Passed by the Senate March 7, 2007 YEAS 45   BRAD OWEN ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House April 5, 2007 YEAS 97   FRANK CHOPP ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Thomas Hoemann, Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SENATE BILL 5086 as passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on the dates hereon set forth. THOMAS HOEMANN ________________________________________ Secretary | |
Approved April 18, 2007, 9:48 a.m. CHRISTINE GREGOIRE ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | April 18, 2007 Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2007 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/10/2007. Referred to Committee on Transportation.
AN ACT Relating to increasing the population threshold for state highway maintenance responsibility in cities and towns; and amending RCW 47.24.020.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 47.24.020 and 2001 c 201 s 8 are each amended to read
as follows:
The jurisdiction, control, and duty of the state and city or town
with respect to such streets is as follows:
(1) The department has no authority to change or establish any
grade of any such street without approval of the governing body of such
city or town, except with respect to limited access facilities
established by the commission;
(2) The city or town shall exercise full responsibility for and
control over any such street beyond the curbs and if no curb is
installed, beyond that portion of the highway used for highway
purposes. However, within incorporated cities and towns the title to
a state limited access highway vests in the state, and, notwithstanding
any other provision of this section, the department shall exercise full
jurisdiction, responsibility, and control to and over such facility as
provided in chapter 47.52 RCW;
(3) The department has authority to prohibit the suspension of
signs, banners, or decorations above the portion of such street between
the curbs or portion used for highway purposes up to a vertical height
of twenty feet above the surface of the roadway;
(4) The city or town shall at its own expense maintain all
underground facilities in such streets, and has the right to construct
such additional underground facilities as may be necessary in such
streets. However, pavement trenching and restoration performed as part
of installation of such facilities must meet or exceed requirements
established by the department;
(5) The city or town has the right to grant the privilege to open
the surface of any such street, but all damage occasioned thereby shall
promptly be repaired either by the city or town itself or at its
direction. Pavement trenching and restoration performed under a
privilege granted by the city under this subsection must meet or exceed
requirements established by the department;
(6) The city or town at its own expense shall provide street
illumination and shall clean all such streets, including storm sewer
inlets and catch basins, and remove all snow, except that the state
shall when necessary plow the snow on the roadway. In cities and towns
having a population of ((twenty-two)) twenty-five thousand ((five
hundred)) or less according to the latest determination of population
by the office of financial management, the state, when necessary for
public safety, shall assume, at its expense, responsibility for the
stability of the slopes of cuts and fills and the embankments within
the right of way to protect the roadway itself. When the population of
a city or town first exceeds ((twenty-two)) twenty-five thousand ((five
hundred)) according to the determination of population by the office of
financial management, the city or town shall have three years from the
date of the determination to plan for additional staffing, budgetary,
and equipment requirements before being required to assume the
responsibilities under this subsection. The state shall install,
maintain, and operate all illuminating facilities on any limited access
facility, together with its interchanges, located within the corporate
limits of any city or town, and shall assume and pay the costs of all
such installation, maintenance, and operation incurred after November
1, 1954;
(7) The department has the right to use all storm sewers on such
highways without cost; and if new storm sewer facilities are necessary
in construction of new streets by the department, the cost of the
facilities shall be borne by the state and/or city as may be mutually
agreed upon between the department and the governing body of the city
or town;
(8) Cities and towns have exclusive right to grant franchises not
in conflict with state laws and rules, over, beneath, and upon such
streets, but the department is authorized to enforce in an action
brought in the name of the state any condition of any franchise which
a city or town has granted on such street. No franchise for
transportation of passengers in motor vehicles may be granted on such
streets without the approval of the department, but the department
shall not refuse to approve such franchise unless another street
conveniently located and of strength of construction to sustain travel
of such vehicles is accessible;
(9) Every franchise or permit granted any person by a city or town
for use of any portion of such street by a public utility must require
the grantee or permittee to restore, repair, and replace any portion of
the street damaged or injured by it to conditions that meet or exceed
requirements established by the department;
(10) The city or town has the right to issue overload or overwidth
permits for vehicles to operate on such streets or roads subject to
regulations printed and distributed to the cities and towns by the
department;
(11) Cities and towns shall regulate and enforce all traffic and
parking restrictions on such streets, but all regulations adopted by a
city or town relating to speed, parking, and traffic control devices on
such streets not identical to state law relating thereto are subject to
the approval of the department before becoming effective. All
regulations pertaining to speed, parking, and traffic control devices
relating to such streets heretofore adopted by a city or town not
identical with state laws shall become null and void unless approved by
the department heretofore or within one year after March 21, 1963;
(12) The department shall erect, control, and maintain at state
expense all route markers and directional signs, except street signs,
on such streets;
(13) The department shall install, operate, maintain, and control
at state expense all traffic control signals, signs, and traffic
control devices for the purpose of regulating both pedestrian and motor
vehicular traffic on, entering upon, or leaving state highways in
cities and towns having a population of ((twenty-two)) twenty-five
thousand ((five hundred)) or less according to the latest determination
of population by the office of financial management. Such cities and
towns may submit to the department a plan for traffic control signals,
signs, and traffic control devices desired by them, indicating the
location, nature of installation, or type thereof, or a proposed
amendment to such an existing plan or installation, and the department
shall consult with the cities or towns concerning the plan before
installing such signals, signs, or devices. Cities and towns having a
population in excess of ((twenty-two)) twenty-five thousand ((five
hundred)) according to the latest determination of population by the
office of financial management shall install, maintain, operate, and
control such signals, signs, and devices at their own expense, subject
to approval of the department for the installation and type only. When
the population of a city or town first exceeds ((twenty-two)) twenty-five thousand ((five hundred)) according to the determination of
population by the office of financial management, the city or town
shall have three years from the date of the determination to plan for
additional staffing, budgetary, and equipment requirements before being
required to assume the responsibilities under this subsection. For the
purpose of this subsection, striping, lane marking, and channelization
are considered traffic control devices;
(14) All revenue from parking meters placed on such streets belongs
to the city or town;
(15) Rights of way for such streets shall be acquired by either the
city or town or by the state as shall be mutually agreed upon. Costs
of acquiring rights of way may be at the sole expense of the state or
at the expense of the city or town or at the expense of the state and
the city or town as may be mutually agreed upon. Title to all such
rights of way so acquired shall vest in the city or town: PROVIDED,
That no vacation, sale, rental, or any other nontransportation use of
any unused portion of any such street may be made by the city or town
without the prior written approval of the department; and all revenue
derived from sale, vacation, rental, or any nontransportation use of
such rights of way shall be shared by the city or town and the state in
the same proportion as the purchase costs were shared;
(16) If any city or town fails to perform any of its obligations as
set forth in this section or in any cooperative agreement entered into
with the department for the maintenance of a city or town street
forming part of the route of a state highway, the department may notify
the mayor of the city or town to perform the necessary maintenance
within thirty days. If the city or town within the thirty days fails
to perform the maintenance or fails to authorize the department to
perform the maintenance as provided by RCW 47.24.050, the department
may perform the maintenance, the cost of which is to be deducted from
any sums in the motor vehicle fund credited or to be credited to the
city or town.