Passed by the House March 9, 2013 Yeas 97   ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives Passed by the Senate April 17, 2013 Yeas 47   ________________________________________ President of the Senate | I, Barbara Baker, Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SUBSTITUTE HOUSE BILL 1568 as passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate on the dates hereon set forth. ________________________________________ Chief Clerk | |
Approved ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2013 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 02/22/13.
AN ACT Relating to the business licensing service program administered by the department of revenue; amending RCW 15.13.250, 15.13.250, 15.13.280, 15.13.290, 15.49.011, 15.49.380, 15.49.390, 15.54.275, 15.58.180, 15.58.235, 18.44.031, 18.64.044, 19.02.010, 19.02.030, 19.02.035, 19.02.070, 19.02.075, 19.02.080, 19.02.085, 19.02.090, 19.02.100, 19.02.110, 19.02.115, 19.02.210, 19.02.310, 19.02.800, 19.02.890, 19.80.010, 19.80.075, 19.94.2582, 35.21.392, 35A.21.340, 36.110.130, 43.22.035, 46.72A.020, 50.12.290, 59.30.050, 59.30.090, 69.25.050, 69.25.060, 70.290.030, 76.48.121, 82.24.510, 82.24.520, 82.26.150, 90.76.010, and 90.76.020; reenacting and amending RCW 15.58.030, 18.64.011, 19.02.020, 19.94.015, and 69.25.020; adding a new section to chapter 19.80 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 70.290 RCW; creating a new section; repealing RCW 19.02.220, 19.02.810, 19.80.065, and 43.24.160; prescribing penalties; providing an effective date; and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 15.13.250 and 2007 c 335 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
For the purpose of this chapter:
(1) "Department" means the department of agriculture of the state
of Washington.
(2) "Director" means the director of the department or the
director's duly authorized representative.
(3) "Person" means any individual, firm, partnership, corporation,
company, society and association, and every officer, agent or employee
thereof.
(4) "Horticultural plant" includes, but is not limited to, any
horticultural, floricultural, or viticultural plant, or turf, for
planting, propagation or ornamentation growing or otherwise. The term
does not apply to potato, garlic, or onion planting stock or to cut
plant material, except plant parts used for propagative purposes.
(5) "Horticultural facilities" means, but is not limited to, the
premises where horticultural plants or Christmas trees are grown,
stored, handled or delivered for sale or transportation, or where
records required under this chapter are stored or kept, and all
vehicles and equipment used to transport horticultural plants or
Christmas trees.
(6) "Plant pests" means, but is not limited to, a living stage of
insect, mite, or other arthropod; nematode; slug, snail, or other
mollusk; protozoa or other invertebrate animals; bacteria; fungus;
virus; viroid; phytoplasma; weed or parasitic plant; or any organisms
similar to or allied with any of the plant pests listed in this
section; or any infectious substance; which can directly or indirectly
injure or cause disease or damage to any plant or plant product or that
threatens the diversity or abundance of native species.
(7) "Inspection and/or certification" means, but is not limited to,
the inspection by the director of horticultural plants or Christmas
trees at any time prior to, during, or subsequent to harvest or sale
and the issuance by the director of a written certificate stating if
the horticultural plants or Christmas trees are in compliance with the
provisions of this chapter and rules adopted under this chapter.
Inspection may include, but is not limited to, examination of
horticultural plants or Christmas trees, taking samples, destructive
testing, conducting interviews, taking photographs, and examining
records.
(8) "Nursery dealer" means any person who sells horticultural
plants or plants, grows, receives, or handles horticultural plants for
the purpose of selling or planting for another person.
(9) "Sell" means to sell, hold for sale, offer for sale, handle, or
to use as an inducement for the sale of another article or product.
(10) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed utilizing a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(11) "Certificate" or "certificate of inspection" means an official
document certifying compliance with the requirements of this chapter.
The term "certificate" includes labels, rubber stamp imprints, tags,
permits, written statements, or any other form of certification
document that accompanies the movement of inspected and certified plant
material, including Christmas trees.
(12) "Turf" means field-cultivated turf grass sod consisting of
grass varieties, or blends of grass varieties, and dichondra for use in
residential and commercial landscapes.
(13) "This chapter" means this chapter and the rules adopted under
this chapter.
(14) "Compliance agreement" means a written agreement between the
department and a person engaged in growing, handling, or moving
articles, plants, or plant products regulated under this chapter or
title, in which the person agrees to comply with stipulated
requirements.
(15) "Consignor" means the person named in the invoice, bill, or
other shipping document accompanying a horticultural plant as the
person from whom the horticultural plant has been received for
shipment.
(16) "Christmas tree" means a cut evergreen tree:
(a) Of a marketable species;
(b) Managed to produce trees meeting United States number 2 or
better standards for Christmas trees as specified by the United States
department of agriculture; and
(c) Evidencing periodic maintenance practices of shearing or
culturing, or both; weed and brush control; and one or more of the
following practices: Basal pruning, fertilization, insect and disease
control, stump culture, soil cultivation, and irrigation.
(17) "Christmas tree grower" means any person who grows Christmas
trees for sale.
Sec. 2 RCW 15.13.250 and 2000 c 144 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
For the purpose of this chapter:
(1) "Department" means the department of agriculture of the state
of Washington.
(2) "Director" means the director of the department or the
director's duly authorized representative.
(3) "Person" means any individual, firm, partnership, corporation,
company, society and association, and every officer, agent or employee
thereof.
(4) "Horticultural plant" includes, but is not limited to, any
horticultural, floricultural, or viticultural plant, or turf, for
planting, propagation or ornamentation growing or otherwise. The term
does not apply to potato, garlic, or onion planting stock or to cut
plant material, except plant parts used for propagative purposes.
(5) "Horticultural facilities" means, but is not limited to, the
premises where horticultural plants are grown, stored, handled or
delivered for sale or transportation, or where records required under
this chapter are stored or kept, and all vehicles and equipment used to
transport horticultural plants.
(6) "Plant pests" means, but is not limited to, a living stage of
insect, mite, or other arthropod; nematode; slug, snail, or other
mollusk; protozoa or other invertebrate animals; bacteria; fungus;
virus; viroid; phytoplasma; weed or parasitic plant; or any organisms
similar to or allied with any of the plant pests listed in this
section; or any infectious substance; which can directly or indirectly
injure or cause disease or damage to any plant or plant product or that
threatens the diversity or abundance of native species.
(7) "Inspection and/or certification" means, but is not limited to,
the inspection by the director of horticultural plants at any time
prior to, during, or subsequent to harvest or sale and the issuance by
the director of a written certificate stating if the horticultural
plants are in compliance with the provisions of this chapter and rules
adopted under this chapter. Inspection may include, but is not limited
to, examination of horticultural plants, taking samples, destructive
testing, conducting interviews, taking photographs, and examining
records.
(8) "Nursery dealer" means any person who sells horticultural
plants or plants, grows, receives, or handles horticultural plants for
the purpose of selling or planting for another person.
(9) "Sell" means to sell, hold for sale, offer for sale, handle, or
to use as an inducement for the sale of another article or product.
(10) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed utilizing a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(11) "Certificate" or "certificate of inspection" means an official
document certifying compliance with the requirements of this chapter.
The term "certificate" includes labels, rubber stamp imprints, tags,
permits, written statements, or any other form of certification
document that accompanies the movement of inspected and certified plant
material.
(12) "Turf" means field-cultivated turf grass sod consisting of
grass varieties, or blends of grass varieties, and dichondra for use in
residential and commercial landscapes.
(13) "This chapter" means this chapter and the rules adopted under
this chapter.
(14) "Compliance agreement" means a written agreement between the
department and a person engaged in growing, handling, or moving
articles, plants, or plant products regulated under this chapter or
title, in which the person agrees to comply with stipulated
requirements.
(15) "Consignor" means the person named in the invoice, bill, or
other shipping document accompanying a horticultural plant as the
person from whom the horticultural plant has been received for
shipment.
Sec. 3 RCW 15.13.280 and 2000 c 144 s 6 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) No person ((shall)) may act as a nursery dealer without a
license for each place of business where horticultural plants are sold
except as provided in RCW 15.13.270. Any person applying for such a
license ((shall)) must apply through the ((master license)) business
licensing system. The application ((shall)) must be accompanied by the
appropriate fee. The director ((shall)) must establish a schedule of
fees for retail and wholesale nursery dealer licenses based upon the
person's gross annual sales of horticultural plants at each place of
business. The schedule for retail licenses ((shall)) must include
separate fees for at least the following two categories:
(a) A person whose gross annual sales of horticultural plants do
not exceed two thousand five hundred dollars; and
(b) A person whose gross annual sales of horticultural plants
exceed two thousand five hundred dollars.
(2) A person conducting both retail and wholesale sales of
horticultural plants at the same place of business ((shall)) must
secure one of the following:
(a) A retail nursery dealer license if retail sales of the
horticultural plants exceed such wholesale sales; or
(b) A wholesale nursery dealer license if wholesale sales of the
horticultural plants exceed such retail sales.
(3) The director may issue a wholesale nursery dealer license to a
person operating as a farmers market at which individual producers are
selling directly to consumers. The license ((shall)) must be at the
appropriate level to cover all persons selling horticultural plants at
each site at which the person operates a market.
(4) The licensing fee that must accompany an application for a new
license ((shall)) must be based upon the applicant's estimated gross
sales of horticultural plants for the ensuing licensing year. The fee
for renewing a license ((shall)) must be based upon the licensee's
gross sales of these products during the preceding licensing year.
(5) The license expires on the ((master)) business license
expiration date unless it has been revoked or suspended prior to the
expiration date by the director for cause. Each license ((shall)) must
be posted in a conspicuous place open to the public in the location for
which it was issued.
(6) The department may audit licensees during normal business hours
to determine that appropriate fees have been paid.
Sec. 4 RCW 15.13.290 and 2000 c 144 s 8 are each amended to read
as follows:
If any application for renewal of a nursery dealer license is not
filed prior to the ((master)) business license expiration date, the
((master)) business license delinquency fee ((shall)) must be assessed
under chapter 19.02 RCW and ((shall)) must be paid by the applicant
before the renewal license is issued.
Sec. 5 RCW 15.49.011 and 1989 c 354 s 73 are each amended to read
as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in
this section apply throughout this chapter.
(l) "Advertisement" means all representations, other than those on
the label, disseminated in any manner or by any means, relating to seed
within the scope of this chapter.
(2) "Agricultural seed" includes grass, forage, cereal, oil, fiber,
and other kinds of crop seeds commonly recognized within this state as
agricultural seeds, lawn seeds, and combinations of such seeds, and may
include common and restricted noxious weed seeds but not prohibited
noxious weed seeds.
(3) "Blend" means seed consisting of more than one variety of a
kind, each in excess of five percent by weight of the whole.
(4) "Bulk seed" means seed distributed in a nonpackage form.
(5) "Certifying agency" means (a) an agency authorized under the
laws of any state, territory, or possession to certify seed officially
and which has standards and procedures approved by the United States
secretary of agriculture to assure the genetic purity and identity of
the seed certified; or (b) an agency of a foreign country determined by
the United States secretary of agriculture to adhere to procedures and
standards for seed certification comparable to those adhered to
generally by seed-certifying agencies under (a) of this subsection.
(6) "Conditioning" means drying, cleaning, scarifying, and other
operations that could change the purity or germination of the seed and
require the seed lot to be retested to determine the label information.
(7) "Dealer" means any person who distributes.
(8) "Department" means the department of agriculture of the state
of Washington or its duly authorized representative.
(9) "Director" means the director of the department of agriculture.
(10) "Distribute" means to import, consign, offer for sale, hold
for sale, sell, barter, or otherwise supply seed in this state.
(11) "Flower seeds" includes seeds of herbaceous plants grown from
their blooms, ornamental foliage, or other ornamental parts, and
commonly known and sold under the name of flower seeds in this state.
(12) The terms "foundation seed," "registered seed," and "certified
seed" mean seed that has been produced and labeled in compliance with
the regulations of the department.
(13) "Germination" means the emergence and development from the
seed embryo of those essential structures which, for the kind of seed
in question, are indicative of the ability to produce a normal plant
under favorable conditions.
(14) "Hard seeds" means seeds that remain hard at the end of the
prescribed test period because they have not absorbed water due to an
impermeable seed coat.
(15) "Hybrid" means the first generation seed of a cross produced
by controlling the pollination and by combining (a) two or more inbred
lines; (b) one inbred or a single cross with an open pollinated
variety; or (c) two varieties or species, except open-pollinated
varieties of corn (Zea mays). The second generation or subsequent
generations from such crosses ((shall)) are not ((be)) regarded as
hybrids. Hybrid designations ((shall)) must be treated as variety
names.
(16) "Inert matter" means all matter not seed, that includes broken
seeds, sterile florets, chaff, fungus bodies, and stones as determined
by methods defined by rule.
(17) "Kind" means one or more related species or subspecies that
singly or collectively is known by one common name, for example, corn,
oats, alfalfa, and timothy.
(18) "Label" includes a tag or other device attached to or written,
stamped, or printed on any container or accompanying any lot of bulk
seeds purporting to set forth the information required on the seed
label by this chapter, and it may include any other information
relating to the labeled seed.
(19) "Lot" means a definite quantity of seed identified by a lot
number or other mark, every portion or bag of which is uniform within
recognized tolerances for the factors that appear in the labeling.
(20) "Lot number" ((shall)) must identify the producer or dealer
and year of production or the year distributed for each lot of seed.
This requirement may be satisfied by use of a conditioner's or dealer's
code.
(21) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed using a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(22) "Mixture," "mix," or "mixed" means seed consisting of more
than one kind, each in excess of five percent by weight of the whole.
(23) "Official sample" means any sample of seed taken and
designated as official by the department.
(24) "Other crop seed" means seed of plants grown as crops, other
than the kind or variety included in the pure seed, as determined by
methods defined by rule.
(25) "Prohibited (primary) noxious weed seeds" are the seeds of
weeds which when established are highly destructive, competitive,
and/or difficult to control by cultural or chemical practices.
(26) "Person" means an individual, partnership, corporation,
company, association, receiver, trustee, or agent.
(27) "Pure live seed" means the product of the percent of
germination plus hard or dormant seed multiplied by the percent of pure
seed divided by one hundred. The result is expressed as a whole
number.
(28) "Pure seed" means seed exclusive of inert matter and all other
seeds not of the seed being considered as determined by methods defined
by rule.
(29) "Restricted (secondary) noxious weed seeds" are the seeds of
weeds which are objectionable in fields, lawns, and gardens of this
state, but which can be controlled by cultural or chemical practices.
(30) "Retail" means to distribute to the ultimate consumer.
(31) "Screenings" mean chaff, seed, weed seed, inert matter, and
other materials removed from seed in cleaning or conditioning.
(32) "Seed labeling registrant" means a person who has obtained a
permit to label seed for distribution in this state.
(33) "Seeds" mean agricultural or vegetable seeds or other seeds as
determined by rules adopted by the department.
(34) "Stop sale, use, or removal order" means an administrative
order restraining the sale, use, disposition, and movement of a
specific amount of seed.
(35) "Treated" means that the seed has received an application of
a substance, or that it has been subjected to a process for which a
claim is made.
(36) "Type" means a group of varieties so nearly similar that the
individual varieties cannot be clearly differentiated except under
special conditions.
(37) "Variety" means a subdivision of a kind that is distinct,
uniform, and stable; "distinct" in the sense that the variety can be
differentiated by one or more identifiable morphological,
physiological, or other characteristics from all other varieties of
public knowledge; "uniform" in the sense that variations in essential
and distinctive characteristics are describable; and "stable" in the
sense that the variety will remain unchanged in its essential and
distinctive characteristics and its uniformity when reproduced or
reconstituted as required by the different categories of varieties.
(38) "Vegetable seeds" includes the seeds of those crops that are
grown in gardens and on truck farms and are generally known and sold
under the name of vegetable or herb seeds in this state.
(39) "Weed seeds" include the seeds of all plants generally
recognized as weeds within this state, and includes the seeds of
prohibited and restricted noxious weeds as determined by regulations
adopted by the department.
(40) "Inoculant" means a commercial preparation containing nitrogen
fixing bacteria applied to the seed.
(41) "Coated seed" means seed that has been treated and has
received an application of inert material during the treatment process.
Sec. 6 RCW 15.49.380 and 2012 c 61 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) No person ((shall)) may distribute seeds without having
obtained a dealer's license for each regular place of business((:
PROVIDED, That no)). However, a license ((shall be)) is not required
of a person who distributes seeds only in sealed packages of eight
ounces or less, packed by a seed labeling registrant and bearing the
name and address of the registrant((: PROVIDED FURTHER, That)).
Moreover, a license ((shall not be)) is not required of any grower
selling seeds of his or her own production exclusively. Such seed sold
by such grower must be properly labeled as provided in this chapter.
Each dealer's license ((shall)) costs one hundred twenty-five dollars,
((shall)) must be issued through the ((master)) business license
system, ((shall)) must bear the date of issue, ((shall)) must expire on
the ((master license)) business licensing expiration date, and
((shall)) must be prominently displayed in each place of business.
(2) Persons custom conditioning and/or custom treating seeds for
others for remuneration ((shall be)) are considered dealers for the
purpose of this chapter.
(3) Application for a license to distribute seed ((shall)) must be
through the ((master license)) business licensing system and ((shall))
must include the name and address of the person applying for the
license, the name of a person domiciled in this state authorized to
receive and accept service or legal notices of all kinds, and any other
reasonable and practical information prescribed by the department
necessary to carry out the purposes and provisions of this chapter.
Sec. 7 RCW 15.49.390 and 1982 c 182 s 25 are each amended to read
as follows:
If an application for renewal of the dealer's license provided for
in RCW 15.49.380, is not filed prior to the ((master)) business license
expiration date, the ((master)) business license delinquency fee
((shall)) must be assessed under chapter 19.02 RCW and ((shall)) must
be paid by the applicant before the renewal license ((shall be)) is
issued.
Sec. 8 RCW 15.54.275 and 1998 c 36 s 3 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) No person may distribute a bulk fertilizer in this state until
a license to distribute has been obtained by that person. An annual
license is required for each out-of-state or in-state location that
distributes bulk fertilizer in Washington state. An application for
each location ((shall)) must be filed on forms provided by the ((master
license)) business licensing system established under chapter 19.02 RCW
and ((shall)) must be accompanied by an annual fee of twenty-five
dollars per location. The license ((shall)) expires on the ((master))
business license expiration date.
(2) An application for license ((shall)) must include the
following:
(a) The name and address of licensee.
(b) Any other information required by the department by rule.
(3) The name and address shown on the license ((shall)) must be
shown on all labels, pertinent invoices, and storage facilities for
fertilizer distributed by the licensee in this state.
(4) If an application for license renewal provided for in this
section is not filed prior to the ((master)) business license
expiration date, a delinquency fee of twenty-five dollars ((shall))
must be assessed and added to the original fee and ((shall)) must be
paid by the applicant before the renewal license ((shall be)) is
issued. The assessment of this delinquency fee ((shall)) does not
prevent the department from taking any other action as provided for in
this chapter. The penalty ((shall)) does not apply if the applicant
furnishes an affidavit that he or she has not distributed this
commercial fertilizer subsequent to the expiration of his or her prior
license.
Sec. 9 RCW 15.58.030 and 2011 c 103 s 35 are each reenacted and
amended to read as follows:
((As used in this chapter the words and phrases defined in this
section shall have the meanings indicated)) The definitions in this
section apply throughout this chapter unless the context clearly
requires otherwise.
(1) "Active ingredient" means any ingredient which will prevent,
destroy, repel, control, or mitigate pests, or which will act as a
plant regulator, defoliant, desiccant, or spray adjuvant.
(2) "Antidote" means the most practical immediate treatment in case
of poisoning and includes first aid treatment.
(3) "Arthropod" means any invertebrate animal that belongs to the
phylum arthropoda, which in addition to insects, includes allied
classes whose members are wingless and usually have more than six legs;
for example, spiders, mites, ticks, centipedes, and isopod crustaceans.
(4) "Complete wood destroying organism inspection" means inspection
for the purpose of determining evidence of infestation, damage, or
conducive conditions as part of the transfer, exchange, or refinancing
of any structure in Washington state. Complete wood destroying
organism inspections include any wood destroying organism inspection
that is conducted as the result of telephone solicitation by an
inspection, pest control, or other business, even if the inspection
would fall within the definition of a specific wood destroying organism
inspection.
(5) "Defoliant" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to cause the leaves or foliage to drop from a plant with or
without causing abscission.
(6) "Department" means the Washington state department of
agriculture.
(7) "Desiccant" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to artificially accelerate the drying of plant tissues.
(8) "Device" means any instrument or contrivance intended to trap,
destroy, control, repel, or mitigate pests, or to destroy, control,
repel or mitigate fungi, nematodes, or such other pests, as may be
designated by the director, but not including equipment used for the
application of pesticides when sold separately from the pesticides.
(9) "Director" means the director of the department or a duly
authorized representative.
(10) "Distribute" means to offer for sale, hold for sale, sell,
barter, or supply pesticides in this state.
(11) "EPA" means the United States environmental protection agency.
(12) "EPA restricted use pesticide" means any pesticide with
restricted uses as classified for restricted use by the administrator,
EPA.
(13) "FIFRA" means the federal insecticide, fungicide, and
rodenticide act as amended (61 Stat. 163, 7 U.S.C. Sec. 136 et seq.).
(14) "Fungi" means all nonchlorophyll-bearing thallophytes (all
nonchlorophyll-bearing plants of a lower order than mosses and
liverworts); for example, rusts, smuts, mildews, molds, yeasts, and
bacteria, except those on or in living persons or other animals.
(15) "Fungicide" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or mitigate any fungi.
(16) "Herbicide" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or mitigate any weed.
(17) "Inert ingredient" means an ingredient which is not an active
ingredient.
(18) "Ingredient statement" means a statement of the name and
percentage of each active ingredient together with the total percentage
of the inert ingredients in the pesticide, and when the pesticide
contains arsenic in any form, the ingredient statement ((shall)) must
also include percentages of total and water soluble arsenic, each
calculated as elemental arsenic. The ingredient statement for a spray
adjuvant must be consistent with the labeling requirements adopted by
rule.
(19) "Insect" means any of the numerous small invertebrate animals
whose bodies are more or less obviously segmented, and which for the
most part belong to the class insecta, comprising six-legged, usually
winged forms, for example, beetles, bugs, bees, flies, and to other
allied classes of arthropods whose members are wingless and usually
have more than six legs, for example, spiders, mites, ticks,
centipedes, and isopod crustaceans.
(20) "Insecticide" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or mitigate any insects which may
be present in any environment whatsoever.
(21) "Inspection control number" means a number obtained from the
department that is recorded on wood destroying organism inspection
reports issued by a structural pest inspector in conjunction with the
transfer, exchange, or refinancing of any structure.
(22) "Label" means the written, printed, or graphic matter on, or
attached to, the pesticide, device, or immediate container, and the
outside container or wrapper of the retail package.
(23) "Labeling" means all labels and other written, printed, or
graphic matter:
(a) Upon the pesticide, device, or any of its containers or
wrappers;
(b) Accompanying the pesticide, or referring to it in any other
media used to disseminate information to the public; and
(c) To which reference is made on the label or in literature
accompanying or referring to the pesticide or device except when
accurate nonmisleading reference is made to current official
publications of the department, United States departments of
agriculture; interior; education; health and human services; state
agricultural colleges; and other similar federal or state institutions
or agencies authorized by law to conduct research in the field of
pesticides.
(24) "Land" means all land and water areas, including airspace and
all plants, animals, structures, buildings, devices and contrivances,
appurtenant thereto or situated thereon, fixed or mobile, including any
used for transportation.
(25) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed using a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(26) "Nematocide" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or mitigate nematodes.
(27) "Nematode" means any invertebrate animal of the phylum
nemathelminthes and class nematoda, that is, unsegmented round worms
with elongated, fusiform, or saclike bodies covered with cuticle, and
inhabiting soil, water, plants or plant parts, may also be called nemas
or eelworms.
(28) "Person" means any individual, partnership, association,
corporation, or organized group of persons whether or not incorporated.
(29) "Pest" means, but is not limited to, any insect, rodent,
nematode, snail, slug, weed and any form of plant or animal life or
virus, except virus on or in a living person or other animal, which is
normally considered to be a pest or which the director may declare to
be a pest.
(30) "Pest control consultant" means any individual who sells or
offers for sale at other than a licensed pesticide dealer outlet or
location where they are employed, or who offers or supplies technical
advice or makes recommendations to the user of:
(a) Highly toxic pesticides, as determined under RCW 15.58.040;
(b) EPA restricted use pesticides or restricted use pesticides
which are restricted by rule to distribution by licensed pesticide
dealers only; or
(c) Any other pesticide except those pesticides which are labeled
and intended for home and garden use only.
(31) "Pesticide" means, but is not limited to:
(a) Any substance or mixture of substances intended to prevent,
destroy, control, repel, or mitigate any insect, rodent, snail, slug,
fungus, weed, and any other form of plant or animal life or virus,
except virus on or in a living person or other animal which is normally
considered to be a pest or which the director may declare to be a pest;
(b) Any substance or mixture of substances intended to be used as
a plant regulator, defoliant or desiccant; and
(c) Any spray adjuvant.
(32) "Pesticide dealer" means any person who distributes any of the
following pesticides:
(a) Highly toxic pesticides, as determined under RCW 15.58.040;
(b) EPA restricted use pesticides or restricted use pesticides
which are restricted by rule to distribution by licensed pesticide
dealers only; or
(c) Any other pesticide except those pesticides which are labeled
and intended for home and garden use only.
(33) "Pesticide dealer manager" means the owner or other individual
supervising pesticide distribution at one outlet holding a pesticide
dealer license.
(34) "Plant regulator" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended through physiological action, to accelerate or retard the rate
of growth or maturation, or to otherwise alter the behavior of
ornamental or crop plants or their produce, but ((shall)) does not
include substances insofar as they are intended to be used as plant
nutrients, trace elements, nutritional chemicals, plant inoculants, or
soil amendments.
(35) "Registrant" means the person registering any pesticide under
the provisions of this chapter.
(36) "Restricted use pesticide" means any pesticide or device
which, when used as directed or in accordance with a widespread and
commonly recognized practice, the director determines, subsequent to a
hearing, requires additional restrictions for that use to prevent
unreasonable adverse effects on the environment including people,
lands, beneficial insects, animals, crops, and wildlife, other than
pests.
(37) "Rodenticide" means any substance or mixture of substances
intended to prevent, destroy, repel, or mitigate rodents, or any other
vertebrate animal which the director may declare by rule to be a pest.
(38) "Special local needs registration" means a registration issued
by the director pursuant to provisions of section 24(c) of FIFRA.
(39) "Specific wood destroying organism inspection" means an
inspection of a structure for purposes of identifying or verifying
evidence of an infestation of wood destroying organisms prior to pest
management activities.
(40) "Spray adjuvant" means any product intended to be used with a
pesticide as an aid to the application or to the effect of the
pesticide, and which is in a package or container separate from the
pesticide. Spray adjuvant includes, but is not limited to, acidifiers,
compatibility agents, crop oil concentrates, defoaming agents, drift
control agents, modified vegetable oil concentrates, nonionic
surfactants, organosilicone surfactants, stickers, and water
conditioning agents. Spray adjuvant does not include products that are
only intended to mark the location where a pesticide is applied.
(41) "Structural pest inspector" means any individual who performs
the service of conducting a complete wood destroying organism
inspection or a specific wood destroying organism inspection.
(42) "Unreasonable adverse effects on the environment" means any
unreasonable risk to people or the environment taking into account the
economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use of
any pesticide, or as otherwise determined by the director.
(43) "Weed" means any plant which grows where not wanted.
(44) "Wood destroying organism" means insects or fungi that
consume, excavate, develop in, or otherwise modify the integrity of
wood or wood products. Wood destroying organism includes, but is not
limited to, carpenter ants, moisture ants, subterranean termites,
dampwood termites, beetles in the family Anobiidae, and wood decay
fungi (wood rot).
(45) "Wood destroying organism inspection report" means any written
document that reports or comments on the presence or absence of wood
destroying organisms, their damage, and/or conducive conditions leading
to the establishment of such organisms.
Sec. 10 RCW 15.58.180 and 2008 c 285 s 16 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Except as provided in subsections (4) and (5) of this section,
it is unlawful for any person to act in the capacity of a pesticide
dealer or advertise as or assume to act as a pesticide dealer without
first having obtained an annual license from the director. The license
expires on the ((master)) business license expiration date. A license
is required for each location or outlet located within this state from
which pesticides are distributed. A manufacturer, registrant, or
distributor who has no pesticide dealer outlet licensed within this
state and who distributes pesticides directly into this state must
obtain a pesticide dealer license for his or her principal out-of-state
location or outlet, but such a licensed out-of-state pesticide dealer
is exempt from the pesticide dealer manager requirements.
(2) Application for a license must be accompanied by a fee of
sixty-seven dollars and must be made through the ((master license))
business licensing system and must include the full name of the person
applying for the license and the name of the individual within the
state designated as the pesticide dealer manager. If the applicant is
a partnership, association, corporation, or organized group of persons,
the full name of each member of the firm or partnership or the names of
the officers of the association or corporation must be given on the
application. The application must state the principal business address
of the applicant in the state and elsewhere, the name of a person
domiciled in this state authorized to receive and accept service of
summons of legal notices of all kinds for the applicant, and any other
necessary information prescribed by the director.
(3) It is unlawful for any licensed dealer outlet to operate
without a pesticide dealer manager who has a license of qualification.
(4) This section does not apply to (a) a licensed pesticide
applicator who sells pesticides only as an integral part of the
applicator's pesticide application service when pesticides are
dispensed only through apparatuses used for pesticide application, or
(b) any federal, state, county, or municipal agency that provides
pesticides only for its own programs.
(5) A user of a pesticide may distribute a properly labeled
pesticide to another user who is legally entitled to use that pesticide
without obtaining a pesticide dealer's license if the exclusive purpose
of distributing the pesticide is keeping it from becoming a hazardous
waste as defined in chapter 70.105 RCW.
Sec. 11 RCW 15.58.235 and 1989 c 380 s 19 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) If an application for renewal of a pesticide dealer license is
not filed on or before the ((master)) business license expiration date,
the ((master)) business license delinquency fee ((shall)) must be
assessed under chapter 19.02 RCW and ((shall)) must be paid by the
applicant before the renewal license is issued.
(2) If application for renewal of any license provided for in this
chapter other than the pesticide dealer license is not filed on or
before the expiration date of the license, a penalty equivalent to the
license fee ((shall)) must be assessed and added to the original fee,
and ((shall)) must be paid by the applicant before the renewal license
is issued((: PROVIDED, That)). However, such penalty ((shall)) does
not apply if the applicant furnishes an affidavit certifying that he or
she has not acted as a licensee subsequent to the expiration of the
license.
(3) Any license for which a renewal application has been made, all
other requirements have been met, and the proper fee paid, continues in
full force and effect until the director notifies the applicant that
the license has been renewed or the application has been denied.
Sec. 12 RCW 18.44.031 and 2010 c 34 s 3 are each amended to read
as follows:
An application for an escrow agent license ((shall)) must be in
writing in such form as is prescribed by the director, and ((shall))
must be verified on oath by the applicant. An application for an
escrow agent license ((shall)) must include the following:
(1) The applicant's form of business organization and place of
organization;
(2) Information concerning the identity of the applicant, and its
officers, directors, owners, partners, controlling persons, and
employees, including fingerprints for submission to the Washington
state patrol, the federal bureau of investigation, and any government
agency or subdivision authorized to receive information for state and
national criminal history background checks; personal history;
experience; business record; purposes; and other pertinent facts, as
the director may reasonably require. The director may also request
criminal history record information, including nonconviction data, as
defined by RCW 10.97.030. The department may disseminate nonconviction
data obtained under this section only to criminal justice agencies.
The applicant must pay the cost of fingerprinting and processing the
fingerprints by the department;
(3) If the applicant is a corporation or limited liability company,
the address of its physical location, a list of officers, controlling
persons, and directors of such corporation or company and their
residential addresses, telephone numbers, and other identifying
information as the director may determine by rule. If the applicant is
a sole proprietorship or partnership, the address of its business
location, a list of owners, partners, or controlling persons and their
residential addresses, telephone numbers, and other identifying
information as the director may determine by rule. Any information in
the application regarding the personal residential address or telephone
number of any officer, director, partner, owner, controlling person, or
employee is exempt from the public records disclosure requirements of
chapter 42.56 RCW;
(4) In the event the applicant is doing business under an assumed
name, a copy of the ((master)) business license issued through the
business licensing system established under chapter 19.02 RCW, with the
registered trade name shown;
(5) The qualifications and business history of the applicant and
all of its officers, directors, owners, partners, and controlling
persons;
(6) A personal credit report from a recognized credit reporting
bureau satisfactory to the director on all officers, directors, owners,
partners, and controlling persons of the applicant;
(7) Whether any of the officers, directors, owners, partners, or
controlling persons have been convicted of any crime within the
preceding ten years which relates directly to the business or duties of
escrow agents, or have suffered a judgment within the preceding five
years in any civil action involving fraud, misrepresentation, any
unfair or deceptive act or practice, or conversion;
(8) The identity of the licensed escrow officer designated by the
escrow agent as the designated escrow officer responsible for
supervising the agent's escrow activity;
(9) Evidence of compliance with the bonding and insurance
requirements of RCW 18.44.201; and
(10) Any other information the director may require by rule. The
director may share any information contained within a license
application, including fingerprints, with the federal bureau of
investigation and other regulatory or law enforcement agencies.
Sec. 13 RCW 18.64.011 and 2009 c 549 s 1008 are each reenacted
and amended to read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise((, definitions of terms
shall be as indicated when used in this chapter)).
(1) "Administer" means the direct application of a drug or device,
whether by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any other means, to the
body of a patient or research subject.
(2) "Board" means the Washington state board of pharmacy.
(3) "Compounding" ((shall be)) means the act of combining two or
more ingredients in the preparation of a prescription.
(4) "Controlled substance" means a drug or substance, or an
immediate precursor of such drug or substance, so designated under or
pursuant to the provisions of chapter 69.50 RCW.
(5) "Deliver" or "delivery" means the actual, constructive, or
attempted transfer from one person to another of a drug or device,
whether or not there is an agency relationship.
(6) "Department" means the department of health.
(7) "Device" means instruments, apparatus, and contrivances,
including their components, parts, and accessories, intended (a) for
use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of
disease in human beings or other animals, or (b) to affect the
structure or any function of the body of human beings or other animals.
(8) "Dispense" means the interpretation of a prescription or order
for a drug, biological, or device and, pursuant to that prescription or
order, the proper selection, measuring, compounding, labeling, or
packaging necessary to prepare that prescription or order for delivery.
(9) "Distribute" means the delivery of a drug or device other than
by administering or dispensing.
(10) ((The words)) "Drug" and "devices" ((shall)) do not include
surgical or dental instruments or laboratory materials, gas and oxygen,
therapy equipment, X-ray apparatus or therapeutic equipment, their
component parts or accessories, or equipment, instruments, apparatus,
or contrivances used to render such articles effective in medical,
surgical, or dental treatment, or for use or consumption in or for
mechanical, industrial, manufacturing, or scientific applications or
purposes((, nor shall the word)). "Drug" also does not include any
article or mixture covered by the Washington pesticide control act
(chapter 15.58 RCW), as enacted or hereafter amended, nor medicated
feed intended for and used exclusively as a feed for animals other than
human beings.
(11) "Drugs" means:
(a) Articles recognized in the official United States pharmacopoeia
or the official homeopathic pharmacopoeia of the United States;
(b) Substances intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment, or prevention of disease in human beings or other animals;
(c) Substances (other than food) intended to affect the structure
or any function of the body of human beings or other animals; or
(d) Substances intended for use as a component of any substances
specified in (a), (b), or (c) of this subsection, but not including
devices or their component parts or accessories.
(12) "Health care entity" means an organization that provides
health care services in a setting that is not otherwise licensed by the
state. Health care entity includes a freestanding outpatient surgery
center or a freestanding cardiac care center. It does not include an
individual practitioner's office or a multipractitioner clinic.
(13) "Labeling" ((shall)) means the process of preparing and
affixing a label to any drug or device container. The label must
include all information required by current federal and state law and
pharmacy rules.
(14) "Legend drugs" means any drugs which are required by any
applicable federal or state law or regulation to be dispensed on
prescription only or are restricted to use by practitioners only.
(15) "Manufacture" means the production, preparation, propagation,
compounding, or processing of a drug or other substance or device or
the packaging or repackaging of such substance or device, or the
labeling or relabeling of the commercial container of such substance or
device, but does not include the activities of a practitioner who, as
an incident to his or her administration or dispensing such substance
or device in the course of his or her professional practice, prepares,
compounds, packages, or labels such substance or device.
(16) "Manufacturer" ((shall)) means a person, corporation, or other
entity engaged in the manufacture of drugs or devices.
(17) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed utilizing a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(18) "Nonlegend" or "nonprescription" drugs means any drugs which
may be lawfully sold without a prescription.
(19) "Person" means an individual, corporation, government,
governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust,
partnership or association, or any other legal entity.
(20) "Pharmacist" means a person duly licensed by the Washington
state board of pharmacy to engage in the practice of pharmacy.
(21) "Pharmacy" means every place properly licensed by the board of
pharmacy where the practice of pharmacy is conducted.
(22) ((The word)) "Poison" ((shall)) does not include any article
or mixture covered by the Washington pesticide control act (chapter
15.58 RCW), as enacted or hereafter amended.
(23) "Practice of pharmacy" includes the practice of and
responsibility for: Interpreting prescription orders; the compounding,
dispensing, labeling, administering, and distributing of drugs and
devices; the monitoring of drug therapy and use; the initiating or
modifying of drug therapy in accordance with written guidelines or
protocols previously established and approved for his or her practice
by a practitioner authorized to prescribe drugs; the participating in
drug utilization reviews and drug product selection; the proper and
safe storing and distributing of drugs and devices and maintenance of
proper records thereof; the providing of information on legend drugs
which may include, but is not limited to, the advising of therapeutic
values, hazards, and the uses of drugs and devices.
(24) "Practitioner" means a physician, dentist, veterinarian,
nurse, or other person duly authorized by law or rule in the state of
Washington to prescribe drugs.
(25) "Prescription" means an order for drugs or devices issued by
a practitioner duly authorized by law or rule in the state of
Washington to prescribe drugs or devices in the course of his or her
professional practice for a legitimate medical purpose.
(26) "Secretary" means the secretary of health or the secretary's
designee.
(27) "Wholesaler" ((shall)) means a corporation, individual, or
other entity which buys drugs or devices for resale and distribution to
corporations, individuals, or entities other than consumers.
Sec. 14 RCW 18.64.044 and 2005 c 388 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) A shopkeeper registered as provided in this section may sell
nonprescription drugs, if such drugs are sold in the original package
of the manufacturer.
(2) Every shopkeeper not a licensed pharmacist, desiring to secure
the benefits and privileges of this section, is ((hereby)) required to
register as a shopkeeper through the ((master license system)) business
licensing system established under chapter 19.02 RCW, and he or she
((shall)) must pay the fee determined by the secretary for
registration, and on a date to be determined by the secretary
thereafter the fee determined by the secretary for renewal of the
registration; and ((shall)) must at all times keep said registration or
the current renewal thereof conspicuously exposed in the location to
which it applies. In event such shopkeeper's registration is not
renewed by the ((master)) business license expiration date, no renewal
or new registration ((shall)) may be issued except upon payment of the
registration renewal fee and the ((master)) business license
delinquency fee under chapter 19.02 RCW. This registration fee
((shall)) does not authorize the sale of legend drugs or controlled
substances.
(3) The registration fees determined by the secretary under
subsection (2) of this section ((shall)) may not exceed the cost of
registering the shopkeeper.
(4) Any shopkeeper who ((shall)) vends or sells, or offers to sell
to the public any such nonprescription drug or preparation without
having registered to do so as provided in this section, ((shall be)) is
guilty of a misdemeanor and each sale or offer to sell ((shall))
constitutes a separate offense.
(5) A shopkeeper who is not a licensed pharmacy may purchase
products containing any detectable quantity of ephedrine,
pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine, or their salts, isomers, or
salts of isomers, only from a wholesaler licensed by the department
under RCW 18.64.046 or from a manufacturer licensed by the department
under RCW 18.64.045. The board ((shall)) must issue a warning to a
shopkeeper who violates this subsection, and may suspend or revoke the
registration of the shopkeeper for a subsequent violation.
(6) A shopkeeper who has purchased products containing any
detectable quantity of ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or
phenylpropanolamine, or their salts, isomers, or salts of isomers, in
a suspicious transaction as defined in RCW 69.43.035, is subject to the
following requirements:
(a) The shopkeeper may not sell any quantity of ephedrine,
pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine, or their salts, isomers, or
salts of isomers, if the total monthly sales of these products exceed
ten percent of the shopkeeper's total prior monthly sales of
nonprescription drugs in March through October. In November through
February, the shopkeeper may not sell any quantity of ephedrine,
pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine, or their salts, isomers, or
salts of isomers, if the total monthly sales of these products exceed
twenty percent of the shopkeeper's total prior monthly sales of
nonprescription drugs. For purposes of this section, "monthly sales"
means total dollars paid by buyers. The board may suspend or revoke
the registration of a shopkeeper who violates this subsection.
(b) The shopkeeper ((shall)) must maintain inventory records of the
receipt and disposition of nonprescription drugs, utilizing existing
inventory controls if an auditor or investigator can determine
compliance with (a) of this subsection, and otherwise in the form and
manner required by the board. The records must be available for
inspection by the board or any law enforcement agency and must be
maintained for two years. The board may suspend or revoke the
registration of a shopkeeper who violates this subsection. For
purposes of this subsection, "disposition" means the return of product
to the wholesaler or distributor.
Sec. 15 RCW 19.02.010 and 1982 c 182 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) Experience under the pilot program of the business coordination
act suggests that the number of state licenses required for new
businesses and the renewal of existing licenses places an undue burden
on business. Studies under this act also show that the state can
reduce its costs by coordinating and consolidating application forms,
information, and licenses. Therefore, the legislature extends the
business coordination act by establishing a business license program
and license center to develop and implement the following goals and
objectives:
(((1))) (a) The first goal of this system is to provide a
convenient, accessible, and timely one-stop system for the business
community to acquire and maintain the necessary state licenses to
conduct business. This system ((shall)) must be developed and operated
in the most cost-efficient manner for the business community and state.
The objectives of this goal are:
(((a))) (i) To provide a service whereby information is available
to the business community concerning all state licensing and regulatory
requirements, and to the extent feasible, include local and federal
information concerning the same regulated activities;
(((b))) (ii) To provide a system which ((will)) enables state
agencies to efficiently store, retrieve, and exchange license
information with due regard to privacy statutes; to issue and renew
((master)) business licenses where such licenses are appropriate; and
to provide appropriate support services for this objective;
(((c))) (iii) To provide at designated locations one consolidated
application form to be completed by any given applicant; and
(((d))) (iv) To provide a statewide system of common business
identification.
(((2))) (b) The second goal of this system is to aid business and
the growth of business in Washington state by instituting a ((master))
business license system that ((will)) reduces the paperwork burden on
business, and promote the elimination of obsolete and duplicative
licensing requirements by consolidating existing licenses and
applications.
(2) It is the intent of the legislature that the authority for
determining if a requested license ((shall be)) is issued ((shall))
remains with the agency legally authorized to issue the license.
(3) It is the further intent of the legislature that those licenses
which no longer serve a useful purpose in regulating certain business
activities should be eliminated.
Sec. 16 RCW 19.02.020 and 2011 c 298 s 4 are each reenacted and
amended to read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Business license" means the single document designed for
public display issued by the business licensing service, which
certifies state agency or local government license approval and which
incorporates the endorsements for individual licenses included in the
business licensing system, which the state or local government requires
for any person subject to this chapter.
(2) "Business license application" means a document incorporating
pertinent data from existing applications for licenses covered under
this chapter.
(3) "Business ((license center)) licensing service" means the
business registration and licensing ((center)) service established by
this chapter and located in and under the administrative control of the
department of revenue.
(((2))) (4) "Department" means the department of revenue.
(((3))) (5) "Director" means the director of ((revenue)) the
department.
(((4))) (6) "License" means the whole or part of any agency or
local government permit, license, certificate, approval, registration,
charter, or any form or permission required by law, including agency
rule, to engage in any activity.
(((5))) (7) "License information packet" means a collection of
information about licensing requirements and application procedures
custom-assembled for each request.
(((6) "Master application" means a document incorporating pertinent
data from existing applications for licenses covered under this
chapter.))
(7) "Master license" means the single document designed for public
display issued by the business license center which certifies state
agency or local government license approval and which incorporates the
endorsements for individual licenses included in the master license
system, which the state or local government requires for any person
subject to this chapter.
(8) "Participating local government" means a municipal corporation
or political subdivision that participates in the ((master license))
business licensing system established by this chapter.
(9) "Person" means any individual, sole proprietorship,
partnership, association, cooperative, corporation, nonprofit
organization, state or local government agency, and any other
organization required to register with the state or a participating
local government to do business in the state or the participating local
government and to obtain one or more licenses from the state or any of
its agencies or the participating local government.
(10) "Regulatory" means all licensing and other governmental or
statutory requirements pertaining to business or professional
activities.
(11) "Regulatory agency" means any state agency, board, commission,
division, or local government that regulates one or more professions,
occupations, industries, businesses, or activities.
(12) "Renewal application" means a document used to collect
pertinent data for renewal of licenses covered under this chapter.
(13) "System" or "((master license)) business licensing system"
means the procedure by which ((master)) business licenses are issued
and renewed, license and regulatory information is collected and
disseminated with due regard to privacy statutes, and account data is
exchanged by the agencies and participating local governments.
Sec. 17 RCW 19.02.030 and 2011 c 298 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) There is located within the department a business ((license
center)) licensing service.
(2) The duties of the ((center)) business licensing service
include:
(a) Developing and administering a computerized one-stop ((master
license)) business licensing system capable of storing, retrieving, and
exchanging license information with due regard to privacy statutes, as
well as issuing and renewing ((master)) business licenses in an
efficient manner;
(b) Providing a license information service detailing requirements
to establish or engage in business in this state;
(c) Providing for staggered ((master)) business license renewal
dates;
(d) Identifying types of licenses appropriate for inclusion in the
((master license)) business licensing system;
(e) Recommending in reports to the governor and the legislature the
elimination, consolidation, or other modification of duplicative,
ineffective, or inefficient licensing or inspection requirements; and
(f) Incorporating licenses into the ((master license)) business
licensing system.
(3) The department may adopt under chapter 34.05 RCW such rules as
may be necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter.
Sec. 18 RCW 19.02.035 and 1982 c 182 s 4 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The business ((license center shall)) licensing service must
compile information regarding the regulatory programs associated with
each of the licenses obtainable under the ((master license)) business
licensing system. This information ((shall)) must include, at a
minimum, a listing of the statutes and administrative rules requiring
the licenses and pertaining to the regulatory programs that are
directly related to the licensure. For example, for pesticide dealers'
licenses, the information ((shall)) must include the statutes and rules
requiring licensing as well as those pertaining to the subject of
registering or distributing pesticides.
(2) The business ((license center shall)) licensing service must
provide information governed by this section to any person requesting
it. Materials used by the ((center to describe the services provided
by the center shall)) business licensing service to describe its
services must indicate that this information is available upon request.
Sec. 19 RCW 19.02.070 and 2011 c 298 s 7 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) Any person requiring licenses ((which)) that have been
incorporated into the system must submit a ((master)) business license
application to the department requesting the issuance of the licenses.
The ((master)) business license application form must contain in
consolidated form information necessary for the issuance of the
licenses.
(2) The applicant must include with the application the sum of all
fees and deposits required for the requested individual license
endorsements as well as the handling fee established by the department
under the authority of RCW 19.02.075.
(3) Irrespective of any authority delegated to the department to
implement the provisions of this chapter, the authority for approving
issuance and renewal of any requested license that requires a
prelicensing or renewal investigation, inspection, testing, or other
judgmental review by the regulatory agency otherwise legally authorized
to issue the license must remain with that agency. The business
((license center)) licensing service has the authority to issue those
licenses for which proper fee payment and a completed application form
have been received and for which no prelicensing or renewal approval
action is required by the regulatory agency.
(4) Upon receipt of the application and proper fee payment for any
license for which issuance is subject to regulatory agency action under
subsection (3) of this section, the department must immediately notify
the regulatory agency with authority to approve issuance or renewal of
the license requested by the applicant. Each regulatory agency must
advise the department within a reasonable time after receiving the
notice: (a) That the agency approves the issuance of the requested
license and will advise the applicant of any specific conditions
required for issuing the license; (b) that the agency denies the
issuance of the license and gives the applicant reasons for the denial;
or (c) that the application is pending.
(5) The department must issue a ((master)) business license
endorsed for all the approved licenses to the applicant and advise the
applicant of the status of other requested licenses. It is the
responsibility of the applicant to contest the decision regarding
conditions imposed or licenses denied through the normal process
established by statute or by the regulatory agency with the authority
for approving issuance of the license.
(6) Regulatory agencies must be provided information from the
((master)) business license application for their licensing and
regulatory functions.
Sec. 20 RCW 19.02.075 and 2011 c 298 s 8 are each amended to read
as follows:
The department must collect a handling fee on each ((master))
business license application and each renewal application filing. The
department must set the amount of the handling fees by rule, as
authorized by RCW 19.02.030. The handling fees may not exceed nineteen
dollars for each ((master)) business license application, and eleven
dollars for each business license renewal application filing, and must
be deposited in the ((master license fund)) business license account.
The department may increase handling and renewal fees for the purposes
of making improvements in the ((master license)) business licensing
service program, including improvements in technology and customer
services, expanded access, and infrastructure.
Sec. 21 RCW 19.02.080 and 1992 c 107 s 3 are each amended to read
as follows:
All fees collected under the system ((shall)) must be deposited
with the state treasurer. Upon issuance or renewal of the ((master))
business license or supplemental licenses, the department ((shall))
must distribute the fees, except for fees covered under RCW 19.02.210
and for fees covered under RCW 19.80.075, to the appropriate accounts
under the applicable statutes for those agencies' licenses.
Sec. 22 RCW 19.02.085 and 1992 c 107 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
To encourage timely renewal by applicants, a ((master)) business
license delinquency fee ((shall be)) is imposed on licensees who fail
to renew by the ((master)) business license expiration date. The
((master)) business license delinquency fee ((shall)) must be the
lesser of one hundred fifty dollars or fifty percent of a base
comprised of the licensee's renewal fee minus corporate licensing
taxes, corporation annual report fee, and any interest fees or
penalties charged for late taxes or corporate renewals. The ((master))
business license delinquency fee ((shall)) must be added to the renewal
fee and paid by the licensee before a ((master)) business license
((shall be)) is renewed. The delinquency fee ((shall)) must be
deposited in the ((master license fund)) business license account.
Sec. 23 RCW 19.02.090 and 1982 c 182 s 8 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The department ((shall)) must assign an expiration date for
each ((master)) business license. All renewable licenses endorsed on
that ((master)) business license ((shall)) must expire on that date.
License fees ((shall)) must be prorated to accommodate the staggering
of expiration dates.
(2) All renewable licenses endorsed on a ((master)) business
license ((shall)) must be renewed by the department under conditions
originally imposed unless a regulatory agency advises the department of
conditions or denials to be imposed before the endorsement is renewed.
Sec. 24 RCW 19.02.100 and 2011 c 298 s 9 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The department may ((not)) refuse to issue or renew a
((master)) business license to any person if:
(a) The person does not have a valid tax registration, if required
by a regulatory agency;
(b) The person is a corporation delinquent in fees or penalties
owing to the secretary of state or is not validly registered under
Title 23B RCW, chapter 18.100 RCW, Title 24 RCW, or any other statute
now or hereafter adopted which gives corporate or business licensing
responsibilities to the secretary of state if the person is required to
be so registered and the regulatory agency having the authority to
approve the issuance or renewal of the license requires, as a condition
of such approval, that the person be so registered or not delinquent in
fees or penalties owing to the secretary of state; or
(c) The person has not submitted the sum of all fees and deposits
required for the requested individual license endorsements, any
outstanding ((master)) business license delinquency fee, or other fees
and penalties to be collected through the system.
(2) Nothing in this section prevents registration by the state of
a business for taxation purposes, or an employer for the purpose of
paying an employee of that employer industrial insurance or
unemployment insurance benefits.
(((3) The department must immediately suspend the license or
certificate 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. If the person has
continued to meet all other requirements for reinstatement during the
suspension, reissuance of the license or certificate is automatic upon
the department's receipt of a release issued by the department of
social and health services stating that the licensee is in compliance
with the order.))
Sec. 25 RCW 19.02.110 and 2007 c 52 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) In addition to the licenses processed under the ((master
license)) business licensing system prior to April 1, 1982, on July 1,
1982, use of the ((master license system shall be)) business licensing
system is expanded as provided by this section.
(2) Applications for the following ((shall)) must be filed with the
business ((license center and shall)) licensing service and must be
processed, and renewals ((shall)) must be issued, under the ((master
license)) business licensing system:
(((1))) (a) Nursery dealer's licenses required by chapter 15.13
RCW;
(((2))) (b) Seed dealer's licenses required by chapter 15.49 RCW;
(((3))) (c) Pesticide dealer's licenses required by chapter 15.58
RCW;
(((4))) (d) Shopkeeper's licenses required by chapter 18.64 RCW;
(((5))) (e) Egg dealer's licenses required by chapter 69.25 RCW.
Sec. 26 RCW 19.02.115 and 2011 c 298 s 12 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) For purposes of this section:
(a) "Disclose" means to make known to any person in any manner
licensing information;
(b) "Licensing information" means any information created or
obtained by the department in the administration of this chapter and
chapters 19.80 and 59.30 RCW, which information relates to any person
who: (i) Has applied for or has been issued a license or trade name;
or (ii) has been issued an assessment or delinquency fee. Licensing
information includes ((master applications, renewal applications, and
master)) initial and renewal business license applications, and
business licenses; ((and))
(c) "Person" has the same meaning as in RCW 82.04.030 and also
includes the state and the state's departments and institutions; and
(d) "State agency" means every Washington state office, department,
division, bureau, board, commission, or other state agency.
(2) Licensing information is confidential and privileged, and
except as authorized by this section, neither the department nor any
other person may disclose any licensing information. Nothing in this
chapter requires any person possessing licensing information made
confidential and privileged by this section to delete information from
such information so as to permit its disclosure.
(3) This section does not prohibit the department of revenue, or
any other person receiving licensing information from the department
under this subsection, from:
(a) Disclosing licensing information in a civil or criminal
judicial proceeding or an administrative proceeding:
(i) In which the person about whom such licensing information is
sought and the department, another state agency, or a local government
are adverse parties in the proceeding; or
(ii) Involving a dispute arising out of the department's
administration of chapter ((19.02,)) 19.80((,)) or 59.30 RCW, or this
chapter if the licensing information relates to a party in the
proceeding;
(b) Disclosing, subject to such requirements and conditions as the
director prescribes by rules adopted pursuant to chapter 34.05 RCW,
such licensing information regarding a license applicant or license
holder to such license applicant or license holder or to such person or
persons as that license applicant or license holder may designate in a
request for, or consent to, such disclosure, or to any other person, at
the license applicant's or license holder's request, to the extent
necessary to comply with a request for information or assistance made
by the license applicant or license holder to such other person.
However, licensing information not received from the license applicant
or holder must not be so disclosed if the director determines that such
disclosure would compromise any investigation or litigation by any
federal, state, or local government agency in connection with the civil
or criminal liability of the license applicant, license holder, or
another person, or that such disclosure would identify a confidential
informant, or that such disclosure is contrary to any agreement entered
into by the department that provides for the reciprocal exchange of
information with other government agencies, which agreement requires
confidentiality with respect to such information unless such
information is required to be disclosed to the license applicant or
license holder by the order of any court;
(c) Publishing statistics so classified as to prevent the
identification of particular licensing information;
(d) Disclosing licensing information for official purposes only, to
the governor or attorney general, or to any state agency, or to any
committee or subcommittee of the legislature dealing with matters of
taxation, revenue, trade, commerce, the control of industry or the
professions, or licensing;
(e) Permitting the department's records to be audited and examined
by the proper state officer, his or her agents and employees;
(f) Disclosing any licensing information to a peace officer as
defined in RCW 9A.04.110 or county prosecuting attorney, for official
purposes. The disclosure may be made only in response to a search
warrant, subpoena, or other court order, unless the disclosure is for
the purpose of criminal tax or license enforcement. A peace officer or
county prosecuting attorney who receives the licensing information may
disclose that licensing information only for use in the investigation
and a related court proceeding, or in the court proceeding for which
the licensing information originally was sought;
(g) Disclosing, in a manner that is not associated with other
licensing information, the name of a license applicant or license
holder, entity type, registered trade name, business address, mailing
address, unified business identifier number, list of licenses issued to
a person through the ((master license)) business licensing system
established in this chapter ((19.02 RCW)) and their issuance and
expiration dates, and the dates of opening of a business((. The
department is authorized to give, sell, or provide access to lists of
licensing information under this subsection (3)(g) that will be used
for commercial purposes));
(h) Disclosing licensing information that is also maintained by
another Washington state or local governmental agency as a public
record available for inspection and copying under the provisions of
chapter 42.56 RCW or is a document maintained by a court of record and
is not otherwise prohibited from disclosure;
(i) Disclosing any licensing information when the disclosure is
specifically authorized under any other section of the Revised Code of
Washington;
(j) Disclosing licensing information to the proper officer of the
licensing or tax department of any city, town, or county of this state,
for official purposes. If the licensing information does not relate to
a license issued by the city, town, or county requesting the licensing
information, disclosure may be made only if the laws of the requesting
city, town, or county grants substantially similar privileges to the
proper officers of this state; or
(k) Disclosing licensing information to the federal government for
official purposes.
(4) ((The department)) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
this section, a state agency or local government agency may disclose
licensing information relating to a license issued on its behalf by the
department pursuant to this chapter if the disclosure is authorized by
another statute, local law, or administrative rule.
(5) The department, any other state agency, or local government may
refuse to disclose licensing information that is otherwise disclosable
under subsection (3) of this section if such disclosure would violate
federal law or any information sharing agreement between the state or
local government and federal government.
(((5))) (6) Any person acquiring knowledge of any licensing
information in the course of his or her employment with the department
and any person acquiring knowledge of any licensing information as
provided under subsection (3)(d), (e), (f), (j), or (k) of this
section, who discloses any such licensing information to another person
not entitled to knowledge of such licensing information under the
provisions of this section, is guilty of a misdemeanor. If the person
guilty of such violation is an officer or employee of the state, such
person must forfeit such office or employment and is incapable of
holding any public office or employment in this state for a period of
two years thereafter.
Sec. 27 RCW 19.02.210 and 1992 c 107 s 4 are each amended to read
as follows:
The ((master license fund)) business license account is created in
the state treasury. Unless otherwise indicated in RCW 19.02.075, all
receipts from handling and ((master)) business license delinquency fees
((shall)) must be deposited into the ((fund)) account. Moneys in the
((fund)) account may be spent only after appropriation beginning in
fiscal year 1993. Expenditures from the ((fund)) account may be used
only to administer the ((master license services)) business licensing
service program.
Sec. 28 RCW 19.02.310 and 2005 c 201 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) Subject to the availability of amounts appropriated for this
specific purpose, the department ((shall)) may administer a
performance-based grant program that provides funding assistance to
public agencies that issue business licenses and that wish to join with
the department's ((master)) business licensing service.
(2) The department may determine among interested grant applicants
the order and the amount of the grant. In making grant determinations,
consideration must be given, but not limited to, the following
criteria: Readiness of the public agency to participate; the number of
renewable licenses; and the reduced regulatory impact to businesses
subject to licensure relative to the overall investment required by the
department.
(3) The department ((shall)) must invite and encourage
participation by all Washington city and county governments having
interests or responsibilities relating to business licensing.
(4) The total amount of grants provided under this section may not
exceed seven hundred fifty thousand dollars in any one fiscal year.
(5) The source of funds for this grant program is the ((master))
business license account.
Sec. 29 RCW 19.02.800 and 2011 c 298 s 10 are each amended to
read as follows:
Except as provided in RCW 43.07.200, the provisions of this chapter
regarding the processing of license applications and renewals under ((a
master license)) the business licensing system do not apply to those
business or professional activities that are licensed or regulated
under chapter 31.04, 31.12, or 31.13 RCW or under Title 30, 32, 33, or
48 RCW.
Sec. 30 RCW 19.02.890 and 1982 c 182 s 18 are each amended to
read as follows:
This chapter may be known and cited as the business ((license
center)) licensing service act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 31 A new section is added to chapter 19.80 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The department may require the renewal of trade names and
establish a process for renewing trade names. Any such renewal process
may not require renewals of trade names more often than annually and
must allow persons to renew their trade name at the same time they are
required to renew their business license.
(2) The department may cancel a person's trade name upon request of
the person the trade name is registered to or when the person's
business license account with the department's business licensing
service is inactive. The department may also provide for the
cancellation of trade names under circumstances as defined by the
department by rule, which may include failure to renew a trade name
under a renewal process as may be established by the department under
the authority of subsection (1) of this section.
(3)(a) The department must make a reasonable effort to notify a
person that the department intends to cancel the person's trade name.
This notice is not required when a request for cancelation of a trade
name is received by the department from the person the trade name was
registered to or the person's authorized representative. The
department may comply with this subsection either by mailing the notice
to the person's last known address on record with the department or by
providing the notice electronically instead of by mail. Such
electronic notice is not subject to the confidentiality provisions of
RCW 19.02.115 and may be sent by e-mail to the person's last known
e-mail address on record with the department. However, if the
department sends a notice by e-mail and is notified that the e-mail is
undeliverable, the department must resend the notice by mail to the
person's last known address on record with the department.
(b) The department may cancel a trade name unless, within twenty
days of sending the notice required under this subsection, the person
notifies the department in writing not to cancel the person's trade
name and pays any applicable renewal fee.
(4) The department may remove any canceled trade names from its
database of trade names.
(5) "Business license" and "business licensing service" have the
same meaning as in RCW 19.02.020.
Sec. 32 RCW 19.80.010 and 2011 c 298 s 14 are each amended to
read as follows:
Each person or persons who carries on, conducts, or transacts
business in this state under any trade name must register that trade
name with the department as provided in this section.
(1) Sole proprietorship or general partnership: The registration
must set forth the true and real name or names of each person
conducting the same, together with the post office address or addresses
of each such person and the name of the general partnership, if
applicable.
(2) Foreign or domestic limited partnership: The registration must
set forth the limited partnership name as filed with the office of the
secretary of state.
(3) Foreign or domestic limited liability company: The
registration must set forth the limited liability company name as filed
with the office of the secretary of state.
(4) Foreign or domestic corporation: The registration must set
forth the corporate name as filed with the office of the secretary of
state.
(5) Other business entities: The registration must set forth the
entity's name as required by the department.
Sec. 33 RCW 19.80.075 and 2011 c 298 s 17 are each amended to
read as follows:
All fees collected by the department under this chapter must be
deposited with the state treasurer and credited to the ((master license
fund)) business license account.
Sec. 34 RCW 19.94.015 and 2011 c 298 s 19 and 2011 c 103 s 38 are
each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
(1) Except as provided in subsection (4) of this section for the
initial registration of an instrument or device, no weighing or
measuring instrument or device may be used for commercial purposes in
the state unless its commercial use is registered annually. If its
commercial use is within a city that has a city sealer and a weights
and measures program as provided by RCW 19.94.280, the commercial use
of the instrument or device must be registered with the city if the
city has adopted fees pursuant to subsection (2) of this section. If
its commercial use is outside of such a city, the commercial use of the
instrument or device must be registered with the department.
(2) A city with such a sealer and program may establish an annual
fee for registering the commercial use of such a weighing or measuring
instrument or device with the city. The annual fee may not exceed the
fee established in RCW 19.94.175 for registering the use of a similar
instrument or device with the department. Fees upon weighing or
measuring instruments or devices within the jurisdiction of the city
that are collected under this subsection by city sealers must be
deposited into the general fund, or other account, of the city as
directed by the governing body of the city.
(3) Registrations with the department are accomplished as part of
the ((master license)) business licensing system under chapter 19.02
RCW. Payment of the registration fee for a weighing or measuring
instrument or device under the ((master license)) business licensing
system constitutes the registration required by this section.
(4) The fees established by or under RCW 19.94.175 for registering
a weighing or measuring instrument or device must be paid to the
department of revenue concurrently with an application for a ((master))
business license under chapter 19.02 RCW or with the annual renewal of
a ((master)) business license under chapter 19.02 RCW. A weighing or
measuring instrument or device must be initially registered with the
state at the time the owner applies for a ((master)) business license
for a new business or at the first renewal of the license that occurs
after the instrument or device is first placed into commercial use.
The department of revenue must remit to the department of agriculture
all fees collected under this provision less reasonable collection
expenses.
(5) Each city charging registration fees under this section must
notify the department of agriculture at the time such fees are adopted
and whenever changes in the fees are adopted.
Sec. 35 RCW 19.94.2582 and 2006 c 358 s 5 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Each request for an official registration certificate ((shall))
must be in writing, under oath, and on a form prescribed by the
department and ((shall)) must contain any relevant information as the
director may require, including but not limited to the following:
(a) The name and address of the person, corporation, partnership,
or sole proprietorship requesting registration;
(b) The names and addresses of all individuals requesting an
official registration certificate from the department; and
(c) The tax registration number as required under RCW 82.32.030 or
((uniform)) unified business identifier provided on a ((master))
business license issued under RCW 19.02.070.
(2) Each individual when submitting a request for an official
registration certificate or a renewal of such a certificate ((shall))
must pay a fee to the department in the amount of one hundred sixty
dollars per individual.
(3) The department ((shall)) must issue a decision on a request for
an official registration certificate within twenty days of receipt of
the request. If an individual is denied their request for an official
registration certificate, the department must notify that individual in
writing stating the reasons for the denial and ((shall)) must refund
any payments made by that individual in connection with the request.
Sec. 36 RCW 35.21.392 and 2011 c 298 s 22 are each amended to
read as follows:
A city that issues a business license to a person required to be
registered under chapter 18.27 RCW may verify that the person is
registered under chapter 18.27 RCW and report violations to the
department of labor and industries. The department of revenue must
conduct the verification for cities that participate in the ((master
license)) business licensing system.
Sec. 37 RCW 35A.21.340 and 2011 c 298 s 23 are each amended to
read as follows:
A city that issues a business license to a person required to be
registered under chapter 18.27 RCW may verify that the person is
registered under chapter 18.27 RCW and report violations to the
department of labor and industries. The department of revenue must
conduct the verification for cities that participate in the ((master
license)) business licensing system.
Sec. 38 RCW 36.110.130 and 1995 c 154 s 3 are each amended to
read as follows:
In the event of a failure such as a bankruptcy or dissolution, of
a private sector business, industry, or nonprofit organization engaged
in a free venture industry agreement, responsibility for obligations
under Title 51 RCW ((shall)) must be borne by the city or county
responsible for establishment of the free venture industry agreement,
as if the city or county had been the employing agency. To ensure that
this obligation can be clearly identified and accomplished, and to
provide accountability for purposes of the department of labor and
industries, a free venture jail industry agreement entered into by a
city or county and private sector business, industry, or nonprofit
organization should be filed under a separate ((master business
application)) business license application in accordance with chapter
19.02 RCW, establishing a new and separate account with the department
of labor and industries, and not be reported under an existing account
for parties to the free venture industry agreement.
Sec. 39 RCW 43.22.035 and 2007 c 287 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
When an employer initially files a ((master)) business license
application under chapter 19.02 RCW for the purpose, in whole or in
part, of registering to pay industrial insurance taxes, the department
((shall)) must send to the employer any printed material the department
recommends or requires the employer to post. Any time the printed
material has substantive changes in the information, the department
((shall)) must send a copy to each employer.
Sec. 40 RCW 46.72A.020 and 2011 c 374 s 2 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) Contact by a customer or customer's agent to engage the
services of a carrier's limousine must be initiated by a customer or
customer's agent at a time and place different from the customer's time
and place of departure. The fare for service must be agreed upon prior
to departure. Under no circumstances may customers or customers'
agents make arrangements to immediately engage the services of a
carrier's limousine with the chauffeur, even if the chauffeur is an
owner or officer of the company, with the single exception of stand-hail limousines only at a facility owned and operated by a port
district in a county with a population of one million or more that are
licensed and restricted by the rules and policies set forth by the port
district.
(2) At the time of the conduct of the commercial limousine
business, the chauffeur of a limousine and the limousine carrier
business must possess written or electronic records substantiating the
prearrangement of the carrier's services for any customer carried for
compensation, except for vehicles meeting the requirements of the
exception for stand-hail limousines described in subsection (1) of this
section. Limousine carriers and limousine chauffeurs operating as an
independent business must list a physical address on their ((master))
business license issued under chapter 19.02 RCW where records
substantiating the prearrangement of the carrier's services may be
reviewed by an enforcement officer. A limousine carrier must retain
these records for a minimum of one calendar year, and failure to do so
is a class 3 civil infraction against the carrier for each record that
is missing or fails to include all of the information described in
rules adopted under subsection (4) of this section.
(3) Limousine carriers and limousine chauffeurs operating as an
independent business must list a telephone or pager number that is used
to prearrange the carrier's services for any customer carried for
compensation.
(4) The department ((shall)) must adopt rules specifying the
content and retention schedule of the records required for compliance
with subsection (2) of this section.
(5) The failure of a chauffeur who is operating a limousine to
immediately provide, on demand by an enforcement officer, written or
electronic records required by the department substantiating the
prearrangement of the carrier's services for any customer carried for
compensation, except for limousines meeting the requirements of the
exception for stand-hail limousines described in subsection (1) of this
section, is a class 2 civil infraction and is subject to monetary
penalties under RCW 7.80.120. It is a class 1 civil infraction for a
repeat offense under this subsection during the same calendar year.
(6) The department ((shall)) must define by rule conditions under
which a chauffeur is considered to be operating a limousine, including
when the limousine is parked in a designated passenger load zone.
Sec. 41 RCW 50.12.290 and 2007 c 287 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
When an employer initially files a ((master)) business license
application under chapter 19.02 RCW for the purpose, in whole or in
part, of registering to pay unemployment insurance taxes, the
employment security department ((shall)) must send to the employer any
printed material the department recommends or requires the employer to
post. Any time the printed material has substantive changes in the
information, the department ((shall)) must send a copy to each
employer.
Sec. 42 RCW 59.30.050 and 2011 c 298 s 31 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The department must ((annually)) register all
manufactured/mobile home communities, which registration must be
renewed annually. Each community must be registered separately. The
department must ((deliver by certified)) mail registration
notifications to all known manufactured/mobile home community
landlords. Registration information packets must include:
(a) Registration forms; and
(b) Registration assessment information, including registration due
dates and late fees, and the collections procedures, liens, and
charging costs to tenants.
(2) To apply for registration or registration renewal, the landlord
of a manufactured/mobile home community must file with the department
an application for registration or registration renewal on a form
provided by the department and must pay a registration fee as described
in subsection (3) of this section. The department may require the
submission of information necessary to assist in identifying and
locating a manufactured/mobile home community and other information
that may be useful to the state, which must include, at a minimum:
(a) The names and addresses of the owners of the
manufactured/mobile home community;
(b) The name and address of the manufactured/mobile home community;
(c) The name and address of the landlord and manager of the
manufactured/mobile home community;
(d) The number of lots within the manufactured/mobile home
community that are subject to chapter 59.20 RCW; and
(e) The addresses of each manufactured/mobile home lot within the
manufactured/mobile home community that is subject to chapter 59.20
RCW.
(3) Each manufactured/mobile home community landlord must pay to
the department:
(a) A one-time ((master)) business license application fee for the
first year of registration and, in subsequent years, an annual
((master)) renewal application fee, as provided in RCW 19.02.075; and
(b) An annual registration assessment of ten dollars for each
manufactured/mobile home that is subject to chapter 59.20 RCW within a
manufactured/mobile home community. Manufactured/mobile home community
landlords may charge a maximum of five dollars of this assessment to
tenants. Nine dollars of the registration assessment for each
manufactured/mobile home must be deposited into the manufactured/mobile
home dispute resolution program account created in RCW 59.30.070 to
fund the costs associated with the manufactured/mobile home dispute
resolution program. The remaining one dollar must be deposited into
the ((master license fund)) business license account created in RCW
19.02.210. The annual registration assessment must be reviewed once
each biennium by the department and the attorney general and may be
adjusted to reasonably relate to the cost of administering this
chapter. The registration assessment may not exceed ten dollars, but
if the assessment is reduced, the portion allocated to the
manufactured/mobile home dispute resolution program account and the
((master license fund)) business license account must be adjusted
proportionately.
(4) Initial registrations of manufactured/mobile home communities
must be filed before November 1, 2007, or within three months of the
availability of mobile home lots for rent within the community. The
manufactured/mobile home community is subject to a delinquency fee of
two hundred fifty dollars for late initial registrations. The
delinquency fee must be deposited in the ((master license fund))
business license account. Renewal registrations that are not renewed
by the expiration date as assigned by the department are subject to
delinquency fees under RCW 19.02.085.
(5) Thirty days after sending late fee notices to a noncomplying
landlord, the department may issue a warrant under RCW 59.30.090 for
the unpaid registration assessment and delinquency fee. If a warrant
is issued by the department under RCW 59.30.090, the department must
add a penalty of ten percent of the amount of the unpaid registration
assessment and delinquency fee, but not less than ten dollars. The
warrant penalty must be deposited into the ((master license fund))
business license account created in RCW 19.02.210. Chapter 82.32 RCW
applies to the collection of warrants issued under RCW 59.30.090.
(6) Registration is effective on the date determined by the
department, and the department must issue a registration number to each
registered manufactured/mobile home community. The department must
provide an expiration date, assigned by the department, to each
manufactured/mobile home community who registers.
Sec. 43 RCW 59.30.090 and 2011 c 298 s 33 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) If any registration assessment or delinquency fee is not paid
in full within thirty days after sending late fee notices to a
noncomplying landlord, the department may issue a warrant in the amount
of such unpaid sums, together with interest thereon from the date the
warrant is issued until the date of payment.
(2) Interest must be computed on a daily basis on the amount of
outstanding registration assessment and delinquency fee imposed under
RCW 59.30.050 at the rate as computed under RCW 82.32.050(2). The rate
so computed must be adjusted on the first day of January of each year
for use in computing interest for that calendar year. Interest must be
deposited in the ((master license fund)) business license account
created in RCW 19.02.210.
(3) The department may file a copy of the warrant with the clerk of
the superior court of any county of the state in which real or personal
property of the owner of the manufactured/mobile home community may be
found. The clerk is entitled to a filing fee under RCW 36.18.012(10).
Upon filing, the clerk must enter in the judgment docket the name of
the owner of the manufactured/mobile home community mentioned in the
warrant and the amount of the registration assessment and delinquency
fee, or portion thereof, and any increases and penalties for which the
warrant is issued, and the date when the copy is filed.
(4) The amount of the warrant so docketed becomes a lien upon the
title to, and interest in, all real and personal property of the owner
of the manufactured/mobile home community against whom the warrant is
issued the same as a judgment in a civil case duly docketed in the
office of the clerk. The warrant so docketed is sufficient to support
the issuance of writs of garnishment in favor of the state in the
manner provided by law in the case of judgments wholly or partially
unsatisfied.
(5) The lien is not superior to bona fide interests of third
persons that had vested prior to the filing of the warrant. The phrase
"bona fide interests of third persons" does not include any mortgage of
real or personal property or any other credit transaction that results
in the mortgagee or the holder of the security acting as trustee for
unsecured creditors of the owner of the manufactured/mobile home
community mentioned in the warrant who executed the chattel or real
property mortgage or the document evidencing the credit transaction.
Sec. 44 RCW 69.25.020 and 2011 c 306 s 1 are each reenacted and
amended to read as follows:
((When used in this chapter the following terms shall have the
indicated meanings,)) The definitions in this section apply throughout
this chapter unless the context clearly otherwise requires((:)).
(1) "Adulterated" applies to any egg or egg product under one or
more of the following circumstances:
(a) If it bears or contains any poisonous or deleterious substance
((which)) that may render it injurious to health; but in case the
substance is not an added substance, such article ((shall)) is not
((be)) considered adulterated under this clause if the quantity of such
substance in or on such article does not ordinarily render it injurious
to health;
(b) If it bears or contains any added poisonous or added
deleterious substance (other than one which is: (i) A pesticide
chemical in or on a raw agricultural commodity; (ii) a food additive;
or (iii) a color additive) which may, in the judgment of the director,
make such article unfit for human food;
(c) If it is, in whole or in part, a raw agricultural commodity and
such commodity bears or contains a pesticide chemical which is unsafe
within the meaning of RCW 69.04.392, as enacted or hereafter amended;
(d) If it bears or contains any food additive which is unsafe
within the meaning of RCW 69.04.394, as enacted or hereafter amended;
(e) If it bears or contains any color additive which is unsafe
within the meaning of RCW 69.04.396; however, an article which is not
otherwise deemed adulterated under ((subsection (1)))(c), (d), or (e)
of this ((section shall)) subsection are nevertheless ((be)) deemed
adulterated if use of the pesticide chemical, food additive, or color
additive, in or on such article, is prohibited by regulations of the
director in official plants;
(f) If it consists in whole or in part of any filthy, putrid, or
decomposed substance, or if it is otherwise unfit for human food;
(g) If it consists in whole or in part of any damaged egg or eggs
to the extent that the egg meat or white is leaking, or it has been
contacted by egg meat or white leaking from other eggs;
(h) If it has been prepared, packaged, or held under insanitary
conditions whereby it may have become contaminated with filth, or
whereby it may have been rendered injurious to health;
(i) If it is an egg which has been subjected to incubation or the
product of any egg which has been subjected to incubation;
(j) If its container is composed, in whole or in part, of any
poisonous or deleterious substance which may render the contents
injurious to health;
(k) If it has been intentionally subjected to radiation, unless the
use of the radiation was in conformity with a regulation or exemption
in effect pursuant to RCW 69.04.394; or
(l) If any valuable constituent has been in whole or in part
omitted or abstracted therefrom; or if any substance has been
substituted, wholly or in part therefor; or if damage or inferiority
has been concealed in any manner; or if any substance has been added
thereto or mixed or packed therewith so as to increase its bulk or
weight, or reduce its quality or strength, or make it appear better or
of greater value than it is.
(2) "Ambient temperature" means the atmospheric temperature
surrounding or encircling shell eggs.
(3) "At retail" means any transaction in intrastate commerce
between a retailer and a consumer.
(4) "Candling" means the examination of the interior of eggs by the
use of transmitted light used in a partially dark room or place.
(5) "Capable of use as human food" ((shall apply)) applies to any
egg or egg product unless it is denatured, or otherwise identified, as
required by regulations prescribed by the director, to deter its use as
human food.
(6) "Check" means an egg that has a broken shell or crack in the
shell but has its shell membranes intact and contents not leaking.
(7) "Clean and sound shell egg" means any egg whose shell is free
of adhering dirt or foreign material and is not cracked or broken.
(8) "Consumer" means any person who purchases eggs for his or her
own family use or consumption; or any restaurant, hotel, boarding
house, bakery, or other institution or concern which purchases eggs for
serving to guests or patrons thereof, or for its own use in cooking or
baking.
(9) "Container" or "package" includes any box, can, tin, plastic,
or other receptacle, wrapper, or cover.
(10) "Department" means the department of agriculture of the state
of Washington.
(11) "Director" means the director of the department or his duly
authorized representative.
(12) "Dirty egg" means an egg that has a shell that is unbroken and
has adhering dirt or foreign material.
(13) "Egg" means the shell egg of the domesticated chicken, turkey,
duck, goose, or guinea, or any other specie of fowl.
(14) "Egg handler" or "dealer" means any person who produces,
contracts for or obtains possession or control of any eggs or egg
products for the purpose of sale to another dealer or retailer, or for
processing and sale to a dealer, retailer or consumer. For the purpose
of this chapter, "sell" or "sale" includes the following: Offer for
sale, expose for sale, have in possession for sale, exchange, barter,
trade, or as an inducement for the sale of another product.
(15)(a) "Egg product" means any dried, frozen, or liquid eggs, with
or without added ingredients, excepting products which contain eggs
only in a relatively small proportion, or historically have not been,
in the judgment of the director, considered by consumers as products of
the egg food industry, and which may be exempted by the director under
such conditions as the director may prescribe to assure that the egg
ingredients are not adulterated and are not represented as egg
products.
(b) The following products are not included in the definition of
"egg product" if they are prepared from eggs or egg products that have
been either inspected by the United States department of agriculture or
by the department under a cooperative agreement with the United States
department of agriculture: Freeze-dried products, imitation egg
products, egg substitutes, dietary foods, dried no-bake custard mixes,
eggnog mixes, acidic dressings, noodles, milk and egg dip, cake mixes,
French toast, balut and other similar ethnic delicacies, and sandwiches
containing eggs or egg products.
(16) "Immediate container" means any consumer package, or any other
container in which egg products, not consumer-packaged, are packed.
(17) "Incubator reject" means an egg that has been subjected to
incubation and has been removed from incubation during the hatching
operations as infertile or otherwise unhatchable.
(18) "Inedible" means eggs of the following descriptions: Black
rots, yellow rots, white rots, mixed rots (addled eggs), sour eggs,
eggs with green whites, eggs with stuck yolks, moldy eggs, musty eggs,
eggs showing blood rings, and eggs containing embryo chicks (at or
beyond the blood ring stage).
(19) "Inspection" means the application of such inspection methods
and techniques as are deemed necessary by the director to carry out the
provisions of this chapter.
(20) "Inspector" means any employee or official of the department
authorized to inspect eggs or egg products under the authority of this
chapter.
(21) "Intrastate commerce" means any eggs or egg products in
intrastate commerce, whether such eggs or egg products are intended for
sale, held for sale, offered for sale, sold, stored, transported, or
handled in this state in any manner and prepared for eventual
distribution in this state, whether at wholesale or retail.
(22) "Leaker" means an egg that has a crack or break in the shell
and shell membranes to the extent that the egg contents are exposed or
are exuding or free to exude through the shell.
(23) "Loss" means an egg that is unfit for human food because it is
smashed or broken so that its contents are leaking; or overheated,
frozen, or contaminated; or an incubator reject; or because it contains
a bloody white, large meat spots, a large quantity of blood, or other
foreign material.
(24) "((Master license)) Business licensing system" means the
mechanism established by chapter 19.02 RCW by which ((master)) business
licenses, endorsed for individual state-issued licenses, are issued and
renewed utilizing a ((master)) business license application and a
((master)) business license expiration date common to each renewable
license endorsement.
(25) "Misbranded" ((shall apply)) applies to egg products ((which))
that are not labeled and packaged in accordance with the requirements
prescribed by regulations of the director under RCW 69.25.100.
(26) "Official certificate" means any certificate prescribed by
regulations of the director for issuance by an inspector or other
person performing official functions under this chapter.
(27) "Official device" means any device prescribed or authorized by
the director for use in applying any official mark.
(28) "Official inspection legend" means any symbol prescribed by
regulations of the director showing that egg products were inspected in
accordance with this chapter.
(29) "Official mark" means the official inspection legend or any
other symbol prescribed by regulations of the director to identify the
status of any article under this chapter.
(30) "Official plant" means any plant which is licensed under the
provisions of this chapter, at which inspection of the processing of
egg products is maintained by the United States department of
agriculture or by the state under cooperative agreements with the
United States department of agriculture or by the state.
(31) "Official standards" means the standards of quality, grades,
and weight classes for eggs, adopted under the provisions of this
chapter.
(32) "Pasteurize" means the subjecting of each particle of egg
products to heat or other treatments to destroy harmful, viable micro-organisms by such processes as may be prescribed by regulations of the
director.
(33) "Person" means any natural person, firm, partnership,
exchange, association, trustee, receiver, corporation, and any member,
officer, or employee thereof, or assignee for the benefit of creditors.
(34) "Pesticide chemical," "food additive," "color additive," and
"raw agricultural commodity" ((shall)) have the same meaning for
purposes of this chapter as prescribed in chapter 69.04 RCW.
(35) "Plant" means any place of business where egg products are
processed.
(36) "Processing" means manufacturing egg products, including
breaking eggs or filtering, mixing, blending, pasteurizing,
stabilizing, cooling, freezing, drying, or packaging egg products.
(37) "Restricted egg" means any check, dirty egg, incubator reject,
inedible, leaker, or loss.
(38) "Retailer" means any person in intrastate commerce who sells
eggs to a consumer.
(39) "Shipping container" means any container used in packaging a
product packed in an immediate container.
Sec. 45 RCW 69.25.050 and 2011 c 306 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1)(a) No person ((shall)) may act as an egg handler or dealer
without first obtaining an annual license and permanent dealer's number
from the department.
(b) Application for an egg dealer license and renewal or egg dealer
branch license must be made through the ((master license)) business
licensing system as provided under chapter 19.02 RCW and expires on the
((master)) business license expiration date. The annual egg dealer
license fee is thirty dollars and the annual egg dealer branch license
fee is fifteen dollars. A copy of the ((master)) business license
issued under chapter 19.02 RCW must be posted at each location where
the licensee operates. The application must include the full name of
the applicant for the license, the location of each facility the
applicant intends to operate, and, if applicable, documentation of
compliance with RCW 69.25.065 or 69.25.103.
(2) If an applicant is an individual, receiver, trustee, firm,
partnership, association or corporation, the full name of each member
of the firm or partnership or the names of the officers of the
association or corporation ((shall)) must be given on the application.
The application must further state the principal business address of
the applicant in the state and elsewhere and the name of a person
domiciled in this state authorized to receive and accept service of
summons of legal notices of all kinds for the applicant and any other
necessary information prescribed by the director.
(3) The applicant must be issued a license or renewal under this
section upon the approval of the application and compliance with the
provisions of this chapter, including the applicable rules adopted by
the department.
(4) The license and permanent egg handler or dealer's number is
nontransferable.
Sec. 46 RCW 69.25.060 and 1982 c 182 s 44 are each amended to
read as follows:
If the application for the renewal of an egg handler's or dealer's
license is not filed before the ((master)) business license expiration
date, the ((master)) business license delinquency fee ((shall)) must be
assessed under chapter 19.02 RCW and ((shall)) must be paid by the
applicant before the renewal license ((shall be)) is issued.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 47 A new section is added to chapter 70.290
RCW to read as follows:
(1) A third-party administrator must register with the association.
Registrants must report a change of legal name, business name, business
address, or business telephone number to the association within ten
days after the change.
(2) The association must establish data elements and procedures for
the registration of third-party administrators necessary to implement
this section in its plan of operation.
Sec. 48 RCW 70.290.030 and 2010 c 174 s 3 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The association is comprised of all health carriers issuing or
renewing health benefit plans in Washington state and all third-party
administrators conducting business on behalf of residents of Washington
state or Washington health care providers and facilities. Third-party
administrators are subject to registration under ((RCW 43.24.160))
section 47 of this act.
(2) The association is a nonprofit corporation under chapter 24.03
RCW and has the powers granted under that chapter.
(3) The board of directors includes the following voting members:
(a) Four members, selected from health carriers or third-party
administrators, excluding health maintenance organizations, that have
the most fully insured and self-funded covered lives in Washington
state. The count of total covered lives includes enrollment in all
companies included in their holding company system. Each health
carrier or third-party administrator is entitled to no more than a
single position on the board to represent all entities under common
ownership or control.
(b) One member selected from the health maintenance organization
having the most fully insured and self-insured covered lives in
Washington state. The count of total lives includes enrollment in all
companies included in its holding company system. Each health
maintenance organization is entitled to no more than a single position
on the board to represent all entities under common ownership or
control.
(c) One member, representing health carriers not otherwise
represented on the board under (a) or (b) of this subsection, who is
elected from among the health carrier members not designated under (a)
or (b) of this subsection.
(d) One member, representing Taft Hartley plans, appointed by the
secretary from a list of nominees submitted by the Northwest
administrators association.
(e) One member representing Washington state employers offering
self-funded health coverage, appointed by the secretary from a list of
nominees submitted by the Puget Sound health alliance.
(f) Two physician members appointed by the secretary, including at
least one board certified pediatrician.
(g) The secretary, or a designee of the secretary with expertise in
childhood immunization purchasing and distribution.
(4) The directors' terms and appointments must be specified in the
plan of operation adopted by the association.
(5) The board of directors of the association ((shall)) must:
(a) Prepare and adopt articles of association and bylaws;
(b) Prepare and adopt a plan of operation. The plan of operation
((shall)) must include a dispute mechanism through which a carrier or
third-party administrator can challenge an assessment determination by
the board under RCW 70.290.040. The board ((shall)) must include a
means to bring unresolved disputes to an impartial decision maker as a
component of the dispute mechanism;
(c) Submit the plan of operation to the secretary for approval;
(d) Conduct all activities in accordance with the approved plan of
operation;
(e) Enter into contracts as necessary or proper to collect and
disburse the assessment;
(f) Enter into contracts as necessary or proper to administer the
plan of operation;
(g) Sue or be sued, including taking any legal action necessary or
proper for the recovery of any assessment for, on behalf of, or against
members of the association or other participating person;
(h) Appoint, from among its directors, committees as necessary to
provide technical assistance in the operation of the association,
including the hiring of independent consultants as necessary;
(i) Obtain such liability and other insurance coverage for the
benefit of the association, its directors, officers, employees, and
agents as may in the judgment of the board of directors be helpful or
necessary for the operation of the association;
(j) ((By May 1, 2010, establish the estimated amount of the
assessment needed for the period of May 1, 2010, through December 31,
2010, based upon the estimate provided to the association under RCW
70.290.040(1); and notify, in writing, each health carrier and
third-party administrator of the health carrier's or third-party
administrator's total assessment for this period by May 15, 2010;)) On an annual basis, beginning no later than November 1, 2010,
and by November 1st of each year thereafter, establish the estimated
amount of the assessment;
(k)
(((l))) (k) Notify, in writing, each health carrier and third-party
administrator of the health carrier's or third-party administrator's
estimated total assessment by November 15th of each year;
(((m))) (l) Submit a periodic report to the secretary listing those
health carriers or third-party administrators that failed to remit
their assessments and audit health carrier and third-party
administrator books and records for accuracy of assessment payment
submission;
(((n))) (m) Allow each health carrier or third-party administrator
no more than ninety days after the notification required by (((l))) (k)
of this subsection to remit any amounts in arrears or submit a payment
plan, subject to approval by the association and initial payment under
an approved payment plan;
(((o))) (n) Deposit annual assessments collected by the
association, less the association's administrative costs, with the
state treasurer to the credit of the universal vaccine purchase account
established in RCW 43.70.720;
(((p))) (o) Borrow and repay such working capital, reserve, or
other funds as, in the judgment of the board of directors, may be
helpful or necessary for the operation of the association; and
(((q))) (p) Perform any other functions as may be necessary or
proper to carry out the plan of operation and to affect any or all of
the purposes for which the association is organized.
(6) The secretary ((shall)) must convene the initial meeting of the
association board of directors.
Sec. 49 RCW 76.48.121 and 2011 c 298 s 34 are each amended to
read as follows:
Every first or secondary specialized forest products buyer
purchasing specialty wood and every specialty wood processor must
prominently display the ((master)) business license issued under RCW
19.02.070 and endorsed with the respective licenses or registrations or
a copy of the ((master)) business license at each location where the
buyer or processor receives specialty wood if the first or secondary
specialized forest products buyer or specialty wood processor is
required to possess a license incorporated into the ((master license))
business licensing system created in chapter 19.02 RCW.
Sec. 50 RCW 82.24.510 and 2009 c 154 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The licenses issuable under this chapter are as follows:
(a) A wholesaler's license.
(b) A retailer's license.
(2) Application for the licenses ((shall)) must be made through the
((master license)) business licensing system under chapter 19.02 RCW.
The board ((shall)) must adopt rules regarding the regulation of the
licenses. The board may refrain from the issuance of any license under
this chapter if the board has reasonable cause to believe that the
applicant has ((wilfully)) willfully withheld information requested for
the purpose of determining the eligibility of the applicant to receive
a license, or if the board has reasonable cause to believe that
information submitted in the application is false or misleading or is
not made in good faith. In addition, for the purpose of reviewing an
application for a wholesaler's license or retailer's license and for
considering the denial, suspension, or revocation of any such license,
the board may consider any prior criminal conduct of the applicant,
including an administrative violation history record with the board and
a criminal history record information check within the previous five
years, in any state, tribal, or federal jurisdiction in the United
States, its territories, or possessions, and the provisions of RCW
9.95.240 and chapter 9.96A RCW ((shall)) do not apply to such cases.
The board may, in its discretion, grant or refuse the wholesaler's
license or retailer's license, subject to the provisions of RCW
82.24.550.
(3) No person may qualify for a wholesaler's license or a
retailer's license under this section without first undergoing a
criminal background check. The background check ((shall)) must be
performed by the board and must disclose any criminal conduct within
the previous five years in any state, tribal, or federal jurisdiction
in the United States, its territories, or possessions. A person who
possesses a valid license on July 22, 2001, is subject to this
subsection and subsection (2) of this section beginning on the date of
the person's ((master)) business license expiration under chapter 19.02
RCW, and thereafter. If the applicant or licensee also has a license
issued under chapter 66.24 or 82.26 RCW, the background check done
under the authority of chapter 66.24 or 82.26 RCW satisfies the
requirements of this section.
(4) Each such license ((shall)) expires on the ((master)) business
license expiration date, and each such license ((shall)) must be
continued annually if the licensee has paid the required fee and
complied with all the provisions of this chapter and the rules of the
board made pursuant thereto.
(5) Each license and any other evidence of the license that the
board requires must be exhibited in each place of business for which it
is issued and in the manner required for the display of a ((master))
business license.
Sec. 51 RCW 82.24.520 and 1986 c 321 s 6 are each amended to read
as follows:
A fee of six hundred fifty dollars ((shall)) must accompany each
wholesaler's license application or license renewal application. If a
wholesaler sells or intends to sell cigarettes at two or more places of
business, whether established or temporary, a separate license with a
license fee of one hundred fifteen dollars ((shall be)) is required for
each additional place of business. Each license, or certificate
thereof, and such other evidence of license as the department of
revenue requires, ((shall)) must be exhibited in the place of business
for which it is issued and in such manner as is prescribed for the
display of a ((master license. The department of revenue shall))
business license issued under chapter 19.02 RCW. The board must
require each licensed wholesaler to file with the department of revenue
a bond in an amount not less than one thousand dollars to guarantee the
proper performance of the duties and the discharge of the liabilities
under this chapter. The bond ((shall)) must be executed by such
licensed wholesaler as principal, and by a corporation approved by the
department of revenue and authorized to engage in business as a surety
company in this state, as surety. The bond ((shall)) must run
concurrently with the wholesaler's license.
Sec. 52 RCW 82.26.150 and 2009 c 154 s 4 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The licenses issuable by the board under this chapter are as
follows:
(a) A distributor's license; and
(b) A retailer's license.
(2) Application for the licenses ((shall)) must be made through the
((master license)) business licensing system under chapter 19.02 RCW.
The board may adopt rules regarding the regulation of the licenses.
The board may refuse to issue any license under this chapter if the
board has reasonable cause to believe that the applicant has willfully
withheld information requested for the purpose of determining the
eligibility of the applicant to receive a license, or if the board has
reasonable cause to believe that information submitted in the
application is false or misleading or is not made in good faith. In
addition, for the purpose of reviewing an application for a
distributor's license or retailer's license and for considering the
denial, suspension, or revocation of any such license, the board may
consider criminal conduct of the applicant, including an administrative
violation history record with the board and a criminal history record
information check within the previous five years, in any state, tribal,
or federal jurisdiction in the United States, its territories, or
possessions, and the provisions of RCW 9.95.240 and chapter 9.96A RCW
((shall)) do not apply to such cases. The board may, in its
discretion, issue or refuse to issue the distributor's license or
retailer's license, subject to the provisions of RCW 82.26.220.
(3) No person may qualify for a distributor's license or a
retailer's license under this section without first undergoing a
criminal background check. The background check ((shall)) must be
performed by the board and must disclose any criminal conduct within
the previous five years in any state, tribal, or federal jurisdiction
in the United States, its territories, or possessions. If the
applicant or licensee also has a license issued under chapter 66.24 or
82.24 RCW, the background check done under the authority of chapter
66.24 or 82.24 RCW satisfies the requirements of this section.
(4) Each license issued under this chapter ((shall)) expires on the
((master)) business license expiration date. The license ((shall))
must be continued annually if the licensee has paid the required fee
and complied with all the provisions of this chapter and the rules of
the board adopted pursuant to this chapter.
(5) Each license and any other evidence of the license required
under this chapter must be exhibited in each place of business for
which it is issued and in the manner required for the display of a
((master)) business license.
Sec. 53 RCW 90.76.010 and 2011 c 298 s 39 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Department" means the department of ecology.
(b) "Director" means the director of the department.
(c) "Facility compliance tag" means a marker, constructed of metal,
plastic, or other durable material, that clearly identifies all
qualifying underground storage tanks on the particular site for which
it is issued.
(d) "Federal act" means the federal resource conservation and
recovery act, as amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 6901, et seq.).
(e) "Federal regulations" means the underground storage tanks
regulations (40 C.F.R. Secs. 280 and 281) adopted by the United States
environmental protection agency under the federal act.
(f) "License" means the ((master)) business license underground
storage tank endorsement issued by the department of revenue under
chapter 19.02 RCW.
(g) "Underground storage tank compliance act of 2005" means Title
XV and subtitle B of P.L. 109-58 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 15801 et seq.) which
have amended the federal resource conservation and recovery act's
subtitle I.
(h) "Underground storage tank system" means an underground storage
tank, connected underground piping, underground ancillary equipment,
and containment system, if any.
(2) Except as provided in this section and any rules adopted by the
department under this chapter, the definitions contained in the federal
regulations apply to the terms in this chapter.
Sec. 54 RCW 90.76.020 and 2011 c 298 s 40 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The department must adopt rules establishing requirements for
all underground storage tanks that are regulated under the federal act,
taking into account the various classes or categories of tanks to be
regulated. The rules must be consistent with and no less stringent
than the federal regulations and the underground storage tank
compliance act of 2005 and consist of requirements for the following:
(a) New underground storage tank system design, construction,
installation, and notification;
(b) Upgrading existing underground storage tank systems;
(c) General operating requirements;
(d) Release detection;
(e) Release reporting;
(f) Out-of-service underground storage tank systems and closure;
(g) Financial responsibility for underground storage tanks
containing regulated substances; and
(h) Groundwater protection measures, including secondary
containment and monitoring for installation or replacement of all
underground storage tank systems or components, such as tanks and
piping, installed after July 1, 2007, and under dispenser spill
containment for installation or replacement of all dispenser systems
installed after July 1, 2007.
(2) The department must adopt rules:
(a) Establishing physical site criteria to be used in designating
local environmentally sensitive areas;
(b) Establishing procedures for local government application for
this designation; and
(c) Establishing procedures for local government adoption and
department approval of rules more stringent than the statewide
standards in these designated areas.
(3) The department must establish by rule an administrative and
enforcement program that is consistent with and no less stringent than
the program required under the federal regulations in the areas of:
(a) Compliance monitoring, including procedures for recordkeeping
and a program for systematic inspections;
(b) Enforcement;
(c) Public participation;
(d) Information sharing;
(e) Owner and operator training; and
(f) Delivery prohibition for underground storage tank systems or
facilities that are determined by the department to be ineligible to
receive regulated substances.
(4) The department must establish a program that provides for the
annual licensing of underground storage tanks. The license must take
the form of a tank endorsement on the facility's annual ((master))
business license issued by the department of revenue under chapter
19.02 RCW. A tank is not eligible for a license unless the owner or
operator can demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this
chapter and the annual tank fees have been remitted. The department
may revoke a tank license if a facility is not in compliance with this
chapter, or any rules adopted under this chapter. The ((master))
business license must be displayed by the tank owner or operator in a
location clearly identifiable.
(5)(a) The department must issue a one-time "facility compliance
tag" to underground storage tank facilities that have installed the
equipment required to meet corrosion protection, spill prevention,
overfill prevention, leak detection standards, have demonstrated
financial responsibility, and have paid annual tank fees. The facility
must continue to maintain compliance with corrosion protection, spill
prevention, overfill prevention, and leak detection standards,
financial responsibility, and have remitted annual tank fees to display
a facility compliance tag. The facility compliance tag must be
displayed on or near the fire emergency shutoff device, or in the
absence of such a device in close proximity to the fill pipes and
clearly identifiable to persons delivering regulated substance to
underground storage tanks.
(b) The department may revoke a facility compliance tag if a
facility is not in compliance with the requirements of this chapter, or
any rules adopted under this chapter.
(6) The department may place a red tag on a tank at a facility if
the department determines that the owner or operator is not in
compliance with this chapter or the rules adopted under this chapter
regarding the compliance requirements related to that tank. Removal of
a red tag without authorization from the department is a violation of
this chapter.
(7) The department may establish programs to certify persons who
install or decommission underground storage tank systems or conduct
inspections, testing, closure, cathodic protection, interior tank
lining, corrective action, site assessments, or other activities
required under this chapter. Certification programs must be designed
to ensure that each certification will be effective in all
jurisdictions of the state.
(8) When adopting rules under this chapter, the department must
consult with the state building code council to ensure coordination
with the building and fire codes adopted under chapter 19.27 RCW.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 55 The following acts or parts of acts are
each repealed:
(1) RCW 19.02.220 (Combined licensing project -- Report -- Evaluation)
and 1995 c 403 s 1006;
(2) RCW 19.02.810 (Master license system -- Existing licenses or
permits registered under, when) and 1982 c 182 s 46;
(3) RCW 19.80.065 (RCW 42.56.070(9) inapplicable) and 2005 c 274 s
236, 2000 c 171 s 59, & 1984 c 130 s 8; and
(4) RCW 43.24.160 (Registration of third-party administrators--Fee -- Penalty -- Rules) and 2010 c 174 s 9.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 56 The repeals in section 55 of this act do
not affect any existing right acquired or liability or obligation
incurred under the statutes repealed or under any rule or order adopted
under them nor does it affect any proceedings instituted under them.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 57 Section 2 of this act takes effect July 1,
2014.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 58 Section 1 of this act expires July 1, 2014.