FINAL BILL REPORT
SHB 3374
C 179 L 08
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Regarding general obligation bonds for flood hazard mitigation projects and school facilities.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Capital Budget (originally sponsored by Representatives Fromhold, McDonald, VanDeWege, Alexander and DeBolt).
House Committee on Capital Budget
Senate Committee on Ways & Means
Background:
Washington periodically issues general obligation bonds to finance projects authorized in the
capital and transportation budgets. General obligation bonds pledge the full faith and credit
and taxing power of the state toward payment of debt service. Legislation authorizing the
issuance of bonds requires a 60 percent majority vote in both the House of Representatives
and the Senate. The State Finance Committee, composed of the Governor, the Lieutenant
Governor, and the State Treasurer, is responsible for supervising and controlling the issuance
of all state bonds.
Bond authorization legislation generally specifies the account or accounts into which bond
sale proceeds are deposited, as well as the source of debt service payments. When debt
service payments are due, the State Treasurer withdraws the amounts necessary to make the
payments from the State General Fund and deposits them into the bond retirement funds.
Washington's indebtedness is limited by both a statutory and a constitutional debt limit. The
State Treasurer may not issue any bonds that would cause the debt service on the new, plus
existing bonds, to exceed 7 percent of general state revenues averaged over three years in the
case of the statutory limit and 9 percent under the constitutional limit. For purposes of the
debt limit, "general state revenues" is defined in the State Constitution and by statute.
There are several categories of state general obligation debt that are excluded from the 9
percent constitutional debt limit including: (1) voter-approved debt; (2) bonds payable from
the gas tax and motor vehicle license fees; (3) bonds payable from income received from the
investment of the Permanent Common School Fund; (4) debt issued to meet temporary
deficiencies in the State Treasury and debt issued to pay current expenses of state
government; (5) debt issued in the form of bond anticipation notes; (6) debt payable solely
from revenues of particular public improvements; (7) debt that has been refunded; and (8)
state guarantee of voter-approved general obligation debt of school districts.
In December 2007 a series of storms caused flood damage in southwest Washington. On
December 8, 2007, the President declared a major disaster in the counties of Grays Harbor,
Kitsap, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, and Thurston. Federal funding assistance was made available
following this declaration.
At statehood, the Enabling Act granted certain lands to the state to be held in trust for various
public purposes. Article IX of the State Constitution reflects the Enabling Act by
establishing the Permanent Common School Fund and the Common School Construction
Fund. There are also five other permanent funds.
The Department of Natural Resources transfers proceeds from the sale of stone, minerals, or
property other than timber and crops for school and state land to the Washington State
Investment Board for investment in the Permanent Common School Fund. Earnings of the
Permanent Common School Fund are deposited in the Common School Construction Fund,
which is appropriated for K-12 school construction.
Summary:
The State Finance Committee is authorized to issue $50 million in state general obligation
bonds for federally matched flood hazard mitigation projects and other projects throughout
the Chehalis River basin.
The State Finance Committee is also authorized to issue $100 million in state general
obligation bonds to finance school construction assistance grants and capital improvements
related to skill centers. The State Treasurer is required to withdraw funds from that portion
of the Common School Construction Fund derived from the investment income on the
Permanent Common School Fund to make the principal and interest payments on the bonds.
The proceeds from the sale of skill center bonds must be deposited into the Skill Centers
Building Account, an appropriated account created in the bill. The bill exempts the skill
center bonds authorized in the bill from the 7 percent statutory debt limit. The
Superintendent of Public Instruction is required to adopt rules that set a 10 percent minimum
local project contribution threshold for major skill center projects, unless there is a rationale
not to do so, given economic conditions or other compelling circumstances.
The State Treasurer is required to withdraw from state general revenues the amounts
necessary to make the principal and interest payments on the bonds authorized in the bill and
to deposit these amounts into the Bond Retirement Account.
Votes on Final Passage:
House 96 0
Senate 43 4 (Senate amended)
House 97 0 (House concurred)
Effective: March 27, 2008