Bill Text: MN SF1143 | 2011-2012 | 87th Legislature | Engrossed
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Omnibus data practices provisions modification
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 3-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-05-10 - Secretary of State Chapter 290 [SF1143 Detail]
Download: Minnesota-2011-SF1143-Engrossed.html
Bill Title: Omnibus data practices provisions modification
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 3-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-05-10 - Secretary of State Chapter 290 [SF1143 Detail]
Download: Minnesota-2011-SF1143-Engrossed.html
1.2relating to state government; classifying and authorizing sharing of data;
1.3making technical and clarifying changes to data practices and open meeting law
1.4provisions; imposing a limitation on state dependent audits; repealing certain data
1.5practices provisions; adding cross-references to open meeting law provisions
1.6codified elsewhere;amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.02,
1.7subdivisions 3, 4, 8a, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16; 13.03, subdivisions 2, 4; 13.072,
1.8subdivision 2; 13.10, subdivision 1; 13.202, subdivision 3; 13.37, subdivisions 1,
1.92; 13.3805, subdivision 1; 13.384, subdivision 1; 13.39, by adding a subdivision;
1.1013.43, subdivision 1, by adding subdivisions; 13.44, subdivision 3; 13.46,
1.11subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; 13.462, subdivision 1; 13.47, subdivision 1; 13.485,
1.12by adding subdivisions; 13.548; 13.585, subdivisions 2, 3; 13.601, subdivision
1.133; 13.635, by adding a subdivision; 13.64, by adding a subdivision; 13.643,
1.14subdivisions 5, 7; 13.6435, by adding a subdivision; 13.65, subdivisions 1, 2, 3;
1.1513.679, subdivision 2; 13.719, subdivisions 1, 5; 13.7191, subdivisions 14, 18;
1.1613.72, subdivision 11, by adding a subdivision; 13.7932; 13.82, subdivisions 2,
1.173, 6, 7, by adding a subdivision; 13.83, subdivisions 2, 4, 6; 13.87, subdivision 2;
1.1813D.015, subdivision 5; 43A.28; 79A.16; 79A.28; 84.0874; 216C.266; 237.701,
1.19subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 13;
1.2013D; 43A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.05, subdivisions 1, 2,
1.218; 13.4967, subdivision 6a; 298.22, subdivision 12.
1.22BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.23 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
1.24 Subd. 3. Confidential data on individuals. "Confidential data on individuals"
1.25means are data which is made not public by statute or federal law applicable to the data
1.26andis are inaccessible to the individual subject of that those data.
1.27 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
1.28 Subd. 4. Data not on individuals. "Data not on individuals"means are all
1.29government datawhich is that are not data on individuals.
2.1 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 8a, is amended to read:
2.2 Subd. 8a. Not public data. "Not public data"means are any government data which
2.3is classified by statute, federal law, or temporary classification as confidential, private,
2.4nonpublic, or protected nonpublic.
2.5 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
2.6 Subd. 9. Nonpublic data. "Nonpublic data"means are data not on individuals that
2.7is made by statute or federal law applicable to the data: (a) not accessible to the public;
2.8and (b) accessible to the subject, if any, of the data.
2.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
2.10 Subd. 12. Private data on individuals. "Private data on individuals"means are
2.11datawhich is made by statute or federal law applicable to the data: (a) not public; and
2.12(b) accessible to the individual subject ofthat those data.
2.13 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
2.14 Subd. 13. Protected nonpublic data. "Protected nonpublic data"means are data
2.15not on individualswhich is made by statute or federal law applicable to the data (a) not
2.16public and (b) not accessible to the subject of the data.
2.17 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
2.18 Subd. 14. Public data not on individuals. "Public data not on individuals"means
2.19are datawhich is accessible to the public pursuant to section
13.03 .
2.20 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 15, is amended to read:
2.21 Subd. 15. Public data on individuals. "Public data on individuals"means are data
2.22which is accessible to the public in accordance with the provisions of section
13.03 .
2.23 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 16, is amended to read:
2.24 Subd. 16. Responsible authority. (a) "Responsible authority" in a state agency or
2.25statewide system means the state official designated by law or by the commissioner as
2.26the individual responsible for the collection, use and dissemination of any set of data on
2.27individuals, government data, or summary data.
2.28(b) "Responsible authority" in any political subdivision means the individual
2.29designated by the governing body of that political subdivision as the individual responsible
2.30for the collection, use, and dissemination of any set of data on individuals, government
3.1data, or summary data, unless otherwise provided by state law. Until an individual is
3.2designated by the political subdivision's governing body, the responsible authority is:
3.3(1) for counties, the county coordinator or administrator. If the county does not
3.4employ a coordinator or administrator, the responsible authority is the county auditor;
3.5(2) for statutory or home rule charter cities, the elected or appointed city clerk. If the
3.6home rule charter does not provide for an office of city clerk, the responsible authority is
3.7the chief clerical officer for filing and record keeping purposes;
3.8(3) for school districts, the superintendent; and
3.9(4) for all other political subdivisions, the chief clerical officer for filing and record
3.10keeping purposes.
3.11 Sec. 10. [13.025] GOVERNMENT ENTITY OBLIGATION.
3.12 Subdivision 1. Data inventory. The responsible authority shall prepare an inventory
3.13containing the authority's name, title, address, and a description of each category of record,
3.14file, or process relating to private or confidential data on individuals maintained by the
3.15authority's government entity. Forms used to collect private and confidential data may be
3.16included in the inventory. The responsible authority shall update the inventory annually
3.17and make any changes necessary to maintain the accuracy of the inventory. The inventory
3.18must be available from the responsible authority to the public according to the provisions
3.19of sections 13.03 and 15.17. The commissioner may require responsible authorities to
3.20submit copies of the inventory and may request additional information relevant to data
3.21collection practices, policies, and procedures.
3.22 Subd. 2. Public data access policy. The responsible authority shall prepare a
3.23written data access policy and update it no later than August 1 of each year, and at any
3.24other time as necessary to reflect changes in personnel, procedures, or other circumstances
3.25that impact the public's ability to access data.
3.26 Subd. 3. Data subject rights and access policy. The responsible authority shall
3.27prepare a written policy of the rights of data subjects under section 13.04 and the specific
3.28procedures used by the government entity for access by the data subject to public or
3.29private data on individuals. The written policy must be updated no later than August 1 of
3.30each year, and at any other time as necessary to reflect changes in personnel, procedures,
3.31or other circumstances that impact the public's ability to access data.
3.32 Subd. 4. Availability. The responsible authority shall make copies of the policies
3.33required under subdivisions 2 and 3 easily available to the public by distributing free copies
3.34to the public or by posting the policies in a conspicuous place within the government entity
3.35that is easily accessible to the public or by posting it on the government entity's Web site.
4.1 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
4.2 Subd. 2. Procedures. (a) The responsible authority in every government entity shall
4.3establish procedures, consistent with this chapter, to insure that requests for government
4.4data are received and complied with in an appropriate and prompt manner.
4.5(b) The responsible authority shall prepare public access procedures in written form
4.6and update them no later than August 1 of each year as necessary to reflect any changes
4.7in personnel or circumstances that might affect public access to government data. The
4.8responsible authority shall make copies of the written public access procedures easily
4.9available to the public by distributing free copies of the procedures to the public or by
4.10posting a copy of the procedures in a conspicuous place within the government entity that
4.11is easily accessible to the public.
4.12(c) (b) Full convenience and comprehensive accessibility shall be allowed to
4.13researchers including historians, genealogists and other scholars to carry out extensive
4.14research and complete copying of all records containing government data except as
4.15otherwise expressly provided by law.
4.16A responsible authority may designate one or more designees.
4.17 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.03, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
4.18 Subd. 4. Change in classification of data; effect of dissemination among
4.19agencies. (a) The classification of a government entity's datain the possession of an entity
4.20shall change if it is required to do so to comply with either judicial or administrative rules
4.21pertaining to the conduct of legal actions or with a specific statute applicable to the data
4.22in the possession of the disseminating or receiving entity.
4.23 (b) If data on individualsis are classified as both private and confidential by this
4.24chapter, or any other statute or federal law, the datais are private.
4.25 (c) To the extent that government datais are disseminated to a government entity
4.26by another government entity, the data disseminated shall have the same classification
4.27in the hands of at the entity receiving it them as it they had in the hands of at the entity
4.28providingit them.
4.29 (d) If a government entity disseminates data to another government entity, a
4.30classification provided for by lawin the hands of at the entity receiving the data does not
4.31affect the classification of the datain the hands of at the entity that disseminates the data.
4.32 (e) To the extent that judicial branch datais are disseminated to government entities
4.33by the judicial branch, the data disseminated shall have the same level of accessibility
4.34in the hands of the agency at the government entity receiving it them as it they had
4.35in the hands of at the judicial branch entity providing it them. If the data have a specific
5.1classification in state statute or federal law, the government entity must maintain the
5.2data according to the specific classification.
5.3 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.072, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
5.4 Subd. 2. Effect. Opinions issued by the commissioner under this section are not
5.5binding on the government entity or members of a body subject to chapter 13D whose
5.6data or performance of duties is the subject of the opinion, but an opinion described in
5.7subdivision 1, paragraph (a), must be given deference by a court or other tribunal in a
5.8proceeding involving the data. The commissioner shall arrange for public dissemination
5.9of opinions issued under this section, and shall indicate when the principles stated in
5.10an opinion are not intended to provide guidance to all similarly situated persons or
5.11government entities. This section does not preclude a person from bringing any other
5.12action under this chapter or other law in addition to or instead of requesting a written
5.13opinion. A government entity, members of a body subject to chapter 13D, or person that
5.14acts in conformity with a written opinion of the commissioner issued to the government
5.15entity, members, or person or to another party is not liable for compensatory or exemplary
5.16damages or awards of attorneys fees in actions for violations arising under section13.08
5.17or13.085 , or for a penalty under section
13.09 or for fines, awards of attorney fees, or
5.18any other penalty under chapter 13D. A member of a body subject to chapter 13D is not
5.19subject to forfeiture of office if the member was acting in reliance on an opinion.
5.20 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.10, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
5.21 Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this chapter:
5.22(a) "Confidential data on decedents"means are data which, prior to the death of
5.23the data subject, were classified by statute, federal law, or temporary classification as
5.24confidential data.
5.25(b) "Private data on decedents"means are data which, prior to the death of the data
5.26subject, were classified by statute, federal law, or temporary classification as private data.
5.27(c) "Representative of the decedent"means is the personal representative of the
5.28estate of the decedent during the period of administration, or if no personal representative
5.29has been appointed or after discharge of the personal representative, the surviving spouse,
5.30any child of the decedent, or, if there is no surviving spouse or children, the parents of
5.31the decedent.
5.32 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.202, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
6.1 Subd. 3. Hennepin County. (a) Data collected by the Hennepin Healthcare System,
6.2Inc. are governed under section383B.17 383B.917, subdivision 1 .
6.3(b) Records of Hennepin County board meetings permitted to be closed under
6.4section383B.217, subdivision 7 , are classified under that subdivision.
6.5 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.37, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
6.6 Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have the
6.7meanings given them.
6.8(a) "Security information" means government data the disclosure of which the
6.9responsible authority determines would be likely to substantially jeopardize the security of
6.10information, possessions, individuals or property against theft, tampering, improper use,
6.11attempted escape, illegal disclosure, trespass, or physical injury. "Security information"
6.12includes crime prevention block maps and lists of volunteers who participate in community
6.13crime prevention programs and their home addresses and telephone numbers.
6.14(b) "Trade secret information" means government data, including a formula, pattern,
6.15compilation, program, device, method, technique or process (1) that was supplied by the
6.16affected individual or organization, (2) that is the subject of efforts by the individual or
6.17organization that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy, and (3)
6.18that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally
6.19known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can
6.20obtain economic value from its disclosure or use.
6.21(c) "Labor relations information" means management positions on economic and
6.22noneconomic items that have not been presented during the collective bargaining process
6.23or interest arbitration, including information specifically collected or created to prepare
6.24the management position.
6.25(d) "Parking space leasing data" means the following government data on an
6.26applicant for, or lessee of, a parking space: residence address, home telephone number,
6.27beginning and ending work hours, place of employment, work telephone number, and
6.28location of the parking space.
6.29 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.37, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
6.30 Subd. 2. Classification. (a) The following government data is classified as nonpublic
6.31data with regard to data not on individuals, pursuant to section13.02, subdivision 9 , and as
6.32private data with regard to data on individuals, pursuant to section13.02, subdivision 12 :
6.33Security information; trade secret information; sealed absentee ballots prior to opening
6.34by an election judge; sealed bids, including the number of bids received, prior to the
7.1opening of the bids; parking space leasing data; and labor relations information, provided
7.2that specific labor relations information which relates to a specific labor organization is
7.3classified as protected nonpublic data pursuant to section13.02, subdivision 13 .
7.4(b) If a government entity denies a data request based on a determination that the
7.5data are security information, upon request, the government entity must provide a short
7.6description explaining the necessity for the classification.
7.7 Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.3805, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
7.8 Subdivision 1. Health data generally. (a) Definitions. As used in this subdivision:
7.9(1) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of health.
7.10(2) "Health data"means are data on individuals created, collected, received, or
7.11maintained by the Department of Health, political subdivisions, or statewide systems
7.12relating to the identification, description, prevention, and control of disease or as part of
7.13an epidemiologic investigation the commissioner designates as necessary to analyze,
7.14describe, or protect the public health.
7.15(b) Data on individuals. (1) Health data are private data on individuals.
7.16Notwithstanding section13.05, subdivision 9 , health data may not be disclosed except as
7.17provided in this subdivision and section13.04 .
7.18(2) The commissioner or a local board of health as defined in section145A.02,
7.19subdivision 2 , may disclose health data to the data subject's physician as necessary to locate
7.20or identify a case, carrier, or suspect case, to establish a diagnosis, to provide treatment, to
7.21identify persons at risk of illness, or to conduct an epidemiologic investigation.
7.22(3) With the approval of the commissioner, health data may be disclosed to the
7.23extent necessary to assist the commissioner to locate or identify a case, carrier, or suspect
7.24case, to alert persons who may be threatened by illness as evidenced by epidemiologic
7.25data, to control or prevent the spread of serious disease, or to diminish an imminent threat
7.26to the public health.
7.27(c) Health summary data. Summary data derived from data collected under section
7.28145.413
may be provided under section
13.05, subdivision 7 .
7.29 Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.384, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
7.30 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section:
7.31 (a) "Directory information" means name of the patient, date admitted, and general
7.32condition.
7.33 (b) "Medical data"means are data collected because an individual was or is a patient
7.34or client of a hospital, nursing home, medical center, clinic, health or nursing agency
8.1operated by a government entity including business and financial records, data provided
8.2by private health care facilities, and data provided by or about relatives of the individual.
8.3 Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.39, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.4to read:
8.5 Subd. 4. Exclusion. This section does not apply when the sole issue or dispute is a
8.6government entity's timeliness in responding to a data request.
8.7 Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
8.8 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section, "personnel data" means
8.9government data on individuals maintained because the individual is or was an employee
8.10of or an applicant for employment by, performs services on a voluntary basis for, or acts
8.11as an independent contractor with a government entity.Personnel data includes data
8.12submitted by an employee to a government entity as part of an organized self-evaluation
8.13effort by the government entity to request suggestions from all employees on ways to cut
8.14costs, make government more efficient, or improve the operation of government. An
8.15employee who is identified in a suggestion shall have access to all data in the suggestion
8.16except the identity of the employee making the suggestion.
8.17 Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.18to read:
8.19 Subd. 7a. Employee suggestion data. Personnel data includes data submitted by
8.20an employee to a government entity as part of an organized self-evaluation effort by the
8.21government entity to request suggestions from all employees on ways to cut costs, make
8.22government more efficient, or improve the operation of government. An employee who is
8.23identified in a suggestion shall have access to all data in the suggestion except the identity
8.24of the employee making the suggestion.
8.25 Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.26to read:
8.27 Subd. 19. Employee of contractor or subcontractor. The following data
8.28maintained as a result of a contractual relationship entered on or after August 1, 2012,
8.29between a government entity and a contractor or subcontractor are private: the personal
8.30telephone number, home address, and e-mail address of a current or former employee
8.31of the contractor or subcontractor. A government entity maintaining data under this
8.32subdivision must share the data with another government entity to perform a function
9.1authorized by law. The data must be disclosed to a government entity or any person for
9.2prevailing wage purposes.
9.3 Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.44, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
9.4 Subd. 3. Real property; appraisal data. (a) Confidential or protected nonpublic
9.5data. Estimated or appraised values of individual parcels of real property that are made by
9.6personnel of a government entity or by independent appraisers acting for a government
9.7entity for the purpose of selling or acquiring land through purchase or condemnation are
9.8classified as confidential data on individuals or protected nonpublic data.
9.9 (b) Private or nonpublic data. Appraised values of individual parcels of real
9.10property that are made by appraisers working for fee owners or contract purchasers who
9.11have received an offer to purchase their property from a government entity are classified
9.12as private data on individuals or nonpublic data.
9.13 (c) Public data. The data made confidential or protected nonpublic under paragraph
9.14(a) or made private or nonpublic under paragraph (b) become public upon the occurrence
9.15of any of the following:
9.16 (1) the data are submitted to a court-appointed condemnation commissioner;
9.17 (2) the data are presented in court in condemnation proceedings; or
9.18 (3) the negotiating parties enter into an agreement for the purchase and sale of the
9.19property.
9.20The data made confidential or protected nonpublic under paragraph (a) also
9.21become public at the discretion of the government entity, determined by majority vote
9.22of the entity's governing body, or, in the case of a state agency, as determined by the
9.23commissioner of the agency.
9.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
9.25 Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
9.26 Subd. 2. General. (a)Unless the data is summary data or a statute specifically
9.27provides a different classification, Data on individuals collected, maintained, used, or
9.28disseminated by the welfare systemis are private data on individuals, and shall not be
9.29disclosed except:
9.30 (1) according to section13.05 ;
9.31 (2) according to court order;
9.32 (3) according to a statute specifically authorizing access to the private data;
10.1 (4) to an agent of the welfare system, including a law enforcement person, attorney,
10.2or investigator acting for it in the investigation or prosecution of a criminal or civil
10.3proceeding relating to the administration of a program;
10.4 (5) to personnel of the welfare system who require the data to verify an individual's
10.5identity; determine eligibility, amount of assistance, and the need to provide services to
10.6an individual or family across programs; evaluate the effectiveness of programs; assess
10.7parental contribution amounts; and investigate suspected fraud;
10.8 (6) to administer federal funds or programs;
10.9 (7) between personnel of the welfare system working in the same program;
10.10 (8) to the Department of Revenue to assess parental contribution amounts for
10.11purposes of section252.27, subdivision 2a , administer and evaluate tax refund or tax credit
10.12programs and to identify individuals who may benefit from these programs. The following
10.13information may be disclosed under this paragraph: an individual's and their dependent's
10.14names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, income, addresses, and other data as
10.15required, upon request by the Department of Revenue. Disclosures by the commissioner
10.16of revenue to the commissioner of human services for the purposes described in this clause
10.17are governed by section270B.14, subdivision 1 . Tax refund or tax credit programs include,
10.18but are not limited to, the dependent care credit under section290.067 , the Minnesota
10.19working family credit under section290.0671 , the property tax refund and rental credit
10.20under section290A.04 , and the Minnesota education credit under section
290.0674 ;
10.21 (9) between the Department of Human Services, the Department of Employment
10.22and Economic Development, and when applicable, the Department of Education, for
10.23the following purposes:
10.24 (i) to monitor the eligibility of the data subject for unemployment benefits, for any
10.25employment or training program administered, supervised, or certified by that agency;
10.26 (ii) to administer any rehabilitation program or child care assistance program,
10.27whether alone or in conjunction with the welfare system;
10.28 (iii) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program or the child
10.29care assistance program by exchanging data on recipients and former recipients of food
10.30support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D, 256J, or 256K, child care assistance
10.31under chapter 119B, or medical programs under chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L; and
10.32 (iv) to analyze public assistance employment services and program utilization,
10.33cost, effectiveness, and outcomes as implemented under the authority established in Title
10.34II, Sections 201-204 of the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of
10.351999. Health records governed by sections144.291 to 144.298 and "protected health
10.36information" as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, section160.103 , and
11.1governed by Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, parts 160-164, including health care
11.2claims utilization information, must not be exchanged under this clause;
11.3 (10) to appropriate parties in connection with an emergency if knowledge of
11.4the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the individual or other
11.5individuals or persons;
11.6 (11) data maintained by residential programs as defined in section245A.02 may
11.7be disclosed to the protection and advocacy system established in this state according
11.8to Part C of Public Law 98-527 to protect the legal and human rights of persons with
11.9developmental disabilities or other related conditions who live in residential facilities for
11.10these persons if the protection and advocacy system receives a complaint by or on behalf
11.11of that person and the person does not have a legal guardian or the state or a designee of
11.12the state is the legal guardian of the person;
11.13 (12) to the county medical examiner or the county coroner for identifying or locating
11.14relatives or friends of a deceased person;
11.15 (13) data on a child support obligor who makes payments to the public agency
11.16may be disclosed to the Minnesota Office of Higher Education to the extent necessary to
11.17determine eligibility under section136A.121, subdivision 2 , clause (5);
11.18 (14) participant Social Security numbers and names collected by the telephone
11.19assistance program may be disclosed to the Department of Revenue to conduct an
11.20electronic data match with the property tax refund database to determine eligibility under
11.21section237.70, subdivision 4a ;
11.22 (15) the current address of a Minnesota family investment program participant
11.23may be disclosed to law enforcement officers who provide the name of the participant
11.24and notify the agency that:
11.25 (i) the participant:
11.26 (A) is a fugitive felon fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after
11.27conviction, for a crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony under the laws of the
11.28jurisdiction from which the individual is fleeing; or
11.29 (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal law;
11.30 (ii) the location or apprehension of the felon is within the law enforcement officer's
11.31official duties; and
11.32 (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of those duties;
11.33 (16) the current address of a recipient of general assistance or general assistance
11.34medical care may be disclosed to probation officers and corrections agents who are
11.35supervising the recipient and to law enforcement officers who are investigating the
11.36recipient in connection with a felony level offense;
12.1 (17) information obtained from food support applicant or recipient households may
12.2be disclosed to local, state, or federal law enforcement officials, upon their written request,
12.3for the purpose of investigating an alleged violation of the Food Stamp Act, according
12.4to Code of Federal Regulations, title 7, section272.1 (c);
12.5 (18) the address, Social Security number, and, if available, photograph of any
12.6member of a household receiving food support shall be made available, on request, to a
12.7local, state, or federal law enforcement officer if the officer furnishes the agency with the
12.8name of the member and notifies the agency that:
12.9 (i) the member:
12.10 (A) is fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after conviction, for a
12.11crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony in the jurisdiction the member is fleeing;
12.12 (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal
12.13law; or
12.14 (C) has information that is necessary for the officer to conduct an official duty related
12.15to conduct described in subitem (A) or (B);
12.16 (ii) locating or apprehending the member is within the officer's official duties; and
12.17 (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of the officer's official
12.18duty;
12.19 (19) the current address of a recipient of Minnesota family investment program,
12.20general assistance, general assistance medical care, or food support may be disclosed to
12.21law enforcement officers who, in writing, provide the name of the recipient and notify the
12.22agency that the recipient is a person required to register under section243.166 , but is not
12.23residing at the address at which the recipient is registered under section243.166 ;
12.24 (20) certain information regarding child support obligors who are in arrears may be
12.25made public according to section518A.74 ;
12.26 (21) data on child support payments made by a child support obligor and data on
12.27the distribution of those payments excluding identifying information on obligees may be
12.28disclosed to all obligees to whom the obligor owes support, and data on the enforcement
12.29actions undertaken by the public authority, the status of those actions, and data on the
12.30income of the obligor or obligee may be disclosed to the other party;
12.31 (22) data in the work reporting system may be disclosed under section256.998,
12.32subdivision 7 ;
12.33 (23) to the Department of Education for the purpose of matching Department of
12.34Education student data with public assistance data to determine students eligible for free
12.35and reduced-price meals, meal supplements, and free milk according to United States
12.36Code, title 42, sections 1758, 1761, 1766, 1766a, 1772, and 1773; to allocate federal and
13.1state funds that are distributed based on income of the student's family; and to verify
13.2receipt of energy assistance for the telephone assistance plan;
13.3 (24) the current address and telephone number of program recipients and emergency
13.4contacts may be released to the commissioner of health or a local board of health as
13.5defined in section145A.02, subdivision 2 , when the commissioner or local board of health
13.6has reason to believe that a program recipient is a disease case, carrier, suspect case, or at
13.7risk of illness, and the data are necessary to locate the person;
13.8 (25) to other state agencies, statewide systems, and political subdivisions of this
13.9state, including the attorney general, and agencies of other states, interstate information
13.10networks, federal agencies, and other entities as required by federal regulation or law for
13.11the administration of the child support enforcement program;
13.12 (26) to personnel of public assistance programs as defined in section256.741 , for
13.13access to the child support system database for the purpose of administration, including
13.14monitoring and evaluation of those public assistance programs;
13.15 (27) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program by
13.16exchanging data between the Departments of Human Services and Education, on
13.17recipients and former recipients of food support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D,
13.18256J, or 256K, child care assistance under chapter 119B, or medical programs under
13.19chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L;
13.20 (28) to evaluate child support program performance and to identify and prevent
13.21fraud in the child support program by exchanging data between the Department of Human
13.22Services, Department of Revenue under section270B.14, subdivision 1 , paragraphs (a)
13.23and (b), without regard to the limitation of use in paragraph (c), Department of Health,
13.24Department of Employment and Economic Development, and other state agencies as is
13.25reasonably necessary to perform these functions;
13.26 (29) counties operating child care assistance programs under chapter 119B may
13.27disseminate data on program participants, applicants, and providers to the commissioner
13.28of education; or
13.29(30) child support data on the parents and the child may be disclosed to agencies
13.30administering programs under titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security Act, as provided
13.31by federal law. Data may be disclosed only to the extent necessary for the purpose of
13.32establishing parentage or for determining who has or may have parental rights with respect
13.33to a child, which could be related to permanency planning.
13.34 (b) Information on persons who have been treated for drug or alcohol abuse may
13.35only be disclosed according to the requirements of Code of Federal Regulations, title
13.3642, sections2.1 to
2.67 .
14.1 (c) Data provided to law enforcement agencies under paragraph (a), clause (15),
14.2(16), (17), or (18), or paragraph (b), are investigative data and are confidential or protected
14.3nonpublic while the investigation is active. The data are private after the investigation
14.4becomes inactive under section13.82, subdivision 5 , paragraph (a) or (b).
14.5 (d) Mental health data shall be treated as provided in subdivisions 7, 8, and 9, but
14.6is are not subject to the access provisions of subdivision 10, paragraph (b).
14.7 For the purposes of this subdivision, a request will be deemed to be made in writing
14.8if made through a computer interface system.
14.9 Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
14.10 Subd. 3. Investigative data. (a) Data on persons, including data on vendors of
14.11services, licensees, and applicants that is collected, maintained, used, or disseminated
14.12by the welfare system in an investigation, authorized by statute, and relating to the
14.13enforcement of rules or lawis are confidential data on individuals pursuant to section
14.1413.02, subdivision 3
, or protected nonpublic data not on individuals pursuant to section
14.1513.02, subdivision 13
, and shall not be disclosed except:
14.16(1) pursuant to section13.05 ;
14.17(2) pursuant to statute or valid court order;
14.18(3) to a party named in a civil or criminal proceeding, administrative or judicial, for
14.19preparation of defense; or
14.20(4) to provide notices required or permitted by statute.
14.21The data referred to in this subdivision shall be classified as public data upon
14.22its submission to an administrative law judge or court in an administrative or judicial
14.23proceeding. Inactive welfare investigative data shall be treated as provided in section
14.2413.39, subdivision 3
.
14.25(b) Notwithstanding any other provision in law, the commissioner of human services
14.26shall provide all active and inactive investigative data, including the name of the reporter
14.27of alleged maltreatment under section626.556 or
626.557 , to the ombudsman for mental
14.28health and developmental disabilities upon the request of the ombudsman.
14.29 Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
14.30 Subd. 4. Licensing data. (a) As used in this subdivision:
14.31 (1) "licensing data"means are all data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated
14.32by the welfare system pertaining to persons licensed or registered or who apply for
14.33licensure or registration or who formerly were licensed or registered under the authority
14.34of the commissioner of human services;
15.1 (2) "client" means a person who is receiving services from a licensee or from an
15.2applicant for licensure; and
15.3 (3) "personal and personal financial data"means are Social Security numbers,
15.4identity of and letters of reference, insurance information, reports from the Bureau of
15.5Criminal Apprehension, health examination reports, and social/home studies.
15.6 (b)(1)Except as provided in paragraph (c), the following data on applicants, license
15.7holders, and former licensees are public: name, address, telephone number of licensees,
15.8date of receipt of a completed application, dates of licensure, licensed capacity, type of
15.9client preferred, variances granted, record of training and education in child care and child
15.10development, type of dwelling, name and relationship of other family members, previous
15.11license history, class of license, the existence and status of complaints, and the number
15.12of serious injuries to or deaths of individuals in the licensed program as reported to the
15.13commissioner of human services, the local social services agency, or any other county
15.14welfare agency. For purposes of this clause, a serious injury is one that is treated by a
15.15physician.
15.16When a correction order, an order to forfeit a fine, an order of license suspension,
15.17an order of temporary immediate suspension, an order of license revocation, an order
15.18of license denial, or an order of conditional license has been issued, or a complaint is
15.19resolved, the following data on current and former licensees and applicants are public: the
15.20substance and investigative findings of the licensing or maltreatment complaint, licensing
15.21violation, or substantiated maltreatment; the record of informal resolution of a licensing
15.22violation; orders of hearing; findings of fact; conclusions of law; specifications of the final
15.23correction order, fine, suspension, temporary immediate suspension, revocation, denial, or
15.24conditional license contained in the record of licensing action; whether a fine has been
15.25paid; and the status of any appeal of these actions. If a licensing sanction under section
15.26245A.07
, or a license denial under section
245A.05 , is based on a determination that the
15.27license holder or applicant is responsible for maltreatment or is disqualified under chapter
15.28245C, the identity of the license holder or applicant as the individual responsible for
15.29maltreatment or as the disqualified individualis are public data at the time of the issuance
15.30of the licensing sanction or denial.
15.31 (2) Notwithstanding sections626.556, subdivision 11 , and
626.557, subdivision 12b ,
15.32when any person subject to disqualification under section245C.14 in connection with a
15.33license to provide family day care for children, child care center services, foster care
15.34for children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services for adults in the
15.35provider's home is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment, and the substantiated
15.36maltreatment is a reason for a licensing action, the identity of the substantiated perpetrator
16.1of maltreatment is public data. For purposes of this clause, a person is a substantiated
16.2perpetrator if the maltreatment determination has been upheld under section256.045 ;
16.3626.556, subdivision 10i
;
626.557, subdivision 9d ; or chapter 14, or if an individual or
16.4facility has not timely exercised appeal rights under these sections, except as provided
16.5under clause (1).
16.6 (3) For applicants who withdraw their application prior to licensure or denial of a
16.7license, the following data are public: the name of the applicant, the city and county in
16.8which the applicant was seeking licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the
16.9initial application and completed application, the type of license sought, and the date
16.10of withdrawal of the application.
16.11 (4) For applicants who are denied a license, the following data are public: the name
16.12and address of the applicant, the city and county in which the applicant was seeking
16.13licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the initial application and completed
16.14application, the type of license sought, the date of denial of the application, the nature of
16.15the basis for the denial, the record of informal resolution of a denial, orders of hearings,
16.16findings of fact, conclusions of law, specifications of the final order of denial, and the
16.17status of any appeal of the denial.
16.18 (5) The following data on persons subject to disqualification under section245C.14
16.19in connection with a license to provide family day care for children, child care center
16.20services, foster care for children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services
16.21for adults in the provider's home, are public: the nature of any disqualification set
16.22aside under section245C.22 , subdivisions 2 and 4, and the reasons for setting aside the
16.23disqualification; the nature of any disqualification for which a variance was granted under
16.24sections245A.04, subdivision 9 ; and
245C.30 , and the reasons for granting any variance
16.25under section245A.04, subdivision 9 ; and, if applicable, the disclosure that any person
16.26subject to a background study under section245C.03, subdivision 1 , has successfully
16.27passed a background study. If a licensing sanction under section245A.07 , or a license
16.28denial under section245A.05 , is based on a determination that an individual subject to
16.29disqualification under chapter 245C is disqualified, the disqualification as a basis for the
16.30licensing sanction or denial is public data. As specified in clause (1), if the disqualified
16.31individual is the license holder or applicant, the identity of the license holder or applicant
16.32is public data. If the disqualified individual is an individual other than the license holder
16.33or applicant, the identity of the disqualified individual shall remain private data.
16.34 (6) When maltreatment is substantiated under section626.556 or
626.557 and the
16.35victim and the substantiated perpetrator are affiliated with a program licensed under
16.36chapter 245A, the commissioner of human services, local social services agency, or
17.1county welfare agency may inform the license holder where the maltreatment occurred of
17.2the identity of the substantiated perpetrator and the victim.
17.3 (7) Notwithstanding clause (1), for child foster care, only the name of the license
17.4holder and the status of the license are public if the county attorney has requested that data
17.5otherwise classified as public data under clause (1) be considered private data based on the
17.6best interests of a child in placement in a licensed program.
17.7 (c) The following are private data on individuals under section13.02, subdivision
17.812 , or nonpublic data under section
13.02, subdivision 9 : personal and personal financial
17.9data on family day care program and family foster care program applicants and licensees
17.10and their family members who provide services under the license.
17.11 (d) The following are private data on individuals: the identity of persons who have
17.12made reports concerning licensees or applicants that appear in inactive investigative data,
17.13and the records of clients or employees of the licensee or applicant for licensure whose
17.14records are received by the licensing agency for purposes of review or in anticipation of a
17.15contested matter. The names of reporters of complaints or alleged violations of licensing
17.16standards under chapters 245A, 245B, 245C, and applicable rules and alleged maltreatment
17.17under sections626.556 and
626.557 , are confidential data and may be disclosed only as
17.18provided in section626.556, subdivision 11 , or
626.557, subdivision 12b .
17.19 (e) Data classified as private, confidential, nonpublic, or protected nonpublic under
17.20this subdivision become public data if submitted to a court or administrative law judge as
17.21part of a disciplinary proceeding in which there is a public hearing concerning a license
17.22which has been suspended, immediately suspended, revoked, or denied.
17.23 (f) Data generated in the course of licensing investigations that relate to an alleged
17.24violation of law are investigative data under subdivision 3.
17.25 (g) Data that are not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
17.26this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report as defined in section626.556,
17.27subdivision 2 , or
626.5572, subdivision 18 , are subject to the destruction provisions of
17.28sections626.556, subdivision 11c , and
626.557, subdivision 12b .
17.29 (h) Upon request, not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
17.30this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report of substantiated maltreatment as
17.31defined in section626.556 or
626.557 may be exchanged with the Department of Health
17.32for purposes of completing background studies pursuant to section144.057 and with
17.33the Department of Corrections for purposes of completing background studies pursuant
17.34to section241.021 .
17.35 (i) Data on individuals collected according to licensing activities under chapters
17.36245A and 245C, and data on individuals collected by the commissioner of human services
18.1according to maltreatment investigations under sections626.556 and
626.557 , may be
18.2shared with the Department of Human Rights, the Department of Health, the Department
18.3of Corrections, the ombudsman for mental health and developmental disabilities, and
18.4the individual's professional regulatory board when there is reason to believe that laws
18.5or standards under the jurisdiction of those agencies may have been violated. Unless
18.6otherwise specified in this chapter, the identity of a reporter of alleged maltreatment or
18.7licensing violations may not be disclosed.
18.8 (j) In addition to the notice of determinations required under section626.556,
18.9subdivision 10f , if the commissioner or the local social services agency has determined
18.10that an individual is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment of a child based on sexual
18.11abuse, as defined in section626.556, subdivision 2 , and the commissioner or local social
18.12services agency knows that the individual is a person responsible for a child's care in
18.13another facility, the commissioner or local social services agency shall notify the head
18.14of that facility of this determination. The notification must include an explanation of the
18.15individual's available appeal rights and the status of any appeal. If a notice is given under
18.16this paragraph, the government entity making the notification shall provide a copy of the
18.17notice to the individual who is the subject of the notice.
18.18 (k) All not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under this
18.19subdivision and subdivision 3 may be exchanged between the Department of Human
18.20Services, Licensing Division, and the Department of Corrections for purposes of
18.21regulating services for which the Department of Human Services and the Department
18.22of Corrections have regulatory authority.
18.23 Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
18.24 Subd. 5. Medical data; contracts. Data relating to the medical, psychiatric, or
18.25mental health of any individual, including diagnosis, progress charts, treatment received,
18.26case histories, and opinions of health care providers, thatis collected, are maintained,
18.27used, or disseminated by any agency to the welfare system is private data on individuals
18.28and will be available to the data subject, unless the private health care provider has clearly
18.29requested in writing that the data be withheld pursuant to sections144.291 to 144.298.
18.30Data on individuals that is collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by a private health
18.31care provider under contract to any agency of the welfare systemis are private data on
18.32individuals, andis are subject to the provisions of sections
13.02 to
13.07 and this section,
18.33except that the provisions of section13.04, subdivision 3 , shall not apply. Access to
18.34medical data referred to in this subdivision by the individual who is the subject of the data
18.35is subject to the provisions of sections144.291 to 144.298. Access to information that is
19.1maintained by the public authority responsible for support enforcement and that is needed
19.2to enforce medical support is subject to the provisions of section518A.41 .
19.3 Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
19.4 Subd. 6. Other data. Data collected, used, maintained, or disseminated by the
19.5welfare system thatis are not data on individuals is are public pursuant to section
13.03 ,
19.6except the following data:
19.7(a) investigative data classified by section13.39 ;
19.8(b) welfare investigative data classified by section13.46, subdivision 3 ; and
19.9(c) security information classified by section13.37, subdivision 2 .
19.10 Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.462, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.11 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section, "benefit data"means are data on
19.12individuals collected or created because an individual seeks information about becoming,
19.13is, or was an applicant for or a recipient of benefits or services provided under various
19.14housing, home ownership, rehabilitation and community action agency, Head Start, and
19.15food assistance programs administered by government entities. Benefit data does not
19.16include welfare data which shall be administered in accordance with section13.46 .
19.17 Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.47, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.18 Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) "Employment and training data"means are data on
19.19individuals collected, maintained, used, or disseminated because an individual applies for,
19.20is currently enrolled in, or has been enrolled in employment and training programs funded
19.21with federal, state, or local resources, including those provided under the Workforce
19.22Investment Act of 1998, United States Code, title 29, section 2801.
19.23(b) "Employment and training service provider" means an entity certified, or seeking
19.24to be certified, by the commissioner of employment and economic development to
19.25deliver employment and training services under section116J.401, subdivision 2 , or an
19.26organization that contracts with a certified entity or the Department of Employment and
19.27Economic Development to deliver employment and training services.
19.28(c) "Provider of training services" means an organization or entity that provides
19.29training under the Workforce Investment Act of 1998, United States Code, title 29,
19.30section 2801.
19.31 Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.485, is amended by adding a subdivision
19.32to read:
20.1 Subd. 5. Corporations created before May 31, 1997. Government data maintained
20.2by a corporation created by a political subdivision before May 31, 1997, are governed by
20.3section 465.719, subdivision 14.
20.4 Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.485, is amended by adding a subdivision
20.5to read:
20.6 Subd. 6. Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. Government data maintained by
20.7Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. are classified under section 116T.02, subdivisions
20.87 and 8.
20.9 Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.548, is amended to read:
20.1013.548 SOCIAL RECREATIONAL DATA.
20.11The following data collected and maintained by political subdivisions for the purpose
20.12of enrolling individuals in recreational and other social programs areclassified as private,
20.13pursuant to section
13.02, subdivision 12 : the name, address, telephone number, any other
20.14data thatidentifies identify the individual, and any data which describes the health or
20.15medical condition of the individual, family relationships and living arrangements of an
20.16individual or which are opinions as to the emotional makeup or behavior of an individual.
20.17 Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.585, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
20.18 Subd. 2. Confidential data. The following data on individuals maintained by the
20.19housing agency areclassified as confidential data, pursuant to section
13.02, subdivision
20.203
: correspondence between the agency and the agency's attorney containing data collected
20.21as part of an active investigation undertaken for the purpose of the commencement or
20.22defense of potential or actual litigation, including but not limited to: referrals to the Office
20.23of the Inspector General or other prosecuting agencies for possible prosecution for fraud;
20.24initiation of lease terminations and eviction actions; admission denial hearings concerning
20.25prospective tenants; commencement of actions against independent contractors of the
20.26agency; and tenant grievance hearings.
20.27 Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.585, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
20.28 Subd. 3. Protected nonpublic data. The following data not on individuals
20.29maintained by the housing agency areclassified as protected nonpublic data, pursuant
20.30to section13.02, subdivision 13 : correspondence between the agency and the agency's
20.31attorney containing data collected as part of an active investigation undertaken for the
20.32purpose of the commencement or defense of potential or actual litigation, including but
21.1not limited to, referrals to the Office of the Inspector General or other prosecuting bodies
21.2or agencies for possible prosecution for fraud and commencement of actions against
21.3independent contractors of the agency.
21.4 Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.601, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
21.5 Subd. 3. Applicants for appointment. (a) Data about applicants for appointment to
21.6a public body collected by a government entity as a result of the applicant's application for
21.7appointment to the public body are private data on individuals except that the following
21.8are public:
21.9 (1) name;
21.10 (2) city of residence, except when the appointment has a residency requirement that
21.11requires the entire address to be public;
21.12 (3) education and training;
21.13 (4) employment history;
21.14 (5) volunteer work;
21.15 (6) awards and honors;
21.16 (7) prior government service;and
21.17 (8) any data required to be provided or thatis are voluntarily provided in an
21.18application for appointment to a multimember agency pursuant to section15.0597 .; and
21.19(9) veteran status.
21.20 (b) Once an individual is appointed to a public body, the following additional items
21.21of data are public:
21.22 (1) residential address;and
21.23 (2) either a telephone number or electronic mail address where the appointee can be
21.24reached, or both at the request of the appointee.;
21.25(3) first and last dates of service on the public body;
21.26(4) the existence and status of any complaints or charges against an appointee; and
21.27(5) upon completion of an investigation of a complaint or charge against an
21.28appointee, the final investigative report is public, unless access to the data would
21.29jeopardize an active investigation.
21.30 (c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), any electronic mail address or telephone number
21.31provided by a public body for use by an appointee shall be public. An appointee may
21.32use an electronic mail address or telephone number provided by the public body as the
21.33designated electronic mail address or telephone number at which the appointee can be
21.34reached.
22.1 Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.635, is amended by adding a subdivision
22.2to read:
22.3 Subd. 4a. Dependent eligibility audit. Data submitted to the commissioner of
22.4management and budget as part of a dependent eligibility audit are classified under
22.5section 43A.28.
22.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
22.7 Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.64, is amended by adding a subdivision
22.8to read:
22.9 Subd. 3. Unofficial fiscal notes. (a) For purposes of this subdivision, "unofficial
22.10fiscal note" means a fiscal note requested by or on behalf of a member of the legislature
22.11on draft language for a bill that has not been introduced.
22.12(b) This paragraph applies if a request for an unofficial fiscal note is accompanied
22.13by a directive from the requester that the data be classified under this paragraph.
22.14Government data on the request, the bill draft, and the unofficial fiscal note are private
22.15data on individuals or nonpublic data, provided that the data are accessible to, and may
22.16be disclosed by, the requester. If the unofficial fiscal note or an updated version is
22.17subsequently used for an introduced bill, or any legislation, including an amendment or a
22.18proposed bill, that any member of the legislature offers for consideration by a legislative
22.19committee, the fiscal note becomes public data.
22.20 Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.643, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
22.21 Subd. 5. Data received from federal government. All data received by the
22.22Department of Agriculture from the United States Department of Health and Human
22.23Services, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Agriculture, Food Safety, and
22.24Inspection Service thatis are necessary for the purpose of carrying out the Department
22.25of Agriculture's statutory food safety regulatory and enforcement duties are classified
22.26as nonpublic data under section13.02, subdivision 9 , and private data on individuals
22.27under section13.02, subdivision 12 . This section does not preclude the obligation of the
22.28Department of Agriculture to appropriately inform consumers of issues that could affect
22.29public health.
22.30 Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.643, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
22.31 Subd. 7. Research, monitoring, or assessment data. (a) Except as provided in
22.32paragraph (b), the following data created, collected, and maintained by the Department of
22.33Agriculture during research, monitoring, or the assessment of farm practices and related
23.1to natural resources, the environment, agricultural facilities, or agricultural practices are
23.2classified as private or nonpublic:
23.3(1) names, addresses, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses of study participants
23.4or cooperators; and
23.5(2) location of research, study site, and global positioning system data.
23.6(b) The following datais are public:
23.7(1) location data and unique well numbers for wells and springs unless protected
23.8under section18B.10 or another statute or rule; and
23.9(2) data from samples collected from a public water supply as defined in section
23.10144.382, subdivision 4
.
23.11(c) The Department of Agriculture may disclose data collected under paragraph (a) if
23.12the Department of Agriculture determines that there is a substantive threat to human health
23.13and safety or to the environment, or to aid in the law enforcement process. The Department
23.14of Agriculture may also disclose data with written consent of the subject of the data.
23.15 Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.6435, is amended by adding a subdivision
23.16to read:
23.17 Subd. 13. Ethanol producer payments. Audited financial statements and notes
23.18and disclosure statements submitted to the commissioner of agriculture regarding
23.19ethanol producer payments pursuant to section 41A.09 are governed by section 41A.09,
23.20subdivision 3a.
23.21 Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
23.22 Subdivision 1. Private data. The following data created, collected and maintained
23.23by the Office of the Attorney General areclassified as private data on individuals:
23.24(a) the record, including but not limited to, the transcript and exhibits of all
23.25disciplinary proceedings held by a state agency, board or commission, except in those
23.26instances where there is a public hearing;
23.27(b) communications and noninvestigative files regarding administrative or policy
23.28matters which do not evidence final public actions;
23.29(c) consumer complaint data, other thanthat those data classified as confidential,
23.30including consumers' complaints against businesses and follow-up investigative materials;
23.31(d) investigative data, obtained in anticipation of, or in connection with litigation or
23.32an administrative proceeding where the investigation is not currently active; and
23.33(e) data collected by the Consumer Division of the Attorney General's Office in its
23.34administration of the home protection hot line including: the name, address, and phone
24.1number of the consumer; the name and address of the mortgage company; the total amount
24.2of the mortgage; the amount of money needed to bring the delinquent mortgage current;
24.3the consumer's place of employment; the consumer's total family income; and the history
24.4of attempts made by the consumer to renegotiate a delinquent mortgage.
24.5 Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
24.6 Subd. 2. Confidential data. The following data created, collected and maintained
24.7by the Office of the Attorney General areclassified as confidential, pursuant to section
24.813.02, subdivision 3
: data acquired through communications made in official confidence
24.9to members of the attorney general's staff where the public interest would suffer by
24.10disclosure of the data.
24.11 Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
24.12 Subd. 3. Public data. Data describing the final disposition of disciplinary
24.13proceedings held by any state agency, board, or commission areclassified as public,
24.14pursuant to section13.02, subdivision 15 .
24.15 Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.679, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
24.16 Subd. 2. Utility or telephone company employee or customer. (a) The following
24.17are private data on individuals: data collected by the commissioner of commerce or the
24.18Public Utilities Commission, including the names or any other data that would reveal the
24.19identity of either an employee or customer of a telephone company or public utility who
24.20files a complaint or provides information regarding a violation or suspected violation by
24.21the telephone company or public utility of any federal or state law or rule; exceptthis these
24.22data may be released as needed to law enforcement authorities.
24.23(b) The following are private data on individuals: data collected by the commission
24.24or the commissioner of commerce on individual public utility or telephone company
24.25customers or prospective customers, including copies of tax forms, needed to administer
24.26federal or state programs that provide relief from telephone company bills, public utility
24.27bills, or cold weather disconnection. The determination of eligibility of the customers
24.28or prospective customers may be released to public utilities or telephone companies to
24.29administer the programs.
24.30 Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.719, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
24.31 Subdivision 1. Comprehensive health insurance data. (a) The following data
24.32on eligible persons and enrollees of the state comprehensive health insurance plan are
25.1classified as private: all data collected or maintained by the Minnesota Comprehensive
25.2Health Association, the writing carrier, and the Department of Commerce.
25.3(b) The Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association is considered a state agency
25.4for purposes of this chapter.
25.5(c) The Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association may disclose data on eligible
25.6persons and enrollees of the state comprehensive health insurance plan to conduct actuarial
25.7and research studies, notwithstanding the classification ofthis these data, if:
25.8(1) the board authorizes the disclosure;
25.9(2) no individual may be identified in the actuarial or research report;
25.10(3) materials allowing an individual to be identified are returned or destroyed as soon
25.11as they are no longer needed; and
25.12(4) the actuarial or research organization agrees not to disclose the information
25.13unless the disclosure would be permitted under this chapter is made by the association.
25.14 Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.719, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
25.15 Subd. 5. Data on insurance companies and township mutual companies. The
25.16following data collected and maintained by the Department of Commerce areclassified
25.17as nonpublic data:
25.18(a) that portion of any of the following data which would identify the affected
25.19insurance company or township mutual company: (1) any order issued pursuant to
25.20section60A.031, subdivision 5 , or
67A.241, subdivision 4 , and based in whole or in
25.21part upon a determination or allegation by the Commerce Department or commissioner
25.22that an insurance company or township mutual company is in an unsound, impaired, or
25.23potentially unsound or impaired condition; or (2) any stipulation, consent agreement, letter
25.24agreement, or similar document evidencing the settlement of any proceeding commenced
25.25pursuant to an order of a type described in clause (1), or an agreement between the
25.26department and an insurance company or township mutual company entered in lieu of the
25.27issuance of an order of the type described in clause (1); and
25.28(b) any correspondence or attachments relating to the data listed in this subdivision.
25.29 Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7191, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
25.30 Subd. 14. Requirements for health plan companies. (a) Minnesota Risk
25.31Adjustment Association. Data privacy issues concerning the Minnesota Risk Adjustment
25.32Association are governed by section62Q.03, subdivision 9 .
25.33(b) Essential community provider. Data on applications for designation as an
25.34essential community provider are classified under section62Q.19, subdivision 2 .
26.1(c) Disclosure of executive compensation. Disclosure of certain data to consumer
26.2advisory boards is governed by section62Q.64 .
26.3(d) Audits conducted by independent organizations. Data provided by an
26.4independent organization related to an audit report are governed by section 62Q.37,
26.5subdivision 8.
26.6 Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7191, subdivision 18, is amended to read:
26.7 Subd. 18. Workers' compensation self-insurance. (a) Self-Insurers' Advisory
26.8Committee. Data received by the Self-Insurers' Advisory Committee from the
26.9commissioner are classified under section79A.02, subdivision 2 .
26.10(b) Self-insurers' security fund. Disclosure of certain data received by the
26.11self-insurers' security is governed by section79A.09, subdivision 4 .
26.12(c) Commercial self-insurers' security fund. Disclosure of certain data received by
26.13the commercial self-insurers' security fund is governed by section79A.26, subdivision 4 .
26.14(d) Self-insurers' security fund and the board of trustees. The security fund and
26.15its board of trustees are governed by section 79A.16.
26.16(e) Commercial self-insurance group security fund. The commercial
26.17self-insurance group security fund and its board of trustees are governed by section
26.1879A.28.
26.19 Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.72, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
26.20 Subd. 11. Design-build transportation project data. (a) This subdivision
26.21applies to government data of the Department of Transportation when theDepartment
26.22commissioner of transportation undertakes a design-build transportation project as defined
26.23in section161.3410, subdivision 6 , the statement of qualification evaluation criteria and
26.24scoring methodology, statement of qualification evaluations, technical proposal evaluation
26.25criteria and scoring methodology, and technical proposal evaluations are classified as
26.26protected nonpublic data with regard to data not on individuals and as confidential
26.27data on individuals. The statement of qualification evaluation criteria and scoring
26.28methodology and statement of qualification evaluations are public when the Department
26.29of Transportation announces the short list of qualified contractors. The technical proposal
26.30evaluation criteria, scoring methodology, and technical proposal evaluations are public
26.31when the project is awarded.
26.32(b) When the commissioner solicits a request for qualifications (RFQ), as defined in
26.33section 161.3410, subdivision 9:
27.1(1) the statement of qualifications evaluation criteria and scoring methodology,
27.2identifying information concerning the members of the technical review committee, and
27.3the statement of qualifications evaluations are confidential data on individuals or protected
27.4nonpublic data; and
27.5(2) the statement of qualifications submitted by a potential design-build firm, as
27.6defined in section 161.3410, subdivision 4, is nonpublic data.
27.7When the commissioner announces the short list of qualified design-build firms, the
27.8statement of qualifications evaluation criteria and scoring methodology and the statement
27.9of qualifications evaluations classified under clause (1) become public data.
27.10(c) When the commissioner solicits a request for proposals (RFP), as defined in
27.11section 161.3410, subdivision 8:
27.12(1) the technical proposal; alternative technical concepts; preapproved elements;
27.13price proposal; disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity
27.14submittal; and data used to evaluate the disadvantaged business enterprise and equal
27.15employment opportunity submittal, are nonpublic data; and
27.16(2) the technical proposal evaluation criteria and scoring methodology, and technical
27.17proposal evaluations are protected nonpublic data.
27.18(d) When the commissioner opens the price proposals under section 161.3426,
27.19subdivision 1, paragraph (b):
27.20(1) the technical proposal evaluation scores and the dollar amounts in the price
27.21proposals become public data;
27.22(2) the statement of qualifications submitted by a potential design-build firm;
27.23the technical proposal; alternative technical concepts; preapproved elements; the
27.24disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity submittal; and data
27.25used to evaluate the disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity
27.26submittal, remain nonpublic data until the project is awarded, with the exception of trade
27.27secret data as defined and classified in section 13.37; and
27.28(3) the technical proposal evaluation criteria and scoring methodology; technical
27.29proposal evaluations, other than scores made public under clause (1); and identifying
27.30information concerning the members of the technical review committee, remain protected
27.31nonpublic data until the project is awarded.
27.32(e) If all responses to a request for proposals are rejected before awarding the
27.33project, data that do not become public under this subdivision retain their classification
27.34until a resolicitation of the request for proposals results in award of the project or a
27.35determination is made to abandon the project. If a resolicitation of proposals does not
28.1occur within one year of the announcement of the short list of qualified design-build firms,
28.2all data under this subdivision become public.
28.3 Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.72, is amended by adding a subdivision
28.4to read:
28.5 Subd. 17. Adopt-a-highway data. The following data on participants collected
28.6by the Department of Transportation to administer the adopt-a-highway program are
28.7classified as private data on individuals: home addresses, except for zip codes; home
28.8e-mail addresses; and home telephone numbers.
28.9 Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7932, is amended to read:
28.1013.7932 LOGGER SAFETY AND EDUCATION PROGRAM DATA.
28.11 The following data collected from persons who attend safety and education programs
28.12or seminars for loggers established or approved by the commissioner under section
28.13176.130, subdivision
11, is are public data:
28.14 (1) the names of the individuals attending the program or seminar;
28.15 (2) the names of each attendee's employer;
28.16 (3) the city where the employer is located;
28.17 (4) the date the program or seminar was held; and
28.18 (5) a description of the seminar or program.
28.19 Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
28.20 Subd. 2. Arrest data. The following data created or collected by law enforcement
28.21agencies whichdocuments document any actions taken by them to cite, arrest, incarcerate
28.22or otherwise substantially deprive an adult individual of liberty shall be public at all
28.23times in the originating agency:
28.24(a) time, date and place of the action;
28.25(b) any resistance encountered by the agency;
28.26(c) any pursuit engaged in by the agency;
28.27(d) whether any weapons were used by the agency or other individual;
28.28(e) the charge, arrest or search warrants, or other legal basis for the action;
28.29(f) the identities of the agencies, units within the agencies and individual persons
28.30taking the action;
28.31(g) whether and where the individual is being held in custody or is being incarcerated
28.32by the agency;
29.1(h) the date, time and legal basis for any transfer of custody and the identity of the
29.2agency or person who received custody;
29.3(i) the date, time and legal basis for any release from custody or incarceration;
29.4(j) the name, age, sex and last known address of an adult person or the age and sex
29.5of any juvenile person cited, arrested, incarcerated or otherwise substantially deprived
29.6of liberty;
29.7(k) whether the agency employed wiretaps or other eavesdropping techniques, unless
29.8the release of this specific data would jeopardize an ongoing investigation;
29.9(l) the manner in which the agencies received the information that led to the arrest
29.10and the names of individuals who supplied the information unless the identities of those
29.11individuals qualify for protection under subdivision 17; and
29.12(m) response or incident report number.
29.13 Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
29.14 Subd. 3. Request for service data. The following data created or collected by
29.15law enforcement agencies whichdocuments document requests by the public for law
29.16enforcement services shall be public government data:
29.17(a) the nature of the request or the activity complained of;
29.18(b) the name and address of the individual making the request unless the identity of
29.19the individual qualifies for protection under subdivision 17;
29.20(c) the time and date of the request or complaint; and
29.21(d) the response initiated and the response or incident report number.
29.22 Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
29.23 Subd. 6. Response or incident data. The following data created or collected by
29.24law enforcement agencies whichdocuments document the agency's response to a request
29.25for service including, but not limited to, responses to traffic accidents, or whichdescribes
29.26describe actions taken by the agency on its own initiative shall be public government data:
29.27(a) date, time and place of the action;
29.28(b) agencies, units of agencies and individual agency personnel participating in the
29.29action unless the identities of agency personnel qualify for protection under subdivision 17;
29.30(c) any resistance encountered by the agency;
29.31(d) any pursuit engaged in by the agency;
29.32(e) whether any weapons were used by the agency or other individuals;
29.33(f) a brief factual reconstruction of events associated with the action;
30.1(g) names and addresses of witnesses to the agency action or the incident unless the
30.2identity of any witness qualifies for protection under subdivision 17;
30.3(h) names and addresses of any victims or casualties unless the identities of those
30.4individuals qualify for protection under subdivision 17;
30.5(i) the name and location of the health care facility to which victims or casualties
30.6were taken;
30.7(j) response or incident report number;
30.8(k) dates of birth of the parties involved in a traffic accident;
30.9(l) whether the parties involved were wearing seat belts; and
30.10(m) the alcohol concentration of each driver.
30.11 Sec. 57. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
30.12 Subd. 7. Criminal investigative data. Except for the data defined in subdivisions
30.132, 3, and 6, investigative data collected or created by a law enforcement agency in order
30.14to prepare a case against a person, whether known or unknown, for the commission of a
30.15crime or other offense for which the agency has primary investigative responsibilityis are
30.16confidential or protected nonpublic while the investigation is active. Inactive investigative
30.17datais are public unless the release of the data would jeopardize another ongoing
30.18investigation or would reveal the identity of individuals protected under subdivision 17.
30.19Photographs which are part of inactive investigative files and which are clearly offensive
30.20to common sensibilities are classified as private or nonpublic data, provided that the
30.21existence of the photographs shall be disclosed to any person requesting access to the
30.22inactive investigative file. An investigation becomes inactive upon the occurrence of any
30.23of the following events:
30.24(a) a decision by the agency or appropriate prosecutorial authority not to pursue
30.25the case;
30.26(b) expiration of the time to bring a charge or file a complaint under the applicable
30.27statute of limitations, or 30 years after the commission of the offense, whichever comes
30.28earliest; or
30.29(c) exhaustion of or expiration of all rights of appeal by a person convicted on
30.30the basis of the investigative data.
30.31Any investigative data presented as evidence in court shall be public. Data
30.32determined to be inactive under clause (a) may become active if the agency or appropriate
30.33prosecutorial authority decides to renew the investigation.
30.34During the time when an investigation is active, any person may bring an action in
30.35the district court located in the county where the datais are being maintained to authorize
31.1disclosure of investigative data. The court may order that all or part of the data relating to
31.2a particular investigation be released to the public or to the person bringing the action. In
31.3making the determination as to whether investigative data shall be disclosed, the court
31.4shall consider whether the benefit to the person bringing the action or to the public
31.5outweighs any harm to the public, to the agency or to any person identified in the data.
31.6The data in dispute shall be examined by the court in camera.
31.7 Sec. 58. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, is amended by adding a subdivision
31.8to read:
31.9 Subd. 30. Inactive financial transaction investigative data. Investigative data
31.10that become inactive under subdivision 7 that are a person's financial account number or
31.11transaction numbers are private or nonpublic data.
31.12 Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
31.13 Subd. 2. Public data. Unless specifically classified otherwise by state statute or
31.14federal law, the following data created or collected by a medical examiner or coroner on
31.15a deceased individualis are public: name of the deceased; date of birth; date of death;
31.16address; sex; race; citizenship; height; weight; hair color; eye color; build; complexion;
31.17age, if known, or approximate age; identifying marks, scars and amputations; a description
31.18of the decedent's clothing; marital status; location of death including name of hospital
31.19where applicable; name of spouse; whether or not the decedent ever served in the armed
31.20forces of the United States; occupation; business; father's name (also birth name, if
31.21different); mother's name (also birth name, if different); birthplace; birthplace of parents;
31.22cause of death; causes of cause of death; whether an autopsy was performed and if so,
31.23whether it was conclusive; date and place of injury, if applicable, including work place;
31.24how injury occurred; whether death was caused by accident, suicide, homicide, or was
31.25of undetermined cause; certification of attendance by physician; physician's name and
31.26address; certification by coroner or medical examiner; name and signature of coroner
31.27or medical examiner; type of disposition of body; burial place name and location, if
31.28applicable; date of burial, cremation or removal; funeral home name and address; and
31.29name of local register or funeral director.
31.30 Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
31.31 Subd. 4. Investigative data. Data created or collected by a county coroner or
31.32medical examiner whichis are part of an active investigation mandated by chapter 390, or
31.33any other general or local law relating to coroners or medical examinersis are confidential
32.1data or protected nonpublic data, until the completion of the coroner's or medical
32.2examiner's final summary of findings but may be disclosed to a state or federal agency
32.3charged by law with investigating the death of the deceased individual about whom the
32.4medical examiner or coroner has medical examiner data. Upon completion of the coroner's
32.5or medical examiner's final summary of findings, the data collected in the investigation
32.6and the final summary of it are private or nonpublic data. However, if the final summary
32.7and the record of death indicate the manner of death is homicide, undetermined, or
32.8pending investigation and there is an active law enforcement investigation, within the
32.9meaning of section13.82, subdivision 7 , relating to the death of the deceased individual,
32.10the data remain confidential or protected nonpublic. Upon review by the county attorney
32.11of the jurisdiction in which the law enforcement investigation is active, the data may be
32.12released to persons described in subdivision 8 if the county attorney determines release
32.13would not impede the ongoing investigation. When the law enforcement investigation
32.14becomes inactive, the data are private or nonpublic data. Nothing in this subdivision shall
32.15be construed to make not public the data elements identified in subdivision 2 at any point
32.16in the investigation or thereafter.
32.17 Sec. 61. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
32.18 Subd. 6. Classification of other data. Unless a statute specifically provides a
32.19different classification, all other data created or collected by a county coroner or medical
32.20examiner thatis are not data on deceased individuals or the manner and circumstances of
32.21their deathis are public pursuant to section
13.03 .
32.22 Sec. 62. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.87, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
32.23 Subd. 2. Firearms data. All data pertaining to the purchase or transfer of firearms
32.24and applications for permits to carry firearms which are collected by government entities
32.25pursuant to sections624.712 to
624.719 are classified as private, pursuant to section
32.2613.02, subdivision 12
.
32.27 Sec. 63. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13D.015, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
32.28 Subd. 5. Notice. If telephone or another electronic means is used to conduct a
32.29regular, special, or emergency meeting, the entity shall provide notice of the regular
32.30meeting location, of the fact that some members may participate by electronic means, and
32.31of the provisions of subdivision 4. The timing and method of providing notice is governed
32.32by section13D.04 . In addition, the entity must post the notice on its Web site at least ten
32.33days beforethe any regular meeting as defined in section 13D.04, subdivision 1.
33.1 Sec. 64. [13D.08] OPEN MEETING LAW CODED ELSEWHERE.
33.2 Subdivision 1. Board of Animal Health. Certain meetings of the Board of Animal
33.3Health are governed by section 35.0661, subdivision 1.
33.4 Subd. 2. Minnesota Life and Health Guaranty Association. Meetings of the
33.5Minnesota Life and Health Guaranty Association Board of Directors are governed by
33.6section 61B.22.
33.7 Subd. 3. Comprehensive Health Association. Certain meetings of the
33.8Comprehensive Health Association are governed by section 62E.10, subdivision 4.
33.9 Subd. 4. Health Technology Advisory Committee. Certain meetings of the Health
33.10Technology Advisory Committee are governed by section 62J.156.
33.11 Subd. 5. Health Coverage Reinsurance Association. Meetings of the Health
33.12Coverage Reinsurance Association are governed by section 62L.13, subdivision 3.
33.13 Subd. 6. Self-insurers' security fund. Meetings of the self-insurers' security fund
33.14and its board of trustees are governed by section 79A.16.
33.15 Subd. 7. Commercial self-insurance group security fund. Meetings of the
33.16commercial self-insurance group security fund are governed by section 79A.28.
33.17 Subd. 8. Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council. Certain meetings of the
33.18Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council are governed by section 97A.056, subdivision 5.
33.19 Subd. 9. Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. Certain meetings of the board of directors of
33.20Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. are governed by section 116O.03.
33.21 Subd. 10. Minnesota Business Finance, Inc. Certain meetings of Minnesota
33.22Business Finance, Inc. are governed by section 116S.02.
33.23 Subd. 11. Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. Certain meetings of Northern
33.24Technology Initiative, Inc. are governed by section 116T.02.
33.25 Subd. 12. Agricultural Utilization Research Institute. Certain meetings of the
33.26Agricultural Utilization Research Institute are governed by section 116V.01, subdivision
33.2710.
33.28 Subd. 13. Hospital authorities. Certain meetings of hospitals established under
33.29section 144.581 are governed by section 144.581, subdivisions 4 and 5.
33.30 Subd. 14. Advisory Council on Workers' Compensation. Certain meetings of
33.31the Advisory Council on Workers' Compensation are governed by section 175.007,
33.32subdivision 3.
33.33 Subd. 15. Electric cooperatives. Meetings of a board of directors of an electric
33.34cooperative that has more than 50,000 members are governed by section 308A.327.
33.35 Subd. 16. Town boards. Certain meetings of town boards are governed by section
33.36366.01, subdivision 11.
34.1 Subd. 17. Hennepin County Medical Center and HMO. Certain meetings of the
34.2Hennepin County Board on behalf of the HMO or Hennepin Healthcare System, Inc. are
34.3governed by section 383B.217.
34.4 Subd. 18. Hennepin Healthcare System, Inc. Certain meetings of the Hennepin
34.5Healthcare System, Inc. are governed by section 383B.917.
34.6 Sec. 65. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 43A.28, is amended to read:
34.743A.28 ENROLLMENT.
34.8 Subdivision 1. General. The time, manner, and conditions and terms of eligibility
34.9for enrollment of persons eligible for state paid or individual paid life insurance, hospital,
34.10medical and dental benefits, and optional coverages authorized shall be determined and
34.11prescribed by the commissioner according to collective bargaining agreements and plans
34.12established pursuant to section43A.18 .
34.13 Subd. 2. Audit data. Data submitted to the commissioner by individuals for the
34.14purposes of a dependent eligibility audit conducted pursuant to Laws 2011, First Special
34.15Session chapter 10, article 3, section 40, for life insurance and hospital, medical, and
34.16dental benefits are private data on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12,
34.17provided that the data may be shared with and used by an employer if necessary to pursue
34.18any action arising out of apparent ineligibility of a dependent.
34.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
34.20 Sec. 66. [43A.281] LIMIT ON TERMINATION OF DEPENDENT COVERAGE.
34.21(a) The commissioner of management and budget may not terminate the enrollment
34.22of a dependent in the state employee group insurance program as a result of a failure to
34.23submit documentation required under a dependent eligibility verification audit unless all
34.24of the following have occurred:
34.25(1) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
34.26commissioner has notified the covered plan member by mail of each type of required
34.27documentation that has not been submitted;
34.28(2) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
34.29commissioner has notified the covered plan member of the name, telephone number,
34.30and e-mail address of one or more employees of the Department of Management and
34.31Budget who the covered plan member may contact regarding the proposed termination of
34.32the dependent's coverage;
35.1(3) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
35.2commissioner has notified the covered plan member of how the covered plan member
35.3may appeal a finding that a dependent is not eligible to continue in the program, and the
35.4appeal process has been completed; and
35.5(4) if a covered plan member has demonstrated to the commissioner's satisfaction
35.6that it is impractical for the covered plan member to submit required documentation,
35.7the commissioner has provided the covered plan member an alternative compliance
35.8method that the commissioner has determined is a reasonable manner of proving eligible
35.9dependent status, and the covered plan member has not submitted documents required
35.10under this alternative method.
35.11(b) This section expires on January 1, 2014.
35.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
35.13 Sec. 67. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 79A.16, is amended to read:
35.1479A.16 OPEN MEETING; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT.
35.15The security fund and its board of trustees shall not be subject to (1) the Open
35.16Meeting Law, chapter 13D, (2) the Open Appointments Law, (3) theData Privacy Law
35.17Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, chapter 13, and (4) except where specifically
35.18set forth, the Administrative Procedure Act.
35.19The Self-Insurers' Advisory Committee shall not be subject to clauses (2) and (4).
35.20 Sec. 68. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 79A.28, is amended to read:
35.2179A.28 OPEN MEETING; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT.
35.22The commercial self-insurance group security fund and its board of trustees shall not
35.23be subject to:
35.24(1) the Open Meeting Law, chapter 13D;
35.25(2) the Open Appointments Law;
35.26(3) theData Privacy Law Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, chapter 13; and
35.27(4) except where specifically set forth, the Administrative Procedure Act.
35.28 Sec. 69. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 84.0874, is amended to read:
35.2984.0874 ELECTRONIC LICENSING SYSTEM DATA.
35.30(a) The following data created, collected, stored, or maintained by the department
35.31for purposes of obtaining a noncommercial game and fish license, cross-country ski pass,
35.32horse pass, or snowmobile trail sticker; registering a recreational motor vehicle; or any
36.1other electronic licensing transaction are private data on individuals as defined in section
36.213.02, subdivision 12
: name, addresses, driver's license number, and date of birth. The data
36.3may be disclosed for law enforcement purposes. The data, other than the driver's license
36.4number, may be disclosed to a government entity and for natural resources management
36.5purposes, including recruitment, retention, and training certification and verification.
36.6(b) Private data on individuals under paragraph (a) may be disclosed as follows:
36.7(1) for use by any government agency, including a court or law enforcement agency,
36.8in carrying out its functions, or any private person or entity acting on behalf of a federal,
36.9state, or local agency in carrying out its functions;
36.10(2) for use in connection with matters of vehicle or operator safety and theft,
36.11emissions, product alterations, recalls or advisories, and performance monitoring;
36.12(3) for use in the normal course of business by a legitimate business or its agents,
36.13employees, or contractors, in order to verify the accuracy of personal information
36.14submitted by an individual. If the information as submitted is not correct or is no longer
36.15correct, correct information may be obtained only for the purpose of preventing fraud
36.16by, pursuing legal remedies against, or recovering on a debt or security interest against
36.17the individual. If the person requesting access is acting as the agent of a lienholder, the
36.18requestor must submit proof of a contract with the lienholder;
36.19(4) for use in connection with any civil, criminal, administrative, or arbitration
36.20proceedings in any federal, state, or local court or agency or before any self-regulatory
36.21body, including service of process, investigation in anticipation of litigation, and the
36.22execution or enforcement of judgments and orders, or pursuant to an order of a federal,
36.23state, or local court, provided that the requestor provides a copy of the court order;
36.24(5) for use by any insurer or insurance support organization, or by a self-insured
36.25entity, or its agents, employees, or contractors, in connection with claims investigation
36.26activities or antifraud activities. If the person requesting access is an agent of an insurance
36.27company, the requestor must provide the insurance company's name;
36.28(6) for use in providing notice to the owners of towed or impounded recreational
36.29vehicles or watercraft. The person requesting access must provide the name, address, and
36.30telephone number of the entity that requested that the recreational vehicle or watercraft
36.31be towed;
36.32(7) for use by any licensed private investigative agency or licensed security service
36.33for any purpose permitted under this section, provided that the person provides a copy of
36.34a valid license; or
36.35(8) where the use is related to the physical safety or security of operators, vehicles,
36.36pedestrians, or property.
37.1The commissioner must not disclose data under this paragraph if the commissioner
37.2concludes that the requester is likely to use the data for an improper purpose or other
37.3purpose not authorized by this paragraph.
37.4 Sec. 70. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 216C.266, is amended to read:
37.5216C.266 DATA PRIVACY; ENERGY PROGRAMS.
37.6 Subdivision 1. Classification of application data. Data on individuals collected,
37.7maintained, or created because an individual applies on behalf of a household for benefits
37.8or services provided by the energy assistance and weatherization programsis are private
37.9data on individuals and must not be disseminated except pursuant to section13.05,
37.10subdivisions 3 and 4 , or as provided in this section.
37.11 Subd. 2. Sharing energy assistance program data. The commissioner may
37.12disseminate to the commissioner of human services the name, telephone number, and last
37.13four digits of the Social Security number of any individual who applies on behalf of
37.14a household for benefits or services provided by the energy assistance program if the
37.15household is determined to be eligible for the energy assistance program.
37.16 Subd. 3. Use of shared data. Data disseminated to the commissioner of human
37.17services under subdivision 2 may be disclosed to a person other than the subject of the data
37.18only for the purpose of determining a household's eligibility for the telephone assistance
37.19program pursuant to section 13.46, subdivision 2, clause (23).
37.20 Subd. 4. Additional use of energy assistance program data. The commissioner
37.21may use the name, telephone number, and last four digits of the Social Security number of
37.22any individual who applies on behalf of a household for benefits or services provided by
37.23the energy assistance program for the purpose of determining whether the household is
37.24eligible for the telephone assistance program if the household is determined to be eligible
37.25for the energy assistance program.
37.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
37.27 Sec. 71. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.701, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
37.28 Subdivision 1. Fund created; authorized expenditures. The telephone assistance
37.29fund is created as a separate account in the state treasury to consist of amounts received
37.30by the commissioner of public safety representing the surcharge authorized by section
37.31237.70, subdivision 6
, and amounts earned on the fund assets. Money in the fund may be
37.32used only for:
38.1(1) reimbursement to local service providers for expenses and credits allowed in
38.2section237.70, subdivision 7 , paragraph (d), clause (5);
38.3(2) reimbursement of the reasonable administrative expenses of the commission,
38.4a portion of which may be used for periodic promotional activities, including, but not
38.5limited to, radio or newspaper advertisements, to inform eligible households of the
38.6availability of the telephone assistance program;and
38.7(3) reimbursement of the statewide indirect cost of the commission; and
38.8(4) reimbursement of the reasonable expenses of the commissioner of commerce and
38.9the commissioner of human services for administering section 216C.266, subdivisions
38.102 and 4.
38.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
38.12 Sec. 72. REPEALER.
38.13(a) Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.05, subdivisions 1, 2, and 8, are repealed.
38.14(b) Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.4967, subdivision 6a; and 298.22,
38.15subdivision 12, are repealed retroactively from the date of their final enactment.
1.3making technical and clarifying changes to data practices and open meeting law
1.4provisions; imposing a limitation on state dependent audits; repealing certain data
1.5practices provisions; adding cross-references to open meeting law provisions
1.6codified elsewhere;amending Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.02,
1.7subdivisions 3, 4, 8a, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16; 13.03, subdivisions 2, 4; 13.072,
1.8subdivision 2; 13.10, subdivision 1; 13.202, subdivision 3; 13.37, subdivisions 1,
1.92; 13.3805, subdivision 1; 13.384, subdivision 1; 13.39, by adding a subdivision;
1.1013.43, subdivision 1, by adding subdivisions; 13.44, subdivision 3; 13.46,
1.11subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; 13.462, subdivision 1; 13.47, subdivision 1; 13.485,
1.12by adding subdivisions; 13.548; 13.585, subdivisions 2, 3; 13.601, subdivision
1.133; 13.635, by adding a subdivision; 13.64, by adding a subdivision; 13.643,
1.14subdivisions 5, 7; 13.6435, by adding a subdivision; 13.65, subdivisions 1, 2, 3;
1.1513.679, subdivision 2; 13.719, subdivisions 1, 5; 13.7191, subdivisions 14, 18;
1.1613.72, subdivision 11, by adding a subdivision; 13.7932; 13.82, subdivisions 2,
1.173, 6, 7, by adding a subdivision; 13.83, subdivisions 2, 4, 6; 13.87, subdivision 2;
1.1813D.015, subdivision 5; 43A.28; 79A.16; 79A.28; 84.0874; 216C.266; 237.701,
1.19subdivision 1; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 13;
1.2013D; 43A; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.05, subdivisions 1, 2,
1.218; 13.4967, subdivision 6a; 298.22, subdivision 12.
1.22BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
1.23 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
1.24 Subd. 3. Confidential data on individuals. "Confidential data on individuals"
1.25
1.26and
1.27 Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
1.28 Subd. 4. Data not on individuals. "Data not on individuals"
1.29government data
2.1 Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 8a, is amended to read:
2.2 Subd. 8a. Not public data. "Not public data"
2.3
2.4nonpublic, or protected nonpublic.
2.5 Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 9, is amended to read:
2.6 Subd. 9. Nonpublic data. "Nonpublic data"
2.7
2.8and (b) accessible to the subject, if any, of the data.
2.9 Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 12, is amended to read:
2.10 Subd. 12. Private data on individuals. "Private data on individuals"
2.11data
2.12(b) accessible to the individual subject of
2.13 Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 13, is amended to read:
2.14 Subd. 13. Protected nonpublic data. "Protected nonpublic data"
2.15not on individuals
2.16public and (b) not accessible to the subject of the data.
2.17 Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
2.18 Subd. 14. Public data not on individuals. "Public data not on individuals"
2.19are data
2.20 Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 15, is amended to read:
2.21 Subd. 15. Public data on individuals. "Public data on individuals"
2.22
2.23 Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.02, subdivision 16, is amended to read:
2.24 Subd. 16. Responsible authority. (a) "Responsible authority" in a state agency or
2.25statewide system means the state official designated by law or by the commissioner as
2.26the individual responsible for the collection, use and dissemination of any set of data on
2.27individuals, government data, or summary data.
2.28(b) "Responsible authority" in any political subdivision means the individual
2.29designated by the governing body of that political subdivision as the individual responsible
2.30for the collection, use, and dissemination of any set of data on individuals, government
3.1data, or summary data, unless otherwise provided by state law. Until an individual is
3.2designated by the political subdivision's governing body, the responsible authority is:
3.3(1) for counties, the county coordinator or administrator. If the county does not
3.4employ a coordinator or administrator, the responsible authority is the county auditor;
3.5(2) for statutory or home rule charter cities, the elected or appointed city clerk. If the
3.6home rule charter does not provide for an office of city clerk, the responsible authority is
3.7the chief clerical officer for filing and record keeping purposes;
3.8(3) for school districts, the superintendent; and
3.9(4) for all other political subdivisions, the chief clerical officer for filing and record
3.10keeping purposes.
3.11 Sec. 10. [13.025] GOVERNMENT ENTITY OBLIGATION.
3.12 Subdivision 1. Data inventory. The responsible authority shall prepare an inventory
3.13containing the authority's name, title, address, and a description of each category of record,
3.14file, or process relating to private or confidential data on individuals maintained by the
3.15authority's government entity. Forms used to collect private and confidential data may be
3.16included in the inventory. The responsible authority shall update the inventory annually
3.17and make any changes necessary to maintain the accuracy of the inventory. The inventory
3.18must be available from the responsible authority to the public according to the provisions
3.19of sections 13.03 and 15.17. The commissioner may require responsible authorities to
3.20submit copies of the inventory and may request additional information relevant to data
3.21collection practices, policies, and procedures.
3.22 Subd. 2. Public data access policy. The responsible authority shall prepare a
3.23written data access policy and update it no later than August 1 of each year, and at any
3.24other time as necessary to reflect changes in personnel, procedures, or other circumstances
3.25that impact the public's ability to access data.
3.26 Subd. 3. Data subject rights and access policy. The responsible authority shall
3.27prepare a written policy of the rights of data subjects under section 13.04 and the specific
3.28procedures used by the government entity for access by the data subject to public or
3.29private data on individuals. The written policy must be updated no later than August 1 of
3.30each year, and at any other time as necessary to reflect changes in personnel, procedures,
3.31or other circumstances that impact the public's ability to access data.
3.32 Subd. 4. Availability. The responsible authority shall make copies of the policies
3.33required under subdivisions 2 and 3 easily available to the public by distributing free copies
3.34to the public or by posting the policies in a conspicuous place within the government entity
3.35that is easily accessible to the public or by posting it on the government entity's Web site.
4.1 Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.03, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
4.2 Subd. 2. Procedures. (a) The responsible authority in every government entity shall
4.3establish procedures, consistent with this chapter, to insure that requests for government
4.4data are received and complied with in an appropriate and prompt manner.
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.8
4.9
4.10
4.11
4.12
4.13researchers including historians, genealogists and other scholars to carry out extensive
4.14research and complete copying of all records containing government data except as
4.15otherwise expressly provided by law.
4.16A responsible authority may designate one or more designees.
4.17 Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.03, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
4.18 Subd. 4. Change in classification of data; effect of dissemination among
4.19agencies. (a) The classification of a government entity's data
4.20shall change if it is required to do so to comply with either judicial or administrative rules
4.21pertaining to the conduct of legal actions or with a specific statute applicable to the data
4.22in the possession of the disseminating or receiving entity.
4.23 (b) If data on individuals
4.24chapter, or any other statute or federal law, the data
4.25 (c) To the extent that government data
4.26by another government entity, the data disseminated shall have the same classification
4.27
4.28providing
4.29 (d) If a government entity disseminates data to another government entity, a
4.30classification provided for by law
4.31affect the classification of the data
4.32 (e) To the extent that judicial branch data
4.33by the judicial branch, the data disseminated shall have the same level of accessibility
4.34
4.35
5.1classification in state statute or federal law, the government entity must maintain the
5.2data according to the specific classification.
5.3 Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.072, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
5.4 Subd. 2. Effect. Opinions issued by the commissioner under this section are not
5.5binding on the government entity or members of a body subject to chapter 13D whose
5.6data or performance of duties is the subject of the opinion, but an opinion described in
5.7subdivision 1, paragraph (a), must be given deference by a court or other tribunal in a
5.8proceeding involving the data. The commissioner shall arrange for public dissemination
5.9of opinions issued under this section, and shall indicate when the principles stated in
5.10an opinion are not intended to provide guidance to all similarly situated persons or
5.11government entities. This section does not preclude a person from bringing any other
5.12action under this chapter or other law in addition to or instead of requesting a written
5.13opinion. A government entity, members of a body subject to chapter 13D, or person that
5.14acts in conformity with a written opinion of the commissioner issued to the government
5.15entity, members, or person or to another party is not liable for compensatory or exemplary
5.16damages or awards of attorneys fees in actions for violations arising under section
5.17or
5.18any other penalty under chapter 13D. A member of a body subject to chapter 13D is not
5.19subject to forfeiture of office if the member was acting in reliance on an opinion.
5.20 Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.10, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
5.21 Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this chapter:
5.22(a) "Confidential data on decedents"
5.23the data subject, were classified by statute, federal law, or temporary classification as
5.24confidential data.
5.25(b) "Private data on decedents"
5.26subject, were classified by statute, federal law, or temporary classification as private data.
5.27(c) "Representative of the decedent"
5.28estate of the decedent during the period of administration, or if no personal representative
5.29has been appointed or after discharge of the personal representative, the surviving spouse,
5.30any child of the decedent, or, if there is no surviving spouse or children, the parents of
5.31the decedent.
5.32 Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.202, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
6.1 Subd. 3. Hennepin County. (a) Data collected by the Hennepin Healthcare System,
6.2Inc. are governed under section
6.3(b) Records of Hennepin County board meetings permitted to be closed under
6.4section
6.5 Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.37, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
6.6 Subdivision 1. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have the
6.7meanings given them.
6.8(a) "Security information" means government data the disclosure of which the
6.9responsible authority determines would be likely to substantially jeopardize the security of
6.10information, possessions, individuals or property against theft, tampering, improper use,
6.11attempted escape, illegal disclosure, trespass, or physical injury. "Security information"
6.12includes crime prevention block maps and lists of volunteers who participate in community
6.13crime prevention programs and their home addresses and telephone numbers.
6.14(b) "Trade secret information" means government data, including a formula, pattern,
6.15compilation, program, device, method, technique or process (1) that was supplied by the
6.16affected individual or organization, (2) that is the subject of efforts by the individual or
6.17organization that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy, and (3)
6.18that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally
6.19known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can
6.20obtain economic value from its disclosure or use.
6.21(c) "Labor relations information" means management positions on economic and
6.22noneconomic items that have not been presented during the collective bargaining process
6.23or interest arbitration, including information specifically collected or created to prepare
6.24the management position.
6.25(d) "Parking space leasing data" means the following government data on an
6.26applicant for, or lessee of, a parking space: residence address, home telephone number,
6.27beginning and ending work hours, place of employment, work telephone number, and
6.28location of the parking space.
6.29 Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.37, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
6.30 Subd. 2. Classification. (a) The following government data is classified as nonpublic
6.31data with regard to data not on individuals, pursuant to section
6.32private data with regard to data on individuals, pursuant to section
6.33Security information; trade secret information; sealed absentee ballots prior to opening
6.34by an election judge; sealed bids, including the number of bids received, prior to the
7.1opening of the bids; parking space leasing data; and labor relations information, provided
7.2that specific labor relations information which relates to a specific labor organization is
7.3classified as protected nonpublic data pursuant to section
7.4(b) If a government entity denies a data request based on a determination that the
7.5data are security information, upon request, the government entity must provide a short
7.6description explaining the necessity for the classification.
7.7 Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.3805, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
7.8 Subdivision 1. Health data generally. (a) Definitions. As used in this subdivision:
7.9(1) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of health.
7.10(2) "Health data"
7.11maintained by the Department of Health, political subdivisions, or statewide systems
7.12relating to the identification, description, prevention, and control of disease or as part of
7.13an epidemiologic investigation the commissioner designates as necessary to analyze,
7.14describe, or protect the public health.
7.15(b) Data on individuals. (1) Health data are private data on individuals.
7.16Notwithstanding section
7.17provided in this subdivision and section
7.18(2) The commissioner or a local board of health as defined in section
7.19subdivision 2
7.20or identify a case, carrier, or suspect case, to establish a diagnosis, to provide treatment, to
7.21identify persons at risk of illness, or to conduct an epidemiologic investigation.
7.22(3) With the approval of the commissioner, health data may be disclosed to the
7.23extent necessary to assist the commissioner to locate or identify a case, carrier, or suspect
7.24case, to alert persons who may be threatened by illness as evidenced by epidemiologic
7.25data, to control or prevent the spread of serious disease, or to diminish an imminent threat
7.26to the public health.
7.27(c) Health summary data. Summary data derived from data collected under section
7.29 Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.384, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
7.30 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section:
7.31 (a) "Directory information" means name of the patient, date admitted, and general
7.32condition.
7.33 (b) "Medical data"
7.34or client of a hospital, nursing home, medical center, clinic, health or nursing agency
8.1operated by a government entity including business and financial records, data provided
8.2by private health care facilities, and data provided by or about relatives of the individual.
8.3 Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.39, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.4to read:
8.5 Subd. 4. Exclusion. This section does not apply when the sole issue or dispute is a
8.6government entity's timeliness in responding to a data request.
8.7 Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
8.8 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section, "personnel data" means
8.9government data on individuals maintained because the individual is or was an employee
8.10of or an applicant for employment by, performs services on a voluntary basis for, or acts
8.11as an independent contractor with a government entity.
8.12
8.13
8.14
8.15
8.16
8.17 Sec. 22. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.18to read:
8.19 Subd. 7a. Employee suggestion data. Personnel data includes data submitted by
8.20an employee to a government entity as part of an organized self-evaluation effort by the
8.21government entity to request suggestions from all employees on ways to cut costs, make
8.22government more efficient, or improve the operation of government. An employee who is
8.23identified in a suggestion shall have access to all data in the suggestion except the identity
8.24of the employee making the suggestion.
8.25 Sec. 23. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.43, is amended by adding a subdivision
8.26to read:
8.27 Subd. 19. Employee of contractor or subcontractor. The following data
8.28maintained as a result of a contractual relationship entered on or after August 1, 2012,
8.29between a government entity and a contractor or subcontractor are private: the personal
8.30telephone number, home address, and e-mail address of a current or former employee
8.31of the contractor or subcontractor. A government entity maintaining data under this
8.32subdivision must share the data with another government entity to perform a function
9.1authorized by law. The data must be disclosed to a government entity or any person for
9.2prevailing wage purposes.
9.3 Sec. 24. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.44, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
9.4 Subd. 3. Real property; appraisal data. (a) Confidential or protected nonpublic
9.5data. Estimated or appraised values of individual parcels of real property that are made by
9.6personnel of a government entity or by independent appraisers acting for a government
9.7entity for the purpose of selling or acquiring land through purchase or condemnation are
9.8classified as confidential data on individuals or protected nonpublic data.
9.9 (b) Private or nonpublic data. Appraised values of individual parcels of real
9.10property that are made by appraisers working for fee owners or contract purchasers who
9.11have received an offer to purchase their property from a government entity are classified
9.12as private data on individuals or nonpublic data.
9.13 (c) Public data. The data made confidential or protected nonpublic under paragraph
9.14(a) or made private or nonpublic under paragraph (b) become public upon the occurrence
9.15of any of the following:
9.16 (1) the data are submitted to a court-appointed condemnation commissioner;
9.17 (2) the data are presented in court in condemnation proceedings; or
9.18 (3) the negotiating parties enter into an agreement for the purchase and sale of the
9.19property.
9.20The data made confidential or protected nonpublic under paragraph (a) also
9.21become public at the discretion of the government entity, determined by majority vote
9.22of the entity's governing body, or, in the case of a state agency, as determined by the
9.23commissioner of the agency.
9.24EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
9.25 Sec. 25. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
9.26 Subd. 2. General. (a)
9.27
9.28disseminated by the welfare system
9.29disclosed except:
9.30 (1) according to section
9.31 (2) according to court order;
9.32 (3) according to a statute specifically authorizing access to the private data;
10.1 (4) to an agent of the welfare system, including a law enforcement person, attorney,
10.2or investigator acting for it in the investigation or prosecution of a criminal or civil
10.3proceeding relating to the administration of a program;
10.4 (5) to personnel of the welfare system who require the data to verify an individual's
10.5identity; determine eligibility, amount of assistance, and the need to provide services to
10.6an individual or family across programs; evaluate the effectiveness of programs; assess
10.7parental contribution amounts; and investigate suspected fraud;
10.8 (6) to administer federal funds or programs;
10.9 (7) between personnel of the welfare system working in the same program;
10.10 (8) to the Department of Revenue to assess parental contribution amounts for
10.11purposes of section
10.12programs and to identify individuals who may benefit from these programs. The following
10.13information may be disclosed under this paragraph: an individual's and their dependent's
10.14names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, income, addresses, and other data as
10.15required, upon request by the Department of Revenue. Disclosures by the commissioner
10.16of revenue to the commissioner of human services for the purposes described in this clause
10.17are governed by section
10.18but are not limited to, the dependent care credit under section
10.19working family credit under section
10.20under section
10.21 (9) between the Department of Human Services, the Department of Employment
10.22and Economic Development, and when applicable, the Department of Education, for
10.23the following purposes:
10.24 (i) to monitor the eligibility of the data subject for unemployment benefits, for any
10.25employment or training program administered, supervised, or certified by that agency;
10.26 (ii) to administer any rehabilitation program or child care assistance program,
10.27whether alone or in conjunction with the welfare system;
10.28 (iii) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program or the child
10.29care assistance program by exchanging data on recipients and former recipients of food
10.30support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D, 256J, or 256K, child care assistance
10.31under chapter 119B, or medical programs under chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L; and
10.32 (iv) to analyze public assistance employment services and program utilization,
10.33cost, effectiveness, and outcomes as implemented under the authority established in Title
10.34II, Sections 201-204 of the Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of
10.351999. Health records governed by sections
10.36information" as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, section
11.1governed by Code of Federal Regulations, title 45, parts 160-164, including health care
11.2claims utilization information, must not be exchanged under this clause;
11.3 (10) to appropriate parties in connection with an emergency if knowledge of
11.4the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the individual or other
11.5individuals or persons;
11.6 (11) data maintained by residential programs as defined in section
11.7be disclosed to the protection and advocacy system established in this state according
11.8to Part C of Public Law 98-527 to protect the legal and human rights of persons with
11.9developmental disabilities or other related conditions who live in residential facilities for
11.10these persons if the protection and advocacy system receives a complaint by or on behalf
11.11of that person and the person does not have a legal guardian or the state or a designee of
11.12the state is the legal guardian of the person;
11.13 (12) to the county medical examiner or the county coroner for identifying or locating
11.14relatives or friends of a deceased person;
11.15 (13) data on a child support obligor who makes payments to the public agency
11.16may be disclosed to the Minnesota Office of Higher Education to the extent necessary to
11.17determine eligibility under section
11.18 (14) participant Social Security numbers and names collected by the telephone
11.19assistance program may be disclosed to the Department of Revenue to conduct an
11.20electronic data match with the property tax refund database to determine eligibility under
11.21section
11.22 (15) the current address of a Minnesota family investment program participant
11.23may be disclosed to law enforcement officers who provide the name of the participant
11.24and notify the agency that:
11.25 (i) the participant:
11.26 (A) is a fugitive felon fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after
11.27conviction, for a crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony under the laws of the
11.28jurisdiction from which the individual is fleeing; or
11.29 (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal law;
11.30 (ii) the location or apprehension of the felon is within the law enforcement officer's
11.31official duties; and
11.32 (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of those duties;
11.33 (16) the current address of a recipient of general assistance or general assistance
11.34medical care may be disclosed to probation officers and corrections agents who are
11.35supervising the recipient and to law enforcement officers who are investigating the
11.36recipient in connection with a felony level offense;
12.1 (17) information obtained from food support applicant or recipient households may
12.2be disclosed to local, state, or federal law enforcement officials, upon their written request,
12.3for the purpose of investigating an alleged violation of the Food Stamp Act, according
12.4to Code of Federal Regulations, title 7, section
12.5 (18) the address, Social Security number, and, if available, photograph of any
12.6member of a household receiving food support shall be made available, on request, to a
12.7local, state, or federal law enforcement officer if the officer furnishes the agency with the
12.8name of the member and notifies the agency that:
12.9 (i) the member:
12.10 (A) is fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after conviction, for a
12.11crime or attempt to commit a crime that is a felony in the jurisdiction the member is fleeing;
12.12 (B) is violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under state or federal
12.13law; or
12.14 (C) has information that is necessary for the officer to conduct an official duty related
12.15to conduct described in subitem (A) or (B);
12.16 (ii) locating or apprehending the member is within the officer's official duties; and
12.17 (iii) the request is made in writing and in the proper exercise of the officer's official
12.18duty;
12.19 (19) the current address of a recipient of Minnesota family investment program,
12.20general assistance, general assistance medical care, or food support may be disclosed to
12.21law enforcement officers who, in writing, provide the name of the recipient and notify the
12.22agency that the recipient is a person required to register under section
12.23residing at the address at which the recipient is registered under section
12.24 (20) certain information regarding child support obligors who are in arrears may be
12.25made public according to section
12.26 (21) data on child support payments made by a child support obligor and data on
12.27the distribution of those payments excluding identifying information on obligees may be
12.28disclosed to all obligees to whom the obligor owes support, and data on the enforcement
12.29actions undertaken by the public authority, the status of those actions, and data on the
12.30income of the obligor or obligee may be disclosed to the other party;
12.31 (22) data in the work reporting system may be disclosed under section
12.32subdivision 7
12.33 (23) to the Department of Education for the purpose of matching Department of
12.34Education student data with public assistance data to determine students eligible for free
12.35and reduced-price meals, meal supplements, and free milk according to United States
12.36Code, title 42, sections 1758, 1761, 1766, 1766a, 1772, and 1773; to allocate federal and
13.1state funds that are distributed based on income of the student's family; and to verify
13.2receipt of energy assistance for the telephone assistance plan;
13.3 (24) the current address and telephone number of program recipients and emergency
13.4contacts may be released to the commissioner of health or a local board of health as
13.5defined in section
13.6has reason to believe that a program recipient is a disease case, carrier, suspect case, or at
13.7risk of illness, and the data are necessary to locate the person;
13.8 (25) to other state agencies, statewide systems, and political subdivisions of this
13.9state, including the attorney general, and agencies of other states, interstate information
13.10networks, federal agencies, and other entities as required by federal regulation or law for
13.11the administration of the child support enforcement program;
13.12 (26) to personnel of public assistance programs as defined in section
13.13access to the child support system database for the purpose of administration, including
13.14monitoring and evaluation of those public assistance programs;
13.15 (27) to monitor and evaluate the Minnesota family investment program by
13.16exchanging data between the Departments of Human Services and Education, on
13.17recipients and former recipients of food support, cash assistance under chapter 256, 256D,
13.18256J, or 256K, child care assistance under chapter 119B, or medical programs under
13.19chapter 256B, 256D, or 256L;
13.20 (28) to evaluate child support program performance and to identify and prevent
13.21fraud in the child support program by exchanging data between the Department of Human
13.22Services, Department of Revenue under section
13.23and (b), without regard to the limitation of use in paragraph (c), Department of Health,
13.24Department of Employment and Economic Development, and other state agencies as is
13.25reasonably necessary to perform these functions;
13.26 (29) counties operating child care assistance programs under chapter 119B may
13.27disseminate data on program participants, applicants, and providers to the commissioner
13.28of education; or
13.29(30) child support data on the parents and the child may be disclosed to agencies
13.30administering programs under titles IV-B and IV-E of the Social Security Act, as provided
13.31by federal law. Data may be disclosed only to the extent necessary for the purpose of
13.32establishing parentage or for determining who has or may have parental rights with respect
13.33to a child, which could be related to permanency planning.
13.34 (b) Information on persons who have been treated for drug or alcohol abuse may
13.35only be disclosed according to the requirements of Code of Federal Regulations, title
13.3642, sections
14.1 (c) Data provided to law enforcement agencies under paragraph (a), clause (15),
14.2(16), (17), or (18), or paragraph (b), are investigative data and are confidential or protected
14.3nonpublic while the investigation is active. The data are private after the investigation
14.4becomes inactive under section
14.5 (d) Mental health data shall be treated as provided in subdivisions 7, 8, and 9, but
14.6
14.7 For the purposes of this subdivision, a request will be deemed to be made in writing
14.8if made through a computer interface system.
14.9 Sec. 26. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
14.10 Subd. 3. Investigative data. (a) Data on persons, including data on vendors of
14.11services, licensees, and applicants that is collected, maintained, used, or disseminated
14.12by the welfare system in an investigation, authorized by statute, and relating to the
14.13enforcement of rules or law
14.16(1) pursuant to section
14.17(2) pursuant to statute or valid court order;
14.18(3) to a party named in a civil or criminal proceeding, administrative or judicial, for
14.19preparation of defense; or
14.20(4) to provide notices required or permitted by statute.
14.21The data referred to in this subdivision shall be classified as public data upon
14.22
14.23proceeding. Inactive welfare investigative data shall be treated as provided in section
14.25(b) Notwithstanding any other provision in law, the commissioner of human services
14.26shall provide all active and inactive investigative data, including the name of the reporter
14.27of alleged maltreatment under section
14.28health and developmental disabilities upon the request of the ombudsman.
14.29 Sec. 27. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
14.30 Subd. 4. Licensing data. (a) As used in this subdivision:
14.31 (1) "licensing data"
14.32by the welfare system pertaining to persons licensed or registered or who apply for
14.33licensure or registration or who formerly were licensed or registered under the authority
14.34of the commissioner of human services;
15.1 (2) "client" means a person who is receiving services from a licensee or from an
15.2applicant for licensure; and
15.3 (3) "personal and personal financial data"
15.4identity of and letters of reference, insurance information, reports from the Bureau of
15.5Criminal Apprehension, health examination reports, and social/home studies.
15.6 (b)(1)Except as provided in paragraph (c), the following data on applicants, license
15.7holders, and former licensees are public: name, address, telephone number of licensees,
15.8date of receipt of a completed application, dates of licensure, licensed capacity, type of
15.9client preferred, variances granted, record of training and education in child care and child
15.10development, type of dwelling, name and relationship of other family members, previous
15.11license history, class of license, the existence and status of complaints, and the number
15.12of serious injuries to or deaths of individuals in the licensed program as reported to the
15.13commissioner of human services, the local social services agency, or any other county
15.14welfare agency. For purposes of this clause, a serious injury is one that is treated by a
15.15physician.
15.16When a correction order, an order to forfeit a fine, an order of license suspension,
15.17an order of temporary immediate suspension, an order of license revocation, an order
15.18of license denial, or an order of conditional license has been issued, or a complaint is
15.19resolved, the following data on current and former licensees and applicants are public: the
15.20substance and investigative findings of the licensing or maltreatment complaint, licensing
15.21violation, or substantiated maltreatment; the record of informal resolution of a licensing
15.22violation; orders of hearing; findings of fact; conclusions of law; specifications of the final
15.23correction order, fine, suspension, temporary immediate suspension, revocation, denial, or
15.24conditional license contained in the record of licensing action; whether a fine has been
15.25paid; and the status of any appeal of these actions. If a licensing sanction under section
15.27license holder or applicant is responsible for maltreatment or is disqualified under chapter
15.28245C, the identity of the license holder or applicant as the individual responsible for
15.29maltreatment or as the disqualified individual
15.30of the licensing sanction or denial.
15.31 (2) Notwithstanding sections
15.32when any person subject to disqualification under section
15.33license to provide family day care for children, child care center services, foster care
15.34for children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services for adults in the
15.35provider's home is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment, and the substantiated
15.36maltreatment is a reason for a licensing action, the identity of the substantiated perpetrator
16.1of maltreatment is public data. For purposes of this clause, a person is a substantiated
16.2perpetrator if the maltreatment determination has been upheld under section
16.4facility has not timely exercised appeal rights under these sections, except as provided
16.5under clause (1).
16.6 (3) For applicants who withdraw their application prior to licensure or denial of a
16.7license, the following data are public: the name of the applicant, the city and county in
16.8which the applicant was seeking licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the
16.9initial application and completed application, the type of license sought, and the date
16.10of withdrawal of the application.
16.11 (4) For applicants who are denied a license, the following data are public: the name
16.12and address of the applicant, the city and county in which the applicant was seeking
16.13licensure, the dates of the commissioner's receipt of the initial application and completed
16.14application, the type of license sought, the date of denial of the application, the nature of
16.15the basis for the denial, the record of informal resolution of a denial, orders of hearings,
16.16findings of fact, conclusions of law, specifications of the final order of denial, and the
16.17status of any appeal of the denial.
16.18 (5) The following data on persons subject to disqualification under section
16.20services, foster care for children in the provider's home, or foster care or day care services
16.21for adults in the provider's home, are public: the nature of any disqualification set
16.22aside under section
16.23disqualification; the nature of any disqualification for which a variance was granted under
16.24sections
16.25under section
16.26subject to a background study under section
16.27passed a background study. If a licensing sanction under section
16.28denial under section
16.29disqualification under chapter 245C is disqualified, the disqualification as a basis for the
16.30licensing sanction or denial is public data. As specified in clause (1), if the disqualified
16.31individual is the license holder or applicant, the identity of the license holder or applicant
16.32is public data. If the disqualified individual is an individual other than the license holder
16.33or applicant, the identity of the disqualified individual shall remain private data.
16.34 (6) When maltreatment is substantiated under section
16.35victim and the substantiated perpetrator are affiliated with a program licensed under
16.36chapter 245A, the commissioner of human services, local social services agency, or
17.1county welfare agency may inform the license holder where the maltreatment occurred of
17.2the identity of the substantiated perpetrator and the victim.
17.3 (7) Notwithstanding clause (1), for child foster care, only the name of the license
17.4holder and the status of the license are public if the county attorney has requested that data
17.5otherwise classified as public data under clause (1) be considered private data based on the
17.6best interests of a child in placement in a licensed program.
17.7 (c) The following are private data on individuals under section
17.812
17.9data on family day care program and family foster care program applicants and licensees
17.10and their family members who provide services under the license.
17.11 (d) The following are private data on individuals: the identity of persons who have
17.12made reports concerning licensees or applicants that appear in inactive investigative data,
17.13and the records of clients or employees of the licensee or applicant for licensure whose
17.14records are received by the licensing agency for purposes of review or in anticipation of a
17.15contested matter. The names of reporters of complaints or alleged violations of licensing
17.16standards under chapters 245A, 245B, 245C, and applicable rules and alleged maltreatment
17.17under sections
17.18provided in section
17.19 (e) Data classified as private, confidential, nonpublic, or protected nonpublic under
17.20this subdivision become public data if submitted to a court or administrative law judge as
17.21part of a disciplinary proceeding in which there is a public hearing concerning a license
17.22which has been suspended, immediately suspended, revoked, or denied.
17.23 (f) Data generated in the course of licensing investigations that relate to an alleged
17.24violation of law are investigative data under subdivision 3.
17.25 (g) Data that are not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
17.26this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report as defined in section
17.27subdivision 2
17.28sections
17.29 (h) Upon request, not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under
17.30this subdivision that relate to or are derived from a report of substantiated maltreatment as
17.31defined in section
17.32for purposes of completing background studies pursuant to section
17.33the Department of Corrections for purposes of completing background studies pursuant
17.34to section
17.35 (i) Data on individuals collected according to licensing activities under chapters
17.36245A and 245C, and data on individuals collected by the commissioner of human services
18.1according to maltreatment investigations under sections
18.2shared with the Department of Human Rights, the Department of Health, the Department
18.3of Corrections, the ombudsman for mental health and developmental disabilities, and
18.4the individual's professional regulatory board when there is reason to believe that laws
18.5or standards under the jurisdiction of those agencies may have been violated. Unless
18.6otherwise specified in this chapter, the identity of a reporter of alleged maltreatment or
18.7licensing violations may not be disclosed.
18.8 (j) In addition to the notice of determinations required under section
18.9subdivision 10f
18.10that an individual is a substantiated perpetrator of maltreatment of a child based on sexual
18.11abuse, as defined in section
18.12services agency knows that the individual is a person responsible for a child's care in
18.13another facility, the commissioner or local social services agency shall notify the head
18.14of that facility of this determination. The notification must include an explanation of the
18.15individual's available appeal rights and the status of any appeal. If a notice is given under
18.16this paragraph, the government entity making the notification shall provide a copy of the
18.17notice to the individual who is the subject of the notice.
18.18 (k) All not public data collected, maintained, used, or disseminated under this
18.19subdivision and subdivision 3 may be exchanged between the Department of Human
18.20Services, Licensing Division, and the Department of Corrections for purposes of
18.21regulating services for which the Department of Human Services and the Department
18.22of Corrections have regulatory authority.
18.23 Sec. 28. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
18.24 Subd. 5. Medical data; contracts. Data relating to the medical, psychiatric, or
18.25mental health of any individual, including diagnosis, progress charts, treatment received,
18.26case histories, and opinions of health care providers, that
18.27used, or disseminated by any agency to the welfare system is private data on individuals
18.28and will be available to the data subject, unless the private health care provider has clearly
18.29requested in writing that the data be withheld pursuant to sections
18.30Data on individuals that is collected, maintained, used, or disseminated by a private health
18.31care provider under contract to any agency of the welfare system
18.32individuals, and
18.33except that the provisions of section
18.34medical data referred to in this subdivision by the individual who is the subject of the data
18.35is subject to the provisions of sections
19.1maintained by the public authority responsible for support enforcement and that is needed
19.2to enforce medical support is subject to the provisions of section
19.3 Sec. 29. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.46, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
19.4 Subd. 6. Other data. Data collected, used, maintained, or disseminated by the
19.5welfare system that
19.6except the following data:
19.7(a) investigative data classified by section
19.8(b) welfare investigative data classified by section
19.9(c) security information classified by section
19.10 Sec. 30. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.462, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.11 Subdivision 1. Definition. As used in this section, "benefit data"
19.12individuals collected or created because an individual seeks information about becoming,
19.13is, or was an applicant for or a recipient of benefits or services provided under various
19.14housing, home ownership, rehabilitation and community action agency, Head Start, and
19.15food assistance programs administered by government entities. Benefit data does not
19.16include welfare data which shall be administered in accordance with section
19.17 Sec. 31. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.47, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
19.18 Subdivision 1. Definitions. (a) "Employment and training data"
19.19individuals collected, maintained, used, or disseminated because an individual applies for,
19.20is currently enrolled in, or has been enrolled in employment and training programs funded
19.21with federal, state, or local resources, including those provided under the Workforce
19.22Investment Act of 1998, United States Code, title 29, section 2801.
19.23(b) "Employment and training service provider" means an entity certified, or seeking
19.24to be certified, by the commissioner of employment and economic development to
19.25deliver employment and training services under section
19.26organization that contracts with a certified entity or the Department of Employment and
19.27Economic Development to deliver employment and training services.
19.28(c) "Provider of training services" means an organization or entity that provides
19.29training under the Workforce Investment Act of 1998, United States Code, title 29,
19.30section 2801.
19.31 Sec. 32. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.485, is amended by adding a subdivision
19.32to read:
20.1 Subd. 5. Corporations created before May 31, 1997. Government data maintained
20.2by a corporation created by a political subdivision before May 31, 1997, are governed by
20.3section 465.719, subdivision 14.
20.4 Sec. 33. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.485, is amended by adding a subdivision
20.5to read:
20.6 Subd. 6. Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. Government data maintained by
20.7Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. are classified under section 116T.02, subdivisions
20.87 and 8.
20.9 Sec. 34. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.548, is amended to read:
20.1013.548 SOCIAL RECREATIONAL DATA.
20.11The following data collected and maintained by political subdivisions for the purpose
20.12of enrolling individuals in recreational and other social programs are
20.13
20.14data that
20.15medical condition of the individual, family relationships and living arrangements of an
20.16individual or which are opinions as to the emotional makeup or behavior of an individual.
20.17 Sec. 35. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.585, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
20.18 Subd. 2. Confidential data. The following data on individuals maintained by the
20.19housing agency are
20.20
20.21as part of an active investigation undertaken for the purpose of the commencement or
20.22defense of potential or actual litigation, including but not limited to: referrals to the Office
20.23of the Inspector General or other prosecuting agencies for possible prosecution for fraud;
20.24initiation of lease terminations and eviction actions; admission denial hearings concerning
20.25prospective tenants; commencement of actions against independent contractors of the
20.26agency; and tenant grievance hearings.
20.27 Sec. 36. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.585, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
20.28 Subd. 3. Protected nonpublic data. The following data not on individuals
20.29maintained by the housing agency are
20.30to section
20.31attorney containing data collected as part of an active investigation undertaken for the
20.32purpose of the commencement or defense of potential or actual litigation, including but
21.1not limited to, referrals to the Office of the Inspector General or other prosecuting bodies
21.2or agencies for possible prosecution for fraud and commencement of actions against
21.3independent contractors of the agency.
21.4 Sec. 37. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.601, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
21.5 Subd. 3. Applicants for appointment. (a) Data about applicants for appointment to
21.6a public body collected by a government entity as a result of the applicant's application for
21.7appointment to the public body are private data on individuals except that the following
21.8are public:
21.9 (1) name;
21.10 (2) city of residence, except when the appointment has a residency requirement that
21.11requires the entire address to be public;
21.12 (3) education and training;
21.13 (4) employment history;
21.14 (5) volunteer work;
21.15 (6) awards and honors;
21.16 (7) prior government service;
21.17 (8) any data required to be provided or that
21.18application for appointment to a multimember agency pursuant to section
21.19(9) veteran status.
21.20 (b) Once an individual is appointed to a public body, the following additional items
21.21of data are public:
21.22 (1) residential address;
21.23 (2) either a telephone number or electronic mail address where the appointee can be
21.24reached, or both at the request of the appointee
21.25(3) first and last dates of service on the public body;
21.26(4) the existence and status of any complaints or charges against an appointee; and
21.27(5) upon completion of an investigation of a complaint or charge against an
21.28appointee, the final investigative report is public, unless access to the data would
21.29jeopardize an active investigation.
21.30 (c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b), any electronic mail address or telephone number
21.31provided by a public body for use by an appointee shall be public. An appointee may
21.32use an electronic mail address or telephone number provided by the public body as the
21.33designated electronic mail address or telephone number at which the appointee can be
21.34reached.
22.1 Sec. 38. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.635, is amended by adding a subdivision
22.2to read:
22.3 Subd. 4a. Dependent eligibility audit. Data submitted to the commissioner of
22.4management and budget as part of a dependent eligibility audit are classified under
22.5section 43A.28.
22.6EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
22.7 Sec. 39. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.64, is amended by adding a subdivision
22.8to read:
22.9 Subd. 3. Unofficial fiscal notes. (a) For purposes of this subdivision, "unofficial
22.10fiscal note" means a fiscal note requested by or on behalf of a member of the legislature
22.11on draft language for a bill that has not been introduced.
22.12(b) This paragraph applies if a request for an unofficial fiscal note is accompanied
22.13by a directive from the requester that the data be classified under this paragraph.
22.14Government data on the request, the bill draft, and the unofficial fiscal note are private
22.15data on individuals or nonpublic data, provided that the data are accessible to, and may
22.16be disclosed by, the requester. If the unofficial fiscal note or an updated version is
22.17subsequently used for an introduced bill, or any legislation, including an amendment or a
22.18proposed bill, that any member of the legislature offers for consideration by a legislative
22.19committee, the fiscal note becomes public data.
22.20 Sec. 40. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.643, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
22.21 Subd. 5. Data received from federal government. All data received by the
22.22Department of Agriculture from the United States Department of Health and Human
22.23Services, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Agriculture, Food Safety, and
22.24Inspection Service that
22.25of Agriculture's statutory food safety regulatory and enforcement duties are classified
22.26as nonpublic data under section
22.27under section
22.28Department of Agriculture to appropriately inform consumers of issues that could affect
22.29public health.
22.30 Sec. 41. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.643, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
22.31 Subd. 7. Research, monitoring, or assessment data. (a) Except as provided in
22.32paragraph (b), the following data created, collected, and maintained by the Department of
22.33Agriculture during research, monitoring, or the assessment of farm practices and related
23.1to natural resources, the environment, agricultural facilities, or agricultural practices are
23.2classified as private or nonpublic:
23.3(1) names, addresses, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses of study participants
23.4or cooperators; and
23.5(2) location of research, study site, and global positioning system data.
23.6(b) The following data
23.7(1) location data and unique well numbers for wells and springs unless protected
23.8under section
23.9(2) data from samples collected from a public water supply as defined in section
23.11(c) The Department of Agriculture may disclose data collected under paragraph (a) if
23.12the Department of Agriculture determines that there is a substantive threat to human health
23.13and safety or to the environment, or to aid in the law enforcement process. The Department
23.14of Agriculture may also disclose data with written consent of the subject of the data.
23.15 Sec. 42. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.6435, is amended by adding a subdivision
23.16to read:
23.17 Subd. 13. Ethanol producer payments. Audited financial statements and notes
23.18and disclosure statements submitted to the commissioner of agriculture regarding
23.19ethanol producer payments pursuant to section 41A.09 are governed by section 41A.09,
23.20subdivision 3a.
23.21 Sec. 43. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
23.22 Subdivision 1. Private data. The following data created, collected and maintained
23.23by the Office of the Attorney General are
23.24(a) the record, including but not limited to, the transcript and exhibits of all
23.25disciplinary proceedings held by a state agency, board or commission, except in those
23.26instances where there is a public hearing;
23.27(b) communications and noninvestigative files regarding administrative or policy
23.28matters which do not evidence final public actions;
23.29(c) consumer complaint data, other than
23.30including consumers' complaints against businesses and follow-up investigative materials;
23.31(d) investigative data, obtained in anticipation of, or in connection with litigation or
23.32an administrative proceeding where the investigation is not currently active; and
23.33(e) data collected by the Consumer Division of the Attorney General's Office in its
23.34administration of the home protection hot line including: the name, address, and phone
24.1number of the consumer; the name and address of the mortgage company; the total amount
24.2of the mortgage; the amount of money needed to bring the delinquent mortgage current;
24.3the consumer's place of employment; the consumer's total family income; and the history
24.4of attempts made by the consumer to renegotiate a delinquent mortgage.
24.5 Sec. 44. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
24.6 Subd. 2. Confidential data. The following data created, collected and maintained
24.7by the Office of the Attorney General are
24.9to members of the attorney general's staff where the public interest would suffer by
24.10disclosure of the data.
24.11 Sec. 45. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.65, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
24.12 Subd. 3. Public data. Data describing the final disposition of disciplinary
24.13proceedings held by any state agency, board, or commission are
24.14pursuant to section
24.15 Sec. 46. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.679, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
24.16 Subd. 2. Utility or telephone company employee or customer. (a) The following
24.17are private data on individuals: data collected by the commissioner of commerce or the
24.18Public Utilities Commission, including the names or any other data that would reveal the
24.19identity of either an employee or customer of a telephone company or public utility who
24.20files a complaint or provides information regarding a violation or suspected violation by
24.21the telephone company or public utility of any federal or state law or rule; except
24.22data may be released as needed to law enforcement authorities.
24.23(b) The following are private data on individuals: data collected by the commission
24.24or the commissioner of commerce on individual public utility or telephone company
24.25customers or prospective customers, including copies of tax forms, needed to administer
24.26federal or state programs that provide relief from telephone company bills, public utility
24.27bills, or cold weather disconnection. The determination of eligibility of the customers
24.28or prospective customers may be released to public utilities or telephone companies to
24.29administer the programs.
24.30 Sec. 47. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.719, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
24.31 Subdivision 1. Comprehensive health insurance data. (a) The following data
24.32on eligible persons and enrollees of the state comprehensive health insurance plan are
25.1classified as private: all data collected or maintained by the Minnesota Comprehensive
25.2Health Association, the writing carrier, and the Department of Commerce.
25.3(b) The Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association is considered a state agency
25.4for purposes of this chapter.
25.5(c) The Minnesota Comprehensive Health Association may disclose data on eligible
25.6persons and enrollees of the state comprehensive health insurance plan to conduct actuarial
25.7and research studies, notwithstanding the classification of
25.8(1) the board authorizes the disclosure;
25.9(2) no individual may be identified in the actuarial or research report;
25.10(3) materials allowing an individual to be identified are returned or destroyed as soon
25.11as they are no longer needed; and
25.12(4) the actuarial or research organization agrees not to disclose the information
25.13unless the disclosure would be permitted under this chapter is made by the association.
25.14 Sec. 48. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.719, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
25.15 Subd. 5. Data on insurance companies and township mutual companies. The
25.16following data collected and maintained by the Department of Commerce are
25.17
25.18(a) that portion of any of the following data which would identify the affected
25.19insurance company or township mutual company: (1) any order issued pursuant to
25.20section
25.21part upon a determination or allegation by the Commerce Department or commissioner
25.22that an insurance company or township mutual company is in an unsound, impaired, or
25.23potentially unsound or impaired condition; or (2) any stipulation, consent agreement, letter
25.24agreement, or similar document evidencing the settlement of any proceeding commenced
25.25pursuant to an order of a type described in clause (1), or an agreement between the
25.26department and an insurance company or township mutual company entered in lieu of the
25.27issuance of an order of the type described in clause (1); and
25.28(b) any correspondence or attachments relating to the data listed in this subdivision.
25.29 Sec. 49. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7191, subdivision 14, is amended to read:
25.30 Subd. 14. Requirements for health plan companies. (a) Minnesota Risk
25.31Adjustment Association. Data privacy issues concerning the Minnesota Risk Adjustment
25.32Association are governed by section
25.33(b) Essential community provider. Data on applications for designation as an
25.34essential community provider are classified under section
26.1(c) Disclosure of executive compensation. Disclosure of certain data to consumer
26.2advisory boards is governed by section
26.3(d) Audits conducted by independent organizations. Data provided by an
26.4independent organization related to an audit report are governed by section 62Q.37,
26.5subdivision 8.
26.6 Sec. 50. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7191, subdivision 18, is amended to read:
26.7 Subd. 18. Workers' compensation self-insurance. (a) Self-Insurers' Advisory
26.8Committee. Data received by the Self-Insurers' Advisory Committee from the
26.9commissioner are classified under section
26.10(b) Self-insurers' security fund. Disclosure of certain data received by the
26.11self-insurers' security is governed by section
26.12(c) Commercial self-insurers' security fund. Disclosure of certain data received by
26.13the commercial self-insurers' security fund is governed by section
26.14(d) Self-insurers' security fund and the board of trustees. The security fund and
26.15its board of trustees are governed by section 79A.16.
26.16(e) Commercial self-insurance group security fund. The commercial
26.17self-insurance group security fund and its board of trustees are governed by section
26.1879A.28.
26.19 Sec. 51. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.72, subdivision 11, is amended to read:
26.20 Subd. 11. Design-build transportation project data. (a) This subdivision
26.21applies to government data of the Department of Transportation when the
26.22commissioner of transportation undertakes a design-build transportation project as defined
26.23in section
26.24
26.25
26.26
26.27
26.28
26.29
26.30
26.31
26.32(b) When the commissioner solicits a request for qualifications (RFQ), as defined in
26.33section 161.3410, subdivision 9:
27.1(1) the statement of qualifications evaluation criteria and scoring methodology,
27.2identifying information concerning the members of the technical review committee, and
27.3the statement of qualifications evaluations are confidential data on individuals or protected
27.4nonpublic data; and
27.5(2) the statement of qualifications submitted by a potential design-build firm, as
27.6defined in section 161.3410, subdivision 4, is nonpublic data.
27.7When the commissioner announces the short list of qualified design-build firms, the
27.8statement of qualifications evaluation criteria and scoring methodology and the statement
27.9of qualifications evaluations classified under clause (1) become public data.
27.10(c) When the commissioner solicits a request for proposals (RFP), as defined in
27.11section 161.3410, subdivision 8:
27.12(1) the technical proposal; alternative technical concepts; preapproved elements;
27.13price proposal; disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity
27.14submittal; and data used to evaluate the disadvantaged business enterprise and equal
27.15employment opportunity submittal, are nonpublic data; and
27.16(2) the technical proposal evaluation criteria and scoring methodology, and technical
27.17proposal evaluations are protected nonpublic data.
27.18(d) When the commissioner opens the price proposals under section 161.3426,
27.19subdivision 1, paragraph (b):
27.20(1) the technical proposal evaluation scores and the dollar amounts in the price
27.21proposals become public data;
27.22(2) the statement of qualifications submitted by a potential design-build firm;
27.23the technical proposal; alternative technical concepts; preapproved elements; the
27.24disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity submittal; and data
27.25used to evaluate the disadvantaged business enterprise and equal employment opportunity
27.26submittal, remain nonpublic data until the project is awarded, with the exception of trade
27.27secret data as defined and classified in section 13.37; and
27.28(3) the technical proposal evaluation criteria and scoring methodology; technical
27.29proposal evaluations, other than scores made public under clause (1); and identifying
27.30information concerning the members of the technical review committee, remain protected
27.31nonpublic data until the project is awarded.
27.32(e) If all responses to a request for proposals are rejected before awarding the
27.33project, data that do not become public under this subdivision retain their classification
27.34until a resolicitation of the request for proposals results in award of the project or a
27.35determination is made to abandon the project. If a resolicitation of proposals does not
28.1occur within one year of the announcement of the short list of qualified design-build firms,
28.2all data under this subdivision become public.
28.3 Sec. 52. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.72, is amended by adding a subdivision
28.4to read:
28.5 Subd. 17. Adopt-a-highway data. The following data on participants collected
28.6by the Department of Transportation to administer the adopt-a-highway program are
28.7classified as private data on individuals: home addresses, except for zip codes; home
28.8e-mail addresses; and home telephone numbers.
28.9 Sec. 53. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.7932, is amended to read:
28.1013.7932 LOGGER SAFETY AND EDUCATION PROGRAM DATA.
28.11 The following data collected from persons who attend safety and education programs
28.12or seminars for loggers established or approved by the commissioner under section
28.14 (1) the names of the individuals attending the program or seminar;
28.15 (2) the names of each attendee's employer;
28.16 (3) the city where the employer is located;
28.17 (4) the date the program or seminar was held; and
28.18 (5) a description of the seminar or program.
28.19 Sec. 54. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
28.20 Subd. 2. Arrest data. The following data created or collected by law enforcement
28.21agencies which
28.22or otherwise substantially deprive an adult individual of liberty shall be public at all
28.23times in the originating agency:
28.24(a) time, date and place of the action;
28.25(b) any resistance encountered by the agency;
28.26(c) any pursuit engaged in by the agency;
28.27(d) whether any weapons were used by the agency or other individual;
28.28(e) the charge, arrest or search warrants, or other legal basis for the action;
28.29(f) the identities of the agencies, units within the agencies and individual persons
28.30taking the action;
28.31(g) whether and where the individual is being held in custody or is being incarcerated
28.32by the agency;
29.1(h) the date, time and legal basis for any transfer of custody and the identity of the
29.2agency or person who received custody;
29.3(i) the date, time and legal basis for any release from custody or incarceration;
29.4(j) the name, age, sex and last known address of an adult person or the age and sex
29.5of any juvenile person cited, arrested, incarcerated or otherwise substantially deprived
29.6of liberty;
29.7(k) whether the agency employed wiretaps or other eavesdropping techniques, unless
29.8the release of this specific data would jeopardize an ongoing investigation;
29.9(l) the manner in which the agencies received the information that led to the arrest
29.10and the names of individuals who supplied the information unless the identities of those
29.11individuals qualify for protection under subdivision 17; and
29.12(m) response or incident report number.
29.13 Sec. 55. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
29.14 Subd. 3. Request for service data. The following data created or collected by
29.15law enforcement agencies which
29.16enforcement services shall be public government data:
29.17(a) the nature of the request or the activity complained of;
29.18(b) the name and address of the individual making the request unless the identity of
29.19the individual qualifies for protection under subdivision 17;
29.20(c) the time and date of the request or complaint; and
29.21(d) the response initiated and the response or incident report number.
29.22 Sec. 56. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
29.23 Subd. 6. Response or incident data. The following data created or collected by
29.24law enforcement agencies which
29.25for service including, but not limited to, responses to traffic accidents, or which
29.26describe actions taken by the agency on its own initiative shall be public government data:
29.27(a) date, time and place of the action;
29.28(b) agencies, units of agencies and individual agency personnel participating in the
29.29action unless the identities of agency personnel qualify for protection under subdivision 17;
29.30(c) any resistance encountered by the agency;
29.31(d) any pursuit engaged in by the agency;
29.32(e) whether any weapons were used by the agency or other individuals;
29.33(f) a brief factual reconstruction of events associated with the action;
30.1(g) names and addresses of witnesses to the agency action or the incident unless the
30.2identity of any witness qualifies for protection under subdivision 17;
30.3(h) names and addresses of any victims or casualties unless the identities of those
30.4individuals qualify for protection under subdivision 17;
30.5(i) the name and location of the health care facility to which victims or casualties
30.6were taken;
30.7(j) response or incident report number;
30.8(k) dates of birth of the parties involved in a traffic accident;
30.9(l) whether the parties involved were wearing seat belts; and
30.10(m) the alcohol concentration of each driver.
30.11 Sec. 57. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
30.12 Subd. 7. Criminal investigative data. Except for the data defined in subdivisions
30.132, 3, and 6, investigative data collected or created by a law enforcement agency in order
30.14to prepare a case against a person, whether known or unknown, for the commission of a
30.15crime or other offense for which the agency has primary investigative responsibility
30.16confidential or protected nonpublic while the investigation is active. Inactive investigative
30.17data
30.18investigation or would reveal the identity of individuals protected under subdivision 17.
30.19Photographs which are part of inactive investigative files and which are clearly offensive
30.20to common sensibilities are classified as private or nonpublic data, provided that the
30.21existence of the photographs shall be disclosed to any person requesting access to the
30.22inactive investigative file. An investigation becomes inactive upon the occurrence of any
30.23of the following events:
30.24(a) a decision by the agency or appropriate prosecutorial authority not to pursue
30.25the case;
30.26(b) expiration of the time to bring a charge or file a complaint under the applicable
30.27statute of limitations, or 30 years after the commission of the offense, whichever comes
30.28earliest; or
30.29(c) exhaustion of or expiration of all rights of appeal by a person convicted on
30.30the basis of the investigative data.
30.31Any investigative data presented as evidence in court shall be public. Data
30.32determined to be inactive under clause (a) may become active if the agency or appropriate
30.33prosecutorial authority decides to renew the investigation.
30.34During the time when an investigation is active, any person may bring an action in
30.35the district court located in the county where the data
31.1disclosure of investigative data. The court may order that all or part of the data relating to
31.2a particular investigation be released to the public or to the person bringing the action. In
31.3making the determination as to whether investigative data shall be disclosed, the court
31.4shall consider whether the benefit to the person bringing the action or to the public
31.5outweighs any harm to the public, to the agency or to any person identified in the data.
31.6The data in dispute shall be examined by the court in camera.
31.7 Sec. 58. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.82, is amended by adding a subdivision
31.8to read:
31.9 Subd. 30. Inactive financial transaction investigative data. Investigative data
31.10that become inactive under subdivision 7 that are a person's financial account number or
31.11transaction numbers are private or nonpublic data.
31.12 Sec. 59. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
31.13 Subd. 2. Public data. Unless specifically classified otherwise by state statute or
31.14federal law, the following data created or collected by a medical examiner or coroner on
31.15a deceased individual
31.16address; sex; race; citizenship; height; weight; hair color; eye color; build; complexion;
31.17age, if known, or approximate age; identifying marks, scars and amputations; a description
31.18of the decedent's clothing; marital status; location of death including name of hospital
31.19where applicable; name of spouse; whether or not the decedent ever served in the armed
31.20forces of the United States; occupation; business; father's name (also birth name, if
31.21different); mother's name (also birth name, if different); birthplace; birthplace of parents;
31.22cause of death; causes of cause of death; whether an autopsy was performed and if so,
31.23whether it was conclusive; date and place of injury, if applicable, including work place;
31.24how injury occurred; whether death was caused by accident, suicide, homicide, or was
31.25of undetermined cause; certification of attendance by physician; physician's name and
31.26address; certification by coroner or medical examiner; name and signature of coroner
31.27or medical examiner; type of disposition of body; burial place name and location, if
31.28applicable; date of burial, cremation or removal; funeral home name and address; and
31.29name of local register or funeral director.
31.30 Sec. 60. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
31.31 Subd. 4. Investigative data. Data created or collected by a county coroner or
31.32medical examiner which
31.33any other general or local law relating to coroners or medical examiners
32.1data or protected nonpublic data, until the completion of the coroner's or medical
32.2examiner's final summary of findings but may be disclosed to a state or federal agency
32.3charged by law with investigating the death of the deceased individual about whom the
32.4medical examiner or coroner has medical examiner data. Upon completion of the coroner's
32.5or medical examiner's final summary of findings, the data collected in the investigation
32.6and the final summary of it are private or nonpublic data. However, if the final summary
32.7and the record of death indicate the manner of death is homicide, undetermined, or
32.8pending investigation and there is an active law enforcement investigation, within the
32.9meaning of section
32.10the data remain confidential or protected nonpublic. Upon review by the county attorney
32.11of the jurisdiction in which the law enforcement investigation is active, the data may be
32.12released to persons described in subdivision 8 if the county attorney determines release
32.13would not impede the ongoing investigation. When the law enforcement investigation
32.14becomes inactive, the data are private or nonpublic data. Nothing in this subdivision shall
32.15be construed to make not public the data elements identified in subdivision 2 at any point
32.16in the investigation or thereafter.
32.17 Sec. 61. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.83, subdivision 6, is amended to read:
32.18 Subd. 6. Classification of other data. Unless a statute specifically provides a
32.19different classification, all other data created or collected by a county coroner or medical
32.20examiner that
32.21their death
32.22 Sec. 62. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.87, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
32.23 Subd. 2. Firearms data. All data pertaining to the purchase or transfer of firearms
32.24and applications for permits to carry firearms which are collected by government entities
32.25pursuant to sections
32.27 Sec. 63. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13D.015, subdivision 5, is amended to read:
32.28 Subd. 5. Notice. If telephone or another electronic means is used to conduct a
32.29regular, special, or emergency meeting, the entity shall provide notice of the regular
32.30meeting location, of the fact that some members may participate by electronic means, and
32.31of the provisions of subdivision 4. The timing and method of providing notice is governed
32.32by section
32.33days before
33.1 Sec. 64. [13D.08] OPEN MEETING LAW CODED ELSEWHERE.
33.2 Subdivision 1. Board of Animal Health. Certain meetings of the Board of Animal
33.3Health are governed by section 35.0661, subdivision 1.
33.4 Subd. 2. Minnesota Life and Health Guaranty Association. Meetings of the
33.5Minnesota Life and Health Guaranty Association Board of Directors are governed by
33.6section 61B.22.
33.7 Subd. 3. Comprehensive Health Association. Certain meetings of the
33.8Comprehensive Health Association are governed by section 62E.10, subdivision 4.
33.9 Subd. 4. Health Technology Advisory Committee. Certain meetings of the Health
33.10Technology Advisory Committee are governed by section 62J.156.
33.11 Subd. 5. Health Coverage Reinsurance Association. Meetings of the Health
33.12Coverage Reinsurance Association are governed by section 62L.13, subdivision 3.
33.13 Subd. 6. Self-insurers' security fund. Meetings of the self-insurers' security fund
33.14and its board of trustees are governed by section 79A.16.
33.15 Subd. 7. Commercial self-insurance group security fund. Meetings of the
33.16commercial self-insurance group security fund are governed by section 79A.28.
33.17 Subd. 8. Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council. Certain meetings of the
33.18Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council are governed by section 97A.056, subdivision 5.
33.19 Subd. 9. Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. Certain meetings of the board of directors of
33.20Enterprise Minnesota, Inc. are governed by section 116O.03.
33.21 Subd. 10. Minnesota Business Finance, Inc. Certain meetings of Minnesota
33.22Business Finance, Inc. are governed by section 116S.02.
33.23 Subd. 11. Northern Technology Initiative, Inc. Certain meetings of Northern
33.24Technology Initiative, Inc. are governed by section 116T.02.
33.25 Subd. 12. Agricultural Utilization Research Institute. Certain meetings of the
33.26Agricultural Utilization Research Institute are governed by section 116V.01, subdivision
33.2710.
33.28 Subd. 13. Hospital authorities. Certain meetings of hospitals established under
33.29section 144.581 are governed by section 144.581, subdivisions 4 and 5.
33.30 Subd. 14. Advisory Council on Workers' Compensation. Certain meetings of
33.31the Advisory Council on Workers' Compensation are governed by section 175.007,
33.32subdivision 3.
33.33 Subd. 15. Electric cooperatives. Meetings of a board of directors of an electric
33.34cooperative that has more than 50,000 members are governed by section 308A.327.
33.35 Subd. 16. Town boards. Certain meetings of town boards are governed by section
33.36366.01, subdivision 11.
34.1 Subd. 17. Hennepin County Medical Center and HMO. Certain meetings of the
34.2Hennepin County Board on behalf of the HMO or Hennepin Healthcare System, Inc. are
34.3governed by section 383B.217.
34.4 Subd. 18. Hennepin Healthcare System, Inc. Certain meetings of the Hennepin
34.5Healthcare System, Inc. are governed by section 383B.917.
34.6 Sec. 65. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 43A.28, is amended to read:
34.743A.28 ENROLLMENT.
34.8 Subdivision 1. General. The time, manner, and conditions and terms of eligibility
34.9for enrollment of persons eligible for state paid or individual paid life insurance, hospital,
34.10medical and dental benefits, and optional coverages authorized shall be determined and
34.11prescribed by the commissioner according to collective bargaining agreements and plans
34.12established pursuant to section
34.13 Subd. 2. Audit data. Data submitted to the commissioner by individuals for the
34.14purposes of a dependent eligibility audit conducted pursuant to Laws 2011, First Special
34.15Session chapter 10, article 3, section 40, for life insurance and hospital, medical, and
34.16dental benefits are private data on individuals as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12,
34.17provided that the data may be shared with and used by an employer if necessary to pursue
34.18any action arising out of apparent ineligibility of a dependent.
34.19EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
34.20 Sec. 66. [43A.281] LIMIT ON TERMINATION OF DEPENDENT COVERAGE.
34.21(a) The commissioner of management and budget may not terminate the enrollment
34.22of a dependent in the state employee group insurance program as a result of a failure to
34.23submit documentation required under a dependent eligibility verification audit unless all
34.24of the following have occurred:
34.25(1) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
34.26commissioner has notified the covered plan member by mail of each type of required
34.27documentation that has not been submitted;
34.28(2) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
34.29commissioner has notified the covered plan member of the name, telephone number,
34.30and e-mail address of one or more employees of the Department of Management and
34.31Budget who the covered plan member may contact regarding the proposed termination of
34.32the dependent's coverage;
35.1(3) at least 30 days before the proposed termination of a dependent's coverage, the
35.2commissioner has notified the covered plan member of how the covered plan member
35.3may appeal a finding that a dependent is not eligible to continue in the program, and the
35.4appeal process has been completed; and
35.5(4) if a covered plan member has demonstrated to the commissioner's satisfaction
35.6that it is impractical for the covered plan member to submit required documentation,
35.7the commissioner has provided the covered plan member an alternative compliance
35.8method that the commissioner has determined is a reasonable manner of proving eligible
35.9dependent status, and the covered plan member has not submitted documents required
35.10under this alternative method.
35.11(b) This section expires on January 1, 2014.
35.12EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
35.13 Sec. 67. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 79A.16, is amended to read:
35.1479A.16 OPEN MEETING; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT.
35.15The security fund and its board of trustees shall not be subject to (1) the Open
35.16Meeting Law, chapter 13D, (2) the Open Appointments Law, (3) the
35.17Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, chapter 13, and (4) except where specifically
35.18set forth, the Administrative Procedure Act.
35.19The Self-Insurers' Advisory Committee shall not be subject to clauses (2) and (4).
35.20 Sec. 68. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 79A.28, is amended to read:
35.2179A.28 OPEN MEETING; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT.
35.22The commercial self-insurance group security fund and its board of trustees shall not
35.23be subject to:
35.24(1) the Open Meeting Law, chapter 13D;
35.25(2) the Open Appointments Law;
35.26(3) the
35.27(4) except where specifically set forth, the Administrative Procedure Act.
35.28 Sec. 69. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 84.0874, is amended to read:
35.2984.0874 ELECTRONIC LICENSING SYSTEM DATA.
35.30(a) The following data created, collected, stored, or maintained by the department
35.31for purposes of obtaining a noncommercial game and fish license, cross-country ski pass,
35.32horse pass, or snowmobile trail sticker; registering a recreational motor vehicle; or any
36.1other electronic licensing transaction are private data on individuals as defined in section
36.3may be disclosed for law enforcement purposes. The data, other than the driver's license
36.4number, may be disclosed to a government entity and for natural resources management
36.5purposes, including recruitment, retention, and training certification and verification.
36.6(b) Private data on individuals under paragraph (a) may be disclosed as follows:
36.7(1) for use by any government agency, including a court or law enforcement agency,
36.8in carrying out its functions, or any private person or entity acting on behalf of a federal,
36.9state, or local agency in carrying out its functions;
36.10(2) for use in connection with matters of vehicle or operator safety and theft,
36.11emissions, product alterations, recalls or advisories, and performance monitoring;
36.12(3) for use in the normal course of business by a legitimate business or its agents,
36.13employees, or contractors, in order to verify the accuracy of personal information
36.14submitted by an individual. If the information as submitted is not correct or is no longer
36.15correct, correct information may be obtained only for the purpose of preventing fraud
36.16by, pursuing legal remedies against, or recovering on a debt or security interest against
36.17the individual. If the person requesting access is acting as the agent of a lienholder, the
36.18requestor must submit proof of a contract with the lienholder;
36.19(4) for use in connection with any civil, criminal, administrative, or arbitration
36.20proceedings in any federal, state, or local court or agency or before any self-regulatory
36.21body, including service of process, investigation in anticipation of litigation, and the
36.22execution or enforcement of judgments and orders, or pursuant to an order of a federal,
36.23state, or local court, provided that the requestor provides a copy of the court order;
36.24(5) for use by any insurer or insurance support organization, or by a self-insured
36.25entity, or its agents, employees, or contractors, in connection with claims investigation
36.26activities or antifraud activities. If the person requesting access is an agent of an insurance
36.27company, the requestor must provide the insurance company's name;
36.28(6) for use in providing notice to the owners of towed or impounded recreational
36.29vehicles or watercraft. The person requesting access must provide the name, address, and
36.30telephone number of the entity that requested that the recreational vehicle or watercraft
36.31be towed;
36.32(7) for use by any licensed private investigative agency or licensed security service
36.33for any purpose permitted under this section, provided that the person provides a copy of
36.34a valid license; or
36.35(8) where the use is related to the physical safety or security of operators, vehicles,
36.36pedestrians, or property.
37.1The commissioner must not disclose data under this paragraph if the commissioner
37.2concludes that the requester is likely to use the data for an improper purpose or other
37.3purpose not authorized by this paragraph.
37.4 Sec. 70. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 216C.266, is amended to read:
37.5216C.266 DATA PRIVACY; ENERGY PROGRAMS.
37.6 Subdivision 1. Classification of application data. Data on individuals collected,
37.7maintained, or created because an individual applies on behalf of a household for benefits
37.8or services provided by the energy assistance and weatherization programs
37.9data on individuals and must not be disseminated except pursuant to section
37.10subdivisions 3 and 4
37.11 Subd. 2. Sharing energy assistance program data. The commissioner may
37.12disseminate to the commissioner of human services the name, telephone number, and last
37.13four digits of the Social Security number of any individual who applies on behalf of
37.14a household for benefits or services provided by the energy assistance program if the
37.15household is determined to be eligible for the energy assistance program.
37.16 Subd. 3. Use of shared data. Data disseminated to the commissioner of human
37.17services under subdivision 2 may be disclosed to a person other than the subject of the data
37.18only for the purpose of determining a household's eligibility for the telephone assistance
37.19program pursuant to section 13.46, subdivision 2, clause (23).
37.20 Subd. 4. Additional use of energy assistance program data. The commissioner
37.21may use the name, telephone number, and last four digits of the Social Security number of
37.22any individual who applies on behalf of a household for benefits or services provided by
37.23the energy assistance program for the purpose of determining whether the household is
37.24eligible for the telephone assistance program if the household is determined to be eligible
37.25for the energy assistance program.
37.26EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
37.27 Sec. 71. Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 237.701, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
37.28 Subdivision 1. Fund created; authorized expenditures. The telephone assistance
37.29fund is created as a separate account in the state treasury to consist of amounts received
37.30by the commissioner of public safety representing the surcharge authorized by section
37.32used only for:
38.1(1) reimbursement to local service providers for expenses and credits allowed in
38.2section
38.3(2) reimbursement of the reasonable administrative expenses of the commission,
38.4a portion of which may be used for periodic promotional activities, including, but not
38.5limited to, radio or newspaper advertisements, to inform eligible households of the
38.6availability of the telephone assistance program;
38.7(3) reimbursement of the statewide indirect cost of the commission; and
38.8(4) reimbursement of the reasonable expenses of the commissioner of commerce and
38.9the commissioner of human services for administering section 216C.266, subdivisions
38.102 and 4.
38.11EFFECTIVE DATE.This section is effective the day following final enactment.
38.12 Sec. 72. REPEALER.
38.13(a) Minnesota Statutes 2010, section 13.05, subdivisions 1, 2, and 8, are repealed.
38.14(b) Minnesota Statutes 2010, sections 13.4967, subdivision 6a; and 298.22,
38.15subdivision 12, are repealed retroactively from the date of their final enactment.