The Controlled Substances Act allows civil forfeiture of real and personal property used in drug-related offenses. Once property is deemed forfeited, the enforcement agency may retain the property for official use, sell the property, dispose of the property, or forward it to the Drug Enforcement Administration.
In addition to drug-related offenses, seizure and forfeiture of property is authorized for other types of offenses, including a person's vehicle upon the person's second or subsequent conviction for driving while intoxicated and property used in the commission of a felony. Ten percent of the net proceeds of any property forfeited during the preceding calendar year for these offenses are remitted to the State Treasurer for deposit into the State General Fund.
Seizure and forfeiture is also authorized for property used in the commission of various sex crimes. Ten percent of the net proceeds from these forfeitures is deposited in the Prostitution Prevention and Intervention Account.
The Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program was established in 2019. The program provides financial support to eligible licensed health professionals through loan repayment and conditional scholarships.
The state's portion of specified civil asset forfeiture collections must be deposited in the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program Account instead of the State General Fund through June 30, 2027. After that date, it is deposited in the State General Fund. These civil forfeitures relate to drug-related offenses, some driving while intoxicated offenses, and commission of felonies.
Technical changes are made regarding remitting forfeiture proceeds relating to various sex crimes.
The Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program Account will retain its own interest earnings.
The amended bill directs the state's portion of the specific civil forfeiture revenues into the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program Account through June 30, 2027, and into the State General Fund thereafter. The amended bill adds an effective date of July 1, 2022.
(In support) This is a request from the Office of the State Treasurer and is a good common-sense bill. The amount in this bill being directed to the loan repayment program was previously directed to other social purposes but went back to the State General Fund by default when the legislation expired. Under current statute, 10 percent of assets acquired through Washington's civil asset forfeiture laws are allocated to the state. Although it varies year to year, it averages to $1 million annually. This legislation would simply direct these dollars to the Behavioral Health Loan Repayment Program Account which offers loan repayment assistance to primary healthcare professionals who agree to practice in areas of our state where shortages impact reliable access to healthcare. Directing the funds to a single account will maximize the impact and support an effective tool to deliver needed behavioral healthcare resources, especially in our rural Washington communities. The maximum award amount is $75,000 and cannot exceed the participant's loan debts. There are checks and balances in place to make sure participants follow through with their commitments.
(Opposed) None.