Senator Darling Representative Vos BUDGET MODIFICATIONS Motion: Education and Building Program 1. Community Partnerships. Require DOA to submit a plan for approval by the Committee under 5. 13.10 of the statutes by January 10, 2012, encompassing requests from the following agencies: the Department of Public Instruction, to provide a plan for funding community?based nongovernmental organizations to establish partnerships with local school districts; and the Department of Children and Families, to provide a plan for funding community-based nongOvernmental organizations to establish partnerships with residential foster care agencies. Specify that these partnerships should center on the nongovernmental organizations providing advocacy for students, and liaisons between families and institutional staff, with all activities having the goal of improving educational outcomes and promoting and teaching greater self~suf?ciency. 2. Capital Expenditures Financed with Student Housing Fees. Provide that the referendum requirement for capital expenditures over $1.5 million does not apply to the portion of a capital expenditure funded with student housing payments for the construction, or the lease/purchase, of a student residence facility. Provide that no district tax levy, state aid, or student fees (tuition) could be used for the purchase or construction, or the lease/purchase, of such a student residence facility. Specify that this provision would ?rst apply to district board resolutions adopted on the effective date of the bill. 3. Public Finance Authority Modi?cations to Enabling Legislation. Modify current general municipal law relating to intergovernmental cooperation??conduit revenue bonds, under which the Public Finance Authority (PF A) was created, as follows: a. Modify the de?nition of bond to include obligations "entered into" as well as issued as under current law, and add "installment sale, or other ?nancing"; b. -Modify the definition of participant to include "unincorporated association?; c. Modify the de?nition of political subdivision to include "or of?ce, department, authority or agency of any of such other state or territory of the United States"; d. Under the powers of the authority, authorize re?nancing of a project and allow the authority to assign or pledge its interests in projects, bonds, or contracts acquired in connection with Motion #518 Page 1 bonds; e. Authorize PFA to purchase bonds issued by this state or any of its departments, authorities or agencies, or any political subdivision. f. As an alternative to specifying various aspects of a bond issue in the bond resolution, provide that the resolution may specify members of the board, of?cers or employees, by name or position, to whom the commission delegates authority to determine those matters, and such other matters as the commission may deem appropriate, for inclusion in the trust agreement, indenture or- other agreement providing for issuance of the bonds as ?nally executed. However, require that the resolution must specify the maximum principal amount of bonds to be issued, the maximum term of those bonds, and the maximum interest rate to be borne by the bonds. g. Provide that proceeds of a bond issue may be used for one or more projects in WisConsin or outside of this state. h. Modify the current requirement that a political subdivision within whose boundaries the project is to be located has approved the ?nancing, to specify the approval may be by the governing body or, except in first class cities in this state or counties with such a first class city within its boundaries, by the highest ranking executive or administrator of the political subdivision. 4. Normal School Fund Distribution. Specify that all income and interest ?om the normal school fund (excluding allowable expenses deducted from gross receipts) be deposited in an appropriation to be distributed as follows: (1) to make need?based grants totaling $100,000 annually to students who are members of underrepresented groups and who are enrolled in a program leading to a certificate or a bachelor's degree from the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; (2) to provide annual scholarships totaling $100,000 to students enrolled in the sustainable management degree program through the University of Wisconsin? Extension; and (3) the remainder to the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point for environmental programs. In addition, reestimate income and interest from the normal school fund to $300,000 annually (an increase of $95,600 annually to the bill) and reduce general fund revenues by $4,400 annually. 5. State Facility Maintenance Funding. Provide $2,000,000 in additional GPR supported bonding for the state facility purposes funded under the Committee's modi?cations to the building program. 6. Exception to the Restrictions on Use of Certain Terms. Allow a residential facility in the Village of Union Grove that is an in?state school that is exempt from federal income taxes and that was incorporated in this state prior to January 1, 1992, to use the term "college" in its name. General Government and Justice 7. DOA Information Technology Executive Salary Group Designation. Modify Motion #518 Page 2 previous Committee action on Information Technology Managers in Executive Salary Groups Paper #102], by. specifying that the division administrator for the Department of Administration?s Division of Enterprise Technology could be assigned to Executive Salary Group 7 [Alternative 8. Web Site Information on State Expenditures, Contracts, and Grants. Specify that, beginning on July 1, 2013, the Department of Administration (DOA) must ensure that all state agency expenditures for state operations exceeding $100, including salaries and ?inge bene?ts paid to state agency employees, are available for inspection on a searchable Internet Web site maintained by DOA. Require the Department to categorize the expenditure information on the web site by state agency, expenditure category, expenditure amount, and the person to whom the expenditure is made. Specify that any person must be able to search on the web site for aggregate expenditures for state operations by state agency, expenditure category, expenditure amount, and the person to whom the expenditure is made. Specify that beginning with expenditures made on July 1, 2013, state agencies must provide DOA with all required expenditure information within 60 days of the expenditure. The Department could specify the format in which state agencies provide the expenditure information. Specify that if any of the expenditure information may be found on other web sites, the Department shall ensure that the information is accessible through the searchable Internet web site. Specify that, beginning on July 1, 2013, DOA must ensure that all of the following information relating to state agency grants and contracts is available for inspection on a searchable Internet web site: a copy of the contract and grant award; the state agency making the grant or entering into the contract; the name and address of the person receiving the grant or entering into the contract; the purpose of the grant or contract; and the amount of the grant or the amount the state agency must expend under the contract and the name of the state fund from which the grant is paid or moneys are expended under the contract. Require agencies to submit this information to DOA within 10 days after the state agency makes a grant or enters into a contract. Require DOA to make this information available on the searchable Internet web site no later than 30 days after the state agency makes a grant or enters into a contract. Define financial instrument as any check, draft, warrant, money order, note, certi?cate of . deposit, letter of credit, bill of exchange, credit or credit card, transaction authorization mechanism, marketable security, and any computer representation of them. De?ne grant as a payment made to a person, other than aids to individuals and organizations and local assistance and the payment of salaries and ?inge bene?ts for state employees. The motion would incorporate 2009 Assembly Bill 120 into the bill, with the date modi?ed to July 1, 2013, rather than July 1, 2011, for availability of data. Motion #518 Page 3 9. Reimbursement of Certain Local Election Administration Costs and Voter Identification Implementation. Delete the program under the Government Accountability Board (GAB) which reimburses qualifying municipalities for the additional costs (or any portion of these costs) incurred to adjust polling hours to begin at 7 am, at any election held after April 29, 2006. Delete the associated GPR biennial election-related cost reimbursement appropriation and its expenditure authority of $82,600 GPR annually. Instead, provide $82,600 GPR annually to a new GPR annual appropriation under GAB to offset costs incurred to provide training to local election clerks regarding the new voter identi?cation provisions under 2011 Act 23. 1 10. Wisconsin Employee Suggestion Program. Modify the cash award structure of the Wisconsin Employee Suggestion Program under the Of?ce of State Employment Relations from awards based on 3% of the average annual savings that the suggestion generates, with a minimum cash award of $50 and a maximum cash award of $1,500, to awards based on 10% of the average annual savings that the suggestion generates, with a minimum cash award of $50 and a maximum cash award of $10,000. 11. Calculation Exclusions for DOA Weatherization/Heating Assistance Splits. Specify that, in the 2011-13 biennium, the Department of Administration could exclude federal funds in excess .of the amount of funds received in 2007-08, from the federal government for low~income weatherization and low-income heating assistance, in determining the appropriate amount of ?mding that must be provided for each of the programs. [Under current law, DOA must insure that 4 7% of the following is provided for low?income weatherization: amounts received from the federal government for low-income heating assistance; public bene?ts funds received for low- I income heating assistance; and the amounts charged by municipal utilities and retail electric cooperatives for low?income assistance. In 2 00 7-08, the federal government provided 60.5 million for lowwincome heating assistance. Under the motion, if the state received more than that amount in either 2011-12 or 2012?13, amounts received ?om the federal government that were in excess of $60.5 million would not be subject to the 47% weatherization formula and could be used for additional low-income heating assistance at DOA ?s discretion] 12. Provisions Ajfecting State Troopers and Inspectors. Provide that the state as the employer of state trooper and inspector personnel under the State Employment Relations Act (SELRA) may not pay, on behalf of any state trooper or inspector employee, the employee-required retirement contributions speci?ed in 2011 Wisconsin Act 10, if that employee ?rst becomes a participating employee in a retirement system on or after the bill?s effective date. Provide that nonrepresented state trooper and inspector personnel who are employed by the state before the effective date of the bill would be exempt ?om a provision in 2011 Act 10 that prohibits the employer from paying, on behalf of the employee, any employee?required retirement contributions. Require that nonrepresented state trooper and inspector personnel who are employed by the state before the effective date of the bill, be subject to the same employee retirement contribution and health insurance contribution requirements that apply to represented state trooper and inSpector personnel who are employed by the state before the effective date of the bill. Motion #518 Page 4 Provide that the treatment of nonrepresented state trooper and inspector personnel under these provisions would apply to a represented state trooper or inspector employee moving to a nonrepresented position within the Department of Transportation. Provide that the provisions would take effect on the later of: the day after publication of the budget bill; the day after publication of 2011 Wisconsin Act 10; or the effective date of substantially similar provisions enacted under separate legislation in the 2011 legislative session. 13. Nonrepresented Police and Fire Personnel of Combined Departments. Amend Motion #472 to provide that an employee of a Department that is combined with other Departments at a ?iture date would not be considered a newly hired employee subject to the prohibition of an employer paying on behalf of the employee, the employee-required retirement. contributions speci?ed in Act 10. Provide that the treatment of nonrepresented law enforcement and ?re fighting personnel under the provisions of Motion #472 would apply to a represented law enforcement or ?re ?ghting employee moving to a nonrepresented position in a combined department that includes the department the individual was employed with on the day preceding the effective date of the combined department. 14. Memorandum of Understanding Relating to Current Technical College District Collective Bargaining Agreements Entered into Before February I, 20] I. Apply the provisions of Motion #472 related to memorandum of understanding (MOU) allowing a single MOU within 90 days of the effective date of the bill to modify compensation and fringe bene?t requirements for school districts to also apply to technical college districts. 15. Volunteer Health Care Provider Services Expansion. Add the following procedures to the list of procedures that could be conducted by volunteer health care providers: procedures that are confined to incision or excision or manipulation of epidermal and dermal skin; skin biopsies to a depth of five millimeters as well as debridement of diabetic ulcers to include subcutaneous tissue; (0) punch biopsies of epidermal and dermal lesions with incidental removal of minimal fat; liquid nitrogen destruction of epidermal and dermal lesions; and corticosteroid injections of dermal lesions, joints, tendon sheaths and bursae. 16. Capitol Security. Provide $10,000,000 GPR in 2011-12 for increased security costs at the state Capitol in the Joint Committee on Finance's program supplements appropriation. 17. Increase the Jurisdictional Amount for Small Claims. Increase the jurisdictional amount for small claims actions ?om $5,000 or less to $10,000 or less, except for third party complaints, personal injury claims, or tort claims, which would remain at the current jurisdictional amount. 18. Ronald W. Reagan Day. Specify that February 6 is designated as Ronald W. Reagan Day and that appropriate exercises and celebrations may be held on that day, his birthday, to honor him and remember him as the 40thl President of the United States and a promoter of freedom and democracy throughout the world. Motion #518 Page 5 Health Services and Insurance 19. Review and Con?dentiality of Information Residential Care Apartment Complexes. Include residential care apartment complexes (RCACs), as de?ned in 50.01(1d) of the statutes, in the de?nition of "health care provider" as it pertains to the review and evaluation of health care services and the con?dentiality of information under s. 146.38 of the statutes. 20. Aggregate Claims Data. Prohibit an insurer from changing the rating methodology between community rating and experience rating or otherwise penalizing a policyholder or employer (in addition to charging the policyholder, as allowed under current law) when the insurer is asked to provide aggregate group health claims experience under 632.797 of Wisconsin Statutes. Natural Resources and Commerce 21. WHEDA Loan to Public A?airs Network. Require the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA) to guarantee, with monies from the Wisconsin Development Reserve Fund (WDRF), loans not to exceed $5 million, provided: a loan is made to a nonpro?t public affairs network with the primary purpose of broadcasting meetings of the Wisconsin Legislature and other programming relating to Wisconsin politics and current events; and the loan is made by the Authority or a lender entering into a guarantee agreement with WHEDA. Specify a loan eligible for a guarantee: would be for operating or capital expenses; would not be for entertainment expenses or for re?nancing existing debt; and would allow the lender, for the purpose of securing loan repayment, to take a security interest in the real or personal property of the borrower. Specify the Authority shall guarantee, through the WDRF, not less than 90% of the principal of the eligible loan, and up to the full amount of loan principal, but that the total loan principal to be guaranteed shall not exceed $5 million. Specify the Authority shall maintain a ratio of at least $1 in reserve funding for every $4 in total guaranteed amounts. Provide WHEDA may transfer, to the WDRP from the housing rehabilitation loan program administration fund, amounts necessary to support guarantees of eligible loans to nonpro?t public affairs networks, but that a transfer may not exceed $5 million. Specify WHEDA shall report to the Joint Committee on Finance on any transfer from the housing rehabilitation loan program administration fund to the WDRF, and specify the report shall be submitted within 14 days after the transfer. Specify a loan issued under these provisions be for a term of not less than 13 years, and specify that the lender shall not require payment of principal or of interest within the ?rst three years after loan closing. Specify prior to guaranteeing a loan under the section, WHEDA document to the Secretary of Administration that combined amounts in the WDRF and housing rehabilitation loan program administration fund are suf?cient to guarantee the loan. Specify interest received from any bonds or notes issued by WHEDA to a loan to a nonpro?t public affairs network are exempt from Wisconsin personal income taxes. 22. Copper Culture State Park. Provide the Department of Natural Resources $25,000 Motion #518 Page 6 parks SEG in 2011-12 for facility repairs and upgrades at Copper Culture State Park in Oconto County. In addition, require the Department of Transportation to place two signs on Highway 41 (one on the northbound side and one on the southbound side) noting the location of Copper Culture State Park. 23. Local Reguiation of Bird Hunting Preserves. Specify that land subject to a bird hunting preserve license issued under Chapter 169 of the statutes (Captive Wildlife) be a "sport- shooting range" under section 895.527 of the statutes (limits on liability and local regulation of sport shooting range activities). In addition, prohibit counties, cities, villages, and towns from regulating the number of birds that may be released into the wild on land subject to a bird hunting preserve license. 24. Private Sewage System Replacement Requirements. Specify that DSPS, DNR or- the appropriate local government may only require a property owner to replace or rehabilitate a failing residential private sewage system if one of the following applies: a. If the private sewage system fails by discharging sewage to the surface water, groundwater, drain tiles, bedrock, or zones of saturated soils and if the discharge of sewage reaches a property owned by a different person than the owner of the private sewage system, the owner of the failing private sewage system would have to replace or rehabilitate the private sewage system so that it does not discharge to the other property. b. If the owner of the failing private sewage system is eligible for a private sewage system replacement or rehabilitation grant, and receives a grant equal to 75% of eligible costs, the owner would have to replace or rehabilitate the system. c. The owner's family income exceeds 300% of the federal poverty level. (1. Upon transfer of ownership of the property. i Amend the private sewage system replacement or rehabilitation grant program as follows: a. Require the Department to provide a grant equal to 75% of the eligible work components and costs for replacement or rehabilitation of the private sewage system. (Current administrative rules establish grant funding tables with funding components intended to provide grants equal to 60% of eligible costs.) b. Increase the maximum family income to 300% of the federal poverty level. (This would be approximately $67,000 for a family of four under the motion. The current maximum family income is $45,000.) 0. Require the Department to promulgate rules for awarding grants under the grant program that establish a priority system for ?nding that places the highest priority for private sewage systems that received a written enforcement order by the appropriate local governmental unit, DSPS, or DNR to correct a violation of the private sewage system statutes and rules. Allow Motion #518 i Page 7 DSPS to promulgate an emergency rule, without the ?nding of an emergency, to implement the program changes. d. Make the changes effective for applications received by Commerce under the grant program after June 1, 2011. (Applications for 2011~12 grants were due to Commerce by February 1, 2011.) . e. Repeal the current prioritization of available funding, under which Commerce prorates grant awards within the available funds. (The funding priority list would replace the prioritization of funding.) . It is expected that approximately 450 properw owners would qualify for a grant annually (assuming a $5,200 average grant) beginning in 2012-13. 25. Mercury-Containing Button Cetl Batteries. Move to repeal statutory allowances for sales of mercuric oxide button cell batteries. Specify that no person may sell or offer for sale a mercuric oxide button cell battery. (Federal law bans the sale of mercuric oxide button cell batteries. This provision is intended to make state law consistent with the federal prohibition on mercuric oxide button cell batteries.) 26. Ice Age Trail Interpretive Center. Specify the Chippewa Moraine State Recreation Area Interpretive Center in Chippewa County be renamed the David Obey Ice Age Trail Interpretive Center. Tax Policy, Children and Families, and Workforce Development 27. Transitional Jobs Demonstration Project. To clarify the intent of Motions #417 and #419, passed by the Committee on May 31, 2011, specify that: in the case of a natural disaster for which the Governor has declared a state of emergency, preference must be given to any work crew placement or host site involved in natural disaster recovery; and in all other cases, host sites must be for?profit businesses, and work crews must be placed with for-profit businesses. In addition, modify Motion #417 to sunset the transitional jobs demonstration project on June 30, 2013, instead of June 30, 2012. 28. Sates and Use Tax Exemption for Snowmaking and Snow?Grooming Equipment. Provide an exemption from the state sales and use tax for snowmaking and snow-grooming machines and equipment, including accessories, attachments, and parts for the machines and equipment and the fuel and electricity used to operate such machines and equipment, that are used exclusively and directly for snowmaking and snow grooming at ski hills, ski slopes, and ski trails. Specify that this provision would become first effective on July 1, 2013. Estimate the ?scal effect to be an annual revenue loss of $150,000 annually beginning in 2013-14. 29. Three?Tiered Beer Laws. Amend Motion #414, which was adopted by the Committee at its May 31, 2011 executive session to permit a brewer to sell intoxicating liquor for on?premise consumption on the brewery premises and for on?premise consumption at an off?site Motion #518 Page 8 retail outlet established by the brewer. Require a brewer selling intoxicating liquor at retail to purchase the liquor from a liquor wholesaler. Specify that these provisions apply only to brewers that held permits or licenses authorizing the sale of intoxicating liquor on June 1, 2011. 30. Employment Regulations Child Labor Laws. Modify laws governing hours of employment for minors in the following manner: a. Hours of Labor. Repeal the current law prohibition that no minor under age 18 may be employed or permitted to work at any gainful occupation other than domestic service, farm labor, or service as an election inspector for more than eight hours in any one day, nor more than 40 hours or six days in any week, nor during hours the minor is required to attend school. Instead, specify that no minor under age 18 may be employed or permitted to work at any gainful occupation during such hours as the minor is required to attend school. Repeal the current prohibition that no minor under age 16 may be employed or permitted to work in any gainful occupation, other than domestic service or farm labor more than 24 hours in any one week, nor, except in domestic service, farm labor, or in public exhibitions, or in street trades before 7 am. nor after 6 pm. Instead, provide that no minor under 16 years of age may be employed or permitted to work in any gainful occupation, other than in domestic service, farm labor, or public exhibitions, as follows: (1) For more than three hours on a school day or eight hours on a nonschool day; (2) For more than 18 hours in a school week or 40 hours on a nonschool week; (3) For more than six days in a week; (4) Before 7 am. or after 7 pm. ?om the day after Labor Day to May 31; or (5) Before 7 am. or after 9 pm. from June 1 to Labor day. b. Hours of Work in Street Trades. Modify laws governing hours of work to require the Department of Workforce Development (DWD) to determine and fix reasonable hours of employment for minors in street trades to, instead, only determine and fix such hours if the minor is under 16 years of age. Specify that DWD may not ?x hours of employment for minors under 16 years of age in street trades that exceed the maximum hours per day and week, the maximum days per week, or that begin earlier or end later than the hours specified above. Prohibit DWD ?om limiting hours of employment for minors 16 years of age or over in street trades or the hours of employment for minors of any age who are engaged in the delivery of newspapers to the consumer. c. General Standards for Employment of Minors. Modify laws governing general standards for employment of minors to specify that only minors under 16 years of age are subject to laws prohibiting a minor to be employed or permitted to work at any employment for such hours of the day or week, for such days of the week, or at such periods of the day as may be dangerous or prejudicial to the life, health, safety, or welfare of the minor. d. Powers and Duties of DWD Relating to Employment of Minors. Modify laws governing DWD's authority to investigate and fix reasonable classifications of employment for minors to apply only to minors under the age of 16. In addition, specify that for minors under 16 Motion #518 Page 9 years of age, DWD may not ?x hours of employment that exceed the maximum hours per day and per week, exceed the maximum hours per week, exceed .the maximum days per week, or begin earlier or end later than the hours speci?ed above. Provide that, for minors 16 years of age or over, DWD may ?x the duration of lunch or other rest periods, but may not limit hours of employment or issue general or special orders ?xing maximum hours of employment per day or per week, maximum days or employment per week, or hours at which employment may begin or end. 31. Sales and Use ax Exemption for Advertising and Promotional Direct Mail. Create an exemption for advertising and promotional direct mail from the state sales and use tax. Specify that this provision would become ?rst effective beginning July 1, 2013 . Estimate the ?scal effect to be an annual revenue loss of $500,000 annually beginning in 2013-14. 32. Prevailing Wage Exemption. Provide an exemption ?om local prevailing wage law for a nursinghome project of public works in a county with a population of less than 50,000, if the project breaks ground within one year after the effective date of the budget bill. Transportation and Property Tax Relief 33. Distribution of Southeastern Regional Transit Authority Assets. Require that upon its dissolution, any remaining assets of the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority (RTA) would be divided as follows: 50% to Milwaukee County; 25% to Kenosha County; and 25% to Racine County. [This would override an earlier action of the Committee that repealed the statutory authority for the Southeastern RTA (Motion #71) and required that the assets of the RTA be divided evenly among the member counties, unless otherwise agreed upon by the counties] 34. Metropolitan Sewerage District Per Diems. Delete current law provisions for metropolitan sewerage districts, other than the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District, that set the per diem compensation for district commissioners at $50 and allow commissioners to be reimbursed for actual expenses they incur in carrying out the work of the commission. Instead, specify that per diem compensation may be paid to such commissioners in an amount that the commission speci?es by resolution. Provide that any change in the per diem amount'after its initial - establishment applies only to subsequently appointed or reappointed commissioners. Specify that these changes would ?rst apply to a commissioner who is appointed or reappointed after the general effective date of the bill, except that if a commission speci?es by resolution a per diem amount that is at least equal to the per diem amount that is paid before the resolution takes effect, the amount speci?ed in the resolution would apply to a commissioner on the resolution?s effective date. 35. City of New Lisbon TIF District #12. Specify that if the City of New Lisbon amends or attempts to amend its TIF District #12 on January 1, 2012, based on actions taken by the city council during the time periodof July 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011, the TIF district base value would be calculated by the Department of Revenue (DOR) as if the TIF district had been amended on January 1, 2012, and DOR would not be allowed to certify a value increment associated with the amendment before 2012. Exempt the TIF district amendment from the following current law requirements: the time limits whereby a city clerk is required to submit the TIF district amendment application and required forms to and that the equalized value of taxable property of a TIF district, plus the value increment of all of a city?s other TIF districts, Motion #5 18 Page 1 0 cannot exceed 12% of the total equalized value of taxable property in the city. 36. Modi?cation to Motor Vehicle Warranty Law. Modify a provision of the state's motor vehicle warranty law that requires a vehicle manufacturer to replace a vehicle or provide a refund to the consumer if a defect covered by an express warranty cannot be repaired after at least four attempts are made to repair the vehicle Without success or the vehicle is out of service for an aggregate of at least 30 days because of the defect, to specify that the 30?day period shall be extended by any period of time during which repair services are not available to the consumer because of war, invasion, strike, ?re, ?ood, or other natural disaster. [Change to Bill: -$4,400 $10,000,000 GPR, $25,000 SEG in 2011-12; and ?$4,400 in 2012~l3; and $2,000,000 Motion #518 Page 1 1 axes MEYER A LEMAHIEU A NYGREN A STRACHOTA 2 KLEEFISCH GRIGSBY SHILLING 2 DARLING EOLSEN A HARSDORFF A LEIBHAM A GROTHMAN 3y? A HOPPER A TAYLOR A JAUCH WM: rm} A am, v03 A MEYER A LEMAHIEU A NYGREN A STRACHOTA A N. A GRIGSBY a" A SHELLING A DARLING A OLSEN A HARSDORFF x? 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