BILL REQ. #: H-2514.1
State of Washington | 59th Legislature | 2005 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 03/07/05.
AN ACT Relating to creating a job development fund; amending RCW 82.18.040; adding new sections to chapter 43.155 RCW; and creating a new section.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature has and continues to
recognize the vital importance of economic development to the health
and prosperity of Washington state as indicated in RCW 43.160.010,
43.155.070(4)(g), 43.163.005, and 43.168.010. The legislature finds
that current economic development programs and funding, which are
primarily low-interest loan programs, can be enhanced by creating a
grant program to assist local governments with public infrastructure
projects that directly stimulate community and economic development by
supporting the creation of new jobs or the retention of existing jobs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 43.155 RCW
to read as follows:
The job development fund is created in the state treasury. All
receipts from section 5 of this act must be deposited into the account.
Money in the fund may be spent only after appropriation. Expenditures
from the account shall be used to make grants to local governments for
public infrastructure projects to stimulate community and economic
development as provided in this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 A new section is added to chapter 43.155 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) In administering the job development fund, the board shall
establish a competitive process to request and prioritize proposals for
public infrastructure projects, the primary objective of which is to
stimulate community and economic development through development or
redevelopment of an area.
(2) The board shall conduct a statewide request for project
applications from political subdivisions or federally recognized Indian
tribes in partnership with a political subdivision. The board shall
develop criteria on which to evaluate and rank applications, and shall
develop performance and evaluation criteria to review how well
successful applicants met the community and economic development
objectives stated in their applications. Among the priorities for
ranking projects, the board shall include consideration of:
(a) The relative benefits provided to the community by the jobs the
project would create, including, but not limited to: (i) The total
number of jobs; (ii) the total number of full-time, family wage jobs;
(iii) the unemployment rate in the area; and (iv) the increase in
employment in comparison to total community population;
(b) The present level of economic activity in the community and the
existing local financial capacity to increase economic activity in the
community;
(c) The rate of return of the state's investment, that includes the
expected increase in state and local tax revenues associated with the
project;
(d) The lack of another timely source of funding available to
finance the project which would likely prevent the proposed community
or economic development, absent the financing available under this act;
(e) The ability of the project to improve the viability of existing
business entities in the project area; and
(f) Whether or not the project is a partnership of multiple
jurisdictions.
(3) At a minimum, applicants shall demonstrate that the requested
assistance will directly stimulate community and economic development
by facilitating the creation of new jobs or the retention of existing
jobs. The evaluation and ranking process shall also include an
examination of existing assets that applicants may apply to projects.
(4) The board shall not provide financial assistance if the funds
will not be used within the jurisdiction or jurisdictions of the local
government deemed in need of the community or economic development.
(5) The board shall not provide financial assistance for any
project for which evidence exists that the project would result in a
development or expansion that would displace existing jobs in any other
community in the state.
(6) Beginning September 1, 2010, and continuing every five years
thereafter, the joint legislative audit and review committee shall
submit a report to the appropriate committees of the legislature. The
report, at a minimum, should evaluate the effectiveness of the job
development fund grant program, including a project by project review.
The report should include information regarding the criteria and
performance measures used, whether the performance measures were met,
and how the funds were used.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 A new section is added to chapter 43.155 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) For the 2005-2007 biennium, the board may solicit and rank
applications as provided in section 3(2) of this act, and need not
submit the list for approval to the legislature, to the extent funding
is included in the 2005-2007 capital budget for purposes of this
section and to the extent the legislature has not specified otherwise
in the appropriation.
(2)(a) Beginning with the 2007-2009 biennium, for seventy percent
of any biennial appropriation, the board may not sign contracts or
otherwise financially obligate funds until the legislature has approved
a specific list of projects. Beginning with the 2007-2009 biennium and
thereafter, the board shall submit a prioritized list of recommended
projects to the governor and the legislature. The legislature may
remove projects from the list recommended by the board.
The legislature may not change the order of the priorities
recommended for funding by the board. For purposes of the biennial
capital budget request, the board shall base their request on the
available money in the job development fund at the beginning of the
last fiscal year of a biennium. The total amount of the board's
recommended state funding for projects on a biennial project list
submitted by the board may not exceed seventy percent of the available
money in the job development fund at the beginning of the last fiscal
year of a biennium. The board may provide an additional alternate
project list up to ten million dollars. The list shall include a
description of each project, the amount of recommended state funding,
and documentation of nonstate funds to be used for the project. The
board shall also describe the expected community or economic
development benefits for each of the recommended projects in its budget
request.
(b) The remaining funds not expended or obligated under (a) of this
subsection may be expended or obligated by the governor, in
consultation with the legislature, for applications not on the list
approved by the legislature if:
(i) The application was submitted for consideration in the board's
biennial application solicitation and ranking process, meets the
criteria developed pursuant to section 3(2) of this act, but
circumstances have subsequently changed that make the project more
urgent and more highly ranked;
(ii)(A) The application was submitted after the board's biennial
application deadline through no fault of the applicant; (B) the
application meets the criteria developed pursuant to section 3(2) of
this act; (C) the application would have ranked high on the list had it
been submitted in time; and (D) the applicant cannot wait for the next
biennial application period due to exigent or emergency circumstances;
or
(iii)(A) Through no fault of the applicant, the project was not
proposed in time for consideration in the board's biennial application
solicitation; (B) the project meets the criteria developed pursuant to
section 3(2) of this act; (C) the project would have ranked high had it
been submitted; and (D) the project cannot wait for the next biennial
application period due to exigent or emergency circumstances.
(c) As used in (b) of this subsection, "consultation with the
legislature" means the board notifies in writing the speaker of the
house of representatives and the majority leader of the senate, or
their designees, and waits ten business days to give the legislature an
opportunity to comment on the governor's proposed action before the
department expends or obligates the funds. If the governor receives a
letter from either the speaker of the house of representatives or the
majority leader of the senate, or their designees, within the ten
business days opposing the funding of the project, the project will not
receive any funds under (b) of this subsection.
(3) The maximum grant from the job development fund for any one
project is ten million dollars. Grant assistance from the job
development fund may not exceed thirty-three percent of the total cost
of the project. The nonstate portion of the total project cost may
include cash, the value of real property when acquired solely for the
purpose of the project, and in-kind contributions.
Sec. 5 RCW 82.18.040 and 2000 c 103 s 11 are each amended to read
as follows:
Taxes collected under this chapter shall be held in trust until
paid to the state. Taxes received by the state shall be deposited in
the ((public works assistance account created in RCW 43.155.050)) job
development fund created in section 2 of this act. Any person
collecting the tax who appropriates or converts the tax collected shall
be guilty of a gross misdemeanor if the money required to be collected
is not available for payment on the date payment is due. If a taxpayer
fails to pay the tax imposed by this chapter to the person charged with
collection of the tax and the person charged with collection fails to
pay the tax to the department, the department may, in its discretion,
proceed directly against the taxpayer for collection of the tax.
The tax shall be due from the taxpayer within twenty-five days from
the date the taxpayer is billed by the person collecting the tax.
The tax shall be due from the person collecting the tax at the end
of the tax period in which the tax is received from the taxpayer. If
the taxpayer remits only a portion of the total amount billed for
taxes, consideration, and related charges, the amount remitted shall be
applied first to payment of the solid waste collection tax and this tax
shall have priority over all other claims to the amount remitted.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 If any provision of this act or its
application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
remainder of the act or the application of the provision to other
persons or circumstances is not affected.