BILL REQ. #: H-3610.2
State of Washington | 58th Legislature | 2004 Regular Session |
Prefiled 12/24/2003. Read first time 01/12/2004. Referred to Committee on Criminal Justice & Corrections.
AN ACT Relating to requiring prehire screening for law enforcement applicants; and amending RCW 43.101.080 and 43.43.020.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 43.101.080 and 2001 c 166 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
The commission shall have all of the following powers:
(1) To meet at such times and places as it may deem proper;
(2) To adopt any rules and regulations as it may deem necessary;
(3) To contract for services as it deems necessary in order to
carry out its duties and responsibilities;
(4) To cooperate with and secure the cooperation of any department,
agency, or instrumentality in state, county, and city government, and
other commissions affected by or concerned with the business of the
commission;
(5) To do any and all things necessary or convenient to enable it
fully and adequately to perform its duties and to exercise the power
granted to it;
(6) To select and employ an executive director, and to empower him
to perform such duties and responsibilities as it may deem necessary;
(7) To assume legal, fiscal, and program responsibility for all
training conducted by the commission;
(8) To establish, by rule and regulation, standards for the
training of criminal justice personnel where such standards are not
prescribed by statute;
(9) To own, establish, and operate, or to contract with other
qualified institutions or organizations for the operation of, training
and education programs for criminal justice personnel and to purchase,
lease, or otherwise acquire, subject to the approval of the department
of general administration, a training facility or facilities necessary
to the conducting of such programs;
(10) To establish, by rule and regulation, minimum curriculum
standards for all training programs conducted for employed criminal
justice personnel;
(11) To review and approve or reject standards for instructors of
training programs for criminal justice personnel, and to employ
personnel on a temporary basis as instructors without any loss of
employee benefits to those instructors;
(12) To direct the development of alternative, innovate, and
interdisciplinary training techniques;
(13) To review and approve or reject training programs conducted
for criminal justice personnel and rules establishing and prescribing
minimum training and education standards recommended by the training
standards and education boards;
(14) To allocate financial resources among training and education
programs conducted by the commission;
(15) To allocate training facility space among training and
education programs conducted by the commission;
(16) To issue diplomas certifying satisfactory completion of any
training or education program conducted or approved by the commission
to any person so completing such a program;
(17) To provide for the employment of such personnel as may be
practical to serve as temporary replacements for any person engaged in
a basic training program as defined by the commission;
(18) To establish rules and regulations recommended by the training
standards and education boards prescribing minimum standards relating
to physical, mental and moral fitness which shall govern the
recruitment of criminal justice personnel where such standards are not
prescribed by statute or constitutional provision. The minimum
standards must include, but not be limited to, the requirement that
county, city, and state agencies administer psychological examinations
and polygraph tests to persons applying for law enforcement personnel
positions, including part-time positions and positions for reserve
officers, with the county, city, or state agency.
All rules and regulations adopted by the commission shall be
adopted and administered pursuant to the administrative procedure act,
chapter 34.05 RCW, and the open public meetings act, chapter 42.30 RCW.
Sec. 2 RCW 43.43.020 and 1983 c 144 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
The governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall
appoint the chief of the Washington state patrol, determine his
compensation, and may remove him at will.
The chief shall appoint a sufficient number of competent persons to
act as Washington state patrol officers, may remove them for cause, as
provided in this chapter, and shall make promotional appointments,
determine their compensation, and define their rank and duties, as
hereinafter provided. Before a person may be appointed to act as a
Washington state patrol officer, the person shall meet the minimum
standards for employment with the Washington state patrol, including
successful completion of a psychological examination and polygraph
examination administered by the chief or his or her designee.
The chief may appoint employees of the Washington state patrol to
serve as special deputies, with such restricted police authority as the
chief shall designate as being necessary and consistent with their
assignment to duty. Such appointment and conferral of authority shall
not qualify said employees for membership in the Washington state
patrol retirement system, nor shall it grant tenure of office as a
regular officer of the Washington state patrol.
The chief may personally appoint, with the consent of the state
treasurer, employees of the office of the state treasurer who are
qualified under the standards of the criminal justice training
commission, or who have comparable training and experience, to serve as
special deputies. The law enforcement powers of any special deputies
appointed in the office of the state treasurer shall be designated by
the chief and shall be restricted to those powers necessary to provide
for statewide security of the holdings or property of or under the
custody of the office of the state treasurer. These appointments may
be revoked by the chief at any time and shall be revoked upon the
written request of the state treasurer or by operation of law upon
termination of the special deputy's employment with the office of the
state treasurer or thirty days after the chief who made the appointment
leaves office. The chief shall be civilly immune for the acts of such
special deputies. Such appointment and conferral of authority shall
not qualify such employees for membership in the Washington state
patrol retirement system, nor shall it grant tenure of office as a
regular officer of the Washington state patrol.