This publication includes digest and history for bills, joint memorials, joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, initiatives, and substitutes. Engrossed measures may be republished if the amendment makes a substantive change. Electronic versions of Legislative Digests are available at http://apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/digests.aspx?year=2014. HB 1135-S by House Committee on Agriculture & Natural Resources (originally sponsored by Representatives Overstreet, Moeller, Taylor, Shea, Condotta, Buys, Dahlquist, Hargrove, and Warnick) Concerning the annual gross sales limits for cottage food operations. Removes the automatic increases to the gross income limit for cottage food operations.Increases the maximum annual gross sales amount for cottage food operations to twenty-five thousand dollars.
HB 1170-S2 by House Committee on Finance (originally sponsored by Representatives Morrell, Cody, Seaquist, Morris, Green, Ormsby, Freeman, Jinkins, Blake, Moeller, Upthegrove, Ryu, Liias, Pollet, Fey, Haigh, Bergquist, S. Hunt, and Santos) Modifying the income thresholds for the exemption and deferral property tax relief programs for senior citizens and persons retired because of physical disability. Requires the department of revenue, with input from a task force established for this purpose, to study certain issues relating to property tax relief programs for senior citizens, disabled persons, and veterans.Requires county assessors to provide data, requested by the department of revenue to conduct the study, in an electronic format accessible by the department.
HB 1424-S3 by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Haigh, Santos, Sullivan, Maxwell, Ryu, Freeman, Stonier, Seaquist, McCoy, Fey, Roberts, Morrell, Kagi, Bergquist, and Jinkins) Enhancing the statewide K-12 dropout prevention, intervention, and reengagement system. Takes steps to enhance the current dropout prevention, intervention, and reengagement system by: (1) Clarifying the laws pertaining to the statewide system and the state-level work group charged with overseeing the system; and(2) Providing specific additional support for some of the highest need students, including those who have already dropped out of school and those who are enrolled in chronically low-performing schools.
HB 1709-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Dahlquist, Santos, Magendanz, Moscoso, Fagan, Ryu, Maxwell, Pollet, and Bergquist) Requiring a study to develop a state foreign language education interpreter training program. Requires the office of the education ombuds to submit to the education committees of the legislature a feasibility study for development of a state foreign language education interpreter training program designed to create a pool of trained interpreters for public schools, including volunteer interpreters.
HB 1815-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Moscoso, Appleton, Dahlquist, Ryu, Roberts, Pettigrew, Takko, Maxwell, Pollet, Fey, Santos, and Tharinger) Assuring that education-related information is appropriately provided to parents with diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. Requires the state school directors' association, the office of the education ombuds, the office of the superintendent of public instruction, representatives of the educational opportunity gap oversight and accountability committee, certain parents, and interested education associations to develop a model language access policy and procedure for adoption by school districts.
HB 2002-S2 by House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Condotta and Reykdal) Modifying snowmobile license fees. Increases license fees for snowmobiles.
HB 2029-S2 by House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Morris and Hudgins) Eliminating the economic development-related agencies, boards, and commissions. Eliminates the Washington state economic development commission, the Washington tourism commission, and the microenterprise development program.Abolishes innovate Washington and transfers its missions, powers, duties, and functions to the department of commerce.Creates the innovate Washington program in the department of commerce.Changes requirements with regard to administration of the Washington global health technologies and product development competitiveness program.
HB 2105-S by House Committee on Government Operations & Elections (originally sponsored by Representatives Hawkins, Bergquist, Buys, S. Hunt, Holy, Orwall, Ross, Pedersen, Reykdal, Hayes, Pollet, Kochmar, Hudgins, Magendanz, Moscoso, Vick, Riccelli, Klippert, Stonier, Nealey, Tarleton, Scott, Pike, Fagan, Fey, Seaquist, Chandler, Farrell, Haigh, Fitzgibbon, Sawyer, Moeller, Gregerson, Johnson, Haler, Appleton, Carlyle, Morrell, Goodman, Van De Wege, and Freeman) Promoting transparency in government by requiring public agencies with governing bodies to post their agendas online in advance of meetings. Requires a public agency with a governing body to make the agenda of each regular meeting of the governing body available online no later than twenty-four hours in advance of the published start time of the meeting.Excludes an agency that does not have a web site or if it employs less than ten full-time employees.
HB 2109-S by House Committee on Higher Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Haler, Klippert, and Van De Wege) Concerning the development of residency training programs to recruit and retain primary care physicians in rural and underserved areas of the state. Requires the University of Washington school of medicine to support the development of residency training programs in southeastern Washington in partnership with a qualified hospital licensed in the state that is willing to sponsor primary care training.Revises the definition of "school of medicine" in chapter 70.112 RCW (family medicine--education and residency programs) to include the Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences located in Yakima.Makes an appropriation.
HB 2121-S by House Committee on Government Operations & Elections (originally sponsored by Representatives Pollet, S. Hunt, Rodne, Bergquist, Holy, Moeller, Hayes, Carlyle, Fitzgibbon, Liias, Takko, Springer, Appleton, Morrell, Reykdal, Jinkins, Moscoso, Ryu, Fagan, Farrell, Riccelli, and Freeman; by request of Attorney General) Concerning training public officials and employees regarding public records, records management, and open public meetings requirements. Establishes the open government trainings act.Requires every member of the governing body of a public agency to complete training on the requirements of the open public meetings act.Requires each elected state or local official and each person appointed to fill a vacancy in elective office, who is subject to the requirements of the public records act, to complete a training course regarding the provisions of the public records act and the provisions of chapter 40.14 RCW for records retention.Requires certain designated records officers and public records officers to complete a training course regarding the provisions of the public records act and the provisions of chapter 40.14 RCW for records retention.Authorizes the attorney general's office to provide information, technical assistance, and training on the provisions of the public records act.
HB 2126-S by House Committee on Agriculture & Natural Resources (originally sponsored by Representatives Lytton, Warnick, Tharinger, Chandler, Blake, Van De Wege, MacEwen, Pettigrew, Dunshee, Stanford, Fitzgibbon, Haler, Ross, Buys, Morrell, Roberts, and Ryu; by request of Commissioner of Public Lands) Creating the community forest trust account. Creates the community forest trust account and requires all money received for the acquisition, sale, management, and administration of the department of natural resources' duties for community forest trust lands to be deposited into the account.
HB 2158-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Haigh, Seaquist, S. Hunt, Reykdal, Tharinger, and Freeman) Concerning dropout prevention, intervention, and reengagement activities by educational service districts. Requires educational service districts, as a basic core service, to: (1) Coordinate and convene school, family, and community partnerships to develop and implement comprehensive K-12 dropout prevention, intervention, and reengagement systems;(2) Facilitate and assist local partnerships in using dropout prevention, intervention, and reengagement system assessment tools; and(3) Develop dropout reengagement programs to be offered under contract with school districts.Authorizes an educational service district that offers a dropout reengagement program under contract with one or more school districts to, with the agreement of the contracting district, award high school credit to students residing in that district who successfully complete courses eligible for credit under the program.
HB 2165-S by House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services (originally sponsored by Representatives Kagi, Lytton, Morrell, Jinkins, and Haigh) Concerning department of early learning fatality reviews. Establishes the Eve Uphold act.Requires the department of early learning to conduct a child fatality review if a child fatality occurs in an early learning program, a licensed child care center, or a licensed child care home.
HB 2215-S by House Committee on Government Operations & Elections (originally sponsored by Representatives Robinson, Manweller, S. Hunt, and Haler; by request of Secretary of State) Reconciling election laws. Reconciles election laws.
HB 2523-S by House Committee on Business & Financial Services (originally sponsored by Representatives Kirby, Vick, and Santos) Revising provisions governing money transmitters. Revises money transmitter provisions relating to money transmitter licensees that accept money or its equivalent from consumers purchasing goods or services.
HB 2662 by Representative Stanford Addressing electronic notices and document delivery of insurance products. Addresses electronic notices and document delivery of insurance products.
HB 2663 by Representatives Pollet, Kretz, Goodman, Rodne, Gregerson, and Freeman Regulating tow truck operators not regulated under chapter 46.55 RCW. Regulates tow truck operators that are not regulated under chapter 46.55 RCW (towing and impoundment).
HB 2664 by Representatives Taylor, Blake, Overstreet, Shea, Scott, and Young Ensuring the right of self-defense against attacks by aggressive, violent animals. Ensures the right of self-defense against attacks by aggressive, violent animals.
HB 2665 by Representatives Pettigrew, Kagi, Sawyer, Gregerson, Freeman, and Ortiz-Self; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Concerning the expiration of the advisory committee on the disproportionate representation of children of color in Washington's child welfare system. Eliminates the June 30, 2014, expiration of the advisory committee on the disproportionate representation of children of color in Washington's child welfare system.Requires the advisory committee to develop membership rules by August 1, 2014, and requires the rules to be included in the annual secretary's report.
HB 2666 by Representatives G. Hunt, Kirby, Dahlquist, Hurst, and Parker Placing restrictions on construction agreements. Voids any provision in a construction agreement that requires a party to indemnify another against liability for damage arising out of death or bodily injury to persons or damage to property caused in whole or in part by the negligence of the indemnitee.
HB 2667 by Representatives Morris, Tarleton, Freeman, and Fey Implementing least cost planning to analyze transportation system performance. Authorizes the department of transportation, in carrying out its transportation planning responsibilities and conducting special studies, to use least cost planning as a method of analyzing transportation system performance and identifying an optimal mix of strategies for managing and improving a transportation system that supports communities, the economy, and the environment.Requires regional transportation planning organizations to collaborate with the department of transportation in the development of a least cost planning and programming framework that: (1) Supports the state transportation system policy goals and uses analytical methods to examine transportation system performance; and(2) Identifies an optimal mix of practical investment and policy strategies for managing and improving a transportation system that supports communities, the economy, and the environment.
HB 2668 by Representatives Sawyer, Zeiger, Muri, Tarleton, Seaquist, Moscoso, Reykdal, Sells, Rodne, Stanford, Gregerson, Morrell, Freeman, and Ortiz-Self Concerning insurance for enlisted members of the Washington national guard. Provides a premium-based health plan and a premium-based dental plan for certain Washington national guard members.
HB 2669 by Representatives Klippert and Haler Expanding DNA databases to include DNA from certain arrestees. Requires the collection of biological samples for DNA identification analysis from adults lawfully arrested for the commission of a criminal offense.Requires the director of the Washington state patrol's forensic laboratory services to perform an annual audit to ensure that biological samples are destroyed as required.Authorizes a person, under certain circumstances, to request expungement of his or her sample and DNA records from the DNA identification system.Imposes an additional fee of fifty cents, per traffic infraction, on a person found to have committed such an infraction and requires the revenue from the fee to be forwarded to the state treasurer for deposit in the state DNA database account.Prohibits a court from suspending, reducing, or deferring payment of the one hundred-dollar crime laboratory analysis fee.
HB 2670 by Representative Kirby Concerning licensure of persons providing debt settlement services. Establishes the debt settlement services act.
HB 2671 by Representatives Magendanz, Carlyle, Manweller, Fey, Warnick, Sawyer, Morris, Gregerson, Hansen, Condotta, Muri, Tharinger, Morrell, Wylie, Haler, Fitzgibbon, S. Hunt, Tarleton, Freeman, Ortiz-Self, and Moscoso Clarifying the application of tax exemptions for vehicles powered by clean alternative fuels. Clarifies the application of sales and use tax exemptions for vehicles powered by clean alternative fuels.
HB 2672 by Representatives Farrell, Sells, Ryu, Green, Reykdal, Stanford, Pollet, Hudgins, Gregerson, Walkinshaw, Robinson, Bergquist, S. Hunt, Fey, Riccelli, Lytton, Tharinger, Fitzgibbon, Sawyer, Tarleton, Jinkins, Goodman, Roberts, Moeller, Freeman, Moscoso, Cody, Wylie, Appleton, Ormsby, Dunshee, and Habib Increasing the minimum hourly wage to twelve dollars over three years. Increases the minimum hourly wage to: (1) Ten dollars beginning January 1, 2015;(2) Eleven dollars beginning January 1, 2016; and(3) Twelve dollars beginning January 1, 2017.
HB 2673 by Representatives Zeiger, Wylie, and Vick Concerning the use and possession of electronic or electromechanical amusement machines. Excludes an electronic or electromechanical amusement machine from the definition of "gambling device," for purposes of chapter 9.46 RCW (gambling--1973 act).
HB 2674 by Representatives Warnick and Sawyer Concerning the processing of quick titles by subagents. Authorizes a subagent to process a quick title in accordance with rules adopted by the department of licensing.
HB 2675 by Representatives Shea, Blake, Moscoso, Reykdal, Sells, Condotta, Scott, and Young Modifying provisions applicable to off-road, nonhighway, and wheeled all-terrain vehicles and their drivers. Modifies provisions applicable to off-road, nonhighway, and wheeled all-terrain vehicles and their drivers.
HB 2676 by Representatives Short, Morris, Magendanz, Takko, Smith, Van De Wege, Wylie, Muri, Haler, Springer, Tarleton, Freeman, and Fagan Allowing incremental electricity produced as a result of efficiency improvements to hydroelectric generation projects whose energy output is marketed by the Bonneville power administration to qualify as an eligible renewable resource under the energy independence act. Allows certain incremental electricity to qualify as an eligible renewable resource under the energy independence act.
HB 2677 by Representatives Springer, Dahlquist, Habib, Takko, Haler, Walsh, Manweller, Tharinger, Harris, Pike, Sawyer, and Hayes Establishing a process for the payment of impact fees through provisions stipulated in recorded covenants. Requires counties, cities, and towns collecting impact fees to adopt a permanent system for the collection of the fees from applicants for certain residential building permits.
HB 2678 by Representatives Senn, Stonier, Nealey, Harris, Seaquist, Bergquist, Fey, Magendanz, Morrell, Tharinger, Clibborn, Freeman, Haigh, Habib, Stanford, Kagi, Haler, and Gregerson; by request of Governor Inslee Providing greater small business assistance by modifying the filing threshold for excise tax purposes. Changes the filing threshold for excise tax purposes to provide greater small business assistance.
HB 2679 by Representatives DeBolt and Haler Concerning the expenditure limit for the state universal communications services program. Requires expenditures for the state universal communications services program to be five million dollars per fiscal year less administrative costs appropriated to the utilities and transportation commission to administer the program.
HB 2680 by Representatives Springer, Haler, Goodman, and Freeman Establishing a caterer's license to sell spirits, beer, and wine. Creates a caterer's license to sell spirits, beer, and wine.
SB 5887-S by Senate Committee on Health Care (originally sponsored by Senators Rivers, Tom, and Litzow) Merging the medical marijuana system with the recreational marijuana system. Merges medical marijuana and recreational marijuana provisions.Changes the name of the state liquor control board to the state substance control board.Changes the name of the basic health plan trust account to the basic health services account.Requires the code reviser to prepare legislation for the 2015 legislative session changing references from the state liquor control board to the state substance control board.
SB 5977-S by Senate Committee on Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance (originally sponsored by Senators Hobbs and Fain) Addressing the regulation of service contracts and protection product guarantees. Modifies provisions relating to the regulation of service contracts and protection product guarantees.
SB 6406 by Senators Cleveland, Eide, Billig, and Chase Modifying when to display vehicle headlights. Changes the requirements for displaying vehicle headlights.
SB 6407 by Senators Cleveland, Ranker, Keiser, and Darneille Consenting to medical care by a minor. Allows certain minors to consent to certain hospital, medical, and dental treatment and procedures.
SB 6408 by Senators Cleveland, Keiser, Ranker, and Chase Authorizing physician assistants to perform opthalmic-related services under employment or supervision by a medical doctor or an osteopathic physician. Authorizes the performance of opthalmic-related services by physician assistants.
SB 6409 by Senators Cleveland and Chase Implementing changes to child support based on the child support schedule work group report. Implements recommendations made by the 2011 child support schedule work group.
SB 6410 by Senators Cleveland and Chase Concerning surname changes after the solemnization of a marriage. Provides for surname changes after a marriage.
SB 6411 by Senator Cleveland Concerning small estate guardian reporting intervals and training reporting requirements. Revises reporting and training requirements for small estate guardians.
SB 6412 by Senators Cleveland, Rolfes, Hasegawa, Chase, Ranker, Braun, and Kline Concerning tax, penalty, and interest assessments on claims for collection of sales tax debt. Prohibits a claim on sales tax debt by a seller against a buyer later than the end of the statutory period for assessment of certain taxes, penalties, or interest.
SB 6413 by Senators Fain, Eide, Padden, Pearson, Hobbs, Angel, King, Becker, Tom, Sheldon, Dammeier, Honeyford, Hill, O'Ban, Litzow, Brown, Schoesler, and Rolfes Clarifying prior offenses for driving under the influence or physical control of a vehicle under the influence. Revises the definition of "prior offense," for purposes of physical control of a vehicle and driving under the influence laws, to include driving or operating a commercial vehicle, a vessel, an aircraft, a nonhighway vehicle, or a snowmobile while under the influence.
SB 6414 by Senators Fain, Tom, Eide, Hill, Angel, Braun, Becker, Litzow, Bailey, Brown, Schoesler, and Rolfes Improving lobbyist reporting and disclosure. Requires certain agencies, lobbyists, and lobbyists' employers to file required reports electronically over the internet as provided by the public disclosure commission.Requires the appropriate ethics boards to define the limits of accepting gifts in the form of food or beverage.Requires lobbyists who are required to report entertainment expenditures to the public disclosure commission to pay a fee of two hundred dollars to the commission each calendar year that it is required to report.Creates the public disclosure electronic filing account.
SB 6415 by Senators Fain, Angel, Tom, Dammeier, Hill, Becker, Eide, Hobbs, King, Brown, Bailey, Litzow, Schoesler, Braun, and Rolfes Concerning consecutive sentences for driving under the influence or physical control of a vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor, marijuana, or any drug. Requires sentences imposed for certain alcohol-related violations to be served consecutively with sentences imposed for certain ignition interlock device-related violations.
SB 6416 by Senators Hatfield and Hobbs Concerning dealer deliveries to active duty law enforcement officers. Allows a dealer to deliver a pistol to a purchaser who produces a valid commission card issued by a state law enforcement agency that shows the purchaser is a full-time, commissioned law enforcement officer of the agency.
SB 6417 by Senators Chase, Rolfes, Kline, and Kohl-Welles Involving communities in environmental decision making. Requires state agencies to make achieving environmental justice part of their mission by identifying and addressing, as appropriate, the disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and activities on minority populations and low-income populations in the state.Requires the department of ecology to identify and maintain a list of highly impacted communities in the state.
SB 6418 by Senators Litzow, Fain, Dammeier, Angel, Tom, Bailey, Becker, and Mullet Creating flexibility for the educator retooling conditional scholarship program. Changes the name of the retooling to teach mathematics and science conditional scholarship program to the educator retooling conditional scholarship program.Addresses the requirements for a mathematics, science, special education, bilingual education, or English language learner endorsement.
SB 6419 by Senators Cleveland, Benton, Keiser, Darneille, Frockt, Billig, Chase, Rolfes, Nelson, Dammeier, Fraser, Eide, Kohl-Welles, Kline, Pedersen, Hargrove, Ranker, Conway, and McAuliffe Concerning expanding access to medicaid programs in border communities. Requires the state health care authority and the department of social and health services to collaborate and seek opportunities to expand access to care for enrollees in certain medicaid programs living in border communities that may require contractual agreements with providers across the state border when care is appropriate, available, and cost- effective.
SB 6420 by Senators Keiser, Bailey, Chase, and Conway; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Concerning investigations involving vulnerable adults. Revises the definition of "vulnerable adult," for purposes of chapter 74.34 RCW (abuse of vulnerable adults), to include a person who the department of social and health services reasonably believes has a developmental disability.
SB 6421 by Senators Bailey, Keiser, and Becker; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Providing certification exemptions and training requirements for certain individual provider long-term care workers. Exempts from certain training and certification requirements until July 1, 2016, a long-term care worker who: (1) Works as an individual provider;(2) Provides only respite services; and(3) Works less than three hundred hours in any calendar year.
SB 6422 by Senators Becker and Keiser; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Concerning electronic timekeeping for in-home personal care or respite services. Provides an exception for electronic timekeeping for in-home personal care or respite services.
SB 6423 by Senators Bailey, Kohl-Welles, Litzow, McAuliffe, Dammeier, Frockt, Fain, Mullet, Chase, and Tom Changing provisions relating to the opportunity scholarship. Changes the composition of the opportunity scholarship board.Changes the month from May to October for the annual disbursement of scholarships from the scholarship account.Authorizes the opportunity scholarship board to elect to have the state investment board invest the funds in the scholarship account and the endowment account.Requires the student achievement council to enter into an appropriate agreement with the program administrator to demonstrate exchange of consideration for the matching funds. Once money in the opportunity scholarship match transfer account is subject to the agreement and is deposited in the scholarship account or endowment account, the state acts in a fiduciary rather than ownership capacity with regard to those assets.
SB 6424 by Senators Roach, McAuliffe, Litzow, Fain, Bailey, Mullet, Hasegawa, and Tom Establishing a state seal of biliteracy for high school students. Creates the Washington state seal of biliteracy to recognize public high school graduates who have attained a high level of proficiency in speaking, reading, and writing in one or more world languages in addition to English.Requires the office of the superintendent of public instruction to adopt rules establishing criteria for award of the state seal of biliteracy.Allows the standardized high school transcript to include a notation of whether the student has earned the state seal of biliteracy.
SB 6425 by Senators Hasegawa, Roach, Keiser, McCoy, Eide, Kline, and Chase Providing direction to public hospital districts regarding limits on delegation of authority pursuant to joint venture agreements. Provides direction to public hospital districts regarding limits on delegation of authority pursuant to joint venture agreements.
SB 6426 by Senators Hasegawa, Chase, and Kline Increasing the available funding limit of the linked deposit program. Increases the funding limit of the linked deposit program.
SB 6427 by Senators Hasegawa, McCoy, and Chase Creating the Puget Sound port authority. Requires a port district located in a county with a population of one million five hundred thousand persons or more and a port district located in an adjoining county with a population of over five hundred thousand persons to establish a Puget Sound port authority.
SB 6428 by Senators Liias and Hasegawa Concerning heavy civil construction projects. Provides alternative public works procedures for heavy civil construction projects.
SB 6429 by Senators Darneille, Hargrove, Chase, and Kline; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Concerning the expiration of the advisory committee on the disproportionate representation of children of color in Washington's child welfare system. Eliminates the June 30, 2014, expiration of the advisory committee on the disproportionate representation of children of color in Washington's child welfare system.Requires the advisory committee to develop membership rules by August 1, 2014, and requires the rules to be included in the annual secretary's report.
SB 6430 by Senators Liias, Fain, Hobbs, Litzow, Eide, Dammeier, McAuliffe, Baumgartner, Cleveland, Angel, and Ericksen Extending tax preferences for high-technology research and development. Delays the expiration of tax preferences for high-technology research and development.
SB 6431 by Senators Hargrove, Kohl-Welles, Liias, Kline, Rolfes, Parlette, Frockt, Pedersen, and Conway Concerning assistance for schools in implementing youth suicide prevention activities. Requires the office of the superintendent of public instruction, working with state and community partners, to prioritize funding, appropriated for assisting schools in implementing youth suicide prevention activities, to the following schools and communities: (1) Schools identified by the department of health as situated in a high-risk area or in a community with high-risk populations;(2) Tribal communities; and(3) Communities with a high percentage of students who speak English as a second language.Makes an appropriation.
SB 6432 by Senators Roach, Benton, Dansel, Hargrove, and Kline Removing references to federal manufacturing standards. Ends illegal profiling of motorcyclists by removing the reference in state law to federal manufacturing standards for motorcycle helmets.
SB 6433 by Senators Padden, Kline, and Darneille Prohibiting discrimination by an individual or entity on the basis of creed. Prohibits an individual or entity from discriminating against another individual on the basis of creed in regard to the protected practices under the state civil rights act.
SB 6434 by Senators O'Ban, Kohl-Welles, Fain, Kline, Bailey, Angel, Becker, Dammeier, and Chase Concerning seizure and forfeiture of property for patronizing a prostitute. Subjects certain property to seizure and forfeiture for patronizing a prostitute.
SB 6435 by Senators O'Ban, Kohl-Welles, Bailey, Kline, Angel, Becker, and Chase Ordering mandatory restitution for sexual exploitation of children. Requires a court, in addition to other civil or criminal penalties authorized by law, to order restitution for an offense for the sexual exploitation of children.
SB 6436 by Senators Frockt, Bailey, Kohl-Welles, and Hargrove Creating a work group to make recommendations for the continued viability of the college bound scholarship program. Creates a college bound scholarship program work group to make recommendations to ensure the college bound scholarship program is viable, productive, and effective.
SB 6437 by Senators Conway, Hasegawa, Kohl-Welles, Chase, and Kline Concerning registration requirements for contractors. Curtails the operations of illegal businesses in the construction industry.Requires a business that applies for a contractor registration under chapter 18.27 RCW to have a state industrial insurance account, a state unemployment insurance account, and a state business tax account.Encourages an owner, officer, or partner of a contractor registration applicant to complete a preregistration contractor training class.Charges an additional contractor registration fee for an applicant that has not completed the preregistration training class.Requires the department of labor and industries to provide preregistration training in each of its service regions at least once each month.Requires the department of revenue and the employment security department to assist the department of labor and industries in presenting the contractor preregistration training program.
SB 6438 by Senators Liias, McAuliffe, Rolfes, Hasegawa, Billig, Conway, McCoy, Kohl-Welles, and Keiser Enhancing the basic education allocation formula to adopt the staffing resources recommended by the quality education council. Defines a fully implemented prototypical school model for the 2017-2018 school year through annual improvements in staffing levels, with a priority on staffing schools with a high level of poverty students first.Increases student opportunities to receive a basic education as well as improve student performance and graduation rates by lowering class sizes and increasing school staffing.
SB 6439 by Senators Liias, Litzow, McAuliffe, Billig, Kohl-Welles, Keiser, Pedersen, Mullet, Rolfes, Cleveland, Fraser, and Frockt Concerning preventing harassment, intimidation, and bullying in public schools. Requires the office of the superintendent of public instruction to develop a statewide training class for those people in each school district who act as the primary contact regarding the antiharassment, intimidation, or bullying policy.
SB 6440 by Senators King, Eide, and Kline Imposing motor vehicle fuel taxes on compressed natural and liquefied natural gas used for transportation purposes. Imposes motor vehicle fuel taxes on natural gas, the sale of compressed natural gas, or liquefied natural gas, used as transportation fuel by a motor vehicle.Clarifies for future use the appropriate taxation of natural gas, when used as a transportation fuel, in a manner similar to gasoline and diesel.
SB 6441 by Senators Kohl-Welles, Darneille, Chase, Keiser, Hobbs, Hatfield, Kline, Rolfes, and Conway Concerning consumer warranty protections. Addresses express warranties with respect to consumer goods.
SB 6442 by Senators Brown, Hatfield, Schoesler, Hobbs, Honeyford, Hewitt, Kohl-Welles, Keiser, Kline, and Rolfes Allowing sales of growlers of cider. Allows licensees holding either a license that permits, or a license with an endorsement that permits, the sale of beer to a purchaser in a growler to also sell cider in a growler.
SB 6443 by Senators Liias, Angel, Eide, Bailey, and Rolfes; by request of Department of Transportation Modifying time period and monetary limits on ferry vessel and terminal work by state forces. Allows work for less than two hundred thousand dollars to be performed on ferry vessels and terminals by state forces.
SB 6444 by Senators Litzow, Angel, Tom, Bailey, Billig, Fain, and Keiser Creating the breakfast after the bell program. Establishes a three-year, phased-in process for providing breakfast after the bell in high needs schools.Provides technical assistance through dedicated staff within the office of the superintendent of public instruction to successfully implement the model, as well as assistance through local public-private partnerships between the office of the superintendent of public instruction and nonprofit organizations knowledgeable about hunger and food security issues.Works with schools to identify funding mechanisms to institute universal breakfast.Encourages schools providing breakfast after the bell to use a model that allows breakfast time to be part of instructional time.
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