S-0748.1  _______________________________________________

 

                         SENATE BILL 5266

          _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington      56th Legislature     1999 Regular Session

 

By Senators Swecker, Rasmussen, Morton and Fraser

 

Read first time 01/18/1999.  Referred to Committee on Agriculture & Rural Economic Development.

Authorizing grant authority for permit coordination.


    AN ACT Relating to permit coordination; and amending RCW 43.160.060.

 

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

 

    Sec. 1.  RCW 43.160.060 and 1996 c 51 s 5 are each amended to read as follows:

    The board is authorized to make direct loans to political subdivisions of the state for the purposes of assisting the political subdivisions in financing the cost of public facilities, including development of land and improvements for public facilities, as well as the construction, rehabilitation, alteration, expansion, or improvement of the facilities.  Grants may be authorized for permit coordination under chapters 36.70B and 90.60 RCW and for facilitation costs of collaborative procedure products under section 1, chapter . . ., Laws of 1999 (section 1 of S-0741/99).  A grant may also be authorized for purposes designated in this chapter, but only when, and to the extent that, a loan is not reasonably possible, given the limited resources of the political subdivision and the finding by the board that unique circumstances exist.  The board shall not obligate more than twenty percent of its biennial appropriation as grants.

    Application for funds shall be made in the form and manner as the board may prescribe.  In making grants or loans the board shall conform to the following requirements:

    (1) The board shall not provide financial assistance:

    (a) For a project the primary purpose of which is to facilitate or promote a retail shopping development or expansion.

    (b) For any project that evidence exists would result in a development or expansion that would displace existing jobs in any other community in the state.

    (c) For the acquisition of real property, including buildings and other fixtures which are a part of real property.

    (2) The board shall only provide financial assistance:

    (a) For those projects which would result in specific private developments or expansions (i) in manufacturing, production, food processing, assembly, warehousing, and industrial distribution; (ii) for processing recyclable materials or for facilities that support recycling, including processes not currently provided in the state, including but not limited to, de-inking facilities, mixed waste paper, plastics, yard waste, and problem-waste processing; (iii) for manufacturing facilities that rely significantly on recyclable materials, including but not limited to waste tires and mixed waste paper; (iv) which support the relocation of businesses from nondistressed urban areas to distressed rural areas; or (v) which substantially support the trading of goods or services outside of the state's borders.

    (b) For projects which it finds will improve the opportunities for the successful maintenance, establishment, or expansion of industrial or commercial plants or will otherwise assist in the creation or retention of long-term economic opportunities.

    (c) When the application includes convincing evidence that a specific private development or expansion is ready to occur and will occur only if the public facility improvement is made.

    (3) The board shall prioritize each proposed project according to the relative benefits provided to the community by the jobs the project would create, not just the total number of jobs it would create after the project is completed and according to the unemployment rate in the area in which the jobs would be located.  As long as there is more demand for financial assistance than there are funds available, the board is instructed to fund projects in order of their priority.

    (4) A responsible official of the political subdivision shall be present during board deliberations and provide information that the board requests.

    Before any financial assistance application is approved, the political subdivision seeking the assistance must demonstrate to the community economic revitalization board that no other timely source of funding is available to it at costs reasonably similar to financing available from the community economic revitalization board.

 


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