Bill Text: MN SF1573 | 2011-2012 | 87th Legislature | Chaptered


Bill Title: Omnibus higher education provisions modifications and appropriations

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 2-0)

Status: (Passed) 2012-05-07 - Secretary of State Chapter 270 05/02/12 [SF1573 Detail]

Download: Minnesota-2011-SF1573-Chaptered.html

CHAPTER 270--S.F.No. 1573
An act
relating to higher education; requiring the provision of textbook
information to certain students; providing for the continued operation of
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities in certain circumstances; increasing
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system revenue bond authority;
prescribing uses of the permanent university fund; requiring an expanded
waiver for mandatory healthcare coverage; providing a graduate study benefit
to certain safety officer survivors; providing funding for the Hennepin County
Medical Center graduate family education programs; establishing textbook work
group; making miscellaneous technical changes; requiring a report;amending
Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 135A.14, subdivision 1; 135A.25, subdivision
5; 136F.58, subdivision 3, by adding a subdivision; 136F.71, subdivision 3, by
adding a subdivision; 136F.98, subdivision 1; 136G.03, subdivision 7; 137.022,
subdivision 4; 141.35; 299A.45, subdivisions 1, 2; proposing coding for new law
in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 135A.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:

    Section 1. [135A.044] STUDENT HEALTH CARE.
A Minnesota public postsecondary institution must grant a waiver from its required
student health insurance plan coverage if the student requests the waiver and the student
has health plan coverage from another source, including employer group coverage, private
insurance, association group coverage, health sharing organizations, and MinnesotaCare.
An institution must notify students of the right to request the waiver.

    Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 135A.14, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
    Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have the
meanings given them.
(a) "Administrator" means the administrator of the institution or other person with
general control and supervision of the institution.
(b) "Public or private postsecondary educational institution" or "institution" means
any of the following institutions having an enrollment of more than 100 persons during
any quarter, term, or semester during the preceding year: (1) the University of Minnesota;
(2) the state universities; (3) the state community colleges; (4) public technical colleges;
(5) private four-year, professional and graduate institutions; (6) private two-year colleges;
and (7) schools subject to either chapter 141, sections 136A.61 to 136A.71, or schools
exempt under section 136A.657, and which offer educational programs within the state
for an academic year greater than six consecutive months. An institution's report to the
Minnesota Office of Higher Education or the Minnesota Department of Education may be
considered when determining enrollment.
(c) "Student" means a person born after 1956 who did not graduate from a Minnesota
high school in 1997 or later, and who is (1) registering for more than one class during
a full academic term, such as a quarter or a semester or (2) housed on campus and is
registering for one or more classes. Student does not include persons who are only
enrolled in extension classes only or, correspondence classes only, online classes, or
evening or weekend adult accelerated programs.

    Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 135A.25, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
    Subd. 5. Bookstores; course materials. The University of Minnesota and private
colleges are encouraged to comply with the requirements for instructors and bookstores
under section 136F.58, subdivision subdivisions 2, 2a, and 3.

    Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136F.58, is amended by adding a subdivision
to read:
    Subd. 2a. Course schedule and material list. (a) Each state college and university
shall compile a course schedule indicating each course offered by the state college or
university for each term and shall include with the course schedule a list of the required
and recommended course materials that specifies, to the extent practicable, the information
required in subdivision 3, paragraph (c).
(b) At the time required by subdivision 3, paragraph (c), a state college or university
shall publish course schedules and course material lists on the state college's or university's
Web site.

    Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136F.58, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
    Subd. 3. Notice to purchase. (a) An instructor or department shall make reasonable
efforts to notify a college or university bookstore of the final order for required and
recommended course material at least 30 45 days prior to the commencement of the term.
(b) An instructor or department must notify the bookstore, as required in paragraph
(a), if a previous edition of the textbook is acceptable as a substitute textbook for the
course.
    (b) (c) The bookstore must make reasonable efforts to notify students of the
following information concerning the required and recommended course material at
least 15 30 days prior to the commencement of the term for which the course material
is required including, but not limited to:
    (1) the title, edition, author, and International Standard Book Number (ISBN) of
the course material;
    (2) the retail price charged in the college or university bookstore for the course
material, including custom textbooks;
    (3) whether the required course material is bundled with optional material, whether
it can be unbundled, and the price for each bundled and unbundled component if
applicable, whether a previous edition of the textbook is acceptable as required under
this subdivision; and
    (4) whether the material is available in an alternative format and the cost for the
alternatively formatted material.; and
(5) the most recent copyright date of the printed course material and the copyright
date of the most recent prior edition of the course material, if that prior edition is
acceptable for class use.
(d) For purposes of this subdivision, "custom textbooks" means course materials
that are compiled by a publisher at the direction of a faculty member or, if applicable,
the other adopting entity in charge of selecting course materials for courses taught at a
state college or university. Custom textbooks may include items such as selections from
original instructor materials, previously copyrighted publisher materials, copyrighted
third-party works, or elements unique to a specific state college or university.

    Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136F.71, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
    Subd. 3. Interest income. Beginning July 1, 1997, Interest income attributable to
general fund dedicated receipts of the board is appropriated to the board. The board shall
allocate the income proportionately among the colleges and universities. The board shall
report this income separately in its biennial budget requests.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

    Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136F.71, is amended by adding a subdivision
to read:
    Subd. 5. Continued operation. Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, to
the extent that the board has receipts under this section sufficient to continue operations,
the commissioner of management and budget shall provide the board with statewide
systems services under section 16A.1286 and access to its funds as deemed necessary
by the board to continue its operations. The board shall pay for the services received
in accordance with section 16A.1286, including any administrative services necessary
for the commissioner of management and budget to provide the statewide systems
services. In addition, the board shall pay for treasury operations services provided by the
commissioner of management and budget. Payments received by the commissioner of
management and budget under this subdivision are appropriated to the Department of
Management and Budget for the purposes of providing those services. The commissioner
of management and budget may transfer payments received under this subdivision to the
chief information officer and the commissioner of administration, if necessary.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective July 1, 2012.

    Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136F.98, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
    Subdivision 1. Issuance of bonds. The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State
Colleges and Universities or a successor may issue revenue bonds under sections 136F.90
to 136F.97 whose aggregate principal amount at any time may not exceed $300,000,000
$405,000,000, and payable from the revenue appropriated to the fund established by
section 136F.94, and use the proceeds together with other public or private money that
may otherwise become available to acquire land, and to acquire, construct, complete,
remodel, and equip structures or portions thereof to be used for dormitory, residence hall,
student union, food service, parking purposes, or for any other similar revenue-producing
building or buildings of such type and character as the board finds desirable for the good
and benefit of the state colleges and universities. Before issuing the bonds or any part
of them, the board shall consult with and obtain the advisory recommendations of the
chairs of the house of representatives Ways and Means Committee and the senate Finance
Committee about the facilities to be financed by the bonds.

    Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 136G.03, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
    Subd. 7. Contingent account owner. "Contingent account owner" means the
individual person designated as the account owner, either in the participation agreement or
pursuant to a separate Minnesota college savings plan form, in the event of the death of
the account owner.

    Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 137.022, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
    Subd. 4. Mineral research; scholarships. (a) All income credited after July 1,
1992, to the permanent university fund from royalties for mining under state mineral
leases from and after July 1, 1991, must be allocated as provided in this subdivision.
(b)(1) Fifty Beginning January 1, 2013, 50 percent of the income must be allocated
according to this paragraph. One-half of the income under this paragraph, up to
$50,000,000, must be credited to the mineral research account of the fund to be allocated
for the Natural Resources Research Institute-Duluth and Coleraine facilities, for mineral
and mineral-related research including mineral-related environmental research; and. The
other one-half of the income under this paragraph, up to $25,000,000, is credited to an
endowment for the costs of operating a mining, metallurgical, or related engineering
degree program offered through the University of Minnesota at Mesabi Range Community
and Technical College and for scholarships for students to attend the mining, metallurgical,
or related engineering program. The maximum scholarship awarded to attend the mining,
metallurgical, or related engineering degree program funded under this paragraph cannot
exceed $6,500 per academic year and may be awarded a maximum of four academic years.
(2) The remainder of the income under paragraph (a) plus the amount of any income
under clause (1) after $50,000,000 has been credited to the mineral research account
for the Natural Resources Research Institute and the amount of any income over the
$25,000,000 for the engineering program must be credited to the endowed scholarship
account of the fund for distribution annually for scholastic achievement as provided by
the Board of Regents to undergraduates enrolled at the University of Minnesota who are
resident students as defined in section 136A.101, subdivision 8.
(c) The annual distribution from the endowed scholarship account must be allocated
to the various campuses of the University of Minnesota in proportion to the number of
undergraduate resident students enrolled on each campus.
(d) The Board of Regents must report to the education committees of the legislature
biennially at the time of the submission of its budget request on the disbursement of money
from the endowed scholarship account and to the environment and natural resources
committees on the use of the mineral research account.
(e) Capital gains and losses and portfolio income of the permanent university fund
must be credited to its three accounts in proportion to the market value of each account.
(f) The endowment support from the income and capital gains of the endowed
mineral research and endowed scholarship accounts of the fund must not total more than
six percent per year of the 36-month trailing average market value of the account from
which the support is derived.

    Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 141.35, is amended to read:
141.35 EXEMPTIONS.
    Sections 141.21 to 141.32 shall not apply to the following:
    (1) public postsecondary institutions;
    (2) postsecondary institutions registered under sections 136A.61 to 136A.71;
    (3) schools of nursing accredited by the state Board of Nursing or an equivalent
public board of another state or foreign country;
    (4) private schools complying with the requirements of section 120A.22, subdivision
4
;
    (5) courses taught to students in a valid apprenticeship program taught by or
required by a trade union;
    (6) schools exclusively engaged in training physically or mentally disabled persons
for the state of Minnesota;
    (7) schools licensed by boards authorized under Minnesota law to issue licenses
except schools required to obtain a private career school license due to the use of
"academy," "institute," "college," or "university" in their names;
    (8) schools and educational programs, or training programs, contracted for by
persons, firms, corporations, government agencies, or associations, for the training of their
own employees, for which no fee is charged the employee;
    (9) schools engaged exclusively in the teaching of purely avocational, recreational,
or remedial subjects as determined by the office except schools required to obtain a private
career school license due to the use of "academy," "institute," "college," or "university" in
their names unless the school used "academy" or "institute" in its name prior to August
1, 2008;
    (10) classes, courses, or programs conducted by a bona fide trade, professional, or
fraternal organization, solely for that organization's membership;
    (11) programs in the fine arts provided by organizations exempt from taxation
under section 290.05 and registered with the attorney general under chapter 309. For
the purposes of this clause, "fine arts" means activities resulting in artistic creation or
artistic performance of works of the imagination which are engaged in for the primary
purpose of creative expression rather than commercial sale or employment. In making
this determination the office may seek the advice and recommendation of the Minnesota
Board of the Arts;
    (12) classes, courses, or programs intended to fulfill the continuing education
requirements for licensure or certification in a profession, that have been approved by
a legislatively or judicially established board or agency responsible for regulating the
practice of the profession, and that are offered exclusively to an individual practicing
the profession;
    (13) classes, courses, or programs intended to prepare students to sit for
undergraduate, graduate, postgraduate, or occupational licensing and occupational
entrance examinations;
    (14) classes, courses, or programs providing 16 or fewer clock hours of instruction
that are not part of the curriculum for an occupation or entry level employment except
schools required to obtain a private career school license due to the use of "academy,"
"institute," "college," or "university" in their names;
    (15) classes, courses, or programs providing instruction in personal development,
modeling, or acting;
    (16) training or instructional programs, in which one instructor teaches an individual
student, that are not part of the curriculum for an occupation or are not intended to prepare
a person for entry level employment; and
    (17) schools with no physical presence in Minnesota, as determined by the office,
engaged exclusively in offering distance instruction that are located in and regulated
by other states or jurisdictions.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from August 1, 2008.

    Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 299A.45, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
    Subdivision 1. Eligibility. A person is eligible to receive educational benefits under
this section if the person:
    (1) is certified under section 299A.44 and in compliance with this section and rules
of the commissioner of public safety and the Minnesota Office of Higher Education;
    (2) is enrolled in an undergraduate degree or certificate program after June 30, 1990,
or a graduate degree or certificate program after June 30, 2011, at an eligible Minnesota
institution as provided in section 136A.101, subdivision 4;
    (3) has not received a baccalaureate degree or been enrolled full time for nine
semesters or the equivalent, except that a student who withdraws from enrollment for
active military service is entitled to an additional semester or the equivalent of eligibility
benefits for the maximum duration specified in subdivision 4; and
    (4) is related in one of the following ways to a public safety officer killed in the
line of duty on or after January 1, 1973:
    (i) as a dependent child less than 23 years of age;
    (ii) as a surviving spouse; or
    (iii) as a dependent child less than 30 years of age who has served on active military
duty 181 consecutive days or more and has been honorably discharged or released to the
dependent child's reserve or National Guard unit.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from July 1, 2011.

    Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 299A.45, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
    Subd. 2. Award amount. (a) The amount of the award is the lesser of:
(1) the average tuition and fees charged by the institution; or
(2) the tuition maximums established by law for the state grant program under
section 136A.121. The tuition maximum for graduate study is the maximum established
by law for the state grant program for four-year programs.
(b) An award under this subdivision must not affect a recipient's eligibility for a
state grant under section 136A.121.
(c) For the purposes of this subdivision, "fees" include only those fees that are
mandatory and charged to all students attending the institution.
(d) For the purpose of benefits awarded under this section, "full time" for a graduate
program is eight or more credits per term or the equivalent.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective retroactively from July 1, 2011.

    Sec. 14. MINNESOTA STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES TEXTBOOK
WORK GROUP.
The Board of Trustees of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities shall
establish a work group to study methods that result in lower textbook costs for
students. Methods include studying alternative textbook delivery methods, including a
cross-campus shared delivery system for textbooks, the expansion of electronic textbooks
with an assessment of effective methods for delivering e-books to students, and other
technology-based innovative or best practices methods to bring real cost savings to
students. The goal of this work group is to help assess current practices, present a stable
of business strategies, technologies, and campus deployment plans that are effective in
driving down the cost of learning resources for students while offering greater access to
no- or low-cost academic content for faculty.

    Sec. 15. UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA APPROPRIATION TRANSFER TO
HENNEPIN COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER.
The regents of the University of Minnesota must transfer $645,000 in fiscal year
2012 and $645,000 in fiscal year 2013 from the appropriations made to it for operations
and maintenance in Laws 2011, First Special Session chapter 5, article 1, section 5, to the
Hennepin County Medical Center for graduate family medicine education programs at
Hennepin County Medical Center.
EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.

    Sec. 16. TEACHER PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT.
By January 15, 2013, the Minnesota Board of Teaching must report to the
committees of the legislature responsible for K-12 and higher education finance and
policy, with recommendations for eliminating lower priority tests or assessments to offset
the additional fees charged to students for the teacher performance assessment.
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