State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2014 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 03/11/14.
AN ACT Relating to a surcharge for local homeless housing and assistance; amending RCW 36.22.179, 43.185C.060, and 43.185C.240; and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 36.22.179 and 2012 c 90 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) In addition to the surcharge authorized in RCW 36.22.178, and
except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, an additional
surcharge of ten dollars shall be charged by the county auditor for
each document recorded, which will be in addition to any other charge
allowed by law. ((From July 1, 2009, through August 31, 2012, and from
July 1, 2015, through June 30, 2017, the surcharge shall be thirty
dollars.)) From September 1, 2012, through June 30, ((2015)) 2019, the
surcharge shall be forty dollars. The funds collected pursuant to this
section are to be distributed and used as follows:
(a) The auditor shall retain two percent for collection of the fee,
and of the remainder shall remit sixty percent to the county to be
deposited into a fund that must be used by the county and its cities
and towns to accomplish the purposes of chapter 484, Laws of 2005, six
percent of which may be used by the county for administrative costs
related to its homeless housing plan, and the remainder for programs
which directly accomplish the goals of the county's local homeless
housing plan, except that for each city in the county which elects as
authorized in RCW 43.185C.080 to operate its own local homeless housing
program, a percentage of the surcharge assessed under this section
equal to the percentage of the city's local portion of the real estate
excise tax collected by the county shall be transmitted at least
quarterly to the city treasurer, without any deduction for county
administrative costs, for use by the city for program costs which
directly contribute to the goals of the city's local homeless housing
plan; of the funds received by the city, it may use six percent for
administrative costs for its homeless housing program.
(b) The auditor shall remit the remaining funds to the state
treasurer for deposit in the home security fund account. The
department may use twelve and one-half percent of this amount for
administration of the program established in RCW 43.185C.020, including
the costs of creating the statewide homeless housing strategic plan,
measuring performance, providing technical assistance to local
governments, and managing the homeless housing grant program. Of the
remaining eighty-seven and one-half percent, at least forty-five
percent must be set aside for the use of private rental housing
payments, and the remainder is to be used by the department to:
(i) Provide housing and shelter for homeless people including, but
not limited to: Grants to operate, repair, and staff shelters; grants
to operate transitional housing; partial payments for rental
assistance; consolidated emergency assistance; overnight youth
shelters; grants and vouchers designated for victims of human
trafficking and their families; and emergency shelter assistance; and
(ii) Fund the homeless housing grant program.
(2) ((The surcharge imposed in this section applies to documents
required to be recorded or filed under RCW 65.04.030(1) including, but
not limited to: Full reconveyance; deeds of trust; deeds; liens
related to real property; release of liens related to real property;
notice of trustee sales; judgments related to real property; and all
other documents pertaining to real property as determined by the
department. However, the surcharge does not apply to (a) assignments
or substitutions of previously recorded deeds of trust, or (b)
documents recording a birth, marriage, divorce, or death or any
documents otherwise exempted from a recording fee under state law.)) The surcharge imposed in this section does not apply to (a)
assignments or substitutions of previously recorded deeds of trust, (b)
documents recording a birth, marriage, divorce, or death, (c) any
recorded documents otherwise exempted from a recording fee or
additional surcharges under state law, (d) marriage licenses issued by
the county auditor, or (e) documents recording a state, county, or city
lien or satisfaction of lien.
(3) By August 31, 2012, the department shall submit to each county
auditor a list of documents that are subject to the surcharge
established in subsection (1) of this section.
(4) If section 2, chapter 90, Laws of 2012 is not enacted into law
by July 31, 2012, section 1, chapter 90, Laws of 2012 is null and
void.
Sec. 2 RCW 43.185C.060 and 2007 c 427 s 6 are each amended to
read as follows:
The home security fund account is created in the state treasury,
subject to appropriation. The state's portion of the surcharge
established in RCW 36.22.179 and 36.22.1791 must be deposited in the
account. Expenditures from the account may be used only for homeless
housing programs as described in this chapter. If an independent audit
finds that the department has failed to set aside at least forty-five
percent of funds received under RCW 36.22.179(1)(b) after the effective
date of this section for the use of private rental housing payments,
the department must submit a corrective action plan to the office of
financial management within thirty days of receipt of the independent
audit. The office of financial management must monitor the
department's corrective action plan and expenditures from this account
for the remainder of the fiscal year. If the department is not in
compliance with RCW 36.22.179(1)(b) in any month of the fiscal year
following submission of the corrective action plan, the office of
financial management must reduce the department's allotments from this
account and hold in reserve status a portion of the department's
appropriation equal to the expenditures made during the month not in
compliance with RCW 36.22.179(1)(b).
Sec. 3 RCW 43.185C.240 and 2012 c 90 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) As a means of efficiently and cost-effectively providing
housing assistance to very-low income and homeless households:
(a) Any local government that has the authority to issue housing
vouchers, directly or through a contractor, using document recording
surcharge funds collected pursuant to RCW 36.22.178, 36.22.179, or
36.22.1791 must:
(i)(A) Maintain an interested landlord list, which at a minimum,
includes information on rental properties in buildings with fewer than
fifty units;
(B) Update the list at least once per quarter;
(C) Distribute the list to agencies providing services to
individuals and households receiving housing vouchers;
(D) Ensure that a copy of the list or information for accessing the
list online is provided with voucher paperwork; and
(E) ((Use reasonable best efforts to)) Communicate and interact
with landlord and tenant associations located within its jurisdiction
to facilitate development, maintenance, and distribution of the list to
private rental housing landlords. The department must make reasonable
efforts to ensure that local providers conduct outreach to private
rental housing landlords each calendar quarter regarding opportunities
to provide rental housing to the homeless and the availability of
funds;
(ii) Using cost-effective methods of communication, convene, on a
semiannual or more frequent basis, landlords represented on the
interested landlord list and agencies providing services to individuals
and households receiving housing vouchers to identify successes,
barriers, and process improvements. The local government is not
required to reimburse any participants for expenses related to
attendance;
(iii) Produce data, limited to document recording fee uses and
expenditures, on a calendar year basis in consultation with landlords
represented on the interested landlord list and agencies providing
services to individuals and households receiving housing vouchers, that
include the following: Total amount expended from document recording
fees; amount expended on, number of households that received, and
number of housing vouchers issued in each of the private, public, and
nonprofit markets; amount expended on, number of households that
received, and number of housing placement payments provided in each of
the private, public, and nonprofit markets; amount expended on and
number of eviction prevention services provided in the private market;
and amount expended on and number of other tenant-based rent assistance
services provided in the private market. If these data elements are
not readily available, the reporting government may request the
department to use the sampling methodology established pursuant to
(c)(iii) of this subsection to obtain the data; and
(iv) Annually submit the calendar year data to the department by
October 1st, with preliminary data submitted by October 1, 2012, and
full calendar year data submitted beginning October 1, 2013.
(b) Any local government receiving more than three million five
hundred thousand dollars during the previous calendar year from
document recording surcharge funds collected pursuant to RCW 36.22.178,
36.22.179, and 36.22.1791, must apply to the Washington state quality
award program, or similar Baldrige assessment organization, for an
independent assessment of its quality management, accountability, and
performance system. The first assessment may be a lite assessment.
After submitting an application, a local government is required to
reapply at least every two years.
(c) The department must:
(i) Require contractors that provide housing vouchers to distribute
the interested landlord list created by the appropriate local
government to individuals and households receiving the housing
vouchers;
(ii) ((Using cost-effective methods of communication, annually
convene local governments issuing housing vouchers, landlord
association representatives, and agencies providing services to
individuals and households receiving housing vouchers to identify
successes, barriers, and process improvements. The department is not
required to reimburse any participants for expenses related to
attendance;)) Convene a stakeholder group by March 1, 2017, consisting of
landlords, homeless housing advocates, real estate industry
representatives, cities, counties, and the department to meet to
discuss long-term funding strategies for homeless housing programs that
do not include a surcharge on document recording fees. The stakeholder
group must provide a report of its findings to the legislature by
December 1, 2017;
(iii)
(iii) Develop a sampling methodology to obtain data required under
this section when a local government or contractor does not have such
information readily available. The process for developing the sampling
methodology must include providing notification to and the opportunity
for public comment by local governments issuing housing vouchers,
landlord association representatives, and agencies providing services
to individuals and households receiving housing vouchers;
(iv) Develop a report, limited to document recording fee uses and
expenditures, on a calendar year basis ((in)) that may include
consultation with local governments, landlord association
representatives, and agencies providing services to individuals and
households receiving housing vouchers, that includes the following:
Total amount expended from document recording fees; amount expended on,
number of households that received, and number of housing vouchers
issued in each of the private, public, and nonprofit markets; amount
expended on, number of households that received, and number of housing
placement payments provided in each of the private, public, and
nonprofit markets; amount expended on and number of eviction prevention
services provided in the private market; the total amount of funds set
aside for private rental housing payments as required in RCW
36.22.179(1)(b); and amount expended on and number of other tenant-based rent assistance services provided in the private market. The
information in the report must include data submitted by local
governments and data on all additional document recording fee
activities for which the department contracted that were not otherwise
reported. The data, samples, and sampling methodology used to develop
the report must be made available upon request and for the audits
required in this section;
(v) Annually submit the calendar year report to the legislature by
December 15th, with a preliminary report submitted by December 15,
2012, and full calendar year reports submitted beginning December 15,
2013; and
(vi) Work with the Washington state quality award program, local
governments, and any other organizations to ensure the appropriate
scheduling of assessments for all local governments meeting the
criteria described in subsection (1)(b) of this section.
(d) The office of financial management must secure an independent
audit of the department's data and expenditures of state funds received
under RCW 36.22.179(1)(b) on an annual basis. The independent audit
must review a random sample of local governments, contractors, and
housing providers that is geographically and demographically diverse.
The independent auditor must meet with the department and a landlord
representative to review the preliminary audit and provide the
department and the landlord representative with the opportunity to
include written comments regarding the findings that must be included
with the audit. The first audit of the department's data and
expenditures will be for calendar year 2014 and is due July 1, 2015.
Each audit thereafter will be due July 1st following the department's
submission of the report to the legislature. If the independent audit
finds that the department has failed to set aside at least forty-five
percent of the funds received under RCW 36.22.179(1)(b) after the
effective date of this section for private rental housing payments, the
independent auditor must notify the department and the office of
financial management of its finding. In addition, the independent
auditor must make recommendations to the office of financial management
and the legislature on alternative means of distributing the funds to
meet the requirements of RCW 36.22.179(1)(b).
(e) The office of financial management must contract with an
independent auditor to conduct a performance audit of the programs
funded by document recording surcharge funds collected pursuant to RCW
36.22.178, 36.22.179, and 36.22.1791. The audit must provide findings
to determine if the funds are being used effectively, efficiently, and
for their intended purpose. The audit must review the department's
performance in meeting all statutory requirements related to document
recording surcharge funds including, but not limited to, the data the
department collects, the timeliness and quality of required reports,
and whether the data and required reports provide adequate information
and accountability for the use of the document recording surcharge
funds. The audit must include recommendations for policy and
operational improvements to the use of document recording surcharges by
counties and the department. The performance audit must be submitted
to the legislature by December 1, 2016.
(2) For purposes of this section:
(a) "Housing placement payments" means one-time payments, such as
first and last month's rent and move-in costs, funded by document
recording surcharges collected pursuant to RCW 36.22.178, 36.22.179, or
36.22.1791 that are made to secure a unit on behalf of a tenant.
(b) "Housing vouchers" means payments, including private rental
housing payments, funded by document recording surcharges collected
pursuant to RCW 36.22.178, 36.22.179, or 36.22.1791 that are made by a
local government or contractor to secure: (i) A rental unit on behalf
of an individual tenant; or (ii) a block of units on behalf of multiple
tenants.
(c) "Interested landlord list" means a list of landlords who have
indicated to a local government or contractor interest in renting to
individuals or households receiving a housing voucher funded by
document recording surcharges.
(d) "Private rental housing" means housing owned by a private
landlord and does not include housing owned by a nonprofit housing
entity or government entity.
(3) This section expires June 30, ((2017)) 2019.
(((4) If section 1, chapter 90, Laws of 2012 is not enacted into
law by July 31, 2012, this section is null and void.))