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Some New Laws Now in Effect
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July 16, 2021
Some New Laws

July 1 is an important date for new laws. If a bill contains an appropriation, its effective date is July 1. All other bills that do not name a specific start date become effective August 1. Some of the newest Minnesota laws are:

  • HF2360: $110,000 in payouts for claims against the state. This is an annual practice by the Legislature. The joint House and Senate Claims Subcommittee is tasked with determining which claims against the state should be funded.
  • SF1712: Portions of the Pensions and Retirement omnibus bill.
  • SF440: Modifications in statute for tax-forfeited land sales.

Laws that went into effect during the legislative session include:

  • HF729: $7.8 million to law enforcement agencies for expenses related to civil unrest response, including maintaining civil order.
  • SF958: A person who is certified under the Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board can treat police dogs wounded in the line of duty.
  • SF227: Various measures for energy conservation including increasing the state’s annual energy savings goal from 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent and increasing the annual energy savings goal for public utilities providing electric service from 1.5 percent to 1.75 percent.
State Revenue Update

Fiscal year 2021 came to an end on June 30, and the state is beginning to look at the numbers. Preliminary analysis indicates that state general fund revenue for FY 2021 is now 11.2 percent over projection (about $2.68 billion). In total, revenues for FY 2021 totaled $26.58 billion.

A complete report of FY 2021 will be included in October’s Revenue and Economic Update.
Frontline Worker Pay

$250 million in American Rescue Plan aid will be divvied up and paid out to Minnesota’s frontline workers in bonuses. During the pandemic, the term “frontline worker” was broad. Frontline workers included grocery store workers, delivery drivers, childcare employees, health care workers and many in between.

A legislative panel will have the potentially quite heated task of deciding who gets bonuses and in what amount. Panel members who have been determined so far are House Majority Leader Ryan Winker, Rep. Cedrick Frazier, Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, Sen. Erin Murphy, Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer and Sen. Karin Housley. Three members have yet to be appointed.

The only predetermined rule going into negotiations surrounding the pot of money is that long-term care workers must be included. Based on COVID-19 vaccine priority groupings during the initial rollout, about 924,000 Minnesotans are considered “essential workers.”

The panel has until Sept. 6 to decide who will receive bonuses.
They Said It...

We’re just acknowledging that there are a lot of people on the front line of this — long-term care and others — that we say, ‘Yes, you were there,’ and we want to give a bonus related to that. Sen. Majority Leader Paul Gazelka on frontline worker bonuses
Ewald Government Relations Team
David Ewald
651-290-6276
davide@ewald.com

Valerie Dosland
651-265-7857
valeried@ewald.com


Phil Griffin
651-791-0341
philg@ewald.com

Troy Olsen
651-288-3425
troyo@ewald.com


Becca Pryse
651-265-7858
beccap@ewald.com

Allie Spellman

651-285-3522
allies@ewald.com

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