of Cook for street improvements, business park
72.21infrastructure, and a maintenance garage;
72.22(17) 0.5 cents per ton to the city of Cook for a water line project;
72.23(18) (17) 1.8 cents per ton to the city of Eveleth to be used for Jones Street
72.24reconstruction and the city auditorium;
72.25(19) (18) 0.5 cents per ton for the city of Keewatin for an electrical substation and
72.26water line replacements;
72.27(20) (19) 3.3 cents per ton for the city of Virginia for Fourth Street North
72.28infrastructure and Franklin Park improvement; and
72.29(21) (20) 0.5 cents per ton to the city of Grand Rapids for an economic development
72.30project.
72.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

72.32    Sec. 7. REALLOCATION OF BOND PAYMENTS.
72.33In each year subsequent to the year in which the following appropriations terminate
72.34under their terms, an amount equal to the amount payable in 2013 based upon 2012
72.35production of the terminating appropriation is appropriated from the same sources listed
73.1in this section to the Iron Range school consolidation and cooperatively operated school
73.2account under Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 6, section 13:
73.3(1) Laws 1996, chapter 412, article 5, section 21, subdivision 3, appropriation for
73.4bonds of Independent School District No. 166, Cook County;
73.5(2) Laws 1996, chapter 412, article 5, section 20, subdivision 2, appropriation for
73.6bonds of Independent School District No. 696, Ely;
73.7(3) Laws 1996, chapter 412, article 5, section 20, subdivision 2, appropriation for
73.8bonds of Independent School District No. 706, Virginia:
73.9(4) Laws 1996, chapter 412, article 5, section 20, subdivision 2, appropriation for
73.10bonds of Independent School District No. 2154, Eveleth-Gilbert;
73.11(5) Laws 1998, chapter 398, article 4, section 17, subdivision 2, appropriation for
73.12bonds of Independent School District No. 712, Mountain Iron-Buhl;
73.13(6) Laws 2000, chapter 489, article 5, section 24, subdivision 1, appropriation for
73.14bonds of Independent School District No. 695, Chisholm;
73.15(7) Laws 2000, chapter 489, article 5, section 25, subdivision 1, appropriation for
73.16bonds of Independent School District No. 316, Greenway-Coleraine;
73.17(8) Laws 2000, chapter 489, article 5, section 26, subdivision 1, appropriation for
73.18bonds of Independent School District No. 381, Lake Superior; and
73.19(9) Laws 2008, chapter 154, article 8, section 18, appropriation for bonds of
73.20Independent School District No. 2711, Mesabi East.
73.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with the distribution
73.22in 2015.

73.23ARTICLE 5
73.24LOCAL DEVELOPMENT

73.25    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 469.1763, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
73.26    Subd. 3. Five-year rule. (a) Revenues derived from tax increments are considered
73.27to have been expended on an activity within the district under subdivision 2 only if one
73.28of the following occurs:
73.29(1) before or within five years after certification of the district, the revenues are
73.30actually paid to a third party with respect to the activity;
73.31(2) bonds, the proceeds of which must be used to finance the activity, are issued and
73.32sold to a third party before or within five years after certification, the revenues are spent
73.33to repay the bonds, and the proceeds of the bonds either are, on the date of issuance,
73.34reasonably expected to be spent before the end of the later of (i) the five-year period, or
74.1(ii) a reasonable temporary period within the meaning of the use of that term under section
74.2148(c)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, or are deposited in a reasonably required reserve
74.3or replacement fund;
74.4(3) binding contracts with a third party are entered into for performance of the
74.5activity before or within five years after certification of the district and the revenues are
74.6spent under the contractual obligation;
74.7(4) costs with respect to the activity are paid before or within five years after
74.8certification of the district and the revenues are spent to reimburse a party for payment
74.9of the costs, including interest on unreimbursed costs; or
74.10(5) expenditures are made for housing purposes as permitted by subdivision 2,
74.11paragraphs (b) and (d), or for public infrastructure purposes within a zone as permitted
74.12by subdivision 2, paragraph (e).
74.13(b) For purposes of this subdivision, bonds include subsequent refunding bonds if
74.14the original refunded bonds meet the requirements of paragraph (a), clause (2).
74.15(c) For a redevelopment district or a renewal and renovation district certified after
74.16June 30, 2003, and before April 20, 2009, the five-year periods described in paragraph (a)
74.17are extended to ten years after certification of the district. For a redevelopment district
74.18certified after April 20, 2009, and before June 30, 2013, the five-year periods described in
74.19paragraph (a) are extended to eight years after certification of the district. This extension is
74.20provided primarily to accommodate delays in development activities due to unanticipated
74.21economic circumstances.
74.22EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for districts for which the request for
74.23certification was made after April 20, 2009.

74.24    Sec. 2. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 9, section 23, is amended to read:
74.25    Sec. 23. CITY OF BLOOMINGTON; OLD CEDAR AVENUE BRIDGE.
74.26    (a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the city of Bloomington shall transfer
74.27from the tax increment financing accounts for its Tax Increment Financing District No.
74.281-C and Tax Increment Financing District No. 1-G an amount equal to the tax increment
74.29for each district that is computed under the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section
74.30473F.08, subdivision 3c , for taxes payable in 2014 to an account or fund established for
74.31the repair, restoration, or replacement of the Old Cedar Avenue bridge for use by bicycle
74.32commuters and recreational users. The city is authorized to and must use the transferred
74.33funds to complete the repair, renovation, or replacement of the bridge. Upon completion
74.34of the repair, renovation, or replacement of the bridge, the city may use any remaining
75.1funds in the account for costs of improving bicycle and pedestrian trails that access the
75.2bridge and that use is deemed to be a permitted use of the increments.
75.3    (b) No signs, plaques, or markers acknowledging or crediting donations for,
75.4sponsorships of, or naming rights may be posted on or in the vicinity of the Old Cedar
75.5Avenue bridge.
75.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective without local approval under
75.7Minnesota Statutes, section 645.023, subdivision 1, paragraph (a).

75.8    Sec. 3. CITY OF BAXTER; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING DISTRICT;
75.9PROJECT REQUIREMENT.
75.10    Subdivision 1. Addition of parcels to district. Notwithstanding Minnesota
75.11Statutes, sections 469.174, subdivision 12; 469.176, subdivision 4c; or any other law to
75.12the contrary, the governing body of the city of Baxter may elect to expand the boundaries
75.13of Isle Drive Tax Increment Financing District to include the real property described as tax
75.14parcel number 034120010010009 in the city of Baxter, Crow Wing County, Minnesota.
75.15    Subd. 2. Original tax capacity of district. Upon addition of the property described
75.16in subdivision 1 to the Isle Drive Tax Increment Financing District, the Crow Wing
75.17County auditor shall increase the original tax capacity of Isle Drive Tax Increment
75.18Financing District by the amount required by Minnesota Statutes, section 469.177, except
75.19as provided in subdivision 3.
75.20    Subd. 3. Prior planned improvements. Minnesota Statutes, section 469.177,
75.21subdivision 4, does not apply to the property described in subdivision 1 added to the Isle
75.22Drive Tax Increment Financing District.
75.23    Subd. 4. Use of increments. Tax increments and other revenues derived from any
75.24portion of Isle Drive Tax Increment Financing District, as expanded under this section,
75.25may be used to reimburse or otherwise pay for allowable expenditures under the plan
75.26budget for Isle Drive Tax Increment Financing District, as amended in accordance with
75.27Minnesota Statutes, section 469.175, subdivision 4.
75.28    Subd. 5. Approval and effect of modification. If the governing body of the
75.29city elects to exercise the authority provided in subdivision 1 to modify the district, the
75.30following conditions apply:
75.31(1) the city must comply with Minnesota Statutes, section 469.175, subdivision 4; and
75.32(2) beginning with the subsequent calendar year, except as otherwise provided
75.33in this section, the district is subject to the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, sections
75.34469.174 to 469.1794, as if the request for certification of the entire district was made on
76.1December 30, 2011, the date the original request for certification for the Isle Drive Tax
76.2Increment Financing District was made.
76.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon approval by the governing body
76.4of the city of Baxter and upon compliance by the city with Minnesota Statutes, section
76.5645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

76.6    Sec. 4. CITY OF EAGAN; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING.
76.7Notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.176, subdivision
76.81b, or any other law to the contrary, the city of Eagan may collect tax increment from the
76.9Cedar Grove Tax Increment Financing District through December 31, 2039.
76.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon compliance by the governing
76.11bodies of the city of Eagan, Dakota County, and Independent School District No. 191 with
76.12the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.1782, subdivision 2, and 645.021,
76.13subdivision 3.

76.14    Sec. 5. CITY OF EDINA; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING.
76.15    Subdivision 1. Authority to create districts. (a) The governing body of the city of
76.16Edina or its development authority may establish one or more tax increment financing
76.17housing districts in the Southeast Edina Redevelopment Project Area, as the boundaries
76.18exist on March 31, 2014.
76.19(b) The authority to request certification of districts under this authority expires
76.20on June 30, 2017.
76.21    Subd. 2. Rules governing districts. (a) Housing districts established under this
76.22section are subject to the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.174 to 469.1794,
76.23except as otherwise provided in this subdivision.
76.24(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.176,
76.25subdivision 1b, no increment must be paid to the authority after 20 years after receipt by
76.26the authority of the first increment from a district established under this section.
76.27(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1761,
76.28subdivision 3, for a residential rental project the city may elect to substitute "20 percent"
76.29for "40 percent" in the 40-60 test under section 142(d)(1)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code
76.30in determining the applicable income limits.
76.31    Subd. 3. Pooling authority. The city may elect, in the tax increment financing
76.32plan for the district, to increase by up to 15 percentage points the permitted amount of
76.33expenditures for activities located outside the geographic area of the district.
77.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon compliance by the governing
77.2body of the city of Edina with the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021,
77.3subdivisions 2 and 3.

77.4    Sec. 6. CITY OF MAPLE GROVE; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING DISTRICT.
77.5    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following terms
77.6have the meanings given to them.
77.7(b) "City" means the city of Maple Grove.
77.8(c) "Project area" means the area in the city commencing at a point 130 feet East and
77.9120 feet North of the southwest corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 23, Township
77.10119, Range 22, Hennepin County, said point being on the easterly right-of-way line of
77.11Hemlock Lane; thence northerly along said easterly right-of-way line of Hemlock Lane
77.12a distance of 900 feet; thence easterly to the east line of Section 23, 1,030 feet North
77.13from the southeast corner thereof; thence South 74 degrees East 1,285 feet; thence East
77.14a distance of 1,000 feet; thence North 59 degrees West a distance of 650 feet; thence
77.15northerly to a point on the northerly right-of-way line of 81st Avenue North, 650 feet
77.16westerly measured at right angles, from the east line of the Northwest Quarter of Section
77.1724; thence North 13 degrees West a distance of 795 feet; thence West to the west line of
77.18the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 24; thence North 55 degrees
77.19West to the south line of the Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 24;
77.20thence West along said south line to the east right-of-way line of Zachary Lane; thence
77.21North along the east right-of-way line of Zachary Lane to the southwest corner of Lot 1,
77.22Block 1, Metropolitan Industrial Park 5th Addition; thence East along the south line of
77.23said Lot 1 to the northeast corner of Outlot A, Metropolitan Industrial Park 5th Addition;
77.24thence South along the east line of said Outlot A and its southerly extension to the south
77.25right-of-way line of County State-Aid Highway (CSAH) 109; thence easterly along the
77.26south right-of-way line of CSAH 109 to the east line of the Northwest Quarter of the
77.27Northeast Quarter of Section 24; thence South along said east line to the north line of the
77.28South Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section 24; thence East along said north line to
77.29the westerly right-of-way line of Jefferson Highway North; thence southerly along the
77.30westerly right-of-way line of Jefferson Highway to the centerline of CSAH 130; thence
77.31continuing South along the west right-of-way line of Pilgrim Lane North to the westerly
77.32extension of the north line of Outlot A, Park North Fourth Addition; thence easterly
77.33along the north line of Outlot A, Park North Fourth Addition to the northeast corner
77.34of said Outlot A; thence southerly along the east line of said Outlot A to the southeast
77.35corner of said Outlot A; thence easterly along the south line of Lot 1, Block 1, Park
78.1North Fourth Addition to the westerly right-of-way line of State Highway 169; thence
78.2southerly, southwesterly, westerly, and northwesterly along the westerly right-of-way
78.3line of State Highway 169 and the northerly right-of-way line of Interstate 694 to its
78.4intersection with the southerly extension of the easterly right-of-way line of Zachary Lane
78.5North; thence northerly along the easterly right-of-way line of Zachary Lane North and
78.6its northerly extension to the north right-of-way line of CSAH 130; thence westerly,
78.7southerly, northerly, southwesterly, and northwesterly to the point of beginning and there
78.8terminating, provided that the project area includes the rights-of-way for all present and
78.9future highway interchanges abutting the area described in this paragraph.
78.10(d) "Soil deficiency district" means a type of tax increment financing district
78.11consisting of a portion of the project area in which the city finds by resolution that the
78.12following conditions exist:
78.13(1) unusual terrain or soil deficiencies that occurred over 80 percent of the acreage in
78.14the district require substantial filling, grading, or other physical preparation for use; and
78.15(2) the estimated cost of the physical preparation under clause (1), but excluding
78.16costs directly related to roads as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 160.01, and
78.17local improvements as described in Minnesota Statutes, sections 429.021, subdivision 1,
78.18clauses (1) to (7), (11), and (12), and 430.01, exceeds the fair market value of the land
78.19before completion of the preparation.
78.20    Subd. 2. Special rules. (a) If the city elects, upon the adoption of the tax increment
78.21financing plan for a district, the rules under this section apply to a redevelopment
78.22district, renewal and renovation district, soil condition district, or soil deficiency district
78.23established by the city or a development authority of the city in the project area.
78.24(b) Prior to or upon the adoption of the first tax increment plan subject to the special
78.25rules under this subdivision, the city must find by resolution that parcels consisting
78.26of at least 80 percent of the acreage of the project area, excluding street and railroad
78.27rights-of-way, are characterized by one or more of the following conditions:
78.28(1) peat or other soils with geotechnical deficiencies that impair development of
78.29commercial buildings or infrastructure;
78.30(2) soils or terrain that requires substantial filling in order to permit the development
78.31of commercial buildings or infrastructure;
78.32(3) landfills, dumps, or similar deposits of municipal or private waste;
78.33(4) quarries or similar resource extraction sites;
78.34(5) floodway; and
78.35(6) substandard buildings, within the meaning of Minnesota Statutes, section
78.36469.174, subdivision 10.
79.1(c) For the purposes of paragraph (b), clauses (1) to (5), a parcel is characterized by
79.2the relevant condition if at least 70 percent of the area of the parcel contains the relevant
79.3condition. For the purposes of paragraph (b), clause (6), a parcel is characterized by
79.4substandard buildings if substandard buildings occupy at least 30 percent of the area
79.5of the parcel.
79.6(d) The five-year rule under Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1763, subdivision
79.73, is extended to ten years for any district, and Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1763,
79.8subdivision 4, does not apply to any district.
79.9(e) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in Minnesota Statutes, section
79.10469.1763, subdivision 2, paragraph (a), not more than 80 percent of the total revenue
79.11derived from tax increments paid by properties in any district, measured over the life of
79.12the district, may be expended on activities outside the district but within the project area.
79.13(f) For a soil deficiency district:
79.14(1) increments may be collected through 20 years after the receipt by the authority of
79.15the first increment from the district; and
79.16(2) except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, increments may be used only to:
79.17(i) acquire parcels on which the improvements described in item (ii) will occur;
79.18(ii) pay for the cost of correcting the unusual terrain or soil deficiencies and the
79.19additional cost of installing public improvements directly caused by the deficiencies; and
79.20(iii) pay for the administrative expenses of the authority allocable to the district.
79.21(g) Increments spent for any infrastructure costs, whether inside a district or outside
79.22a district but within the project area, are deemed to satisfy the requirements of paragraph
79.23(f) and Minnesota Statutes, section 469.176, subdivisions 4b and 4j.
79.24(h) The authority to approve tax increment financing plans to establish tax increment
79.25financing districts under this section expires December 31, 2022.
79.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon compliance with Minnesota
79.27Statutes, section 645.021, subdivision 3.

79.28    Sec. 7. CITY OF MOUND; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING.
79.29The requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1763, subdivision 3, that
79.30activities must be undertaken within a five-year period from the date of certification of
79.31a tax increment financing district, are considered to be met for the Mound Harbor Tax
79.32Increment Financing District administered by the Housing and Redevelopment Authority
79.33in and for the city of Mound if the activities are undertaken within 13 years from the
79.34date of certification of the district.
80.1EFFECTIVE DATE.The section is effective upon compliance by the governing
80.2body of the city of Mound with the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section 645.021,
80.3subdivisions 2 and 3.

80.4    Sec. 8. CITY OF NORTH ST. PAUL; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING;
80.5PARCELS DEEMED OCCUPIED.
80.6(a) If the city of North St. Paul authorizes the creation of a redevelopment tax
80.7increment financing district under Minnesota Statutes, section 469.174, subdivision 10,
80.8parcel number 122922330059 is deemed to meet the requirements of Minnesota Statutes,
80.9section 469.174, subdivision 10, paragraph (d), notwithstanding any contrary provisions
80.10of that paragraph, if the following conditions are met:
80.11(1) buildings located on the parcel were demolished after the city of North St. Paul
80.12adopted a resolution under Minnesota Statutes, section 469.174, subdivision 10, paragraph
80.13(d), clause (3);
80.14(2) the buildings were removed either by the city of North St. Paul or by the owner
80.15of the property by entering into a development agreement; and
80.16(3) the request for certification of the parcel as part of a district is filed with the
80.17county auditor by December 31, 2017.
80.18(b) The city of North St. Paul may elect to use the current value for purposes of
80.19calculating original net tax capacity for the parcels deemed occupied under paragraph (a),
80.20notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.174, subdivision 10,
80.21paragraph (d), and 469.177, subdivision 1, paragraph (f).
80.22EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon compliance by the governing
80.23body of the city of North St. Paul with the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, section
80.24645.021, subdivisions 2 and 3.

80.25    Sec. 9. CITY OF SAVAGE; TAX INCREMENT FINANCING DISTRICT.
80.26    Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) For the purposes of this section, the following terms
80.27have the meanings given to them.
80.28(b) "City" means the city of Savage.
80.29(c) "Project area" means parcel numbers 26-931-023-0, 26-931-022-0, 26-931-039-0,
80.3026-931-041-0, 26-931-018-1, 26-931-043-0, 26-931-020-0, 26-931-021-0, 26-931-035-0,
80.3126-931-040-0, 26-931-036-0, 26-931-037-0, 26-931-038-0, 26-931-0310.
80.32(d) "Soil deficiency district" means a type of tax increment financing district
80.33consisting of a portion of the project area in which the city finds by resolution that the
80.34following conditions exist:
81.1(1) unusual terrain or soil deficiencies that occurred over 80 percent of the acreage in
81.2the district require substantial filling, grading, or other physical preparation for use; and
81.3(2) the estimated cost of the physical preparation under clause (1), but excluding
81.4costs directly related to roads as defined in Minnesota Statutes, section 160.01, and
81.5local improvements as described in Minnesota Statutes, sections 429.021, subdivision 1,
81.6clauses (1) to (7), (11), and (12), and 430.01, exceeds the fair market value of the land
81.7before completion of the preparation.
81.8    Subd. 2. Special rules. (a) If the city elects, upon the adoption of the tax increment
81.9financing plan for a district, the rules under this section apply to a redevelopment
81.10district, renewal and renovation district, soil condition district, or soil deficiency district
81.11established by the city or a development authority of the city in the project area.
81.12(b) Prior to or upon the adoption of the first tax increment plan subject to the special
81.13rules under this subdivision, the city must find by resolution that parcels consisting
81.14of at least 80 percent of the acreage of the project area, excluding street and railroad
81.15rights-of-way, are characterized by one or more of the following conditions:
81.16(1) peat or other soils with geotechnical deficiencies that impair development of
81.17commercial buildings or infrastructure;
81.18(2) soils or terrain that requires substantial filling in order to permit the development
81.19of commercial buildings or infrastructure;
81.20(3) landfills, dumps, or similar deposits of municipal or private waste;
81.21(4) quarries or similar resource extraction sites;
81.22(5) floodway; and
81.23(6) substandard buildings, within the meaning of Minnesota Statutes, section
81.24469.174, subdivision 10.
81.25(c) For the purposes of paragraph (b), clauses (1) to (5), a parcel is characterized by
81.26the relevant condition if at least 70 percent of the area of the parcel contains the relevant
81.27condition. For the purposes of paragraph (b), clause (6), a parcel is characterized by
81.28substandard buildings if substandard buildings occupy at least 30 percent of the area
81.29of the parcel.
81.30(d) The five-year rule under Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1763, subdivision
81.313, is extended to ten years for any district, and Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1763,
81.32subdivision 4, does not apply to any district.
81.33(e) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in Minnesota Statutes, section
81.34469.1763, subdivision 2, paragraph (a), not more than 80 percent of the total revenue
81.35derived from tax increments paid by properties in any district, measured over the life of
81.36the district, may be expended on activities outside the district but within the project area.
82.1(f) For a soil deficiency district:
82.2(1) increments may be collected through 20 years after the receipt by the authority of
82.3the first increment from the district; and
82.4(2) except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, increments may be used only to:
82.5(i) acquire parcels on which the improvements described in item (ii) will occur;
82.6(ii) pay for the cost of correcting the unusual terrain or soil deficiencies and the
82.7additional cost of installing public improvements directly caused by the deficiencies; and
82.8(iii) pay for the administrative expenses of the authority allocable to the district.
82.9(g) Increments spent for any infrastructure costs, whether inside a district or outside
82.10a district but within the project area, are deemed to satisfy the requirements of paragraph
82.11(f) and Minnesota Statutes, section 469.176, subdivisions 4b and 4j.
82.12(h) The authority to approve tax increment financing plans to establish tax increment
82.13financing districts under this section expires December 31, 2022.
82.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective upon compliance with Minnesota
82.15Statutes, section 645.021, subdivision 3.

82.16    Sec. 10. WORKFORCE HOUSING TAX INCREMENT FINANCING PILOT
82.17PROJECT.
82.18    Subdivision 1. Authority to create districts. (a) The governing body of a city
82.19located in either Roseau or Pennington County and has a population exceeding 1,500
82.20may establish no more than two tax increment financing housing districts subject to the
82.21rules as provided in this section.
82.22(b) The authority to establish or approve the tax increment financing plans and
82.23request certification for districts under this section expires on June 30, 2019.
82.24    Subd. 2. Rules governing districts. (a) Housing districts established under this
82.25section are subject to the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, sections 469.174 to 469.1794,
82.26except as otherwise provided in this subdivision.
82.27(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1761,
82.28subdivision 2, for a residential rental project, the city may elect to substitute "80 percent"
82.29for both "40 percent" and "60 percent" in the 40-60 test under section 142(d)(1)(B) of the
82.30Internal Revenue Code in determining the applicable income limits.
82.31(c) Within five years from the date of certification of a tax increment financing
82.32district under this section, the governing body of the city must submit a report detailing
82.33the funding mechanisms, in addition to the use of the tax increment, that are being used
82.34to fund the projects as outlined in the tax increment financing plan. The report must be
83.1submitted to the committees of the house of representatives and senate having jurisdiction
83.2over taxes and economic development.
83.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for districts for which the request for
83.4certification is made after June 30, 2014.

83.5ARTICLE 6
83.6MISCELLANEOUS

83.7    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 116V.03, is amended to read:
83.8116V.03 APPROPRIATION.
83.9$1,000,000 in fiscal year 2014 and each year thereafter is appropriated from the
83.10general fund to the commissioner of revenue for transfer to the agricultural project
83.11utilization account in the special revenue fund for the Agricultural Utilization Research
83.12Institute established under section 116V.01.

83.13    Sec. 2. [168A.125] TRANSFER-ON-DEATH OF TITLE TO MOTOR VEHICLE.
83.14    Subdivision 1. Titled as transfer-on-death. A motor vehicle may be titled in
83.15transfer-on-death or TOD form by a natural person by including in the certificate of title a
83.16designation of a beneficiary or beneficiaries who are natural persons to whom the motor
83.17vehicle must be transferred on death of the owner or the last survivor of joint owners with
83.18rights of survivorship, subject to the rights of all secured parties.
83.19    Subd. 2. Designation of beneficiary. A motor vehicle is registered in
83.20transfer-on-death form by designating on the certificate of title the name of the owner
83.21and the names of joint owners with identification of rights of survivorship, followed by
83.22the words "transfer-on-death to (name of beneficiary or beneficiaries)." The designation
83.23"TOD" may be used instead of "transfer-on-death." A title in transfer-on-death form is
83.24not required to be supported by consideration, and the certificate of title in which the
83.25designation is made is not required to be delivered to the beneficiary or beneficiaries in
83.26order for the designation to be effective.
83.27    Subd. 3. Interest of beneficiary. The transfer-on-death beneficiary or beneficiaries
83.28shall have no interest in the motor vehicle until the death of the owner or the last survivor
83.29of the joint owners with right of survivorship. A beneficiary designation may be changed at
83.30any time by the owner or by all joint owners with rights of survivorship, without the consent
83.31of the beneficiary or beneficiaries, by filing an application for a new certificate of title.
83.32    Subd. 4. Vesting of ownership in beneficiary. Ownership of a motor vehicle
83.33titled in transfer-on-death form shall vest in the designated beneficiary or beneficiaries on
84.1the death of the owner or the last of the joint owners with right of survivorship, subject
84.2to the rights of all secured parties, including any claim or lien by the state or county
84.3agency authorized by section 246.53, 256B.15, 256D.16, or 261.04. The transfer-on-death
84.4beneficiary or beneficiaries who survive the owner may apply for a new certificate of
84.5title to the motor vehicle upon submitting proof of the death of the owner of the motor
84.6vehicle. If no transfer-on-death beneficiary or beneficiaries survive the owner of a motor
84.7vehicle, the motor vehicle must be included in the probate estate of the deceased owner.
84.8A transfer of a motor vehicle to a transfer-on-death beneficiary or beneficiaries is not
84.9a testamentary transfer.
84.10    Subd. 5. Rights of creditors. This section does not limit the rights of any secured
84.11party or creditor of the owner of a motor vehicle against a transfer-on-death beneficiary
84.12or beneficiaries, including any claim or lien by the state or county agency authorized by
84.13section 246.53, 256B.15, 256D.16, or 261.04, if other assets of the deceased owner's
84.14estate are insufficient to pay the amount of any such claim.

84.15    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.72, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
84.16    Subdivision 1. Tax clearance required. (a) The state or a political subdivision of
84.17the state may not issue, transfer, or renew, and must revoke, a license for the conduct of
84.18a profession, occupation, trade, or business, if the commissioner notifies the licensing
84.19authority that the applicant owes the state delinquent taxes payable to the commissioner,
84.20penalties, or interest. The commissioner may not notify the licensing authority unless the
84.21applicant taxpayer owes $500 or more in delinquent taxes, penalties, or interest, or has
84.22not filed returns. If the applicant taxpayer does not owe delinquent taxes, penalties, or
84.23interest, but has not filed returns, the commissioner may not notify the licensing authority
84.24unless the taxpayer has been given 90 days' written notice to file the returns or show
84.25that the returns are not required to be filed.
84.26(b) Within ten days after receipt of the notification from the commissioner under
84.27paragraph (a), the licensing authority must notify the license holder by certified mail of
84.28the potential revocation of the license for the applicable reason under paragraph (a).
84.29The notice must include a copy of the commissioner's notice to the licensing agency
84.30and information, in the form specified by the commissioner, on the licensee's option for
84.31receiving a tax clearance from the commissioner. The licensing authority must revoke the
84.32license 30 days after receiving the notice from the commissioner, unless it receives a tax
84.33clearance from the commissioner as provided in paragraph (c).
84.34(c) A licensing authority that has received a notice from the commissioner may
84.35issue, transfer, renew, or not revoke the applicant's license only if (a) (1) the commissioner
85.1issues a tax clearance certificate and (b) (2) the commissioner or the applicant forwards a
85.2copy of the clearance to the authority. The commissioner may issue a clearance certificate
85.3only if the applicant does not owe the state any uncontested delinquent taxes, penalties, or
85.4interest and has filed all required returns.
85.5EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014.

85.6    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.72, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
85.7    Subd. 3. Notice and hearing. (a) The commissioner, on notifying a licensing
85.8authority pursuant to subdivision 1 not to issue, transfer, or renew a license, must send a
85.9copy of the notice to the applicant. If the applicant requests, in writing, within 30 days
85.10of the date of the notice a hearing, a contested case hearing must be held. The hearing
85.11must be held within 45 days of the date the commissioner refers the case to the Office of
85.12Administrative Hearings. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the applicant must be
85.13served with 20 days' notice in writing specifying the time and place of the hearing and the
85.14allegations against the applicant. The notice may be served personally or by mail.
85.15(b) (a) Prior to notifying a licensing authority pursuant to subdivision 1 to revoke a
85.16license, the commissioner must send a notice to the applicant of the commissioner's intent
85.17to require revocation of the license and of the applicant's right to a hearing under paragraph
85.18(a). If the applicant requests a hearing in writing within 30 days of the date of the notice, a
85.19contested case hearing must be held. The hearing must be held within 45 days of the date
85.20the commissioner refers the case to the Office of Administrative Hearings. Notwithstanding
85.21any law to the contrary, the applicant must be served with 20 days notice in writing
85.22specifying the time and place of the hearing and the allegations against the applicant. The
85.23notice may be served personally or by mail. A license is subject to revocation when 30
85.24days have passed following the date of the notice in this paragraph without the applicant
85.25requesting a hearing, or, if a hearing is timely requested, upon final determination of the
85.26hearing under section 14.62, subdivision 1. A license shall be revoked by the licensing
85.27authority within 30 days after receiving notice from the commissioner to revoke.
85.28(b) The commissioner may notify a licensing authority under subdivision 1 only
85.29after the requirements of paragraph (a) have been satisfied.
85.30(c) A hearing under this subdivision is in lieu of any other hearing or proceeding
85.31provided by law arising from any action taken under subdivision 1.
85.32EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014.

86.1    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297B.01, subdivision 16, is
86.2amended to read:
86.3    Subd. 16. Sale, sells, selling, purchase, purchased, or acquired. (a) "Sale,"
86.4"sells," "selling," "purchase," "purchased," or "acquired" means any transfer of title of any
86.5motor vehicle, whether absolutely or conditionally, for a consideration in money or by
86.6exchange or barter for any purpose other than resale in the regular course of business.
86.7    (b) Any motor vehicle utilized by the owner only by leasing such vehicle to others
86.8or by holding it in an effort to so lease it, and which is put to no other use by the owner
86.9other than resale after such lease or effort to lease, shall be considered property purchased
86.10for resale.
86.11    (c) The terms also shall include any transfer of title or ownership of a motor vehicle
86.12by other means, for or without consideration, except that these terms shall not include:
86.13    (1) the acquisition of a motor vehicle by inheritance from or by bequest of, or
86.14transfer-on-death of title by, a decedent who owned it;
86.15    (2) the transfer of a motor vehicle which was previously licensed in the names of
86.16two or more joint tenants and subsequently transferred without monetary consideration to
86.17one or more of the joint tenants;
86.18    (3) the transfer of a motor vehicle by way of gift from a limited used vehicle dealer
86.19licensed under section 168.27, subdivision 4a, to an individual, when the transfer is with
86.20no monetary or other consideration or expectation of consideration and the parties to the
86.21transfer submit an affidavit to that effect at the time the title transfer is recorded;
86.22    (4) the transfer of a motor vehicle by gift between:
86.23(i) spouses;
86.24(ii) parents and a child; or
86.25(iii) grandparents and a grandchild;
86.26(5) the voluntary or involuntary transfer of a motor vehicle between a husband and
86.27wife in a divorce proceeding; or
86.28    (6) the transfer of a motor vehicle by way of a gift to an organization that is exempt
86.29from federal income taxation under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code when
86.30the motor vehicle will be used exclusively for religious, charitable, or educational purposes.

86.31ARTICLE 7
86.32UNSESSION

86.33    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
86.34    Subd. 3. Debt. "Debt" means an amount owed to the state directly, or through a
86.35state agency, on account of a fee, duty, lease, direct loan, loan insured or guaranteed by
87.1the state, rent, service, sale of real or personal property, overpayment, fine, assessment,
87.2penalty, restitution, damages, interest, tax, bail bond, forfeiture, reimbursement, liability
87.3owed, an assignment to the state including assignments under section 256.741, the Social
87.4Security Act, or other state or federal law, recovery of costs incurred by the state, or any
87.5other source of indebtedness to the state. Debt also includes amounts owed to individuals
87.6as a result of civil, criminal, or administrative action brought by the state or a state agency
87.7pursuant to its statutory authority or for which the state or state agency acts in a fiduciary
87.8capacity in providing collection services in accordance with the regulations adopted under
87.9the Social Security Act at Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, section 302.33. When
87.10the commissioner provides collection services pursuant to a debt qualification plan to a
87.11referring agency, debt also includes an amount owed to the courts, local government
87.12units, Minnesota state colleges and universities governed by the Board of Trustees of the
87.13Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, or University of Minnesota.
87.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

87.15    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.02, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
87.16    Subd. 6. Referring agency. "Referring agency" means a state agency, local
87.17government unit, Minnesota state colleges and universities governed by the Board of
87.18Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, University of Minnesota, or a
87.19court, that has entered into a debt qualification plan an agreement with the commissioner
87.20to refer debts to the commissioner for collection.
87.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

87.22    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.04, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
87.23    Subd. 3. Services. The commissioner shall provide collection services for a state
87.24agency, and may provide for collection services for a court, in accordance with the terms and
87.25conditions of a signed debt qualification plan referring agencies other than state agencies.
87.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

87.27    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.04, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
87.28    Subd. 4. Authority to contract. The commissioners commissioner of revenue and
87.29management and budget may contract with credit bureaus, private collection agencies, and
87.30other entities as necessary for the collection of debts. A private collection agency acting
87.31under a contract with the commissioner of revenue or management and budget is subject
87.32to sections 332.31 to 332.45, except that the private collection agency may indicate that it
88.1is acting under a contract with the state. The commissioner may not delegate the powers
88.2provided under section 16D.08 to any nongovernmental entity.
88.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

88.4    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.07, is amended to read:
88.516D.07 NOTICE TO DEBTOR.
88.6The referring agency shall send notice to the debtor by United States mail or
88.7personal delivery at the debtor's last known address at least 20 days before the debt is
88.8referred to the commissioner. The notice must state the nature and amount of the debt,
88.9identify to whom the debt is owed, and inform the debtor of the remedies available under
88.10this chapter. The referring agency shall advise the debtor of collection costs imposed
88.11under section 16D.11 and of the debtor's right to cancellation of collection costs under
88.12section 16D.11, subdivision 3.
88.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

88.14    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
88.15    Subdivision 1. Imposition. As determined by the commissioner of management and
88.16budget revenue, collection costs shall be added to the debts referred to the commissioner
88.17or private collection agency for collection. Collection costs are collectible by the
88.18commissioner or private agency from the debtor at the same time and in the same
88.19manner as the referred debt. The referring agency shall advise the debtor of collection
88.20costs under this section and the debtor's right to cancellation of collection costs under
88.21subdivision 3 at the time the agency sends notice to the debtor under section 16D.07.
88.22 If the commissioner or private agency collects an amount less than the total due, the
88.23payment is applied proportionally to collection costs and the underlying debt unless
88.24the commissioner of management and budget has waived this requirement for certain
88.25categories of debt pursuant to the department's internal guidelines. Collection costs
88.26collected by the commissioner under this subdivision or retained under subdivision 6 shall
88.27be deposited in the general fund as nondedicated receipts. Collection costs collected by
88.28private agencies are appropriated to the referring agency to pay the collection fees charged
88.29by the private agency. Collections of collection costs in excess of collection agency fees
88.30must be deposited in the general fund as nondedicated receipts.
88.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

89.1    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.11, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
89.2    Subd. 3. Cancellation. Collection costs imposed under subdivision 1 shall be
89.3canceled and subtracted from the amount due if:
89.4(1) the debtor's household income as defined in section 290A.03, subdivision 5,
89.5excluding the exemption subtractions in subdivision 3, paragraph (3) of that section, for
89.6the 12 months preceding the date of referral is less than twice the annual federal poverty
89.7guideline under United States Code, title 42, section 9902, subsection (2);
89.8(2) within 60 days after the first contact with the debtor by the enterprise
89.9 commissioner or collection agency, the debtor establishes reasonable cause for the failure
89.10to pay the debt prior to referral of the debt to the enterprise commissioner;
89.11(3) a good faith dispute as to the legitimacy or the amount of the debt is made,
89.12and payment is remitted or a payment agreement is entered into within 30 days after
89.13resolution of the dispute;
89.14(4) good faith litigation occurs and the debtor's position is substantially justified, and
89.15if the debtor does not totally prevail, the debt is paid or a payment agreement is entered
89.16into within 30 days after the judgment becomes final and nonappealable; or
89.17(5) collection costs have been added by the referring agency and are included in
89.18the amount of the referred debt.
89.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

89.20    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 16D.11, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
89.21    Subd. 7. Adjustment of rate. By June 1 of each year, the commissioner shall
89.22determine the rate of collection costs for debts referred to the enterprise commissioner
89.23 during the next fiscal year. The rate is a percentage of the debts in an amount that most
89.24nearly equals the costs of the enterprise commissioner necessary to process and collect
89.25referred debts under this chapter. In no event shall the rate of the collection costs exceed
89.2625 percent of the debt. Determination of the rate of collection costs under this section is
89.27not subject to the fee setting requirements of section 16A.1283.
89.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

89.29    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 84A.20, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
89.30    Subd. 2. County proposal to state. Under certain conditions, The board of county
89.31commissioners of any county may by resolution propose to the state that one or more
89.32areas in the county be taken over by the state for afforestation, reforestation, flood control
89.33projects, or other state purposes. The projects are to be managed, controlled, and used for
90.1the purposes in subdivision 1 on lands to be acquired by the state within the projects, as set
90.2forth in sections 84A.20 to 84A.30. The county board may propose this if (1) the county
90.3contains lands suitable for the purposes in subdivision 1, (2) on January 1, 1931, the taxes
90.4on more than 35 percent of the taxable land in the county are delinquent, (3) on January 1,
90.51931, the county's bonded ditch indebtedness, including accrued interest, equals or exceeds
90.6nine percent of the assessed valuation of the county, exclusive of money and credits.
90.7The area taken over must include lands that have been assessed for all or part of
90.8the cost of the establishment and construction of public drainage ditches under state law,
90.9and on which the assessments or installments are delinquent. A certified copy of the
90.10county board's resolution must be filed with the department and considered and acted
90.11upon by the department. If approved by the department, it must then be submitted to,
90.12considered, and acted upon by the executive council. If approved by the Executive
90.13Council, the proposition must be formally accepted by the governor. Acceptance must be
90.14communicated in writing to and filed with the county auditor.
90.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

90.16    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 84A.31, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
90.17    Subd. 2. County proposal to state. Under certain conditions, The board of county
90.18commissioners of any county may by resolution propose that the state take over part of the
90.19tax-delinquent lands in the county. The board may propose this if:
90.20(1) the county contains land suitable for the purposes in subdivision 1;.
90.21(2) on January 1, 1933, the taxes on more than 25 percent of the acreage of the lands
90.22in a town in the county are delinquent, as shown by its tax books;
90.23(3) on January 1, 1933, the taxes or ditch assessments on more than 50 percent of the
90.24acreage of the lands to be taken over are delinquent, as shown by the county's tax books; and
90.25(4) on January 1, 1933, the bonded ditch indebtedness of the county equals or
90.26exceeds 15 percent of the assessed value of the county for 1932 as fixed by the Minnesota
90.27Tax Commission, exclusive of money and credits.
90.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

90.29    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 115B.49, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
90.30    Subd. 4. Registration; fees. (a) The owner or operator of a dry cleaning facility
90.31shall register on or before October 1 of each year with the commissioner of revenue in
90.32a manner prescribed by the commissioner of revenue and pay a registration fee for the
90.33facility. The amount of the fee is:
91.1(1) $500, for facilities with a full-time equivalence of fewer than five;
91.2(2) $1,000, for facilities with a full-time equivalence of five to ten; and
91.3(3) $1,500, for facilities with a full-time equivalence of more than ten.
91.4The registration fee must be paid on or before October 18 or the owner or operator
91.5of a dry cleaning facility may elect to pay the fee in equal installments. Installment
91.6payments must be paid on or before October 18, on or before January 18, on or before
91.7April 18, and on or before June 18. All payments made after October 18 bear interest
91.8at the rate specified in section 270C.40.
91.9(b) A person who sells dry cleaning solvents for use by dry cleaning facilities in
91.10the state shall collect and remit to the commissioner of revenue in a the same manner
91.11prescribed by the commissioner of revenue, on or before the 20th day of the month
91.12following the month in which the sales of dry cleaning solvents are made for the taxes
91.13imposed under chapter 297A, a fee of:
91.14(1) $3.50 for each gallon of perchloroethylene sold for use by dry cleaning facilities
91.15in the state;
91.16(2) 70 cents for each gallon of hydrocarbon-based dry cleaning solvent sold for use
91.17by dry cleaning facilities in the state; and
91.18(3) 35 cents for each gallon of other nonaqueous solvents sold for use by dry
91.19cleaning facilities in the state.
91.20(c) The audit, assessment, appeal, collection, enforcement, and administrative
91.21provisions of chapters 270C and 289A apply to the fee imposed by this subdivision. To
91.22enforce this subdivision, the commissioner of revenue may grant extensions to file returns
91.23and pay fees, impose penalties and interest on the annual registration fee under paragraph
91.24(a) and the monthly fee under paragraph (b), and abate penalties and interest in the manner
91.25provided in chapters 270C and 289A. The penalties and interest imposed on taxes under
91.26chapter 297A apply to the fees imposed under this subdivision. Disclosure of data collected
91.27by the commissioner of revenue under this subdivision is governed by chapter 270B.
91.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for fees due after June 30, 2014.

91.29    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 163.06, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
91.30    Subdivision 1. Levy. The county board of any county in which there are unorganized
91.31townships may levy a tax for road and bridge purposes upon all the real and personal
91.32property in such unorganized townships, exclusive of money and credits taxed under the
91.33provisions of chapter 285.
91.34EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

92.1    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
92.2    Subdivision 1. To act as State Board of Equalization. The commissioner of
92.3revenue shall have and exercise all the rights, powers and authority by law vested in the
92.4State Board of Equalization, which board of equalization is hereby continued, with full
92.5power and authority to review, modify, and revise all of the acts and proceedings of the
92.6commissioner in so far as they relate to the equalization and valuation of property assessed
92.7for taxation, as prescribed by section 270.12.
92.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

92.9    Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270.12, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
92.10    Subd. 2. Meeting dates; duties. The board shall meet annually between April 15
92.11and June 30 at the office of the commissioner of revenue and examine and compare the
92.12returns of the assessment of the property in the several counties, and equalize the same so
92.13that all the taxable property in the state shall be assessed at its market value, subject to
92.14the following rules:
92.15(1) The board shall add to or deduct from the aggregate valuation of the real property
92.16of every county, which the board believes to be valued below or above its market value in
92.17money, such percent as will bring the same to its market value in money;
92.18(2) The board shall deduct from the aggregate valuation of the real property of every
92.19county, which the board believes to be valued above its market value in money, such
92.20percent as will reduce the same to its market value in money;
92.21(3) (2) If the board believes the valuation for a part of a class determined by a range
92.22of market value under clause (8) (6) or otherwise, a class, or classes of the real property of
92.23any town or district in any county, or the valuation for a part of a class, a class, or classes
92.24of the real property of any county not in towns or cities, should be raised or reduced,
92.25without raising or reducing the other real property of such county, or without raising or
92.26reducing it in the same ratio, the board may add to, or take from, the valuation of a part of
92.27a class, a class, or classes in any one or more of such towns or cities, or of the property not
92.28in towns or cities, such percent as the board believes will raise or reduce the same to its
92.29market value in money;
92.30(4) (3) The board shall add to or take from the aggregate valuation of any part of a
92.31class, a class, or classes of personal property of any county, town, or city, which the
92.32board believes to be valued below or above the market value thereof, such percent as will
92.33raise the same to its market value in money;
92.34(5) The board shall take from the aggregate valuation of any part of a class, a class,
92.35or classes of personal property in any county, town or city, which the board believes to
93.1be valued above the market value thereof, such percent as will reduce the same to its
93.2market value in money;
93.3(6) (4) The board shall not reduce the aggregate valuation of all the property of the
93.4state, as returned by the several county auditors, more than one percent on the whole
93.5valuation thereof;
93.6(7) (5) When it would be of assistance in equalizing values the board may require any
93.7county auditor to furnish statements showing assessments of real and personal property
93.8of any individuals, firms, or corporations within the county. The board shall consider
93.9and equalize such assessments and may increase the assessment of individuals, firms, or
93.10corporations above the amount returned by the county board of equalization when it shall
93.11appear to be undervalued, first giving notice to such persons of the intention of the board
93.12so to do, which notice shall fix a time and place of hearing. The board shall not decrease
93.13any such assessment below the valuation placed by the county board of equalization;
93.14(8) (6) In equalizing values pursuant to this section, the board shall utilize a 12-month
93.15assessment/sales ratio study conducted by the Department of Revenue containing only
93.16sales that are filed in the county auditor's office under section 272.115, by November 1 of
93.17the previous year and that occurred between October 1 of the year immediately preceding
93.18the previous year and September 30 of the previous year.
93.19The assessment/sales ratio study may separate the values of residential property
93.20into market value categories. The board may adjust the market value categories and the
93.21number of categories as necessary to create an adequate sample size for each market value
93.22category. The board may determine the adequate sample size. To the extent practicable,
93.23the methodology used in preparing the assessment/sales ratio study must be consistent
93.24with the most recent Standard on Assessment Sales Ratio Studies published by the
93.25Assessment Standards Committee of the International Association of Assessing Officers.
93.26The board may determine the geographic area used in preparing the study to accurately
93.27equalize values. A sales ratio study separating residential property into market value
93.28categories may not be used as the basis for a petition under chapter 278.
93.29The sales prices used in the study must be discounted for terms of financing. The
93.30board shall use the median ratio as the statistical measure of the level of assessment for
93.31any particular category of property; and
93.32(9) (7) The board shall receive from each county the estimated market values on the
93.33assessment date falling within the study period for all parcels by magnetic tape or other a
93.34 medium as prescribed by the commissioner of revenue.
93.35EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

94.1    Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270.12, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
94.2    Subd. 4. Public utility property. For purposes of equalization only, public utility
94.3personal property shall be treated as a separate class of property notwithstanding the fact
94.4that its class rate is the same as commercial-industrial property.
94.5EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

94.6    Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270A.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
94.7    Subd. 2. Claimant agency. "Claimant agency" means any state agency, as defined
94.8by section 14.02, subdivision 2, the regents of the University of Minnesota, any district
94.9court of the state, any county, any statutory or home rule charter city, including a city that
94.10is presenting a claim for a municipal hospital or a public library or a municipal ambulance
94.11service, a hospital district, a private nonprofit hospital that leases its building from the
94.12county or city in which it is located, any ambulance service licensed under chapter 144E,
94.13any public agency responsible for child support enforcement, any public agency responsible
94.14for the collection of court-ordered restitution, and any public agency established by
94.15general or special law that is responsible for the administration of a low-income housing
94.16program, and the Minnesota collection enterprise as defined in section 16D.02, subdivision
94.178
, for the purpose of collecting the costs imposed under section 16D.11.
94.18EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

94.19    Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270B.14, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
94.20    Subd. 3. Administration of enterprise, and job opportunity, and biotechnology
94.21and health sciences industry zone programs. The commissioner may disclose return
94.22information relating to the taxes imposed by chapters 290 and 297A to the Department of
94.23Employment and Economic Development or a municipality with a border city enterprise
94.24zone as defined under section 469.166, but only as necessary to administer the funding
94.25limitations under section 469.169, or to the Department of Employment and Economic
94.26Development and appropriate officials from the local government units in which a
94.27qualified business is located but only as necessary to enforce the job opportunity building
94.28zone benefits under section 469.315, or biotechnology and health sciences industry zone
94.29benefits under section 469.336.
94.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective January 1, 2016.

95.1    Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.085, is amended to read:
95.2270C.085 NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS; SALES AND USE TAXES.
95.3The commissioner of revenue shall establish a means of electronically notifying
95.4persons holding a sales tax permit under section 297A.84 of any statutory change in
95.5chapter 297A and any issuance or change in any administrative rule, revenue notice, or
95.6sales tax fact sheet or other written information provided by the department explaining the
95.7interpretation or administration of the tax imposed under that chapter. The notification
95.8must indicate the basic subject of the statute, rule, fact sheet, or other material and provide
95.9an electronic link to the material. Any person holding a sales tax permit that provides
95.10an electronic address to the department must receive these notifications unless they
95.11specifically request electronically, or in writing, to be removed from the notification list.
95.12This requirement does not replace traditional means of notifying the general public or
95.13persons without access to electronic communications of changes in the sales tax law. The
95.14electronic notification must begin no later than December 31, 2009.
95.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

95.16    Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.52, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
95.17    Subd. 2. Payment agreements. (a) When any portion of any tax payable to the
95.18commissioner together with interest and penalty thereon, if any, has not been paid, the
95.19commissioner may extend the time for payment for a further period. When the authority
95.20of this section is invoked, the extension shall be evidenced by written agreement signed by
95.21the taxpayer and the commissioner, stating the amount of the tax with penalty and interest,
95.22if any, and providing for the payment of the amount in installments.
95.23(b) The agreement may contain a confession of judgment for the amount and for any
95.24unpaid portion thereof. If the agreement contains a confession of judgment, the confession
95.25of judgment must provide that the commissioner may enter judgment against the taxpayer
95.26in the district court of the county of residence as shown upon the taxpayer's tax return for
95.27the unpaid portion of the amount specified in the extension agreement.
95.28(c) The agreement shall provide that it can be terminated, after notice by the
95.29commissioner, if information provided by the taxpayer prior to the agreement was
95.30inaccurate or incomplete, collection of the tax covered by the agreement is in jeopardy,
95.31there is a subsequent change in the taxpayer's financial condition, the taxpayer has failed
95.32to make a payment due under the agreement, or the taxpayer has failed to pay any other
95.33tax or file a tax return coming due after the agreement.
96.1(d) The notice must be given at least 14 calendar days prior to termination, and shall
96.2advise the taxpayer of the right to request a reconsideration from the commissioner of
96.3whether termination is reasonable and appropriate under the circumstances. A request for
96.4reconsideration does not stay collection action beyond the 14-day notice period. If the
96.5commissioner has reason to believe that collection of the tax covered by the agreement
96.6is in jeopardy, the commissioner may proceed under section 270C.36 and terminate the
96.7agreement without regard to the 14-day period.
96.8(e) The commissioner may accept other collateral the commissioner considers
96.9appropriate to secure satisfaction of the tax liability. The principal sum specified in the
96.10agreement shall bear interest at the rate specified in section 270C.40 on all unpaid portions
96.11thereof until the same has been fully paid or the unpaid portion thereof has been entered as
96.12a judgment. The judgment shall bear interest at the rate specified in section 270C.40.
96.13(f) If it appears to the commissioner that the tax reported by the taxpayer is in excess
96.14of the amount actually owing by the taxpayer, the extension agreement or the judgment
96.15entered pursuant thereto shall be corrected. If after making the extension agreement
96.16or entering judgment with respect thereto, the commissioner determines that the tax as
96.17reported by the taxpayer is less than the amount actually due, the commissioner shall
96.18assess a further tax in accordance with the provisions of law applicable to the tax.
96.19(g) The authority granted to the commissioner by this section is in addition to any
96.20other authority granted to the commissioner by law to extend the time of payment or the
96.21time for filing a return and shall not be construed in limitation thereof.
96.22(h) The commissioner shall charge a fee for entering into payment agreements that
96.23reflects the commissioner's costs for entering into payment agreements. The fee is set at
96.24$50 and is charged for entering into a payment agreement, for entering into a new payment
96.25agreement after the taxpayer has defaulted on a prior agreement, and for entering into a
96.26new payment agreement as a result of renegotiation of the terms of an existing agreement.
96.27The fee is paid to the commissioner before the payment agreement becomes effective and
96.28does not reduce the amount of the liability.
96.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

96.30    Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.01, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
96.31    Subdivision 1. Generally taxable. All real and personal property in this state, and
96.32all personal property of persons residing therein, including the property of corporations,
96.33banks, banking companies, and bankers, is taxable, except Indian lands and such other
96.34property as is by law exempt from taxation.
97.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

97.2    Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.01, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
97.3    Subd. 3. Exceptions. The provisions of subdivision 2 shall not apply to:
97.4(a) Federal property for which payments are made in lieu of taxes in amounts
97.5equivalent to taxes which might otherwise be lawfully assessed;
97.6(b) Real estate exempt from ad valorem taxes and taxes in lieu thereof which is
97.7leased, loaned, or otherwise made available to telephone companies or electric, light
97.8and power companies upon which personal property consisting of transmission and
97.9distribution lines is situated and assessed pursuant to sections 273.37, 273.38, 273.40
97.10and 273.41, or upon which are situated the communication lines of express, railway, or
97.11telephone or telegraph companies, or pipelines used for the transmission and distribution
97.12of petroleum products, or the equipment items of a cable communications company
97.13subject to sections 238.35 to 238.42;
97.14(c) Property presently owned by any educational institution chartered by the
97.15territorial legislature;
97.16(d) Indian lands;
97.17(e) Property of any corporation organized as a tribal corporation under the Indian
97.18Reorganization Act of June 18, 1934, (Statutes at Large, volume 48, page 984);
97.19(f) Real property owned by the state and leased pursuant to section 161.23 or
97.20161.431 , and acts amendatory thereto;
97.21(g) Real property owned by a seaway port authority on June 1, 1967, upon which
97.22there has been constructed docks, warehouses, tank farms, administrative and maintenance
97.23buildings, railroad and ship terminal facilities and other maritime and transportation
97.24facilities or those directly related thereto, together with facilities for the handling of
97.25passengers and baggage and for the handling of freight and bulk liquids, and personal
97.26property owned by a seaway port authority used or usable in connection therewith, when
97.27said property is leased to a private individual, association or corporation, but only when
97.28such lease provides that the said facilities are available to the public for the loading and
97.29unloading of passengers and their baggage and the handling, storage, care, shipment,
97.30and delivery of merchandise, freight and baggage and other maritime and transportation
97.31activities and functions directly related thereto, but not including property used for grain
97.32elevator facilities; it being the declared policy of this state that such property when
97.33so leased is public property used exclusively for a public purpose, notwithstanding the
97.34one-year limitation in the provisions of section 273.19;
98.1(h) Notwithstanding the provisions of clause (g), when the annual rental received by
98.2a seaway port authority in any calendar year for such leased property exceeds an amount
98.3reasonably required for administrative expense of the authority per year, plus promotional
98.4expense for the authority not to exceed the sum of $100,000 per year, to be expended
98.5when and in the manner decided upon by the commissioners, plus an amount sufficient to
98.6pay all installments of principal and interest due, or to become due, during such calendar
98.7year and the next succeeding year on any revenue bonds issued by the authority, plus
98.825 percent of the gross annual rental to be retained by the authority for improvement,
98.9development, or other contingencies, the authority shall make a payment in lieu of real
98.10and personal property taxes of a reasonable portion of the remaining annual rental to the
98.11county treasurer of the county in which such seaway port authority is principally located.
98.12Any such payments to the county treasurer shall be disbursed by the treasurer on the same
98.13basis as real estate taxes are divided among the various governmental units, but if such
98.14port authority shall have received funds from the state of Minnesota and funds from any
98.15city and county pursuant to Laws 1957, chapters 648, 831, and 849 and acts amendatory
98.16thereof, then such disbursement by the county treasurer shall be on the same basis as real
98.17estate taxes are divided among the various governmental units, except that the portion of
98.18such payments which would otherwise go to other taxing units shall be divided equally
98.19among the state of Minnesota and said county and city.
98.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

98.21    Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.025, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
98.22    Subdivision 1. Statement of exemption. (a) Except in the case of property owned
98.23by the state of Minnesota or any political subdivision thereof, and property exempt from
98.24taxation under section 272.02, subdivisions 9, 10, 13, 15, 18, 20, and 22 to 25, and at the
98.25times provided in subdivision 3, a taxpayer claiming an exemption from taxation on
98.26property described in section 272.02, subdivisions 1 2 to 33, must file a statement of
98.27exemption with the assessor of the assessment district in which the property is located.
98.28(b) A taxpayer claiming an exemption from taxation on property described in section
98.29272.02, subdivision 10 , must file a statement of exemption with the commissioner of
98.30revenue, on or before February 15 of each year for which the taxpayer claims an exemption.
98.31(c) In case of sickness, absence or other disability or for good cause, the assessor
98.32or the commissioner may extend the time for filing the statement of exemption for a
98.33period not to exceed 60 days.
98.34(d) The commissioner of revenue shall prescribe the form and contents of the
98.35statement of exemption.
99.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

99.2    Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.027, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
99.3    Subdivision 1. Electricity generated to produce goods and services. Personal
99.4property used to generate electric power is exempt from property taxation if the electric
99.5power is used to manufacture or produce goods, products, or services, other than electric
99.6power, by the owner of the electric generation plant. Except as provided in subdivisions 2
99.7and 3, The exemption does not apply to property used to produce electric power for sale
99.8to others and does not apply to real property. In determining the value subject to tax,
99.9a proportionate share of the value of the generating facilities, equal to the proportion
99.10that the power sold to others bears to the total generation of the plant, is subject to the
99.11general property tax in the same manner as other property. Power generated in such a
99.12plant and exchanged for an equivalent amount of power that is used for the manufacture or
99.13production of goods, products, or services other than electric power by the owner of the
99.14generating plant is considered to be used by the owner of the plant.
99.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

99.16    Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.029, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
99.17    Subd. 6. Distribution of revenues. Revenues from the taxes imposed under
99.18subdivision 5 must be part of the settlement between the county treasurer and the county
99.19auditor under section 276.09. The revenue must be distributed by the county auditor or the
99.20county treasurer to local taxing jurisdictions in which the wind energy conversion system
99.21is located as follows: beginning with distributions in 2010, 80 percent to counties; and 20
99.22percent to cities and townships; and for distributions occurring in 2006 to 2009, 80 percent
99.23to counties; 14 percent to cities and townships; and six percent to school districts.
99.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

99.25    Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.061, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
99.26    Subd. 6. Salaries; expenses. The salaries of the county assessor and assistants and
99.27clerical help, shall be fixed by the board of county commissioners and shall be payable in
99.28monthly installments out of the general revenue fund of the county. In counties with a
99.29population of less than 50,000 inhabitants, according to the then last preceding federal
99.30census, the board of county commissioners shall not fix the salary of the county assessor at
99.31an amount below the following schedule:
99.32In counties with a population of less than 6,500, $5,900;
100.1In counties with a population of 6,500 but less than 12,000, $6,200;
100.2In counties with a population of 12,000 but less than 16,000, $6,500;
100.3In counties with a population of 16,000 but less than 21,000, $6,700;
100.4In counties with a population of 21,000 but less than 30,000, $6,900;
100.5In counties with a population of 30,000 but less than 39,500, $7,100;
100.6In counties with a population of 39,500 but less than 50,000, $7,300;
100.7In counties with a population of 50,000 or more, $8,300.
100.8In addition to their salaries, the county assessor and assistants shall be allowed their
100.9expenses for reasonable and necessary travel in the performance of their duties, including
100.10necessary travel, lodging and meal expense incurred by them while attending meetings of
100.11instructions or official hearings called by the commissioner of revenue. These expenses
100.12shall be payable out of the general revenue fund of the county, and shall be allowed on the
100.13same basis as such expenses are allowed to other county officers.
100.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

100.15    Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.10, is amended to read:
100.16273.10 SCHOOL DISTRICTS.
100.17When assessing personal property the county assessor shall designate the number of
100.18the school district in which each person assessed is liable for tax, by writing the number
100.19of the district opposite each assessment in a column provided for that purpose in the
100.20assessment book. When the personal property of any person is assessable in several
100.21school districts, the amount in each shall be assessed separately, and the name of the
100.22owner placed opposite each amount.
100.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

100.24    Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.11, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
100.25    Subd. 13. Valuation of income-producing property. Beginning with the 1995
100.26assessment, Only accredited assessors or senior accredited assessors or other licensed
100.27assessors who have successfully completed at least two income-producing property
100.28appraisal courses may value income-producing property for ad valorem tax purposes.
100.29"Income-producing property" as used in this subdivision means the taxable property in
100.30class 3a and 3b in section 273.13, subdivision 24; class 4a and 4c, except for seasonal
100.31recreational property not used for commercial purposes; and class 5 in section 273.13,
100.32subdivision 31
. "Income-producing property" includes any property in class 4e in section
100.33273.13, subdivision 25 , that would be income-producing property under the definition in
101.1this subdivision if it were not substandard. "Income-producing property appraisal course"
101.2as used in this subdivision means a course of study of approximately 30 instructional
101.3hours, with a final comprehensive test. An assessor must successfully complete the final
101.4examination for each of the two required courses. The course must be approved by the
101.5board of assessors.
101.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

101.7    Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.112, subdivision 6a, is amended to read:
101.8    Subd. 6a. Guidelines issued by commissioner. The commissioner of revenue shall
101.9develop and issue guidelines for qualification by private golf clubs under this section
101.10covering the access to and use of the golf course by members and other adults so as to be
101.11consistent with the purposes and terms of this section. The guidelines shall be mailed to
101.12the county attorney and assessor of each county not later than 60 days following May 26,
101.131989. Within 15 days of receipt of the guidelines from the commissioner, the assessor
101.14shall mail a copy of the guidelines to each golf club in the county.
101.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

101.16    Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 273.1325, subdivision 2,
101.17is amended to read:
101.18    Subd. 2. Methodology. In making its annual assessment/sales ratio studies, the
101.19Department of Revenue must use a methodology consistent with the most recent Standard
101.20on Assessment Ratio Studies published by the assessment standards committee of the
101.21International Association of Assessing Officers. The commissioner of revenue shall
101.22supplement this general methodology with specific procedures necessary for execution of
101.23the study in accordance with other Minnesota laws impacting the assessment/sales ratio
101.24study. The commissioner shall document these specific procedures in writing and shall
101.25publish the procedures in the State Register, but these procedures will not be considered
101.26"rules" pursuant to the Minnesota Administrative Procedure Act. When property is sold and
101.27the purchaser changes its use in a manner that would result in a change of classification of
101.28the property, the assessment sales ratio study under this subdivision must take into account
101.29that changed classification as soon as practicable. A change in status from homestead to
101.30nonhomestead or from nonhomestead to homestead is not a change under this subdivision.
101.31For purposes of this section, sections 270.12, subdivision 2, clause (8) (6), and 278.05,
101.32subdivision 4
, the commissioner of revenue shall exclude from the assessment/sales ratio
101.33study the sale of any nonagricultural property which does not contain an improvement,
102.1if (1) the statutory basis on which the property's taxable value as most recently assessed
102.2is less than market value as defined in section 273.11, or (2) the property has undergone
102.3significant physical change or a change of use since the most recent assessment.
102.4EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

102.5    Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.18, is amended to read:
102.6273.18 LISTING, VALUATION, AND ASSESSMENT OF EXEMPT
102.7PROPERTY BY COUNTY AUDITORS.
102.8(a) In every sixth year after the year 1926 2010, the county auditor shall enter, in
102.9a separate place in the real estate assessment books, the description of each tract of real
102.10property exempt by law from taxation, with the name of the owner, if known, and the
102.11assessor shall value and assess the same in the same manner that other real property is
102.12valued and assessed, and shall designate in each case the purpose for which the property is
102.13used.
102.14(b) For purposes of the apportionment of fire state aid under section 69.021,
102.15subdivision 7
, the county auditor shall include on the abstract of assessment of exempt real
102.16property filed under this section, the total number of acres of all natural resources lands for
102.17which in lieu payments are made under sections 477A.11 to 477A.14. The assessor shall
102.18estimate its market value, provided that if the assessor is not able to estimate the market
102.19value of the land on a per parcel basis, the assessor shall furnish the commissioner of
102.20revenue with an estimate of the average value per acre of this land within the county.
102.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

102.22    Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 274.01, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
102.23    Subdivision 1. Ordinary board; meetings, deadlines, grievances. (a) The town
102.24board of a town, or the council or other governing body of a city, is the board of appeal
102.25and equalization except (1) in cities whose charters provide for a board of equalization or
102.26(2) in any city or town that has transferred its local board of review power and duties to
102.27the county board as provided in subdivision 3. The county assessor shall fix a day and
102.28time when the board or the board of equalization shall meet in the assessment districts
102.29of the county. Notwithstanding any law or city charter to the contrary, a city board of
102.30equalization shall be referred to as a board of appeal and equalization. On or before
102.31February 15 of each year the assessor shall give written notice of the time to the city or
102.32town clerk. Notwithstanding the provisions of any charter to the contrary, the meetings
103.1must be held between April 1 and May 31 each year. The clerk shall give published and
103.2posted notice of the meeting at least ten days before the date of the meeting.
103.3    The board shall meet at the office of the clerk to review the assessment and
103.4classification of property in the town or city. No changes in valuation or classification
103.5which are intended to correct errors in judgment by the county assessor may be made by
103.6the county assessor after the board has adjourned in those cities or towns that hold a
103.7local board of review; however, corrections of errors that are merely clerical in nature or
103.8changes that extend homestead treatment to property are permitted after adjournment until
103.9the tax extension date for that assessment year. The changes must be fully documented and
103.10maintained in the assessor's office and must be available for review by any person. A copy
103.11of the changes made during this period in those cities or towns that hold a local board of
103.12review must be sent to the county board no later than December 31 of the assessment year.
103.13    (b) The board shall determine whether the taxable property in the town or city has
103.14been properly placed on the list and properly valued by the assessor. If real or personal
103.15property has been omitted, the board shall place it on the list with its market value, and
103.16correct the assessment so that each tract or lot of real property, and each article, parcel,
103.17or class of personal property, is entered on the assessment list at its market value. No
103.18assessment of the property of any person may be raised unless the person has been
103.19duly notified of the intent of the board to do so. On application of any person feeling
103.20aggrieved, the board shall review the assessment or classification, or both, and correct
103.21it as appears just. The board may not make an individual market value adjustment or
103.22classification change that would benefit the property if the owner or other person having
103.23control over the property has refused the assessor access to inspect the property and the
103.24interior of any buildings or structures as provided in section 273.20. A board member
103.25shall not participate in any actions of the board which result in market value adjustments
103.26or classification changes to property owned by the board member, the spouse, parent,
103.27stepparent, child, stepchild, grandparent, grandchild, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew,
103.28or niece of a board member, or property in which a board member has a financial interest.
103.29The relationship may be by blood or marriage.
103.30    (c) A local board may reduce assessments upon petition of the taxpayer but the total
103.31reductions must not reduce the aggregate assessment made by the county assessor by more
103.32than one percent. If the total reductions would lower the aggregate assessments made by
103.33the county assessor by more than one percent, none of the adjustments may be made. The
103.34assessor shall correct any clerical errors or double assessments discovered by the board
103.35without regard to the one percent limitation.
104.1    (d) A local board does not have authority to grant an exemption or to order property
104.2removed from the tax rolls.
104.3    (e) A majority of the members may act at the meeting, and adjourn from day to day
104.4until they finish hearing the cases presented. The assessor shall attend, with the assessment
104.5books and papers, and take part in the proceedings, but must not vote. The county assessor,
104.6or an assistant delegated by the county assessor shall attend the meetings. The board shall
104.7list separately, on a form appended to the assessment book, all omitted property added
104.8to the list by the board and all items of property increased or decreased, with the market
104.9value of each item of property, added or changed by the board, placed opposite the item.
104.10The county assessor shall enter all changes made by the board in the assessment book.
104.11    (f) Except as provided in subdivision 3, if a person fails to appear in person, by
104.12counsel, or by written communication before the board after being duly notified of the
104.13board's intent to raise the assessment of the property, or if a person feeling aggrieved by an
104.14assessment or classification fails to apply for a review of the assessment or classification,
104.15the person may not appear before the county board of appeal and equalization for a review
104.16of the assessment or classification. This paragraph does not apply if an assessment was
104.17made after the local board meeting, as provided in section 273.01, or if the person can
104.18establish not having received notice of market value at least five days before the local
104.19board meeting.
104.20    (g) The local board must complete its work and adjourn within 20 days from the
104.21time of convening stated in the notice of the clerk, unless a longer period is approved by
104.22the commissioner of revenue. No action taken after that date is valid. All complaints
104.23about an assessment or classification made after the meeting of the board must be heard
104.24and determined by the county board of equalization. A nonresident may, at any time,
104.25before the meeting of the board file written objections to an assessment or classification
104.26with the county assessor. The objections must be presented to the board at its meeting by
104.27the county assessor for its consideration.
104.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

104.29    Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 274.01, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
104.30    Subd. 2. Special board; duties delegated. The governing body of a city, including
104.31a city whose charter provides for a board of equalization, may appoint a special board of
104.32review. The city may delegate to the special board of review all of the powers and duties
104.33in subdivision 1. The special board of review shall serve at the direction and discretion
104.34of the appointing body, subject to the restrictions imposed by law. The appointing body
104.35shall determine the number of members of the board, the compensation and expenses to be
105.1paid, and the term of office of each member. At least one member of the special board
105.2of review must be an appraiser, realtor, or other person familiar with property valuations
105.3in the assessment district.
105.4EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

105.5    Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 275.08, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
105.6    Subd. 1a. Computation of tax capacity. For taxes payable in 1989, the county
105.7auditor shall compute the gross tax capacity for each parcel according to the class rates
105.8specified in section 273.13. The gross tax capacity will be the appropriate class rate
105.9multiplied by the parcel's market value. For taxes payable in 1990 and subsequent years,
105.10 The county auditor shall compute the net tax capacity for each parcel according to the
105.11class rates specified in section 273.13. The net tax capacity will be the appropriate class
105.12rate multiplied by the parcel's market value.
105.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

105.14    Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 275.08, subdivision 1d, is amended to read:
105.15    Subd. 1d. Additional adjustment. If, after computing each local government's
105.16adjusted local tax rate within a unique taxing jurisdiction pursuant to subdivision 1c, the
105.17auditor finds that the total adjusted local tax rate of all local governments combined is
105.18less than 90 percent of gross tax capacity for taxes payable in 1989 and 90 percent of net
105.19tax capacity for taxes payable in 1990 and thereafter, the auditor shall increase each local
105.20government's adjusted local tax rate proportionately so the total adjusted local tax rate of
105.21all local governments combined equals 90 percent. The total amount of the increase in
105.22tax resulting from the increased local tax rates must not exceed the amount of disparity
105.23aid allocated to the unique taxing district under section 273.1398. The auditor shall
105.24certify to the Department of Revenue the difference between the disparity aid originally
105.25allocated under section 273.1398, subdivision 3, and the amount necessary to reduce
105.26the total adjusted local tax rate of all local governments combined to 90 percent. Each
105.27local government's disparity reduction aid payment under section 273.1398, subdivision
105.286
, must be reduced accordingly.
105.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

105.30    Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 275.70, subdivision 5, is
105.31amended to read:
106.1    Subd. 5. Special levies. "Special levies" means those portions of ad valorem taxes
106.2levied by a local governmental unit for the following purposes or in the following manner:
106.3    (1) to pay the costs of the principal and interest on bonded indebtedness or to
106.4reimburse for the amount of liquor store revenues used to pay the principal and interest
106.5due on municipal liquor store bonds in the year preceding the year for which the levy
106.6limit is calculated;
106.7    (2) to pay the costs of principal and interest on certificates of indebtedness issued for
106.8any corporate purpose except for the following:
106.9    (i) tax anticipation or aid anticipation certificates of indebtedness;
106.10    (ii) certificates of indebtedness issued under sections 298.28 and 298.282;
106.11    (iii) certificates of indebtedness used to fund current expenses or to pay the costs of
106.12extraordinary expenditures that result from a public emergency; or
106.13    (iv) certificates of indebtedness used to fund an insufficiency in tax receipts or an
106.14insufficiency in other revenue sources, provided that nothing in this subdivision limits the
106.15special levy authorized under section 475.755;
106.16    (3) to provide for the bonded indebtedness portion of payments made to another
106.17political subdivision of the state of Minnesota;
106.18    (4) to fund payments made to the Minnesota State Armory Building Commission
106.19under section 193.145, subdivision 2, to retire the principal and interest on armory
106.20construction bonds;
106.21    (5) property taxes approved by voters which are levied against the referendum
106.22market value as provided under section 275.61;
106.23    (6) to fund matching requirements needed to qualify for federal or state grants or
106.24programs to the extent that either (i) the matching requirement exceeds the matching
106.25requirement in calendar year 2001, or (ii) it is a new matching requirement that did not
106.26exist prior to 2002;
106.27    (7) to pay the expenses reasonably and necessarily incurred in preparing for or
106.28repairing the effects of natural disaster including the occurrence or threat of widespread
106.29or severe damage, injury, or loss of life or property resulting from natural causes, in
106.30accordance with standards formulated by the Emergency Services Division of the state
106.31Department of Public Safety, as allowed by the commissioner of revenue under section
106.32275.74, subdivision 2 ;
106.33    (8) pay amounts required to correct an error in the levy certified to the county
106.34auditor by a city or county in a levy year, but only to the extent that when added to the
106.35preceding year's levy it is not in excess of an applicable statutory, special law or charter
107.1limitation, or the limitation imposed on the governmental subdivision by sections 275.70
107.2to 275.74 in the preceding levy year;
107.3    (9) to pay an abatement under section 469.1815;
107.4    (10) to pay any costs attributable to increases in the employer contribution rates under
107.5chapter 353, or locally administered pension plans, that are effective after June 30, 2001;
107.6    (11) to pay the operating or maintenance costs of a county jail as authorized in section
107.7641.01 or 641.262, or of a correctional facility as defined in section 241.021, subdivision 1,
107.8paragraph (f), to the extent that the county can demonstrate to the commissioner of revenue
107.9that the amount has been included in the county budget as a direct result of a rule, minimum
107.10requirement, minimum standard, or directive of the Department of Corrections, or to pay
107.11the operating or maintenance costs of a regional jail as authorized in section 641.262. For
107.12purposes of this clause, a district court order is not a rule, minimum requirement, minimum
107.13standard, or directive of the Department of Corrections. If the county utilizes this special
107.14levy, except to pay operating or maintenance costs of a new regional jail facility under
107.15sections 641.262 to 641.264 which will not replace an existing jail facility, any amount
107.16levied by the county in the previous levy year for the purposes specified under this clause
107.17and included in the county's previous year's levy limitation computed under section
107.18275.71 , shall be deducted from the levy limit base under section 275.71, subdivision 2,
107.19when determining the county's current year levy limitation. The county shall provide the
107.20necessary information to the commissioner of revenue for making this determination;
107.21    (12) to pay for operation of a lake improvement district, as authorized under section
107.22103B.555 . If the county utilizes this special levy, any amount levied by the county in the
107.23previous levy year for the purposes specified under this clause and included in the county's
107.24previous year's levy limitation computed under section 275.71 shall be deducted from
107.25the levy limit base under section 275.71, subdivision 2, when determining the county's
107.26current year levy limitation. The county shall provide the necessary information to the
107.27commissioner of revenue for making this determination;
107.28    (13) to repay a state or federal loan used to fund the direct or indirect required
107.29spending by the local government due to a state or federal transportation project or other
107.30state or federal capital project. This authority may only be used if the project is not a
107.31local government initiative;
107.32    (14) to pay for court administration costs as required under section 273.1398,
107.33subdivision 4b
, less the (i) county's share of transferred fines and fees collected by the
107.34district courts in the county for calendar year 2001 and (ii) the aid amount certified to be
107.35paid to the county in 2004 under section 273.1398, subdivision 4c; however, for taxes
107.36levied to pay for these costs in the year in which the court financing is transferred to the
108.1state, the amount under this clause is limited to the amount of aid the county is certified to
108.2receive under section 273.1398, subdivision 4a;
108.3    (15) (14) to fund a firefighters relief association as required under Laws 2013,
108.4chapter 111, article 5, sections 31 to 42, to the extent that the required amount exceeds the
108.5amount levied for this purpose in 2001;
108.6    (16) (15) for purposes of a storm sewer improvement district under section 444.20;
108.7    (17) (16) to pay for the maintenance and support of a city or county society for
108.8the prevention of cruelty to animals under section 343.11, but not to exceed in any year
108.9$4,800 or the sum of $1 per capita based on the county's or city's population as of the most
108.10recent federal census, whichever is greater. If the city or county uses this special levy, any
108.11amount levied by the city or county in the previous levy year for the purposes specified
108.12in this clause and included in the city's or county's previous year's levy limit computed
108.13under section 275.71, must be deducted from the levy limit base under section 275.71,
108.14subdivision 2
, in determining the city's or county's current year levy limit;
108.15    (18) (17) for counties, to pay for the increase in their share of health and human
108.16service costs caused by reductions in federal health and human services grants effective
108.17after September 30, 2007;
108.18    (19) (18) for a city, for the costs reasonably and necessarily incurred for securing,
108.19maintaining, or demolishing foreclosed or abandoned residential properties, as allowed by
108.20the commissioner of revenue under section 275.74, subdivision 2. A city must have either
108.21(i) a foreclosure rate of at least 1.4 percent in 2007, or (ii) a foreclosure rate in 2007 in
108.22the city or in a zip code area of the city that is at least 50 percent higher than the average
108.23foreclosure rate in the metropolitan area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2,
108.24to use this special levy. For purposes of this paragraph, "foreclosure rate" means the
108.25number of foreclosures, as indicated by sheriff sales records, divided by the number of
108.26households in the city in 2007;
108.27    (20) for a city, for the unreimbursed costs of redeployed traffic-control agents and
108.28lost traffic citation revenue due to the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge, as certified
108.29to the Federal Highway Administration;
108.30    (21) (19) to pay costs attributable to wages and benefits for sheriff, police, and fire
108.31personnel. If a local governmental unit did not use this special levy in the previous year its
108.32levy limit base under section 275.71 shall be reduced by the amount equal to the amount it
108.33levied for the purposes specified in this clause in the previous year;
108.34    (22) (20) an amount equal to any reductions in the certified aids or credit
108.35reimbursements payable under sections 477A.011 to 477A.014, and section 273.1384,
108.36due to unallotment under section 16A.152 or reductions under another provision of law.
109.1The amount of the levy allowed under this clause for each year is limited to the amount
109.2unallotted or reduced from the aids and credit reimbursements certified for payment in the
109.3year following the calendar year in which the tax levy is certified unless the unallotment
109.4or reduction amount is not known by September 1 of the levy certification year, and
109.5the local government has not adjusted its levy under section 275.065, subdivision 6, or
109.6275.07, subdivision 6 , in which case that unallotment or reduction amount may be levied
109.7in the following year;
109.8(23) (21) to pay for the difference between one-half of the costs of confining sex
109.9offenders undergoing the civil commitment process and any state payments for this
109.10purpose pursuant to section 253D.12;
109.11(24) (22) for a county to pay the costs of the first year of maintaining and operating
109.12a new facility or new expansion, either of which contains courts, corrections, dispatch,
109.13criminal investigation labs, or other public safety facilities and for which all or a portion
109.14of the funding for the site acquisition, building design, site preparation, construction, and
109.15related equipment was issued or authorized prior to the imposition of levy limits in 2008.
109.16The levy limit base shall then be increased by an amount equal to the new facility's first
109.17full year's operating costs as described in this clause; and
109.18(25) (23) for the estimated amount of reduction to market value credit reimbursements
109.19under section 273.1384 for credits payable in the year in which the levy is payable.
109.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

109.21    Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 275.74, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
109.22    Subd. 2. Authorization for special levies. (a) A local governmental unit may
109.23request authorization to levy for unreimbursed costs for natural disasters under section
109.24275.70, subdivision 5 , clause (7). The local governmental unit shall submit a request to
109.25levy under section 275.70, subdivision 5, clause (7), to the commissioner of revenue by
109.26September 30 of the levy year and the request must include information documenting the
109.27estimated unreimbursed costs. The commissioner of revenue may grant levy authority,
109.28up to the amount requested based on the documentation submitted. All decisions of the
109.29commissioner are final.
109.30    (b) A city may request authorization to levy for reasonable and necessary costs for
109.31securing, maintaining, or demolishing foreclosed or abandoned residential properties under
109.32section 275.70, subdivision 5, clause (19) (18). The local governmental unit shall submit a
109.33request to levy under section 275.70, subdivision 5, clause (19) (18), to the commissioner
109.34of revenue by September 30 of the levy year and the request must include information
109.35documenting the estimated costs. For taxes payable in 2009, the amount may include
110.1unanticipated costs incurred above the amount budgeted for these purposes in 2008. Costs
110.2of securing foreclosed or abandoned residential properties include payment for police and
110.3fire department services. The commissioner of revenue may grant levy authority, up to the
110.4lesser of (1) the amount requested based on the documentation submitted, or (2) $3,000
110.5multiplied by the number of foreclosed residential properties, as defined by sheriff sales
110.6records, in calendar year 2007. All decisions of the commissioner are final.
110.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

110.8    Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 275.75, is amended to read:
110.9275.75 CHARTER EXEMPTION FOR AID LOSS.
110.10Notwithstanding any other provision of a municipal charter that limits ad valorem
110.11taxes to a lesser amount, or that would require voter approval for any increase, the
110.12governing body of a municipality may by resolution increase its levy in any year by an
110.13amount equal to its special levies under section 275.70, subdivision 5, clauses (22) and
110.14(25) (20) and (23).
110.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

110.16    Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.03, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
110.17    Subdivision 1. Rate Interest calculation. The rate of interest on delinquent
110.18property taxes levied in 1979 and prior years is fixed at six percent per year until January
110.191, 1983. Thereafter Interest is payable at the rate determined pursuant to section 549.09.
110.20The rate of interest on delinquent property taxes levied in 1980 and subsequent years is
110.21the rate determined pursuant to section 549.09. All provisions of law except section
110.22549.09 providing for the calculation of interest at any different rate on delinquent taxes in
110.23any notice or proceeding in connection with the payment, collection, sale, or assignment
110.24of delinquent taxes, or redemption from such sale or assignment are hereby amended
110.25to correspond herewith. Section 549.09 shall continue in force applies with respect to
110.26judgments arising out of petitions for review filed pursuant to chapter 278 irrespective of
110.27the levy year.
110.28For property taxes levied in 1980 and prior years, interest is to be calculated at
110.29simple interest from the second Monday in May following the year in which the taxes
110.30become due until the time that the taxes and penalties are paid, computed on the amount
110.31of unpaid taxes, penalties and costs. For property taxes levied in 1981 and subsequent
110.32years, Interest shall commence on the first day of January following the year in which the
111.1taxes become due, but the county treasurer need not calculate interest on unpaid taxes and
111.2penalties on the tax list returned to the county auditor pursuant to section 279.01.
111.3If interest is payable for a portion of a year, the interest is calculated only for the
111.4months that the taxes or penalties remain unpaid, and for this purpose a portion of a month
111.5is deemed to be a whole month.
111.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

111.7    Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.03, subdivision 1a, is amended to read:
111.8    Subd. 1a. Rate after December 31, 1990. (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b),
111.9interest on delinquent property taxes, penalties, and costs unpaid on or after January 1,
111.101991, shall be is payable at the per annum rate determined in section 270C.40, subdivision
111.115
. If the rate so determined is less than ten percent, the rate of interest shall be is ten
111.12percent. The maximum per annum rate shall be is 14 percent if the rate specified under
111.13section 270C.40, subdivision 5, exceeds 14 percent. The rate shall be is subject to change
111.14on January 1 of each year.
111.15(b) If a person is the owner of one or more parcels of property on which taxes are
111.16delinquent, and the delinquent taxes are more than 25 percent of the prior year's school
111.17district levy, interest on the delinquent property taxes, penalties, and costs unpaid after
111.18January 1, 1992, shall be is payable at twice the rate determined under paragraph (a) for
111.19the year.
111.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

111.21    Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.16, is amended to read:
111.22279.16 JUDGMENT WHEN NO ANSWER; FORM; ENTRY.
111.23Upon the expiration of 20 days from the later of the filing of the affidavit of
111.24publication or the filing of the affidavit of mailing pursuant to section 279.131, the
111.25court administrator shall enter judgment against each and every such parcel as to which
111.26no answer has been filed, which judgment shall include all such parcels, and shall be
111.27substantially in the following form:
111.28
State of Minnesota
)
District Court,
111.29
) ss.
111.30
County of
.....
)
.............. Judicial District.
111.31In the matter of the proceedings to enforce payment of the taxes on real estate
111.32remaining delinquent on the first Monday in January, ......., for the county of ....................,
111.33state of Minnesota.
112.1A list of taxes on real property, delinquent on the first Monday in January, ......., for
112.2said county of ................., having been duly filed in the office of the court administrator of
112.3this court, and the notice and list required by law having been duly published and mailed
112.4as required by law, and more than 20 days having elapsed since the last publication of the
112.5notice and list, and no answer having been filed by any person, company, or corporation
112.6to the taxes upon any of the parcels of land hereinafter described, it is hereby adjudged
112.7that each parcel of land hereinafter described is liable for taxes, penalties, and costs to the
112.8amount set opposite the same, as follows:
112.9
Description.
Parcel Number.
Amount.
112.10The amount of taxes, penalties, and cost to which, as hereinbefore stated, each of
112.11such parcels of land is liable, is hereby declared a lien upon such parcel of land as against
112.12the estate, right, title, interest, claim, or lien, of whatever nature, in law or equity, of every
112.13person, company, or corporation; and it is adjudged that, unless the amount to which
112.14each of such parcels is liable be paid, each of such parcels be sold, as provided by law,
112.15to satisfy the amount to which it is liable.
112.16
Dated this ............. day of ..............., .......
112.17
112.18
112.19
.....
Court Administrator of the District Court,
County of
.....
112.20The judgment shall be entered by the court administrator in a book to be kept by
112.21the court administrator, to be called the real estate tax judgment book, and signed by the
112.22court administrator. The judgment shall be written out on the left-hand pages of the book,
112.23leaving the right-hand pages blank for the entries in this chapter hereinafter provided; and
112.24 The same presumption in favor of the regularity and validity of the judgment shall be
112.25deemed to exist as in respect to judgments in civil actions in such court, except where taxes
112.26have been paid before the entry of judgment, or where the land is exempt from taxation, in
112.27which cases the judgment shall be prima facie evidence only of its regularity and validity.
112.28EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

112.29    Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.23, is amended to read:
112.30279.23 COPY OF JUDGMENT TO COUNTY AUDITOR.
112.31When any real estate tax judgment is entered, the court administrator shall forthwith
112.32 deliver to the county auditor, in a book to be provided by the auditor, a certified copy of
112.33such judgment, which shall be written on the left-hand pages of the book, leaving the
112.34right-hand pages blank.
113.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

113.2    Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 279.25, is amended to read:
113.3279.25 PAYMENT BEFORE JUDGMENT.
113.4Before sale any person may pay the amount adjudged against any parcel of land.
113.5If payment is made before entry of judgment, and the delinquent list has been filed with
113.6the court administrator, the county auditor shall immediately certify such payment to the
113.7court administrator, who shall note the same on such delinquent list; and all proceedings
113.8pending against such parcel shall thereupon be discontinued. If payment is made after
113.9judgment is entered and before sale, the auditor shall certify such payment to the clerk,
113.10who, upon production of such certificate and the payment of a fee of ten cents, shall enter
113.11on the right-hand page of the real estate tax judgment book, and opposite the description
113.12of such parcel, satisfaction of the judgment against the same. The auditor shall make
113.13proper records of all payments made under this section.
113.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

113.15    Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 279.37, subdivision 2, is
113.16amended to read:
113.17    Subd. 2. Installment payments. The owner of any such parcel, or any person to
113.18whom the right to pay taxes has been given by statute, mortgage, or other agreement, may
113.19make and file with the county auditor of the county in which the parcel is located a written
113.20offer to pay the current taxes each year before they become delinquent, or to contest the
113.21taxes under Minnesota Statutes 1941, sections 278.01 to 278.13 chapter 278, and agree
113.22to confess judgment for the amount provided, as determined by the county auditor. By
113.23filing the offer, the owner waives all irregularities in connection with the tax proceedings
113.24affecting the parcel and any defense or objection which the owner may have to the
113.25proceedings, and also waives the requirements of any notice of default in the payment of
113.26any installment or interest to become due pursuant to the composite judgment to be so
113.27entered. Unless the property is subject to subdivision 1a, with the offer, the owner shall (i)
113.28tender one-tenth of the amount of the delinquent taxes, costs, penalty, and interest, and
113.29(ii) tender all current year taxes and penalty due at the time the confession of judgment is
113.30entered. In the offer, the owner shall agree to pay the balance in nine equal installments,
113.31with interest as provided in section 279.03, payable annually on installments remaining
113.32unpaid from time to time, on or before December 31 of each year following the year in
113.33which judgment was confessed. The offer must be substantially as follows:
114.1"To the court administrator of the district court of ........... county, I, .....................,
114.2am the owner of the following described parcel of real estate located in ....................
114.3county, Minnesota:
114.4.............................. Upon that real estate there are delinquent taxes for the year ........., and
114.5prior years, as follows: (here insert year of delinquency and the total amount of delinquent
114.6taxes, costs, interest, and penalty). By signing this document I offer to confess judgment in
114.7the sum of $...... and waive all irregularities in the tax proceedings affecting these taxes and
114.8any defense or objection which I may have to them, and direct judgment to be entered for
114.9the amount stated above, minus the sum of $............, to be paid with this document, which
114.10is one-tenth or one-fifth of the amount of the taxes, costs, penalty, and interest stated above.
114.11I agree to pay the balance of the judgment in nine or four equal, annual installments, with
114.12interest as provided in section 279.03, payable annually, on the installments remaining
114.13unpaid. I agree to pay the installments and interest on or before December 31 of each year
114.14following the year in which this judgment is confessed and current taxes each year before
114.15they become delinquent, or within 30 days after the entry of final judgment in proceedings
114.16to contest the taxes under Minnesota Statutes, sections 278.01 to 278.13 chapter 278.
114.17Dated .............., ......."
114.18EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

114.19    Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 280.001, is amended to read:
114.20280.001 PUBLIC SALES, AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATES ABOLISHED.
114.21Effective the second Monday in May 1974, and each year thereafter, No parcel of
114.22land against which judgment has been entered and remains unsatisfied for the taxes of
114.23the preceding year or years may be sold at public vendue as provided in sections 280.01
114.24and 280.02 by the county auditor but shall be treated in the same manner and regarded in
114.25all respects as land bid in for the state by the auditor in the manner provided in section
114.26280.02 . No notice of sale required by section 280.01 shall be published or posted in 1974
114.27and in years thereafter, and no auditor's certificate authorized by section 280.03 shall be
114.28issued on the second Monday in May 1974, or thereafter.
114.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

114.30    Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 280.03, is amended to read:
114.31280.03 CERTIFICATE OF SALE.
115.1The county auditor shall execute to the purchaser of each parcel a certificate which
115.2may be substantially in the following form:
115.3"I, .........., auditor of the county of .........., state of Minnesota, do hereby certify that
115.4at the sale of lands pursuant to the real estate tax judgment entered in the district court
115.5in the county of .........., on the .......... day of .........., ......., in proceedings to enforce the
115.6payment of taxes delinquent on real estate for the years .........., for the county of ..........,
115.7which sale was held at ..............., in said county of ........, on the ........ day of ........, .......,
115.8the following described parcel of land, situate in said county of .........., state of Minnesota:
115.9(insert description), was offered for sale to the bidder who should offer to pay the amount
115.10for which the same was to be sold, at the lowest annual rate of interest on such amount;
115.11and at said sale I did sell the said parcel of land to .......... for the sum of .......... dollars,
115.12with interest at .......... percent per annum on such amount, that being the sum for which the
115.13same was to be sold, and such rate of interest being the lowest rate percent per annum bid
115.14on such sum; and, the sum having been paid, I do therefore, in consideration thereof, and
115.15pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, convey the said parcel of land, in
115.16fee simple, subject to easements and restrictions of record at the date of the tax judgment
115.17sale, including, but without limitation, permits for telephone, telegraph and electric
115.18power lines either by underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and water lines,
115.19highways, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension, to said ..........,
115.20and the heirs and assigns of ......., forever, subject to redemption as provided by law.
115.21Witness my hand and official seal this ........ day of ........, ....... .
115.22
115.23
.....
County Auditor."
115.24If the land shall not be redeemed as provided in chapter 281, such certificate shall
115.25pass to the purchaser an estate therein, in fee simple, without any other act or deed
115.26whatever subject to easements and restrictions of record at the date of the tax judgment
115.27sale, including, but without limitation, permits for telephone, telegraph, and electric
115.28power lines either by underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and water lines,
115.29highways, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension. Such certificate
115.30may be recorded, after the time for redemption shall have expired, as other deeds of real
115.31estate, and with like effect. If any purchaser at such sale shall purchase more than one
115.32parcel, the auditor shall issue to the purchaser a certificate for each parcel so purchased.
115.33EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

115.34    Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 280.07, is amended to read:
115.35280.07 ENTRIES IN JUDGMENT BOOKS AFTER SALE.
116.1Immediately after such sale the county auditor shall set out in the copy judgment
116.2book record that all parcels were bid in for the state. The county auditor shall thereupon
116.3deliver such book to notify the court administrator, who shall forthwith enter on the
116.4right-hand page of the real estate tax judgment book, opposite the description of each
116.5parcel sold, the words "bid in for the state," and thereupon redeliver the copy judgment
116.6book to the auditor. Upon redemption the auditor shall make a note thereon in the copy
116.7judgment book, opposite the parcel redeemed.
116.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

116.9    Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 280.11, is amended to read:
116.10280.11 LANDS BID IN FOR STATE.
116.11At any time after any parcel of land has been bid in for the state, the same not having
116.12been redeemed, the county auditor shall assign and convey the same, and all the right of
116.13the state therein acquired at such sale, to any person who shall pay the amount for which
116.14the same was bid in, with interest at the rate of 12 percent per annum, and the amount of
116.15all subsequent delinquent taxes, penalties, costs, and interest at such rate upon the same
116.16from the time when such taxes became delinquent. The county auditor shall execute to
116.17such person a certificate for such parcel, which may be substantially in the following form:
116.18"I, .........., auditor of the county of .........., state of Minnesota, do hereby certify that
116.19at the sale of lands pursuant to the real estate tax judgment entered in the district court
116.20in the county of .........., on the .......... day of .........., ......., in proceedings to enforce the
116.21payment of taxes delinquent upon real estate for the years .......... for the county of ..........,
116.22which sale was held at .........., in said county of .........., on the .......... day of .........., .......,
116.23the following described parcel of land, situate in said county of .........., state of Minnesota:
116.24(insert description), was duly offered for sale; and, no one bidding upon such offer an
116.25amount equal to that for which the parcel was subject to be sold, the same was then bid in
116.26for the state at such amount, being the sum of .......... dollars; and the same still remaining
116.27unredeemed, and on this day .......... having paid into the treasury of the county the amount
116.28for which the same was so bid in, and all subsequent delinquent taxes, penalties, costs,
116.29and interest, amounting in all to .......... dollars, therefore, in consideration thereof, and
116.30pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, I do hereby assign and convey this
116.31parcel of land, in fee simple, subject to easements and restrictions of record at the date of
116.32the tax judgment sale, including but without limitation, permits for telephone, telegraph,
116.33 and electric power lines either by underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and
116.34water lines, highways, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension,
117.1with all the right, title and interest of the state acquired therein at such sale to .........., and
117.2the heirs and assigns of ........, forever, subject to redemption as provided by law.
117.3Witness my hand and official seal this .......... day of .........., .......
117.4
117.5
.....
County Auditor."
117.6If the land shall not be redeemed, as provided in chapter 281, such certificate shall
117.7pass to the purchaser or assignee an estate therein, in fee simple, without any other act
117.8or deed whatever subject to easements and restrictions of record at the date of the tax
117.9judgment sale, including, but without limitation, permits for telephone, telegraph and
117.10electric power lines either by underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and water
117.11lines, highways, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension. Such
117.12certificate or conveyance may be recorded, after the time for redemption shall have
117.13expired, as other deeds of real estate, and with like effect. No assignment of the right of
117.14the state shall be given pursuant to this section after January 1, 1972.
117.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

117.16    Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 281.03, is amended to read:
117.17281.03 AUDITOR'S CERTIFICATE.
117.18The county auditor shall certify to the amount due on such redemption, and, on
117.19payment of the same to the county treasurer, shall make duplicate receipts for the certified
117.20amount, describing the property redeemed, one of which shall be filed with the auditor.
117.21Such receipts shall be governed by the provisions of this chapter regulating the payment
117.22of current taxes and such payment shall have the effect to annul the sale. If the amount
117.23certified by the auditor and received in payment for redemption be less than that required
117.24by law, it shall not invalidate the redemption. On redemption being made, the auditor shall
117.25enter upon the copy of the tax judgment book, opposite the description of record the
117.26parcel as redeemed, the word, "redeemed.".
117.27EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

117.28    Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 281.17, is amended to read:
117.29281.17 PERIOD FOR REDEMPTION.
117.30Except for properties for which the period of redemption has been limited under
117.31sections 281.173 and 281.174, the following periods for redemption apply.
117.32The period of redemption for all lands sold to the state at a tax judgment sale shall
117.33be three years from the date of sale to the state of Minnesota.
118.1The period of redemption for homesteaded lands as defined in section 273.13,
118.2subdivision 22
, located in a targeted neighborhood as defined in Laws 1987, chapter 386,
118.3article 6, section 4, and sold to the state at a tax judgment sale is three years from the date
118.4of sale. The period of redemption for all lands located in a targeted neighborhood as
118.5defined in Laws 1987, chapter 386, article 6, section 4, except (1) homesteaded lands as
118.6defined in section 273.13, subdivision 22, and (2) for periods of redemption beginning
118.7after June 30, 1991, but before July 1, 1996, lands located in the Loring Park targeted
118.8neighborhood on which a notice of lis pendens has been served, and sold to the state at a
118.9tax judgment sale is one year from the date of sale.
118.10The period of redemption for all real property constituting a mixed municipal solid
118.11waste disposal facility that is a qualified facility under section 115B.39, subdivision 1, is
118.12one year from the date of the sale to the state of Minnesota.
118.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

118.14    Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 281.327, is amended to read:
118.15281.327 CANCELLATION OF CERTIFICATE UPON JUDICIAL ORDER.
118.16Upon the petition of any person interested in the land covered by a real estate tax
118.17sale certificate, state assignment certificate, or forfeited tax sale certificate and, upon the
118.18giving of such notice to the holder of such certificate as may be ordered, the district court,
118.19in the proceedings resulting in the judgment upon which a real estate tax judgment sale
118.20certificate, state assignment certificate, or forfeited tax sale certificate is based, may order
118.21the cancellation of a real estate tax judgment sale certificate, state assignment certificate,
118.22or forfeited tax sale certificate upon which notice of expiration of time of redemption
118.23has been issued when the certificate or a deed issued thereon has not been recorded in
118.24the office of the county recorder or filed in that of the registrar of titles, if the land is
118.25registered, within seven years after the date of the issuance of such certificate; the county
118.26auditor, on the filing of the order, shall make an entry in the proper copy real estate tax
118.27judgment book, opposite the description of the land, "canceled by order of court" record
118.28the land as canceled by order of court; and the rights of the holder under the certificate
118.29shall thereupon be terminated of record in the office of the county auditor.
118.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

118.31    Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.01, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
118.32    Subd. 6. Duties of commissioner after sale. When any sale has been made by the
118.33county auditor under sections 282.01 to 282.13, the auditor shall immediately certify to
119.1the commissioner of revenue such information relating to such sale, on such forms as the
119.2commissioner of revenue may prescribe as will enable the commissioner of revenue to
119.3prepare an appropriate deed if the sale is for cash, or keep necessary records if the sale
119.4is on terms; and not later than October 31 of each year the county auditor shall submit
119.5to the commissioner of revenue a statement of all instances wherein any payment of
119.6principal, interest, or current taxes on lands held under certificate, due or to be paid during
119.7the preceding calendar years, are still outstanding at the time such certificate is made.
119.8When such statement shows that a purchaser or the purchaser's assignee is in default, the
119.9commissioner of revenue may instruct the county board of the county in which the land is
119.10located to cancel said certificate of sale in the manner provided by subdivision 5, provided
119.11that upon recommendation of the county board, and where the circumstances are such
119.12that the commissioner of revenue after investigation is satisfied that the purchaser has
119.13made every effort reasonable to make payment of both the annual installment and said
119.14taxes, and that there has been no willful neglect on the part of the purchaser in meeting
119.15these obligations, then the commissioner of revenue may extend the time for the payment
119.16for such period as the commissioner may deem warranted, not to exceed one year. On
119.17payment in full of the purchase price, appropriate conveyance in fee, in such form as may
119.18be prescribed by the attorney general, shall be issued by the commissioner of revenue,
119.19which conveyance must be recorded by the county and shall have the force and effect of
119.20a patent from the state subject to easements and restrictions of record at the date of the
119.21tax judgment sale, including, but without limitation, permits for telephone, telegraph, and
119.22electric power lines either by underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and water
119.23lines, highways, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension.
119.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

119.25    Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.04, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
119.26    Subd. 4. Easements. The county auditor, when and for such price and on such
119.27terms and for such period as the county board prescribes, may grant easements or permits
119.28on unsold tax-forfeited land for telephone, telegraph, and electric power lines either by
119.29underground cable or conduit or otherwise, sewer and water lines, highways, recreational
119.30trails, railroads, and pipe lines for gas, liquids, or solids in suspension. Any such easement
119.31or permit may be canceled by resolution of the county board after reasonable notice for
119.32any substantial breach of its terms or if at any time its continuance will conflict with
119.33public use of the land, or any part thereof, on which it is granted. Land affected by any
119.34such easement or permit may be sold or leased for mineral or other legal purpose, but sale
119.35or lease shall be subject to the easement or permit, and all rights granted by the easement
120.1or permit shall be excepted from the conveyance or lease of the land and be reserved,
120.2and may be canceled by the county board in the same manner and for the same reasons
120.3as it could have been canceled before sale and in that case the rights granted thereby
120.4shall vest in the state in trust as the land on which it was granted was held before sale or
120.5lease. Any easement or permit granted before passage of Laws 1951, Chapter 203, may
120.6be governed thereby if the holder thereof and county board so agree. Reasonable notice
120.7as used in this subdivision, means a 90-day written notice addressed to the record owner
120.8of the easement at the last known address, and upon cancellation the county board may
120.9grant extensions of time to vacate the premises affected.
120.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

120.11    Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.261, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
120.12    Subd. 2. Interest rate. The unpaid balance on any repurchase contract approved
120.13by the county board on or after July 1, 1982, is subject to interest at the rate determined
120.14pursuant to section 549.09. Repurchase contracts approved after December 31, 1990, are
120.15subject to interest at the rate determined in section 279.03, subdivision 1a. The interest
120.16rate is subject to change each year on the unpaid balance in the manner provided for rate
120.17changes in section 549.09 or 279.03, subdivision 1a, whichever is applicable. Interest on
120.18the unpaid contract balance on repurchases approved before July 1, 1982, is payable at the
120.19rate applicable to the repurchase contract at the time that it was approved.
120.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

120.21    Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.261, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
120.22    Subd. 4. Service fee. The county auditor may collect a service fee to cover
120.23administrative costs as set by the county board for each repurchase application received
120.24after July 1, 1985. The fee must be paid at the time of application and must be credited to
120.25the county general revenue fund.
120.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

120.27    Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.261, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
120.28    Subd. 5. County may impose conditions of repurchase. The county auditor, after
120.29receiving county board approval, may impose conditions on repurchase of tax-forfeited
120.30lands limiting the use of the parcel subject to the repurchase, including, but not limited to,
120.31environmental remediation action plan restrictions or covenants, or easements for lines or
120.32equipment for telephone, telegraph, electric power, or telecommunications.
121.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

121.2    Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 282.322, is amended to read:
121.3282.322 FORFEITED LANDS LIST.
121.4The county board of any county may at any time after the passage of Laws 1945,
121.5chapter 296, file a list of forfeited lands with the county auditor, if the board is of the
121.6opinion that such lands may be acquired by the state or any municipal subdivision thereof
121.7for public purposes. Upon the filing of such list the county auditor shall withhold said
121.8lands from repurchase. If no proceeding shall be started to acquire such lands by the
121.9state or some municipal subdivision thereof within one year after the filing of such list
121.10the county board shall withdraw said list and thereafter the owner shall have one year in
121.11which to repurchase as otherwise provided in Laws 1945, chapter 296.
121.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

121.13    Sec. 57. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 287.30, is amended to read:
121.14287.30 COUNTY TREASURER; DUTIES.
121.15The care of documentary stamps entrusted to county treasurers and the duties imposed
121.16upon county treasurers by this chapter are within the duties of such office and are within
121.17the coverage of any official bond delivered to the state, conditioned that any such officer
121.18shall faithfully execute the duties of office. The county board may by resolution require
121.19the county auditor to perform any duty imposed on the county treasurer under this chapter.
121.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

121.21    Sec. 58. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 289A.25, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
121.22    Subdivision 1. Requirements to pay. An individual, trust, S corporation, or
121.23partnership must, when prescribed in subdivision 3, paragraph (b), make payments of
121.24estimated tax. For individuals, the term "estimated tax" means the amount the taxpayer
121.25estimates is the sum of the taxes imposed by chapter 290 for the taxable year. For trusts,
121.26S corporations, and partnerships, the term estimated tax means the amount the taxpayer
121.27estimates is the sum of the taxes for the taxable year imposed by chapter 290 and the
121.28composite income tax imposed by section 289A.08, subdivision 7. If the individual is an
121.29infant or incompetent person, the payments must be made by the individual's guardian. If
121.30joint payments on estimated tax are made but a joint return is not made for the taxable
121.31year, the estimated tax for that year may be treated as the estimated tax of either the
121.32husband or the wife or may be divided between them.
122.1Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, no payments of estimated tax are
122.2required if the estimated tax, as defined in this subdivision, less the credits allowed against
122.3the tax, is less than $500.
122.4EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

122.5    Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.01, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
122.6    Subd. 5. Domestic corporation. The term "domestic" when applied to a corporation
122.7means a corporation:
122.8(1) created or organized in the United States, or under the laws of the United
122.9States or of any state, the District of Columbia, or any political subdivision of any of
122.10the foregoing but not including the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any possession
122.11of the United States; or
122.12(2) which qualifies as a DISC, as defined in section 992(a) of the Internal Revenue
122.13Code; or.
122.14(3) which qualifies as a FSC, as defined in section 922 of the Internal Revenue Code.
122.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
122.16December 31, 2013.

122.17    Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.01, subdivision 19d,
122.18is amended to read:
122.19    Subd. 19d. Corporations; modifications decreasing federal taxable income. For
122.20corporations, there shall be subtracted from federal taxable income after the increases
122.21provided in subdivision 19c:
122.22    (1) the amount of foreign dividend gross-up added to gross income for federal
122.23income tax purposes under section 78 of the Internal Revenue Code;
122.24    (2) the amount of salary expense not allowed for federal income tax purposes due to
122.25claiming the work opportunity credit under section 51 of the Internal Revenue Code;
122.26    (3) any dividend (not including any distribution in liquidation) paid within the
122.27taxable year by a national or state bank to the United States, or to any instrumentality of
122.28the United States exempt from federal income taxes, on the preferred stock of the bank
122.29owned by the United States or the instrumentality;
122.30    (4) amounts disallowed for intangible drilling costs due to differences between
122.31this chapter and the Internal Revenue Code in taxable years beginning before January
122.321, 1987, as follows:
123.1    (i) to the extent the disallowed costs are represented by physical property, an amount
123.2equal to the allowance for depreciation under Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.09,
123.3subdivision 7
, subject to the modifications contained in subdivision 19e; and
123.4    (ii) to the extent the disallowed costs are not represented by physical property, an
123.5amount equal to the allowance for cost depletion under Minnesota Statutes 1986, section
123.6290.09, subdivision 8;
123.7    (5) (4) the deduction for capital losses pursuant to sections 1211 and 1212 of the
123.8Internal Revenue Code, except that:
123.9    (i) for capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after December 31, 1986,
123.10capital loss carrybacks shall not be allowed;
123.11    (ii) for capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after December 31, 1986,
123.12a capital loss carryover to each of the 15 taxable years succeeding the loss year shall be
123.13allowed;
123.14    (iii) for capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning before January 1, 1987, a
123.15capital loss carryback to each of the three taxable years preceding the loss year, subject to
123.16the provisions of Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.16, shall be allowed; and
123.17    (iv) for capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning before January 1, 1987,
123.18a capital loss carryover to each of the five taxable years succeeding the loss year to the
123.19extent such loss was not used in a prior taxable year and subject to the provisions of
123.20Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.16, shall be allowed;
123.21    (6) (5) an amount for interest and expenses relating to income not taxable for federal
123.22income tax purposes, if (i) the income is taxable under this chapter and (ii) the interest and
123.23expenses were disallowed as deductions under the provisions of section 171(a)(2), 265 or
123.24291 of the Internal Revenue Code in computing federal taxable income;
123.25    (7) (6) in the case of mines, oil and gas wells, other natural deposits, and timber for
123.26which percentage depletion was disallowed pursuant to subdivision 19c, clause (8), a
123.27reasonable allowance for depletion based on actual cost. In the case of leases the deduction
123.28must be apportioned between the lessor and lessee in accordance with rules prescribed
123.29by the commissioner. In the case of property held in trust, the allowable deduction must
123.30be apportioned between the income beneficiaries and the trustee in accordance with the
123.31pertinent provisions of the trust, or if there is no provision in the instrument, on the basis
123.32of the trust's income allocable to each;
123.33    (8) (7) for certified pollution control facilities placed in service in a taxable year
123.34beginning before December 31, 1986, and for which amortization deductions were elected
123.35under section 169 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended through December
124.131, 1985, an amount equal to the allowance for depreciation under Minnesota Statutes
124.21986, section 290.09, subdivision 7;
124.3    (9) (8) amounts included in federal taxable income that are due to refunds of
124.4income, excise, or franchise taxes based on net income or related minimum taxes paid
124.5by the corporation to Minnesota, another state, a political subdivision of another state,
124.6the District of Columbia, or a foreign country or possession of the United States to the
124.7extent that the taxes were added to federal taxable income under subdivision 19c, clause
124.8(1), in a prior taxable year;
124.9    (10) (9) income or gains from the business of mining as defined in section 290.05,
124.10subdivision 1
, clause (a), that are not subject to Minnesota franchise tax;
124.11    (11) (10) the amount of disability access expenditures in the taxable year which are not
124.12allowed to be deducted or capitalized under section 44(d)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code;
124.13    (12) (11) the amount of qualified research expenses not allowed for federal income
124.14tax purposes under section 280C(c) of the Internal Revenue Code, but only to the extent
124.15that the amount exceeds the amount of the credit allowed under section 290.068;
124.16    (13) (12) the amount of salary expenses not allowed for federal income tax purposes
124.17due to claiming the Indian employment credit under section 45A(a) of the Internal
124.18Revenue Code;
124.19    (14) (13) any decrease in subpart F income, as defined in section 952(a) of the
124.20Internal Revenue Code, for the taxable year when subpart F income is calculated without
124.21regard to the provisions of Division C, title III, section 303(b) of Public Law 110-343;
124.22    (15) (14) in each of the five tax years immediately following the tax year in which
124.23an addition is required under subdivision 19c, clause (12), an amount equal to one-fifth
124.24of the delayed depreciation. For purposes of this clause, "delayed depreciation" means
124.25the amount of the addition made by the taxpayer under subdivision 19c, clause (12). The
124.26resulting delayed depreciation cannot be less than zero;
124.27    (16) (15) in each of the five tax years immediately following the tax year in which an
124.28addition is required under subdivision 19c, clause (13), an amount equal to one-fifth of the
124.29amount of the addition;
124.30(17) (16) to the extent included in federal taxable income, discharge of indebtedness
124.31income resulting from reacquisition of business indebtedness included in federal taxable
124.32income under section 108(i) of the Internal Revenue Code. This subtraction applies only
124.33to the extent that the income was included in net income in a prior year as a result of the
124.34addition under subdivision 19c, clause (16); and
125.1(18) (17) the amount of expenses not allowed for federal income tax purposes due
125.2to claiming the railroad track maintenance credit under section 45G(a) of the Internal
125.3Revenue Code.
125.4EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
125.5December 31, 2013.

125.6    Sec. 61. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.01, subdivision 19f, is amended to read:
125.7    Subd. 19f. Basis modifications affecting gain or loss on disposition of property.
125.8(a) For individuals, estates, and trusts, the basis of property is its adjusted basis for federal
125.9income tax purposes except as set forth in paragraphs (e) and (f), (g), and (m). For
125.10corporations, the basis of property is its adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes,
125.11without regard to the time when the property became subject to tax under this chapter or to
125.12whether out-of-state losses or items of tax preference with respect to the property were not
125.13deductible under this chapter, except that the modifications to the basis for federal income
125.14tax purposes set forth in paragraphs (b) to (j) (i) are allowed to corporations, and the
125.15resulting modifications to federal taxable income must be made in the year in which gain
125.16or loss on the sale or other disposition of property is recognized.
125.17(b) The basis of property shall not be reduced to reflect federal investment tax credit.
125.18(c) The basis of property subject to the accelerated cost recovery system under
125.19section 168 of the Internal Revenue Code shall be modified to reflect the modifications in
125.20depreciation with respect to the property provided for in subdivision 19e. For certified
125.21pollution control facilities for which amortization deductions were elected under section
125.22169 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, the basis of the property must be increased by
125.23the amount of the amortization deduction not previously allowed under this chapter.
125.24(d) For property acquired before January 1, 1933, the basis for computing a gain is
125.25the fair market value of the property as of that date. The basis for determining a loss is
125.26the cost of the property to the taxpayer less any depreciation, amortization, or depletion,
125.27actually sustained before that date. If the adjusted cost exceeds the fair market value of the
125.28property, then the basis is the adjusted cost regardless of whether there is a gain or loss.
125.29(e) (d) The basis is reduced by the allowance for amortization of bond premium if
125.30an election to amortize was made pursuant to Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.09,
125.31subdivision 13, and the allowance could have been deducted by the taxpayer under this
125.32chapter during the period of the taxpayer's ownership of the property.
125.33(f) (e) For assets placed in service before January 1, 1987, corporations, partnerships,
125.34or individuals engaged in the business of mining ores other than iron ore or taconite
126.1concentrates subject to the occupation tax under chapter 298 must use the occupation
126.2tax basis of property used in that business.
126.3(g) (f) For assets placed in service before January 1, 1990, corporations, partnerships,
126.4or individuals engaged in the business of mining iron ore or taconite concentrates subject
126.5to the occupation tax under chapter 298 must use the occupation tax basis of property
126.6used in that business.
126.7(h) (g) In applying the provisions of sections 301(c)(3)(B), 312(f) and (g), and
126.8316(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, the dates December 31, 1932, and January 1,
126.91933, shall be substituted for February 28, 1913, and March 1, 1913, respectively.
126.10(i) (h) In applying the provisions of section 362(a) and (c) of the Internal Revenue
126.11Code, the date December 31, 1956, shall be substituted for June 22, 1954.
126.12(j) (i) The basis of property shall be increased by the amount of intangible drilling
126.13costs not previously allowed due to differences between this chapter and the Internal
126.14Revenue Code.
126.15(k) (j) The adjusted basis of any corporate partner's interest in a partnership is
126.16the same as the adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes modified as required to
126.17reflect the basis modifications set forth in paragraphs (b) to (j) (i). The adjusted basis
126.18of a partnership in which the partner is an individual, estate, or trust is the same as the
126.19adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes modified as required to reflect the basis
126.20modifications set forth in paragraphs (e) and (f) and (g).
126.21(l) (k) The modifications contained in paragraphs (b) to (j) (i) also apply to the basis
126.22of property that is determined by reference to the basis of the same property in the hands
126.23of a different taxpayer or by reference to the basis of different property.
126.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
126.25December 31, 2013.

126.26    Sec. 62. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.01, subdivision 29, is amended to read:
126.27    Subd. 29. Taxable income. The term "taxable income" means:
126.28(1) for individuals, estates, and trusts, the same as taxable net income;
126.29(2) for corporations, the taxable net income less
126.30(i) the net operating loss deduction under section 290.095;
126.31(ii) the dividends received deduction under section 290.21, subdivision 4; and
126.32(iii) the exemption for operating in a job opportunity building zone under section
126.33469.317 ; and.
126.34(iv) the exemption for operating in a biotechnology and health sciences industry
126.35zone under section 469.337.
127.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
127.2December 31, 2015.

127.3    Sec. 63. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.015, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
127.4    Subdivision 1. General rule. (a) Except as provided in subdivision 3, a person
127.5that conducts a trade or business that has a place of business in this state, regularly has
127.6employees or independent contractors conducting business activities on its behalf in this
127.7state, or owns or leases real property that is located in this state or tangible personal
127.8property, including but not limited to mobile property, that is present in this state is subject
127.9to the taxes imposed by this chapter.
127.10(b) Except as provided in subdivision 3, a person that conducts a trade or business
127.11not described in paragraph (a) is subject to the taxes imposed by this chapter if the trade
127.12or business obtains or regularly solicits business from within this state, without regard
127.13to physical presence in this state.
127.14(c) For purposes of paragraph (b), business from within this state includes, but is
127.15not limited to:
127.16(1) sales of products or services of any kind or nature to customers in this state who
127.17receive the product or service in this state;
127.18(2) sales of services which are performed from outside this state but the services
127.19are received in this state;
127.20(3) transactions with customers in this state that involve intangible property and
127.21result in receipts attributed to this state as provided in section 290.191, subdivision 5 or 6;
127.22(4) leases of tangible personal property that is located in this state as defined in
127.23section 290.191, subdivision 5, paragraph (g), or 6, paragraph (e); and
127.24(5) sales and leases of real property located in this state.
127.25(d) For purposes of paragraph (b), solicitation includes, but is not limited to:
127.26(1) the distribution, by mail or otherwise, without regard to the state from which such
127.27distribution originated or in which the materials were prepared, of catalogs, periodicals,
127.28advertising flyers, or other written solicitations of business to customers in this state;
127.29(2) display of advertisements on billboards or other outdoor advertising in this state;
127.30(3) advertisements in newspapers published in this state;
127.31(4) advertisements in trade journals or other periodicals, the circulation of which is
127.32primarily within this state;
127.33(5) advertisements in a Minnesota edition of a national or regional publication or a
127.34limited regional edition of which this state is included of a broader regional or national
128.1publication which are not placed in other geographically defined editions of the same issue
128.2of the same publication;
128.3(6) advertisements in regional or national publications in an edition which is not
128.4by its contents geographically targeted to Minnesota, but which is sold over the counter
128.5in Minnesota or by subscription to Minnesota residents;
128.6(7) advertisements broadcast on a radio or television station located in Minnesota; or
128.7(8) any other solicitation by telegraph, telephone, computer database, cable, optic,
128.8microwave, or other communication system.
128.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

128.10    Sec. 64. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.07, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
128.11    Subdivision 1. Annual accounting period. Net income and taxable net income
128.12shall be computed upon the basis of the taxpayer's annual accounting period. If a taxpayer
128.13has no annual accounting period, or has one other than a fiscal year, as heretofore defined,
128.14 the net income and taxable net income shall be computed on the basis of the calendar year.
128.15Taxpayers shall employ the same accounting period on which they report, or would be
128.16required to report, their net income under the Internal Revenue Code. The commissioner
128.17shall provide by rule for the determination of the accounting period for taxpayers who file
128.18a combined report under section 290.17, subdivision 4, when members of the group use
128.19different accounting periods for federal income tax purposes. Unless the taxpayer changes
128.20its accounting period for federal purposes, the due date of the return is not changed.
128.21    A taxpayer may change accounting periods only with the consent of the
128.22commissioner. In case of any such change, the taxpayer shall pay a tax for the period
128.23not included in either the taxpayer's former or newly adopted taxable year, computed as
128.24provided in section 290.32.
128.25EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
128.26December 31, 2013.

128.27    Sec. 65. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.07, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
128.28    Subd. 2. Accounting methods. Except as specifically provided to the contrary by
128.29this chapter, net income and taxable net income shall be computed in accordance with
128.30the method of accounting regularly employed in keeping the taxpayer's books. If no such
128.31accounting system has been regularly employed, or if that employed does not clearly or
128.32fairly reflect income or the income taxable under this chapter, the computation shall be
129.1made in accordance with such method as in the opinion of the commissioner does clearly
129.2and fairly reflect income and the income taxable under this chapter.
129.3Except as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, a taxpayer who changes the
129.4method of accounting for regularly computing the taxpayer's income in keeping books
129.5shall, before computing net income and taxable net income under the new method, secure
129.6the consent of the commissioner.
129.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
129.8December 31, 2013.

129.9    Sec. 66. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.0921, subdivision 3,
129.10is amended to read:
129.11    Subd. 3. Alternative minimum taxable income. "Alternative minimum taxable
129.12income" is Minnesota net income as defined in section 290.01, subdivision 19, and
129.13includes the adjustments and tax preference items in sections 56, 57, 58, and 59(d), (e),
129.14(f), and (h) of the Internal Revenue Code. If a corporation files a separate company
129.15Minnesota tax return, the minimum tax must be computed on a separate company basis.
129.16If a corporation is part of a tax group filing a unitary return, the minimum tax must be
129.17computed on a unitary basis. The following adjustments must be made.
129.18(1) For purposes of the depreciation adjustments under section 56(a)(1) and
129.1956(g)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code, the basis for depreciable property placed in
129.20service in a taxable year beginning before January 1, 1990, is the adjusted basis for federal
129.21income tax purposes, including any modification made in a taxable year under section
129.22290.01, subdivision 19e, or Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.09, subdivision 7,
129.23paragraph (c).
129.24For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000, the amount of any remaining
129.25modification made under section 290.01, subdivision 19e, or Minnesota Statutes 1986,
129.26section 290.09, subdivision 7, paragraph (c), not previously deducted is a depreciation
129.27allowance in the first taxable year after December 31, 2000.
129.28(2) (1) The portion of the depreciation deduction allowed for federal income tax
129.29purposes under section 168(k) of the Internal Revenue Code that is required as an
129.30addition under section 290.01, subdivision 19c, clause (12), is disallowed in determining
129.31alternative minimum taxable income.
129.32(3) (2) The subtraction for depreciation allowed under section 290.01, subdivision
129.3319d
, clause (15) (14), is allowed as a depreciation deduction in determining alternative
129.34minimum taxable income.
130.1(4) (3) The alternative tax net operating loss deduction under sections 56(a)(4) and
130.256(d) of the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
130.3(5) (4) The special rule for certain dividends under section 56(g)(4)(C)(ii) of the
130.4Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
130.5(6) (5) The tax preference for depletion under section 57(a)(1) of the Internal
130.6Revenue Code does not apply.
130.7(7) The tax preference for intangible drilling costs under section 57(a)(2) of the
130.8Internal Revenue Code must be calculated without regard to subparagraph (E) and the
130.9subtraction under section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (4).
130.10(8) (6) The tax preference for tax exempt interest under section 57(a)(5) of the
130.11Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
130.12(9) (7) The tax preference for charitable contributions of appreciated property under
130.13section 57(a)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code does not apply.
130.14(10) For purposes of calculating the tax preference for accelerated depreciation or
130.15amortization on certain property placed in service before January 1, 1987, under section
130.1657(a)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code, the deduction allowable for the taxable year is the
130.17deduction allowed under section 290.01, subdivision 19e.
130.18For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000, the amount of any remaining
130.19modification made under section 290.01, subdivision 19e, not previously deducted is a
130.20depreciation or amortization allowance in the first taxable year after December 31, 2004.
130.21(11) (8) For purposes of calculating the adjustment for adjusted current earnings
130.22in section 56(g) of the Internal Revenue Code, the term "alternative minimum taxable
130.23income" as it is used in section 56(g) of the Internal Revenue Code, means alternative
130.24minimum taxable income as defined in this subdivision, determined without regard to the
130.25adjustment for adjusted current earnings in section 56(g) of the Internal Revenue Code.
130.26(12) (9) For purposes of determining the amount of adjusted current earnings under
130.27section 56(g)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, no adjustment shall be made under section
130.2856(g)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code with respect to (i) the amount of foreign dividend
130.29gross-up subtracted as provided in section 290.01, subdivision 19d, clause (1), or (ii) the
130.30amount of refunds of income, excise, or franchise taxes subtracted as provided in section
130.31290.01, subdivision 19d , clause (9).
130.32(13) (10) Alternative minimum taxable income excludes the income from operating
130.33in a job opportunity building zone as provided under section 469.317.
130.34(14) Alternative minimum taxable income excludes the income from operating in a
130.35biotechnology and health sciences industry zone as provided under section 469.337.
131.1Items of tax preference must not be reduced below zero as a result of the
131.2modifications in this subdivision.
131.3EFFECTIVE DATE.The amendments striking clauses (1), (7), and (10), and
131.4the renumbering of clauses are effective for taxable years beginning after December
131.531, 2013. The amendment striking clause (14) is effective for taxable years beginning
131.6after December 31, 2015.

131.7    Sec. 67. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.0922, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
131.8    Subd. 3. Definitions. (a) "Minnesota sales or receipts" means the total sales
131.9apportioned to Minnesota pursuant to section 290.191, subdivision 5, the total receipts
131.10attributed to Minnesota pursuant to section 290.191, subdivisions 6 to 8, and/or the
131.11total sales or receipts apportioned or attributed to Minnesota pursuant to any other
131.12apportionment formula applicable to the taxpayer.
131.13(b) "Minnesota property" means total Minnesota tangible property as provided in
131.14section 290.191, subdivisions 9 to 11, any other tangible property located in Minnesota,
131.15but does not include: (1) the property of a qualified business as defined under section
131.16469.310, subdivision 11 , that is located in a job opportunity building zone designated
131.17under section 469.314 and (2) property of a qualified business located in a biotechnology
131.18and health sciences industry zone designated under section 469.334. Intangible property
131.19shall not be included in Minnesota property for purposes of this section. Taxpayers who
131.20do not utilize tangible property to apportion income shall nevertheless include Minnesota
131.21property for purposes of this section. On a return for a short taxable year, the amount of
131.22Minnesota property owned, as determined under section 290.191, shall be included in
131.23Minnesota property based on a fraction in which the numerator is the number of days in
131.24the short taxable year and the denominator is 365.
131.25(c) "Minnesota payrolls" means total Minnesota payrolls as provided in section
131.26290.191, subdivision 12 , but does not include: (1) the job opportunity building zone payroll
131.27under section 469.310, subdivision 8, of a qualified business as defined under section
131.28469.310, subdivision 11 , and (2) biotechnology and health sciences industry zone payrolls
131.29under section 469.330, subdivision 8. Taxpayers who do not utilize payrolls to apportion
131.30income shall nevertheless include Minnesota payrolls for purposes of this section.
131.31EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
131.32December 31, 2015.

131.33    Sec. 68. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.095, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
132.1    Subd. 3. Carryover. (a) A net operating loss incurred in a during the taxable year:
132.2(i) beginning after December 31, 1986, shall be a net operating loss carryover to each of
132.3the 15 taxable years following the taxable year of such loss; (ii) beginning before January
132.41, 1987, shall be a net operating loss carryover to each of the five taxable years following
132.5the taxable year of such loss subject to the provisions of Minnesota Statutes 1986, section
132.6290.095; and (iii) beginning before January 1, 1987, shall be a net operating loss carryback
132.7to each of the three taxable years preceding the loss year subject to the provisions of
132.8Minnesota Statutes 1986, section 290.095.
132.9(b) The entire amount of the net operating loss for any taxable year shall be carried to
132.10the earliest of the taxable years to which such loss may be carried. The portion of such loss
132.11which shall be carried to each of the other taxable years shall be the excess, if any, of the
132.12amount of such loss over the sum of the taxable net income, adjusted by the modifications
132.13specified in subdivision 4, for each of the taxable years to which such loss may be carried.
132.14(c) Where a corporation apportions its income under the provisions of section
132.15290.191 , the net operating loss deduction incurred in any taxable year shall be allowed
132.16to the extent of the apportionment ratio of the loss year.
132.17(d) The provisions of sections 381, 382, and 384 of the Internal Revenue Code apply
132.18to carryovers in certain corporate acquisitions and special limitations on net operating loss
132.19carryovers. The limitation amount determined under section 382 shall be applied to net
132.20income, before apportionment, in each post change year to which a loss is carried.
132.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
132.22December 31, 2013.

132.23    Sec. 69. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 290.191, subdivision 5, is
132.24amended to read:
132.25    Subd. 5. Determination of sales factor. For purposes of this section, the following
132.26rules apply in determining the sales factor.
132.27    (a) The sales factor includes all sales, gross earnings, or receipts received in the
132.28ordinary course of the business, except that the following types of income are not included
132.29in the sales factor:
132.30    (1) interest;
132.31    (2) dividends;
132.32    (3) sales of capital assets as defined in section 1221 of the Internal Revenue Code;
132.33    (4) sales of property used in the trade or business, except sales of leased property of
132.34a type which is regularly sold as well as leased; and
133.1    (5) sales of debt instruments as defined in section 1275(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue
133.2Code or sales of stock.
133.3    (b) Sales of tangible personal property are made within this state if the property is
133.4received by a purchaser at a point within this state, and the taxpayer is taxable in this state,
133.5 regardless of the f.o.b. point, other conditions of the sale, or the ultimate destination
133.6of the property.
133.7    (c) Tangible personal property delivered to a common or contract carrier or foreign
133.8vessel for delivery to a purchaser in another state or nation is a sale in that state or nation,
133.9regardless of f.o.b. point or other conditions of the sale.
133.10    (d) Notwithstanding paragraphs (b) and (c), when intoxicating liquor, wine,
133.11fermented malt beverages, cigarettes, or tobacco products are sold to a purchaser who is
133.12licensed by a state or political subdivision to resell this property only within the state of
133.13ultimate destination, the sale is made in that state.
133.14    (e) Sales made by or through a corporation that is qualified as a domestic
133.15international sales corporation under section 992 of the Internal Revenue Code are not
133.16considered to have been made within this state.
133.17    (f) Sales, rents, royalties, and other income in connection with real property is
133.18attributed to the state in which the property is located.
133.19    (g) Receipts from the lease or rental of tangible personal property, including finance
133.20leases and true leases, must be attributed to this state if the property is located in this
133.21state and to other states if the property is not located in this state. Receipts from the
133.22lease or rental of moving property including, but not limited to, motor vehicles, rolling
133.23stock, aircraft, vessels, or mobile equipment are included in the numerator of the receipts
133.24factor to the extent that the property is used in this state. The extent of the use of moving
133.25property is determined as follows:
133.26    (1) A motor vehicle is used wholly in the state in which it is registered.
133.27    (2) The extent that rolling stock is used in this state is determined by multiplying
133.28the receipts from the lease or rental of the rolling stock by a fraction, the numerator of
133.29which is the miles traveled within this state by the leased or rented rolling stock and the
133.30denominator of which is the total miles traveled by the leased or rented rolling stock.
133.31    (3) The extent that an aircraft is used in this state is determined by multiplying the
133.32receipts from the lease or rental of the aircraft by a fraction, the numerator of which is
133.33the number of landings of the aircraft in this state and the denominator of which is the
133.34total number of landings of the aircraft.
133.35    (4) The extent that a vessel, mobile equipment, or other mobile property is used in
133.36the state is determined by multiplying the receipts from the lease or rental of the property
134.1by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of days during the taxable year the
134.2property was in this state and the denominator of which is the total days in the taxable year.
134.3    (h) Royalties and other income received for the use of or for the privilege of using
134.4intangible property, including patents, know-how, formulas, designs, processes, patterns,
134.5copyrights, trade names, service names, franchises, licenses, contracts, customer lists, or
134.6similar items, must be attributed to the state in which the property is used by the purchaser.
134.7If the property is used in more than one state, the royalties or other income must be
134.8apportioned to this state pro rata according to the portion of use in this state. If the portion
134.9of use in this state cannot be determined, the royalties or other income must be excluded
134.10from both the numerator and the denominator. Intangible property is used in this state if
134.11the purchaser uses the intangible property or the rights therein in the regular course of its
134.12business operations in this state, regardless of the location of the purchaser's customers.
134.13    (i) Sales of intangible property are made within the state in which the property is
134.14used by the purchaser. If the property is used in more than one state, the sales must be
134.15apportioned to this state pro rata according to the portion of use in this state. If the
134.16portion of use in this state cannot be determined, the sale must be excluded from both the
134.17numerator and the denominator of the sales factor. Intangible property is used in this
134.18state if the purchaser used the intangible property in the regular course of its business
134.19operations in this state.
134.20    (j) Receipts from the performance of services must be attributed to the state where
134.21the services are received. For the purposes of this section, receipts from the performance
134.22of services provided to a corporation, partnership, or trust may only be attributed to a state
134.23where it has a fixed place of doing business. If the state where the services are received is
134.24not readily determinable or is a state where the corporation, partnership, or trust receiving
134.25the service does not have a fixed place of doing business, the services shall be deemed
134.26to be received at the location of the office of the customer from which the services were
134.27ordered in the regular course of the customer's trade or business. If the ordering office
134.28cannot be determined, the services shall be deemed to be received at the office of the
134.29customer to which the services are billed.
134.30    (k) For the purposes of this subdivision and subdivision 6, paragraph (l), receipts
134.31from management, distribution, or administrative services performed by a corporation
134.32or trust for a fund of a corporation or trust regulated under United States Code, title 15,
134.33sections 80a-1 through 80a-64, must be attributed to the state where the shareholder of
134.34the fund resides. Under this paragraph, receipts for services attributed to shareholders are
134.35determined on the basis of the ratio of: (1) the average of the outstanding shares in the
134.36fund owned by shareholders residing within Minnesota at the beginning and end of each
135.1year; and (2) the average of the total number of outstanding shares in the fund at the
135.2beginning and end of each year. Residence of the shareholder, in the case of an individual,
135.3is determined by the mailing address furnished by the shareholder to the fund. Residence
135.4of the shareholder, when the shares are held by an insurance company as a depositor for
135.5the insurance company policyholders, is the mailing address of the policyholders. In
135.6the case of an insurance company holding the shares as a depositor for the insurance
135.7company policyholders, if the mailing address of the policyholders cannot be determined
135.8by the taxpayer, the receipts must be excluded from both the numerator and denominator.
135.9Residence of other shareholders is the mailing address of the shareholder.
135.10EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

135.11    Sec. 70. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 290.9728, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
135.12    Subd. 2. Taxable income. For purposes of this section, taxable income means
135.13the lesser of:
135.14(1) the amount of the net capital gain of the S corporation for the taxable year, as
135.15determined under sections 1222 and 1374 of the Internal Revenue Code, and subject to the
135.16modifications provided in section 290.01, subdivisions 19e and subdivision 19f, in excess
135.17of $25,000 that is allocable to this state under section 290.17, 290.191, or 290.20; or
135.18(2) the amount of the S corporation's federal taxable income, subject to the
135.19provisions of section 290.01, subdivisions 19c to 19f, that is allocable to this state under
135.20section 290.17, 290.191, or 290.20.
135.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for taxable years beginning after
135.22December 31, 2013.

135.23    Sec. 71. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.61, subdivision 3, as
135.24amended by Laws 2014, chapter 150, article 2, section 1, is amended to read:
135.25    Subd. 3. Sale and purchase. (a) "Sale" and "purchase" include, but are not limited
135.26to, each of the transactions listed in this subdivision. In applying the provisions of this
135.27chapter, the terms "tangible personal property" and "retail sale" include the taxable
135.28services listed in paragraph (g), clause (6), items (i) to (vi) and (viii), and the provision
135.29of these taxable services, unless specifically provided otherwise. Services performed by
135.30an employee for an employer are not taxable. Services performed by a partnership or
135.31association for another partnership or association are not taxable if one of the entities owns
135.32or controls more than 80 percent of the voting power of the equity interest in the other
135.33entity. Services performed between members of an affiliated group of corporations are not
136.1taxable. For purposes of the preceding sentence, "affiliated group of corporations" means
136.2those entities that would be classified as members of an affiliated group as defined under
136.3United States Code, title 26, section 1504, disregarding the exclusions in section 1504(b).
136.4    (b) Sale and purchase include:
136.5    (1) any transfer of title or possession, or both, of tangible personal property, whether
136.6absolutely or conditionally, for a consideration in money or by exchange or barter; and
136.7    (2) the leasing of or the granting of a license to use or consume, for a consideration
136.8in money or by exchange or barter, tangible personal property, other than a manufactured
136.9home used for residential purposes for a continuous period of 30 days or more.
136.10    (c) Sale and purchase include the production, fabrication, printing, or processing of
136.11tangible personal property for a consideration for consumers who furnish either directly or
136.12indirectly the materials used in the production, fabrication, printing, or processing.
136.13    (d) Sale and purchase include the preparing for a consideration of food.
136.14Notwithstanding section 297A.67, subdivision 2, taxable food includes, but is not limited
136.15to, the following:
136.16    (1) prepared food sold by the retailer;
136.17    (2) soft drinks;
136.18    (3) candy;
136.19    (4) dietary supplements; and
136.20    (5) all food sold through vending machines.
136.21    (e) A sale and a purchase includes the furnishing for a consideration of electricity,
136.22gas, water, or steam for use or consumption within this state.
136.23    (f) A sale and a purchase includes the transfer for a consideration of prewritten
136.24computer software whether delivered electronically, by load and leave, or otherwise.
136.25    (g) A sale and a purchase includes the furnishing for a consideration of the following
136.26services:
136.27    (1) the privilege of admission to places of amusement, recreational areas, or athletic
136.28events, and the making available of amusement devices, tanning facilities, reducing
136.29salons, steam baths, Turkish baths, health clubs, and spas or athletic facilities;
136.30    (2) lodging and related services by a hotel, rooming house, resort, campground,
136.31motel, or trailer camp, including furnishing the guest of the facility with access to
136.32telecommunication services, and the granting of any similar license to use real property in
136.33a specific facility, other than the renting or leasing of it for a continuous period of 30 days
136.34or more under an enforceable written agreement that may not be terminated without prior
136.35notice and including accommodations intermediary services provided in connection with
136.36other services provided under this clause;
137.1    (3) nonresidential parking services, whether on a contractual, hourly, or other
137.2periodic basis, except for parking at a meter;
137.3    (4) the granting of membership in a club, association, or other organization if:
137.4    (i) the club, association, or other organization makes available for the use of its
137.5members sports and athletic facilities, without regard to whether a separate charge is
137.6assessed for use of the facilities; and
137.7    (ii) use of the sports and athletic facility is not made available to the general public
137.8on the same basis as it is made available to members.
137.9Granting of membership means both onetime initiation fees and periodic membership
137.10dues. Sports and athletic facilities include golf courses; tennis, racquetball, handball, and
137.11squash courts; basketball and volleyball facilities; running tracks; exercise equipment;
137.12swimming pools; and other similar athletic or sports facilities;
137.13    (5) delivery of aggregate materials by a third party, excluding delivery of aggregate
137.14material used in road construction; and delivery of concrete block by a third party if the
137.15delivery would be subject to the sales tax if provided by the seller of the concrete block.
137.16For purposes of this clause, "road construction" means construction of:
137.17    (i) public roads;
137.18    (ii) cartways; and
137.19    (iii) private roads in townships located outside of the seven-county metropolitan area
137.20up to the point of the emergency response location sign; and
137.21    (6) services as provided in this clause:
137.22    (i) laundry and dry cleaning services including cleaning, pressing, repairing, altering,
137.23and storing clothes, linen services and supply, cleaning and blocking hats, and carpet,
137.24drapery, upholstery, and industrial cleaning. Laundry and dry cleaning services do not
137.25include services provided by coin operated facilities operated by the customer;
137.26    (ii) motor vehicle washing, waxing, and cleaning services, including services
137.27provided by coin operated facilities operated by the customer, and rustproofing,
137.28undercoating, and towing of motor vehicles;
137.29    (iii) building and residential cleaning, maintenance, and disinfecting services and
137.30pest control and exterminating services;
137.31    (iv) detective, security, burglar, fire alarm, and armored car services; but not
137.32including services performed within the jurisdiction they serve by off-duty licensed peace
137.33officers as defined in section 626.84, subdivision 1, or services provided by a nonprofit
137.34organization or any organization at the direction of a county for monitoring and electronic
137.35surveillance of persons placed on in-home detention pursuant to court order or under the
137.36direction of the Minnesota Department of Corrections;
138.1    (v) pet grooming services;
138.2    (vi) lawn care, fertilizing, mowing, spraying and sprigging services; garden planting
138.3and maintenance; tree, bush, and shrub pruning, bracing, spraying, and surgery; indoor
138.4plant care; tree, bush, shrub, and stump removal, except when performed as part of a land
138.5clearing contract as defined in section 297A.68, subdivision 40; and tree trimming for
138.6public utility lines. Services performed under a construction contract for the installation of
138.7shrubbery, plants, sod, trees, bushes, and similar items are not taxable;
138.8    (vii) massages, except when provided by a licensed health care facility or
138.9professional or upon written referral from a licensed health care facility or professional for
138.10treatment of illness, injury, or disease; and
138.11    (viii) the furnishing of lodging, board, and care services for animals in kennels and
138.12other similar arrangements, but excluding veterinary and horse boarding services.
138.13    (h) A sale and a purchase includes the furnishing for a consideration of tangible
138.14personal property or taxable services by the United States or any of its agencies or
138.15instrumentalities, or the state of Minnesota, its agencies, instrumentalities, or political
138.16subdivisions.
138.17    (i) A sale and a purchase includes the furnishing for a consideration of
138.18telecommunications services, ancillary services associated with telecommunication
138.19services, and pay television services. Telecommunication services include, but are
138.20not limited to, the following services, as defined in section 297A.669: air-to-ground
138.21radiotelephone service, mobile telecommunication service, postpaid calling service,
138.22prepaid calling service, prepaid wireless calling service, and private communication
138.23services. The services in this paragraph are taxed to the extent allowed under federal law.
138.24    (j) A sale and a purchase includes the furnishing for a consideration of installation if
138.25the installation charges would be subject to the sales tax if the installation were provided
138.26by the seller of the item being installed.
138.27    (k) A sale and a purchase includes the rental of a vehicle by a motor vehicle dealer
138.28to a customer when (1) the vehicle is rented by the customer for a consideration, or (2)
138.29the motor vehicle dealer is reimbursed pursuant to a service contract as defined in section
138.3059B.02, subdivision 11.
138.31    (l) A sale and a purchase includes furnishing for a consideration of specified digital
138.32products or other digital products or granting the right for a consideration to use specified
138.33digital products or other digital products on a temporary or permanent basis and regardless
138.34of whether the purchaser is required to make continued payments for such right. Wherever
138.35the term "tangible personal property" is used in this chapter, other than in subdivisions 10
139.1and 38, the provisions also apply to specified digital products, or other digital products,
139.2unless specifically provided otherwise or the context indicates otherwise.
139.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

139.4    Sec. 72. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.70, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
139.5    Subd. 10. Nonprofit tickets or admissions. (a) Tickets or admissions to an event
139.6are exempt if all the gross receipts are recorded as such, in accordance with generally
139.7accepted accounting principles, on the books of one or more organizations whose primary
139.8mission is to provide an opportunity for citizens of the state to participate in the creation,
139.9performance, or appreciation of the arts, and provided that each organization is:
139.10(1) an organization described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code
139.11in which voluntary contributions make up at least the following five percent of the
139.12organization's annual revenue in its most recently completed 12-month fiscal year, or in
139.13the current year if the organization has not completed a 12-month fiscal year:;
139.14(i) for sales made after July 31, 2001, and before July 1, 2002, for the organization's
139.15fiscal year completed in calendar year 2000, three percent;
139.16(ii) for sales made on or after July 1, 2002, and on or before June 30, 2003, for the
139.17organization's fiscal year completed in calendar year 2001, three percent;
139.18(iii) for sales made on or after July 1, 2003, and on or before June 30, 2004, for the
139.19organization's fiscal year completed in calendar year 2002, four percent; and
139.20(iv) for sales made in each 12-month period, beginning on July 1, 2004, and each
139.21subsequent year, for the organization's fiscal year completed in the preceding calendar
139.22year, five percent;
139.23(2) a municipal board that promotes cultural and arts activities; or
139.24(3) the University of Minnesota, a state college and university, or a private nonprofit
139.25college or university provided that the event is held at a facility owned by the educational
139.26institution holding the event.
139.27The exemption only applies if the entire proceeds, after reasonable expenses, are used
139.28solely to provide opportunities for citizens of the state to participate in the creation,
139.29performance, or appreciation of the arts.
139.30(b) Tickets or admissions to the premises of the Minnesota Zoological Garden are
139.31exempt, provided that the exemption under this paragraph does not apply to tickets or
139.32admissions to performances or events held on the premises unless the performance or
139.33event is sponsored and conducted exclusively by the Minnesota Zoological Board or
139.34employees of the Minnesota Zoological Garden.
140.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

140.2    Sec. 73. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.75, subdivision 1, is
140.3amended to read:
140.4    Subdivision 1. Tax collected. The tax on the gross receipts from the sale of the
140.5following exempt items must be imposed and collected as if the sale were taxable and the
140.6rate under section 297A.62, subdivision 1, applied. The exempt items include:
140.7    (1) building materials for an agricultural processing facility exempt under section
140.8297A.71, subdivision 13 ;
140.9    (2) building materials for mineral production facilities exempt under section
140.10297A.71, subdivision 14 ;
140.11    (3) building materials for correctional facilities under section 297A.71, subdivision 3;
140.12    (4) building materials used in a residence for disabled veterans exempt under section
140.13297A.71, subdivision 11 ;
140.14    (5) elevators and building materials exempt under section 297A.71, subdivision 12;
140.15    (6) building materials for the Long Lake Conservation Center exempt under section
140.16297A.71, subdivision 17;
140.17    (7) (6) materials and supplies for qualified low-income housing under section
140.18297A.71, subdivision 23 ;
140.19    (8) (7) materials, supplies, and equipment for municipal electric utility facilities
140.20under section 297A.71, subdivision 35;
140.21    (9) (8) equipment and materials used for the generation, transmission, and
140.22distribution of electrical energy and an aerial camera package exempt under section
140.23297A.68 , subdivision 37;
140.24    (10) (9) commuter rail vehicle and repair parts under section 297A.70, subdivision
140.253, paragraph (a), clause (10);
140.26    (11) (10) materials, supplies, and equipment for construction or improvement of
140.27projects and facilities under section 297A.71, subdivision 40;
140.28(12) (11) materials, supplies, and equipment for construction or improvement of a
140.29meat processing facility exempt under section 297A.71, subdivision 41;
140.30(13) (12) materials, supplies, and equipment for construction, improvement, or
140.31expansion of:
140.32(i) an aerospace defense manufacturing facility exempt under section 297A.71,
140.33subdivision 42
;
140.34(ii) a biopharmaceutical manufacturing facility exempt under section 297A.71,
140.35subdivision 45
;
141.1(iii) a research and development facility exempt under section 297A.71, subdivision
141.246
; and
141.3(iv) an industrial measurement manufacturing and controls facility exempt under
141.4section 297A.71, subdivision 47;
141.5(14) (13) enterprise information technology equipment and computer software for
141.6use in a qualified data center exempt under section 297A.68, subdivision 42;
141.7(15) (14) materials, supplies, and equipment for qualifying capital projects under
141.8section 297A.71, subdivision 44;
141.9(16) (15) items purchased for use in providing critical access dental services exempt
141.10under section 297A.70, subdivision 7, paragraph (c); and
141.11(17) (16) items and services purchased under a business subsidy agreement for use or
141.12consumption primarily in greater Minnesota exempt under section 297A.68, subdivision 44.
141.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

141.14    Sec. 74. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.75, subdivision 2, is
141.15amended to read:
141.16    Subd. 2. Refund; eligible persons. Upon application on forms prescribed by the
141.17commissioner, a refund equal to the tax paid on the gross receipts of the exempt items
141.18must be paid to the applicant. Only the following persons may apply for the refund:
141.19    (1) for subdivision 1, clauses (1), (2), and (16) (15), the applicant must be the
141.20purchaser;
141.21    (2) for subdivision 1, clauses clause (3) and (6), the applicant must be the
141.22governmental subdivision;
141.23    (3) for subdivision 1, clause (4), the applicant must be the recipient of the benefits
141.24provided in United States Code, title 38, chapter 21;
141.25    (4) for subdivision 1, clause (5), the applicant must be the owner of the homestead
141.26property;
141.27    (5) for subdivision 1, clause (7) (6), the owner of the qualified low-income housing
141.28project;
141.29    (6) for subdivision 1, clause (8) (7), the applicant must be a municipal electric utility
141.30or a joint venture of municipal electric utilities;
141.31    (7) for subdivision 1, clauses (9), (12), (13), (14) (8), (11), (12), (13), and (17) (16),
141.32the owner of the qualifying business; and
141.33    (8) for subdivision 1, clauses (9), (10), (11), and (15) (14), the applicant must be the
141.34governmental entity that owns or contracts for the project or facility.
142.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

142.2    Sec. 75. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 297A.75, subdivision 3, is
142.3amended to read:
142.4    Subd. 3. Application. (a) The application must include sufficient information
142.5to permit the commissioner to verify the tax paid. If the tax was paid by a contractor,
142.6subcontractor, or builder, under subdivision 1, clauses (3) to (15) (13), or (17) (15), the
142.7contractor, subcontractor, or builder must furnish to the refund applicant a statement
142.8including the cost of the exempt items and the taxes paid on the items unless otherwise
142.9specifically provided by this subdivision. The provisions of sections 289A.40 and
142.10289A.50 apply to refunds under this section.
142.11    (b) An applicant may not file more than two applications per calendar year for
142.12refunds for taxes paid on capital equipment exempt under section 297A.68, subdivision 5.
142.13    (c) Total refunds for purchases of items in section 297A.71, subdivision 40, must not
142.14exceed $5,000,000 in fiscal years 2010 and 2011. Applications for refunds for purchases
142.15of items in sections 297A.70, subdivision 3, paragraph (a), clause (11), and 297A.71,
142.16subdivision 40, must not be filed until after June 30, 2009.
142.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

142.18    Sec. 76. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297A.94, is amended to read:
142.19297A.94 DEPOSIT OF REVENUES.
142.20(a) Except as provided in this section, the commissioner shall deposit the revenues,
142.21including interest and penalties, derived from the taxes imposed by this chapter in the state
142.22treasury and credit them to the general fund.
142.23(b) The commissioner shall deposit taxes in the Minnesota agricultural and economic
142.24account in the special revenue fund if:
142.25(1) the taxes are derived from sales and use of property and services purchased for
142.26the construction and operation of an agricultural resource project; and
142.27(2) the purchase was made on or after the date on which a conditional commitment
142.28was made for a loan guaranty for the project under section 41A.04, subdivision 3.
142.29The commissioner of management and budget shall certify to the commissioner the date
142.30on which the project received the conditional commitment. The amount deposited in
142.31the loan guaranty account must be reduced by any refunds and by the costs incurred by
142.32the Department of Revenue to administer and enforce the assessment and collection of
142.33the taxes.
143.1(c) The commissioner shall deposit the revenues, including interest and penalties,
143.2derived from the taxes imposed on sales and purchases included in section 297A.61,
143.3subdivision 3
, paragraph (g), clauses (1) and (4), in the state treasury, and credit them
143.4as follows:
143.5(1) first to the general obligation special tax bond debt service account in each fiscal
143.6year the amount required by section 16A.661, subdivision 3, paragraph (b); and
143.7(2) after the requirements of clause (1) have been met, the balance to the general fund.
143.8(d) The commissioner shall deposit the revenues, including interest and penalties,
143.9collected under section 297A.64, subdivision 5, in the state treasury and credit them to the
143.10general fund. By July 15 of each year the commissioner shall transfer to the highway user
143.11tax distribution fund an amount equal to the excess fees collected under section 297A.64,
143.12subdivision 5
, for the previous calendar year.
143.13(e) For fiscal year 2001, 97 percent; for fiscal years 2002 and 2003, 87 percent; and
143.14For fiscal year 2004 and thereafter, 72.43 percent of the revenues, including interest and
143.15penalties, transmitted to the commissioner under section 297A.65, must be deposited by
143.16the commissioner in the state treasury as follows:
143.17(1) 50 percent of the receipts must be deposited in the heritage enhancement account
143.18in the game and fish fund, and may be spent only on activities that improve, enhance, or
143.19protect fish and wildlife resources, including conservation, restoration, and enhancement
143.20of land, water, and other natural resources of the state;
143.21(2) 22.5 percent of the receipts must be deposited in the natural resources fund, and
143.22may be spent only for state parks and trails;
143.23(3) 22.5 percent of the receipts must be deposited in the natural resources fund, and
143.24may be spent only on metropolitan park and trail grants;
143.25(4) three percent of the receipts must be deposited in the natural resources fund, and
143.26may be spent only on local trail grants; and
143.27(5) two percent of the receipts must be deposited in the natural resources fund,
143.28and may be spent only for the Minnesota Zoological Garden, the Como Park Zoo and
143.29Conservatory, and the Duluth Zoo.
143.30(f) The revenue dedicated under paragraph (e) may not be used as a substitute
143.31for traditional sources of funding for the purposes specified, but the dedicated revenue
143.32shall supplement traditional sources of funding for those purposes. Land acquired with
143.33money deposited in the game and fish fund under paragraph (e) must be open to public
143.34hunting and fishing during the open season, except that in aquatic management areas or
143.35on lands where angling easements have been acquired, fishing may be prohibited during
143.36certain times of the year and hunting may be prohibited. At least 87 percent of the money
144.1deposited in the game and fish fund for improvement, enhancement, or protection of fish
144.2and wildlife resources under paragraph (e) must be allocated for field operations.
144.3(g) The revenues deposited under paragraphs (a) to (f) do not include the revenues,
144.4including interest and penalties, generated by the sales tax imposed under section
144.5297A.62, subdivision 1a , which must be deposited as provided under the Minnesota
144.6Constitution, article XI, section 15.
144.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

144.8    Sec. 77. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297B.09, is amended to read:
144.9297B.09 ALLOCATION OF REVENUE.
144.10    Subdivision 1. Deposit of revenues. (a) Money collected and received under this
144.11chapter must be deposited as provided in this subdivision.
144.12    (b) From July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2008, 38.25 percent of the money collected
144.13and received must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund, 24 percent must
144.14be deposited in the metropolitan area transit account under section 16A.88, and 1.5 percent
144.15must be deposited in the greater Minnesota transit account under section 16A.88. The
144.16remaining money must be deposited in the general fund.
144.17    (c) From July 1, 2008, through June 30, 2009, 44.25 percent of the money collected
144.18and received must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund, 27.75 percent
144.19must be deposited in the metropolitan area transit account under section 16A.88, 1.75
144.20percent must be deposited in the greater Minnesota transit account under section 16A.88,
144.21and the remaining money must be deposited in the general fund.
144.22(d) From July 1, 2009, through June 30, 2010, 47.5 percent of the money collected
144.23and received must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund, 30 percent
144.24must be deposited in the metropolitan area transit account under section 16A.88, 3.5
144.25percent must be deposited in the greater Minnesota transit account under section 16A.88,
144.26and 16.25 percent must be deposited in the general fund. The remaining amount must
144.27be deposited as follows:
144.28(1) 1.5 percent in the metropolitan area transit account, except that any amount in
144.29excess of $6,000,000 must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund; and
144.30(2) 1.25 percent in the greater Minnesota transit account, except that any amount in
144.31excess of $5,000,000 must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund.
144.32(e) From July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2011, 54.5 percent of the money collected
144.33and received must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund, 33.75 percent
144.34must be deposited in the metropolitan area transit account under section 16A.88, 3.75
145.1
percent must be deposited in the greater Minnesota transit account under section 16A.88,
145.2and 6.25 percent must be deposited in the general fund. The remaining amount must
145.3be deposited as follows:
145.4(1) 1.5 percent in the metropolitan area transit account, except that any amount in
145.5excess of $6,750,000 must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund; and
145.6(2) 0.25 percent in the greater Minnesota transit account, except that any amount in
145.7excess of $1,250,000 must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund.
145.8    (f) On and after July 1, 2011, (b) 60 percent of the money collected and received
145.9must be deposited in the highway user tax distribution fund, 36 percent must be deposited
145.10in the metropolitan area transit account under section 16A.88, and four percent must be
145.11deposited in the greater Minnesota transit account under section 16A.88.
145.12(g) (c) It is the intent of the legislature that the allocations under paragraph (f) (b)
145.13 remain unchanged for fiscal year 2012 and all subsequent fiscal years.
145.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

145.15    Sec. 78. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297F.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
145.16    Subd. 2. Form of application. Every application for a cigarette or tobacco products
145.17license shall be made on a form prescribed by the commissioner and shall state the name
145.18and address of the applicant; if the applicant is a firm, partnership, or association, the name
145.19and address of each of its members; if the applicant is a corporation, the name and address
145.20of each of its officers; the address of its principal place of business; the place where the
145.21business to be licensed is to be conducted; and any other information the commissioner
145.22may require for the administration of this chapter.
145.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

145.24    Sec. 79. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 297I.05, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
145.25    Subd. 14. Life insurance. A tax is imposed on life insurance. The rate of tax equals
145.26a percentage 1.5 percent of gross premiums less return premiums on all direct business
145.27received by the insurer or agents of the insurer in Minnesota for life insurance, in cash or
145.28otherwise, during the year. For premiums received after December 31, 2005, but before
145.29January 1, 2007, the rate of tax is 1.875 percent. For premiums received after December
145.3031, 2006, but before January 1, 2008, the rate of tax is 1.75 percent. For premiums
145.31received after December 31, 2007, but before January 1, 2009, the rate of tax is 1.625
145.32percent. For premiums received after December 31, 2008, the rate of tax is 1.5 percent.
145.33EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

146.1    Sec. 80. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 412.131, is amended to read:
146.2412.131 ASSESSOR; DUTIES, COMPENSATION.
146.3The city assessor, if there is one, shall assess and return as provided by law all
146.4property taxable within the city, if a separate assessment district, and the assessor of the
146.5town within which the city lies shall not include in the return any property taxable in the
146.6city. Any assessor may appoint a deputy assessor as provided in section 273.06. The
146.7assessor may be compensated on a full-time or part-time basis at the option of the council
146.8but the compensation shall be not less than $100 in any one year, if fixed on an annual
146.9basis, or not more than $20 per day, if fixed on a per diem basis. If the compensation is
146.10not fixed by the council the assessor shall be entitled to compensation at the rate of $20
146.11per day for each days service necessarily rendered, and mileage at the rate paid other city
146.12officers for each mile necessarily traveled in going to and returning from the county seat of
146.13the county to attend any meeting of the assessors of the county legally called by the county
146.14auditor, and also for each mile necessarily traveled in making the return of assessment
146.15to the proper county officer and in attending sectional meetings called by the county
146.16assessor, except when mileage is paid by the county. In addition to other compensation,
146.17the council may allow the assessor mileage at the same rate per mile as paid other city
146.18officers for each mile necessarily traveled in assessment work.
146.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

146.20    Sec. 81. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 423A.022, subdivision 3,
146.21is amended to read:
146.22    Subd. 3. Reporting; definitions. (a) On or before September 1, annually, the
146.23executive director of the Public Employees Retirement Association shall report to the
146.24commissioner of revenue the following:
146.25    (1) the municipalities which employ firefighters with retirement coverage by the
146.26public employees police and fire retirement plan;
146.27    (2) the number of firefighters with public employees police and fire retirement plan
146.28coverage employed by each municipality;
146.29    (3) (2) the fire departments covered by the voluntary statewide lump-sum volunteer
146.30firefighter retirement plan; and
146.31    (4) (3) any other information requested by the commissioner to administer the police
146.32and firefighter retirement supplemental state aid program.
146.33    (b) For this subdivision, (i) the number of firefighters employed by a municipality
146.34who have public employees police and fire retirement plan coverage means the number
147.1of firefighters with public employees police and fire retirement plan coverage that were
147.2employed by the municipality for not less than 30 hours per week for a minimum of six
147.3months prior to December 31 preceding the date of the payment under this section and, if
147.4the person was employed for less than the full year, prorated to the number of full months
147.5employed; and (ii) the number of active police officers certified for police state aid receipt
147.6under section 69.011, subdivisions 2 and 2b, means, for each municipality, the number of
147.7police officers meeting the definition of peace officer in section 69.011, subdivision 1,
147.8counted as provided and limited by section 69.011, subdivisions 2 and 2b.
147.9EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

147.10    Sec. 82. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 469.176, subdivision 1b, is amended to read:
147.11    Subd. 1b. Duration limits; terms. (a) No tax increment shall in any event be
147.12paid to the authority:
147.13(1) after 15 years after receipt by the authority of the first increment for a renewal
147.14and renovation district;
147.15(2) after 20 years after receipt by the authority of the first increment for a soils
147.16condition district;
147.17(3) after eight years after receipt by the authority of the first increment for an
147.18economic development district;
147.19(4) for a housing district, a compact development district, or a redevelopment
147.20district, after 25 years from the date of receipt by the authority of the first increment.
147.21(b) For purposes of determining a duration limit under this subdivision or subdivision
147.221e that is based on the receipt of an increment, any increments from taxes payable in the year
147.23in which the district terminates shall be paid to the authority. This paragraph does not affect
147.24a duration limit calculated from the date of approval of the tax increment financing plan or
147.25based on the recovery of costs or to a duration limit under subdivision 1c. This paragraph
147.26does not supersede the restrictions on payment of delinquent taxes in subdivision 1f.
147.27(c) An action by the authority to waive or decline to accept an increment has no
147.28effect for purposes of computing a duration limit based on the receipt of increment under
147.29this subdivision or any other provision of law. The authority is deemed to have received an
147.30increment for any year in which it waived or declined to accept an increment, regardless
147.31of whether the increment was paid to the authority.
147.32(d) Receipt by a hazardous substance subdistrict of an increment as a result of a
147.33reduction in original net tax capacity under section 469.174, subdivision 7, paragraph
147.34(b), does not constitute receipt of increment by the overlying district for the purpose of
147.35calculating the duration limit under this section.
148.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

148.2    Sec. 83. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 469.176, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
148.3    Subd. 3. Limitation on administrative expenses. (a) For districts for which
148.4certification was requested before August 1, 1979, or after June 30, 1982 and before
148.5 August 1, 2001, no tax increment shall be used to pay any administrative expenses for
148.6a project which exceed ten percent of the total estimated tax increment expenditures
148.7authorized by the tax increment financing plan or the total tax increment expenditures
148.8for the project, whichever is less.
148.9(b) For districts for which certification was requested after July 31, 1979, and before
148.10July 1, 1982, no tax increment shall be used to pay administrative expenses, as defined in
148.11Minnesota Statutes 1980, section 273.73, for a district which exceeds five percent of the
148.12total tax increment expenditures authorized by the tax increment financing plan or the total
148.13estimated tax increment expenditures for the district, whichever is less.
148.14(c) (b) For districts for which certification was requested after July 31, 2001, no tax
148.15increment may be used to pay any administrative expenses for a project which exceed
148.16ten percent of total estimated tax increment expenditures authorized by the tax increment
148.17financing plan or the total tax increments, as defined in section 469.174, subdivision 25,
148.18clause (1), from the district, whichever is less.
148.19(d) (c) Increments used to pay the county's administrative expenses under
148.20subdivision 4h are not subject to the percentage limits in this subdivision.
148.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

148.22    Sec. 84. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 469.1763, subdivision 2,
148.23is amended to read:
148.24    Subd. 2. Expenditures outside district. (a) For each tax increment financing
148.25district, an amount equal to at least 75 percent of the total revenue derived from tax
148.26increments paid by properties in the district must be expended on activities in the district
148.27or to pay bonds, to the extent that the proceeds of the bonds were used to finance activities
148.28in the district or to pay, or secure payment of, debt service on credit enhanced bonds.
148.29For districts, other than redevelopment districts for which the request for certification
148.30was made after June 30, 1995, the in-district percentage for purposes of the preceding
148.31sentence is 80 percent. Not more than 25 percent of the total revenue derived from tax
148.32increments paid by properties in the district may be expended, through a development fund
148.33or otherwise, on activities outside of the district but within the defined geographic area of
148.34the project except to pay, or secure payment of, debt service on credit enhanced bonds.
149.1For districts, other than redevelopment districts for which the request for certification was
149.2made after June 30, 1995, the pooling percentage for purposes of the preceding sentence is
149.320 percent. The revenue derived from tax increments for the district that are expended on
149.4costs under section 469.176, subdivision 4h, paragraph (b), may be deducted first before
149.5calculating the percentages that must be expended within and without the district.
149.6    (b) In the case of a housing district, a housing project, as defined in section 469.174,
149.7subdivision 11
, is an activity in the district.
149.8    (c) All administrative expenses are for activities outside of the district, except that
149.9if the only expenses for activities outside of the district under this subdivision are for
149.10the purposes described in paragraph (d), administrative expenses will be considered as
149.11expenditures for activities in the district.
149.12    (d) The authority may elect, in the tax increment financing plan for the district,
149.13to increase by up to ten percentage points the permitted amount of expenditures for
149.14activities located outside the geographic area of the district under paragraph (a). As
149.15permitted by section 469.176, subdivision 4k, the expenditures, including the permitted
149.16expenditures under paragraph (a), need not be made within the geographic area of the
149.17project. Expenditures that meet the requirements of this paragraph are legally permitted
149.18expenditures of the district, notwithstanding section 469.176, subdivisions 4b, 4c, and 4j.
149.19To qualify for the increase under this paragraph, the expenditures must:
149.20    (1) be used exclusively to assist housing that meets the requirement for a qualified
149.21low-income building, as that term is used in section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code; and
149.22    (2) not exceed the qualified basis of the housing, as defined under section 42(c) of
149.23the Internal Revenue Code, less the amount of any credit allowed under section 42 of
149.24the Internal Revenue Code; and
149.25    (3) be used to:
149.26    (i) acquire and prepare the site of the housing;
149.27    (ii) acquire, construct, or rehabilitate the housing; or
149.28    (iii) make public improvements directly related to the housing; or
149.29(4) be used to develop housing:
149.30(i) if the market value of the housing does not exceed the lesser of:
149.31(A) 150 percent of the average market value of single-family homes in that
149.32municipality; or
149.33(B) $200,000 for municipalities located in the metropolitan area, as defined in
149.34section 473.121, or $125,000 for all other municipalities; and
149.35(ii) if the expenditures are used to pay the cost of site acquisition, relocation,
149.36demolition of existing structures, site preparation, and pollution abatement on one or
150.1more parcels, if the parcel contains a residence containing one to four family dwelling
150.2units that has been vacant for six or more months and is in foreclosure as defined in
150.3section 325N.10, subdivision 7, but without regard to whether the residence is the owner's
150.4principal residence, and only after the redemption period has expired.
150.5    (e) For a district created within a biotechnology and health sciences industry zone
150.6as defined in Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 469.330, subdivision 6, or for an existing
150.7district located within such a zone, tax increment derived from such a district may be
150.8expended outside of the district but within the zone only for expenditures required for the
150.9construction of public infrastructure necessary to support the activities of the zone, land
150.10acquisition, and other redevelopment costs as defined in section 469.176, subdivision 4j.
150.11These expenditures are considered as expenditures for activities within the district. The
150.12authority provided by this paragraph expires for expenditures made after the later of (1)
150.13December 31, 2015, or (2) the end of the five-year period beginning on the date the district
150.14was certified, provided that date was before January 1, 2016.
150.15(f) The authority under paragraph (d), clause (4), expires on December 31, 2016.
150.16Increments may continue to be expended under this authority after that date, if they are
150.17used to pay bonds or binding contracts that would qualify under subdivision 3, paragraph
150.18(a), if December 31, 2016, is considered to be the last date of the five-year period after
150.19certification under that provision.
150.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment
150.21and applies to all districts, regardless of when the request for certification was made.

150.22    Sec. 85. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 473.665, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
150.23    Subd. 5. Tax levy; surplus; reduction. The corporation, upon issuing any bonds
150.24under the provisions of this section, shall, before the issuance thereof, levy for each year,
150.25until the principal and interest are paid in full, a direct annual tax on all the taxable property
150.26of the cities in and for which the corporation has been created in an amount not less than
150.27five percent in excess of the sum required to pay the principal and interest thereof, when
150.28and as such principal and interest matures. After any of such bonds have been delivered to
150.29purchasers, such tax shall be irrepealable until all such indebtedness is paid, and after the
150.30issuance of such bonds no further action of the corporation shall be necessary to authorize
150.31the extensions, assessments, and collection of such tax. The secretary of the corporation
150.32shall forthwith furnish a certified copy of such levy to the county auditor or county
150.33auditors of the county or counties in which the cities in and for which the corporation has
150.34been created are located, together with full information regarding the bonds for which the
150.35tax is levied, and such county auditor or such county auditors, as the case may be, shall
151.1enter the same in the register provided for in section 475.62, or a similar register, and shall
151.2extend and assess the tax so levied. If both cities are located wholly within one county, the
151.3county auditor thereof shall annually extend and assess the amount of the tax so levied. If
151.4the cities are located in different counties, the county auditor of each such county shall
151.5annually extend and assess such portion of the tax levied as the net tax capacity of the
151.6taxable property, not including moneys and credits, located wholly within the city in such
151.7county bears to the total net tax capacity of the taxable property, not including moneys and
151.8credits, within both cities. Any surplus resulting from the excess levy herein provided
151.9for shall be transferred to a sinking fund after the principal and interest for which the tax
151.10was levied and collected has been paid; provided, that the corporation may, on or before
151.11October 15 in any year, by appropriate action, cause its secretary to certify to the county
151.12auditor, or auditors, the amount on hand and available in its treasury from earnings, or
151.13otherwise, including the amount in the sinking fund, which it will use to pay principal or
151.14interest or both on each specified issue of its bonds, and the county auditor or auditors
151.15shall reduce the levy for that year, herein provided for by that amount. The amount of
151.16funds so certified shall be set aside by the corporation, and be used for no other purpose
151.17than for the payment of the principal and interest of the bonds. All taxes hereunder shall
151.18be collected and remitted to the corporation by the county treasurer or county treasurers,
151.19in accordance with the provisions of law governing the collection of other taxes, and shall
151.20be used solely for the payment of the bonds where due.
151.21EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

151.22    Sec. 86. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 477A.0124, subdivision 5, is amended to
151.23read:
151.24    Subd. 5. County transition aid. (a) For 2009 and each year thereafter, A county is
151.25eligible to receive the transition aid it received in 2007.
151.26    (b) In 2009 only, a county with (1) a 2006 population less than 30,000, and (2)
151.27an average Part I crimes per capita greater than 3.9 percent based on factors used in
151.28determining county program aid payable in 2008, shall receive $100,000.
151.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

151.30    Sec. 87. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 477A.014, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
151.31    Subdivision 1. Calculations and payments. (a) The commissioner of revenue shall
151.32make all necessary calculations and make payments pursuant to sections 477A.013 and
151.33477A.03 directly to the affected taxing authorities annually. In addition, the commissioner
152.1shall notify the authorities of their aid amounts, as well as the computational factors used
152.2in making the calculations for their authority, and those statewide total figures that are
152.3pertinent, before August 1 of the year preceding the aid distribution year.
152.4(b) For the purposes of this subdivision, aid is determined for a city or town based
152.5on its city or town status as of June 30 of the year preceding the aid distribution year. If
152.6the effective date for a municipal incorporation, consolidation, annexation, detachment,
152.7dissolution, or township organization is on or before June 30 of the year preceding
152.8the aid distribution year, such change in boundaries or form of government shall be
152.9recognized for aid determinations for the aid distribution year. If the effective date for a
152.10municipal incorporation, consolidation, annexation, detachment, dissolution, or township
152.11organization is after June 30 of the year preceding the aid distribution year, such change in
152.12boundaries or form of government shall not be recognized for aid determinations until
152.13the following year.
152.14(c) Changes in boundaries or form of government will only be recognized for the
152.15purposes of this subdivision, to the extent that: (1) changes in market values are included
152.16in market values reported by assessors to the commissioner, and changes in population,
152.17 and household size, and the road accidents factor are included in their respective
152.18certifications to the commissioner as referenced in section 477A.011, or (2) an annexation
152.19information report as provided in paragraph (d) is received by the commissioner on
152.20or before July 15 of the aid calculation year. Revisions to estimates or data for use in
152.21recognizing changes in boundaries or form of government are not effective for purposes
152.22of this subdivision unless received by the commissioner on or before July 15 of the aid
152.23calculation year. Clerical errors in the certification or use of estimates and data established
152.24as of July 15 in the aid calculation year are subject to correction within the time periods
152.25allowed under subdivision 3.
152.26(d) In the case of an annexation, an annexation information report may be completed
152.27by the annexing jurisdiction and submitted to the commissioner for purposes of this
152.28subdivision if the net tax capacity of annexed area for the assessment year preceding the
152.29effective date of the annexation exceeds five percent of the city's net tax capacity for the
152.30same year. The form and contents of the annexation information report shall be prescribed
152.31by the commissioner. The commissioner shall change the net tax capacity, the population,
152.32the population decline, the commercial industrial percentage, and the transformed
152.33population for the annexing jurisdiction only if the annexation information report provides
152.34data the commissioner determines to be reliable for all of these factors used to compute city
152.35revenue need for the annexing jurisdiction. The commissioner shall adjust the pre-1940
152.36housing percentage, the road accidents factor, and household size only if the entire area of
153.1an existing city or town is annexed or consolidated and only if reliable data is available for
153.2all of these factors used to compute city revenue need for the annexing jurisdiction.
153.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

153.4    Sec. 88. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 611.27, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
153.5    Subd. 13. Public defense services; correctional facility inmates. All billings
153.6for services rendered and ordered under subdivision 7 shall require the approval of the
153.7chief district public defender before being forwarded on a monthly basis to the state
153.8public defender. In cases where adequate representation cannot be provided by the district
153.9public defender and where counsel has been appointed under a court order, the state
153.10public defender shall forward to the commissioner of management and budget all billings
153.11for services rendered under the court order. The commissioner shall pay for services
153.12from county program aid retained by the commissioner of revenue for that purpose under
153.13section 477A.0124, subdivision 1, clause (4), or 477A.03, subdivision 2b, paragraph (a).
153.14    The costs of appointed counsel and associated services in cases arising from new
153.15criminal charges brought against indigent inmates who are incarcerated in a Minnesota
153.16state correctional facility are the responsibility of the state Board of Public Defense. In
153.17such cases the state public defender may follow the procedures outlined in this section for
153.18obtaining court-ordered counsel.
153.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

153.20    Sec. 89. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 611.27, subdivision 15, is amended to read:
153.21    Subd. 15. Costs of transcripts. In appeal cases and postconviction cases where
153.22the appellate public defender's office does not have sufficient funds to pay for transcripts
153.23and other necessary expenses because it has spent or committed all of the transcript
153.24funds in its annual budget, the state public defender may forward to the commissioner
153.25of management and budget all billings for transcripts and other necessary expenses. The
153.26commissioner shall pay for these transcripts and other necessary expenses from county
153.27program aid retained by the commissioner of revenue for that purpose under section
153.28477A.0124, subdivision 1, clause (4), or 477A.03, subdivision 2b, paragraph (a).
153.29EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

153.30    Sec. 90. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
153.31The revisor of statutes shall make all necessary cross-reference changes in
153.32Minnesota Statutes and Minnesota Rules consistent with the amendments and repealers in
154.1this act. The revisor can make changes to sentence structure to preserve the meaning of
154.2the text. The revisor shall make other changes in chapter titles; section, subdivision, part,
154.3and subpart headnotes; and in other terminology necessary as a result of the enactment of
154.4this act. The Department of Revenue shall assist in making these corrections.

154.5    Sec. 91. REPEALER.
154.6(a) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 290.01, subdivision 19e; 290.0674,
154.7subdivision 3; and 290.33, and Minnesota Rules, part 8007.0200, are repealed.
154.8(b) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 16D.02, subdivisions 5 and 8; 16D.11,
154.9subdivision 2; 270C.131; 270C.53; 270C.991, subdivision 4; 272.02, subdivisions 1, 1a,
154.1048, 51, 53, 67, 72, and 82; 272.027, subdivision 2; 272.031; 273.015, subdivision 1;
154.11273.03, subdivision 3; 273.075; 273.1383; 273.1386; 273.80; 275.77; 279.32; 281.173,
154.12subdivision 8; 281.174, subdivision 8; 281.328; 282.10; 282.23; 287.20, subdivision 4;
154.13287.27, subdivision 2; 290.01, subdivisions 4b and 20e; 295.52, subdivision 7; 297A.71,
154.14subdivisions 4, 5, 7, 10, 17, 18, 20, and 32; 297F.08, subdivision 11; 297H.10, subdivision
154.152; 469.174, subdivision 10c; 469.175, subdivision 2b; 469.176, subdivision 1i; 469.177,
154.16subdivision 10; 477A.0124, subdivisions 1 and 6; and 505.173, and Minnesota Rules,
154.17parts 8002.0200, subpart 8; 8100.0800; 8130.7500, subpart 7; 8130.8900, subpart 3; and
154.188130.9500, subparts 1, 1a, 2, 3, 4, and 5, are repealed.
154.19(c) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 3.192, is repealed.
154.20(d) Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 469.1764, and Minnesota Statutes 2013
154.21Supplement, section 469.340, subdivision 4, are repealed.
154.22(e) Minnesota Statutes 2012, sections 289A.56, subdivision 7; 290.06, subdivisions
154.2330 and 31; 297A.68, subdivision 38; 469.330; 469.331; 469.332; 469.333; 469.334;
154.24469.335; 469.336; 469.337; 469.338; 469.339; 469.340, subdivisions 1, 2, 3, and 5; and
154.25469.341, are repealed.
154.26EFFECTIVE DATE.Paragraph (a) is effective for taxable years beginning after
154.27December 31, 2013.
154.28Paragraph (b) is effective the day following final enactment.
154.29Paragraph (c) is effective retroactively from April 1, 2014.
154.30Paragraph (d) is effective the day following final enactment and any remaining
154.31unexpended tax increments from a district subject to Minnesota Statutes, section 469.1764,
154.32must be distributed as excess increments to the city, county, and school district under
154.33Minnesota Statutes, section 469.176, subdivision 2, paragraph (c), clause (4), on or before
154.34December 31, 2014.
154.35Paragraph (e) is effective January 1, 2016.

155.1ARTICLE 8
155.2DEPARTMENT POLICY AND TECHNICAL; PROPERTY

155.3    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270.87, is amended to read:
155.4270.87 CERTIFICATION TO COUNTY ASSESSORS.
155.5After making an annual determination of the equalized fair market value of the
155.6operating property of each company in each of the respective counties, and in the taxing
155.7districts therein, the commissioner shall certify the equalized fair market value to the
155.8county assessor on or before June 30. The equalized fair market value of the operating
155.9property of the railroad company in the county and the taxing districts therein is the value
155.10on which taxes must be levied and collected in the same manner as on the commercial and
155.11industrial property of such county and the taxing districts therein. If the commissioner
155.12determines that the equalized fair market value certified on or before June 30 is in error,
155.13the commissioner may issue a corrected certification on or before August 31. The
155.14commissioner may correct errors that are merely clerical in nature until December 31.
155.15EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

155.16    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 272.029, subdivision 4a, is amended to read:
155.17    Subd. 4a. Correction of errors. If the commissioner of revenue determines that
155.18the amount of production tax has been erroneously calculated, the commissioner may
155.19correct the error. The commissioner must notify the owner of the wind energy conversion
155.20system of the correction and the amount of tax due to each county and must certify the
155.21correction to the county auditor of each county in which the system is located on or before
155.22April 1 of the current year. The commissioner may correct errors that are merely clerical
155.23in nature until December 31.
155.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

155.25    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.01, is amended to read:
155.26273.01 LISTING AND ASSESSMENT, TIME.
155.27All real property subject to taxation shall be listed and at least one-fifth of the parcels
155.28listed shall be appraised each year with reference to their value on January 2 preceding the
155.29assessment so that each parcel shall be reappraised at maximum intervals of five years. All
155.30real property becoming taxable in any year shall be listed with reference to its value on
155.31January 2 of that year. Except as provided in this section and section 274.01, subdivision
155.321
, all real property assessments shall be completed two weeks prior to the date scheduled
156.1for the local board of review or equalization. No changes in valuation or classification
156.2which are intended to correct errors in judgment by the county assessor may be made by
156.3the county assessor after the board of review or the county board of equalization has
156.4adjourned; however, corrections of errors for real or personal property that are merely
156.5clerical in nature or changes that extend homestead treatment to property are permitted
156.6after adjournment until the tax extension date for that assessment year. Any changes made
156.7by the assessor after adjournment must be fully documented and maintained in a file in the
156.8assessor's office and shall be available for review by any person. A copy of any changes
156.9made during this period shall be sent to the county board no later than December 31 of
156.10the assessment year. In the event a valuation and classification is not placed on any real
156.11property by the dates scheduled for the local board of review or equalization the valuation
156.12and classification determined in the preceding assessment shall be continued in effect and
156.13the provisions of section 273.13 shall, in such case, not be applicable, except with respect
156.14to real estate which has been constructed since the previous assessment. Real property
156.15containing iron ore, the fee to which is owned by the state of Minnesota, shall, if leased by
156.16the state after January 2 in any year, be subject to assessment for that year on the value of
156.17any iron ore removed under said lease prior to January 2 of the following year. Personal
156.18property subject to taxation shall be listed and assessed annually with reference to its value
156.19on January 2; and, if acquired on that day, shall be listed by or for the person acquiring it.
156.20EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

156.21    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.13, subdivision 22, is amended to read:
156.22    Subd. 22. Class 1. (a) Except as provided in subdivision 23 and in paragraphs (b)
156.23and (c), real estate which is residential and used for homestead purposes is class 1a. In the
156.24case of a duplex or triplex in which one of the units is used for homestead purposes, the
156.25entire property is deemed to be used for homestead purposes. The market value of class 1a
156.26property must be determined based upon the value of the house, garage, and land.
156.27    The first $500,000 of market value of class 1a property has a net class classification
156.28 rate of one percent of its market value; and the market value of class 1a property that
156.29exceeds $500,000 has a class classification rate of 1.25 percent of its market value.
156.30    (b) Class 1b property includes homestead real estate or homestead manufactured
156.31homes used for the purposes of a homestead by:
156.32    (1) any person who is blind as defined in section 256D.35, or the blind person and
156.33the blind person's spouse;
156.34    (2) any person who is permanently and totally disabled or by the disabled person and
156.35the disabled person's spouse; or
157.1    (3) the surviving spouse of a permanently and totally disabled veteran homesteading
157.2a property classified under this paragraph for taxes payable in 2008.
157.3    Property is classified and assessed under clause (2) only if the government agency or
157.4income-providing source certifies, upon the request of the homestead occupant, that the
157.5homestead occupant satisfies the disability requirements of this paragraph, and that the
157.6property is not eligible for the valuation exclusion under subdivision 34.
157.7    Property is classified and assessed under paragraph (b) only if the commissioner
157.8of revenue or the county assessor certifies that the homestead occupant satisfies the
157.9requirements of this paragraph.
157.10    Permanently and totally disabled for the purpose of this subdivision means a
157.11condition which is permanent in nature and totally incapacitates the person from working
157.12at an occupation which brings the person an income. The first $50,000 market value of
157.13class 1b property has a net class classification rate of .45 percent of its market value. The
157.14remaining market value of class 1b property has a class classification rate using the rates
157.15for class 1a or class 2a property, whichever is appropriate, of similar market value.
157.16    (c) Class 1c property is commercial use real and personal property that abuts public
157.17water as defined in section 103G.005, subdivision 15, and is devoted to temporary and
157.18seasonal residential occupancy for recreational purposes but not devoted to commercial
157.19purposes for more than 250 days in the year preceding the year of assessment, and that
157.20includes a portion used as a homestead by the owner, which includes a dwelling occupied
157.21as a homestead by a shareholder of a corporation that owns the resort, a partner in a
157.22partnership that owns the resort, or a member of a limited liability company that owns the
157.23resort even if the title to the homestead is held by the corporation, partnership, or limited
157.24liability company. For purposes of this paragraph, property is devoted to a commercial
157.25purpose on a specific day if any portion of the property, excluding the portion used
157.26exclusively as a homestead, is used for residential occupancy and a fee is charged for
157.27residential occupancy. Class 1c property must contain three or more rental units. A "rental
157.28unit" is defined as a cabin, condominium, townhouse, sleeping room, or individual camping
157.29site equipped with water and electrical hookups for recreational vehicles. Class 1c property
157.30must provide recreational activities such as the rental of ice fishing houses, boats and
157.31motors, snowmobiles, downhill or cross-country ski equipment; provide marina services,
157.32launch services, or guide services; or sell bait and fishing tackle. Any unit in which the
157.33right to use the property is transferred to an individual or entity by deeded interest, or the
157.34sale of shares or stock, no longer qualifies for class 1c even though it may remain available
157.35for rent. A camping pad offered for rent by a property that otherwise qualifies for class 1c
157.36is also class 1c, regardless of the term of the rental agreement, as long as the use of the
158.1camping pad does not exceed 250 days. If the same owner owns two separate parcels that
158.2are located in the same township, and one of those properties is classified as a class 1c
158.3property and the other would be eligible to be classified as a class 1c property if it was
158.4used as the homestead of the owner, both properties will be assessed as a single class 1c
158.5property; for purposes of this sentence, properties are deemed to be owned by the same
158.6owner if each of them is owned by a limited liability company, and both limited liability
158.7companies have the same membership. The portion of the property used as a homestead
158.8is class 1a property under paragraph (a). The remainder of the property is classified as
158.9follows: the first $600,000 of market value is tier I, the next $1,700,000 of market value is
158.10tier II, and any remaining market value is tier III. The class classification rates for class 1c
158.11are: tier I, 0.50 percent; tier II, 1.0 percent; and tier III, 1.25 percent. Owners of real and
158.12personal property devoted to temporary and seasonal residential occupancy for recreation
158.13purposes in which all or a portion of the property was devoted to commercial purposes for
158.14not more than 250 days in the year preceding the year of assessment desiring classification
158.15as class 1c, must submit a declaration to the assessor designating the cabins or units
158.16occupied for 250 days or less in the year preceding the year of assessment by January 15 of
158.17the assessment year. Those cabins or units and a proportionate share of the land on which
158.18they are located must be designated as class 1c as otherwise provided. The remainder of
158.19the cabins or units and a proportionate share of the land on which they are located must be
158.20designated as class 3a commercial. The owner of property desiring designation as class
158.211c property must provide guest registers or other records demonstrating that the units for
158.22which class 1c designation is sought were not occupied for more than 250 days in the
158.23year preceding the assessment if so requested. The portion of a property operated as a
158.24(1) restaurant, (2) bar, (3) gift shop, (4) conference center or meeting room, and (5) other
158.25nonresidential facility operated on a commercial basis not directly related to temporary
158.26and seasonal residential occupancy for recreation purposes does not qualify for class 1c.
158.27    (d) Class 1d property includes structures that meet all of the following criteria:
158.28    (1) the structure is located on property that is classified as agricultural property under
158.29section 273.13, subdivision 23;
158.30    (2) the structure is occupied exclusively by seasonal farm workers during the time
158.31when they work on that farm, and the occupants are not charged rent for the privilege of
158.32occupying the property, provided that use of the structure for storage of farm equipment
158.33and produce does not disqualify the property from classification under this paragraph;
158.34    (3) the structure meets all applicable health and safety requirements for the
158.35appropriate season; and
159.1    (4) the structure is not salable as residential property because it does not comply
159.2with local ordinances relating to location in relation to streets or roads.
159.3    The market value of class 1d property has the same class rates as class 1a property
159.4under paragraph (a) a classification rate of one percent on the first $500,000 of market
159.5value and a classification rate of 1.25 percent on the market value that exceeds $500,000.
159.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with assessment year 2014.

159.7    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 273.13, subdivision 25, is
159.8amended to read:
159.9    Subd. 25. Class 4. (a) Class 4a is residential real estate containing four or more
159.10units and used or held for use by the owner or by the tenants or lessees of the owner
159.11as a residence for rental periods of 30 days or more, excluding property qualifying for
159.12class 4d. Class 4a also includes hospitals licensed under sections 144.50 to 144.56, other
159.13than hospitals exempt under section 272.02, and contiguous property used for hospital
159.14purposes, without regard to whether the property has been platted or subdivided. The
159.15market value of class 4a property has a class classification rate of 1.25 percent.
159.16    (b) Class 4b includes:
159.17    (1) residential real estate containing less than four units that does not qualify as class
159.184bb, other than seasonal residential recreational property;
159.19    (2) manufactured homes not classified under any other provision;
159.20    (3) a dwelling, garage, and surrounding one acre of property on a nonhomestead
159.21farm classified under subdivision 23, paragraph (b) containing two or three units; and
159.22    (4) unimproved property that is classified residential as determined under subdivision
159.2333.
159.24    The market value of class 4b property has a class classification rate of 1.25 percent.
159.25    (c) Class 4bb includes nonhomestead residential real estate containing one unit,
159.26other than seasonal residential recreational property, and a single family dwelling, garage,
159.27and surrounding one acre of property on a nonhomestead farm classified under subdivision
159.2823, paragraph (b).
159.29    Class 4bb property has the same class rates as class 1a property under subdivision 22
159.30 a classification rate of one percent on the first $500,000 of market value and a classification
159.31rate of 1.25 percent on the market value that exceeds $500,000.
159.32    Property that has been classified as seasonal residential recreational property at
159.33any time during which it has been owned by the current owner or spouse of the current
159.34owner does not qualify for class 4bb.
159.35    (d) Class 4c property includes:
160.1    (1) except as provided in subdivision 22, paragraph (c), real and personal property
160.2devoted to commercial temporary and seasonal residential occupancy for recreation
160.3purposes, for not more than 250 days in the year preceding the year of assessment. For
160.4purposes of this clause, property is devoted to a commercial purpose on a specific day
160.5if any portion of the property is used for residential occupancy, and a fee is charged for
160.6residential occupancy. Class 4c property under this clause must contain three or more
160.7rental units. A "rental unit" is defined as a cabin, condominium, townhouse, sleeping room,
160.8or individual camping site equipped with water and electrical hookups for recreational
160.9vehicles. A camping pad offered for rent by a property that otherwise qualifies for class
160.104c under this clause is also class 4c under this clause regardless of the term of the rental
160.11agreement, as long as the use of the camping pad does not exceed 250 days. In order for a
160.12property to be classified under this clause, either (i) the business located on the property
160.13must provide recreational activities, at least 40 percent of the annual gross lodging receipts
160.14related to the property must be from business conducted during 90 consecutive days,
160.15and either (A) at least 60 percent of all paid bookings by lodging guests during the year
160.16must be for periods of at least two consecutive nights; or (B) at least 20 percent of the
160.17annual gross receipts must be from charges for providing recreational activities, or (ii) the
160.18business must contain 20 or fewer rental units, and must be located in a township or a city
160.19with a population of 2,500 or less located outside the metropolitan area, as defined under
160.20section 473.121, subdivision 2, that contains a portion of a state trail administered by the
160.21Department of Natural Resources. For purposes of item (i)(A), a paid booking of five or
160.22more nights shall be counted as two bookings. Class 4c property also includes commercial
160.23use real property used exclusively for recreational purposes in conjunction with other class
160.244c property classified under this clause and devoted to temporary and seasonal residential
160.25occupancy for recreational purposes, up to a total of two acres, provided the property is
160.26not devoted to commercial recreational use for more than 250 days in the year preceding
160.27the year of assessment and is located within two miles of the class 4c property with which
160.28it is used. In order for a property to qualify for classification under this clause, the owner
160.29must submit a declaration to the assessor designating the cabins or units occupied for 250
160.30days or less in the year preceding the year of assessment by January 15 of the assessment
160.31year. Those cabins or units and a proportionate share of the land on which they are located
160.32must be designated class 4c under this clause as otherwise provided. The remainder of the
160.33cabins or units and a proportionate share of the land on which they are located will be
160.34designated as class 3a. The owner of property desiring designation as class 4c property
160.35under this clause must provide guest registers or other records demonstrating that the units
160.36for which class 4c designation is sought were not occupied for more than 250 days in the
161.1year preceding the assessment if so requested. The portion of a property operated as a
161.2(1) restaurant, (2) bar, (3) gift shop, (4) conference center or meeting room, and (5) other
161.3nonresidential facility operated on a commercial basis not directly related to temporary and
161.4seasonal residential occupancy for recreation purposes does not qualify for class 4c. For
161.5the purposes of this paragraph, "recreational activities" means renting ice fishing houses,
161.6boats and motors, snowmobiles, downhill or cross-country ski equipment; providing
161.7marina services, launch services, or guide services; or selling bait and fishing tackle;
161.8    (2) qualified property used as a golf course if:
161.9    (i) it is open to the public on a daily fee basis. It may charge membership fees or
161.10dues, but a membership fee may not be required in order to use the property for golfing,
161.11and its green fees for golfing must be comparable to green fees typically charged by
161.12municipal courses; and
161.13    (ii) it meets the requirements of section 273.112, subdivision 3, paragraph (d).
161.14    A structure used as a clubhouse, restaurant, or place of refreshment in conjunction
161.15with the golf course is classified as class 3a property;
161.16    (3) real property up to a maximum of three acres of land owned and used by a
161.17nonprofit community service oriented organization and not used for residential purposes
161.18on either a temporary or permanent basis, provided that:
161.19    (i) the property is not used for a revenue-producing activity for more than six days
161.20in the calendar year preceding the year of assessment; or
161.21    (ii) the organization makes annual charitable contributions and donations at least
161.22equal to the property's previous year's property taxes and the property is allowed to be
161.23used for public and community meetings or events for no charge, as appropriate to the
161.24size of the facility.
161.25    For purposes of this clause:
161.26    (A) "charitable contributions and donations" has the same meaning as lawful
161.27gambling purposes under section 349.12, subdivision 25, excluding those purposes
161.28relating to the payment of taxes, assessments, fees, auditing costs, and utility payments;
161.29    (B) "property taxes" excludes the state general tax;
161.30    (C) a "nonprofit community service oriented organization" means any corporation,
161.31society, association, foundation, or institution organized and operated exclusively for
161.32charitable, religious, fraternal, civic, or educational purposes, and which is exempt from
161.33federal income taxation pursuant to section 501(c)(3), (8), (10), or (19) of the Internal
161.34Revenue Code; and
161.35    (D) "revenue-producing activities" shall include but not be limited to property or that
161.36portion of the property that is used as an on-sale intoxicating liquor or 3.2 percent malt
162.1liquor establishment licensed under chapter 340A, a restaurant open to the public, bowling
162.2alley, a retail store, gambling conducted by organizations licensed under chapter 349, an
162.3insurance business, or office or other space leased or rented to a lessee who conducts a
162.4for-profit enterprise on the premises.
162.5    Any portion of the property not qualifying under either item (i) or (ii) is class 3a.
162.6The use of the property for social events open exclusively to members and their guests
162.7for periods of less than 24 hours, when an admission is not charged nor any revenues are
162.8received by the organization shall not be considered a revenue-producing activity.
162.9    The organization shall maintain records of its charitable contributions and donations
162.10and of public meetings and events held on the property and make them available upon
162.11request any time to the assessor to ensure eligibility. An organization meeting the
162.12requirement under item (ii) must file an application by May 1 with the assessor for
162.13eligibility for the current year's assessment. The commissioner shall prescribe a uniform
162.14application form and instructions;
162.15    (4) postsecondary student housing of not more than one acre of land that is owned by
162.16a nonprofit corporation organized under chapter 317A and is used exclusively by a student
162.17cooperative, sorority, or fraternity for on-campus housing or housing located within two
162.18miles of the border of a college campus;
162.19    (5)(i) manufactured home parks as defined in section 327.14, subdivision 3,
162.20excluding manufactured home parks described in section 273.124, subdivision 3a, and (ii)
162.21manufactured home parks as defined in section 327.14, subdivision 3, that are described in
162.22section 273.124, subdivision 3a;
162.23    (6) real property that is actively and exclusively devoted to indoor fitness, health,
162.24social, recreational, and related uses, is owned and operated by a not-for-profit corporation,
162.25and is located within the metropolitan area as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2;
162.26    (7) a leased or privately owned noncommercial aircraft storage hangar not exempt
162.27under section 272.01, subdivision 2, and the land on which it is located, provided that:
162.28    (i) the land is on an airport owned or operated by a city, town, county, Metropolitan
162.29Airports Commission, or group thereof; and
162.30    (ii) the land lease, or any ordinance or signed agreement restricting the use of the
162.31leased premise, prohibits commercial activity performed at the hangar.
162.32    If a hangar classified under this clause is sold after June 30, 2000, a bill of sale must
162.33be filed by the new owner with the assessor of the county where the property is located
162.34within 60 days of the sale;
162.35    (8) a privately owned noncommercial aircraft storage hangar not exempt under
162.36section 272.01, subdivision 2, and the land on which it is located, provided that:
163.1    (i) the land abuts a public airport; and
163.2    (ii) the owner of the aircraft storage hangar provides the assessor with a signed
163.3agreement restricting the use of the premises, prohibiting commercial use or activity
163.4performed at the hangar; and
163.5    (9) residential real estate, a portion of which is used by the owner for homestead
163.6purposes, and that is also a place of lodging, if all of the following criteria are met:
163.7    (i) rooms are provided for rent to transient guests that generally stay for periods
163.8of 14 or fewer days;
163.9    (ii) meals are provided to persons who rent rooms, the cost of which is incorporated
163.10in the basic room rate;
163.11    (iii) meals are not provided to the general public except for special events on fewer
163.12than seven days in the calendar year preceding the year of the assessment; and
163.13    (iv) the owner is the operator of the property.
163.14    The market value subject to the 4c classification under this clause is limited to
163.15five rental units. Any rental units on the property in excess of five, must be valued and
163.16assessed as class 3a. The portion of the property used for purposes of a homestead by the
163.17owner must be classified as class 1a property under subdivision 22;
163.18    (10) real property up to a maximum of three acres and operated as a restaurant
163.19as defined under section 157.15, subdivision 12, provided it: (A) is located on a lake
163.20as defined under section 103G.005, subdivision 15, paragraph (a), clause (3); and (B)
163.21is either devoted to commercial purposes for not more than 250 consecutive days, or
163.22receives at least 60 percent of its annual gross receipts from business conducted during
163.23four consecutive months. Gross receipts from the sale of alcoholic beverages must be
163.24included in determining the property's qualification under subitem (B). The property's
163.25primary business must be as a restaurant and not as a bar. Gross receipts from gift shop
163.26sales located on the premises must be excluded. Owners of real property desiring 4c
163.27classification under this clause must submit an annual declaration to the assessor by
163.28February 1 of the current assessment year, based on the property's relevant information for
163.29the preceding assessment year;
163.30(11) lakeshore and riparian property and adjacent land, not to exceed six acres, used
163.31as a marina, as defined in section 86A.20, subdivision 5, which is made accessible to
163.32the public and devoted to recreational use for marina services. The marina owner must
163.33annually provide evidence to the assessor that it provides services, including lake or river
163.34access to the public by means of an access ramp or other facility that is either located on
163.35the property of the marina or at a publicly owned site that abuts the property of the marina.
163.36No more than 800 feet of lakeshore may be included in this classification. Buildings used
164.1in conjunction with a marina for marina services, including but not limited to buildings
164.2used to provide food and beverage services, fuel, boat repairs, or the sale of bait or fishing
164.3tackle, are classified as class 3a property; and
164.4(12) real and personal property devoted to noncommercial temporary and seasonal
164.5residential occupancy for recreation purposes.
164.6    Class 4c property has a class classification rate of 1.5 percent of market value, except
164.7that (i) each parcel of noncommercial seasonal residential recreational property under
164.8clause (12) has the same class rates as class 4bb property a classification rate of one percent
164.9on the first $500,000 of market value and a classification rate of 1.25 percent on the market
164.10value that exceeds $500,000, (ii) manufactured home parks assessed under clause (5), item
164.11(i), have the same class rate as class 4b property a classification rate of 1.25 percent, and
164.12the market value of manufactured home parks assessed under clause (5), item (ii), has the
164.13same class rate as class 4d property have a classification rate of 0.75 percent if more than 50
164.14percent of the lots in the park are occupied by shareholders in the cooperative corporation
164.15or association and a class classification rate of one percent if 50 percent or less of the lots
164.16are so occupied, (iii) commercial-use seasonal residential recreational property and marina
164.17recreational land as described in clause (11), has a class classification rate of one percent
164.18for the first $500,000 of market value, and 1.25 percent for the remaining market value, (iv)
164.19the market value of property described in clause (4) has a class classification rate of one
164.20percent, (v) the market value of property described in clauses (2), (6), and (10) has a class
164.21 classification rate of 1.25 percent, and (vi) that portion of the market value of property in
164.22clause (9) qualifying for class 4c property has a class classification rate of 1.25 percent.
164.23    (e) Class 4d property is qualifying low-income rental housing certified to the assessor
164.24by the Housing Finance Agency under section 273.128, subdivision 3. If only a portion
164.25of the units in the building qualify as low-income rental housing units as certified under
164.26section 273.128, subdivision 3, only the proportion of qualifying units to the total number
164.27of units in the building qualify for class 4d. The remaining portion of the building shall be
164.28classified by the assessor based upon its use. Class 4d also includes the same proportion of
164.29land as the qualifying low-income rental housing units are to the total units in the building.
164.30For all properties qualifying as class 4d, the market value determined by the assessor must
164.31be based on the normal approach to value using normal unrestricted rents.
164.32    (f) The first tier of market value of class 4d property has a class classification rate
164.33of 0.75 percent. The remaining value of class 4d property has a class classification
164.34 rate of 0.25 percent. For the purposes of this paragraph, the "first tier of market value
164.35of class 4d property" means the market value of each housing unit up to the first tier
164.36limit. For the purposes of this paragraph, all class 4d property value must be assigned
165.1to individual housing units. The first tier limit is $100,000 for assessment year 2014.
165.2For subsequent years, the limit is adjusted each year by the average statewide change in
165.3estimated market value of property classified as class 4a and 4d under this section for the
165.4previous assessment year, excluding valuation change due to new construction, rounded to
165.5the nearest $1,000, provided, however, that the limit may never be less than $100,000.
165.6Beginning with assessment year 2015, the commissioner of revenue must certify the limit
165.7for each assessment year by November 1 of the previous year.
165.8EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with assessment year 2014.

165.9    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 273.1325, subdivision 1, is
165.10amended to read:
165.11    Subdivision 1. Computation. The Department of Revenue must annually conduct
165.12an assessment/sales ratio study of the taxable property in each county, city, town, and
165.13school district in accordance with the procedures in subdivisions 2 and 3. Based upon the
165.14results of this assessment/sales ratio study, the Department of Revenue must determine
165.15an equalized net tax capacity for the various classes of taxable property in each taxing
165.16district, the aggregate of which is designated as the adjusted net tax capacity. The adjusted
165.17net tax capacity must be reduced by the captured tax capacity of tax increment districts
165.18under section 469.177, subdivision 2, fiscal disparities contribution tax capacities under
165.19sections 276A.06 and 473F.08, and the tax capacity of transmission lines required to be
165.20subtracted from the local tax base under section 273.425; and increased by fiscal disparities
165.21distribution tax capacities under sections 276A.06 and 473F.08. The adjusted net tax
165.22capacities shall be determined using the net tax capacity percentages in effect for the
165.23assessment year following the assessment year of the study. The Department of Revenue
165.24must make whatever estimates are necessary to account for changes in the classification
165.25system. The Department of Revenue may incur the expense necessary to make the
165.26determinations. The commissioner of revenue may reimburse any county or governmental
165.27official for requested services performed in ascertaining the adjusted net tax capacity. On
165.28or before March 15 annually, the Department of Revenue shall file with the chair of the
165.29Tax Committee of the house of representatives and the chair of the Committee on Taxes
165.30and Tax laws of the senate a report of adjusted net tax capacities for school districts.
165.31On or before June 15 30 annually, the Department of Revenue shall file its final report
165.32on the adjusted net tax capacities for school districts established by the previous year's
165.33assessments and the current year's net tax capacity percentages with the commissioner of
165.34education and each county auditor for those school districts for which the auditor has the
165.35responsibility for determination of local tax rates. A copy of the report so filed shall be
166.1mailed to the clerk of each school district involved and to the county assessor or supervisor
166.2of assessments of the county or counties in which each school district is located.
166.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective January 1, 2014.

166.4    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.33, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
166.5    Subd. 2. Listing and assessment by commissioner. The personal property,
166.6consisting of the pipeline system of mains, pipes, and equipment attached thereto, of
166.7pipeline companies and others engaged in the operations or business of transporting natural
166.8gas, gasoline, crude oil, or other petroleum products by pipelines, shall be listed with and
166.9assessed by the commissioner of revenue and the values provided to the city or county
166.10assessor by order. This subdivision shall not apply to the assessment of the products
166.11transported through the pipelines nor to the lines of local commercial gas companies
166.12engaged primarily in the business of distributing gas to consumers at retail nor to pipelines
166.13used by the owner thereof to supply natural gas or other petroleum products exclusively
166.14for such owner's own consumption and not for resale to others. If more than 85 percent
166.15of the natural gas or other petroleum products actually transported over the pipeline is
166.16used for the owner's own consumption and not for resale to others, then this subdivision
166.17shall not apply; provided, however, that in that event, the pipeline shall be assessed in
166.18proportion to the percentage of gas actually transported over such pipeline that is not used
166.19for the owner's own consumption. On or before August 1, the commissioner shall certify
166.20to the auditor of each county, the amount of such personal property assessment against
166.21each company in each district in which such property is located. If the commissioner
166.22determines that the amount of personal property assessment certified on or before August
166.231 is in error, the commissioner may issue a corrected certification on or before October 1.
166.24 The commissioner may correct errors that are merely clerical in nature until December 31.
166.25EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

166.26    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.37, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
166.27    Subd. 2. Listing and assessment by commissioner. Transmission lines of less
166.28than 69 kv, transmission lines of 69 kv and above located in an unorganized township,
166.29and distribution lines, and equipment attached thereto, having a fixed situs outside the
166.30corporate limits of cities except distribution lines taxed as provided in sections 273.40
166.31and 273.41, shall be listed with and assessed by the commissioner of revenue in the
166.32county where situated and the values provided to the city or county assessor by order.
166.33The commissioner shall assess such property at the percentage of market value fixed by
167.1law; and, on or before August 1, shall certify to the auditor of each county in which
167.2such property is located the amount of the assessment made against each company and
167.3person owning such property. If the commissioner determines that the amount of the
167.4assessment certified on or before August 1 is in error, the commissioner may issue a
167.5corrected certification on or before October 1. The commissioner may correct errors that
167.6are merely clerical in nature until December 31.
167.7EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

167.8    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 273.3711, is amended to read:
167.9273.3711 RECOMMENDED AND ORDERED VALUES.
167.10    For purposes of sections 273.33, 273.35, 273.36, 273.37, 273.371, and 273.372,
167.11all values not required to be listed and assessed by the commissioner of revenue are
167.12recommended values. If the commissioner provides recommended values, the values must
167.13be certified to the auditor of each county in which the property is located on or before
167.14August 1. If the commissioner determines that the certified recommended value is in
167.15error the commissioner may issue a corrected certification on or before October 1. The
167.16commissioner may correct errors that are merely clerical in nature until December 31.
167.17EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

167.18    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 274.01, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
167.19    Subdivision 1. Ordinary board; meetings, deadlines, grievances. (a) The town
167.20board of a town, or the council or other governing body of a city, is the board of appeal
167.21and equalization except (1) in cities whose charters provide for a board of equalization or
167.22(2) in any city or town that has transferred its local board of review power and duties to
167.23the county board as provided in subdivision 3. The county assessor shall fix a day and
167.24time when the board or the board of equalization shall meet in the assessment districts
167.25of the county. Notwithstanding any law or city charter to the contrary, a city board of
167.26equalization shall be referred to as a board of appeal and equalization. On or before
167.27February 15 of each year the assessor shall give written notice of the time to the city or
167.28town clerk. Notwithstanding the provisions of any charter to the contrary, the meetings
167.29must be held between April 1 and May 31 each year. The clerk shall give published and
167.30posted notice of the meeting at least ten days before the date of the meeting.
167.31    The board shall meet either at a central location within the county or at the office of
167.32the clerk to review the assessment and classification of property in the town or city. No
167.33changes in valuation or classification which are intended to correct errors in judgment by
168.1the county assessor may be made by the county assessor after the board has adjourned
168.2in those cities or towns that hold a local board of review; however, corrections of errors
168.3that are merely clerical in nature or changes that extend homestead treatment to property
168.4are permitted after adjournment until the tax extension date for that assessment year. The
168.5changes must be fully documented and maintained in the assessor's office and must be
168.6available for review by any person. A copy of the changes made during this period in
168.7those cities or towns that hold a local board of review must be sent to the county board no
168.8later than December 31 of the assessment year.
168.9    (b) The board shall determine whether the taxable property in the town or city has
168.10been properly placed on the list and properly valued by the assessor. If real or personal
168.11property has been omitted, the board shall place it on the list with its market value, and
168.12correct the assessment so that each tract or lot of real property, and each article, parcel,
168.13or class of personal property, is entered on the assessment list at its market value. No
168.14assessment of the property of any person may be raised unless the person has been
168.15duly notified of the intent of the board to do so. On application of any person feeling
168.16aggrieved, the board shall review the assessment or classification, or both, and correct
168.17it as appears just. The board may not make an individual market value adjustment or
168.18classification change that would benefit the property if the owner or other person having
168.19control over the property has refused the assessor access to inspect the property and the
168.20interior of any buildings or structures as provided in section 273.20. A board member
168.21shall not participate in any actions of the board which result in market value adjustments
168.22or classification changes to property owned by the board member, the spouse, parent,
168.23stepparent, child, stepchild, grandparent, grandchild, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew,
168.24or niece of a board member, or property in which a board member has a financial interest.
168.25The relationship may be by blood or marriage.
168.26    (c) A local board may reduce assessments upon petition of the taxpayer but the total
168.27reductions must not reduce the aggregate assessment made by the county assessor by more
168.28than one percent. If the total reductions would lower the aggregate assessments made by
168.29the county assessor by more than one percent, none of the adjustments may be made. The
168.30assessor shall correct any clerical errors or double assessments discovered by the board
168.31without regard to the one percent limitation.
168.32    (d) A local board does not have authority to grant an exemption or to order property
168.33removed from the tax rolls.
168.34    (e) A majority of the members may act at the meeting, and adjourn from day to day
168.35until they finish hearing the cases presented. The assessor shall attend, with the assessment
168.36books and papers, and take part in the proceedings, but must not vote. The county assessor,
169.1or an assistant delegated by the county assessor shall attend the meetings. The board shall
169.2list separately, on a form appended to the assessment book, all omitted property added
169.3to the list by the board and all items of property increased or decreased, with the market
169.4value of each item of property, added or changed by the board, placed opposite the item.
169.5The county assessor shall enter all changes made by the board in the assessment book.
169.6    (f) Except as provided in subdivision 3, if a person fails to appear in person, by
169.7counsel, or by written communication before the board after being duly notified of the
169.8board's intent to raise the assessment of the property, or if a person feeling aggrieved by an
169.9assessment or classification fails to apply for a review of the assessment or classification,
169.10the person may not appear before the county board of appeal and equalization for a review
169.11of the assessment or classification. This paragraph does not apply if an assessment was
169.12made after the local board meeting, as provided in section 273.01, or if the person can
169.13establish not having received notice of market value at least five days before the local
169.14board meeting.
169.15    (g) The local board must complete its work and adjourn within 20 days from the
169.16time of convening stated in the notice of the clerk, unless a longer period is approved by
169.17the commissioner of revenue. No action taken after that date is valid. All complaints
169.18about an assessment or classification made after the meeting of the board must be heard
169.19and determined by the county board of equalization. A nonresident may, at any time,
169.20before the meeting of the board file written objections to an assessment or classification
169.21with the county assessor. The objections must be presented to the board at its meeting by
169.22the county assessor for its consideration.
169.23EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

169.24    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 274.014, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
169.25    Subd. 3. Proof of compliance; transfer of duties. (a) Any city or town that
169.26conducts local boards of appeal and equalization meetings must provide proof to the
169.27county assessor by December 1, 2006 February 15, 2015, and each year thereafter, that it
169.28is in compliance with the requirements of subdivision 2. Beginning in 2006 2015, this
169.29notice must also verify that there was a quorum of voting members at each meeting of the
169.30board of appeal and equalization in the current year. A city or town that does not comply
169.31with these requirements is deemed to have transferred its board of appeal and equalization
169.32powers to the county beginning with the following year's assessment and continuing
169.33unless the powers are reinstated under paragraph (c).
169.34    (b) The county shall notify the taxpayers when the board of appeal and equalization
169.35for a city or town has been transferred to the county under this subdivision and, prior to
170.1the meeting time of the county board of equalization, the county shall make available to
170.2those taxpayers a procedure for a review of the assessments, including, but not limited to,
170.3open book meetings. This alternate review process shall take place in April and May.
170.4    (c) A local board whose powers are transferred to the county under this subdivision
170.5may be reinstated by resolution of the governing body of the city or town and upon proof
170.6of compliance with the requirements of subdivision 2. The resolution and proofs must be
170.7provided to the county assessor by December 1 February 15 in order to be effective for
170.8the following year's assessment.
170.9    (d) A local board whose powers are transferred to the county under this subdivision
170.10may continue to employ a local assessor and is not deemed to have transferred its powers
170.11to make assessments.
170.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective beginning with local boards of appeal
170.13and equalization meetings held after December 31, 2014.

170.14    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 423A.02, subdivision 3, is
170.15amended to read:
170.16    Subd. 3. Reallocation of amortization state aid. (a) Seventy percent of the
170.17difference between $5,720,000 and the current year amortization aid distributed under
170.18subdivision 1 that is not distributed for any reason to a municipality must be distributed
170.19by the commissioner of revenue according to this paragraph. The commissioner shall
170.20distribute 50 percent of the amounts derived under this paragraph to the Teachers
170.21Retirement Association, ten percent to the Duluth Teachers Retirement Fund Association,
170.22and 40 percent to the St. Paul Teachers Retirement Fund Association to fund the unfunded
170.23actuarial accrued liabilities of the respective funds. These payments must be made on July
170.2415 each fiscal year. If the St. Paul Teachers Retirement Fund Association or the Duluth
170.25Teachers Retirement Fund Association becomes fully funded, the association's eligibility
170.26for its portion of this aid ceases. Amounts remaining in the undistributed balance account
170.27at the end of the biennium if aid eligibility ceases cancel to the general fund.
170.28    (b) In order to receive amortization aid under paragraph (a), before June 30 annually
170.29Independent School District No. 625, St. Paul, must make an additional contribution of
170.30$800,000 each year to the St. Paul Teachers Retirement Fund Association.
170.31    (c) Thirty percent of the difference between $5,720,000 and the current year
170.32amortization aid under subdivision 1a 1 that is not distributed for any reason to a
170.33municipality must be distributed under section 69.021, subdivision 7, paragraph (d), as
170.34additional funding to support a minimum fire state aid amount for volunteer firefighter
170.35relief associations.
171.1EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from June 1, 2013.

171.2    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 477A.14, subdivision 1, is
171.3amended to read:
171.4    Subdivision 1. General distribution. Except as provided in subdivisions 2 and 3,
171.540 percent of the total payment to the county shall be deposited in the county general
171.6revenue fund to be used to provide property tax levy reduction. The remainder shall be
171.7distributed by the county in the following priority:
171.8(a) (1) 64.2 cents, for each acre of county-administered other natural resources land
171.9shall be deposited in a resource development fund to be created within the county treasury
171.10for use in resource development, forest management, game and fish habitat improvement,
171.11and recreational development and maintenance of county-administered other natural
171.12resources land. Any county receiving less than $5,000 annually for the resource
171.13development fund may elect to deposit that amount in the county general revenue fund;
171.14(b) from the funds remaining, (2) within 30 days of receipt of the payment to
171.15the county, the county treasurer shall pay each organized township ten percent of the
171.16amount received a township with land that qualifies for payment under section 477A.12,
171.17subdivision 1
, clauses (1), (2), and (5) to (7), ten percent of the payment the county
171.18received for such land within that township. Payments for natural resources lands not
171.19located in an organized township shall be deposited in the county general revenue fund.
171.20Payments to counties and townships pursuant to this paragraph shall be used to provide
171.21property tax levy reduction, except that of the payments for natural resources lands not
171.22located in an organized township, the county may allocate the amount determined to be
171.23necessary for maintenance of roads in unorganized townships. Provided that, if the total
171.24payment to the county pursuant to section 477A.12 is not sufficient to fully fund the
171.25distribution provided for in this clause, the amount available shall be distributed to each
171.26township and the county general revenue fund on a pro rata basis; and
171.27(c) (3) any remaining funds shall be deposited in the county general revenue fund.
171.28Provided that, if the distribution to the county general revenue fund exceeds $35,000, the
171.29excess shall be used to provide property tax levy reduction.
171.30EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2014.

171.31    Sec. 14. REVISOR'S INSTRUCTION.
171.32The revisor of statutes shall change the terms "class rate" or "class rates" to
171.33"classification rate" or "classification rates" or similar terms whenever they appear in
171.34Minnesota Statutes when the terms are used to refer to the calculation of net tax capacity
172.1in the property tax system. The revisor can make changes to sentence structure to preserve
172.2the meaning of the text. The revisor shall make other changes in section and subdivision
172.3headnotes and in other terminology as necessary as a result of the enactment of this
172.4section. The Department of Revenue shall assist in making these corrections.

172.5ARTICLE 9
172.6DEPARTMENT POLICY AND TECHNICAL; INCOME AND
172.7FRANCHISE; SALES AND USE

172.8    Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.34, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
172.9    Subd. 2. Procedure. (a) A request for abatement of penalty under subdivision 1 or
172.10section 289A.60, subdivision 4, or a request for abatement of interest or additional tax
172.11charge, must be filed with the commissioner within 60 days of the date the notice was
172.12mailed to the taxpayer's last known address, stating that a penalty has been imposed.
172.13(b) If the commissioner issues an order denying a request for abatement of penalty,
172.14interest, or additional tax charge, the taxpayer may file an administrative appeal as
172.15provided in section 270C.35 or appeal to Tax Court as provided in section 271.06.
172.16(c) If the commissioner does not issue an order on the abatement request within
172.1760 days from the date the request is received, the taxpayer may appeal to Tax Court as
172.18provided in section 271.06.
172.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

172.20    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 270C.56, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
172.21    Subd. 3. Procedure for assessment; claims for refunds. (a) The commissioner
172.22may assess liability for the taxes described in subdivision 1 against a person liable
172.23under this section. The assessment may be based upon information available to the
172.24commissioner. It must be made within the prescribed period of limitations for assessing
172.25the underlying tax, or within one year after the date of an order assessing underlying
172.26tax, or within one year after the date of a final administrative or judicial determination,
172.27whichever period expires later. An order assessing personal liability under this section is
172.28reviewable under section 270C.35 and is appealable to Tax Court.
172.29(b) If the time for appealing the order has expired and a payment is made by or
172.30collected from the person assessed on the order in excess of the amount lawfully due
172.31from that person of any portion of the liability shown on the order, a claim for refund
172.32may be made by that person within 120 days after any payment of the liability if the
172.33payment is within 3-1/2 years after the date the order was issued. Claims for refund under
173.1this paragraph are limited to the amount paid during the 120-day period. Any amounts
173.2collected under paragraph (c) after a claim for refund is filed in order to satisfy the unpaid
173.3balance of the assessment that is the subject of the claim shall be returned if the claim is
173.4allowed. There is no claim for refund available under this paragraph if the assessment has
173.5previously been the subject of an administrative or Tax Court appeal, or a denied claim
173.6for refund. The taxpayer may contest denial of the refund as provided in the procedures
173.7governing claims for refunds under section 289A.50, subdivision 7.
173.8(c) If a person has been assessed under this section for an amount for a given period
173.9and the time for appeal has expired, regardless of whether an action contesting denial of a
173.10claim for refund has been filed under paragraph (b), or there has been a final determination
173.11that the person is liable, collection action is not stayed pursuant to section 270C.33,
173.12subdivision 5
, for that assessment or for subsequent assessments of additional amounts for
173.13the same person for the same period and tax type.
173.14EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

173.15    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 289A.18, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
173.16    Subd. 2. Withholding returns, entertainer withholding returns, returns for
173.17withholding from payments to out-of-state contractors, and withholding returns
173.18from partnerships and S corporations. (a) Withholding returns for the first, second,
173.19 and third quarters are due on or before the last day of the month following the close of
173.20the quarterly period. However, if the return shows timely deposits in full payment of
173.21the taxes due for that period, the returns for the first, second, and third quarters may be
173.22filed on or before the tenth day of the second calendar month following the period. The
173.23return for the fourth quarter must be filed on or before the 28th day of the second calendar
173.24month following the period. An employer, in preparing a quarterly return, may take credit
173.25for deposits previously made for that quarter. Entertainer withholding tax returns are
173.26due within 30 days after each performance. Returns for withholding from payments to
173.27out-of-state contractors are due within 30 days after the payment to the contractor. Returns
173.28for withholding by partnerships are due on or before the due date specified for filing
173.29partnership returns. Returns for withholding by S corporations are due on or before the
173.30due date specified for filing corporate franchise tax returns.
173.31(b) A seasonal employer who provides notice in the form and manner prescribed
173.32by the commissioner before the end of the calendar quarter is not required to file a
173.33withholding tax return for periods of anticipated inactivity unless the employer pays wages
173.34during the period from which tax is withheld. For purposes of this paragraph, a seasonal
174.1employer is an employer that regularly, in the same one or more quarterly periods of each
174.2calendar year, pays no wages to employees.
174.3EFFECTIVE DATE.(a) The amendments in paragraph (a) are effective for returns
174.4due after January 1, 2016.
174.5(b) The amendment adding paragraph (b) is effective for wages paid after December
174.631, 2015.

174.7    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2012, section 296A.01, subdivision 16, is amended to read:
174.8    Subd. 16. Dyed fuel. "Dyed fuel" means diesel motor fuel to which indelible dye
174.9has been added, either before or upon withdrawal at a terminal or refinery rack, and which
174.10may be sold for exempt purposes. The dye may be either dye required to be added per the
174.11EPA or dye that meets other specifications required by the Internal Revenue Service or
174.12the commissioner.
174.13EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

174.14    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2013 Supplement, section 403.162, subdivision 5, is
174.15amended to read:
174.16    Subd. 5. Fees deposited. (a) The commissioner of revenue shall, based on
174.17the relative proportion of the prepaid wireless E911 fee and the prepaid wireless
174.18telecommunications access Minnesota fee imposed per retail transaction, divide the fees
174.19collected in corresponding proportions. Within 30 days of receipt of the collected fees,
174.20the commissioner shall:
174.21(1) deposit the proportion of the collected fees attributable to the prepaid wireless
174.22E911 fee in the 911 emergency telecommunications service account in the special revenue
174.23fund; and
174.24(2) deposit the proportion of collected fees attributable to the prepaid wireless
174.25telecommunications access Minnesota fee in the telecommunications access fund
174.26established in section 237.52, subdivision 1.
174.27(b) The department commissioner of revenue may deduct and retain deposit in a
174.28special revenue account an amount, not to exceed two percent of collected fees,. Money
174.29in the account is annually appropriated to the commissioner of revenue to reimburse its
174.30direct costs of administering the collection and remittance of prepaid wireless E911 fees
174.31and prepaid wireless telecommunications access Minnesota fees.
174.32EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from January 1, 2014.

175.1    Sec. 6. Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 3, the effective date, is amended to
175.2read:
175.3EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective for sales and purchases made after
175.4June 30, 2013, except for paragraph (p), which is effective the day following final
175.5enactment.
175.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from the day following
175.7final enactment of Laws 2013, chapter 143, article 8, section 3.

175.8    Sec. 7. REPEALER.
175.9Minnesota Rules, parts 8130.8900, subpart 3; and 8130.9500, subparts 1, 1a, 2,
175.103, 4, and 5, are repealed.
175.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.