The capital budget appropriates state funding to support major projects and minor works at the public, four-year higher education institutions, and the community and technical colleges. Projects with costs of less than $2 million are generally considered minor works. Major projects have higher costs and generally take two or more biennia to complete, encompassing predesign, design, and construction.
Four-Year Institutions.
Each public, four-year higher education institution submits a separate capital budget request to the Governor and the Legislature. Major projects developed by the four-year institutions of higher education are often submitted to the Office of the Financial Management (OFM) for a biennial scoring process in even-numbered years. Submitted projects are scored by panels of higher education professionals using OFM-developed scoring standards within one of the following six project categories, each according to their primary purpose: growth, renovation, replacement, research, infrastructure, and acquisition. OFM reports the results of this scoring process, with a separate list for each project category, to the Governor, the legislative fiscal committees, and the four-year institutions. For the 2023-25 biennium, OFM and the Governor are not required to develop, or adhere to, a single prioritized list of higher education capital projects.
Community and Technical Colleges.
The State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (State Board) supervises and coordinates Washington's public community and technical colleges. Each biennium, the State Board creates a capital budget request for the Governor and the Legislature that includes a single, prioritized list of all capital project requests for the community and technical college system. The request and prioritization process is determined by State Board policy. While minor works requests are based on a facility and infrastructure survey process, major works are prioritized based on the proposals submitted by each college. For the 2023-25 biennium, institutions may only submit one project proposal, which is scored within the following project categories: (a) infrastructure; (b) renovation; (c) replacement; and (d) new area.
A competitive capital budget matching grant program is created for private, non-profit higher education institutions' facilities.
Eligibility.
Applicant eligibility is limited to private, non-profit educational institutions meeting all of the following conditions: (a) the main campus is permanently situated in the state and is open to residents of the state; (b) there is no restriction to entry on racial or religious grounds; (c) the programs of education beyond high school lead to at least the baccalaureate degree; and (d) the institution is accredited by the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges or by an accrediting association recognized by the Council for Higher Education.
Project eligibility is limited to projects with estimated costs of not less than $2 million and projects must construct or improve facilities that are primarily for instructional purposes.
Matching Funds.
The Department of Commerce (Commerce) must require that higher education institutions receiving a grant through this program provide matching non-state funding equal to at least 100 percent of the grant awards.
Grant Prioritization Process.
Commerce is required to consult with the State Board of Community and Technical Colleges, the Washington Higher Education Facilities Authority, and stakeholders to develop a grant prioritization process. Commerce may use up to three percent of amounts appropriated for the grant program for the program's administrative costs. This consultative process must create an application evaluation and ranking system that results in a single prioritized list of proposed grants from the pool of applications submitted by eligible institutions in each application cycle. The project prioritization process developed through this consultation must give primary consideration to institutional programmatic needs and facility conditions.
Grant Lists and Requests.
An initial, prioritized grant request list is submitted to the Governor in 2022, with future request lists submitted by September 1 of even-numbered years. Commerce and the Governor may determine the level of program funding in their related capital budget requests, but these requests must follow the prioritized list unless new information determines that a specific project is no longer viable as proposed.
Program Administration.
Commerce must develop a grant application process and assist higher education institutions in matters related to applying for grants through this program. Prior to receiving funding, project grant recipients must demonstrate that the project site is under control for a minimum of 10 years, either through ownership or a long-term lease. This requirement does not apply to appropriations for preconstruction activities or appropriations in which the sole purpose is to purchase real property that does not include a construction or renovation component. In contracts for grants awarded through this program, Commerce must include provisions that require that capital improvements be held by the grantee for a specified period of time appropriate to the amount of the grant and that facilities be used for the express purpose of the grant. Commerce may also require projects funded through this grant program to comply with Washington's high-performance public building standards.
Commerce may provide program funding on a reimbursement basis only and funding may not be advanced under any circumstances. Commerce may not expend funding for a project grant unless and until the non-state share of that project's costs have been either expended or firmly committed, or both, in an amount sufficient to complete the project or a distinct phase of the project that is usable to the public for the purpose intended by the Legislature. This requirement does not apply to projects where a share of the appropriation is for design costs only.
If Commerce finds the grantee out of compliance with provisions of the contract, the grantee must repay to the state general fund the principal amount of the grant plus interest calculated at the rate of interest on the state general obligation bonds issued most closely to the date of authorization of the grant.