HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESB 6868
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
As Reported by House Committee On:
Environmental Health, Select
Title: An act relating to protecting sole source aquifers by providing sewer utility service to mobile home parks.
Brief Description: Protecting sole source aquifers by providing sewer utility service to mobile home parks.
Sponsors: Senators Brown and Marr.
Brief History:
Select Committee on Environmental Health: 2/25/08, 2/28/08 [DPA].
Brief Summary of Engrossed Bill (As Amended by House Committee) |
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HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
Majority Report: Do pass as amended. Signed by 6 members: Representatives Campbell, Chair; Hudgins, Vice Chair; Chase, Hunt, Morrell and Wood.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 2 members: Representatives Sump, Ranking Minority Member; Newhouse.
Staff: Brad Avy (786-7289).
Background:
Under current state law, cities, towns, or counties cannot require a mobile home park on a
septic system to connect to a local sewer system unless a local board of health makes a
determination that the mobile home park's septic system is failing. Failing septic systems can
impact public health, groundwater, and drinking water supplies.
Drinking water supplies are protected, planned for, and regulated through a mix of local,
state, and federal statutes including the: State Public Water Systems Act, State Water
Pollution Control Act, State Public Water System Coordination Act, State Growth
Management Act, State Underground Injection Control Program, Federal Clean Water Act,
and federal Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA).
Under the SDWA, the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency is authorized to designate
"sole source aquifers." Sole source aquifers are ground water areas that supply at least 50
percent of the drinking water consumed in the area overlying the aquifer. Sole source
aquifers also have no alternative drinking water source which could physically, legally, and
economically supply all those who depend upon the aquifer for drinking water. There are 11
sole source aquifers designated in Washington. The Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie
aquifer, which extends across Idaho and Washington, is the sole source of drinking water for
more than 500,000 people.
Summary of Amended Bill:
Any county lying east of the crest of the Cascade mountains with a population greater than
400,000, and any city within such county, may require a mobile home park using an existing
septic system that has not been determined to be failing to connect to a sewer system, when
the city or county legislative authority determines that:
The cost of connecting a mobile home park to a sewer system may not be passed on to the
tenants of the mobile home park.
The county or city authority requiring a mobile home park to connect to a sewer system
should identify and extend financial assistance programs.
Amended Bill Compared to Original Bill:
The bill as amended requires that the cost of connecting a mobile home park to a sewer
system may not be passed onto the tenants of the mobile home park.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date of Amended Bill: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Staff Summary of Public Testimony:
(In support) Ground water is a critical source of drinking water for many Washington
citizens. Spokane's sole source aquifer is a critical drinking water supply with no feasible
alternatives. The City of Spokane and Spokane County have been working on a septic tank
elimination program as part of the dissolved oxygen problems in the Spokane River. The bill
will address removal of phosphorus from the system. The state has funded about $5 million
per year towards septic tank elimination. Sixty percent of pollution reaching the aquifer is
caused by septic systems. Due to coarse soils, septic tank discharge receives little additional
treatment. All other classes of property owners must hook up to a sewer system. Typical
residential on-site septic systems do not remove phosphates. Phosphates are going down in
the Spokane Valley, but they are not where they need to be.
(Opposed) Two previous bills passed in 1998 and 2003 expressly said that if a mobile home
park does not have a failing septic system they do not have to hook up to sewer systems.
There is no evidence the septic tank system is failing for the 200 unit Pinecroft Mobile Home
Park (Pinecroft). Pinecroft sued Spokane County when they were required to hook up to the
sewer system at a cost of over $400,000. This is a constitutional issue. Legal cases show that
if an entity does not use a service, it does not have to pay for it. There is a question about the
timing of the bill given the current lawsuit. The health department has expertise to determine
if a system is failing. The county decided to move forward, but not because the health
department found the system to be failing. There is no proof that septic tanks leach into the
aquifer. If it has already been decided that the septic tank is failing, without proof, it is not
fair to require hook up to the sewer system. The cost of hook up is astronomical. Fifty
dollars additional a month would be a hardship on the Pinecroft residents. The committee is
urged to retain existing law. Mobile home parks are the last bastion of affordable housing.
Parks are closing and fewer are being built. Where are these people supposed to go? Tax
bills are getting harder to bear due to increasing property values. There are 93 mobile home
parks in Spokane County, though not all are over the aquifer. The health department has not
deemed any of these systems failing. It is not just the cost for hook up. The tenant will
ultimately have to pay via costs that are passed on. If phosphates cause a septic system to
fail, then the existing statute already provides for connection to a sewer system. The bill is
seen as a litigation tactic to undercut current law.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Melodie Selby, Department of Ecology; and Ed Thorpe,
Coalition for Clean Water.
(Opposed) Representative Schindler; Walt Olsen, Olsen Law Firm, PLLC; and John
Woodring, Manufactured Housing Communities Washington.