FINAL BILL REPORT

SHB 1467

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

C 196 L 17

Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Removing disincentives to the voluntary formation of regional fire protection service authorities by establishing parity, equalizing certain provisions with existing laws governing fire protection districts, and clarifying the formation process.

Sponsors: House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representatives Stokesbary, Peterson, Griffey, Robinson, Muri, McBride, Rodne, Fitzgibbon and Tharinger).

House Committee on Local Government

House Committee on Finance

Senate Committee on Local Government

Background:

Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities.

Regional fire protection services authorities (RFAs) are municipal corporations created to conduct selected fire protection functions at a regional level. Regional fire protection services authorities are formed by transferring the powers, duties, and functions of two or more adjacent fire protection jurisdictions to a RFA in accordance with a RFA plan approved by voters. If the voters approve the plan, including the creation of a RFA, the RFA is formed on the next January 1 or July 1, whichever occurs first. A fire protection jurisdiction includes a fire district, city, town, port district, municipal airport, or Indian tribe. A fire protection jurisdiction may not participate in more than one RFA. In addition, RFAs are classified as junior taxing districts with independent taxing authority.

A RFA planning committee acts as an advisory entity for the RFA and adopts a RFA plan providing for the governance, design, financing, and development of fire protection and emergency services. Each governing body of the fire protection jurisdictions participating in planning must appoint three elected officials to the planning committee. Each RFA is governed by a governing board, which is determined by the RFA plan.

Fire Districts.

Fire protection districts (fire districts) are created to provide fire and emergency services to protect life and property in locations outside of cities and towns. A fire district may be established through a process involving a petition by the residents of a proposed district, a public hearing, and voter approval. A board of three or five elected commissioners govern fire districts.

Property Tax and Benefit Charges Imposed–Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities.

For purposes of financing, a RFA may impose up to three separate regular property tax levies, each of which may not exceed 50 cents per $1,000 of assessed value on taxable property located within the jurisdiction of the authority (for a total of $1.50 per $1,000 of assessed value).

In addition, a RFA may impose a benefit charge on personal property and improvements to real property located within the jurisdiction of the RFA, which have received or will receive the benefits provided by the RFA. Personal property includes tangible property such as chattels, stock in trade, estates, or crops. It does not include personal property used for farming, field crops, farm equipment, or livestock. The benefit charges must be reasonably proportioned to the measurable benefits to the property. The governing body of a RFA must hold a public hearing on its proposal to impose benefit charges prior to the election at which the proposition to impose the benefit charge is to be decided.

Any benefit charge imposed must be approved by 60 percent of voters within the RFA, and expires in six or fewer years. An election to authorize benefit charges must be held within 12 months of the date on which the first charge will be assessed. Once a benefit charge expires, a RFA may impose another benefit charge for an additional six years with the subsequent approval of 60 percent of voters. A RFA that imposes a benefit charge is barred from imposing 50 cents of the total property tax levy of $1.50 per $1,000 of assessed valuation that it may otherwise impose.

Benefit charges do not apply to certain properties owned or used by any recognized religious denomination or religious organization, unless it is being used for business operations, profit-making enterprises, or activities other than the use of a sanctuary or activities that are related to kindergarten, primary, or secondary educational purposes or for institutions of higher education.

Property Tax and Benefit Charges Imposed–Fire Districts.

Fire districts may impose property taxes, benefit charges, or both. Similar to RFAs, benefit charges in fire districts are imposed on personal property and improvements to real property within the fire district. A fire district that imposes a benefit charge may not impose all or part of the property levies that are originally authorized. For a fire district, the initial imposition of benefit charges requires approval by 60 percent of the voters voting on the ballot measure. However, unlike in a RFA, the continued imposition of benefit charges need only be approved by a majority of the voters voting on the measure. In addition, similar to RFAs, benefit charges imposed by fire districts do not apply to certain properties owned or used by a recognized religious organization, with exceptions identical to the exceptions that apply in RFAs.

Property Tax Limitations and Prorationing.

All property is subject to a tax each year based on the highest and best use, unless the law provides for a specific exemption. State and local governments, including RFAs and fire districts, impose property taxes. The county assessor determines assessed value for each property and calculates property taxes. The property tax bill for an individual property is determined by multiplying the assessed value of the property by the tax rate for each taxing district in which the property is located.

The state Constitution limits regular property tax levies to a maximum of 1 percent of the property's value ($10 per $1,000 of assessed value). Property taxes that are subject to this 1 percent limitation are "regular" property tax levies.

The Legislature established individual district rate maximums and aggregate rate maximums to keep the total tax rate for regular property taxes within the constitutional limit. The total tax rates for most senior and junior taxing districts must fit within an overall rate limit of $5.90 per $1,000 of value. Senior taxing districts are the state, city, and county taxing districts. Junior taxing districts include RFAs and fire districts.

There is a system of prorating the various levies imposed by junior taxing districts so that the total rate does not exceed $5.90. Statutory schedules specify the preferential order in which the various junior taxing district levies will be reduced, or prorationed, in the event that the total tax rate exceeds the $5.90 limit.

Some regular property tax levies of junior taxing districts are not subject to the $5.90 aggregate rate limit and are protected from prorationing. This includes the protected portion of a fire district's levy. A fire district may, in order to protect its tax levy from prorationing, impose up to a total of 25 cents per $1,000 of assessed value of tax levies outside of the $5.90 per $1,000 of assessed value if those taxes would otherwise be reduced.

Protection of Future Levy Capacities.

A regular property tax district that chooses to levy an amount that is less than the highest lawful amount allowed may retain its ability to levy higher taxes in the future if necessary. The regular property tax levy for fire districts may be set at the amount that would be allowed otherwise if the property tax levy for the district had been set at the full amount authorized by law. This includes any fire district levy that would have been imposed but for provisions barring the imposition of the tax levy because of the imposition of a benefit charge.

The expressly stated purpose of the fire district levy protection provisions is to:

Summary:

Voter Approval of Benefit Charges–Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities and Fire Districts.

In a regional fire protection services authority, only initial benefit charges must be approved by 60 percent of the voters voting on the ballot measure. After the initial benefit charge expires, reapproval is contingent upon a majority of voters voting in the election to approve the continued imposition of a benefit charge. In addition, the requirement that an election for the imposition of a benefit charge be held within 12 months of the date that the first charge will be assessed is limited to the initial imposition of a benefit charge only. Moreover, the RFA planning committee, rather than the governing board of the RFA, must conduct the public hearing required before an election authorizing the imposition of benefit charges by a RFA, if the benefit charge is proposed as part of the initial formation of a RFA.

For both RFAs and fire districts, the reauthorization of a benefit charge is for six consecutive years. The ballot question in the ballot measure calling for the continued imposition of a benefit charge is changed to reflect that the six-year period is for six consecutive years.

Properties Exempt from Benefit Charges–Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities and Fire Districts.

For both RFAs and fire districts, certain tax-exempt properties of the following entities are not subject to a benefit charge:

If at the annual review of the benefit charge, an RFA or fire district may take further action if it finds that a property exempt from benefit charges has a substantial increase in requested emergency services over the prior year or a new tax-exempt property similar in size, population, and geographic location as another tax-exempt property has an increase in requested emergency services.

The fire service agency must work in collaboration, and in good faith, with the tax-exempt property owner to address the problem by implementing community risk reduction efforts. The community risk reduction plan may include wellness programs and community action plans.

If, at the next annual review, the heightened service needs have not been reasonably addressed by joint mitigation efforts, and the tax-exempt property owner has not acted in good faith, either:

A benefit charge may apply to the above mentioned tax-exempt properties if the property is located in a fire protection district that is less than 4 square miles in size, has previously approved a benefit charge and has a population exceeding 19,000 as of the date of the section.

A limited benefit charge may apply to property or improvements owned by a Christmas tree grower if the property is located on land that has been approved as farm and agricultural land with standing crops. Such a benefit charge may not exceed the reduction in property tax that results from the imposition of the benefit charge.

Protection of Future Levy Capacities–Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities.

The regular property tax levy for RFAs may be set at the amount that would otherwise be allowed if the property tax levy for the district had been set at the full amount authorized by law. This includes any RFA levy that would have been imposed but for provisions barring the imposition of the tax levy because of the imposition of a benefit charge.

The protection of future levy capacity applies to property taxes levied for collection in 2018.

Tax Limitations and Protection from Prorationing–Regional Fire Protection Service Authorities.

If a RFA's tax levies will be reduced, a RFA may protect part of its tax levy from reduction by imposing up to a total of 25 cents per $1,000 of assessed value of tax levies outside of the $5.90 per $1,000 of assessed value limit. This protected portion of a RFA's tax levy is not subject to the $5.90 per $1,000 of assessed value limit applicable to junior taxing districts. However, if the combined rate of regular property tax levies subject to the $10 per $1,000 assessed value limitation exceeds the $10 (1 percent) limit, then any protected portion of the RFA's tax levy will be reduced or eliminated.

This provision applies to property taxes levied for collection beginning in 2018.

Formation of the RFA.

When voters approve the creation of a RFA, it is formed on the effective date set forth in the service plan or the next January 1 or July 1, whichever occurs first.

Votes on Final Passage:

House

85

12

Senate

48

1

(Senate amended)

House

80

15

(House concurred)

Effective:

May 5, 2017

January 1, 2018 (Sections 10 and 12)