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Bill

Bill

SF 1353

Minimum city aid distribution establishment

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Liz Boldon

Creates a statutory minimum city aid distribution to Minnesota cities, guaranteeing a baseline funding level to stabilize budgets and reduce disparities.

Referred to Taxes
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SF 1353

Summary: SF 1353 — Minimum City Aid Distribution Establishment

Overview

  • Bill number: SF 1353
  • Title: Minimum city aid distribution establishment
  • Status: Referred to Taxes
  • Introduced: February 13, 2025
  • Companion bill: HF 350 (House)

SF 1353 proposes the establishment of a minimum distribution of city aid. The available information does not include the bill text, so the specific parameters, methods of calculation, funding sources, and implementation details are not publicly disclosed in the summary provided. The bill has progressed to a committee stage by being referred to the Taxes committee.

Purpose and Intent (Based on Title)

  • The bill appears to seek a statutory floor for aid allocated to cities, aiming to ensure that each city receives at least a baseline level of state aid. This could be intended to stabilize municipal financing, reduce disparities in city-funded services, and support local government operations.

Key Provisions (Not Yet Publicly Available)

  • The exact provisions are not disclosed in the provided material. If enacted, typical elements in a “minimum city aid distribution” measure might include:
    • The total annual amount designated as the minimum distribution, or a formula to determine it.
    • Calculation method (per-capita basis, per-city baseline, or a blend with existing aid programs like Local Government Aid).
    • Eligible recipients (which cities or municipalities qualify).
    • Funding source (general fund appropriations, dedicated revenue streams, or through reallocation of existing aid).
    • Adjustment mechanisms (inflation indexing, annual review, caps, or phase-in periods).
    • Administrative responsibilities (which agency administers the distribution and reporting requirements).
    • Oversight and reporting requirements (audits, transparency, and accountability provisions).

Note: Specifics will be defined in the bill text and any amendments.

Affected Parties

  • Cities and municipalities in Minnesota that would receive the minimum aid distribution.
  • State authorities responsible for revenue distribution and oversight (likely the taxation framework, given the committee referral to Taxes).
  • Potentially local property taxpayers and city managers/finance directors who rely on state aid for budgeting.

Procedural and Timeline Aspects

  • Introduced and first read on February 13, 2025.
  • Referred to the Taxes committee, where it may receive further hearings, amendments, and potential floor consideration.
  • A House companion exists (HF 350), indicating cross-chamber activity and alignment efforts.

Observations and Next Steps

  • The bill’s substantive details are not included here. To understand the full impact, the bill text, fiscal note, and any amendments filed in the Taxes committee will be essential.
  • Readers should monitor committee hearings for SF 1353 and the companion HF 350 for details on calculation, funding, eligibility, and timelines.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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