Wisconsin Code § 59.52

County administration
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(1) DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATION. (a) In counties with a population of 750,000 or
more, the county may create a department of administration, provide for the appointment by the county executive of a director of
such department and assign such administrative functions to the
department as it considers appropriate, subject to the limitations
of this paragraph. No such function shall be assigned to the department where the performance of the same by some other
county office, department or commission is required by any provision of the constitution or statutes of this state, except that administrative functions under the jurisdiction of the county civil
service commission or the county auditor may be so assigned notwithstanding sub. (8) and ss. 59.47, 59.60 and 63.01 to 63.17.
Such director shall be appointed by the county executive in the
unclassified civil service and is subject to confirmation by the
county board, as provided in s. 59.17 (2) (bm).
(b) Any county with a population of less than 750,000 may
create a department of administration and assign any administrative function to the department as it considers appropriate, except
that no administrative function may be assigned to the department if any other provision of state law requires the performance
of the function by any other county office, department or commission unless the administrative function is under the jurisdiction of the county civil service commission or the county auditor,
in which case, the function may be assigned to the department
notwithstanding sub. (8) and ss. 59.47, 59.60 and 63.01 to 63.17.
Except as provided under par. (a), in any county with a county executive or county administrator, the county executive or county
administrator shall have the authority to appoint and supervise
the head of a department of administration; and except as provided under par. (a), the appointment is subject to confirmation
by the county board unless the appointment is made under a civil
service system competitive examination procedure established
under sub. (8) or ch. 63.
(2) PUBLIC RECORDS. The board may prescribe the form and
manner of keeping the records in any county office and the accounts of county officers. The board may enact an ordinance
designating legal custodians for the county. Unless prohibited by
law, the ordinance may require the clerk or the clerk’s designee to
act as legal custodian for the board and for any committees, commissions, boards or authorities created by ordinance or resolution
of the board.
(3) RECORDS WHERE KEPT; PUBLIC EXAMINATION; REBINDING; TRANSCRIBING. (a) The books, records, papers and accounts of the board shall be deposited with the respective county
clerks and shall be open without any charge to the examination of
all persons.
(b) When any book, public record or the record of any city,
village or town plat in any county office shall, from any cause,
become unfit for use in whole or in part, the board shall order that
the book, record or plat be rebound or transcribed. If the order is
to rebind such book, record or plat, the rebinding must be done
under the direction of the officer in charge of the book, record or
plat, and in that officer’s office. If the order is to transcribe such
book, record or plat, the officer having charge of the same shall
provide a suitable book for that purpose; and thereupon such officer shall transcribe the same in the book so provided and carefully compare the transcript with the originals, and make the
same a correct copy thereof, and shall attach to the transcript a
certificate over that officer’s official signature that that officer
has carefully compared the matter therein contained with, and
that the same is a correct and literal copy of the book, record or
plat from which the same was transcribed, naming such book.
The certified copy of the book, record or plat shall have the same
effect in all respects as the original, and the original book, record
or plat shall be deposited with the treasurer and carefully preserved, except that in counties having a population of 750,000 or
more where a book containing a tract index is rewritten or transcribed the original book may be destroyed. The order of the
board directing the transcribing of any book, record or plat duly
certified by the clerk shall, with such certificate, be recorded in
each copy of the book, record or plat transcribed. The fee of the
officer for such service shall be fixed by the board, not exceeding
10 cents per folio, or if such books or any part thereof consist of
printed forms, not to exceed 5 cents per folio for such books or
records, to be paid by the county.
(4) DESTRUCTION, TRANSFER OF OBSOLETE RECORDS. (a)
Destruction of obsolete county records. Whenever necessary to
gain needed vault and filing space, county or court officers and
the custodian of the records of all courts of record in the state
may, subject to pars. (b) and (c), destroy obsolete records in their
custody as follows:
1. Notices of tax apportionment that are received from the
secretary of state, after 3 years.
2. Copies of notices of tax apportionment that are sent to local taxing districts by the clerk, after 3 years.
3. Records of bounty claims that are forwarded to the department of natural resources, after one year.
4. Lists of officers of a municipality that are certified to the
county clerk by the municipal clerks, after the date of the expiration of the term listed.
5. Crop reports that are submitted to the clerk by the local assessors, after 3 years.
6. Illegal tax certificates that are charged back to local taxing
districts, 3 years after the date of charging back such certificates.
7. Notices of application for the taking of tax deeds and cer-

tificates of nonoccupancy, proofs of service and tax certificates
that are filed with the clerk in connection with the taking of tax
deeds, after 15 years.
8. Official bonds, after 6 years.
9. Claims that are paid by the county, and papers supporting
such claims, after 7 years.
10. Contracts, notices of taking bids, and insurance policies
to which the county is a party, 7 years after the last effective day
thereof.
11. Reports of town treasurers that are submitted to the clerk
on dog licenses sold and records of dog licenses issued, after 3
years.
12. The clerk’s copies of all receipts that are issued by the
treasurer, 4 years or until after being competently audited, whichever is earlier.
13. Copies of notices that are given by the clerk to the town
assessors setting out lands owned by the county and lands sold by
the county, after 3 years.
14. Tax receipts, after 15 years.
15. All other receipts of the treasurer, after 7 years.
16. Canceled checks, after 7 years.
17. Oaths of office, after 7 years.
18. Case records and other record material of all public assistance that are kept as required under ch. 49, if no payments have
been made for at least 3 years and if a face sheet or similar record
of each case and a financial record of all payments for each aid
account are preserved in accordance with rules adopted by the
department of health services or by the department of children
and families. If the department of health services or the department of children and families has preserved such case records and
other record material on computer disc or tape or similar device,
a county may destroy the original records and record material under rules adopted by the department that has preserved those case
records or other record material.
19. Marriage license applications and records and papers
pertaining to the applications, including antenuptial physical examinations and test certificates, consents of parent or guardian
for marriage and orders of the court waiving the waiting period,
after 10 years.
20. Books in the office of the register of deeds in counties
with a population of 750,000 or more containing copies of deeds,
mortgages, other miscellaneous documents and military discharges that are authorized by law to be recorded in the office if
the records first shall be photographed or microphotographed and
preserved in accordance with ch. 228.
(b) Transfer of obsolete county records. Before the destruction of public records under par. (a), the proper officers in counties with a population of less than 750,000 shall make a written
offer to the historical society under s. 44.09 (1). If the offer is accepted by the society within 60 days, the officers shall transfer title to noncurrent records in their custody as follows:
1. Original papers, resolutions and reports that are connected
with board proceedings.
2. Tax rolls.
3. Original minutes of the board.
(c) Destruction of county records, when. If title is not accepted by the historical society within 60 days after a written offer is made under par. (b), county officers in counties with a population of less than 750,000 may destroy records as follows:
1. Original papers, resolutions and reports appearing in
county board proceedings, 6 years following the date of first publication of the same in the official proceedings of the board.
2. Tax rolls, after 15 years.
3. No assessment roll that contains forest crop acreage may
be destroyed without the prior approval of the secretary of
revenue.
(5) OFFICIAL SEALS. The board may provide an official seal
for the county and the county officers required to have one; and
for the circuit court, with such inscription and devices as that
court requires.
(6) PROPERTY. Except as provided in s. 59.17 (2) (b) 3., the
board may:
(a) How acquired; purposes. Take and hold land acquired under ch. 75 and acquire, lease or rent property, real and personal,
for public uses or purposes of any nature, including without limitation acquisitions for county buildings, airports, parks, recreation, highways, dam sites in parks, parkways and playgrounds,
flowages, sewage and waste disposal for county institutions, lime
pits for operation under s. 59.70 (24), equipment for clearing and
draining land and controlling weeds for operation under s. 59.70
(18), ambulances, acquisition and transfer of real property to the
state for new collegiate institutions or research facilities, and for
transfer to the state for state parks and for the uses and purposes
specified in s. 23.09 (2) (d). The power of condemnation may not
be used to acquire property for the purpose of establishing or extending a recreational trail; a bicycle way, as defined in s. 340.01
(5s); a bicycle lane, as defined in s. 340.01 (5e); or a pedestrian
way, as defined in s. 346.02 (8) (a).
(b) Control; actions. Make all orders concerning county
property and commence and maintain actions to protect the interests of the county.
(c) Transfers. Direct the clerk to lease, sell or convey or contract to sell or convey any county property, not donated and required to be held for a special purpose, on terms that the board
approves. In addition, any county property may be leased, rented
or transferred to the United States, the state, any other county
within the state or any municipality or school district within the
county. Oil, gas and mineral rights may be reserved and leased or
transferred separately.
(d) Construction, maintenance and financing of countyowned buildings and public works projects. 1. Construct, purchase, acquire, lease, develop, improve, extend, equip, operate
and maintain all county buildings, structures and facilities hereinafter in this subsection referred to as “projects”, including without limitation because of enumeration swimming pools, stadiums, golf courses, tennis courts, parks, playgrounds, bathing
beaches, bathhouses and other recreational facilities, exhibition
halls, convention facilities, convention complexes, including indoor recreational facilities, dams in county lands, garbage incinerators, courthouses, jails, schools, hospitals and facilities for
medical education use in conjunction with such hospitals, homes
for the aged or indigent, regional projects, sewage disposal plants
and systems, and including all property, real and personal, pertinent or necessary for such purposes.
2. Finance such projects, including necessary sites, by the issuance of revenue bonds under s. 66.0621, and payable solely
from the income, revenues and rentals and fees derived from the
operation of the project financed from the proceeds of the bonds.
If any such project is constructed on a site owned by the county
before the issuance of the bonds, the county shall be reimbursed
from the proceeds of the bonds in the amount of not less than the
reasonable value of the site. The reasonable value of the site shall
be determined by the board after having obtained written appraisals of value by 2 general appraisers, as defined in s. 458.01
(11), in the county having a reputation for skill and experience in
appraising real estate values. Any bonds issued under this subsection shall not be included in arriving at the constitutional debt
limitation.

3. Operate or lease such projects in their entirety or in part,
and impose fees or charges for the use of or admission to such
projects. Such projects may include space designed for leasing to
others if such space is incidental to the purposes thereof.
(e) Leases to department of natural resources. Lease lands
owned by the county to the department of natural resources for
game management purposes. Lands so leased shall not be eligible for entry under s. 28.11. Of the rental paid by the state to the
county for lands so leased, 60 percent shall be retained by the
county and 40 percent shall be paid by the county to the town in
which the lands are located and of the amount received by the
town, 40 percent shall be paid by the town to the school district in
which the lands are located. The amount so paid by a town to a
joint school district shall be credited against the amount of taxes
certified for assessment in that town by the clerk of the joint
school district under s. 120.17 (8), and the assessment shall be reduced by such amount. In case any leased land is located in more
than one town or school district the amounts paid to them shall be
apportioned on the basis of area. This paragraph shall not affect
the distribution of rental moneys received on leases executed before June 22, 1955.
(7) JOINT COOPERATION. The board may join with the state,
other counties and municipalities in a cooperative arrangement as
provided by s. 66.0301, including the acquisition, development,
remodeling, construction, equipment, operation and maintenance
of land, buildings and facilities for regional projects, whether or
not such projects are located within the county. If a county is required to establish or maintain an agency, department, commission, or any other office or position to carry out a county responsibility, and the county joins with another county or municipality
by entering into an intergovernmental cooperation contract under
s. 66.0301 (2) to jointly carry out the responsibility, the jointly established or maintained agency, department, commission, or any
other office or position to which the contract applies fulfills the
county’s obligation to establish or maintain such entities or positions until the contract entered into under s. 66.0301 (2) expires
or is terminated by the parties. In addition, if 2 or more counties
enter into an intergovernmental cooperation contract and create a
commission under s. 66.0301 (2) to jointly or regionally administer a function or project, the commission shall be considered to be
a single entity that represents, and may act on behalf of, the joint
interests of the signatories to the contract entered into under s.
66.0301 (2).
(8) CIVIL SERVICE SYSTEM. (a) The board may establish a
civil service system of selection, tenure and status, and the system
may be made applicable to all county personnel, except the members of the board, constitutional officers and members of boards
and commissions. The system may also include uniform provisions in respect to classification of positions and salary ranges,
payroll certification, attendance, vacations, sick leave, competitive examinations, hours of work, tours of duty or assignments according to earned seniority, employee grievance procedure, disciplinary actions, layoffs and separations for just cause, as described in par. (b), subject to approval of a civil service commission or the board. The board may request the assistance of the department of administration and pay for such services, under s.
16.58.
(b) A law enforcement employee of the county may not be
suspended, demoted, dismissed or suspended and demoted by the
civil service commission or by the board, based either on its own
investigation or on charges filed by the sheriff, unless the commission or board determines whether there is just cause, as described in this paragraph, to sustain the charges. In making its
determination, the commission or the board shall apply the following standards, to the extent applicable:
1. Whether the employee could reasonably be expected to
have had knowledge of the probable consequences of his or her
alleged conduct.
2. Whether the rule or order that the employee allegedly violated is reasonable.
3. Whether the sheriff, before filing a charge against the employee, made a reasonable effort to discover whether the employee did in fact violate a rule or order.
4. Whether the effort described under subd. 3. was fair and
objective.
5. Whether the sheriff discovered substantial evidence that
the employee violated the rule or order as described in the
charges filed against the employee.
6. Whether the sheriff is applying the rule or order fairly and
without discrimination to the employee.
7. Whether the proposed discipline reasonably relates to the
seriousness of the alleged violation and to the employee’s record
of service with the sheriff’s department.
(c) If a law enforcement employee of the county is dismissed,
demoted, suspended or suspended and demoted by the civil service commission or the board under the system established under
par. (a), the person dismissed, demoted, suspended or suspended
and demoted may appeal from the order of the civil service commission or the board to the circuit court by serving written notice
of the appeal on the secretary of the commission or the board
within 10 days after the order is filed. Within 5 days after receiving written notice of the appeal, the commission or the board
shall certify to the clerk of the circuit court the record of the proceedings, including all documents, testimony and minutes. The
action shall then be at issue and shall have precedence over any
other cause of a different nature pending in the court, which shall
always be open to the trial thereof. The court shall upon application of the accused or of the board or the commission fix a date of
trial which shall not be later than 15 days after the application except by agreement. The trial shall be by the court and upon the
return of the board or the commission, except that the court may
require further return or the taking and return of further evidence
by the board or the commission. The question to be determined
by the court shall be: Upon the evidence is there just cause, as described in par. (b), to sustain the charges against the employee?
No cost shall be allowed either party and the clerk’s fees shall be
paid by the county. If the order of the board or the commission is
reversed, the accused shall be immediately reinstated and entitled
to pay as though in continuous service. If the order of the board
or the commission is sustained, it shall be final and conclusive.
(8m) EMPLOYMENT OF COUNTY JAILERS. (a) The board of
an employer that did not classify county jailers as protective occupation participants on January 1, 2024, shall provide to an individual who is employed as a county jailer the irrevocable option
to elect not to be a protective occupation participant under s.
40.02 (48) (b) 5. when hired after January 1, 2024, as a county
jailer for the employer. An individual shall make an election under this paragraph within 60 days of being hired, in writing and
on a form provided by the board.
(b) The board of an employer that classified county jailers as
protective occupation participants on January 1, 2024, and that
subsequent to that date determines to classify county jailers as
general participating employees shall provide to an individual
who is employed as a county jailer on the date the board of the
employer determines to classify county jailers as general participating employees the irrevocable option to not be a protective occupation participant under s. 40.02 (48) (b) 5. Such a board shall
provide notice to county jailers of the board’s determination and
a jailer’s opportunity to remain a protective occupation participant in writing, in a manner that the employer typically uses to
provide notices to employees, and shall post such a notice where

notices to employees are customarily posted. An individual shall
make an election under this paragraph within 60 days after the
determination by the board of the employer to classify county
jailers as general participating employees, in writing and on a
form provided by the board.
(c) The board of an employer that classified county jailers as
protective occupation participants on January 1, 2024, and that
subsequent to that date determines to classify county jailers as
general participating employees shall provide to an individual
who is hired as a county jailer after the date the board of the employer determines to classify county jailers as general participating employees the irrevocable option to elect to not become a protective occupation participant under s. 40.02 (48) (b) 5. An individual shall make an election under this paragraph within 60 days
after being hired, in writing and on a form provided by the board.
(9) PURCHASING AGENT. The board may appoint a person or
committee as county purchasing agent, and provide compensation for their services. Any county officer or supervisor may be
the agent or a committee member. The purchasing agent shall
provide all supplies and equipment for the various county offices
and the board chairperson shall promptly sign orders in payment
therefor. The board may require that all purchases be made in the
manner determined by it.
(10) SALARIES AND AUTOMOBILE ALLOWANCE; WHEN
PAYABLE. Salaries of county officers and employees shall be
paid at the end of each month, but the board of any county may
authorize the payment of such salaries semimonthly or once in
every 2 weeks in such manner as it may determine. Payment for
automobile allowance to officers and employees, duly authorized
to use privately owned automobiles in their work for the county,
shall be made upon certification of the respective department
heads in a manner similar to that in which salaries are paid, provided such method of payment of automobile allowance is authorized by ordinance specifically stating the departments to which
it applies.
(11) INSURANCE. The board may:
(a) Liability and property damage. Provide public liability
and property damage insurance, either in commercial companies
or by self-insurance created by setting up an annual fund for such
purpose or by a combination thereof, covering without limitation
because of enumeration motor vehicles, malfeasance of professional employees, maintenance and operation of county highways, parks, parkways and airports and any other county activities involving the possibility of damage to the general public.
(b) Fire and casualty. Provide for fire and casualty insurance
for all county property.
(c) Employee insurance. Provide for individual or group hospital, surgical, and life insurance for county officers and employees and for payment of premiums for county officers and employees. A county with at least 100 employees may elect to provide
health care benefits on a self-insured basis to its officers and employees. A county and one or more cities, villages, towns, other
counties, county housing authorities, or school districts that together have at least 100 employees may jointly provide health
care benefits to their officers and employees on a self-insured basis. Counties that elect to provide health care benefits on a selfinsured basis to their officers and employees shall be subject to
the requirements set forth under s. 120.13 (2) (c) to (e) and (g).
(d) Bonds of officers and employees. Provide for the protection of the county and public against loss or damage resulting
from the act, neglect or default of county officers, department
heads and employees and may contract for and procure bonds or
contracts of insurance to accomplish that purpose either from
commercial companies or by self-insurance created by setting up
an annual fund for such purpose or by a combination thereof.
Any number of officers, department heads or employees not otherwise required by statute to furnish an official bond may be
combined in a schedule or blanket bond or contract of insurance.
So far as applicable ss. 19.01 (2), (2m), (3), (4) (d) and (dm) and
(4m) and 19.07 shall apply to the bonds or contracts of insurance.
The bond shall be for a definite period. Each renewal of the bond
shall constitute a new bond for the principal amount covering the
renewal period.
(12) ACCOUNTS AND CLAIMS; SETTLEMENT. The board may:
(a) Examine and settle all accounts of the county and all
claims, demands or causes of action against the county and issue
county orders therefor. In counties with a population of less than
50,000, the board may delegate its power in regard to current accounts, claims, demands or causes of action against the county to
a standing committee where the amount does not exceed $5,000.
In counties with a population of 50,000 or more, the board may
delegate its power in regard to current accounts, claims, demands
or causes of action against the county to a standing committee if
the amount does not exceed $10,000. Instead of delegating its
power under this paragraph to a standing committee, the board
may, by resolution adopted by majority vote, delegate such power
to the chairperson of a standing committee. Such a resolution remains in effect for one year after its effective date or until rescinded, whichever occurs first.
(b) Delegate its power in regard to any claim, demand or cause
of action not exceeding $500 to the corporation counsel. If the
corporation counsel finds that payment of the claim to a claimant
is justified, the corporation counsel may order the claim paid.
The claim shall be paid upon certification of the corporation
counsel and shall be annually reported to the board.
(13) INJURED COUNTY WORKERS. The board may, in addition
to any payments made under ch. 102, make further payment in
such amounts as the board determines to any county employee injured at any time before January 1, 1937, while performing services for the county, in cases in which such further payments
were made over a period of time following the injury and were
based on a moral obligation to such employee.
(14) OPTICAL DISC AND ELECTRONIC STORAGE. (a) Upon request of any office, department, commission, board, or agency of
the county, the board may authorize any county record that is in
the custody of the office, department, commission, board, or
agency to be transferred to, or maintained in, optical disc or electronic storage in accordance with rules of the department of administration under s. 16.612. The board may thereafter authorize
destruction of the original record, if appropriate, in accordance
with sub. (4) and ss. 16.61 (3) (e) and 19.21 (5) unless preservation is required by law.
(b) Any copy of a county record generated from optical imaging or electronic formatting of an original record is considered an
original record if all of the following conditions are met:
1. The devices used to transform the record to optical disc or
electronic format and to generate a copy of the record from optical disc or electronic format are ones that accurately reproduce
the content of the original.
2. The optical disc or electronic copy and the copy generated
from optical disc or electronic format comply with the minimum
standards of quality for such copies, as established by the rule of
the department of administration under s. 16.612.
3. The record is arranged, identified, and indexed so that any
individual document or component of the record can be located
with the use of proper equipment.
4. The legal custodian of the record executes a statement of
intent and purpose describing the record to be transferred to optical disc or electronic format and the disposition of the original

record, and executes a certificate verifying that the record was received or created and transferred to optical disc or electronic format in the normal course of business and that the statement of intent and purpose is properly recorded in his or her office.
(c) The statement of intent and purpose executed under par.
(b) 4. is presumptive evidence of compliance with all conditions
and standards prescribed under par. (b).
(d) A copy of a record generated from an original record
stored on an optical disc or in electronic format that conforms
with the standards prescribed under par. (b) shall be taken as,
stand in lieu of, and have all of the effect of the original record
and shall be admissible in evidence in all courts and all other tribunals or agencies, administrative or otherwise, in all cases
where the original document is admissible. A transcript, exemplification, or certified copy of such a record so generated, for the
purposes specified in this paragraph, is deemed to be a transcript,
exemplification, or certified copy of the original. An enlarged
copy of any record so generated, made in accordance with the
standards prescribed under par. (b) and certified by the custodian
as provided in s. 889.18 (2), has the same effect as an actual-size
copy.
(15) PRINTING IN LOCAL TAX ROLLS, ETC. The board may
provide for the printing in assessment rolls and tax rolls and on
data cards for local municipal officials, the descriptions of properties and the names of the owners thereof, but no municipality
shall be subject to any tax levied to effect these functions where
the municipality provides its own printing for the functions.
(16) PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAX. The board may:
(a) Institutions, state farms, airports. Appropriate each year
to any municipality and school district in which a county farm,
hospital, charitable or penal institution or state hospital, charitable or penal institution or state-owned lands used for agricultural
purposes or county or municipally owned airport is located, an
amount of money equal to the amount which would have been
paid in municipal and school tax upon the lands without buildings, if those lands were privately owned. The valuation of the
lands, without buildings, and computation of the tax shall be
made by the board. In making the computation under this paragraph, lands on which a courthouse or jail are located and unimproved county lands shall not be included.
(b) County veterans housing. 1. If a county has acquired land
and erected on that land housing facilities for rent by honorably
discharged U.S. veterans of any war and the land and housing facilities are exempt from general taxation, appropriate money and
pay to any school district or joint school district wherein the land
and housing facilities are located a sum of money which shall be
computed by obtaining the product of the following factors:
a. The tax rate for school district purposes of the school years
for which the payment is made.
b. The ratio of the assessed valuation to the equalized valuation of the municipality in which the school district lies, multiplied by the actual cost incurred by the county for the acquisition
of the land and improvements on the land used for such purposes.
2. In case of a joint school district, computation shall be
made on the basis of the valuation of the several municipalities in
which the school district lies. If school buildings are inadequate
to accommodate the additional school population resulting from
the county veterans housing program, and the school district cannot legally finance the necessary increased facilities, the board
may appropriate money and grant assistance to the school district
but the assistance shall be used solely to finance the purchase of
land and the erection and equipment of the necessary additional
facilities.
(17) RETURN OF RENTS TO MUNICIPALITIES. The board may
return to municipalities all or any part of rent moneys received by
the county under leases of county-owned lands.
(18) RETURN OF FOREST INCOME TO TOWNS. The board may
return and distribute to the several towns in the county all or any
part of any money received by the county from the sale of any
product from county-owned lands which are not entered under
the county forest law under s. 28.11.
(19) DONATIONS, GIFTS AND GRANTS. The board may accept
donations, gifts or grants for any public governmental purpose
within the powers of the county.
(20) SHERIFF’S FAMILY PENSION. The board may appropriate
money to the family of any sheriff or sheriff’s deputies killed
while in the discharge of official duties.
(21) COUNTY COMMISSIONS. Except in counties having a
population of 750,000 or more, the board may fix and pay the
compensation of members of the county park commission and
the county planning and zoning commission for attendance at
meetings at a rate not to exceed the compensation permitted
supervisors.
(22) COUNTY BOARDS’ ASSOCIATION. By a two-thirds vote,
the board may purchase membership in an association of county
boards for the protection of county interests and the furtherance
of better county government.
(23) PURCHASE OF PUBLICATIONS. The board may purchase
publications dealing with governmental problems and furnish
copies thereof to supervisors, officers and employees.
(24) PARKING AREAS. The board may enact ordinances establishing areas for parking of vehicles on lands owned or leased
by the county; for regulating or prohibiting parking of vehicles on
such areas or parts of such areas, including, but not limited to,
provision for parking in such areas or parts thereof for only certain purposes or by only certain personnel; for forfeitures for violations thereof, but not to exceed $50 for each offense; and for the
enforcement of such ordinances.
(25) ADVISORY AND CONTINGENT REFERENDA. The board
may conduct a countywide referendum for the purpose of ratifying or validating a resolution adopted or ordinance enacted by the
board contingent upon approval in the referendum. The board
may not conduct a referendum for advisory purposes, except as
provided under s. 66.0305 (6) or for an advisory referendum regarding capital expenditures proposed to be funded by the county
property tax levy.
(26) TRANSCRIPTS. The board may procure transcripts or abstracts of the records of any other county affecting the title to real
estate in such county, and such transcripts or abstracts shall be
prima facie evidence of title.
(27) BAIL BONDS. The authority of the board to remit forfeited bond moneys to the bondsmen or their heirs or legal representatives, where such forfeiture arises as a result of failure of a
defendant to appear and where such failure to appear is occasioned by a justifiable cause, is hereby confirmed.
(28) COLLECTION OF COURT IMPOSED PENALTIES. The board
may adopt a resolution authorizing the clerk of circuit court, under s. 59.40 (4), to contract with a debt collector, as defined in s.
427.103 (3), or enter into an agreement with the department of
revenue under s. 71.93 (8) for the collection of debt.
(29) PUBLIC WORK, HOW DONE; PUBLIC EMERGENCIES. (a)
All public work, including any contract for the construction, repair, remodeling or improvement of any public work, building, or
furnishing of supplies or material of any kind where the estimated cost of such work will exceed $25,000 shall be let by contract to the lowest responsible bidder. Any public work, the estimated cost of which does not exceed $25,000, shall be let as the
board may direct. If the estimated cost of any public work is be-

tween $5,000 and $25,000, the board shall give a class 1 notice
under ch. 985 before it contracts for the work or shall contract
with a person qualified as a bidder under s. 66.0901 (2). A contract, the estimated cost of which exceeds $25,000, shall be let
and entered into under s. 66.0901, except that the board may by a
three-fourths vote of all the members entitled to a seat provide
that any class of public work or any part thereof may be done directly by the county without submitting the same for bids. This
subsection does not apply to public construction if the materials
for such a project are donated or if the labor for such a project is
provided by volunteers. This subsection does not apply to highway contracts which the county highway committee or the county
highway commissioner is authorized by law to let or make.
(b) The provisions of par. (a) are not mandatory for the repair
or reconstruction of public facilities when damage or threatened
damage thereto creates an emergency, as determined by resolution of the board, in which the public health or welfare of the
county is endangered. Whenever the board by majority vote at a
regular or special meeting determines that an emergency no
longer exists, this paragraph no longer applies.
(29m) EXCEPTION TO PUBLIC WORK REQUIREMENTS. Subsection (29) does not apply to the purchase of used mobile homes
and park model homes for the purpose of providing housing for
persons placed on supervised release under s. 980.08.
(30) LIMITATION ON PERFORMANCE OF HIGHWAY WORK.
Notwithstanding ss. 66.0131, 66.0301, and 83.035, a county may
not use its own workforce to perform a highway improvement
project on a highway under the jurisdiction of another county or a
municipality that is located in a different county unless one of the
following applies:
(a) A portion of the project lies within the county performing
the work and no portion of the project extends beyond an adjoining county.
(b) The project lies, wholly or in part, within a municipality
that lies partially within the county performing the work.
(31) PUBLIC CONTRACTS, POPULOUS COUNTIES. (a) In this
subsection, “county” means any county with a population of
750,000 or more.
(b) 1. Any contract with a value of at least $100,000, but not
more than $300,000, to which a county is a party and which satisfies any other statutory requirements, may take effect only if the
board’s finance committee does not vote to approve or reject the
contract within 14 days after the contract is signed or countersigned by the county executive, or as described in subd. 2.
2. If a board’s finance committee votes to approve a contract
described under subd. 1., the contract may take effect. If a
board’s finance committee votes to reject a contract described under subd. 1., the contract may take effect only if the contract is approved by a vote of the board within 30 days after the board’s finance committee votes to reject the contract.
(c) Any single contract, or group of contracts between the
same parties which generally relate to the same transaction, with
a value or aggregate value of more than $300,000, to which a
county is a party and which satisfies any other statutory requirements, may take effect only if it is approved by a vote of the
board.
(d) With regard to any contract to which a county is a party
and which is subject to review by the board or by a committee of
the board under this subsection, the board’s finance committee is
the only committee which has jurisdiction over the contract.
(e) With regard to any transaction to which s. 59.17 (2) (b) 3.
applies, such a transaction is not subject to the provisions of pars.
(b), (c), and (d).
(32) RESEARCH DEPARTMENT. In any county with a population of 750,000 or more, the board may enact an ordinance creating a department in county government to provide independent
and nonpartisan research services for the board and the county
executive. The department may not consist of more than 4.0 fulltime equivalent positions. Employees of the department shall be
hired and supervised by the comptroller, and shall serve at the
pleasure of the comptroller. Such a department shall respond to
requests for services from the board and the county executive.
The authority to create a department under this subsection may
not be exercised after the county board enacts its budget for the
2017 fiscal year.

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