Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
CHAPTER 372-S.F.No. 2392
An act relating to public safety; modifying emergency
911 telephone system provisions to establish emergency
911 telecommunications system; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2000, sections 403.01; 403.02, subdivisions
3, 6, 7, by adding subdivisions; 403.05; 403.06;
403.07; 403.08; 403.09; 403.10, subdivision 1; 403.11,
subdivisions 3, 4, by adding subdivisions; 403.113,
subdivision 1; Minnesota Statutes 2001 Supplement,
section 403.11, subdivision 1; repealing Minnesota
Statutes 2000, sections 403.04; 403.11, subdivision 2;
403.113, subdivision 5; 403.12, subdivision 1; 403.13;
403.14; Minnesota Rules, parts 1215.0400; 1215.0600;
1215.0700; 1215.1200, subpart 3; 1215.1500.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.01, is
amended to read:
403.01 [911 EMERGENCY TELEPHONE TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
REQUIRED.]
Subdivision 1. [GENERAL REQUIREMENT.] Each county in the
metropolitan area shall establish operate and maintain a 911
emergency telephone telecommunications system on or before
December 15, 1982 and each remaining county shall establish a
911 emergency telephone system on or before December 15, 1986.
Subd. 1a. [EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBER 911.] The digits
911, so designated by the Federal Communications Commission,
must be the primary emergency telephone number within the
system. A public safety agency may maintain a separate
secondary backup number for emergency calls and shall maintain a
separate number for nonemergency telephone calls.
Subd. 2. [MULTIJURISDICTIONAL SYSTEM.] The 911 systems may
be multijurisdictional and regional in character provided that
design and implementation are preceded by cooperative planning
on a county-by-county basis with local public safety agencies.
Subd. 3. [WIRELINE REQUIREMENTS.] Every owner and operator
of a wireline telecommunications system shall design and
maintain the system to dial the 911 number without charge to the
caller.
Subd. 4. [WIRELESS REQUIREMENTS.] Every owner and operator
of a wireless telecommunications system shall design and
maintain the system to dial the 911 number without charge to the
caller.
Subd. 5. [PAY PHONE REQUIREMENTS.] Every pay phone owner
and operator shall permit dialing of the 911 number without coin
and without charge to the caller.
Subd. 6. [MULTISTATION OR PBX SYSTEM.] Every owner and
operator of a multistation or private branch exchange (PBX)
telecommunications system shall design and maintain the system
to dial the 911 number without charge to the caller.
Subd. 7. [CONTRACTUAL REQUIREMENT.] (a) The state,
together with the county or other governmental agencies
operating public safety answering points, shall contract with
the appropriate wireline telecommunications service providers
for the operation, maintenance, enhancement, and expansion of
the 911 system.
(b) The state shall contract with the appropriate wireless
telecommunications service providers for maintaining, enhancing,
and expanding the 911 system.
(c) The contract language or subsequent amendments to the
contract must include a description of the services to be
furnished by wireless and wireline telecommunications service
providers to the county or other governmental agencies operating
public safety answering points, as well as compensation based on
the effective tariff or price list approved by the public
utilities commission. The contract language or subsequent
amendments must include the terms of compensation based on the
effective tariff or price list filed with the public utilities
commission or the prices agreed to by the parties.
(d) The contract language or subsequent amendments to
contracts between the parties must contain a provision for
resolving disputes.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.02,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [PUBLIC GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY.] "Public
Governmental agency" means any unit of local government or
special purpose district located in whole or in part within this
state which that provides or has authority to provide fire
fighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other emergency
services.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.02,
subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. [MINIMUM 911 SERVICE STANDARDS.] "Minimum 911
service" means a telephone telecommunications service meeting
the design standards established pursuant to section 403.07,
which that automatically connects a person dialing the digits
911 to an established public safety answering point. Minimum
911 service includes (1) equipment for connecting and
outswitching 911 calls within a telephone central office,
trunking facilities from the central office to a public safety
answering point; (2) equipment, as appropriate, for
automatically selectively routing 911 calls in situations where
one telephone central office serves more than one public safety
answering point; and (3) provision of automatic location
identification if the public safety answering point has the
capability of providing that service.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.02,
subdivision 7, is amended to read:
Subd. 7. [AUTOMATIC LOCATION IDENTIFICATION.] "Automatic
location identification" means the process of electronically
identifying and displaying on a special viewing screen the name
of the subscriber and the address location, where available, of
the calling telephone number to a person answering a 911
emergency call.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 11. [WIRELINE TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICE
PROVIDER.] "Wireline telecommunications service provider" means
a person, firm, association, corporation, or other legal entity,
however organized, or combination of them, authorized by state
or federal regulatory agencies to furnish telecommunications
service, including local service, over wireline facilities.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 12. [WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICE
PROVIDER.] "Wireless telecommunications service provider" means
a provider of commercial mobile radio services, as that term is
defined in United States Code, title 47, section 332, subsection
(d), including all broadband personal communications services,
wireless radio telephone services, geographic area specialized
and enhanced specialized mobile radio services, and incumbent
wide area specialized mobile radio licensees, that offers real
time, two-way voice service interconnected with the public
switched telephone network and that is doing business in the
state of Minnesota.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.05, is
amended to read:
403.05 [DESIGN OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF 911 SYSTEM,
GENERALLY SYSTEMS.]
Subdivision 1. [OPERATE AND MAINTAIN.] Each county or any
other governmental agency shall design operate and maintain its
911 system to meet the requirements of governmental agencies
whose services are available through the 911 system and to
permit future expansion or enhancement of the system. Each
county or any other governmental agency shall ensure that a 911
emergency call made with a wireless access device is
automatically connected to and answered by the appropriate
public safety answering point.
Subd. 2. [REQUIREMENTS.] Each county or any other
governmental agency shall maintain and update its 911 system
plans as required under Minnesota Rules, chapter 1215.
Subd. 3. [AGREEMENTS FOR SERVICE.] Each county and any
other governmental agency shall contract with the state and
wireline telecommunications service providers for the recurring
and nonrecurring costs associated with operating and maintaining
911 emergency communications systems.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.06, is
amended to read:
403.06 [911 SYSTEM PLANNING AND COORDINATION DEPARTMENT
DUTIES.]
Subdivision 1. [DUTIES.] The department of administration
shall coordinate the implementation maintenance of 911
systems on or before the deadlines established in section
403.01. The department shall aid counties in the formulation of
concepts, methods and procedures which will improve the
operation and maintenance of 911 systems. The department shall
establish procedures for determining and evaluating requests for
variations from the established design standards. The
department shall respond to requests by wireless or wireline
telecommunications service providers or by counties or other
governmental agencies for system agreements, contracts, and
tariff language promptly and no later than within 45 days of the
request unless otherwise mutually agreed to by the parties. The
department shall prepare a biennial budget for maintaining the
911 system. The department shall prepare an annual report to
the legislature detailing the expenditures for maintaining the
911 system, the 911 fees collected, the balance of the 911 fund,
and the 911-related administrative expenses of the department.
The department is authorized to expend funds that have been
appropriated to pay for the maintenance, enhancements, and
expansion of the 911 system.
Subd. 2. [WAIVER.] Any county, other governmental agency,
wireless telecommunications service provider, or wireline
telecommunications service provider may petition the department
of administration for a waiver of all or portions of the
requirements. A waiver may be granted upon a demonstration by
the petitioner that the requirement is economically infeasible.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.07, is
amended to read:
403.07 [STANDARDS ESTABLISHED; DATA PRIVACY.]
Subdivision 1. [RULES.] The department of administration
shall establish and adopt in accordance with chapter 14, rules
for the administration of this chapter and for the development
of 911 systems in the state including:
(a) design standards for 911 systems incorporating the
standards adopted pursuant to subdivision 2 for the seven-county
metropolitan area; and
(b) a procedure for determining and evaluating requests for
variations from the established design standards.
Subd. 2. [DESIGN STANDARDS.] The metropolitan council 911
board shall establish and adopt design standards for the
metropolitan area 911 system and transmit them to the department
of administration for incorporation into the rules adopted
pursuant to this section.
Subd. 3. [DATABASE.] In 911 systems that have been
approved by the department of administration for a local
location identification base database, each public utility
providing telephone wireline telecommunications service provider
shall provide current customer names, service addresses, and
telephone numbers to each public safety answering point within
the 911 system and shall update the information according to a
schedule prescribed by the county 911 plan. Information provided
under this subdivision must be provided in accordance with the
transactional record disclosure requirements of the federal
Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, United States
Code, title 18, section 2703, subsection (c), paragraph (1),
clause (B)(iv).
Subd. 4. [USE OF FURNISHED INFORMATION.] Names, addresses,
and telephone numbers provided to a 911 system under subdivision
3 are private data and may be used only for identifying the
location or identity, or both, of a person calling a 911 public
safety answering point. The information furnished under
subdivision 3 may not be used or disclosed by 911 system
agencies, their agents, or their employees for any other purpose
except under a court order.
Subd. 5. [LIABILITY.] A wireline telecommunications
service provider, its employees, or its agents are not liable to
any person who uses enhanced 911 telecommunications service for
release of subscriber information required under this chapter to
any public safety answering point. A telephone company
or wireline telecommunications service provider is not liable to
any person for the good faith release to emergency
communications personnel of information not in the public
record, including, but not limited to, nonpublished or nonlisted
telephone numbers. A wireline telecommunications service
provider, its employees, or its agents are not liable to any
person for civil damages resulting from or caused by any act or
omission in the development, design, installation, operation,
maintenance, performance, or provision of enhanced 911
telecommunications service, except for willful or wanton
misconduct.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.08, is
amended to read:
403.08 [911 SYSTEM PLANS SUBMITTED; CHANGE; WAIVER WIRELESS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICE PROVIDER.]
Subdivision 1. [TENTATIVE PLAN.] (a) Before December 15,
1978, each county shall submit tentative plans for the
establishment of a 911 system to the public utility or utilities
providing public telephone service within the county, to the
department of administration and to the public utilities
commission.
(b) The department of administration shall review the plan
for consistency with the standards adopted pursuant to section
403.07 and report its findings to the county within six months
of receipt of the plan.
(c) The public utilities commission shall review the plan
and comment to the county within six months of the receipt of
the plan.
(d) Each public utility providing telephone service within
the county shall review the plan and transmit to the county good
faith estimates of local system implementation expenses within
six months of the receipt of the plan.
Subd. 2. [FINAL PLAN.] (a) Before December 15, 1979, each
county shall submit final plans for the establishment of a 911
system to the public utility or utilities providing public
telephone service within the county, to the department of
administration and to the public utilities commission. The
final plan shall include a description of all capital and
recurring costs for the proposed 911 system.
(b) The department of administration shall review the final
plan for consistency with the standards adopted pursuant to
section 403.07 and approve or disapprove the plan within six
months of receipt.
(c) The public utilities commission shall review the final
plan and determine that portion of plan implementation capital
costs which may be applied to the utility company rate base and
report findings to the county within six months of receipt of
the plan.
Subd. 3. [IMPLEMENTATION CONTRACT.] After department of
administration approval of design and public utilities
commission report of findings, each county, together with the
department of administration and the local governmental units or
public agencies operating public safety answering points, shall
contract with the appropriate public utility or utilities for
the implementation of the approved 911 system plan.
Subd. 4. [EXCEPTION.] Each county implementing a 911
system before December 15, 1978, shall submit to the department
of administration and the public utilities commission in lieu of
the required plan a report describing the system and stating its
operational date.
Subd. 5. [SYSTEM CHANGE AFTER DECEMBER 14, 1978.] Any
subsequent changes to 911 systems described in subdivision 4
shall conform to standards established by the department of
administration pursuant to section 403.07.
Subd. 6. [WAIVER.] After adoption of final 911 system
plans, any county or utility may petition the department of
administration for a waiver of all or portions of the
requirements or time limits of sections 403.01 to 403.08.
Waivers shall be granted upon a demonstration by petitioner that
the requirement is economically infeasible in the sense that
federal or state funding for the initial capital investment
required of the county to implement a 911 system is not
available.
Subd. 7. [CELLULAR OR OTHER NONWIRE PROVIDER DUTIES.] (a)
Each cellular and other wireless access telecommunications
service provider shall cooperate in planning and implementing
integration with enhanced 911 systems operating in their service
territories to meet Federal Communications Commission-enhanced
911 standards. By August 1, 1997, each 911 emergency telephone
telecommunications service provider operating enhanced 911
systems, in cooperation with each involved cellular or other
wireless access telecommunications service provider, shall
develop and provide to the commissioner good-faith estimates of
installation and recurring expenses to integrate
cellular wireless 911 service into the enhanced 911 networks to
meet Federal Communications Commission phase one wireless
enhanced 911 standards. The commissioner shall coordinate with
counties and affected public safety agency representatives in
developing a statewide design and plan for implementation.
(b) Subd. 8. [SCHEDULE.] Planning shall be completed by
October 1, 1997, for the metropolitan area and shall be
completed by December 1, 1997, for the areas outside of the
metropolitan area.
(c) Subd. 9. [SCOPE.] Planning considerations must include
cost, degree of integration into existing 911 systems, the
retention of existing 911 infrastructure, and the potential
implications of phase 2 of the Federal Communications Commission
wireless enhanced 911 standards.
(d) Subd. 10. [PLAN INTEGRATION.] Counties shall
incorporate the statewide design when modifying county 911 plans
to provide for integrating wireless 911 service into existing
county 911 systems. The commissioner shall contract with the
involved wireless service providers and 911 service providers to
integrate cellular and other wireless services into existing 911
systems where feasible.
Subd. 11. [LIABILITY.] No wireless enhanced 911 emergency
telecommunications service provider, its employees, or its
agents are liable to any person for civil damages resulting from
or caused by any act or omission in the development, design,
installation, operation, maintenance, performance, or provision
of enhanced 911 wireless service, except for willful or wanton
misconduct. No wireless carrier, its employees, or its agents
are liable to any person who uses enhanced 911 wireless service
for release of subscriber information required under this
chapter to any public safety answering point.
Subd. 12. [NOTIFICATION OF SUBSCRIBER.] A provider of
wireless telecommunications services shall notify its
subscribers at the time of initial subscription and four times
per year thereafter that a 911 emergency call made from a
wireless telephone is not always answered by a local public
safety answering point but may be routed to a state patrol
dispatcher and that, accordingly, the caller must provide
specific information regarding the caller's location.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.09, is
amended to read:
403.09 [ENFORCEMENT.]
Subdivision 1. [DEPARTMENT AUTHORITY.] At the request of
the department of administration, the attorney general may
commence proceedings in the district court against any person or
public or private body to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
Subd. 2. [PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION AUTHORITY.] At the
request of the public utilities commission, the attorney general
may commence proceedings before the district court pursuant to
section 237.27, against any public utility providing
telephone wireline telecommunications service which provider
that refuses to comply with this chapter.
Subd. 3. [DISPUTE RESOLUTION.] Disputes between parties
must be resolved pursuant to section 403.01, subdivision 7,
paragraph (d).
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.10,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [AUTHORITY.] In counties implementing 911
systems pursuant to sections 403.01 to 403.08, All public
agencies and counties which that are part of different 911
systems but share common boundary lines may enter into
cooperative agreements which shall to provide that once an
emergency unit is dispatched in response to a request through
the system, the unit shall render its services to the requesting
party without regard to jurisdictional boundaries.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2001 Supplement, section
403.11, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [EMERGENCY TELEPHONE SERVICE FEE.] (a) Each
customer of a telephone company or communications carrier that
provides wireless or wireline telecommunications service
provider that furnishes service capable of originating a 911
emergency telephone call is assessed a fee to cover the costs of
ongoing maintenance and related improvements for trunking and
central office switching equipment for minimum 911 emergency
telephone telecommunications service, plus administrative and
staffing costs of the department of administration related to
managing the 911 emergency telephone telecommunications service
program. Recurring charges by a public utility providing
telephone service wireline telecommunications service provider
for updating the information required by section 403.07,
subdivision 3, must be paid by the commissioner of
administration if the utility wireline telecommunications
service provider is included in an approved 911 plan and the
charges have been certified and approved under subdivision 3 are
made pursuant to tariff, price list, or contract. The
commissioner of administration shall transfer an amount equal to
two cents a month from the fee assessed under this section
on cellular and other nonwire access wireless telecommunications
services to the commissioner of public safety for the purpose of
offsetting the costs, including administrative and staffing
costs, incurred by the state patrol division of the department
of public safety in handling 911 emergency calls made
from cellular wireless phones.
(b) Money remaining in the 911 emergency telephone
telecommunications service account after all other obligations
are paid must not cancel and is carried forward to subsequent
years and may be appropriated from time to time to the
commissioner of administration to provide financial assistance
to counties for the improvement of local emergency
telephone telecommunications services. The improvements may
include providing access to minimum 911 service for telephone
telecommunications service subscribers currently without access
and upgrading existing 911 service to include automatic number
identification, local location identification, automatic
location identification, and other improvements specified in
revised county 911 plans approved by the department.
(b) (c) The fee is 27 cents a month for each customer
access line or other basic access service, including trunk
equivalents as designated by the public utilities commission for
access charge purposes and including cellular and other nonwire
access wireless telecommunications services. The fee must be
the same for all customers.
(c) (d) The fee must be collected by each company or
carrier providing service wireless or wireline
telecommunications service provider subject to the fee. Fees
are payable to and must be submitted to the commissioner of
administration monthly before the 25th of each month following
the month of collection, except that fees may be submitted
quarterly if less than $250 a month is due, or annually if less
than $25 a month is due. Receipts must be deposited in the
state treasury and credited to a 911 emergency telephone
telecommunications service account in the special revenue fund.
The money in the account may only be used for 911
telephone telecommunications services as provided in paragraph
(a).
(d) (e) This subdivision does not apply to customers of a
telecommunications carrier as defined in section 237.01,
subdivision 6 interexchange carriers.
(f) The installation and recurring charges for integrating
wireless 911 calls into enhanced 911 systems must be paid by the
commissioner if the 911 service provider is included in the
statewide design plan and the charges are made pursuant to
tariff, price list, or contract.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [METHOD OF PAYMENT; CERTIFICATION.] A public
utility (a) Any wireless or wireline telecommunications service
provider incurring reimbursable costs under subdivision 1 or 2
shall certify those costs submit an invoice itemizing rate
elements by county or service area to the commissioner of
administration. The certification shall be in a form as
prescribed by the commissioner after consultation with the
public utilities commission. If the commissioner and the
commission approve the certified costs as appropriate and
accurate, for 911 services furnished under tariff, price list,
or contract. Any wireless or wireline telecommunications
service provider is eligible to receive payment for 911 services
rendered according to the terms and conditions specified in the
contract. Competitive local exchange carriers holding
certificates of authority from the public utilities commission
are eligible to receive payment for recurring 911 services
provided after July 1, 2001. The commissioner shall pay
the certified costs from money appropriated for that
purpose invoice within 90 30 days following receipt by the
commissioner of the certified costs of the invoice unless the
commissioner notifies the service provider that the commissioner
disputes the invoice.
(b) The commissioner of administration shall estimate the
amount required to reimburse public utilities wireless and
wireline telecommunications service providers for the state's
obligations under subdivisions subdivision 1 and 2 and the
governor shall include the estimated amount in the biennial
budget request.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3a. [TIMELY CERTIFICATION.] A certification must be
submitted to the commissioner of administration no later than
two years after commencing a new or additional eligible 911
service. Any wireless or wireline telecommunications service
provider incurring reimbursable costs under this section at any
time before the effective date of section 14 may certify those
costs for payment to the commissioner of administration
according to this section for a period of 90 days after the
effective date of section 14. During this period, the
commissioner of administration shall reimburse any wireless or
wireline telecommunications service provider for approved,
certified costs without regard to any contrary provision of this
subdivision.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3b. [CERTIFICATION.] All wireless and wireline
telecommunications service providers shall submit a
self-certification form signed by an officer of the company to
the department with invoices for payment of an initial or
changed service described in the service provider's 911
contract. The self-certification shall affirm that the 911
service contracted for is being provided and the costs invoiced
for the service are true and correct. All certifications are
subject to verification and audit.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 3c. [AUDIT.] If the commissioner of administration
determines that an audit is necessary to document the
certification described in subdivision 3b, the wireless or
wireline telecommunications service provider must contract with
an independent certified public accountant to conduct the
audit. The audit must be conducted according to generally
accepted accounting principles. The wireless or wireline
telecommunications service provider is responsible for any costs
associated with the audit.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [LOCAL RECURRING COSTS.] Recurring costs of
telephone communications telecommunications equipment and
services at public safety answering points shall must be borne
by the local governmental unit agency operating the public
safety answering point or allocated pursuant to section 403.10,
subdivision 3. Costs attributable to local government electives
for services beyond minimum 911 service not otherwise addressed
under section 403.11 or 403.113 shall must be borne by the
governmental unit agency requesting the elective service.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.11, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 5. [TARIFF NOTIFICATION.] Wireline
telecommunications service providers or wireless
telecommunications service providers holding eligible
telecommunications carrier status shall give notice to the
department of administration and any other affected governmental
agency of tariff or price list changes related to 911 service at
the same time that the filing is made with the public utilities
commission.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2000, section 403.113,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [FEE.] (a) In addition to the actual fee
assessed under section 403.11, Each customer receiving local
telephone service, including cellular or other nonwire service,
from a wireless or wireline telecommunications service provider
is assessed a fee to fund implementation and, operation,
maintenance, enhancement, and expansion of enhanced 911 service,
including acquisition of necessary equipment and the costs of
the commissioner to administer the program. The enhanced fee
collected from cellular or other nonwire service customers must
be collected effective in July 1997 billings. The actual fee
assessed under section 403.11 and the enhanced 911 service fee
must be collected as one amount and may not exceed the amount
specified in section 403.11, subdivision 1, paragraph (b).
(b) The enhanced 911 service fee must be collected and
deposited in the same manner as the fee in section 403.11 and
used solely for the purposes of paragraph (a) and subdivision 3.
(c) The commissioner of the department of administration,
in consultation with counties and 911 system users, shall
determine the amount of the enhanced 911 service fee and
inform telephone companies or communications carriers wireless
and wireline telecommunications service providers that provide
service capable of originating a 911 emergency telephone call of
the total amount of the 911 service fees in the same manner as
provided in section 403.11.
Sec. 21. [REPEALER.]
(a) Minnesota Statutes 2000, sections 403.04; 403.113,
subdivision 5; 403.12, subdivision 1; 403.13; and 403.14, are
repealed. Section 403.11, subdivision 2, is repealed effective
January 1, 2003.
(b) Minnesota Rules, parts 1215.0400; 1215.0600; 1215.0700;
1215.1200, subpart 3; and 1215.1500, are repealed.
Sec. 22. [EFFECTIVE DATES.]
Sections 1 to 13 and 15 to 21 are effective the day
following final enactment. Section 14 is effective January 1,
2003.
Presented to the governor May 14, 2002
Signed by the governor May 17, 2002, 10:35 a.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes