BILL REQ. #: S-0570.1
State of Washington | 61st Legislature | 2009 Regular Session |
Read first time 02/02/09. Referred to Committee on Labor, Commerce & Consumer Protection.
AN ACT Relating to authorizing the creation of cultural access authorities; amending RCW 36.96.010; adding a new chapter to Title 36 RCW; and creating new sections.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 101
NEW SECTION. Sec. 201
(1) "Administrative costs" means all operating, administrative, and
maintenance expenses of an authority, a designated public agency, or a
designated entity.
(2) "Attendance" means the total number of visits by persons in
physical attendance during a year at cultural organization facilities
located or cultural organization programs provided within an authority
service area, including attendance for which admission was paid,
discounted, or free, consistent with and verifiable under guidelines
adopted by the appropriate authority.
(3) "Authority" means a cultural access authority.
(4) "Authority board" means the board of directors of an authority.
(5) "Community-based organization" means a cultural organization
that primarily functions, focuses its activities, and is supported or
patronized within a local community and is not a regional organization,
subject to further definition under guidelines adopted by the
appropriate designated public agency.
(6) "Cultural organization" means a nonprofit corporation
incorporated under the laws of the state of Washington and recognized
by the internal revenue service as described in section 501(c)(3) of
the internal revenue code of 1986, as amended, with its principal
location or locations and conducting a majority of its activities
within the state, not including any agency of the state or any of its
political subdivisions; any municipal corporation; any educational
institution; any organization that raises funds for redistribution to
cultural organizations; or any radio or television broadcasting network
or station, cable communications system, internet-based communications
venture or service, newspaper, or magazine. The primary purpose of the
organization must be the advancement and preservation of science or
technology, the visual or performing arts, zoology, botany,
anthropology, or cultural or natural history and any organization shall
directly provide programming or experiences available to the general
public. Any organization with the primary purpose of advancing and
preserving zoology such as zoos and aquariums must be or support a
facility that is accredited by the association of zoos and aquariums or
its functional successor. A state-related cultural organization may be
a cultural organization.
(7) "Designated entity" means the entity designated by the
legislative authority of a participating county. The entity may be a
public agency or a Washington nonprofit corporation that is not a
cultural organization eligible for funding under this chapter.
(8) "Designated public agency" means the agency designated by the
legislative authority of a participating county within an authority
service area.
(9) "Participating county" means a county that participated in the
formation of an authority under this chapter.
(10) "Regional organization" means a cultural organization that
owns, operates, or supports cultural facilities or provides
performances, exhibits, educational programs, experiences, or
entertainment that widely benefit and are broadly attended by the
public within the authority service area, subject to further definition
under guidelines adopted by the appropriate authority. A regional
organization may also generally be characterized under authority
guidelines as a financially stable, substantial organization with
full-time support and program staff, maintaining a broad-based
membership within the authority service area, having year-round or
enduring seasonal operations, being a substantial financial contributor
to the development, operation, and maintenance of the organization's
principal venue or venues, and providing substantial public benefits
within the authority service area.
(11) "Revenues" means revenues generated by a cultural
organization, consistent with generally accepted accounting practices
and any authority guidelines, excluding (a) revenues associated with
capital projects other than major maintenance projects including, but
not limited to, capital campaign expenses; (b) funds provided under
this chapter; (c) revenue that would be considered unrelated business
taxable income under the internal revenue code of 1986, as amended; and
(d) with respect to a state-related cultural organization, state
funding received by it or for the institution it supports. Revenues
include transfers from an organization's endowment or reserves and may
include the value of in-kind goods and services to the extent permitted
under any authority guidelines.
(12) "Service area" means the area in which an authority functions
that is coterminous with the boundaries of one or two or more
contiguous participating counties.
(13) "State-related cultural organization" means an organization
incorporated as a nonprofit corporation under the laws of the state of
Washington and recognized by the internal revenue service as described
in section 501(c)(3) of the internal revenue code of 1986, as amended,
with a primary purpose and directly providing programming or
experiences available to the general public consistent with the
requirements for recognition as a cultural organization under this
chapter operating in a facility owned and supported by the state, a
state agency, or state educational institution.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 301
(b) Any contiguous group of up to four counties, including at least
one county with a population of more than one hundred fifty thousand,
may create an authority by entering into an interlocal agreement under
chapter 39.34 RCW, approved by resolution of the county legislative
authorities.
(2) An authority service area must be coextensive with the
boundaries of the participating county or counties that created the
authority, including incorporated areas.
(3)(a) An authority created by a single participating county must
be governed by a five-member authority board consisting of four members
appointed by the county legislative authority and one member appointed
by the governor. In a participating county with an elected county
executive, authority board members appointed by the county legislative
authority must be nominated by the county executive subject to
confirmation by the county legislative authority. The members
appointed under this subsection may not be members of the legislative
authority of the participating county or of any city or town located in
a participating county. The members of the authority board shall serve
four-year terms. Of the initial members, one must be appointed for a
one-year term, one must be appointed for a two-year term, one must be
appointed for a three-year term, and the remainder must be appointed
for four-year terms.
(b) An authority created by two or three participating counties
under subsection (1)(b) of this section must be governed by a
seven-member authority board consisting of six members appointed as
specified in the interlocal agreement creating the authority and one
member appointed by the governor. In a participating county with an
elected county executive, authority board members appointed by the
county legislative authority must be nominated by the county executive
subject to confirmation by the county legislative authority. The
members appointed under this subsection may not be members of the
legislative authorities of the participating counties or of any city or
town located in a participating county. The members of the authority
board shall serve four-year terms. Of the initial members, two must be
appointed for a one-year term, two must be appointed for a two-year
term, two must be appointed for a three-year term, and one must be
appointed for a four-year term, as set forth in the interlocal
agreement creating the authority.
(c) An authority created by up to four participating counties under
subsection (1)(b) of this section with an aggregate population of more
than two million five hundred thousand must be governed by a seven to
eleven-member authority board as follows: (i) With respect to a two-county authority formed under this subsection, one member appointed by
the legislative authority of each participating county; one member
appointed by the legislative authority of each of the two largest
cities by population as of formation of the authority in the larger
participating county by population as of formation of the authority;
one member appointed by the legislative authority of the largest city
by population as of formation of the authority in the smaller
participating county by population as of formation of the authority;
and two members appointed by the governor; and (ii) with respect to a
three or four-county authority formed under this subsection, one member
appointed by the legislative authority of each participating county;
one member appointed by the legislative authority of each of the two
largest cities by population as of formation of the authority in the
largest participating county by population as of formation of the
authority; one member appointed by the legislative authority of the
largest city by population as of formation of the authority in each of
the other participating counties; and two members appointed by the
governor. A county legislative authority appointing members under this
subsection shall solicit recommendations from the county cultural
commission, if any, and the county's designated public agency prior to
final approval of any appointment or appointments. The members
appointed under this subsection may not be members of the legislative
authorities of the participating counties or of any city or town
located in a participating county. In a participating county with an
elected county executive, authority board members appointed by the
county legislative authority must be nominated by the county executive
subject to confirmation by the county legislative authority. The
members of the authority board shall serve four-year terms. Of the
initial members of the board of a two-county authority formed under
this subsection, two must be appointed for a one-year term; two must be
appointed for a two-year term; two must be appointed for a three-year
term; and one member must be appointed for a four-year term as set
forth in the interlocal agreement creating the authority. Of the
initial members of the board of a three or four-county authority formed
under this subsection, three must be appointed for a one-year term;
three must be appointed for a two-year term; three must be appointed
for a three-year term; and two members must be appointed for a
four-year term as set forth in the interlocal agreement creating the
authority.
(4) An authority is a municipal corporation, a political
subdivision, an independent taxing authority, and a taxing district.
(5) An authority constitutes a body corporate and possesses all the
usual powers of a corporation for public purposes as well as all other
powers that may now or hereafter be specifically conferred by statute.
(6) An authority board shall adopt ethics policies consistent with
applicable law and generally recognized best practices for comparable
entities addressing disclosure and management of potential conflicts of
interest, among other matters. The policies must apply to authority
board members, officers, and employees.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 302
NEW SECTION. Sec. 303
NEW SECTION. Sec. 304
NEW SECTION. Sec. 305
(1) Maintain an office or offices;
(2) Sue and be sued in its own name, and plead and be impleaded;
(3) Engage consultants, agents, attorneys, and advisers, contract
with state and local governmental entities for services, and hire such
employees, agents, and other personnel as the authority deems
necessary, useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes;
(4) Establish procurement policies by resolution, including
procedures for competitive procurement of services when required under
its established policies;
(5) Make and execute all manner of contracts, agreements, and
documents with public and private parties as the authority deems
necessary, useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes;
(6) Acquire and hold real or personal property, or any interest
therein, in the name of the authority, and sell, assign, lease,
encumber, mortgage, or otherwise dispose of the same in the manner as
the authority deems necessary, useful, or convenient to accomplish its
purposes. Any county legislative authority may transfer property, with
or without consideration, to an authority created under this chapter;
(7) Open and maintain accounts in qualified public depositaries and
otherwise provide for the investment of any funds not required for
immediate disbursement, and provide for the selection of investments;
(8) Appear in its own behalf before boards, commissions,
departments, or agencies of federal, state, or local government;
(9) Procure insurance in amounts and from insurers as the authority
deems desirable including, but not limited to, insurance against any
loss or damage to its property or other assets, public liability
insurance for injuries to persons or property, and liability insurance
with limits an authority board deems reasonable for the purpose of
protecting and holding personally harmless board members, officers, and
employees of the authority against liability arising from their acts or
omissions while performing or in good faith purporting to perform their
official duties;
(10) Apply for and accept grants, loans, advances, and
contributions from any source of money, property, labor, or other
things of value, to be held, used, and applied as the authority deems
necessary, useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes, without
competing with cultural organizations as defined under this chapter or
private organizations that raise funds for distribution to cultural
organizations;
(11) Make expenditures as are appropriate for paying the
administrative costs and expenses of the authority in carrying out the
provisions of this chapter;
(12) Establish reserves and special funds, and controls on deposits
to and disbursements from them, as the authority deems necessary,
useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes;
(13) Prepare, publish, and distribute, with or without charge,
studies, reports, bulletins, and other material as the authority deems
necessary, useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes;
(14) Conduct meetings at which members participating through the
use of any means of communication by which all members participating
can hear each other during the meeting are deemed to be present in
person at the meeting for all purposes;
(15) Delegate any of its powers and duties if consistent with the
purposes of this chapter;
(16) Adopt rules and guidelines as may be necessary to implement
this chapter; and
(17) Exercise any other power the authority deems necessary,
useful, or convenient to accomplish its purposes and exercise the
powers expressly granted in this chapter.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 306
NEW SECTION. Sec. 307
NEW SECTION. Sec. 308
NEW SECTION. Sec. 309
NEW SECTION. Sec. 310
NEW SECTION. Sec. 401
NEW SECTION. Sec. 501
(a) Until any start-up funding provided to the authority under
section 302 of this act has been fully repaid within two years after
the sales and use tax authorized under section 401 of this act is first
collected, the authority shall reserve from total funds available
annually funding sufficient to provide for repayment of such start-up
funding;
(b) After allocating any funds necessary for repayment of start-up
funding as provided in (a) of this subsection, up to one and one-fourth
percent of total funds available annually may be used for authority
administrative costs;
(c)(i) After allocating funds for repayment of start-up funding as
provided under (a) of this subsection and for authority administrative
expenses as provided in (b) of this subsection, ten percent of
remaining funds available annually must be used to fund a public school
cultural access program to be administered by the authority and, to the
extent funds are available after funding the public school cultural
access program, such other projects of regional benefit to be
undertaken within the authority's service area. As determined by the
authority board and to the extent practicable consistent with available
resources, the public school cultural access program must include the
following attributes:
(A) Provide benefits designed to increase public school student
access to the programming offered and facilities operated by regional
and community-based organizations receiving funding under this chapter;
(B) Offer benefits to every public school in the authority's
service area while scaling the range of benefits available to and the
frequency of opportunities to participate by any particular school to
coincide with the relative percentage of students attending the school
who participate in the national free or reduced-price school meals
program; and
(C) Benefits provided under the public school cultural access
program must include, without limitation:
(I) Establishment and operation, within funding provided to support
the public school cultural access program under this subsection, of a
centralized service available to regional and community-based
organizations receiving funding under this chapter and public schools
in the authority's service area to coordinate opportunities for public
school student access to the programs and activities offered by the
organizations both at the facilities and venues operated by the
organizations and through programs and experiences provided by the
organizations at schools and elsewhere;
(II) Providing directly or otherwise funding and arranging for
transportation for public school students to attend and participate in
the programs and activities offered by such organizations;
(III) In consultation with regional and community-based
organizations, preparing and maintaining a readily accessible and
current guide cataloging access opportunities and facilitating
scheduling;
(IV) Coordinating closely with regional and community-based
organizations to maximize student utilization of available
opportunities in a cost-efficient manner including possible scheduling
on a single day opportunities for different grade levels at any one
school and participation in multiple programs or activities in the same
general area for which authority-funded transportation is provided;
(V) Supporting the development of tools, materials, and media by
cultural organizations to ensure that school access programs and
activities correlate with school curricula and extend the reach of
access programs and activities for classroom use with or without direct
on-site participation, to the extent practicable;
(VI) Building meaningful partnerships with public schools and
cultural organizations in order to maximize participation in school
access programs and activities and ensure their relevance and
effectiveness;
(VII) Preparing an annual public school access plan for authority
board review and adoption prior to implementation; and
(VIII) Compiling an annual report documenting the reach and
evaluating the effectiveness of authority-funded public school access
efforts, including recommendations to the authority board for
improvements.
(ii) The authority board shall establish eligibility guidelines,
criteria for the award of funding to support projects of regional
benefit, including identification and evaluation of the public benefits
to be derived from the projects, and a competitive allocation process
to be undertaken at least annually. The projects may include, without
limitation, regional cultural public information and promotional
activities; support for new cultural organizations; and support for
specific projects or organizations working to expand access to cultural
activities by underserved populations. Regional organizations
receiving funding under this chapter are not eligible applicants for
funding under this section. However, regional organizations may
participate in broad-based, collaborative projects funded under this
section and may partner with a community-based organization in a
project for which the community-based organization is the applicant for
funding and plays the lead role in the project;
(d) Seventy-five percent of total remaining funds available
annually excluding funds initially reserved under (a), (b), and (c) of
this subsection must be reserved for distribution by the authority
board to each regional organization that the authority board
determines, on an annual basis, to have met the following guidelines:
(i) For at least the preceding three years, the organization has
been continuously in good standing as a nonprofit corporation under the
laws of the state of Washington;
(ii) Has its principal location or locations and conducts the
majority of its activities within the authority service area primarily
for the benefit of authority residents;
(iii) Has not declared bankruptcy or suspended or substantially
curtailed operations for a period longer than six months during the
preceding three years;
(iv) Has provided to the authority audited annual financial
statements for at least its two most recent fiscal years;
(v) Over the three preceding years, has minimum average annual
revenues of at least one million two hundred fifty thousand dollars.
The authority board shall annually and cumulatively adjust the minimum
revenues by the annual percentage change in the consumer price index
for the prior year for the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Washington
metropolitan statistical area for all urban consumer, all goods, as
published by the United States department of labor, bureau of labor
statistics. The minimum revenues requirement, adjusted for inflation
as provided in this section, remains effective through the date on
which the initial tax authorized by the voters under section 401 of
this act expires. Thereafter, the authority board shall, at the
beginning of each subsequent period of funding as approved by the
voters, establish initial minimum average annual revenues of not less
than the amount of the minimum revenues required during the final year
of the immediately preceding period of funding;
(vi) For purposes of determining the eligibility of a cultural
organization to receive funding or the relative magnitude of the
funding it receives on the basis of its revenues, any determination
with respect to a qualifying state-related cultural organization must
exclude any state funding received by the organization or for the
institution it supports; and
(vii) Any additional guidelines, consistent with section 201 of
this act and this section, as it deems necessary or appropriate for
determining the eligibility of prospective regional organizations to
receive funding under this section and for establishing the amount of
funding any organization may receive;
(e) Funds available under (d) of this subsection must be
distributed among eligible regional organizations based on an annual
ranking of eligible organizations by the combined size of their average
annual revenues and their average annual attendance, both over the
three preceding years. However, an organization's attendance must have
twice the weight of the organization's revenues in determining its
relative ranking. Available funds must be distributed proportionally
among eligible organizations, consistent with the ranking, such that
the organization with the largest combined revenues and weighted
attendance would receive the most funding and the organization with the
smallest combined revenues and weighted attendance would receive the
least funding. However, no organization may receive funds in excess of
fifteen percent of its average annual revenues over the three preceding
years. Any funds available under (d) of this subsection not
distributed to regional organizations as a result of application of the
formula provided under this subsection (1)(e) must be allocated by the
authority board for distribution under (g) of this subsection;
(f) Funds distributed to regional organizations under (d) of this
subsection must be used to support cultural and educational activities,
programs and initiatives, public benefits and communications, and basic
operations. No funds distributed to regional organizations under (d)
of this subsection may be used for capital expenditures or acquisitions
including, but not limited to, the acquisition of or the construction
of improvements to real property;
(g) Remaining funds available annually, including funds not
initially reserved under (a) through (d) of this subsection as well as
funds not distributed by the authority from the reserved funds must be
distributed by the authority board to public agencies designated by the
legislative authorities of the participating counties, subject to the
following guidelines:
(i) With respect to an authority created by four contiguous
counties with an aggregate service area population of more than three
million, the agency designated by the legislative authority of the
largest of the participating counties by size of population shall
receive fifty percent of funds available under this subsection (1)(g);
the agencies designated by the legislative authorities of the next two
largest of the participating counties by size of population must each
receive twenty percent of funds available under this subsection (1)(g);
and the agency designated by the legislative authority of the smallest
of the participating counties by size of population must receive the
remaining ten percent of funds available;
(ii) With respect to an authority created by fewer than four
contiguous counties with an aggregate service area population of more
than two million five hundred thousand, funds must be distributed by
the authority board to public agencies designated by the legislative
authorities of the participating counties under a formula to be
determined by the authority board. In determining its formula for the
distribution of remaining funds among the designated public agencies,
the authority board shall consider factors such as the relative size of
the populations and the economies of the participating counties; the
number of regional organizations receiving funds under (d) of this
subsection in each participating county; and the extent to which
citizens or groups of citizens within each county may be underserved by
cultural organizations;
(iii) The distribution formula for an authority comprised of three
contiguous counties including one county with a population in excess of
one million five hundred thousand, another county with a population in
excess of six hundred thousand, and one with a population of less than
three hundred thousand shall provide that the agency designated by the
legislative authority of the largest county by population receives not
less than sixty percent of funds available; the next largest county by
population receives not less than twenty-five percent of funds
available; and the smallest county by population receives not less than
twelve percent of funds available;
(iv) The distribution formula for an authority comprised of three
continuous counties including one county with a population in excess of
one million five hundred thousand and two other counties each with a
population in excess of six hundred thousand shall provide that the
agency designated by the legislative authority of the largest county by
population receives not less than fifty-five percent of funds available
and each of the other two counties receive not less than twenty percent
of funds available;
(v) The distribution formula for an authority comprised of two
contiguous counties including one county with a population in excess of
one million five hundred thousand and one county with a population in
excess of six hundred thousand shall provide that the agency designated
by the legislative authority of the larger county by population
receives not less than seventy-five percent of the funds available; and
(vi) The distribution formula for an authority comprised of two
contiguous counties including one county with a population in excess of
one million five hundred thousand and one county with a population of
less than three hundred thousand shall provide that the agency
designated by the legislative authority of the larger county by
population receives not less than eighty-five percent of funds
available;
(h) Funds distributed by the designated public agencies under (g)
of this subsection must be applied as follows:
(i) Not more than eight percent of such funds must be used for
administrative costs of the public agency designated by a participating
county; and
(ii) The balance must be used to fund community-based
organizations. Designated public agencies shall adopt:
(A) Guidelines, consistent with the requirements of this chapter,
it deems necessary or appropriate for determining the eligibility of
community-based organizations to receive funding under this chapter and
for establishing the amount of funding any organization may receive;
(B) Criteria for the award of funds to eligible community-based
organizations, including the public benefits to be derived from
projects submitted for funding; and
(C) Procedures for conducting, at least annually, a competitive
process for the award of available funding;
(i) Funds distributed to community-based organizations may be used
to support cultural and educational activities, programs, and
initiatives; public benefits and communications; and basic operations.
Funds may also be used for (i) capital expenditures or acquisitions
including, but not limited to, the acquisition of or construction of
improvements to real property; and (ii) technology, equipment, and
supplies reasonably related to or necessary for a project otherwise
eligible for funding under this chapter. Authority guidelines may also
determine the circumstances under which funds may be used to fund
start-up expenses of new community-based organizations.
(2) An authority, other than an authority described in subsection
(1) of this section, shall allocate available funding as follows:
(a) Not more than five percent of total funds available annually
may be reserved for authority administrative costs, including its
start-up funding provided under section 302 of this act and to support
projects of regional benefit to be undertaken within the authority's
service area, as determined by the authority board. Not more than two
and one half percent of total funds available annually may be used for
authority administrative costs. The authority board shall establish
eligibility guidelines, criteria for the award of funding to support
projects of regional benefit, including identification and evaluation
of the public benefits to be derived from the projects, and a
competitive allocation process to be undertaken at least annually. The
projects may include, without limitation, regional cultural public
information and promotional activities, support for new cultural
organizations, and support for specific projects or organizations
working to expand access to cultural activities by underserved
populations. Regional organizations receiving funding under this
chapter are not eligible applicants for funding under this section.
However, regional organizations may participate in broad-based,
collaborative projects funded under this section and may partner with
a community-based organization in a project for which the community-based organization is the applicant for funding and plays the lead role
in the project;
(b) The authority board shall determine the percentage of total
funds available annually to be reserved for a public school cultural
access program established and managed by the authority to increase
access to cultural activities and programming for public school
students resident in the authority's service area. The activities and
programming need not be located or provided within the authority's
service area. In developing its program, the authority may consider
the attributes prescribed for a public school cultural access program
required to be undertaken under subsection (1)(c) of this section.
(c) The authority board shall determine the percentage of total
funds available annually to be reserved for distribution by the
authority board to regional organizations under a formula to be
determined by the authority board. The authority board may adopt
guidelines, consistent with the requirements of this chapter, it deems
necessary or appropriate for determining the eligibility of regional
organizations to receive funding under this chapter. Total funds
reserved for distribution to regional organizations may not exceed
seventy-five percent of total funds available annually excluding funds
initially reserved under (a) and (b) of this subsection;
(d) Remaining funds available annually, including all funds not
initially reserved under (a), (b), or (c) of this subsection as well as
funds not distributed by the authority from the reserved funds must be
distributed by the authority board to an entity in each participating
county designated by the legislative authorities of the participating
counties under a formula to be determined by the authority board. In
determining its formula for the distribution of remaining funds among
the designated entities, the authority board shall consider factors
such as the relative size of the economies of the participating
counties, the number of regional organizations receiving funds under
(c) of this subsection in each participating county, and the extent to
which citizens or groups of citizens within each county may be
underserved by cultural organizations. The authority shall determine
the amount of funding to be allocated to support designated agency
administrative costs. Funds distributed to the designated entity under
this section must be awarded to community-based cultural organizations.
Subject to the approval of the authority, designated entities shall
adopt:
(i) Guidelines, consistent with the requirements of this chapter,
it deems necessary or appropriate for determining the eligibility of
community-based organizations to receive funding under this chapter;
(ii) Criteria for the award of funds to eligible community-based
organizations, including the public benefits to be derived from
projects submitted for funding; and
(iii) Procedures for conducting, at least annually, a competitive
process for the award of available funding.
(e) Funds distributed to community-based organizations may be used
to support cultural and educational activities, programs, and
initiatives; public benefits and communications; and basic operations.
Funds may also be used for (i) capital expenditures or acquisitions
including, but not limited to, the acquisition of or construction of
improvements to real property; and (ii) technology, equipment, and
supplies reasonably related to or necessary for a project otherwise
eligible for funding under this chapter. Authority guidelines may also
determine the circumstances under which funds may be used to fund
start-up expenses of new community-based organizations;
(f) If the authority board or designated agency determine the
eligibility of a cultural organization to receive funding or the
relative magnitude of the funding it receives on the basis of its
budget, revenues, or expenses, any determination with respect to a
qualifying state-related cultural organization must exclude any state
funding received by the organization or for the institution it
supports.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 502
(2) In evaluating requests for funding authorized under this
chapter for projects of regional benefit under section 501(1) of this
act or this subsection, the authority board shall consider the public
benefits to be derived from proposed projects. At the conclusion of a
project of regional benefit, the recipient of funding authorized under
this chapter is required to report to the authority on the public
benefits realized. Each regional organization receiving funds
authorized under this chapter pursuant to an authority allocation
formula shall annually, prior to year end, preview for the authority
public benefits the organization's plans to provide or continue to
provide in the following year and report on public benefits it provided
or continued to provide during the current year. In evaluating
requests for funding authorized under this chapter, a county-designated
public agency responsible for the distribution of the funds shall
consider the public benefits applicant community-based organizations
represent will be derived from proposed projects. At the conclusion of
a project approved for funding, the sponsoring community-based
organization is required to report to the county-designated public
agency on the public benefits realized.
(3) Each authority established under this chapter shall adopt
guidelines establishing a baseline standard of continuous performance
with respect to the provision of public benefits required under this
chapter and for evaluating the continuing eligibility of any regional
or community-based organization to receive funds under this chapter
based on the continuous performance of the organization in the
provision of the public benefits. The guidelines must include (a)
procedures for notifying any organization at risk of losing its
continuing eligibility to receive funds under this chapter for failure
to achieve the authority's baseline standard of performance with
respect to the continuous provision of public benefits and (b) measures
or procedures available to such an organization for either retaining or
recovering eligibility, as appropriate.
Sec. 601 RCW 36.96.010 and 1999 c 153 s 50 are each amended to
read as follows:
As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:
(1) "Special purpose district" means every municipal and quasi-municipal corporation other than counties, cities, and towns. Such
special purpose districts shall include, but are not limited to, water-sewer districts, fire protection districts, port districts, public
utility districts, county park and recreation service areas, flood
control zone districts, diking districts, drainage improvement
districts, cultural access authorities, and solid waste collection
districts, but shall not include industrial development districts
created by port districts, and shall not include local improvement
districts, utility local improvement districts, and road improvement
districts;
(2) "Governing authority" means the commission, council, or other
body which directs the affairs of a special purpose district;
(3) "Inactive" means that a special purpose district, other than a
public utility district, is characterized by either of the following
criteria:
(a) Has not carried out any of the special purposes or functions
for which it was formed within the preceding consecutive five-year
period; or
(b) No election has been held for the purpose of electing a member
of the governing body within the preceding consecutive seven-year
period or, in those instances where members of the governing body are
appointed and not elected, where no member of the governing body has
been appointed within the preceding seven-year period.
A public utility district is inactive when it is characterized by
both criteria (a) and (b) of this subsection.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 602
NEW SECTION. Sec. 603 No direct or collateral attack on any
authority purported to be authorized or created in conformance with
this chapter may be commenced more than thirty days after creation.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 604 Part headings and captions used in this
act are not any part of the law.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 605 Sections 101 through 502, 602, and 603 of
this act constitute a new chapter in Title
NEW SECTION. Sec. 606 If any provision of this act or its
application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other
persons or circumstances is not affected.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 607 The provisions of this act shall be
liberally construed to effect the policies and purposes of this act.