Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Economic Development, Agriculture & Trade Committee | |
HB 2559
Brief Description: Changing the registration fees for weighing and measuring devices.
Sponsors: Representatives Hasegawa, Pettigrew and Linville; by request of Department of Agriculture.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/25/06
Staff: Meg Van Schoorl (786-7105).
Background:
The state Department of Agriculture (Department) regulates all commercial weighing, measuring
and counting devices used in the state, except those used in the cities of Spokane and Seattle
which operate their own regulatory programs. Examples of regulated devices include gasoline
pumps, railroad track scales, home heating oil truck meters, grocery store scales, taxi meters, and
truck scales.
The Department's Weights and Measures program inspectors test devices for accuracy and
suitability for service. They also inspect price scanner systems for accuracy; inspect packaged
commodities for correct content, labeling and pricing; and investigate consumer complaints.
The Weights and Measures program was historically supported by the State General Fund until
1990 when a system based primarily on inspection fees began. In 1995, the Legislature
established the current funding structure. Businesses are required to pay an annual device
registration fee, according to a statutory fee schedule, ranging from $5 to $800, depending upon
the category of the device. In 2005, 67,600 devices were registered. Ninety-two percent of these
devices cost $5 to register. Revenues from device registration fees in FY2005 totaled $499,773.
The Department's frequency of inspection and device failure rate each differ significantly from
national averages. For inspection intervals, the national average is 1 - 1.5 years. The state's
average varies depending upon device. The most frequent inspections are of railroad track scales
(2 years), gas pumps (2.5 years), and small scales (once every 3.7 years). Other devices are
rarely, if ever, inspected. For failure rates, the national average is 6.9 percent for small scales
and 6.6 percent for gas pumps, while the failure rates in the last two years for those same
state-inspected devices averaged 9.5 percent and 8.9 percent respectively.
Cities with weights and measures programs may establish their own annual fees as long as they
do not exceed the statutory fee schedule.
Summary of Bill:
The annual registration fee for each category of commercial weighing, measuring, and counting
device is increased by a factor of 2.5, as shown on the following chart:
Device Type | Current Fee | Fee Proposed in HB 2559 |
Small Scale (0-400 lbs capacity) | $ 5.00 | $ 12.50 |
Intermediate Scale (401-5,000 lbs) | 20.00 | 50.00 |
Large Scale (5,000+ lbs) | 52.00 | 130.00 |
Railroad Track Scale | 800.00 | 2,000.00 |
Liquid Fuel Meter (0-20 gal) | 5.00 | 12.50 |
Liquid Fuel Meter (21-150 gal) | 16.00 | 40.00 |
Liquid Fuel Meter (151+ gallon) | 25.00 | 62.50 |
Liquid Petroleum Gas Meter (small) | 10.00 | 25.00 |
Liquid Petroleum Gas Meter (large) | 30.00 | 75.00 |
Fabric Meter | 5.00 | 12.50 |
Cordage Meter | 5.00 | 12.50 |
Mass Flow Meter | 14.00 | 35.00 |
Taxi Meter | 5.00 | 12.50 |
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect on July 1, 2006.