AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Allow the state Building Code administration to enter into agreements with municipalities to provide plan review, inspection, code administration, and code enforcement for public buildings and state-licensed facilities, if the municipality has enough trained inspectors. The aim is to share or shift building code duties to qualified local governments when appropriate.
Main Provisions
Municipal agreements for ongoing building code work
- The commissioner may contract with a municipality (not the state) to handle plan review, inspection, code administration, and code enforcement for public buildings and state-licensed facilities in the municipality’s jurisdiction, if the municipality requests it and has sufficiently trained inspectors.
- The commissioner must consider inspectors who are employed, under contract, or otherwise obligated to provide these services in the municipality when deciding if there are enough qualified inspectors.
- The commissioner must provide written criteria used to determine whether the municipality has enough qualified inspectors.
- If the commissioner finds the municipality lacks enough qualified inspectors, the commissioner must issue a written explanation of deficiencies.
- The municipality has a chance to fix the deficiencies and may request reconsideration in writing with supporting documentation within 90 days of the determination.
- The commissioner must review the reconsideration and issue a final determination within 30 days.
- If the municipality disagrees with the final decision to not enter into an agreement, it may appeal as a contested case under Minnesota law (chapter 14).
Municipal agreements for certain building projects (reserved projects)
- The commissioner may also enter into an agreement with a municipality to provide plan review, inspection, code administration, and code enforcement for “reserved projects” on public buildings and state-licensed facilities, if the municipality has a designated building official (as required by another statute) and requests to provide these services.
- Reserved projects include specific categories of work identified by the bill.
Significant Changes to Law
- Formalizes a process for municipalities to assume building code duties for certain state-related facilities and public buildings when they demonstrate sufficient local inspector capacity.
- Establishes written criteria and a formal reconsideration process for determining whether a municipality can take on these duties.
- Creates an appeals pathway (contested case) for municipalities unhappy with the commissioner’s decision.
- Introduces a defined list of “reserved projects” that may be handled by a municipality under an agreement, outlining specific project types and conditions.
Key Terms and Concepts (Notable terms used in the bill)
- plan review
- inspection
- code administration
- code enforcement
- public buildings
- state-licensed facilities
- municipality
- adequately trained and qualified inspectors
- written criteria
- reconsideration
- final determination
- contested case
- designated building official
- reserved projects
- roof covering replacement
- towers requiring special inspection
- single-level storage buildings
- exterior maintenance (siding, windows, doors)
- HVAC unit replacement
- accessibility upgrades
- remodeling
- occupancy
- structural system
- exit access
- discharge pattern
- mechanical load
Relevant Terms - plan review, inspection, code administration, code enforcement, public buildings, state-licensed facilities, municipality, designated building official, reconsideration, contested case, reserved projects, roof covering replacement, towers requiring special inspection, HVAC unit replacement, accessibility upgrades, remodeling, occupancy, structural system, exit access, discharge pattern, mechanical load.
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Past committee meetings
- Workforce, Labor, and Economic Development Finance and Policy on: April 14, 2026 08:15
- Workforce, Labor, and Economic Development Finance and Policy on: April 15, 2026 08:15
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 23, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Workforce, Labor, and Economic Development Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Written criteria to determine whether a municipality has enough adequately trained and qualified inspectors.",
"A 90-day window for the municipality to request reconsideration after a determination.",
"A final determination by the commissioner within 30 days of the reconsideration request.",
"The right to be heard as a contested case under Chapter 14 if aggrieved by the final decision."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill amends Subd.2 to authorize municipalities (other than the state) to enter into agreements for plan review, inspection, code administration, and code enforcement on public buildings and state-licensed facilities, contingent on adequate staffing and written criteria.",
"modified": [
"Clarifies and codifies the process for municipal agreements for plan review, inspection, code administration, and code enforcement, including criteria, remedy opportunities, and timelines."
]
},
"citation": "326B.107",
"subdivision": "2"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Explicit listing of reserved project categories, including: roof covering replacement not adding roof load; towers requiring special inspection; single-level storage buildings not exceeding 5,000 square feet; exterior maintenance (siding, windows, doors); HVAC unit replacement not adding roof load or ventilation capacity; accessibility upgrades not involving additions or structural alterations; remodeling not changing occupancy, structural system, exits, access, or mechanical load; and other projects deemed reserved by the commissioner."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill amends Subd.3 to define and expand the scope of 'reserved projects' that may be subject to municipal agreements for certain building project activities.",
"modified": [
"Expands/clarifies the scope of projects eligible as 'reserved' for municipal agreement under Subd.3."
]
},
"citation": "326B.107",
"subdivision": "3"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Note asserting the requirement for a designated building official as specified by 326B.133 in the context of agreements."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill references section 326B.133 in connection with requiring a designated building official for municipal building project agreements.",
"modified": [
"Explicitly links the designation requirement to the municipal agreement framework, affecting eligibility and implementation."
]
},
"citation": "326B.133",
"subdivision": ""
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Right to appeal final decisions as a contested case under Chapter 14."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "The bill permits contested-case hearing rights under Minnesota Statutes Chapter 14 for certain determinations.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "Chapter 14",
"subdivision": ""
}
]Progress through the legislative process
In Committee