CERTIFICATION OF ENROLLMENT
ENGROSSED HOUSE BILL 2993
Chapter 329, Laws of 2002
57th Legislature
2002 Regular Session
WATER POLICY
EFFECTIVE DATE: 6/13/02 - Except section 11, which becomes effective 4/3/02.
Passed by the House March 13, 2002 Yeas 95 Nays 0
FRANK CHOPP Speaker of the House of Representatives
Passed by the Senate March 13, 2002 Yeas 46 Nays 2 |
CERTIFICATE
I, Cynthia Zehnder, Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is ENGROSSED HOUSE BILL 2993 as passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate on the dates hereon set forth.
CYNTHIA ZEHNDER Chief Clerk
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BRAD OWEN President of the Senate |
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Approved April 3, 2002 |
FILED
April 3, 2002 - 10:34 a.m. |
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GARY LOCKE Governor of the State of Washington |
Secretary of State State of Washington |
_______________________________________________
ENGROSSED HOUSE BILL 2993
_______________________________________________
Passed Legislature - 2002 Regular Session
State of Washington 57th Legislature 2002 Regular Session
By Representatives Linville and Kirby
Read first time 02/27/2002. Referred to Committee on Agriculture & Ecology.
AN ACT Relating to water policy; amending RCW 90.46.010, 90.46.030, 90.46.130, 90.38.020, 90.42.040, 90.42.080, and 90.03.370; adding a new section to chapter 90.54 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 90.03 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 90.46 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 43.155 RCW; and declaring an emergency.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. A new section is added to chapter 90.54 RCW to read as follows:
The legislature recognizes the critical importance of providing and securing sufficient water to meet the needs of people, farms, and fish. The legislature finds that an effective way to meet the water needs of people, farms, and fish is through strategies developed and implemented at the local watershed level. The objectives of these strategies are to supply water in sufficient quantities to satisfy the following three water resource objectives:
(1) Providing sufficient water for residential, commercial, and industrial needs;
(2) Providing sufficient water for productive fish populations; and
(3) Providing sufficient water for productive agriculture.
The legislature affirms its intent to provide continued support for watershed strategies and provides the tools in this bill to assist local watersheds in meeting these objectives.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2. A new section is added to chapter 90.03 RCW to read as follows:
(1) The department shall, through a network of water masters appointed under this chapter, stream patrollers appointed under chapter 90.08 RCW, and other assigned compliance staff to the extent such a network is funded, achieve compliance with the water laws and rules of the state of Washington in the following sequence:
(a) The department shall prepare and distribute technical and educational information to the general public to assist the public in complying with the requirements of their water rights and applicable water laws;
(b) When the department determines that a violation has occurred or is about to occur, it shall first attempt to achieve voluntary compliance. As part of this first response, the department shall offer information and technical assistance to the person in writing identifying one or more means to accomplish the person's purposes within the framework of the law; and
(c) If education and technical assistance do not achieve compliance the department shall issue a notice of violation, a formal administrative order under RCW 43.27A.190, or assess penalties under RCW 90.03.600 unless the noncompliance is corrected expeditiously or the department determines no impairment or harm.
(2) Nothing in the section is intended to prevent the department of ecology from taking immediate action to cause a violation to be ceased immediately if in the opinion of the department the nature of the violation is causing harm to other water rights or to public resources.
(3) The department of ecology shall to the extent practicable station its compliance personnel within the watershed communities they serve. To the extent practicable, compliance personnel shall be distributed evenly among the regions of the state.
Sec. 3. RCW 90.46.010 and 2001 c 69 s 2 are each amended to read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Greywater" means wastewater having the consistency and strength of residential domestic type wastewater. Greywater includes wastewater from sinks, showers, and laundry fixtures, but does not include toilet or urinal waters.
(2) "Land application" means application of treated effluent for purposes of irrigation or landscape enhancement for residential, business, and governmental purposes.
(3) "Person" means any state, individual, public or private corporation, political subdivision, governmental subdivision, governmental agency, municipality, copartnership, association, firm, trust estate, or any other legal entity whatever.
(4) "Reclaimed water" means effluent derived in any part from sewage from a wastewater treatment system that has been adequately and reliably treated, so that as a result of that treatment, it is suitable for a beneficial use or a controlled use that would not otherwise occur and is no longer considered wastewater.
(5) "Sewage" means water-carried human wastes from residences, buildings, industrial and commercial establishments, or other places, together with such ground water infiltration, surface waters, or industrial wastewater as may be present.
(6) "User" means any person who uses reclaimed water.
(7) "Wastewater" means water and wastes discharged from homes, businesses, and industry to the sewer system.
(8) "Beneficial use" means the use of reclaimed water, that has been transported from the point of production to the point of use without an intervening discharge to the waters of the state, for a beneficial purpose.
(9) "Direct recharge" means the controlled subsurface addition of water directly to the ground water basin that results in the replenishment of ground water.
(10) "Ground water recharge criteria" means the contaminant criteria found in the drinking water quality standards adopted by the state board of health pursuant to chapter 43.20 RCW and the department of health pursuant to chapter 70.119A RCW.
(11) "Planned ground water recharge project" means any reclaimed water project designed for the purpose of recharging ground water, via direct recharge or surface percolation.
(12) "Reclamation criteria" means the criteria set forth in the water reclamation and reuse interim standards and subsequent revisions adopted by the department of ecology and the department of health.
(13) "Streamflow augmentation" means the discharge of reclaimed water to rivers and streams of the state or other surface water bodies, but not wetlands.
(14) "Surface percolation" means the controlled application of water to the ground surface for the purpose of replenishing ground water.
(15) "Wetland or wetlands" means areas that are inundated or saturated by surface water or ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted to life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs, and similar areas. Wetlands regulated under this chapter shall be delineated in accordance with the manual adopted by the department of ecology pursuant to RCW 90.58.380.
(16) "Constructed beneficial use wetlands" means those wetlands intentionally constructed on nonwetland sites to produce or replace natural wetland functions and values. Constructed beneficial use wetlands are considered "waters of the state."
(17) "Constructed treatment wetlands" means those wetlands intentionally constructed on nonwetland sites and managed for the primary purpose of wastewater or storm water treatment. Constructed treatment wetlands are considered part of the collection and treatment system and are not considered "waters of the state."
(18)
"Agricultural industrial process water" means water that has been
used for the purpose of ((agriculture [agricultural])) agricultural
processing and has been adequately and reliably treated, so that as a result of
that treatment, it is suitable for other agricultural water use.
(19) "Agricultural processing" means the processing of crops or milk to produce a product primarily for wholesale or retail sale for human or animal consumption, including but not limited to potato, fruit, vegetable, and grain processing.
(20) "Agricultural water use" means the use of water for irrigation and other uses related to the production of agricultural products. These uses include, but are not limited to, construction, operation, and maintenance of agricultural facilities and livestock operations at farms, ranches, dairies, and nurseries. Examples of these uses include, but are not limited to, dust control, temperature control, and fire control.
(21) "Industrial reuse water" means water that has been used for the purpose of industrial processing and has been adequately and reliably treated so that, as a result of that treatment, it is suitable for other uses.
Sec. 4. RCW 90.46.030 and 1992 c 204 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The department of health shall, in coordination with the department of ecology, adopt a single set of standards, procedures, and guidelines on or before August 1, 1993, for the industrial and commercial use of reclaimed water.
(2) The department of health may issue a reclaimed water permit for industrial and commercial uses of reclaimed water to the generator of reclaimed water who may then distribute the water, subject to provisions in the permit governing the location, rate, water quality, and purposes of use.
(3) The department of health in consultation with the advisory committee established in RCW 90.46.050, shall develop recommendations for a fee structure for permits issued under subsection (2) of this section. Fees shall be established in amounts to fully recover, and not exceed, expenses incurred by the department of health in processing permit applications and modifications, monitoring and evaluating compliance with permits, and conducting inspections and supporting the reasonable overhead expenses that are directly related to these activities. Permit fees may not be used for research or enforcement activities. The department of health shall not issue permits under this section until a fee structure has been established.
(4) A permit under this section for use of reclaimed water may be issued only to a municipal, quasi-municipal, or other governmental entity or to the holder of a waste discharge permit issued under chapter 90.48 RCW.
(5) The authority and duties created in this section are in addition to any authority and duties already provided in law with regard to sewage and wastewater collection, treatment, and disposal for the protection of health and safety of the state's waters. Nothing in this section limits the powers of the state or any political subdivision to exercise such authority.
(6) The department of health may implement the requirements of this section through the department of ecology by execution of a formal agreement between the departments. Upon execution of such an agreement, the department of ecology may issue reclaimed water permits for industrial and commercial uses of reclaimed water by issuance of permits under chapter 90.48 RCW, and may establish and collect fees as required for permits issued under chapter 90.48 RCW.
Sec. 5. RCW 90.46.130 and 2001 c 69 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) Except as provided in subsection (2) of this section, facilities that reclaim water under this chapter shall not impair any existing water right downstream from any freshwater discharge points of such facilities unless compensation or mitigation for such impairment is agreed to by the holder of the affected water right.
(2) Agricultural water use of agricultural industrial process water and use of industrial reuse water under this chapter shall not impair existing water rights within the water source that is the source of supply for the agricultural processing plant or the industrial processing and, if the water source is surface water, the existing water rights are downstream from the agricultural processing plant's discharge points existing on July 22, 2001, or from the industrial processing's discharge points existing on the effective date of this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6. A new section is added to chapter 90.46 RCW to read as follows:
(1) The permit to use industrial reuse water shall be the permit issued under chapter 90.48 RCW to the owner of the plant that is the source of the industrial process water, who may then distribute the water according to provisions in the permit governing the location, rate, water quality, and purpose. In cases where the department of ecology determines that a proposed use may pose a significant risk to public health, the department shall refer the permit application to the department of health for review and consultation.
(2) The owner of the industrial plant who obtains a permit under this section has the exclusive right to the use of any industrial reuse water generated from the plant and to the distribution of such water. Use and distribution of the water by the owner is exempt from the permit requirements of RCW 90.03.250, 90.03.380, 90.44.060, and 90.44.100.
(3) Nothing in this section affects any right to reuse industrial process water in existence on or before the effective date of this section.
Sec. 7. RCW 90.38.020 and 2001 c 237 s 28 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)(a) The department may acquire water rights, including but not limited to storage rights, by purchase, lease, gift, or other appropriate means other than by condemnation, from any person or entity or combination of persons or entities. Once acquired, such rights are trust water rights. A water right acquired by the state that is expressly conditioned to limit its use to instream purposes shall be administered as a trust water right in compliance with that condition.
(b)
If ((an aquatic species is listed as threatened or endangered under federal
law for a body of water, or is listed as depressed or threatened by reason of
inadequate stream flows under state law, and)) the holder of a right to
water from ((the)) a body of water chooses to donate all or a
portion of the person's water right to the trust water system to assist in
providing ((those)) instream flows on a temporary or permanent basis, the
department shall accept the donation on such terms as the person may prescribe
as long as the donation satisfies the requirements of subsection (4) of this
section and the other applicable requirements of this chapter and the terms
prescribed are relevant and material to protecting any interest in the water
right retained by the donor. Once accepted, such rights are trust water rights
within the conditions prescribed by the donor.
(2) The department may make such other arrangements, including entry into contracts with other persons or entities as appropriate to ensure that trust water rights acquired in accordance with this chapter can be exercised to the fullest possible extent.
(3) The trust water rights may be acquired on a temporary or permanent basis.
(4) A water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section shall not exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised during the five years before the donation nor may the total of any portion of the water right remaining with the donor plus the donated portion of the water right exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised during the five years before the donation. A water right holder who believes his or her water right has been impaired by a trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section may request that the department review the impairment claim. If the department determines that exercising the trust water right resulting from the donation or exercising a portion of that trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section is impairing existing water rights in violation of RCW 90.38.902, the trust water right shall be altered by the department to eliminate the impairment. Any decision of the department to alter or not alter a trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section is appealable to the pollution control hearings board under RCW 43.21B.230. A donated water right's status as a trust water right under this subsection is not evidence of the validity or quantity of the water right.
(5) Any water right conveyed to the trust water right system as a gift that is expressly conditioned to limit its use to instream purposes shall be managed by the department for public purposes to ensure that it qualifies as a gift that is deductible for federal income taxation purposes for the person or entity conveying the water right.
(6)
If the department acquires a trust water right by lease ((in an area in
which a drought order has been issued under RCW 43.83B.405 and is in effect at
the time the department leases the water right)), the amount of the trust
water right shall not exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised
during the five years before the acquisition was made nor may the total of any
portion of the water right remaining with the original water right holder plus
the portion of the water right leased by the department exceed the extent to
which the water right was exercised during the five years before the
acquisition. A water right holder who believes his or her water right has been
impaired by a trust water right leased under this subsection may request that
the department review the impairment claim. If the department determines that
exercising the trust water right resulting from the leasing or exercising (([of]))
of a portion of that trust water right leased under this subsection is
impairing existing water rights in violation of RCW 90.38.902, the trust water
right shall be altered by the department to eliminate the impairment. Any
decision of the department to alter or not to alter a trust water right leased
under this subsection is appealable to the pollution control hearings board
under RCW 43.21B.230. The department's leasing of a trust water right under
this subsection is not evidence of the validity or quantity of the water right.
(7) For a water right donated to or acquired by the trust water rights program on a temporary basis, the full quantity of water diverted or withdrawn to exercise the right before the donation or acquisition shall be placed in the trust water rights program and shall revert to the donor or person from whom it was acquired when the trust period ends.
Sec. 8. RCW 90.42.040 and 2001 c 237 s 30 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) All trust water rights acquired by the state shall be placed in the state trust water rights program to be managed by the department. Trust water rights acquired by the state shall be held or authorized for use by the department for instream flows, irrigation, municipal, or other beneficial uses consistent with applicable regional plans for pilot planning areas, or to resolve critical water supply problems. To the extent practicable and subject to legislative appropriation, trust water rights acquired in an area with an approved watershed plan developed under chapter 90.82 RCW shall be consistent with that plan if the plan calls for such acquisition.
(2) The department shall issue a water right certificate in the name of the state of Washington for each permanent trust water right conveyed to the state indicating the reach or reaches of the stream, the quantity, and the use or uses to which it may be applied. A superseding certificate shall be issued that specifies the amount of water the water right holder would continue to be entitled to as a result of the water conservation project. The superseding certificate shall retain the same priority date as the original right. For nonpermanent conveyances, the department shall issue certificates or such other instruments as are necessary to reflect the changes in purpose or place of use or point of diversion or withdrawal.
(3) A trust water right retains the same priority date as the water right from which it originated, but as between them the trust right shall be deemed to be inferior in priority unless otherwise specified by an agreement between the state and the party holding the original right.
(4) Exercise of a trust water right may be authorized only if the department first determines that neither water rights existing at the time the trust water right is established, nor the public interest will be impaired. If impairment becomes apparent during the time a trust water right is being exercised, the department shall cease or modify the use of the trust water right to eliminate the impairment.
(5) Before any trust water right is created or modified, the department shall, at a minimum, require that a notice be published in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county or counties in which the storage, diversion, and use are to be made, and in other newspapers as the department determines is necessary, once a week for two consecutive weeks. At the same time the department shall send a notice containing pertinent information to all appropriate state agencies, potentially affected local governments and federally recognized tribal governments, and other interested parties.
(6) RCW 90.14.140 through 90.14.230 have no applicability to trust water rights held by the department under this chapter or exercised under this section.
(7) RCW 90.03.380 has no applicability to trust water rights acquired by the state through the funding of water conservation projects.
(8) Subsections (4) and (5) of this section do not apply to a trust water right resulting from a donation for instream flows described in RCW 90.42.080(1)(b) or to a trust water right leased under RCW 90.42.080(8) if the period of the lease does not exceed five years. However, the department shall provide the notice described in subsection (5) of this section the first time the trust water right resulting from the donation is exercised.
(9) Where a portion of an existing water right that is acquired or donated to the trust water rights program will assist in achieving established instream flows, the department shall process the change or amendment of the existing right without conducting a review of the extent and validity of the portion of the water right that will remain with the water right holder.
Sec. 9. RCW 90.42.080 and 2001 c 237 s 31 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)(a) The state may acquire all or portions of existing water rights, by purchase, gift, or other appropriate means other than by condemnation, from any person or entity or combination of persons or entities. Once acquired, such rights are trust water rights. A water right acquired by the state that is expressly conditioned to limit its use to instream purposes shall be administered as a trust water right in compliance with that condition.
(b)
If ((an aquatic species is listed as threatened or endangered under federal
law for a body of water, or is listed as depressed or threatened by reason of
inadequate stream flow under state law, and)) the holder of a right to
water from ((the)) a body of water chooses to donate all or a
portion of the person's water right to the trust water system to assist in
providing ((those)) instream flows on a temporary or permanent basis,
the department shall accept the donation on such terms as the person may
prescribe as long as the donation satisfies the requirements of subsection (4)
of this section and the other applicable requirements of this chapter and the
terms prescribed are relevant and material to protecting any interest in the
water right retained by the donor. Once accepted, such rights are trust water
rights within the conditions prescribed by the donor.
(2) The department may enter into leases, contracts, or such other arrangements with other persons or entities as appropriate, to ensure that trust water rights acquired in accordance with this chapter may be exercised to the fullest possible extent.
(3) Trust water rights may be acquired by the state on a temporary or permanent basis.
(4) A water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section shall not exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised during the five years before the donation nor may the total of any portion of the water right remaining with the donor plus the donated portion of the water right exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised during the five years before the donation. A water right holder who believes his or her water right has been impaired by a trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section may request that the department review the impairment claim. If the department determines that exercising the trust water right resulting from the donation or exercising a portion of that trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section is impairing existing water rights in violation of RCW 90.42.070, the trust water right shall be altered by the department to eliminate the impairment. Any decision of the department to alter or not to alter a trust water right donated under subsection (1)(b) of this section is appealable to the pollution control hearings board under RCW 43.21B.230. A donated water right's status as a trust water right under this subsection is not evidence of the validity or quantity of the water right.
(5) The provisions of RCW 90.03.380 and 90.03.390 do not apply to donations for instream flows described in subsection (1)(b) of this section, but do apply to other transfers of water rights under this section.
(6) No funds may be expended for the purchase of water rights by the state pursuant to this section unless specifically appropriated for this purpose by the legislature.
(7) Any water right conveyed to the trust water right system as a gift that is expressly conditioned to limit its use to instream purposes shall be managed by the department for public purposes to ensure that it qualifies as a gift that is deductible for federal income taxation purposes for the person or entity conveying the water right.
(8)
If the department acquires a trust water right by lease ((in an area in
which a drought order has been issued under RCW 43.83B.405 and is in effect at
the time the department leases the water right)), the amount of the trust
water right shall not exceed the extent to which the water right was exercised
during the five years before the acquisition was made nor may the total of any
portion of the water right remaining with the original water right holder plus
the portion of the water right leased by the department exceed the extent to
which the water right was exercised during the five years before the
acquisition. A water right holder who believes his or her water right has been
impaired by a trust water right leased under this subsection may request that
the department review the impairment claim. If the department determines that
exercising the trust water right resulting from the leasing or exercising (([of]))
of a portion of that trust water right leased under this subsection is
impairing existing water rights in violation of RCW 90.42.070, the trust water
right shall be altered by the department to eliminate the impairment. Any
decision of the department to alter or not to alter a trust water right leased
under this subsection is appealable to the pollution control hearings board
under RCW 43.21B.230. The department's leasing of a trust water right under
this subsection is not evidence of the validity or quantity of the water right.
(9) For a water right donated to or acquired by the trust water rights program on a temporary basis, the full quantity of water diverted or withdrawn to exercise the right before the donation or acquisition shall be placed in the trust water rights program and shall revert to the donor or person from whom it was acquired when the trust period ends.
Sec. 10. RCW 90.03.370 and 2000 c 98 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)(a)
All applications for reservoir permits ((shall be)) are subject
to the provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through 90.03.320. But the party or parties
proposing to apply to a beneficial use the water stored in any such reservoir
shall also file an application for a permit, to be known as the secondary permit,
which shall be in compliance with the provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through
90.03.320. Such secondary application shall refer to such reservoir as its
source of water supply and shall show documentary evidence that an agreement
has been entered into with the owners of the reservoir for a permanent and
sufficient interest in said reservoir to impound enough water for the purposes
set forth in said application. When the beneficial use has been completed and
perfected under the secondary permit, the department shall take the proof of
the water users under such permit and the final certificate of appropriation
shall refer to both the ditch and works described in the secondary permit and
the reservoir described in the primary permit. The department may accept
for processing a single application form covering both a proposed reservoir and
a proposed secondary permit or permits for use of water from that reservoir.
(b) The department shall expedite processing applications for the following types of storage proposals:
(i) Development of storage facilities that will not require a new water right for diversion or withdrawal of the water to be stored;
(ii) Adding or changing one or more purposes of use of stored water;
(iii) Adding to the storage capacity of an existing storage facility; and
(iv) Applications for secondary permits to secure use from existing storage facilities.
(c) A secondary permit for the beneficial use of water shall not be required for use of water stored in a reservoir where the water right for the source of the stored water authorizes the beneficial use.
(2)(a) For the purposes of this section, "reservoir" includes, in addition to any surface reservoir, any naturally occurring underground geological formation where water is collected and stored for subsequent use as part of an underground artificial storage and recovery project. To qualify for issuance of a reservoir permit an underground geological formation must meet standards for review and mitigation of adverse impacts identified, for the following issues:
(i) Aquifer vulnerability and hydraulic continuity;
(ii) Potential impairment of existing water rights;
(iii) Geotechnical impacts and aquifer boundaries and characteristics;
(iv) Chemical compatibility of surface waters and ground water;
(v) Recharge and recovery treatment requirements;
(vi) System operation;
(vii) Water rights and ownership of water stored for recovery; and
(viii) Environmental impacts.
(b) Standards for review and standards for mitigation of adverse impacts for an underground artificial storage and recovery project shall be established by the department by rule. Notwithstanding the provisions of RCW 90.03.250 through 90.03.320, analysis of each underground artificial storage and recovery project and each underground geological formation for which an applicant seeks the status of a reservoir shall be through applicant-initiated studies reviewed by the department.
(3) For the purposes of this section, "underground artificial storage and recovery project" means any project in which it is intended to artificially store water in the ground through injection, surface spreading and infiltration, or other department-approved method, and to make subsequent use of the stored water. However, (a) this subsection does not apply to irrigation return flow, or to operational and seepage losses that occur during the irrigation of land, or to water that is artificially stored due to the construction, operation, or maintenance of an irrigation district project, or to projects involving water reclaimed in accordance with chapter 90.46 RCW; and (b) RCW 90.44.130 applies to those instances of claimed artificial recharge occurring due to the construction, operation, or maintenance of an irrigation district project or operational and seepage losses that occur during the irrigation of land, as well as other forms of claimed artificial recharge already existing at the time a ground water subarea is established.
(4) Nothing in chapter 98, Laws of 2000 changes the requirements of existing law governing issuance of permits to appropriate or withdraw the waters of the state.
(5) The department shall report to the legislature by December 31, 2001, on the standards for review and standards for mitigation developed under subsection (3) of this section and on the status of any applications that have been filed with the department for underground artificial storage and recovery projects by that date.
(6) Where needed to ensure that existing storage capacity is effectively and efficiently used to meet multiple purposes, the department may authorize reservoirs to be filled more than once per year or more than once per season of use.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11. A new section is added to chapter 43.155 RCW to read as follows:
The water conservation account is created in the custody of the state treasurer. All receipts from federal funding dedicated to water conservation under 16 U.S.C. Sec. 3831 shall be deposited in the account. In addition, the legislature may appropriate money to the account. The account is subject to allotment procedures under chapter 43.88 RCW, but an appropriation is not required for expenditures. Expenditures from the account shall be used for the development and support of water conservation as defined by 16 U.S.C. Sec. 3831. Only the public works board or its designee may make expenditures from the account.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 12. Section 11 of this act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions, and takes effect immediately.
Passed the House March 13, 2002.
Passed the Senate March 13, 2002.
Approved by the Governor April 3, 2002.
Filed in Office of Secretary of State April 3, 2002.