S-0442.2  _______________________________________________

 

                         SENATE BILL 5102

          _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington      56th Legislature     1999 Regular Session

 

By Senators Haugen, Snyder, Winsley, Goings, Gardner, T. Sheldon, Bauer, Rasmussen, Hale, McCaslin, Sellar, Swecker, Patterson, Morton, Prentice, Oke, Kohl‑Welles and Costa

 

Read first time 01/13/1999.  Referred to Committee on Transportation.

Increasing the level of training for fire fighters.


    AN ACT Relating to establishing and funding fire fighter training; amending RCW 43.43.934, 43.43.944, 41.16.050, and 41.24.170; and making appropriations.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

    Sec. 1.  RCW 43.43.934 and 1998 c 245 s 65 are each amended to read as follows:

    Except for matters relating to the statutory duties of the chief of the Washington state patrol that are to be carried out through the director of fire protection, the board shall have the responsibility of developing a comprehensive state policy regarding fire protection services.  In carrying out its duties, the board shall:

    (1)(a) Adopt a state fire training and education master plan that allows to the maximum feasible extent for negotiated agreements:  (i) With the state board for community and technical colleges to provide academic, vocational, and field training programs for the fire service and (ii) with the higher education coordinating board and the state colleges and universities to provide instructional programs requiring advanced training, especially in command and management skills;

    (b) Adopt minimum standards for each level of responsibility among personnel with fire suppression, prevention, inspection, and investigation responsibilities that assure continuing assessment of skills and are flexible enough to meet emerging technologies.  With particular respect to training for fire investigations, the master plan shall encourage cross training in appropriate law enforcement skills.  To meet special local needs, fire agencies may adopt more stringent requirements than those adopted by the state;

    (c) Cooperate with the common schools, technical and community colleges, institutions of higher education, and any department or division of the state, or of any county or municipal corporation in establishing and maintaining instruction in fire service training and education in accordance with any act of congress and legislation enacted by the legislature in pursuance thereof and in establishing, building, and operating training and education facilities.

    Industrial fire departments and private fire investigators may participate in training and education programs under this chapter for a reasonable fee established by rule;

    (d) Develop and adopt a master plan for constructing, equipping, maintaining, and operating necessary fire service training and education facilities subject to the provisions of chapter 43.19 RCW; ((and))

    (e) Develop and adopt a master plan for the purchase, lease, or other acquisition of real estate necessary for fire service training and education facilities in a manner provided by law; and

    (f) Develop and adopt a plan with a goal of providing training at the level of fire fighter one to all fire fighters in the state.  The plan will include a reimbursement for fire protection districts and city fire departments of not less than two dollars for every hour of fire fighter one training actually provided by the Washington state patrol to the district or department.  The Washington state patrol shall not provide reimbursement for more than one hundred fifty hours of fire fighter one training for each fire fighter trained.

    (2) In addition to its responsibilities for fire service training, the board shall:

    (a) Adopt a state fire protection master plan;

    (b) Monitor fire protection in the state and develop objectives and priorities to improve fire protection for the state's citizens including:  (i) The comprehensiveness of state and local inspections required by law for fire and life safety; (ii) the level of skills and training of inspectors, as well as needs for additional training; and (iii) the efforts of local, regional, and state inspection agencies to improve coordination and reduce duplication among inspection efforts;

    (c) Establish and promote state arson control programs and ensure development of local arson control programs;

    (d) Provide representation for local fire protection services to the governor in state-level fire protection planning matters such as, but not limited to, hazardous materials control;

    (e) Recommend to the director of community, trade, and economic development rules on minimum information requirements of automatic location identification for the purposes of enhanced 911 emergency service;

    (f) Seek and solicit grants, gifts, bequests, devises, and matching funds for use in furthering the objectives and duties of the board, and establish procedures for administering them;

    (g) Promote mutual aid and disaster planning for fire services in this state;

    (h) Assure the dissemination of information concerning the amount of fire damage including that damage caused by arson, and its causes and prevention; and

    (i) Implement any legislation enacted by the legislature to meet the requirements of any acts of congress that apply to this section.

    (3) In carrying out its statutory duties, the board shall give particular consideration to the appropriate roles to be played by the state and by local jurisdictions with fire protection responsibilities.  Any determinations on the division of responsibility shall be made in consultation with local fire officials and their representatives.

    To the extent possible, the board shall encourage development of regional units along compatible geographic, population, economic, and fire risk dimensions.  Such regional units may serve to:  (a) Reinforce coordination among state and local activities in fire service training, reporting, inspections, and investigations; (b) identify areas of special need, particularly in smaller jurisdictions with inadequate resources; (c) assist the state in its oversight responsibilities; (d) identify funding needs and options at both the state and local levels; and (e) provide models for building local capacity in fire protection programs.

 

    Sec. 2.  RCW 43.43.944 and 1995 c 369 s 21 are each amended to read as follows:

    (1) The fire service training account is hereby established in the state treasury.  The ((Washington state patrol shall deposit in the account)) fund shall consist of:

    (a) All fees received by the Washington state patrol for fire service training((.));

    (b) All grants and bequests accepted by the Washington state patrol under RCW 43.43.940;

    (c) Twenty percent of all moneys received by the state on fire insurance premiums; and

    (d) All moneys collected from fines levied by the insurance commissioner pursuant to disciplinary orders issued by the insurance commissioner under Title 48 RCW.

    (2) Moneys in the account may be appropriated only for fire service training.

 

    Sec. 3.  RCW 41.16.050 and 1994 c 273 s 23 are each amended to read as follows:

    There is hereby created and established in the treasury of each municipality a fund which shall be known and designated as the firemen's pension fund, which shall consist of:  (1) All bequests, fees, gifts, emoluments, or donations given or paid thereto; (2) ((forty-five)) twenty-five percent of all moneys received by the state from taxes on fire insurance premiums; (3) taxes paid pursuant to the provisions of RCW 41.16.060; (4) interest on the investments of the fund; and (5) contributions by fire fighters as provided for herein.  The moneys received from the tax on fire insurance premiums under the provisions of this chapter shall be distributed in the proportion that the number of paid fire fighters in the city, town, or fire protection district bears to the total number of paid fire fighters throughout the state to be ascertained in the following manner:  The secretary of the firemen's pension board of each city, town, and fire protection district now or hereafter coming under the provisions of this chapter shall within thirty days after June 7, 1961, and on or before the fifteenth day of January thereafter, certify to the state treasurer the number of paid fire fighters in the fire department in such city, town, or fire protection district.  For any city or town annexed by a fire protection district at any time before, on, or after June 9, 1994, the city or town shall continue to certify to the state treasurer the number of paid fire fighters in the city or town fire department immediately before annexation until all obligations against the firemen's pension fund in the city or town have been satisfied.  For the purposes of the calculation in this section, the state treasurer shall subtract the number certified by the annexed city or town from the number of paid fire fighters certified by an annexing fire protection district.  The state treasurer shall on or before the first day of June of each year deliver to the treasurer of each city, town, and fire protection district coming under the provisions of this chapter his or her warrant, payable to each city, town, or fire protection district for the amount due such city, town or fire protection district ascertained as herein provided and the treasurer of each such city, town, or fire protection district shall place the amount thereof to the credit of the firemen's pension fund of such city, town, or fire protection district.

 

    Sec. 4.  RCW 41.24.170 and 1995 c 11 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:

    Except as provided in RCW 41.24.410, whenever any participant has been a member and served honorably for a period of ten years or more as an active member in any capacity, of any regularly organized volunteer fire department or law enforcement agency of any municipality in this state, and which municipality and participant are enrolled under the retirement provisions, and the participant has reached the age of sixty-five years, the board of trustees shall order and direct that he or she be retired and be paid a monthly pension as provided in this section.

    Whenever a participant has been a member, and served honorably for a period of twenty-five years or more as an active member in any capacity, of any regularly organized volunteer fire department or law enforcement agency of any municipality in this state, and he or she has reached the age of sixty-five years, and the annual retirement fee has been paid for a period of twenty-five years, the board of trustees shall order and direct that he or she be retired and such participant be paid a monthly pension of two hundred ((twenty-five)) eighty dollars from the fund for the balance of that participant's life.

    Whenever any participant has been a member, and served honorably for a period of twenty-five years or more as an active member in any capacity, of any regularly organized volunteer fire department or law enforcement agency of any municipality in this state, and the participant has reached the age of sixty-five years, and the annual retirement fee has been paid for a period of less than twenty-five years, the board of trustees shall order and direct that he or she be retired and that such participant shall receive a minimum monthly pension of ((twenty-five)) thirty dollars increased by the sum of ((eight)) ten dollars each month for each year the annual fee has been paid, but not to exceed the maximum monthly pension provided in this section, for the balance of the participant's life.

    No pension provided in this section may become payable before the sixty-fifth birthday of the participant, nor for any service less than twenty-five years:  PROVIDED, HOWEVER, That:

    (1) Any participant, ((upon completion of)) who is older than fifty-nine years of age, less than sixty-five years of age, and has completed twenty-five ((years')) years or more of service ((and attainment of age sixty,)) may irrevocably elect((,)) a reduced monthly pension in lieu of, and calculated as a percentage of, the pension ((to which)) that participant would be entitled under this section at age sixty-five((, to)).  The participant who elects this option shall receive the reduced pension for the balance of his or her life ((a monthly pension equal to sixty percent of such pension.

    (2) Any participant, upon completion of twenty-five years' service and attainment of age sixty-two, may irrevocably elect, in lieu of the pension to which that participant would be entitled under this section at age sixty-five, to receive for the balance of his or her life a monthly pension equal to seventy-five percent of such pension.

    (3) Any participant, upon completion of less than twenty-five years of service shall receive the applicable reduced pension provided in this subsection, according to the age at which that participant elects to begin to receive the pension.  If receipt of the benefits begins at age sixty-five the participant shall receive one hundred percent of the reduced benefit; at age sixty-two the participant shall receive seventy-five percent of the reduced benefit; and at age sixty the participant shall receive sixty percent of the reduced benefit)).  The reduction of the monthly pension is calculated based upon the age of the participant as follows:

 

      Age 60        Sixty percent

      Age 61        Sixty-eight percent

      Age 62        Seventy-six percent

      Age 63        Eighty-four percent

     Age 64    Ninety-two percent

 

     (2) If a participant is age sixty-five or older but has less than twenty-five years of service, the participant is entitled to a reduced benefit.  The reduced benefit shall be computed as follows:

     (a) Upon completion of ten years, but less than fifteen years of service, a monthly pension equal to ((fifteen)) twenty percent of such pension as the participant would have been entitled to receive at age sixty-five after twenty-five years of service;

     (b) Upon completion of fifteen years, but less than twenty years of service, a monthly pension equal to thirty-five percent of such pension as the participant would have been entitled to receive at age sixty-five after twenty-five years of service; and

     (c) Upon completion of twenty years, but less than twenty-five years of service, a monthly pension equal to ((sixty)) seventy-five percent of such pension as the participant would have been entitled to receive at age sixty-five after twenty-five years of service.

     (3) If a participant with less than twenty-five years of service elects to retire after turning age sixty but before turning age sixty-five, the participant's retirement allowance is subject:

     (a) First to the reduction under subsection (2) of this section based upon the participant's years of service; and

     (b) Second to the reduction under subsection (1) of this section based upon the participant's age.

 

     NEW SECTION.  Sec. 5.  The sum of one million seven hundred fifty thousand dollars, or as much thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2000, from the general fund to the fire service training account for the purposes of this act.

 

     NEW SECTION.  Sec. 6.  The sum of one million seven hundred fifty thousand dollars, or as much thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2001, from the general fund to the fire service training account for the purposes of this act.

 

     NEW SECTION.  Sec. 7.  The sum of three million five hundred thousand dollars, or as much thereof as may be necessary, is appropriated for the biennium ending June 30, 2001, from the fire service training account to the Washington state patrol solely to provide for the implementation of fire fighter training as authorized under RCW 43.43.934(1)(f).

 


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