Z-0901.1 _______________________________________________
HOUSE BILL 2399
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 56th Legislature 2000 Regular Session
By Representatives Constantine, Esser, Lantz, Barlean, Cairnes and Pflug; by request of Office of the Code Reviser
Read first time 01/12/2000. Referred to Committee on Judiciary.
AN ACT Relating to technical corrections to various natural resource laws; amending RCW 75.08.011, 75.08.206, 75.08.208, 75.08.245, 75.10.160, 75.12.140, 75.20.100, 75.20.103, 75.28.042, 75.28.340, 75.28.700, 75.28.730, 75.28.760, 75.30.050, 75.30.065, 75.30.250, 75.30.290, 75.30.320, 75.30.370, 75.30.420, 75.46.010, 75.46.110, 75.46.160, 75.46.170, 75.46.200, 75.50.110, 75.52.020, 75.52.050, 75.58.010, 75.58.030, 76.01.060, 76.06.020, 76.09.040, 76.09.055, 76.09.065, 76.09.140, 76.09.150, 76.12.090, 76.12.100, 76.12.140, 76.13.010, 76.13.110, 76.13.120, 76.14.010, 76.15.010, 76.36.010, 76.42.020, 76.48.020, 76.48.085, 77.08.010, 77.12.101, 77.12.204, 77.12.250, 77.12.315, 77.12.470, 77.12.480, 77.12.610, 77.12.620, 77.12.630, 77.15.070, 77.15.160, 77.15.400, 77.15.480, 77.15.700, 77.15.730, 77.16.340, 77.16.360, 77.18.010, 77.21.020, 77.21.070, 77.32.014, 77.32.380, 77.44.030, 78.16.070, 78.44.020, 78.44.031, 79.08.275, 79.24.570, 79.71.090, 79.71.100, 79.92.070, 79.92.080, 79.94.070, 79.96.110, 79A.05.155, 79A.05.200, 79A.05.205, 79A.05.250, 79A.05.255, 79A.05.265, 79A.05.300, 79A.05.315, 79A.05.320, 79A.05.405, 79A.05.420, 79A.05.500, 79A.05.520, 79A.05.535, 79A.05.540, 79A.05.610, 79A.05.615, 79A.05.620, 79A.05.625, 79A.05.630, 79A.05.635, 79A.05.640, 79A.05.645, 79A.05.650, 79A.05.655, 79A.05.665, 79A.05.685, 79A.05.693, 79A.05.695, 79A.05.735, 79A.05.750, 79A.05.765, 79A.05.780, 79A.05.793, 79A.15.020, 79A.15.030, 79A.15.060, 79A.15.070, 79A.25.020, 79A.25.030, 79A.25.040, 79A.25.060, 79A.25.070, 79A.25.080, 79A.25.100, 79A.25.180, 79A.25.200, 79A.25.240, 79A.25.250, 79A.25.800, 79A.25.820, 79A.25.830, 79A.30.010, 79A.30.020, 79A.30.030, 79A.35.030, 79A.40.020, 79A.40.030, 79A.40.060, 79A.40.080, 79A.45.040, 79A.60.010, 79A.60.030, 79A.60.050, 79A.60.060, 79A.60.070, 79A.60.130, 79A.60.160, 79A.60.170, 79A.60.180, 79A.60.190, 79A.60.200, 79A.60.300, 79A.60.400, 79A.60.410, 79A.60.420, 79A.60.440, 79A.60.470, 79A.60.480, 79A.60.485, 79A.60.490, 79A.60.540, 79A.60.590, 79A.60.620, 79A.65.010, 79A.65.030, and 79A.65.040; and repealing RCW 75.08.274, 75.25.090, 75.28.012, 76.12.200, 77.16.290, and 77.32.060.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1. RCW 75.08.011 and 1998 c 190 s 70 are each amended to read as follows:
As used in this title or Title 77 RCW or rules adopted under those titles, unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
(1)
(("Commission" means the fish and wildlife commission.
(2)
"Director" means the director of fish and wildlife.
(3)
"Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(4)
"Person" means an individual or a public or private entity or
organization. The term "person" includes local, state, and federal
government agencies, and all business organizations, including corporations and
partnerships.
(5)
"Fish and wildlife officer" means a person appointed and commissioned
by the commission, with authority to enforce this title, rules of the
department, and other statutes as prescribed by the legislature. Fish and
wildlife officers are peace officers. Fish and wildlife officer includes a
person commissioned before June 11, 1998, as a fisheries patrol officer.
(6)
"Ex officio fish and wildlife officer" means a commissioned officer
of a municipal, county, state, or federal agency having as its primary function
the enforcement of criminal laws in general, while the officer is in the
appropriate jurisdiction. The term "ex officio fish and wildlife
officer" also includes special agents of the national marine fisheries
service, United States fish and wildlife special agents, state parks
commissioned officers, department of natural resources enforcement officers,
and United States forest service officers, while the agents and officers are
within their respective jurisdictions.
(7)
"To fish," "to harvest," and "to take" and their
derivatives mean an effort to kill, injure, harass, or catch fish or shellfish.
(8)
"State waters" means all marine waters and fresh waters within
ordinary high water lines and within the territorial boundaries of the state.
(9)
"Offshore waters" means marine waters of the Pacific Ocean outside
the territorial boundaries of the state, including the marine waters of other
states and countries.
(10)
"Concurrent waters of the Columbia river" means those waters of the
Columbia river that coincide with the Washington-Oregon state boundary.
(11)
"Resident" means a person who has maintained a permanent place of
abode within the state for at least ninety days immediately preceding an
application for a license, has established by formal evidence an intent to
continue residing within the state, and who is not licensed to hunt or fish as
a resident in another state.
(12)
"Nonresident" means a person who has not fulfilled the qualifications
of a resident.
(13)
"Food fish" means those species of the classes Osteichthyes, Agnatha,
and Chondrichthyes that have been classified and that shall not be fished for
except as authorized by rule of the commission. The term "food fish"
includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of food fish species.
(14)
"Shellfish" means those species of marine and freshwater
invertebrates that have been classified and that shall not be taken except as
authorized by rule of the commission. The term "shellfish" includes
all stages of development and the bodily parts of shellfish species.
(15)
"Salmon" means all species of the genus Oncorhynchus, except those
classified as game fish in Title 77 RCW, and includes:
Scientific
Name Common Name
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha Chinook salmon
Oncorhynchus kisutch Coho salmon
Oncorhynchus keta Chum salmon
Oncorhynchus gorbuscha Pink salmon
Oncorhynchus nerka Sockeye salmon
(16)
"Commercial" means related to or connected with buying, selling, or
bartering. Fishing for food fish or shellfish with gear unlawful for fishing
for personal use, or possessing food fish or shellfish in excess of the limits
permitted for personal use are commercial activities.
(17)
"To process" and its derivatives mean preparing or preserving food
fish or shellfish.
(18)
"Personal use" means for the private use of the individual taking the
food fish or shellfish and not for sale or barter.
(19)))
"Angling gear" means a line attached to a rod and reel capable of
being held in hand while landing the fish or a hand-held line operated without
rod or reel.
(((20)))
(2) "Commercial" means related to or connected with buying,
selling, or bartering. Fishing for food fish or shellfish with gear unlawful
for fishing for personal use, or possessing food fish or shellfish in excess of
the limits permitted for personal use are commercial activities.
(3) "Commission" means the fish and wildlife commission.
(4) "Concurrent waters of the Columbia river" means those waters of the Columbia river that coincide with the Washington-Oregon state boundary.
(5) "Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(6) "Director" means the director of fish and wildlife.
(7) "Ex officio fish and wildlife officer" means a commissioned officer of a municipal, county, state, or federal agency having as its primary function the enforcement of criminal laws in general, while the officer is in the appropriate jurisdiction. The term "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" also includes special agents of the national marine fisheries service, United States fish and wildlife special agents, state parks commissioned officers, department of natural resources enforcement officers, and United States forest service officers, while the agents and officers are within their respective jurisdictions.
(8) "Fish" includes all species classified as game fish or food fish by statute or rule, as well as all fin fish not currently classified as food fish or game fish if such species exist in state waters. The term "fish" includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of fish species.
(9) "Fish and wildlife officer" means a person appointed and commissioned by the commission, with authority to enforce this title, rules of the department, and other statutes as prescribed by the legislature. Fish and wildlife officers are peace officers. Fish and wildlife officer includes a person commissioned before June 11, 1998, as a fisheries patrol officer.
(10) "Fishery" means the taking of one or more particular species of food fish or shellfish with particular gear in a particular geographical area.
(11) "Food fish" means those species of the classes Osteichthyes, Agnatha, and Chondrichthyes that have been classified and that shall not be fished for except as authorized by rule of the commission. The term "food fish" includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of food fish species.
(12) "Limited-entry license" means a license subject to a license limitation program established in chapter 75.30 RCW.
(13) "Nonresident" means a person who has not fulfilled the qualifications of a resident.
(14) "Offshore waters" means marine waters of the Pacific Ocean outside the territorial boundaries of the state, including the marine waters of other states and countries.
(15) "Open season" means those times, manners of taking, and places or waters established by rule of the commission for the lawful fishing, taking, or possession of food fish or shellfish. "Open season" includes the first and last days of the established time.
(((21)
"Fishery" means the taking of one or more particular species of food
fish or shellfish with particular gear in a particular geographical area.
(22)
"Limited-entry license" means a license subject to a license
limitation program established in chapter 75.30 RCW.
(23)
"Seaweed" means marine aquatic plant species that are dependent upon
the marine aquatic or tidal environment, and exist in either an attached or free
floating form, and includes but is not limited to marine aquatic plants in the
classes Chlorophyta, Phaeophyta, and Rhodophyta.
(24)
"Fish" includes all species classified as game fish or food fish by
statute or rule, as well as all fin fish not currently classified as food fish
or game fish if such species exist in state waters. The term "fish"
includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of fish species.))
(16) "Person" means an individual or a public or private entity or organization. The term "person" includes local, state, and federal government agencies, and all business organizations, including corporations and partnerships.
(17) "Personal use" means for the private use of the individual taking the food fish or shellfish and not for sale or barter.
(18) "Resident" means a person who has maintained a permanent place of abode within the state for at least ninety days immediately preceding an application for a license, has established by formal evidence an intent to continue residing within the state, and who is not licensed to hunt or fish as a resident in another state.
(19) "Salmon" means all species of the genus Oncorhynchus, except those classified as game fish in Title 77 RCW, and includes:
Scientific Name Common Name
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha Chinook salmon
Oncorhynchus kisutch Coho salmon
Oncorhynchus keta Chum salmon
Oncorhynchus gorbuscha Pink salmon
Oncorhynchus nerka Sockeye salmon
(20) "Seaweed" means marine aquatic plant species that are dependent upon the marine aquatic or tidal environment, and exist in either an attached or free floating form, and includes but is not limited to marine aquatic plants in the classes Chlorophyta, Phaeophyta, and Rhodophyta.
(21) "Shellfish" means those species of marine and freshwater invertebrates that have been classified and that shall not be taken except as authorized by rule of the commission. The term "shellfish" includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of shellfish species.
(22) "State waters" means all marine waters and fresh waters within ordinary high water lines and within the territorial boundaries of the state.
(23) "To fish," "to harvest," and "to take" and their derivatives mean an effort to kill, injure, harass, or catch fish or shellfish.
(24) "To process" and its derivatives mean preparing or preserving food fish or shellfish.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Puts twenty-four definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 2. RCW 75.08.206 and 1983 1st ex.s. c 46 s 20 are each amended to read as follows:
The
director shall provide compensation insurance for ((fisheries patrol)) fish
and wildlife officers, insuring these employees against injury or death in
the performance of enforcement duties not covered under the workers'
compensation act of the state. The beneficiaries and the compensation and
benefits under the compensation insurance shall be the same as provided in
chapter 51.32 RCW, and the compensation insurance also shall provide for
medical aid and hospitalization to the extent and amount as provided in RCW
51.36.010 and 51.36.020.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
"Fisheries patrol officers" were redesignated "fish and wildlife officers" by 1998 c 190 s 70.
Sec. 3. RCW 75.08.208 and 1983 1st ex.s. c 46 s 22 are each amended to read as follows:
The
director shall relieve from active duty ((fisheries patrol)) fish and
wildlife officers who are injured in the performance of their official
duties to such an extent as to be incapable of active service. While relieved
from active duty, the employees shall receive one-half of their salary less any
compensation received through the provisions of RCW 41.40.200, 41.40.220, and
75.08.206.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
"Fisheries patrol officers" were redesignated "fish and wildlife officers" by 1998 c 190 s 70.
Sec. 4. RCW 75.08.245 and 1988 c 115 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The department may supply, at a reasonable charge, surplus salmon eggs to a person for use in the cultivation of salmon. The department shall not intentionally create a surplus of salmon to provide eggs for sale. The department shall only sell salmon eggs from stocks that are not suitable for salmon population rehabilitation or enhancement in state waters in Washington. All sales or transfers shall be consistent with the department's egg transfer and aquaculture disease control regulations as now existing or hereafter amended. Prior to department determination that eggs of a salmon stock are surplus and available for sale, the department shall assess the productivity of each watershed that is suitable for receiving eggs.
((The
salmon enhancement advisory council, created in RCW 75.48.120, shall consider
egg sales at each meeting.))
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.48.120 expired December 31, 1989.
Sec. 5. RCW 75.10.160 and 1989 c 393 s 16 are each amended to read as follows:
((Fisheries
patrol)) Fish and wildlife officers are authorized to enforce all
provisions of chapter 88.02 RCW and any rules adopted thereunder, and the
provisions of RCW ((43.51.400)) 79A.05.310 and any rules adopted
thereunder.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
"Fisheries patrol officers" were redesignated "fish and wildlife officers" by 1998 c 190 s 70.
Sec. 6. RCW 75.12.140 and 1998 c 190 s 79 are each amended to read as follows:
The commission shall not authorize use of reef net fishing gear except in the reef net areas described in this section.
(1) Point Roberts reef net fishing area includes those waters within 250 feet on each side of a line projected 129E true from a point at longitude 123E 01' 15" W. latitude 48E 58' 38" N. to a point one mile distant, as such description is shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6300, published September, 1941, in Washington, D.C., eleventh edition.
(2)
Cherry Point reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside the
10-fathom line between lines projected 205E true
from points on the mainland at longitude 122E 44'
54" latitude 48E 51' 48" and longitude
122E 44' 18" latitude 48E 51'
33", ((a [as])) as such descriptions are shown upon the
United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March,
1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(3) Lummi Island reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from Village Point 208E true to a point 900 yards distant, thence 129E true to the point of intersection with a line projected 259E true from the shore of Lummi Island 122E 40' 42" latitude 48E 41' 32", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition, revised 11-25-57, save and except that there shall be excluded therefrom all waters lying inside of a line projected 259E true from a point at 122E 40' 42" latitude 48E 41' 32" to a point 300 yards distant from high tide, thence in a northerly direction to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey reference mark number 2, 1941-1950, located on that point on Lummi Island known as Lovers Point, as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map number 6380 as aforesaid. The term "Village Point" as used herein shall be construed to mean a point of location on Village Point, Lummi Island, at the mean high tide line on a true bearing of 43E 53' a distance of 457 feet to the center of the chimney of a wood frame house on the east side of the county road. Said chimney and house being described as Village Point Chimney on page 612 of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey list of geographic positions No. G-5455, Rosario Strait.
(4) Sinclair Island reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from the northern point of Sinclair Island to Boulder reef, thence 200E true to the northwesterly point of Sinclair Island, as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(5) Flat Point reef net fishing area includes those waters within a radius of 175 feet of a point off Lopez Island located at longitude 122E 55' 24" latitude 48E 32' 33", as such description is shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(6) Lopez Island reef net fishing area includes those waters within 400 yards of shore between lines projected true west from points on the shore of Lopez Island at longitude 122E 55' 04" latitude 48E 31' 59" and longitude 122E 55' 54" latitude 48E 30' 55", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(7) Iceberg Point reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from Davis Point on Lopez Island to the west point of Long Island, thence to the southern point of Hall Island, thence to the eastern point at the entrance to Jones Bay, and thence to the southern point at the entrance to Mackaye Harbor on Lopez Island; and those waters inland and inside a line projected 320E from Iceberg Point light on Lopez Island, a distance of 400 feet, thence easterly to the point on Lopez Island at longitude 122E 53' 00" latitude 48E 25' 39", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(8) Aleck Bay reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from the southwestern point at the entrance to Aleck Bay on Lopez Island at longitude 122E 51' 11" latitude 48E 25' 14" southeasterly 800 yards to the submerged rock shown on U.S.G.S. map number 6380, thence northerly to the cove on Lopez Island at longitude 122E 50' 49" latitude 48E 25' 42", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(9) Shaw Island reef net fishing area number 1 includes those waters within 300 yards of shore between lines projected true south from points on Shaw Island at longitude 122E 56' 14" latitude 48E 33' 28" and longitude 122E 57' 29" latitude 48E 32' 58", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(10) Shaw Island reef net fishing area number 2 includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from Point George on Shaw Island to the westerly point of Neck Point on Shaw Island, as such description is shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(11) Stuart Island reef net fishing area number 1 includes those waters within 600 feet of the shore of Stuart Island between lines projected true east from points at longitude 123E 10' 47" latitude 48E 39' 47" and longitude 123E 10' 47" latitude 48E 39' 33", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(12) Stuart Island reef net fishing area number 2 includes those waters within 250 feet of Gossip Island, also known as Happy Island, as such description is shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(13) Johns Island reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected from the eastern point of Johns Island to the northwestern point of Little Cactus Island, thence northwesterly to a point on Johns Island at longitude 123E 09' 24" latitude 48E 39' 59", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(14) Battleship Island reef net fishing area includes those waters lying within 350 feet of Battleship Island, as such description is shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(15) Open Bay reef net fishing area includes those waters lying within 150 feet of shore between lines projected true east from a point on Henry Island at longitude 123E 11' 34 1/2" latitude 48E 35' 27 1/2" at a point 250 feet south, as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(16) Mitchell Reef net fishing area includes those waters within a line beginning at the rock shown on U.S.G.S. map number 6380 at longitude 123E 10' 56" latitude 48E 34' 49 1/2", and projected 50 feet northwesterly, thence southwesterly 250 feet, thence southeasterly 300 feet, thence northeasterly 250 feet, thence to the point of beginning, as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(17) Smugglers Cove reef fishing area includes those waters within 200 feet of shore between lines projected true west from points on the shore of San Juan Island at longitude 123E 10' 29" latitude 48E 33' 50" and longitude 123E 10' 31" latitude 48E 33' 45", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(18) Andrews Bay reef net fishing area includes those waters lying within 300 feet of the shore of San Juan Island between a line projected true south from a point at the northern entrance of Andrews Bay at longitude 123E 09' 53 1/2" latitude 48E 33' 00" and the cable crossing sign in Andrews Bay, at longitude 123E 09' 45" latitude 48E 33' 04", as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
(19) Orcas Island reef net fishing area includes those waters inland and inside a line projected true west a distance of 1,000 yards from the shore of Orcas Island at longitude 122E 57' 40" latitude 48E 41' 06" thence northeasterly to a point 500 feet true west of Point Doughty, then true east to Point Doughty, as such descriptions are shown upon the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey map numbered 6380, published March, 1947, in Washington, D.C., eighth edition.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest grammatical error.
Sec. 7. RCW 75.20.100 and 1998 c 190 s 87 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) In the event that any person or government agency desires to construct any form of hydraulic project or perform other work that will use, divert, obstruct, or change the natural flow or bed of any of the salt or fresh waters of the state, such person or government agency shall, before commencing construction or work thereon and to ensure the proper protection of fish life, secure the approval of the department as to the adequacy of the means proposed for the protection of fish life. This approval shall not be unreasonably withheld.
(2)(a)
((Except as provided in RCW 75.20.1001,)) The department shall
grant or deny approval of a standard permit within forty-five calendar days of
the receipt of a complete application and notice of compliance with any
applicable requirements of the state environmental policy act, made in the
manner prescribed in this section.
(b) The applicant may document receipt of application by filing in person or by registered mail. A complete application for approval shall contain general plans for the overall project, complete plans and specifications of the proposed construction or work within the mean higher high water line in salt water or within the ordinary high water line in fresh water, and complete plans and specifications for the proper protection of fish life.
(c) The forty-five day requirement shall be suspended if:
(i) After ten working days of receipt of the application, the applicant remains unavailable or unable to arrange for a timely field evaluation of the proposed project;
(ii) The site is physically inaccessible for inspection; or
(iii) The applicant requests delay. Immediately upon determination that the forty-five day period is suspended, the department shall notify the applicant in writing of the reasons for the delay.
(d) For purposes of this section, "standard permit" means a written permit issued by the department when the conditions under subsections (3) and (5)(b) of this section are not met.
(3)(a) The department may issue an expedited written permit in those instances where normal permit processing would result in significant hardship for the applicant or unacceptable damage to the environment. In cases of imminent danger, the department shall issue an expedited written permit, upon request, for work to repair existing structures, move obstructions, restore banks, protect property, or protect fish resources. Expedited permit requests require a complete written application as provided in subsection (2)(b) of this section and shall be issued within fifteen calendar days of the receipt of a complete written application. Approval of an expedited permit is valid for up to sixty days from the date of issuance.
(b) For the purposes of this subsection, "imminent danger" means a threat by weather, water flow, or other natural conditions that is likely to occur within sixty days of a request for a permit application.
(c) The department may not require the provisions of the state environmental policy act, chapter 43.21C RCW, to be met as a condition of issuing a permit under this subsection.
(d) The department or the county legislative authority may determine if an imminent danger exists. The county legislative authority shall notify the department, in writing, if it determines that an imminent danger exists.
(4) Approval of a standard permit is valid for a period of up to five years from date of issuance. The permittee must demonstrate substantial progress on construction of that portion of the project relating to the approval within two years of the date of issuance. If the department denies approval, the department shall provide the applicant, in writing, a statement of the specific reasons why and how the proposed project would adversely affect fish life. Protection of fish life shall be the only ground upon which approval may be denied or conditioned. Chapter 34.05 RCW applies to any denial of project approval, conditional approval, or requirements for project modification upon which approval may be contingent.
(5)(a) In case of an emergency arising from weather or stream flow conditions or other natural conditions, the department, through its authorized representatives, shall issue immediately, upon request, oral approval for removing any obstructions, repairing existing structures, restoring stream banks, or to protect property threatened by the stream or a change in the stream flow without the necessity of obtaining a written approval prior to commencing work. Conditions of an oral approval to protect fish life shall be established by the department and reduced to writing within thirty days and complied with as provided for in this section. Oral approval shall be granted immediately, upon request, for a stream crossing during an emergency situation.
(b) For purposes of this section and RCW 75.20.103, "emergency" means an immediate threat to life, the public, property, or of environmental degradation.
(c) The department or the county legislative authority may declare and continue an emergency when one or more of the criteria under (b) of this subsection are met. The county legislative authority shall immediately notify the department if it declares an emergency under this subsection.
(6) The department shall, at the request of a county, develop five-year maintenance approval agreements, consistent with comprehensive flood control management plans adopted under the authority of RCW 86.12.200, or other watershed plan approved by a county legislative authority, to allow for work on public and private property for bank stabilization, bridge repair, removal of sand bars and debris, channel maintenance, and other flood damage repair and reduction activity under agreed-upon conditions and times without obtaining permits for specific projects.
(7) This section shall not apply to the construction of any form of hydraulic project or other work which diverts water for agricultural irrigation or stock watering purposes authorized under or recognized as being valid by the state's water codes, or when such hydraulic project or other work is associated with streambank stabilization to protect farm and agricultural land as defined in RCW 84.34.020. These irrigation or stock watering diversion and streambank stabilization projects shall be governed by RCW 75.20.103.
A landscape management plan approved by the department and the department of natural resources under RCW 76.09.350(2), shall serve as a hydraulic project approval for the life of the plan if fish are selected as one of the public resources for coverage under such a plan.
(8) For the purposes of this section and RCW 75.20.103, "bed" means the land below the ordinary high water lines of state waters. This definition does not include irrigation ditches, canals, storm water run-off devices, or other artificial watercourses except where they exist in a natural watercourse that has been altered by man.
(9) The phrase "to construct any form of hydraulic project or perform other work" does not include the act of driving across an established ford. Driving across streams or on wetted stream beds at areas other than established fords requires approval. Work within the ordinary high water line of state waters to construct or repair a ford or crossing requires approval.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.20.1001 was repealed by 1999 c 89 s 1.
Sec. 8. RCW 75.20.103 and 1998 c 190 s 88 are each amended to read as follows:
In
the event that any person or government agency desires to construct any form of
hydraulic project or other work that diverts water for agricultural irrigation
or stock watering purposes, or when such hydraulic project or other work is
associated with streambank stabilization to protect farm and agricultural land
as defined in RCW 84.34.020, and when such diversion or streambank
stabilization will use, divert, obstruct, or change the natural flow or bed of
any river or stream or will utilize any waters of the state or materials from
the stream beds, the person or government agency shall, before commencing
construction or work thereon and to ensure the proper protection of fish life,
secure a written approval from the department as to the adequacy of the means
proposed for the protection of fish life. This approval shall not be
unreasonably withheld. ((Except as provided in RCW 75.20.1001,)) The
department shall grant or deny the approval within forty-five calendar days of
the receipt of a complete application and notice of compliance with any
applicable requirements of the state environmental policy act, made in the
manner prescribed in this section. The applicant may document receipt of
application by filing in person or by registered mail. A complete application
for an approval shall contain general plans for the overall project, complete
plans and specifications of the proposed construction or work within ordinary
high water line, and complete plans and specifications for the proper
protection of fish life. The forty-five day requirement shall be suspended if
(1) after ten working days of receipt of the application, the applicant remains
unavailable or unable to arrange for a timely field evaluation of the proposed
project; (2) the site is physically inaccessible for inspection; or (3) the
applicant requests delay.
Immediately upon determination that the forty-five day period is suspended, the department shall notify the applicant in writing of the reasons for the delay.
An approval shall remain in effect without need for periodic renewal for projects that divert water for agricultural irrigation or stock watering purposes and that involve seasonal construction or other work. Approval for streambank stabilization projects shall remain in effect without need for periodic renewal if the problem causing the need for the streambank stabilization occurs on an annual or more frequent basis. The permittee must notify the appropriate agency before commencing the construction or other work within the area covered by the approval.
The permittee must demonstrate substantial progress on construction of that portion of the project relating to the approval within two years of the date of issuance. If the department denies approval, the department shall provide the applicant, in writing, a statement of the specific reasons why and how the proposed project would adversely affect fish life. Protection of fish life shall be the only ground upon which approval may be denied or conditioned. Issuance, denial, conditioning, or modification shall be appealable to the hydraulic appeals board established in RCW 43.21B.005 within thirty days of the notice of decision. The burden shall be upon the department to show that the denial or conditioning of an approval is solely aimed at the protection of fish life.
The department may, after consultation with the permittee, modify an approval due to changed conditions. The modifications shall become effective unless appealed to the hydraulic appeals board within thirty days from the notice of the proposed modification. The burden is on the department to show that changed conditions warrant the modification in order to protect fish life.
A permittee may request modification of an approval due to changed conditions. The request shall be processed within forty-five calendar days of receipt of the written request. A decision by the department may be appealed to the hydraulic appeals board within thirty days of the notice of the decision. The burden is on the permittee to show that changed conditions warrant the requested modification and that such modification will not impair fish life.
In case of an emergency arising from weather or stream flow conditions or other natural conditions, the department, through its authorized representatives, shall issue immediately upon request oral approval for removing any obstructions, repairing existing structures, restoring stream banks, or to protect property threatened by the stream or a change in the stream flow without the necessity of obtaining a written approval prior to commencing work. Conditions of an oral approval shall be reduced to writing within thirty days and complied with as provided for in this section.
For purposes of this chapter, "streambank stabilization" shall include but not be limited to log and debris removal, bank protection (including riprap, jetties, and groins), gravel removal and erosion control.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.20.1001 was repealed by 1999 c 89 s 1.
Sec. 9. RCW 75.28.042 and 1997 c 58 s 882 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department shall immediately suspend the license of a person who has been certified pursuant to RCW 74.20A.320 by the department of social and health services as a person who is not in compliance with a support order or a residential or visitation order.
(2)
A listing on the department of licensing's data base that an individual's
license is currently suspended pursuant to RCW 46.20.291(((7))) (8)
shall be prima facie evidence that the individual is in noncompliance with a
support order or residential or visitation order. Presentation of a written
release issued by the department of social and health services or a court
stating that the person is in compliance with an order shall serve as proof of
compliance.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) The reference to section 402 of this act is erroneous. Section 802 of the act, codified as RCW 74.20A.320, was apparently intended.
(2) RCW 46.20.291 was amended by 1998 c 165 s 12, changing subsection (7) to subsection (8).
Sec. 10. RCW 75.28.340 and 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 46 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) A fish buyer's license is required of and shall be carried by each individual engaged by a wholesale fish dealer to purchase food fish or shellfish from a licensed commercial fisherman. A fish buyer may represent only one wholesale fish dealer.
(2)
((Unless adjusted by the director pursuant to the director's authority
granted in RCW 75.28.065,)) The annual fee for a fish buyer's
license is ninety-five dollars.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.28.065 was repealed by 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 31, effective January 1, 1994.
Sec. 11. RCW 75.28.700 and 1989 c 316 s 20 are each amended to read as follows:
All
revenues generated from the license fee increases in sections 1 through 14 and
16 through 19 ((of this act)), chapter 316, Laws of 1989 shall be
deposited in the general fund and shall be appropriated for the food fish and
shellfish enhancement programs.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
"Sections 1 through 14 and 16 through 19 of this act" consist of the enactment of RCW 75.28.065 and the 1989 c 316 amendments to RCW 75.28.035, 75.28.095, 75.28.110, 75.28.113, 75.28.116, 75.28.120, 75.28.125, 75.28.130, 75.28.134, 75.28.140, 75.28.255, 75.28.280, 75.28.287, 75.28.290, 75.28.300, 75.28.340, and 75.28.690.
Sec. 12. RCW 75.28.730 and 1993 c 376 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
An
ocean pink shrimp delivery license is required to deliver ocean pink shrimp
taken in offshore waters and delivered to a port in the state. ((Unless
adjusted by the director pursuant to the director's authority granted in RCW
75.28.065,)) The annual license fee is one hundred fifty dollars for
residents and three hundred dollars for nonresidents. Ocean pink shrimp
delivery licenses are transferable.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.28.065 was repealed by 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 31, effective January 1, 1994.
Sec. 13. RCW 75.28.760 and 1993 sp.s. c 4 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
By
July 1, 1994, the department((s of fisheries)) of fish and
wildlife ((jointly)) with the appropriate Indian tribes, shall ((each))
establish a wild salmonid policy. The policy shall ensure that department
actions and programs are consistent with the goals of rebuilding wild stock
populations to levels that permit commercial and recreational fishing
opportunities.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Powers, duties, and functions of the department of fisheries and the department of wildlife were transferred to the department of fish and wildlife by 1993 sp.s. c 2, effective July 1, 1994.
Sec. 14. RCW 75.30.050 and 1999 c 151 s 1601 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The director shall appoint three-member advisory review boards to hear cases as provided in RCW 75.30.060. Members shall be from:
(a)
The commercial sea urchin and sea cucumber fishery in cases involving sea
urchin and sea cucumber dive fishery licenses; (([and])) and
(b) The commercial coastal crab fishery in cases involving Dungeness crab-coastal fishery licenses and Dungeness crab-coastal class B fishery licenses. The members shall include one person from the commercial crab processors, one Dungeness crab-coastal fishery license holder, and one citizen representative of a coastal community.
(2) Members shall serve at the discretion of the director and shall be reimbursed for travel expenses as provided in RCW 43.03.050, 43.03.060, and 43.03.065.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects an apparent drafting error.
Sec. 15. RCW 75.30.065 and 1993 c 340 s 28 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) After May 28, 1977, the director shall issue no new salmon charter licenses. A person may renew an existing salmon charter license only if the person held the license sought to be renewed during the previous year or acquired the license by transfer from someone who held it during the previous year, and if the person has not subsequently transferred the license to another person.
(2) Salmon charter licenses may be renewed each year. A salmon charter license which is not renewed each year shall not be renewed further.
(3)
((Subject to the restrictions in section 11 of this act,)) Salmon
charter licenses are transferrable from one license holder to another.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Section 11 of this act [1993 c 340 s 11] was repealed by 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 47, effective January 1, 1994.
Sec. 16. RCW 75.30.250 and 1999 c 126 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) A sea cucumber dive fishery license is required to take sea cucumbers for commercial purposes. A sea cucumber dive fishery license authorizes the use of only one diver in the water at any time during sea cucumber harvest operations. If the same vessel has been designated on two sea cucumber dive fishery licenses, two divers may be in the water. A natural person may not hold more than two sea cucumber dive fishery licenses.
(2) Except as provided in subsection (6) of this section, the director shall issue no new sea cucumber dive fishery licenses. For licenses issued for the year 2000 and thereafter, the director shall renew existing licenses only to a natural person who held the license at the end of the previous year. If a sea cucumber dive fishery license is not held by a natural person as of December 31, 1999, it is not renewable. However, if the license is not held because of revocation or suspension of licensing privileges, the director shall renew the license in the name of a natural person at the end of the revocation or suspension if the license holder applies for renewal of the license before the end of the year in which the revocation or suspension ends.
(3) Where a licensee failed to obtain the license during either of the previous two years because of a license suspension by the department or the court, the licensee may qualify for a license by establishing that the person held such a license during the last year in which the person was eligible.
(4) Surcharges as provided for in this section shall be collected and deposited into the sea cucumber dive fishery account hereby created in the custody of the state treasurer. Only the director or the director's designee may authorize expenditures from the account. The sea cucumber dive fishery account is subject to allotment procedures under chapter 43.88 RCW, but no appropriation is required for expenditures. Expenditures from the account shall only be used to retire sea cucumber licenses until the number of licenses is reduced to twenty-five, and thereafter shall only be used for sea cucumber management and enforcement.
(a) A surcharge of one hundred dollars shall be charged with each sea cucumber dive fishery license renewal for licenses issued in 2000 through 2005.
(b)
For licenses issued for the year 2000 and thereafter, a surcharge shall be
charged on the sea cucumber dive fishery (([license])) license
for designating an alternate operator. The surcharge shall be as follows:
Five hundred dollars for the first year or each of the first two consecutive
years after 1999 that any alternate operator is designated and two thousand
five hundred dollars each year thereafter that any alternate operator is
designated.
(5) Sea cucumber dive fishery licenses are transferable. After December 31, 1999, there is a surcharge to transfer a sea cucumber dive fishery license. The surcharge is five hundred dollars for the first transfer of a license valid for calendar year 2000 and two thousand five hundred dollars for any subsequent transfer whether occurring in the year 2000 or thereafter. Notwithstanding this subsection, a one-time transfer exempt from surcharge applies for a transfer from the natural person licensed on January 1, 2000, to that person's spouse or child.
(6) If fewer than twenty-five persons are eligible for sea cucumber dive fishery licenses, the director may accept applications for new licenses. The additional licenses may not cause more than twenty-five natural persons to be eligible for a sea cucumber dive fishery license. New licenses issued under this section shall be distributed according to rules of the department that recover the value of such licensed privilege.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest drafting error.
Sec. 17. RCW 75.30.290 and 1998 c 190 s 107 are each amended to read as follows:
A person shall not commercially deliver into any Washington state port ocean pink shrimp caught in offshore waters without an ocean pink shrimp delivery license issued under RCW 75.28.730, or an ocean pink shrimp single delivery license issued under RCW 75.30.320. An ocean pink shrimp delivery license shall be issued to a vessel that:
(1) Landed a total of at least five thousand pounds of ocean pink shrimp in Washington in any single calendar year between January 1, 1983, and December 31, 1992, as documented by a valid shellfish receiving ticket; and
(2) Can show continuous participation in the Washington, Oregon, or California ocean pink shrimp fishery by being eligible to land ocean pink shrimp in either Washington, Oregon, or California each year since the landing made under subsection (1) of this section. Evidence of such eligibility shall be a certified statement from the relevant state licensing agency that the applicant for a Washington ocean pink shrimp delivery license held at least one of the following permits:
(a)
For Washington: Possession of a delivery permit or delivery license issued
under RCW 75.28.125 ((or a trawl license (other than Puget Sound) issued
under RCW 75.28.140));
(b) For Oregon: Possession of a vessel permit issued under Oregon Revised Statute 508.880; or
(c) For California: A trawl permit issued under California Fish and Game Code sec. 8842.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.28.140 was repealed by 1993 c 340 s 56, effective January 1, 1994.
Sec. 18. RCW 75.30.320 and 1993 c 376 s 8 are each amended to read as follows:
The
owner of an ocean pink shrimp fishing vessel that does not qualify for an ocean
pink shrimp delivery license issued under RCW 75.28.730 shall obtain an ocean
pink shrimp single delivery license in order to make a landing into a state
port of ocean pink shrimp taken in offshore waters. The director shall not
issue an ocean pink shrimp single delivery license unless, as determined by the
director, a bona fide emergency exists. A maximum of six ocean pink shrimp single
delivery licenses may be issued annually to any vessel. ((Unless adjusted
by the director pursuant to the director's authority granted in RCW 75.28.065,))
The fee for an ocean pink shrimp single delivery license is one hundred
dollars.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.28.065 was repealed by 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 31, effective January 1, 1994.
Sec. 19. RCW 75.30.370 and 1994 c 260 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
A person commercially fishing for Dungeness crab in offshore waters outside of Washington state jurisdiction shall obtain a Dungeness crab offshore delivery license from the director if the person does not possess a valid Dungeness crab-coastal fishery license or a valid Dungeness crab-coastal class B fishery license and the person wishes to land Dungeness crab into a place or a port in the state. The annual fee for a Dungeness crab offshore delivery license is two hundred fifty dollars. The director may specify restrictions on landings of offshore Dungeness crab in Washington state as authorized in RCW 75.30.360.
Fees
from the offshore Dungeness crab delivery license shall be placed in the ((costal
[coastal])) coastal crab account created in RCW 75.30.390.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest typographical error.
Sec. 20. RCW 75.30.420 and 1994 c 260 s 9 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
An Oregon resident who can show historical and continuous participation in the
Washington state coastal crab fishery by having held a nonresident non-Puget
Sound crab pot license issued under RCW 75.28.130 each year from 1990 through
1994, and who has delivered a minimum of eight landings totaling five thousand
pounds of crab into Oregon during any two of the four qualifying seasons as
provided in RCW 75.30.350(((4))) (5) as evidenced by valid Oregon
fish receiving tickets, shall be issued a nonresident Dungeness crab-coastal
fishery license valid for fishing in Washington state waters north from the
Oregon-Washington boundary to United States latitude forty-six degrees thirty
minutes north. Such license shall be issued upon application and submission of
proof of delivery.
(2) This section shall become effective contingent upon reciprocal statutory authority in the state of Oregon providing for equal access for Washington state coastal crab fishers to Oregon territorial coastal waters north of United States latitude forty-five degrees fifty-eight minutes north, and Oregon waters of the Columbia river.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 75.30.350 was amended by 1995 c 252 s 1, changing subsection (4) to subsection (5).
Sec. 21. RCW 75.46.010 and 1998 c 246 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Adaptive management" means reliance on scientific methods to test the results of actions taken so that the management and related policy can be changed promptly and appropriately.
(2) "Critical pathways methodology" means a project scheduling and management process for examining interactions between habitat projects and salmonid species, prioritizing habitat projects, and assuring positive benefits from habitat projects.
(3) "Habitat project list" is the list of projects resulting from the critical pathways methodology under RCW 75.46.070(2). Each project on the list must have a written agreement from the landowner on whose land the project will be implemented. Projects include habitat restoration projects, habitat protection projects, habitat projects that improve water quality, habitat projects that protect water quality, habitat-related mitigation projects, and habitat project maintenance and monitoring activities.
(4) "Habitat work schedule" means those projects from the habitat project list that will be implemented during the current funding cycle. The schedule shall also include a list of the entities and individuals implementing projects, the start date, duration, estimated date of completion, estimated cost, and funding sources for the projects.
(5) "Limiting factors" means conditions that limit the ability of habitat to fully sustain populations of salmon. These factors are primarily fish passage barriers and degraded estuarine areas, riparian corridors, stream channels, and wetlands.
(6) "Owner" means the person holding title to the land or the person under contract with the owner to lease or manage the legal owner's property.
(7) "Project sponsor" is a county, city, special district, tribal government, a combination of such governments through interlocal agreements provided under chapter 39.34 RCW, a nonprofit organization, or one or more private citizens.
(((7)))
(8) "Salmon" includes all species of the family Salmonidae
which are capable of self-sustaining, natural production.
(((8)))
(9) "Salmon recovery plan" means a state plan developed in
response to a proposed or actual listing under the federal endangered species
act that addresses limiting factors including, but not limited to harvest,
hatchery, hydropower, habitat, and other factors of decline.
(((9)))
(10) "Tribe" or "tribes" means federally recognized
Indian tribes.
(((10)))
(11) "WRIA" means a water resource inventory area established
in chapter 173-500 WAC as it existed on January 1, 1997.
(((11)
"Owner" means the person holding title to the land or the person
under contract with the owner to lease or manage the legal owner's property.))
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 22. RCW 75.46.110 and 1998 c 246 s 12 are each amended to read as follows:
The
southwest Washington salmon recovery region, whose boundaries are provided in
chapter 60, Laws of 1998, is created. ((If chapter 60, Laws of 1998 is not
enacted by July 1, 1998, this section is null and void.))
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 60, Laws of 1998 took effect March 19, 1998.
Sec. 23. RCW 75.46.160 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 13 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The (([salmon recovery funding])) salmon recovery funding board
is responsible for making grants and loans for salmon habitat projects and
salmon recovery activities from the amounts appropriated to the board for this
purpose. To accomplish this purpose the board may:
(a) Provide assistance to grant applicants regarding the procedures and criteria for grant and loan awards;
(b) Make and execute all manner of contracts and agreements with public and private parties as the board deems necessary, consistent with the purposes of this chapter;
(c) Accept any gifts, grants, or loans of funds, property, or financial or other aid in any form from any other source on any terms that are not in conflict with this chapter;
(d) Adopt rules under chapter 34.05 RCW as necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter; and
(e) Do all acts and things necessary or convenient to carry out the powers expressly granted or implied under this chapter.
(2) The interagency committee for outdoor recreation shall provide all necessary grants and loans administration assistance to the board, and shall distribute funds as provided by the board in RCW 75.46.170.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The salmon recovery funding board is created in RCW 75.46.150. The governor vetoed section 2, chapter 13, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess., which defined "board" as the salmon recovery funding board. This correction clarifies that the "board" is the salmon recovery funding board.
Sec. 24. RCW 75.46.170 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 13 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The (([salmon recovery funding])) salmon recovery funding board
shall develop procedures and criteria for allocation of funds for salmon
habitat projects and salmon recovery activities on a state-wide basis to
address the highest priorities for salmon habitat protection and restoration.
To the extent practicable the board shall adopt an annual allocation of
funding. The allocation should address both protection and restoration of
habitat, and should recognize the varying needs in each area of the state on an
equitable basis. The board has the discretion to partially fund, or to fund in
phases, salmon habitat projects. The board may annually establish a maximum
amount of funding available for any individual project, subject to available
funding. No projects required solely as a mitigation or a condition of
permitting are eligible for funding.
(2)(a) In evaluating, ranking, and awarding funds for projects and activities the board shall give preference to projects that:
(i) Are based upon the limiting factors analysis identified under RCW 75.46.070;
(ii) Provide a greater benefit to salmon recovery based upon the stock status information contained in the department of fish and wildlife salmonid stock inventory (SASSI), the salmon and steelhead habitat inventory and assessment project (SSHIAP), and any comparable science-based assessment when available;
(iii) Will benefit listed species and other fish species; and
(iv) Will preserve high quality salmonid habitat.
(b) In evaluating, ranking, and awarding funds for projects and activities the board shall also give consideration to projects that:
(i) Are the most cost-effective;
(ii) Have the greatest matched or in-kind funding; and
(iii) Will be implemented by a sponsor with a successful record of project implementation.
(3) The board may reject, but not add, projects from a habitat project list submitted by a lead entity for funding.
(4) For fiscal year 2000, the board may authorize the interagency review team to evaluate, rank, and make funding decisions for categories of projects or activities or from funding sources provided for categories of projects or activities. In delegating such authority the board shall consider the review team's staff resources, procedures, and technical capacity to meet the purposes and objectives of this chapter. The board shall maintain general oversight of the team's exercise of such authority.
(5) The board shall seek the guidance of the technical review team to ensure that scientific principles and information are incorporated into the allocation standards and into proposed projects and activities. If the technical review team determines that a habitat project list complies with the critical pathways methodology under RCW 75.46.070, it shall provide substantial weight to the list's project priorities when making determinations among applications for funding of projects within the area covered by the list.
(6) The board shall establish criteria for determining when block grants may be made to a lead entity or other recognized regional recovery entity consistent with one or more habitat project lists developed for that region. Where a lead entity has been established pursuant to RCW 75.46.060, the board may provide grants to the lead entity to assist in carrying out lead entity functions under this chapter, subject to available funding. The board shall determine an equitable minimum amount of funds for each region, and shall distribute the remainder of funds on a competitive basis.
(7) The board may waive or modify portions of the allocation procedures and standards adopted under this section in the award of grants or loans to conform to legislative appropriations directing an alternative award procedure or when the funds to be awarded are from federal or other sources requiring other allocation procedures or standards as a condition of the board's receipt of the funds. The board shall develop an integrated process to manage the allocation of funding from federal and state sources to minimize delays in the award of funding while recognizing the differences in state and legislative appropriation timing.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The salmon recovery funding board is created in RCW 75.46.150. The governor vetoed section 2, chapter 13, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess., which defined "board" as the salmon recovery funding board. This correction clarifies that the "board" is the salmon recovery funding board.
Sec. 25. RCW 75.46.200 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 13 s 13 are each amended to read as follows:
State
salmon monitoring data provided by lead entities, regional fisheries
enhancement groups, and others shall be included in the data base of ((SASSI
[salmon and steelhead stock inventory])) the salmon and steelhead stock
inventory and ((SSHIAP [salmon and steelhead habitat inventory
assessment project])) the salmon and steelhead habitat inventory
assessment project. Information pertaining to habitat preservation
projects funded through the Washington wildlife and recreation program, the
conservation reserve enhancement program, and other conservancy programs
related to salmon habitat shall be included in the ((SSHIAP)) salmon
and steelhead habitat inventory assessment project data base.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Section 2, chapter 13, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess., vetoed by the governor, defined "SASSI" as salmon and steelhead stock inventory, and "SSHIAP" as the salmon and steelhead habitat inventory assessment project.
Sec. 26. RCW 75.50.110 and 1995 1st sp.s. c 2 s 40 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
A regional fisheries enhancement group advisory board is established to make
recommendations to the commission. The members shall be appointed by the
commission and consist of two commercial fishing representatives, two
recreational fishing representatives, and three at-large positions. At least
two of the advisory board members shall be members of a regional fisheries
enhancement group. Advisory board members shall serve three-year terms. The
advisory board membership shall include two members serving ex officio to be
nominated, one through the Northwest Indian fisheries commission, and one
through the Columbia river intertribal fish commission. The chair of the
regional fisheries enhancement group advisory board shall be elected annually
by members of the regional fisheries enhancement (([group])) group
advisory board. The advisory board shall meet at least quarterly. All
meetings of the advisory board shall be open to the public under the open
public meetings act, chapter 42.30 RCW.
The department shall invite the advisory board to comment and provide input into all relevant policy initiatives, including, but not limited to, wild stock, hatcheries, and habitat restoration efforts.
(2) Members shall not be compensated but shall receive reimbursement for travel expenses in accordance with RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
(3)
The department may use account funds to provide agency assistance to the
groups, to provide professional, administrative or clerical services to the
advisory board, or to implement the training and technical (([assistance]))
assistance services plan as developed by the advisory board pursuant to
RCW 75.50.115. The level of account funds used by the department shall be
determined by the commission after review of recommendation by the regional
fisheries enhancement group advisory board and shall not exceed twenty percent
of annual contributions to the account.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the references to the regional fisheries enhancement group advisory board and the training and technical assistance services plan.
Sec. 27. RCW 75.52.020 and 1993 sp.s. c 2 s 50 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1)
(("Volunteer group" means any person or group of persons
interested in or party to an agreement with the department relating to a
cooperative fish or wildlife project.
(2)))
"Cooperative project" means a project conducted by a volunteer group
that will benefit the fish, shellfish, game bird, nongame wildlife, or game
animal resources of the state and for which the benefits of the project,
including fish and wildlife reared and released, are available to all citizens
of the state. Indian tribes may elect to participate in cooperative fish and
wildlife projects with the department.
(((3)))
(2) "Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(3) "Volunteer group" means any person or group of persons interested in or party to an agreement with the department relating to a cooperative fish or wildlife project.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 28. RCW 75.52.050 and 1995 1st sp.s. c 2 s 42 are each amended to read as follows:
The commission shall establish by rule:
(1)
The procedure for entering a cooperative agreement and the application forms
for a permit to release fish or wildlife required by RCW 75.08.295 ((or
77.16.150)). The procedure shall indicate the information required from
the volunteer group as well as the process of review by the department. The
process of review shall include the means to coordinate with other agencies and
Indian tribes when appropriate and to coordinate the review of any necessary
hydraulic permit approval applications.
(2) The procedure for providing within forty-five days of receipt of a proposal a written response to the volunteer group indicating the date by which an acceptance or rejection of the proposal can be expected, the reason why the date was selected, and a written summary of the process of review. The response should also include any suggested modifications to the proposal which would increase its likelihood of approval and the date by which such modified proposal could be expected to be accepted. If the proposal is rejected, the department must provide in writing the reasons for rejection. The volunteer group may request the director or the director's designee to review information provided in the response.
(3) The priority of the uses to which eggs, seed, juveniles, or brood stock are put. Use by cooperative projects shall be second in priority only to the needs of programs of the department or of other public agencies within the territorial boundaries of the state. Sales of eggs, seed, juveniles, or brood stock have a lower priority than use for cooperative projects.
(4) The procedure for notice in writing to a volunteer group of cause to revoke the agreement for the project and the procedure for revocation. Revocation shall be documented in writing to the volunteer group. Cause for revocation may include: (a) The unavailability of adequate biological or financial resources; (b) the development of unacceptable biological or resource management conflicts; or (c) a violation of agreement provisions. Notice of cause to revoke for a violation of agreement provisions may specify a reasonable period of time within which the volunteer group must comply with any violated provisions of the agreement.
(5) An appropriate method of distributing among volunteer groups fish, bird, or animal food or other supplies available for the program.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.16.150 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124.
Sec. 29. RCW 75.58.010 and 1998 c 190 s 110 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The director of agriculture and the director shall jointly develop a program of disease inspection and control for aquatic farmers as defined in RCW 15.85.020. The program shall be administered by the department under rules established under this section. The purpose of the program is to protect the aquaculture industry and wildstock fisheries from a loss of productivity due to aquatic diseases or maladies. As used in this section "diseases" means, in addition to its ordinary meaning, infestations of parasites or pests. The disease program may include, but is not limited to, the following elements:
(a) Disease diagnosis;
(b) Import and transfer requirements;
(c) Provision for certification of stocks;
(d) Classification of diseases by severity;
(e) Provision for treatment of selected high-risk diseases;
(f) Provision for containment and eradication of high-risk diseases;
(g) Provision for destruction of diseased cultured aquatic products;
(h) Provision for quarantine of diseased cultured aquatic products;
(i) Provision for coordination with state and federal agencies;
(j) Provision for development of preventative or control measures;
(k) Provision for cooperative consultation service to aquatic farmers; and
(l) Provision for disease history records.
(2)
The commission shall adopt rules implementing this section. However, such
rules shall have the prior approval of the director of agriculture and shall
provide therein that the director of agriculture has provided such approval.
The director of agriculture or the director's designee shall attend the
rule-making hearings conducted under chapter 34.05 RCW and shall assist in
conducting those hearings. The authorities granted the department by these
rules and by RCW ((75.08.080(1)(g),)) 75.24.080, 75.24.110, 75.28.125,
75.58.020, 75.58.030, and 75.58.040 constitute the only authorities of the
department to regulate private sector cultured aquatic products and aquatic
farmers as defined in RCW 15.85.020. Except as provided in subsection (3) of
this section, no action may be taken against any person to enforce these rules
unless the department has first provided the person an opportunity for a
hearing. In such a case, if the hearing is requested, no enforcement action
may be taken before the conclusion of that hearing.
(3) The rules adopted under this section shall specify the emergency enforcement actions that may be taken by the department, and the circumstances under which they may be taken, without first providing the affected party with an opportunity for a hearing. Neither the provisions of this subsection nor the provisions of subsection (2) of this section shall preclude the department from requesting the initiation of criminal proceedings for violations of the disease inspection and control rules.
(4) A person shall not violate the rules adopted under subsection (2) or (3) of this section or violate RCW 75.58.040.
(5) In administering the program established under this section, the department shall use the services of a pathologist licensed to practice veterinary medicine.
(6) The director in administering the program shall not place constraints on or take enforcement actions in respect to the aquaculture industry that are more rigorous than those placed on the department or other fish-rearing entities.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Rule-making authority under RCW 75.08.080 was transferred from the director of fisheries to the fish and wildlife commission by 1995 1st sp.s. c 2 (Referendum Bill No. 45). The definitions in RCW 75.08.011 reflect this transfer, making an additional note in this section unnecessary.
Sec. 30. RCW 75.58.030 and 1993 sp.s. c 2 s 57 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The director shall consult regarding the disease inspection and control program established under RCW 75.58.010 with federal agencies and Indian tribes to assure protection of state, federal, and tribal aquatic resources and to protect private sector cultured aquatic products from disease that could originate from waters or facilities managed by those agencies.
(2) With regard to the program, the director may enter into contracts or interagency agreements for diagnostic field services with government agencies and institutions of higher education and private industry.
(3)
The director shall provide for the creation and distribution of a roster of
biologists having a ((speciality [specialty])) specialty in the
diagnosis or treatment of diseases of fish or shellfish. The director shall
adopt rules specifying the qualifications which a person must have in order to
be placed on the roster.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest grammatical error.
Sec. 31. RCW 76.01.060 and 1983 c 3 s 194 are each amended to read as follows:
Any
authorized assistants, employees, agents, appointees or representatives of the
department of natural resources may, in the course of their inspection and
enforcement duties as provided for in chapters 76.04, 76.06, 76.09, 76.16, and
76.36 ((and 76.40)) RCW, enter upon any lands, real estate, waters or
premises except the dwelling house or appurtenant buildings in this state
whether public or private and remain thereon while performing such duties.
Similar entry by the department of natural resources may be made for the
purpose of making examinations, locations, surveys and/or appraisals of all
lands under the management and jurisdiction of the department of natural
resources; or for making examinations, appraisals and, after five days' written
notice to the landowner, making surveys for the purpose of possible acquisition
of property to provide public access to public lands. In no event other than
an emergency such as fire fighting shall motor vehicles be used to cross a
field customarily cultivated, without prior consent of the owner. None of the
entries herein provided for shall constitute trespass, but nothing contained
herein shall limit or diminish any liability which would otherwise exist as a
result of the acts or omissions of said department or its representatives.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 76.40 RCW was repealed by 1994 c 163 s 6.
Sec. 32. RCW 76.06.020 and 1988 c 128 s 15 are each amended to read as follows:
As used in this chapter:
(1) "Agent" means the recognized legal representative, representatives, agent, or agents for any owner;
(2) "Department" means the department of natural resources;
(3) "Owner" means and includes individuals, partnerships, corporations, and associations;
(("Agent"
means the recognized legal representative, representatives, agent or agents for
any owner;))
(4) "Timber land" means any land on which there is a sufficient number of trees, standing or down, to constitute, in the judgment of the department, a forest insect or forest disease breeding ground of a nature to constitute a menace, injurious and dangerous to permanent forest growth in the district under consideration.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Numbers the definitions and places them in alphabetical order.
Sec. 33. RCW 76.09.040 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 701 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Where necessary to accomplish the purposes and policies stated in RCW 76.09.010, and to implement the provisions of this chapter, the board shall adopt forest practices rules pursuant to chapter 34.05 RCW and in accordance with the procedures enumerated in this section that:
(a) Establish minimum standards for forest practices;
(b) Provide procedures for the voluntary development of resource management plans which may be adopted as an alternative to the minimum standards in (a) of this subsection if the plan is consistent with the purposes and policies stated in RCW 76.09.010 and the plan meets or exceeds the objectives of the minimum standards;
(c) Set forth necessary administrative provisions;
(d) Establish procedures for the collection and administration of forest practice fees as set forth by this chapter; and
(e) Allow for the development of watershed analyses.
Forest practices rules pertaining to water quality protection shall be adopted by the board after reaching agreement with the director of the department of ecology or the director's designee on the board with respect thereto. All other forest practices rules shall be adopted by the board.
Forest practices rules shall be administered and enforced by either the department or the local governmental entity as provided in this chapter. Such rules shall be adopted and administered so as to give consideration to all purposes and policies set forth in RCW 76.09.010.
(2) The board shall prepare proposed forest practices rules. In addition to any forest practices rules relating to water quality protection proposed by the board, the department of ecology may submit to the board proposed forest practices rules relating to water quality protection.
Prior to initiating the rule making process, the proposed rules shall be submitted for review and comments to the department of fish and wildlife and to the counties of the state. After receipt of the proposed forest practices rules, the department of fish and wildlife and the counties of the state shall have thirty days in which to review and submit comments to the board, and to the department of ecology with respect to its proposed rules relating to water quality protection. After the expiration of such thirty day period the board and the department of ecology shall jointly hold one or more hearings on the proposed rules pursuant to chapter 34.05 RCW. At such hearing(s) any county may propose specific forest practices rules relating to problems existing within such county. The board may adopt and the department of ecology may approve such proposals if they find the proposals are consistent with the purposes and policies of this chapter.
(3)
The board shall establish by rule a riparian open space program that includes
acquisition of a fee interest in, or at the landowner's option, a conservation
easement on lands within unconfined avulsing channel migration zones. Once
acquired, these lands may be held and managed by the department, transferred to
another state agency, transferred to an appropriate local government agency, or
transferred to a private nonprofit nature ((conservation [conservancy]))
conservancy corporation, as defined in RCW 64.04.130, in fee or transfer
of management obligation. The board shall adopt rules governing the
acquisition by the state or donation to the state of such interest in lands
including the right of refusal if the lands are subject to unacceptable liabilities.
The rules shall include definitions of qualifying lands, priorities for
acquisition, and provide for the opportunity to transfer such lands with
limited warranties and with a description of boundaries that does not require
full surveys where the cost of securing the surveys would be unreasonable in
relation to the value of the lands conveyed. The rules shall provide for the
management of the lands for ecological protection or fisheries enhancement.
Because there are few, if any, comparable sales of forest land within
unconfined avulsing channel migration zones, separate from the other lands or
assets, these lands are likely to be extraordinarily difficult to appraise and
the cost of a conventional appraisal often would be unreasonable in relation to
the value of the land involved. Therefore, for the purposes of voluntary sales
under this section, the legislature declares that these lands are presumed to
have a value equal to: (a) The acreage in the sale multiplied by the average
value of commercial forest land in the region under the land value tables used
for property tax purposes under RCW 84.33.120; plus (b) the cruised volume of
any timber located within the channel migration multiplied by the appropriate
quality code stumpage value for timber of the same species shown on the
appropriate table used for timber harvest excise tax purposes under RCW
84.33.091. For purposes of this section, there shall be an eastside region and
a westside region as defined in the forests and fish report as defined in RCW
76.09.020.
(4) Subject to appropriations sufficient to cover the cost of such an acquisition program and the related costs of administering the program, the department is directed to purchase a fee interest or, at the owner's option, a conservation easement in land that an owner tenders for purchase; provided that such lands have been taxed as forest lands and are located within an unconfined avulsing channel migration zone. Lands acquired under this section shall become riparian open space. These acquisitions shall not be deemed to trigger the compensating tax of chapters 84.33 and 84.34 RCW.
(5) Instead of offering to sell interests in qualifying lands, owners may elect to donate the interests to the state.
(6) Any acquired interest in qualifying lands by the state under this section shall be managed as riparian open space.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to a nature conservancy corporation.
Sec. 34. RCW 76.09.055 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 201 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The legislature finds that the declines of fish stocks throughout much of the
state ((requires [require])) require immediate action to be taken
to help restore these fish runs where possible. The legislature also
recognizes that federal and state agencies, tribes, county representatives, and
private timberland owners have spent considerable effort and time to develop
the forests and fish report. Given the agreement of the parties, the legislature
believes that the immediate adoption of emergency rules is appropriate in this
particular instance. These rules can implement many provisions of the forests
and fish report to protect the economic well-being of the state, and to
minimize the risk to the state and landowners to legal challenges. This
authority is not designed to set any precedents for the forest practices board
in future rule making or set any precedents for other rule-making bodies of the
state.
(2) The forest practices board is authorized to adopt emergency rules amending the forest practices rules with respect to the protection of aquatic resources, in accordance with RCW 34.05.350, except: (a) That the rules adopted under this section may remain in effect until permanent rules are adopted, or until June 30, 2001, whichever is sooner; (b) notice of the proposed rules must be published in the Washington State Register as provided in RCW 34.05.320; (c) at least one public hearing must be conducted with an opportunity to provide oral and written comments; and (d) a rule-making file must be maintained as required by RCW 34.05.370. In adopting the emergency rules, the board is not required to prepare a small business economic impact statement under chapter 19.85 RCW, prepare a statement indicating whether the rules constitute a significant legislative rule under RCW 34.05.328, prepare a significant legislative rule analysis under RCW 34.05.328, or follow the procedural requirements of the state environmental policy act, chapter 43.21C RCW. The forest practices board may only adopt recommendations contained in the forests and fish report as emergency rules under this section.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest grammatical error.
Sec. 35. RCW 76.09.065 and 1997 c 173 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Effective July 1, 1997, an applicant shall pay an application fee and a recording fee, if applicable, at the time an application or notification is submitted to the department or to the local governmental entity as provided in this chapter.
(2) For applications and notifications submitted to the department, the application fee shall be fifty dollars for class II, III, and IV forest practices applications or notifications relating to the commercial harvest of timber. However, the fee shall be five hundred dollars for class IV forest practices applications on lands being converted to other uses or on lands which are not to be reforested because of the likelihood of future conversion to urban development or on lands that are contained within "urban growth areas," designated pursuant to chapter 36.70A RCW, except the fee shall be fifty dollars on those lands where the forest landowner provides:
(a) A written statement of intent signed by the forest landowner not to convert to a use other than commercial forest product operations for ten years, accompanied by either a written forest management plan acceptable to the department or documentation that the land is enrolled under the provisions of chapter 84.33 RCW; or
(b)
A conversion option harvest plan approved by the local ((government
[governmental])) governmental entity and submitted to the department
as part of the forest practices application.
All money collected from fees under this subsection shall be deposited in the state general fund.
(3) For applications submitted to the local governmental entity, the fee shall be five hundred dollars for class IV forest practices on lands being converted to other uses or lands that are contained within "urban growth areas," designated pursuant to chapter 36.70A RCW, except as otherwise provided in this section, unless a different fee is otherwise provided by the local governmental entity.
(4) Recording fees shall be as provided in chapter 36.18 RCW.
(5) An application fee under subsection (2) of this section shall be refunded or credited to the applicant if either the application or notification is disapproved by the department or the application or notification is withdrawn by the applicant due to restrictions imposed by the department.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest grammatical error.
Sec. 36. RCW 76.09.140 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 801 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department of natural resources may take any necessary action to enforce any final order or final decision, and may disapprove any forest practices application or notification submitted by any person who has failed to comply with a final order or final decision or has failed to pay any civil penalties as provided in RCW 76.09.170, for up to one year from the issuance of a notice of intent to disapprove notifications and applications under this section or until the violator pays all outstanding civil penalties and complies with all validly issued and outstanding notices to comply and stop work orders, whichever is longer. For purposes of chapter 482, Laws of 1993, the terms "final order" and "final decision" shall mean the same as set forth in RCW 76.09.080, 76.09.090, and 76.09.110. The department shall provide written notice of its intent to disapprove an application or notification under this subsection. The department shall forward copies of its notice of intent to disapprove to any affected landowner. The disapproval period shall run from thirty days following the date of actual notice or when all administrative and judicial appellate processes, if any, have been exhausted. Any person provided the notice may seek review from the appeals board by filing a request for review within thirty days of the date of the notice of intent. While the notice of intent to disapprove is in effect, the violator may not serve as a person in charge of, be employed by, manage, or otherwise participate to any degree in forest practices.
(2) On request of the department, the attorney general may take action necessary to enforce this chapter, including, but not limited to: Seeking penalties, interest, costs, and attorneys' fees; enforcing final orders or decisions; and seeking civil injunctions, show cause orders, or contempt orders.
(3)
A county may bring injunctive, declaratory, or other actions for enforcement
for forest practice activities within its jurisdiction in the superior court as
provided by law against the department, the forest landowner, timber owner or
operator to enforce the forest ((practice[s])) practices rules or
any final order of the department, or the appeals board. No civil or criminal
penalties shall be imposed for past actions or omissions if such actions or
omissions were conducted pursuant to an approval or directive of the
department. Injunctions, declaratory actions, or other actions for enforcement
under this subsection may not be commenced unless the department fails to take
appropriate action after ten days written notice to the department by the
county of a violation of the forest practices rules or final orders of the
department or the appeals board.
(4)(a) The department may require financial assurance prior to the conduct of any further forest practices from an operator or landowner who within the preceding three-year period has:
(i) Operated without an approved forest practices application, other than an unintentional operation in connection with an approved application outside the approved boundary of such an application;
(ii) Continued to operate in breach of, or failed to comply with, the terms of an effective stop work order or notice to comply; or
(iii) Failed to pay any civil or criminal penalty.
(b) The department may deny any application for failure to submit financial assurances as required.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to forest practices.
Sec. 37. RCW 76.09.150 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 802 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department shall make inspections of forest lands, before, during and after the conducting of forest practices as necessary for the purpose of ensuring compliance with this chapter and the forest practices rules and to ensure that no material damage occurs to the natural resources of this state as a result of such practices.
(2) Any duly authorized representative of the department shall have the right to enter upon forest land at any reasonable time to enforce the provisions of this chapter and the forest practices rules.
(3) The department or the department of ecology may apply for an administrative inspection warrant to either Thurston county superior court, or the superior court in the county in which the property is located. An administrative inspection warrant may be issued where:
(a)
The department has attempted an inspection of forest lands under this chapter
to ensure compliance with this chapter and the forest ((practice[s])) practices
rules or to ensure that no potential or actual material damage occurs to the
natural resources of this state, and access to all or part of the forest lands
has been actually or constructively denied; or
(b) The department has reasonable cause to believe that a violation of this chapter or of rules adopted under this chapter is occurring or has occurred.
(4) In connection with any watershed analysis, any review of a pending application by an identification team appointed by the department, any compliance studies, any effectiveness monitoring, or other research that has been agreed to by a landowner, the department may invite representatives of other agencies, tribes, and interest groups to accompany a department representative and, at the landowner's election, the landowner, on any such inspections. Reasonable efforts shall be made by the department to notify the landowner of the persons being invited onto the property and the purposes for which they are being invited.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to forest practices.
Sec. 38. RCW 76.12.090 and 1988 c 128 s 29 are each amended to read as follows:
For
the purpose of acquiring and paying for lands for state forests and
reforestation as herein provided the department may issue utility bonds of the
state of Washington, in an amount not to exceed two hundred thousand dollars in
principal, during the biennium expiring March 31, 1925, and such other amounts
as may hereafter be authorized by the legislature. Said bonds shall bear
interest at not to exceed the rate of two percent per annum which shall be
payable annually. Said bonds shall never be sold or exchanged at less than par
and accrued interest, if any, and shall mature in not less than a period equal
to the time necessary to develop a merchantable forest on the lands exchanged
for said bonds or purchased with money derived from the sale thereof. Said
bonds shall be known as state forest utility bonds. The principal or interest
of said bonds shall not be a general obligation of the state, but shall be
payable only from the forest development account. The department may issue
said bonds in exchange for lands selected by it in accordance with RCW
76.12.020, 76.12.030, 76.12.080, 76.12.090, 76.12.110, 76.12.120, and
76.12.140, ((and 76.12.150,)) or may sell said bonds in such manner as
it deems advisable, and with the proceeds purchase and acquire such lands. Any
of said bonds issued in exchange and payment for any particular tract of lands
may be made a first and prior lien against the particular land for which they are
exchanged, and upon failure to pay said bonds and interest thereon according to
their terms, the lien of said bonds may be foreclosed by appropriate court
action.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 76.12.150 was repealed by 1977 c 75 s 96.
Sec. 39. RCW 76.12.100 and 1988 c 128 s 30 are each amended to read as follows:
For
the purpose of acquiring, seeding, reforestation and administering land for
forests and of carrying out RCW 76.12.020, 76.12.030, 76.12.080, 76.12.090,
76.12.110, 76.12.120, and 76.12.140, ((and 76.12.150,)) the
department is authorized to issue and dispose of utility bonds of the state of
Washington in an amount not to exceed one hundred thousand dollars in principal
during the biennium expiring March 31, 1951: PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That no sum in
excess of one dollar per acre shall ever be paid or allowed either in cash,
bonds, or otherwise, for any lands suitable for forest growth, but devoid of
such, nor shall any sum in excess of three dollars per acre be paid or allowed
either in cash, bonds, or otherwise, for any lands adequately restocked with
young growth.
Any utility bonds issued under the provisions of this section may be retired from time to time, whenever there is sufficient money in the forest development account, said bonds to be retired at the discretion of the department either in the order of issuance, or by first retiring bonds with the highest rate of interest.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 76.12.150 was repealed by 1977 c 75 s 96.
Sec. 40. RCW 76.12.140 and 1988 c 128 s 33 are each amended to read as follows:
Any
lands acquired by the state under RCW 76.12.020, 76.12.030, 76.12.080,
76.12.090, 76.12.110, 76.12.120, and 76.12.140, ((and 76.12.150,))
or any amendments thereto, shall be logged, protected and cared for in such
manner as to insure natural reforestation of such lands, and to that end the
department shall have power, and it shall be its duty to make rules and
regulations, and amendments thereto, governing logging operations on such
areas, and to embody in any contract for the sale of timber on such areas, such
conditions as it shall deem advisable, with respect to methods of logging,
disposition of slashings, and debris, and protection and promotion of new
forests. All such rules and regulations, or amendments thereto, shall be
adopted by the department under chapter 34.05 RCW. Any violation of any such
rules shall be a gross misdemeanor unless the department has specified by rule,
when not inconsistent with applicable statutes, that violation of a specific
rule is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 76.12.150 was repealed by 1977 c 75 s 96.
Sec. 41. RCW 76.13.010 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 502 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply to RCW 76.13.005, 76.13.007, 76.13.020, and 76.13.030.
(1) "Cooperating organization" means federal, state, and local agencies, colleges and universities, landowner assistance organizations, consultants, forest resource-related industries, and environmental organizations which promote and maintain programs designed to provide information and technical assistance services to nonindustrial forest and woodland owners.
(2) "Department" means the department of natural resources.
(((2)))
(3) "Landowner" means an individual, partnership, private,
public or municipal corporation, Indian tribe, state agency, county, or local
government entity, educational institution, or association of individuals of
whatever nature that own nonindustrial forests and woodlands.
(((3)))
(4) "Nonindustrial forests and woodlands" are those suburban
acreages and rural lands supporting or capable of supporting trees and other
flora and fauna associated with a forest ecosystem, comprised of total
individual land ownerships of less than five thousand acres and not directly
associated with wood processing or handling facilities.
(((4)))
(5) "Stewardship" means managing by caring for, promoting,
protecting, renewing, or reestablishing or both, forests and associated
resources for the benefit of the landowner, the natural resources and the
citizens of Washington state, in accordance with each landowner's objectives,
best management practices, and legal requirements.
(((5)
"Cooperating organization" means federal, state, and local agencies,
colleges and universities, landowner assistance organizations, consultants,
forest resource-related industries, and environmental organizations which
promote and maintain programs designed to provide information and technical
assistance services to nonindustrial forest and woodland owners.))
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 42. RCW 76.13.110 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 503 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department of natural resources shall establish and maintain a small forest landowner office. The small forest landowner office shall be a resource and focal point for small forest landowner concerns and policies, and shall have significant expertise regarding the management of small forest holdings, governmental programs applicable to such holdings, and the forestry riparian easement program.
(2) The small forest landowner office shall administer the provisions of the forestry riparian easement program created under RCW 76.13.120. With respect to that program, the office shall have the authority to contract with private consultants that the office finds qualified to perform timber cruises of forestry riparian easements.
(3) The small forest landowner office shall assist in the development of small landowner options through alternate management plans or alternate harvest restrictions appropriate to small landowners. The small forest landowner office shall develop criteria to be adopted by the forest practices board in a manual for alternate management plans or alternate harvest restrictions. These alternate plans or alternate harvest restrictions shall meet riparian functions while requiring less costly regulatory prescriptions. At the landowner's option, alternate plans or alternate harvest restrictions may be used to further meet riparian functions.
The
small (([forest])) forest landowner office shall evaluate the
cumulative impact of such alternate management plans or alternate harvest
restrictions on essential riparian functions at the subbasin or watershed
level. The small forest landowner office shall adjust future alternate
management plans or alternate harvest restrictions in a manner that will
minimize the negative impacts on essential riparian functions within a subbasin
or watershed.
(4) An advisory committee is established to assist the small forest landowner office in developing policy and recommending rules to the forest practices board. The advisory committee shall consist of seven members, including a representative from the department of ecology, the department of fish and wildlife, and a tribal representative. Four additional committee members shall be small forest landowners who shall be appointed by the commissioner of public lands from a list of candidates submitted by the board of directors of the Washington farm forestry association or its successor organization. The association shall submit more than one candidate for each position. Appointees shall serve for a term of four years. The small forest landowner office shall review draft rules or rule concepts with the committee prior to recommending such rules to the forest practices board. The office shall reimburse nongovernmental committee members for reasonable expenses associated with attending committee meetings as provided in RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
(5) By December 1, 2000, the small forest landowner office shall provide a report to the board and the legislature containing:
(a) Estimates of the amounts of nonindustrial forests and woodlands in holdings of twenty acres or less, twenty-one to one hundred acres, one hundred to one thousand acres, and one thousand to five thousand acres, in western Washington and eastern Washington, and the number of persons having total nonindustrial forest and woodland holdings in those size ranges;
(b) Estimates of the number of parcels of nonindustrial forests and woodlands held in contiguous ownerships of twenty acres or less, and the percentages of those parcels containing improvements used: (i) As primary residences for half or more of most years; (ii) as vacation homes or other temporary residences for less than half of most years; and (iii) for other uses;
(c) The watershed administrative units in which significant portions of the riparian areas or total land area are nonindustrial forests and woodlands;
(d) Estimates of the number of forest practices applications and notifications filed per year for forest road construction, silvicultural activities to enhance timber growth, timber harvest not associated with conversion to nonforest land uses, with estimates of the number of acres of nonindustrial forests and woodlands on which forest practices are conducted under those applications and notifications; and
(e) Recommendations on ways the board and the legislature could provide more effective incentives to encourage continued management of nonindustrial forests and woodlands for forestry uses in ways that better protect salmon, other fish and wildlife, water quality, and other environmental values.
(6) By December 1, 2002, and every four years thereafter, the small forest landowner office shall provide to the board and the legislature an update of the report described in subsection (5) of this section, containing more recent information and describing:
(a) Trends in the items estimated under subsection (5)(a) through (d) of this section;
(b) Whether, how, and to what extent the forest practices act and rules contributed to those trends; and
(c) Whether, how, and to what extent: (i) The board and legislature implemented recommendations made in the previous report; and (ii) implementation of or failure to implement those recommendations affected those trends.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to the small forest landowner office.
Sec. 43. RCW 76.13.120 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 4 s 504 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The legislature finds that the state should acquire easements along riparian and other sensitive aquatic areas from small forest landowners willing to sell or donate such easements to the state provided that the state will not be required to acquire such easements if they are subject to unacceptable liabilities. The legislature therefore establishes a forestry riparian easement program.
(2) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section and RCW 76.13.100 and 76.13.110 unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Forestry riparian easement" means an easement covering qualifying timber granted voluntarily to the state by a small forest landowner.
(b) "Qualifying timber" means those trees covered by a forest practices application that the small forest landowner is required to leave unharvested under the rules adopted under RCW 76.09.055 and 76.09.370 or that is made uneconomic to harvest by those rules, and for which the small landowner is willing to grant the state a forestry riparian easement. "Qualifying timber" is timber within or bordering a commercially reasonable harvest unit as determined under rules adopted by the forest practices board.
(c) "Small forest landowner" means a landowner meeting all of the following characteristics: (i) A forest landowner as defined in RCW 76.09.020 whose interest in the land and timber is in fee or who has rights to the timber to be included in the forestry riparian easement that extend at least fifty years from the date the forest practices application associated with the easement is submitted; (ii) an entity that has harvested from its own lands in this state during the three years prior to the year of application an average timber volume that would qualify the owner as a small timber harvester under RCW 84.33.073(1); and (iii) an entity that certifies at the time of application that it does not expect to harvest from its own lands more than the volume allowed by RCW 84.33.073(1) during the ten years following application. If a landowner's prior three-year average harvest exceeds the limit of RCW 84.33.073(1), or the landowner expects to exceed this limit during the ten years following application, and that landowner establishes to the department of natural resources' reasonable satisfaction that the harvest limits were or will be exceeded to raise funds to pay estate taxes or equally compelling and unexpected obligations such as court-ordered judgments or extraordinary medical expenses, the landowner shall be deemed to be a small forest landowner.
For purposes of determining whether a person qualifies as a small forest landowner, the small forest landowner office, created in RCW 76.13.110, shall evaluate the landowner under this definition as of the date that the forest practices application is submitted with which the forestry riparian easement is associated. A small forest landowner can include an individual, partnership, corporate, or other nongovernmental legal entity. If a landowner grants timber rights to another entity for less than five years, the landowner may still qualify as a small forest landowner under this section.
(d) "Completion of harvest" means that the trees have been harvested from an area and that further entry into that area by mechanized logging or slash treating equipment is not expected.
(3) The department of natural resources is authorized and directed to accept and hold in the name of the state of Washington forestry riparian easements granted by small forest landowners covering qualifying timber and to pay compensation to such landowners in accordance with subsections (6) and (7) of this section. The department of natural resources may not transfer the easements to any entity other than another state agency.
(4) Forestry riparian easements shall be effective for fifty years from the date the forest practices application associated with the qualifying timber is submitted to the department of natural resources, unless the easement is terminated earlier by the department of natural resources voluntarily, based on a determination that termination is in the best interest of the state, or under the terms of a termination clause in the easement.
(5) Forestry riparian easements shall be restrictive only, and shall preserve all lawful uses of the easement premises by the landowner that are consistent with the terms of the easement and the requirement to protect riparian functions during the term of the easement, subject to the restriction that the leave trees required by the rules to be left on the easement premises may not be cut during the term of the easement. No right of public access to or across, or any public use of the easement premises is created by this statute or by the easement. Forestry riparian easements shall not be deemed to trigger the compensating tax of or otherwise disqualify land from being taxed under chapter 84.33 or 84.34 RCW.
(6)
Upon application of a small forest landowner for a riparian easement that is
associated with a forest practices application and the landowner's marking of
the qualifying timber on the qualifying lands, the small forest landowner
office shall determine the compensation to be offered to the small (([forest]))
forest landowner as provided for in this section. The legislature
recognizes that there is not readily available market transaction evidence of
value for easements of this nature, and thus establishes the following
methodology to ascertain the value for forestry riparian easements. Values so
determined shall not be considered competent evidence of value for any other
purpose.
The small forest landowner office shall establish the volume of the qualifying timber. Based on that volume and using data obtained or maintained by the department of revenue under RCW 84.33.074 and 84.33.091, the small forest landowner office shall attempt to determine the fair market value of the qualifying timber as of the date the forest practices application associated with the qualifying timber was submitted. If, under the forest practices rules adopted under chapter 4, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess., some qualifying timber may be removed prior to the expiration of the fifty-year term of the easement, the small forest landowner office shall apply a reduced compensation factor to ascertain the value of those trees based on the proportional economic value, considering income and growth, lost to the landowner.
(7) Except as provided in subsection (8) of this section, the small forest landowner office shall, subject to available funding, offer compensation to the small forest landowner in the amount of fifty percent of the value determined in subsection (6) of this section. If the landowner accepts the offer, the department of natural resources shall pay the compensation promptly upon (a) completion of harvest in the area covered by the forestry riparian easement; (b) verification that there has been compliance with the rules requiring leave trees in the easement area; and (c) execution and delivery of the easement to the department of natural resources. Upon donation or payment of compensation, the department of natural resources may record the easement.
(8)
For approved forest ((practice[s])) practices applications where
the regulatory impact is greater than the average percentage impact for all
small landowners as determined by the department of natural resources analysis
under the regulatory fairness act, chapter 19.85 RCW, the compensation offered
will be increased to one hundred percent for that portion of the regulatory
impact that is in excess of the average. Regulatory impact includes trees left
in buffers, special management zones, and those rendered uneconomic to harvest
by these rules. A separate average or high impact regulatory threshold shall
be established for western and eastern Washington. Criteria for these
measurements and payments shall be established by the small forest landowner
office.
(9) The forest practices board shall adopt rules under the administrative procedure act, chapter 34.05 RCW, to implement the forestry riparian easement program, including the following:
(a) A standard version or versions of all documents necessary or advisable to create the forestry riparian easements as provided for in this section;
(b) Standards for descriptions of the easement premises with a degree of precision that is reasonable in relation to the values involved;
(c) Methods and standards for cruises and valuation of forestry riparian easements for purposes of establishing the compensation. The department of natural resources shall perform the timber cruises of forestry riparian easements required under this chapter and chapter 76.09 RCW. Any rules concerning the methods and standards for valuations of forestry riparian easements shall apply only to the department of natural resources, small forest landowners, and the small forest landowner office;
(d)
A method to determine that a forest ((practice[s])) practices
application involves a commercially reasonable harvest;
(e) A method to address blowdown of qualified timber falling outside the easement premises;
(f) A formula for sharing of proceeds in relation to the acquisition of qualified timber covered by an easement through the exercise or threats of eminent domain by a federal or state agency with eminent domain authority, based on the present value of the department of natural resources' and the landowner's relative interests in the qualified timber;
(g) High impact regulatory thresholds;
(h) A method to determine timber that is qualifying timber because it is rendered uneconomic to harvest by the rules adopted under RCW 76.09.055 and 76.09.370; and
(i)
A method for internal department of natural resources review of small (([forest]))
forest landowner office compensation decisions under subsection (7) of
this section.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Clarifies a reference to the small forest landowner.
Also corrects references to forest practices applications and the small forest landowner office.
Sec. 44. RCW 76.14.010 and 1988 c 128 s 37 are each amended to read as follows:
As used in this chapter:
(1) "Department" means the department of natural resources;
(2) "Forest land" means any lands considered best adapted for the growing of trees; and
(3)
The term "owner" means and includes individuals, partnerships,
corporations, associations, federal land managing agencies, state of
Washington, counties, municipalities, and other forest landowners((;
"Forest
land" means any lands considered best adapted for the growing of trees)).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 45. RCW 76.15.010 and 1991 c 179 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1)
(("Department" means the department of natural resources.
(2)
"Person" means an individual, partnership, private or public
municipal corporation, Indian tribe, state entity, county or local governmental
entity, or association of individuals of whatever nature.
(3)))
"Community and urban forest" is that land in and around human
settlements ranging from small communities to metropolitan areas, occupied or
potentially occupied by trees and associated vegetation. Community and urban
forest land may be planted or unplanted, used or unused, and includes public
and private lands, lands along transportation and utility corridors, and
forested watershed lands within populated areas.
(((4)))
(2) "Community and urban forestry" means the planning,
establishment, protection, care, and management of trees and associated plants
individually, in small groups, or under forest conditions within municipalities
and counties.
(((5)))
(3) "Department" means the department of natural resources.
(4) "Municipality" means a city, town, port district, public school district, community college district, irrigation district, weed control district, park district, or other political subdivision of the state.
(5) "Person" means an individual, partnership, private or public municipal corporation, Indian tribe, state entity, county or local governmental entity, or association of individuals of whatever nature.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 46. RCW 76.36.010 and 1984 c 60 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The words and phrases herein used, unless the same be clearly contrary to or inconsistent with the context of this chapter or the section in which used, shall be construed as follows:
(1)
(("Person" includes the plural and all corporations, foreign and
domestic, copartnerships, firms and associations of persons.
(2)
"Waters of this state" includes any and all bodies of fresh and salt
water within the jurisdiction of the state capable of being used for the
transportation or storage of forest products, including all rivers and lakes
and their tributaries, harbors, bays, bayous and marshes.
(3)
"Forest products" means logs, spars, piles, and poles, boom sticks
and shingle bolts and every form into which a fallen tree may be cut before it
is manufactured into lumber or run through a sawmill, shingle mill or tie mill,
or cut into cord wood, stove wood or hewn ties.
(4)
"Brand" means a unique symbol or mark placed on or in forest products
for the purpose of identifying ownership.
(5)
"Catch brand" means a mark or brand used by a person as an
identifying mark placed upon forest products and booming equipment previously
owned by another.
(6)))
"Booming equipment" includes boom sticks and boom chains.
(((7)))
(2) "Brand" means a unique symbol or mark placed on or in forest
products for the purpose of identifying ownership.
(3) "Catch brand" means a mark or brand used by a person as an identifying mark placed upon forest products and booming equipment previously owned by another.
(4) "Department" means the department of natural resources.
(5) "Forest products" means logs, spars, piles, and poles, boom sticks, and shingle bolts and every form into which a fallen tree may be cut before it is manufactured into lumber or run through a sawmill, shingle mill, or tie mill, or cut into cord wood, stove wood, or hewn ties.
(6) "Person" includes the plural and all corporations, foreign and domestic, copartnerships, firms, and associations of persons.
(7) "Waters of this state" includes any and all bodies of fresh and salt water within the jurisdiction of the state capable of being used for the transportation or storage of forest products, including all rivers and lakes and their tributaries, harbors, bays, bayous, and marshes.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 47. RCW 76.42.020 and 1994 c 163 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(("Wood
debris" as used in this chapter is wood that is adrift on navigable waters
or has been adrift thereon and stranded on beaches, marshes, or tidal and
shorelands and which is not merchantable or economically salvageable under
chapter 76.40 RCW.))
(1) "Removal" as used in this chapter shall include all activities necessary for the collection and disposal of such wood debris: PROVIDED, That nothing herein provided shall permit removal of wood debris from private property without written consent of the owner.
(2) "Wood debris" as used in this chapter is wood that is adrift on navigable waters or has been adrift thereon and stranded on beaches, marshes, or tidal and shorelands.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) Chapter 76.40 RCW was repealed by 1994 c 163 s 6.
(2) Numbers definitions and arranges them in alphabetical order.
Sec. 48. RCW 76.48.020 and 1995 c 366 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless otherwise required by the context, as used in this chapter:
(1)
(("Christmas trees" means any evergreen trees or the top thereof,
commonly known as Christmas trees, with limbs and branches, with or without
roots, including fir, pine, spruce, cedar, and other coniferous species.
(2)
"Native ornamental trees and shrubs" means any trees or shrubs which
are not nursery grown and which have been removed from the ground with the
roots intact.
(3)
"Cut or picked evergreen foliage," commonly known as brush, means
evergreen boughs, huckleberry, salal, fern, Oregon grape, rhododendron, mosses,
bear grass, scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius) and other cut or picked evergreen
products. "Cut or picked evergreen foliage" does not mean cones or
seeds.)) "Authorization" means a properly
completed preprinted form authorizing the transportation or possession of
Christmas trees which contains the information required by RCW 76.48.080, a
sample of which is filed before the harvesting occurs with the sheriff of the
county in which the harvesting is to occur.
(2) "Cascara bark" means the bark of a Cascara tree.
(3) "Cedar processor" means any person who purchases, takes, or retains possession of cedar products or cedar salvage for later sale in the same or modified form following removal and delivery from the land where harvested.
(4) "Cedar products" means cedar shakeboards, shake and shingle bolts, and rounds one to three feet in length.
(5) "Cedar salvage" means cedar chunks, slabs, stumps, and logs having a volume greater than one cubic foot and being harvested or transported from areas not associated with the concurrent logging of timber stands (a) under a forest practices application approved or notification received by the department of natural resources, or (b) under a contract or permit issued by an agency of the United States government.
(6)
(("Processed cedar products" means cedar shakes, shingles, fence
posts, hop poles, pickets, stakes, rails, or rounds less than one foot in
length.
(7)
"Cedar processor" means any person who purchases, takes, or retains
possession of cedar products or cedar salvage for later sale in the same or
modified form following removal and delivery from the land where harvested.
(8)
"Cascara bark" means the bark of a Cascara tree.
(9)
"Wild edible mushrooms" means edible mushrooms not cultivated or
propagated by artificial means.
(10)
"Specialized forest products" means Christmas trees, native
ornamental trees and shrubs, cut or picked evergreen foliage, cedar products,
cedar salvage, processed cedar products, wild edible mushrooms, and Cascara
bark.
(11)
"Person" includes the plural and all corporations, foreign or
domestic, copartnerships, firms, and associations of persons.
(12))) "Christmas
trees" means any evergreen trees or the top thereof, commonly known as
Christmas trees, with limbs and branches, with or without roots, including fir,
pine, spruce, cedar, and other coniferous species.
(7) "Cut or picked evergreen foliage," commonly known as brush, means evergreen boughs, huckleberry, salal, fern, Oregon grape, rhododendron, mosses, bear grass, scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius), and other cut or picked evergreen products. "Cut or picked evergreen foliage" does not mean cones or seeds.
(8) "Harvest" means to separate, by cutting, prying, picking, peeling, breaking, pulling, splitting, or otherwise removing, a specialized forest product (a) from its physical connection or contact with the land or vegetation upon which it is or was growing or (b) from the position in which it is lying upon the land.
(((13)
"Transportation" means the physical conveyance of specialized forest
products outside or off of a harvest site by any means.
(14)
"Landowner" means, with regard to real property, the private owner,
the state of Washington or any political subdivision, the federal government,
or a person who by deed, contract, or lease has authority to harvest and sell
forest products of the property. "Landowner" does not include the
purchaser or successful high bidder at a public or private timber sale.
(15)
"Authorization" means a properly completed preprinted form
authorizing the transportation or possession of Christmas trees which contains
the information required by RCW 76.48.080, a sample of which is filed before
the harvesting occurs with the sheriff of the county in which the harvesting is
to occur.
(16))) (9)
"Harvest site" means each location where one or more persons are
engaged in harvesting specialized forest products close enough to each other
that communication can be conducted with an investigating law enforcement
officer in a normal conversational tone.
(((17)
"Specialized forest products permit" means a printed document in a
form specified by the department of natural resources, or true copy thereof,
that is signed by a landowner or his or her authorized agent or representative,
referred to in this chapter as "permittors" and validated by the
county sheriff and authorizes a designated person, referred to in this chapter
as "permittee", who has also signed the permit, to harvest and
transport a designated specialized forest product from land owned or controlled
and specified by the permittor and that is located in the county where the
permit is issued.
(18))) (10)
"Landowner" means, with regard to real property, the private owner,
the state of Washington or any political subdivision, the federal government,
or a person who by deed, contract, or lease has authority to harvest and sell
forest products of the property. "Landowner" does not include the
purchaser or successful high bidder at a public or private timber sale.
(11) "Native ornamental trees and shrubs" means any trees or shrubs which are not nursery grown and which have been removed from the ground with the roots intact.
(12) "Permit area" means a designated tract of land that may contain single or multiple harvest sites.
(13) "Person" includes the plural and all corporations, foreign or domestic, copartnerships, firms, and associations of persons.
(14) "Processed cedar products" means cedar shakes, shingles, fence posts, hop poles, pickets, stakes, rails, or rounds less than one foot in length.
(15) "Sheriff" means, for the purpose of validating specialized forest products permits, the county sheriff, deputy sheriff, or an authorized employee of the sheriff's office or an agent of the office.
(16) "Specialized forest products" means Christmas trees, native ornamental trees and shrubs, cut or picked evergreen foliage, cedar products, cedar salvage, processed cedar products, wild edible mushrooms, and Cascara bark.
(17) "Specialized forest products permit" means a printed document in a form specified by the department of natural resources, or true copy thereof, that is signed by a landowner or his or her authorized agent or representative, referred to in this chapter as "permittors" and validated by the county sheriff and authorizes a designated person, referred to in this chapter as "permittee," who has also signed the permit, to harvest and transport a designated specialized forest product from land owned or controlled and specified by the permittor and that is located in the county where the permit is issued.
(18) "Transportation" means the physical conveyance of specialized forest products outside or off of a harvest site by any means.
(19) "True copy" means a replica of a validated specialized forest products permit as reproduced by a copy machine capable of effectively reproducing the information contained on the permittee's copy of the specialized forest products permit. A copy is made true by the permittee or the permittee and permittor signing in the space provided on the face of the copy. A true copy will be effective until the expiration date of the specialized forest products permit unless the permittee or the permittee and permittor specify an earlier date. A permittor may require the actual signatures of both the permittee and permittor for execution of a true copy by so indicating in the space provided on the original copy of the specialized forest products permit. A permittee, or, if so indicated, the permittee and permittor, may condition the use of the true copy to harvesting only, transportation only, possession only, or any combination thereof.
(20)
(("Permit area" means a designated tract of land that may contain
single or multiple harvest sites.)) "Wild edible mushrooms"
means edible mushrooms not cultivated or propagated by artificial means.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 49. RCW 76.48.085 and 1995 c 366 s 14 are each amended to read as follows:
Buyers who purchase specialized forest products are required to record (1) the permit number; (2) the type of forest product purchased; (3) the permit holder's name; and (4) the amount of forest product purchased. The buyer shall keep a record of this information for a period of one year from the date of purchase and make the records available for inspection by authorized enforcement officials.
The buyer of specialized forest products must record the license plate number of the vehicle transporting the forest products on the bill of sale, as well as the seller's permit number on the bill of sale. This section shall not apply to transactions involving Christmas trees.
((The
[This])) This section shall not apply to buyers of specialized
forest products at the retail sales level.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a manifest grammatical error.
Sec. 50. RCW 77.08.010 and 1998 c 190 s 111 are each amended to read as follows:
As used in this title or Title 75 RCW or rules adopted pursuant to those titles, unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
(1)
(("Director" means the director of fish and wildlife.
(2)
"Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(3)
"Commission" means the state fish and wildlife commission.
(4)
"Person" means and includes an individual, a corporation, or a group
of two or more individuals acting with a common purpose whether acting in an
individual, representative, or official capacity.
(5)
"Fish and wildlife officer" means a person appointed and commissioned
by the director, with authority to enforce laws and rules adopted pursuant to
this title, and other statutes as prescribed by the legislature. Fish and
wildlife officer includes a person commissioned before June 11, 1998, as a
wildlife agent.
(6)
"Ex officio fish and wildlife officer" means a commissioned officer
of a municipal, county, state, or federal agency having as its primary function
the enforcement of criminal laws in general, while the officer is in the
appropriate jurisdiction. The term "ex officio fish and wildlife
officer" includes special agents of the national marine fisheries service,
state parks commissioned officers, United States fish and wildlife special
agents, department of natural resources enforcement officers, and United States
forest service officers, while the agents and officers are within their
respective jurisdictions.
(7)
"To hunt" and its derivatives means an effort to kill, injure,
capture, or harass a wild animal or wild bird.
(8)
"To trap" and its derivatives means a method of hunting using devices
to capture wild animals or wild birds.
(9)
"To fish" and its derivatives means an effort to kill, injure,
harass, or catch a fish.
(10)
"Open season" means those times, manners of taking, and places or
waters established by rule of the commission for the lawful hunting, fishing,
or possession of game animals, game birds, or game fish that conform to the
special restrictions or physical descriptions established by rule of the
commission or that have otherwise been deemed legal to hunt, fish, or possess
by rule of the commission. "Open season" includes the first and last
days of the established time.
(11)
"Closed season" means all times, manners of taking, and places or
waters other than those established by rule of the commission as an open
season. "Closed season" also means all hunting, fishing, or
possession of game animals, game birds, or game fish that do not conform to the
special restrictions or physical descriptions established by rule of the
commission as an open season or that have not otherwise been deemed legal to
hunt, fish, or possess by rule of the commission as an open season.
(12)
"Closed area" means a place where the hunting of some species of wild
animals or wild birds is prohibited.
(13)
"Closed waters" means all or part of a lake, river, stream, or other
body of water, where fishing for game fish is prohibited.
(14)
"Game reserve" means a closed area where hunting for all wild animals
and wild birds is prohibited.
(15)))
"Bag limit" means the maximum number of game animals, game birds, or
game fish which may be taken, caught, killed, or possessed by a person, as
specified by rule of the commission for a particular period of time, or as to
size, sex, or species.
(((16)
"Wildlife" means all species of the animal kingdom whose members
exist in Washington in a wild state. This includes but is not limited to
mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates. The term
"wildlife" does not include feral domestic mammals, the family
Muridae of the order Rodentia (old world rats and mice), or those fish,
shellfish, and marine invertebrates classified as food fish or shellfish by the
director. The term "wildlife" includes all stages of development and
the bodily parts of wildlife members.
(17)
"Wild animals" means those species of the class Mammalia whose
members exist in Washington in a wild state and the species Rana catesbeiana
(bullfrog). The term "wild animal" does not include feral domestic
mammals or the family Muridae of the order Rodentia (old world rats and mice).
(18)
"Wild birds" means those species of the class Aves whose members
exist in Washington in a wild state.
(19)
"Protected wildlife" means wildlife designated by the commission that
shall not be hunted or fished.
(20)
"Endangered species" means wildlife designated by the commission as
seriously threatened with extinction.
(21)
"Game animals" means wild animals that shall not be hunted except as
authorized by the commission.
(22)
"Fur-bearing animals" means game animals that shall not be trapped
except as authorized by the commission.
(23)
"Game birds" means wild birds that shall not be hunted except as
authorized by the commission.
(24)
"Predatory birds" means wild birds that may be hunted throughout the
year as authorized by the commission.
(25))) (2)
"Closed area" means a place where the hunting of some species of wild
animals or wild birds is prohibited.
(3) "Closed season" means all times, manners of taking, and places or waters other than those established by rule of the commission as an open season. "Closed season" also means all hunting, fishing, or possession of game animals, game birds, or game fish that do not conform to the special restrictions or physical descriptions established by rule of the commission as an open season or that have not otherwise been deemed legal to hunt, fish, or possess by rule of the commission as an open season.
(4) "Closed waters" means all or part of a lake, river, stream, or other body of water, where fishing for game fish is prohibited.
(5) "Commission" means the state fish and wildlife commission.
(6) "Deleterious exotic wildlife" means species of the animal kingdom not native to Washington and designated as dangerous to the environment or wildlife of the state.
(((26)
"Game farm" means property on which wildlife is held or raised for
commercial purposes, trade, or gift. The term "game farm" does not
include publicly owned facilities.
(27)
"Person of disability" means a permanently disabled person who is not
ambulatory without the assistance of a wheelchair, crutches, or similar
devices.
(28))) (7)
"Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(8) "Director" means the director of fish and wildlife.
(9) "Endangered species" means wildlife designated by the commission as seriously threatened with extinction.
(10) "Ex officio fish and wildlife officer" means a commissioned officer of a municipal, county, state, or federal agency having as its primary function the enforcement of criminal laws in general, while the officer is in the appropriate jurisdiction. The term "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" includes special agents of the national marine fisheries service, state parks commissioned officers, United States fish and wildlife special agents, department of natural resources enforcement officers, and United States forest service officers, while the agents and officers are within their respective jurisdictions.
(11) "Fish" includes all species classified as game fish or food fish by statute or rule, as well as all fin fish not currently classified as food fish or game fish if such species exist in state waters. The term "fish" includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of fish species.
(12) "Fish and wildlife officer" means a person appointed and commissioned by the director, with authority to enforce laws and rules adopted pursuant to this title, and other statutes as prescribed by the legislature. Fish and wildlife officer includes a person commissioned before June 11, 1998, as a wildlife agent.
(13) "Fur-bearing animals" means game animals that shall not be trapped except as authorized by the commission.
(14) "Game animals" means wild animals that shall not be hunted except as authorized by the commission.
(15) "Game birds" means wild birds that shall not be hunted except as authorized by the commission.
(16) "Game farm" means property on which wildlife is held or raised for commercial purposes, trade, or gift. The term "game farm" does not include publicly owned facilities.
(17) "Game reserve" means a closed area where hunting for all wild animals and wild birds is prohibited.
(18) "Open season" means those times, manners of taking, and places or waters established by rule of the commission for the lawful hunting, fishing, or possession of game animals, game birds, or game fish that conform to the special restrictions or physical descriptions established by rule of the commission or that have otherwise been deemed legal to hunt, fish, or possess by rule of the commission. "Open season" includes the first and last days of the established time.
(19) "Person" means and includes an individual, a corporation, or a group of two or more individuals acting with a common purpose whether acting in an individual, representative, or official capacity.
(20) "Person of disability" means a permanently disabled person who is not ambulatory without the assistance of a wheelchair, crutches, or similar devices.
(21) "Predatory birds" means wild birds that may be hunted throughout the year as authorized by the commission.
(22) "Protected wildlife" means wildlife designated by the commission that shall not be hunted or fished.
(23) "To fish" and its derivatives means an effort to kill, injure, harass, or catch a fish.
(24) "To hunt" and its derivatives means an effort to kill, injure, capture, or harass a wild animal or wild bird.
(25) "To trap" and its derivatives means a method of hunting using devices to capture wild animals or wild birds.
(26) "Wild animals" means those species of the class Mammalia whose members exist in Washington in a wild state and the species Rana catesbeiana (bullfrog). The term "wild animal" does not include feral domestic mammals or the family Muridae of the order Rodentia (old world rats and mice).
(27) "Wild birds" means those species of the class Aves whose members exist in Washington in a wild state.
(28) "Wildlife" means all species of the animal kingdom whose members exist in Washington in a wild state. This includes but is not limited to mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates. The term "wildlife" does not include feral domestic mammals, the family Muridae of the order Rodentia (old world rats and mice), or those fish, shellfish, and marine invertebrates classified as food fish or shellfish by the director. The term "wildlife" includes all stages of development and the bodily parts of wildlife members.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 51. RCW 77.12.101 and 1989 c 314 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
((Wildlife agents and ex officio wildlife agents)) Fish and wildlife
officers and ex officio fish and wildlife officers may seize without a
warrant wildlife, as defined in RCW 77.08.010(((16))), they have
probable cause to believe have been taken, killed, transported, or possessed in
violation of this title or rule of the commission or director. Agents may also
seize without warrant boat(s), vehicle(s), all conveyances, airplane(s),
motorized implement(s), gear, appliance(s), or other articles they have
probable cause to believe: (a) Are held with intent to violate; or (b) were
used in the violation of Title 77 RCW, or any regulation pursuant thereto when
the species involved is one which is listed in RCW 77.21.070((, or any
wildlife involved in trafficking under RCW 77.16.040 or illegal netting of game
fish under RCW 77.16.060)). However, agents may not seize any item or
article, other than evidence, from a violator if under the circumstances it is
reasonable to conclude that the violation was inadvertent. The articles seized
shall be forfeited to the state, upon conviction, plea of guilty, or bail
forfeiture. Articles seized may be recovered by their owner by depositing into
court a cash bond equal to the value of the seized articles. The cash bond is
subject to forfeiture in lieu of the seized articles.
(2)(a) In the event of a seizure of an article under subsection (1) of this section, proceedings for forfeiture shall be deemed commenced by bail forfeiture, plea of guilty, or upon conviction. The seizing authority shall serve notice within fifteen days following the seizure on the owner of the property seized and on any person having any known right or interest in the property seized. Notice may be served by any method authorized by law or court rule, including service by certified mail with return receipt requested, and service by such mail shall be deemed complete upon mailing within the fifteen-day period following the seizure.
(b) If no person notifies the department in writing of the person's claim of ownership or right to possession of articles seized pursuant to subsection (1) of this section within forty-five days of the seizure, the articles shall be deemed forfeited.
(c) If any person notifies the department in writing within forty-five days of the seizure, the person shall be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to the claim or right. The hearing shall be before the director or his designee, or before an administrative law judge appointed under chapter 34.12 RCW, except that any person asserting a claim or right may remove the matter to a court of competent jurisdiction. The department hearing and any appeal therefrom shall be under Title 34 RCW. The burden of producing evidence shall be upon the person claiming to be the lawful owner or person claiming lawful right of possession of the articles seized. The department shall promptly return the seized articles to the claimant upon a determination by the director or designee, an administrative law judge, or a court that the claimant is the present lawful owner or is lawfully entitled to possession of the articles seized, and that the seized articles were improperly seized.
(d)(i) No conveyance, including vessels, vehicles, or aircraft, is subject to forfeiture under this section by reason of any act or omission established by the owner of the conveyance to have been committed or omitted without his knowledge or consent.
(ii) A forfeiture of a conveyance encumbered by a bona fide security interest is subject to the interest of the secured party if the secured party neither had knowledge nor consented to the act or omission.
(e) When seized property is forfeited under this section the department may retain it for official use unless the property is required to be destroyed, or upon application by any law enforcement agency of the state, release such property to such agency for the use of enforcing Title 77 RCW, or sell such property, and deposit the proceeds to the wildlife fund in the state treasury, as provided for in RCW 77.12.170.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) The terms "wildlife agent" and "ex officio wildlife agent" were changed to "fish and wildlife officer" and "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
(2) RCW 77.16.040 and 77.16.060 were repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124.
Sec. 52. RCW 77.12.204 and 1993 sp.s. c 4 s 6 are each amended to read as follows:
The
department of fish and wildlife shall implement practices necessary to
meet the standards developed under RCW 79.01.295 on agency-owned and managed
agricultural and grazing lands. The standards may be modified on a
site-specific basis as necessary and as determined by the department of ((fisheries
or)) fish and wildlife, for species that these agencies respectively
manage, to achieve the goals established under RCW 79.01.295(1). Existing
lessees shall be provided an opportunity to participate in any site-specific
field review. Department agricultural and grazing leases issued after December
31, 1994, shall be subject to practices to achieve the standards that meet
those developed pursuant to RCW 79.01.295.
This section shall in no way prevent the department of fish and wildlife from managing its lands to accomplish its statutory mandate pursuant to RCW 77.12.010, nor shall it prevent the department from managing its lands according to the provisions of RCW 77.12.210 or rules adopted pursuant to this chapter.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Powers, duties, and functions of the department of fisheries and the department of wildlife were transferred to the department of fish and wildlife by 1993 sp.s. c 2, effective July 1, 1994.
Sec. 53. RCW 77.12.250 and 1980 c 78 s 42 are each amended to read as follows:
The
director, ((wildlife agents, ex officio wildlife agents)) fish and
wildlife officers, ex officio fish and wildlife officers, and department
employees may enter upon lands or waters and remain there while performing
their duties without liability for trespass.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The terms "wildlife agent" and "ex officio wildlife agent" were changed to "fish and wildlife officer" and "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 54. RCW 77.12.315 and 1987 c 506 s 40 are each amended to read as follows:
If
the director determines that a severe problem exists in an area of the state
because deer and elk are being pursued, harassed, attacked or killed by dogs,
the director may declare by emergency rule that an emergency exists and specify
the area where it is lawful for ((wildlife agents)) fish and wildlife
officers to take into custody or destroy the dogs if necessary. ((Wildlife
agents)) Fish and wildlife officers who take into custody or destroy
a dog pursuant to this section are immune from civil or criminal liability
arising from their actions.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The term "wildlife agent" was changed to "fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 55. RCW 77.12.470 and 1980 c 78 s 63 are each amended to read as follows:
To
enforce RCW 77.12.480 and 77.12.490, courts in the counties contiguous to the
boundary waters, ((wildlife agents, and ex officio wildlife agents)) fish
and wildlife officers, and ex officio fish and wildlife officers have
jurisdiction over the boundary waters to the furthermost shoreline. This
jurisdiction is concurrent with the courts and law enforcement officers of
Idaho.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The terms "wildlife agent" and "ex officio wildlife agent" were changed to "fish and wildlife officer" and "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 56. RCW 77.12.480 and 1980 c 78 s 64 are each amended to read as follows:
The
taking of wildlife from the boundary waters or islands of the Snake river shall
be in accordance with the wildlife laws of the respective states. ((Wildlife
agents and ex officio wildlife agents)) Fish and wildlife officers and
ex officio fish and wildlife officers shall honor the license of either
state and the right of the holder to take wildlife from the boundary waters and
islands in accordance with the laws of the state issuing the license.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The terms "wildlife agent" and "ex officio wildlife agent" were changed to "fish and wildlife officer" and "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 57. RCW 77.12.610 and 1982 c 155 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The
purposes of RCW 77.12.610 through 77.12.630 ((and 77.16.610)) are to
facilitate the department's gathering of biological data for managing wildlife
resources of this state and to protect wildlife resources by assuring
compliance with Title 77 RCW, and rules adopted thereunder, in a manner
designed to minimize inconvenience to the public.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.16.610 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124.
Sec. 58. RCW 77.12.620 and 1982 c 155 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
The
department is authorized to require hunters and fishermen occupying a motor
vehicle approaching or entering a check station to stop and produce for
inspection: (1) Any wildlife in their possession; (2) licenses, permits, tags,
stamps, or punchcards required under Title 77 RCW, or rules adopted
thereunder. For these purposes, the department is authorized to operate check
stations which shall be plainly marked by signs, operated by at least one
uniformed ((wildlife agent)) fish and wildlife officer, and
operated in a safe manner.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The term "wildlife agent" was changed to "fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 59. RCW 77.12.630 and 1982 c 155 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
The
powers conferred by RCW 77.12.610 through 77.12.630 ((and 77.16.610))
are in addition to all other powers conferred by law upon the department.
Nothing in RCW 77.12.610 through 77.12.630 ((and 77.16.610)) shall be
construed to prohibit the department from operating wildlife information
stations at which persons shall not be required to stop and report, or from
executing arrests, searches, or seizures otherwise authorized by law.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.16.610 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124.
Sec. 60. RCW 77.15.070 and 1998 c 190 s 69 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Fish and wildlife officers and ex officio fish and wildlife officers may seize without warrant boats, airplanes, vehicles, gear, appliances, or other articles they have probable cause to believe have been used in violation of this chapter. However, fish and wildlife officers may not seize any item or article, other than for evidence, if under the circumstances, it is reasonable to conclude that the violation was inadvertent. The property seized is subject to forfeiture to the state under this section regardless of ownership. Property seized may be recovered by its owner by depositing into court a cash bond equal to the value of the seized property but not more than twenty‑five thousand dollars. Such cash bond is subject to forfeiture in lieu of the property. Forfeiture of property seized under this section is a civil forfeiture against property intended to be a remedial civil sanction.
(2) In the event of a seizure of property under this section, jurisdiction to begin the forfeiture proceedings shall commence upon seizure. Within fifteen days following the seizure, the seizing authority shall serve a written notice of intent to forfeit property on the owner of the property seized and on any person having any known right or interest in the property seized. Notice may be served by any method authorized by law or court rule, including service by certified mail with return receipt requested. Service by mail is deemed complete upon mailing within the fifteen‑day period following the seizure.
(3) Persons claiming a right of ownership or right to possession of property are entitled to a hearing to contest forfeiture. Such a claim shall specify the claim of ownership or possession and shall be made in writing and served on the director within forty‑five days of the seizure. If the seizing authority has complied with notice requirements and there is no claim made within forty-five days, then the property shall be forfeited to the state.
(4) If any person timely serves the director with a claim to property, the person shall be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to the person's claim or right. The hearing shall be before the director or director's designee, or before an administrative law judge appointed under chapter 34.12 RCW, except that a person asserting a claim or right may remove the matter to a court of competent jurisdiction if the aggregate value of the property seized is more than five thousand dollars.
(5) The hearing to contest forfeiture and any subsequent appeal shall be as provided for in Title 34 RCW. The seizing authority has the burden to demonstrate that it had reason to believe the property was held with intent to violate or was used in violation of this title or rule of the commission or director. The person contesting forfeiture has the burden of production and proof by a preponderance of evidence that the person owns or has a right to possess the property and:
(a) That the property was not held with intent to violate or used in violation of this title or Title 75 RCW; or
(b) If the property is a boat, airplane, or vehicle, that the illegal use or planned illegal use of the boat, airplane, or vehicle occurred without the owner's knowledge or consent, and that the owner acted reasonably to prevent illegal uses of such boat, airplane, or vehicle.
(6)
A forfeiture of a conveyance encumbered by a perfected security interest is
subject to the interest of the secured party if the secured party neither had
knowledge (([of])) of nor consented to the act or omission. No
security interest in seized property may be perfected after seizure.
(7) If seized property is forfeited under this section the department may retain it for official use unless the property is required to be destroyed, or upon application by any law enforcement agency of the state, release such property to the agency for the use of enforcing this title, or sell such property, and deposit the proceeds to the wildlife fund, as provided for in RCW 77.12.170.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a drafting deficiency.
Sec. 61. RCW 77.15.160 and 1998 c 190 s 17 are each amended to read as follows:
A person is guilty of an infraction, which shall be cited and punished as provided under chapter 7.84 RCW, if the person:
(1)
Fails to immediately record a catch of fish or shellfish on a catch record card
required by RCW ((75.25.190 or 77.32.050)) 77.32.430, or required
by rule of the commission under this title or Title 75 RCW; or
(2) Fishes for personal use using barbed hooks in violation of any rule; or
(3) Violates any other rule of the commission or director that is designated by rule as an infraction.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 75.25.190 was recodified as RCW 77.32.430 pursuant to 1998 c 191 s 42, effective January 1, 1999.
(2) RCW 77.32.050 was amended by 1998 c 191 s 10 which removed any recording requirements from that section.
Sec. 62. RCW 77.15.400 and 1999 c 258 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) A person is guilty of unlawful hunting of wild birds in the second degree if the person:
(a) Hunts for, takes, or possesses a wild bird and the person does not have and possess all licenses, tags, stamps, and permits required under this title;
(b)
Maliciously destroys, takes, or harms the eggs or nests of a ((game [wild]))
wild bird except when authorized by permit;
(c) Violates any rule of the commission or director regarding seasons, bag or possession limits but less than two times the bag or possession limit, closed areas, closed times, or other rule addressing the manner or method of hunting or possession of wild birds; or
(d) Possesses a wild bird taken during a closed season for that wild bird or taken from a closed area for that wild bird.
(2)
A person is guilty of unlawful hunting of wild birds in the first degree if the
person takes or possesses two times or more than the possession or bag limit
for ((game [wild])) wild birds allowed by rule of the commission
or director.
(3)(a) Unlawful hunting of wild birds in the second degree is a misdemeanor.
(b) Unlawful hunting of wild birds in the first degree is a gross misdemeanor.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to wild birds.
Sec. 63. RCW 77.15.480 and 1980 c 78 s 27 are each amended to read as follows:
Articles
or devices unlawfully used, possessed, or maintained for catching, taking,
killing, attracting, or decoying wildlife are public nuisances. If necessary,
((wildlife agents and ex officio wildlife agents)) fish and wildlife
officers and ex officio fish and wildlife officers may seize, abate, or
destroy these public nuisances without warrant or process.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
The terms "wildlife agent" and "ex officio wildlife agent" were changed to "fish and wildlife officer" and "ex officio fish and wildlife officer" by 1998 c 190 s 111.
Sec. 64. RCW 77.15.700 and 1998 c 190 s 66 are each amended to read as follows:
The department shall impose revocation and suspension of privileges upon conviction in the following circumstances:
(1) If directed by statute for an offense;
(2) If the department finds that actions of the defendant demonstrated a willful or wanton disregard for conservation of fish or wildlife. Such suspension of privileges may be permanent;
(3)
If a person is convicted twice within ten years for a violation involving
unlawful hunting, killing, or possessing big game, the department shall order
revocation and suspension of all hunting privileges for two years. RCW
77.16.020 ((or 77.16.050)) as it existed before June 11, 1998, may
comprise one of the convictions constituting the basis for revocation and
suspension under this subsection;
(4) If a person is convicted three times in ten years of any violation of recreational hunting or fishing laws or rules, the department shall order a revocation and suspension of all recreational hunting and fishing privileges for two years;
(5) If a person is convicted twice within five years of a gross misdemeanor or felony involving unlawful commercial fish or shellfish harvesting, buying, or selling, the department shall impose a revocation and suspension of the person's commercial fishing privileges for one year. A commercial fishery license suspended under this subsection may not be used by an alternate operator or transferred during the period of suspension.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.16.050 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124. See chapter 77.15 RCW.
Sec. 65. RCW 77.15.730 and 1994 c 264 s 45 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Upon receipt of a report of failure to comply with the terms of a citation
issued for a recreational violation from the licensing authority of a state
that is a party to the wildlife violator compact under RCW 77.17.010, the
department shall suspend the violator's recreational license privileges under
this title until (([there is])) there is satisfactory evidence of
compliance with the terms of the wildlife citation. The department shall adopt
by rule procedures for the timely notification and administrative review of
such suspension of recreational licensing privileges.
(2) Upon receipt of a report of a conviction for a recreational offense from the licensing authority of a state that is a party to the wildlife violator compact under RCW 77.17.010, the department shall enter such conviction in its records and shall treat such conviction as if it occurred in the state of Washington for the purposes of suspension, revocation, or forfeiture of recreational license privileges.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a drafting deficiency.
Sec. 66. RCW 77.16.340 and 1988 c 265 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) A person commits the crime of obstructing the taking of fish or wildlife if the person:
(a) Harasses, drives, or disturbs fish or wildlife with the intent of disrupting lawful pursuit or taking thereof; or
(b) Harasses, interferes with, or intimidates an individual engaged in the lawful taking of fish or wildlife or lawful predator control.
(2)
Violation of this section is a gross misdemeanor ((under RCW 77.21.010))
punishable under RCW 9.92.020.
(3) It is a defense to any prosecution under subsection (1) of this section, if the person charged:
(a) Interferes with any person engaged in hunting outside legally established hunting seasons;
(b) Is preventing or attempting to prevent the injury or killing of a protected wildlife species, as defined by this title;
(c) Is preventing or attempting to prevent unauthorized trespass on private property; or
(d) Is defending oneself or another person from bodily harm or property damage by a person attempting to prevent hunting in a legally established hunting season.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.21.010 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124. Punishment of gross misdemeanors, if not fixed by statute, is described in RCW 9.92.020.
Sec. 67. RCW 77.16.360 and 1997 c 1 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of RCW 77.12.240 ((and 77.12.265)) or
other provisions of law, it is unlawful to take, hunt, or attract black bear
with the aid of bait.
(a) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prohibit the killing of black bear with the aid of bait by employees or agents of county, state, or federal agencies while acting in their official capacities for the purpose of protecting livestock, domestic animals, private property, or the public safety.
(b) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prevent the establishment and operation of feeding stations for black bear in order to prevent damage to commercial timberland.
(c) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prohibit the director from issuing a permit or memorandum of understanding to a public agency, university, or scientific or educational institution for the use of bait to attract black bear for scientific purposes.
(d) As used in this subsection, "bait" means a substance placed, exposed, deposited, distributed, scattered, or otherwise used for the purpose of attracting black bears to an area where one or more persons hunt or intend to hunt them.
(2) Notwithstanding RCW 77.12.240 or any other provisions of law, it is unlawful to hunt or pursue black bear, cougar, bobcat, or lynx with the aid of a dog or dogs.
(a)
Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prohibit the killing of black
bear, cougar, bobcat, or lynx with the aid of a dog or dogs by employees or
agents of county, state, or federal agencies while acting in their official
capacities for the purpose of protecting livestock, domestic animals, private
property, or the public safety. ((A dog or dogs may be used by the owner or
tenant of real property consistent with a permit issued and conditioned by the
director under RCW 77.12.265.))
(b) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to prohibit the director from issuing a permit or memorandum of understanding to a public agency, university, or scientific or educational institution for the use of a dog or dogs for the pursuit of black bear, cougar, bobcat, or lynx for scientific purposes.
(3) A person who violates subsection (1) or (2) of this section is guilty of a gross misdemeanor. In addition to appropriate criminal penalties, the director shall revoke the hunting license of a person who violates subsection (1) or (2) of this section and a hunting license shall not be issued for a period of five years following the revocation. Following a subsequent violation of subsection (1) or (2) of this section by the same person, a hunting license shall not be issued to the person at any time.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 77.12.265 was repealed by 1996 c 54 s 12, effective July 1, 1996. See chapter 77.36 RCW.
Sec. 68. RCW 77.18.010 and 1993 sp.s. c 2 s 76 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1)
(("Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.)) "Aquatic
farmer" means a private sector person who commercially farms and manages
private sector cultured aquatic products on the person's own land or on land in
which the person has a present right of possession.
(2) "Contract" means an agreement setting at a minimum, price, quantity of fish to be delivered, time of delivery, and fish health requirements.
(3) "Department" means the department of fish and wildlife.
(4) "Fish health requirements" means those site specific fish health and genetic requirements actually used by the department of fish and wildlife in fish stocking.
(((4)
"Aquatic farmer" means a private sector person who commercially farms
and manages private sector cultured aquatic products on the person's own land
or on land in which the person has a present right of possession.))
(5) "Person" means a natural person, corporation, trust, or other legal entity.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Arranges definitions in alphabetical order.
Sec. 69. RCW 77.21.020 and 1998 c 191 s 35 are each amended to read as follows:
((In
addition to other penalties provided by law, the director shall revoke all
hunting licenses of a person who is convicted of a violation of RCW 77.16.020
involving big game or RCW 77.16.050. Forfeiture of bail twice during a
five-year period for these violations constitutes the basis for a revocation
under this section.))
No hunting license may be issued to the person for two years from the revocation.
A person who has had a license revoked or has been denied issuance pursuant to this section or RCW 77.21.030, may appeal the decision as provided in chapter 34.05 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 77.16.020 was amended by 1998 c 190 s 119 and no longer refers to big game violations. See chapter 77.15 RCW.
(2) RCW 77.16.050 was repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124. For later enactment, see chapter 77.15 RCW.
Sec. 70. RCW 77.21.070 and 1997 c 226 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Whenever a person is convicted of illegal killing or possession of wildlife listed in this subsection, the convicting court shall order the person to pay restitution to the state in the following amounts for each animal killed or possessed:
(a) Moose, mountain sheep, mountain goat, and all wildlife species classified as endangered by rule of the commission, except for mountain caribou and grizzly bear as listed under (d) of this subsection......................................... $4,000.00
(b) Elk, deer, black bear, and cougar.................. $2,000.00
(c) Trophy animal elk and deer.......................... $6,000.00
(d) Mountain caribou, grizzly bear, (([and])) and
trophy animal mountain sheep....................... $12,000.00
(2) For the purpose of this section, the term "convicted" includes a plea of guilty, a finding of guilt regardless of whether the imposition of the sentence is deferred or any part of the penalty is suspended, and the payment of a fine. No court may establish bail for illegal possession of wildlife listed in subsection (1) of this section in an amount less than the bail established for hunting during the closed season plus the restitution value of wildlife set forth in subsection (1) of this section.
(3) For the purpose of this section a "trophy animal" is:
(a) A buck deer with four or more antler points on either side;
(b) A bull elk with five or more antler points on either side; or
(c) A mountain sheep with a horn curl of three-quarter curl or greater.
(4) If two or more persons are convicted of illegally possessing wildlife listed in this section, the restitution amount shall be imposed upon them jointly and severally.
(5) The restitution amount provided in this section shall be imposed in addition to and regardless of any penalty, including fines, or costs, that is provided for violating any provision of Title 77 RCW. The restitution required by this section shall be included by the court in any pronouncement of sentence and may not be suspended, waived, modified, or deferred in any respect. Nothing in this section may be construed to abridge or alter alternative rights of action or remedies in equity or under common law or statutory law, criminal or civil.
(6) A defaulted restitution or any installment payment thereof may be collected by any means authorized by law for the enforcement of orders of the court or collection of a fine or costs, including vacation of a deferral of sentencing or of a suspension of sentence.
(7) A person assessed a restitution under this section shall have his or her hunting license revoked and all hunting privileges suspended until the restitution is paid through the registry of the court in which the restitution was assessed.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects a drafting deficiency.
Sec. 71. RCW 77.32.014 and 1998 c 191 s 8 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Licenses, tags, and stamps issued pursuant to this chapter shall be invalid for
any period in which a person is certified by the department of social and
health services or a court of competent jurisdiction as a person in
noncompliance with a support order. Fish and wildlife officers and ex officio
fish and wildlife officers shall enforce this section through checks of the
department of licensing's computer data base. A listing on the department of
licensing's data base that an individual's license is currently suspended
pursuant to RCW 46.20.291(((7))) (8) shall be prima facie
evidence that the individual is in noncompliance with a support order.
Presentation of a written release issued by the department of social and health
services stating that the person is in compliance with an order shall serve as
prima facie proof of compliance with a support order.
(2) It is unlawful to purchase, obtain, or possess a license required by this chapter during any period in which a license is suspended.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 46.20.291 was amended by 1998 c 165 s 12, changing subsection (7) to subsection (8).
Sec. 72. RCW 77.32.380 and 1998 c 87 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Persons who enter upon or use clearly identified department improved access
facilities with a motor vehicle may be required to display a current annual
fish and wildlife lands vehicle use permit on the motor vehicle while within or
while using an improved access facility. An "improved access
facility" is a clearly identified area specifically created for motor
vehicle parking, and includes any boat launch or boat ramp associated with the
parking area, but does not include the department parking facilities at the
Gorge Concert Center near George, Washington. The vehicle use permit is issued
in the form of a decal. One decal shall be issued at no charge with each
annual saltwater, freshwater, combination, small game hunting, big game
hunting, and trapping license issued by the department. The annual fee for a
fish and wildlife lands vehicle use permit, if purchased separately, is ten
dollars. A person to whom the department has issued a decal or who has
purchased a vehicle use permit separately may purchase a decal from the
department for each additional vehicle owned by the person at a cost of five
dollars per decal upon a showing of proof to the department that the person
owns the additional vehicle or vehicles. Revenue derived from the sale of fish
and wildlife lands vehicle use permits shall be used solely for the stewardship
and maintenance of department improved access facilities. ((Revenue derived
from the sale of fish and wildlife lands vehicle use permits shall be used
solely for the stewardship and maintenance of department improved access
facilities.))
Youth groups may use department improved access facilities without possessing a vehicle use permit when accompanied by a vehicle use permit holder.
The department may accept contributions into the state wildlife fund for the sound stewardship of fish and wildlife. Contributors shall be known as "conservation patrons" and, for contributions of twenty dollars or more, shall receive a fish and wildlife lands vehicle use permit free of charge.
(2) The decal must be affixed in a permanent manner to the motor vehicle before entering upon or using the motor vehicle on a department improved access facility, and must be displayed on the rear window of the motor vehicle, or, if the motor vehicle does not have a rear window, on the rear of the motor vehicle.
(3) Failure to display the fish and wildlife lands vehicle use permit if required by this section is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW, and department employees are authorized to issue a notice of infraction to the registered owner of any motor vehicle entering upon or using a department improved access facility without such a decal. The penalty for failure to display or improper display of the decal is sixty-six dollars.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Due to a drafting error, this sentence was repeated. The language in the deleted sentence is identical to that of the previous sentence.
Sec. 73. RCW 77.44.030 and 1998 c 191 s 29 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) As provided in RCW 77.32.440, a portion of each freshwater and combination fishing license fee shall be deposited into the warm water game fish account.
(2)
The department shall use the most cost-effective format in designing and
administering the warm water game fish ((surcharge [account])) account.
(3) A warm water game fish account shall be used for enhancement of largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, walleye, black crappie, white crappie, channel catfish, and tiger musky.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to the warm water game fish account.
Sec. 74. RCW 78.16.070 and 1945 c 93 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
In
the event said lease shall be for reserved mineral rights on lands previously
sold by said county with mineral rights reserved, as provided in ((chapter
19, Laws of 1943 [RCW 36.34.010])) RCW 36.34.010, said lease shall
contain a provision that no rights shall be exercised under said lease by the
lessee, his or her heirs, executors, administrators, successors,
or assigns, until provision has been made by the lessee, his or her
heirs, executors, administrators, successors, or assigns to pay to the
owner of the land upon which the rights reserved to the county are sought to be
((exercise [exercised])) exercised, full payment for all damages
to said owner by reason of entering upon said land; said rights to be
determined as provided for in ((said chapter 19, Laws of Washington, 1943
[RCW 36.34.010])) RCW 36.34.010: PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That in the
event of litigation to determine such damage, the primary term of such lease
shall be extended for a period equal to the time required for such litigation,
but not to exceed three years.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to RCW 36.34.010, corrects a manifest grammatical error, and makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 75. RCW 78.44.020 and 1993 c 518 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
The purposes of this chapter are to:
(1) Provide that the usefulness, productivity, and scenic values of all lands and waters involved in surface mining within the state will receive the greatest practical degree of protection and reclamation at the earliest opportunity following completion of surface mining;
(2) Provide for the greatest practical degree of state-wide consistency in the regulation of surface mines;
(3) Apportion regulatory authority between state and local governments in order to minimize redundant regulation of mining; and
(4)
Ensure that reclamation is consistent with local land use plans((; and
(5)
Ensure the power of local government to regulate land use and operations
pursuant to section 16 of this act)).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
1993 c 518 s 16 was vetoed by the governor.
Sec. 76. RCW 78.44.031 and 1999 c 252 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1) "Approved subsequent use" means the post surface-mining land use contained in an approved reclamation plan and approved by the local land use authority.
(2) "Completion of surface mining" means the cessation of mining and directly related activities in any segment of a surface mine that occurs when essentially all minerals that can be taken under the terms of the reclamation permit have been depleted except minerals required to accomplish reclamation according to the approved reclamation plan.
(3) "Department" means the department of natural resources.
(4) "Determination" means any action by the department including permit issuance, reporting, reclamation plan approval or modification, permit transfers, orders, fines, or refusal to issue permits.
(5) "Disturbed area" means any place where activities clearly in preparation for, or during, surface mining have physically disrupted, covered, compacted, moved, or otherwise altered the characteristics of soil, bedrock, vegetation, or topography that existed prior to such activity. Disturbed areas may include but are not limited to: Working faces, water bodies created by mine-related excavation, pit floors, the land beneath processing plant and stock pile sites, spoil pile sites, and equipment staging areas. Disturbed areas shall also include aboveground waste rock sites and tailing facilities, and other surface manifestations of underground mines.
Disturbed areas do not include:
(a) Surface mine access roads unless these have characteristics of topography, drainage, slope stability, or ownership that, in the opinion of the department, make reclamation necessary;
(b) Lands that have been reclaimed to all standards outlined in this chapter, rules of the department, any applicable SEPA document, and the approved reclamation plan; and
(c) Subsurface aspects of underground mines, such as portals, tunnels, shafts, pillars, and stopes.
(6) "Miner" means any person or persons, any partnership, limited partnership, or corporation, or any association of persons, including every public or governmental agency engaged in surface mining.
(7) "Minerals" means clay, coal, gravel, industrial minerals, metallic substances, peat, sand, stone, topsoil, and any other similar solid material or substance to be excavated from natural deposits on or in the earth for commercial, industrial, or construction use.
(8) "Operations" means all mine-related activities, exclusive of reclamation, that include, but are not limited to activities that affect noise generation, air quality, surface and ground water quality, quantity, and flow, glare, pollution, traffic safety, ground vibrations, and/or significant or substantial impacts commonly regulated under provisions of land use or other permits of local government and local ordinances, or other state laws.
Operations specifically include:
(a) The mining or extraction of rock, stone, gravel, sand, earth, and other minerals;
(b) Blasting, equipment maintenance, sorting, crushing, and loading;
(c) On-site mineral processing including asphalt or concrete batching, concrete recycling, and other aggregate recycling;
(d) Transporting minerals to and from the mine, on site road maintenance, road maintenance for roads used extensively for surface mining activities, traffic safety, and traffic control.
(9) "Overburden" means the earth, rock, soil, and topsoil that lie above mineral deposits.
(10) "Permit holder" means any person or persons, any partnership, limited partnership, or corporation, or any association of persons, either natural or artificial, including every public or governmental agency engaged in surface mining and/or the operation of surface mines, whether individually, jointly, or through subsidiaries, agents, employees, operators, or contractors who holds a state reclamation permit.
(11) "Reclamation" means rehabilitation for the appropriate future use of disturbed areas resulting from surface mining including areas under associated mineral processing equipment, areas under stockpiled materials, and aboveground waste rock and tailing facilities, and all other surface disturbances associated with underground mines. Although both the need for and the practicability of reclamation will control the type and degree of reclamation in any specific surface mine, the basic objective shall be to reestablish on a perpetual basis the vegetative cover, soil stability, and water conditions appropriate to the approved subsequent use of the surface mine and to prevent or mitigate future environmental degradation.
(12) "Reclamation setbacks" include those lands along the margins of surface mines wherein minerals and overburden shall be preserved in sufficient volumes to accomplish reclamation according to the approved plan and the minimum reclamation standards. Maintenance of reclamation setbacks may not preclude other mine-related activities within the reclamation setback.
(13) "Recycling" means the reuse of minerals or rock products.
(14) "Screening" consists of vegetation, berms or other topography, fencing, and/or other screens that may be required to mitigate impacts of surface mining on adjacent properties and/or the environment.
(15) "Segment" means any portion of the surface mine that, in the opinion of the department:
(a) Has characteristics of topography, drainage, slope stability, ownership, mining development, or mineral distribution, that make reclamation necessary;
(b) Is not in use as part of surface mining and/or related activities; and
(c) Is larger than seven acres and has more than five hundred linear feet of working face except as provided in a segmental reclamation agreement approved by the department.
(16) "SEPA" means the state environmental policy act, chapter 43.21C RCW and rules adopted thereunder.
(17)(a) "Surface mine" means any area or areas in close proximity to each other, as determined by the department, where extraction of minerals results in:
(i) More than three acres of disturbed area;
(ii) Surface mined slopes greater than thirty feet high and steeper than 1.0 foot horizontal to 1.0 foot vertical; or
(iii) More than one acre of disturbed area within an eight acre area, when the disturbed area results from mineral prospecting or exploration activities.
(b) Surface mines include areas where mineral extraction from the surface or subsurface occurs by the auger method or by reworking mine refuse or tailings, when the disturbed area exceeds the size or height thresholds listed in (a) of this subsection.
(c) Surface mining occurs when operations have created or are intended to create a surface mine as defined by this subsection.
(d) Surface mining shall exclude excavations or grading used:
(i) Primarily for on-site construction, on-site road maintenance, or on-site landfill construction;
(ii) For the purpose of public safety or restoring the land following a natural disaster;
(iii) For the purpose of removing stockpiles;
(iv) For forest or farm road construction or maintenance on site or on contiguous lands;
(v) Primarily for public works projects if the mines are owned or primarily operated by counties with 1993 populations of less than twenty thousand persons, and if each mine has less than seven acres of disturbed area; and
(vi)
For sand authorized by RCW ((43.51.685)) 79A.05.630.
(18) "Topsoil" means the naturally occurring upper part of a soil profile, including the soil horizon that is rich in humus and capable of supporting vegetation together with other sediments within four vertical feet of the ground surface.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.685 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.630 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 77. RCW 79.08.275 and 1996 c 129 s 8 are each amended to read as follows:
Except
as provided in RCW ((43.51.1121 and 43.51.113)) 79A.05.120 and
79A.05.125, the portion of the Milwaukee Road corridor from the west end of
the bridge structure over the Columbia river, which point is located in section
34, township 16 north, range 23 east, W.M., to the Idaho border purchased by
the state shall be under the management and control of the department of
natural resources.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.1121 and 43.51.113 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.120 and 79A.05.125, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 78. RCW 79.24.570 and 1969 ex.s. c 273 s 11 are each amended to read as follows:
All
moneys received by the department of general administration from the management
of the east capitol site, excepting (1) funds otherwise dedicated prior to
April 28, 1967, (2) parking and rental charges and fines which are required to
be deposited in other accounts, and (3) reimbursements of service and other
utility charges made to the department of general administration, shall be
deposited in the capitol purchase and development account of the state general
fund ((or, in the event that revenue bonds are issued as authorized by RCW
79.24.630 through 79.24.647, into the state building bond redemption fund
pursuant to RCW 79.24.638)).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 79.24.630 through 79.24.647 were repealed by 1994 c 219 s 21.
Sec. 79. RCW 79.71.090 and 1991 sp.s. c 13 s 118 are each amended to read as follows:
There is hereby created the natural resources conservation areas stewardship account in the state treasury to ensure proper and continuing management of land acquired or designated pursuant to this chapter. Funds for the stewardship account shall be derived from appropriations of state general funds, federal funds, grants, donations, gifts, bond issue receipts, securities, and other monetary instruments of value. Income derived from the management of natural resources conservation areas shall also be deposited in this stewardship account.
Appropriations
from this account to the department shall be expended for no other purpose than
the following: (1) To manage the areas approved by the legislature in
fulfilling the purposes of this chapter; (2) to manage property acquired as
natural area preserves under chapter 79.70 RCW; (3) to manage property
transferred under the authority and appropriation provided by the legislature
to be managed under chapter 79.70 RCW or this chapter or acquired under chapter
((43.98A)) 79A.15 RCW; and (4) to pay for operating expenses for
the natural heritage program under chapter 79.70 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 43.98A RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.15 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 80. RCW 79.71.100 and 1987 c 472 s 10 are each amended to read as follows:
The legislature hereby designates certain areas as natural resources conservation areas:
(1)
The Mt. Si conservation area (King County), RCW ((43.51.940)) 79A.05.725,
is hereby designated the Mt. Si natural resources conservation area. The
department is directed to continue its management of this area and to develop a
plan for its continued conservation and use by the public. In accordance with
Article XVI of the Washington state Constitution, any available private lands
and trust lands located within the designated boundaries of the Mt. Si
conservation area shall be leased or acquired in fee from the appropriate trust
at fair market value using funds appropriated for that purpose.
(2) Trust lands and state-owned land on Cypress Island (Skagit County) are hereby designated as the Cypress Island natural resources conservation area. Any available private lands necessary to achieve the purposes of this section shall be acquired by the department of natural resources using funds appropriated for that purpose. Trust lands located within the designated boundaries of the Cypress Island natural resources conservation area shall be leased or acquired in fee from the appropriate trust at fair market value.
(3) Woodard Bay (Thurston County) is hereby designated the Woodard Bay natural resources conservation area. The department is directed to acquire property available in Sec. 18, T.19N, R1W using funds appropriated for that purpose.
(4) The area adjacent to the Dishman Hills natural area (Spokane County) is hereby designated the Dishman Hills natural resources conservation area. The department is directed to acquire property available in Sec. 19, 29 and 30, T.25N, R44E, using funds appropriated for that purpose.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.940 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.725 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 81. RCW 79.92.070 and 1982 1st ex.s. c 21 s 75 are each amended to read as follows:
If
the owner of any harbor area lease upon tidal waters shall desire to construct
thereon any wharf, dock, or other convenience of navigation or commerce, or to
extend, enlarge, or substantially improve any existing structure used in
connection with such harbor area, and shall deem the required expenditure not warranted
by his or her right to occupy such harbor area during the remainder of
the term of his or her lease, ((he)) the lease owner may
make application to the department of natural resources for a new lease of such
harbor area for a period not exceeding thirty years. Upon the filing of such
application accompanied by such proper plans, drawings or other data, the
department shall forthwith investigate the same and if it shall determine that
the proposed work or improvement is in the public interest and reasonably
adequate for the public needs, it shall by order fix the terms and conditions
and the rate of rental for such new lease, such rate of rental shall be a fixed
percentage, during the term of such lease, on the true and fair value in money
of such harbor area determined from time to time by the department ((as
provided in RCW 79.92.050)). The department may propose modifications of
the proposed wharf, dock, or other convenience or extensions, enlargements, or
improvements thereon. The department shall, within ninety days from the filing
of such application notify the applicant in writing of the terms and conditions
upon which such new lease will be granted, and of the rental to be paid, and if
the applicant shall within ninety days thereafter elect to accept a new lease
of such harbor area upon the terms and conditions, and at the rental prescribed
by the department, the department shall make a new lease for such harbor area
for the term applied for and the existing lease shall thereupon be surrendered
and canceled.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 79.92.050 was repealed by 1984 c 221 s 30, effective October 1, 1984.
Makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 82. RCW 79.92.080 and 1982 1st ex.s. c 21 s 76 are each amended to read as follows:
Upon
the expiration of any harbor area lease upon tidal waters hereafter expiring,
the owner thereof may apply for a re-lease of such harbor area for a period not
exceeding thirty years. Such application shall be accompanied with maps
showing the existing improvements upon such harbor area and the tidelands
adjacent thereto and with proper plans, drawings, and other data showing any
proposed extensions or improvements of existing structures. Upon the filing of
such application the department of natural resources shall forthwith
investigate the same and if it shall determine that the character of the
wharves, docks or other conveniences of commerce and navigation are reasonably
adequate for the public needs and in the public interest, it shall by order fix
and determine the terms and conditions upon which such re-lease shall be
granted and the rate of rental to be paid, which rate shall be a fixed
percentage during the term of such lease on the true and fair value in money of
such harbor area as determined from time to time by the department of natural
resources ((in accordance with RCW 79.92.050)).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 79.92.050 was repealed by 1984 c 221 s 30, effective October 1, 1984.
Sec. 83. RCW 79.94.070 and 1982 1st ex.s. c 21 s 92 are each amended to read as follows:
Upon platting and appraisal of tidelands or shorelands of the first class as in this chapter provided, if the department of natural resources shall deem it for the best public interest to offer said tide or shore lands of the first class for lease, the department shall cause a notice to be served upon the owner of record of uplands fronting upon the tide or shore lands to be offered for lease if he or she be a resident of the state, or if he or she be a nonresident of the state, shall mail to his or her last known post office address, as reflected in the county records, a copy of the notice notifying him or her that the state is offering such tide or shore lands for lease, giving a description of those lands and the department's appraised fair market value of such tide or shore lands for lease, and notifying such owner that he or she has a preference right to apply to lease said tide or shore lands at the appraised value for the lease thereof for a period of sixty days from the date of service of mailing of said notice. If at the expiration of sixty days from the service or mailing of the notice, as above provided, there being no conflicting applications filed, and the owner of the uplands fronting upon the tide or shore lands offered for lease, has failed to avail himself or herself of his or her preference right to apply to lease or to pay to the department the appraised value for lease of the tide or shore lands described in said notice, then in that event, said tide or shore lands may be offered for lease to any person and may be leased in the manner provided for in the case of lease of state lands.
If
at the expiration of sixty days two or more claimants asserting a preference
right to lease shall have filed applications to lease any tract, conflicting
with each other, the conflict between the claimants shall be equitably resolved
by the department of natural ((resource[s])) resources as the
best interests of the state require in accord with the procedures prescribed by
chapter 34.05 RCW: PROVIDED, That any contract purchaser of lands or rights
therein, which upland qualifies the owner for a preference right under this
section, shall have first priority for such preference right.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Corrects the reference to the department of natural resources.
Makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 84. RCW 79.96.110 and 1994 c 264 s 72 are each amended to read as follows:
In
case the director of fish and wildlife approves the vacation of the whole or
any part of said reserve, the department of natural resources may vacate and
offer for lease such parts or all of said reserve as it deems to be for the
best interest of the state, and all moneys received for the lease of such lands
shall be paid to the department of natural resources ((in accordance with
RCW 79.94.190)): PROVIDED, That nothing in RCW 79.96.090 through 79.96.110
shall be construed as authorizing the lease of any tidelands which have
heretofore, or which may hereafter, be set aside as state oyster reserves in
Eld Inlet, Hammersley Inlet, or Totten Inlet, situated in Mason or Thurston
counties: PROVIDED FURTHER, That any portion of Plat 138, Clifton's Oyster
Reserve, which has already been vacated, may be leased by the department.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 79.94.190 was repealed by 1984 c 221 s 30, effective October 1, 1984.
Sec. 85. RCW 79A.05.155 and 1982 c 156 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
If
the commission determines it necessary, the applicant shall execute and file
with the secretary of state a bond payable to the state, in such penal sum as
the commission shall require, with good and sufficient sureties to be approved
by the commission, conditioned that the grantee of the permit will make the
improvement in accordance with the plans and specifications contained in the
permit, and, in case the improvement is made upon lands withdrawn from sale
under the provisions of RCW ((43.51.100)) 79A.05.105, will pay
into the state treasury to the credit of the fund to which the proceeds of the
sale of such lands would belong, the appraised value of all merchantable timber
and material on the land, destroyed, or used in making such improvement.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.100 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.105 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 86. RCW 79A.05.200 and 1967 ex.s. c 96 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The
powers, functions, and duties heretofore exercised by the department of ((fisheries))
fish and wildlife, or its director, respecting the management, control,
and operation of the following enumerated tidelands, which are presently
suitable for public recreational use, are hereby transferred to the parks and
recreation commission which shall also have respecting such tidelands all the
powers conferred by this chapter ((43.51 RCW)), as now or
hereafter amended, respecting parks and parkways:
Parcel No. 1. (Toandos Peninsula) The tidelands of the second class, owned by the state of Washington, situate in front of, adjacent to, or abutting upon lots 1, 2, and 3, section 5, lots 1, 2, and 3, section 4, and lot 1, section 3, all in township 25 north, range 1 west, W.M., with a frontage of 158.41 lineal chains, more or less.
Parcel No. 2. (Shine) The tidelands of the second class, owned by the state of Washington, situate in front of, adjacent to, or abutting upon lots 1, 2, 3 and that portion of lot 4 lying north of the south 8.35 chains thereof as measured along the government meander line, all in section 35, township 28 north, range 1 east, W.M., with a frontage of 76.70 lineal chains, more or less.
Subject to an easement for right of way for county road granted to Jefferson county December 8, 1941 under application No. 1731, records of department of public lands.
Parcel No. 3. (Mud Bay - Lopez Island) The tidelands of the second class, owned by the state of Washington situate in front of, adjacent to, or abutting upon lots 5, 6 and 7, section 18, lot 5, section 7 and lots 3, 4, and 5, section 8, all in township 34 north, range 1 west, W.M., with a frontage of 172.11 lineal chains, more or less.
Excepting, however, any tideland of the second class in front of said lot 3, section 8 conveyed through deeds issued April 14, 1909 pursuant to the provisions of chapter 24, Laws of 1895 under application No. 4985, records of department of public lands.
Parcel No. 4. (Spencer Spit) The tidelands of the second class, owned by the state of Washington, situate in front of, adjacent to, or abutting upon lots 1, 3, and 4, section 7, and lot 5, section 18 all in township 35 north, range 1 west, W.M., with a frontage of 118.80 lineal chains, more or less.
Parcel No. 5. (Lilliwaup) The tidelands of the second class, owned by the state of Washington, lying easterly of the east line of vacated state oyster reserve plat No. 133 produced southerly and situate in front of, adjacent to or abutting upon lot 9, section 30, lot 8, section 19 and lot 5 and the south 20 acres of lot 4, section 20, all in township 23 north, range 3 west, W.M., with a frontage of 62.46 lineal chains, more or less.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) Powers, duties, and functions of the department of fisheries and the department of wildlife were transferred to the department of fish and wildlife by 1993 sp.s. c 2, effective July 1, 1994.
(2) Chapter 43.51 RCW was repealed and/or recodified in its entirety pursuant to 1999 c 249. The remaining sections were recodified in chapter 79A.05 RCW.
Sec. 87. RCW 79A.05.205 and 1967 ex.s. c 96 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
The
state parks and recreation commission may take appropriate action to provide
public and private access, including roads and docks, to and from the tidelands
described in RCW ((43.51.240)) 79A.05.200.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.240 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.200 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 88. RCW 79A.05.250 and 1982 c 11 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
The
commission may adopt such rules as are necessary to implement and enforce RCW
((43.51.290 through 43.51.320)) 79A.05.225 through 79A.05.240 and
46.61.585 after consultation with the winter recreation advisory committee.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.290 through 43.51.320 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.225 through 79A.05.240 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 89. RCW 79A.05.255 and 1994 c 264 s 19 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) There is created a winter recreation advisory committee to advise the parks and recreation commission in the administration of this chapter and to assist and advise the commission in the development of winter recreation facilities and programs.
(2) The committee shall consist of:
(a) Six representatives of the nonsnowmobiling winter recreation public appointed by the commission, including a resident of each of the six geographical areas of this state where nonsnowmobiling winter recreation activity occurs, as defined by the commission.
(b) Three representatives of the snowmobiling public appointed by the commission.
(c) One representative of the department of natural resources, one representative of the department of fish and wildlife, and one representative of the Washington state association of counties, each of whom shall be appointed by the director of the particular department or association.
(3) The terms of the members appointed under subsection (2) (a) and (b) of this section shall begin on October 1st of the year of appointment and shall be for three years or until a successor is appointed, except in the case of appointments to fill vacancies for the remainder of the unexpired term: PROVIDED, That the first of these members shall be appointed for terms as follows: Three members shall be appointed for one year, three members shall be appointed for two years, and three members shall be appointed for three years.
(4)
Members of the committee shall be reimbursed from the winter recreational
program account created by RCW ((43.51.310)) 79A.05.235 for
travel expenses as provided in RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
(5) The committee shall meet at times and places it determines not less than twice each year and additionally as required by the committee chairman or by majority vote of the committee. The chairman of the committee shall be chosen under procedures adopted by the committee. The committee shall adopt any other procedures necessary to govern its proceedings.
(6) The director of parks and recreation or the director's designee shall serve as secretary to the committee and shall be a nonvoting member.
(7) The winter recreation advisory committee and its powers and duties shall terminate on June 30, 2001.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.310 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.235 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 90. RCW 79A.05.265 and 1977 ex.s. c 281 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The
legislature finds that there is a need for hostels in the state for the safety
and welfare of transient persons with limited resources. It is the intent of
RCW ((43.51.360 through 43.51.370)) 79A.05.265 through 79A.05.275
that such facilities be established using locally donated structures. It is
the further intent of RCW ((43.51.360 through 43.51.370)) 79A.05.265
through 79A.05.275 that the state dispense any available federal or other
moneys for such related projects and provide assistance where possible.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.360 through 43.51.370 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.265 through 79A.05.275 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 91. RCW 79A.05.300 and 1980 c 89 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
For
the reasons specified in RCW ((43.51.380)) 79A.25.250, the state
parks and recreation commission shall place a high priority on the
establishment of urban area state parks and shall revise its plan for future
state parks to achieve this priority. This section shall be implemented by
January 1, 1981.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.380 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.250 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 92. RCW 79A.05.315 and 1996 c 129 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
Except
as provided in RCW ((43.51.1121 and 43.51.113)) 79A.05.120 and
79A.05.125, management control of the portion of the Milwaukee Road
corridor, beginning at the western terminus near Easton and concluding at the
west end of the bridge structure over the Columbia river, which point is
located in section 34, township 16 north, range 23 east, W.M., inclusive of the
northerly spur line therefrom, shall be transferred by the department of
natural resources to the state parks and recreation commission at no cost to
the commission.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.1121 and 43.51.113 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.120 and 79A.05.125 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 93. RCW 79A.05.320 and 1987 c 438 s 39 are each amended to read as follows:
The state parks and recreation commission shall do the following with respect to the portion of the Milwaukee Road corridor under its control:
(1)
Manage the corridor as a recreational trail except when closed under RCW ((43.51.409))
79A.05.325;
(2) Close the corridor to hunting;
(3) Close the corridor to all motorized vehicles except: (a) Emergency or law enforcement vehicles; (b) vehicles necessary for access to utility lines; and (c) vehicles necessary for maintenance of the corridor, or construction of the trail;
(4) Comply with legally enforceable conditions contained in the deeds for the corridor;
(5) Control weeds under the applicable provisions of chapters 17.04, 17.06, and 17.10 RCW; and
(6) Clean and maintain culverts.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.409 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.325 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 94. RCW 79A.05.405 and 1993 c 182 s 6 are each amended to read as follows:
The
water trail program account is created in the state treasury. All receipts
from sales of materials pursuant to RCW ((43.51.442)) 79A.05.385,
from state-wide water trail permit fees collected pursuant to RCW ((43.51.448))
79A.05.400, and all monetary civil penalties collected pursuant to RCW
((43.51.454)) 79A.05.415 shall be deposited in the water trail
program account. Any gifts, grants, donations, or moneys from any source
received by the commission for the water trail program shall also be deposited
in the water trail program account. Moneys in the account may be spent only
after appropriation to the commission, and may be used solely for water trail
program purposes, including: (1) Administration, acquisition, development,
operation, planning, and maintenance of water trail lands and facilities, and
grants or contracts therefor; and (2) the development and implementation of
water trail informational, safety, enforcement, and education programs, and
grants or contracts therefor.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.442, 43.52 448, and 43.51.454 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.385, 79A.05.400, and 79A.05.415, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 95. RCW 79A.05.420 and 1994 c 264 s 21 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
There is created a water trail advisory committee to advise the parks and
recreation commission in the administration of RCW ((43.51.440 through
43.51.454)) 79A.05.380 through 79A.05.415 and to assist and advise
the commission in the development of water trail facilities and programs.
(2) The advisory committee shall consist of twelve members, who shall be appointed as follows:
(a) Five public members representing recreational water trail users, to be appointed by the commission;
(b) Two public members representing commercial sectors with an interest in the water trail system, to be appointed by the commission;
(c) One representative each from the department of natural resources, the department of fish and wildlife, the Washington state association of counties, and the association of Washington cities, to be appointed by the director of the agency or association. The director of the Washington state parks and recreation commission or the director's designee shall serve as secretary to the committee and shall be a nonvoting member.
(3) Except as provided in this section, the terms of the public members appointed by the commission shall begin on January 1st of the year of appointment and shall be for three years or until a successor is appointed, except in the case of appointments to fill vacancies for the remainder of an unexpired term. In making the initial appointments to the advisory committee, the commission shall appoint two public members to serve one year, two public members to serve for two years, and three public members to serve for three years. Public members of the advisory committee may be reimbursed from the water trail program account for travel expenses as provided in RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.
(4) The committee shall select a chair and adopt rules necessary to govern its proceedings. The committee shall meet at the times and places it determines, not less than twice a year, and additionally as required by the committee chair or by majority vote of the committee.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.440 through 43.51.454 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.380 through 79A.05.415 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 96. RCW 79A.05.500 and 1969 ex.s. c 96 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The
purpose of RCW ((43.51.500 through 43.51.570)) 79A.05.500 through
79A.05.530 is to provide: (1) The opportunity for healthful employment of
youths in programs of conservation, developing, improving, and maintaining
natural and artificial recreational areas for the welfare of the general
public; (2) the opportunity for our youths to learn vocational and work skills,
develop good work habits and a sense of responsibility and contribution to
society, improvement in personal physical and moral well being, and an
understanding and appreciation of nature.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.500 through 43.51.570 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.500 through 79A.05.530 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601, except for RCW 43.51.545 which was repealed by 1999 c 249 s 1701.
Sec. 97. RCW 79A.05.520 and 1965 c 8 s 43.51.550 are each amended to read as follows:
Existing
provisions of law with respect to hours of work, rate of compensation, sick
leave, vacation, civil service and unemployment compensation shall not be
applicable to enrollees or temporary employees working under the provisions of
RCW ((43.51.500 through 43.51.570)) 79A.05.500 through 79A.05.530.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.500 through 43.51.570 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.500 through 79A.05.530 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601, except for RCW 43.51.545 which was repealed by 1999 c 249 s 1701.
Sec. 98. RCW 79A.05.535 and 1965 ex.s. c 48 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The
state parks and recreation commission is authorized to enter into agreements
with and accept grants from the federal government for the support of any
program within the purposes of RCW ((43.51.500 through 43.51.570)) 79A.05.500
through 79A.05.530.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.500 through 43.51.570 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.500 through 79A.05.530 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601, except for RCW 43.51.545 which was repealed by 1999 c 249 s 1701.
Sec. 99. RCW 79A.05.540 and 1965 ex.s. c 48 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
Notwithstanding
the provisions of RCW ((43.51.530 and 43.51.540)) 79A.05.510 and
79A.05.515, the commission may determine the length of enrollment and the
compensation of enrollees in accordance with the standards of any federal act
or regulation under which an agreement is made with, or a grant is received
from the federal government pursuant to RCW ((43.51.580)) 79A.05.535.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.530, 43.51.540, and 43.51.580 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.510, 79A.05.515, and 79A.05.535, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 100. RCW 79A.05.610 and 1969 ex.s. c 55 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
Except
as otherwise provided in RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600
through 79A.05.630, the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area shall
be under the jurisdiction of the Washington state parks and recreation
commission, which shall administer RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600
through 79A.05.630 in accordance with the powers granted it herein and
under the appropriate provisions of this chapter ((43.51 RCW)).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) Chapter 43.51 RCW was repealed and/or recodified in its entirety by 1999 c 249. The remaining sections were recodified in chapter 79A.05 RCW.
Sec. 101. RCW 79A.05.615 and 1969 ex.s. c 55 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
The
Washington state parks and recreation commission shall administer the
Washington State Seashore Conservation Area in harmony with the broad
principles set forth in RCW ((43.51.650)) 79A.05.600. Where
feasible, the area shall be preserved in its present state; everywhere it shall
be maintained in the best possible condition for public use. All forms of
public outdoor recreation shall be permitted and encouraged in the area, unless
specifically excluded or limited by the commission. While the primary purpose
in the establishment of the area is to preserve the coastal beaches for public
recreation, other uses shall be allowed as provided in RCW ((43.51.650
through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630, or when found not
inconsistent with public recreational use by the Washington state parks and
recreation commission.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 43.51.650 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 102. RCW 79A.05.620 and 1969 ex.s. c 55 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
In
administering the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area, the Washington
state parks and recreation commission shall seek the cooperation and assistance
of federal agencies, other state agencies, and local political subdivisions.
All state agencies, and the governing officials of each local subdivision shall
cooperate with the commission in carrying out its duties. Except as otherwise
provided in RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600 through
79A.05.630, and notwithstanding any other provision of law, other state
agencies and local subdivisions shall perform duties in the Washington State
Seashore Conservation Area which are within their normal jurisdiction, except
when such performance clearly conflicts with the purposes of RCW ((43.51.650
through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 103. RCW 79A.05.625 and 1994 c 264 s 22 are each amended to read as follows:
Nothing
in RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630
and ((43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695
shall be construed to interfere with the powers, duties and authority of the
department of fish and wildlife to regulate the conservation or taking of food
fish and shellfish. Nor shall anything in RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685))
79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and ((43.51.695 through 43.51.765))
79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 be construed to interfere with the powers,
duties and authority of the department of fish and wildlife to regulate,
manage, conserve, and provide for the harvest of wildlife within such area:
PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That no hunting shall be permitted in any state park.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 104. RCW 79A.05.630 and 1997 c 137 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
Lands
within the Seashore Conservation Area shall not be sold, leased, or otherwise
disposed of, except as herein provided. The commission may, under authority
granted in RCW ((43.51.210 and 43.51.215)) 79A.05.175 and 79A.05.180,
exchange state park lands in the Seashore Conservation Area for lands of equal
value to be managed by the commission consistent with this chapter. Only state
park lands lying east of the Seashore Conservation Line, as it is located at
the time of exchange, may be so exchanged. The department of natural resources
may lease the lands within the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area as
well as the accreted lands along the ocean in state ownership for the
exploration and production of oil and gas: PROVIDED, That oil drilling rigs
and equipment will not be placed on the Seashore Conservation Area or
state-owned accreted lands.
Sale of sand from accretions shall be made to supply the needs of cranberry growers for cranberry bogs in the vicinity and shall not be prohibited if found by the commission to be reasonable, and not generally harmful or destructive to the character of the land: PROVIDED, That the commission may grant leases and permits for the removal of sands for construction purposes from any lands within the Seashore Conservation Area if found by the commission to be reasonable and not generally harmful or destructive to the character of the land: PROVIDED FURTHER, That net income from such leases shall be deposited in the state parks renewal and stewardship account.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.210 and 43.51.215 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.175 and 79A.05.180 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 105. RCW 79A.05.635 and 1988 c 75 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
A
cooperative program to provide recreation management plans for the ocean
beaches that comprise the Seashore Conservation Area established by RCW ((43.51.655))
79A.05.605 is created.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.655 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.605 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 106. RCW 79A.05.640 and 1988 c 75 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless
the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply
to RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.600
through 79A.05.695.
(1) "Local government" means a county, city, or town.
(2)
"Ocean beaches" include the three ocean beaches described in RCW ((43.51.655))
79A.05.605.
(3) "Pedestrian use" means any use that does not involve a motorized vehicle.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601. These citations have been combined to accurately reflect those sections that relate to the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area, RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695.
(2) RCW 43.51.655 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.605 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 107. RCW 79A.05.645 and 1988 c 75 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
Local
governments having a portion of the Seashore Conservation Area within their
boundaries may, individually or through an agreement with other local
governments located on the same ocean beach, adopt a recreation management plan
which meets the requirements of RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and
43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695 for that
portion of the ocean beach. The legislature hereby encourages adoption of a
single plan for each beach.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601. These citations have been combined to accurately reflect those sections that relate to the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area, RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695.
Sec. 108. RCW 79A.05.650 and 1988 c 75 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Except as provided in RCW ((43.51.715 and 43.51.720)) 79A.05.655 and
79A.05.660, a total of forty percent of the length of the beach subject to
the recreation management plan shall be reserved for pedestrian use under this
section and RCW ((43.51.725)) 79A.05.665. Restrictions on
motorized traffic under this section shall be from April 15th to the day
following Labor day of each year. Local jurisdictions may adopt provisions
within recreation management plans that exceed the requirements of this
section. The commission shall not require that a plan designate for pedestrian
use more than forty percent of the land subject to the plan.
(2) In designating areas to be reserved for pedestrian use, the plan shall consider the following:
(a) Public safety;
(b) State-wide interest in recreational use of the ocean beaches;
(c) Protection of shorebird and marine mammal habitats;
(d) Preservation of native beach vegetation;
(e) Protection of sand dune topography;
(f) Prudent management of clam beds;
(g) Economic impacts to the local community; and
(h) Public access and parking availability.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.715, 43.51.720, and 43.51.725 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.655, 79A.05.660, and 79A.05.665 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Also puts the date reference in standard drafting style.
Sec. 109. RCW 79A.05.655 and 1988 c 75 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
Notwithstanding
RCW ((43.51.710(1))) 79A.05.650(1), recreation management plans
may make provision for vehicular traffic on areas otherwise reserved for
pedestrian use in order to:
(1) Facilitate clam digging;
(2) Accommodate organized recreational events of not more than seven consecutive days duration;
(3)
Provide for removal of wood debris under RCW 4.24.210 and ((43.51.045(5)))
79A.05.035(5); and
(4) Accommodate removal of sand located upland from the Seashore Conservation Area or removal of sand within the Seashore Conservation Area under the terms of a covenant, easement, or deed.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.710 and 43.51.045 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.650 and 79A.05.035 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 110. RCW 79A.05.665 and 1988 c 75 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
Recreation
management plans shall, upon request of the commission, reserve on a permanent,
seasonal, or temporary basis, land adjoining national wildlife refuges and
state parks for pedestrian use. After a plan is approved, the commission may
require local jurisdictions to adopt amendments to the plan governing driving
on land adjoining wildlife refuges and state parks. Land reserved for
pedestrian use under this section for at least the period from April 15th
through the day following Labor Day of each year shall be included when
determining compliance with the requirements of RCW ((43.51.710)) 79A.05.650.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.710 was recodified as RCW 79A.05.650 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 111. RCW 79A.05.685 and 1988 c 75 s 11 are each amended to read as follows:
Recreation
management plans shall be adopted by each participating jurisdiction and
submitted to the commission by September 1, 1989. The commission shall approve
the proposed plan if, in the commission's judgment, the plan adequately
fulfills the requirements of RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695
through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695.
If
the proposed plan is not approved, the commission shall suggest modifications
to the participating local governments. Local governments shall have ninety
days after receiving the suggested modifications to resubmit a recreation
management plan. Thereafter, if the commission finds that a plan does not
adequately fulfill the requirements of RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and
43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695, the
commission may amend the proposal or adopt an alternative plan.
If
a plan for all or any portion of the Seashore Conservation Area is not
submitted in accordance with RCW ((43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.635
through 79A.05.695, the commission shall adopt a recreation management plan
for that site.
Administrative rules adopted by the commission under RCW 43.51.680 shall remain in effect for all or any portion of each ocean beach until a recreation management plan for that site is adopted or approved by the commission.
The commission shall not adopt a recreation management plan for all or any portion of an ocean beach while appeal of a commission decision regarding that site is pending.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601. The references to RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 have been combined to accurately reflect those sections that relate to the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area, RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695.
Sec. 112. RCW 79A.05.693 and 1988 c 75 s 14 are each amended to read as follows:
The
ocean beaches within the Seashore Conservation Area are hereby declared a
public highway and shall remain forever open to the use of the public as
provided in RCW ((43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.635 through
79A.05.695.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 113. RCW 79A.05.695 and 1988 c 75 s 15 are each amended to read as follows:
Amendments
to the recreation management plan may be adopted jointly by each local
government participating in the plan and submitted to the commission for
approval. The commission shall approve a proposed amendment if, in the
commission's judgment, the amendment adequately fulfills the requirements of
RCW ((43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765)) 79A.05.600
through 79A.05.695.
After a plan is approved, the commission may require local jurisdictions to adopt amendments to the plan if the commission finds that such amendments are necessary to protect public health and safety, or to protect significant natural resources as determined by the agency having jurisdiction over the resource.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.650 through 43.51.685 and 43.51.695 through 43.51.765 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.630 and 79A.05.635 through 79A.05.695 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601. These citations have been combined to accurately reflect those sections that relate to the Washington State Seashore Conservation Area, RCW 79A.05.600 through 79A.05.695.
Sec. 114. RCW 79A.05.735 and 1994 c 264 s 23 are each amended to read as follows:
The
state department of natural resources and the state parks and recreation
commission have joined together in excellent cooperation in the conducting of
this study along with the citizen advisory subcommittee and have joined
together in cooperation with the department of fish and wildlife to accomplish
other projects of multidisciplinary concern, and because it may be in the best
interests of the state to continue such cooperation, the state parks and
recreation commission, the department of natural resources, and the department
of fish and wildlife are hereby directed to consider both short and long term
objectives, the expertise of each agency's staff, and alternatives such as
reasonably may be expected to safeguard the conservation area's values as
described in RCW ((43.51.940)) 79A.05.725 giving due regard to
efficiency and economy of management: PROVIDED, That the interests conveyed to
or by the state agencies identified in this section shall be managed by the
department of natural resources until such time as the state parks and
recreation commission or other public agency is managing public recreation
areas and facilities located in such close proximity to the conservation area
described in RCW ((43.51.942)) 79A.05.730 so as to make combined
management of those areas and facilities and transfer of management of the
conservation area more efficient and economical than continued management by
the department of natural resources. At that time the department of natural
resources is directed to negotiate with the appropriate public agency for the
transfer of those management responsibilities for the interests obtained within
the conservation area under RCW ((43.51.940 through 43.51.945)) 79A.05.725
through 79A.05.745: PROVIDED FURTHER, That the state agencies identified
in this section may, by mutual agreement, undertake management of portions of
the conservation area as they may from time to time determine in accordance
with those rules and regulations established for natural area preserves under
chapter 79.70 RCW, for natural and conservation areas under present WAC
352-16-020(3) and (6), and under chapter 77.12 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 43.51.940 and 43.51.942 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.725 and 79A.05.730 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 43.51.940 through 43.51.945 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.725 through 79A.05.745 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 115. RCW 79A.05.750 and 1977 ex.s. c 75 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
It
is the intent of RCW ((43.51.946 through 43.51.956)) 79A.05.750
through 79A.05.795 to establish and recognize the Yakima river corridor
from Selah Gap (Yakima Ridge) to Union Gap (Rattlesnake Hills) as a uniquely
valuable recreation, conservation, and scenic resource in the state of
Washington.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.946 through 43.51.956 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 116. RCW 79A.05.765 and 1977 ex.s. c 75 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
The
Yakima county commissioners are authorized to coordinate the acquisition,
development, and operation of the Yakima river conservation area in accordance
with the purposes of RCW ((43.51.946 through 43.51.956)) 79A.05.750
through 79A.05.795 and in cooperation with public parks, conservation and
resource managing agencies.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.946 through 43.51.956 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 117. RCW 79A.05.780 and 1977 ex.s. c 75 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
The
Washington state parks and recreation commission is directed to consult with
the Yakima county commissioners in the acquisition, development, and operation
of the Yakima river conservation area in accordance with the purposes of RCW ((43.51.946
through 43.51.956)) 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795 and the Yakima
river study authorized in section 170, chapter 269, Laws of 1975, first
extraordinary session.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.946 through 43.51.956 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 118. RCW 79A.05.793 and 1993 sp.s. c 2 s 19 are each amended to read as follows:
Nothing
in RCW ((43.51.946 through 43.51.956)) 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795
shall be construed to interfere with the powers, duties, and authority of the
state department of fish and wildlife or the state fish and wildlife commission
to regulate, manage, conserve, and provide for the harvest of wildlife within
such area: PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That no hunting shall be permitted in any state
park.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.946 through 43.51.956 were recodified as RCW 79A.05.750 through 79A.05.795 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 119. RCW 79A.15.020 and 1990 1st ex.s. c 14 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
The
habitat conservation account is established in the state treasury. The
committee shall administer the account in accordance with chapter ((43.99))
79A.25 RCW and this chapter, and shall hold it separate and apart from
all other money, funds, and accounts of the committee.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 43.99 RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.25 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 120. RCW 79A.15.030 and 1990 1st ex.s. c 14 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Moneys appropriated for this chapter shall be divided equally between the habitat conservation and outdoor recreation accounts and shall be used exclusively for the purposes specified in this chapter.
(2) Moneys deposited in these accounts shall be invested as authorized for other state funds, and any earnings on them shall be credited to the respective account.
(3)
All moneys deposited in the habitat conservation and outdoor recreation
accounts shall be allocated under RCW ((43.98A.040 and 43.98A.050)) 79A.15.040
and 79A.15.050 as grants to state or local agencies for acquisition,
development, and renovation within the jurisdiction of those agencies, subject
to legislative appropriation. The committee may use or permit the use of any
funds appropriated for this chapter as matching funds where federal, local, or
other funds are made available for projects within the purposes of this
chapter.
(4) Projects receiving grants under this chapter that are developed or otherwise accessible for public recreational uses shall be available to the public on a nondiscriminatory basis.
(5)
The committee may make grants to an eligible project from both the habitat
conservation and outdoor recreation accounts and any one or more of the
applicable categories under such accounts described in RCW ((43.98A.040 and
43.98A.050)) 79A.15.040 and 79A.15.050.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.98A.040 and 43.98A.050 were recodified as RCW 79A.15.040 and 79A.15.050 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 121. RCW 79A.15.060 and 1999 c 379 s 918 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The committee may adopt rules establishing acquisition policies and priorities for distributions from the habitat conservation account.
(2) Moneys appropriated for this chapter may not be used by the committee to fund additional staff positions or other overhead expenses, or by a state, regional, or local agency to fund operation and maintenance of areas acquired under this chapter, except that the committee may use moneys appropriated for this chapter for the fiscal biennium ending June 30, 2001, for the administrative costs of implementing the pilot watershed plan implementation program established in section 329(6), chapter 235, Laws of 1997, and developing an inventory of publicly owned lands established in section 329(7), chapter 235, Laws of 1997.
(3) Moneys appropriated for this chapter may be used for costs incidental to acquisition, including, but not limited to, surveying expenses, fencing, and signing.
(4) Except as provided in subsection (5) of this section, the committee may not approve a local project where the local agency share is less than the amount to be awarded from the habitat conservation account.
(5) During the fiscal biennium ending June 30, 2001, the committee may approve a riparian zone habitat protection project established in section 329(6), chapter 235, Laws of 1997, where the local agency share is less than the amount to be awarded from the habitat conservation account.
(6) In determining acquisition priorities with respect to the habitat conservation account, the committee shall consider, at a minimum, the following criteria:
(a) For critical habitat and natural areas proposals:
(i) Community support;
(ii) Immediacy of threat to the site;
(iii) Uniqueness of the site;
(iv) Diversity of species using the site;
(v) Quality of the habitat;
(vi) Long-term viability of the site;
(vii) Presence of endangered, threatened, or sensitive species;
(viii) Enhancement of existing public property;
(ix) Consistency with a local land use plan, or a regional or state-wide recreational or resource plan; and
(x) Educational and scientific value of the site.
(b) For urban wildlife habitat proposals, in addition to the criteria of (a) of this subsection:
(i) Population of, and distance from, the nearest urban area;
(ii) Proximity to other wildlife habitat;
(iii) Potential for public use; and
(iv) Potential for use by special needs populations.
(7)
Before October 1st of each even-numbered year, the committee shall recommend to
the governor a prioritized list of state agency projects to be funded under RCW
((43.98A.040)) 79A.15.040(1) (a), (b), and (c). The governor may
remove projects from the list recommended by the committee and shall submit
this amended list in the capital budget request to the legislature. The list
shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each project; and shall
describe for each project any anticipated restrictions upon recreational
activities allowed prior to the project.
(8)
Before October 1st of each year, the committee shall recommend to the governor
a prioritized list of all local projects to be funded under RCW ((43.98A.040))
79A.15.040(1)(c). The governor may remove projects from the list
recommended by the committee and shall submit this amended list in the capital
budget request to the legislature. The list shall include, but not be limited
to, a description of each project and any particular match requirement, and
describe for each project any anticipated restrictions upon recreational
activities allowed prior to the project.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.98A.040 was recodified as RCW 79A.15.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 122. RCW 79A.15.070 and 1999 c 379 s 919 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) In determining which state parks proposals and local parks proposals to fund, the committee shall use existing policies and priorities.
(2) Moneys appropriated for this chapter may not be used by the committee to fund additional staff or other overhead expenses, or by a state, regional, or local agency to fund operation and maintenance of areas acquired under this chapter, except that the committee may use moneys appropriated for this chapter for the fiscal biennium ending June 30, 2001, for the administrative costs of implementing the pilot watershed plan implementation program established in section 329(6), chapter 235, Laws of 1997, and developing an inventory of publicly owned lands established in section 329(7), chapter 235, Laws of 1997.
(3) Moneys appropriated for this chapter may be used for costs incidental to acquisition, including, but not limited to, surveying expenses, fencing, and signing.
(4) The committee may not approve a project of a local agency where the share contributed by the local agency is less than the amount to be awarded from the outdoor recreation account.
(5) The committee may adopt rules establishing acquisition policies and priorities for the acquisition and development of trails and water access sites to be financed from moneys in the outdoor recreation account.
(6) In determining the acquisition and development priorities, the committee shall consider, at a minimum, the following criteria:
(a) For trails proposals:
(i) Community support;
(ii) Immediacy of threat to the site;
(iii) Linkage between communities;
(iv) Linkage between trails;
(v) Existing or potential usage;
(vi) Consistency with an existing local land use plan or a regional or state-wide recreational or resource plan;
(vii) Availability of water access or views;
(viii) Enhancement of wildlife habitat; and
(ix) Scenic values of the site.
(b) For water access proposals:
(i) Community support;
(ii) Distance from similar water access opportunities;
(iii) Immediacy of threat to the site;
(iv) Diversity of possible recreational uses; and
(v) Public demand in the area.
(7)
Before October 1st of each even-numbered year, the committee shall recommend to
the governor a prioritized list of state agency projects to be funded under RCW
((43.98A.050)) 79A.15.050(1) (a), (c), and (d). The governor may
remove projects from the list recommended by the committee and shall submit
this amended list in the capital budget request to the legislature. The list
shall include, but not be limited to, a description of each project; and shall
describe for each project any anticipated restrictions upon recreational
activities allowed prior to the project.
(8)
Before October 1st of each year, the committee shall recommend to the governor
a prioritized list of all local projects to be funded under RCW ((43.98A.050))
79A.15.050(1) (b), (c), and (d) of this act. The governor may remove
projects from the list recommended by the committee and shall submit this
amended list in the capital budget request to the legislature. The list shall
include, but not be limited to, a description of each project and any
particular match requirement, and describe for each project any anticipated restrictions
upon recreational activities allowed prior to the project.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.98A.050 was recodified as RCW 79A.15.050 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 123. RCW 79A.25.020 and 1989 c 237 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
The director shall have the following powers and duties:
(1) To supervise the administrative operations of the committee and its staff;
(2) To administer recreation grant-in-aid programs and provide technical assistance to state and local agencies;
(3) To prepare and update a strategic plan for the acquisition, renovation, and development of recreational resources and the preservation and conservation of open space. The plan shall be prepared in coordination with the office of the governor and the office of financial management, with participation of federal, state, and local agencies having recreational responsibilities, user groups, private sector interests, and the general public. The plan shall be submitted to the committee for review, and the committee shall submit its recommendations on the plan to the governor. The plan shall include, but is not limited to: (a) an inventory of current resources; (b) a forecast of recreational resource demand; (c) identification and analysis of actual and potential funding sources; (d) a process for broad scale information gathering; (e) an assessment of the capabilities and constraints, both internal and external to state government, that affect the ability of the state to achieve the goals of the plan; (f) an analysis of strategic options and decisions available to the state; (g) an implementation strategy that is coordinated with executive policy and budget priorities; and (h) elements necessary to qualify for participation in or the receipt of aid from any federal program for outdoor recreation;
(4) To represent and promote the interests of the state on recreational issues and further the mission of the committee;
(5) Upon approval of the committee, to enter into contracts and agreements with private nonprofit corporations to further state goals of preserving, conserving, and enhancing recreational resources and open space for the public benefit and use;
(6) To appoint such technical and other committees as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter;
(7) To create and maintain a repository for data, studies, research, and other information relating to recreation in the state, and to encourage the interchange of such information;
(8) To encourage and provide opportunities for interagency and regional coordination and cooperative efforts between public agencies and between public and private entities involved in the development and preservation of recreational resources; and
(9)
To prepare the state trails plan, as required by RCW ((67.32.050)) 79A.35.040.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 67.32.050 was recodified as RCW 79A.35.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 124. RCW 79A.25.030 and 1995 c 166 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
From
time to time, but at least once each four years, the director of licensing
shall determine the amount or proportion of moneys paid to him or her as
motor vehicle fuel tax which is tax on marine fuel. The director shall make or
authorize the making of studies, surveys, or investigations to assist him or
her in making such determination, and shall hold one or more public
hearings on the findings of such studies, surveys, or investigations prior to
making his or her determination. The studies, surveys, or
investigations conducted pursuant to this section shall encompass a period of
twelve consecutive months each time. The final determination by the director
shall be implemented as of the next biennium after the period from which the
study data were collected. The director may delegate his or her duties
and authority under this section to one or more persons of the department of
licensing if he or she finds such delegation necessary and proper to the
efficient performance of these duties. Costs of carrying out the provisions of
this section shall be paid from the marine fuel tax refund account created in
RCW ((43.99.040)) 79A.25.040, upon legislative appropriation.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.040 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Also makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 125. RCW 79A.25.040 and 1995 c 166 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
There
is created the marine fuel tax refund account in the state treasury. The
director of licensing shall request the state treasurer to refund monthly from
the motor vehicle fund amounts which have been determined to be tax on marine
fuel. The state treasurer shall refund such amounts and place them in the
marine fuel tax refund account to be held for those entitled thereto pursuant
to chapter 82.36 RCW and RCW ((43.99.050)) 79A.25.050, except
that he or she shall not refund and place in the marine fuel tax refund
account for any period for which a determination has been made pursuant to RCW
((43.99.030)) 79A.25.030 more than the greater of the following
amounts: (1) An amount equal to two percent of all moneys paid to him or
her as motor vehicle fuel tax for such period, (2) an amount necessary to
meet all approved claims for refund of tax on marine fuel for such period.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.050 and 43.99.030 were recodified as RCW 79A.25.050 and 79A.25.030 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Also makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 126. RCW 79A.25.060 and 1995 c 166 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
The
outdoor recreation account is created in the state treasury. Moneys in the
account are subject to legislative appropriation. The committee shall
administer the account in accordance with chapter ((43.98A)) 79A.15
RCW and this chapter, and shall hold it separate and apart from all other
money, funds, and accounts of the committee.
Grants, gifts, or other financial assistance, proceeds received from public bodies as administrative cost contributions, and moneys made available to the state of Washington by the federal government for outdoor recreation, may be deposited into the account.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 43.98A RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.15 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 127. RCW 79A.25.070 and 1995 c 166 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
Upon
expiration of the time limited by RCW 82.36.330 for claiming of refunds of tax
on marine fuel, the state of Washington shall succeed to the right to such
refunds. The director of licensing, after taking into account past and
anticipated claims for refunds from and deposits to the marine fuel tax refund
account and the costs of carrying out the provisions of RCW ((43.99.030))
79A.25.030, shall request the state treasurer to transfer monthly from
the marine fuel tax refund account an amount equal to the proportion of the
moneys in the account representing the motor vehicle fuel tax rate under RCW
82.36.025 in effect on January 1, 1990, to the recreation resource account and
the remainder to the motor vehicle fund.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.030 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.030 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 128. RCW 79A.25.080 and 1999 c 341 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
Moneys
transferred to the recreation resource account from the marine fuel tax refund
account may be used when appropriated by the legislature, as well as any
federal or other funds now or hereafter available, to pay the necessary
administrative and coordinative costs of the interagency committee for outdoor
recreation established by RCW ((43.99.110)) 79A.25.110. All
moneys so transferred, except those appropriated as aforesaid, shall be divided
into two equal shares and shall be used to benefit watercraft recreation in
this state as follows:
(1) One share as grants to state agencies for (a) acquisition of title to, or any interests or rights in, marine recreation land, (b) capital improvement and renovation of marine recreation land, including periodic dredging in accordance with subsection (3) of this section, if needed, to maintain or make the facility more useful, or (c) matching funds in any case where federal or other funds are made available on a matching basis for purposes described in (a) or (b) of this subsection;
(2) One share as grants to public bodies to help finance (a) acquisition of title to, or any interests or rights in, marine recreation land, or (b) capital improvement and renovation of marine recreation land, including periodic dredging in accordance with subsection (3) of this section, if needed, to maintain or make the facility more useful. A public body is authorized to use a grant, together with its own contribution, as matching funds in any case where federal or other funds are made available for purposes described in (a) or (b) of this subsection. The committee may prescribe further terms and conditions for the making of grants in order to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
(3) For the purposes of this section "periodic dredging" is limited to dredging of materials that have been deposited in a channel due to unforeseen events. This dredging should extend the expected usefulness of the facility for at least five years.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.110 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.110 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 129. RCW 79A.25.100 and 1965 c 5 s 10 are each amended to read as follows:
Marine
recreation land with respect to which money has been expended under RCW ((43.99.080))
79A.25.080 shall not, without the approval of the committee, be
converted to uses other than those for which such expenditure was originally
approved. The committee shall only approve any such conversion upon conditions
which will assure the substitution of other marine recreation land of at least
equal fair market value at the time of conversion and of as nearly as feasible
equivalent usefulness and location.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.080 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.080 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 130. RCW 79A.25.180 and 1989 c 237 s 6 are each amended to read as follows:
The
director shall periodically review and have updated the guide authorized by RCW
((43.99.142)) 79A.25.170.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.142 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.170 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 131. RCW 79A.25.200 and 1995 c 166 s 10 are each amended to read as follows:
The
recreation resource account is created in the state treasury. Moneys in this
account are subject to legislative appropriation. The committee shall
administer the account in accordance with this chapter and chapter ((67.32))
79A.35 RCW and shall hold it separate and apart from all other money,
funds, and accounts of the committee. Moneys received from the marine fuel tax
refund account under RCW ((43.99.070)) 79A.25.070 shall be
deposited into the account. Grants, gifts, or other financial assistance,
proceeds received from public bodies as administrative cost contributions, and
moneys made available to the state of Washington by the federal government for
outdoor recreation may be deposited into the account.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) Chapter 67.32 RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.35 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 43.99.070 was recodified as RCW 79A.25.070 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 132. RCW 79A.25.240 and 1999 1st sp.s. c 13 s 17 are each amended to read as follows:
The
interagency committee for outdoor recreation shall provide necessary grants and
loan administration support to the salmon recovery funding board as provided in
RCW 75.46.160. The committee shall also be responsible for tracking salmon
recovery expenditures under RCW 75.46.180. The committee shall provide all
necessary administrative support to the board, and the board shall be located
with the committee. The committee shall ((coordinate its activities under
this section with the salmon recovery technical review team created in section
7 of this act and)) provide necessary information to the salmon recovery
office.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Section 7, chapter 13, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess. was vetoed by the governor.
Sec. 133. RCW 79A.25.250 and 1980 c 89 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
Recognizing
the fact that the demand for park services is greatest in our urban areas, that
parks should be accessible to all Washington citizens, that the urban poor
cannot afford to travel to remotely located parks, that few state parks are
located in or near urban areas, that a need exists to conserve energy, and that
local governments having jurisdiction in urban areas cannot afford the costs of
maintaining and operating the extensive park systems needed to service their
large populations, the legislature hereby directs the interagency committee for
outdoor recreation to place a high priority on the acquisition, development,
redevelopment, and renovation of parks to be located in or near urban areas and
to be particularly accessible to and used by the populations of those areas.
For purposes of RCW ((43.51.380 and 43.51.385)) 79A.25.250 and
79A.05.300, "urban areas" means any incorporated city with
a population of five thousand persons or greater or any county with a
population density of two hundred fifty persons per square mile or greater.
This section shall be implemented by January 1, 1981.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.51.380 and 43.51.385 were recodified as RCW 79A.25.250 and 79A.05.300 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 134. RCW 79A.25.800 and 1998 c 264 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The legislature recognizes that coordinated funding efforts are needed to maintain, develop, and improve the state's community outdoor athletic fields. Rapid population growth and increased urbanization have caused a decline in suitable outdoor fields for community athletic activities and has resulted in overcrowding and deterioration of existing surfaces. Lack of adequate community outdoor athletic fields directly affects the health and well-being of all citizens of the state, reduces the state's economic viability, and prevents Washington from maintaining and achieving the quality of life that it deserves. Therefore, it is the policy of the state and its agencies to maintain, develop, fund, and improve youth or community athletic facilities, including but not limited to community outdoor athletic fields.
(2)
In carrying out this policy, the legislature intends to promote the building of
new community outdoor athletic fields, the upgrading of existing community
outdoor athletic fields, and the maintenance of existing community outdoor
athletic fields across the state of Washington. The purpose of RCW ((43.99.800
through 43.99.830)) 79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830 is to create an
advisory council to provide information and advice to the interagency committee
for outdoor recreation in the distribution of the funds in the youth athletic
facility grant account established in RCW 43.99N.060(4).
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.800 through 43.99.830 were recodified as RCW 79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 135. RCW 79A.25.820 and 1998 c 264 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
Subject to available resources, the interagency committee for outdoor recreation, in consultation with the community outdoor athletic fields advisory council may:
(1) Prepare and update a strategic plan for the development, maintenance, and improvement of community outdoor athletic fields in the state. In the preparation of such plan, the interagency committee for outdoor recreation may use available data from federal, state, and local agencies having community outdoor athletic responsibilities, user groups, private sector interests, and the general public. The plan may include, but is not limited to:
(a) An inventory of current community outdoor athletic fields;
(b) A forecast of demand for these fields;
(c) An identification and analysis of actual and potential funding sources; and
(d)
Other information the interagency committee for outdoor recreation deems
appropriate to carry out the purposes of RCW ((43.99.800 through 43.99.830))
79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830;
(2) Determine the eligibility requirements for cities, counties, and qualified nonprofit organizations to access funding from the youth athletic facility grant account created in RCW 43.99N.060(4);
(3) Encourage and provide opportunities for interagency and regional coordination and cooperative efforts between public agencies and between public entities and nonprofit organizations involved in the maintenance, development, and improvement of community outdoor athletic fields; and
(4) Create and maintain data, studies, research, and other information relating to community outdoor athletic fields in the state, and to encourage the exchange of this information.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.800 through 43.99.830 were recodified as RCW 79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 136. RCW 79A.25.830 and 1998 c 264 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
The
interagency committee for outdoor recreation may receive gifts, grants, or
endowments from public and private sources that are made from time to time, in
trust or otherwise, for the use and benefit of the purposes of RCW ((43.99.800
through 43.99.830)) 79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830 and spend gifts,
grants, or endowments or income from the public or private sources according to
their terms, unless the receipt of the gifts, grants, or endowments violates
RCW 42.17.710.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 43.99.800 through 43.99.830 were recodified as RCW 79A.25.800 through 79A.25.830 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 137. RCW 79A.30.010 and 1995 c 200 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1)
"Authority" means the Washington state horse park authority
authorized to be created in RCW ((67.18.030)) 79A.30.030.
(2) "Commission" means the Washington state parks and recreation commission.
(3) "Horses" includes all domesticated members of the taxonomic family Equidae, including but not limited to horses, donkeys, and mules.
(4)
"State horse park" means the Washington state horse park established
in RCW ((67.18.020)) 79A.30.020.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 67.18.030 and 67.18.020 were recodified as RCW 79A.30.030 and 79A.30.020, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 138. RCW 79A.30.020 and 1995 c 200 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The Washington state horse park is hereby established, to be located at a site approved by the commission. In approving a site for the state horse park, the commission shall consider areas with large blocks of land suitable for park development, the distance to various population centers in the state, the ease of transportation to the site for large vehicles traveling along either a north-south or an east-west corridor, and other factors deemed important by the commission.
(2) Ownership of land for the state horse park shall be as follows:
(a)
The commission is vested with and shall retain ownership of land provided by
the state for the state horse park. Any lands acquired by the commission after
July 23, 1995, for the state horse park shall be purchased under chapter ((43.98A))
79A.15 RCW. The legislature encourages the commission to provide a
long-term lease of the selected property to the Washington state horse park
authority at a minimal charge. The lease shall contain provisions ensuring
public access to and use of the horse park facilities, and generally maximizing
public recreation opportunities at the horse park, provided that the facility
remains available primarily for horse-related activities.
(b) Land provided for the state horse park by the county in which the park is located shall remain in the ownership of that county unless the county determines otherwise. The legislature encourages the county to provide a long-term lease of selected property to the Washington state horse park authority at a minimal charge.
(c) If the authority acquires additional lands through donations, grants, or other means, or with funds generated from the operation of the state horse park, the authority shall retain ownership of those lands. The authority shall also retain ownership of horse park site improvements paid for by or through donations or gifts to the authority.
(3)
Development, promotion, operation, management, and maintenance of the state
horse park is the responsibility of the authority created in RCW ((67.18.030))
79A.30.030.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) Chapter 43.98A RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.15 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 67.18.030 was recodified as RCW 79A.30.030 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 139. RCW 79A.30.030 and 1995 c 200 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
A nonprofit corporation may be formed under the nonprofit corporation
provisions of chapter 24.03 RCW to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
Except as provided in RCW ((67.18.040)) 79A.30.040, the
corporation shall have all the powers and be subject to the same restrictions
as are permitted or prescribed to nonprofit corporations and shall exercise
those powers only for carrying out the purposes of this chapter and those purposes
necessarily implied therefrom. The nonprofit corporation shall be known as the
Washington state horse park authority. The articles of incorporation shall
provide that it is the responsibility of the authority to develop, promote,
operate, manage, and maintain the Washington state horse park. The articles of
incorporation shall provide for appointment of directors and other conduct of
business consistent with the requirements of this chapter.
(2)(a) The articles of incorporation shall provide for a seven-member board of directors for the authority, all appointed by the governor. Board members shall serve three-year terms, except that two of the original appointees shall serve one-year terms, and two of the original appointees shall serve two-year terms. A board member may serve consecutive terms.
(b) The articles of incorporation shall provide that the governor appoint board members as follows:
(i) One board member shall represent the interests of the commission. In making this appointment, the governor shall solicit recommendations from the commission;
(ii) One board member shall represent the interests of the county in which the park is located. In making this appointment, the governor shall solicit recommendations from the county legislative authority; and
(iii) Five board members shall represent the geographic and sports discipline diversity of equestrian interests in the state, and at least one of these members shall have business experience relevant to the organization of horse shows or operation of a horse show facility. In making these appointments, the governor shall solicit recommendations from a variety of active horse-related organizations in the state.
(3) The articles of incorporation shall include a policy that provides for the preferential use of a specific area of the horse park facilities at nominal cost for horse groups associated with youth groups and the disabled.
(4) The governor shall make appointments to fill board vacancies for positions authorized under subsection (2) of this section, upon additional solicitation of recommendations from the board of directors.
(5) The board of directors shall perform their duties in the best interests of the authority, consistent with the standards applicable to directors of nonprofit corporations under RCW 24.03.127.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 67.18.040 was recodified as RCW 79A.30.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 140. RCW 79A.35.030 and 1970 ex.s. c 76 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The system shall be composed of trails as designated by the IAC. Such trails shall meet the conditions established in this chapter and such supplementary criteria as the IAC may prescribe.
(2)
The IAC shall establish a procedure whereby federal, state, and local
governmental agencies and/or public and private organizations may propose
trails for inclusion within the system. Such proposals will comply with the
proposal requirements contained in RCW ((67.32.060)) 79A.35.050.
(3) In consultation with appropriate federal, state, and local governmental agencies and public and private organizations, the IAC shall establish a procedure for public review of the proposals considered appropriate for inclusion in the state-wide trails system.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 67.32.060 was recodified as RCW 79A.35.050 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 141. RCW 79A.40.020 and 1959 c 327 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
It
shall be unlawful after June 10, 1959, to construct or install any such
recreational device as set forth in RCW ((70.88.010)) 79A.40.010
without first submitting plans and specifications for such device to the state
parks and recreation commission and receiving the approval of the commission
for such construction or installation. Violation of this section shall be a
misdemeanor.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 70.88.010 was recodified as RCW 79A.40.010 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 142. RCW 79A.40.030 and 1959 c 327 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
The
state parks and recreation commission shall have the authority and the
responsibility for the inspection of the devices set forth in RCW ((70.88.010))
79A.40.010 and in addition shall have the following powers and duties:
(1)
Whenever the commission, after hearing called upon its own motion or upon
complaint, finds that additional apparatus, equipment, facilities or devices
for use or in connection with the transportation or conveyance of persons upon
the devices set forth in RCW ((70.88.010)) 79A.40.010, ought
reasonably to be provided, or any repairs or improvements to, or changes in,
any theretofore in use ought reasonably to be made, or any additions or changes
in construction should reasonably be made thereto, in order to promote the
security and safety of the public or employees, it may make and serve an order
directing such repairs, improvements, changes, or additions to be made.
(2)
If the commission finds that the equipment, or appliances in connection
therewith, or the apparatus, or other structures of the recreational device set
forth in RCW ((70.88.010)) 79A.40.010 are defective, and that the
operation thereof is dangerous to the employees of the owner or operator of
such device or to the public, it shall immediately give notice to the owner or
operator of such device of the repairs or reconstruction necessary to place the
same in a safe condition, and may prescribe the time within which they shall be
made. If, in its opinion, it is needful or proper, the commission may forbid
the operation of the device until it is repaired and placed in a safe
condition.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 70.88.010 was recodified as RCW 79A.40.010 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 143. RCW 79A.40.060 and 1959 c 327 s 6 are each amended to read as follows:
The
inspector of recreational devices and his or her assistants shall
inspect all equipment and appliances connected with the recreational devices
set forth in RCW ((70.88.010)) 79A.40.010 and make such reports
of his or her inspection to the commission as may be required. He or
she shall, on discovering any defective equipment, or appliances connected
therewith, rendering the use of the equipment dangerous, immediately report the
same to the owner or operator of the device on which it is found, and in
addition report it to the commission. If in the opinion of the inspector the
continued operation of the defective equipment constitutes an immediate danger
to the safety of the persons operating or being conveyed by such equipment, the
inspector may condemn such equipment and shall immediately notify the
commission of his or her action in this respect: PROVIDED, That
inspection required by this chapter must be conducted at least once each year.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 70.88.010 was recodified as RCW 79A.40.010 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Also makes the section gender neutral.
Sec. 144. RCW 79A.40.080 and 1991 c 75 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
Inspections,
rules, and orders of the state parks and recreation commission resulting from
the exercise of the provisions of this chapter and chapter ((70.117)) 79A.45
RCW shall not in any manner be deemed to impose liability upon the state for
any injury or damage resulting from the operation or signing of the facilities
regulated by this chapter, and all actions of the state parks and recreation
commission and its personnel shall be deemed to be an exercise of the police
power of the state.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
Chapter 70.117 RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.45 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 145. RCW 79A.45.040 and 1989 c 81 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
Ski
area operators shall place a notice of the provisions of RCW ((70.117.020(7)))
79A.45.030(7) on their trail maps, at or near the ticket booth, and at
the bottom of each ski lift or similar device.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 70.117.020 was recodified as RCW 79A.45.030 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 146. RCW 79A.60.010 and 1998 c 219 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1) "Boat wastes" includes, but is not limited to, sewage, garbage, marine debris, plastics, contaminated bilge water, cleaning solvents, paint scrapings, or discarded petroleum products associated with the use of vessels.
(2) "Boater" means any person on a vessel on waters of the state of Washington.
(3) "Carrying passengers for hire" means carrying passengers in a vessel on waters of the state for valuable consideration, whether given directly or indirectly or received by the owner, agent, operator, or other person having an interest in the vessel. This shall not include trips where expenses for food, transportation, or incidentals are shared by participants on an even basis. Anyone receiving compensation for skills or money for amortization of equipment and carrying passengers shall be considered to be carrying passengers for hire on waters of the state.
(4) "Commission" means the state parks and recreation commission.
(5) "Darkness" means that period between sunset and sunrise.
(6) "Environmentally sensitive area" means a restricted body of water where discharge of untreated sewage from boats is especially detrimental because of limited flushing, shallow water, commercial or recreational shellfish, swimming areas, diversity of species, the absence of other pollution sources, or other characteristics.
(7) "Guide" means any individual, including but not limited to subcontractors and independent contractors, engaged for compensation or other consideration by a whitewater river outfitter for the purpose of operating vessels. A person licensed under RCW 77.32.211 or 75.28.780 and acting as a fishing guide is not considered a guide for the purposes of this chapter.
(8) "Marina" means a facility providing boat moorage space, fuel, or commercial services. Commercial services include but are not limited to overnight or live‑aboard boating accommodations.
(9) "Motor driven boats and vessels" means all boats and vessels which are self propelled.
(10) "Muffler" or "muffler system" means a sound suppression device or system, including an underwater exhaust system, designed and installed to abate the sound of exhaust gases emitted from an internal combustion engine and that prevents excessive or unusual noise.
(11) "Operate" means to steer, direct, or otherwise have physical control of a vessel that is underway.
(12) "Operator" means an individual who steers, directs, or otherwise has physical control of a vessel that is underway or exercises actual authority to control the person at the helm.
(13) "Observer" means the individual riding in a vessel who is responsible for observing a water skier at all times.
(14) "Owner" means a person who has a lawful right to possession of a vessel by purchase, exchange, gift, lease, inheritance, or legal action whether or not the vessel is subject to a security interest.
(15) "Person" means any individual, sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, nonprofit corporation or organization, limited liability company, firm, association, or other legal entity located within or outside this state.
(16) "Personal flotation device" means a buoyancy device, life preserver, buoyant vest, ring buoy, or buoy cushion that is designed to float a person in the water and that is approved by the commission.
(17) "Personal watercraft" means a vessel of less than sixteen feet that uses a motor powering a water jet pump, as its primary source of motive power and that is designed to be operated by a person sitting, standing, or kneeling on, or being towed behind the vessel, rather than in the conventional manner of sitting or standing inside the vessel.
(18) "Polluted area" means a body of water used by boaters that is contaminated by boat wastes at unacceptable levels, based on applicable water quality and shellfish standards.
(19) "Public entities" means all elected or appointed bodies, including tribal governments, responsible for collecting and spending public funds.
(20) "Reckless" or "recklessly" means acting carelessly and heedlessly in a willful and wanton disregard of the rights, safety, or property of another.
(21) "Sewage pumpout or dump unit" means:
(a) A receiving chamber or tank designed to receive vessel sewage from a "porta‑potty" or a portable container; and
(b) A stationary or portable mechanical device on land, a dock, pier, float, barge, vessel, or other location convenient to boaters, designed to remove sewage waste from holding tanks on vessels.
(22) "Underway" means that a vessel is not at anchor, or made fast to the shore, or aground.
(23) "Vessel" includes every description of watercraft on the water, other than a seaplane, used or capable of being used as a means of transportation on the water. However, it does not include inner tubes, air mattresses, sailboards, and small rafts or flotation devices or toys customarily used by swimmers.
(24) "Water skiing" means the physical act of being towed behind a vessel on, but not limited to, any skis, aquaplane, kneeboard, tube, or any other similar device.
(25) "Waters of the state" means any waters within the territorial limits of Washington state.
(26) "Whitewater river outfitter" means any person who is advertising to carry or carries passengers for hire on any whitewater river of the state, but does not include any person whose only service on a given trip is providing instruction in canoeing or kayaking skills.
(27)
"Whitewater rivers of the state" means those rivers and streams, or
parts thereof, within the boundaries of the state as listed in RCW ((88.12.265))
79A.60.470 or as designated by the commission under RCW ((88.12.279))
79A.60.495.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.265 and 88.12.279 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.470 and 79A.60.495, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 147. RCW 79A.60.030 and 1993 c 244 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
A
person shall not operate a vessel in a negligent manner. For the purposes of
this section, to "operate in a negligent manner" means operating a
vessel in disregard of careful and prudent operation, or in disregard of
careful and prudent rates of speed that are no greater than is reasonable and
proper under the conditions existing at the point of operation, taking into
account the amount and character of traffic, size of the lake or body of water,
freedom from obstruction to view ahead, effects of vessel wake, and so as not
to unduly or unreasonably endanger life, limb, property or other rights of any
person entitled to the use of such waters. Except as provided in RCW ((88.12.015))
79A.60.020, a violation of this section is an infraction under chapter
7.84 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 148. RCW 79A.60.050 and 1998 c 219 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) When the death of any person ensues within three years as a proximate result of injury proximately caused by the operating of any vessel by any person, the operator is guilty of homicide by watercraft if he or she was operating the vessel:
(a)
While under the influence of intoxicating liquor or any drug, as defined by RCW
((88.12.025)) 79A.60.040;
(b) In a reckless manner; or
(c) With disregard for the safety of others.
(2) When the death is caused by a skier towed by a vessel, the operator of the vessel is not guilty of homicide by watercraft.
(3) A violation of this section is punishable as a class A felony according to chapter 9A.20 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.025 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 149. RCW 79A.60.060 and 1998 c 219 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) "Serious bodily injury" means bodily injury which involves a substantial risk of death, serious permanent disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of any part or organ of the body.
(2) A person is guilty of assault by watercraft if he or she operates any vessel:
(a) In a reckless manner, and this conduct is the proximate cause of serious bodily injury to another; or
(b)
While under the influence of intoxicating liquor or any drug, as defined by RCW
((88.12.025)) 79A.60.040, and this conduct is the proximate cause
of serious bodily injury to another.
(3) When the injury is caused by a skier towed by a vessel, the operator of the vessel is not guilty of assault by watercraft.
(4) A violation of this section is punishable as a class B felony according to chapter 9A.20 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.025 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.040 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 150. RCW 79A.60.070 and 1998 c 219 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
A
person convicted under RCW ((88.12.029 or 88.12.032)) 79A.60.050 or
79A.60.060 shall, as a condition of community ((supervision)) custody
imposed under RCW 9.94A.383 or community placement imposed under RCW
9.94A.120(9), complete a diagnostic evaluation by an alcohol or drug dependency
agency approved by the department of social and health services or a qualified
probation department, defined under RCW 46.61.516, that has been approved by
the department of social and health services. If the person is found to have
an alcohol or drug problem that requires treatment, the person shall complete
treatment in a program approved by the department of social and health services
under chapter 70.96A RCW. If the person is found not to have an alcohol or
drug problem that requires treatment, he or she shall complete a course in an
information school approved by the department of social and health services
under chapter 70.96A RCW. The convicted person shall pay all costs for any
evaluation, education, or treatment required by this section, unless the person
is eligible for an existing program offered or approved by the department of
social and health services. Nothing in chapter 219, Laws of 1998 requires the
addition of new treatment or assessment facilities nor affects the department
of social and health services use of existing programs and facilities
authorized by law.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 88.12.029 and 88.12.032 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.050 and 79A.60.060 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 9.94A.383 was amended by 1999 c 196 s 10, changing the term "community supervision" to "community custody."
Sec. 151. RCW 79A.60.130 and 1993 c 244 s 39 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) All motor-propelled vessels shall be equipped and maintained with an effective muffler that is in good working order and in constant use. For the purpose of this section, an effective muffler or underwater exhaust system does not produce sound levels in excess of ninety decibels when subjected to a stationary sound level test that shall be prescribed by rules adopted by the commission, as of July 25, 1993, and for engines manufactured on or after January 1, 1994, a noise level of eighty-eight decibels when subjected to a stationary sound level test that shall be prescribed by rules adopted by the commission.
(2) A vessel that does not meet the requirements of subsection (1) of this section shall not be operated on the waters of this state.
(3) No person may operate a vessel on waters of the state in such a manner as to exceed a noise level of seventy-five decibels measured from any point on the shoreline of the body of water on which the vessel is being operated that shall be specified by rules adopted by the commission, as of July 25, 1993. Such measurement shall not preclude a stationary sound level test that shall be prescribed by rules adopted by the commission.
(4) This section does not apply to: (a) A vessel tuning up, testing for, or participating in official trials for speed records or a sanctioned race conducted pursuant to a permit issued by an appropriate governmental agency; or (b) a vessel being operated by a vessel or marine engine manufacturer for the purpose of testing or development. Nothing in this subsection prevents local governments from adopting ordinances to control the frequency, duration, and location of vessel testing, tune-up, and racing.
(5) Any officer authorized to enforce this section who has reason to believe that a vessel is not in compliance with the noise levels established in this section may direct the operator of the vessel to submit the vessel to an on-site test to measure noise level, with the officer on board if the officer chooses, and the operator shall comply with such request. If the vessel exceeds the decibel levels established in this section, the officer may direct the operator to take immediate and reasonable measures to correct the violation.
(6) Any officer who conducts vessel sound level tests as provided in this section shall be qualified in vessel noise testing. Qualifications shall include but may not be limited to the ability to select the appropriate measurement site and the calibration and use of noise testing equipment.
(7) A person shall not remove, alter, or otherwise modify in any way a muffler or muffler system in a manner that will prevent it from being operated in accordance with this chapter.
(8) A person shall not manufacture, sell, or offer for sale any vessel that is not equipped with a muffler or muffler system that does not comply with this chapter. This subsection shall not apply to power vessels designed, manufactured, and sold for the sole purpose of competing in racing events and for no other purpose. Any such exemption or exception shall be documented in any and every sale agreement and shall be formally acknowledged by signature on the part of both the buyer and the seller. Copies of the agreement shall be maintained by both parties. A copy shall be kept on board whenever the vessel is operated.
(9)
Except as provided in RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020, a violation
of this section is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW.
(10) Vessels that are equipped with an engine modified to increase performance beyond the engine manufacturer's stock configuration shall have an exhaust system that complies with the standards in this section after January 1, 1994. Until that date, operators or owners, or both, of such vessels with engines that are out of compliance shall be issued a warning and be given educational materials about types of muffling systems available to muffle noise from such high performance engines.
(11) Nothing in this section preempts a local government from exercising any power that it possesses under the laws or Constitution of the state of Washington to adopt more stringent regulations.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 152. RCW 79A.60.160 and 1999 c 310 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) No person may operate or permit the operation of a vessel on the waters of the state without a personal flotation device on board for each person on the vessel. Each personal flotation device shall be in serviceable condition, of an appropriate size, and readily accessible.
(2)
Except as provided in RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020, a violation
of subsection (1) of this section is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW if
the vessel is not carrying passengers for hire.
(3) A violation of subsection (1) of this section is a misdemeanor punishable under RCW 9.92.030, if the vessel is carrying passengers for hire.
(4) No person shall operate a vessel under nineteen feet in length on the waters of this state with a child twelve years old and under, unless the child is wearing a personal flotation device that meets or exceeds the United States coast guard approval standards of the appropriate size, while the vessel is underway. For the purposes of this section, a personal flotation device is not considered readily accessible for children twelve years old and under unless the device is worn by the child while the vessel is underway. The personal flotation device must be worn at all times by a child twelve years old and under whenever the vessel is underway and the child is on an open deck or open cockpit of the vessel. The following circumstances are excepted:
(a) While a child is below deck or in the cabin of a boat with an enclosed cabin;
(b) While a child is on a United States coast guard inspected passenger-carrying vessel operating on the navigable waters of the United States; or
(c) While on board a vessel at a time and place where no person would reasonably expect a danger of drowning to occur.
(5)
Except as provided in RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020, a violation
of subsection (4) of this section is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW.
Enforcement of subsection (4) of this section by law enforcement officers may
be accomplished as a primary action, and need not be accompanied by the
suspected violation of some other offense.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 153. RCW 79A.60.170 and 1993 c 244 s 15 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The purpose of this section is to promote safety in water skiing on the waters of Washington state, provide a means of ensuring safe water skiing and promote the enjoyment of water skiing.
(2)
No vessel operator may tow or attempt to tow a water skier on any waters of
Washington state unless such craft shall be occupied by at least an operator
and an observer. The observer shall continuously observe the person or persons
being towed and shall display a flag immediately after the towed person or persons
fall into the water, and during the time preparatory to skiing while the person
or persons are still in the water. Such flag shall be a bright red or
brilliant orange color, measuring at least twelve inches square, mounted on a
pole not less than twenty-four inches long and displayed as to be visible from
every direction. This subsection does not apply to a personal watercraft, the
design of which makes no provision for carrying an operator or any other person
on board, and that is actually operated by the person or persons being towed.
Every remote-operated personal watercraft shall have a flag attached which
meets the requirements of this subsection. Except as provided under RCW ((88.12.015))
79A.60.020, a violation of this subsection is an infraction under
chapter 7.84 RCW.
(3)
The observer and the operator shall not be the same person. The observer shall
be an individual who meets the minimum qualifications for an observer
established by rules of the commission. Except as provided under RCW ((88.12.015))
79A.60.020, a violation of this subsection is an infraction under
chapter 7.84 RCW.
(4)
No person shall engage or attempt to engage in water skiing without wearing a
personal flotation device. Except as provided under RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020,
a violation of this subsection is an infraction under chapter 7.84 RCW.
(5) No person shall engage or attempt to engage in water skiing, or operate any vessel to tow a water skier, on the waters of Washington state during the period from one hour after sunset until one hour prior to sunrise. A violation of this subsection is a misdemeanor, punishable as provided under RCW 9.92.030.
(6) No person engaged in water skiing either as operator, observer, or skier, shall conduct himself or herself in a reckless manner that willfully or wantonly endangers, or is likely to endanger, any person or property. A violation of this subsection is a misdemeanor as provided under RCW 9.92.030.
(7) The requirements of subsections (2), (3), (4), and (5) of this section shall not apply to persons engaged in tournaments, competitions, or exhibitions that have been authorized or otherwise permitted by the appropriate agency having jurisdiction and authority to authorize such events.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 154. RCW 79A.60.180 and 1993 c 244 s 16 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) A person shall not load or permit to be loaded a vessel with passengers or cargo beyond its safe carrying ability or carry passengers or cargo in an unsafe manner taking into consideration weather and other existing operating conditions.
(2) A person shall not operate or permit to be operated a vessel equipped with a motor or other propulsion machinery of a power beyond the vessel's ability to operate safely, taking into consideration the vessel's type, use, and construction, the weather conditions, and other existing operating conditions.
(3)
A violation of subsection (1) or (2) of this section is an infraction
punishable as provided under chapter 7.84 RCW except as provided under RCW ((88.12.015))
79A.60.020 or where the overloading or overpowering is reasonably
advisable to effect a rescue or for some similar emergency purpose.
(4) If it appears reasonably certain to any law enforcement officer that a person is operating a vessel clearly loaded or powered beyond its safe operating ability and in the judgment of that officer the operation creates an especially hazardous condition, the officer may direct the operator to take immediate and reasonable steps necessary for the safety of the individuals on board the vessel, including directing the operator to return to shore or a mooring and to remain there until the situation creating the hazard is corrected or ended. Failure to follow the direction of an officer under this subsection is a misdemeanor punishable as provided under RCW 9.92.030.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 155. RCW 79A.60.190 and 1993 c 244 s 17 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
A person shall not operate a personal watercraft unless each person aboard the
personal watercraft is wearing a personal flotation device approved by the
commission. Except as provided for in RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020,
a violation of this subsection is a civil infraction punishable under RCW
7.84.100.
(2) A person operating a personal watercraft equipped by the manufacturer with a lanyard‑type engine cutoff switch shall attach the lanyard to his or her person, clothing, or personal flotation device as appropriate for the specific vessel. It is unlawful for any person to remove or disable a cutoff switch that was installed by the manufacturer.
(3) A person shall not operate a personal watercraft during darkness.
(4) A person under the age of fourteen shall not operate a personal watercraft on the waters of this state.
(5) A person shall not operate a personal watercraft in a reckless manner, including recklessly weaving through congested vessel traffic, recklessly jumping the wake of another vessel unreasonably or unnecessarily close to the vessel or when visibility around the vessel is obstructed, or recklessly swerving at the last possible moment to avoid collision.
(6) A person shall not lease, hire, or rent a personal watercraft to a person under the age of sixteen.
(7) Subsections (1) through (6) of this section shall not apply to a performer engaged in a professional exhibition or a person participating in a regatta, race, marine parade, tournament, or exhibition authorized or otherwise permitted by the appropriate agency having jurisdiction and authority to authorize such events.
(8) Violations of subsections (2) through (6) of this section constitute a misdemeanor under RCW 9.92.030.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 156. RCW 79A.60.200 and 1996 c 36 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The operator of a vessel involved in a collision, accident, or other casualty,
to the extent the operator can do so without serious danger to the operator's
own vessel or persons aboard, shall render all practical and necessary
assistance to persons affected by the collision, accident, or casualty to save
them from danger caused by the incident. Under no circumstances may the
rendering of assistance or other compliance with this section be evidence of
the liability of such operator for the collision, accident, or casualty. The
operator shall also give all pertinent accident information, as specified by
rule by the commission, to the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction:
PROVIDED, That this requirement shall not apply to operators of vessels when
they are participating in an organized competitive event authorized or
otherwise permitted by the appropriate agency having jurisdiction and authority
to authorize such events. These duties are in addition to any duties otherwise
imposed by law. Except as provided for in RCW ((88.12.015)) 79A.60.020
and subsection (3) of this section, a violation of this subsection is a civil
infraction punishable under RCW 7.84.100.
(2) Any person who complies with subsection (1) of this section or who gratuitously and in good faith renders assistance at the scene of a vessel collision, accident, or other casualty, without objection of the person assisted, shall not be held liable for any civil damages as a result of the rendering of assistance or for any act or omission in providing or arranging salvage, towage, medical treatment, or other assistance, where the assisting person acts as any reasonably prudent person would have acted under the same or similar circumstances.
(3) An operator of a vessel is guilty of a class C felony and is punishable pursuant to RCW 9A.20.021 if the operator: (a) Is involved in a collision that results in injury to a person; (b) knew or reasonably should have known that a person was injured in the collision; and (c) leaves the scene of the collision without rendering all practical and necessary assistance to the injured person as required pursuant to subsection (1) of this section, under circumstances in which the operator could have rendered assistance without serious danger to the operator's own vessel or persons aboard. This subsection (3) does not apply to vessels involved in commerce, including but not limited to tugs, barges, cargo vessels, commercial passenger vessels, fishing vessels, and processing vessels.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.015 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 157. RCW 79A.60.300 and 1994 c 51 s 8 are each amended to read as follows:
The
provisions of RCW ((88.12.185 through 88.12.225)) 79A.60.230 through
79A.60.290 do not apply to vessels secured pursuant to chapter ((88.27))
79A.65 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) Chapter 88.27 RCW was recodified as chapter 79A.65 RCW pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 88.12.185 through 88.12.225 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.230 through 79A.60.290 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 158. RCW 79A.60.400 and 1993 c 244 s 26 are each amended to read as follows:
The
purpose of RCW ((88.12.250 through 88.12.275)) 79A.60.440 through
79A.60.480 is to further the public interest, welfare, and safety by
providing for the protection and promotion of safety in the operation of
vessels carrying passengers for hire on the whitewater rivers of this state.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.250 through 88.12.275 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.440 through 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 159. RCW 79A.60.410 and 1997 c 391 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
No person shall act in the capacity of a paid whitewater river outfitter, or
advertise in any newspaper or magazine or any other trade publication, or
represent himself or herself as a whitewater river outfitter in the state,
without first obtaining a whitewater river outfitter's license from the
department of licensing in accordance with RCW ((88.12.275)) 79A.60.480.
(2) Every whitewater river outfitter's license must, at all times, be conspicuously placed on the premises set forth in the license.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.275 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 160. RCW 79A.60.420 and 1997 c 391 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
Except
as provided in RCW ((88.12.275)) 79A.60.480, the commission of a
prohibited act or the omission of a required act under RCW ((88.12.245
through 88.12.275)) 79A.60.430 through 79A.60.480 constitutes a
misdemeanor, punishable as provided under RCW 9.92.030.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 88.12.275 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 88.12.245 through 88.12.275 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.430 through 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 161. RCW 79A.60.440 and 1993 c 244 s 28 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) No person may operate any vessel carrying passengers for hire on whitewater rivers in a manner that interferes with other vessels or with the free and proper navigation of the rivers of this state.
(2) Every operator of a vessel carrying passengers for hire on whitewater rivers shall at all times operate the vessel in a careful and prudent manner and at such a speed as to not endanger the life, limb, or property of any person.
(3) No vessel carrying passengers for hire on whitewater rivers may be loaded with passengers or cargo beyond its safe carrying capacity taking into consideration the type and construction of the vessel and other existing operating conditions. In the case of inflatable vessels, safe carrying capacity in whitewater shall be considered as less than the United States coast guard capacity rating for each vessel. This subsection shall not apply in cases of an unexpected emergency on the river.
(4)
Individuals licensed under chapter 77.32 RCW and acting as fishing guides are
exempt from RCW ((88.12.235)) 79A.60.420 and ((88.12.260
through 88.12.275)) 79A.60.460 through 79A.60.480.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 88.12.235 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.420 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
(2) RCW 88.12.260 through 88.12.275 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.460 through 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 162. RCW 79A.60.470 and 1997 c 391 s 6 are each amended to read as follows:
Whitewater river sections include but are not limited to:
(1) Green river above Flaming Geyser state park;
(2) Klickitat river above the confluence with Summit creek;
(3) Methow river below the town of Carlton;
(4) Sauk river above the town of Darrington;
(5) Skagit river above Bacon creek;
(6) Suiattle river;
(7) Tieton river below Rimrock dam;
(8) Skykomish river below Sunset Falls and above the Highway 2 bridge one mile east of the town of Gold Bar;
(9) Wenatchee river above the Wenatchee county park at the town of Monitor;
(10) White Salmon river; and
(11)
Any other section of river designated a "whitewater river section" by
the commission under RCW ((88.12.279)) 79A.60.495.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.279 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.495 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 163. RCW 79A.60.480 and 1997 c 391 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department of licensing shall issue a whitewater river outfitter's license to an applicant who submits a completed application, pays the required fee, and complies with the requirements of this section.
(2) An applicant for a whitewater river outfitter's license shall make application upon a form provided by the department of licensing. The form must be submitted annually and include the following information:
(a) The name, residence address, and residence telephone number, and the business name, address, and telephone number of the applicant;
(b)
Certification that all employees, subcontractors, or independent contractors
hired as guides meet training standards under RCW ((88.12.245(2))) 79A.60.430
before carrying any passengers for hire;
(c) Proof that the applicant has liability insurance for a minimum of three hundred thousand dollars per claim for occurrences by the applicant and the applicant's employees that result in bodily injury or property damage. All guides must be covered by the applicant's insurance policy;
(d) Certification that the applicant will maintain the insurance for a period of not less than one year from the date of issuance of the license; and
(e) Certification by the applicant that for a period of not less than twenty-four months immediately preceding the application the applicant:
(i) Has not had a license, permit, or certificate to carry passengers for hire on a river revoked by another state or by an agency of the government of the United States due to a conviction for a violation of safety or insurance coverage requirements no more stringent than the requirements of this chapter; and
(ii) Has not been denied the right to apply for a license, permit, or certificate to carry passengers for hire on a river by another state.
(3) The department of licensing shall charge a fee for each application, to be set in accordance with RCW 43.24.086.
(4) Any person advertising or representing himself or herself as a whitewater river outfitter who is not currently licensed is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
(5) The department of licensing shall submit annually a list of licensed persons and companies to the department of community, trade, and economic development, tourism promotion division.
(6) If an insurance company cancels or refuses to renew insurance for a licensee, the insurance company shall notify the department of licensing in writing of the termination of coverage and its effective date not less than thirty days before the effective date of termination.
(a) Upon receipt of an insurance company termination notice, the department of licensing shall send written notice to the licensee that on the effective date of termination the department of licensing will suspend the license unless proof of insurance as required by this section is filed with the department of licensing before the effective date of the termination.
(b) If an insurance company fails to give notice of coverage termination, this failure shall not have the effect of continuing the coverage.
(c) The department of licensing may suspend a license under this section if the licensee fails to maintain in full force and effect the insurance required by this section.
(7) The state of Washington shall be immune from any civil action arising from the issuance of a license under this section.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.245 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.430 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 164. RCW 79A.60.485 and 1997 c 391 s 9 are each amended to read as follows:
The
department of licensing may adopt and enforce such rules, including the setting
of fees, as may be consistent with and necessary to implement RCW ((88.12.275))
79A.60.480. The fees must approximate the cost of administration. The
fees must be deposited in the master license account.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.275 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 165. RCW 79A.60.490 and 1997 c 391 s 8 are each amended to read as follows:
Within
five days after conviction for any of the provisions of RCW ((88.12.245
through 88.12.275)) 79A.60.430 through 79A.60.480, the court shall
forward a copy of the judgment to the department of licensing. After receiving
proof of conviction, the department of licensing may suspend the license of any
whitewater river outfitter for a period not to exceed one year or until proof
of compliance with all licensing requirements and correction of the violation
under which the whitewater river outfitter was convicted.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.245 through 88.12.275 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.430 through 79A.60.480 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 166. RCW 79A.60.540 and 1993 c 244 s 33 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
Marinas and boat launches designated as appropriate for installation of a
sewage pumpout or dump unit under RCW ((88.12.315)) 79A.60.530
shall be eligible for funding support for installation of such facilities from
funds specified in RCW ((88.12.375)) 79A.60.590. The commission
shall notify owners or operators of all designated marinas and boat launches of
the designation, and of the availability of funding to support installation of
appropriate sewage disposal facilities. The commission shall encourage the
owners and operators to apply for available funding.
(2) The commission shall seek to provide the most cost-efficient and accessible facilities possible for reducing the amount of boat waste entering the state's waters. The commission shall consider providing funding support for portable pumpout facilities in this effort.
(3) The commission shall contract with, or enter into an interagency agreement with another state agency to contract with, applicants based on the criteria specified below:
(a)(i) Contracts may be awarded to publicly owned, tribal, or privately owned marinas or boat launches.
(ii) Contracts may provide for state reimbursement to cover eligible costs as deemed reasonable by commission rule. Eligible costs include purchase, installation, or major renovation of the sewage pumpout or dump units, including sewer, water, electrical connections, and those costs attendant to the purchase, installation, and other necessary appurtenances, such as required pier space, as determined by the commission.
(iii) Ownership of the sewage pumpout or dump unit will be retained by the state through the commission in privately owned marinas. Ownership of the sewage pumpout or dump unit in publicly owned marinas will be held by the public entity.
(iv) Operation, normal and expected maintenance, and ongoing utility costs will be the responsibility of the contract recipient. The sewage pumpout or dump unit shall be kept in operating condition and available for public use at all times during operating hours of the facility, excluding necessary maintenance periods.
(v) The contract recipient agrees to allow the installation, existence and use of the sewage pumpout or dump unit by granting an irrevocable license for a minimum of ten years at no cost to the commission.
(b) Contracts awarded pursuant to (a) of this subsection shall be subject, for a period of at least ten years, to the following conditions:
(i) Any contract recipient entering into a contract under this section must allow the boating public access to the sewage pumpout or dump unit during operating hours.
(ii) The contract recipient must agree to monitor and encourage the use of the sewage pumpout or dump unit, and to cooperate in any related boater environmental education program administered or approved by the commission.
(iii) The contract recipient must agree not to charge a fee for the use of the sewage pumpout or dump unit.
(iv) The contract recipient must agree to arrange and pay a reasonable fee for a periodic inspection of the sewage pumpout or dump unit by the local health department or appropriate authority.
(v) Use of a free sewage pumpout or dump unit by the boating public shall be deemed to be included in the term "outdoor recreation" for the purposes of chapter 4.24 RCW.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.315 and 88.12.375 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.530 and 79A.60.590, respectively, pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 167. RCW 79A.60.590 and 1993 c 244 s 37 are each amended to read as follows:
The amounts allocated in accordance with RCW 82.49.030(3) shall be expended upon appropriation in accordance with the following limitations:
(1) Thirty percent of the funds shall be appropriated to the interagency committee for outdoor recreation and be expended for use by state and local government for public recreational waterway boater access and boater destination sites. Priority shall be given to critical site acquisition. The interagency committee for outdoor recreation shall administer such funds as a competitive grants program. The amounts provided for in this subsection shall be evenly divided between state and local governments.
(2)
Thirty percent of the funds shall be expended by the commission exclusively for
sewage pumpout or dump units at publicly and privately owned marinas as
provided for in RCW ((88.12.315 and 88.12.325)) 79A.60.530 and
79A.60.540.
(3) Twenty-five percent of the funds shall be expended for grants to state agencies and other public entities to enforce boating safety and registration laws and to carry out boating safety programs. The commission shall administer such grant program.
(4) Fifteen percent shall be expended for instructional materials, programs or grants to the public school system, public entities, or other nonprofit community organizations to support boating safety and boater environmental education or boat waste management planning. The commission shall administer this program.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.12.315 and 88.12.325 were recodified as RCW 79A.60.530 and 79A.60.540 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 168. RCW 79A.60.620 and 1991 c 200 s 110 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The Washington sea grant program, in consultation with the department (([of
ecology])) of ecology, shall develop and conduct a voluntary spill
prevention education program that targets small spills from commercial fishing
vessels, ferries, cruise ships, ports, and marinas. Washington sea grant shall
coordinate the spill prevention education program with recreational boater
education performed by the state parks and recreation commission.
(2) The spill prevention education program shall illustrate ways to reduce oil contamination of bilge water, accidental spills of hydraulic fluid and other hazardous substances during routine maintenance, and reduce spillage during refueling. The program shall illustrate proper disposal of oil and hazardous substances and promote strategies to meet shoreside oil and hazardous substance handling, and disposal needs of the targeted groups. The program shall include a series of training workshops and the development of educational materials.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 90.56.090 was recodified as RCW 79A.60.620 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601. This amendment clarifies that the department referred to is the department of ecology.
Sec. 169. RCW 79A.65.010 and 1994 c 51 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1)
"Charges" means charges of the commission for moorage and storage,
and all other charges related to the vessel and owing to or that become owing
to the commission, including but not limited to costs of securing, disposing,
or removing vessels, damages to any commission facility, and any costs of sale
and related legal expenses for implementing RCW ((88.27.020 and 88.27.030))
79A.65.020 and 79A.65.030.
(2) "Commission" means the Washington state parks and recreation commission.
(3) "Commission facility" means any property or facility owned, leased, operated, managed, or otherwise controlled by the commission or by a person pursuant to a contract with the commission.
(4) "Owner" means a person who has a lawful right to possession of a vessel by purchase, exchange, gift, lease, inheritance, or legal action whether or not the vessel is subject to a security interest, and shall not include the holder of a bona fide security interest.
(5) "Person" means any natural person, firm, partnership, corporation, association, organization, or any other entity.
(6)(a) "Registered owner" means any person that is either: (i) Shown as the owner in a vessel certificate of documentation issued by the secretary of the United States department of transportation under 46 U.S.C. Sec. 12103; or (ii) the registered owner or legal owner of a vessel for which a certificate of title has been issued under chapter 88.02 RCW; or (iii) the owner of a vessel registered under the vessel registration laws of another state under which laws the commission can readily identify the ownership of vessels registered with that state.
(b) "Registered owner" also includes: (i) Any holder of a security interest or lien recorded with the United States department of transportation with respect to a vessel on which a certificate of documentation has been issued; (ii) any holder of a security interest identified in a certificate of title for a vessel registered under chapter 88.02 RCW; or (iii) any holder of a security interest in a vessel where the holder is identified in vessel registration information of a state with vessel registration laws that fall within (a)(iii) of this subsection and under which laws the commission can readily determine the identity of the holder.
(c) "Registered owner" does not include any vessel owner or holder of a lien or security interest in a vessel if the vessel does not have visible information affixed to it (such as name and hailing port or registration numbers) that will enable the commission to obtain ownership information for the vessel without incurring unreasonable expense.
(7) "Registered vessel" means a vessel having a registered owner.
(8) "Secured vessel" means any vessel that has been secured by the commission that remains in the commission's possession and control.
(9) "Unauthorized vessel" means a vessel using a commission facility of any type whose owner has not paid the required moorage fees or has left the vessel beyond the posted time limits, or a vessel otherwise present without permission of the commission.
(10) "Vessel" means every watercraft or part thereof constructed, used, or capable of being used as a means of transportation on the water. It includes any equipment or personal property on the vessel that is used or capable of being used for the operation, navigation, or maintenance of the vessel.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.27.020 and 88.27.030 were recodified as RCW 79A.65.020 and 79A.65.030 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 170. RCW 79A.65.030 and 1994 c 51 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)
The commission may provide for the public sale of vessels considered abandoned
under RCW ((88.27.020)) 79A.65.020. At such sales, the vessels
shall be sold for cash to the highest and best bidder.
(2) Before a vessel is sold, the commission shall make a reasonable effort to provide notice of sale, at least twenty days before the day of the sale, to each registered owner of a registered vessel and each owner of an unregistered vessel. The notice shall contain the time and place of the sale, a reasonable description of the vessel to be sold, and the amount of charges then owing with respect to the vessel, and a summary of the rights and procedures under this chapter. A notice of sale shall be published at least once, more than ten but not more than twenty days before the sale, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the commission facility is located. This notice shall include: (a) If known, the name of the vessel and the last owner and the owner's address; and (b) a reasonable description of the vessel. The commission may bid all or part of its charges at the sale and may become a purchaser at the sale.
(3)
Before a vessel is sold, any person seeking to redeem a secured vessel may
commence a lawsuit in the superior court for the county in which the vessel was
secured to contest the commission's decision to secure the vessel or the amount
of charges owing. This lawsuit shall be commenced within fifteen days of the
date the notification was posted under RCW ((88.27.020(3))) 79A.65.020(3),
or the right to a hearing is deemed waived and the owner is liable for any
charges owing the commission. In the event of litigation, the prevailing party
is entitled to reasonable attorneys' fees and costs.
(4) The proceeds of a sale under this section shall be applied first to the payment of the amount of the reasonable charges incurred by the commission and moorage fees owed to the commission, then to the owner or to satisfy any liens of record or security interests of record on the vessel in the order of their priority. If an owner cannot in the exercise of due diligence be located by the commission within one year of the date of the sale, any excess funds from the sale, following the satisfaction of any bona fide security interest, shall revert to the department of revenue under chapter 63.29 RCW. If the sale is for a sum less than the applicable charges, the commission is entitled to assert a claim for the deficiency against the vessel owner. Nothing in this section prevents any lien holder or secured party from asserting a claim for any deficiency owed the lien holder or secured party.
(5) If no one purchases the vessel at a sale, the commission may proceed to properly dispose of the vessel in any way the commission considers appropriate, including, but not limited to, destruction of the vessel or by negotiated sale. The commission may assert a claim against the owner for any charges incurred thereby. If the vessel, or any part of the vessel, or any rights to the vessel, are sold under this subsection, any proceeds from the sale shall be distributed in the manner provided in subsection (4) of this section.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.27.020 was recodified as RCW 79A.65.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
Sec. 171. RCW 79A.65.040 and 1994 c 51 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
If
the full amount of all charges due the commission on an unauthorized vessel is
not paid to the commission within thirty days after the date on which notice is
affixed or posted under RCW ((88.27.020(3))) 79A.65.020(3), the
commission may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction to
recover the charges, plus reasonable attorneys' fees and costs incurred by the
commission.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
RCW 88.27.020 was recodified as RCW 79A.65.020 pursuant to 1999 c 249 s 1601.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 172. The following acts or parts of acts are each repealed:
(1) RCW 75.08.274 (Taking food fish for propagation or scientific purposes--Permit authorized by rule) and 1998 c 190 s 72, 1995 1st sp.s. c 2 s 15, 1983 1st ex.s. c 46 s 28, 1971 c 35 s 1, & 1955 c 12 s 75.16.010;
(2) RCW 75.25.090 (Personal use fishing licenses--Fees) and 1993 c 215 s 1, 1989 c 305 s 5, & 1987 c 87 s 1;
(3) RCW 75.28.012 (Licensing districts‑-Created) and 1993 c 20 s 3, 1983 1st ex.s. c 46 s 102, 1971 ex.s. c 283 s 2, & 1957 c 171 s 1;
(4) RCW 76.12.200 (Reserved timber--Report to legislature) and 1989 c 424 s 3;
(5) RCW 77.16.290 (Law enforcement officers, exemption) and 1994 sp.s. c 7 s 444, 1980 c 78 s 95, & 1955 c 36 s 77.16.290; and
(6) RCW 77.32.060 (Licenses, permits, tags, stamps, and raffle tickets--Amount of fees to be retained by license dealers) and 1998 c 245 s 160, 1996 c 101 s 9, 1995 c 116 s 2, 1987 c 506 s 78, 1985 c 464 s 1, 1981 c 310 s 17, 1980 c 78 s 107, 1979 ex.s. c 3 s 3, 1970 ex.s. c 29 s 2, 1957 c 176 s 2, & 1955 c 36 s 77.32.060.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(1) RCW 75.08.274 was repealed by 1998 c 191 s 46, effective April 1, 1999, without cognizance of its amendment by 1998 c 190 s 72. Repealing this section removes the decodified section from the code.
(2) RCW 75.25.090 was amended by 1993 c 215 s 1 without reference to its repeal by 1993 sp.s. c 17 s 31, effective January 1, 1994. Repealing this section removes the decodified section from the code.
(3) RCW 75.28.012 was amended by 1993 c 20 s 3 without reference to its repeal by 1993 c 340 s 56, effective January 1, 1994. Repealing this section removes the decodified section from the code.
(4) RCW 76.12.200 requires reporting pursuant to RCW 76.12.190 which expired June 30, 1994, making this section obsolete.
(5) RCW 77.16.290 refers to exemptions in RCW 77.16.250 and 77.16.260 which were repealed by 1998 c 190 s 124, making this section obsolete.
(6) RCW 77.32.060 was amended by 1998 c 245 s 160 without reference to its repeal by 1998 c 191 s 45. Repealing this section removes the decodified section from the code.
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