Z-0357.3 _______________________________________________
HOUSE BILL 1186
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 56th Legislature 1999 Regular Session
By Representatives H. Sommers and Huff; by request of Governor Locke
Read first time 01/18/1999. Referred to Committee on Appropriations.
AN ACT Relating to fiscal matters; making appropriations and authorizing expenditures for the operations of state agencies for the fiscal biennium beginning July 1, 1999, and ending June 30, 2001; amending RCW 69.50.520 and 72.09.050; creating new sections; providing an effective date; and declaring an emergency.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. (1) A budget is hereby adopted and, subject to the provisions set forth in the following sections, the several amounts specified in parts I through VIII of this act, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to accomplish the purposes designated, are hereby appropriated and authorized to be incurred for salaries, wages, and other expenses of the agencies and offices of the state and for other specified purposes for the fiscal biennium beginning July 1, 1999, and ending June 30, 2001, except as otherwise provided, out of the several funds of the state hereinafter named.
(2) Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this act.
(a) "Fiscal year 2000" or "FY 2000" means the fiscal year ending June 30, 2000.
(b) "Fiscal year 2001" or "FY 2001" means the fiscal year ending June 30, 2001.
(c) "FTE" means full time equivalent.
(d) "Lapse" or "revert" means the amount shall return to an unappropriated status.
(e) "Provided solely" means the specified amount may be spent only for the specified purpose. Unless otherwise specifically authorized in this act, any portion of an amount provided solely for a specified purpose which is unnecessary to fulfill the specified purpose shall lapse.
PART I
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
NEW SECTION. Sec. 101. FOR THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 24,828,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 25,667,000
Department of Retirement Systems Expense Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 25,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 50,520,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 102. FOR THE SENATE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 19,674,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 21,131,000
Department of Retirement Systems Expense Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 25,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 40,830,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 103. FOR THE JOINT LEGISLATIVE AUDIT AND REVIEW COMMITTEE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,988,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,050,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,038,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 104. FOR THE LEGISLATIVE EVALUATION AND ACCOUNTABILITY PROGRAM COMMITTEE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,457,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,585,000
Public Works Assistance Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 202,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 3,244,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 105. FOR THE OFFICE OF THE STATE ACTUARY
Department of Retirement Systems Expense Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 1,926,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 106. FOR THE JOINT LEGISLATIVE SYSTEMS COMMITTEE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 5,847,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 5,847,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 11,694,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 107. FOR THE STATUTE LAW COMMITTEE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 3,785,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 3,947,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 7,732,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 108. FOR THE SUPREME COURT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 4,847,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 5,061,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 9,908,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 109. FOR THE LAW LIBRARY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,827,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,846,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 3,673,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 110. FOR THE COURT OF APPEALS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 12,123,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 12,757,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 24,880,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 111. FOR THE COMMISSION ON JUDICIAL CONDUCT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 921,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 832,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,753,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 112. FOR THE ADMINISTRATOR FOR THE COURTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 14,495,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 14,745,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 26,041,000
Judicial Information Systems Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 17,018,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 72,299,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 113. FOR THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC DEFENSE
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 12,594,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 114. FOR THE OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 6,348,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 6,374,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 14,209,000
Water Quality Account‑-State Appropriation..... $ 700,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 27,631,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $1,612,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $1,588,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, $700,000 of the water quality account appropriation, and $209,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action items PSAT-01 through PSAT-05.
(2) $743,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $822,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the salmon recovery office to meet its responsibilities for the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. Of this amount: (a) $1,000,000 is provided for volunteer coordination and training activities; (b) $100,000 is provided for the operation of the independent science panel; and (c) $465,000 is provided for staff at the salmon recovery office to support local salmon recovery planning efforts.
(3) $14,000,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation is provided solely for implementation of the forestry components of the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. These funds shall be provided to the department of natural resources to implement new forest practice rules adopted by the forest practices board including the following activities: (a) $5,000,000 is provided to purchase or lease riparian areas and other habitat from landowners with small parcels; (b) $1,492,000 is provided for technical assistance to small landowners to develop forestry plans; (c) $530,000 is provided for the protection of cultural resources; (d) $5,505,000 is for the development of geographic information system data layers for forest roads, hydrography, water type, and wetlands; (d) $1,253,000 is for cooperative, monitoring, evaluation, and research (CMER) projects related to monitoring the new forest practice rules; and (e) $220,000 is provided for a rate of timber harvest study.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 115. FOR THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 302,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 301,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 160,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 763,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 116. FOR THE PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,400,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001) ... $ 1,414,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 2,814,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 117. FOR THE SECRETARY OF STATE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 13,912,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 8,286,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 120,000
Archives and Records Management Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 5,401,000
Archives and Records Management Account‑-Private/
Local Appropriation........................ $ 2,581,000
Department of Personnel Service Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 681,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 30,981,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $2,355,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is provided solely to reimburse counties for the state's share of primary and general election costs and the costs of conducting mandatory recounts on state measures.
(2) $3,780,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is provided solely to reimburse counties for the state's share of presidential preference primary election costs.
(3) $2,231,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,788,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the verification of initiative and referendum petitions, maintenance of related voter registration records, and the publication and distribution of the voters and candidates pamphlet.
(4) $125,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $125,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for legal advertising of state measures under RCW 29.27.072.
(5)(a) $1,870,350 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,907,757 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for continuing the contract with a nonprofit organization to produce gavel-to-gavel television coverage of state government deliberations and other events of state-wide significance during the 1999-2001 biennium.
(b) The funding level for each year of the contract shall be based on the amount provided in this subsection and adjusted to reflect the implicit price deflator for the previous year. The nonprofit organization shall be required to raise contributions or commitments to make contributions, in cash or in kind, in an amount equal to forty percent of the state contribution. The office of the secretary of state may make full or partial payment once all criteria in (a) and (b) of this subsection have been satisfactorily documented.
(c) The nonprofit organization shall prepare an annual independent audit, an annual financial statement, and an annual report, including benchmarks that measure the success of the nonprofit organization in meeting the intent of the program.
(d) No portion of any amounts disbursed pursuant to this subsection may be used, directly or indirectly, for any of the following purposes:
(i) Attempting to influence the passage or defeat of any legislation by the legislature of the state of Washington, by any county, city, town, or other political subdivision of the state of Washington, or by the congress, or the adoption or rejection of any rule, standard, rate, or other legislative enactment of any state agency;
(ii) Making contributions reportable under chapter 42.17 RCW; or
(iii) Providing any: (A) Gift; (B) honoraria; or (C) travel, lodging, meals, or entertainment to a public officer or employee.
(6) $867,000 of the archives and records management account‑-state appropriation is provided solely for operation of the central microfilming bureau under RCW 40.14.020(8)
NEW SECTION. Sec. 118. FOR THE GOVERNOR'S OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 270,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 269,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 539,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: Within the appropriations provided in this section, the governor's office of Indian affairs may participate in activities to examine tribal economies, diversification opportunities, and tribal contributions to local economies.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 119. FOR THE COMMISSION ON ASIAN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 215,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 215,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 430,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 120. FOR THE STATE TREASURER
State Treasurer's Service Account‑-State
Appropriation.. ........................... $ 13,184,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 121. FOR THE REDISTRICTING COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 496,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 122. FOR THE STATE AUDITOR
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 917,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 914,000
State Auditing Services Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 12,728,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 14,559,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 123. FOR THE CITIZENS' COMMISSION ON SALARIES FOR ELECTED OFFICIALS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 84,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 122,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 206,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 124. FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 3,929,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 3,917,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 2,291,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,338,000
New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,109,000
Legal Services Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 117,364,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 129,948,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The attorney general shall report each fiscal year on actual legal services expenditures and actual attorney staffing levels for each agency receiving legal services. The report shall be submitted to the office of financial management and the fiscal committees of the senate and house of representatives no later than ninety days after the end of each fiscal year.
(2) The attorney general shall include, at a minimum, the following information with each bill sent to agencies receiving legal services: (a) The number of hours and cost of attorney services provided during the billing period; (b) cost of support staff services provided during the billing period; (c) attorney general overhead and central support costs charged to the agency for the billing period; (d) direct legal costs, such as filing and docket fees, charged to the agency for the billing period; and (e) other costs charged to the agency for the billing period. The attorney general may, with approval of the office of financial management change its billing system to meet the needs of its user agencies.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 125. FOR THE CASELOAD FORECAST COUNCIL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 401,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 399,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 800,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 126. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Securities Regulation Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 7,002,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 127. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY, TRADE, AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 69,321,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 71,068,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 147,675,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 6,918,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 8,793,000
Public Works Assistance Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,344,000
Building Code Council Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,375,000
Administrative Contingency Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,776,000
Low-Income Weatherization Assistance Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,289,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 6,051,000
Manufactured Home Installation Training Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 252,000
Washington Housing Trust Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 6,485,000
Public Facility Construction Loan Revolving
Account‑-State Appropriation............... $ 522,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 325,869,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $2,962,500 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $3,602,500 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for a contract with the Washington technology center. For work essential to the mission of the Washington technology center and conducted in partnership with universities, the center shall not pay any increased indirect rate nor increases in other indirect charges above the absolute amount paid during the 1995-97 biennium.
(2) $61,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $62,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DCTED-01.
(3) $11,593,320 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation is provided solely for the drug control and system improvement formula grant program, to be distributed in state fiscal year 2000 as follows:
(a) $3,603,250 to local units of government to continue multijurisdictional narcotics task forces;
(b) $620,000 to the department to continue the drug prosecution assistance program in support of multijurisdictional narcotics task forces;
(c) $1,552,800 to the Washington state patrol for coordination, investigative, and supervisory support to the multijurisdictional narcotics task forces and for methamphetamine education and response;
(d) $240,000 to the department for grants to support tribal law enforcement needs;
(e) $991,000 to drug courts in eastern and western Washington;
(f) $302,551 to the department for grants assisting in the development, conduct, and training on sentencing alternatives;
(g) $200,000 to the department to continue a substance-abuse treatment in jails program, to test the effect of treatment on future criminal behavior;
(h) $667,075 to the department to continue domestic violence legal advocacy;
(i) $903,000 to the department to continue youth violence prevention and intervention projects;
(j) $91,000 to the department to continue the governor's council on substance abuse;.
(k) $99,000 to the department to continue evaluation of Byrne formula grant programs;
(l) $1,519,244 to the office of financial management for criminal history records improvement;
(m) $804,400 to the department for required grant administration, monitoring, and reporting on Byrne formula grant programs.
These amounts represent the maximum Byrne grant expenditure authority for each program. No program may expend Byrne grant funds in excess of the amounts provided in this subsection. If moneys in excess of those appropriated in this subsection become available, whether from prior or current fiscal year Byrne grant distributions, the department shall hold these moneys in reserve and may not expend them without specific appropriation. These moneys shall be carried forward and applied to the pool of moneys available for appropriation for programs and projects in the succeeding fiscal year. As part of its budget request for the succeeding year, the department shall estimate and request authority to spend any funds remaining in reserve as a result of this subsection.
(4) $500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the tourism office to increase rural tourism development, consumer marketing, and international marketing. Within the funds provided in this section the tourism office will develop a system that will provide internet access to photographs and other images. Within the funds provided in this section, the tourism office and the film office will administer $60,000 in grants and technical assistance to help communities attract film and video production to their communities.
(5) $750,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $750,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for a grant program to help communities design and carry out rural economic development projects.
(6) $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, and $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for grants to operate, repair, and staff shelters for homeless families with children.
(7) $2,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for grants to operate transitional housing for homeless families with children. The grants may also be used to make partial payments for rental assistance.
(8) $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for consolidated emergency assistance to homeless families with children.
(9) $250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is provided solely for the department to contract with the Washington state institute for public policy to complete a study on homelessness. The institute will:
(a) Review the methods used to collect information on the homeless and services to the homeless and determine the accuracy of the information that has been collected;
(b) Recommend methods that will improve the collection, accuracy, and reliability of information on homeless persons and the services they receive; and
(c) Recommend the priority for spending funds on shelters, transitional housing, affordable housing, and homelessness prevention.
The institute will provide a final report to the department and the office of financial management no later than June 30, 2000.
(10) $250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 is provided solely for the department to develop and implement a system to collect accurate and reliable information on homeless persons.
(11) $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to the department solely for providing technical assistance to developers of housing for farmworkers.
(12) $160,000 of the public works assistance account appropriation is solely for providing technical assistance to local communities that are developing the infrastructure needed to support the development of housing for farmworkers.
(13) $205,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $205,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for grants to Washington Columbia river gorge counties to implement their responsibilities under the national scenic area management plan. Of this amount, $390,000 is provided for Skamania county, and $20,000 is provided for Clark county.
(14) $1,105,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,105,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the department's responsibilities in the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. Of this amount: (a) $2,000,000 is provided for a grant program to counties to update their critical area ordinances to reflect best available science. Counties with demonstrated financial need shall receive priority for these grants; and (b) $210,000 is provided for technical assistance to local watershed planning efforts under the watershed planning act.
(15) $500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for a competitive grant program for local governments for coastal erosion activities. All grant applications will be reviewed and prioritized by a state and federal agency technical task force consisting of, but not limited to, the department of community, trade, and economic development; the department of ecology; the department of fish and wildlife; the parks and recreation commission; and the United States army corps of engineers. All local governments receiving a coastal erosion grant must use a competitive bid process in awarding contracts resulting from these grants. Up to $120,000 of these funds may be used by the department for the activities of its coastal task force.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 128. FOR THE ECONOMIC AND REVENUE FORECAST COUNCIL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 457,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 459,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 916,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 129. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 12,396,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 11,986,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 23,340,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 47,722,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 130. FOR THE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
Administrative Hearings Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 21,347,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 131. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL
Department of Personnel Service Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 16,947,000
Higher Education Personnel Services Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,640,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 18,587,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The department shall reduce its charge for personnel services to the lowest rate possible.
(2) The department of personnel service account appropriation contains sufficient funds to continue the employee exchange program with the Hyogo prefecture in Japan.
(3) $515,000 of the department of personnel service account appropriation is provided solely for the development and implementation of a new employment application processing system to: Provide for electronic applications via the internet, provide continuous application acceptance, provide increased public access to job openings, allow for single applications for multiple jobs, and provide for scanning of larger applicant databases as job openings arise.
(4) $190,000 of the department of personnel service account appropriation is provided solely for the expansion of the executive fellowship program.
(5) $108,000 of the department of personnel service account appropriation is provided solely for increased funding of the administrative expenses of the combined fund drive.
(6) The department of personnel has the authority to charge agencies for expenses associated with converting its payroll/personnel computer system to accommodate the year 2000 date change. Funding to cover these expenses shall be realized from the agency FICA savings associated with the pretax benefits contributions plan.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 132. FOR THE WASHINGTON STATE LOTTERY
Lottery Administrative Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 21,187,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 133. FOR THE COMMISSION ON HISPANIC AFFAIRS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 216,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 225,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 441,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 134. FOR THE COMMISSION ON AFRICAN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 193,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 191,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 384,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 135. FOR THE PERSONNEL APPEALS BOARD
Department of Personnel Service Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,624,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 136. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF RETIREMENT SYSTEMS‑-OPERATIONS
Dependent Care Administrative Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 361,000
Department of Retirement Systems Expense Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 40,735,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 41,096,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $212,000 of the department of retirement systems expense account appropriation is provided solely for the additional resources needed for the teachers' retirement system plan 3.
(2) $1,154,000 of the department of retirement systems expense account appropriation is provided solely for the replacement of the deferred compensation program record keeping system.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 137. FOR THE STATE INVESTMENT BOARD
State Investment Board Expense Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 10,519,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 138. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 71,007,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 69,419,000
Timber Tax Distribution Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 4,899,000
Waste Education/Recycling/Litter Control‑-State
Appropriation.......................... ... $ 101,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 67,000
Oil Spill Administration Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 14,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 145,507,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 139. FOR THE BOARD OF TAX APPEALS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 920,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 936,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,856,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 140. FOR THE MUNICIPAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,766,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,822,000
County Research Services Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 681,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,269,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 141. FOR THE OFFICE OF MINORITY AND WOMEN'S BUSINESS ENTERPRISES
OMWBE Enterprises Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,546,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 142. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 279,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 279,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 2,116,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 417,000
Air Pollution Control Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 395,000
General Administration Service Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 44,124,000
Energy Efficiency Services Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 199,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 47,809,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The department shall develop an allocation method for tort defense costs with the office of the attorney general and selected agency representatives. A report shall be submitted to the office of financial management and the fiscal committees of the house of representatives and the senate by June 30, 2000, on how the agencies will be billed for their tort defense services from the liability account. If Z-. . . ./99 (consolidates tort activities) is not enacted by June 30, 1999, this subsection shall lapse.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 143. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION SERVICES
Data Processing Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,605,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 144. FOR THE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 304,000
Insurance Commissioners Regulatory Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 24,425,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 24,729,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $500,000 of the insurance commissioner's regulatory account appropriation is provided solely for funding agreements with insurance companies, to counsel policyholders and administer the liquidation of insurance companies.
(2) $730,000 of the insurance commissioner's regulatory account appropriation is provided solely for performing market conduct exams on life and annuity policies.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 145. FOR THE BOARD OF ACCOUNTANCY
Certified Public Accountants' Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,180,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 146. FOR THE FORENSIC INVESTIGATION COUNCIL
Death Investigations Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 22,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 147. FOR THE HORSE RACING COMMISSION
Horse Racing Commission Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 4,605,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 148. FOR THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,310,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,302,000
Liquor Control Board Construction and Maintenance
Account‑-State Appropriation............... $ 8,120,000
Liquor Revolving Account‑-State Appropriation... $........................................... 128,389,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 139,121,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: $300,000 of the liquor revolving account appropriation is provided solely for the board to develop a business plan. The board shall provide copies of the plan to the office of financial management and the fiscal committees of the legislature by September 30, 1999.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 149. FOR THE UTILITIES AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION
Public Service Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 25,918,000
Public Service Revolving Account‑-Federal
Appropriation.............................. $ 652,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 26,570,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 150. FOR THE BOARD FOR VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTERS
Volunteer Firefighters' Relief and Pension
Administrative Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 573,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 151. FOR THE MILITARY DEPARTMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 26,186,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 8,264,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 22,148,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 238,000
Enhanced 911 Account‑-State Appropriation...... $ 16,491,000
Disaster Response Account‑-State Appropriation. $ 17,792,000
Disaster Response Account‑-Federal Appropriation $ 88,126,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 179,245,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $17,792,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is provided solely for deposit in the disaster response account to cover costs pursuant to subsection (2) of this section.
(2) $17,792,000 of the disaster response account‑-state appropriation is provided solely for the state share of response and recovery costs associated with federal emergency management agency (FEMA) disaster 1079 (November/December 1995 storms), FEMA disaster 1100 (February 1996 floods), FEMA disaster 1152 (November 1996 ice storm), FEMA disaster 1159 (December 1996 holiday storm), FEMA disaster 1172 (March 1997 floods), FEMA disaster 1252 (1998 northeast counties floods), and FEMA disaster 1255 (Kelso landslide). The military department is to submit a report quarterly to the office of financial management and the fiscal committees of the house of representatives and senate detailing disaster costs, including: (a) Estimates of total costs; (b) incremental changes from the previous estimate; (c) actual expenditures; (d) estimates of total remaining costs to be paid; and (d) estimates of future payments by biennium. This information is to be displayed by individual disaster, by fund, and by type of assistance.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 152. FOR THE PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,034,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,032,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,066,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 153. FOR THE GROWTH PLANNING HEARINGS BOARD
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,422,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,383,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 2,805,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 154. FOR THE STATE CONVENTION AND TRADE CENTER
State Convention and Trade Center Operating
Account‑-State Appropriation............... $ 29,963,000
(End of part)
PART II
HUMAN SERVICES
NEW SECTION. Sec. 201. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES. (1) Appropriations made in this act to the department of social and health services shall initially be allotted as required by this act. Subsequent allotment modifications shall not include transfers of moneys between sections of this act except as expressly provided in subsection (3) of this section.
(2) The department of social and health services shall not initiate any services that will require expenditure of state general fund moneys unless expressly authorized in this act or other law. The department may seek, receive, and spend, under RCW 43.79.260 through 43.79.282, federal moneys not anticipated in this act as long as the federal funding does not require expenditure of state moneys for the program in excess of amounts anticipated in this act. If the department receives unanticipated unrestricted federal moneys, those moneys shall be spent for services authorized in this act or in any other legislation providing appropriation authority, and an equal amount of appropriated state general fund moneys shall lapse. Upon the lapsing of any moneys under this subsection, the office of financial management shall notify the legislative fiscal committees. As used in this subsection, "unrestricted federal moneys" includes block grants and other funds that federal law does not require to be spent on specifically defined projects or matched on a formula basis by state funds.
(3)(a) The appropriations to the department of social and health services in chapters . . . and . . ., Laws of 1999, as amended, shall be expended for the programs and in the amounts specified therein. However, after May 1, 2000, unless specifically prohibited by this act, the department may transfer general fund‑-state appropriations for fiscal year 2000 among programs and among amounts including amounts provided under conditions and limitations after approval by the director of the office of financial management.
(b) The director of the office of financial management shall notify the appropriate fiscal committees of the senate and house of representatives in writing prior to approving any allotment modifications.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 202. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 209,526,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 224,123,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 336,120,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 400,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 4,182,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 774,351,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: $376,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2000 appropriation, $380,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2001 appropriation, and $4,182,000 of the violence reduction and drug enforcement account appropriation are provided solely for the operation of the family policy council and the community public health and safety networks and these shall be the only funds made available in this section to the family policy council and the community public health and safety networks.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 203. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-JUVENILE REHABILITATION PROGRAM
(1) COMMUNITY SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 34,286,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 35,746,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 7,013,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 380,000
Juvenile Accountability Incentive Account‑-Federal
Appropriation.............................. $ 5,250,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 20,674,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 103,349,000
The appropriations in this subsection are subject to the following conditions and limitations: $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2000 appropriation and $1,250,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2001 appropriation are provided to implement community juvenile accountability grants. Grant moneys awarded by the department under this subsection must be matched on a dollar-for-dollar basis, in cash and must be used to supplement, not supplant, other federal, state and local funds.
(2) INSTITUTIONAL SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 48,003,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 49,179,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 740,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 15,282,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 113,204,000
(3) PROGRAM SUPPORT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,501,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,500,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 156,000
Juvenile Accountability Incentive Account‑-Federal
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,100,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 421,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,678,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 204. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM
(1) COMMUNITY SERVICES/REGIONAL SUPPORT NETWORKS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 167,619,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 173,229,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 298,576,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 639,424,000
The appropriations in this subsection are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(a) Regional support networks shall use portions of the general fund‑-state appropriation for implementation of working agreements with the vocational rehabilitation program which will maximize the use of federal funding for vocational programs.
(b) From the general fund‑-state appropriations in this subsection, the secretary of social and health services shall assure that regional support networks reimburse the aging and adult services program for the general fund‑-state cost of medicaid personal care services that enrolled regional support network consumers use because of their psychiatric disability.
(2) INSTITUTIONAL SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 72,720,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 72,485,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 139,206,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 28,779,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 313,190,000
The appropriations in this subsection are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(a) The state mental hospitals may use funds appropriated in this subsection to purchase goods and supplies through hospital group purchasing organizations when it is cost-effective to do so.
(b) The mental health program at Western state hospital shall continue to use labor provided by the Tacoma prerelease program of the department of corrections.
(3) CIVIL COMMITMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 9,163,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 9,817,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 18,980,000
(4) SPECIAL PROJECTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 494,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 493,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 3,282,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,269,000
(5) PROGRAM SUPPORT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 3,178,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,766,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 3,822,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 9,766,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 205. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES PROGRAM
(1) COMMUNITY SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 182,014,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 194,700,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 303,003,000
Health Services Account‑-State Appropriation... $ 144,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 679,861,000
The appropriations in this subsection are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The health services account appropriation and $155,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely for the enrollment in the basic health plan of home care workers with family incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty level who are employed through state contracts. Enrollment in the basic health plan for home care workers with family incomes at or above 200 percent of poverty shall be covered with general fund‑-state and matching general fund‑-federal revenues that were identified by the department to have been previously appropriated for health benefits coverage, to the extent that these funds had not been contractually obligated for worker wage increases prior to March 1, 1996.
(2) INSTITUTIONAL SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 67,363,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 66,937,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 147,412,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 9,732,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 291,444,000
(3) PROGRAM SUPPORT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,317,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,316,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 2,353,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 6,986,000
(4) SPECIAL PROJECTS
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 12,007,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 206. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-AGING AND ADULT SERVICES PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 438,881,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 462,869,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 969,039,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 5,404,000
Health Services Account‑-State Appropriation... $ 1,720,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,877,913,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The entire health services account appropriation and $1,676,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely for the enrollment in the basic health plan of home care workers with family incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty level who are employed through state contracts. Enrollment in the basic health plan for home care workers with family incomes at or above 200 percent of poverty shall be covered with general fund‑-state and matching general fund‑-federal revenues that were identified by the department to have been previously appropriated for health benefits coverage, to the extent that these funds had not been contractually obligated for worker wage increases prior to March 1, 1996.
(2) $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for payments to any nursing facility licensed under chapter 18.51 RCW which meets all of the following criteria: (a) The nursing home entered into an arm's length agreement for a facility lease prior to January 1, 1980; (b) the lessee purchased the leased nursing home after January 1, 1980; and (c) the lessor defaulted on its loan or mortgage for the assets of the home after January 1, 1991, and prior to January 1, 1992. Payments provided pursuant to this subsection shall not be subject to the settlement, audit, or rate-setting requirements contained in chapter 74.46 RCW.
(3) For purposes of implementing chapter 322, Laws of 1998 (nursing home payment rates), the weighted average nursing facility payment rate for fiscal year 2000 shall be no more than $114.62 and no more than $117.39 for fiscal year 2001, including vendor rate increases, but excluding nurse's aide training. These maximum allowable yearly rates are based on the following quarterly average rates: First quarter, fiscal year 2000: $115.46; second quarter, fiscal year 2000: $114.01; third quarter, fiscal year 2000: $114.34; fourth quarter, fiscal year 2000: $114.67; first quarter, fiscal year 2001: $115.76; second quarter, fiscal year 2001: $117.59; third quarter, fiscal year 2001: $117.93; and fourth quarter, fiscal year 2001: $118.28. The department may adjust the quarterly rates provided that the fiscal year maximum is not exceeded.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 207. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-ECONOMIC SERVICES PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 479,328,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 458,137,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 1,251,198,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 35,412,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 2,224,075,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 208. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 17,599,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 21,970,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 88,580,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 1,204,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 6,638,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 76,899,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 212,890,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 209. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 729,078,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 782,127,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 2,335,713,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 269,299,000
Emergency Medical Services and Trauma Care Systems
Trust Account‑-State Appropriation......... $ 9,200,000
Health Services Account‑-State Appropriation... $ 339,284,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,464,701,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The department shall continue to make use of the special eligibility category created for children through age 18 and in households with incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty level made eligible for medicaid as of July 1, 1994.
(2) It is the intent of the legislature that Harborview medical center continue to be an economically viable component of the health care system and that the state's financial interest in Harborview medical center be recognized.
(3) Funding is provided in this section for the adult dental program for Title XIX categorically eligible and medically needy persons and to provide foot care services by podiatric physicians and surgeons.
(4) $1,647,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,672,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for treatment of low-income kidney dialysis patients.
(5) $80,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $80,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $160,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely for the prenatal triage clearinghouse to provide access and outreach to reduce infant mortality.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 210. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 10,751,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 10,663,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 81,172,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 102,586,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The division of vocational rehabilitation shall negotiate the transfer of funds from state and local entities to improve and expand employment opportunities for persons with severe disabilities.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 211. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORTING SERVICES PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 26,365,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 26,302,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 45,736,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 720,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 99,123,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 212. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES‑-PAYMENTS TO OTHER AGENCIES PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 32,365,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 32,364,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 20,125,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 84,854,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 213. FOR THE STATE HEALTH CARE AUTHORITY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 6,421,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 6,542,000
State Health Care Authority Administrative Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 15,598,000
Health Services Account‑-State Appropriation... $ 403,997,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 432,558,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The general fund‑-state appropriations are provided solely for health care services provided through local community clinics.
(2) Within funds appropriated in this section and sections 205 and 206 of chapter 149, Laws of 1997, the health care authority shall continue to provide an enhanced basic health plan subsidy option for foster parents licensed under chapter 74.15 RCW and workers in state-funded homecare programs. Under this enhanced subsidy option, foster parents and homecare workers with family incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty level shall be allowed to enroll in the basic health plan at a cost of ten dollars per covered worker per month.
(3) The health care authority shall require organizations and individuals which are paid to deliver basic health plan services and which choose to sponsor enrollment in the subsidized basic health plan to pay the following: (i) A minimum of fifteen dollars per enrollee per month for persons below 100 percent of the federal poverty level; and (ii) a minimum of twenty dollars per enrollee per month for persons whose family income is 100 percent to 200 percent of the federal poverty level.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 214. FOR THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,536,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,550,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 1,474,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 100,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 6,660,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 215. FOR THE BOARD OF INDUSTRIAL INSURANCE APPEALS
Worker and Community Right-to-Know Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 20,000
Accident Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 11,603,000
Medical Aid Account‑-State Appropriation........ $...................................... 11,608,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 23,231,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 216. FOR THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE TRAINING COMMISSION
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 100,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 1,138,000
Death Investigations Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 38,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 14,271,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 349,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 15,896,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 217. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,238,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,225,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 20,742,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-Federal
Appropriation.............................. $ 5,950,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-Private/Local
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,178,000
Electrical License Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 24,055,000
Farm Labor Revolving Account‑-Private/Local
Appropriation.............................. $ 28,000
Worker and Community Right-to-Know Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,211,000
Public Works Administration Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,996,000
Contractor Registration Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 4,892,000
Factory Assembled Structures Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,547,000
Elevator Inspection Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,164,000
Accident Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 166,184,000
Accident Account‑-Federal Appropriation........ $ 9,112,000
Medical Aid Account‑-State Appropriation........ $...................................... 163,543,000
Medical Aid Account‑-Federal Appropriation..... $ 1,592,000
Plumbing Certificate Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 971,000
Pressure Systems Safety Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,167,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 416,795,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: Pursuant to RCW 7.68.015, the department shall operate the crime victims compensation program within the public safety and education account funds appropriated in this section. In the event that cost containment measures are necessary, the department may (a) institute copayments for services; (b) develop preferred provider and managed care contracts; (c) coordinate with the department of social and health services to use the public safety and education account as matching funds for federal Title XIX reimbursement, to the extent this maximizes total funds available for services to crime victims.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 218. FOR THE INDETERMINATE SENTENCE REVIEW BOARD
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 929,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 925,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,854,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 219. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
(1) HEADQUARTERS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,432,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,428,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 72,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 78,000
Industrial Insurance Premium Refund Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 78,000
Charitable, Educational, Penal, and Reformatory
Institutions Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 3,090,000
(2) FIELD SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,461,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,490,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 26,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 595,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 5,572,000
(3) INSTITUTIONAL SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 5,943,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 5,887,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 19,439,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 15,628,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 46,897,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 220. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 69,807,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 70,255,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 267,521,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 69,502,000
Hospital Commission Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,128,000
Health Professions Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 36,454,000
Emergency Medical Services and Trauma Care Systems
Trust Account‑-State Appropriation......... $ 14,856,000
State Drinking Water Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,531,000
Drinking Water Assistance Account‑-Federal
Appropriation.............................. $ 5,456,000
Waterworks Operator Certification‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 593,000
Water Quality Account‑-State Appropriation..... $ 3,124,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,904,000
Medical Test Site Licensure Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,651,000
Youth Tobacco Prevention Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 1,804,000
Tobacco Prevention Trust Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 5,000,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 554,586,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $2,434,000 of the health professions account appropriation is provided solely for the development and implementation of a licensing and disciplinary management system. Expenditures are conditioned upon compliance with section 902 of this act. These funds shall not be expended without appropriate project approval by the department of information systems.
(2) The department or any successor agency is authorized to raise existing fees charged to the nursing assistants, podiatrists, and osteopaths; for certificate of need; for temporary worker housing; for state institution inspection; for residential care facilities and for transient accommodations, in excess of the fiscal growth factor established by Initiative Measure No. 601, if necessary, to meet the actual costs of conducting business and the appropriation levels in this section.
(3) $1,324,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,288,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department to meet its responsibilities in the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. Of this amount: (a) $866,000 is provided to develop a water use data management system; (b) $390,000 is provided for technical assistance to local watershed planning efforts under the watershed planning act; and (c) $1,356,000 is provided for water conservation and reuse programs for local governments and special districts.
(4) $1,685,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2000 appropriation and $1,686,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2001 appropriation are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound water work plan and agency action items, DOH-01, DOH-02, DOH-03, and DOH-04.
(5) $4,645,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2000 appropriation and $4,645,000 of the general fund‑-state fiscal year 2001 appropriation are provided solely for distribution to local health departments.
(6) The department of health shall not initiate any services that will require expenditure of state general fund moneys unless expressly authorized in this act or other law. The department may seek, receive, and spend, under RCW 43.79.260 through 43.79.282, federal moneys not anticipated in this act as long as the federal funding does not require expenditure of state moneys for the program in excess of amounts anticipated in this act. If the department receives unanticipated unrestricted federal moneys, those moneys shall be spent for services authorized in this act or in any other legislation that provides appropriation authority, and an equal amount of appropriated state moneys shall lapse. Upon the lapsing of any moneys under this subsection, the office of financial management shall notify the legislative fiscal committees. As used in this subsection, "unrestricted federal moneys" includes block grants and other funds that federal law does not require to be spent on specifically defined projects or matched on a formula basis by state funds.
(7) $1,047,000 of the fiscal year 2000 general fund‑-state appropriation and $1,047,000 of the fiscal year 2001 general fund‑-state appropriation are provided solely for deposit in the county public health account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 221. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
The appropriations to the department of corrections in this act shall be expended for the programs and in the amounts specified therein. However, after May 1, 2000, unless specifically prohibited by this act, the department may transfer general fund‑-state appropriations for fiscal year 2000 between the correctional operations and community supervision programs after approval by the director of the office of financial management. The director of the office of financial management shall notify the appropriate fiscal committees of the senate and house of representatives in writing prior to approving any deviations from appropriation levels.
(1) ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 30,212,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 33,908,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 1,686,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 65,806,000
(2) CORRECTIONAL OPERATIONS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 366,399,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 372,045,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 32,594,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 1,059,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 772,097,000
The appropriations in this subsection are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(a) Not more than $3,000,000 may be expended to provide financial assistance to counties for monitoring and treatment services provided to felony offenders who graduate from drug court programs and who otherwise would have been sentenced to more than 12 months imprisonment in a department facility. The secretary may negotiate terms, conditions, and amounts of assistance with counties or groups of counties operating drug courts, and may review charging and other documents to verify eligibility for payment. The secretary shall consult with the division of alcohol and substance abuse, department of social and health services, in determining appropriate terms, conditions, and amounts of assistance. For counties receiving assistance under this subsection which operated drug courts before July 1, 1999, the secretary shall provide assistance only for the number of offenders graduating from drug court that exceeds the number graduating in fiscal year 1999 who otherwise would have been sentenced to more than 12 months imprisonment in a department facility. For the purposes of this subsection, "drug court" means a department of a superior court that has special calendars or dockets designed to achieve a reduction in recidivism and substance abuse among nonviolent, substance abusing offenders by increasing their likelihood of successful rehabilitation through early, continuous, and intense judicially supervised treatment; mandatory periodic drug testing; and the use of appropriate sanctions and other rehabilitation services, as an alternative to incarceration.
(b) The department may expend funds generated by contractual agreements entered into for mitigation of severe overcrowding in local jails. If any funds are generated in excess of actual costs, they shall be deposited in the state general fund. Expenditures shall not exceed revenue generated by such agreements and shall be treated as recovery of costs.
(3) COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 55,430,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 62,059,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 117,489,000
(4) CORRECTIONAL INDUSTRIES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 2,069,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 2,869,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 4,938,000
(5) INTERAGENCY PAYMENTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 13,082,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 12,247,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 25,329,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 222. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF SERVICES FOR THE BLIND
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,481,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,513,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 11,062,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 80,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 14,136,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 223. FOR THE SENTENCING GUIDELINES COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 803,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 746,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,549,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 224. FOR THE EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DEPARTMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 1,263,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 1,259,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 209,698,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 29,135,000
Unemployment Compensation Administration Account‑-
Federal Appropriation...................... $ 174,543,000
Administrative Contingency Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 9,443,000
Employment Service Administrative Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 17,078,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 442,419,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: Expenditures of funds appropriated in this section for the information systems project to improve the agency's labor exchange system are conditioned upon compliance with section 902 of this act.
(End of part)
PART III
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEW SECTION. Sec. 301. FOR THE COLUMBIA RIVER GORGE COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 370,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 327,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 657,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 1,354,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $80,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $80,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement the scenic area management plan for Klickitat county. If Klickitat county adopts an ordinance to implement the scenic area management plan in accordance with the national scenic area act, P.L. 99-663, then the amounts provided in this subsection shall be provided as a grant to Klickitat county to implement its responsibilities under the act.
(2) Within the funding provided, the commission shall make every effort to complete its review of the national scenic area management plan by the end of the 1999-01 biennium.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 302. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 39,235,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 32,767,000
General fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 45,692,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 2,719,000
Special Grass Seed Burning Research Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 14,000
Reclamation Revolving Account‑-State Appropriation... $................................................ 1,735,000
Flood Control Assistance Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 3,989,000
State Emergency Water Projects Revolving Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 317,000
Waste Reduction/Recycling/Litter Control Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 13,192,000
State and Local Improvements Revolving Account
(Water Supply Facilities)‑-State Appropriation... $ 557,000
Water Quality Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 3,760,000
Wood Stove Education and Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 351,000
Worker and Community Right-to-Know Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 1,109,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 51,976,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-Private/Local
Appropriation................................... $ 377,000
Local Toxics Control Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 4,586,000
Water Quality Permit Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 21,003,000
Underground Storage Tank Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 2,475,000
Solid Waste Management Account‑-State Appropriation. $ 169,000
Environmental Excellence Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 20,000
Biosolids Permit Account‑-State Appropriation........ $ 572,000
Hazardous Waste Assistance Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 4,242,000
Air Pollution Control Account‑-State Appropriation... $................................................ 35,882,000
Oil Spill Administration Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 8,632,000
Air Operating Permit Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 3,548,000
Freshwater Aquatic Weeds Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 1,430,000
Oil Spill Response Account‑-State Appropriation..... $ 7,078,000
Metals Mining Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 43,000
Water Pollution Control Revolving Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 503,000
Water Pollution Control Revolving Account‑-
Federal Appropriation........................... $ 2,136,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 290,109,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $3,432,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $3,438,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, $394,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation, $2,070,000 of the oil spill administration account‑-state appropriation, $819,000 of the state toxics control account‑-state appropriation, and $3,686,000 of the water quality permit account‑-state appropriation are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action items DOE-01, DOE-02, DOE-03, DOE-05, DOE-06, DOE-07, DOE-08, and DOE-09.
(2) $170,000 of the oil spill administration account appropriation is provided solely for implementation of the Puget Sound work plan action item UW-02 through a contract with the University of Washington's sea grant program to develop an educational program targeted to small spills from commercial fishing vessels, ferries, cruise ships, ports, and marinas.
(3) $1,749,000 of the oil spill administration account appropriation and $370,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation may only be expended upon the passage of Z-..../99 transferring funding from the oil spill response account to the oil spill administration account. Of these amounts, $1,111,000 of the oil spill administration account and the entire general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided to contract for the operation of a rescue tug in north Puget Sound. The entire amount in this subsection is to implement Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DOE-09.
(4) $1,360,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation, $900,000 of the general fund‑-private/local appropriation, and $800,000 of the water quality account appropriation are provided solely to implement Z‑0243.3/99 (the Washington conservation corps). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(5) $1,780,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is provided for the auto emissions inspection and maintenance program. Expenditures of the amounts provided in this subsection are contingent upon a like amount being deposited in the state general fund from auto emission inspection fees in accordance with RCW 70.120.170(4).
(6) $19,385,000 of the air pollution control account appropriation is provided solely for implementation of Z-0204.1/99 (vehicle emission inspection). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(7) $133,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $134,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for implementation of Z-0102.2/99 (permit assistance center). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amounts provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(8) $438,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $1,025,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $1,870,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely for the establishment of total maximum daily loads for water bodies across the state. $433,000 of the general fund‑‑state appropriation is to implement the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DOE-02.
(9) $4,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is appropriated solely for deposit in the salmon recovery account for clean water projects as described in section 302 of the omnibus capital budget.
(10) $1,507,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,060,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for enforcement of laws pertaining to nonpoint pollution and illegal water withdrawals, and for implementing immediate actions to restore instream flows and ensuring compliance with water resources laws in basins with current or proposed federal endangered species act listings and where low instream flows have been identified as a limiting factor for salmon recovery. $340,000 of this amount is to implement Puget Sound work plan and agency action items DOE-03.
(11) $1,079,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,072,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to assist local governments in revising shoreline master plans. Of this amount, $2,000,000 is provided for grants to local governments to revise their shoreline master programs. Counties with demonstrated financial need shall receive priority for these grants. $667,000 of the amount in this subsection is to implement the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DOE-08.
(12) $289,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $265,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department's responsibilities to conduct water quality activities related to forest practices.
(13) $198,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $165,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department, in cooperation with the department of fish and wildlife, to establish fish and habitat index monitoring sites to measure the effectiveness of the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. $121,000 of this amount is to implement the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DOE-01.
(14) $2,515,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,340,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to implement the watershed management act, chapter 90.82 RCW. Of this amount: (a) $898,000 is provided for technical assistance to local watershed planning efforts; (b) $1,157,000 is provided for the department to update its water rights tracking system, digitize water rights documents, and provide access to this information to the public; and (c) $2,800,000 is provided for grants to local governments to conduct watershed planning. $800,000 of the amount in (c) of this subsection is to implement the Puget Sound workplan and agency action item DOE-02.
(15) $2,310,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,456,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for water quantity activities related to the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. Of this amount: (a) $1,722,000 is provided to process water rights documents; and (b) $1,450,000 is provided to implement metering and increased stream gauging. Expenditure of $521,000 of the amount in (b) of this subsection is dependent upon passage of Z-..../99 (omnibus water resources); and (c) $1,594,000 is provided for technical assistance and project review for water conservation and reuse projects.
(16) $340,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $340,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department to update its storm water manual and provide technical assistance to local governments on storm water management. $267,000 of this amount is to implement the Puget Sound workplan and agency action item DOE-06.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 303. FOR THE STATE PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 27,624,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 27,348,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 2,113,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 59,000
Winter Recreation Program Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 763,000
Off Road Vehicle Account‑-State Appropriation........ $ 264,000
Snowmobile Account‑-State Appropriation............. $ 3,653,000
Aquatic Lands Enhancement Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 325,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 48,000
Water Trail Program Account‑-State Appropriation.... $ 14,000
Parks Renewal and Stewardship Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 29,307,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 91,518,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $189,000 of the aquatic lands enhancement account appropriation is provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan agency action items P&RC-01 and P&RC-03.
(2) $105,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $31,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the state parks and recreation commission to meet its responsibilities under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (P.L. 101-601).
(3) $4,500,000 of the parks renewal and stewardship account appropriation is dependent upon the parks and recreation commission generating revenue to the account in excess of $26,000,000 for the biennium. These funds shall be used for deferred maintenance and visitor and ranger safety activities.
(4) $668,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $701,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement Z-0243.3/99 (the Washington conservation corps). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amounts provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(5) The state parks and recreation commission may increase fees by amounts that exceed the fiscal growth factor under RCW 43.135.055.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 304. FOR THE INTERAGENCY COMMITTEE FOR OUTDOOR RECREATION
Firearms Range Account‑-State Appropriation......... $ 34,000
Recreation Resources Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 2,370,000
Recreation Resources Account‑-Federal Appropriation. $ 11,000
NOVA Program Account‑-State Appropriation........... $ 604,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION.... ................. $ 3,019,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 305. FOR THE ENVIRONMENTAL HEARINGS OFFICE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 845,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 843,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 1,688,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 306. FOR THE CONSERVATION COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 4,028,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 3,990,000
Water Quality Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 444,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 8,462,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $182,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $182,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $130,000 of the water quality account appropriation are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan agency action item CC-01.
(2) $550,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $550,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for grants to conservation districts to reduce nitrate contamination in the Columbia Basin ground water management area.
(3) $260,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $260,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for administration of the conservation reserve enhancement program.
(4) $984,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $984,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for conducting limiting factors analysis for salmon species.
(5) $135,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $115,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for development of a state-wide database for monitoring development and implementation of comprehensive farm plans.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 307. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 52,331,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 48,480,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 35,880,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 14,416,000
Off Road Vehicle Account‑-State Appropriation........ $ 490,000
Aquatic Lands Enhancement Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 6,432,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 586,000
Recreational Fisheries Enhancement Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 3,596,000
Warm Water Game Fish Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 2,419,000
Eastern Washington Pheasant Enhancement Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 551,000
Wildlife Account‑-State Appropriation............... $ 40,360,000
Wildlife Account‑-Federal Appropriation............. $ 40,040,000
Wildlife Account‑-Private/Local Appropriation........ $........................................... 13,072,000
Game Special Wildlife Account‑-State Appropriation... $................................................ 1,939,000
Game Special Wildlife Account‑-Federal
Appropriation................................... $ 9,603,000
Game Special Wildlife Account‑-Private/Local
Appropriation................................... $ 350,000
Environmental Excellence Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 15,000
Regional Fisheries Salmonid Recovery Account‑-
Federal Appropriation........................... $ 550,000
Oil Spill Administration Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 969,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 272,079,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $1,064,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,055,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan agency action items DFW-01, DFW-02, DFW-03, DFW-04, and DFW-05.
(2) $272,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $305,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to develop marine protected areas in Puget Sound. This item represents Puget Sound work plan agency action item DFW-10.
(3) $860,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $424,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for business practice and information system improvements identified in the TKW business practices assessment study of November 1998. The department shall submit a status report to the governor and the appropriate legislative committees by November 1, 1999, on the status of implementing these improvements and a final report by November 1, 2000.
(4) $178,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $168,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $346,000 of the wildlife account‑-state appropriation are provided for the operation of the department's automated license system.
(5) $256,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $208,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the control of European green crab (Carcinus maenas). The department shall submit a report to the governor and the appropriate legislative committees by September 1, 2000, evaluating the effectiveness of various control strategies and providing recommendations on long-term control strategies. $248,000 of this amount is for implementation of Puget Sound work plan and agency action item DFW-23.
(6) $191,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $191,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for noxious weed control and survey activities on department lands. Of this amount, $48,000 is provided for the biological control of yellowstar thistle.
(7) $1,890,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,495,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to the department for monitoring the effectiveness of the state-wide salmon recovery strategy. Of this amount: (a) $2,984,000 is provided for the department, in cooperation with the department of ecology, to establish fish and habitat index monitoring sites to measure the effectiveness of the state-wide salmon recovery strategy; and (b) $401,000 is provided to update the salmon and steelhead stock inventory.
(8) $553,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $998,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department's review of forest practices applications and related hydraulic permit applications.
(9) $155,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $130,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for additional review of hydro power relicensing applications before the federal energy regulatory commission (FERC).
(10) $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for an interagency agreement with the salmon recovery office in the office of the governor for operation of the independent science panel established in RCW 75.46.050.
(11) $1,643,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $594,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for fish passage technical assistance to local governments, volunteer groups, and regional fisheries enhancement groups. Of this amount: (a) $337,000 is provided for technical assistance for correction of fish screens at irrigation diversions in order to protect salmon; and (b) $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 is appropriated for deposit in the salmon recovery account for grants to correct fish screens at irrigation diversions as described in section 357 of the omnibus capital budget.
(12) $4,675,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $4,425,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to implement the salmon recovery act under chapter 75.46 RCW. Of this amount: (a) $7,000,000 is provided for salmon restoration grants. Up to $100,000 of the amount in (a) of this subsection is provided for the department to contract with the interagency committee for outdoor recreation to utilize the PRISM data base for tracking salmon restoration projects including projects funded through the regional fisheries enhancement groups program and the cooperative fish and wildlife projects funded through the aquatic lands enhancement account; and (b) $2,100,000 is provided for grants to lead entities established through RCW 75.46.060.
(13) All salmon habitat restoration and protection projects proposed for funding by regional fisheries enhancement groups and all proposed cooperative fish and wildlife projects funded through the aquatic lands enhancement account shall be submitted by January 1st or July 1st of each year for review to the interagency review team established in RCW 75.46.080. The interagency review team shall coordinate these projects with habitat restoration project lists prepared by lead entities and provide recommendations for funding to the department.
(14) $1,170,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $3,500,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation are provided solely to implement a license buy back program for commercial fishing licenses.
(15) $2,043,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,444,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for additional fish and wildlife enforcement officers. Within these funds the department shall provide support to the department of health to enforce state shellfish harvest laws. Within these funds, the department shall emphasize enforcement of laws related to protection of fish habitat and the illegal harvest of salmon and steelhead.
(16) $460,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $415,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement Z-0243.3/99 (the Washington conservation corps). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(17) By July 15, 1999, the department shall establish a hatchery closure commission. The commission shall consist of representatives from the department, the northwest Indian fisheries commission, the national marine fisheries service, and the United States fish and wildlife service. The commission is to develop a list of hatcheries funded with state general funds to be closed or to have production reduced for savings totaling a minimum of $1,668,000 for the 1999-01 biennium. In developing this list, the commission shall evaluate each hatchery based upon the following criteria: (a) Its impact upon wildstocks including, but not limited to, genetics and smolt interactions; (b) its cost effectiveness, including both short and long term operating and capital cost; and (c) its economic impact on the local community. The commission shall provide its recommended list to the legislature by January 7, 2000. Unless the legislature enacts legislation rejecting the closure list in whole or in part and appropriates funding to maintain operation of these hatcheries, these reductions will be implemented effective April 3, 2000.
(18) Any indirect cost reimbursement received by the department from federal grants must be spent on agency administrative activities and cannot be redirected to direct program activities.
(19) $251,000 of the wildlife account‑-state appropriation is provided for additional field surveys of the Olympic Peninsula, North Rainier, and Packwood/South Rainier elk herds.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 308. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 29,932,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 27,523,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 1,665,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 420,000
Forest Development Account‑-State Appropriation..... $ 53,250,000
Off Road Vehicle Account‑-State Appropriation........ $........................................... 3,668,000
Surveys and Maps Account‑-State Appropriation........ $........................................... 2,221,000
Aquatic Lands Enhancement Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 3,131,000
Resources Management Cost Account‑-State
Appropriation.......................... ........ $ 83,787,000
Surface Mining Reclamation Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 1,435,000
Aquatic Land Dredged Material Disposal Site Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 764,000
Air Pollution Control Account‑-State Appropriation... $ 900,000
Metals Mining Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 63,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 208,759,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $18,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $18,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $1,058,000 of the aquatic lands enhancement account appropriation are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action items DNR-01, DNR-02, and DNR-04.
(2) $7,304,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $7,304,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for emergency fire suppression.
(3) $2,522,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,523,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for fire protection activities.
(4) $331,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $339,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for geologic studies to evaluate ground stability in high growth areas and to provide geologic expertise to small communities.
(5) $607,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $607,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement Z-0243.3/99 (Washington conservation corps). If this bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amounts provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(6) $600,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $600,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the cooperative monitoring, evaluation, and research projects related to implementation of the timber-fish-wildlife agreement.
(7) $3,909,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,564,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided for the department to implement changes in forest practice rules for the protection of salmon.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 309. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 7,476,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 7,316,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 4,440,000
General fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation........... $ 410,000
Aquatic Lands Enhancement Account‑-State
Appropriation................................... $ 818,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-State Appropriation.... $................................................ 1,365,000
Local Toxics Control Account‑-State Appropriation.... $ 241,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 22,066,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $36,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $37,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for technical assistance on pesticide management including the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan agency action item DOA-01.
(2) $241,000 of the local toxics control account appropriation is provided solely to implement chapter 36, Laws of 1998 (fertilizer regulation). The amount provided in this subsection shall be used to conduct a comprehensive study of plant uptake of metals and to implement new fertilizer registration requirements.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 310. FOR THE WASHINGTON POLLUTION LIABILITY REINSURANCE PROGRAM
Pollution Liability Insurance Program Trust Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 957,000
(End of part)
PART IV
TRANSPORTATION
NEW SECTION. Sec. 401. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 5,432,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 4,983,000
Architects' License Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 755,000
Cemetery Account‑-State Appropriation.......... $ 204,000
Profession Engineers' Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,734,000
Real Estate Commission ‑-State Appropriation... $ 7,130,000
Master License Account‑-State Appropriation.... $ 7,440,000
Uniform Commercial Code Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,482,000
Real Estate Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 606,000
Funeral Directors and Embalmers Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 457,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 33,223,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 402. FOR THE STATE PATROL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 22,650,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 21,677,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation............. $.................................. 4,015,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation...... $ 344,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 7,114,000
County Criminal Justice Assistance Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 4,641,000
Municipal Criminal Justice Assistance Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 1,850,000
Fire Service Trust Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 92,000
Fire Service Training Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 3,830,000
State Toxics Control Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 442,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation........................ $ 260,000
Fingerprint Identification Account‑-State
Appropriation.............................. $ 2,392,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 69,307,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: $255,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $95,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for replacement of fire training equipment at the fire service training academy.
(End of part)
PART V
EDUCATION
NEW SECTION. Sec. 501. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR STATE ADMINISTRATION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)......... $ 37,540,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)......... $ 36,340,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.................. $.................................. 78,121,000
Public Safety and Education Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 2,602,000
Violence Reduction and Drug Enforcement Account‑-
State Appropriation............................. $ 3,671,000
Education Savings Account‑-State Appropriation...... $ 7,000,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 165,274,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) AGENCY OPERATIONS
(a) $404,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $403,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the operation and expenses of the state board of education, including basic education assistance activities.
(b) $348,000 of the public safety and education account appropriation is provided solely for administration of the traffic safety education program, including in-service training related to instruction in the risks of driving while under the influence of alcohol and other drugs.
(c) $50,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $50,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement chapter 165, Laws of 1997 (school audit resolutions).
(2) STATE-WIDE PROGRAMS
(a) $2,174,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for in-service training and educational programs conducted by the Pacific Science Center.
(b) $64,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for operation of the Cispus environmental learning center.
(c) $2,754,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for educational centers, including state support activities. $100,000 of this amount is provided to help stabilize funding through distribution among existing education centers that are currently funded by the state at an amount less than $100,000 a biennium.
(d) $100,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for an organization in southwest Washington that received funding from the Spokane educational center in the 1995-97 biennium and provides educational services to students who have dropped out.
(e) $3,671,000 of the violence reduction and drug enforcement account appropriation and $2,250,000 of the public safety education account appropriation are provided solely for matching grants to enhance security in schools. Not more than seventy-five percent of a district's total expenditures for school security in any school year may be paid from a grant under this subsection. The grants shall be expended solely for the costs of employing or contracting for building security monitors in schools during school hours and school events. Of the amount provided in this subsection, at least $2,850,000 shall be spent for grants to districts that, during the 1988-89 school year, employed or contracted for security monitors in schools during school hours. However, these grants may be used only for increases in school district expenditures for school security over expenditure levels for the 1988-89 school year.
(f) $200,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2000, $200,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001, and $400,000 of the general fund--federal appropriation transferred from the department of health are provided solely for a program that provides grants to school districts for media campaigns promoting sexual abstinence and addressing the importance of delaying sexual activity, pregnancy, and childbearing until individuals are ready to nurture and support their children. Grants to the school districts shall be for projects that are substantially designed and produced by students. The grants shall require a local private sector match equal to one-half of the state grant, which may include in-kind contribution of technical or other assistance from consultants or firms involved in public relations, advertising broadcasting, and graphics or video production or other related fields.
(g) $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,500,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for school district petitions to juvenile court for truant students as provided in RCW 28A.225.030 and 28A.225.035. Allocation of this money to school districts shall be based on the number of petitions filed.
(h) $300,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for alcohol and drug prevention programs pursuant to RCW 66.08.180.
(i) $7,000,000 of the education savings account appropriation is provided solely for grants to school districts for programs to prepare high school students to achieve information technology industry skills certifications. Funding may be expended to provide or improve internet access; purchase and install networking or computer equipment; train faculty; or acquire curriculum materials. A match of cash or in-kind contributions from nonstate sources equal to at least half of the cash amount of the grant is required. To assure continuity of the curriculum with higher education institutions, the grant program will be designed and implemented by an interagency team compromised of representatives from the office of the superintendent of public instruction, the state board for community and technical colleges, the higher education coordinating board, and the office of financial management. School districts may apply for grants in cooperation with other school districts or community or technical colleges and must demonstrate in the grant application a cooperative relationship with a community or technical college in information technology programs. Preference for grants shall be made to districts with sound technology plans, which offer student access to computers outside of school hours, which demonstrate involvement of the private sector in information technology programs, and which serve the needs of low-income communities.
(j) $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for competitive grants to school districts to obtain curriculum or programs that allow high school students to have access to internet-based curriculum that leads directly to higher education credits or provides preparation for tests that lead to higher education credit in subjects including but not limited to mathematics, languages, and science. To assure continuity of the curriculum with higher education institutions, the grant program will be designed and implemented by an interagency team comprised of representatives from the office of the superintendent of public instruction, the state board for community and technical colleges, the higher education coordinating board, and the office of financial management.
(k) $5,702,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for shared infrastructure costs, data equipment maintenance, and depreciation costs for operation of the K-20 telecommunications network.
(l) $5,627,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for a K-20 telecommunications network technical support system in the K-12 sector to prevent system failures and avoid interruptions in school utilization of the data processing and video-conferencing capabilities of the network. These funds may be used to purchase engineering and advanced technical support for the network. No more than $650,000 of this amount may be spent for state-level administration and staff training on the K-20 network.
(m) $25,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $25,000 of the general fund--state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for allocation to the primary coordinators of the state geographic alliance to improve the teaching of geography in schools.
(n) $2,958,000 of the general fund--state appropriation is provided for state administrative costs and start-up grants for alternative programs and services that improve instruction and learning for at-risk and expelled students consistent with the objectives of chapter 265, Laws of 1997 (disruptive students/offenders). Each grant application shall contain proposed performance indicators and an evaluation plan to measure the success of the program and its impact on improved student learning. Applications shall contain the applicant's plan for maintaining the program and/or services after the grant period, shall address the needs of students who cannot be accommodated within the framework of existing school programs or services and shall address how the applicant will serve any student within the proposed program's target age range regardless of the reason for truancy, suspension, expulsion, or other disciplinary action. Up to $50,000 per year may be used by the superintendent of public instruction for grant administration. The superintendent shall submit an evaluation of the alternative program start-up grants provided under this section, and section 501(2)(q), chapter 283, Laws of 1996, to the fiscal and education committees of the legislature by November 15, 2000. Grants shall be awarded to applicants showing the greatest potential for improved student learning for at-risk students including:
(i) Students who have been suspended, expelled, or are subject to other disciplinary actions;
(ii) Students with unexcused absences who need intervention from community truancy boards or family support programs;
(iii) Students who have left school; and
(iv) Students involved with the court system.
The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall prepare a report describing student recruitment, program offerings, staffing practices, and available indicators of program effectiveness of alternative education programs funded with state and, to the extent information is available, local funds. The report shall contain a plan for conducting an evaluation of the educational effectiveness of alternative education programs.
(o) $1,600,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for grants for magnet schools to be distributed as recommended by the superintendent of public instruction pursuant to chapter 232, section 516(13), Laws of 1992.
(p) $4,300,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided for complex need grants. Grants shall be provided according to amounts shown in LEAP Document 30C as developed on April 27, 1997, at 03:00 hours.
(q) $8,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $8,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to continue the Washington reading corps program to provide intensive reading instruction to students in the elementary grades (K-6) during the summer months, vacation periods, intercessions, Saturdays, and before and after and during school. Of these amounts, $15,850,000 is for grants to be awarded to school districts after an abbreviated application. In making awards, the superintendent of public instruction shall strive to maximize three objectives: (i) Provide grants to school districts with existing Washington reading corps school programs; (ii) give priority to districts with schools that have high percentages of students not meeting the reading standard of the Washington assessment of student learning; and (iii) provide grants to as many school districts as possible. Districts receiving grants shall agree to create programs that provide a minimum of eighty hours of instructional activity for each student, supervision by certificated staff, and a ratio of at least one adult for every four students achieved through a combination of certificated staff, paid tutors, and volunteer tutors. Recipient districts shall agree to evaluate, in a manner prescribed by the superintendent of public instruction, how effectively their program improves academic achievement of students.
Grant awards, volunteer training, publicity, and assistance with recruitment of volunteers shall be coordinated by a steering committee led by the office of the superintendent of public instruction and including school districts, educational service districts, and the commission for national and community service in order to maximize collaboration among the various agencies involved with reading tutors. Up to $150,000 may be expended on program administration.
(r) $750,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for increased costs of providing a norm-referenced test to all third grade students and retests of certain third grade students and other costs in accordance with chapter 319, Laws of 1998 (student achievement).
(s) $2,660,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely to expand the number of summer accountability institutes offered by the superintendent of public instruction. The institutes shall provide school and school district staff with training in the analysis of student assessment data, information regarding successful district and school teaching models, research on curriculum and instruction, and planning tools and time for districts to improve instruction in reading, mathematics, communications, and writing.
(t) $720,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for state-level content area expertise and support to teachers and school staff in reading, mathematics, language arts, and guidance and counseling.
(u) $2,700,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation is provided solely for a program of teacher assessment in accordance with Z-..../99 (teacher assessment). Of this amount, $2,520,000 is provided to subsidize the cost of a teacher skills assessment for teacher certification applicants and $180,000 is provided for the administration and development of the teacher assessment program. If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 502. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR GENERAL APPORTIONMENT (BASIC EDUCATION)
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000).... $ 3,564,459,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001).... $ 3,576,874,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 7,141,333,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The state appropriations include such funds as are necessary to complete the school year that is ending and for prior school year adjustments.
(2) Allocations for certificated staff salaries for the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years shall be determined using formula‑generated staff units calculated pursuant to this subsection. Staff allocations for small school enrollments in (d) through (f) of this subsection shall be reduced for vocational full-time equivalent enrollments. Staff allocations for small school enrollments in grades K-6 shall be the greater of that generated under (a) of this subsection, or under (d) and (e) of this subsection. Certificated staffing allocations shall be as follows:
(a) On the basis of each 1,000 average annual full-time equivalent enrollments, excluding full-time equivalent enrollment otherwise recognized for certificated staff unit allocations under (c) through (f) of this subsection:
(i) Four certificated administrative staff units per thousand full-time equivalent students in grades K-12;
(ii) 49 certificated instructional staff units per thousand full-time equivalent students in grades K-3;
(iii) An additional 5.3 certificated instructional staff units for grades K-3. Any funds allocated for these additional certificated units shall not be considered as basic education funding;
(iv) An additional 2.36 certificated instructional staff units for grades 4 and 5. These additional certificated instructional staff units are provided in these grades for allocation purposes only, and districts are authorized to use these allocations for additional staff in any elementary (K-5) grade or grades. Any funds allocated for these additional units shall not be considered as basic education funding;
(A) Except for opportunity districts authorized in Z-..../99 (opportunity districts), funds provided under this subsection (2)(a)(iii) in excess of the amount required to maintain the statutory minimum ratio established under RCW 28A.150.260(2)(b) shall be allocated only if the district documents an actual ratio equal to or greater than 54.3 certificated instructional staff per thousand full-time equivalent students in grades K-3. For any school district documenting a lower certificated instructional staff ratio, the allocation shall be based on the district's actual grades K-3 certificated instructional staff ratio achieved in that school year, or the statutory minimum ratio established under RCW 28A.150.260(2)(b), if greater;
(B) Except for opportunity districts authorized in Z-..../99 (opportunity districts), districts at or above 51.0 certificated instructional staff per one thousand full-time equivalent students in grades K-3 may dedicate up to 1.3 of the 54.3 funding ratio to employ additional classified instructional assistants assigned to basic education classrooms in grades K-3. For purposes of documenting a district's staff ratio under this section, funds used by the district to employ additional classified instructional assistants shall be converted to a certificated staff equivalent and added to the district's actual certificated instructional staff ratio. Additional classified instructional assistants, for the purposes of this subsection, shall be determined using the 1989-90 school year as the base year;
(C) Any district maintaining a ratio equal to or greater than 54.3 certificated instructional staff per thousand full-time equivalent students in grades K-3 may use allocations generated under this subsection (2)(a)(iii) in excess of that required to maintain the minimum ratio established under RCW 28A.150.260(2)(b) to employ additional basic education certificated instructional staff or classified instructional assistants in grades 4-6. Funds allocated under this subsection (2)(a)(iii) shall only be expended to reduce class size in grades K-6. No more than 1.3 of the certificated instructional funding ratio amount may be expended for provision of classified instructional assistants; and
(iv) Forty‑six certificated instructional staff units per thousand full-time equivalent students in grades 4-12;
(b) For school districts with a minimum enrollment of 250 full-time equivalent students whose full-time equivalent student enrollment count in a given month exceeds the first of the month full-time equivalent enrollment count by 5 percent, an additional state allocation of 110 percent of the share that such increased enrollment would have generated had such additional full-time equivalent students been included in the normal enrollment count for that particular month;
(c) On the basis of full-time equivalent enrollment in:
(i) Vocational education programs approved by the superintendent of public instruction, a maximum of 0.92 certificated instructional staff units and 0.08 certificated administrative staff units for each 19.5 full-time equivalent vocational students for the 1999-00 school year and the 2000-01 school year. Except for opportunity districts authorized in Z-..../99 (opportunity districts), districts documenting staffing ratios of less than 1 certificated staff per 19.5 students shall be allocated the greater of the total ratio in subsections (2)(a)(i) and (iv) of this section or the actual documented ratio;
(ii) Skills center programs approved by the superintendent of public instruction for skills centers approved prior to September 1, 1997, 0.92 certificated instructional staff units and 0.08 certificated administrative units for each 16.67 full-time equivalent vocational students;
(iii) Except for opportunity districts authorized in Z-..../99 (opportunity districts), indirect cost charges, as defined by the superintendent of public instruction, to vocational-secondary programs shall not exceed 10 percent; and
(iv) Vocational full-time equivalent enrollment shall be reported on the same monthly basis as the enrollment for students eligible for basic support, and payments shall be adjusted for reported vocational enrollments on the same monthly basis as those adjustments for enrollment for students eligible for basic support.
(d) For districts enrolling not more than twenty‑five average annual full-time equivalent students in grades K-8, and for small school plants within any school district which have been judged to be remote and necessary by the state board of education and enroll not more than twenty‑five average annual full-time equivalent students in grades K-8:
(i) For those enrolling no students in grades 7 and 8, 1.76 certificated instructional staff units and 0.24 certificated administrative staff units for enrollment of not more than five students, plus one‑twentieth of a certificated instructional staff unit for each additional student enrolled; and
(ii) For those enrolling students in grades 7 or 8, 1.68 certificated instructional staff units and 0.32 certificated administrative staff units for enrollment of not more than five students, plus one‑tenth of a certificated instructional staff unit for each additional student enrolled;
(e) For specified enrollments in districts enrolling more than twenty‑five but not more than one hundred average annual full-time equivalent students in grades K-8, and for small school plants within any school district which enroll more than twenty‑five average annual full-time equivalent students in grades K-8 and have been judged to be remote and necessary by the state board of education:
(i) For enrollment of up to sixty annual average full-time equivalent students in grades K-6, 2.76 certificated instructional staff units and 0.24 certificated administrative staff units; and
(ii) For enrollment of up to twenty annual average full-time equivalent students in grades 7 and 8, 0.92 certificated instructional staff units and 0.08 certificated administrative staff units;
(f) For districts operating no more than two high schools with enrollments of less than three hundred average annual full-time equivalent students, for enrollment in grades 9-12 in each such school, other than alternative schools:
(i) For remote and necessary schools enrolling students in any grades 9-12 but no more than twenty‑five average annual full-time equivalent students in grades K-12, four and one‑half certificated instructional staff units and one‑quarter of a certificated administrative staff unit;
(ii) For all other small high schools under this subsection, nine certificated instructional staff units and one‑half of a certificated administrative staff unit for the first sixty average annual full time equivalent students, and additional staff units based on a ratio of 0.8732 certificated instructional staff units and 0.1268 certificated administrative staff units per each additional forty‑three and one‑half average annual full time equivalent students.
Units calculated under (f)(ii) of this subsection shall be reduced by certificated staff units at the rate of forty‑six certificated instructional staff units and four certificated administrative staff units per thousand vocational full-time equivalent students.
(g) For each nonhigh school district having an enrollment of more than seventy annual average full-time equivalent students and less than one hundred eighty students, operating a grades K-8 program or a grades 1-8 program, an additional one-half of a certificated instructional staff unit; and
(h) For each nonhigh school district having an enrollment of more than fifty annual average full-time equivalent students and less than one hundred eighty students, operating a grades K-6 program or a grades 1-6 program, an additional one‑half of a certificated instructional staff unit.
(3) Allocations for classified salaries for the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years shall be calculated using formula‑generated classified staff units determined as follows:
(a) For enrollments generating certificated staff unit allocations under subsection (2)(d) through (h) of this section, one classified staff unit for each three certificated staff units allocated under such subsections;
(b) For all other enrollment in grades K-12, including vocational full-time equivalent enrollments, one classified staff unit for each sixty average annual full-time equivalent students; and
(c) For each nonhigh school district with an enrollment of more than fifty annual average full-time equivalent students and less than one hundred eighty students, an additional one‑half of a classified staff unit.
(4) Fringe benefit allocations shall be calculated at a rate of 16.86 percent in the 1999‑00 and 2000-01 school years for certificated salary allocations provided under subsection (2) of this section, and a rate of 15.70 percent in the 1999‑00 and 2000-01 school years for classified salary allocations provided under subsection (3) of this section.
(5) Insurance benefit allocations shall be calculated at the maintenance rate specified in section 504(2) of this act, based on the number of benefit units determined as follows:
(a) The number of certificated staff units determined in subsection (2) of this section; and
(b) The number of classified staff units determined in subsection (3) of this section multiplied by 1.152. This factor is intended to adjust allocations so that, for the purposes of distributing insurance benefits, full-time equivalent classified employees may be calculated on the basis of 1440 hours of work per year, with no individual employee counted as more than one full-time equivalent.
(6)(a) For nonemployee-related costs associated with each certificated staff unit allocated under subsection (2)(a), (b), and (d) through (h) of this section, there shall be provided a maximum of $8,214 per certificated staff unit in the 1999‑00 school year and a maximum of $8,436 per certificated staff unit in the 2000-01 school year.
(b) For nonemployee-related costs associated with each vocational certificated staff unit allocated under subsection (2)(c)(i) of this section, there shall be provided a maximum of $20,171 per certificated staff unit in the 1999‑00 school year and a maximum of $20,716 per certificated staff unit in the 2000-01 school year.
(c) For nonemployee-related costs associated with each vocational certificated staff unit allocated under subsection (2)(c)(ii) of this section, there shall be provided a maximum of $15,651 per certificated staff unit in the 1999-00 school year and a maximum of $16,074 per certificated staff unit in the 2000-01 school year.
(7) Allocations for substitute costs for classroom teachers shall be distributed at a maintenance rate of $365.28 per allocated classroom teachers exclusive of salary increase amounts provided in section 504 of this act. Solely for the purposes of this subsection, allocated classroom teachers shall be equal to the number of certificated instructional staff units allocated under subsection (2) of this section, multiplied by the ratio between the number of actual basic education certificated teachers and the number of actual basic education certificated instructional staff reported state‑wide for the 1996-97 school year.
(8) Any school district board of directors may petition the superintendent of public instruction by submission of a resolution adopted in a public meeting to reduce or delay any portion of its basic education allocation for any school year. The superintendent of public instruction shall approve such reduction or delay if it does not impair the district's financial condition. Any delay shall not be for more than two school years. Any reduction or delay shall have no impact on levy authority pursuant to RCW 84.52.0531 and local effort assistance pursuant to chapter 28A.500 RCW.
(9) The superintendent may distribute a maximum of $6,267,000 outside the basic education formula during fiscal years 2000 and 2001 as follows:
(a) For fire protection for school districts located in a fire protection district as now or hereafter established pursuant to chapter 52.04 RCW, a maximum of $462,000 may be expended in fiscal year 2000 and a maximum of $474,000 may be expended in fiscal year 2001;
(b) For summer vocational programs at skills centers, a maximum of $2,000,000 may be expended each fiscal year;
(c) A maximum of $331,000 may be expended for school district emergencies; and
(d) A maximum of $500,000 per fiscal year may be expended for programs providing skills training for secondary students who are enrolled in extended day school-to-work programs, as approved by the superintendent of public instruction. The funds shall be allocated at a rate not to exceed $500 per full-time equivalent student enrolled in those programs.
(10) For the purposes of RCW 84.52.0531, the increase per full-time equivalent student in state basic education appropriations provided under this act, including appropriations for salary and benefits increases, is 1.8 percent from the 1998‑99 school year to the 1999‑00 school year, and 2.7 percent from the 1999‑00 school year to the 2000‑01 school year.
(11) If two or more school districts consolidate and each district was receiving additional basic education formula staff units pursuant to subsection (2)(b) through (h) of this section, the following shall apply:
(a) For three school years following consolidation, the number of basic education formula staff units shall not be less than the number of basic education formula staff units received by the districts in the school year prior to the consolidation; and
(b) For the fourth through eighth school years following consolidation, the difference between the basic education formula staff units received by the districts for the school year prior to consolidation and the basic education formula staff units after consolidation pursuant to subsection (2)(a) through (h) of this section shall be reduced in increments of twenty percent per year.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 503. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-BASIC EDUCATION EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION
(1) The following calculations determine the salaries used in the general fund allocations for certificated instructional, certificated administrative, and classified staff units under section 503 of this act:
(a) Salary allocations for certificated instructional staff units shall be determined for each district by multiplying the district's certificated instructional derived base salary shown on LEAP Document 12D, by the district's average staff mix factor for basic education and special education certificated instructional staff in that school year, computed using LEAP Document 1A; and
(b) Salary allocations for certificated administrative staff units and classified staff units for each district shall be based on the district's certificated administrative and classified salary allocation amounts shown on LEAP Document 12D.
(2) For the purposes of this section:
(a) "Basic education certificated instructional staff" is defined as provided in RCW 28A.150.100 and "special education certificated staff" means staff assigned to the state-supported special education program pursuant to chapter 28A.155 RCW in positions requiring a certificate;
(b) "LEAP Document 1A" means the computerized tabulation establishing staff mix factors for certificated instructional staff according to education and years of experience, as developed by the legislative evaluation and accountability program committee on April 8, 1991, at 13:35 hours; and
(c) "LEAP Document 12D" means the computerized tabulation of 1999-00 and 2000-01 school year salary allocations for certificated administrative staff and classified staff and derived base salaries for certificated instructional staff as developed by the legislative evaluation and accountability program committee on December 7, 1998 at 11:45 hours.
(3) Incremental fringe benefit factors shall be applied to salary adjustments at a rate of 16.22 percent for certificated staff and 12.20 percent for classified staff for both years of the biennium.
(4)(a) Pursuant to RCW 28A.150.410, the following state‑wide salary allocation schedules for certificated instructional staff are established for basic education salary allocations:
STATE-WIDE SALARY ALLOCATION SCHEDULE
FOR THE 1999-00 SCHOOL YEAR
Years of
Service BA BA+15 BA+30 BA+45 BA+90
0 23,409 24,041 24,696 25,352 27,459
1 24,176 24,829 25,505 26,204 28,373
2 24,959 25,632 26,328 27,095 29,300
3 25,780 26,474 27,190 27,999 30,243
4 26,617 27,354 28,091 28,943 31,245
5 27,492 28,249 29,006 29,922 32,262
6 28,404 29,158 29,957 30,939 33,314
7 29,331 30,104 30,923 31,968 34,401
8 30,271 31,087 31,925 33,057 35,524
9 32,105 32,984 34,157 36,681
10 34,056 35,313 37,872
11 36,503 39,118
12 37,656 40,397
13 41,708
14 43,026
15 or more 44,145
Years of MA+90
Service BA+135 MA MA+45 or PHD
0 28,816 28,066 30,173 31,530
1 29,748 28,918 31,087 32,462
2 30,717 29,809 32,014 33,430
3 31,722 30,713 32,957 34,437
4 32,765 31,657 33,959 35,479
5 33,843 32,636 34,976 36,557
6 34,935 33,653 36,028 37,649
7 36,084 34,682 37,115 38,799
8 37,268 35,771 38,238 39,982
9 38,485 36,870 39,395 41,199
10 39,735 38,027 40,586 42,449
11 41,019 39,218 41,832 43,733
12 42,355 40,456 43,111 45,069
13 43,725 41,735 44,422 46,439
14 45,145 43,054 45,825 47,860
15 or more 46,319 44,173 47,017 49,104
STATE-WIDE SALARY ALLOCATION SCHEDULE
FOR THE 2000-01 SCHOOL YEAR
Years of
Service BA BA+15 BA+30 BA+45 BA+90
0 23,878 24,523 25,191 25,860 28,009
1 24,660 25,326 26,016 26,729 28,941
2 25,459 26,145 26,855 27,637 29,887
3 26,297 27,005 27,735 28,560 30,849
4 27,150 27,902 28,653 29,523 31,871
5 28,043 28,815 29,587 30,522 32,908
6 28,973 29,742 30,558 31,559 33,981
7 29,919 30,707 31,542 32,609 35,091
8 30,878 31,710 32,564 33,719 36,235
9 32,748 33,645 34,841 37,416
10 34,738 36,020 38,630
11 37,235 39,902
12 38,411 41,207
13 42,544
14 43,888
15 or more 45,029
Years of MA+90
Service BA+135 MA MA+45 or PHD
0 29,394 28,628 30,777 32,162
1 30,344 29,497 31,710 33,112
2 31,332 30,406 32,655 34,100
3 32,358 31,329 33,617 35,126
4 33,422 32,291 34,639 36,190
5 34,521 33,290 35,677 37,290
6 35,635 34,328 36,750 38,403
7 36,807 35,377 37,859 39,576
8 38,014 36,487 39,004 40,783
9 39,256 37,608 40,185 42,024
10 40,531 38,789 41,399 43,299
11 41,840 40,003 42,670 44,609
12 43,204 41,266 43,975 45,972
13 44,601 42,571 45,312 47,369
14 46,050 43,917 46,744 48,819
15 or more 47,247 45,058 47,959 50,088
(b) As used in this subsection, the column headings "BA+(N)" refer to the number of credits earned since receiving the baccalaureate degree.
(c) For credits earned after the baccalaureate degree but before the masters degree, any credits in excess of forty‑five credits may be counted after the masters degree. Thus, as used in this subsection, the column headings "MA+(N)" refer to the total of:
(i) Credits earned since receiving the masters degree; and
(ii) Any credits in excess of forty‑five credits that were earned after the baccalaureate degree but before the masters degree.
(5) For the purposes of this section:
(a) "BA" means a baccalaureate degree.
(b) "MA" means a masters degree.
(c) "PHD" means a doctorate degree.
(d) "Years of service" shall be calculated under the same rules adopted by the superintendent of public instruction.
(e) "Credits" means college quarter hour credits and equivalent in-service credits computed in accordance with RCW 28A.415.020 and chapter 90, Laws of 1997.
(6) No more than ninety college quarter-hour credits received by any employee after the baccalaureate degree may be used to determine compensation allocations under the state salary allocation schedule and LEAP documents referenced in this act, or any replacement schedules and documents, unless:
(a) The employee has a masters degree; or
(b) The credits were used in generating state salary allocations before January 1, 1992.
(7) The salary allocation schedules established in this section are for allocation purposes only except as provided in RCW 28A.400.200(2).
NEW SECTION. Sec. 504. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR SCHOOL EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION ADJUSTMENTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 103,931,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 213,470,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 317,401,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $173,761,000 is provided for a cost of living adjustment of 2.0 percent effective September 1, 1999, and another 2.0 percent effective September 1, 2000, for state formula staff units. The appropriations include associated incremental fringe benefit allocations at rates of 16.22 percent for certificated staff and 12.20 percent for classified staff.
(a) The appropriations in this section include the increased portion of salaries and incremental fringe benefits for all relevant state-funded school programs in part V of this act. Salary adjustments for state employees in the office of superintendent of public instruction and the education reform program are provided in part VII of this act. Increases for general apportionment (basic education) are based on the salary allocation schedules and methodology in section 502 of this act. Increases for special education result from increases in each district's basic education allocation per student. Increases for educational service districts and institutional education programs are determined by the superintendent of public instruction using the methodology for general apportionment salaries and benefits in section 502 of this act.
(b) The appropriations in this section provide salary increase and incremental fringe benefit allocations based on formula adjustments as follows:
(i) For pupil transportation, an increase of $0.40 per weighted pupil‑mile for the 1999‑00 school year and $0.81 per weighted pupil-mile for the 2000-01 school year;
(ii) For education of highly capable students, an increase of $4.54 per formula student for the 1999‑00 school year and $9.18 per formula student for the 2000-01 school year; and
(iii) For transitional bilingual education, an increase of $11.81 per eligible bilingual student for the 1999‑00 school year and $23.85 per eligible student for the 2000-01 school year; and
(iv) For learning assistance, an increase of $5.84 per entitlement unit for the 1999‑00 school year and $11.80 per entitlement unit for the 2000-01 school year.
(c) The appropriations in this section include $921,000 for salary increase adjustments for substitute teachers at a rate of $10.64 per unit in the 1999-00 school year and maintained in the 2000-01 school year.
(2) $19,600,000 is provided for adjustments to insurance benefit allocations. The maintenance rate for insurance benefit allocations is $314.51 per month for the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years. The appropriations in this section provide for a rate increase to $317.34 per month for the 1999-00 school year and $335.75 per month for the 2000-01 school year at the following rates:
(a) For pupil transportation, an increase of $0.03 per weighted pupil‑mile for the 1999‑00 school year and $0.19 for the 2000-01 school year;
(b) For education of highly capable students, an increase of $0.20 per formula student for the 1999‑00 school year and $1.35 for the 2000-01 school year;
(c) For transitional bilingual education, an increase of $.46 per eligible bilingual student for the 1999‑00 school year and $3.44 for the 2000-01 school year; and
(d) For learning assistance, an increase of $.36 per funded unit for the 1999‑00 school year and $2.70 for the 2000-01 school year.
(3) The rates specified in this section are subject to revision each year by the legislature.
(4) For the 1999-00 school year, the superintendent shall prepare a report showing the allowable derived base salary for certificated instructional staff in accordance with RCW 28A.400.200 and LEAP Document 12D, and the actual derived base salary paid by each school district as shown on the S-275 report and shall make the report available to the fiscal committees of the legislature no later than February 15, 1998.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 505. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR PUPIL TRANSPORTATION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 185,449,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 189,170,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 374,619,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The state appropriations include such funds as are necessary to complete the school year that is ending and for prior school year adjustments.
(2) A maximum of $1,499,000 may be expended for regional transportation coordinators and related activities. The transportation coordinators shall ensure that data submitted by school districts for state transportation funding shall, to the greatest extent practical, reflect the actual transportation activity of each district.
(3) $40,000 of the fiscal year 2000 appropriation and $40,000 of the fiscal year 2001 appropriation are provided solely for the transportation of students enrolled in "choice" programs. Transportation shall be limited to low-income students who are transferring to "choice" programs solely for educational reasons.
(4) Allocations for transportation of students shall be based on reimbursement rates of $35.12 per weighted mile in the 1999-00 school year and $35.42 per weighted mile in the 2000-01 school year exclusive of salary and benefit adjustments provided in section 504 of this act. Allocations for transportation of students transported more than one radius mile shall be based on weighted miles as determined by superintendent of public instruction times the per mile reimbursement rates for the school year pursuant to the formulas adopted by the superintendent of public instruction. Allocations for transportation of students living within one radius mile shall be based on the number of enrolled students in grades kindergarten through five living within one radius mile of their assigned school times the per mile reimbursement rate for the school year times 1.29.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 506. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR SCHOOL FOOD SERVICE PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 3,100,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 3,100,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 194,483,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 200,683,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $6,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriations are provided for state matching money for federal child nutrition programs.
(2) $175,000 of the general fund--state appropriations are provided for summer food programs for children in low-income areas.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 507. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 389,291,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 389,805,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 147,986,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 927,082,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The state appropriations include such funds as are necessary to complete the school year that is ending and for prior school year adjustments.
(2) The superintendent of public instruction shall distribute state funds to school districts based on two categories, the optional birth through age two program for special education eligible developmentally delayed infants and toddlers, and the mandatory special education program for special education eligible students ages three to twenty-one. A "special education eligible student" means a student receiving specially designed instruction in accordance with a properly formulated individualized education program.
(3) For the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years, the superintendent shall distribute state funds to each district based on the sum of:
(a) A district's annual average headcount enrollment of developmentally delayed infants and toddlers ages birth through two, times the district's average basic education allocation per full-time equivalent student, times 1.15; and
(b) A district's annual average full-time equivalent basic education enrollment times the funded enrollment percent determined pursuant to subsection (4)(c) of this section, times the district's average basic education allocation per full-time equivalent student times 0.9309.
(4) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section.
(a) "Average basic education allocation per full-time equivalent student" for a district shall be based on the staffing ratios required by RCW 28A.150.260 (i.e., 49/1000 certificated instructional staff in grades K-3, and 46/1000 in grades 4-12) and shall not include enhancements for K-3, secondary vocational education, or small schools.
(b) "Annual average full-time equivalent basic education enrollment" means the resident enrollment including students enrolled through choice (RCW 28A.225.225) and students from nonhigh districts (RCW 28A.225.210) and excluding students residing in another district enrolled as part of an interdistrict cooperative program (RCW 28A.225.250).
(c) "Enrollment percent" means the district's resident special education annual average enrollment including those students counted under the special education demonstration projects, excluding the birth through age two enrollment, as a percent of the district's annual average full-time equivalent basic education enrollment. For the 1999-00 and the 2000-01 school years, each district's funded enrollment percent shall be:
(i) For districts whose enrollment percent for 1994-95 was at or below 12.7 percent, the lesser of the district's actual enrollment percent for the school year for which the allocation is being determined or 12.7 percent.
(ii) For districts whose enrollment percent for 1994-95 was above 12.7 percent, the lesser of:
(A) The district's actual enrollment percent for the school year for which the special education allocation is being determined; or
(B) The district's actual enrollment percent for the school year immediately prior to the school year for which the special education allocation is being determined if greater than 12.7 percent.
(5) At the request of any interdistrict cooperative of at least 15 districts in which all excess cost services for special education students of the districts are provided by the cooperative, the maximum enrollment percent shall be 12.7, and shall be calculated in the aggregate rather than individual district units. For purposes of this subsection (4) of this section, the average basic education allocation per full-time equivalent student shall be calculated in the aggregate rather than individual district units.
(6) A maximum of $12,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and a maximum of $12,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided as safety net funding for districts with demonstrated needs for state special education funding beyond the amounts provided in subsection (3) of this section. Safety net funding shall be awarded by the state safety net oversight committee.
(a) The safety net oversight committee shall first consider the needs of districts adversely affected by the 1995 change in the special education funding formula. Awards shall be based on the amount required to maintain the 1994-95 state special education excess cost allocation to the school district in aggregate or on a dollar per funded student basis.
(b) The committee shall then consider unusual needs of districts due to a special education population which differs significantly from the assumptions of the state funding formula. Awards shall be made to districts that convincingly demonstrate need due to the concentration and/or severity of disabilities in the district. Differences in program costs attributable to district philosophy or service delivery style are not a basis for safety net awards.
(7) Prior to June 1st of each year, the superintendent shall make available to each school district from available data the district's maximum funded enrollment percent for the coming school year.
(8) The superintendent of public instruction may adopt such rules and procedures as are necessary to administer the special education funding and safety net award process. Prior to revising any standards, procedures, or rules in place for the 1996-97 school year, the superintendent shall consult with the office of financial management and the fiscal committees of the legislature.
(9) The safety net oversight committee appointed by the superintendent of public instruction shall consist of:
(a) Staff of the office of superintendent of public instruction;
(b) Staff of the office of the state auditor;
(c) Staff from the office of the financial management; and
(d) One or more representatives from school districts or educational service districts knowledgeable of special education programs and funding.
(10) A maximum of $4,500,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation shall be expended for safety net funding to meet the extraordinary needs of one or more individual special education students.
(11) A maximum of $678,000 may be expended from the general fund‑-state appropriations to fund 5.43 full-time equivalent teachers and 2.1 full-time equivalent aides at children's orthopedic hospital and medical center. This amount is in lieu of money provided through the home and hospital allocation and the special education program.
(12) A maximum of $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-federal appropriation is provided for projects to provide special education students with appropriate job and independent living skills, including work experience where possible, to facilitate their successful transition out of the public school system. The funds provided by this subsection shall be from federal discretionary grants.
(13) A school district may carry over up to 10 percent of general fund‑-state funds allocated under this program; however, carry over funds shall be expended in the special education program.
(14) The superintendent shall maintain the percentage of federal flow-through to school districts at 84 percent. In addition to other purposes, school districts may use increased federal funds for high cost students, for purchasing regional special education services from educational service districts, and for staff development activities particularly relating to inclusion issues.
(15) Up to one percent of the general fund--federal appropriation shall be expended by the superintendent for projects related to use of inclusion strategies by school districts for provision of special education services. The superintendent shall prepare an information database on laws, best practices, examples of programs, and recommended resources. The information may be disseminated in a variety of ways, including workshops and other staff development activities.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 508. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR TRAFFIC SAFETY EDUCATION PROGRAMS
Public Safety and Education Account‑-State
Appropriation................................. $ 16,883,000
The appropriation in this section is subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriation includes such funds as are necessary to complete the school year that is ending and for prior school year adjustments.
(2) A maximum of $507,000 shall be expended for regional traffic safety education coordinators.
(3) The maximum basic state allocation per student completing the program shall be $137.16 in the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years.
(4) Additional allocations to provide tuition assistance for students from low-income families who complete the program shall be a maximum of $66.81 per eligible student in the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 509. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DISTRICTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 4,545,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 4,545,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 9,090,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The educational service districts shall continue to furnish financial services required by the superintendent of public instruction and RCW 28A.310.190 (3) and (4).
(2) $250,000 of the general fund appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $250,000 of the general fund appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for student teaching centers as provided in RCW 28A.415.100.
(3) A maximum of $500,000 is provided for centers for the improvement of teaching pursuant to RCW 28A.415.010.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 510. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR LOCAL EFFORT ASSISTANCE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 92,110,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 99,422,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 191,532,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 511. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR THE ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT ACT
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 264,388,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 512. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR INSTITUTIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 20,950,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 22,265,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 8,548,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 51,763,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The general fund‑-state appropriations include such funds as are necessary to complete the school year that is ending and for prior school year adjustments.
(2) State funding provided under this section is based on salaries and other expenditures for a 220‑day school year. The superintendent of public instruction shall monitor school district expenditure plans for institutional education programs to ensure that districts plan for a full-time summer program.
(3) State funding for each institutional education program shall be based on the institution's annual average full-time equivalent student enrollment. Staffing ratios for each category of institution shall remain the same as those funded in the 1995-97 biennium.
(4) The funded staffing ratios for education programs for juveniles age 18 or less in department of corrections facilities shall be the same as those provided in the 1997-99 biennium.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 513. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR PROGRAMS FOR HIGHLY CAPABLE STUDENTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 6,224,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 6,220,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 12,444,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriation for fiscal year 2000 includes such funds as are necessary for the remaining months of the 1998‑99 school year.
(2) Allocations for school district programs for highly capable students shall be distributed at a maximum rate of $313.07 per funded student for the 1999-00 school year and $313.19 per funded student for the 2000-01 school year, exclusive of salary and benefit adjustments pursuant to section 504 of this act. The number of funded students shall be a maximum of two percent of each district's full-time equivalent basic education enrollment.
(3) $350,000 of the appropriation is for the centrum program at Fort Worden state park.
(4) $186,000 of the appropriation is for the odyssey of the mind and future problem-solving programs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 514. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-EDUCATION REFORM PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 27,962,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 28,978,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 400,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION.................. ... $ 57,340,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $26,039,000 is provided for the operation of the commission on student learning reauthorized in Z-..../99 (accountability system) and the continued development and implementation of student assessments. If Z-..../99 is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the appropriation in this section shall be made to the office of the superintendent of public instruction solely for the continued development and implementation of student assessments. Of the amount provided in this subsection, $689,000 is provided for research and data analysis, by the office of the superintendent of public instruction, associated with using a standards-based student assessment system to improve student learning.
(2) $2,190,000 is provided solely for training of paraprofessional classroom assistants and certificated staff who work with classroom assistants as provided in RCW 28A.415.310.
(3) $6,818,000 is provided for mentor teacher assistance, including state support activities, under RCW 28A.415.250 and 28A.415.260. Funds for the teacher assistance program shall be allocated to school districts based on the number of beginning teachers.
(4) $4,050,000 is provided for improving technology infrastructure, monitoring and reporting on school district technology development, promoting standards for school district technology, promoting statewide coordination and planning for technology development, and providing regional educational technology support centers, including state support activities, under chapter 28A.650 RCW.
(5) $7,200,000 is provided for grants to school districts to provide a continuum of care for children and families to help children become ready to learn. Grant proposals from school districts shall contain local plans designed collaboratively with community service providers. If a continuum of care program exists in the area in which the school district is located, the local plan shall provide for coordination with existing programs to the greatest extent possible. Grant funds shall be allocated pursuant to RCW 70.190.040.
(6) $5,000,000 is provided solely for the meals for kids program under RCW 28A.235.145 through 28A.235.155.
(7) $1,260,000 is provided for technical assistance related to education reform through the office of the superintendent of public instruction, in consultation with the commission on student learning, as specified in RCW 28A.300.130 (center for the improvement of student learning).
(8) $1,598,000 of the fiscal year 1999 appropriation is provided solely for the leadership internship program for superintendents, principals, and program administrators. The purpose of the program is to provide funds to school districts to provide partial release time for district employees in an internship with an appropriate mentor. The funds shall be distributed by the superintendent to school districts subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(i) The superintendent with the assistance of an advisory board that includes school administrators and higher education representatives shall select internship participants giving priority to candidates who intend to serve in school districts where finding qualified applicants has been difficult.
(ii) Candidates if accepted in the internship program must agree to seek employment in Washington after receiving certification, participate in education improvement training activities, and participate in evaluations of the effectiveness of the internship program.
(iii) The maximum amount of state funding for each internship shall not exceed the daily rate of providing a substitute teacher for the equivalent of up to forty-five days and the funds shall be used to pay for partial release time while the school district employee is completing the internship.
(iv) The superintendent may withhold a maximum of seven percent of the funds for costs of implementing the program.
(9) $330,000 of the appropriation is provided to create an incentive and reward system for certification by the national board for professional teaching standards, and for state professional level certified teachers. Beginning July 1, 1998, teachers certified by the national board may receive a bonus of $3,000 per year as recognition of their outstanding performance. Also beginning July 1, 1998, teachers who are state professional level certified may receive a bonus of $1,000 in recognition of their performance. The amount of the bonuses shall be prorated by the number of months in the fiscal year the individual is actually certified. The superintendent of public instruction shall adopt rules to implement this subsection to ensure appropriate accountability and documentation of receipt of bonuses. Bonuses provided in this subsection shall not be considered salary or compensation for purposes of RCW 28A.400.200.
(10) $2,000,000 is provided solely for staff training in shared decision-making and effective resource management for principals, teachers, and other school staff in opportunity school districts authorized in Z-..../99 (opportunity school districts). This training will be administered by the office of the superintendent of public instruction, in consultation with the office of financial management, Washington state school directors association, Washington association of school administrators, association of Washington school principals, Washington education association, public school employees of Washington, and the Washington state parent-teacher association. If Z‑..../99 is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(11) $500,000 is provided solely for operation of the Washington professional teacher standards board created in Z-..../99 (teacher standards board). If Z-..../99 is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 515. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR TRANSITIONAL BILINGUAL PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 35,373,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 36,843,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 72,216,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriation for fiscal year 2000 provides such funds as are necessary for the remaining months of the 1998-99 school year.
(2) The superintendent shall distribute a maximum of $647.94 per eligible bilingual student in the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years, exclusive of salary and benefit adjustments provided in section 503 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 516. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-FOR THE LEARNING ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 90,613,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 102,537,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 193,150,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriation for fiscal year 2000 provides such funds as are necessary for the remaining months of the 1998‑99 school year.
(2) Funding for school district learning assistance programs shall be allocated at maximum rates of $360.00 per funded unit for the 1999-00 school year and $369.72 per funded unit for the 2000-01 school year. School districts may carryover up to 10 percent of funds allocated under this program; however, carryover funds shall be expended for the learning assistance program. A school district's funded units for the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years shall be the district's number of students enrolled in the free and reduced price lunch program in grades K-9. Districts not participating in the free and reduced price lunch program will consult with the office of the superintendent of public instruction to determine their funded units. In determining the funded units for districts not participating in the free and reduced price lunch program, the office of the superintendent of public instruction shall consider poverty data from the most recent federal decennial census.
(3) The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall also calculate the funding for school district learning assistance programs under the methodology used for the 1997-98 and 1998-99 school years. For school years 1999-00 and 2000-01, school districts shall receive the higher of the allocation amounts in this subsection or in subsection (2) of this section.
(4) $9,000,000 is provided for targeted assistance grants to low-performing schools in accordance with Z-..../99 (accountability and assistance). Targeted assistance grants shall not exceed $50,000 per school building per year.
(5) $15,800,000 is provided solely for school performance award grants. Annual grants in the amount of $25 per enrolled student shall be awarded to individual schools which reduce, by 25 percent over the three preceding years, the school's total percentage of students who did not meet the Washington assessment of student learning standard. For fiscal year 2000, for schools which have only three years of Washington assessment of student learning data, the two-year improvement required to receive a performance grant shall be prorated to two-thirds of 25 percent, or 16 2/3 percent.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 517. FOR THE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION‑-LOCAL ENHANCEMENT FUNDS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 55,719,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 55,998,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 111,717,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) A maximum of $56,670,000 is provided for learning improvement allocations to school districts to enhance the ability of instructional staff to teach and assess the essential academic learning requirements for reading, writing, communication, and math in accordance with the timelines and requirements established under RCW 28A.630.885. However, special emphasis shall be given to the successful teaching of reading. Allocations under this section shall be subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(a) The allocations for the 1999-00 and 2000-01 school years shall be at a maximum annual rate per full-time equivalent student of $29.66 for students enrolled in grades K-4, $29.65 for students enrolled in grades 5-7, and $29.65 for students enrolled in grades 8-12. Allocations shall be made on the monthly apportionment schedule provided in RCW 28A.510.250.
(b) A district receiving learning improvement allocations shall:
(i) Develop and keep on file at each building a student learning improvement plan to achieve the student learning goals and essential academic learning requirements and to implement the assessment system as it is developed. The plan shall delineate how the learning improvement allocations will be used to accomplish the foregoing. The plan shall be made available to the public upon request;
(ii) Maintain a policy regarding the involvement of school staff, parents, and community members in instructional decisions;
(iii) File a report by October 1, 1999, and October 1, 2000, with the office of the superintendent of public instruction, in a format developed by the superintendent that: Enumerates the activities funded by these allocations; the amount expended for each activity; describes how the activity improved understanding, teaching, and assessment of the essential academic learning requirements by instructional staff; and identifies any amounts expended from this allocation for supplemental contracts; and
(iv) Provide parents and the local community with specific information on the use of this allocation by including in the annual performance report required in RCW 28A.320.205, information on how funds allocated under this subsection were spent and the results achieved.
(c) The superintendent of public instruction shall compile and analyze the school district reports and present the results to the office of financial management and the appropriate committees of the legislature no later than November 15, 1999, and November 15, 2000.
(2) $55,046,000 is provided for local education program enhancements to meet educational needs as identified by the school district, including alternative education programs. This amount includes such amounts as are necessary for the remainder of the 1998-99 school year. Allocations for the 1999-00 school year shall be at a maximum annual rate of $28.816 per full-time equivalent student and $28.81 per full-time equivalent student for the 2000-01 school year as determined pursuant to subsection (3) of this section. Allocations shall be made on the monthly apportionment payment schedule provided in RCW 28A.510.250.
(3) Allocations provided under this section shall be based on school district annual average full-time equivalent enrollment in grades kindergarten through twelve: PROVIDED, That for school districts enrolling not more than one hundred average annual full-time equivalent students, and for small school plants within any school district designated as remote and necessary schools, the allocations shall be as follows:
(a) Enrollment of not more than sixty average annual full-time equivalent students in grades kindergarten through six shall generate funding based on sixty full-time equivalent students;
(b) Enrollment of not more than twenty average annual full-time equivalent students in grades seven and eight shall generate funding based on twenty full-time equivalent students; and
(c) Enrollment of not more than sixty average annual full-time equivalent students in grades nine through twelve shall generate funding based on sixty full-time equivalent students.
(4) Funding provided pursuant to this section does not fall within the definition of basic education for purposes of Article IX of the state Constitution and the state's funding duty thereunder.
(5) Receipt by a school district of one-fourth of the district's allocation of funds under this section, shall be conditioned on a finding by the superintendent that:
(a) The district is enrolled as a medicaid service provider and is actively pursuing federal matching funds for medical services provided through special education programs, pursuant to RCW 74.09.5241 through 74.09.5256 (Title XIX funding); and
(b) The district is filing truancy petitions as required under chapter 312, Laws of 1995 and RCW 28A.225.030.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 518. K-12 CARRYFORWARD AND PRIOR SCHOOL YEAR ADJUSTMENTS. State general fund appropriations provided to the superintendent of public instruction for state entitlement programs in the public schools in this part V may be expended as needed by the superintendent for adjustments to apportionment for prior fiscal periods. Recoveries of state general fund moneys from school districts and educational service districts for a prior fiscal period shall be made as reductions in apportionment payments for the current fiscal period and shall be shown as prior year adjustments on apportionment reports for the current period. Such recoveries shall not be treated as revenues to the state, but as a reduction in the amount expended against the appropriation for the current fiscal period.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 519. FOR THE STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION
Education Savings Account‑-State Appropriation..... $ 65,000,000
The appropriation in this section is subject to the following conditions and limitations: $32,500,000 in fiscal year 2000 and $32,500,000 in fiscal year 2001 are appropriated to the common school construction account.
(End of part)
PART VI
HIGHER EDUCATION
NEW SECTION. Sec. 601. The appropriations in sections 603 through 609 of this act are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) "Institutions" means the institutions of higher education receiving appropriations under sections 603 through 609 of this act.
(2)(a) Until such time as learning standards and competencies are developed as specified in section 610(3) of this act, each institution receiving appropriations under sections 604 through 609 of this act shall submit plans for achieving measurable and specific improvements in academic years 1999-00 and 2000-01 to the higher education coordinating board. The plans, to be prepared at the direction of the board, shall be submitted by August 15, 1999, (for academic year 1999-00) and June 30, 2000 (for academic year 2000-01). The following measures will be used for the 1999-01 biennium:
(i) Undergraduate graduation efficiency index for students beginning as freshmen and for transfer students;
(ii) Undergraduate student retention, defined as the percentage of all undergraduate students who return for the next year at the same institution, measured from fall to fall;
(iii) Graduation rates, defined as the percentage of an entering freshmen class at each institution that graduates within five years;
(iv) A measure of faculty productivity to be determined by the higher education coordinating board in consultation with the institutions receiving appropriations under sections 604 through 609 of this act; and
(v) An additional measure to be selected by the higher education coordinating board for each institution, in consultation with each institution.
(b) Academic year 1998-99 shall be the baseline year against which performance in academic year 1999-00 shall be measured. Academic year 1999-00 shall be the baseline year against which performance in academic year 2000-01 shall be measured. Each institution shall report to the higher education coordinating board on its actual performance achievement for each measure for academic year 1999-00 by November 1, 2000.
(3) The state board for community and technical colleges shall develop an implementation plan for measurable and specific improvements in academic years 1999-00 and 2000-01 consistent with the performance management system developed by the work force training and education coordinating board and for the following performance measures:
(a) Skilled labor force training gap;
(b) Share of students served by technology-supported instruction and student services;
(c) Percent of basic skills students accomplishing skills gains; and
(d) Percent of students prepared for transfer to baccalaureate institutions.
(4) Each institution receiving appropriations under sections 603 through 609 of this act shall participate in the establishment of learning standards for undergraduates as specified in section 610(3) of this act.
(5) General fund‑-state appropriations to higher education institutions in sections 603 through 609 provide an average salary increase of 2.0 percent effective September 1, 1999, and an average salary increase of 2.0 percent effective September 1, 2000.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 602. The appropriations in sections 603 through 609 of this act provide state general fund support or employment and training trust account support for full-time equivalent student enrollments at each institution of higher education. Listed below are the annual full-time equivalent student enrollments by institutions assumed in this act.
1999-2000 2000-2001
Annual Annual
Average Average
University of Washington
Main campus 31,927 32,266
Bothell branch 993 1,136
Tacoma branch 1,143 1,316
Washington State University
Main campus 17,272 17,649
Spokane branch 472 601
Tri-Cities branch 754 754
Vancouver branch 1,015 1,090
Central Washington University 7,670 7,867
Eastern Washington University 7,739 7,739
The Evergreen State College 3,638 3,713
Western Washington University 10,648 10,761
State Board for Community and
Technical Colleges 122,141 123,671
Higher Education Coordinating
Board 50 1,750
NEW SECTION. Sec. 603. FOR THE STATE BOARD FOR COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 452,785,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 475,821,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 11,404,000
Employment and Training Trust Account‑-
State Appropriation........................... $ 2,497,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 942,507,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $1,441,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,441,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for 500 FTE enrollment slots to implement RCW 28B.50.259 (timber-dependent communities).
(2) $1,862,500 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,862,500 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes at community and technical colleges.
(3) $706,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $706,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(4) $1,155,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,345,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for faculty salary increments and associated benefits and may be used in combination with salary and benefit savings from faculty turnover to provide faculty salary increments and associated benefits.
(5) $332,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,739,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for Cascadia Community College start-up and enrollment costs.
(6) $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for tuition support for students enrolled in work-based learning programs.
(7) $1,650,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,650,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for administration and customized training contracts through the job skills program.
(8) $925,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $925,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for investment in new and upgraded high-demand technical programs. The state board for community and technical colleges shall provide a report to the governor and legislative fiscal committees by June 30, 2001, including but not limited to the number of new programs created, the number of programs redeveloped, and the number of students trained in programs receiving funds from this section.
(9) $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the development of skill standards and the incorporation of skill standards into existing or new training programs. The state board for community and technical colleges shall provide a report to the governor and legislative fiscal committees by June 30, 2001, including but not limited to the number of new programs created, the number of programs redeveloped, and the number of students trained in programs receiving funds from this section.
(10) $570,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,330,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for part-time faculty retirement benefits.
(11) $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for part-time faculty salary adjustments to help reduce the disparity between compensation levels for full-time faculty and part-time faculty. General fund‑-state expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further close the compensation disparity between part-time and full-time faculty.
(12) $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for grants to expand information technology and computer science programs. Successful grant applications from a college, partnerships of colleges, or partnerships of colleges and K-12 school districts must include a match of cash, in-kind, or donations equivalent to the grant amount. Grant applications shall receive priority that prepare students to meet industry standards, achieve industry skill certificates, or continue to upper division computer science or computer engineering studies. No college may receive more than $600,000 from appropriations in this section. The state board for community and technical colleges shall report the implementation of this section to the governor and legislative fiscal committees by June 30, 2001, including plans of successful grant recipients for the continuation of programs funded by this section.
(13) $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the Pierce College branch at Puyallup.
(14) Funding in this section provides support for up to 7,200 full-time equivalent students in fiscal year 2000 and up to 7,200 full-time equivalent students in fiscal year 2001 in the worker retraining program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 604. FOR UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 312,923,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 326,421,000
Death Investigations Account‑-State Appropriation... $............................................... 2,751,000
Accident Account‑-State Appropriation.............. $ 5,654,000
Medical Aid Account‑-State Appropriation................ $ 5,696,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 653,445,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $9,031,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $10,647,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for upper division and graduate courses and other educational services offered at the Bothell branch campus.
(2) $10,542,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $11,566,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for upper division and graduate courses and other educational services offered at the Tacoma branch campus.
(3) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(4) $324,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $324,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(5) $925,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $925,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
(6) $1,975,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,975,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to extend the next-generation internet hub and related expertise.
(7) $200,000 of the death investigations account appropriation is provided solely for the forensic pathologist fellowship program.
(8) $136,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $137,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item UW-01.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 605. FOR WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 181,459,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 194,631,000
Air Pollution Control Account‑-State
Appropriation................................. $ 206,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 376,296,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $6,419,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $9,095,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for upper division and graduate courses and other educational services offered at the Spokane branch campus.
(2) $5,083,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $5,217,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for upper division and graduate courses and other educational services offered at the Tri-Cities branch campus.
(3) $8,292,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $9,232,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for upper division and graduate courses and other educational services offered at the Vancouver branch campus.
(4) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(5) $140,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $140,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(6) $575,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $575,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
(7) $2,350,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 is provided solely for the safe food initiative. Funds provided in this section can only be expended when matched with $700,000 in other funds including private donations and other reallocation of $700,000 from the university's existing budget. The university shall contract for a performance review of agricultural extension activities and deliver an agricultural extension strategic plan to the governor and legislative fiscal committees by September 1, 2000.
(8) $900,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,200,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the Spokane health sciences consortium.
(9) $500,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to Washington State University as fiscal agent and lead agency among higher education institutions for phase one of the development of a life-long learning college. The scope of phase one includes but is not limited to creation of an administrative core; development of a system-wide on-line catalog and registration form; solicitation of partnerships, resources, and expertise from private sector industries; development of best practices for the generation of scalable technology-mediated curricula; and collaboration with other consortia such as Spokane health sciences, the western governors' university, Wenatchee, Yakima, Clark county, the North Snohomish, Island, and Skagit consortium, and the Washington state community and technical colleges.
(10) $165,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $166,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the implementation of the Puget Sound work plan and agency action item WSU-01.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 606. FOR EASTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 41,180,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 42,483,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 83,663,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(2) $93,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $93,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(3) $150,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $150,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 607. FOR CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 41,136,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 43,006,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 84,142,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(2) $70,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $70,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(3) $125,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $125,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 608. FOR THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 21,517,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 23,020,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 44,537,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(2) $47,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $47,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(3) $75,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $75,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 609. FOR WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 54,606,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 56,642,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 111,248,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $186,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for assessment of student outcomes.
(2) $93,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $93,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to recruit and retain minority students and faculty.
(3) $150,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $150,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitively offered faculty recruitment and retention salary adjustments. General fund expenditures required by this section must be matched by an equal amount of tuition revenue expenditures. Tuition revenues may be expended in addition to those required by this section to further provide recruitment and retention salary adjustments. The university shall provide a report in their 2001-03 biennial operating budget request submittal on the effective expenditure of funds for the purposes of this section.
(4) $2,285,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,285,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to the university as the fiscal agent for the seven-institution higher education consortium to serve the counties of Island and Skagit and the northern area of Snohomish county. Funds shall support program administration, student services, academic support, facility leases, and program marketing.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 610. FOR THE HIGHER EDUCATION COORDINATING BOARD‑-POLICY COORDINATION AND ADMINISTRATION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 4,468,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 12,584,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 653,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION ...................... $ 17,705,000
The appropriations in this section are provided to carry out the accountability, performance measurement, policy coordination, planning, studies and administrative functions of the board and are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The board shall review, recommend changes if necessary, and approve plans defined in section 601(2)(a) of this act for achieving measurable and specific improvements in academic years 1999-00 and 2000-01.
(2) By January, 2000, the board shall recommend to the office of financial management and appropriate legislative committees any recommended additions, deletions, or revisions to the performance and accountability measures in section 601(2)(a) of this act as part of the next master plan for higher education. The recommendations shall be developed in consultation with the institutions of higher education and may include additional performance indicators to measure successful student learning and other student outcomes for possible inclusion in the 2001-03 operating budget. The recommendations shall include measures of performance demonstrating specific and measurable improvements related to distance education and education provided primarily through technology, to be determined by the board, in consultation with the institutions of higher education.
(3) $250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $250,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to develop undergraduate learning standards for experiential learning and new learning in the post-secondary system, and to develop credentialing standards based on learning competencies.
(4) $280,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $280,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for enrollment to implement RCW 28B.80.570 through 28B.80.585 (rural natural resources impact areas). The number of students served shall be 50 full-time equivalent students per fiscal year. The board shall ensure that enrollments reported under this subsection meet the criteria outlined in RCW 28B.80.570 through 28B.80.585.
(5) $110,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $155,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided to develop a competency based admissions system for higher education institutions.
(6) $8,090,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 is provided solely to contract for 1,700 full-time equivalent students in high demand fields and programs. The board shall design and implement a bidding process to solicit proposals from public institutions to deliver these student enrollments. Successful proposals shall include institutional plans to reallocate 1 base full-time equivalent student into high demand programs for every 2 full-time equivalent students funded in and awarded according to this section.
(7) $2,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for competitive grants to public baccalaureate institutions to expand information technology programs. Successful grant applications to fund faculty, staff, or equipment for computer science, computer engineering, or related disciplines must include a match of nonstate cash or donations equivalent to the grant amount. No institution may receive more than $2,000,000 from appropriations in this section. The board shall report on the implementation of this section to the governor and legislative fiscal committees by June 30, 2001, including plans of successful grant recipients for the continuation of programs funded by this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 611. FOR THE HIGHER EDUCATION COORDINATING BOARD‑-FINANCIAL AID AND GRANT PROGRAMS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000) ........ $ 103,679,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 117,644,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation.. 4........... $ 2,423,000
Advanced College Tuition Payment Program Account‑-
State Appropriation........................... $ 3,408,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 227,154,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $534,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $529,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the displaced homemakers program.
(2) $220,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $225,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the western interstate commission for higher education.
(3) $613,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $613,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the future teacher conditional scholarship program under chapter 28B.102 RCW.
(4) $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,000,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the health professional conditional scholarship and loan program under chapter 28B.115 RCW. This amount shall be deposited to the health professional loan repayment and scholarship trust fund to carry out the purposes of the program.
(5) $98,111,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $98,131,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for student financial aid, including all administrative costs. Of these amounts:
(a) $77,668,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $77,768,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the state need grant program. After April 1 of each fiscal year, up to one percent of the annual appropriation for the state need grant program may be transferred to the state work study program;
(b) $15,350,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $15,350,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the state work study program. After April 1 of each fiscal year, up to one percent of the annual appropriation for the state work study program may be transferred to the state need grant program;
(c) $2,420,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $2,420,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for educational opportunity grants;
(d) A maximum of 2.1 percent of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and 2.1 percent of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 may be expended for financial aid administration, excluding the 4 percent state work study program administrative allowance provision;
(e) $230,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $201,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the educator's excellence awards. Any educator's excellence moneys not awarded by April 1st of each year may be transferred by the board to either the Washington scholars program or to the Washington award for vocational excellence;
(f) $1,402,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $1,475,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement the Washington scholars program. Any Washington scholars program moneys not awarded by April 1st of each year may be transferred by the board to either the educator's excellence awards or to the Washington award for vocational excellence;
(g) $560,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $588,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement Washington award for vocational excellence program. Any Washington award for vocational program moneys not awarded by April 1st of each year may be transferred by the board to either the educator's excellence awards or the Washington scholars program;
(h) $51,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $51,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for community scholarship matching grants of $2,000 each. To be eligible for the matching grant, a nonprofit community organization organized under section 501(c)(3) of the internal revenue code must demonstrate that it has raised $2,000 in new moneys for college scholarships after the effective date of this act. No organization may receive more than one $2,000 matching grant; and
(6) $3,014,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $16,958,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely to implement Z-..../99 (Washington's promise scholarship program). If the bill is not enacted by June 30, 1999, the amount provided in this subsection shall lapse.
(7) $187,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $188,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for undergraduate fellowships based upon the graduate fellowship program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 612. FOR THE WORK FORCE TRAINING AND EDUCATION COORDINATING BOARD
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 1,045,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 1,043,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 34,408,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 36,496,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 613. FOR WASHINGTON STATE LIBRARY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 8,369,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 8,149,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 8,859,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 25,377,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) At least $2,524,000 shall be expended for a contract with the Seattle public library for library services for the Washington book and braille library.
(2) $200,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $200,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for the state library to continue the government information locator service in accordance with chapter 171, Laws of 1996.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 614. FOR THE WASHINGTON STATE ARTS COMMISSION
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 2,320,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 2,568,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation................ $ 1,000,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 5,888,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 615. FOR THE WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 2,621,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 2,636,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 5,257,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following condition and limitation: $50,000 of the general fund‑‑state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $50,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for activities related to the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 616. FOR THE EASTERN WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 1,228,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 1,397,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 2,625,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) $467,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2000 and $322,200 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 are provided solely for temporary relocation of the Cheney Cowles museum operations.
(2) $311,000 of the general fund‑-state appropriation for fiscal year 2001 is provided solely for the building operation and maintenance of the Cheney Cowles museum addition.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 617. FOR THE STATE SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 3,986,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 4,006,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation.......... $ 644,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 8,636,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 618. FOR THE STATE SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)........ $ 6,704,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)........ $ 6,686,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION...................... $ 13,390,000
(End of part)
PART VII
SPECIAL APPROPRIATIONS
NEW SECTION. Sec. 701. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST, AND ONGOING BOND REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER CHARGES: FOR DEBT SUBJECT TO THE DEBT LIMIT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 521,672,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 538,689,000
State Building Construction Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 4,168,000
Debt-Limit Reimbursable Bond Retirement Account‑-
State Appropriation...................... $ 2,574,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION......... ........ $ 1,067,103,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The general fund appropriation is for deposit into the debt-limit general fund bond retirement account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 702. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST, AND ONGOING BOND REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER CHARGES: FOR GENERAL OBLIGATION DEBT TO BE REIMBURSED BY ENTERPRISE ACTIVITIES
State Convention and Trade Center Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 32,575,000
Accident Account‑-State Appropriation......... $ 5,080,000
Medical Aid Account‑-State Appropriation...... $ 5,080,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 42,735,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 703. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST, AND ONGOING BOND REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER CHARGES: FOR GENERAL OBLIGATION DEBT TO BE REIMBURSED AS PRESCRIBED BY STATUTE
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 23,806,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 23,445,000
Higher Education Construction Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 118,000
Nondebt-Limit Reimbursable Bond Retirement
Account‑-State Appropriation............. $ 106,498,000
Stadium and Exhibition Center Construction‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 1,250,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 155,117,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The general fund appropriation is for deposit into the nondebt-limit general fund bond retirement account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 704. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST, AND ONGOING BOND REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER CHARGES: FOR DEBT TO BE PAID BY STATUTORILY PRESCRIBED REVENUE
Nondebt-Limit Revenue Bond Retirement
Account‑-State Appropriation............. $ 1,229,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 705. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST, AND ONGOING BOND REGISTRATION AND TRANSFER CHARGES: FOR BOND SALE EXPENSES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 567,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 568,000
Higher Education Construction Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 30,000
State Building Construction Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 1,237,000
Public Safety Reimbursable Bond Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 3,000
Stadium/Exhibition Center Construction
Account‑-State Appropriation ............ $ 250,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 2,655,000
Total Bond Retirement and Interest Appropriations
contained in sections 701 through 705 of this
act...................................... $ 1,268,839,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 706. FOR THE GOVERNOR‑-TORT DEFENSE SERVICES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 1,632,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 1,633,000
Tort Defense Services Revolving Account........ $..................................... 3,265,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 6,530,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: To facilitate payment of tort defense services from special funds, the state treasurer is directed to transfer sufficient moneys from each special fund to the special fund agency tort defense services revolving fund, in accordance with schedules provided by the office of financial management. The governor shall distribute the moneys appropriated in this section to agencies to pay for tort defense services.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 707. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-EMERGENCY FUND
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 850,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 850,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 1,700,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The appropriations in this section are for the governor's emergency fund for the critically necessary work of any agency.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 708. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-FIRE CONTINGENCY POOL. The sum of five million dollars or so much thereof as may be available on June 30, 1999, from the total amount of unspent fiscal year 1999 fire contingency funding in the disaster response account, is appropriated for the purpose of making allocations to the military department for fire mobilizations costs or to the department of natural resources for fire suppression costs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 709. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-IMPLEMENTATION OF THE GOVERNOR'S COLLECTIVE BARGAINING BILL
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 2,500,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 2,500,000
Special Payroll System Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 5,000,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 10,000,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The appropriations in this section are for the governor's emergency fund for the critically necessary work of any agency.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 710. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-IMPLEMENTATION OF INCREASED MINIMUM WAGE LAW
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 2,500,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 7,500,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 10,800,000
Salary and Insurance Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 9,000,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 29,800,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The appropriations in this section are for allocation to agencies that experience increased costs because of the passage of Initiative 688 by the voters in November, 1998.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 711. FOR THE VIOLENCE REDUCTION AND DRUG ENFORCEMENT ACCOUNT. The sum of twenty-two million, five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated for fiscal year 2000 from the general fund to the violence reduction and drug enforcement account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 712. FOR THE WILDLIFE ACCOUNT. The sum of three million, five hundred thousand dollars is appropriated for fiscal year 2000 from the general fund to the wildlife account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 713. FOR THE EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY REVOLVING ACCOUNT. The sum of fourteen million, eight hundred thousand dollars is appropriated for fiscal year 2000 from the general fund to the education technology revolving account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 714. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-YEAR 2000 ALLOCATIONS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 10,000,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 462,000
Hospital Commission Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 19,000
Health Professions Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 182,000
Certified Public Accountants' Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 5,000
Safe Drinking Water Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 96,000
State Health Care Authority Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 1,456,000
Year 2000 Contingency Revolving Account‑-State
Appropriation............................ $ 10,000,000
Accident Account‑-State Appropriation......... $ 150,000
Medical Aid Account‑-State Appropriation.. ... $ 150,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 22,520,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriations will be allocated by the office of financial management to agencies to resolve year 2000 issues. Agencies shall submit their estimated costs to resolve year 2000 issues to the office of financial management.
(2) To facilitate the transfer of moneys from dedicated funds and accounts, the state treasurer is directed to transfer sufficient moneys from each dedicated fund or account to the year 2000 contingency revolving account, in accordance with schedules provided by the office of financial management.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 715. BELATED CLAIMS. The agencies and institutions of the state may expend moneys appropriated in this act, upon approval of the office of financial management, for the payment of supplies and services furnished to the agency or institution in prior fiscal biennia.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 716. FOR THE GOVERNOR‑-COMPENSATION‑-INSURANCE BENEFITS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 20,541,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 32,499,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 13,927,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation..... $ 1,006,000
Salary and Insurance Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 35,453,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 103,426,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1)(a) The monthly employer funding rate for insurance benefit premiums shall not exceed $394.14 per eligible employee for fiscal year 2000, and $430.11 for fiscal year 2001.
(b) The monthly employer funding rate for the operating costs of the health care authority shall not exceed $5.51 per eligible employee for fiscal year 2000, and $5.02 for fiscal year 2001.
(c) An additional $5.77 per eligible employee shall be included in the employer funding rate for fiscal years 2000 and 2001 to repay the public employees' and retirees' insurance account for any claims paid as a result of a court-approved stipulated settlement in Retired State Employees et al. v. State of Washington (Thurston county superior court cause no. 92-2-01294-1).
(d) Surplus moneys accruing to the public employees' and retirees' insurance account due to lower-than-projected insurance costs may not be reallocated by the health care authority to increase the actuarial value of public employee insurance plans. Such funds shall be held in reserve in the public employees' and retirees' insurance account and may not be expended without prior legislative authorization.
(f) In order to achieve the level of funding provided for health benefits, the public employees' benefits board may require employee premium copayments, increase point-of-service cost sharing, and/or implement managed competition.
(2) To facilitate the transfer of moneys from dedicated funds and accounts, the state treasurer is directed to transfer sufficient moneys from each dedicated fund or account to the special fund salary and insurance contribution increase revolving fund in accordance with schedules provided by the office of financial management.
(3) The health care authority, subject to the approval of the public employees' benefits board, shall provide subsidies for health benefit premiums to eligible retired or disabled public employees and school district employees who are eligible for parts A and B of medicare, pursuant to RCW 41.05.085. From July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999, the subsidy shall be $56.02 per month. From January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2000, the subsidy shall be $65.82. Starting January 1, 2001, the subsidy shall be $74.38 per month.
(4) Technical colleges, school districts, and educational service districts shall remit to the health care authority for deposit into the public employees' and retirees' insurance account established in RCW 41.05.120 the following amounts:
(a) For each full-time employee, $21.70 per month beginning September 1, 1999, and $23.90 beginning September 1, 2000;
(b) For each part-time employee who, at the time of the remittance, is employed in an eligible position as defined in RCW 41.32.010 or 41.40.010 and is eligible for employer fringe benefit contributions for basic benefits, $21.70 each month beginning September 1, 1999, and $23.90 beginning September 1, 2000, prorated by the proportion of employer fringe benefit contributions for a full-time employee that the part-time employee receives.
The remittance requirements specified in this subsection shall not apply to employees of a technical college, school district, or educational service district who purchase insurance benefits through contracts with the health care authority.
(5) The salary and insurance increase revolving account appropriation includes amounts sufficient to fund health benefits for ferry workers at the premium levels specified in subsection (1) of this section, consistent with the 1999-01 transportation appropriations act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 717. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF RETIREMENT SYSTEMS‑-CONTRIBUTIONS TO RETIREMENT SYSTEMS
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations: The appropriations shall be made on a monthly basis consistent with chapter 41.45 RCW.
(1) There is appropriated for state contributions to the law enforcement officers' and fire fighters' retirement system:
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 27,760,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 16,640,000
(2) There is appropriated for contributions to the judicial retirement system:
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 8,500,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 8,500,000
(3) There is appropriated for contributions to the judges retirement system:
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 750,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 750,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 62,900,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 718. SALARY COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENT
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 18,958,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 43,001,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 16,613,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation..... $ 1,176,000
Salary and Insurance Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 42,975,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 122,723,000
The appropriations in this section shall be expended solely for the purposes designated in this section and are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) In addition to the purposes set forth in subsections (2) and (3) of this section, appropriations in this section are provided solely for a 2.0 percent salary increase effective September 1, 1999, and a 2.0 percent salary increase effective September 1, 2000, for all classified employees, including those employees in the Washington management service, and exempt employees under the jurisdiction of the personnel resources board.
(2) The appropriations in this section are sufficient to fund a 2.0 percent salary increase effective September 1, 1999, and a 2.0 percent increase effective September 1, 2000, for general government, legislative, and judicial employees exempt from merit system rules whose salaries are not set by the commission on salaries for elected officials.
(3) The salary and insurance increase revolving account appropriation in this section includes funds sufficient to fund a 2.0 percent salary increase effective September 1, 1999, and a 2.0 percent salary increase effective September 1, 2000, for ferry workers consistent with the 1999-01 transportation appropriations act.
(4) No salary increase may be paid under this section to any person whose salary has been Y-rated pursuant to rules adopted by the personnel resources board.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 719. FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL‑-SALARY ADJUSTMENTS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000)... $ 1,014,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 2,371,000
Attorney General Salary Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 3,385,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 6,770,000
The appropriations in this section are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) The appropriations are provided solely for increases in salaries and related benefits of assistant attorneys general effective September 1, 1999, and another increase effective September 1, 2000. This funding, in combination with the provision for salary cost of living adjustments, should be sufficient to provide an overall average 10.5 percent increase to each assistant attorney general in an effort to achieve market parity in the year 2003, as determined by the 1998 compensation study of assistant attorneys general.
(2) To facilitate the transfer of moneys from dedicated funds and accounts, state agencies are directed to transfer sufficient moneys from each dedicated fund or account to the attorney general salary increase revolving account, hereby created in the state treasury, in accordance with schedules provided by the office of financial management.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 720. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-COMPENSATION ACTIONS OF PERSONNEL RESOURCES BOARD
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2000) ... $ 3,459,000
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 4,150,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 2,356,000
General Fund‑-Private/Local Appropriation..... $ 148,000
Salary and Insurance Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 9,099,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 19,212,000
The appropriations in this section shall be expended solely for the purposes designated in this section and are subject to the following conditions and limitations:
(1) Funding is provided to implement the recommendations of the Washington personnel resources board for the top eight listed priority classes consistent with the provisions of chapter 319, Laws of 1996.
(2) Implementation of the salary adjustments for the various occupational and physical therapy classes, information technology classes, medical transcriptionists classes, fisheries biometrician class, developmental disability case resource classes, psychiatric child care counselors, dieticians, and the physician three modification to include specialty classifications is effective September 1, 1999.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 721. FOR THE OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT‑-PERSONNEL RESOURCES BOARD'S SALARY SURVEY FOR STATE AND HIGHER EDUCATION EMPLOYEES
General Fund‑-State Appropriation (FY 2001)... $ 5,208,000
General Fund‑-Federal Appropriation........... $ 1,259,000
Salary and Insurance Increase Revolving Account
Appropriation............................ $ 5,966,000
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 12,433,000
The appropriations in this section shall be expended solely for the purposes designated in this section and are subject to the conditions and limitations in this section.
(1) Funding is provided in sufficient amounts to bring the current salary range to within 12 ranges of their market rate, including any cost-of-living adjustments and associated benefit costs, those state and higher education classified and exempt employees whose base salary combined with any special pay provisions, are greater than 12 ranges from their approved survey applied salary range as determined under the provisions of RCW 41.06.160.
(2) Implementation of the salary adjustments for the various classifications is effective September 1, 2000.
(3) In allocating these funds, if sufficient funding exists, the office of financial management may determine to bring to within 11 ranges of market rate, including any cost-of-living adjustments and associated benefit costs, those state and higher education classified and exempt employees whose base salary range combined with any special pay provisions, are greater than 11 ranges from their approved survey applied salary range as determined under the provisions of RCW 41.06.160.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 722. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑‑FOR THE COUNTY CRIMINAL JUSTICE ASSISTANCE ACCOUNT
Impaired Driving Safety Account Appropriation. $ 1,440,000
The appropriation in this section is subject to the following conditions and limitations: The amount appropriated in this section shall be distributed in accordance with RCW 82.14.310.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 723. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑‑FOR THE MUNICIPAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE ASSISTANCE ACCOUNT
Impaired Driving Safety Account Appropriation........... $ 960,000
The appropriation in this section is subject to the following conditions and limitations: The amount appropriated in this section shall be distributed in accordance with RCW 82.14.330.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 724. INCENTIVE SAVINGS‑‑FY 2000. The sum of one hundred million dollars or so much thereof as may be available on June 30, 2000, from the total amount of unspent fiscal year 2000 state general fund appropriations is appropriated for the purposes of RCW 43.79.460 in the manner provided in this section.
(1) Of the total appropriated amount, one-half of that portion that is attributable to incentive savings, not to exceed twenty-five million dollars, is appropriated to the savings incentive account for the purpose of improving the quality, efficiency, and effectiveness of agency services, and credited to the agency that generated the savings.
(2) The remainder of the total amount, not to exceed seventy-five million dollars, is appropriated to the education savings account.
(3) For purposes of this section, the total amount of unspent state general fund appropriations does not include the appropriations made in this section or any amounts included in across-the-board allotment reductions under RCW 43.88.110.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 725. INCENTIVE SAVINGS‑-FY 2001. The sum of one hundred million dollars or so much thereof as may be available on June 30, 2001, from the total amount of unspent fiscal year 2001 state general fund appropriations is appropriated for the purposes of RCW 43.79.460 in the manner provided in this section.
(1) Of the total appropriated amount, one-half of that portion that is attributable to incentive savings, not to exceed twenty-five million dollars, is appropriated to the savings incentive account for the purpose of improving the quality, efficiency, and effectiveness of agency services, and credited to the agency that generated the savings.
(2) The remainder of the total amount, not to exceed seventy-five million dollars, is appropriated to the education savings account.
(3) For purposes of this section, the total amount of unspent state general fund appropriations does not include the appropriations made in this section or any amounts included in across-the-board allotment reductions under RCW 43.88.110.
(End of part)
PART VIII
OTHER TRANSFERS AND APPROPRIATIONS
NEW SECTION. Sec. 801. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-STATE REVENUES FOR DISTRIBUTION
General Fund Appropriation for fire insurance
premiums distribution.................... $ 6,617,250
General Fund Appropriation for public utility
district excise tax distribution......... $ 35,876,898
General Fund Appropriation for prosecuting attorneys
salaries................................. $ 2,960,000
General Fund Appropriation for camper and travel
trailer excise tax distribution.......... $ 4,325,826
General Fund Appropriation for boating
safety/education and law enforcement
distribution............................. $ 3,616,000
Aquatic Lands Enhancement Account Appropriation
for harbor improvement revenue distribution $ 138,000
Liquor Excise Tax Account Appropriation for liquor
excise tax distribution.................. $ 25,580,000
Liquor Revolving Fund Appropriation for liquor
profits distribution..................... $ 52,269,932
Timber Tax Distribution Account Appropriation
for distribution to "Timber" counties.... $ 74,025,900
Municipal Sales and Use Tax Equalization Account
Appropriation............................ $ 103,520,000
County Sales and Use Tax Equalization Account
Appropriation............................ $ 13,147,000
Death Investigations Account Appropriation for
distribution to counties for publicly funded
autopsies................................ $ 1,375,332
County Criminal Justice Account Appropriation. $ 103,105,000
Municipal Criminal Justice Account
Appropriation............................ $ 23,678,000
County Public Health Account Appropriation.... $ 51,520,250
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 501,755,388
The total expenditures from the state treasury under the appropriations in this section shall not exceed the funds available under statutory distributions for the stated purposes.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 802. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-FEDERAL REVENUES FOR DISTRIBUTION
Forest Reserve Fund Appropriation for federal forest
reserve fund distribution................ $ 56,150,492
General Fund Appropriation for federal flood control
funds distribution....................... $ 4,000
General Fund Appropriation for federal grazing fees
distribution............................. $ 52,000
General Fund Appropriation for distribution of
federal funds to counties in conformance with
P.L. 97-99 Federal Aid to Counties........ $ 1,281,266
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 57,487,758
The total expenditures from the state treasury under the appropriations in this section shall not exceed the funds available under statutory distributions for the stated purposes.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 803. FOR THE STATE TREASURER‑-TRANSFERS
General Fund: For transfer to the Water Quality
Account.................................. $ 30,498,300
General Fund: For transfer to the Flood Control
Assistance Account....................... $ 4,000,000
State Convention and Trade Center Account: For
transfer to the State Convention and Trade
Center Operations Account................ $ 3,800,000
Water Quality Account: For transfer to the Water
Pollution Control Account. Transfers shall be
made at intervals coinciding with deposits of
federal capitalization grant money into the
account. The amounts transferred shall not
exceed the match required for each federal
deposit.................................. $ 16,350,000
State Treasurer's Service Account: For transfer to
the general fund on or before June 30, 2001, an
amount up to $13,000,000 in excess of the cash
requirements of the State Treasurer's Service
Account.................................. $ 13,000,000
Public Works Assistance Account: For transfer to
the Drinking Water Assistance Account.... $ 7,700,000
County Sales and Use Tax Equalization Account:
For transfer to the County Public Health
Account.................................. $ 2,577,664
Public Health Services Account: For transfer to
the County Public Health Account......... $ 1,056,000
State Emergency Water Projects Revolving Account:
For transfer to the State Drought Preparedness
Account.................................. $ 6,800,000
Tobacco Settlement Account: For transfer to
the Health Services Account.............. $ 168,088,595
Tobacco Settlement Account: For transfer to the
Tobacco Prevention Trust Account......... $ 155,000,000
NEW SECTION. Sec. 804. FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF RETIREMENT SYSTEMS‑-TRANSFERS
General Fund‑-State Appropriation: For transfer to
the Department of Retirement Systems Expense
Account: For the administrative expenses
of the judicial retirement system........ $ 21,550
TOTAL APPROPRIATION................. $ 21,550
(End of part)
PART IX
MISCELLANEOUS
NEW SECTION. Sec. 901. EXPENDITURE AUTHORIZATIONS. The appropriations contained in this act are maximum expenditure authorizations. Pursuant to RCW 43.88.037, moneys disbursed from the treasury on the basis of a formal loan agreement shall be recorded as loans receivable and not as expenditures for accounting purposes. To the extent that moneys are disbursed on a loan basis, the corresponding appropriation shall be reduced by the amount of loan moneys disbursed from the treasury during the 1999-01 biennium.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 902. INFORMATION SYSTEMS PROJECTS. Agencies shall comply with the following requirements regarding information systems projects when specifically directed to do so by this act.
(1) Agency planning and decisions concerning information technology shall be made in the context of its information technology portfolio. "Information technology portfolio" means a strategic management approach in which the relationships between agency missions and information technology investments can be seen and understood, such that: Technology efforts are linked to agency objectives and business plans; the impact of new investments on existing infrastructure and business functions are assessed and understood before implementation; and agency activities are consistent with the development of an integrated, nonduplicative state-wide infrastructure.
(2) Agencies shall use their information technology portfolios in making decisions on matters related to the following:
(a) System refurbishment, acquisitions, and development efforts;
(b) Setting goals and objectives for using information technology in meeting legislatively-mandated missions and business needs;
(c) Assessment of overall information processing performance, resources, and capabilities;
(d) Ensuring appropriate transfer of technological expertise for the operation of any new systems developed using external resources; and
(e) Progress toward enabling electronic access to public information.
(3) The agency shall produce a feasibility study for information technology projects at the direction of the information services board and in accordance with published department of information services policies and guidelines. At a minimum, such studies shall include a statement of: (a) The purpose or impetus for change; (b) the business value to the agency, including an examination and evaluation of benefits, advantages, and cost; (c) a comprehensive risk assessment based on the proposed project's impact on both citizens and state operations, its visibility, and the consequences of doing nothing; (d) the impact on agency and state-wide information infrastructure; and (e) the impact of the proposed enhancements to an agency's information technology capabilities on meeting service delivery demands.
(4) The agency shall produce a comprehensive management plan for each project. The plan or plans shall address all factors critical to successful completion of each project. The plan(s) shall include, but is not limited to, the following elements: A description of the problem or opportunity that the information technology project is intended to address; a statement of project objectives and assumptions; a definition and schedule of phases, tasks, and activities to be accomplished; and the estimated cost of each phase. The planning for the phased approach shall be such that the business case justification for a project needs to demonstrate how the project recovers cost or adds measurable value or positive cost benefit to the agency's business functions within each development cycle.
(5) The agency shall produce quality assurance plans for information technology projects. Consistent with the direction of the information services board and the published policies and guidelines of the department of information services, the quality assurance plan shall address all factors critical to successful completion of the project and successful integration with the agency and state information technology infrastructure. At a minimum, quality assurance plans shall provide time and budget benchmarks against which project progress can be measured, a specification of quality assurance responsibilities, and a statement of reporting requirements. The quality assurance plans shall set out the functionality requirements for each phase of a project.
(6) A copy of each feasibility study, project management plan, and quality assurance plan shall be provided to the department of information services, the office of financial management, and legislative fiscal committees. The plans and studies shall demonstrate a sound business case that justifies the investment of taxpayer funds on any new project, an assessment of the impact of the proposed system on the existing information technology infrastructure, the disciplined use of preventative measures to mitigate risk, and the leveraging of private-sector expertise as needed. Authority to expend any funds for individual information systems projects is conditioned on the approval of the relevant feasibility study, project management plan, and quality assurance plan by the department of information services and the office of financial management.
(7) Quality assurance status reports shall be submitted to the department of information services, the office of financial management, and legislative fiscal committees at intervals specified in the project's quality assurance plan.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 903. VIDEO TELECOMMUNICATIONS. The department of information services shall act as lead agency in coordinating video telecommunications services for state agencies. As lead agency, the department shall develop standards and common specifications for leased and purchased telecommunications equipment and assist state agencies in developing a video telecommunications expenditure plan. No agency may spend any portion of any appropriation in this act for new video telecommunication equipment, new video telecommunication transmission, or new video telecommunication programming, or for expanding current video telecommunication systems without first complying with chapter 43.105 RCW, including but not limited to, RCW 43.105.041(2), and without first submitting a video telecommunications expenditure plan, in accordance with the policies of the department of information services, for review and assessment by the department of information services under RCW 43.105.052. Prior to any such expenditure by a public school, a video telecommunications expenditure plan shall be approved by the superintendent of public instruction. The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall submit the plans to the department of information services in a form prescribed by the department. The office of the superintendent of public instruction shall coordinate the use of video telecommunications in public schools by providing educational information to local school districts and shall assist local school districts and educational service districts in telecommunications planning and curriculum development. Prior to any such expenditure by a public institution of postsecondary education, a telecommunications expenditure plan shall be approved by the higher education coordinating board. The higher education coordinating board shall coordinate the use of video telecommunications for instruction and instructional support in postsecondary education, including the review and approval of instructional telecommunications course offerings.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 904. EMERGENCY FUND ALLOCATIONS. Whenever allocations are made from the governor's emergency fund appropriation to an agency that is financed in whole or in part by other than general fund moneys, the director of financial management may direct the repayment of such allocated amount to the general fund from any balance in the fund or funds which finance the agency. No appropriation shall be necessary to effect such repayment.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 905. STATUTORY APPROPRIATIONS. In addition to the amounts appropriated in this act for revenues for distribution, state contributions to the law enforcement officers' and fire fighters' retirement system, and bond retirement and interest including ongoing bond registration and transfer charges, transfers, interest on registered warrants, and certificates of indebtedness, there is also appropriated such further amounts as may be required or available for these purposes under any statutory formula or under chapters 39.94 and 39.96 RCW or any proper bond covenant made under law.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 906. BOND EXPENSES. In addition to such other appropriations as are made by this act, there is hereby appropriated to the state finance committee from legally available bond proceeds in the applicable construction or building funds and accounts such amounts as are necessary to pay the expenses incurred in the issuance and sale of the subject bonds.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 907. (1) As a management tool to reduce costs and make more effective use of resources, while improving employee productivity and morale, agencies shall offer voluntary separation and/or downshifting incentives and options according to procedures and guidelines established by the department of personnel and the department of retirement systems in consultation with the office of financial management. The options may include, but are not limited to, financial incentives for: Voluntary resignation and retirement, voluntary leave-without-pay, voluntary workweek or work hour reduction, voluntary downward movement, or temporary separation for development purposes.
(2) Agency plans and offers shall be reviewed and monitored jointly by the department of personnel, the department of retirement systems, and the office of financial management.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 908. It is the intent of the legislature that agencies may implement a voluntary retirement incentive program that is cost neutral or results in cost savings provided that such a program is approved by the director of the office of financial management. Agencies participating in this authorization are required to submit a report by June 30, 2001, to the legislature and the office of financial management on the outcome of their approved retirement incentive program. The report should include information on the details of the program including resulting service delivery changes, agency efficiencies, the cost of the retirement incentive per participant, the total cost to the state, and the projected or actual net dollar savings over the 1999-01 biennium.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 909. LEGISLATIVE FACILITIES. Notwithstanding RCW 43.01.090, the house of representatives, the senate, and the permanent statutory committees shall pay expenses quarterly to the department of general administration facilities and services revolving fund for services rendered by the department for operations, maintenance, and supplies relating to buildings, structures, and facilities used by the legislature for the biennium beginning July 1, 1999.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 910. AGENCY RECOVERIES. Except as otherwise provided by law, recoveries of amounts expended pursuant to an appropriation, including but not limited to, payments for material supplied or services rendered under chapter 39.34 RCW, may be expended as part of the original appropriation of the fund to which such recoveries belong, without further or additional appropriation. Such expenditures shall be subject to conditions and procedures prescribed by the director of financial management. The director may authorize expenditure with respect to recoveries accrued but not received, in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, except that such recoveries shall not be included in revenues or expended against an appropriation for a subsequent fiscal period. This section does not apply to the repayment of loans, except for loans between state agencies.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 911. GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES. The appropriations of moneys and the designation of funds and accounts by this and other acts of the 1999 legislature shall be construed in a manner consistent with legislation enacted by the 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, and 1997 legislatures to conform state funds and accounts with generally accepted accounting principles.
Sec. 912. RCW 69.50.520 and 1998 c 346 s 909 are each amended to read as follows:
The
violence reduction and drug enforcement account is created in the state
treasury. All designated receipts from RCW 9.41.110(8), 66.24.210(4),
66.24.290(2), 69.50.505(h)(1), 82.08.150(5), 82.24.020(2), 82.64.020, and
section 420, chapter 271, Laws of 1989 shall be deposited into the account.
Expenditures from the account may be used only for funding services and
programs under chapter 271, Laws of 1989 and chapter 7, Laws of 1994 sp. sess.,
including state incarceration costs. Funds from the account may also be
appropriated to reimburse local governments for costs associated with
implementing criminal justice legislation including chapter 338, Laws of 1997.
During the 1997-1999 biennium, funds from the account may also be used for
costs associated with conducting a feasibility study of the department of
corrections' offender-based tracking system, providing grants to local
governments in accordance with chapter 338, Laws of 1997, and for
multijurisdictional narcotics task forces. After July 1, ((1999)) 2001,
at least seven and one-half percent of expenditures from the account shall be
used for providing grants to community networks under chapter 70.190 RCW by the
family policy council.
Sec. 913. RCW 72.09.050 and 1995 c 189 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The secretary shall manage the department of corrections and shall be responsible for the administration of adult correctional programs, including but not limited to the operation of all state correctional institutions or facilities used for the confinement of convicted felons. In addition, the secretary shall have broad powers to enter into agreements with any federal agency, or any other state, or any Washington state agency or local government providing for the operation of any correctional facility or program for persons convicted of felonies or misdemeanors or for juvenile offenders. Such agreements for counties with local law and justice councils shall be required in the local law and justice plan pursuant to RCW 72.09.300. The agreements may provide for joint operation or operation by the department of corrections, alone, or by any of the other governmental entities, alone. Between July 1, 1999, and June 30, 2001, the secretary may expend funds appropriated for the 1999-01 biennium to enter into agreements with any local government or private organization in any other state, providing for the operation of any correctional facility or program for persons convicted of felonies. The secretary may employ persons to aid in performing the functions and duties of the department. The secretary may delegate any of his or her functions or duties to department employees, including the authority to certify and maintain custody of records and documents on file with the department. The secretary is authorized to promulgate standards for the department of corrections within appropriation levels authorized by the legislature.
Pursuant to the authority granted in chapter 34.05 RCW, the secretary shall adopt rules providing for inmate restitution when restitution is determined appropriate as a result of a disciplinary action.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 914. If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other persons or circumstances is not affected.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 915. This act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions, and takes effect July 1, 1999.
(End of part)
ADMINISTRATOR FOR THE COURTS.................................... 4
ATTORNEY GENERAL................................................ 8
SALARY ADJUSTMENTS............................................ 110
BELATED CLAIMS................................................ 107
BOARD FOR VOLUNTEER FIRE FIGHTERS.............................. 18
BOARD OF ACCOUNTANCY........................................... 17
BOARD OF INDUSTRIAL INSURANCE APPEALS.......................... 28
BOARD OF TAX APPEALS........................................... 16
BOND EXPENSES................................................. 121
CASELOAD FORECAST COUNCIL....................................... 8
CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY.................................. 94
CITIZENS' COMMISSION ON SALARIES FOR ELECTED OFFICIALS.......... 8
COLUMBIA RIVER GORGE COMMISSION................................ 37
COMMISSION ON AFRICAN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS......................... 14
COMMISSION ON ASIAN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS............................ 7
COMMISSION ON HISPANIC AFFAIRS................................. 14
COMMISSION ON JUDICIAL CONDUCT.................................. 3
CONSERVATION COMMISSION........................................ 43
COURT OF APPEALS................................................ 3
CRIMINAL JUSTICE TRAINING COMMISSION........................... 29
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE...................................... 49
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY, TRADE, AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT........ 9
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS...................................... 33
DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY.......................................... 37
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS............................ 9
DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE................................ 43
DEPARTMENT OF GENERAL ADMINISTRATION........................... 16
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH........................................... 31
DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION SERVICES............................. 17
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES............................. 29
DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING........................................ 51
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES................................ 48
DEPARTMENT OF PERSONNEL........................................ 13
DEPARTMENT OF RETIREMENT SYSTEMS
CONTRIBUTIONS TO RETIREMENT SYSTEMS........................... 109
OPERATIONS..................................................... 15
TRANSFERS..................................................... 117
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE.......................................... 15
DEPARTMENT OF SERVICES FOR THE BLIND........................... 35
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES....................... 20
ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORTING SERVICES PROGRAM................. 27
AGING AND ADULT SERVICES PROGRAM............................... 24
ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROGRAM............................ 26
CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES PROGRAM........................... 21
DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES PROGRAM............................. 23
ECONOMIC SERVICES PROGRAM...................................... 25
JUVENILE REHABILITATION PROGRAM................................ 21
MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM..................................... 26
MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM.......................................... 22
PAYMENTS TO OTHER AGENCIES PROGRAM............................. 27
VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION PROGRAM.............................. 27
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS................................. 30
EASTERN WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY................... 102
EASTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY.................................. 94
ECONOMIC AND REVENUE FORECAST COUNCIL.......................... 13
EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY REVOLVING ACCOUNT........................ 106
EMERGENCY FUND ALLOCATIONS.................................... 121
EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DEPARTMENT................................. 35
ENVIRONMENTAL HEARINGS OFFICE.................................. 43
EXPENDITURE AUTHORIZATIONS.................................... 118
FORENSIC INVESTIGATION COUNCIL................................. 17
GOVERNOR
COMPENSATION--INSURANCE BENEFITS.............................. 107
TORT DEFENSE SERVICES......................................... 104
GOVERNOR'S OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS............................. 7
GROWTH PLANNING HEARINGS BOARD................................. 19
HIGHER EDUCATION COORDINATING BOARD
FINANCIAL AID AND GRANT PROGRAMS............................... 98
POLICY COORDINATION AND ADMINISTRATION......................... 97
HORSE RACING COMMISSION........................................ 17
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES........................................ 2
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION........................................ 28
INCENTIVE SAVINGS
FY 2000....................................................... 113
FY 2001....................................................... 113
INDETERMINATE SENTENCE REVIEW BOARD............................ 30
INFORMATION SYSTEMS PROJECTS.................................. 118
INSURANCE COMMISSIONER......................................... 17
INTERAGENCY COMMITTEE FOR OUTDOOR RECREATION................... 42
JOINT LEGISLATIVE AUDIT AND REVIEW COMMITTEE.................... 2
JOINT LEGISLATIVE SYSTEMS COMMITTEE............................. 3
LAW LIBRARY..................................................... 3
LEGISLATIVE EVALUATION AND ACCOUNTABILITY PROGRAM COMMITTEE..... 2
LEGISLATIVE FACILITIES........................................ 122
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR............................................. 5
LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD........................................... 17
MILITARY DEPARTMENT............................................ 18
MUNICIPAL RESEARCH COUNCIL..................................... 16
OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS.............................. 13
OFFICE OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT................................. 13
COMPENSATION ACTIONS OF PERSONNEL RESOURCES BOARD............. 111
EMERGENCY FUND................................................ 105
FIRE CONTINGENCY POOL......................................... 105
IMPLEMENTATION OF INCREASED MINIMUM WAGE LAW.................. 105
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE GOVERNOR'S COLLECTIVE BARGAINING BILL... 105
PERSONNEL RESOURCES BOARD'S SALARY SURVEY..................... 112
YEAR 2000 ALLOCATIONS......................................... 106
OFFICE OF MINORITY AND WOMEN'S BUSINESS ENTERPRISES............ 16
OFFICE OF PUBLIC DEFENSE........................................ 4
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR.......................................... 4
OFFICE OF THE STATE ACTUARY..................................... 3
PERSONNEL APPEALS BOARD........................................ 15
PUBLIC DISCLOSURE COMMISSION.................................... 5
PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS COMMISSION......................... 19
REDISTRICTING COMMISSION........................................ 7
SALARY COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENT.............................. 109
SECRETARY OF STATE.............................................. 5
SENATE.......................................................... 2
SENTENCING GUIDELINES COMMISSION............................... 35
STATE AUDITOR................................................... 7
STATE BOARD FOR COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGES............... 88
STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION....................................... 85
STATE CONVENTION AND TRADE CENTER.............................. 19
STATE HEALTH CARE AUTHORITY.................................... 28
STATE INVESTMENT BOARD......................................... 15
STATE PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION.......................... 41
STATE PATROL................................................... 51
STATE SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND.................................... 102
STATE SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF..................................... 102
STATE TREASURER................................................. 7
BOND RETIREMENT AND INTEREST............................. 103, 104
COUNTY CRIMINAL JUSTICE ASSISTANCE ACCOUNT.................... 112
FEDERAL REVENUES FOR DISTRIBUTION............................. 116
MUNICIPAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE ASSISTANCE ACCOUNT................. 112
STATE REVENUES FOR DISTRIBUTION............................... 115
TRANSFERS..................................................... 116
STATUTE LAW COMMITTEE........................................... 3
STATUTORY APPROPRIATIONS...................................... 121
SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
BASIC EDUCATION EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION.......................... 65
EDUCATION REFORM PROGRAMS...................................... 78
EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DISTRICTS.................................. 76
ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT ACT................ 77
GENERAL APPORTIONMENT (BASIC EDUCATION)........................ 59
INSTITUTIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS............................... 77
LEARNING ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.................................... 81
LOCAL EFFORT ASSISTANCE........................................ 77
LOCAL ENHANCEMENT FUNDS........................................ 83
PROGRAMS FOR HIGHLY CAPABLE STUDENTS........................... 78
PUPIL TRANSPORTATION........................................... 71
SCHOOL EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION ADJUSTMENTS....................... 69
SCHOOL FOOD SERVICE PROGRAMS................................... 72
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS..................................... 72
STATE ADMINISTRATION........................................... 53
TRAFFIC SAFETY EDUCATION PROGRAMS.............................. 76
TRANSITIONAL BILINGUAL PROGRAMS................................ 81
SUPREME COURT................................................... 3
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE.................................... 95
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON....................................... 90
UTILITIES AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION........................ 18
VIDEO TELECOMMUNICATIONS...................................... 120
VIOLENCE REDUCTION AND DRUG ENFORCEMENT ACCOUNT............... 106
WASHINGTON POLLUTION LIABILITY REINSURANCE PROGRAM............. 50
WASHINGTON STATE ARTS COMMISSION.............................. 101
WASHINGTON STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY........................... 101
WASHINGTON STATE LIBRARY...................................... 101
WASHINGTON STATE LOTTERY....................................... 14
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY.................................... 92
WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY.................................. 96
WILDLIFE ACCOUNT.............................................. 106
WORK FORCE TRAINING AND EDUCATION COORDINATING BOARD.......... 101
--- END ---