Wisconsin Code § 59.60

Budgetary procedure in certain counties
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(1)
APPLICATION. The provisions of this section shall apply to all
counties with a population of 750,000 or more. Except as provided in sub. (13), any county with a county executive or county
administrator may elect to be subject to the provisions of this
section.
(2) DEFINITIONS. In this section:
(ae) “Budget period” means 2 consecutive fiscal years covered by a biennial budget adopted by a county that has acted under sub. (3s), or one fiscal year covered by an annual budget for
any other county that has not acted to adopt a biennial budget under sub. (3s).
(as) “Department” includes all county departments, boards,
commissions, institutions, offices, and other agencies of the
county government for which funds may be legally appropriated.
(b) “Director” means the director of the county department of
administration.
(3) FISCAL YEAR. The fiscal year in every county is the calendar year.

(3m) ACCOUNTING AND BUDGETING PROCEDURE. Every accounting and budgeting procedure that is applied under this section shall comply with generally accepted accounting principles
for government as promulgated by the governmental accounting
standards board or its successor bodies or other authoritative
sources.
(3s) BIENNIAL BUDGET PROCEDURES. (a) A county with a
population of 750,000 or more may adopt a biennial budget by
implementing the procedures under this subsection and using the
procedures under this section. If a county chooses to adopt a biennial budget, it shall adopt such a budget in an odd-numbered
year for the next 2 fiscal years that follow immediately the year in
which the budget is adopted.
(b) For a county to proceed under this subsection, the board
shall adopt a resolution or enact an ordinance stating its intent to
adopt a biennial budget. Once a resolution is adopted or an ordinance is enacted, such an action takes effect and may not be reconsidered or repealed, except as provided in par. (c).
(c) A board that has adopted a biennial budget procedure as
provided in this subsection may return to the use of an annual
budget procedure if the board, by a two-thirds majority vote,
adopts a resolution or enacts an ordinance stating its intent to
adopt an annual budget.
(d) A board or a committee authorized by the board may, at
any time, decrease appropriation amounts in a biennial budget.
(e) In October or November of an even-numbered year, the
board may change any appropriation or revenue amount in relation to the 2nd year of the biennial budget by a simple majority
vote of the members-elect.
(4) SUBMISSION OF BUDGET REQUESTS. On or before the date
that the director specifies, but not later than July 15, each department shall submit to the director in the form that the director
specifies:
(a) The department’s estimated revenues and expenditures for
the fiscal year for the ensuing budget period.
(b) The estimated cost of any capital improvements pending
or proposed for the ensuing fiscal year and for the next 5 fiscal
years.
(c) Any other information that the director requests.
(5) COMPILATION OF BUDGET REQUESTS. Not later than August 15 of the year in which the budget is enacted, the director
shall submit to the county executive or county administrator and
to the board:
(a) The budget estimates of each department.
(b) A statement of principal and interest becoming due on
outstanding bonds and on other financial obligations.
(c) An estimate of all other expenditures, including proposed
expenditures on capital improvements that are not financed by
bonds.
(d) An estimate of anticipated issues of new bond obligations
during the ensuing fiscal year, plus a statement of the funds required for maturities and interest payments on these issues.
(e) An estimate of funds required as an appropriation for
contingencies.
(f) An estimate of revenue from all other sources.
(g) A complete summary of all the budget estimates and a
statement of the property tax levy required if funds were appropriated on the basis of these estimates. In determining the property tax levy required, the director shall deduct from the total estimated expenditures the estimated amount of revenue from
sources other than the property tax levy and shall deduct the
amount of any surplus at the close of the preceding fiscal year not
yet appropriated. The board, by two-thirds vote, may adopt a resolution before the adoption of the tax levy authorizing the use of
the surplus fund in whole or in part as a sinking fund for the redemption or repurchase of bonds or to provide funds for emergency needs under sub. (9), but for no other purposes, except as
provided in sub. (13).
(6) HEARINGS ON ESTIMATES; SUBMISSION TO BOARD. (a)
The county executive or county administrator shall review the estimates of expenditures and revenues and hold public hearings on
such estimates at which the head or a representative of every
county department shall appear and give information with regard
to the appropriations requested, including work programs, other
justification of expenditures, and other data that the county executive or county administrator requests. The county executive or
county administrator shall make changes in the proposed budget
that in the executive’s or administrator’s discretion are considered
desirable or proper.
(b) On or before October 1, and after the hearings required
under par. (a), the county executive or county administrator shall
submit the amended proposed budget to the board. The amended
proposed budget shall be the executive’s or administrator’s budget
and shall include all of the following:
1. A simple, clear, general summary of the detailed contents
of the budget.
2. A comparative statement by organization unit and principal object of expenditure showing the actual expenditures of the
preceding fiscal year, the appropriations and estimated expenditures for the fiscal year currently ending, and the recommended
appropriations for the budget period next succeeding.
3. A comparative statement of the actual revenues from all
sources including property taxes during the preceding fiscal year,
the anticipated revenues and the estimated revenues for the fiscal
year currently ending, and the anticipated revenues for the budget
period next succeeding including any surplus from the preceding
fiscal year not otherwise appropriated under sub. (9).
(c) The anticipated revenues for the budget period next succeeding shall be equal in amount to the recommended
appropriations.
(d) The executive’s or administrator’s budget shall be accompanied by a message prepared by the county executive or county
administrator which shall outline the important features of the
budget plan and indicate any major changes in policy or in recommended appropriations or revenues as compared with the fiscal
year currently ending, and shall set forth the reasons for such
changes.
(7) PUBLICATION OF BUDGET AND PUBLIC HEARING. The
board shall refer the executive’s or administrator’s budget to the
finance committee and such committee shall publish as a class 1
notice, under ch. 985, a summary of the executive’s or administrator’s budget and comparative figures together with a statement
of the county’s bonded indebtedness, in the 2 daily newspapers
having the largest circulation in the county, and shall make available to the general public reprinted copies of the summary as
published. The publication shall also state the date, hour, and
place of the public hearing to be held by the board on such executive’s or administrator’s budget. The board shall, not fewer than
14 days after publication of the summary of the executive’s or administrator’s budget, but not later than the first Monday in November of each budget period and prior to the adoption of the
property tax levy, hold a public hearing on such executive’s or administrator’s budget, at which time citizens may appear and express their opinions. After such public hearing, the finance committee shall submit to the board its recommendations for amendments to the executive’s or administrator’s budget, if any, and the
board shall adopt the budget with such changes as it considers
proper and advisable. Subject to sub. (7e), the board of a county
with a population of at least 750,000 may not adopt a budget in

which the total amount of budgeted expenditures related to the
compensation of county board members, and to any other costs
that are directly related to the operation and functioning of the
county board, including staff, is greater than 0.4 percent of the
county portion of the tax levy for that year to which the budget
applies. When so adopted, the sums provided shall, subject to the
provisions of sub. (8), constitute legal appropriations and anticipated revenues for the ensuing year.
(7e) MILWAUKEE COUNTY BUDGET CAP. The 0.4 percent
budget limitation for a county with a population of at least
750,000 that is described in sub. (7) does not apply to any of the
following elements of the county’s budget:
(a) Any costs related to pension and health care payments for
retired county officers, employees, and their families.
(b) The costs for the salary, health benefits, and pension benefits of county board supervisors and the county board chairperson for any term that begins before April 2016.
(c) Any costs associated with duties performed by the county
clerk under s. 59.23 (2).
(d) Any costs associated with a department created under s.
59.52 (32).
(e) Space rental that is attributable to the county board.
(7m) PUBLICATION OF BUDGET SUMMARY. Notwithstanding
sub. (1), this subsection applies to all counties with a population
of 750,000 or more. Any such county shall publish, in the same
manner as the summary that may be published under sub. (7), a
summary that includes all of the following:
(a) The total amount of budgeted expenditures for the current
year.
(b) The proposed amount of total expenditures and the percentage change compared to the amount in par. (a).
(c) The property tax levy for the current year.
(d) The proposed property tax levy and the percentage change
compared to the amount in par. (c).
(8) TRANSFERS OF APPROPRIATIONS. (a) At the request of the
head of any department, and after receiving the recommendation
of the county executive or county administrator, the finance committee may, at any time during the budget period, transfer any unencumbered appropriation balance or portion thereof between
principal objects of expenditures within a department; but no
transfers shall be made of appropriations originating from bond
funds unless the purpose for which the bonds were issued has
been fulfilled or abandoned. If the county executive or county
administrator fails to make a recommendation within 10 days after the submission of a request for transfer, the finance committee
may act upon the request without his or her recommendation. If
more than one department is under the jurisdiction of the same
board or commission or under the same general management, the
group of departments may be considered as though they were a
single unit with respect to transfers of appropriations within the
group.
(b) Except as provided under sub. (9), the board, upon the recommendation of the finance committee and by resolution
adopted by a majority of the members present and voting at any
meeting, may transfer any unencumbered appropriation balance
or portion thereof from one department or account to another at
any time during the following:
1. The first 9 months of the fiscal year, if another unit of government fails to appropriate moneys which the board anticipated
and appropriated to that department or account when the board
adopted the budget. The amount of money transferred under this
subdivision may not exceed the amount of money which that
other unit of government fails to appropriate.
2. The last 3 months of the fiscal year.
(c) Paragraph (b) does not apply to an appropriation which is
irrepealable by law.
(9) APPROPRIATIONS, SUPPLEMENTAL AND EMERGENCY. (a)
At the request of the head of any department and after review and
recommendation by the finance committee, the board, by resolution adopted by a vote of two-thirds of the members-elect of the
board, may transfer from the contingency appropriation into any
other appropriation or create a new appropriation for any legal
county purpose if any unforeseen condition requires an appropriation of funds during the budget year. The board may make supplemental appropriations for the year up to the amount of the additional revenue and surplus so certified to meet a public emergency affecting life, health, property or the public welfare, if the
director certifies that any of the following funds are available for
appropriation:
1. Revenues that are received from sources not anticipated in
the budget that year.
2. Revenues that are received that exceed budget estimates.
3. Unappropriated surplus funds from the preceding fiscal
year.
(b) An appropriation under par. (a) may be made only by resolution adopted by a vote of two-thirds of the members-elect of
the board. To the extent that unappropriated funds or realized
revenues in excess of anticipated revenues are unavailable to meet
the emergency, the board may, by resolution adopted by threefourths of the members-elect, issue tax anticipation notes under s.
67.12. Notice of intent to make supplemental appropriations
from revenues or surplus or to issue tax anticipation notes shall
be published as a class 1 notice, under ch. 985, in the 2 daily
newspapers having the largest circulation in the county, not less
than 6 days prior to the hearings before the finance committee of
the board in regard to these matters.
(10) ORDINANCE INCREASING SALARIES; NEW POSITIONS;
WHEN EFFECTIVE. No ordinance or resolution authorizing the
creation of new or additional positions or increasing salaries shall
become effective in any budget period until an appropriation of
funds for such purpose is made or the ordinance or resolution
contains a provision for the transfer of funds if required. All such
ordinances or resolutions which do not require an appropriation
or transfer of funds shall state therein the specific account or accounts in which funds are available for such purposes.
(11) LAPSE OF APPROPRIATIONS. Every appropriation excepting an appropriation for a capital expenditure, or a major repair, shall lapse at the close of the fiscal year to the extent that it
has not been expended or encumbered. An appropriation for a
capital expenditure or a major repair shall continue in force until
the purpose for which it was made has been accomplished or
abandoned. The purpose of such appropriation for any capital expenditure or a major repair shall be considered abandoned if 3
years pass without any expenditure from, or encumbrance of, the
appropriation concerned.
(12) PAYMENTS AND OBLIGATIONS PROHIBITED; CERTIFICATIONS; PENALTIES. No payment may be authorized or made and
no obligation incurred against the county unless the county has
sufficient appropriations for payment. No payment may be made
or obligation incurred against an appropriation unless the director
first certifies that a sufficient unencumbered balance is or will be
available in the appropriation to make the payment or to meet the
obligation when it becomes due and payable. An obligation incurred and an authorization of payment in violation of this subsection is void. A county officer who knowingly violates this
subsection is jointly and severally liable to the county for the full
amount paid. A county employee who knowingly violates this
subsection may be removed for cause. This subsection does not
prohibit contracting for capital improvements being financed

wholly or partly by the issuance of bonds or prevent the making
of a contract or lease providing for the payment of funds at a time
beyond the end of the fiscal year in which the contract or lease is
made. The board shall make or approve by resolution each contract, lease or other obligation requiring the payment of funds
from the appropriations of a later fiscal year or of more than one
fiscal year.
(13) TAX STABILIZATION FUND. (a) Notwithstanding sub.
(1), only a county with a population of at least 750,000 may create a tax stabilization fund under this subsection.
(b) The board of a county described in par. (a) may enact an
ordinance creating a tax stabilization fund in the county. If such
fund is created under this paragraph, the following amounts, if
positive, shall be deposited into the tax stabilization fund:
1. The amount determined by subtracting the estimated nonproperty tax revenues collected by the county in the prior year
from the corresponding actual receipts for the prior year, as determined by the comptroller not later than April 15 of each year.
2. The amount determined by subtracting total adjusted operating budget appropriations for the prior year from total expenditures, commitments, and reserves for the prior year, as determined by the comptroller not later than April 15 of each year.
3. Any general surplus balance as of December 31 of the
prior year, as determined by the comptroller not later than April
15 of each year.
4. Any amounts included in the county’s property tax levy
that are designated for deposit in the fund.
(c) Subject to par. (d), the board may withdraw amounts from
the tax stabilization fund, by a three-quarters vote of the members-elect, or by a majority vote of the members-elect if the
county’s total levy rate, as defined in s. 59.605 (1) (g) , is projected by the board to increase by more than 3 percent in the current fiscal year and the withdrawn funds would prevent an increase of more than 3 percent.
(d) The tax stabilization fund may not be used to offset any of
the following:
1. Any deficit that occurs between the board’s total estimated
nonproperty tax revenue, and the total actual nonproperty tax
revenue.
2. Any deficit that occurs between total appropriations and
total expenditures.
(e) If the uncommitted balance in the tax stabilization fund
exceeds 5 percent of the current year’s budget that is under the
board’s control, as of June 1 of the current year, any amount that
exceeds that 5 percent shall be used to reduce the county’s next
property tax levy.

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