HOUSE BILL REPORT
SHB 2384
As Passed Legislature
Title: An act relating to geological survey.
Brief Description: Concerning the state geological survey.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks (originally sponsored by Representatives Dickerson, Buck, Blake and B. Sullivan; by request of Department of Natural Resources).
Brief History:
Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks: 1/12/06, 1/13/06 [DPS];
Appropriations: 1/24/06, 1/25/06 [DPS(NREP)].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 2/10/06, 98-0.
Senate Amended.
Passed Senate: 3/2/06, 47-0.
House Concurred.
Passed House: 3/4/06, 95-0.
Passed Legislature.
Brief Summary of Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES, ECOLOGY & PARKS
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by Representatives B. Sullivan, Chair; Upthegrove, Vice Chair; Buck, Ranking Minority Member; Kretz, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Blake, Chandler, Dickerson, Eickmeyer, Hunt, Kagi and Orcutt.
Staff: Jason Callahan (786-7117).
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
Majority Report: The substitute bill by Committee on Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 30 members: Representatives Sommers, Chair; Fromhold, Vice Chair; Alexander, Ranking Minority Member; Anderson, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; McDonald, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Armstrong, Bailey, Buri, Chandler, Clements, Cody, Conway, Darneille, Dunshee, Grant, Haigh, Hinkle, Hunter, Kagi, Kenney, Kessler, McDermott, McIntire, Miloscia, Pearson, Priest, Schual-Berke, P. Sullivan, Talcott and Walsh.
Staff: Alicia Paatsch (786-7178).
Background:
The Department of Natural Resources (DNR), through the appointed Supervisor of Geology,
is responsible for maintaining the state Geological Survey (Survey). The Survey is required
to meet a number of objectives, including examinations of the state's mined products, the
state's water resources, the state's soil classifications, and the occurrence of natural road
building materials. The Survey must also produce geological and economic maps and
information related to science and economics deemed of value by the Supervisor of Geology.
Reports and maps generated from the Survey must be made available to the general public for
purchase.
Summary of Substitute Bill:
The state "Supervisor of Geology" is renamed the "State Geologist". References in the code
to the old title are updated to reflect the title change.
The Survey is instructed to conduct and maintain an assessment of the volcanic, seismic,
landslide, and tsunami hazards in Washington. The assessment must include identification
and mapping of hazards, as well as an estimation of the potential consequences and the
likelihood of a geological hazard event. Technical assistance must be provided to state and
local governmental agencies for interpreting and applying the assessment.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: (Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks) Hurricane Katrina and the Sumatra
tsunami have demonstrated the importance of disaster preparedness and assessing geological
risk. With the state's largest city vulnerable to liquefaction and the coast susceptible to a
tsunami, the state needs to do all that it can to prepare for possible disaster situations and to
focus on the primary risks. Maps of damage prone areas are vital for emergency service
preparation, and planning will be important for rebuilding the state in the event of a
catastrophe.
The original enabling legislation for the Survey was drafted in the early 1900's. The needs
and requirements of the Survey have changed since the initial creation, and the current code
should reflect modern needs.
There is an economic benefit available to the state if it invests in its geological resources.
Energy exploration companies will invest in the state if they have access to modern and
reliable information on the mineral composition of the area. Currently, there is not any
natural gas production in the state, but that could change if an investment was made in
mapping coal seams and other resources.
The Survey is an important, unbiased place for research and public education to occur. It has
been able to do much with diminishing funds, but a reinvestment in the Survey is needed.
The state geological library is an important resource that needs investment to keep modern.
Science done in isolation is not as effective. The geological library and public dissemination
role of the Survey ensures that research is efficient.
Local governments and land planners need help in knowing where communities should be
built and where gravel and aggregate resources are located. Poor counties have the same
geological needs as large counties, but lack the necessary resources to tend to those needs.
Testimony For: (Appropriations) The Department of Natural Resource's Geology
Department currently has a third of an employee working on geologic hazards. Funding in
2007 allow the completion of liquefaction and seismic work in the Everett and Arlington
areas and will begin to update shoreline slope stability maps that were last updated in 1973.
We have better data and could begin mapping the 2,500 shoreline miles of the Puget Sound at
about two counties per year. We also need to accelerate the time it takes to do the work so
that it doesn't take 15 to 18 years to develop all the maps.
Clallam, Jefferson, and Grays Harbor counties are in severe danger of tsunami and
liquefaction impacts based on a Cascadia Subduction earthquake. Maps from the Department
of Natural Resources show that oil tanks in Port Angeles and oil spill response equipment are
both located in liquefaction and tsunami danger areas. These maps show where fills will
wash out and where bridges may be in danger. Geologic data can also be used to develop
much needed collateral damage maps.
State and local officials are dependent on current geological information in the development
and establishment of building codes, ordinances, and mitigation programs. These plans
ensure public safety of our citizens and can reduce the volume of public and private losses as
a result of a hazardous event.
Testimony Against: (Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks) None.
Testimony Against: (Appropriations) None.
Persons Testifying: (Natural Resources, Ecology & Parks) Representative Dickerson, prime sponsor; Representative Buck; Ron Teissere, Department of Natural Resources; Thomas Deacon, Cascadia Energy Corporation and Methane Energy Corporation; Jim Zimmerman, Washington Cattlemen's Association; Kitty Reed; Connie Manson, American Geological Institute; Lori Evans, Kinross Gold USA; William Steele, University of Washington; Eric Holdeman, King County Office of Emergency Management; Kathy Troost, University of Washington; Heath Packard, Audubon Society; and Mark Molinari, Association of Environmental and Engineering Geologists.
Persons Testifying: (Appropriations) Representative Dickerson, prime sponsor; Representative Buck; Bill Steele, University of Washington Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network; Jim Mullen, Emergency Management Division, Military Department; Ron Teissere, Department of Natural Resources; and John LeManna, Association of Environmental Geologists.